Financial Stability Oversight Council Releases Report on Climate-Related Financial Risk

Environment
Published

The Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC) today released its report on Climate-Related Financial Risk.

The report includes more than 30 specific recommendations to U.S. financial regulators, and lays out necessary actions to identify and address climate-related risks to the U.S. financial system, which include warming temperatures, rising sea levels, droughts, wildfires, intensifying storms and other climate-related events that are already imposing significant costs on the public and U.S. economy.

Established under the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act, the FSOC provides comprehensive monitoring of the stability of the nation’s financial system.

The recommendations that the FSOC and its members can adopt to strengthen the financial system and make it more resilient to climate-related shocks and vulnerabilities fall into four broad categories:

  1. Building capacity and expanding efforts to address climate-related financial risks
  2. Filling climate-related data and methodological gaps
  3. Enhancing public climate-related disclosures
  4. Assessing and mitigating climate-related risks that could threaten the stability of the financial system

One key takeaway from the report regarding the banking sector is there is no bank capital charge. In other words, the report does not seek to impose a capital charge on banks for climate change risk.

View the Treasury Department press release and fact sheet on the climate report.

Subscribe to NAHBNow

Log in or create account to subscribe to notifications of new posts.

Log in to subscribe

Latest from NAHBNow

Advocacy

Apr 03, 2026

NAHB’s Monthly Update Features a Codes Victory and Economic Snapshot

The talking points this month feature news related to federal energy code mandates and the current economic conditions for the housing industry.

Safety

Apr 02, 2026

Call Before You Dig: 6 Key Steps to Prevent Utility Strikes on the Jobsite

April’s National Safe Digging Month is a timely reminder for builders, contractors and trade partners to prioritize one of the most critical and often overlooked jobsite safety practices: preventing utility strikes.

View all

Latest Economic News

Economics

Apr 03, 2026

Job Growth Rebounds in March

The U.S. labor market showed signs of a modest rebound in March following a weak February, as payroll employment increased and the unemployment rate edged down to 4.3%. Job growth was led by healthcare, construction, and transportation and warehousing.

Economics

Apr 02, 2026

Iran Conflict Reverses Decline in Mortgage Rates

Mortgage rates, which dipped below 6% in February, climbed back up to end the month just under 6.4%. According to Freddie Mac, the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage averaged 6.18% in March, 13 points (bps) higher than February. The average 15-year rate also increased by the same amount to 5.56%. Despite the recent increase, both rates remain lower than a year ago by 47 bps and 27 bps, respectively.

Economics

Apr 01, 2026

Consumer Confidence Climbs Despite Oil Price Surge

Consumer confidence in March rose to a three-month high as consumers’ improved view of current business and labor market conditions outweighed weaker future expectations.