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Financial Services Law Insights and Observations

Fed governor discusses community-bank supervision

Federal Issues Federal Reserve Community Banks Bank Supervision Bank Regulatory FDIC

Federal Issues

On September 29, Federal Reserve Governor Michelle W. Bowman spoke at the Community Banking in the 21st Century Research and Policy Conference held in St. Louis, Missouri on creating a new model for the future of supervision in banking. Bowman stated that the Fed has “actively explored ways to reduce regulatory burden and provide greater transparency into the work of bank supervisors,” including a reassessment of disproportionate regulatory burdens on small institutions. Bowman noted there was a systematic movement to FDIC-insured deposits in state or nationally chartered banks during the Covid-19 pandemic. For example, total deposits at all FDIC-insured institutions increased by 22 percent in comparison to deposit data from 2019 to 2020, and small business lending increased significantly. Bowman pointed out that community banks played a large role in allocating credit through the Paycheck Protection Program during the pandemic. She also discussed ways the Fed has evolved since the start of the pandemic, such as utilizing technology that enabled the opportunity to remotely supervise the safety and soundness of institutions and adjusting supervisory practices, among other things.

For the future of supervision, Bowman announced an initiative to investigate the implications of banking evolutions for the Fed’s supervision function, which will ensure the Fed’s supervisory approaches “accommodate a much broader range of activities” while also ensuring it does not “create an unlevel playing field with unfair advantages, or unfair disadvantages, for some types of firms versus others.” Bowman said that when there is significant uncertainty around a new regulation, supervisory expectation, or practice, the Fed “will look beyond [its] traditional communications tools to find innovative ways to reduce that uncertainty.” She also shared some underlying principles, among other things, that she believes will guide future supervisory approaches, such as (i) committing to preserving the stability, integrity, functionality, and diversity of the banking system; (ii) maintaining consumer protection and ensuring banks can safely offer financial products and services; (iii) avoiding adding new burdens on banks; (iv) enhancing transparency around supervisory expectations for safety and soundness and consumer compliance matters; (v) providing timelier feedback to banks; and (vi) having the ability to adjust supervisory expectations effectively and efficiently to enable banks to be more flexible in serving different communities.