STATEMENT OF ADMINISTRATION POLICY
H.R. 3791 – Raise the Consolidated Assets Threshold
under the Small Bank Holding Company Policy Statement
under the Small Bank Holding Company Policy Statement
(Rep. Love,
R-UT, and four cosponsors)
The Administration strongly opposes H.R.
3791, a bill that seeks to raise the consolidated assets threshold
under the Small Bank Holding Company Policy Statement from $1 billion to
$5 billion.
The
primary purpose of the Small Bank Holding Company Policy Statement
(Policy Statement) is to make it easier for small banks to raise capital
so they can continue to provide services to their local communities. The Policy Statement also ensures that when small, community
institutions are purchased, they are more likely to be purchased by
another community institution rather than a larger bank. Less than one
year ago, the Congress reached a compromise to raise the Small Bank
Holding Company Policy Statement threshold from $500 million to $1
billion. That change was intended to ensure that local communities
retain access to the banks that best understand their needs and can
provide personalized services to residents. Now, less than one year later,
this piece of legislation seeks to raise that threshold again – to $5
billion – in an attempt to allow large banks to evade specific minimum
leverage and risk‑based capital requirements. These limitations were
put in place to ensure that banks remain sound and able to serve their
customers. Community banks with $1 to $5 billion in assets already have
sufficient access to capital markets and as a group are exhibiting
health and resilience. Raising the threshold to exempt banks with over
$1 billion from important minimum leverage and capital requirements
would do little more than encourage banks to take on debt, endangering
their soundness and potentially depriving their customers of much needed
banking services should the bank fail.
Setting
the consolidated assets threshold at $1 billion was a bipartisan
decision that struck a balance between allowing small banks to access
capital to better serve their customers, and ensuring their safety and
soundness. Raising the threshold to $5 billion less than a year later
would be an unnecessary and risky change.
If the President were presented with H.R. 3791, his senior advisors would recommend he veto the bill.
H.R. 3340 – Financial Stability Oversight Council
Reform Act
(Rep. Emmer,
R-MN, and 15 cosponsors)
The
Administration strongly opposes House passage of H.R. 3340, the
Financial Stability Oversight Council Reform Act, which seeks to subject
the Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC) and the Office of
Financial Research (OFR) to Congressional appropriations. The bill also
would require the OFR to submit quarterly reports to the Congress
regarding its activities and to provide a public notice and comment
period of at least 90 days before issuing any report, rule, or
regulation. Subjecting these bodies to Congressional appropriations
would hinder their independence and could limit their ability to monitor
and address threats to financial stability.
The
Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Wall Street Reform)
created FSOC to bring independent regulators together with a collective
responsibility for monitoring risks across the system, wherever they may
arise, and to identify and respond to emerging threats to financial
stability. Before FSOC, no single entity was accountable for monitoring
and responding to risks to financial stability. Similarly, the OFR
plays a unique role in promoting financial stability by identifying and
filling in gaps in data and knowledge about the financial system,
monitoring financial stability metrics across the system, conducting
independent research on financial stability policies and providing FSOC
with data and analytical support.
Wall
Street Reform provided FSOC and the OFR with permanent funding through
assessments on the largest financial institutions, including bank
holding companies with total consolidated assets of $50 billion or more
and nonbank financial companies supervised by the Federal Reserve Board
of Governors. This funding system ensures that large financial
institutions bear the costs of protecting financial stability. Maintaining a funding source independent of political interference
allows FSOC and the OFR to function at full capacity and focus on
threats to financial stability. Moreover, funding FSOC and the OFR
through appropriations would subject these entities to political
gamesmanship that could hinder their ability to conduct independent
research, ask questions, and analyze information about industries,
firms, or activities — running the risk of ignoring the next threat to financial stability.
If the President were presented with H.R. 3340, his senior advisors would recommend that he veto the bill.
H.R. 2666 - No Rate Regulation of Broadband Internet
Access Act
(Rep. Kinzinger,
R-IL, and 19 cosponsors)
The Administration strongly opposes House passage of H.R. 2666, the No Rate Regulation of Broadband Internet Access Act, which would undermine key provisions in the Federal Communications Commission's (FCC) Open Internet order and harm the Commission's ability to protect consumers while facilitating innovation and economic growth.
For
almost a century, our laws have recognized that companies that connect
Americans to the world have special obligations not to exploit the
gatekeeper power they enjoy over access in and out of our homes and
businesses. The same philosophy should guide any service that is based
on the transmission of information, whether a phone call or a packet of
data. The FCC's rules — issued after a lengthy rulemaking process that
garnered an unprecedented amount of public input, including comments
from four million Americans — recognize that broadband service is of the
same importance, and must carry the same obligations as so many of the
other vital services do. These carefully‑designed rules have already
been implemented in large part with little or no adverse impact on the
telecommunications companies making important investments in our
economy.
H.R.
2666 is overly broad and extends far beyond codifying the FCC's
forbearance from applying provisions of the Communications Act related
to tariffs, rate approval, or other forms of utility regulation. Even
as amended, H.R. 2666 would restrict the FCC's ability to take
enforcement actions to protect consumers on issues where the FCC has
received numerous consumer complaints. The bill also would hamstring
the FCC's public interest authority to review transactions. H.R. 2666
also could limit the Commission's ability to address new practices and
adapt its rules for a dynamic, fast-changing online marketplace.
If the President were presented with H.R. 2666, his senior advisors would recommend that he veto the bill.
Source: The Executive Office of the President, Office of Management and Budget
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