2 Top Federal Reserve Officials Retire After Trading Disclosures



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Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas President Robert Kaplan, seen in May 2017, will step down in early October.

Richard Drew/AP




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Richard Drew/AP

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Eric Rosengren said Monday, that he will retire on Sept 30 and disclosed that he has qualified for a kidney transplant. Rosengren’s announcement comes after investments by him and other Fed officials last year have come under scrutiny and raised questions about the Fed’s ethics rules.

Steven Senne/AP


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Steven Senne/AP

Eric Rosengren said Monday, that he will retire on Sept 30 and disclosed that he has qualified for a kidney transplant. Rosengren’s announcement comes after investments by him and other Fed officials last year have come under scrutiny and raised questions about the Fed’s ethics rules.

Steven Senne/AP

«The departure of Rosengren and Kaplan should ease pressure on Powell, who notably failed to express confidence in the two presidents» at a news conference last week, said Krishna Guha, an analyst at the investment bank Evercore ISI.

The presidents of the 12 regional banks participate in the Fed’s private policymaking meetings, in which they discuss the central bank’s interest-rate policies and are privy to economic data not always available to the public. The Fed’s decisions can cause sharp swings in financial markets. So can the presidents’ speeches and comments to the media.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell said last week that the Fed would change its ethics policies in the wake of the disclosures. Yet the Fed may still face pressure to allow an outside investigation into whether the two officials, or any others, traded based on inside information about the Fed’s actions.

«After this egregious breach of public trust, nothing but a full investigation and a referral to the (Securities and Exchange Commission) is acceptable,» said Jeff Hauser, director of the Revolving Door Project, a nonprofit group that monitors government appointments.

Last year, Kaplan made trades worth at least $1 million in 22 stocks and index funds, including Amazon, Chevron, Facebook, and Johnson & Johnson.

«The Federal Reserve is approaching a critical point in our economic recovery as it deliberates the future path of monetary policy,» Kaplan said in a written statement. «Unfortunately, the recent focus on my financial disclosure risks becoming a distraction.» Kaplan said he would resign Oct. 8.

Rosengren had invested in funds that owned mortgage-backed bonds, the same kind that the Fed has been buying hundreds of billions of dollars’ worth this year.

Rosengren said he became eligible last year for a kidney transplant and said the stress of working at the Fed during the pandemic recession worsened his health.

«It has become clear that I should aim to reduce my stress so that I can focus on my health issues,» he said.

Rosengren and Kaplan were not voting members of the Fed’s policymaking committee this year, but they contributed to forecasts of the Fed’s interest rate policy, which last week showed the Fed was considering hiking its short-term rate, currently at nearly zero, by the end of 2022. That was a shift from June, when the Fed’s projections did not show any hike until 2023.

Both are considered relatively «hawkish» policymakers, meaning that they often favor higher interest rates to counter inflation.

Powell’s own financial disclosures show that he owned municipal bonds in 2020, even though the Fed began purchasing such bonds for the first time last year in order to stabilize that market. Powell, who was a private equity executive before being appointed to the Fed’s board in 2012, said last week he had owned munis for years and cleared his continued ownership with the Office of Government Ethics.

At last week’s press conference, Powell touched on a reason that these ethics concerns have flared: Previously, municipal bonds were seen as a safe asset for Fed officials to own, because the Fed didn’t buy or sell them. Yet last year it did, and it also began buying corporate bonds for the first time.

The Boston Fed’s first vice president, Kenneth C. Montgomery, will take over as acting president and CEO. Dallas Fed First Vice President Meredith Black will become interim president.

Fed regional bank presidents are chosen by the six members of each bank’s board of directors who are not bankers. Directors who are affiliated with banks are prohibited by law from participating.



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