Incentive-Based Compensation Arrangements, 21170-21219 [2011-7937]
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21170
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 72 / Thursday, April 14, 2011 / Proposed Rules
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency
12 CFR Part 42
[Docket No. OCC–2011–0001]
RIN 1557–AD39
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 236
[Docket No. R–1410]
RIN 7100–AD69
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION
12 CFR Part 372
RIN 3064–AD56
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of Thrift Supervision
12 CFR Part 563h
[Docket No. OTS–2011–0004]
RIN 1550–AC49
NATIONAL CREDIT UNION
ADMINISTRATION
12 CFR Parts 741 and 751
RIN 3133–AD88
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
17 CFR Part 248
[Release No. 34–64140; File no. S7–12–11]
RIN 3235–AL06
FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE
AGENCY
12 CFR Part 1232
RIN 2590–AA42
Incentive-Based Compensation
Arrangements
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency, Treasury (OCC); Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System (Board); Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC); Office of
Thrift Supervision, Treasury (OTS);
National Credit Union Administration
(NCUA); U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC); and Federal Housing
Finance Agency (FHFA).
ACTION: Proposed Rule.
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AGENCY:
The OCC, Board, FDIC, OTS,
NCUA, SEC, and FHFA (the Agencies)
SUMMARY:
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are proposing rules to implement
section 956 of the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection
Act. The proposed rule would require
the reporting of incentive-based
compensation arrangements by a
covered financial institution and
prohibit incentive-based compensation
arrangements at a covered financial
institution that provide excessive
compensation or that could expose the
institution to inappropriate risks that
could lead to material financial loss.
DATES: Comments must be received by
May 31, 2011.
ADDRESSES: Although the Agencies will
jointly review all the comments
submitted, it would facilitate review of
the comments if interested parties send
comments to the Agency that is the
appropriate Federal regulator, as
defined in section 956(e) of the DoddFrank Act for the type of covered
financial institution addressed in the
comments. Commenters are encouraged
to use the title ‘‘Incentive-based
Compensation Arrangements’’ to
facilitate the organization and
distribution of comments among the
Agencies. Interested parties are invited
to submit written comments to:
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency: Because paper mail in the
Washington, DC area and at the OCC is
subject to delay, commenters are
encouraged to submit comments by the
Federal eRulemaking Portal or e-mail, if
possible. Please use the title ‘‘Incentivebased Compensation Arrangements’’ to
facilitate the organization and
distribution of the comments. You may
submit comments by any of the
following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal—
Regulations.gov: Go to https://
www.regulations.gov. Select ‘‘Document
Type’’ of ‘‘Proposed Rule’’, and in ‘‘Enter
Keyword or ID Box’’, enter Docket ID
‘‘OCC–2011–0001’’, and click ‘‘Search.’’
On ‘‘View By Relevance’’ tab at bottom
of screen, in the ‘‘Agency’’ column,
locate the proposed rule for OCC, in the
‘‘Action’’ column, click on ‘‘Submit a
Comment’’ or ‘‘Open Docket Folder’’ to
submit or view public comments and to
view supporting and related materials
for this proposed rule.
• Click on the ‘‘Help’’ tab on the
Regulations.gov home page to get
information on using Regulations.gov,
including instructions for submitting or
viewing public comments, viewing
other supporting and related materials,
and viewing the docket after the close
of the comment period.
• E-mail:
regs.comments@occ.treas.gov.
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• Mail: Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency, 250 E Street, SW., Mail
Stop 2–3, Washington, DC 20219.
• Fax: (202) 874–5274.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: 250 E
Street, SW., Mail Stop 2–3, Washington,
DC 20219.
Instructions: You must include ‘‘OCC’’
as the agency name and ‘‘Docket ID
OCC–2011–0001’’ in your comment. In
general, OCC will enter all comments
received into the docket and publish
them on the Regulations.gov Web site
without change, including any business
or personal information that you
provide such as name and address
information, e-mail addresses, or phone
numbers. Comments received, including
attachments and other supporting
materials, are part of the public record
and subject to public disclosure. Do not
enclose any information in your
comment or supporting materials that
you consider confidential or
inappropriate for public disclosure.
You may review comments and other
related materials that pertain to this
proposed rule by any of the following
methods:
• Viewing Comments Electronically:
Go to https://www.regulations.gov. Select
‘‘Document Type’’ of ‘‘Public
Submission,’’ in ‘‘Enter Keyword or ID
Box,’’ enter Docket ID ‘‘OCC–2011–
0001’’, and click ‘‘Search.’’ Comments
will be listed under ‘‘View By
Relevance’’ tab at bottom of screen. If
comments from more than one agency
are listed, the ‘‘Agency’’ column will
indicate which comments were received
by the OCC.
• Viewing Comments Personally: You
may personally inspect and photocopy
comments at the OCC, 250 E Street,
SW., Washington, DC. For security
reasons, the OCC requires that visitors
make an appointment to inspect
comments. You may do so by calling
(202) 874–4700. Upon arrival, visitors
will be required to present valid
government-issued photo identification
and to submit to security screening in
order to inspect and photocopy
comments.
• Docket: You may also view or
request available background
documents and project summaries using
the methods described above.
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System: You may submit
comments, identified by Docket No. R–
1410 and RIN No. 7100–AD69, by any
of the following methods:
• Agency Web Site: https://
www.federalreserve.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments at
https://www.federalreserve.gov/
generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm.
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Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 72 / Thursday, April 14, 2011 / Proposed Rules
• Federal eRulemaking Portal:https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• E-mail:
regs.comments@federalreserve.gov.
Include the docket number and RIN
number in the subject line of the
message.
• Fax: (202) 452–3819 or (202) 452–
3102.
• Mail: Address to Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary, Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, 20th Street and
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington,
DC 20551.
All public comments will be made
available on the Board’s Web site at
https://www.federalreserve.gov/
generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm as
submitted, unless modified for technical
reasons. Accordingly, comments will
not be edited to remove any identifying
or contact information. Public
comments may also be viewed
electronically or in paper in Room MP–
500 of the Board’s Martin Building (20th
and C Streets, NW.) between 9 a.m. and
5 p.m. on weekdays.
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation: You may submit
comments, identified by RIN number,
by any of the following methods:
• Agency Web Site: https://
www.FDIC.gov/regulations/laws/
federal/propose.html. Follow
instructions for submitting comments
on the Agency Web Site.
• E-mail: Comments@FDIC.gov.
Include the RIN number on the subject
line of the message.
• Mail: Robert E. Feldman, Executive
Secretary, Attention: Comments, Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th
Street, NW., Washington, DC 20429.
• Hand Delivery: Comments may be
hand delivered to the guard station at
the rear of the 550 17th Street Building
(located on F Street) on business days
between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Instructions: All comments received
must include the agency name and RIN
for this rulemaking and will be posted
without change to https://www.fdic.gov/
regulations/laws/Federal/propose.html,
including any personal information
provided.
Office of Thrift Supervision: You may
submit comments, identified by OTS–
2011–0004, by any of the following
methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal—
Regulations.gov: Go to https://
www.regulations.gov and follow the
directions.
• E-mail:
regs.comments@ots.treas.gov. Please
include OTS–2011–0004 in the subject
line of the message and include your
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name and telephone number in the
message.
• Mail: Regulation Comments, Chief
Counsel’s Office, Office of Thrift
Supervision, 1700 G Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20552, Attention: OTS–
2011–0004.
• Facsimile: (202) 906–6518.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: Guard’s
Desk, East Lobby Entrance, 1700 G
Street, NW., from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on
business days, Attention: Regulation
Comments, Chief Counsel’s Office,
Attention: OTS–2011–0004.
• Instructions: All submissions
received must include the agency name
and docket number for this rulemaking.
All comments received will be entered
into the docket and posted on
Regulations.gov without change,
including any personal information
provided. Comments, including
attachments and other supporting
materials received, are part of the public
record and subject to public disclosure.
Do not enclose any information in your
comment or supporting materials that
you consider confidential or
inappropriate for public disclosure.
• Viewing Comments On-Site: You
may inspect comments at the Public
Reading Room, 1700 G Street, NW., by
appointment. To make an appointment
for access, call (202) 906–5922, send an
e-mail to public.info@ots.treas.gov, or
send a facsimile transmission to (202)
906–6518. (Prior notice identifying the
materials you will be requesting will
assist us in serving you.) We schedule
appointments on business days between
10 a.m. and 4 p.m. In most cases,
appointments will be available the next
business day following the date we
receive a request.
National Credit Union
Administration: You may submit
comments by any of the following
methods (please send comments by one
method only): Federal eRulemaking
Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting
comments.
• Agency Web site: https://
www.ncua.gov/Resources/
RegulationsOpinionsLaws/
ProposedRegulations.aspx. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• E-mail: Address to
regcomments@ncua.gov. Include ‘‘[Your
name] Comments on ‘‘Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking for Incentivebased Compensation Arrangements’’ in
the e-mail subject line.
• Fax: (703) 518–6319. Use the
subject line described above for e-mail.
• Mail: Address to Mary Rupp,
Secretary of the Board, National Credit
Union Administration, 1775 Duke
PO 00000
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21171
Street, Alexandria, Virginia 22314–
3428.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: Same as
mail address.
• Public Inspection: All public
comments are available on the agency’s
Web site at https://www.ncua.gov/
Resources/RegulationsOpinionsLaws/
ProposedRegulations.aspx as submitted,
except when not possible for technical
reasons. Public comments will not be
edited to remove any identifying or
contact information. Paper copies of
comments may be inspected in NCUA’s
law library at 1775 Duke Street,
Alexandria, Virginia 22314, by
appointment weekdays between 9 a.m.
and 3 p.m. To make an appointment,
call (703) 518–6546 or send an e-mail to
OGCMail@ncua.gov.
Securities and Exchange Commission:
You may submit comments by the
following method:
Electronic Comments
• Use the Commission’s Internet
comment form (https://www.sec.gov/
rules/exorders.shtml); or
• Send an e-mail to rulecomments@sec.gov Please include File
Number S7–12–11 on the subject line;
or
• Use the Federal eRulemaking Portal
(https://www.regulations.gov). Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
Paper Comments
• Send paper comments in triplicate
to Elizabeth M. Murphy, Secretary,
Securities and Exchange Commission,
100 F Street, NE., Washington, DC
20549.
All submissions should refer to File
Number S7–12–11. This file number
should be included on the subject line
if e-mail is used. To help us process and
review your comments more efficiently,
please use only one method. The
Commission will post all comments on
the Commission’s Internet Web site
(https://www.sec.gov/rules/
proposed.shtml). Comments are also
available for Web site viewing and
printing in the Commission’s Public
Reference Room, 100 F St., NE.,
Washington, DC 20549 on official
business days between the hours of 10
a.m. and 3 p.m. All comments received
will be posted without change; the
Commission does not edit personal
identifying information from
submissions. You should submit only
information that you wish to make
available publicly.
Federal Housing Finance Agency: You
may submit your written comments on
the proposed rulemaking, identified by
RIN number 2590–AA42, by any of the
following methods:
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• E-mail: Comments to Alfred M.
Pollard, General Counsel, may be sent
by e-mail at RegComments@fhfa.gov.
Please include ‘‘RIN 2590–AA42’’ in the
subject line of the message.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments. If
you submit your comment to the
Federal eRulemaking Portal, please also
send it by e-mail to FHFA at
RegComments@fhfa.gov to ensure
timely receipt by the Agency. Please
include ‘‘RIN 2590–AA42’’ in the subject
line of the message.
