The Federal Reserve Board issued an important, long-awaited
Following the crisis, regulators in practice increased scrutiny of large-bank boards, but the demands became too expansive, diverting board time and attention away from their central function of setting a bank’s strategic path. The new Fed proposal is welcome news for the industry since it would
Initial
From a supervisory perspective, setting clearer criteria of what the Fed expects from board members will help correct weaknesses in board oversight of their institutions. Clearer direction from regulators is all the more important as memories of the crisis increasingly fade. Strong implementation of these supervisory policies will give the public more confidence about the financial industry’s safety and stability.
For banks, a more focused articulation of Fed expectations is good news in light of how the less formal supervisory policy coming out of the crisis led to substantial misplaced demands on board time and attention.
But have no doubt: The new requirements will require large banks to do some substantial legwork. They face significant regulatory risk if they only concentrate on the narrowing of Fed demands for boards and fail to properly address the new expectations.
Yet the new expectations appear aimed at effecting real improvements in board operation.
For example, the proposal promotes improvement in how management communicates with the board. Communications to the board should be sharply focused on key strategic and trend information that allows directors to prioritize their strategic role. The far too common practice of bank management producing voluminous data-laden board materials needs to be overhauled to better enable directors to home in on key information.
The proposal also prominently discusses the role of board self-assessments both as a way to support board effectiveness and as a method to provide significant information to examiners. The Fed has long viewed strong self-assessment processes as important for management but explicitly extending these expectations to the board is new. This aspect of the proposal provides positive incentives for banks to establish strong self-assessment processes that can be a dynamic tool for maintaining board effectiveness.
The five measures for effective boards laid out in the proposal are: providing clear direction on a firm’s strategy and risk tolerance; managing information flow; holding management accountable; supporting the independence of risk management and audit functions; and maintaining “a capable board composition and governance structure.”
The Fed simultaneously issued a
This reflects the Fed’s determination that boards of large financial institutions must effectively align firm strategy and firm risk tolerance. Implementing the new rating system will be a major step to interrelate the various responsibilities of boards to fulfill enhanced supervisory requirements on governance, strategy, risk tolerance, capital, liquidity, and for the very largest firms, recovery planning.
In the wake of these new proposals, banking organizations should educate boards and senior management on the Fed’s expectations and more generally review the adequacy for board training; assess board policies in light of the five proposed measure of board effectiveness; and review the board’s process for self-assessments.
Unfortunately, the Fed proposal is limited to central bank’s policies, putting off to a later date interagency guidance for banks boards, which can be applied consistently across institution types. Addressing requirements across multiple agencies is still a challenge for the industry. Banks will need to conduct a thorough analysis of how the Fed’s proposals line up with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency’s “heightened standards” and other relevant requirements to ensure compliance with all policies while avoiding redundancies.
Yet the Fed proposal is a much-needed clarification of supervisory expectations of boards that will benefit both banks and the public.