Background
Bank capital rules have piled up layer after layer for nearly two decades. The consequence? Low-risk activities incur comparable penalties to risky ones, restricting credit availability.
The Federal Reserve intends to rectify the situation. The accumulation of overlapping requirements has created complexity that disproportionately affects low-risk lending, such as residential mortgages and small business loans. By eliminating redundant calculations and recalibrating capital charges to better match actual risk, regulators hope to free up credit for businesses and households without compromising financial stability.
The United States has lagged behind other major economies in fully adopting the final Basel III framework, known as Basel III Endgame. Bowman's announcement signals a renewed effort to strike a balance - one that reduces compliance burdens while still ensuring banks hold enough capital to weather downturns. The updated approach directly responds to industry feedback that low-risk assets like mortgages were being over-penalized, pushing lending into less regulated corners of the financial system.
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The Basel III framework, developed by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, sets international standards for bank capital adequacy. The U.S. has implemented most parts but delayed the final "Endgame" provisions due to industry pushback. The new proposal aims to address concerns that the original plan would have imposed excessive capital requirements on activities such as mortgage lending and trading. By recalibrating risk weights, regulators seek to align capital charges more closely with actual historical losses, potentially reducing the cost of lending for households and small businesses.
Bowman's Remarks
On March 12, 2026, Michelle W. Bowman, who serves as the Fed's Vice Chair for Supervision, gave a speech at the Cato Institute in Washington, D.C. She said the central bank plans to propose regulations soon to implement the remaining Basel III capital standards nationwide. The Federal Reserve is working jointly with the OCC and the FDIC on the new proposals.
She noted, "Following the 2008 financial crisis, regulators implemented reforms that substantially increased bank capital and strengthened financial system resilience."
Next Steps
The proposed rules will be published in the coming weeks. After that, the Fed will open a public comment period. The goal is to eliminate overlapping calculations and free up credit for businesses and households. But regulators still have to balance safety with simplicity.
The final answer is not written yet.
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