• U.S. Mail, United Parcel Service,
Federal Express, or Other Mail Service:
The mailing address for comments is:
Alfred M. Pollard, General Counsel,
Attention: Comments/RIN 2590–AA42,
Federal Housing Finance Agency,
Fourth Floor, 1700 G Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20552.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: The hand
delivery address is: Alfred M. Pollard,
General Counsel, Attention: Comments/
RIN 2590–AA42, Federal Housing
Finance Agency, Fourth Floor, 1700 G
Street, NW., Washington, DC 20552. A
hand-delivered package should be
logged at the Guard Desk, First Floor, on
business days between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
All comments received by the
deadline will be posted for public
inspection on the FHFA Web site at
https://www.fhfa.gov. Copies of all
comments timely received will be
available for public inspection and
copying at the address above on
government-business days between the
hours of 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. To make an
appointment to inspect comments
please call the Office of General Counsel
at (202) 414–6924.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
OCC: Michele Meyer, Assistant Director,
and Patrick Tierney, Counsel,
Legislative and Regulatory Activities,
(202) 874–5090, and Karen Kwilosz,
Director, Operational Risk Policy,
(202) 874–5350, Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency, 250 E
Street, SW., Washington, DC 20219.
Board: Michael Waldron, Counsel, (202)
452–2798, or Amanda Allexon,
Counsel, (202) 452–3818, Legal
Division; William F. Treacy, Advisor,
(202) 452–3859, or Meg Donovan,
Supervisory Financial Analyst, (202)
452–7542, Division of Banking
Supervision and Regulation; Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, 20th and C Streets, NW.,
Washington, DC 20551.
FDIC: Steven D. Fritts, Associate
Director, Risk Management Policy
Branch, DSC, (202) 898–3723;
Melinda West, Chief, Policy &
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Program Development, DSC, (202)
898–7221, George Parkerson, Senior
Policy Analyst, (202) 898–3648; Rose
Kushmeider, Senior Financial
Economist, (202) 898–3861; Daniel
Lonergan, Counsel, (202) 898–6791,
Rodney Ray, Counsel, (202) 898–3556,
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, 550 17th Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20429.
OTS: Mary Jo Johnson, Senior Project
Manager, Examination Programs,
(202) 906–5739, Richard Bennett,
Senior Compliance Counsel,
Regulations and Legislation Division,
(202) 906–7409; Robyn Dennis,
Director, Examination Programs, (202)
906–5751; James Caton, Managing
Director, Economic and Industry
Analysis, (202) 906–5680, Office of
Thrift Supervision, 1700 G Street,
NW., Washington, DC 20552.
NCUA: Regina Metz, Staff Attorney,
Office of General Counsel, (703) 518–
6561; or Vickie Apperson, Program
Officer, Office of Examination &
Insurance, (703) 518–6385, National
Credit Union Administration, 1775
Duke Street, Alexandria, Virginia
22314.
SEC: Raymond A. Lombardo, Branch
Chief, Division of Trading & Markets,
(202) 551–5755; Timothy C. Fox,
Special Counsel, Division of Trading
& Markets, (202) 551–5687; Nadya B.
Roytblat, Assistant Chief Counsel,
Division of Investment Management,
(202) 551–6823; or Jennifer R. Porter,
Attorney-Advisor, Division of
Investment Management, (202) 551–
6787, United States Securities and
Exchange Commission, 100 F Street
NE., Washington, DC 20549.
FHFA: Alfred M. Pollard, General
Counsel, (202) 414–3788 or Patrick J.
Lawler, Associate Director and Chief
Economist (202) 414–3746, Federal
Housing Finance Agency, Fourth
Floor, 1700 G Street NW.,
Washington, DC 20552. The telephone
number of the Telecommunications
Device for the Deaf is (800) 877–8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Dodd-Frank Act
The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act (the
‘‘Dodd-Frank Act’’ or the ‘‘Act’’) (Pub. L.
111–203, section 956, 124 Stat. 1376,
2011–2018 (2010)), which was signed
into law on July 21, 2010, requires the
Agencies to jointly prescribe regulations
or guidelines with respect to incentivebased compensation practices at
covered financial institutions.
Specifically, section 956 of the DoddFrank Act (codified at 12 U.S.C. 5641)
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requires that the Agencies prohibit
incentive-based payment arrangements,
or any feature of any such arrangement,
at a covered financial institution that
the Agencies determine encourages
inappropriate risks by a financial
institution by providing excessive
compensation or that could lead to
material financial loss. Under the Act, a
covered financial institution also must
disclose to its appropriate Federal
regulator the structure of its incentivebased compensation arrangements
sufficient to determine whether the
structure provides ‘‘excessive
compensation, fees, or benefits’’ or
‘‘could lead to material financial loss’’ to
the institution. The Dodd-Frank Act
does not require a covered financial
institution to report the actual
compensation of particular individuals
as part of this requirement.
The Act defines ‘‘covered financial
institution’’ to include any of the
following types of institutions that have
$1 billion or more in assets: (A) A
depository institution or depository
institution holding company, as such
terms are defined in section 3 of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (‘‘FDIA’’)
(12 U.S.C. 1813); (B) a broker-dealer
registered under section 15 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15
U.S.C. 78o); (C) a credit union, as
described in section 19(b)(1)(A)(iv) of
the Federal Reserve Act; (D) an
investment adviser, as such term is
defined in section 202(a)(11) of the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (15
U.S.C. 80b-2(a)(11)); (E) the Federal
National Mortgage Association (Fannie
Mae); (F) the Federal Home Loan
Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac);
and (G) any other financial institution
that the appropriate Federal regulators,
jointly, by rule, determine should be
treated as a covered financial institution
for these purposes.
The Act also requires the Agencies to
ensure that any standards adopted with
regard to excessive compensation under
section 956 of the Act are comparable to
the compensation-related safety and
soundness standards applicable to
insured depository institutions under
section 39 of the FDIA (12 U.S.C.
1831p– 1(c)),1 and to take the
compensation standards described in
section 39 of the FDIA into
consideration in establishing
1 The Federal banking agencies each have
adopted guidelines implementing the
compensation-related and other safety and
soundness standards in section 39 of the FDIA. See
12 CFR part 30, Appendix A (OCC); 12 CFR part
208, Appendix D–1 (Board); 12 CFR part 364,
Appendix A (FDIC); 12 CFR part 570, Appendix A
(OTS).
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compensation standards under section
956 of the Act.
Compensation arrangements are
critical tools in the successful
management of financial institutions.
These arrangements serve several
important objectives, including
attracting and retaining skilled staff,
promoting better organizational and
individual employee performance, and
providing retirement security to
employees.
At the same time, improperly
structured compensation arrangements
can provide executives and employees
with incentives to take imprudent risks
that are not consistent with the longterm health of the organization. The
Agencies believe that flawed incentive
compensation practices in the financial
industry were one of many factors
contributing to the financial crisis that
began in 2007.
Shareholders and, for a credit union,
members of a covered financial
institution have an interest in aligning
the interests of managers and other
employees of the institution with its
long-term health. Aligning the interests
of shareholders or members and
employees, however, is not always
sufficient to protect the safety and
soundness of an organization, deter
excessive compensation, or deter
behavior that could lead to material
financial loss at the organization.
Managers and employees of a covered
financial institution may be willing to
tolerate a degree of risk that is
inconsistent with broader public policy
goals. In addition, particularly at larger
institutions, shareholders or members
may have difficulty effectively
monitoring and controlling the
incentive-based compensation
arrangements throughout the institution
that may materially affect the
institution’s risk profile, even with
increased disclosure provisions. As a
result, supervision and regulation of
incentive compensation, as with other
aspects of financial oversight, can play
an important role in helping ensure that
incentive compensation practices at
covered financial institutions do not
threaten their safety and soundness, are
not excessive, or do not lead to material
financial loss.
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II. Overview of the Proposed Rule
The Agencies have elected to propose
rules, rather than guidelines, in order to
establish general requirements
applicable to the incentive-based
compensation arrangements of all
covered financial institutions
(‘‘Proposed Rule’’). The Proposed Rule
would supplement existing rules,
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guidance, and ongoing supervisory
efforts of the Agencies.
The Proposed Rule has the following
components:
• The Proposed Rule would prohibit
incentive-based compensation
arrangements at a covered financial
institution that encourage executive
officers, employees, directors, or
principal shareholders (‘‘covered
persons’’) to expose the institution to
inappropriate risks by providing the
covered person excessive compensation.
As described further below, consistent
with the directive of section 956, the
Agencies propose to use standards
comparable to those developed under
section 39 of the FDIA for purposes of
determining whether incentive-based
compensation is ‘‘excessive’’ in a
particular case.
• The Proposed Rule would prohibit
a covered financial institution from
establishing or maintaining any
incentive-based compensation
arrangements for covered persons that
encourage inappropriate risks by the
covered financial institution that could
lead to material financial loss. The
Agencies propose to adopt standards for
determining whether an incentive-based
compensation arrangement may
encourage inappropriate risk-taking that
are consistent with the key principles
established for incentive compensation
in the Interagency Guidance on Sound
Incentive Compensation Policies
(‘‘Banking Agency Guidance’’) adopted
by the Federal banking agencies.2 The
Proposed Rule would also require
deferral of a portion of incentive-based
compensation for executive officers of
larger covered financial institutions.
The Proposed Rule would also require
that, at larger covered financial
institutions, the board of directors or a
committee of such a board identify
those covered persons (other than
executive officers) that have the ability
to expose the institution to possible
losses that are substantial in relation to
the institution’s size, capital, or overall
risk tolerance. The Proposed Rule
would require that the board of
directors, or a committee thereof, of the
institution approve the incentive-based
compensation arrangement for such
individuals, and maintain
documentation of such approval. The
term ‘‘larger covered financial
institution’’ for the Federal banking
agencies and the SEC means those
covered financial institutions with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
2 Guidance on Sound Incentive Compensation
Policies, 75 FR 36395 (June 25, 2010), adopted by
the Federal banking agencies, meaning the OCC,
Board, FDIC, and OTS.
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more. For the NCUA, all credit unions
with total consolidated assets of $10
billion or more are larger covered
financial institutions. For the FHFA, all
Federal Home Loan Banks with total
consolidated assets of $1 billion or more
are larger covered financial institutions.
• In connection with these
restrictions, the Proposed Rule would
require covered financial institutions to
maintain policies and procedures
appropriate to their size, complexity,
and use of incentive-based
compensation to help ensure
compliance with these requirements
and prohibitions.
• The Proposed Rule also would
require covered financial institutions to
provide certain information to their
appropriate Federal regulator(s)
concerning their incentive-based
compensation arrangements for covered
persons.
The Proposed Rule would supplement
existing rules and guidance adopted by
the Agencies regarding compensation
and incentive-based compensation.3
These include the Banking Agency
Guidance, the Standards for Safety and
Soundness adopted by the Federal
banking agencies,4 the compensationrelated disclosure requirements adopted
by the SEC for public companies,5 the
rules and guidance adopted by the
FHFA for regulatory oversight of the
executive compensation practices of its
regulated entities 6 and the
compensation rules adopted by the
NCUA for institutions under its
supervision.7 Each Agency may issue
3 See,
e.g., Banking Agency Guidance, supra note
2.
4 60 FR 35674 (July 10, 1995), as amended at 61
FR 43948 (Aug. 27, 1996).
5 See, e.g., Item 402(s) of Regulation S–K, 17 CFR
229.402(s), adopted in Securities Act Release No.
9089 (Dec. 16, 2009), 74 FR 68334 (Dec. 23, 2009).
6 12 CFR 1770.1 (b) (1) requires the FHFA
Director to prohibit the excessive compensation of
executive officers. Section 1770.4 provides specific
details as to the categories of information that are
required to be submitted to the FHFA pertaining to
the prohibition of excessive compensation (Sept.
