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NAFCU to NCUA: Consider strength of CUs in RBC framework

WASHINGTON, DC (July 26, 2019) — The National Association of Federally-Insured Credit Unions (NAFCU) EVP ofGovernment Affairs and General Counsel Carrie Hunt in a letter today urged the NCUA to consider “the totality of new regulation imposed since the financial crisis, much of which has sought to improve the safety and soundness of the financial sector as a whole,” as it seeks ways to moderate the effects of its risk-based capital (RBC) rule. Last month, the board moved forward with a proposed rule to further delay the rule’s implementation date to Jan. 1, 2022.

“All credit unions must now have a plan to access a contingent liquidity source, all credit unions will soon be subject to the current expected credit loss (CECL) standard, most are subject to new interest rate risk management expectations, and most credit union lending activities are subject to greater scrutiny and restrictions than existed prior to the financial crisis,” said Hunt.

Hunt also lists several recommendations for the board to consider as it evaluates a community bank leverage ratio analog for credit unions, as well as how the agency should proceed with asset securitization and subordinated debt and improving certain aspects of the 2015 RBC final rule. Hunt also urges the NCUA to work with Congress to amend the Federal Credit Union Act to achieve “comprehensive capital reform.”

NAFCU has led efforts to ensure credit unions and their members benefit from a modern capital regime, working closely with policymakers on Capitol Hill and at the NCUA. A NAFCU-backed provision to delay the rule by two years from its original implementation date passed the House three times in 2018.

“In any risk-based capital regime, NAFCU has one key tenet that needs to exist: capital must be sufficient to protect the institution, but not so restrictive as to provide a competitive disadvantage or curtail lending,” Hunt continued in the letter.

Hunt also shared the association’s concern that the NCUA’s current definition of “complex” – although more favorable in the 2018 final rule – is still overly simplistic and out of line with the approach of other financial regulators.


About NAFCU

The National Association of Federally-Insured Credit Unions is the only national trade association focusing exclusively on federal issues affecting the nation’s federally-insured credit unions. NAFCU membership is direct and provides credit unions with the best in federal advocacy, education and compliance assistance. For more information on NAFCU, go to www.nafcu.org or @NAFCU on Twitter.

Contacts

Molly Safreed, msafreed@nafcu.org (NAFCU)

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