Federal regulators
seized
the struggling First Republic Bank on Monday, which they promptly
sold
to JPMorgan Chase. Reports show First Republic had
some $230 billion
in financial assets, which quickly evaporated, making it the second largest bank collapse in U.S. history, exceeding the recent bankruptcies of
Silicon Valley Bank
and
Signature Bank
.
You read that correctly: Three of the four largest bank collapses in U.S. history have occurred in the last 60 days. The events naturally have raised questions about the strength and durability of the U.S. banking system. As of Tuesday, confidence appeared weak. The KBW Regional Banking Index saw shares
hit an annual low
as investors fled from regional bank stocks.
That something is wrong in the U.S. financial sector is apparent, but few agree on the source of the affliction. Some blame banks for
going âwoke,â
while others point to Federal Reserve policies. Others call out the failure of regulators and
bank auditors
.
One possible cause for the financial reckoning has gone largely unnoticed, though it was buried in
a Fed report
published last week.
While the conventional wisdom is that banks simply need to be regulated harder, a report from the Fedâs Board of Governors suggests banks are already struggling to navigate a labyrinth of federal rules and regulations. This was particularly true of SVB, which had experienced rapid growth in recent years, causing it to âmove across categories of the Federal Reserveâs regulatory framework.â
That framework, the Fed dryly notes, âis quite complicatedâ (
indeed
), and the report makes it clear that SVB was spending a lot of time and money on consultants trying to navigate this framework âto understand the rules and when they apply, including the implications of different evaluation criteria, historical and prospective transition periods, cliff effects, and complicated definitions.â
Ultimately, the Fed points the finger squarely at SVB in its postmortem, not government regulations.
âSilicon Valley Bankâs board of directors and management failed to manage their risks,â the report states. âSupervisors did not fully appreciate the extent of the vulnerabilities as Silicon Valley Bank grew in size and complexity.â
That SVB bears the most blame for its demise is true, as Iâve
explained
. But the Fedâs report sheds new light on why SVB wasnât as focused on managing its risk as it should have been.
âItâs clear SVB found it challenging to deal with an overly complicated regulatory framework being pushed by the Fed, which included a new focus on climate change risk assessment and cultural issues, such as fairness and equity,â Stephen Dewey, a retired federal financial regulator, tells me. âThat is time and resources the bank could have spent analyzing interest rate risk and prudent management of its balance sheet.”
Although the Fed owns up to some of its own regulatory impotence during the collapse, it mostly passes the buck on to SVB. Worse, the central bank cites SVBâs collapse as a reason to give regulators more control over the financial system. This might sound ludicrous given the Fedâs recent failures, yet itâs precisely what we should expect.
âAn iron law of the modern administrative state is that the solution to regulatory failure is always to give regulators more power,â the Wall Street Journalâs
editorial page noted
.
This phenomenon is what Austrian economist Ludwig von Mises described in his
historic 1950 address
âMiddle-of-the-Road Policy Leads to Socialism.â Mises understood that not all countries adopt socialism through bloody revolutions. Some arrive there slowly, through a process he describes as âinterventionism,â which is viewed as a middle way between âunbridled capitalismâ and socialism.
The problem is these interventions â price controls, labor standards, consumer protections, etc. â come with costs and often create market problems. When these problems arise, regulations are rarely lifted. On the contrary, the âfree marketâ is often blamed, and more intervention is demanded.
“As a remedy for the undesirable effects of interventionism they ask for still more interventionism,” Mises observed. âThey blame capitalism for the effects of the actions of governments which pursue an anti-capitalistic policy.â
This is precisely what is happening today with the banking crisis. Instead of blaming the governmentâs byzantine regulatory framework or the Fedâs monetary schemes, which no doubt are even more to blame, bureaucrats say they simply need more control.
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Jon Miltimore is managing editor of FEE.org, the online portal of the Foundation for Economic Education. Follow his work
on Substack
.