12, 2001). FHFA’s examination guidance (PG–06–
002), ‘‘Examination for Compensation Practices,’’
sets forth the disclosure requirements pertaining to
the compensation and benefits programs of Fannie
Mae and Freddie Mac (together, the Enterprises)
(Nov. 8, 2006). In carrying out its corporate
governance requirements, the FHFA is guided by
the provisions set forth in 12 CFR 1710.13. FHFA’s
Advisory Bulletin (2009–AB–02), ‘‘Principles for
Executive Compensation at the Federal Home Loan
Banks and the Office of Finance,’’ provides
guidance to the Home Loan Banks on reporting
requirements (Oct. 27, 2009). FHFA’s proposed rule
on executive compensation, 74 FR 26989 (June 5,
2009), includes incentive compensation in its
prohibition on excessive compensation. For the
FHFA, the regulated entities are, collectively: the
Enterprises, the Federal Home Loan Banks, and the
Office of Finance.
7 See, e.g., 12 U.S.C. 1761a; 12 CFR 701.2 & 12
CFR part 701 App. A, Art. VII. § 8; 12 CFR
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supplemental guidance specific to their
regulated entities, including guidance as
necessary to clarify the regulatory
requirements proposed in this
rulemaking. Covered financial
institutions supervised by the Federal
banking agencies should continue to
consult the Banking Agency Guidance
for additional information on how to
balance risk and financial rewards.
The Agencies propose to make the
terms of the Proposed Rule, if adopted,
effective six months after publication of
the final rule in the Federal Register,
with annual reports due within 90 days
of the end of each covered financial
institution’s fiscal year. The Agencies
request specific comment on whether
these dates will provide sufficient time
for covered financial institutions to
comply with the rule and, if not, why.
Commenters are also asked to address
whether the Agencies should designate
different compliance dates for different
types of covered financial institutions,
or consider designating different
compliance dates for different parts of
the Proposed Rule (e.g., disclosure,
prohibition, and policies and
procedures).
A detailed description of the
Proposed Rule with a request for
comments is set forth below. Although
this is a joint-interagency rulemaking,
each Agency will codify its version of
the rule in its specified portion of the
Code of Federal Regulations in order to
accommodate differences between
regulated entities as well as other
applicable statutory and regulatory
requirements. Any significant
differences between the Proposed Rules
issued by individual agencies are noted
below.8
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III. Section-By-Section Description of
the Proposed Rule
§ __.1 Authority. Section __.1 provides
that this rule is issued pursuant to
section 956 of the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection
Act (Pub. L. 111–203). Certain Agencies
also have listed their general rulemaking
authority in their respective authority
citations.
§ __.2 Scope and Purpose. Section
__.2 provides that this rule applies to a
covered financial institution that has
total consolidated assets of $1 billion or
more that offers incentive-based
701.21(c)(8)(i); 12 CFR 701.23(g) (1); 12 CFR 701.33;
12 CFR 702.203 & 702.204; 12 CFR 703.17; 12 CFR
704.19 & 704.20; 12 CFR part 708a; 12 CFR 712.8;
12 CFR 721.7; 12 CFR part 750; and NCUA
Examiners Guide Ch. 7 at https://www.ncua.gov/
GenInfo/GuidesManuals/examiners_guide/
chapters/Chapter07.pdf.
8 Since the Agencies’ proposed rules use
consistent section numbering, relevant sections are
cited, for example, as ‘‘§ __.1.’’
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compensation arrangements to covered
persons. This section also notes that this
rule would in no way limit the authority
of any Agency under other provisions of
applicable law and regulations.
§ __.3 Definitions. Section __.3 defines
the various terms used in the Proposed
Rule. If a term is defined in section 956
of the Dodd-Frank Act, the Proposed
Rule generally incorporates that
definition.9
Compensation. The Proposed Rule
defines ‘‘compensation’’ to mean all
direct and indirect payments, fees or
benefits, both cash and non-cash,
awarded to, granted to, or earned by or
for the benefit of, any covered person in
exchange for services rendered to the
covered financial institution, including,
but not limited to, payments or benefits
pursuant to an employment contract,
compensation or benefit agreement, fee
arrangement, perquisite, stock option
plan, postemployment benefit, or other
compensatory arrangement. For credit
unions, the definition of compensation
specifically excludes reimbursement for
reasonable and proper costs incurred by
covered persons in carrying out official
credit union business; provision of
reasonable health, accident and related
types of personal insurance protection;
and indemnification. This is consistent
with NCUA’s regulations at 12 CFR
701.33. The Agencies seek comment on
this proposed definition.
Covered Financial Institution. As
noted above, only ‘‘covered financial
institutions’’ that have total consolidated
assets of $1 billion or more would be
subject to the Proposed Rule. Under the
Proposed Rule, a ‘‘covered financial
institution’’ would include:
• In the case of the OCC, a national
bank and Federal branch and agency of
a foreign bank;
• In the case of the Board, a state
member bank; a bank holding company;
a state-licensed uninsured branch or
agency of a foreign bank; and the U.S.
operations of a foreign bank with more
than $1 billion of U.S. assets that is
treated as a bank holding company
pursuant to section 8(a) of the
International Banking Act of 1978 (12
U.S.C. 3106(a)). A covered financial
institution includes the subsidiaries of
the institution;
• In the case of the FDIC, a state
nonmember bank and an insured U.S.
branch of a foreign bank;
• In the case of the OTS, a savings
association as defined in 12 U.S.C.
1813(b) and a savings and loan holding
9 These definitions are proposed for purposes of
administering Section 956 and are not intended to
affect the interpretation or construction of the same
or similar terms for purposes of any other statute
or regulation administered by the Agencies.
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company as defined in 12 U.S.C.
1467a(a). (A covered financial
institution also includes an operating
subsidiary of a Federal savings
association as defined in 12 CFR 559.2.)
The Board, OCC, and FDIC will assume
supervisory and rulemaking
responsibility for these entities on the
transfer date provided in Title III of the
Dodd-Frank Act. These agencies expect
to adopt, or incorporate, as appropriate,
any final rule adopted by OTS as part
of this rulemaking for relevant covered
financial institutions that come under
their respective supervisory authority
after the transfer date;
• In the case of the NCUA, a credit
union, as described in section
19(b)(1)(A)(iv) of the Federal Reserve
Act, meaning an insured credit union as
defined under 12 U.S.C. 1752(7) or
credit union eligible to make
application to become an insured credit
union under 12 U.S.C. 1781. Instead of
the term ‘‘covered financial institution’’,
the NCUA uses the term ‘‘credit union’’
throughout its proposed rule;
• In the case of the SEC, a brokerdealer registered under section 15 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15
U.S.C. 78o; and an investment adviser,
as such term is defined in section
202(a)(11) of the Investment Advisers
Act of 1940, 15 U.S.C. 80b–2(a)(11); 10
• The FHFA, because it proposes to
extend the requirements of the rule to
the Federal Home Loan Bank System’s
Office of Finance,11 which is not a
financial institution, is not proposing to
use the term ‘‘covered financial
institution,’’ but rather the term
‘‘covered entity,’’ defined to mean
Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, the Federal
Home Loan Banks, and the Office of
Finance.
As indicated in the above listing, the
Agencies propose to expand the
definition of a covered financial
institution beyond those specifically
identified in section 956, as authorized
by section 956(e)(2)(G) of the DoddFrank Act. Consistent with the principle
of national treatment and equality of
competitive opportunity, the Agencies
propose to include as covered financial
institutions the uninsured branches and
10 By its terms, the definition of ‘‘covered
financial institution’’ in section 956 includes any
firm that meets the definition of ‘‘investment
adviser’’ under the Investment Advisers Act of 1940
(‘‘Investment Advisers Act’’), regardless of whether
the firm is registered as an investment adviser
under that Act. Banks and bank holding companies
are generally excluded from the definition of
‘‘investment adviser’’ under section 202(a)(11) of the
Investment Advisers Act.
11 The Office of Finance is a joint agency of the
twelve Federal Home Loan Banks and is described
and regulated in the FHFA’s rules at 12 CFR part
1273.
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agencies of a foreign bank, as well as the
other U.S. operations of foreign banking
organizations that are treated as bank
holding companies pursuant to section
8(a) of the International Banking Act of
1978. These offices and operations
currently are subject to the Banking
Agency Guidance, and are subject to
section 8 of the FDIA, which prohibits
institutions from engaging in unsafe or
unsound practices to the same extent as
insured depository institutions and
bank holding companies.12
The Agencies also propose including
the Federal Home Loan Banks because
they pose similar risks and should be
subject to the same regulatory regime.
FHFA also proposes to subject the
Office of Finance to the Proposed Rule,
using authority other than section 956.13
Commenters are specifically asked to
address whether there are there other
types of financial institutions, such as a
credit union service organization
(‘‘CUSO’’), that the Agencies should treat
as a covered financial institution to
better promote the purpose of section
956 and competitive equity. Currently
no CUSOs wholly owned by a federally
insured credit union have total
consolidated assets of $1 billion or
more.
Covered Person. Only incentive-based
compensation paid to ‘‘covered persons’’
would be subject to the requirements of
this Proposed Rule. A ‘‘covered person’’
would be any executive officer,
employee, director, or principal
shareholder of a covered financial
institution. No specific categories of
employees are excluded from the scope
of the Proposed Rule, although it is the
underlying purpose of this rulemaking
to address those incentive-based
compensation arrangements for covered
persons or groups of covered persons
that encourage inappropriate risk
because they provide excessive
compensation or pose a risk of material
financial loss to a covered financial
institution. Accordingly, as will be
discussed later in this SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section, certain
12 See
12 U.S.C. 1813(c)(3) and 1818(b)(4).
Office of Finance is an agent of the Federal
Home Loan Banks in issuing the hundreds of
billions of dollars’ worth of Federal Home Loan
Bank System obligations that are outstanding at any
time. It is not a financial institution, but because of
its critical role in the mortgage finance system, it
is proposed to be made subject to the provisions of
the Proposed Rule that apply to financial
institutions with assets of over $50 billion. Because
it is not a financial institution and hence not within
the scope of section 956, FHFA bases its authority
over the Office of Finance for this purpose not on
section 956 but on the Federal Housing Enterprises
Financial Safety and Soundness Act, which in
section 1311(b)(2) (12 U.S.C. 4511(b)(2)) grants
FHFA general regulatory authority over the Office
of Finance.
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13 The
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prohibitions in the Proposed Rule apply
only to a subset of covered persons. As
a result, the proposal contains separate
definitions of director, executive officer,
and principal shareholder. For Federal
credit unions, only one director, if any,
may be considered a covered person
since, under the Federal Credit Union
Act section 112 (12 U.S.C. 1761a) and
NCUA’s regulations at 12 CFR 701.33,
only one director may be compensated
as an officer of the board.
Director and Board of Directors. The
Proposed Rule defines ‘‘director’’ of a
covered financial institution as a
member of the board of directors of the
covered financial institution or of a
board or committee performing a similar
function to a board of directors. For
NCUA’s proposed rule, the director is
always a member of the credit union’s
board of directors so the definition is
omitted. The Proposed Rule also defines
‘‘board of directors’’ as the governing
body of any covered financial
institution performing functions similar
to a board of directors. For a foreign
banking organization, ‘‘board of
directors’’ refers to the relevant senior
management or oversight body for the
firm’s U.S. branch, agency or operations,
consistent with the foreign banking
organization’s overall corporate and
management structure. The Agencies
seek comment on these proposed
definitions.
Executive Officer. As discussed in
more detail later in this Supplementary
Information, the Proposed Rule would
apply certain restrictions to the
incentive-based compensation of
‘‘executive officers’’ of larger covered
financial institutions.14 The Proposed
Rule defines ‘‘executive officer’’ of a
covered financial institution as a person
who holds the title or performs the
function (regardless of title, salary or
compensation) of one or more of the
following positions: President, chief
executive officer, executive chairman,
chief operating officer, chief financial
officer, chief investment officer, chief
legal officer, chief lending officer, chief
risk officer, or head of a major business
line.15
14 As discussed previously, the term ‘‘larger
covered financial institution’’ for the Federal
banking agencies and the SEC means those covered
financial institutions with total consolidated assets
of $50 billion or more. For the NCUA, all credit
unions with total consolidated assets of $10 billion
or more are larger covered financial institutions. For
the FHFA, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and all of the
Federal Home Loan Banks with total consolidated
assets of $1 billion or more are larger covered
financial institutions. In addition, the FHFA
proposes to make the same requirements applicable
to the Office of Finance.
