Least Cost Exception Act
HR 6547 expands regulatory exceptions allowing costly bank failure resolutions beyond least-cost requirements, increasing regulator discretion but potentially raising insurance costs and systemic risk.
HR 6547 expands regulatory exceptions allowing costly bank failure resolutions beyond least-cost requirements, increasing regulator discretion but potentially raising insurance costs and systemic risk.
HR 6547, the Least Cost Exception Act, modifies federal banking regulations to expand exceptions to least-cost resolution requirements for failing financial institutions. The bill allows regulators greater discretion in how they manage bank failures by loosening constraints that previously mandated choosing the lowest-cost method for resolving troubled banks.
Bank failure resolution directly affects depositor protection, systemic financial stability, and taxpayer exposure to losses through the Deposit Insurance Fund. The regulatory flexibility this bill provides could enable regulators to prevent broader financial contagion but may also increase costs to the insurance fund or create moral hazard by reducing consequences for risky banking practices.
Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.
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