http://www.wsj.com/articles/fed-stress-tests-clear-31-of-33-big-u-s-banks-for-capital-returns-1467232237
Big U.S. banks won permission from regulators Wednesday to boost
dividends and buybacks, offering investors some welcome news after the
sector got hammered when the U.K. voted last week to exit the European
Union.
All but two of 33 institutions passed the final round of the Federal
Reserve's annual "stress tests," conducted to gauge how such firms would
fare in a new financial crisis. (See this interactive graphic on how
each bank fared.)
Big firms such as Bank of America Corp. and Citigroup Inc., which
struggled on the tests in recent years, passed this time. Morgan Stanley
also passed but received a bit of a rebuke. The Fed said it found
"weaknesses" in internal risk- management processes and required the
bank to submit a revised capital plan by the end of the year, though it
will still be able to return capital in the meantime.
...
The
U.S. banking units of two foreign firms, Deutsche Bank AG and Banco
Santander SA, were flunked, due to Fed concerns about their ability to
measure risks. It was the second year in a row the German bank failed
and the third consecutive failure for the Spanish firm.
...
For
Deutsche Bank and Santander, the Fed's rejection of those firms'
capital plans is a public embarrassment, but the practical impact is
more limited. The rejection effectively locks up some U.S. profits,
which can't be sent home to the parent firms at a higher rate until they
pass the tests, but the firms don't have publicly announced plans to
return capital home that would be affected by that restriction, a Fed
official said.
...
M&T Bank Corp. gained the Fed's
approval, but the Buffalo, N.Y., firm passed only after scaling back its
proposal to distribute funds to shareholders, to ensure its capital
buffers stayed above the minimums required by the Fed.
It was the only bank to take the "mulligan" allowing banks to adjust
their payout plans. Had the bank not done so, it would have failed the
test by falling below two of the four required capital ratios in a
hypothetical recession, the Fed said.
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