Biden calls for tougher penalties for execs of failed banks
President Joe Biden on Friday called on Congress to allow regulators to impose tougher penalties on the executives of failed banks, including clawing back compensation and making it easier to bar them from working in the industry.
Biden wants the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation to be able to force the return of compensation paid to executives at a broader range of banks should they fail, and to lower the threshold for the regulator to impose fines and bar executives from working at another bank.
He called on Congress to grant the FDIC those powers after sent shockwaves through the global banking industry.
맥스카지노Strengthening accountability is an important deterrent to prevent mismanagement in the future,맥스카지노 Biden said in a statement. 맥스카지노Congress must act to impose tougher penalties for senior bank executives whose mismanagement contributed to their institutions failing.맥스카지노
Currently the FDIC can only take back the compensation of executives at the largest banks in the nation, and other penalties on executives require 맥스카지노recklessness맥스카지노 or acting with 맥스카지노willful or continuing disregard" for their bank's health. Biden wants Congress to allow the regulator to impose penalties for 맥스카지노negligent맥스카지노 executives 맥스카지노 a lower legal threshold.
The White House highlighted reports that Silicon Valley Bank CEO Gregory Becker sold $3 million worth of shares in the bank in the days before its collapse, saying Biden wants the FDIC to have the authority to go after that compensation.
The shuttering of Silicon Valley Bank last Friday and of New York맥스카지노s Signature Bank two days later has revived bad memories of the financial crisis that plunged the United States into the Great Recession about 15 years ago.
Over the weekend the federal government, determined to restore public confidence in the banking system, moved to protect all the banks맥스카지노 deposits, even those that exceeded the FDIC맥스카지노s $250,000 limit per individual account.