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US banking rules may affect South African banks over reputational risk closures
The Mercury
|March 28, 2025
A LEGAL expert with deep knowledge of regulation of financial institutions has warned that the United States’ legislation against the closure of bank accounts due to reputational risks could see SA banks sanctioned if they close accounts of businesses in which US companies or individuals are invested.
This comes as the Banking Committee announced this week that the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) will eliminate reputational risk as a factor in bank supervision, following the passage of Senator Tim Scott’s Financial Regulation and Regulation Management (FIRM) Act.
The FIRM Act aims to remove reputational risk as a concern of federal financial institutions intimidating or pressuring businesses with business or individuals due to concerns about reputational risk. The legislation aims to scrap this concept across all federal banking regulators.
In an interview with Business Report on Thursday, the legal expert who preferred to keep his anonymity said banks were now in limbo as to resolve in the way they were arbitrarily, using reputational risk. “Reputational risk has got no parameters, and has got no level of calibration, take everything else that is legal, you’ve got to do something which must trigger something to get to the conclusion that something is happening,” explained the legal expert.
“That’s how our law functions.
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