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    Stock futures are flat ahead of key employment report

    U.S. stock index futures were flat during overnight trading on Thursday as Wall Street awaits Friday’s key September jobs report.
    Futures contracts tied to the Dow Jones Industrial Average gained 41 points. S&P 500 futures were up 0.08%, while Nasdaq 100 futures advanced 0.1%.

    Stocks advanced during regular trading on Thursday as Washington reached a deal to raise the debt ceiling into December. The Dow gained about 340 points, or 0.98%, for its third straight positive session. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite also advanced for a third day, gaining 0.83% and 1.05%, respectively. The three major averages are on track to finish the week in the green.
    All eyes are on Friday’s jobs report, which will be key as the Federal Reserve prepares to slow its $120 billion-per-month bond-buying program. Economists are expecting the economy to have added 500,000 jobs in September, according to estimates from Dow Jones. In August, just 235,000 jobs were added, significantly below the consensus estimate of 720,000.
    The Department of Labor said Thursday that jobless claims for the prior week totaled 326,000. That was lower than the 345,000 economists had been calling for. Continuing claims, meanwhile, declined by 97,000 to 2.71 million.

    Morgan Stanley reveals its top Asia dividend stocks

    “The last appetizer to Friday’s nonfarm payroll report was a positive weekly jobless claims report,” said Edward Moya, senior market analyst at Oanda. “As the US continues to get the delta variant spread under control, the labor market recovery should continue to improve.”
    Uncertainty around the debt ceiling had been a headwind for the market but other risks remain, including accelerating inflation and rising rates. The 10-year Treasury yield was around 1.57% on Thursday, and UBS sees it rising to 1.8% by the end of the year.

    “A steadily improving US labor market and solid US economic growth should provide the Federal Reserve with the green light to start curbing its quantitative easing (QE) program,” the firm wrote in a note to clients.
    Wall Street is also preparing for third-quarter earnings season, which kicks off next week. JPMorgan, BlackRock and Delta report on Wednesday, with the other major banks reporting later in the week.

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    Senator Cynthia Lummis discloses a bitcoin purchase worth up to $100,000

    Senator Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo., bought bitcoin worth between $50,001 to $100,000 on Aug.16, according to a filing on Thursday.
    The purchase was disclosed outside of the 45-day reporting deadline.
    A spokesperson at Lummis’ office told CNBC that the delay in disclosing was due to “a filing error.”
    The congresswoman has been a longtime bitcoin bull. She previously said she made her first bitcoin purchase in 2013 for $330 per token.
    Lummis’ bitcoin disclosure has drawn scrutiny before.

    Senator-elect Cynthia Lummis, a Republican from Wyoming, stands for a photo at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C., November 9, 2020.
    Stefani Reynolds | Pool | Reuters

    Senator Cynthia Lummis, R-Wyo., just disclosed a sizable bitcoin purchase as the crypto supporter continued to grow her stake in the volatile asset.
    The Republican senator scooped up the world’s largest cryptocurrency on Aug. 16 worth between $50,001 to $100,000, according to a filing on Thursday. The purchase was disclosed outside of the 45-day reporting deadline set by The Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge (STOCK) Act.

    The congresswoman has been a longtime bitcoin bull, touting Wyoming as a leader in developing financial institutions to work with the crypto world. She previously told CNBC that she made her first bitcoin purchase in 2013 for $330 per token, and she said she owned five bitcoins as of the end of June.
    The 2012 STOCK Act requires members of Congress to disclose the purchase and sale of individual stocks, bonds and commodity futures within 45 days of the transaction. Other assets — such as mutual funds, EIFs and T-bills — are exempt from the 45-day requirement and need to be disclosed only once a year. The different reporting schedules prioritize the disclosure of trades that could be used to profit from nonpublic information.
    A spokesperson at Lummis’ office told CNBC that the delay in disclosing was due to “a filing error.”
    “Once we realized it we worked with the Ethics committee to fix it,” the spokesperson said. “It was an honest mistake, and the issue has been resolved without penalty.”

