
President Trump said Monday that Federal Reserve governor Michelle Bowman would be the central bank’s new vice chair for supervision, tapping a former Kansas banking commissioner as the Fed’s top banking cop.
Bowman could take oversight of giant US banks in a new direction as the Trump administration makes it clear it wants to lift constraints on lenders and overhaul a regulatory framework put in place following the 2008 financial crisis.
“Our Economy has been mismanaged for the past four years, and it is time for a change,” Trump said in a social media post Monday. “Miki has the ‘know-how’ to get it done. I am confident we will achieve Economic heights never before seen in our Nation’s History.”
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has flagged that changes are coming to how Washington regulates banks, citing “backward-looking” policies designed to address the failures of the 2008 financial crisis and the need for better coordination among bank oversight agencies.
“We need our financial regulators singing in unison from the same song sheet,” he said in a speech earlier this month, citing “a broken supervisory culture.”
Bowman has signaled that she could be in favor of some changes. She opposed some of the proposals put forward by the former vice chair for supervision, Michael Barr, including a new set of controversial capital rules that would have required lenders to set aside greater buffers for future losses.
The requirements are based on an international set of capital requirements known as Basel III imposed in the decade following the 2008 financial crisis.
Banks have been fighting this US proposal for the last year in an aggressive public campaign and even dropped hints about suing regulators if they don’t get their way.
Bowman has argued that the plan needed “substantive changes” and that an increase in capital requirements at the scale proposed by regulators could significantly harm the economy.
She wanted the Fed to tailor capital requirements to a bank’s size and risk profile as the regulator does now, arguing that she hasn’t seen compelling evidence that changing this approach would bolster the banking system.
Banks appear to be in favor of her appointment, which still requires Senate confirmation.
“I’d be excited to see Miki Bowman appointed,” Goldman Sachs CEO David Solomon said in a Fox News interview last week. “I think the industry would be excited.”
Rob Nichols, CEO of the American Bankers Association, said Monday that “Bowman has been a thoughtful, principled voice for sensible regulatory and monetary policy and someone who understands the important role that banks of all sizes play in our financial system and our economy.”