New Bank Stress Tests Coming, Generated Under Self-Direction

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By Jon C. Ogg Updated Published
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Dodd-Frank, the Volcker Rule, and other bank regulations have been ongoing and increasing in the years after the great recession. Now we have a new communication from the Federal Reserve calling for the top eighteen large U.S. bank holding companies being required to submit the results of their own company-run, mid-year stress tests back to the Federal Reserve on July 5.

The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act requires that these largest bank holding companies and non-bank financial institutions conduct two stress tests per year and this is the first communication of such.

Each banking firm is charged with developing its own baseline, adverse, and severely adverse scenarios. This is supposed to best reflect the strength and weakness and the individual operations and risks for each bank.

Tests conducted earlier this year used Fed-generated scenarios and the Federal Reserve also conducted its own supervisory stress tests of the institutions. Each firm will be required to release the results produced under its severely adverse scenario between September 15 and September 30.

Read Also: America’s 7 Safest Banks for 2013 

The full mid-cycle stress test instruction summary is here. Today’s news should probably be considered more routine updates than anything breaking.

We would take the cynical side of this with a simple question. If a creditor asked you to construct a financial scenario on yourself based upon your creditworthiness and your ability to operate under adverse conditions that you deem the most adverse, would you skew your valuations and assumptions higher or lower?

Photo of Jon C. Ogg
About the Author Jon C. Ogg →

Jon Ogg has been a financial news analyst since 1997. Mr. Ogg set up one of the first audio squawk box services for traders called TTN, which he sold in 2003. He has previously worked as a licensed broker to some of the top U.S. and E.U. financial institutions, managed capital, and has raised private capital at the seed and venture stage. He has lived in Copenhagen, Denmark, as well as New York and Chicago, and he now lives in Houston, Texas. Jon received a Bachelor of Business Administration in finance at University of Houston in 1992. a673b.bigscoots-temp.com.

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