[Senate Hearing 118-496]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]




                                                        S. Hrg. 118-496


                 ANNUAL OVERSIGHT OF WALL STREET FIRMS

=======================================================================

                                HEARING

                               before the

                              COMMITTEE ON
                   BANKING,HOUSING,AND URBAN AFFAIRS
                          UNITED STATES SENATE

                    ONE HUNDRED EIGHTEENTH CONGRESS

                             FIRST SESSION

                                   ON

EXAMINING HOW THE FAILURE OF THE LARGEST BANKS IN THE NATION COULD POSE 
             A THREAT TO THE ENTIRE GLOBAL FINANCIAL SYSTEM

                               __________


                            DECEMBER 6, 2023

                               __________


  Printed for the use of the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban 
                                Affairs





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                 U.S. GOVERNMENT PUBLISHING OFFICE

57-430 PDF                WASHINGTON : 2025









            COMMITTEE ON BANKING, HOUSING, AND URBAN AFFAIRS

                       SHERROD BROWN, Ohio, Chair

JACK REED, Rhode Island              TIM SCOTT, South Carolina
ROBERT MENENDEZ, New Jersey          MIKE CRAPO, Idaho
JON TESTER, Montana                  MIKE ROUNDS, South Dakota
MARK R. WARNER, Virginia             THOM TILLIS, North Carolina
ELIZABETH WARREN, Massachusetts      JOHN KENNEDY, Louisiana
CHRIS VAN HOLLEN, Maryland           BILL HAGERTY, Tennessee
CATHERINE CORTEZ MASTO, Nevada       CYNTHIA M. LUMMIS, Wyoming
TINA SMITH, Minnesota                J.D. VANCE, Ohio
RAPHAEL G. WARNOCK, Georgia          KATIE BOYD BRITT, Alabama
JOHN FETTERMAN, Pennsylvania         KEVIN CRAMER, North Dakota
LAPHONZA R. BUTLER, California       STEVE DAINES, Montana

                     Laura Swanson, Staff Director

               Lila Nieves-Lee, Republican Staff Director

                       Elisha Tuku, Chief Counsel

                  Amber Beck, Republican Chief Counsel

                      Cameron Ricker, Chief Clerk

                      Shelvin Simmons, IT Director

                       Pat Lally, Assistant Clerk

                      Jason T. Parker, GPO Detail

                    Sheryl L. Arrington, GPO Detail



                                  (ii)









                            C O N T E N T S

                              ----------                              

                      WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 2023

                                                                   Page

Opening statement of Chair Brown.................................     1
        Prepared statement.......................................    60

Opening statements, comments, or prepared statements of:
    Senator Scott................................................     4
        Prepared statement.......................................    61

                               WITNESSES

Charles W. Scharf, CEO and President, Wells Fargo & Company......     7
    Prepared statement...........................................    64
    Responses to written questions of:
        Chair Brown..............................................   166
        Senator Cortez Masto.....................................   174
        Senator Fetterman........................................   180
        Senator Vance............................................   182
        Senator Warnock..........................................   184
        Senator Warren...........................................   188
Brian Thomas Moynihan, Chairman and CEO, Bank of America.........     9
    Prepared statement...........................................    79
    Responses to written questions of:
        Chair Brown..............................................   207
        Senator Cortez Masto.....................................   214
        Senator Fetterman........................................   217
        Senator Vance............................................   220
        Senator Warnock..........................................   222
        Senator Warren...........................................   227
Jamie Dimon, Chairman and CEO, JPMorgan Chase & Co...............    10
    Prepared statement...........................................    94
    Responses to written questions of:
        Chair Brown..............................................   241
        Senator Cortez Masto.....................................   248
        Senator Fetterman........................................   251
        Senator Vance............................................   252
        Senator Warnock..........................................   254
        Senator Warren...........................................   260
Jane Fraser, CEO, Citigroup......................................    13
    Prepared statement...........................................   113
    Responses to written questions of:
        Chair Brown..............................................   271
        Senator Cortez Masto.....................................   278
        Senator Fetterman........................................   280
        Senator Vance............................................   281
        Senator Warnock..........................................   285
        Senator Warren...........................................   288

                                 (iii)

Ronald O'Hanley, CEO, State Street...............................    14
    Prepared statement...........................................   122
    Responses to written questions of:
        Chair Brown..............................................   298
        Senator Cortez Masto.....................................   299
        Senator Fetterman........................................   300
        Senator Warnock..........................................   300
        Senator Warren...........................................   305
Robin Vince, CEO, BNY Mellon.....................................    15
    Prepared statement...........................................   129
    Responses to written questions of:
        Chair Brown..............................................   310
        Senator Cortez Masto.....................................   312
        Senator Fetterman........................................   313
        Senator Warnock..........................................   314
        Senator Warren...........................................   318
David Solomon, CEO, Goldman Sachs................................    17
    Prepared statement...........................................   138
    Responses to written questions of:
        Chair Brown..............................................   321
        Senator Cortez Masto.....................................   323
        Senator Fetterman........................................   324
        Senator Warnock..........................................   325
        Senator Warren...........................................   328
James P. Gorman, CEO, Morgan Stanley.............................    18
    Prepared statement...........................................   151
    Responses to written questions of:
        Chair Brown..............................................   332
        Senator Cortez Masto.....................................   334
        Senator Fetterman........................................   335
        Senator Warnock..........................................   336
        Senator Warren...........................................   340

              Additional Material Supplied for the Record

Chart submitted by Senator Vance.................................   345
Statement submitted by Better Markets............................   346








 
                 ANNUAL OVERSIGHT OF WALL STREET FIRMS

                              ----------                              


                      WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 6, 2023

                                       U.S. Senate,
          Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs,
                                                    Washington, DC.
    The Committee met at 9:30 a.m., in room 216, Hart Senate 
Office Building, Hon. Sherrod Brown, Chair of the Committee, 
presiding.

            OPENING STATEMENT OF CHAIR SHERROD BROWN

    Chair Brown. The Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban 
Affairs will come to order. Thank you to our eight witnesses 
today. Senator Scott, thank you for your work on this.
    The eight bank CEOs appearing before us today lead the 
biggest global, systemically important banks in the United 
States of America. Your banks hold nearly $15 trillion in 
assets, manage trillions of dollars of investments and 
retirement accounts, and fund the biggest companies in the 
country. You hold nearly half of the Nation's deposits and more 
than $80 trillion in client assets. Your banks touch almost 
every aspect of our financial system and working Americans' 
money, even if they are not your customers.
    All of that makes you eight of the most powerful people in 
the country.
    The banks you run are so large, so complex, and so 
interconnected, that their distress or failure could pose a 
threat to the entire global financial system.
    You may be private companies, but the risks you take and 
the mistakes you make do not just affect you. They do not even 
just affect your customers, or not even just your shareholders, 
or not even just your workers. Mistakes you make affect the 
whole economy, and, as we all remember from 2008 and 2009, they 
can certainly affect American taxpayers.
    That amount of enormous power should also come with 
enormous responsibility. A big part of that responsibility is 
to make sure that investors, not taxpayers, are on the hook 
when risks at your bank do not pay off.
    That is why we need strong capital requirements at the 
biggest banks. Because of this Committee, we finally have 
financial watchdogs in place who are now serious about the need 
for these protections, commonsense rules to ensure that banks 
can withstand losses from the riskiest financial shenanigans 
that create no value to the real economy. These rules protect 
against risky trading and derivative activities on Wall Street, 
the same activities that led to the 2008 financial crisis. They 
would close a loophole that allowed banks like SVB to hide 
behind an accounting fiction that lowered capital requirements 
and contributed to its failure.
    And anyone who had any doubt about whether Wall Street 
could be trusted to use its power responsibly need only look at 
the current lobbying fight on this. If you have watched the 
local news in Washington, if you have waited at a bus stop in 
Washington, if you have flown out of Washington National 
Airport, you have probably seen ads urging people to ``Stop 
Basel Endgame.''
    The eight of you surely know your audience.
    And you have not stopped there. You have even gone national 
in that campaign, pouring money into ads for Sunday Night 
Football. It is a campaign waged by your lobbyists to prevent 
financial watchdogs from putting in place these stronger 
capital requirements to protect our banking system and our 
economy.
    Listening to these ads, you hear all kinds of claims about 
how stronger rules will raise the cost of mortgages and stop 
small businesses from making loans. Wall Street banks are 
actually saying that cracking down on them will, quote, ``hurt 
working families.'' Really? You are saying that cracking down 
on Wall Street is going to hurt working families? You are going 
to claim that?
    The economic devastation of 2008 is what hurt working 
families. The uncertainty and turmoil from the failure of 
Silicon Valley Bank hurt working families, when small 
businesses and their employees in Ohio and Utah and Minnesota 
and California and Rhode Island and South Carolina and across 
the country did not know if they could get access to their 
money and make payroll.
    And of course, the claims in this ad campaign simply are 
not true. Your game, too often, is to try to confuse people. 
Most Americans think of a bank's capital--if you force people 
to think about it at all--most Americans think of a bank's 
capital as money stashed away in a vault somewhere.
    But that is not what it means. You all know that. Capital 
is just a way to fund loans and investments and risky 
activities in a way that can absorb losses if things go south. 
It means shareholders and investors are on the hook, not 
taxpayers. And what those glossy ads do not tell you is that 
your banks have been reducing your lending to small businesses 
and veterans and homebuyers for years now, long before the new 
capital requirement were proposed.
    Remember that. These are just proposals at this point. They 
have not even been implemented.
    Let us be clear. Absolutely nothing in these rules would 
stop your banks from making loans to working families, to 
veterans, to homeowners, and small businesses. Absolutely 
nothing.
    The reason banks might make fewer of these good loans in 
the future is the same reason we have been seeing less and less 
productive banking activity for years: it does not make your 
banks as much money as the risky stuff. You know that. We all 
know that. You would rather fund risky trading and derivatives 
bets than boring, bread-and-butter small business lending.
    So even with this rule, you can still lend to small 
businesses and homeowners. You just might not increase your 
profits quarter-over-quarter by quite as much as you increased 
them last year.
    But I think most Americans would agree that is a fair 
tradeoff for society: More small business lending. More first-
time homebuyers. Less chance of taxpayer bank bailouts. And, in 
exchange, maybe, smaller executive bonuses and a teeny tiny bit 
less profits for multitrillion-dollar Wall Street banks.
    We know the banking industry does not give up without a 
well-funded fight. Wall Street pours money into high-priced 
lobbyists to fight any effort to put the most basic guardrails 
on your ability to do whatever you want. And what your banks 
want is to maximize quarterly profits, we understand that--the 
cost to everything and everyone else be damned.
    We have seen over and over what a problem that is, and the 
harm that the current system does in places like Ohio. Earlier 
this year, when I first heard about SVB's collapse, my mind 
immediately went to another crisis in my State, in East 
Palestine, Ohio, the place where the train derailment happened 
and affected, dramatically, a community in my State. They have 
one thing in common: corporate lobbyists for years pushed for 
weaker rules, less oversight. Companies cut costs, did not care 
about safety if it got in the way of increasing profits. And 
working people--always, always, always working people--pay the 
price.
    This is why people hate Wall Street. And that is why people 
hate Washington, because these lobbying campaigns, that you 
have engaged in, usually work. We see it over and over. We saw 
it during the fight to pass Dodd-Frank, after the financial 
crisis. Many of us remember the quote from an industry lobbyist 
after the President signed Dodd-Frank--``Now it is halftime.''
    This time, Wall Street was true to its word.
    The executives whose banks failed this spring had lobbied 
for watered-down rules to make it easier to chase profits at 
all costs. They knew risks were building at their banks, but 
they chose to ignore those risks because it meant a bigger 
payout for executives at the top. So we should be concerned 
when the executives of even bigger banks are doing the same 
thing against capital requirements.
    Working Americans are tired of arrogant executives gambling 
with other people's money, then riding off into the sunset 
without any consequences. That is why we need to pass the 
bipartisan RECOUP Act--thank you, Senator Scott, for your work 
on that--to hold failed bank executives accountable for driving 
their banks into the ground. And it is why we need strong 
capital rules.
    Before you protest, I know, of course, that it was not your 
banks, the eight of you, that failed. But after those failures 
earlier this year, we were reminded about how fragile our 
banking system could be, and as a result, your banks only got 
even more powerful. So it is fair to take stock of how you are 
using that power.
    I appreciate the long overdue increases in wages and 
benefits for many of your frontline employees. Thank you for 
that. At least one of your banks has made real efforts to get 
rid of overdraft fees. Thank you for that.
    But your banks need to do far better when it comes to 
meeting your customers where they are and recognizing their 
dignity of work, your employees and your customers. You should 
be cutting prices for consumers, increasing opportunity for 
your employees, increasing diversity within your executive 
ranks, and supporting your workers' efforts, if they so choose, 
to unionize. And you should stop pouring money into lobbying 
against efforts to protect the taxpayers who, in the end, 
subsidize your entire industry.
    The reason for this hearing every year is to hold the 
biggest banks accountable to the American public. I thanked 
each of you for being here, a moment ago, personally. I 
appreciate you all coming together for this hearing. We want to 
hear from you--what will you do to support workers, to invest 
in the real economy, and to finally put Wall Street to work for 
Main Street?
    Senator Scott.

             OPENING STATEMENT OF SENATOR TIM SCOTT

    Senator Scott. Thank you, Chairman, and thank you to a very 
long list of CEOs who have come to talk with us about how the 
impacts of our regulatory environment will impact everyday 
consumers.
    And I hope that you all, some of the things I will say will 
be redundant because some of it is unprepared based on what the 
Chairman just said, but I hope you all will really answer the 
question of whether nothing in these proposals will stop your 
banks from lending to small businesses or first-time 
homebuyers. Because if the proposals, Basel III Endgame--who in 
America knows of Basel III Endgame really is?--let's translate 
that for the average American sitting at home watching this 
because they have nothing else on TV to watch.
    It is simply requiring more capital on the sidelines, which 
then means fewer dollars to lend to small businesses, first-
time homebuyers, car loans. So the actual impact of a higher 
regulatory standard is fewer dollars to lend to Americans who 
need desperately to be engaged in the process of achieving the 
American Dream that is typically defined by having access to 
capital.
    If you work really hard and keep your life in order, you 
can have a good quality middle-class life. But if you want to 
actually experience wealth in America, you have to experience 
the benefits of profit or equity. Equity comes from having 
capital. Having capital typically means you either have it 
because you are born with it or you have access to it because 
you have an idea or a vision that will make your community or 
this Nation better.
    When that happens, you go to a lending facility called a 
bank or outside of the market and you find that capital that 
allows you to start your business. And as you start your 
business and it appreciates, it creates a profit, and that 
profit allows you to experience the upper echelon of the 
American Dream. If you have a home, look at the differences 
between African Americans and majority population and net 
worth--tenfold difference. Much of that difference is found in 
the profit or the equity in a home.
    So, when we think about the proposals, not of good 
regulation, but of a nightmare proposal called Basel III 
Endgame that will put so much more capital on the sidelines, we 
should ask ourselves, how does that translate for the average 
American living and working paycheck to paycheck? My thought is 
that it has a devastating impact on access to capital that 
makes the American Dream harder to achieve and access to 
capital, for some folks who started where I started, virtually 
impossible.
    I think if you if you think about today's hearing from my 
perspective, I want to talk about three things. Number one is 
certainly Basel III Endgame, number two is the burdensome 
regulations and guidance that will ultimately hamper consumer 
choice, and number three, the job our regulators are doing, or 
frankly should be doing, and the work and the workplaces our 
regulators cultivate.
    I will start as I just did with Basel III Endgame. The fact 
of the matter is that this one proposal could have a 
devastating impact on small businesses, and I would like for 
you all to address that either now or during the questions.
    Last month, I led a letter to the FDIC, Fed, and OCC 
calling on them to withdraw this misguided proposal because 
American families, the folks who will bear the burden of these 
burdensome regulations, simply cannot afford it. The letter was 
signed by nearly 80 percent of my Republican colleagues that 
really span the entire ideological spectrum and the country. 
Nearly every single person who has signed the letter did so 
because they all agreed that costly, harmful impacts on our 
constituents, our businesses, and their families is something 
that could be avoided if, simply, the banking regulators would 
listen to common sense and withdraw the proposal.
    And frankly, last month when the regulators spoke, even 
some of my Democrat colleagues agreed with our concerns on the 
negative impacts brought to us by a burdensome regulatory 
environment.
    Let me be clear. This proposal could limit, and frankly I 
think will limit, the following: availability of credit for 
housing for those who need it most, severely restrict lending 
for small businesses that are still rebounding from the 
pandemic, and cut into the retirement savings for hardworking 
Americans, like teachers, police officers, firefighters, when 
they are dealing with higher prices and runaway inflation and 
brought by the radical left. These are very, very serious and 
real concerns.
    But Americans should not just hear about the concerns from 
those of us who are Senators. We should hear from those who 
actually run the institutions that they have and trust in and 
have confidence in. As a former business owner myself, I 
believe that you all, as the day-to-day operators of these 
businesses, not elected officials, have a better sense of what 
the communities are facing, the challenges brought upon the 
communities by these higher standards.
    Vice Chair Barr last month said that the new Basel Endgame 
will only impact about 40 of the banks in our country. Said 
differently, two-thirds of all the loans processed will be 
negatively impacted by the Endgame proposal. That is $60 
billion in small business loans in 2021, $250 billion 
negatively impacted, and the definition of ``negative,'' higher 
interest rates or fewer loans in 2022. In my home State of 
South Carolina, that translates into $550 million of small 
businesses having higher interest rates or fewer loans, and $3 
billion in 2022 in home mortgage originations.
    If regulations continue to increase the costs of providing 
a loan, I fear that banks will decrease lending, not only in my 
home State, but across the country. The increased lending means 
increased financial hardship, and increased financial hardship 
means a reduction in opportunity.
    That is my ultimate concern, reducing opportunity for 
everyday Americans. At the end of the day, these consequences 
will create a ceiling for low-income Americans, and it will not 
be a ceiling made of glass. Instead it will be made of 
concrete. We simply cannot let that happen.
    The second item I want to discuss with you all today 
concerns the onslaught of rules and proposals targeting your 
institutions and the banking system writ large. For instance, 
in recent months, we have seen proposals or final rules all the 
way from climate risk management to the Community Reinvestment 
Act.
    None of these proposals exist in a vacuum, and it is vital 
that this Committee hear from each of you about the overall 
impact on the health of our economy. In particular, I am deeply 
concerned by the continued partisan attempts of this 
Administration to advance their climate goals by any means 
possible, including through our banking system, with the recent 
climate risk management guidance.
    Banks have been considering weather risks for decades--and 
you should--it is called common sense. And it remains incumbent 
upon each of you to base your lending decisions on risks you 
can reasonably assess, like weather or credit risk, not, 
however, perceived political, rhetorical, or reputational risk.
    Beyond the explicit cost of these proposals, which 
ultimately are passed on to consumers, I fear that the only 
real accomplishments of the regulators will be to push more 
activity outside of the regulated financial system where we 
have less insight into the impacts on consumers.
    And finally, number three, we must emphasize and turn our 
attention to the performance of our regulators and their core 
mission--the supervision of your banks and the stability of our 
financial economy.
    This past spring, we saw the failures of several banks, 
which shook consumer confidence. Since then, there has been 
nonstop finger-pointing by our regulators. In the aftermath of 
the failures, I was critical of the failed bank executives 
because that is where the dollar should stop. The buck stops 
with the executives.
    But you cannot see that in a vacuum. You have to ask 
yourself the question, what was the role of the regulators? 
What did they do? What did they see? How do they respond to 
that?
    Your institutions have teams of examiners from the 
regulatory agencies in your offices every day, and I can tell 
by your faces you are really excited to see them when they show 
up.
    But the truth is that we, the American people, deserve to 
understand the complexity of the web that exists that makes the 
headwinds real for lending money to would-be entrepreneurs or 
first-time homebuyers.
    Let me close with this. We are not on the same page on a 
lot of issues. I think there are times when banks go too far in 
getting involved in politics. But when it comes to your 
objective of creating access to credit, to resources, for the 
American people and the American Dream, that is where I hope we 
find our attention today, focused on an environment that is 
easier for the average American to experience the American 
Dream or it is made harder because of the challenges brought to 
them by this Government.
    Chair Brown. Thank you, Senator Scott.
    I would like to introduce our eight witnesses, and then I 
am going to ask you each to stand and raise your right hand to 
swear you in.
    Charles Scharf, CEO and President of Wells Fargo, welcome. 
Brian Moynihan, Chair and CEO of Bank of America, welcome. 
Jamie Dimon, Chair and CEO of JPMorgan Chase, welcome. Jane 
Fraser, CEO of Citigroup, welcome. Ron O'Hanley, CEO of State 
Street, welcome to you. Robin Vince, CEO of BNY Mellon, thank 
you for joining us. David Solomon of Goldman Sachs, CEO. James 
Gorman, CEO of Morgan Stanley.
    Please stand for a moment and raise your right hand.
    Do you swear or affirm that the testimony you are about to 
give is the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, 
so help you God?
    Mr. Scharf. I do.
    Mr. Moynihan. I do.
    Mr. Dimon. I do.
    Ms. Fraser. I do.
    Mr. O'Hanley. I do.
    Mr. Vince. I do.
    Mr. Solomon. I do.
    Mr. Gorman. I do.
    Chair Brown. Thank you. You may take your seat.
    Mr. Scharf, please begin.

