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June 24, 2026

Federal Reserve Board’s annual bank stress test confirms that large banks are well positioned to weather a severe recession and able to continue to lend to households and businesses

For release at 4:00 p.m. EDT

The results of the Federal Reserve Board’s annual bank stress test confirmed that large banks are well positioned to weather a severe recession and able to continue to lend to households and businesses. Despite absorbing more than $708 billion in total loan losses under this year’s hypothetical scenario, capital declined only 1.6 percentage points in aggregate, staying above minimum capital requirements.

“Today’s results underscore the strength of the banking system,” Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle W. Bowman said. “As we work to increase the transparency and accountability of the stress test, public feedback will help us continue to improve and instill greater confidence in the stress test and its results.”

As the Board previously announced, today’s results will not impact large bank capital requirements, which have been published today. The current capital requirements will stay in place until 2027, when the stress test will be run with loss-estimating models that take public feedback into consideration.

All 32 banks tested remained above their minimum common equity tier 1 capital requirements during this year’s hypothetical recession scenario, which was similar in severity to the prior test. The hypothetical scenario this year included a severe global recession with a 39 percent decline in commercial real estate prices and a 30 percent decline in house prices. The unemployment rate also increased to a peak of 10 percent, and economic output declined commensurately.

Three main factors influenced the results of this year’s test, with two leading to a larger decline in the aggregate capital ratio than last year, and one more than offsetting this decline:

  • Projected capital decreased from higher loan losses due to increased loan balances and the increased severity of certain scenario variables;
  • Projected capital decreased from lower projected unrealized gains in bank securities due to smaller hypothetical declines in interest rates during the scenario; and
  • Projected capital increased from higher interest income due to recent bank financial performance and smaller hypothetical declines of interest rates during the scenario.

The total projected losses include roughly $200 billion in credit card losses, $160 billion in losses from commercial and industrial loans, and $75 billion in losses from commercial real estate.

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Last Update:
June 24, 2026