    The purchase was made less than two weeks after Lummis and two other senators tried to insert an amendment into the Senate-passed infrastructure bill that would have limited the definition of who qualified as a crypto currency broker, and by extension shielded those who didn’t qualify as brokers from regulation. But the amendment was ultimately blocked.

    Bitcoin jumped to a nearly five-month high above $55,000 on Wednesday and last traded around $54,000. The rally comes amid a series of small developments in Washington that have provided some comfort to institutional investors keen to jump into cryptocurrencies.
    Lummis’ bitcoin disclosure has drawn scrutiny before. In April of this year, she filed her annual financial disclosure form with the Senate, but did not include the bitcoin. A week later, Lummis filed an amended disclosure that revealed she owned bitcoin worth between $100,000-$250,000.
    Lummis’ new stake marked one of the first congressional cryptocurrency purchases, according to Quiver Quantitative, an alternative data firm that tracks senators’ trading activities.
    The only other notable cryptocurrency bet came from Sen. Pat Toomey, R-Penn., who bought up to $15,000 of Grayscale Ethereum Trust (ETH) and up to $15,000 Grayscale Bitcoin Trust (BTC) in mid-June, according to Quiver Quantitative and a filing.
    Lummis previously said she’d like to see retirement funds invested in bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies.
    “I would like to see cryptocurrency, like bitcoin, become part of a diversified asset allocation that are used in retirement funds and other opportunities for people to save for the future,” Lummis said in a June CNBC interview.
    — CNBC’s Christina Wilkie contributed reporting.

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    Covid-19: Kids ages 5 to 11 ‘need to get that vaccination,’ says Dr. Peter Hotez

    Pfizer said Thursday it asked the FDA to authorize its Covid-19 vaccine with BioNTech for kids ages 5 to 11.
    “Kids need to get that vaccination, so it’s really good news, and, hopefully, shortly after Halloween it will be released to the public,” said Dr. Peter Hotez, co-director of the Center for Vaccine Development at Texas Children’s Hospital.

    Dr. Hotez urged parents to avoid misinformation and to get their younger children vaccinated after Pfizer officially asked the Food and Drug Administration to authorize its Covid-19 vaccine with BioNTech for kids ages 5 to 11.  
    “There’s a narrative out there that’s false…that this is an illness that’s exclusively of older Americans, those over the age of 70 or 80, and we learned with this delta variant over the summer…it was never true,” said Hotez, co-director of the Center for Vaccine Development at Texas Children’s Hospital. “Kids need to get that vaccination, so it’s really good news, and, hopefully, shortly after Halloween it will be released to the public.”

    If the FDA approves the vaccine, 28 million more kids would be eligible for it. Currently, the Pfizer vaccine is only approved for kids 12 and up. A key FDA vaccine advisory group is scheduled to meet on Oct. 26 to discuss Pfizer’s data. 
    More than 22,000 children have been hospitalized due to Covid-19 and 520 have died, according to the American Academy of Pediatrics. Hotez told CNBC’s “The News with Shepard Smith” that given those high numbers, the “need is apparent” to vaccinate kids ages 5 to 11. 
    Hotez called out another false narrative when it comes to Covid-19 vaccines for kids.
    “The other piece of disinformation that you’re hearing is that we’re only vaccinating kids to protect the adults and that kids are fine, and we’re only using them as, kind of, cannon fodder to protect the adults, and it’s nonsense,” said Hotez.

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    18 former NBA players, including 'Big Baby' Davis, charged in alleged $4 million health insurance fraud

    Eighteen former NBA players, including former Celtics player Glen “Big Baby” Davis, have been arrested and charged with defrauding the NBA’s Health and Welfare Benefit Plan out of $4 million.
    Terrence Williams, 11th overall in the 2009 NBA draft by the then-New Jersey Nets, was named as the alleged ringleader of the scheme, according to the indictment. 
    Those false claims totaled about $3.9 million and the players received about $2.5 million in fraudulent proceeds, the indictment said.

