Press Releases

Readout from a Treasury Spokesperson on Deputy Secretary Raskin's Meeting Today with Financial and Banking Information Infrastructure Committee (FBIIC) Senior Leadership on Cybersecurity

(Archived Content)


WASHINGTON - Today, Deputy Secretary Sarah Bloom Raskin hosted top officials of the Financial and Banking Information Infrastructure Committee (FBIIC) to discuss cybersecurity policy issues in the financial sector. Treasury chairs this committee of federal and state financial regulators and organizations that coordinate on critical infrastructure matters in the financial sector.

The meeting focused on the FBIIC’s continued efforts to enhance the sharing of timely, actionable information regarding cybersecurity vulnerabilities, threats, and incidents between FBIIC member organizations, other federal agencies, including law enforcement, and private entities within the financial sector. Participants also discussed how these various organizations can coordinate response efforts during a cyber-incident through joint planning and communication.

Meeting participants included:

Sarah Bloom Raskin, Deputy Secretary, U.S. Department of the Treasury

David Cotney, Chairman, Conference of State Bank Supervisors

Timothy Massad, Chairman, Commodity Futures Trading Commission

Martin Gruenberg, Chairman, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

​Janet Yellen, Chair, Federal Reserve Board

Daniel Tarullo, Governor, Federal Reserve Board

Charles Evans, President & CEO, Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago

William Dudley, President, Federal Reserve Bank of New York

Adam Hamm, Commissioner, National Association of Insurance Commissioners

Steven Pleger, Chair, National Association of State Credit Union Supervisors

Debbie Matz, Chairman, National Credit Union Administration

Thomas J. Curry, Comptroller, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency

Mary Jo White, Chair, Securities and Exchange Commission

Stephen P. Harbeck, President & CEO, Securities Investor Protection Corporation

About the FBIIC:

The FBIIC consists of 18 member organizations from across the financial regulatory community, both federal and state.  It was chartered under the President’s Working Group on Financial Markets following September 11, 2001 to improve coordination and communication among financial regulators, enhance the resiliency of the financial sector, and promote public-private partnership. 

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