15 For the FHFA, the Safety and Soundness Act
of 1992, as reflected in 12 CFR 1770.3 (g)–(1),
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21175
• The Agencies seek comment on
whether the types of positions identified
in this proposed definition are
appropriate, whether additional
positions should be included, or if
certain positions should be removed.
• Should the Agencies define ‘‘head
of a major business line?’’
Incentive-based Compensation.
Consistent with section 956 of the
Dodd-Frank Act, the Proposed Rule
would apply only to incentive-based
compensation arrangements. The
Proposed Rule defines ‘‘incentive-based
compensation’’ to mean any variable
compensation that serves as an
incentive for performance. The
definition is broad and principles-based
to address the objectives of section 956
in a manner that provides for flexibility
as forms of compensation evolve. The
form of payment, whether it is cash, an
equity award, or other property, does
not affect whether compensation meets
the definition of ‘‘incentive-based
compensation.’’
There are types of compensation that
would not fall within the scope of this
definition. Generally, compensation that
is awarded solely for, and the payment
of which is solely tied to, continued
employment (e.g., salary) would not be
considered incentive-based
compensation. Similarly, a
compensation arrangement that
provides rewards solely for activities or
behaviors that do not involve risk-taking
(for example, payments solely for
achieving or maintaining a professional
certification or higher level of
educational achievement) would not be
considered incentive-based
compensation under the proposal. In
addition, the Agencies do not envision
that this definition would include
compensation arrangements that are
determined based solely on the covered
person’s level of fixed compensation
and do not vary based on one or more
performance metrics (e.g., employer
contributions to a 401(k) retirement
savings plan computed based on a fixed
percentage of an employee’s salary). The
defines the term Executive Officer to mean, for
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac: The Chairman of the
Board of Directors, chief executive officer, chief
financial officer, chief operating officer, president,
vice chairman, any executive vice president, and
any individual who performs functions similar to
such positions whether or not the individual has an
official title; and any senior vice president or other
individual with similar responsibilities, without
regard to title: (A) Who is in charge of a principal
business unit, division or function, or (B) who
reports directly to the chairman of the board of
directors, vice chairman, president or chief
operating officer. The Proposed Rule adopts a
modified version of the definitions for Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac, and a definition for the Federal
Home Loan Banks and for the Office of Finance that
the FHFA has determined is appropriate for them.
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proposed definition also would not
include dividends paid and
appreciation realized on stock or other
equity instruments that are owned
outright by a covered person. However,
stock or other equity instruments
awarded to a covered person under a
contract, arrangement, plan, or benefit
would not be considered owned
outright while subject to any vesting or
deferral arrangement (irrespective of
whether such deferral is mandatory).
The Agencies request comment
generally on this proposed definition.
Comment is also requested on the
following questions:
• Is the definition of incentive-based
compensation sufficiently broad to
include all types of compensation that
should be covered under the rule?
• Are there any particular forms of
compensation that should be
specifically designated as incentivebased compensation?
• Are there any other forms of
compensation that the Agencies should
clarify are not incentive-based
compensation?
Principal Shareholder. Under the
Proposed Rule, a ‘‘principal
shareholder’’ means an individual that
directly or indirectly, or acting through
or in concert with one or more persons,
owns, controls, or has the power to vote
10 percent or more of any class of voting
securities of a covered financial
institution.16 The Agencies request
comment on this proposed definition.
The NCUA’s proposed rule does not
include this definition since credit
unions are not-for-profit financial
cooperatives with member owners.
Total Consolidated Assets. As
provided in section 956, the Proposed
Rule would apply to all covered
financial institutions that have total
consolidated assets of $1 billion or
more. Additional requirements would
apply to certain larger covered financial
institutions. With the exception of the
FHFA, the Agencies have specified how
total consolidated assets should be
calculated in their agency specific rule
text.
• OCC: Total consolidated assets
means (i) for a national bank,
calculating the average of the total assets
reported in the bank’s four most recent
Consolidated Reports of Condition and
Income (‘‘Call Report’’) and (ii) for a
Federal branch and agency, calculating
the average of the total assets reported
in the Federal branch or agency’s four
most recent Reports of Assets and
16 The 10 percent threshold used in the definition
of ‘‘principal shareholder’’ is also used in a number
of bank regulatory contexts. See e.g., 12 CFR
215.2(m), 12 CFR 225.2(n)(2), 12 CFR 225.41(c)(2).
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Liabilities of U.S. Branches and
Agencies of Foreign Banks—FFIEC 002.
• Board: For a state member bank,
total consolidated assets as determined
based on the average of the bank’s four
most recent Consolidated Reports of
Condition and Income (‘‘Call Report’’);
for a bank holding company, total
consolidated assets as determined based
on the average of the company’s four
most recent Consolidated Financial
Statements for Bank Holding Companies
(‘‘FR Y–9C’’); for a state-licensed
uninsured branch or agency of a foreign
bank, total consolidated assets as
determined based on the average of the
branch or agency’s four most recent
Reports of Assets and Liabilities of U.S.
Branches and Agencies of Foreign
Banks—FFIEC 002; and for the U.S.
operations of a foreign bank, total
consolidated U.S. assets as determined
by the Board.
• FDIC: For state nonmember banks,
asset size would be determined by
calculating the average of the total assets
reported in the institution’s four most
recent Call Reports. For insured U.S.
branches of foreign banks, asset size will
be determined by calculating the
average of the total assets reported in
the branch’s four most recent Reports of
Assets and Liabilities of U.S. Branches
and Agencies of Foreign Banks.
• OTS: For covered financial
institutions regulated by the OTS, asset
size will be determined by calculating
the average of total assets reported in
the institution’s four most recent Thrift
Financial Reports.
• NCUA: For credit unions, asset size
will be determined by calculating the
average of the total assets reported in
the credit union’s four most recent 5300
Call Reports.
• SEC: For brokers or dealers
registered with the SEC, asset size
would be determined by the total
consolidated assets reported in the
firm’s most recent year-end audited
Consolidated Statement of Financial
Condition filed pursuant to Rule 17a–5
under the Securities Exchange Act of
1934. For investment advisers, asset size
would be determined by the adviser’s
total assets shown on the balance sheet
for the adviser’s most recent fiscal year
end. The proposed method of
calculation for investment advisers is
consistent with the SEC’s recent
proposal that each investment adviser
filing Form ADV Part 1A indicate
whether the adviser had $1 billion or
more in ‘‘assets,’’ defined as the total
assets shown on the balance sheet for
the adviser’s most recent fiscal year
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end.17 In connection with that proposal,
the SEC requested comment on the
reporting requirement and the proposed
method that advisers would use to
determine the amount of their assets
(i.e., total assets as shown on the
adviser’s balance sheet). Commenters
are asked to provide additional
comments on the proposed method of
determining asset size for investment
advisers, and specifically to address
whether the determination of total
assets should be further tailored for
certain types of advisers, such as
advisers to hedge funds or private
equity funds, and if so, why and in what
manner.
• FHFA: The FHFA is not including
a definition of total consolidated assets
in its proposed rule because it is
proposing to make all requirements of
the rule applicable to all the entities it
regulates without regard to asset size.18
The Agencies believe that by
generally establishing a rolling average
for asset size (with the exception of the
SEC and the FHFA), the frequency that
an institution may fall in or out of
covered financial institution status
would be minimized. If a covered
financial institution has fewer than four
reports, the institution must average
total assets from its existing reports for
purposes of determining total
consolidated assets. If a covered
financial institution has a mix of two or
more different types of reports covering
the relevant period, those should be
averaged for purposes of determining
asset size (e.g., an institution with two
Call Reports and two Thrift Financial
Reports as its four most recent reports
would have its total assets from all four
reports averaged).
Should all of the Agencies use a
uniform method to determine whether
an institution has $1 billion or more in
assets? If so, what would commenters
suggest as such a uniform method? If
different calculations are required for
each type of institution, should any of
the Agencies define total consolidated
assets differently than the proposed
calculations described above?
§ ll.4 Required Reports. Section
956(a)(1) of the Dodd-Frank Act requires
that a covered financial institution
submit an annual report to its
17 See Rules Implementing Amendments to the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940, Investment
Advisers Release No. 3110, nn. 194–196 and related
text (Nov. 19, 2010) 75 FR 77052 (Dec. 10, 2010).
18 Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Federal
Home Loan Banks are all far larger than the $1
billion asset threshold in section 956, while the
FHFA is basing its regulatory authority over the
Office of Finance on a different statute. And, for
policy reasons, the FHFA is proposing not to
distinguish ‘‘larger’’ entities from others for
purposes of this rule.
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appropriate Federal regulator disclosing
the structure of its incentive-based
compensation arrangements that is
sufficient to determine whether the
incentive-based compensation structure
provides covered persons with
excessive compensation, fees, or
benefits, or could lead to material
financial loss to the covered financial
institution. In order to fulfill this
requirement, the Proposed Rule would
establish the general rule that a covered
financial institution must submit a
report annually to its appropriate
regulator or supervisor in a format
specified by its appropriate Federal
regulator that describes the structure of
the covered financial institution’s
incentive-based compensation
arrangements for covered persons. The
report must contain:
(1) A clear narrative description of the
components of the covered financial
institution’s incentive-based
compensation arrangements applicable
to covered persons and specifying the
types of covered persons to which they
apply;
(2) A succinct description of the
covered financial institution’s policies
and procedures governing its incentivebased compensation arrangements for
covered persons;
(3) For larger covered financial
institutions, a succinct description of
any specific incentive compensation
policies and procedures for the
institution’s executive officers, and
other covered persons who the board, or
a committee thereof determines under
§ __.5(b)(3)(ii) of the Proposed Rule
individually have the ability to expose
the institution to possible losses that are
substantial in relation to the
institution’s size, capital, or overall risk
tolerance;
(4) Any material changes to the
covered financial institution’s incentivebased compensation arrangements and
policies and procedures made since the
covered financial institution’s last
report was submitted; and
(5) The specific reasons why the
covered financial institution believes
the structure of its incentive-based
compensation plan does not encourage
inappropriate risks by the covered
financial institution by providing
covered persons with excessive
compensation or incentive-based
compensation that could lead to
material financial loss to the covered
financial institution.
In developing the proposed reporting
provisions, the Agencies have taken into
account that substantially all the
covered financial institutions are
already supervised and/or subject to
examination by one or more of the
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Agencies. Accordingly, in the Proposed
Rule, the Agencies have tailored the
annual reporting requirement to the
types of information that would most
efficiently assist the relevant Agency in
determining whether there are any areas
of potential concern with respect to the
structure of the covered financial
institution’s incentive-based
compensation arrangements. Generally,
each Agency has reporting, examination
and enforcement authority for
substantially all of the covered financial
institutions under its respective
jurisdiction that the Agency may use if
the information provided under section
956 were to indicate that the structure
of a covered financial institution’s
incentive-based compensation
arrangements may provide excessive
compensation or encourage
inappropriate risk-taking.19 In this way,
the Proposed Rule seeks to achieve the
objective of section 956 in a manner that
limits unnecessary reporting burden on
covered financial institutions and
leverages the existing supervisory
framework for institutions.