STATEMENT OF CHARLES W. SCHARF, CEO AND PRESIDENT, WELLS FARGO 
                           & COMPANY

    Mr. Scharf. Chairman Brown, Ranking Member Scott, Members 
of the Committee, thank you for the opportunity to be here 
today. I look forward to talking with you about the 
contributions Wells Fargo is making to support our customers, 
communities, employees, and to ensure the banking system is 
strong and resilient.
    In March of this year, we all saw the failure of several 
banks rapidly create instability in certain parts of the 
banking sector. Though the causes were specific to the 
institutions that failed, markets became concerned that the 
issues were broader. In response, Wells Fargo, along with other 
banks here today, stood as a source of strength and stability. 
The strength of our institution allowed us to lend support to a 
smaller bank in a time of need. These actions helped stabilize 
the banking system, ease consumer concerns, and keep a 
challenge from becoming a much broader crisis. I am proud of 
the role we were able to play.
    Wells Fargo's strength comes from a strong financial 
profile, disciplined financial risk management, and a 
commitment to run our business with high standards. Our top 
priority continues to be building and running a well-controlled 
company.
    Over the past 4 years we have simplified our business model 
and have exited or downsized several businesses. We are 
primarily a U.S. domestic bank, and we do not have many 
complexities that running large-scale international businesses 
brings. Our legal entity structure and physical footprint are 
far simpler than many of our competitors. Approximately 90 
percent of our revenues come from the United States.
    We proudly serve one in three U.S. households and more than 
10 percent of small businesses in the U.S. We are a leading 
middle-market banking provider here. We maintain one of the 
largest branch networks in the Nation, and we have more rural 
branches than any other large bank. Nearly 30 percent of our 
branches are in low- or moderate-income census tracts.
    We are constantly improving how we serve our customers and 
our communities. We are investing in our branches, we are 
building digital capabilities to complement our physical 
presence, and we are investing in the products we offer to our 
customers.
    Since 2019, we have taken numerous steps to reduce and 
simplify fees, which as of yearend 2022, have resulted in 
average consumer deposit accounts paying approximately 25 
percent less in fees per year. We give customers the choice of 
an account that offers overdraft protection or one that is not 
subject to overdraft fees. We eliminated nonsufficient fund 
fees and transfer fees for customers enrolled in overdraft 
protection. We introduced Early Pay Day, which makes eligible 
direct deposits available up to 2 days early; Extra Day Grace, 
which gives eligible customers an additional business day to 
make deposits to avoid overdraft fees; and Flex loan, a new 
digital-only small-dollar loan.
    I am also proud of the role we play in our communities, 
where we seek to have broad impact. Last year, people who work 
at Wells Fargo contributed over 700,000 hours of volunteer 
service. I have spoken in the past of our decision to take the 
$420 million in fees we received from administering the PPP 
program and donating them, through local partners, to small 
businesses in need. Through the first half of 2023, these funds 
have helped support more than 203,000 small businesses, the 
majority of them diverse owned, and helped preserve or create 
nearly 254,000 jobs.
    Finally, we believe our employees are our greatest asset. 
We invest in them, and we listen to them. Since 2019, we have 
increased wages for U.S. hourly employees by nearly 20 percent, 
and increased the average pay rate for tellers by 34 percent. 
In 2022, we increased the minimum base pay for more than 40,000 
employees, and we invested an additional $200 million in 
employee development.
    We have several ways for employees to share ideas or voice 
concerns. Their voice matters. We take their feedback 
seriously, and we act on their comments. For example, in our 
consumer bank, approximately 4,000 improvement ideas that our 
employees have submitted this year have been implemented or are 
in the process for future implementation. Engaging directly 
with our employees in this way is critical to improving the 
work experience at Wells Fargo.
    I want to close by thanking our employees. Their dedication 
is unmatched. I am thankful for all that they do, and I remain 
committed to leading Wells Fargo to being one of the most 
respected financial institutions in the country.
    Thank you, and I welcome your questions.
    Chair Brown. Thank you. Mr. Moynihan, welcome.

 STATEMENT OF BRIAN THOMAS MOYNIHAN, CHAIRMAN AND CEO, BANK OF 
                            AMERICA

    Mr. Moynihan. Chairman Brown, Ranking Member Scott, and 
distinguished Members of the Committee, good morning. I am here 
once again to proudly represent my 212,000-plus Bank of America 
teammates. Today I will provide an update from last year on how 
we deliver responsive growth for our clients, our teammates, 
our communities, and shareholders every day.
    Responsible growth continues to deliver strong results 
during times of relative calm as well as during challenging 
environments like we experienced earlier this year. We saw 
market turbulence as a limited number of financial institutions 
faced challenges due to their unique business models. Bank of 
America, as we did during the pandemic, along with my colleague 
companies, served as a source of strength and stability for our 
industry and for our customers during this time. And we did 
this all while continuing to strengthen our balance sheet. As a 
GSIB, we are subject to the highest capital and liquidity 
requirements, and all of our metrics exceed those requirements.
    And while we have declared that we have the capital today 
meet the proposed new capital rules, we remind that recent 
years, including this one, have shown just how important it is 
to have these institutions be able to position our balance 
sheets to help customers and clients in times of stress. That 
is why we continue to play an active role to help inform the 
future of this industry, including comments on proposed Basel 
III capital rule. We believe that capital accumulated by the 
industry should continue to serve the customers in America's 
economy, not be subject to regulatory capture by a theoretical 
model. The $30 billion in excess today at Bank of America 
should be used to grow the U.S. economy, to support the 
business plan of small businesses and medium-sized businesses, 
to help consumers buy a home and recognize the American Dream.
    And now for a few specific examples of progress on 
responsible growth. At Bank of America we serve 60 million 
American consumers, 11 million small business clients, and tens 
of thousands of commercial clients. We continue to focus on 
delivering expert networking guides across our high-touch 
physical network. We ended the year with 3,900 financial 
centers and 15,500 ATMs. We opened 58 new financial centers 
last year and renovated 784 more of them. In addition to these 
branches we have tens of thousands of teammates serving in over 
100 local markets around the country. Over the next 4 years we 
are expanding to Omaha, Louisville, Boise, Birmingham, Madison, 
New Orleans, Milwaukee, Dayton, and Huntsville. This will 
enable us to bring our full range of services and solutions to 
better serve clients and help drive local community growth and 
development.
    We also developed and deployed our strength to low- and 
moderate-income customers, including approximately $9 billion 
in LMI loans to small businesses in 2022. In addition, we 
provided nearly $8 billion in debt and equity financing, 
creating more than 10,000 units of affordable housing. And we 
have committed $15 billion to our Affordable Home Ownership 
program. That will help 60,000 American families purchase a 
home to ensure the American Dream.
    Over the last few years we have also invested in 24 
minority deposit institutions. We have $2 billion outstanding 
at the CDFIs. We have helped seed more than 150 private equity 
funds run by women and diverse private equity entrepreneurs.
    Our clients also continue to look to us to help them 
achieve a transition to secure a low-carbon economy. With tens 
of trillions of dollars of investment needed over the next 30 
years, this transition creates significant opportunities for 
our clients and for our company. This transition has to be led 
by the private sector or it is simply not going to happen.
    Within our company we continue to invest in our teammates' 
physical, emotional, and financial health. This includes taking 
steps to continue to move to our $25 U.S. minimum hourly wage 
pledge, which we increased to $23 in October. And for the 12th 
year in a row, U.S. teammates earning less than $50,000 
annually will not see any increase in medical premiums. For the 
sixth year in a row, our teammates received special sharing 
success bonus, generating equity ownership to over 200,000 
teammates.
    We are a great place to work, as recognized by external 
parties and by our teammates. Our employee satisfaction scores 
remain at all-time highs, and our turnover rate is approaching 
an all-time low.
    Responsible growth also means supporting the communities 
where we live and work. In 2022, we made $360 million in 
philanthropic investments. Our teammates reported nearly 2 
million volunteer hours for the year. We also created 
opportunity in our communities for employment. We are in the 
second leg of a 10,000 teammate hiring. That is 20,000 total, 
from low- and moderate-income communities to work in our 
company. Similarly, we have hired over 15,000 veterans in the 
last 8 years.
    And importantly, responsible growth delivers for our 
shareholders. We have delivered stronger and stronger returns. 
We continue to increase our common dividend, and we continue to 
return capital to shareholders.
    This is driving responsible growth. This is American 
capitalism at work. Thank you.
    Chair Brown. Thank you, Mr. Moynihan. Mr. Dimon, welcome.

 STATEMENT OF JAMIE DIMON, CHAIRMAN AND CEO, JPMORGAN CHASE & 
                              CO.

    Mr. Dimon. Thank you Chairman Brown, Ranking Member Scott, 
and Members of the Committee. I appreciate the opportunity to 
talk about JPMorgan Chase and the role of America's largest 
banks in supporting our economy.
    The United States has the best financial system in the 
world, where retail banks, investment banks, asset managers, 
investors, hedge funds, and nonbanks serve the American 
economy. The country benefits from thousands of banks and 
credit unions of all sizes, covering all corners of our 
country.
    I am very proud of this company and of the more than 
300,000 employees worldwide. In the U.S. we serve more than 80 
million customers, 6 million small businesses, we have more 
than 4,800 branches now in 48 States, almost all of your States 
here, and Washington, DC, which puts a Chase branch within a 
10-minute drive for 60 percent of the population.
    We are a top lender in every rural State, serving medium 
and large companies, local governments, hospital, universities, 
farms, and manufacturers, providing almost $100 billion of 
credit and capital to clients in rural and small towns. 
JPMorgan Chase extended a total of $1.7 trillion in credit to 
consumers and corporation in 2023. We moved $10 trillion around 
the world every day in 120 currencies in 160 countries daily, 
and we safeguard more than $29 trillion in assets.
    The country benefits from thousands of banks and credit 
unions of all sizes, serving all corners, and we must 
acknowledge that there are some things that can only be done by 
large and complex banks, things that are essential to a 
thriving U.S. economy and American competitiveness.
    While we are a large Main Street bank, large banks on this 
panel serve America's interests overseas. We bank America's 
largest multinational corporations around the world. We bank 
other banks and financial institutions such as mortgage finance 
companies, insurance companies, the World Bank, IMF, community 
banks, MDIs, CDFIs. Large American banks support the deepest 
transparent and most liquid capital markets in the world. We 
underwrite large and complex municipal bonds which provide 
Governments' financing for roads, bridges, schools, hospitals, 
and airports, and we help American small businesses manage 
their money and finance their dreams.
    Our collective work is important in good times but 
essential in troubled times.
    In good times, large banks help Americans save, invest, and 
grow. We underwrites stocks and bonds to create investments for 
retirees and other savers, and raise money for companies, 
fueling jobs creation and new business development. As 
guardians of the financial system we support our Government and 
national security to combat financial crimes and to carry out 
complex sanctions. We are a force for good for the country, its 
citizens, and the global economy.
    In troubled times, large banks provide market stability to 
protect customers and employers alike. As demonstrated recently 
during the spring 2023 regional bank turmoil, large banks 
stepped in to provide market liquidity, which protected 
consumers, retirement savers, and employers.
    During COVID we also saw America's large banks provide 
significant support, extending tens of billions of dollars of 
credit and capital to struggling large and small businesses, 
local governments, universities, and hospitals, at a time when 
they needed it the most. Banks waived hundreds of millions of 
dollars in fees and postponed loan payments for customers 
struggling to make ends meet.
    Despite zero evidence that the U.S. banks are 
undercapitalized today, the proposed Basel III Endgame rule, 10 
years in the making--shockingly--if enacted, would increase 
capital requirements by about 25 percent for the largest banks. 
None of these proposed changes, by the way, would have 
effectively prevented the Silicon Valley Bank failure.
    The rule would have predictable and harmful outcomes to the 
economy, markets, businesses of all sizes, and American 
households, in ways the Federal Reserve has not studied, 
contemplated, or shared.
    Mortgages and small business loans would be more expensive 
and harder to access, particularly for low- to moderate-income 
borrowers, as costs for originating and securitizing loans 
rise.
    Savings for retirement or college will yield lower returns 
as costs rise for asset management, money market funds, and 
pension funds.
    Government infrastructure projects will become more 
expensive as capital requirements for market activities more 
than double, translating to higher costs to build hospitals, 
bridges, and roads.
    From beverage companies that need to manage aluminum costs 
to farms that need to protect against environmental risks, if 
the cost of hedging these risks increases, everything from a 
can of soda to meat products will be impacted.
    Ironically, a proposal meant to mitigate risk will actually 
increase risk. This rule will result in an increased shift away 
from regulated markets to less regulated markets--which was not 
also studied, by the way--and this activity will be out of the 
sight of regulators, unable to see the next crisis brewing.
    I fear that ``propose now, study later'' has become the 
troublesome new theme in Washington. There have been a number 
of consumer-focused proposals--caps on late fees or interest 
rates, cuts to debit interchange, to name a few--where 
virtually no economic analysis has been performed to determine 
the individual--or collective--impact of these rules on 
consumers, small businesses, lower-income families, markets, or 
the economy.
    The debate should not always be about more or less 
regulation but about the right regulations to keep America's 
banking system the best in the world. I urge lawmakers and 
regulators to be thoughtful about the effect of arbitrary and 
unstudied regulatory proposals and their cumulative impact on 
the economy.
    Good regulations and good regulators are critical to 
maintaining the strength of our banking system. Our Nation 
should give thanks to Chairman Powell and Secretary Yellen for 
the tremendous work through some complicated economic times, 
including their work on sanctions following Russia's invasion 
of Ukraine and the steps they took during the regional bank 
turmoil this past spring. These are excellent examples of how 
regulators, working with the industry collaboratively, sharing 
information transparently--can protect the financial system and 
the country.
    To close, I would like to speak to my 300,000 employees, 
and actually maybe all bank employees around the world, of how 
I am proud of everything they do every day, in hundreds of 
communities around the world, serving consumers, businesses--
large and small, farms, cities, schools, States, and hospitals, 
around the clock, 24/7. Thank you very much for the great 
things you do for this country.
    Chair Brown. Thanks, Mr. Dimon. Ms. Fraser, welcome.

            STATEMENT OF JANE FRASER, CEO, CITIGROUP

    Ms. Fraser. Thank you. Chairman Brown, Ranking Member Scott 
and esteemed Members of the Committee, thank you for the 
opportunity to speak to you this morning. As CEO, I have the 
opportunity to lead a 211-year-old institution that supports 
clients in nearly 160 markets around the world, and we have 
240,000 employees, of whom I could not be more proud to lead, 
and more grateful too.
    Through decades of geopolitical shifts and technological 
advances, we have seen how the U.S. banking system is truly 
unmatched. The isolated bank failures of the spring may have 
tested some of the confidence of our people in our industry.
    But I am proud of how our industry, including my peers 
sitting around me today, how we came together and worked with 
the Government to affirm the underlying strength and stability 
of the system.
    As we chart a path forward, we need to make sure we do not 
inadvertently upend the very system and unique system that we 
have. Our financial system is the envy of others because it is 
underpinned by the most competitive banking system and the 
deepest capital markets. We are home to banks of all sizes, 
each with an important role to play. Collectively, our banks 
serve as engines of growth, supporting businesses and 
households and promoting access to financial services in hard-
to-reach communities.
    For American multinationals, global banks such as ours 
offer the size and scale to help them compete overseas, without 
having to rely on foreign banks. We finance supply chains and 
partner with America's top companies to bring products and 
services to American consumers at affordable prices.
    We use our robust balance sheets to fund transformational 
projects. Last year alone, Citi worked with State and local 
governments to raise or refinance nearly $31 billion in 
infrastructure investment. That included financing 35,000 
affordable housing units across 32 States. That was our 13th 
year as the country's number one affordable housing lender. And 
in addition, we provide a variety of products to drive 
financial inclusion and work with CDFIs and MDIs to reach the 
underserved. As a proud participant of the OCC's Project Reach, 
we are coleading the work stream that is focused on 
strengthening MDIs, and we are also engaged in initiatives to 
increase access to credit and reduce the number of Americans 
who are credit invisible.
    The strength of our financial system becomes most critical 
when the outlook for our economy weakens. Although we certainly 
do not see a drastic downturn on the horizon, history suggests 
that a recession is possible given the macroeconomic factors at 
play. And they include persistent inflation in services, rising 
debt, and a slowdown in global growth, as well as two major 
conflicts in Europe and the Middle East. And we are beginning 
to see some concernings in the lower FICO score segment of our 
customers, and this is unfortunately the very same group that 
feels any tightening of credit first.
    Raising capital requirements by as much as 20 percent on an 
industry that all participants believe is well capitalized is a 
bad idea in any environment. But it becomes even more 
problematic with economic uncertainty ahead. Almost every 
element of the Basel III Endgame proposal would make lending 
and other financial activities more expensive, especially for 
smaller companies and consumers. The most likely result of 
increasing the cost of banks to offer a variety of products is 
that it would move more activity into the less-regulated, 
nonbank sector, which carries its own risk for consumers and 
the stability of the financial system. It would also diminish 
our industry's ability to compete internationally, especially 
with our European counterparts.
    I raise these concerns as I know we all share the same 
goal, that is of maintaining a strong and competitive banking 
system that supports a resilient economy.
    Thank you, and I look forward to answering your questions 
later today.
    Chair Brown. Thank you, Ms. Fraser. Mr. O'Hanley, welcome.

        STATEMENT OF RONALD O'HANLEY, CEO, STATE STREET

    Mr. O'Hanley. Chairman Brown, Ranking Member Scott, and 
Members of the Committee, good morning. I am proud to serve as 
State Street's Chairman and CEO.
    To start, I need to be clear on what State Street is not. 
We are not a consumer bank, a commercial bank, a mortgage bank, 
or an investment bank. We do not serve individual customers 
directly, and we have no retail branches. What we are is highly 
focused on two lines of business: investment servicing and 
investment management.
    Our investment servicing business, which includes custody 
and related services, enables our clients to invest and execute 
transactions daily in markets across the globe in a safe and 
efficient manner. Our investment management division is a 
pioneer in indexing and quantitative investing, creator of many 
of the world's first ETFs, and the world's fourth largest asset 
manager. Our low-cost, diversified investment products are the 
building blocks of savings and investment across the world.
    Both business lines have the same corporate purpose, to 
create better outcomes for the world's institutional investors 
and the people they serve. Our direct clients are institutions 
across the globe--pension funds, mutual funds, central banks, 
sovereign wealth funds, endowments, foundations, and insurance 
companies, holders of assets for the benefit of individuals, 
such as retirees, savers, or students.
    I would like to focus a bit today on my very strong view of 
the value and importance of custody banks. Quite simply, 
strong, effective custody, combined with innovation in the 
asset management industry, is the backbone of our democratized 
capital market, providing investors access in a secure and 
cost-effective manner to the investment products they need to 
meet retirement and other financial goals.
    The safekeeping custody banks provide ensures investor 
assets are held and accounted for where and how they should be. 
This has not always been the case.
    From the collapse of investment trusts in the 1930s, to the 
failure of the Studebaker pension fund in 1963, to the 
misappropriation of the Mirror Group pension fund prior to 
Robert Maxwell's death in 1991, to the Madoff scandal uncovered 
in the late aughts, investors are put at risk when there is no 
proper custody of assets. In contrast, proper custody 
regulation, such as the Investment Company Act of 1940, and 
ERISA, coupled with the enormous investments in technology by 
today's custody banks has produced a modern-time near perfect 
track record of safekeeping assets.
    The recent events around FTX, which did not use bank 
custodians, demonstrate that more remains to be done to protect 
investors' assets and the financial system. In the emerging 
digital finance space, a comprehensive, effective regulatory 
framework is not yet in place, and the consequences are clear.
    State Street is subject to the highest levels of regulation 
and supervision. We are well-capitalized, both stressed and 
unstressed. Our balance sheet is conservatively positioned to 
deliver liquidity when our clients need it. We are subject to 
extensive resolution and recovery plans. We are a proven source 
of stability for capital markets and our customers in times of 
stress.
    Despite the challenges of COVID and the banking stress 
earlier this year, the eight GSIB banks before you have done 
their jobs exceedingly well, partnering with regulators during 
COVID and the SVB/First Republic crises, and providing 
stability to our financial system. I am proud of State Street's 
strong performance over these stressful periods.
    Looking forward, the geopolitical environment is complex 
and unpredictable. The U.S. and the global economic recovery is 
uncertain as we all navigate higher interest rates and debt 
levels. And the financial services regulatory environment in 
the U.S. is in flux, in many cases with unclear goals.
    From a State Street perspective, I am concerned with the 
U.S. banking regulators' capital proposal, which I fear could 
negatively impact the U.S. economy by limiting bank credit 
extension and impairing the ability of U.S. banks like State 
Street to continue to provide high quality custody and asset 
management services.
    I am also concerned by the SEC's proposed ``safekeeping'' 
rule, which, with no clear rationale, challenges some of the 
foundational elements of custody banking and in effect destroys 
the low-cost, near perfect service now provided to investors.
    I hope these proposals can be adjusted, for if not they 
create risk of negative economic, market, and individual 
outcomes going forward.
    I am very proud of our company, our diverse workforce, and 
the role we play in the financial system. State Street and the 
other GSIB banks here are the most well capitalized and 
technologically advanced financial services firms in the world. 
They are essential to America's competitiveness and prosperity.
    I look forward to our dialogue today.
    Chair Brown. Thank you, Mr. O'Hanley. Mr. Vince, welcome.

