By Ryan Tracy 

A central part of the 2010 Dodd Frank financial law is about to get its own stress test.

MetLife Inc. will try to persuade a federal judge Wednesday that it shouldn't be designated a "systemically important financial institution, " in the first court hearing of a case with potential either to curtail or to solidify the law's reach. A ruling is likely months away.

The company wants the court to nullify its "SIFI" label--a tag the law created for financial firms that pose a risk to the economy and must receive stricter federal oversight. But its broad legal attack could also hamstring the Financial Stability Oversight Council, the new regulatory group created by Dodd-Frank to identify risky activities and financial firms, by overturning one of its most significant accomplishments.

MetLife, the largest U.S. life insurer by assets and known for its smiling Snoopy mascot, has hired a lawyer with a bulldog track record of overturning Dodd-Frank rules in court: Eugene Scalia, a partner at Gibson Dunn & Crutcher LLP and a son of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia.

The lawsuit, filed in January 2015, stems from a 9-1 vote by the oversight council in December 2014 to designate MetLife as a SIFI, sending the company to the Federal Reserve for potentially stiff capital and other requirements that have yet to be determined.

MetLife is the first SIFI to sue the oversight council, known as FSOC. If it succeeds in upending its SIFI designation, it may not be the last. Three other SIFIs--insurers American International Group Inc. and Prudential Financial Inc. and General Electric Co.'s financing arm, GE Capital--are watching the case closely and would likely mount their own challenges if MetLife prevails.

Already, the tougher regulation expected to come with SIFI status is causing major changes at GE and MetLife, and possibly AIG. In April 2015, General Electric made one of the biggest strategic moves in its history by laying plans to get out of the banking business--at the heart of its SIFI designation--and refocus on its industrial operations.

Last month, MetLife announced a plan driven by both strategy and regulatory reasons to divest a chunk of its operations that could be small enough to avoid the SIFI tag.

AIG is currently resisting a proposal by activist investor Carl Icahn to break into three parts as a way to shed its SIFI designation, saying such a split isn't in shareholders' best interests for many reasons.

A legal victory for MetLife could be a defining moment, signaling that regulatory restrictions for those firms will diminish.

An FSOC victory, on the other hand, would protect what Dodd-Frank proponents consider a major accomplishment of the law: extending broad federal supervision to major financial firms that operated before the financial crisis without a regulator watching over their consolidated operations.

"If the court adds new obligations or makes it harder for FSOC to" designate SIFIs, "it would be undoing, rewriting, or undermining arguably the most significant part of Dodd-Frank," said Robert Jackson, a Columbia University law professor who worked at the Treasury Department during the development of the law. Mr. Jackson filed a legal brief last year supporting FSOC.

A decision by Judge Rosemary M. Collyer of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia would likely be appealed by the losing side, so her opinion isn't the last chapter in the case. Judge Collyer, appointed to the court by President George W. Bush, doesn't have an ideological reputation.

Mr. Scalia, who is expected to argue the case for MetLife, has successfully challenged a half-dozen actions by the Securities and Exchange Commission and Commodity Futures Trading Commission, including rules mandated by Dodd-Frank.

For MetLife, Mr. Scalia is reprising a familiar role, arguing that a regulatory agency made an arbitrary decision without properly considering its costs. In court filings, MetLife and its lawyers say the oversight council concocted "unprecedented doomsday scenarios," such as panicked life insurance policyholders canceling their policies en masse, to justify the conclusion that distress at the company could put the U.S. financial system at risk.

"If an agency can make assumptions without empirical evidence, where are the boundaries of where regulatory agencies can't go?" said Thomas Vartanian, a partner at Dechert LLP who helped write a brief supporting MetLife for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

FSOC, which is headed by Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew and includes the leaders of the Fed, SEC and other agencies, has said that Congress didn't require it to do a cost-benefit analysis or to determine the likelihood of significant distress at MetLife.

"Congress undoubtedly recognized that no company is immune from distress or failure," FSOC's lawyers said in a recent court filing.

Leslie Scism contributed to this article.

Write to Ryan Tracy at ryan.tracy@wsj.com

 

(END) Dow Jones Newswires

February 09, 2016 13:50 ET (18:50 GMT)

Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
General Electric (NYSE:GE)
Historical Stock Chart
From Feb 2024 to Mar 2024 Click Here for more General Electric Charts.
General Electric (NYSE:GE)
Historical Stock Chart
From Mar 2023 to Mar 2024 Click Here for more General Electric Charts.