"The Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC) and its Office of Financial Research (OFR)
were established by the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (P.L. 111-
203) to address several potential sources of systemic risk. Some observers argue that
communication and coordination of financial regulators was insufficient to prevent the financial
crisis of 2008. To foster coordination and communication, the FSOC assembles the heads of
federal financial regulators, representatives from state regulatory bodies, and an independent
insurance expert in a single venue. The OFR supports the FSOC with data collection, research,
and analysis.
The FSOC does not generally have direct regulatory authority; its role is to make policy
recommendations to member agencies where authority already exists or to Congress where
additional authority is needed. However, it is responsible for monitoring financial stability and
designating nonbank financial companies and financial market utilities as systemic, which
subjects those entities to heightened prudential regulation and the direct regulatory authority of
other agencies. The FSOC considers a company to pose a threat to financial stability if a
company’s financial distress or activities could be transmitted to other firms or markets, causing
broader disruptions to financial intermediation or other financial market functions. Three of the
many relevant factors used for designation include leverage, interconnectedness with other
systemically important nonbank financial institutions (SIFIs), and whether a primary prudential
regulator already has responsibility for the SIFI and the activity..."
Financial Stability Oversight
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