           STATEMENT OF ROBIN VINCE, CEO, BNY MELLON

    Mr. Vince. Good morning, Chair Brown, Ranking Member Scott, 
and Members of the Committee. I have had the honor of serving 
as the CEO of BNY Mellon for just over a year. I take this 
responsibility very seriously. As a company, we work for a 
strong, competitive banking system that serves customers and 
communities, supports the economy, and preserves U.S. economic 
leadership. My appreciation for this role has only grown as I 
get to know our history, our clients, our people, and our 
culture.
    Let me start with who we are. BNY Mellon is the Nation's 
oldest bank, founded by Alexander Hamilton in 1784. Today we 
are a global financial services company with 50,000 employees. 
Our client base is varied, ranging from Governments and pension 
funds to corporations and financial firms. These clients all 
have different needs and roles in the economy, and we provide 
the services to put their money to work, keeping it safe, 
moving it, and managing it.
    While we are proud of our history and our leading market 
positions, we do not take them for granted. They are constant 
remainders to earn trust and to plan for the long term. We know 
that our economy will face challenges. It's not a matter of if 
but when, and for how long. It is critical that we are prepared 
to operate through these different conditions, being prepared 
to prevent, respond, and recover. This is what we mean by 
resiliency. It is a basic concept and a shared goal amongst our 
clients, regulators, and other stakeholders, and it is embedded 
in our strategy.
    One part of being prepared is financial resiliency, having 
enough capital and liquidity to weather unexpected market 
stress. We have a strong track record, and customers 
consistently look to us as a dependable provider during market 
disruptions. We aim to manage our balance sheet conservatively, 
with a high proportion of cash and high quality liquid assets 
to adjust for changing market conditions.
    Another part of being prepared is operational resiliency, 
having the technology, the people, the processes in place to 
respond to events that could disrupt operations. I am very 
proud of the hard work that our teams have put in to keep 
markets running smoothly, all through record volatility and 
volumes during the pandemic, wars, and market stresses. This 
work happens behind the scenes, and I want to commend our 
people who have made this happen.
    We have a long legacy of firsts as a company to solve 
problems and help move the country forward. We provided the 
first loan to the United States, and we were the first stock 
listed on the New York Stock Exchange. These actions, taken for 
granted today, were financial innovations at the time.
    But we cannot be complacent. Markets are uncertain. We must 
adapt to new needs and address new risks as we plan and prepare 
for the future. U.S. leadership on technology, including on 
cyber, distributed ledger technology, and artificial 
intelligence is important for our economy. This will require 
diligence and innovation by the public and private sectors to 
address them in a responsible way.
    Finally, I would like to close with an emphasis on our more 
than 50,000 employees who do the hard work to keep our company 
and global markets running. Our goal at BNY Mellon is to drive 
a spirit of ownership, shared responsibility, and mutual 
success.
    Equity ownership in our company is an important part of 
this, and I am particularly proud of our BK Shares program to 
grant equity to employees who otherwise would not have received 
stock. This program has benefited more than 45,000 employees 
and allowed many of them to become first-time participants in 
the capital markets that they help to serve. This is just one 
example of our culture and commitment to invest in our people 
and our company's long-term success.
    Thank you for your time, and I am happy to answer any 
questions that you may have.
    Chair Brown. Thank you, Mr. Vince. Mr. Solomon, welcome.

         STATEMENT OF DAVID SOLOMON, CEO, GOLDMAN SACHS

    Mr. Solomon. Thank you. Chairman Brown, Ranking Member 
Scott, Members of the Committee, thank you for giving me the 
opportunity to testify. I am proud to serve as the Chairman and 
CEO of Goldman Sachs and lead our incredibly talented team of 
45,000 people around the world as they work tirelessly to serve 
our clients.
    Goldman Sachs has a deep history, spanning over 150 years 
as a global leader in investment banking, securities, trading, 
and investment management. Our size, global reach, and 
capabilities allows us to provide tailored services and 
products, aiding institutions, businesses of all sizes, and 
individuals in achieving their financial goals.
    We sit at the center of the U.S. capital markets, which 
forms the bedrock of our financial system and helps drive 
America's innovation. In fact, 75 percent of financing for U.S. 
businesses and State and local governments is conducted through 
our capital markets.
    A core component of our firm lies in the talent and 
expertise of our people and their commitment to advising our 
clients on buying and selling businesses, raising capital, and 
managing risks. In particular, Goldman Sachs as a crucial risk 
advisor to help businesses of all sizes navigate through 
challenges and financial risks that range from currency 
fluctuations and commodity price volatility to interest rate 
risks and various forms of credit risk.
    In addition, we finance infrastructure projects for local 
governments to invest in schools, hospitals, and roads. We also 
invest on behalf of our clients so that jobs can be created, 
retirement savings can grow, and economies can expand.
    We are able to facilitate all these activities because of 
the strength and resiliency of our balance sheet. In fact, 
since 2007, Goldman Sachs' capital has nearly tripled, our 
liquidity has increased more than five times, and our leverage 
has decreased by half.
    In addition, the Federal Reserve's stress tests have 
consistently confirmed that all of us here have sufficient 
capital to withstand a severe global recession. As an example, 
the scenario has included 50 percent decline in equity prices 
within a year, in addition to a separate global market shock 
that also features dramatic instantaneous declines in equity 
prices.
    You have the finest and most innovative financial 
institutions in the world represented here today, and we all 
served as a source of strength for the economy throughout the 
pandemic, the Ukraine war, and regional bank failures. Federal 
Reserve Chairman Powell, Treasury Secretary Yellen, and many 
other Government officials of both political parties across 
three administrations have repeatedly stated that the largest 
banks are strong and well capitalized.
    In the wake of significant interest rate hikes I believe 
the U.S. economy has proven to be more resilient than expected, 
and the chances of a recession have decreased, although there 
are many reasons to remain vigilant. We are seeing a further 
tightening of financial conditions, the U.S. structural debt 
continues to grow and become more expensive to finance, and the 
geopolitical stresses associated with Ukraine, China, and the 
Middle East could impact economic growth and stability around 
the world.
    Against this backdrop, one headwind to U.S. economic 
recovery is the finalization of the new capital rules, referred 
to as Basel III Endgame. These rules were conceived to create a 
common set of international capital standards without raising 
the aggregate amount of capital. However, the U.S. proposal 
does exactly the opposite. It is significantly more stringent 
than any other jurisdiction and would increase our capital 
requirements by about 25 percent.
    Although this increase in capital is a result of a number 
of over-calibrations throughout the proposal, I want to 
highlight just one of the many issues that is particularly 
punitive to capital markets' activities. The proposal nearly 
doubles the capital for market-making activity. These higher 
requirements are simply layered on top of the global market 
shock that I discussed moments ago, without any consideration 
for how they interact, resulting in a significant double count. 
As a result, banks will need to hold capital for many of the 
exact same risks associated with those market activities.
    As of the third quarter, the institutions most impacted by 
this proposal amount to two-thirds of both lending and capital 
markets activity in the U.S. In addition, since 2010, U.S. 
banks have underwritten 70 percent of equity financing and 60 
percent of U.S. dollar debt financing.
    These punitive regulatory measures also run the risk of 
harming U.S. competitiveness and capital market strength 
globally, as well as pushing activity overseas and outside of 
the regulated banking sector, without making the U.S. system 
far safer.
    Indeed, we believe the proposal results in increased costs 
for airlines, manufacturers, food producers, pensions and 
mutual funds, insurance companies, small businesses, and energy 
companies. These costs will likely get passed on to consumers. 
For example, it would quadruple our capital requirements for 
clean energy tax equity products and would increase our capital 
eight times for important transactions we enter into with 
pension funds to improve the returns for retirees.
    Systemic financial stability is critical to the functioning 
of the U.S. economy, and we should ensure that we are only 
taking actions that enhance the capacity of financial 
institutions to support our economy and provide demonstrable 
systemic benefit.
    Thank you. I would be happy to take any questions.
    Chair Brown. Thank you, Mr. Solomon. Mr. Gorman, welcome.