    Eighteen former NBA players, including former Celtics and Clippers player Ronald Glen “Big Baby” Davis, have been arrested and charged with defrauding the NBA’s Health and Welfare Benefit Plan out of nearly $4 million.
    The ex-players are accused of submitting false reimbursement claims from around 2017 to 2020 for medical and dental services that were not actually purchased, according to an indictment filed in federal court in the Southern District of New York, or SDNY.

    Those false claims totaled about $3.9 million, according to the indictment. Players received about $2.5 million in total fraudulent proceeds, with each receiving as little as $65,000 to as much as $420,000.
    “The benefit plans provided by the NBA and the National Basketball Players Association to our players are critically important to support their health and well-being throughout their playing careers and over the course of their lives, which makes these allegations particularly disheartening,” The NBA said in a statement Thursday. The league noted that it will cooperate with the U.S. Attorney’s Office in this matter.
    The NBA Players Association also said in a statement late Thursday it was aware of the indictment and will continue to monitor the situation.
    The FBI arrested 16 of the defendants Thursday morning in 12 districts across the country, said Michael Driscoll, the Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI’s New York Field office.
    One defendant, former Portland Trail Blazers player Sebastian Telfair, will be presented late Thursday before a SDNY magistrate judge, SDNY U.S. Attorney Audrey Strauss added. The remaining players will be presented before judges in their districts of arrest.

    The FBI and New York Police Department Health Care Fraud Task Force are conducting an investigation into the scheme, according to Strauss.

    Terrence Williams #55 of the Boston Celtics handles the ball during game against the New York Knicks in Game Four of the Eastern Conference Quarterfinals during the 2013 NBA Playoffs on April 28, 2013 at the TD Garden in Boston.
    Chris Elise | National Basketball Association | Getty Images

    The NBA’s Health and Welfare Benefit Plan provides additional coverage on top of existing medical coverage for eligible active and former NBA players and their families, Strauss said. It is primarily funded by contributions from NBA teams.
    Terrence Williams, 11th overall in the 2009 NBA draft by the then-New Jersey Nets, was the alleged ringleader of the scheme to defraud the plan, according to the indictment. 
    Williams allegedly recruited other NBA players by offering fabricated invoices to be used in false claims in exchange for the payment of kickbacks to him. According to the indictment, Williams received at least $230,000 in kickbacks from the players.
    When one defendant failed to pay for the false documentation in kickbacks, Williams allegedly “tried to frighten the player into re-engaging” by impersonating an employee who processed the health-care plan claims and saying there was an issue, Strauss noted.
    Williams also allegedly assisted three of the ex-players — Davis, Charles Watson Jr. and Antoine Wright — obtain fabricated letters of medical necessity to justify some services on which the false invoices were based.
    Several of the fake invoices and medical necessity forms stood out because they had “unusual formatting, they have grammatical errors” and were sent on the same dates from different offices, the indictment said.
    Strauss pointed out other noticeable errors in the fraudulent documents, noting that former NBA player Gregory Smith submitted invoices for a root canal in Beverly Hills when he was in fact playing basketball in Taiwan at the time.
    A few of the false claims were also for identical reported procedures on the same day, according to Strauss. For example, three players claimed to have had root canals on the same six teeth on April 30, 2016 and crowns on the same six teeth on May 11, 2016.
    Some of the ex-players charged were instructed to repay the proceeds they received from the health-care plan once it was determined that the claims were false, according to the indictment. Some did while others did not.
    Also charged in the case are: Alan Anderson, a former Washington Wizards and Los Angeles Clippers player; Shannon Brown, who played for the Cleveland Cavaliers and Los Angeles Lakers; and Tony Allen, a six-time NBA All-Defensive Team selection.
    Allen’s wife, Desiree Allen, is the only woman and non-NBA player charged in the indictment.
    The list also includes William Bynum, who spent most of his career with the Detroit Pistons; Christopher “Supreme Bey” Douglas-Roberts, former player for the then-New Jersey Nets; Melvin Ely, who played for five NBA teams; and Jamario Moon, who played for five NBA teams as well.
    Others include: Darius Miles, former player for the Los Angeles Clippers and Cleveland Cavaliers; Eddie Robinson, who played for the Charlotte Hornets and the Chicago Bills; Anthony Wroten, who played for the Memphis Grizzlies and the Philadelphia 76ers; Milton Palacio, who played for six NBA teams; and Ruben Patterson, who played for six teams.

