News in Systemic Risk: Thursday, August 3, 2017 (10 a.m. ET)
Shared National Credit Review Finds Risk Remains High, but Underwriting and Risk Management Continue to Improve (Fed Reserve)
Were Banks Ever ‘Boring’? (New York Fed)
Vitas Vasiliauskas: Should Macroprudential Policy Target Real Estate Prices? (BIS)
US Regulators Issue Warning over ‘Aggressive’ Lending (FT)
US Treasury Advisers Warn of Borrowing Surge Risks (FT)
Payouts, Not Capital Requirements, to Blame for Fewer Bank Loans: FDIC Vice Chairman (Reuters)
Carney Says Brexit to Take Toll on Growth as BOE Cuts Forecasts (Bloomberg)
ING Chief Warns over UK Access for European Banks after Brexit (FT)
The Demise of Libor is Not a Done Deal for Markets (FT)
The Day the Credit Crunch Began, 10 Years On: ‘the World Changed’ (Guardian)
U.S. Court Puts MetLife ‘Too Big to Fail’ Case on Indefinite Pause (Reuters)
Banks Asked How the Volcker Rule Should be Revised (Bloomberg)
OCC Solicits Public Comments on Revising the Volcker Rule (OCC)
China’s Fear of Japan-Style Economic Bust Drives Crackdown on Deals, Says Source (Bloomberg)