       STATEMENT OF JAMES P. GORMAN, CEO, MORGAN STANLEY

    Mr. Gorman. Thank you, Chairman Brown, Ranking Member 
Scott, and Members of the Committee. Thanks for having us here. 
I am honored to represent the Morgan Stanley employees today, 
and for the last 14 years as their Chairman and CEO.
    In 2021, we were still battling an extraordinary public 
health crisis. The economy was supported with monetary and 
fiscal stimulus, and inflation was low. A lot has changed 
since. While inflation has receded from its highs, the 
macroeconomic environment continues to be very complex. We are 
also witnessing, as is obvious, considerable geopolitical 
challenges today.
    At Morgan Stanley, in our Institutional business, we help 
advise private companies and public sector entities for mee 
their financing needs. That includes raising equity and debt 
capital to fund and grow businesses, invest in public 
infrastructure, ultimately contributing to the growth of the 
economy. We assist pension funds, mutual funds, and other 
financial institutions trade and manage assets around the 
globe.
    In our Wealth and Asset Management businesses, we are 
managing nearly $6.2 trillion of assets for individuals and 
households, as well as institutions like endowments and pension 
funds that manage the retirements of our public employees. For 
millions of U.S. households, our services help families save 
money for retirement, and for college, and for a mortgage to 
build home ownership.
    The U.S. banking system remains strong, and is the envy of 
the world. It is an extraordinary asset for our country. 
Nowhere--not China, not Europe, not South America, not the 
U.K., not the rest of Asia--has a system remotely having these 
kinds of strengths.
    Large U.S. banks have undergone a dramatic change in their 
capital and liquidity profile since the financial crisis of 15 
years ago, when the U.S. Government, you, acted decisively and 
quickly in implementing the Dodd-Frank and CCAR reforms. As we 
saw earlier this year, there was a crisis among some regional 
banks. It was not a banking crisis. It was a crisis of three 
banks. It was in the spring, and it was quickly averted by 
prompt regulatory action, and with the strength and support 
from these large banks. We, along with three other banks, 
together provided $30 billion in uninsured deposits to First 
Republic to assist the regulators so that they could manage its 
ultimate resolution. It was gratifying, after being part of the 
problem in the 2008 financial crisis, to have the financial 
strength and stability to be part of the solution.
    Current proposals to put additional capital requirements, 
as you have heard today, on all the largest banks, the so-
called Basel III Endgame, need to consider the full impact to 
the U.S. economy and what it will mean for U.S. small 
businesses and consumers. Regulations are only effective when 
they find that balance.
    Blanket increases in capital for the large U.S. banks, who 
already undergo annual rigorous stress testing and are required 
to maintain additional specific capital buffers already, 
additional increases are wholly unnecessary. It will make 
credit more expensive, as everybody has said, make it less 
accessible to consumers and businesses, while harming the 
competitiveness of this economy, one of the great strengths of 
the U.S. economy, the banking system. As it stands, the 
proposal would increase the cost of capital and borrowing 
across the U.S. economy, not just to large and small 
corporations, but to pensions, municipalities, and endowments.
    We hope the Federal agencies will be open to changes and 
reviewing the industry's comments thoughtfully.
    As a global leader in financial services, we have a 
responsibility to all the communities we operate in. Many of 
those communities continue to experience social and financial 
challenges, and we are using our resources to help them.
    Finally, Mr. Chairman, in your letter dated November 6, 
2023, you asked me to provide information on a number of 
topics, and that in the attached addendum.
    Thank you again, Chairman Brown, Ranking Member Scott, and 
Members of the Committee. We look forward to your questions.
    Chair Brown. Thank you, Mr. Gorman.
    A productive third quarter for your banks. Your banks, as 
you like to say, return capital to shareholders in the form of 
dividends and stock buybacks. During your earnings calls at the 
end of the third quarter we heard statements about how you are 
going to continue to manage your businesses to deliver value to 
your shareholders. Of course, what we did not hear was any 
concern that your firms would not be able to meet the 
anticipated increased capital levels under Basel III Endgame.
    If I am mistaken I would like you to set the record 
straight for the public and the investors. Do any of you have 
any reason to believe that your firm would not be able to 
achieve the increased capital requirements of Basel III, 
adopted as proposed? Any of you think you could not achieve the 
increased capital requirements, raise your hands if you think 
you cannot.
    [No hands raised.]
    Chair Brown. Thank you. I think you have indicated your 
firms will be able to meet the enhanced capital requirements. 
It leads me to conclude that the proposed capital standards are 
not too onerous.
    Mr. Scharf, Americans' support for unions, as we have 
discussed, is at a half-century high. Unions help ensure that 
workers share in a company's success through better pay and 
better benefits, control over their schedules, greater 
stability to their personal and professional lives. Workers at 
two Wells Fargo branches will be voting to unionize this month. 
Dozens of other union organizing drives are in the works.
    Wells Fargo's recent scandals highlight the pressure that 
overworked and underpaid workers that short-staffed branches 
face. One worker said, ``The executives do not have to deal 
with the consequences of their decisions in a direct sense but 
we do.''
    Mr. Scharf, I appreciate your willingness to talk one-on-
one about this with me. I remain concerned about unfair labor 
practices and reports that Wells Fargo is geared up in response 
to the union campaign. Will you remain neutral as these 
employees vote to organize?
    Mr. Scharf. Chairman Brown, I agree with your sentiment 
about the importance of the workers and our employees, and as 
you know we have done a tremendous amount to support them and 
will continue to do that. And we believe that it is best that 
we have a direct relationship with those employees, and we do 
intend to exercise our right to speak with them, to make sure 
that they make an informed decision.
    Chair Brown. Thank you. It was an opportunity to show the 
American public truly a new day at Wells Fargo, and I am sorry 
that you have failed to show that real change is afoot at your 
bank.
    Mr. Scharf, Mr. Moynihan, Mr. Dimon, and Ms. Fraser, 
according to CFPB, failure to invoke the Servicemembers Civil 
Relief Act interest rate reductions cost servicemembers $100 
million between 2007 and 2018. You can unilaterally act to 
ensure servicemembers receive those benefits, the SCRA benefits 
they are entitled to.
    Do your banks proactively check authorized military data 
bases to identify accounts that may be eligible for SCRA 
protections? Begin, Mr. Scharf.
    Mr. Scharf. Chairman, we have huge respect for those that 
have been in the military. Specifically, to your question, I am 
not sure, but certainly we will check and get back to you.
    Chair Brown. OK. Thank you. Mr. Moynihan.
    Mr. Moynihan. We, again, follow the SCRA provisions. On an 
annual basis we retroactively, looking back, after we get 
notification, about $180 million a year we send back to those 
servicemembers, including fees, which we are not required to 
rebate, but we go ahead and rebate them. So I will check to 
make sure we are looking at all available means, but we comply 
with the law.
    Chair Brown. Thank you. Mr. Dimon.
    Mr. Dimon. I am sure we comply with the law, but it is an 
opportunity to say that we have hired 18,000 veterans in the 
last couple of years. We support the United States military. We 
have hired 3,000 military spouses. So we stand 100 percent 
behind the servicemembers that we hold in the highest regard.
    Chair Brown. Thank you. Ms. Fraser.
    Ms. Fraser. Similarly, Chair Brown, we are very proud to 
employ many veterans, and we are incredibly grateful for 
everything that they do for our country. We make extensive 
investments in ensuring that we comply with the laws, and we do 
indeed tap into the database.
    Chair Brown. Thank you. Thank you for your candor about 
that. I urge you all to proactively check whether customers are 
eligible for SCRA benefits. It is the type of work that you 
could be doing. The answers were helpful, and we will be back 
with all four of you about how we can help do that proactively.
    There is plenty we do not agree on. It is pretty clear. But 
I also want to finish somewhere we do agree, supplemental 
security income. SSI provides a lifeline for 300,000 Ohioans, 
nearly 8 million Americans living with disabilities. The 
problem is SSI's eligibility rules have not been updated by 
Congress--that is on us--in 40 years. They are now so outdated 
they lock people in poverty. The Bipartisan Policy Center 
called SSI's asset limit the most regressive anti-savings 
provision in Federal law. I have a bipartisan bill with Senator 
Rounds of this Committee to raise the program's asset limit and 
stop punishing people for working and saving.
    Mr. Dimon, I know JPMorgan Chase is supportive of raising 
the asset level. I thank you for your leadership on this. Tell 
us briefly how it affects JPMorgan and why you are so 
supportive, and then I would like to ask all of you if you 
would join Mr. Dimon and Senator Rounds and me in support. Mr. 
Dimon.
    Mr. Dimon. Senator, thank you. We have employees who do not 
want us to increase their salary because if it goes over a 
certain amount they cannot get that benefit, which they are 
entitled to, or they cannot have assets over $10,000. So this 
definitely should be fixed. We fully support it, and try to be 
as helpful as we can.
    Chair Brown. Thank you. Mr. Scharf, would you agree to 
support Mr. Dimon's position and mine?
    Mr. Scharf. It sounds like something that we would be 
willing to support, but we would like to take a look at it.
    Chair Brown. Mr. Moynihan.
    Mr. Moynihan. [Inaudible.]
    Chair Brown. Ms. Fraser.
    Ms. Fraser. Fully and wholeheartedly.
    Chair Brown. OK. Mr. O'Hanley.
    Mr. O'Hanley. We do support it.
    Chair Brown. Thank you. Mr. Vince.
    Mr. Vince. We do support it.
    Chair Brown. Mr. Solomon.
    Mr. Solomon. We do support it.
    Chair Brown. Mr. Gorman.
    Mr. Gorman. Yes.
    Chair Brown. Thank you all. Senator Scott.
    Senator Scott. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. A question for the 
panel. The Chairman asked a question about can you achieve the 
increased capital requirements. My question is can you achieve 
the increased capital requirements without negative 
consequences to the economy and to lending?
    Mr. Scharf. Senator, we do have concerns that some of the 
items in the proposal will lead us to either increase the price 
or to reduce the amount that we lend.
    Mr. Moynihan. There is a chart in the MPR that looks 
deceivingly simple. It says here is the RWA before the proposal 
and here is the RWA after the proposal. Is says 24 percent 
increase. That is a reduction in capacity of this industry to 
service clients, no questions asked. The capital that could 
have been used to create those additional RWA incremental has 
to be used to sustain the same activities we have today, with 
no risk from the day before to the day after in what the 
enterprise does.
    That is the point that we are trying to make is that this 
is about using our capital, whether we have it or not, whether 
we have it to meet the new requirements to support additional 
activity, not the old activity, which does not help the 
American economy.
    Senator Scott. Thank you.
    Mr. Dimon. I think one of the frustrations you hear from 
this group up here is this question should have been asked 
before it went out. We have to hold 30 percent more capital 
than international banks in the United States of America for 
every loan. A lot of loans have now become unprofitable. There 
are a lot of loans that do not make sense for our company 
anymore--small business, CDFI, solar, wind, middle market 
loans, certain trades you do with pension plans, et cetera.
    The work should have been done beforehand. By law, the QIS, 
the qualitative impact, should have been done beforehand. We 
had 10 years to do this, and it is shocking to me that after 10 
years we are talking about what is it going to do for small 
business, and we have to analyze it today. Now are we all going 
to fill out thousands of pages of forms responding in a very 
detailed way to every single one of these things, but it was 
not thoughtfully done. I am not sure it was shared fully among 
all the regulators. This should be relooked at.
    Senator Scott. And before I go to Ms. Fraser, my assumption 
is everyone is going to say ``with consequences that will be 
negative.''
    So let me ask a different question to you, Ms. Fraser. The 
impact, and perhaps the unintended impact, from Basel, the 
Endgame, on customers, we so often talk about the American 
consumer as if there is just one generic consumer out there. 
But from a State like South Carolina where we have a lot of 
farmers, the impact on farmers and access to not only credit 
but liquidity during the hard times, can you perhaps give me a 
30-second reaction to will this have a negative impact on some 
of rural communities that need derivatives? Walk me through 
that for a second.
    Ms. Fraser. Certainly, and thank you very much for your 
question, Senator. This will, to your point, increase the cost 
of borrowing for farmers and rural communities. It could impact 
them in terms of their mortgages. It could impact their credit 
card. It could also, importantly, impact their cost of any 
borrowing that they do.
    And let me give you an example. For a farmer, hedging your 
commodity costs and your commodity prices is an absolutely 
fundamental piece of providing stability and ability to sleep 
at night. Under the Basel III proposal the cost of the 
derivatives would increase quite materially, and that would 
therefore have an impact on farmers' ability to do a fairly 
fundamental component of risk management. It could also impact 
their access to credit.
    So it is the cost of borrowing, it is the access to credit, 
and it is some of the fundamental tools that they need to 
manage their stability of their income.
    Senator Scott. Mr. Solomon, you said something earlier that 
I thought was really important, that as we discuss the Basel 
Endgame proposal and its impact on lending and on folks like me 
that come from poverty or are looking for the ability to 
achieve the American Dream, someone would say contrary to what 
I am talking about maybe there are other points that are 
important that I am missing in my thought process, like is it 
going to make our financial system safer? Have we not done 
enough work since the financial crisis of 2007-2009 to make 
sure that our financial institutions are able to meet 
obligations and responsibilities under an even worse case 
scenario? And your opening comments reflected that, yes, we can 
meet even a more disastrous crisis.
    Can you walk through the importance of the regulatory 
burden that exists and how the Basel Endgame would make it even 
harder for small business borrowers but not necessarily making 
our economy safer?
    Mr. Solomon. Sure. Thank you for the question, Senator. I 
tried to highlight, in my opening comments, and Mr. Gorman 
highlighted it quite clearly, these stress tests are very, very 
significant tests that look at very, very severe shocks to our 
balance sheets. [Unclear] a 50 percent decline in equity prices 
over a 1-year period, on top of then a simultaneous equity 
market shock that has both as much as a 30 percent 
instantaneous equity decline. So very, very severe shocks that 
we have not seen, even in the worst crisis.
    That puts buffers in place that protect the system. Now, of 
course, a sound and secure system is imperative for our capital 
markets, and we can always have debates at the margin as to 
whether or not there are things that we can do that can 
strengthen the system. But a wholesale increase of 25 percent 
capital on the largest banks, with lots of individual 
provisions that affect different activities, I think is 
ultimately punitive to economic growth and does not strike the 
right cost-benefit analysis.
    We, of course, need to make the system secure. The system 
is in good shape. We have seen that under stress. That does not 
mean there are not things that can be done at the margin. But 
this is a wholesale change that leads to problems.
    Ms. Fraser highlighted one example, taking about farmers. 
You can look at airlines hedging jet fuel, if you want to look 
at other derivatives which obviously get passed on to 
consumers. You can look to gas being hedged, and utilities, 
which obviously gets passed on to consumers. And then you can 
look at other transactions. There is a provision under the rule 
called SFT, which allows institutions like ours to borrow 
securities from pension plans and give them cash. That 
increases the returns and allows them to use their assets to 
increase their returns. Capital would increase by 8 times for 
those types of transactions, which would make them unattractive 
and therefore would diminish the ability for pensions to access 
that tool to increase the returns.
    Senator Scott. Thank you.
    Chair Brown. Thank you, Senator Scott.
    Senator Reed, from Rhode Island, is recognized.
    Senator Reed. Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman, and first 
let me thank you for your support of our military men and 
women. They are superb, and their spouses are superb, so thank 
you for helping them out.
    With respect to the legislation that we passed several 
years ago, the Military Lending Act, I think the key aspect is 
the 36 percent interest cap. And I think it is such a critical 
aspect it should not be just a provenance of military personnel 
but every American.
    I think essentially your banks collectively have made about 
$219 billion in profit this year, and I believe that your 
credit cards are not beyond 30 percent. So the 36 percent 
interest rate seems to be very appropriate. And so I can go 
down, starting with Mr. Scharf, would you support a national 36 
percent interest cap?
    Mr. Scharf. Senator, I appreciate your thoughts on this 
one. I think we would be concerned about setting a flat number 
without really understanding what the impact would be in 
different inflationary environments.
    Senator Reed. Mr. Moynihan.
    Mr. Moynihan. Senator, it is not really relevant to us. We 
do not engage in prime lending. I think, as Mr. Scharf said, it 
is a question of balance. What would it push outside the 
system, what would it make not available. But it is just not a 
relevant question for us because we do not have rates that 
high.
    Senator Reed. Well, I guess in a general sense it is 
relevant because most of the people who use this adversely are 
payday lenders and rather dubious operators who will induce 
borrowers into arrangements which are something you would not 
even tolerate. So I think we have reached a point now, after 
several years of questioning you all--and I am not picking on 
you, Mr. Moynihan--to come to a conclusion, and I think the 
conclusion is it should.
    Mr. Dimon, please.
    Mr. Dimon. We do not engage in that. I completely agree 
with your intent, and I think there should be a focus on payday 
lenders and check cashers and sort of things like that. And we 
would love to help you design it so it covers the intent 
without any bad consequences. There are some people that make 
very small loans who it may stop them from doing that and 
actually push people into payday lending.
    Senator Reed. Ms. Fraser, please.
    Ms. Fraser. Senator, thank you for the question. We applaud 
the intent of what you are trying to do. I think as large banks 
we are very mindful of our responsibilities in protecting 
customers from abuses. Experience has shown that caps diminish 
access to credit can do in the system and the Federal Reserve 
has a study to show that. So I think, as with most of my 
colleagues, we believe there are other ways to achieve the 
intent, but we would be supportive of following up with you on 
how.
    Senator Reed. Mr. O'Hanley.
    Mr. O'Hanley. Senator, we do not engage in consumer lending 
but we do support what you are trying to achieve there.
    Senator Reed. Thank you, sir. Mr. Vince.
    Mr. Vince. Senator, we are also not in the consumer 
business, but we support the intent.
    Senator Reed. Thank you. Mr. Solomon.
    Mr. Solomon. We have a very, very small business in the 
consumer area but we support the intent.
    Senator Reed. Thank you.
    Mr. Gorman. I support it, Senator, for what I consider 
normal economic times. I actually came to this country and 
borrowed at 24 percent, so not quite your 36. I found that 
particularly heinous, but it turned out OK. But no, I think 
anybody who is forced to borrow at 36 percent, that is sort of 
unforgiveable.
    Senator Reed. I was living in the United States when I was 
borrowing at 24 percent. In fact, I recall we had to repeal the 
Rhode Island legislation because it was 21 percent. Again, I 
hope to work with you on this because I think it is very 
important, and I do not think it will cause the disruptions 
which you might anticipate. I think it can be done.
    And I think the other thing that should be done, and I know 
many of you are doing it, is to go out aggressively and start 
getting people banked. One of the reasons that they find 
themselves borrowing money from unscrupulous characters is 
because they have not been fully introduced to the banking 
system, understand that it is relatively easy, and it is much 
more appropriate than some of these other arrangements.
    But thank you all, and we will continue to work, and any 
advice, I would appreciate it. Thank you.
    Chair Brown. Thank you, Senator Reed.
    Senator Rounds, of South Dakota, is recognized.
    Senator Rounds. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and I appreciate 
the plug for our bill together. We do things occasionally on a 
bipartisan basis, even in the Banking Committee, but we also 
have an opportunity once in a while to disagree, and sometimes 
that means that we get to have you folks participate in that 
disagreement process.
    Today you are going to hear us talk a lot about consumers 
as they are the latest victim of heavy-handed Washington 
bureaucrats. In the last few months alone, financial regulators 
have put forth or finalized regulations and guidance that 
represent the biggest rewrite of banking regulation since the 
passage of Dodd-Frank. We have seen regulations on bank 
capital, long-term debt, resolution planning, the Community 
Reinvestment Act, and climate risk management, just to name a 
few.
    However, we know that none of these regulations exist in a 
vacuum. Vice Chair Barr said himself that the Basel III Endgame 
proposal is, and I quote, ``projected to raise capital for 
large banks. This may result in higher funding costs. But this 
only half the story,'' end of quote. I want you to help tell 
the other half of the story.
    Now, I was just going to ask this of one of you, but since 
our Chairman has kind of set the example of asking folks to 
raise their hands, I am going to apologize in advance because I 
think folks hate to be put in that position. I think it is 
critical that you get to tell the other half of that story. 
None of you raised your hands when you said that it was a case 
of where you could not meet the capital requirements. The issue 
is what damage it does to the economy when you are expected to 
raise that and the folks who need that capital.
    So here are my questions, and I am going to ask you raise 
your hands. I apologize for that. But if you agree with these 
assessments would you please raise your hands.
    Do you believe, in its current form, could these 
regulations negatively impact first-time homebuyers?
    [All hands raised.]
    Senator Rounds. Do you believe, in its current form, could 
these regulations negatively impact those saving for 
retirement?
    [All hands raised.]
    Senator Rounds. Do you believe that these regulations could 
negatively impact our farmers and our ranchers?
    [All hands raised.]
    Senator Rounds. And do you believe that these regulations 
could negatively impact small business owners?
    [All hands raised.]
    Senator Rounds. See, this is the rest of the story. 
Sometimes we think that we are just beating up on the big 
banks, but the bottom line is it hits the American consumer 
where it hurts. This is at a time that when they try to go 
after the big guys it is the American consumer that will 
suffer.
    You can already see the signs of consumers struggling as 
they are utilizing the ``buy now, pay later'' approach to 
products and making late payments on credit cards. This is 
because Americans are paying more per month just to get by 
since President Biden took office. Bidenomics has led to a 
family of four in South Dakota needing to pay over $900 more a 
month just to get by for normal living expenses.
    I am going to say this again: regulation does not exist in 
a vacuum, and the Federal Reserve must take this into account 
as they work toward finalizing their rulemaking.
    I will not embarrass you by asking you to raise your hands 
anymore. I apologize for that. But I think it is important that 
the American people see the rest of the story and who is really 
going to pay the bill for this overzealous approach, and 
without finding out the rest of the story about these types of 
regulations and who really gets stuck with it.
    In recent years, U.S. Federal debt levels have climbed 
further, and annual interest on the debt is slated to reach 
over $1.4 trillion in the next decade, almost outnumbering all 
discretionary spending. I am concerned about what risk rising 
indebtedness poses to the economy. According to recent 
estimates by your institutions, the Treasury will 
conservatively need to issue $20 trillion of debt in the coming 
decade. I am not only concerned about who is going to buy this 
massive issuance of Treasuries, but with a Federal funds rate 
of 5 percent the Federal Government is going to be paying even 
more to borrow, as Treasuries, with near zero rates, mature.
    Mr. Solomon, how could sustained high levels of debt have 
adverse effects on the U.S. Treasuries market the dollar and 
the general economy?
    Mr. Solomon. Thank you for the question, Senator. This is a 
significant issue and one I tried to highlight in my opening 
remarks. The growth of the U.S. Treasury debt has been very, 
very significant over the last 15 years. It has more than 
tripled. That debt will continue to grow as the cost of 
refinancing that debt will also grow. The Office of Budget and 
Management, looking out through the decade, estimates a 3.5 
percent cost to refinance the debt, but I certainly think there 
are scenarios where that cost could be higher.
    You know, this cost obviously hampers our ability to invest 
in other things, as a Nation, that we need. There certainly is 
a lot of attention and focus on things that are needed to 
strengthen our economy, to strengthen our society, and the cost 
of that burden of the debt to future generations, based on 
decisions we have made, is something that we are going to have 
to get focused on. As the cost of debt goes up, it certainly 
can create volatility in our funding treasuries, it can create 
volatility in the Treasury market.
    One of the things I am also concerned about, when I look at 
Basel III Endgame, is one of the impacts is to a business 
called ``Prime.'' The business of ``Prime'' finances 
institutions' securities positions. So asset managers, 
investment managers, asset management platforms that regularly 
trade on the Treasury market, provide liquidity to the Treasury 
market, and the cost of the financing that they have to finance 
those positions would go up with this proposal, and it could, 
potentially, therefore, impact liquidity. So that is another 
risk that I think we need to look at carefully.
    Chair Brown. Thank you, Mr. Solomon.
    Senator Rounds. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    Chair Brown. Senator Tester is recognized, from Montana.
    Senator Tester. Yeah, I want to thank the Chairman and 
Ranking Member for holding this hearing, and I want to thank 
the panelists for your testimony and for being here today. And 
I also want to echo Senator Reed's comments on your support for 
the military, both active duty and veterans. Them and their 
families are very, very important.
    I serve as the Chair of the Defense Appropriations 
Committee. I spend a fair amount of my time thinking about 
national security, how to protect against folks who want to do 
this Nation harm, terrorist organizations, as well as foreign 
adversaries.
    You all have responsibilities, including legal 
responsibilities, to make sure that you are preventing hostile 
Governments, like Iran, who would like to see the U.S. not 
exist, from financing terrorist operations and other illegal 
activities with fund that have gone through your institutions.
    So this would be a question for Mr. Gorman and then, not 
for any particular reason, just because he is right in front of 
me, and then if any of you would like to add you can. So the 
question is how are you, as chief executives, making sure that 
procedures are in place and that they are followed so that your 
institutions do not end up inadvertently financing illicit 
activities?
    Mr. Gorman. Senator, thank you for the question. Obviously 
it is critical as a good player in this country to do our best 
to work with the Government.
    There are two things that I would just point out. The first 
is what I would call our cybersecurity efforts, to understand 
incoming into the financial system. Several years ago, when I 
started this job, I believe we were spending about $50 million 
on that activity. The number is closer to $1 billion now. We 
work very closely with all the intelligence agencies, ensuring 
that we have a proper cyber command to keep the financial 
system safe.
    And then second, as it relates to specific individuals, bad 
actors, Governments, we have an enormous compliance effort 
focused on anti-money laundering to ensure that they do not get 
in, by verifying the source of where their funds come from. 
Obviously we deal with not as many clients as some of the 
institutions here but we still have over 18 million individual 
clients and many, many, tens of thousands of institutional 
clients.
    So it is an extraordinary effort with several hundred 
employees constantly working. Interestingly, I think the 
advances in AI will be a real strategic weapon in this regard.
    Senator Tester. Very good. Does anybody have anything 
different to add? All right. Thank you.
    Along those same lines, on anti-money laundering 
protections and national security safeguards, Mr. Gorman talked 
about cybersecurity. Mr. Solomon, would you like to add 
anything in regard to anti-money laundering protections that 
you have?
    Mr. Solomon. I do not have anything to add that is 
materially different from what Mr. Gorman stated. It is an 
enormous focus. We file thousands of SARs in the course of our 
Compliance Department's financial crime team working every day, 
but no difference in that focus and the intensity of that 
focus.
    Senator Tester. Very good. Earlier this year, Mr. Scharf, 
Wells paid nearly $100 million in penalties to the Fed and OFAC 
for violating sanctions against Iran, Syria, Sudan. I think we 
can all agree that is not a good thing. But what is your bank 
doing to make sure that these sanction violations never happen 
again?
    Mr. Scharf. Sure, Senator. Preventing bad actors from 
abusing our services is a top priority. We have extensive 
systems in place that we are constantly looking to make sure 
that they are as complete as they can possibly be. We work in 
industry groups, we work with the Government, and we work with 
the regulators to make sure that we are doing everything we 
possibly can to prevent that abuse.
    Senator Tester. Thank you. This goes to the nonbanking 
world. Some of you have talked about the fact that, and maybe 
all of you talked about the fact that Basel will force money to 
go outside the traditional banking system into the unregulated 
banking system. Ms. Fraser, could you just talk about what kind 
of impact that you see that having from a--I do not know if you 
can project percentage of money that you would see going into 
the nonbanking system, but it would be interesting because I 
remember in '08 that was the problem, one of the problems.
    Ms. Fraser. Yes, Senator, we are worried about migration of 
financial activities into the nonbanking sector, particularly 
in a period where there is tremendous technological innovation, 
and making sure that we maintain the safeguards that we all 
invest billions of dollars in, in a year, be it anti-money 
laundering, be it fraud protection, be it cyber protection. All 
of these areas protect the American consumer, protect the 
American saver, safeguard the system, and also the critical 
role that all of our banks play in the global financial system 
as a strategic asset of the United States.
    So we are very concerned that this will undermine some of 
the strengths and foundations of the unique American financial 
