Fed watchdog clears top officials of violations over stock trades

July 18, 2022 | 13:00
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The Federal Reserve watchdog has cleared two top officials of wrongdoing over stock trades that created an uproar, prompting several to leave their posts and led to rule changes at the central bank.
Fed watchdog clears top officials of violations over stock trades
Fed watchdog clears top officials of violations over stock trades, illustration photo/ source: freepik.com

A key focus was trading by former Fed vice chair Richard Clarida in February 2020, just as the central bank was preparing to slash interest rates to support the economy, which sent stock prices higher. Clarida resigned in January 2022, two weeks before his term was up.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell also was a target of the probe for trading by his family trust in 2019, during trading blackout periods around Fed policy meetings.

In a memo to Powell, the Office of Inspector General for the Federal Reserve Board, said "we did not find evidence to substantiate the allegations that former vice chair Clarida or you violated laws, rules, regulations, or policies related to trading activities."

But they noted that Clarida failed to report the trades in question.

The probe did not cover the activities of Dallas Fed bank chief Robert Kaplan or his Boston counterpart Eric Rosengren, who resigned last year amid the controversy.

The watchdog is conducting a separate review on their activities.

Critics say the officials benefited from inside information on Fed policy and interest rates.

The two officials also engaged in large stock trades in 2020, at a time when the central bank was aggressively acting to support the US economy amid the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic.

Clarida reportedly moved between $1 million and $5 million into a stock fund from a bond fund in February 2020, a day before Powell announced the central bank could take action as the Covid-19 pandemic worsened.

Weeks later, the Fed slashed its benchmark lending rate to zero and pumped trillions of dollars of liquidity into the financial system to keep it functioning as the pandemic caused a sharp downturn.

US stock markets plunged, but then shot up in the months to follow in a rally seen as partially fueled by the Fed's easy money policies.

Under new rules adopted in January, Fed officials are banned from holding individual stocks, bonds, cryptocurrencies and certain other investments, and cannot trade "during periods of heightened financial market stress."

AFP

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