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Financial Services Law Insights and Observations

McHenry objects to FSOC’s proposed designation framework

Agency Rule-Making & Guidance Federal Issues FSOC Department of Treasury Nonbank House Financial Services Committee Supervision

Agency Rule-Making & Guidance

On June 15, House Financial Services Committee Chairman Patrick McHenry sent a letter to Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen urging the Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC), which Yellen chairs, to “revisit” its proposals on nonbank financial firm risks. As previously covered by InfoBytes, in April, FSOC released a proposed analytic framework for financial stability risks to provide greater public transparency on how it identifies, assesses, and addresses potential risks “regardless of whether the risk stems from activities or firms.” The same day, FSOC also released for public comment proposed interpretive guidance relating to procedures for designating systemically important nonbank financial companies for Federal Reserve supervision and enhanced prudential standards.

McHenry’s letter raised concerns with FSOC’s decision to evaluate risks based on an entity’s size and not its activities. According to McHenry, FSOC’s April proposals will essentially undo changes it made in 2019, which incorporated principles considering a financial institution’s systematic risk rather than merely its size. In his announcement accompanying the letter, McHenry elaborated on his concerns, stating that “allowing FSOC to extend its supervisory reach beyond prudential institutions to nonbank entities in this way could pose significant regulatory consequences for our financial system.” McHenry claimed these institutions may engage in different activities, thus presenting different risks, and said the proposals do not take this into account. McHenry also argued that expanding the Fed’s oversight jurisdiction is not a “panacea for financial stability.”