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    Fed Governor Lael Brainard is in line for a key banking position. Here's what it could mean for Wall Street

    Fed Governor Lael Brainard should figure prominently as President Joe Biden weighs who will chair the central bank and who will specifically supervise banks.
    Even without getting the chair’s position, Brainard can be a major influence on banks. If she is not nominated as chair, she’s a good bet to be named the vice chair for supervision.
    There are likely three areas where her influence would be most felt: Climate change, central bank digital currency, and getting banks to raise capital during prosperous times.

    Lael Brainard, governor of the U.S. Federal Reserve, speaks during the National Association of Business Economics (NABE) annual meeting in Arlington, Virginia, on Monday, Sept. 27, 2021.
    Al Drago | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Federal Reserve Governor Lael Brainard’s increased influence ahead likely means substantial changes and challenges for the nation’s banking system.
    Considered a progressive who favors tighter reins on financial institutions, particularly the Wall Street powerhouses, Brainard should figure prominently as President Joe Biden weighs who will chair the central bank and who will specifically supervise banks.

    She is widely expected to get either of those two positions in the coming months.
    “Everybody can see that the Fed has been moving toward a more progressive stance, and it wouldn’t be a big shock to see that she gets more power either as Fed chair or as vice chair for regulation,” Yardeni Research President Ed Yardeni said. “To the extent that the Fed’s always more focused on monetary policy than regulation, now one of its new mandates from the progressives is to pay more attention to regulating the banks.”
    That issue came sharply into focus last week when Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., a leading progressive and former presidential candidate, called current Chairman Jerome Powell “dangerous” because of the Fed’s move to loosen bank regulations.
    Warren announced then that she would oppose Powell’s renomination. Powell’s term ends in February, though Biden is expected to make a decision well ahead of that.
    Various reports have put Brainard as a top choice for Warren, though the senator has not publicly committed to a candidate. Efforts to reach Brainard for comment were unsuccessful.

    “The question right now is the renomination of Fed Chair Powell. I’ve made my position clear on that,” Warren said in a CNBC interview earlier this week. “I’m not going to talk about other nominees.”
    For what they’re worth, betting markets don’t expect a change at the Fed’s top rung. PredictIt gives Powell about a 73% chance of being confirmed by the Senate, with Brainard at just 18%.
    Powell also has enough support in the Senate to make it through the banking committee and onto the floor for a confirmation vote, according to a report from Bloomberg News.
    Even without getting the chair’s position, Brainard can be a major influence on banks. If she is not nominated as chair, she’s a good bet to be named the vice chair for supervision, a position the current holder, Randal Quarles, is not expected to keep when his term expires this month.
    “The presumption is that if Powell is renominated, not only will Brainard be the vice chair for supervision but also that she will be given a reasonable amount of free hand,” Brown Advisory head of fixed income Tom Graff said. “Obviously, Brainard would be a stronger, more stringent regulator than Quarles was.”

