Fed says nation’s largest banks can withstand severe economic shock
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The nation’s biggest banks are healthy enough to keep lending in the face of a severe economic shock, the Federal Reserve said on Wednesday as the central bank and other regulators prepare to propose harsher regulations for the financial sector.

Why it matters: The results of the Fed’s annual stress tests — which factor into how much capital banks need to hold — come after a string of bank failures earlier this year took regulators by surprise.

How it works: The Fed started conducting annual stress tests after the 2008 financial crisis.

Catch up quick: The scenarios include a sharp rise in the unemployment rate, a collapse in residential and commercial real estate prices alongside surging office vacancies and extreme volatility in equity and bond markets.

Details: The stress test found that all 23 banks examined remained above the minimum capital levels required by the Fed in a severe, hypothetical recession — despite projected losses of more than $540 billion.

In Wednesday’s report, the Fed said that “recent events have highlighted the need for humility when assessing large bank resilience.”

The intrigue: This year’s test was especially tough, with big shocks created to the commercial real estate sector, which some economists have warned could be the next domino to fall for the financial system as remote work shows staying power.

What they’re saying: “Today’s results confirm that the banking system remains strong and resilient,” Michael Barr, the Fed’s vice chair for supervision, said in a statement.

What to watch: The Fed is reconsidering the structure of its annual stress tests, particularly after the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank forced extraordinary rescue measures for the financial system.

What’s next: Barr is among the regulatory officials leading a proposal that’s widely expected to force banks to hold higher levels of capital — a move that will make the financial system safer, though the industry says it will hurt the economy.