Basel II Standardized Approach for Small Banks -
Implementation & Post Implementation Issues

Mark E. Van Der Weide
Assistant General Counsel
Federal Reserve Board

Mark E. Van Der Weide is an assistant general counsel in the Legal Division of the Federal Reserve Board in Washington, D.C. Mr. Van Der Weide’s primary responsibilities at the Federal Reserve Board include drafting rules and interpretive guidance relating to the Board’s capital adequacy guidelines (including Basel II-related rulemakings), Regulation Y (particularly permissible activities and investments for bank holding companies and financial holding companies, control, and tying), Regulation W (transactions between banks and their affiliates), and Regulation O (extensions of credit by banks to their insiders). Mr. Van Der Weide also has been involved in the review of proposals of bank holding companies to acquire banks and nonbanking companies and proposals by private equity funds and sovereign wealth funds to make investments in banks and bank holding companies.

Prior to joining the Federal Reserve Board in 1998, Mr. Van Der Weide worked as an associate in the Washington, D.C., office of Cleary, Gottlieb, Steen & Hamilton. At Cleary, Mr. Van Der Weide drafted and negotiated documentation for securities offerings, structured finance transactions, separate investment accounts, joint ventures, and mergers and acquisitions.

Mr. Van Der Weide received a J.D. degree from Yale Law School in 1995 and a B.A. degree in history and philosophy from the University of Iowa in 1992.

Mr. Van Der Weide has published articles on corporate, banking, and administrative law in the Notre Dame Law Review, the Boston College Law Review, and The Delaware Journal of Corporate Law.

» back

Teresa A. Scott
Counsel (Banking & Finance), Regulations and Legislation Division
Office of Thrift Supervision

Teresa A. Scott is a Senior Analyst, Capital Policy Division for the Office of Thrift Supervision. She has worked extensively on rulemakings and guidance pertaining to risk transference (recourse) for federal banking organizations. Over the past two years she has served as the primary OTS staff for development of domestic capital modernization, also known as Basel 1I Standardized Approach. Teresa earned a J.D. from the Howard University School of Law, a M.S. in Finance from the Carey School of Business at the Johns Hopkins University, and a B.A. from the University of Tennessee at Knoxville.

» back

Michael E. Bleier
Partner
Reed Smith LLP

Michael is a member of the Financial Industry Group and a member of Financial Services Regulatory Group. Michael joined Reed Smith after serving for nearly 14 years as General Counsel for Mellon Financial Corporation and Mellon Bank, NA, and as manager of legal affairs. Prior to joining Mellon in 1982, he was in the Legal Division of the Federal Reserve Board in Washington, DC for 11 years; when he left the Federal Reserve he was Assistant General Counsel, responsible for the bank holding company area. At Mellon, Michael was actively involved in its expansion, both in the banking and nonbanking areas and in its dealings with the federal and state bank regulatory authorities, as well as with the Congress and the state legislatures. He played a key role in Mellon's growth and transformation into primarily a fee-based business. He was intimately involved in Mellon's Pennsylvania statewide expansion, the creation and implementation of Mellon's good bank/bad bank transaction, the transformative and groundbreaking Boston Company and Dreyfus acquisitions, and in dealing with the federal regulators and Congress on the Basel II risk-based capital rules.

At Reed Smith he has counseled General Counsel clients, filed expansion applications with the Federal Reserve, the Comptroller of the Currency and the FDIC, and also also advised financial institution clients on an array of regulatory matters.

Experience
2007 - Reed Smith
1982 - Mellon Financial Corporation and Mellon Bank, N.A. – Since 1992, General Counsel and Executive Vice President. Responsible for the day-to-day operations of Mellon’s Legal Department, which employed a staff of 70 lawyers at 12 locations worldwide
1971 - Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Washington, D.C.) – Assistant General Counsel
Responsible for the bank holding company areas in the General Counsel’s office

» back

Michael L. Stevens
SVP & Director of Regulatory Affairs
Conference of State Bank Supervisors (CSBS)

Mike serves as the Senior Vice President for Regulatory Policy at the Conference of State Bank Supervisors (CSBS). In this capacity, Mike represents the state banking system in the development of federal regulatory policy in the areas of consumer protection and safety and soundness. He is also responsible for any issues related to the coordination and cooperation between state and federal regulators. Mike serves as the staff director for the Regulatory Committee, State Federal Working Group, and the FFIEC’s State Liaison Committee. Prior to this assignment, Mike worked in all facets of CSBS’s Professional Development Division. He is a frequent instructor and speaker on bank examination, bank financial analysis and regulatory issues. Mike serves on the faculty of the Graduate School of Banking at Colorado, the Texas Tech Bank School and the Graduate School of Bank Investments and Financial Management. Prior to joining CSBS in 1999, Mike was a bank examiner for the Iowa Division of Banking for 11 years.

Mike is a graduate of the University of Nebraska at Omaha. He lives in Ashburn, Virginia with his wife, Becki, and two children.

» back

Jeffrey A. Brown
Managing Director
Promontory Financial Group

Mr. Brown is a Managing Director at Promontory Financial Group, specializing in Basel II capital standards, credit scoring, and risk management. He has over fifteen years experience working with the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC).

Prior to joining Promontory, Mr. Brown was the Senior Deputy Comptroller for International and Economic Affairs at the OCC. There he was responsible for providing economic expertise, fostering relationships with foreign supervisors, and preparing the agency to examine quantitative aspects of regulatory capital determination under forthcoming Basel II standards. As a member of the OCC’s Executive Committee, he contributed to the strategic direction and administrative policy of the agency.

Earlier, Mr. Brown served as Director of the OCC’s Risk Analysis Division, where he was responsible for examining banks’ use of credit scoring models and training other examiners. He was a member of the Basel II Steering Committee, responsible for advice on policy positions and the development of implementation plans.

Mr. Brown has contributed to numerous publications and conferences related to credit rating and risk management. He holds a B.A. in Political Science and Economics from the University of Iowa and a Ph.D. in Economics from Brown University.

» back

Basel II
LIVE Teleconference Speaker Firms:

Federal Reserve Board

Office of Thrift Supervision