Housing starts and building permits data released at 8:30 a.m. … SEC enforcement director Gurbir Grewal testifies before a House Financial Services subcommittee at 10 a.m. … Senate Banking hearing on racism and discrimination in banking at 10:15 a.m. … Senate Banking hearing on homelessness at 2:30 p.m. … Fed Vice Chair Lael Brainard speaks at Minneapolis Fed conference on the Community Reinvestment Act at 2:35 p.m. THE NEW BAGEHOT PROJECT — For policymakers in the midst of a market panic, being able to pull programs off the shelf rather than build them from scratch is essential. It's why the most successful efforts to avoid a full-blown financial crisis in the early days of the pandemic were ones that had been tried and tested in 2008, says Andrew Metrick, director of the Yale Program on Financial Stability and a former economist at the Obama Council of Economic Advisers. But honing those crisis-fighting measures often takes a backseat to efforts to prevent future crises from happening. That's why researchers at Yale began building a database five years ago, which they'll unveil today, with detailed case studies of hundreds of financial crises around the world, dating back to the mid-1800s. Dubbed the New Bagehot Project , the idea is to provide a platform for policymakers to study up during times of calm and use as a resource when markets go off the rails. "We try to understand, in those specific interventions, what seemed to work, what was a good idea, what was a bad idea, really down into the nitty-gritty details," Metrick said. "So that the next time this happens, if somebody really understands these details and has studied them before and knows how to access them, we will avoid at least making the same mistakes we made before." The program also announced today that it has raised another $7.5 million to continue building out the platform over the next five years, with donors including Bloomberg Philanthropies and Dalio Philanthropies. You can catch more details on the project at a 9 a.m. webinar presentation Yale is hosting today. DON'T MISS — Yale also published a transcript of an interview between senior research associate Steven Kelly and Scott Alvarez, the former Fed general counsel often referred to as the eighth Fed governor because of the power he wielded at the central bank. The conversation delves into the Fed's emergency lending authority. Among the newsy nuggets: Alvarez says those powers don't give the central bank the legal authority to buy stocks. LIANG: ANY BANK AFFILIATE SHOULD BE ALLOWED TO ISSUE STABLECOINS — Our Victoria Guida: "A top Treasury official on Monday said the department is working with Congress to pass legislation governing stablecoins that would allow any affiliate of a bank to issue the tokens. In remarks at a Financial Services Forum conference, Nellie Liang said any legislation governing stablecoins, whose value is pegged to an underlying asset like the dollar, would be aimed at allowing both banks and nonbanks to issue the tokens." HOW JOE MANCHIN LEFT A GLOBAL TAX DEAL IN LIMBO — Just last month, Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen privately assured Ireland's finance minister, Paschal Donohoe, that the Biden administration would hold up its end of a global tax agreement brokered by the United States, NYT's Alan Rappeport and Jim Tankersley wrote. "It turns out that Ms. Yellen was overly optimistic." But, but — Jared Bernstein, a member of the president's Council of Economic Advisers, said at a White House briefing Monday that "any rumors of its demise are hugely premature." (h/t Alan) WORD OF TRUMP MEDIA DEAL LEAKED MONTHS IN ADVANCE — NYT's Matthew Goldstein: "Employees at the Miami investment firm, Rocket One Capital, had learned of the pending deal over the summer, long before it was announced, according to three people familiar with the firm's internal discussions. Two of the people said that Rocket One officials at the time talked about ways to profit off the soon-to-be-announced transaction with Trump Media & Technology Group by investing in the SPAC, Digital World Acquisition Corporation. … Federal prosecutors and regulators are now investigating the merger." TREASURY APPROVES $940M IN SMALL BUSINESS CAPITAL FUNDS FOR NINE STATES — Reuters' David Lawder: "The U.S. Treasury Department on Monday said it approved nine state plans for the State Small Business Credit Initiative worth $940 million, bringing total approvals under the COVID-19 recovery venture capital program to $1.5 billion." HOUSE PREPS FISCAL 2023 MINIBUS — House Democrats have teed up their first fiscal 2023 funding package for floor action this week, approving amendments for debate as the chamber prepares to pass the six-bill bundle, our Jennifer Scholtes reports. The House Rules Committee voted Monday to ready the package, H.R. 8294 (117), which combines half of the 12 annual funding bills, including the Financial Services spending bill.
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