system.
    Senator Tester. Thank you all. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    Chair Brown. Thank you, Senator Tester.
    Senator Tillis, of North Carolina.
    Senator Tillis. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Thank you all for 
being here and for the preparation. I am actually very pleased. 
I thought it was going to be the annual flogging of the GSIBs, 
but people are asking very serious questions and I am glad to 
hear it.
    I have got a few serious questions for you all. No. 1, I 
want to start by saying--because thank goodness you are not the 
head of an organization that has had an expose on a culture of 
sexual harassment and workplace hostility, because I guess if 
you were, every person up here would be asking for your 
resignation, including me. But we have got a top financial 
regulator that gets a pass. I do not expect you to respond to 
that, but it is true.
    That same financial regulator has implemented an SEC cyber 
reporting rule that now we have evidence that the ransomware 
companies are exploiting. Right? OK, this is the mandatory 
cyber reporting requirement that now a ransomware company has 
gone on record as reporting. I do not even want you all to 
respond to that, but we have got detailed questions. We are 
going to ask you what impact this is, a 4-day reporting 
requirement, a national security waiver that you have to 
reapply for every 30 days, and it has to be approved by the 
Attorney General. These people are out of control. We have got 
to try and repeal this, and I am putting forth my first CRA to 
try and do that next week. Hopefully the SEC can see that the 
bad guys are exploiting a rule, creating a burden for our 
financial services industry and not producing a good result.
    That is all on that. I want to go back to the operational 
risk question, and I think that Senator Rounds did a good job 
of saying this Basel III Endgame is bad. It is not very well 
thought out, and hopefully it is going to look very differently 
before it gets promulgated. But who would like to speak for 
this group around the impact on operational risk just one more 
time, and how we think that they have missed it in terms of the 
benefit?
    Mr. Gorman, if you could do it in 30 seconds I would 
appreciate it.
    Mr. Gorman. It makes no sense. I mean, that is the bottom 
line. I have been at this for a long time. I served on the New 
York Fed Board for years. I have seen a lot of rules. Some of 
them make sense, and it is a question of how far you turn the 
dial. This does not make sense. You should not punish 
institutions for creating fee-based businesses.
    Senator Tillis. Is there any evidence that work has been 
done to really understand the fully burden costs and the impact 
of this rule on the industry? And more importantly, people like 
my dad who would get 90-day notes to fund his construction job 
that I used to work on. Is there anything out there that I have 
missed in terms of the regulators actually doing an exhaustive 
study of the impact and the downstream implications? Are you 
aware of anything that I have just simply not read?
    Mr. Gorman. I am not aware.
    Senator Tillis. OK. Thank you.
    Mr. Solomon, would you go back to the--I think you 
mentioned SFTs, securities financing transactions. Can you go 
back and talk a little bit about why people in the pension 
business should be worried about the promulgation of this rule, 
in about 30 seconds?
    Mr. Solomon. Sure. Securities financing transactions are 
transactions where institutions like ours borrow stock 
securities from pensions. We pay them cash. They can then 
invest that cash and earn returns. The capital in Basel III 
attributed to those transactions goes up by eight times. It 
would make the transactions uneconomical for businesses like 
us, so we would exit that business. That would then prevent the 
pensions from having that ability to increase their returns 
through this activity.
    Senator Tillis. So anybody who is sitting on top of any 
sort of pension management should understand that if we 
implement it in its current form their returns, at least in 
this segment, are likely to go down.
    Mr. Solomon. They are an end user that would be impacted.
    Senator Tillis. OK. Let's talk more about just--actually, I 
have to get something off my chest because I have heard more--I 
am kind of doing that, you all may have noticed--but I 
understand that you are a gaming CCAR, that somehow that you 
can game stress testing. That is what I am hearing from 
regulators, I am hearing from my colleagues on the other side 
of the aisle.
    Give me an idea of how you game the system. I actually 
thought that this was a regimen that is provided by a 
supervisor, an examiner, and you have got to execute it, and 
then they have to measure it. Is that how it works? Do any of 
you here want to share with me how you game the system? I used 
to work at Pricewaterhouse. We did not have a practice on 
gaming CCAR or stress testing at the time. Have you all cracked 
that code?
    How many of you all think it is absurd to think that people 
would actually assert that you could game a stress test?
    [No response.]
    Senator Tillis. OK. How many of you think that you are 
spending more and money on trying to satisfy stress test 
requirements at the expense of looking at real risks that are 
unique to your banking activities?
    Mr. Dimon. I will take this one.
    Senator Tillis. OK, Jamie.
    Mr. Dimon. The CCAR test is 200,000 pages long. Most of us 
do 10, 20, 30, 40, 50 tests a week. We are quite worried about 
risk. It is one test. It is to the nth degree. It is a big 
black box. So we all agree on stress testing. That thing is 
just out of control.
    Senator Tillis. Yeah, and in closing, look, Silicon Valley 
was a disaster. It was a fingerprint. It was unique in terms of 
their activities. It was a failure of supervision, in my 
opinion. And one thing I hope that we have, over the next year, 
is a hearing on everybody who was in the loop who failed to 
protect the investors and the depositors at Silicon Valley.
    Thank you, Mr. Chair.
    Chair Brown. Thank you, Senator Tillis.
    Senator Menendez, of New Jersey, is recognized.
    Senator Menendez. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    For over a decade, the CFPB has stood up for everyday 
Americans and fought back against abusive and unlawful 
practices by large businesses, including some of the banks in 
this room.
    Mr. Dimon, how much money has JPMorgan Chase returned to 
customers in the form of redresses and payments at the 
direction of CFPB?
    Mr. Dimon. I do not know the number.
    Senator Menendez. Let me help you--$360 million. Mr. 
Moynihan, same question.
    Mr. Moynihan. I do not know the number specifically.
    Senator Menendez. $819 million. Ms. Fraser.
    Ms. Fraser. I do not know the number either, Senator.
    Senator Menendez. One billion. Mr. Scharf.
    Mr. Scharf. I do not know the number, Senator.
    Senator Menendez. Well, it is over $2 billion.
    So from just the four of you that is over $4 billion. It is 
amazing you do not know the number because they are not small 
in nature. Over $4 billion returned to hardworking consumers in 
the past dozen years. And yet this critical agency is under 
constant attack by my Republican colleagues. A lawsuit before 
the Supreme Court is threatening its very existence. And time 
and time again we have seen why the CFPB is so necessary and 
why I intend to continue fight for it. Otherwise, that would 
have been $4 billion out of the pockets of U.S. consumers.
    Now while some banks have either decreased or eliminated 
overdraft fees altogether, in large part due to increased 
scrutiny and oversight, banks still collected an estimated $7.7 
billion in 2022, in overdraft and nonsufficient fund fees.
    Ms. Fraser, your bank eliminated overdraft fees last year. 
Is that not correct?
    Ms. Fraser. Yes, Senator.
    Senator Menendez. Is it fair to say that Citi is still a 
profitable bank?
    Ms. Fraser. Yes, Senator.
    Senator Menendez. Did overdraft fees upend your business 
model?
    Ms. Fraser. No, Senator. We work hard to protect our 
customers and make sure that they do not fall into overdraft.
    Senator Menendez. While the rest of the banks here that 
have retail operations continue, to my knowledge, to charge 
overdraft fees.
    Mr. Moynihan, Mr. Scharf, Mr. Dimon, you are all aware that 
Black and Hispanic households disproportionately incur 
overdraft and NSF fees. Correct? So you know that? Yes or no. 
Could you give me a verbal answer, please.
    Mr. Dimon. I believe so.
    Mr. Moynihan. If that is your statistic, I do not have any 
reason to challenge it.
    Mr. Scharf. The same for me.
    Senator Menendez. Well, the reality is that, again, it is 
amazing you do not know that, because study after study have 
shown that the answer is yes to that question. So I suggest you 
call Ms. Fraser after this hearing to figure out how you can 
still be able to eliminate the fees in its entirety and still 
run a profitable bank. Charging the fees is a choice, one that 
disproportionately harms Black and Brown communities, and it is 
something that you could do that would change the course of 
events for a significant part of the consumer base.
    The lawsuit currently before the Supreme Court over the 
CFPB's funding structure has the potential to upend every rule, 
guidance, and order the CFPB has ever issued, tossing over a 
decade of consumer protection law out of the window. That is 
not just harmful for consumers, I think it is dangerous to the 
financial system. The CFPB does not just issue regulations. 
They also provide safe harbor provisions like the Qualified 
Mortgage Rule, which protects mortgage lenders from certain 
lawsuits.
    Mr. Scharf, Mr. Moynihan, Mr. Dimon, and Ms. Fraser, if you 
were to lose this safe harbor would it impact your bank's 
mortgage lending?
    Mr. Moynihan. I do not think it would make a difference. We 
did mortgage lending before this, and we would do it 
afterwards.
    Mr. Dimon. I think it completely depends on the actual 
detail in the ruling.
    Mr. Scharf. The same. I would like to know the specifics to 
draw a conclusion.
    Ms. Fraser. The same as my colleagues. I would need to 
understand the specifics more.
    Senator Menendez. Well, I am saying if you would lose it, 
not of it is limited. If would lose it totally, it seems to me 
pretty remarkable, based on previous testimony of how important 
the safe harbor provisions would be to banks' mortgage lending 
abilities, that you would suggest that it would have no effect 
whatsoever. We are already in the midst of an affordable 
housing crisis, and eliminating the CFPB and such a rule would 
have a disastrous impact on the mortgage market and make it 
harder for families to buy a home.
    Finally, the number of physical bank branches in the U.S. 
has been trending downward for some time. This has left more 
and more residents in so-called banking deserts, facing 
difficulties in carrying out basic financial tasks such as 
paying bills and depositing checks. A Philadelphia Reserve 
report found that bank closures during the pandemic resulted in 
the number of banking deserts in the Third District States of 
New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Delaware rising from 48 to 63. 
And I understand part of this is mobile and online banking, but 
there are many who do not have the abilities to do that.
    What are some ways that we can ensure communities continue 
to have access to basic banking services?
    Mr. Moynihan. Thanks, Senator. I think if you look at the 
people who have big branch systems we maintain approximately 30 
percent of our branches, Mr. Scharf said earlier, and it is the 
same for us in LMI neighborhoods.
    But importantly, one of the things that has gone on, and 
you mentioned this, we are up to 97 percent of our LMI 
customers use digital banking, which then is more convenient, 
more safe, and reaches them where they are. And so we manage 
that carefully to make sure we cover every market and make the 
calculations. You can see that in the published statistics.
    But if you look at what we do as a group of institutions, 
we maintain that presence but we have driven the digital, and 
we have driven the types of accounts that are more appreciated, 
and that is why we are bringing 2 million people into the 
banking system that were unbanked a few years ago. It is 
largely these larger banks that have driven that.
    Senator Menendez. Well, I will close by simply saying I 
would commend to all of you that look at how your practices 
affect particularly minority communities, including on this 
issue. You have a disproportionate effect, and there is 
something you can do about the largest growing parts in the 
American society that would be beneficial to you and beneficial 
to them.
    Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    Chair Brown. Thank you, Senator Menendez.
    Senator Kennedy, of Louisiana, is recognized.
    Senator Kennedy. Unlike some, I do not think you are 
crooks. In fact, you are all American companies and I am proud 
of you, and I thank you for supporting the most sophisticated 
and powerful economy in all of human history, and the jobs you 
create for Americans in doing it.
    Mr. Dimon, since the last time the Federal Government 
raised your bank's capital requirements in Dodd-Frank, and 
otherwise, have you had a depositor run on your bank?
    Mr. Dimon. No, we have not.
    Senator Kennedy. Have you failed a stress test?
    Mr. Dimon. We have never failed a stress test, no.
    Senator Kennedy. Have you ever reached a point where your 
liabilities were greater than your assets?
    Mr. Dimon. Absolutely no.
    Senator Kennedy. Well, unfortunately, we have had three 
banks this year that did go broke. They are mid-sized banks. 
You know them: Signature, Silicon Valley, First Republic. We 
have held hearings. In my judgment, they went broke because 
their management did really stupid stuff, and because the FDIC 
and the regulators who were in charge of keeping them from 
doing stupid stuff sat there, like bumps on a log, sucking on 
their teeth, and watched them do stupid stuff. And in many 
cases, had to turn to you to clean up the mess.
    Now, in fairness to the FDIC, it may have been that the 
people in charge of watching those banks at the FDIC were too 
busy urinating off the top of a hotel, or abusing young women 
who went to work for the FDIC. The FDIC chairman told us 
recently, yes, he knew about it, it happened, but he wasn't the 
chairman yet and did not have the authority to stop it.
    Mr. Dimon, don't you find it ironic, the FDIC is now 
turning to you and saying, ``You know our track record,'' which 
is blemished at the FDIC. ``Your bank is not broken but we are 
going to tell you how to fix it.'' Do you find that ironic? 
They are going to tell you how to fix it based on standards put 
together by bureaucrats in Basel,
    Switzerland, not by the U.S. Congress. Do you find it 
ironic that they are telling you this and proposing this? Isn't 
that kind of like being given gun safety advice by Alec 
Baldwin?
    Mr. Dimon. Should I answer the question? So the major risk 
of those banks was hiding in plain sight, which was interest 
rate exposure. That was known to most people who actually could 
read a balance sheet and read their financial statements, and 
that is true. I also think----
    Senator Kennedy. The FDIC said they did not know. They were 
busy doing whatever else they were doing at their Gomorrah of 
carnal abuse over there.
    Mr. Dimon. I also do think you are making a good point, 
that some of these rules were put in place, and some folks 
mentioned here are pushing business outside of the banking 
system. And to point out exactly what that is, it is almost 80 
percent of the mortgage business today, it is half of the 
leveraged lending business today, and it is a bunch of other 
things which people do not actually see about the plumbing of 
the system. And I do think it is adding risks about 
transparency, and a very important thing about the impact of--
--
    Senator Kennedy. I am going to stop you, Mr. Dimon, because 
I am going to run out of time. How is this even legal, under 
West Virginia v. EPA? You have bank regulators without clear 
direction from Congress, who are borrowing standards from other 
regulators in Basel, Switzerland, imposing them on you without 
clear directive from Congress. It clearly falls under the major 
questions doctrine. Why does this not violate West Virginia v. 
EPA? You do not have to know a law book from an L.L. Bean 
catalog to see that. Why does it not violate the law? Anybody.
    [No response.]
    Chair Brown. Senator Kennedy's time has expired. Senator 
Warner, from----
    Senator Kennedy. Well, Ms. Fraser was about to answer.
    Chair Brown. Would you like to answer, Ms. Fraser? I 
thought you gave her time. Proceed, please.
    Ms. Fraser. I think we very much appreciate your points of 
view, Senator, on this topic, and I think any of us would 
concur while violations of law are things that we will debate 
as a last record, we would be prepared to do so because there 
is clarity in the law, and that we abide by it.
    Senator Kennedy. Thank you.
    Chair Brown. Senator Warner.
    Senator Warner. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. I do find that it 
is kind of an interesting presentation, the yin and yang of 
whether we are the source of all challenges or the regulators 
are the source of all challenges. Somehow I do not believe 
either presentation represents the truth. My questions on Basel 
III have been raised already. I have indicated I think the 
timing at this moment is very problematic, with interest rates 
as high as they are. And obviously members of the Civil Rights 
Committee have raised this as well.
    But before anybody smiles too much, I could also tell you 
that I get extraordinarily frustrated that any time there is 
any proposed new regulation or rule, the normal industry 
reaction is, ``Oh, my God, the sky is falling,'' and the same 
response is always, ``If you do this, it is going to limit 
access to capital on Main Street.'' And I actually do think 
Senator Menendez's presentation, particularly on CFPB in terms 
of dollars returned was pretty good.
    But I want to actually go to an issue that I have raised 
with many of you in the past, which is I do believe before we 
add new regulatory tools about the safety and soundness of our 
system, one of the things we actually ought to use better is 
some of our existing tools. At the very beginning, when the Fed 
was stood up, the most important liquidity tool was the 
discount window and use of that tool. And yet we saw, with the 
banks that failed this year, particularly in terms of SVB and 
Signature, they did not even have procedures in place to know 
how to utilize that tool.
    So I think I will start with Mr. Moynihan on this one. I 
know there was guidance given out this past July to say 
everybody ought to get their act together, and candidly, I do 
not have a lot of sympathy because of the concern that many of 
you and other colleagues have raised that, oh my gosh, if I go 
to the discount window that is going to raise a stigma with the 
market. Well, you cannot complain about new regulations if you 
are not using existing tools.
    So beyond the guidance that was given, why should we not 
have, maybe on some kind of random basis, a mandatory use of 
the discount window so that we could start erasing that stigma 
to make sure that every bank, from large to small, knows how to 
use it. Because at least in terms of liquidity, this would be 
the most powerful tool of all. Mr. Moynihan.
    Mr. Moynihan. So, Senator, I think two things. One, 
readiness to use it, and I think you would find that the 
institutions all here, because of the amount of regulation we 
have already to use it, and that was an issue of readiness that 
you rose.
    But the second question is the stigma, and we could not 
agree more, whether it was in '07 and '08, whether it was in 
2020, whether it was last spring. Every time a crisis hits, one 
of the core roles of the reason why the Federal Reserve exists 
is to provide that liquidity at a time of stress, as a lender 
of last resort, and every time we are 100 percent reluctant to 
use it, as an industry, because it looks like we are weak. And 
we have got to figure out a way to change that.
    Senator Warner. And that is, again, where I think you see 
folks on my side of the aisle complain that if you are not 
using existing tools, well maybe you ought to look at new 
tools. And I would love to engage with you. I am going to put 
legislation forward that would require some mandatory usage, 
and maybe again how we do that on an episodic basis.
    But just saying we know there is a stigma problem but we do 
not have a plan to address it means that somebody that might be 
sometimes sympathetic to you, if we cannot use that tool my 
sympathy is going to go down dramatically.
    Mr. Moynihan. We agree with you, Senator. We will work 
with----
    Senator Warner. Let me try to hit a couple of other 
questions. Artificial intelligence, I know, has been touched. I 
personally am surprised that there was not greater concern 
about AI in terms of using its ability to disrupt faith in the 
public markets. To me it feels like if there was ever a time 
and a tool that has such wide-reaching implications that FSOC, 
which I know whose record has been somewhat mixed, but I 
strongly believe FSOC ought to take on the responsibility 
around looking at artificial intelligence, from its safety and 
soundness to the overall system.
    Ms. Fraser, we have talked about this a little bit, but 
what do you think on that issue?
    Ms. Fraser. Thank you, Senator. You are raising a very 
important issue and topic that has all of our attention at the 
moment. When we look at artificial intelligence it is both an 
opportunity and a threat. On balance, we all hope it will be an 
opportunity to improve the strength of the financial system and 
of human beings, but the threats are also quite considerable.
    We have a lot of regulation that is in place right now that 
works very well to safeguard our financial system. We think 
that regulation should continue to be used to guide----
    Senator Warner. Let me just say, I know my time is up, but 
I do think FSOC is a tool, and I would make the case, and as 
others have made the case about underserved communities. Some 
of you are participating in the Economic Opportunity Coalition 
and some of our efforts with CDFIs. That is still a tool to get 
into LMI communities. Those of you who are not participating, 
this is bipartisan led by Deputy Secretary Adeyemo out of the 
Administration, I hope you will consider it.
    Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    Senator Kennedy. I will yield some of my time to him, 
Senator.
    Chair Brown. You have no time to yield.
    [Laughter.]
    Chair Brown. Senator Hagerty, of Tennessee.
    Senator Kennedy. I tried, Warner.
    Senator Hagerty. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and to all of 
you, welcome. I know how much you must look forward to these 
meetings that we have here.
    But today my colleagues have focused a great deal on the 
Basel III Endgame. It is something I am deeply concerned about 
too. What we have here in Washington, regretfully, are 
regulators that are in a competition with bureaucrats and other 
jurisdictions. They seem to be regulating for regulation's 
sake. I have the very difficult time when massive bodies of 
regulation are put forward and bureaucrats here try to tell us 
that the impact is going to be minimal.
    I would like to quote specifically from Vice Chair Michael 
Barr, who is leading the effort on the Basel III Endgame. He 
says that the impacts of the new requirements they are 
proposing are going to be minimal. In fact, specifically, he 
says, quote, ``The phase-in will allow ample time for banks to 
adjust their balance sheets and activities and to build capital 
over time. In fact, most banks already have enough capital 
today to meet the new requirements.''
    So the message that the public is getting is that these 
massive regulatory proposals they are putting forward with 
Basel III is going to have a very minimal impact on your banks. 
And I would just like to go back to the tool that everybody 
else is using. Would anybody here that believes that the impact 
of Basel III would be minimal raise your hand, please.
    [No response.]
    Senator Hagerty. I would like the record to reflect, Mr. 
Chairman, that nobody raised their hand. No one believes that 
the impact will be minimal.
    In fact, I think one of the most infuriating patterns of 
behavior I see here among the regulatory class in Washington is 
either an unwillingness or a refusal to take into account the 
knock-on effects of the regulations.
    Mr. Dimon, I would like to come to you. Your bank has 
stated publicly that the Basel Endgame proposals would increase 
capital requirements by some $50 billion. That is not an 
insignificant number. There are obviously very real costs that 
are associated with this proposal, and I would like to get your 
perspective on how this proposal would impact not only your 
bank but the markets and the economy more broadly.
    Mr. Dimon. I think inside a bank you try to look at every 
loan you make and every relationship and every client and every 
country, and obviously you want to do a good job. In the long 
run, no one tries to be rapacious with customers or employees 
in the short run.
    So it would take a lot of loans and immediately make them 
unprofitable, and I will give you a specific example--
mortgages. I have already told our people that mortgages should 
not be on the balance sheet, and, of course, we cannot 
securitize them either because we have not passed a 
securitization law, so it will diminish certain kinds of 
mortgages. It will particularly diminish mortgages for lower-
income people because the cost of all this is actually much 
higher on a $150,000 mortgage than on a jumbo, $2 million 
mortgage. And I can go down the line--CDFIs, financial 
companies, farmers.
    And we have already mentioned the extreme effect on market 
making, which is just a critical function to help finance 
companies around the world and help people manage money, for 
retirees and veterans and State pension plans, to manage their 
money. And in that one it is hard to figure out the full extent 
of that. I think it actually may cause issues in the 
marketplace.
    Senator Hagerty. All of these knock-on effects, I think are 
very negative.
    Ms. Fraser, not limited to your bank, in particular, but if 
you could comment on how this impacts U.S. banking systems' 
competitiveness on an international basis.
    Ms. Fraser. This diminishes the U.S. banks' competitiveness 
on an international basis. I think as we have all reflected, 
the U.S. financial system is the envy of the world. The U.S. 
banks play an incredibly important role supporting 
multinationals and supporting the Western financial system and 
its operations. It is a strategic asset of the U.S.
    Senator Hagerty. Indeed. Indeed. And I think it is 
incredible in its competitive advantage. Yet the regulators 
that are focusing on Basel III seem to be hiding behind the 
claim that this is merely harmonization of capital 
requirements. And when you think about a harmonization of 
capital requirements it would lead you to believe that U.S. 
banking capital is somehow below that of our European 
competitors. And if that were the case, this might allow 
regulators to prevent, quote, ``a race to the bottom.''
    But this is not the case. I want to quote from Chairman 
Powell. Chairman Powell says, quote, ``The proposal exceeds 
what is required by the Basel agreement, and it exceeds what 
has been done by implementation by the jurisdictions.''
    So, Mr. Solomon, I would like to come to you. You made 
reference in your testimony about the competitive disadvantage 
that this unnecessarily stringent proposal would create for 
financial institutions, for the economy more broadly. And would 
you mind to just comment on how this proposal, if it were 
enacted, would compare us to other jurisdictions. You are 
dealing around the world, but how it would make our 
competitiveness be affected in capital markets, specifically, 
versus other Nations.
    Mr. Solomon. Thank you for the question, Senator. You know, 
as you stated, the capital requirements in the Basel III 
normalization in the U.K., in Europe, in Japan, and in other 
jurisdictions are meaningfully less significant than what is 
being proposed here. And so if you look at activities that we 
compete in around the world, particularly in market making, and 
those types of activities, the U.S. capital markets are the 
strongest capital markets in the world. I think it is one of 
our big competitive advantages that everyone comes from all 
over the world into our capital markets. You think about IPO 
activity and debt capital raising. It is done to a great 
proportion for international capital in our capital markets on 
a relative basis.
    And this would just shift that balance. It would push more 
activity to other jurisdictions. It would make banks in other 
jurisdictions more competitive, and I do not think that 
strengthens the U.S. position, over time.
    Senator Hagerty. And then, conversely, the American banking 
system less competitive as well.
    Thank you very much, Mr. Chairman.
    Chair Brown. Senator Cortez Masto, of Nevada, is 
recognized.
    Senator Cortez Masto. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. 
Thank you all for being here. I know the last time you were 
here we talked about affordable housing. I want to continue the 
conversation. As we know, not just Nevadans but so many people 
across the country are struggling to afford homes.
    One way to do that, I believe, is by investing more in 
affordable housing through the Federal Home Loan Bank system. 
And as we all know, the Federal Home Loan Banks enjoy Federal 
benefits that really no other bank has access to, in exchange 
for supporting affordable housing and community development 
across the homelessness.
    Last month, the Federal Housing Finance Agency published 
two reports--I called for them--exploring whether the Federal 
Home Loan Banks' hundreds of billions of taxpayer-supported 
dollars are being well used for affordable housing and 
community development. The answer, according to this report, 
was no. Federal Home Loan Banks currently only provide about 10 
percent of their net income to affordable housing. I, again, 
believe that is too low.
    And my question to all of you is do you think the Federal 
Home Loan Banks should provide 20 percent or more of their net 
revenue for affordable housing or economic development? And 
really, does anyone not support greater affordable housing 
investments by the Federal Home Loan Banks?
    [No response.]
    Senator Cortez Masto. So let me ask you this. For the 
record, nobody has said they do not think there should be more 
investments. So you think there should. Is 20 percent enough. 
Is 20 percent more? What more should we be looking at?
    Mr. Dimon. Probably 20 percent would be fine.
    Senator Cortez Masto. Does everyone agree with that, 20 
percent would be fine?
    [No response.]
    Senator Cortez Masto. Does anybody not agree with that?
    [No response.]
    Senator Cortez Masto. Good. All right. Good start. And I am 
trying to do this so you do not have to raise your hands. I do 
not like that either. I think that is kind of ridiculous.
    Let me say this. The Federal Housing Finance Agency is 
proposing to adjust dividends and advance rates to better 
reflect the bank's support of affordable housing and community 
development. Does anyone not support having the Federal Home 
Loan Banks' dividends and advances tied to missions, activities 
of financial institutions? Is that a good start for us as we 
are looking at this? Does anybody have any comments regarding 
that, or concerns?
    So it is a good start, from what I see the nods of all of 
your heads. Great.
    Senator Cortez Masto. Next question. FHFA has recommended 
that 10 percent of all institutions' assets be held in housing 
assets. Ninety-six percent of credit unions would meet that 
test but likely not some of our biggest banks. Under the 
proposed new policy, would any of your institutions invest more 
in housing to retain access to Federal Home Loan Bank funding?
    [No response.]
    Senator Cortez Masto. Questions? Thoughts? Ever thought 
about it? Still need to think about it?
    Mr. Moynihan. Many of us meet that test today, but I think, 
Senator, that the trick is, going to Mr. Dimon's last point, is 
if some of these rules change we will have to shrink our 
mortgages on balance sheet, which would make us less eligible 
and less able to live up to the principles you are doing, which 
is how much housing can we help drive. And so I think with 
everything balanced, a lot of meet that test today because of 
our business constitution.
    Senator Cortez Masto. So the concern is the changes in the 
rules might have a negative impact on what we are trying to 
achieve here, at the end of the day. Is that what I am hearing?
    Mr. Moynihan. Mortgage loans are tricky to hold, and if you 
make them more capital intensive they are going to be less 
profitable, and if we are going to hold less of them--already 
80 percent of the activity goes on outside the financial 
institutions today. So I think these rules may frustrate your 
intentions of what you are trying to do with the Federal Home 
Loan Banks. And so we have applied that, we think more 
affordable housing, but you might be frustrated on the other 
side. So I think that is the kind of thing we worry about.
    Senator Cortez Masto. Helpful. Thank you.
