Basel Capital Rules Could Free $1 Trillion for Banks, Reshaping Risk Asset Demand

What You Need to Know
- Eight major US banks oppose Basel capital requirements that would increase trading desk buffers by 30% to 89%.
- Federal Reserve officials acknowledge existing leverage ratio rules constrain Treasury market intermediation and distort capital allocation.
- Regulators proposed modernizing capital framework in March 2026, potentially freeing $1 trillion in additional lending capacity.
- Crypto prices correlate with monetary expansion through liquidity conditions rather than direct regulatory mechanisms.
Eight major US banks are pushing back against Basel capital requirements that their own estimates suggest would raise trading desk capital buffers by 30% to 89%, arguing the rules would impair Treasury market liquidity and, by extension, functioning across every major asset class. The lobbying effort targets a specific technical point: how sovereign debt risk is treated under the Basel framework. The stakes are larger than a bank accounting dispute.
The backdrop matters. Federal Reserve Vice Chair for Supervision Michelle Bowman has already proposed recalibrating the enhanced supplementary leverage ratio, arguing the existing rules “distorted capital allocation” and constrained broker-dealers central to Treasury market intermediation. Fed Chair Jerome Powell acknowledged in a June 2025 statement that the leverage ratio had become “more binding” as banks accumulated Treasuries and reserves. The Federal Reserve, OCC, and FDIC issued a joint request for comment on modernizing the capital framework in March 2026. Morgan Stanley analysts estimate the combined changes could free up roughly $1 trillion in additional lending capacity across US banks, though that capital could flow toward buybacks or acquisitions rather than new credit.
That $1 trillion figure is a ceiling, not a forecast, and the distribution of it matters more than the headline number.
For crypto, the transmission mechanism runs through liquidity conditions rather than any direct regulatory link. Research from the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago found that expansionary monetary shocks increase Bitcoin prices and trading volumes, consistent with crypto behaving as a risk asset rather than an uncorrelated store of value. A 2024 Bank for International Settlements report identified global dollar liquidity as a primary driver of crypto fund flows. Looser bank capital rules would ease one constraint on that liquidity, particularly in Treasury markets where dysfunction in 2020 and regional bank stress in 2023 both demonstrated how quickly collateral chains seize. If dealers can intermediate more freely, the baseline financial conditions underpinning risk appetite improve, and crypto historically benefits from that environment with a lag.
The international dimension complicates any clean outcome. The European Commission and Bank of England have already delayed their own Basel III implementation, watching Washington’s moves before committing. The ECB announced plans in late 2025 to streamline regulatory requirements without formally cutting capital buffers. If US banks gain a structural capital advantage, regulators elsewhere face pressure to match rather than hold the line, which is how post-crisis frameworks tend to erode incrementally rather than collapse at once. The 2008 regulatory architecture is not being dismantled; it is being renegotiated piece by piece, jurisdiction by jurisdiction, and the cumulative effect on global risk appetite may only become legible well after the individual decisions are made.
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