Archegos collapse revealed ‘weaknesses’ in global banks, Fed says

The collapse of Archegos Capital Management revealed vulnerabilities at the banks supervised by the Federal Reserve, the U.S. central bank said in a report released Wednesday.

“The event has so far revealed weaknesses in margin practices and counterparty risk management at some firms,” the Fed said in its twice-yearly supervision report, also noting the importance of coordinating with other global regulators in activities that cross borders. The Fed’s Archegos review isn’t yet finished, and the agency said it will be notifying individual firms on “areas of weak practices.”

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The Archegos collapse "has so far revealed weaknesses in margin practices and counterparty risk management at some firms,” the Fed said in its twice-yearly supervision report,
Samuel Corum/Bloomberg

Archegos, the trader Bill Hwang’s family office, blew up in March after making massive, wrong-way option bets. The failure contributed to billions of dollars in losses for banks including Credit Suisse Group, Nomura Holdings and Morgan Stanley that financed Archegos’s wagers through their prime brokerage units, which lend money to hedge funds and other private investment firms.

The Fed’s report also said banking supervision is returning to normal after the central bank lifted its COVID-19 interventions, and the U.S. banking system is healthy and profitable. However, the regulator is worried about increasing attacks from hackers.

“Cybersecurity is a critical component of operational resilience and remains the top risk identified at supervised firms,” the report said, citing ransomware attacks as a particular concern in the financial sector.

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