    I want to jump to one other item around affordable housing. 
Currently in southern Nevada, in Clark County, which is the 
most populated part of our State, Clark County is looking at 
new ways, innovative ways to build more affordable housing. One 
of those is really looking at land trust, Federal land trusts. 
And the challenge they are having is they are not able to get 
any of the banks to write the loans or the mortgages for these 
land trust.
    And here is what I know. For decades--and this is what I 
want to talk to you about--for decades banks have invested in 
apartment buildings that are a deed restricted to require 
affordable rents, but in Clark County, so far, not a single 
bank has been willing to meet Clark County to discuss providing 
mortgages for deed-restricted, standalone homes on Federal 
land. The key here is the Federal land.
    I have worked hard to make sure more Federal land is 
available for housing. It is frustrating to see that, 
unfortunately, the banks refused to offer mortgages to new 
homes on Federal land. The Clark County Land Trust has been 
looking for mortgages for 240 permanently affordable homes 
since August. Clark County has 2.3 million people. It is the 
top 30 largest metro area in the country. The county has a AA+ 
credit rating.
    So I guess my question is what are we missing here from all 
of you that we need to be aware of, why we cannot get a bank to 
come work with us on these land trusts?
    Mr. Dimon. I would love to get a team working the details 
of that, because I do not understand why that would be true 
unless there are legal things about collateral ownership or 
something.
    Senator Cortez Masto. Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Dimon. I 
appreciate. I know my time is up.
    Chair Brown. Thank you, Senator Cortez Masto.
    Senator Vance, of Ohio, is recognized.
    Senator Vance. Thank you, Mr. Chair, and thanks to the CEOs 
for being here. I know a few of you personally. I admire all of 
you. But one of the things that I have expressed in private, 
and also in public, is my concern that the American political 
system is infecting the American financial system, and frankly, 
the American financial system is infecting the American 
political system.
    This is a graphic compiled by my staff, which lists the 
ways in which your financial institutions have gotten involved 
in major political debates of the last few years, things like 
the Georgia voter identification law, things like whether to 
lend to fossil fuel-based companies, things like guns and 
abortion.
    I should say, of course, that we all have our opinions on 
matter of public policy. Senator Cortez Masto and I disagree. 
But the difference between Senator Cortez Masto and I, and all 
of you, is the people of our States elected us to do public 
policy. Nobody elected you. And so my counsel and my line of 
questioning is going to be very focused on this particular 
issue. Stay out of public policy unless it affects your core 
business interests, because if you do not it is going to be a 
lot harder for us to see you guys as neutral arbiters and 
neutral actors in the American financial system. It is going to 
be much easier for us to see you as political actors.
    And I want to focus on a couple of issues just because I 
think they highlight the absurdity of this, and that will lead 
me to my questions. Georgia, in 2021, passed an extraordinarily 
moderate voter identification law. Six of the eight of you 
immediately issued stat4ements criticizing the State of Georgia 
to that effect, or at least your institutions issued statements 
to that effect.
    Now I should point out that New York has a voter 
identification law, a much more stringent voter identification 
law than the State of Georgia. Did any of you issue statements 
criticizing the State of New York for their voter 
identification law? Show of hands.
    Let the record show that none of you criticized New York 
for a more stringent law, but you jumped into a culture war 
over Georgia. I cannot possibly understand why.
    Something that is more concerning to me, because it affects 
my constituents in the State of Ohio, is a lot of your 
approaches on energy policy. We have seen, over the last 18 
months, the consequences of reducing American energy 
independence. It empowers very bad people all over the world. 
It also impoverishes and immiserates some of my constituents 
and destroys their job.
    I am not picking on you, Mr. Moynihan, but I think you are 
the only bank that has a red X on every single issue. This is 
true of most of you. But I am going to ask you this question 
about energy policy. In 2015, Bank of America committed to 
cutoff lending by 2025, which is just a couple of years from 
now, to companies earning 25 percent or more of their revenue 
from thermal coal mining. Now that decision, and some other 
decisions that have been made, are raising the price of energy 
on Ohio consumers and imperiling the jobs of those who work in 
the energy sector.
    Why are you doing this? Did the Government make you do it, 
and if not, why are you doing it?
    Mr. Moynihan. Senator Vance, just to be specific, that was 
a statement about mountaintop removal policy. I grew up in 
southern Ohio where there was, it was called strip mining back 
then. My next-door neighbor was engaged in the business. And 
the statement we made was we would not continue to fund people 
who would continue to take the tops off of the mountains, in 
the Appalachian Mountains, and turn them into mines. And that 
was based on our assessment of the risk at the time.
    Senator Vance. So you guys have taken a number of other 
energy policy decisions that raise the cost of energy on 
American consumers. You guys have committed to a net-zero 
standard by which effectively there are no net-zero carbon 
emissions, and you have held your clients to that standard, 
saying that they need to become aligned with net-zero, and we 
plan to be the advisor of choice to our clients in this 
transition. So it is not just that particular decision, Mr. 
Moynihan, and again, it is not just Bank of America.
    My point here is pretty straightforward and simple, which 
is that whether we achieve net zero, and when we achieve net 
zero is a debate for the elected representatives to the 
American people. What kind of voter identification law we have 
is a decision for the elected representatives of the American 
people. And every time you guys get involved in these culture 
war battles it makes it harder for the American people to see 
you guys as neutral financial institutions, and it frankly 
makes it harder for us to do the same.
    So I will leave you with just this thought. You have heard 
some very good line of questioning on Basel III. I agree with 
Senator Hagerty about Basel III. I do not know what some of the 
regulators are talking about doing. I do not think it makes a 
whole lot of sense. Often bank CEOs and other financial 
institutions will come to Republicans for more reasonable 
regulations, for lower regulations, for lower taxes, to fight 
back against things like Basel III.
    I guess my point is if you guys are going to use the 
financial power that you have accumulated to go to war against 
the values of our voters, impoverish our constituents who rely 
on cheap energy, and destroy the jobs of people who work in the 
energy sector, why should we listen to you when you come and 
ask us for a tax break or for reasonable regulations? I am one 
Republican who wants to have a good relationship with you, but 
the more you guys insert yourselves into these fights the less 
good that relationship will be.
    Thank you all for being here.
    Chair Brown. Thank you, Senator Vance.
    Senator Van Hollen, of Maryland, is recognized.
    Senator Van Hollen. Thank you, Mr. Chairman, and thank all 
of you for being here today. As many of you know, I am a big 
fan of CDFIs and MDIs as vehicles for getting capital into 
lower-income areas, to small businesses in places like 
Baltimore. Baltimore really needs that ecosystem of CDFIs and 
MDIs. And as interest rates go up, of course, the cost of 
borrowing goes up for everybody, but often it is these entities 
that are hardest hit.
    I know all of you are involved in one way or another with 
CDFIs and MDIs. I know Mr. Moynihan and Mr. Scharf, your banks, 
your institutions have a significant presence in Baltimore. 
Could you just speak briefly to what your commitment is, going 
forward, and whether the higher interest rate environment is 
negatively impacting your determination to provide support for 
CDFIs and MDIs.
    Mr. Scharf. Senator, I will start. You know, I would say 
our commitment to working with CDFIs goes through all the 
cycles, and it is not going to be impacted by the rate 
environment that we see. We share your perspective that the 
CDFIs perform a service and reach a series of individuals in 
these markets that banks would not normally be able to access, 
you know, whether it is the investments that we make directly 
in them. We have talked about what we have done with our PPP 
money, where a lot of it was given through CDFIs, specifically 
because they have the ability to access, again, customers that 
are not comfortable doing business with banks. And so those 
partnership and those commitments will continue.
    Senator Van Hollen. Thank you.
    Mr. Moynihan. Senator, we have $2 billion invested in CDFIs 
around the country, and that has increased from about $1.5 
billion 5 or 6 years ago, up to $2 billion. And they are very 
interesting in the way they can help us, including, most 
recently, a lot of participate in the Veterans Loan Fund, where 
the CDFIs can work with veterans to start businesses. That is 
not unique to Bank of America. Many of us participate in it. We 
think they can reach parts of the economy with counseling and 
other things that are critical to the start of a small. Not 
that we do not do a good job. We have $40 billion in small 
business loans outstanding, and that grew 10 percent year over 
year. It is not that we all do not do a good job in that. It is 
just that they reach it.
    So our commitment has been there for many, many, many 
years, probably since they started. I just do not remember the 
history. And it will remain solid through any environment.
    Senator Van Hollen. I appreciate that, and, you know, I 
have worked with the Chairman and Senator Warner and others. I 
chair the Appropriations Subcommittee that funds the Small 
Business Administration, and the Treasury when it comes to 
CDFIs. So I look forward to really pushing hard on this as a 
vehicle going forward.
    We have had many conversations over the years about late 
fees. Obviously, late fees and overdraft fees have a 
disproportionate impact on people living paycheck to paycheck. 
Aaron Klein, over at Brookings, estimated that if the United 
States had adopted a real-time payment system in 2007, when the 
Bank of England did, American consumers, and especially the 
folks at the lower income end, would have saved $100 billion. 
And so I have been very focused on pushing the Fed to adopt the 
FedNow program. We have the clearinghouse system out there as 
well.
    I do just want to get a brief sense of where were on this. 
As I understand, Mr. Vince, Mr. Scharf, and Mr. Dimon, your 
institutions have enrolled in FedNow. Am I right about that? 
Any qualifications?
    Mr. Vince. That is right, Senator.
    Senator Van Hollen. OK. And I know, Ms. Fraser, you and I 
had a conversation about this just a few days ago. I understand 
you are working through some technical issues. Is that correct?
    Ms. Fraser. Yes. We will be joining the system.
    Senator Van Hollen. All right. And Mr. Moynihan, if you 
could give us an update on where you are, American Express.
    Mr. Moynihan. It is Bank of America.
    Senator Van Hollen. Bank of America. Sorry.
    Mr. Moynihan. American Express is not here, but if you want 
them to come next time that would be fine with us.
    [Laughter.]
    Senator Van Hollen. Bank of America.
    Mr. Moynihan. We are in the process of doing the technical 
work, as Jane said, and so it is just a matter of time. It is a 
matter of when, not if, and it is just going through the 
systems and planning now.
    Senator Van Hollen. The more that you can do to push and 
get all your, you know, coordinate this system, the better.
    My last question does not relate to banking specifically 
but it does to an issue that the Chairman and I have worked 
over years, with respect to trying to close a tax loophole on 
carried interest. I know that you are not all directly 
involved, but you are all involved in the finance system, you 
understand the workings of this.
    Mr. Dimon, if I could just ask you, do you agree that we 
should close the carried interest loophole once and for all?
    Mr. Dimon. Yes. I always have. I have been public about it.
    Senator Van Hollen. I appreciate that. I would hope that we 
would do that because it is just egregious that it has gone on 
for so long.
    Thank you. Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    Chair Brown. Thank you, Senator Van Hollen.
    Senator Britt, of Alabama, is recognized.
    Senator Britt. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. It is a pleasure to 
be with all of you today. Thank you so much for carving out 
time for this.
    Over the last year we have seen a host of incredibly 
complex and market-altering rules come out of nearly every 
financial Federal agency. Interestingly, five of our top 
financial regulators sat before this very committee last month 
and unanimously told me that they believed the U.S. banking 
system to be strong, while at the same time they argued for 
proposals that could fundamentally weaken it, without providing 
any adequate answer to the question, why.
    You have seen actions, and we have seen them here, from the 
Federal Reserve, the FDIC, the OCC, the CFPB, the SEC, many of 
which seem to go far beyond the balance of their authority. 
Equally as concerning is the apparent lack of initiative by 
these regulators to understand both the qualitative and 
cumulative impacts of all of these rulemakings.
    For example, focusing on Basel III proposal, in this 
Committee just a few weeks ago, Vice Chair Barr said the rule 
will have a, quote, ``minimal impact on lending that banks 
do,'' end quote.
    Now I would like to say, Mr. Scharf, most, I heard you 
earlier when I was watching, say that you have the most rural 
branches of all the banks represented here, and my question is 
can you briefly respond to that. Would this proposal only have 
a minimal impact on Wells Fargo's lending?
    Mr. Scharf. Well, Senator, we are going to be commenting to 
the Federal Reserve. We do think there are a series of asset 
classes when you look at the increases in capital that are 
proposed, would affect both the availability of credit and the 
pricing of credit in the marketplace. And additionally, as we 
have seen in other asset classes, when regulation like this has 
taken hold, you can see substantial migration outside of the 
regulated banking system.
    Senator Britt. Thank you. At the end of the day the GSIBs 
play a vital role in the U.S. economy, and I do not want to 
diminish that. However, I do want to focus on downstream, so 
impacts on, let's say, Alabama smaller financial institutions, 
small businesses across the country, those in manufacturing and 
energy sectors, individuals seeking maybe a short-term 
liquidity to help pay their bills. I think the list of these 
potentially impacted goes on and on and on. And on this point 
your banks have said that by raising capital requirements by 
nearly 20 percent the proposal would ultimately limit access to 
capital across the board and undermine economic growth.
    Mr. Moynihan, can you briefly explain this trickle-down 
effect, and if your banks are squeezed by the requirements of 
this rule what does this ultimately mean for maybe small 
business owners seeking a loan, a first-time homebuyer, or a 
small financial institution in, let's say, Alabama?
    Mr. Moynihan. Thank you, Senator. As Mr. Scharf said, and 
we talked about a lot today, if you have the same capital 
requirements increased by 20 percent to do the exact same 
activities you did yesterday, you have to get a higher return, 
and that higher return will be borne by the customer base, or 
you will have to leave the business, and either one of those is 
not good for the customer base. And it applies across the 
board.
    In fact, the idea that this does not trickle down through 
the banking system overall, we provide service to a lot of 
those smaller banks. Those costs of the services will go up to 
them. And yes, so it has much more of an impact than people 
think.
    Senator Britt. Right, and just quickly--I know I am running 
out of time--I would love an answer from all of you. Would it 
be an inaccurate statement for regulators to assume that under 
this threshold, you know, those under the $100 billion asset 
mark, they have said they will not feel the impacts of this. So 
my question for you is, will those institutions, and people and 
things that I just mentioned, under the $100 billion mark that 
are, quote, ``not affected by this,'' will they feel the 
impacts of Basel III? Just if we can yes or no down the line.
    Mr. Scharf, we will start with you.
    Mr. Scharf. Ultimately, yes.
    Mr. Moynihan. Ultimately, yes.
    Mr. Dimon. Absolutely. We provide a lot of services.
    Ms. Fraser. Yes. The trickle-down effect is real.
    Mr. O'Hanley. Yes. It is an integrated system.
    Mr. Vince. Yes, Senator. That is likely.
    Mr. Solomon. Yes, I agree.
    Mr. Gorman. Yes.
    Senator Britt. And last but not least, if this rule is 
implemented as written, do we risk putting the United States 
banking sector at a global competitive disadvantage? Ms. 
Fraser, do you mind answering that?
    Ms. Fraser. Yes, we will. We already have an unlevel 
playing field with the European banks. The American banks play 
an incredibly important role globally in the financial system, 
and ultimately affect the competitiveness of American 
companies. This is important.
    Chair Brown. Thank you, Senator Britt.
    Senator Warren, of Massachusetts, is recognized.
    Senator Warren. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. So today I want to 
talk about how criminals are using our financial system to move 
money to finance terrorists, drug traffickers, and sanctioned 
countries, like Russia, Iran, and North Korea. Our witnesses 
are the CEOs of the largest banks in the United States and they 
deal with this issue every single day.
    Mr. Moynihan, you are the CEO of Bank of America so let me 
ask you, if a terrorist group that wanted to attack the United 
States tried to move money through Bank of America accounts do 
you have systems in place to identify that activity, to report 
it to law enforcement, and to shut it down?
    Mr. Moynihan. Yes, we do, Senator.
    Senator Warren. OK. Mr. Dimon, you are the CEO of JPMorgan. 
What about you? If a terrorist group tried to move money 
through JPMorgan accounts do you have systems in place to catch 
it, to report it, and to shut it down?
    Mr. Dimon. We have extensive systems in place, but no 
system is foolproof.
    Senator Warren. OK. But you do have systems in place.
    Mr. Dimon. Yes.
    Senator Warren. You work on this every day.
    And let me just ask all of you, in the interest of time, 
just raise your hand if you have those programs in place.
    Good. I see all of the hands up.
    Look, I believe that none of you want your banks to be used 
to finance terrorist attacks, but let's be clear. None of you 
runs these anti-money laundering programs out of the goodness 
of your hearts. Back in 1970, Congress passed the Bank Secrecy 
Act to make sure that banks do not run a financial system that 
is open to terrorist and drug traffickers and rogue Nations. 
But time passed, and the crooks got more sophisticated. So 
after the 9/11 terrorist attacks law enforcement discovered the 
way terrorists had gotten around the Bank Secrecy Act and 
Congress was then called on to update the laws to cutoff future 
access, and that is what Congress did.
    Today's terrorists have a new way to get around the Bank 
Secrecy Act--cryptocurrency. Last year, an estimated $20 
billion in illicit crypto transactions funded every kind of 
dangerous criminal. North Korea has funded at least half its 
missile program, including nuclear weapons, using the proceeds 
of crypto crime. And Israeli officials have confirmed that 
Hamas received millions of dollars through crypto transactions 
including, quote, ``large sums from Iran.''
    Mr. Dimon, you have been CEO of JPMorgan for almost two 
decades. Can you explain why crypto is such an attractive 
financial tool for terrorists, drug traffickers, and rogue 
Nations?
    Mr. Dimon. I have always been deeply opposed to crypto, 
Bitcoin, et cetera. You pointed out the only true use case for 
it is criminals, drug traffickers, anti-money laundering, tax 
avoidance, and that is a use case, because it is somewhat 
anonymous, not fully, and because you can move money 
instantaneously, and because it does not go through, as you 
mentioned, all these systems built up over many years--Know 
Your Customer, sanctions, OFAC. They can bypass all of that. If 
I was the Government I would close it down.
    Senator Warren. OK. Well, that is what we are going to talk 
about. But this last week, Federal law enforcement asked 
Congress to update the banking laws saying, quote, ``We cannot 
rely on statutory definitions that are decades old to address 
the illicit finance risks that we face in 2023,'' and these law 
enforcement officials specifically called out the use of crypto 
to finance terrorist attacks.
    Now laws clearly need to be updated, but crypto lobbyists 
are working overtime to block any legislation. They claim 
crypto is special, and it should not have to comply with the 
Bank Secrecy Act, even if that means letting terrorists and 
drug traffickers and ransomware criminals and rogue Nations 
move billions of dollars totally unrestricted.
    So I would like to go down the line here. Maybe I can start 
with you, Mr. Scharf. Do you think that crypto companies 
facilitating financial transactions should have to follow the 
same anti-money laundering rules that your bank has to follow?
    Mr. Scharf. Absolutely, Senator.
    Senator Warren. OK. I like absolutely. Let's go on down the 
line. Mr. Moynihan.
    Mr. Moynihan. Absolutely.
    Senator Warren. All right.
    Mr. Dimon. Absolutely. Positively. Certainly.
    Ms. Fraser. Unanimous absolutely.
    Mr. O'Hanley. Absolutely.
    Mr. Vince. Absolutely.
    Mr. Solomon. Absolutely.
    Mr. Gorman. Absolutely.
    Senator Warren. All right. It is the word of the day.
    You know, we have got a way to do this. Senator Marshall 
and I, along with 18 of our Senate colleagues, including 
Senator Cortez Masto, Senator Smith, Senator Fetterman, Senator 
Warnock, Senator Butler, who are here right now and on the 
Senate Banking Committee, have a bill that would do exactly 
what law enforcement asks. It would extend the anti-money 
laundering rules that banks follow so that crypto could not be 
used for financing terrorists attacks or North Korea's nuclear 
program.
    When it comes to banking policy I am not usually holding 
hands with the CEOs of multibillion-dollar banks, but this is a 
matter of national security. Terrorists, drug traffickers, and 
rogue Nations should be barred from using crypto for their 
dangerous activities. It is time for Congress to act.
    Thank you, Mr. Chairman.
    Chair Brown. Thank you, Senator Warren.
    Senator Daines, of Montana, is recognized.
    Senator Daines. Chairman, thank you, and thanks to all of 
our panelists for being here today.
    Earlier this year we saw a series of bank failures which 
were among the largest in our Nation's history. These failures, 
in my opinion, were due to gross mismanagement by bank 
executives and regulators who were also asleep at the wheel. 
Instead of holding accountable those in supervisory positions 
responsible for missing the impending crisis, regulators have 
decided to put forth a host of regulations that would have done 
nothing to prevent the failures in the first place.
    In fact, every regulator I have questioned this year, 
hearings like this, has confirmed that we all know to be true, 
and that is the U.S. banking system is strong, it is well 
capitalized.
    The proposals put forth by Vice Chair Barr and other 
regulators will limit economic growth, reduce lending to small 
businesses, and for those who are able to obtain financing, 
they are going to see increased costs. You know, I have 
frequent meetings with my businesses across Montana. We are a 
State noted for small businesses. I hear from them firsthand 
about the critical need for access to capital, the concern they 
have with pending regulations that could threaten their 
businesses.
    I questioned Vice Chair Barr before this very Committee 
about risk weighting and public listing requirements in the 
Basel III Endgame proposal. Astonishingly, he claimed that 
small businesses would be better off under the proposed scheme 
than they are now, despite the fact that less than one-tenth of 
1 percent of businesses are publicly listed and would qualify 
for the lower risk weighting.
    Mr. Dimon, could you speak to how the Basel III Endgame 
proposal would impact your ability to lend critical funds to 
small businesses and what trickle-down effects we might expect 
if this were to be implemented?
    Mr. Dimon. Yeah, so thank you for the question, Senator. 
First off, these questions should not wait for the NPR coming 
out. They should have been answered way before because it is 
very complex, the work should have been done, the details 
should have been shared. Directly, it makes those loans--we 
would have to charge more, and have a lot of unintended 
consequences.
    As you know, we opened in Bozeman and Billings, but we have 
to charge more locally just to make sure we get our return and 
cost of capital. Secondarily, the operational risk capital, we 
increased the cost of simply holding a small business checking 
account or making a loan. And so all of these things are a 
cumulative effect.
    It will also affect our ability to finance your local 
community banks, which we often do, your local affordable 
housing, or the Montana Pension Plan. So all these things will 
trickle through, they will all become a little bit more 
expensive, and there will be some other unintended 
consequences. One of the things is moving out of banking, but 
also how we deal with customers. So I think some people will be 
surprised, some people may drop a few customers, and it also 
may lead to more concentration in certain ways because you are 
going to have to get more revenues from a client to justify the 
loan.
    Senator Daines. Mr. Dimon, thank you. Mr. Scharf, do you 
have any comments or thoughts on that, as well?
    Mr. Scharf. I agree with what Mr. Dimon said.
    Senator Daines. Thank you. I want to shift into the issue 
of oil and gas investment. In this last year and a half since 
Russia's invasion of Ukraine, February 27th, I have had the 
opportunity to travel extensively throughout Europe, where I 
have met with leaders in virtually all the countries that 
border Ukraine, particularly on the west side. I have been in 
the Baltics, also in the Balkans, as well as Ukraine border 
countries.
    One thing I have heard that is nearly universal is that 
they have let the whims of the day dictate their energy policy 
and moved too quickly away from reliable, baseload forms of 
energy, like natural gas, coal, hydropower, and nuclear. I was 
struck when I was in Vilnius. They took me out to their LNG 
facility. By the way, in that regassification, you know, these 
floating ships, which are parked there, it is fittingly called 
the ``Independence,'' as this LNG has really been key, that is 
coming often from the United States to get Europe back on its 
feet, to a certain extent, as it relates to energy.
    But I asked these folks who were running the LNG plant, 
``What did you do before you were making LNG?'' And I had a 
background in chemical engineering. I was always kind of 
curious about process and who these people are. They said, ``We 
used to run a nuclear plant in Lithuania.'' ``So what do you 
mean, you used to run it?'' They said, ``We used to supply 70 
percent of Lithuania's electricity through a nuclear plant, but 
in 2009, it was shut down.'' I said, ``Why was it shut down?'' 
They said as a condition of joining the EU they made them shut 
it down, and Lithuania went from being a net energy exporter to 
an energy importer.
    And this is just a warning thing for all of us. You cannot 
let the whim of the moment, some particular segment of a green 
movement, which at that time was very anti-nuclear, and to 
their credit it was an old Russian-designed, Chernobyl-type 
reactor that needed to be changed over, which they were. 
Hitachi was going to build a new Japanese, state-of-the-art 
reactor. They shut the whole thing down, and they are paying a 
severe price for it.
    The need for fossil fuels is not going to dissipate in the 
near term. I am very concerned the Biden administration has an 
all-out assault on the oil and gas industry in the United 
States to further their green fantasy and hallucination. We can 
do this in the safest and in the most environmentally sound way 
to have a balanced energy portfolio that includes, of course, 
renewables, and the exciting future we have in the transition. 
But we better make sure we think about expanding our portfolio 
when the world is going to need 50 percent more energy than it 
does today in the next 25 years.
    Mr. Dimon, can you discuss----
    Chair Brown. Very briefly, 30 seconds if you can, Mr. 
Dimon.
    Senator Daines. Mr. Dimon, here is my question. Can you 
discuss the importance of having some common sense as it 
relates to capital requirements, lending, and so forth in the 
oil and gas industry?
    Mr. Dimon. We have to finance transition. You need secure, 
safe, affordable oil and gas to do that. The oil companies are 
doing a great job reducing CO2. If you do not have affordable, 
cheaper energy, the costs on poor people, poor Nations will be 
dramatic. We can get it done right as long as we are very 
thoughtful about it.
    Chair Brown. Senator Smith is recognized, from Minnesota.
    Senator Smith. Thank you, Mr. Chair, and good morning to 
all of you, or I guess it is good afternoon. Glad to have you 
all with us.
    I would like to start with you, Mr. Scharf. So I want to 
talk to you about the Community Reinvestment Act. I think that 
this is a really important tool for making sure that people and 
businesses in low- and moderate-income communities have access 
to capital and lending and financial services. And I, for one, 
am encouraged by the new CRA rulemaking, which I think is an 
important update, and I think it makes some thoughtful changes 
to realign the CRA with its core purpose and to give banks and 
financial institutions clear direction on what activities 
qualify for CRA credit.
    So Mr. Scharf, could you tell me how you assess this final 
rulemaking for the CRA, and od you think that these changes 
will better enable banks to meet their CRA obligations?
    Mr. Scharf. Senator, I very much agree with your sentiment 
of both the importance of CRA and the need to make changes in 
existing CRA legislation to ensure that the ultimate goals are 
actually achieved through the actual legislation. I think when 
you look at the changes that have been made there are certainly 
many items that are taken into account which are directionally 
supportive of what I just said. We have given some comments to 
the regulators about some of the specifics that we would like 
them to just reconsider as they work toward that goal, but 
directionally rethinking CRA and doing it in a way that all the 
regulators come together is extremely helpful.
    Senator Smith. Thank you. I agree with that. I think having 
everybody being on the same page was an extremely important 
part of this as well.
    Another thing that I think is true is that these updates to 
the CRA regs were decades overdue. So do you think that it 
would be helpful for regulators to update these rules more 
regularly to kind of have a more rapid cycle? I am not talking 
about changing rules all the time, but I am saying learning 
from our experience and your experience to make sure they are 
working well.
    Mr. Scharf. I mean, Senator, yes. It absolutely makes sense 
to relook at these things and make sure that they are having 
the intended consequences, and at the same time realize that 
all of those changes then filter through a lot of work that we 
have to do, and so to striking that right balance is also, I 
think, very important.
    Senator Smith. Great. Thank you.
    Mr. Solomon, good afternoon. It is good to see you. Many of 
us are giving thought to how AI, artificial intelligence, is 
being deployed, and how we should be setting guardrails for its 
use, and understanding that AI has been in use for many years. 
I think it is true that generative AI has gotten a lot of 
attention over this last year, both for its capacity and also 
for the limitations that have been on full view.
    Earlier this year, Mr. Chair, the Bing AI chatbot urged a 
New York Times reporter to leave his wife, and just last week 
it was reported that the Amazon chatbot experienced, and I 
quote, ``severe hallucinations and leaked confidential data.''
    So my question for you, as the leader of Goldman Sachs, is 
how do you see using this? I know that you probably have been 
using AI tools for quite a long time, but could you talk a 
little bit about how the generative AI projects that you are 
working on, how you see these being deployed internally and how 
