Fed's Quarles says regulators have begun work to'streamline' Volcker Rule

Reuters  |  WASHINGTON 

By Michelle Price

(Reuters) - U.

S. financial regulators have begun work on a proposal to "streamline" the Volcker Rule banning banks from making risky bets with their own money, the country's top banking regulator said on Friday, in a development that will be cheered by banks that have long complained the rule is too onerous.

Randal Quarles, for supervision at the Federal Reserve, told a conference in that the five agencies which oversee the rule were working on a proposal but warned it would "take a bit of work for the agencies to congeal around a thoughtful Volcker Rule 2.0."

Quarles, who was appointed to his role in October, used the speech to outline for the first time a comprehensive vision for how the - the country's top banking regulator - can go about easing rules introduced following the 2008 global financial crisis.

In addition to simplifying the Volcker Rule, Quarles said a proposal to recalibrate the leverage ratio that imposes an extra capital burden on banks should be published "relatively soon" and that he was working with the board to simplify other capital requirements.

He added that the should take "concrete steps" to tailor liquidity requirements for and to increase further the transparency of stress tests designed to gauge how a would cope with a sudden market shock.

The has also recently told examiners not to treat 2013 guidelines outlining restrictions on leveraged lending as a hard and fast rule - a subject of contention between the regulators and bankers, who say examiners have imposed the guidelines as though they were written into law.

Quarles cautioned that none of the envisaged proposals represented a gutting of core post-crisis reforms that have improved the resilience of the financial system and that his intention was to improve upon the efforts of his predecessors.

"Now is an eminently natural and expected time to step back and assess those efforts. It is our responsibility to ensure that they are working as intended and - given the breadth and complexity of this new body of regulation - it is inevitable that we will be able to improve them, especially with the benefit of experience and hindsight."

(Reporting by Michelle Price; Editing by and Cynthia Osterman)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sat, January 20 2018. 01:24 IST