The Agencies note that they have
intentionally chosen phrases like ‘‘clear
narrative description’’ and ‘‘succinct
description’’ to describe the disclosures
being sought. The Agencies also note
that the use of the word ‘‘specific’’ in the
Proposed Rule is designed to elicit
statements that are direct and
meaningful explanations of why a
covered financial institution believes its
incentive-based compensation plan
properly addresses the ‘‘excessive
compensation’’ and ‘‘material financial
loss’’ components of section 956. These
provisions are designed to help ensure
that covered financial institutions will
provide the Agencies with a streamlined
set of materials that will help the
Agencies promptly and effectively
identify and address any areas of
concern, rather than with voluminous
materials that may obfuscate the actual
structure and likely effects of an
institution’s incentive-based
compensation arrangements. Further, in
light of the nature of the information
that will be provided to the Agencies
under § __.4 of the Proposed Rule, and
the purposes for which the Agencies are
requiring the information, the Agencies
generally will maintain the
confidentiality of the information
submitted to the Agencies, and the
information will be nonpublic, to the
extent permitted by law.20 The nature of
19 NCUA would likely consult with the
appropriate state regulator in cases involving a
state-chartered credit union.
20 The Freedom of Information Act (‘‘FOIA’’)
provides at least two pertinent exemptions under
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the reported information likely will be
sensitive for a variety of reasons,
including competitive reasons.
The volume and detail of information
provided annually by a covered
financial institution should be
commensurate with the size and
complexity of the institution, as well as
the scope and nature of its incentivebased compensation arrangements. As
such, the Agencies expect that the
volume and detail of information
provided by a large, complex institution
that uses incentive-based arrangements
to a significant degree would be
substantially greater than that submitted
by a smaller institution that has only a
few incentive-based compensation
arrangements or arrangements that affect
only a limited number of covered
persons.
The Agencies request comment on all
aspects of the reporting provisions in
the Proposed Rule. Specifically, the
Agencies request comment on the
following:
• Does the Proposed Rule fulfill the
requirement to obtain meaningful and
useful descriptions of incentive-based
compensation arrangements for
supervisory and compliance purposes?
• Does the Proposed Rule impose a
reasonable burden and minimize the
potential for voluminous boilerplate
disclosure?
• Is the language in the Proposed
Rule sufficiently clear in describing the
kinds of information the Agencies
intend to solicit from covered financial
institutions?
• Are there simpler and less
burdensome methods of reporting to the
Agencies that would still be sufficiently
robust to help the Agencies assess
whether the institution’s compensation
arrangements appropriately balance risk
and financial rewards? For example,
would setting up an electronic means of
filing the required disclosure lessen the
burden on covered financial
institutions, and are there specific
factors the Agencies should consider in
developing such a disclosure
mechanism?
• Are there any additional types of
information that the Agencies should
solicit in order to more accurately assess
whether incentive-based compensation
which the Agencies have authority to withhold
certain information. FOIA Exemption 4 provides an
exemption for ‘‘trade secrets and commercial or
financial information obtained from a person and
privileged or confidential.’’ 5 U.S.C. 552(b)(4). FOIA
Exemption 8 provides an exemption for matters that
are ‘‘contained in or related to examination,
operating, or condition reports prepared by, on
behalf of, or for the use of an agency responsible
for the regulation or supervision of financial
institutions.’’ 5 U.S.C. 552(b)(8).
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arrangements are consistent with the
objectives of section 956?
• Should the Agencies consider
modifying the Proposed Rule to require
covered financial institutions to update
their incentive-based compensation
disclosure—between annual disclosure
cycles—if any material changes to their
respective incentive-based
compensation plans occur?
§ __.5 Prohibitions. Section __.5 of the
Proposed Rule would implement
section 956(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act by
prohibiting a covered financial
institution from having incentive-based
compensation arrangements that may
encourage inappropriate risks (a) by
providing excessive compensation or (b)
that could lead to material financial loss
to the covered financial institution.
Consistent with section 956(c), the
Proposed Rule also would establish
standards for determining whether an
incentive-based compensation
arrangement violates these prohibitions.
Excessive Compensation. The
Proposed Rule would establish a general
rule that a covered financial institution
must not establish or maintain any type
of incentive-based compensation
arrangement, or any feature of any such
arrangement, that encourages
inappropriate risks by the covered
financial institution by providing a
covered person with excessive
compensation. As noted previously,
section 956 requires the Agencies to
ensure that any compensation standards
established under section 956 are
comparable to those established under
section 39 of the FDIA. In light of this
directive, the Proposed Rule includes
standards for determining whether an
incentive-based compensation
arrangement provides excessive
compensation that are comparable to,
and based on, the standards established
under section 39 of the FDIA.
Specifically, under the Proposed Rule,
incentive-based compensation for a
covered person would be considered
excessive when amounts paid are
unreasonable or disproportionate to,
among other things, the amount, nature,
quality, and scope of services performed
by the covered person. In making such
a determination, the Agencies will
consider:
(1) The combined value of all cash
and non-cash benefits provided to the
covered person;
(2) The compensation history of the
covered person and other individuals
with comparable expertise at the
covered financial institution;
(3) The financial condition of the
covered financial institution;
(4) Comparable compensation
practices at comparable institutions,
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based upon such factors as asset size,
geographic location, and the complexity
of the institution’s operations and
assets;
(5) For postemployment benefits, the
projected total cost and benefit to the
covered financial institution;
(6) Any connection between the
individual and any fraudulent act or
omission, breach of trust or fiduciary
duty, or insider abuse with regard to the
covered financial institution; and
(7) Any other factors the Agency
determines to be relevant.
The Agencies request comment on
these standards, including comment on
the appropriate factors to consider when
evaluating comparable compensation
practices at comparable institutions.
Should additional factors be included,
such as the nature of the operations at
the comparable institutions?
Inappropriate Risks that May Lead to
Material Financial Loss. Section
956(b)(2) of the Act requires the
Agencies to adopt regulations or
guidelines that prohibit any type of
incentive-based payment arrangement,
or any feature of any such arrangement,
that the Agencies determine encourages
inappropriate risks by a covered
financial institution that could lead to
material financial loss to the covered
institution. Section 39 of the FDIA does
not include standards for determining
whether compensation arrangements
may encourage inappropriate risks that
could lead to material financial loss.
Accordingly the Agencies have
considered the language and purpose of
section 956, existing supervisory
guidance that addresses incentive-based
compensation arrangements that may
encourage excessive risk-taking,21 the
Principles for Sound Compensation
Practices and the related
Implementation Standards adopted by
the Financial Stability Board,22 and
other relevant material in considering
how to implement this aspect of section
956.
As an initial matter, the Agencies note
that section 956 is focused on incentivebased compensation arrangements that
could lead to material financial loss to
a covered financial institution.
Accordingly, this prohibition would
apply only to those incentive-based
compensation arrangements for
individual covered persons, or groups of
covered persons, whose activities may
expose the covered financial institution
21 See,
e.g., Banking Agency Guidance.
Stability Board, FSF Principles for
Sound Compensation Practices, Basel, Switzerland
(April 2009); Financial Stability Board, FSB
Principles for Sound Compensation Practices:
Implementation Standards, Basel, Switzerland
(September 2009).
22 Financial
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to material financial loss. Such covered
persons include:
• Executive officers and other
covered persons who are responsible for
oversight of the covered financial
institution’s firm-wide activities or
material business lines;
• Other individual covered persons,
including non-executive employees,
whose activities may expose the covered
financial institution to material
financial loss (e.g., traders with large
position limits relative to the covered
financial institution’s overall risk
tolerance); and
• Groups of covered persons who are
subject to the same or similar incentivebased compensation arrangements and
who, in the aggregate, could expose the
covered financial institution to material
financial loss, even if no individual
covered person in the group could
expose the covered financial institution
to material financial loss (e.g., loan
officers who, as a group, originate loans
that account for a material amount of
the covered financial institution’s credit
risk).
To implement section 956(b)(2) of the
Act, § __.5(b)(1) of the Proposed Rule
would prohibit a covered financial
institution from establishing or
maintaining any type of incentive
compensation arrangement, or any
feature of any such arrangement, for
these covered persons or groups of
covered persons, that could lead to
material financial loss to the covered
financial institution. Section __.5(b)(2)
of the Proposed Rule provides that an
incentive-based compensation
arrangement established or maintained
by a covered financial institution for
one or more covered persons does not
comply with § __.5(b)(1) unless it:
• Balances risk and financial rewards,
for example by using deferral of
payments, risk adjustment of awards,
reduced sensitivity to short-term
performance, or longer performance
periods;
• Is compatible with effective
controls and risk management; and
• Is supported by strong corporate
governance.
These three standards are consistent
with the principles for sound
compensation practices in the Banking
Agency Guidance.
The following describes these
proposed standards in greater detail. In
order to help ensure that the incentivebased compensation arrangements of
covered financial institutions are
consistent with their standards, § __.6 of
the Proposed Rule would require that
covered financial institutions establish
and maintain policies and procedures
related to these standards.
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Balance of Risk and Financial Rewards
Incentive-based compensation
arrangements typically attempt to
encourage actions that result in greater
revenue or profit for the covered
financial institution. However, short-run
revenue or profit can often diverge
sharply from actual long-run profit
because risk outcomes may become
clear only over time. Activities that
carry higher risk typically yield higher
short-term revenue, and a covered
person who is given incentives to
increase short-term revenue or profit,
without regard to risk, will naturally be
attracted to opportunities to expose the
institution to more risk.23
Accordingly, to be consistent with
section 956, incentive-based
compensation arrangements at a covered
financial institution should balance risk
and financial rewards in a manner that
does not provide covered persons with
incentives to take inappropriate risks
that could lead to material financial loss
at the covered financial institution. The
Agencies would deem an incentivebased compensation arrangement to be
balanced when the amounts paid to a
covered person appropriately take into
account the risks, as well as the
financial benefits, from the covered
person’s activities and the impact of
those activities on the covered financial
institution.
In assessing whether incentive-based
compensation arrangements are
balanced, the Agencies will consider the
full range of risks associated with a
covered person’s activities, as well as
the time horizon over which those risks
may be realized. The activities of a
covered person may create a wide range
of risks for a covered financial
institution, including credit, market,
liquidity, operational, legal, compliance,
and reputational risks. Some of these
risks may be realized in the short term,
while others may become apparent only
over the long term.
The Proposed Rule identifies four
methods that currently are often used to
make compensation more sensitive to
risk. These methods are:
Risk Adjustment of Awards: Under
this method of making a covered
person’s incentive-based compensation
appropriately risk-sensitive, the amount
of the person’s incentive-based
compensation award is adjusted based
on measures that take into account the
risk the covered person’s activities pose
to the covered financial institution.
Such measures may be quantitative, or
the size of a risk adjustment may be set
based on managerial judgment, subject
to appropriate oversight.
Deferral of Payment: Under this
method, the actual payout of an award
to a covered person is delayed
significantly beyond the end of the
performance period, and the amounts
paid are adjusted for actual losses to the
covered financial institution or other
aspects of performance that become
clear only during the deferral period.
Deferred payouts may be altered
according to risk outcomes either
formulaically or based on managerial
judgment, though extensive use of
judgment might make it more difficult
to execute deferral arrangements in a
sufficiently predictable fashion to
influence the risk-taking behavior of a
covered person. To be most effective in
ensuring balance, the deferral period
should be sufficiently long to allow for
the realization of a substantial portion of
the risks from the covered person’s
activities, and the measures of loss
should be clearly explained to covered
persons and closely tied to their
activities during the relevant
performance period.
Longer Performance Periods: Under
this method of making incentive-based
compensation risk sensitive, the time
period covered by the performance
measures used in determining a covered
person’s award is extended (for
example, from one year to two years).
Longer performance periods and
deferral of payment are related in that
both methods allow awards or payments
to be made after some or all risk
outcomes associated with a covered
person’s activities are realized or better
known.
Reduced Sensitivity to Short-Term
Performance: A covered financial
institution using this method reduces
the rate at which awards increase as a
covered person achieves higher levels of
the relevant performance measure(s)
used in the person’s incentive-based
compensation arrangement. Rather than
offsetting risk-taking incentives
associated with the use of short-term
performance measures, this method
reduces the magnitude of such
incentives.
The Agencies recognize that these
methods for achieving balance are not
exclusive, and additional methods or
variations of these approaches may exist
or be developed.24 Methods and
practices for making compensation
sensitive to risk-taking are likely to
evolve during the next few years.