    Three issues to watch

    There are likely three areas where her influence would be most felt: Climate change, the implementation of a central bank digital currency and getting banks to raise capital during prosperous times. The latter issue is referred to in the banking industry as countercyclical capital buffers, which Brainard supports and Quarles has opposed.
    While the third issue takes banks back to the pre-high-risk days of finance, the first two are unchartered waters. The Fed is set soon to release a study on the viability of a Fed-backed digital dollar, of which Brainard has been a strong advocate, though some other officials have been more skeptical.
    Climate change is an area in which Brainard has a particular interest.
    On Thursday, she gave a speech discussing “climate scenario analysis,” essentially a move to get institutions to start planning for the financial risks they could face from climate-related matters. However, she has also discussed the possibility of stress-testing banks for climate risk.
    In the speech she noted that such planning should involve “consistent, comparable, and, ultimately, mandatory disclosures” around climate, indicating that banks at some point will be forced to account for the threat.
    “Together these efforts can help ensure that the financial system is resilient to climate-related risks and well positioned for the transition to a sustainable economy,” she said.

    What it would mean for banks

    Investors already have been leery of bank stocks this year, as low loan demand and extremely low interest rates have hampered operating margins.
    Having Brainard as their direct regulator at the Fed could shake up the sector still more, though experts who watch the industry generally don’t expect her to be perceived as a major threat. The discussions, though, come as Biden has nominated Saule Omarova, who is thought to be tough on banks, to head the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.
    “Brainard has the background for [vice chair for supervision]. She’s actually done that before. That’s safe,” Whalen Global Advisors Chairman Christopher Whalen said. “Her progressive tendencies on the monetary side, if she were chair, I would worry about.”
    Brainard’s background includes a three-year run as under secretary for international affairs at the Treasury during the Obama administration. She has served in multiple capacities at the Fed, including chair of its financial stability and payments, clearing and settlements subcommittees.
    On monetary policy, she’s been one of the leading dovish voices, meaning she has supported low interest rates. She was seen as an ideological kindred spirit to former Chair Janet Yellen – now Treasury secretary – so much so that Fed watchers considered Brainard’s speeches as reliable proxies for where Yellen stood on monetary policy.
    The Fed leadership intrigue comes a time of ethical turmoil that has seen two regional presidents, Eric Rosengren of Boston and Robert Kaplan of Dallas, resign following disclosures that they were making large trades in their individual investment portfolios. A third official, Federal Open Market Committee Vice Chairman Richard Clarida, also has been cited in news reports showing that he executed trades on the eve of a Powell speech in February 2020.
    Like other Fed officials, Brainard has remained mum on the matter as the handicapping continues over where the central bank is headed.
    “Powell was the path of least resistance for the White House,” Brown Advisory’s Graff said. “If this story continues to have salience and gives oxygen to the Warren argument that he is not supervising closely, either his own people or the banks, that may just change the politics of [Biden’s] decision.”

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    How Peloton builds a community around health and wellness to craft its brand

    Peloton wants to be known as a health and wellness company, not a fitness business.
    The company wants to reach its users authentically, through organic interactions among users, Peloton’s Chief Marketing Officer Dara Treseder said Thursday during CNBC’s CMO Exchange virtual event.
    Treseder also spoke about how Peloton invests in its instructors to help grow the business.

    Cari Gundee rides her Peloton exercise bike at her home on April 06, 2020 in San Anselmo, California.
    Ezra Shaw | Getty Images

    Peloton wants to be known as a health and wellness company, not a fitness business, according to its chief marketing executive.
    “We definitely want to make sure that we are reflecting the communities that we serve,” Peloton’s Chief Marketing Officer Dara Treseder told Julia Boorstin on Thursday during CNBC’s CMO Exchange virtual event.

    “One of the things I do with my marketing team is we debate … and some people are like, ‘We’re a fitness company, and this is what it means to be fit.’ And I have to be like, ‘No, no, no. We are actually a health and wellness company, and that comes in different shapes and sizes.'”
    Peloton has recently added “mood rides,” which are geared to different emotions such as being happy, sad or calm. These rides as well as guided meditation classes are examples of how Peloton is trying to raise awareness around the importance of mental health, in addition to keeping in shape.
    Treseder went on to say that Peloton’s rampant growth during the pandemic largely stemmed from its loyal user base sharing their personal experiences with the brand. Peloton counts 2.33 million connected fitness subscribers — people who own a Peloton product and also pay a monthly fee for access to the company’s digital workout content. 