you are thinking about the appropriate guardrails.
    Mr. Solomon. Thank you for the question, Senator. Obviously 
it is something we are very focused on, and as you highlight 
there are super offensive productivity things that can be done 
with the technology as the technology accelerates. As you point 
out, we have been using artificial intelligence in our business 
for quite some times, but these large language models 
accelerate your ability to use very, very highly paid people 
more effectively with clients by giving them access to 
information and giving our clients access to information that 
is sorted and organized more quickly. Those are the positives.
    On the negative, the defense of the technology can 
obviously be used to disrupt activities, to disrupt markets. It 
falls into our category of thinking about cyber protection and 
guardrails. And so we have an enormous amount of focus in 
thinking through how these tools can be used to attack our 
systems, our platforms, et cetera.
    I think the acceleration of this technology is going to 
continue. The pace is quite robust. And I think there are 
opportunities, but we also certainly have to be vigilant to 
recognize that there are things that are going to develop that 
we cannot see, and we have got to make sure we have the right 
protections in place.
    Senator Smith. Thank you. Ms. Fraser, I just have a couple 
of seconds left. You and I spoke about this a little bit 
recently. Tell me how you think about this, from Citi's 
perspective.
    Ms. Fraser. About 4 years ago we put some principles in 
place for how to use AI, topics such as fairness and 
transparency and how it is used, making sure that you can 
understand and trace the different algorithms that are in 
place, elements like that, and making sure there are human 
beings governing this, and making sure the protections are 
there so we get the opportunities realized from it and also use 
it to defend against the threats.
    Senator Smith. Thank you.
    Chair Brown. Thank you, Senator Smith.
    Senator Fetterman, from Pennsylvania, is recognized.
    Senator Fetterman. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Thank you.
    All right, Mr. Moynihan, back in 2008, the Bank of America, 
your bank, did not have enough capital to cushion the bad 
investment decisions that you made, and you had to be bailed 
out. And in 2023, of this year, Silicon Valley Bank did not 
maintain enough capital and had to cost over $20 billion from 
the FDIC.
    So let me ask you, should we believe you that you have the 
Batman, we have got this kind of an issue, or should we be able 
to have to have intervention to adjust this?
    Mr. Moynihan. Senator, I think since the financial crisis 
this body, along with Congress and the President passed the 
Dodd-Frank Act, which changed the capital rules. There was 
adoption of further Basel standards. On top of that there has 
been 13 stress tests, if I have got it right, each one of those 
more severe. So even in the last 5 years we probably have 10, 
15 percent more capital required under those tests. So I think 
there has been a significant amount of regime change made.
    The question for the institutions that failed earlier this 
year is that none of them are captured with that scrutiny, and 
our view was, as a group that had to go in and do two things, 
one, try to keep them alive long enough so it could be 
resolved, and second, this week, we cut a check at $2.1 to $2.2 
billion to the FDIC to pay for the cost of the cleanup, in our 
company along with all of us. Our view is that these capital 
rules are not really going to address that, and many capital 
rules apply to these institutions, and the 30 stress test banks 
which do apply to that. And that is why you saw us be a source 
of strength earlier this year.
    Senator Fetterman. Yeah. Well, if you felt that we all 
supported those kinds of changes after the crash, and then how 
can we have, you know, what happened at the Silicon Valley 
Bank, now some 15 years later, and if there was not the kind of 
intervention it would have caused another kind of a crash. So 
have we got it right yet? Should we have to make any more 
changes? Are you OK with this idea that a relatively small 
bank, especially compared to the size of all of you in front of 
us today, could cause a crash, system-wide, unless the 
President had to quickly intervene and make sure that we 
address this? Any changes, anything else, or that it is OK to 
worry that a small bank could actually imperil our entire 
financial system?
    Mr. Moynihan. I think 4,000 banks have failed over the 
course of time. That is what the FDIC was created to help. And 
they have been resolved, as a----
    Senator Fetterman. But have any of them almost crashed our 
entire economy, or the financial system?
    Mr. Moynihan. In '07-'08, the system was outside the 
system, in addition to that, so many of the people up here were 
not bank holding companies at that time. And that was the 
invention of the broader purview of the banking regulatory net. 
The invention of the FSOC we have talked about. The invention 
of stress testing. The invention of all of these things, and 
Basel rules to measure, to move to an advanced methodology 
using models and other things to measure risk as opposed to 
standardized methodologies, which is what we are going back to 
now. All that was made to change the system.
    Silicon Valley did not threaten the U.S. economy. It could 
have been resolved, and it was resolved.
    Senator Fetterman. Why did the President act so swiftly if 
there was not such a concern? You know, that is amazing that 
you can get on the phone and act so quickly for that kind of 
money, like if it really was not such a significant risk. I 
mean, I wasn't read about the other 4,000 banks that crashed 
that required the President to react in such a swift manner.
    Mr. Moynihan. You would have to ask the people. We did not 
think that all that could have been resolved differently, many 
of us that got involved with the First Republic transaction, 
the deposits we put in. But you are going to have to ask the 
other people why they did what they did. It is not us.
    Senator Fetterman. OK. But again, so no changes are 
necessary, despite now that we seem to have this enduring kind 
of a risk that bad behavior or bad investments could actually 
crash, you know, our whole financial systems.
    Mr. Dimon. There were specific things that happened in 
Silicon Valley Bank that should be addressed by regulations, 
and the most important one is excessive interest rate risk. 
That has got nothing to do with Basel III, the issue here.
    And I think the American public should know that banks pay 
for the FDIC. That is not Government money. That is a mutual 
company, and I would love to take it over and take it off your 
hands and manage it ourselves.
    Senator Fetterman. With all due respect, Mr. Dimon, and do 
not think it really matters who is paying for it. But the fact 
that anyone has to pay because of these choices are necessary.
    Now my Chairman--and actually, Mr. Dimon, was next on my 
questioning.
    Chair Brown. Quickly.
    Senator Fetterman. Outstanding. So Mr. Dimon, you claim 
that the capital requirement, that will increase costs and 
reduce lending. Chase has done $5.5 billion in share buybacks, 
and $9 billion in dividends so far this year. So would it not 
be easier just to kind of hold on to a lot of that money and 
lend it out, or why would you want to give it away to the 
shareholders and other things like that, or buying back your 
own stock?
    Mr. Dimon. It is the shareholders' money, and we do all the 
proper lending we can and should do. It will reduce the 
profitability to a banker doing the business, and I do not 
think you should be asking people to do stuff that is 
unprofitable for their shareholders. That is more like a 
charity. There is tons of that. I am happy to talk about that 
in more detail.
    Chair Brown. Thank you, Senator Fetterman. The Committee 
will take under advisement Mr. Dimon's proposal to take over 
the FDIC.
    [Laughter.]
    Senator Fetterman. Yeah, I would love to buy it if there 
was more time, because I would like to have you explain why 
Democrats should support Nikki Haley for President, but I do 
not have the time.
    Chair Brown. Thank you, Mr. Fetterman. And while I like 
your ideas on SSI, Mr. Dimon, I need to think more about FDIC.
    Senator Warnock, from Georgia, is recognized.
    Senator Warnock. Thank you so very much, Mr. Chair. Before 
I get to the question that I set out to ask I have to respond 
to the Senator from Ohio, not the Chair, who apparently takes 
great umbrage to the words or the letters sent by the leaders 
of these institutions responding to the voter suppression bill 
that was passed in Georgia.
    I know a little something about voter suppression in 
Georgia. Today is, in fact, the 1-year anniversary of my 
election in Georgia. But my election should not give people the 
false impression that there is no voter suppression in Georgia. 
It should not give us any misunderstanding about how bad a law 
S.B. 202 actually is.
    In fact, I had to sue the State of Georgia because at the 
beginning of my runoff a year ago they decided that folks would 
not be able to vote the first Saturday of the runoff, claiming 
that this was the clear letter of the law. You could not vote a 
couple of days after a holiday, that holiday being 
Thanksgiving, and a day they used to honor the anniversary of 
confederate General Robert E. Lee. And so I had to sue them, 
and then appeal again and again, just so Georgia voters could 
vote.
    So I think that people in your position do have a corporate 
responsibility, and I hope you will certainly feel the freedom 
to lean in, in the places and the spaces where it is necessary.
    And in that vein I want to ask you about the SAFER Banking 
Act, legislation recently considered by this
    Committee on cannabis banking. Many of your banks have 
lobbied for this bill, and the American Bankers Association, of 
which you all are members, supports the bill as well.
    I am going to ask you to raise your hand if you support the 
SAFER Banking Act.
    [No response.]
    Senator Warnock. None of you support the SAFER Banking Act.
    I am going to ask you a question. Raise your hand if you 
support the SAFER Banking Act.
    [No response.]
    Mr. Moynihan. Senator, we all support the intent of it. The 
problem is it does not fix the problem. So do not take our non-
assents as----
    Senator Warnock. Let me ask my next question. Raise your 
hand if you believe passing the SAFER Banking Act will reduce 
the racial wealth gap.
    [No response.]
    Senator Warnock. So, this is interesting. We should have 
some conversation about this. The American Bankers Association, 
of which all of you are a part, writes that this legislation 
will provide, quote, ``legal and regulatory clarity for banks, 
and it would help facilitate access to financial services.'' My 
question is legal and regulatory clarity for whom, and who are 
we making safer.
    Since the war on drugs began over 50 years ago, communities 
across America have been decimated. They have been hollowed 
out. Communities all across our country, in the wake of the 
explosion of mass incarceration, making us the mass 
incarceration capital of the world. Missing bodies and 
abandoned building. The war on drugs has been a war on 
communities of color.
    I want to be clear that I am open to SAFER Banking and more 
regulatory clarity around cannabis, but my fear is that if pass 
this bill right now then your banks and other powerful voices 
will be missing in action when it comes time to address the 
broader harms of the war on drugs. And so I support SAFER 
Banking. You all seem reluctant to say whether you support it 
or not. I am concerned about equity and whether we will get 
that in the process.
    So let me ask you this. Will each of you commit to ensuring 
your banks will uphold the standards, standards in the 
Community Reinvestment Act, that is, which we will soon have 
another opportunity to address, will you support standards to 
increase equity as we move forward, perhaps, on SAFER Banking. 
Mr. Scharf.
    Mr. Scharf. Yes, Senator.
    Senator Warnock. Mr. Moynihan.
    Mr. Moynihan. Yes, sir.
    Senator Warnock. Mr. Dimon.
    Mr. Dimon. We support the intent, but I would have to see 
the actual words and the actual law.
    Senator Warnock. Would you support efforts to be 
intentional about supporting equity and addressing the awful 
impact of 40 years of the war on drugs, which in many ways has 
been a war on Black and Brown communities?
    Mr. Dimon. Yes, but before I agree to something I like to 
see the actual detail, down to the last word.
    Senator Warnock. Ms. Fraser.
    Ms. Fraser. Similar to Mr. Dimon, I absolutely support the 
intent. The details matter. We would look at it and work with 
your office if we had concerns.
    Senator Warnock. Mr. O'Hanley.
    Mr. O'Hanley. We support the intent.
    Senator Warnock. Mr. Vince.
    Mr. Vince. Similar to my colleagues, we would want to see 
the details.
    Senator Warnock. Mr. Solomon.
    Mr. Solomon. I would want to understand the detail more. We 
will continue to do things to support investment in underserved 
communities.
    Senator Warnock. Mr. Gorman.
    Mr. Gorman. Exactly the same.
    Senator Warnock. Thank you so very much. I think this is 
critical. There is nothing in history that suggests to me that 
if we leave behind these communities that are marginalized, as 
we make banking safer for powerful banks and people in 
positions who sit here and who sit there, there is nothing in 
history that suggests to me that we are going to go back and 
get those folks. And so I hope that I can continue to engage 
you, and that as good corporate, responsible citizens you will 
take an active interest in this, recognizing that it is not 
only the right thing to do for the future of our economy, it is 
the smart thing to do.
    Thank you so much.
    Chair Brown. Thank you, Senator Warnock, and thank you for 
setting the record straight on the Georgia election law.
    Senator Warnock. Thank you.
    Chair Brown. Senator Lummis.
    Senator Lummis. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Welcome. There has 
been a lot of talk today about Basel III. We know what it means 
for your banks. I would like to explore, for a little bit, what 
it means for small community banks. Wyoming and other rural 
States rely on small community banks, and while the capital 
requirements apply to the systemically important banks, I would 
like to know if there are additional impacts on smaller 
community banks and their customers.
    So I will address the question to Mr. Dimon and then ask 
anybody else who wants to take a swing at this to weigh in as 
well.
    Mr. Dimon. Thank you, Senator. I think the smaller 
community banks would say they are not directly affected by 
this, but since a lot of us up here bank those banks, we bank 
their retirement funds, we bank their cities, we bank other 
small businesses, we bank local schools, cities, States, 
hospitals, it will trickle down to higher costs to them in one 
way or the other.
    It also changes the competitive landscape. It may, in some 
ways, make it harder for them to compete with us as opposed to 
less hard.
    Senator Lummis. Would anyone else like to take a swing at 
that one? Thank you.
    Americans interact with the financial institutions through 
their banks, and they save like for kids' college education 
with mutual funds and protect their families with insurance. 
Can you explain why ultimately these changes will impact 
families planning for the future? So my question is what are 
the impacts of Basel III on pensions, mutual funds, insurance 
companies, and other users of derivatives who hedge? Now 
hedging, in my industry, agriculture, is very important, so I 
am interested in the implications for hedging and the other 
entities I mentioned. Perhaps Ms. Fraser, would you address 
this?
    Ms. Fraser. Yes. Hedging plays a very important role for 
protecting against risk and helping mitigate risk, particularly 
when we are in very volatile times at the moment, it is 
important for providing stability in income flows, and 
commodity hedging is a critical piece for any farmer in 
America. So the increase in capital associated with the Basel 
III rule will have an impact on the cost of that hedging, and 
potentially even the provision of that hedging. And as you say, 
it permeates many different parts of our economy and society. 
It is not just for the most sophisticated players.
    Senator Lummis. I want anyone who is interested in 
responding to this question to take it. One of the things that 
my staff observed is that one of the most poorly thought out 
parts of Basel III is how public listings are used as a proxy 
for counterparty risk in derivatives, counterparty credit risk 
in derivatives. So it looks like this will harm, at a minimum, 
nearly 70 million households who invest in mutual funds.
    I would like to know if you agree with my staff's concern, 
and how we might address that. And this is for anyone who 
wishes to take it. Yes, sir.
    Mr. O'Hanley. It is a very crude measure of risk and does 
not reflect the fact that some of the largest and most 
sophisticated companies in America are public. So it is just 
putting in one basket saying that, by definition, if you are 
not public. And if you look at the trends, in fact, fewer and 
fewer companies are public these days. That is a whole 
different kind of debate that we can get into some other time, 
but it is a terribly crude measure.
    Senator Lummis. Do you know why they chose to make public 
versus private companies different, and treat them different in 
terms of using them as a proxy for counterparty credit risk in 
derivatives? Anyone?
    Well, we do not know either, so we are all in the dark.
    OK, question. Why is it--and this, again, is for anyone who 
wishes to weigh in--why is it so important that the United 
States have a regulatory framework that allows our financial 
institutions to compete on the global stage? As we see the rise 
of China asserting the influence of the yuan all over the 
world, help me understand why we have to stay competitive.
    Ms. Fraser. I speak as an immigrant to the States. America 
plays a critical role around the world in terms of supporting 
supply chains, in terms of the risk management tools it 
provides, the stability it provides to populations all over the 
world, the investment flows. We account for over 50 percent of 
all of the capital activity and investment activity in the 
world. That is a strategic asset for America, it is something 
we should be incredibly proud of, and it is something that we 
need to defend.
    Senator Lummis. Anyone else?
    Chair Brown. OK. Anybody else want to answer? Sure. I think 
when you are next to the last people are getting kind of tired.
    Senator Lummis. Thank you so much.
    Chair Brown. Thank you. Thank you to the patience of all of 
you.
    Senator Butler, the newest Member of this Committee. Sorry 
you have to sit there.
    Senator Butler. I am number 100. When you are number 100 
you stand between the panelists and lunch. So I appreciate very 
much the time that you all put in to talking with me, knowing 
that I was going to be the last person to ask you question.
    But because most of you have a significant footprint in the 
State of California, I thought it important, on behalf of the 
40 million California residents, to sit here the entire time 
and to represent their interests across this industry.
    I am glad our Ranking Member made his way back. As the 
newest Member of the Senate I am still getting to know my 
colleagues, and I wanted to Ranking Member to know that I do 
agree with him on a key point that he made in this opening 
remarks, and that is the majority of the American people who 
are watching this broadcast, particularly who are still 
watching, are not talking about, nor have any interest in Basel 
III Endgame. They are talking about fairness and fees and 
affordability. So that is where I want to land my two 
questions.
    I want to--and it is, honestly, not to pick on anyone, but 
really in the space and intention of moving things along--I 
want to pick up on Senator Smith's point around algorithms and 
algorithmic deployment. Ms. Fraser, you and I spoke about this 
as it relates to customer account closures. We talked 
specifically about the November 5th New York Times article in 
which Citi was specifically mentioned. A customer of yours who 
owned a bar, and who was making bar-like deposits, end-of-day 
cash deposits in round amounts so that they could actually keep 
petty cash on hand to be able to make change at the bar, and 
found themselves the victim of an account closure due to what 
the algorithm determined was suspicious activity.
    Can you talk more about the process that you have deployed 
across Citi to give customers confidence that when you are 
doing your due diligence, as a significant global investment 
institution, when you are doing your due diligence to provide 
and enhanced national security, how do those American people 
who are still watching, who are still listening, who will hear 
this back, how can they have confidence that their credit is 
not going to be negatively impacted, that you are going to 
return their whatever remaining balance that they may have on 
time, in a way that they can actually get their bills paid, due 
to no wrongdoing of their own?
    Ms. Fraser. Senator, thank you very much for the question. 
Thank you also for sitting through the entirety of the hearing 
today.
    You raise a really important point. I think all of us want 
to protect our customers. There is a tremendous amount of 
thought. Cyber probably keeps us awake at night. We want to do 
a good job for our customers. We want to look after them and 
enable them to live their lives and their financial lives 
securely.
    We have money laundering requirements that are very 
significant, in which we are not allowed to go and then tell 
the customer why it is we have closed their account. And I 
think all of us appreciate how frustrating that is for our 
customers, but we must follow the law. You and I have also 
talked about when it is found out that a customer's account is 
being closed in error or for some other reason, or there has 
been fraud blocks, how do we then help them recover their funds 
quickly, and that again, I think there is no bank CEO on this 
table that does not want to help a customer to do that, and we 
are very happy to follow up with you on what are different ways 
that can be achieved. Thank you.
    Senator Butler. Thank you. Thank you for extending that 
opportunity to continue to figure out ways that this body can 
act to protect not only California customers but people who are 
banking with your institutions around the country.
    My last question, Mr. Dimon, you and I also talked about 
this. As the representative from California, it is critical 
that I represent those voices on affordability and home 
affordability. In particular, your institution has done an 
incredible amount on this issue, and I want to applaud and 
recognize you for that.
    On the other hand, the other issue that I raised with you 
is just a concern of this intersection of both a declaration 
and a support for investing in affordable housing and making 
mortgages more affordable for low- and middle-income families, 
and the practice of financial institutions in buying real 
estate development purely for the purposes of putting it up for 
rent. Those two things seem to be in opposite and in contrast 
to me.
    And there is a report of JP, specifically in California, 
about this behavior, and I would love to give you the 
opportunity to talk to Californians about how you are meeting 
both of those obligations, the obligation to provide more 
affordable housing, help to create more access to the American 
Dream, and, at the same time, buying more and more single 
family residential properties where they are going to be only 
available for renting.
    Mr. Dimon. Thank you for the question.
    Chair Brown. Be brief, if you would.
    Mr. Dimon. Thank you for the question, Senator. We love 
affordable housing. We do a lot of it, as do a lot of the banks 
up here. We can make mortgages much lower cost for lower-sized 
mortgages. I have been dying to work on that for 10 years now.
    I think you are referring to an instance where we financed 
a company which is building homes, and I think it is 200 homes, 
for rental. Remember, rental is appropriate for some people. 
And so I understand your concern, and I will look into the 
specifics. But building more homes is good for affordable 
housing.
    Chair Brown. Thank you, Mr. Dimon. Senator Butler, thank 
you. Thanks to the eight of you for joining us today.
    For Senators who wish to submit questions for the hearing 
record, those questions are due 1 week from today, Wednesday, 
December 13. To the banks, please submit your responses to 
these questions for the record no more than 45 days from the 
day you receive them.
    Thank you again. The hearing is adjourned.
    [Whereupon, at 12:36 p.m., the hearing was adjourned.]
    [Prepared statements, responses to written questions, and 
additional material supplied for the record follow:]
               PREPARED STATEMENT OF CHAIR SHERROD BROWN
    This hearing will come to order.
    The eight bank CEOs appearing before us today lead the biggest 
global, systemically important banks in the United States.
    Your banks hold nearly $15 trillion in assets, manage trillions of 
dollars of investments and retirement accounts, and fund the biggest 
companies in the country. You hold nearly half of the Nation's deposits 
and more than $80 trillion in client assets.
    Your banks touch almost every aspect of our financial system and 
working Americans' money--even if they are not your customers.
    All of that makes you eight of the most powerful people in the 
country.
    The banks you run are so large, so complex, and so interconnected, 
that their distress or failure could pose a threat to our entire global 
financial system.
    You may be private companies, but the risks you take and the 
mistakes you make don't just affect you. They don't even just affect 
your customers, or not even just your shareholders, or not even just 
your workers--mistakes you make affect the whole economy, and--as we 
all remember from 2008 and 2009--they can certainly affect American 
taxpayers.
    That amount of enormous power should also come with enormous 
responsibility.
    And a big part of that responsibility is to make sure that 
investors--not taxpayers--are on the hook when risks at your bank don't 
pay off.
    That's why we need strong capital requirements at the biggest 
banks. Because of this Committee, we finally have financial watchdogs 
in place who are getting serious about the need for these protections.
    These are commonsense rules to ensure that banks can withstand 
losses from the riskiest financial shenanigans that create no value to 
the real economy.
    These rules protect against risky trading and derivative activities 
on Wall Street--the same activities that led to the 2008 financial 
crisis. They would close a loophole that allowed banks like SVB to hide 
behind an accounting fiction that lowered capital requirements and 
contributed to its failure.
    And anyone who had any doubt about whether Wall Street could be 
trusted to use its power responsibly need only look at the current 
lobbying fight on this.
    If you've watched the local news in Washington, if you've waited at 
a bus stop in Washington, if you've flown out of Washington National 
Airport, you've probably seen ads urging people to, quote, ``Stop Basel 
Endgame.''
    The eight of you surely know your audience.
    And you haven't stopped there--you've even gone national, pouring 
money into ads for Sunday night football.
    It's a campaign waged by your lobbyists to prevent financial 
watchdogs from putting in place these stronger capital requirements to 
protect our banking system and our economy.
    Listening to these ads, you hear all kinds of claims about how 
stronger rules will raise the cost of mortgages and stop small 
businesses from getting loans.
    Wall Street banks are actually saying that cracking down on them 
will, quote, ``hurt working families.''
    Really? You're saying that cracking down on Wall Street is going to 
hurt working families? You're going to claim that?
    The economic devastation of 2008 hurt working families.
    The uncertainty and turmoil from the failure of Silicon Valley Bank 
hurt working families--when small businesses and their employees in 
Ohio and Utah and across the country didn't know if they could get 
access to their money and make payroll.
    And of course, the claims in this ad campaign aren't true.
    Your game is to try to confuse people. Most Americans probably 
think of a bank's capital--if you force people to think about it at 
all--as money stashed away in a vault.
    But that's not what it means. Capital is just a way to fund loans 
and investments and risky activities in a way that can absorb losses if 
things go south. It means shareholders and investors are on the hook--
not taxpayers.
    And what those glossy ads don't tell you is that your banks have 
been reducing your lending to small businesses and veterans and 
homebuyers for years now--since long before the new capital requirement 
proposals.
    Remember that--these are just proposals at this point, they haven't 
even been implemented.
    Let's be clear: Absolutely nothing in these rules would stop your 
banks from making loans to working families and small businesses.
    Absolutely nothing.
    The reason banks might make fewer of these good loans in the future 
is the same reason we've been seeing less and less productive banking 
activity for years: it doesn't make your banks as much money as the 
risky stuff. You would rather fund risky trading and derivatives bets 
than boring, bread-and-butter small business lending.
    So even with this rule, you can still lend to small businesses and 
homeowners. You just might not increase your profits quarter-over-
quarter by quite as much as you increased them last year.
    But I think most Americans would agree that's a fair trade-off for 
society:
    More small business lending. More first-time homebuyers. Less 
chance of taxpayer bank bailouts. And in exchange, maybe, smaller 
executive bonuses and a teeny tiny bit less profits for multitrillion-
dollar Wall Street banks.
    We know the banking industry isn't giving up without a well-funded 
fight.
    Wall Street pours money into high-priced lobbyists to fight any 
effort to put the most basic guardrails on your ability to do whatever 
you want.
    And what your banks want is to maximize quarterly profits--the cost 
to everything and everyone else be damned.
    We've seen over and over what a problem that is, and the harm that 
the current system does in places like Ohio.
    Earlier this year, when I first heard about SVB's collapse, my mind 
immediately went to another crisis in my State, in East Palestine, 
Ohio.
    They have one thing in common: corporate lobbyists pushed for 
weaker rules, less oversight.
    Companies cut costs, didn't care about safety if it got in the way 
of increasing profits.
    And working people paid the price.
    This is why people hate Wall Street.
    And it's why people hate Washington--because these lobbying 
campaigns usually work.
    We see it over and over.
    We saw it during the fight to pass Dodd-Frank, after the financial 
crisis. Many of us remember the quote from an industry lobbyist after 
we passed that law--``now it's halftime.''
    This time, Wall Street was true to its word.
    The executives whose banks failed this spring had lobbied for 
watered-down rules to make it easier to chase profits at all costs. 
They knew risks were building at their banks, but they chose to ignore 
those risks because it meant a bigger pay out for executives at the 
top.
    So we should be concerned when the executives of even bigger banks 
are doing the same thing against capital requirements.
    Working Americans are tired of arrogant executives gambling with 
other people's money, then riding off into the sunset without any 
consequences.
    That's why we need to pass the bipartisan RECOUP Act, to hold 
failed bank executives accountable for driving their banks into the 
ground.
    And it's why we need strong capital rules.
    Before you protest--I know, of course, that it wasn't your banks 
that failed.
    But after those failures earlier this year, we were reminded about 
how fragile our banking system could be. And as a result, your banks 
only got even more powerful.
    So it's fair to take stock of how you're using that power.
    I appreciate the long overdue increases in wages and benefits for 
many of your frontline employees. At least one of your banks has made 
real efforts to get rid of overdraft fees.
    But your banks need to do far better when it comes to meeting your 
customers where they are and recognizing the dignity of work. You 
should be cutting prices for consumers, increasing opportunity for your 
employees, increasing diversity within your executive ranks, and 
supporting your workers' efforts to unionize.
    And you should stop pouring money into lobbying against efforts to 
protect the taxpayers who subsidize your entire industry.
    The reason for this hearing every year is to hold the biggest banks 
in this country accountable to the American people. We want to hear 
from you: What will you do to support workers, to invest in the real 
economy, and to finally put Wall Street to work for Main Street?
                                 ______
                                 