Moreover, each method has its own
advantages and disadvantages that may
differ depending upon the situation in
which they are used. For example,
where reliable risk measures exist, risk
adjustment of awards may be more
effective than deferral of payment in
reducing incentives for inappropriate
risk-taking. This is because risk
adjustment potentially can take account
of the full range and time horizon of
risks, rather than just those risk
outcomes that occur or become evident
during the deferral period. On the other
hand, deferral of payment may be more
effective than risk adjustment in
mitigating incentives to take hard-tomeasure risks (such as the risks of new
activities or products, or certain risks
such as reputational or operational risk
that may be difficult to measure with
respect to particular activities),
especially if such risks are likely to be
realized during the deferral period. In
some cases, two or more methods may
be needed in combination for an
incentive-based compensation
arrangement to be balanced. The greater
the potential incentives that an
arrangement creates for a covered
person to increase the risks borne by the
covered financial institution, the
stronger the effect should be of the
methods applied to achieve balance.25
Compatibility With Effective Controls
and Risk Management
A covered financial institution’s risk
management processes and internal
controls should reinforce and support
the development and maintenance of
balanced incentive-based compensation
arrangements.26 In particular, under this
proposed standard, the Agencies would
expect a covered financial institution to
have strong controls governing its
processes for designing, implementing
and monitoring incentive-based
compensation arrangements, and for
ensuring that risk-management
personnel have an appropriate role in
the institution’s processes for designing
incentive-based compensation
arrangements, monitoring their use, and
assessing whether they achieve balance.
Covered financial institutions should
have appropriate controls to ensure that
their processes for achieving balanced
compensation arrangements are
followed and to maintain the integrity of
their risk management and other
functions. Such controls are important
because covered persons may seek to
evade or weaken an institution’s
processes to achieve balanced incentivebased compensation arrangements in
order to increase their own
compensation. For example, in order to
increase his or her own incentive
25 See
23 See
Banking Agency Guidance at 36407.
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24 See
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26 See
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Banking Agency Guidance at 36410–11.
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compensation, a covered person may
seek to influence inappropriately the
risk measures, information, or
judgments used to balance the covered
person’s compensation. These activities
can have additional damaging effects on
the institution’s financial health if they
result in the weakening of the
information or processes that the
institution uses for other risk
management, internal control, or
financial purposes.27
Strong Corporate Governance
Strong and effective corporate
governance is critical to the
establishment and maintenance of
sound compensation practices.28 The
board of directors of a covered financial
institution, or committee thereof, should
actively oversee incentive-based
compensation arrangements and is
ultimately responsible for ensuring that
the covered financial institution’s
incentive compensation arrangements
are appropriately balanced.
Accordingly, the board of directors, or a
committee thereof, should actively
oversee the development and operation
of a covered financial institution’s
incentive-based compensation systems
and related control processes. For
example, the board of directors, or a
committee thereof, should review and
approve the overall goals and purposes
of the covered financial institution’s
incentive-based compensation system
and ensure its consistency with the
institution’s overall risk tolerance. In
addition, the board of directors, or
committee thereof, should receive data
and analysis to assess whether the
overall design, as well as the
performance, of the institution’s
incentive compensation arrangements
are consistent with section 956.
The Agencies request comment on all
aspects of § __.5 of the Proposed Rule.
The Agencies also request comment on
whether there are additional factors that
should be considered in evaluating
whether compensation is excessive or
could lead to material financial loss and
whether the Proposed Rule should
include additional details about each of
these standards.
Larger Covered Financial Institutions
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Deferral Arrangements Required for
Executive Officers
Paragraph (b)(3) of § ll.5 of the
Proposed Rule would establish a
deferral requirement for larger covered
financial institutions (i.e., generally
those with $50 billion or more in total
27 See
28 See
Banking Agency Guidance at 36411.
Banking Agency Guidance at 36412.
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consolidated assets).29 At these larger
covered financial institutions, at least 50
percent of the incentive-based
compensation of an ‘‘executive officer’’
(as previously defined), would have to
be deferred over a period of at least
three years. The Proposed Rule also
would require that deferred amounts
paid be adjusted for actual losses of the
covered financial institution or other
measures or aspects of performance that
are realized or become better known
during the deferral period.
The Agencies believe that incentivebased compensation arrangements for
executive officers at larger covered
financial institutions are likely to be
better balanced if they involve the
deferral of a substantial portion of the
executives’ incentive compensation over
a multi-year period in a way that
reduces the amount received in the
event of poor performance. The
decisions of executive officers have a
significant impact on the entire
organization and often involve
substantial strategic or other risks that
are difficult to measure and model—
particularly at larger covered financial
institutions—and therefore difficult to
address adequately by ex ante risk
adjustments.
Requiring deferral for executive
officers is consistent with international
standards 30 that establish the
expectation that large interconnected
firms require the deferral of a
substantial portion of incentive-based
compensation (identified as 40 to 60
percent of the incentive award, or more)
for certain employees for a fixed period
of time not less than three years and that
incentives be correctly aligned with the
nature of the business, its risks, and the
activities of the employees in question.
Because the risks of strategic and other
high-level decisions of executive
officers may not be apparent or become
better known for many years, the
Proposed Rule would require that the
deferral arrangement for executive
29 As noted above, the FHFA is proposing to
adopt this requirement for all the entities it
regulates—Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, the twelve
Federal Home Loan Banks, and the Office of
Finance, without regard to asset size, except for
covered entities in conservatorship, receivership, or
bridge status. FHFA, as conservator of Fannie Mae
and Freddie Mac, requires that one-third of
incentive pay for named executive officers be
deferred over a two-year period. This deferred pay
is based on corporate and individual performance.
In addition, deferred pay is paid to Senior Vice
Presidents and above in quarterly installments in
the year following the performance year. One-half
of this one-year deferral of payments is based on the
Board of Directors’ determination of corporate
performance. As a result, more than one-half of the
annual incentive-based compensation is deferred
for senior executives.
30 See supra note 22.
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officers at these larger covered financial
institutions extend for at least three
years. Larger covered financial
institutions tend to have more diverse
business operations, which can make it
more difficult to immediately recognize
and assess risks for the organization as
a whole. Furthermore, in enacting the
Dodd-Frank Act, Congress recognized
that larger organizations may pose a
greater risk to the financial system by
requiring the creation of enhanced
prudential standards for certain bank
holding companies with total
consolidated assets greater than $50
billion.31
The Proposed Rule recognizes that
requiring deferral for this discrete group
of individuals at larger covered
institutions, where ex ante risk
adjustment measures are less likely to
be effective in and of themselves, is
likely to be a useful balancing tool that
allows a period of time for risks not
previously discerned or quantifiable to
ultimately materialize, and concurrently
provides for adjustment of unreleased
(or ‘‘unvested’’) deferral payments on the
basis of observed consequences and
actual performance as opposed to only
predicted results.
If a covered financial institution is
required to use deferral, the Proposed
Rule provides it with flexibility in
administering its specific deferral
program. A covered financial institution
may decide to release (or allow vesting
of) the full deferred amount in a lumpsum only at the conclusion of the
deferral period; alternatively, the
institution may release the deferred
amounts (or allow vesting) in equal
increments, pro rata, for each year of the
deferral period. However, in no event
may the release or vesting of amounts
required to be deferred under
§ ll.5(b)(3) of the Proposed Rule be
faster than a pro rata equal-annualincrements distribution. For instance,
an institution required to apply a threeyear deferral to a $150,000 deferral
amount could release a maximum of
$50,000 each year or could withhold the
entire sum for the entire period and
distribute it as a lump-sum at the
conclusion of the three-year period. The
institution could also employ an
alternate distribution that is less rapid
than a pro-rata equal-annual-increments
schedule, such as releasing no amount
after the first year, releasing a maximum
of $100,000 the second year, and then
$50,000 for the third year.
Specific comment is solicited on all
aspects of the scope, and specific
requirements, of this proposed deferral
requirement. In particular, commenters
31 12
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are asked to address whether it is
appropriate to mandate deferral for
executive officers at larger covered
financial institutions to promote the
alignment of employees’ incentives with
the risk undertaken by such employees.
For example, comment is solicited on
whether deferral is generally an
appropriate method for achieving
balanced incentive compensation
arrangements for each type of executive
officer at these institutions or whether
there are alternative or more effective
ways to achieve such balance.
Commenters are also asked to address
the possible impact that the required
minimum deferral provisions for senior
executives may have on larger covered
financial institutions and whether the
proposed or different deferral
requirements should apply to senior
executives at institutions other than
larger covered financial institutions. For
example, would it be prudent to
mandate deferred incentive-based
compensation for certain types of
covered financial institutions but not
require such deferral for other
institutions (e.g., investment advisers)
based on the business, risks inherent to
that business, or other relevant factors?
Are there additional considerations,
such as tax or accounting
considerations, that may affect the
ability of larger covered financial
institutions to comply with the
proposed deferral requirement or that
the Agencies should consider in
designing this provision in the rule?
Comment is also sought on whether the
mandatory deferral provisions of the
rule should apply to a differently
defined group of individuals at larger
covered financial institutions, such as
the institution’s top 25 earners of
incentive-based compensation?
Commenters also are asked to address
whether the three-year and 50 percent of
incentive-based compensation
minimums are appropriate? Should the
minimum required deferral period be
extended to, for example, five years?
Special Review and Approval
Requirement for Other Designated
Individuals
Other individuals at a larger covered
financial institution, beyond the
institution’s executive officers may have
the ability to expose the institution to
possible losses that are substantial in
relation to the institution’s size, capital,
or overall risk tolerance. In order to help
ensure that the incentive compensation
arrangements for these individuals are
appropriately balanced, and do not
encourage the individual to expose the
institution to risks that could pose a risk
of material financial loss to the covered
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financial institution, the Proposed Rule
would require that, at a larger covered
financial institution, the board of
directors, or a committee thereof,
identify those covered persons (other
than executive officers) that
individually have the ability to expose
the institution to possible losses that are
substantial in relation to the
institution’s size, capital, or overall risk
tolerance.32 The proposal notes that
these covered persons may include, for
example, traders with large position
limits relative to the institution’s overall
risk tolerance and other individuals that
have the authority to place at risk a
substantial part of the capital of the
covered financial institution. In
addition, the Proposed Rule would
require that the board of directors, or a
committee thereof, of the institution
approve the incentive-based
compensation arrangement for such
individuals, and maintain
documentation of such approval.
Under the proposal, the board of
directors, or committee thereof, of a
larger covered financial institution may
not approve the incentive-based
compensation arrangement for an
individual identified by the board of
directors, or committee thereof, unless
the board (or committee) determines
that the arrangement, including the
method of paying compensation under
the arrangement, effectively balances
the financial rewards to the covered
person and the range and time horizon
of risks associated with the covered
person’s activities, employing
appropriate methods for ensuring risk
sensitivity. The proposal recognizes that
the methods used to balance the
rewards and risks of the individual’s
activities may include deferral of
payments, risk adjustment of awards,
reduced sensitivity to short-term
performance, or longer performance
periods, or other appropriate methods.
However, the board of directors, or
committee thereof, must determine that
the method(s) used effectively balance
the financial rewards to the covered
person and the range and time horizons
of the risks associated with the covered
person’s activities. In performing its
duties in this regard, the board, or
committee thereof, must evaluate the
overall effectiveness of the balancing
methods used in the identified covered
person’s incentive compensation
arrangements in reducing incentives for
inappropriate risk taking by the
identified covered person, as well as the
32 In addition to the compensation-deferral
requirement described above, the FHFA proposes to
apply this requirement to all of the entities it
regulates without regard to asset size.
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ability of the methods used to make
payments sensitive to the full range of
risks presented by that covered person’s
activities, including those risks that may
be difficult to predict, measure, or
model.