    “The reality is when you try to force something, it just doesn’t work,” she said. “So for us, that intentional cultivation of community is really focused on finding where there are organic sparks of connection within our member base, and then kind of pouring fuel on that … shining a spotlight on those things.”
    Peloton has said it plans to soon ramp up spending on paid marketing, in order to advertise both its lower-priced Bike and its updated Tread machine.

    But Peloton also uses its now-famous team of instructors to connect with members. The trainers are active across social media platforms and frequently interact with members online.
    “We want them to be superstars,” Treseder explained. “They’re employees, and so they’re invested in the success of the company. And we are invested in their success.”
    One instructor, Cody Rigsby, is competing on ABC’s “Dancing with the Stars.” Another, Alex Toussaint, was recently signed by the athletic apparel brand Puma.
    “I give so much credit to John [Foley] because that’s a very hard thing to do. … The natural thing to do is to say let’s control them, let’s brand them,” Treseder said about Peloton’s CEO and how he thinks about the instructors. “The fact is, that actually doesn’t work, and people can see right through that.”

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    Here's how U.S. government agencies are planning to adapt to climate change

    More than 20 federal agencies published climate change adaptation plans that reveal the biggest threats global warming poses to their operations and facilities and how they plan to handle them.
    The plans, from agencies including the departments of Energy, Defense and Agriculture, come several months after President Joe Biden ordered a whole-of-government approach to combating climate change.
    “By taking action now to better manage and mitigate climate risks, we will minimize disruptions to federal operations, assets and programs while creating safer working conditions for employees,” the White House said.

    US President Joe Biden speaks to reporters on the South Lawn upon return to the White House in Washington, DC on October 5, 2021.
    Mandel Ngan | AFP | Getty Images

    More than 20 federal agencies on Thursday unveiled climate change adaptation plans that reveal the biggest threats global warming poses to their operations and facilities and suggest how they could handle them.
    The plans, published by agencies including the departments of Energy, Defense, Agriculture, Homeland Security and Transportation, come several months after President Joe Biden ordered a whole-of-government approach to combating climate change.

    Weeks after taking office, the president gave agencies four months to prepare plans outlining their exposure to climate change risk and how to deal with it.
    Some of the main themes of the plans involve:

    Protecting workers from extreme heat events
    Creating supply chains that are more resilient to more frequent and extreme weather disasters
    Assessing the impacts of poor air quality and heat on low-income, minority communities
    Making government buildings better prepared for a changing climate.

    “Agencies face a multitude of risks caused by climate change, including rising costs to maintain and repair damaged infrastructure from more frequent and extreme weather events, challenges to program effectiveness and readiness, and health and safety risks to federal employees who work outside,” according to a White House fact sheet.
    “By taking action now to better manage and mitigate climate risks, we will minimize disruptions to federal operations, assets and programs while creating safer working conditions for employees,” the fact sheet said.
    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, for instance, has developed a tool to provide heat data paired with local vulnerability data for emergency and public health planners to protect people from worsening heat events, the White House said.

