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Home»Regulation»Fed stress tests reveal whether banks can survive a 10% unemployment shock
Regulation

Fed stress tests reveal whether banks can survive a 10% unemployment shock

NBTCBy NBTC29/06/2026No Comments9 Mins Read
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All 32 of America’s largest banks made it through the Federal Reserve’s annual stress test on June 24. This year’s scenario was unusually brutal: the Fed asked them to imagine unemployment climbing to 10%, commercial real estate prices falling 39%, home prices dropping 30%, and roughly $708 billion in losses landing across the group all at once, and even with all of that piled on, the banks came out the other side still holding enough capital to keep lending and keep paying their shareholders.

Here’s where it gets a little strange, though. For all the attention this exercise tends to draw, this year’s results won’t actually change how much capital any of those banks have to hold, because the Fed decided back in February to freeze its stress capital buffer requirements until 2027 while it overhauls the models underneath them.

So what you’re really looking at here is the most closely watched exam in American banking being passed with straight As with almost nothing riding on the outcome.

A stress test with no stakes attached this year

To understand why any of this exists in the first place, we have to go back to 2008. When the financial system nearly came apart that year, a handful of enormous, overleveraged banks got into so much trouble that Washington felt it had no real choice but to bail them out, since letting them fail looked like it would drag everyone else even further down.

The response, a couple of years later, was the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, named for Senator Chris Dodd and Congressman Barney Frank and signed into law in 2010.

Dodd-Frank rewired much of how the US regulates Wall Street. It created a council of regulators to monitor firms large enough to threaten the financial system, established the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau to oversee mortgages and credit cards, and introduced the Volcker Rule to stop banks from making speculative bets with federally insured deposits. Most relevant here, it also required the largest banks to prove they could survive a severe downturn without needing another taxpayer-backed rescue.

That last requirement is the yearly stress test, and banks don’t get to choose their own scenario; they learn the exact assumptions only when the Fed publishes them, which prevents any bank from tailoring its books to a test it can already see coming.

The assumptions the Fed handed over this year were pretty severe. A global recession in which unemployment jumps from 5.5% all the way to a 10% peak, commercial real estate prices collapse by 39%, home prices fall 30%, markets turn violently volatile, and stress works its way through corporate debt, and then, on top of all of that, the banks with the biggest trading desks have to absorb a global market shock and the sudden default of their single largest counterparty.

These shocks feed one another: as unemployment climbs, more borrowers default; as property values sink, the losses on real estate lending deepen; and as markets sell off, the trading revenue a bank would normally lean on to cushion the blow dries up at the exact moment it’s needed most.

When the Fed tallied it all up, it came to roughly $200 billion in credit card losses, around $160 billion on commercial and industrial loans, and about $75 billion tied to commercial real estate. And yet, after swallowing every bit of that, the group’s common equity tier 1 ratio, which is the capital cushion that absorbs losses, slipped only 1.6 percentage points and stayed comfortably above the required minimum.

It helps to put those figures in context, too: the stress test covered 32 banks this year, up from 22 in 2025, and the modeled losses climbed to $708 billion from about $550 billion the year before, so this was a wider and harsher version of the exam than the one banks sat through last time.

The Fed’s Vice Chair for Supervision, Michelle Bowman, framed all of this as proof that the banking system is resilient, and she has a fair point just based on the raw numbers.

But the buffer freeze makes this success almost meaningless. In a normal year, a strong result earns a bank a little more room to raise its dividend and buy back stock, while a weak one tightens the leash, but with the buffers locked in place until 2027, the 2026 scores simply don’t set any new requirements at all.

That’s why analysts at KBW were comfortable shrugging the whole thing off as the banks going through the motions, even as they noted that Morgan Stanley, Citigroup, Citizens Financial, and KeyCorp would have taken the biggest hits to their buffers if the results had actually counted for anything.

But the stress test does serve as a yearly health check on the system, and the scenario this time leaned heavily on commercial real estate and a higher-for-longer interest rate path, which has been pressuring regional banks since 2023.

