20 April 2024

Staffing Changes Afoot at the Fed

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The White House and the Federal Reserve on Tuesday moved to bolster the central bank’s leadership ranks as it prepares to start raising interest rates this year for the first time in nearly a decade. President Barack Obama said he would nominate former community banker Allan Landon to the Fed’s Board of Governors. Separately, the Fed board named staff economist Thomas Laubach to the powerful role of director of its monetary-affairs division, where he will become a close adviser to Chairwoman Janet Yellen on interest-rate decisions in the months ahead.

Mr. Landon previously served as chairman and chief executive of Bank of Hawaii Corp. He has also worked at First American Corp. and Ernst & Young. Mr. Laubach, however, could have a greater influence on Fed policy than Mr. Landon. In his new role, he will have a hand in many of the preparations ahead of policy meetings and a voice in discussions over strategy. He will also have a role in bolstering a monetary-affairs division that has been stretched thin in recent years by attrition and a heavy workload. Mr. Laubach succeeds William English, who said last year he would step down after four years in the high-pressure job.

The seven-member Fed board has two vacancies. Three of the governors, including Chairwoman Janet Yellen, are economists. One, Daniel Tarullo, is a lawyer. The remaining governor, Jerome Powell, is a former private-equity executive who holds a law degree.

The staffing shifts come as the Fed enters an important year for monetary policy. Officials are forecasting solid economic growth this year, and many investors expect them to begin raising interest rates from near zero sometime in the middle of this year as the economy strengthens.

The Landon nomination will be subject to Senate confirmation. Edward Yingling, a lawyer with Covington & Burling and former CEO of the American Bankers Association, gave Mr. Landon “excellent” odds in his confirmation process, in part because so many lawmakers support having a community banker on the Fed board.

In 2005, Mr. Landon was removed from the board of the Seattle Federal Home Loan Bank. The board said there was no wrongdoing but cited “the appearance of impropriety” when the Bank of Hawaii and Washington Federal redeemed $25.4 million of Seattle FHLB stock in October 2004. In arguing for better representation on the Fed board, community bankers—a powerful force in Washington—say large Wall Street firms have disproportionate influence over the Fed, which regulates banks.

Sen. David Vitter (R., La.) introduced legislation in the last Congress that would have required at least one of the Fed board governors to be a person with “demonstrated primary experience working in or supervising community banks” with total assets under $10 billion. The provision was revived this week in legislation extending the government’s terrorism risk insurance program, which the House is scheduled to vote on this week. Mr. Landon wouldn’t necessarily qualify under those criteria since Bank of Hawaii has $14.5 billion in assets as of the third quarter.

Ms. Yellen has publicly opposed the proposal, saying in July that while she would welcome having a community banker on the board. Roberto Perli, a partner at consulting firm Cornerstone Macro, said the Fed has often had a governor on the board with regional or community bank experience.

Click here to access the full article on The Wall Street Journal. 

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