Although the Dodd-Frank Financial Reform Act was passed in 2010 with some reforms, such as liquidity standards, stress tests, a consumer-protection bureau, and resolution
plans, the emphasis on additional capital requirements (i.e., the SIFI surcharges) could be considered as weak because they may not be sufficient should another financial crisis trigger a shutdown in the commercial paperr market (i.e., banks lending to each other). A
study by the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston found that even the additional
capital requirements in Dodd-Frank would not have been enough for eight of the
26 banks with the largest capital loss during the financial crisis of 2008. As overvalued
assets, such as subprime mortgage-backed derivatives, plummet in value, banks
can burn through their capital reserves very quickly. A frenzy of short-sellers
can quicken the downward cycle even more. This raises the question of whether additional capital resources would quickly be "burnt through" rather than being able to stand for long as a bulwark.
The financial crisis showed the cascading effect that can quickly run through a banking sector as fear even between banks widens as one damaged bank impacts another, and another.
The full essay is at "Manipulating Bank Size by Reserves."
The full essay is at "Manipulating Bank Size by Reserves."