A clean pass tells you the country’s largest institutions can take that kind of punishment. What it doesn’t tell you, though, is how the smaller banks would react. The 2023 failures began at small- and mid-sized regional banks, and that gap traces right back to Dodd-Frank itself.

Congress softened the law in 2018, lifting the asset threshold for the toughest supervision from $50 billion up to $250 billion, and when Silicon Valley Bank and a couple of its peers collapsed five years later, a big part of the post-mortem was that those were exactly the mid-sized lenders the 2018 change had let slip out of the strictest tier.

Investors keep a close eye on the outcome regardless, because a pass is essentially a verdict on whether credit will continue to flow once the economy turns. That verdict shapes everything from lending expectations to bank valuations to the broader sense of confidence in the system, all well before any formal capital rule takes effect.

How does this affect Bitcoin?

Bitcoin is now much closer to the banking system than it once was. Banks are the institutions that ultimately decide how freely money moves through the economy, so when they pull back, financial conditions tighten across every risk asset at once, and the leveraged corners of crypto tend to feel it first, since borrowing costs and margin terms there shift quickly the moment banks turn cautious.

You can see how sensitive Bitcoin has become to all of this in the way it’s traded through June. It’s been hovering around $60,000, down roughly 52% from the $126,080 record it set last October, pressed lower by a strong dollar, rising Treasury yields, and a hawkish Fed that’s signaled it intends to keep its policy rate higher through the rest of 2026.

Spot Bitcoin ETFs have become the marginal buyer and seller in this cycle, and in early June, they bled a record $3.4 billion in a single week as institutions rushed to lock in gains and trim risk.

The very same allocators who hold bank stocks and Treasury bonds are very often the ones holding those ETFs, so when they decide to step back, Bitcoin now tends to move right along with them. A banking sector that looks sturdy helps sustain the broad appetite for risk that crypto feeds on, while a banking sector under visible strain can genuinely cut both ways.

Both of these things happened just a few years ago. When Silicon Valley Bank went down in March 2023, Bitcoin actually jumped, because a slice of investors treated it as an escape hatch from a wobbling banking system.

But amid a broad risk-off stampede, as liquidity drained from everything at once, BTC sold hard alongside stocks and credit. Which of those two instincts wins out tends to come down to whether the stress looks like a banking problem or a liquidity problem, and a stress test that reassures everyone the banks are solid effectively pushes the next scare toward the liquidity.

Hedging, where people buy Bitcoin to get away from the banks, used to be more or less the entire pitch. It carries less of the weight now, only because banks, asset managers, ETF issuers, and corporate treasuries all hold real, direct exposure to crypto these days, which laces the two worlds together far more tightly than in any previous cycle.

And the macro backdrop isn’t doing Bitcoin many favors either: the Fed’s June projections nudged the median expectation for the 2026 policy rate up to 3.8% from 3.4% back in March, with nearly half the committee now penciling in an outright hike, and every notch higher tightens the financial conditions crypto depends on.

There’s an irony buried in all of this, which is that a stress test confirming the banks are perfectly fine doubles as confirmation that the Fed has room to stay restrictive without much fear of breaking anything, and the ETF complex has already spent much of the year learning what that feels like, posting outflows nearly every time the rate path firmed up.

So the 2026 stress test ended up as a strange sort of non-event. The Fed ran its harshest scenario in years; the banks cleared it without breaking a sweat, and the scores will now sit on a shelf until 2027 without forcing a single institution to set aside an extra dollar of capital.

What the exercise still does, though, is show you exactly where regulators believe the danger is concentrated, and right now that’s commercial real estate, corporate debt, and interest rates that won’t ease.

Bitcoin is affected by the conditions the test sketched out, because that tight, high-rate backdrop is the very thing that’s been pulling money out of crypto all month. The banks, as it turns out, are built to survive that environment, but Bitcoin is still learning how to trade in it.

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NBTC

NBTC is the editorial account for NBTC News, covering Bitcoin, Ethereum, DeFi, blockchain infrastructure, exchanges, mining, regulation and digital asset markets. The editorial team focuses on clear sourcing, timely updates and practical context for crypto readers.

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