Regulators from the United States and the United Kingdom will get
together in a war room next week to see if they can cope with any
possible fall-out when the next big bank topples over, the two countries said on Friday.
Treasury
Secretary Jack Lew and the UK’s Chancellor of the Exchequer, George
Osborne, on Monday will run a joint exercise simulating how they would
prop up a large bank with operations in both countries that has landed
in trouble.
Also taking part are Federal Reserve Chair Janet
Yellen and Bank of England Governor Mark Carney, and the heads of a
large number of other regulators, in a meeting hosted by the U.S.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
“We are going to make sure
that we can handle an institution that previously would have been
regarded as too big to fail. We’re confident that we now have choices
that did not exist in the past,” Osborne said at the International
Monetary Fund’s annual meeting.
Six years after the financial
crisis, politicians and regulators around the globe are keen to prove
they have created rules that will allow them to let a large bank go
under without spending billions in taxpayer dollars.
They
have forced banks to ramp up equity and debt capital buffers to protect
taxpayers against losses, and have told them to write plans that lay
out how they can go through ordinary bankruptcy. The plans are so-called
living wills.
Yet salvaging a bank with operations in several
countries – which is the norm for most of the world’s largest banks such
as Deutsche Bank, Citigroup Inc and JPMorgan – has proven to be a
particularly thorny issue.
Because the failure of a big bank is
such a rare event, regulators may not be used to talking to each other.
There have also been suspicions that supervisors would first look to
save the domestic operations of a bank, and would worry less about units
abroad.
The exercise comes as regulators are about to bring to fruition further initiatives to make banking safer.
The
first would force banks to have more long-term bonds that investors
know can lose their value during a crisis, on top of their equity
capital, to double their so-called Total Loss-Absorbing Capacity (TLAC).
A
second measure, expected to be announced this weekend, will force
through a change in derivative contracts, which in their current form
protect investors, and complicate the winding down of a bank across
borders.
Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/10/10/banks-regulations-collapse-idUSL2N0S52LK20141010
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