    More from CNBC Climate:

    The Energy Department said it will implement clear climate adaptation requirements for contractors and suppliers to employ climate adaptation and resilience practices, as well as advance research programs for climate technologies at national laboratories.
    The Defense Department wrote that climate change poses a threat to military operations and could create new sources of conflict across the world, including conflicts over potential water shortages. The department has committed to using climate intelligence to inform military planners on where and how military installations are at risk.
    The Transportation Department wrote that climate change will make construction and commuting more difficult and dangerous. It vowed to advance greenhouse gas emissions reductions in the sector and invest in more resilient infrastructure.
    The department said it will also consider environmental justice by assessing the disproportionate impact climate change has on poor, minority communities when designing new transportation projects.
    The Treasury Department said it will work to mitigate the impacts of climate-related financial risks on financial stability. It’s also developing a plan to better sustain its supply chains, including materials required for currency and coinage production.
    Earlier this year, Biden issued an executive order requiring the creation of a governmentwide climate change risk strategy, as well as an annual assessment of climate-related financial risks in the U.S. budget.
    The order was part of the administration’s commitment to cut domestic greenhouse gas emissions in half by 2030 and achieve net-zero emissions by midcentury.

    Here are the agencies that released climate adaptation plans:1          Department of Agriculture2          Department of Commerce3          Department of Defense4          Department of Education5          Department of Energy6          Department of Health and Human Services7          Department of Homeland Security8          Department of Housing and Urban Development9          Department of the Interior10        Department of Justice11        Department of Labor12        Department of State13        Department of the Treasury14        Department of Transportation15        Department of Veterans Affairs16        U.S. International Development Finance Corporation17        Environmental Protection Agency18        General Services Administration19        National Aeronautics and Space Administration20        Office of Personnel Management21        Smithsonian Institution22        U.S. Agency for International Development23        U.S. Army Corps of Engineers

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    Fed governor anticipates new guidance on climate change for big banks

    Federal Reserve Governor Lael Brainard on Thursday said the Fed is developing scenario analysis tools to model the economic risks of climate change and assess the resilience of the entire financial system.
    She signaled the central bank will provide supervisory guidance on climate change to help banks mitigate their exposure.
    The move to develop climate scenarios puts the Fed more in line with what other major central banks are doing, including the European Central Bank and the Bank of England.

    Lael Brainard, governor of the U.S. Federal Reserve, speaks during the National Association of Business Economics (NABE) annual meeting in Arlington, Virginia, on Monday, Sept. 27, 2021.
    Al Drago | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    The U.S. Federal Reserve should advance efforts to assess big banks’ exposure to financial risks related to climate change, Fed Governor Lael Brainard said Thursday.
    Brainard said the Fed, which oversees the country’s largest banks, is developing scenario analysis tools to model the economic risks of climate change and assess the resilience of the entire financial system. She also signaled the Fed will provide supervisory guidance on climate change to help banks mitigate their exposure.

    Damage from worsening storms, floods, droughts and wildfires are among the climate change hazards that could cause massive losses and harm the economy.
    “I anticipate it will be helpful to provide supervisory guidance for large banking institutions in their efforts to appropriately measure, monitor, and manage material climate-related risks, following the lead of a number of other countries,” Brainard said in a virtual speech for a Boston Fed research conference.
    The move to develop climate scenarios and potentially provide guidance to banks puts the Fed more in line with what other major central banks are doing, including the European Central Bank and the Bank of England.
    The Fed has begun to take a more active role in climate change, including the creation of two internal committees focusing on the issue and joining the global Network for Greening the Financial System.
    Brainard’s remarks also come as Fed Chairman Jerome Powell, whose term will expire on Feb. 5, 2022, faces mounting resistance to a potential renomination by progressive Democrats, who have criticized him on issues such as financial regulation and climate change.

    More from CNBC Climate:

    Powell said earlier this year that the Fed would likely require banks to conduct their own tests to assess how vulnerable they are to climate change. He’s also maintained that climate change is not a main consideration for the central bank when formulating monetary policy.
    Brainard said that regulators face “substantial work” in addressing data gaps to assess banks’ climate-related risks. Scenario analysis can also focus on how financial institutions can insure or hedge themselves against climate-related risk, she said.
    “While reinsurance contracts and agreements among investors can transfer risk across the financial system, some level of risk is likely to remain,” she said. “Climate-related risks could build up in hidden ways that could result in cascading losses.”

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