The Federal Reserve said Tuesday it will publish results from its annual bank stress test on June 24 at 4 p.m. EDT.
The assessment will examine whether 32 large banks hold sufficient capital to absorb losses and continue lending to households and businesses in the event of a severe recession. The exercise projects potential losses, estimates net revenue and evaluates capital levels under a hypothetical downturn to measure the institutions' resilience.
This year's hypothetical scenario envisions a severe global recession that brings heightened pressure across both commercial and residential real estate markets and strains corporate debt markets. The stress test framework was created in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis to provide a structured health check of major banking institutions' capacity to withstand severe economic shocks.
The Fed stressed that the upcoming stress test results will not alter large bank capital requirements for the current year. In February, the central bank said it would keep existing stress test capital buffer requirements unchanged until 2027. At that point, new buffer requirements may be calculated based on loss-estimating models, and those calculations will incorporate public feedback on the models.
Regulators employ the stress test as one tool among others to assess how large Wall Street lenders might perform under acute economic strain. The Fed uses capital measurements as a protective cushion against potential losses during downturns, with the stress test offering a scenario-based view of how losses, revenues and capital ratios could evolve under an adverse path.
Investors, bank managers and market participants typically watch the results closely because the exercise illuminates vulnerabilities and strengths within major banks' balance sheets, especially around underwriting exposure and funding resilience. For this edition, the explicit focus on commercial and residential real estate and corporate debt underscores the sectors the Fed considers likely stress channels under the assumed recession.
Summary of what will be released
- Release date and time: June 24 at 4 p.m. EDT.
- Scope: 32 large banks evaluated for loss absorption and continued lending capacity.
- Measures: projected losses, net revenue, and capital levels under a hypothetical severe global recession scenario.