Bloomberg
Big banks cleared the first hurdle of this year’s US stress tests as the Federal Reserve found all 35 lenders examined could withstand a severe economic downturn, though Goldman Sachs Group Inc. trailed the rest of Wall Street in a key measure of leverage.
The results announced mark the third straight year every bank exceeded the Fed’s minimum capital demands, indicating the industry’s increased comfort with reviews that once triggered headaches. The exams assess how much capital lenders would have left after enduring financial shocks. This year, Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley came closest to the edge among Wall Street behemoths.
The Fed started using the annual tests after the 2008 financial crisis to force lenders to bulk up their ability to weather losses. Each year, the agency hatches different hypothetical crises, and the process has become the most important supervisory effort to emerge from the meltdown a decade ago.
“Despite a tough scenario and other factors that affected this year’s test, the capital levels of the firms after the hypothetical severe global recession are higher than the actual capital levels of large banks in the years leading up to the most recent recession,†Fed Vice Chairman for Supervision Randal Quarles said in a statement.
This year, the Fed added the US operations of some foreign banks, including Barclays Plc, Credit Suisse Group AG and a wider swath of Deutsche Bank AG’s American business. The foreign lenders turned in some of the highest capital scores.
CIT Group Inc., Comerica Inc. and Zions Bancorporation were dropped from this year’s Dodd-Frank and CCAR tests in response to Congress’s recent roll back of Dodd-Frank. Lawmakers passed legislation last month that exempted lenders with less than $100 billion from the exams.
After years of practice and a long build-up of capital, banks have become more accustomed to the exams, making surprises that lead to poor performance less likely. The Fed has also tried to make the process more transparent — an effort that has accelerated amid President Donald Trump’s deregulatory agenda. The tests come in two parts, and the announcement disclosed the findings for the Dodd-Frank Act Street Test. This one measures how much capital each firm would have after an upheaval, but it doesn’t come with a passing or failing grade.
For Wall Street, June 28 is the main event because that’s when the Fed will reveal results from what’s known as its Comprehensive Capital Analysis and Review — the test that actually quantifies the capital minimums. How banks perform in that exercise determines whe-ther they can win approval for plans to pay dividends to investors and buy back stock.
Though the results are only seen as providing broad clues of how banks may do next week, and Fed officials routinely warn that this test uses very different calculations than CCAR, Wall Street analysts will probably take note of how close some firms came to falling below the minimum capital thresholds.
Lenders seek to stay above a 3 percent level in their so-called supplementary leverage ratio, and the Fed’s results show Goldman at 3.1 percent and Morgan Stanley at 3.3 percent, with State Street Corp. not far behind at 3.7 percent. The leverage ratio assesses how reliant banks are on borrowed money to fund their operations.