The Agencies request comment on
these proposed additional
identification, review, and approval
requirements for larger covered
financial institutions with respect to
individuals that have the ability to
expose the institution to possible losses
that are substantial in relation to the
institution’s size, capital, or overall risk
tolerance. Is the proposed special
treatment of these covered persons
necessary or appropriate, or is their
incentive compensation adequately
addressed by the prohibitions
applicable to all other covered persons
(other than executive officers at larger
covered financial institutions) under the
proposal? Is it sufficient that, as under
the proposal, such covered persons are
not subject to mandatory deferral but
instead are separately identified by the
institution’s board and the board is
required to approve the incentive-based
compensation arrangement for the
covered person after ensuring it is
balanced and sensitive to risk? Should
further guidance be provided as to the
meaning of the phrase ‘‘substantial in
relation to the institution’s size, capital,
or overall risk tolerance’’?
§ ll.6 Policies and Procedures. As
noted above, the Agencies believe that
the incentive-based compensation
practices of covered financial
institutions should be supported by
policies and procedures, appropriate to
the size and complexity of the covered
financial institution, to foster
transparency of each covered financial
institution’s incentive-based
compensation practices and to promote
compliance and accountability
regarding the practices that the Agencies
propose to prohibit. Accordingly, the
Proposed Rule would require covered
financial institutions to have policies
and procedures governing the award of
incentive-based compensation as a way
to help ensure the full implementation
of the prohibitions in the Proposed
Rule.
The Agencies believe that the policies
and procedures developed by each
covered financial institution in this area
should be appropriately tailored to
balance risk and reward for an
institution of its size, complexity, and
business activity, as well as the scope
and nature of the covered financial
institution’s incentive-based
compensation arrangements. Therefore,
the policies and procedures of smaller
covered financial institutions with less
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complex incentive-based compensation
programs would be expected to be less
extensive than those of larger covered
financial institutions with relatively
complex programs and business
activities. The Agencies note, however,
that no categories of covered financial
institutions using incentive-based
compensation would be systematically
or completely exempt from developing,
maintaining, and documenting their
incentive-based compensation policies
and procedures.
As noted above, the prohibition on
incentive-based compensation
arrangements that could lead to material
financial loss would affect only those
arrangements for covered persons that,
either individually or as a group, may
expose the institution to material
financial loss. Accordingly, the policies
and procedures of an institution related
to this prohibition should be focused on
these covered persons. Depending on
the facts and circumstances of the
individual covered financial institution,
certain jobs and classes of jobs may not
have the ability to expose the
organization to material financial loss
and, as a result, incentive-based
compensation arrangements for these
covered persons within these job classes
may be outside the scope of these
restrictions. Examples of jobs and
classes of jobs that may be unlikely to
expose the institution to material risk
include tellers, bookkeepers, couriers, or
data processing personnel.
Paragraph (b)(1) of § ll.6 of the
Proposed Rule would require that the
policies and procedures, at a minimum,
be designed to address the § ll.4
reporting requirements and the § ll.5
prohibitions.33 Requiring such policies
and procedures of covered financial
institutions that award incentive-based
compensation would promote
compliance with the prohibitions in
practice.
In order to help ensure that the risks
inherent in a covered person’s actions
are appropriately captured, the Agencies
believe that risk-management, riskoversight, and internal-control
personnel should be involved in all
phases of the process for designing
incentive-based compensation
arrangements. Risk-management and
risk-oversight personnel also should
33 In addition, for U.S. operations of foreign
banking organizations (‘‘FBOs’’), the organization’s
policies, including management, review, and
approval requirements for its U.S. operations,
should be coordinated with the FBO’s group-wide
policies developed in accordance with the rules of
the FBO’s home country supervisor. The policies of
the FBO’s U.S. operations should also be consistent
with the FBO’s overall corporate and management
structure, as well as its framework for riskmanagement and internal controls.
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have responsibility for ongoing
assessment of incentive-based
compensation policies to help to ensure
that the covered financial institution’s
processes remain up-to-date and
effective relative to its incentive
compensation practices. The ongoing
involvement of such personnel in the
evaluation of incentive-based
compensation arrangements also helps
to ensure that risks are properly
understood and evaluated as such risks
change over time in light of a
continuously changing business
environment. Accordingly, paragraph
(b)(2) of § ll.6 of the Proposed Rule
would make such a requirement part of
the covered financial institution’s
policies and procedures governing
incentive-based compensation.
Paragraph (b)(3) of § ll.6 would
require that a covered financial
institution’s policies and procedures
provide for the monitoring by a group or
person independent of the covered
person, where practicable in light of the
institution’s size and complexity, of
incentive-based compensation awards
and payments, risks taken, and actual
risk outcomes to determine whether
incentive-based compensation payments
are reduced to reflect adverse risk
outcomes or high levels of risk taken. To
be considered independent under the
Proposed Rule, the group or person at
the covered financial institution
monitoring or assessing incentive-based
compensation awards must have a
separate reporting line to senior
management from the covered person
who is creating the risks so as to help
ensure that the analysis of risk is
unbiased. Given the dynamic nature of
risk management, the Proposed Rule
also provides for incentive-based
compensation awards to be monitored
in light of risks taken and outcomes to
determine whether incentive-based
payments should be modified. The
Agencies contemplate that the
procedures relating to the adjustment of
deferred amounts would be used by
covered financial institutions required
to defer a portion of their incentivebased compensation under § ll.6 of
this Rule to augment their compliance
with the deferral obligation.
Paragraph (b)(4) of § ll.6 would
require a covered financial institution to
develop and maintain policies and
procedures designed to ensure that the
covered financial institution’s board of
directors, or a committee thereof,
receive data and analysis from
management and other sources
sufficient to allow it to assess whether
the overall design and performance of
the firm’s incentive-based compensation
arrangements are consistent with
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section 956 of the Act. As with other
provisions of the Proposed Rule, the
scope and nature of the data and
analysis should be appropriate to the
size and complexity of the covered
financial institution and its use of
incentive-based compensation. The
Agencies expect that the board of
directors, or committee thereof, would
take into consideration the firm’s overall
risk management policies and
procedures and the requirements of
section 956(b) of the Act when assessing
compliance with the Act.
Paragraph (b)(5) of § ll.6 of the
Proposed Rule would specify that the
policies and procedures of a covered
financial institution must provide that
the institution maintains sufficient
documentation of the institution’s
processes for establishing,
implementing, modifying, and
monitoring incentive-based
compensation arrangements sufficient to
enable the institution’s appropriate
Federal regulator to determine the
covered financial institution’s
compliance with section 956 of the Act
and the Proposed Rule. Given that the
determinations to be made regarding
incentive-based compensation are factspecific, the Agencies believe that
effective documentation of the covered
financial institution’s policies,
procedures and actions related to
incentive-based compensation is
essential both to help promote the riskbased discipline that section 956 of the
Act seeks to foster with respect to
covered financial institutions and to
facilitate meaningful oversight and
examination. In this context, the
Agencies would expect the
documentation maintained by a covered
financial institution under the Proposed
Rule to include, but not be limited to,
the following:
(1) A copy of the covered financial
institution’s incentive-based
compensation arrangement(s) or plan(s);
(2) The names and titles of
individuals covered by such
arrangement(s) or plan(s);
(3) A record of the incentive-based
compensation awards made under the
arrangement(s) or plan(s); and
(4) Records reflecting the persons or
units involved in the approval and
ongoing monitoring of the
arrangement(s) or plan(s).
Paragraph (b)(6) of § ll.6 of the
Proposed Rule would provide that,
where a covered financial institution
uses deferral in connection with an
incentive-based compensation
arrangement, the institution’s policies
and procedures provide for deferral of
any such payments in amounts and for
periods of time appropriate to the duties
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and responsibilities of the covered
financial institution’s covered persons,
the risks associated with those duties
and responsibilities, and the size and
complexity of the covered financial
institution.34 Further, proposed
paragraph (b)(6) would require that any
such deferred amounts paid be adjusted
for actual losses or other measures or
aspects of performance that are realized
or become better known during the
deferral period. The Agencies believe
that risk-management personnel at the
covered financial institution would play
a substantial role in identifying and
evaluating risks that become better
known with the passage of time. The
Agencies contemplate that the
procedures relating to the adjustment of
deferred amounts would be used by
covered financial institutions required
to defer a portion of their incentivebased compensation under § ll.5 of
the Proposed Rule to facilitate their
compliance with the deferral obligation.
Given the importance of incentivebased compensation arrangements to a
covered financial institution’s safety
and soundness, paragraph (b)(7) of
§ ll.6 would require the policies and
procedures to subject any incentivebased compensation arrangement or
component thereof to a corporate
governance framework that provides for
ongoing oversight by the board of
directors or a committee of the board of
directors. As discussed above, covered
financial institutions should have strong
and effective corporate governance to
help ensure sound compensation
practices, including active and effective
oversight by the board of directors. The
Agencies believe that the board of
directors or a committee thereof is
ultimately responsible for a covered
institution’s incentive-based
compensation arrangements, which
should appropriately balance risk and
rewards. Therefore, the board or its
committee should engage in regular
oversight of the covered financial
institution’s incentive-based
compensation arrangements.
The Agencies are aware that covered
persons at certain covered financial
institutions who have been awarded
equity as part of a deferred incentivebased compensation arrangement may
wish to use personal hedging strategies
34 The Proposed Rule would require deferral for
at least three years of at least 50 percent of the
incentive-based compensation for executive officers
of larger covered financial institutions (generally
those with $50 billion or more in total consolidated
assets). Most covered financial institutions with
total consolidated assets under $50 billion would be
required to adopt procedures applicable to deferred
compensation only when the firm elects to use
deferral in its incentive-based compensation
program.
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as a way to lock in value for equity
compensation that is vested over time.
The Agencies are concerned that
undertaking such hedging strategies
during deferral periods could diminish
the alignment between risk and
financial rewards that may be achieved
through these types of deferral
arrangements. The Agencies have not
included policies and procedures
regarding such personal hedging
strategies in the Proposed Rule, but the
Agencies are concerned that, to the
extent personal hedging strategies may
be widespread, such practices would
serve to diminish the effectiveness of a
covered financial institution’s policies
and procedures. Thus, the Agencies are
considering whether a covered financial
institution’s policies and procedures
should be required to specifically
include limits on personal hedging
strategies. To assist in the evaluation of
such a provision, in addition to
requesting comment on all aspects of
§ ll.6 of the Proposed Rule, the
Agencies are requesting commenters to
describe the extent to which covered
financial institutions prohibit such
practices among their covered persons
today. Would prohibiting the use of
financial derivatives, insurance
contracts or other similar mechanisms
to hedge against the market risk of
equity-based incentive-based
compensation be an effective means to
help to ensure that incentive-based
compensation arrangements remain
aligned with the risk assumed by
covered persons? Are there other factors
the Agencies should take into account
when considering if, or how, to address
personal hedging activity by covered
persons?
§ ll.7 Evasion. Section ll.7 of the
Proposed Rule would prohibit a covered
financial institution from evading the
restrictions of the rule by doing any act
or thing indirectly, or through or by any
other person, that would be unlawful for
the covered institution to do directly
under the Proposed Rule. This antievasion provision is designed to prevent
covered financial institutions from, for
example, making substantial numbers of
its covered persons independent
contractors for the purpose of evading
this subpart. The Agencies do not
intend, however, to disrupt bona fide
independent contractor relationships of
covered financial institutions.
Comments are invited on whether
greater specificity is required in
identifying possible evasion tactics, and
on all aspects of § ll.7.
IV. Request for Comments
The Agencies encourage comment on
any aspect of this proposal and
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especially on those issues specifically
noted in this preamble.
Solicitation of Comments on Use of
Plain Language
Section 722 of the Gramm-LeachBliley Act, Public Law 106–102, sec.
