Regulators want banks to have larger buffers to absorb losses, planning to boost capital requirements by roughly 20%

Sharing is Caring!



via WSJ:

WASHINGTON—U.S. regulators are preparing to force large banks to shore up their financial footing, moves they say will help boost the resilience of the system after a spate of midsize bank failures this year.

The changes, which regulators are on track to propose as early as this month, could raise overall capital requirements by roughly 20% at larger banks on average, people familiar with the plans said. The precise amount will depend on a firm’s business activities, with the biggest increases expected to be reserved for U.S. megabanks with big trading businesses.

Banks that are heavily dependent on fee income—such as that from investment banking or wealth management—could also face large capital increases. Capital is the buffer banks are required to hold to absorb potential losses.

US banks prepare for losses in rush for commercial property exit

See also  Coincidence? SEC ROLLING BACK REGULATIONS FOR BANKS AND CRYPTO UNDER TRUMP.
See also  10 major banks have stealthily executed significant job cuts, signaling a looming crisis in the financial sector.




Views: 58

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.