UPDATE 1-U.S. eyes size threshold when picking systemic firms
* FSOC hopes plan will give clarity to financial industryWASHINGTON, Oct 11 (Reuters) - U.S. regulators pondering
which non-bank financial firms are large enough to warrant
additional oversight have proposed a $50 billion asset
threshold in conjunction with levels of debt and derivatives.The Financial Stability Oversight Council on Tuesday agreed
to issue for public comment its proposed criteria that includes
whether a firm has $3.5 billion in derivative liabilities and
whether it has $20 billion in outstanding loans borrowed and
bonds issued.Bank holding companies with more than $50 billion in
assets, such as Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase , are automatically subject to the added scrutiny.FSOC, the panel of U.S. financial regulators created by
last year’s Dodd-Frank financial oversight law, said it will
apply the non-bank thresholds as the first part of a
three-stage test.Insurers, hedge funds, mutual funds and other big non-bank
financial firms have been nervous that they will be deemed
systemically important financial institutions, or SIFIs.SIFIs are to be subject to greater oversight by the Federal
Reserve and strict capital and liquidity requirements.Beyond the quantitative thresholds, regulators will also
review a non-bank firm’s potential impact on the health of
financial markets, and will collect data from the firm itself,
FSOC staff said at a public meeting on Tuesday.FSOC will allow 60 days for public comments.”I think the new metrics and the thresholds in particular
will give very important information to the public so they can
better understand the FSOC process to go forward,” said
Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Mary Schapiro, a
member of FSOC.