                PREPARED STATEMENT OF SENATOR TIM SCOTT
    Thank you, Chairman, and thank you to a very long list of CEOs who 
have come to talk with us about how the impacts of our regulatory 
environment will impact everyday consumers.
    And I hope that you all, some of the things I will say will be 
redundant because some of it's unprepared based on what the Chairman 
just said, but I hope you all will really answer the question [of 
whether] nothing in these proposals will stop your banks from lending 
to small businesses or first-time homebuyers. Because if the proposals, 
Basel III Endgame--who in America knows of Basel III Endgame really 
is--let's translate that for the average American sitting at home 
watching this because they have nothing else on TV to watch.
    It is simply requiring more capital on the sidelines, which then 
means fewer dollars to lend to small businesses, first-time homebuyers, 
car loans. So the actual impact of a higher regulatory standard is 
fewer dollars to lend to Americans who need desperately to be engaged 
in the process of achieving the American Dream that is typically 
defined by having access to capital.
    If you work really hard and keep your life in order, you can have a 
good quality middle-class life. But if you want to actually experience 
wealth in America, you have to experience the benefits of profit or 
equity. Equity comes from having capital--having capital typically 
means you either have it because you are born with it or you have 
access to it because you have an idea or a vision that will make your 
community or this Nation better.
    When that happens, you go to a lending facility called a bank or 
outside of the market and you find that capital that allows you to 
start your business. And as you start your business and it appreciates 
it, it creates a profit, and that profit allows you to experience the 
upper echelon of the American Dream. If you have a home, look at the 
differences between African Americans and majority population and net 
worth--tenfold difference. Much of that difference is found in the 
profit or the equity in a home.
    So, when we think about the proposals, not of good regulation, but 
of a nightmare proposal called Basel III Endgame that will put so much 
more capital on the sidelines, we should ask ourselves, how does that 
translate for the average American living and working paycheck to 
paycheck? My thought is that it has a devastating impact on access to 
capital that makes the American Dream harder to achieve and [makes] 
access to capital, for some folks who started where I started, 
virtually impossible.
    I think if you if you think about today's hearing from my 
perspective, I want to talk about three things. Number one is certainly 
Basel III Endgame, number two is the burdensome regulations and 
guidance that will ultimately hamper consumer choice, and number three, 
the job our regulators are doing, or frankly should be doing, and the 
work and the workplaces our regulators cultivate.
    I'll start as I just did with Basel III Endgame. The fact of the 
matter is that this one proposal could have a devastating impact on 
small businesses and I would like for you all to address that either 
now or during the questions.
    Last month, I led a letter to the FDIC, Fed, and OCC calling on 
them to withdraw this misguided proposal because American families, the 
folks who will bear the burden of [these] burdensome regulations, 
simply can't afford it. The letter was signed by nearly 80 percent of 
my Republican colleagues that really span the entire ideological 
spectrum and the country. Nearly every single person who has signed the 
letter did so because they all agreed that costly, harmful impacts on 
our constituents, our businesses, and their families is something that 
could be avoided if, simply, the banking regulators would listen to 
common sense and withdraw the proposal.
    And frankly, last month when the regulators spoke, even some of my 
Democrat colleagues agreed with our concerns on the negative impacts 
brought to us by a burdensome regulatory environment.
    Let me be clear, this proposal could limit, and frankly I think 
will limit, the following: availability of credit for housing for those 
who need it most, severely restrict lending for small businesses that 
are still rebounding from the pandemic, and cut into the retirement 
savings for hardworking Americans, like teachers, police officers, 
firefighters, when they're dealing with higher prices and runaway 
inflation and brought by the radical Left. These are very, very serious 
and real concerns.
    But Americans shouldn't just hear about the concerns from those of 
us who are senators, we should hear from those who actually run the 
institutions that they have and trust in and have confidence in. As a 
former business owner myself, I believe that you all, as the day-to-day 
operators of these businesses, not elected officials, have a better 
sense of what the communities are facing, the challenges brought upon 
the communities by these higher standards.
    Vice Chair Barr last month said that the new Basel Endgame will 
only impact about 40 of the banks in our country.
    Said differently: two-thirds of all the loans processed will be 
negatively impacted by the Endgame proposal. That's $60 billion in 
small business loans in 2021.
    If regulations continue to increase the costs of providing a loan, 
I fear that banks will decrease lending, not only in my home State, but 
across the country. The increased lending means increased financial 
hardship, and increased financial hardship means a reduction in 
opportunity.
    That's my ultimate concern, reducing opportunity for everyday 
Americans. At the end of the day, these consequences will create a 
ceiling for low-income Americans, and it won't be a ceiling made of 
glass, instead it will be made of concrete.
    We simply can't let that happen.
    The second item I want to discuss with you all today concerns the 
onslaught of rules and proposals targeting your institutions and the 
banking system writ large. For instance, in recent months, we have seen 
proposals or final rules all the way from climate risk management to 
the Community Reinvestment Act.
    None of these proposals exist in a vacuum, and it is vital that 
this committee hear from each of you about the overall impact on the 
health of our economy. In particular, I'm deeply concerned by the 
continued partisan attempts of this Administration to advance their 
climate goals by any means possible, including through our banking 
system, with the recent climate risk management guidance.
    Banks have been considering weather risks for decades--and you 
should--it's called common sense. And it remains incumbent upon each of 
you to base your lending decisions on risks you can reasonably assess, 
like weather or credit risk, not however, perceived political, 
rhetorical, or reputational risk.
    Beyond the explicit cost of these proposals, which ultimately are 
passed on to consumers, I fear that the only real accomplishments of 
the regulators will be to push more activity outside of the regulated 
financial system where we have less insight into the impacts on 
consumers.
    And finally, number three, we must emphasize and turn our attention 
to the performance of our regulators and their core mission--the 
supervision of your banks and the stability of our financial economy.
    This past spring, we saw the failures of several banks, which shook 
consumer confidence. Since then, there has been nonstop fingerpointing 
by our regulators. In the aftermath of the failures, I was critical of 
the failed bank executives because that's where the dollar should stop. 
The buck stops with the executives.
    But you can't see that in a vacuum--you have to ask yourself the 
question--what was the role of the regulators? What did they do? What 
did they see? How do they respond to that?
    Your institutions have teams of examiners from the regulatory 
agencies in your offices every day--and I can tell by your faces--
you're really excited to see them when they show up.
    But the truth is that we, the American people, deserve to 
understand the complexity of the web that exists that makes the 
headwinds real for lending money to would be entrepreneurs, or first-
time homebuyers.
    Let me close with this: we're not on the same page on a lot of 
issues. I think there are times when banks go too far in getting 
involved in politics. But when it comes to your objective of creating 
access to credit, to resources, for the American people and the 
American Dream--that's where I hope we find our attention today--
focused on an environment that is easier for the average American to 
experience the American Dream, or it's made harder because of the 
challenges brought to them by this Government.
                                 ______
                                 
                PREPARED STATEMENT OF CHARLES W. SCHARF
                CEO and President, Wells Fargo & Company
                            December 6, 2023

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              PREPARED STATEMENT OF BRIAN THOMAS MOYNIHAN
                   Chairman and CEO, Bank of America
                            December 6, 2023

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                   PREPARED STATEMENT OF JAMIE DIMON
                 Chairman and CEO, JPMorgan Chase & Co.
                            December 6, 2023

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                   PREPARED STATEMENT OF JANE FRASER
                             CEO, Citigroup
                            December 6, 2023

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                 PREPARED STATEMENT OF RONALD O'HANLEY
                           CEO, State Street
                            December 6, 2023

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                   PREPARED STATEMENT OF ROBIN VINCE
                            CEO, BNY Mellon
                            December 6, 2023

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                  PREPARED STATEMENT OF DAVID SOLOMON
                           CEO, Goldman Sachs
                            December 6, 2023

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                 PREPARED STATEMENT OF JAMES P. GORMAN
                          CEO, Morgan Stanley
                            December 6, 2023

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              Additional Material Supplied for the Record

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