722, 113 Stat. 1338, 1471 (Nov. 12,
1999), requires the Federal banking
agencies to use plain language in all
proposed and final rules published after
January 1, 2000. The Federal banking
agencies invite your comments on how
to make this proposal easier to
understand. For example:
• Have we organized the material to
suit your needs? If not, how could this
material be better organized?
• Are the requirements in the
proposed regulation clearly stated? If
not, how could the regulation be more
clearly stated?
• Does the proposed regulation
contain language or jargon that is not
clear? If so, which language requires
clarification?
• Would a different format (grouping
and order of sections, use of headings,
paragraphing) make the regulation
easier to understand? If so, what
changes to the format would make the
regulation easier to understand?
• What else could we do to make the
regulation easier to understand?
NCUA Agency Regulatory Goal
NCUA’s goal is to promulgate clear
and understandable regulations that
impose minimal regulatory burden. We
request your comments on whether the
proposed rule is understandable and
minimally intrusive if implemented as
proposed.
V. Regulatory Analysis
A. Regulatory Flexibility Act
OCC: Pursuant to section 605(b) of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C.
605(b) (RFA), the regulatory flexibility
analysis otherwise required under
section 603 of the RFA is not required
if the agency certifies that the proposed
rule will not, if promulgated, have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
(defined for purposes of the RFA to
include banks and Federal branches and
agencies with assets less than or equal
to $175 million) and publishes its
certification and a short, explanatory
statement in the Federal Register along
with its proposed rule.
Consistent with section 956(f) of the
Dodd-Frank Act, the OCC’s proposed
rule only would apply to national banks
and Federal branches and agencies that
have total consolidated assets of $1
billion or more. The Proposed Rule
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would not apply to any small national
banks and Federal branches and
agencies, as defined by the RFA.
Therefore, the OCC certifies that the
Proposed Rule would not, if
promulgated, have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities.
Board: The Board has considered the
potential impact of the Proposed Rule
on small banking organizations in
accordance with the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 603(b)). As
discussed in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION above, section 956 of the
Dodd-Frank Act (codified at 12 U.S.C.
5641) requires that the Agencies
prohibit any incentive-based payment
arrangement, or any feature of any such
arrangement, at a covered financial
institution that the Agencies determine
encourages inappropriate risks by a
financial institution by providing
excessive compensation or that could
lead to material financial loss. In
addition, under the Act a covered
financial institution also must disclose
to its appropriate Federal regulator the
structure of its incentive-based
compensation arrangements. The Board
and the other Agencies have issued the
Proposed Rule in response to these
requirements of the Dodd-Frank Act.
The Proposed Rule would apply to
‘‘covered financial institutions’’ as
defined in section 956 of the DoddFrank Act. Covered financial
institutions as so defined include
specifically listed types of institutions,
as well as other institutions added by
the Agencies acting jointly by rule. In
every case, however, covered financial
institutions must have at least $1 billion
in total consolidated assets pursuant to
section 956(f). Thus the Proposed Rule
is not expected to apply to any small
banking organizations (defined as
banking organizations with $175 million
or less in total assets). See 13 CFR
121.201.
The Proposed Rule would implement
section 956(a) of the Dodd-Frank act by
requiring a covered financial institution
to submit a report annually to its
appropriate regulator or supervisor in a
format specified by its appropriate
Federal regulator that describes the
structure of the covered financial
institution’s incentive-based
compensation arrangements for covered
persons. The volume and detail of
information provided annually by a
covered financial institution should be
commensurate with the size and
complexity of the institution, as well as
the scope and nature of its incentivebased compensation arrangements. As
such, the Board expects that the volume
and detail of information provided by a
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large, complex institution that uses
incentive-based arrangements to a
significant degree would be
substantially greater than that submitted
by a smaller institution that has only a
few incentive-based compensation
arrangements or arrangements that affect
only a limited number of covered
persons.
The Proposed Rule would implement
section 956(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act by
prohibiting a covered financial
institution from having incentive-based
compensation arrangements that may
encourage inappropriate risks (i) by
providing excessive compensation or (ii)
that could lead to material financial
loss. The Proposed Rule would establish
standards for determining whether an
incentive-based compensation
arrangement violates these prohibitions.
These standards would include deferral
and other requirements for certain
covered persons at covered financial
institutions with total consolidated
assets of more than $50 billion.
Consistent with section 956(c), the
standards adopted under section 956 are
comparable to the compensation-related
safety and soundness standards
applicable to insured depository
institutions under section 39 of the
FDIA. The Proposed Rule also would
supplement existing guidance adopted
by the Board and the other Federal
banking agencies regarding incentivebased compensation (i.e., the Banking
Agency Guidance, as defined in the
‘‘Supplementary Information’’ above).
The Proposed Rule would require
covered financial institutions to have
policies and procedures governing the
award of incentive-based compensation
as a way to help ensure the full
implementation of the prohibitions in
the Proposed Rule. The Board believes
that the policies and procedures
developed by each covered financial
institution in this area should be
appropriately tailored to balance risk
and reward for an institution of its size,
complexity, and business activity, as
well as the scope and nature of the
covered financial institution’s incentivebased compensation arrangements.
Therefore, the policies and procedures
of smaller covered financial institutions
with less complex incentive-based
compensation programs would be
expected to be less extensive than those
of larger covered financial institutions
with relatively complex programs and
business activities.
As noted above, because the Proposed
Rule applies to institutions that have
more than $1 billion in total
consolidated assets, if adopted in final
form it is not expected to apply to any
small banking organizations for
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purposes of the Regulatory Flexibility
Act. In light of the foregoing, the Board
does not believe that the Proposed Rule,
if adopted in final form, would have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
supervised by the Board. The Board
specifically seeks comment on whether
the Proposed Rule would impose undue
burdens on, or have unintended
consequences for, small organizations
and whether there are ways such
potential burdens or consequences
could be addressed in a manner
consistent with section 956 of the DoddFrank Act.
FDIC: In accordance with the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601–
612 (RFA), an agency must publish an
initial regulatory flexibility analysis
with its Proposed Rule, unless the
agency certifies that the rule will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
For purposes of the RFA, small entities
are defined to include banks with less
than $175 million in assets.
Consistent with section 956 of the
Dodd-Frank Act, the FDIC’s Proposed
Rule would only apply to a State
nonmember bank and an insured U.S.
branch of a foreign bank that has total
consolidated assets of $1 billion or more
and offers incentive compensation. The
Proposed Rule would not apply to any
small banks as defined by the RFA.
Thus, the FDIC certifies that the
Proposed Rule, if promulgated, would
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities.
OTS: Pursuant to section 605(b) of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C.
605(b) (RFA), the regulatory flexibility
analysis otherwise required under
section 603 of the RFA is not required
if the agency certifies that the proposed
rule, if promulgated, will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities and
publishes its certification and a short,
explanatory statement in the Federal
Register along with its proposed rule.
OTS certifies that the Proposed Rule
would not have a significant impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
The Small Business Administration has
defined ‘‘small entities’’ for banking
purposes as a bank or savings
association with $175 million or less in
assets. 13 CFR 121.201. Since OTS’s
Proposed Rule only applies to savings
associations and savings and loan
holding companies with $1 billion or
more of assets, it will not apply to any
small entities.
FHFA: The Regulatory Flexibility Act
(5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) requires that a rule
that has a significant economic impact
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on a substantial number of small
entities, small businesses, or small
organizations must include an initial
regulatory flexibility analysis describing
the rule’s impact on small entities. Such
an analysis need not be undertaken if
the agency has certified that the rule
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. 5 U.S.C. 605(b). FHFA has
considered the impact of the final rule
under the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
FHFA certifies that the final rule is not
likely to have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
business entities because the rule is
applicable only to FHFA’s covered
entities, which are not small entities for
purposes of the Regulatory Flexibility
Act.
NCUA: In accordance with the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601–
612 (RFA), NCUA must publish an
initial regulatory flexibility analysis
with its proposed rule, unless NCUA
certifies that the proposed rule would
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities, meaning those credit unions
under $10 million in assets. NCUA
Interpretive Ruling and Policy
Statement 03–2, 68 FR 31949 (May 29,
2003). The Dodd-Frank Act section 956
and the NCUA’s proposed rule only
apply to credit unions of $1 billion in
assets or more. Accordingly, NCUA
certifies that the proposed rule would
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small entities
since the credit unions covered under
NCUA’s proposed rule are not small
entities for RFA purposes.
SEC: The Commission has prepared
the following Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis (IRFA), in
accordance with the provisions of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act 35 regarding
proposed Sections 248.201 through
248.207. The Commission encourages
comments with respect to any aspect of
this IRFA, including comments with
respect to the number of small entities
that may be affected by the proposed
rules. Comments should specify the
costs of compliance with the proposed
rules and suggest alternatives that
would accomplish the goals of the rules.
Comments will be considered in
determining whether a Final Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis is required and will
be placed in the same public file as
comments on the proposed rules.
Comments should be submitted to the
Commission at the addresses previously
indicated.
1. Small Entities Subject to the Rule
As described in more detail above, the
proposed rules would implement
section 956 of the Dodd-Frank Act,
codified as 12 U.S.C. 5641. For purposes
of Commission rulemaking in
connection with the RFA, a small entity
includes a broker-dealer: (i) With total
capital (net worth plus subordinated
liabilities) of less than $500,000 on the
date in the prior fiscal year as of which
its audited financial statements were
prepared pursuant to Rule 17a–5(d)
under the Exchange Act, and (ii) is not
affiliated with any person (other than a
natural person) that is not a small
business or small organization as
defined in this section.36 Commission
rules further provide that, for the
purposes of the Investment Advisers Act
of 1940, an investment adviser generally
is a small entity if it: (i) Has assets under
management having a total value of less
than $25 million; (ii) did not have total
assets of $5 million or more on the last
day of its most recent fiscal year; and
(iii) does not control, is not controlled
by, and is not under common control
with another investment adviser that
has assets under management of $25
million or more, or any person (other
than a natural person) that had $5
million or more on the last day of its
most recent fiscal year (‘‘small
adviser’’).37
Section 956 of the Dodd-Frank Act
requires regulators, including the
Commission, to jointly promulgate rules
that apply to covered financial
institutions with assets of at least $1
billion. The Commission believes that
broker-dealers and investment advisers
that would be subject to the proposed
rule would either have $1 billion in
assets or be affiliated with a firm that is
characterized by at least $1 billion in
assets. Therefore, the Commission
preliminarily believes that there should
not be any small broker-dealers or
investment advisers impacted by this
proposed rule.
2. Duplicative, Overlapping, or
Conflicting Federal Rules
The Commission believes that there
are no Federal rules that duplicate,
overlap, or conflict with the proposed
rules.
3. Significant Alternatives
Pursuant to section 3(c) of the RFA,38
the Commission must consider certain
types of alternatives, including (1) The
establishment of differing compliance or
reporting requirements or timetables
36 17
CFR 240.0–10(c). See 17 CFR 240.17a–5(d).
0–7(a). 17 CFR 275.0–7(a).
38 5 U.S.C. 603(c).
37 Rule
35 5
U.S.C. 603.
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that take into account the resources
available to small entities, (2) the
clarification, consolidation, or
simplification of compliance and
reporting requirements under the rule
for small entities, (3) the use of
performance rather than design
standards, and (4) an exemption from
coverage of the rule, or any part of the
rule, for small entities.
The Commission does not believe it is
necessary or appropriate to establish
different compliance or reporting
requirements or timetables; clarify,
consolidate, or simplify compliance and
reporting requirements under the rule
for small entities; or summarily exempt
small entities from coverage of the rule,
or any part of the rule because the
proposed rule will not apply to any
small entities.
4. Request for Comments
The Commission encourages the
submission of comments to any aspect
of this portion of the IRFA. In particular,
comments are encouraged on whether
any small entities would be subject to
the terms of the proposed rule.
Comments should specify costs of
compliance with the proposed rules and
suggest alternatives that would
accomplish the objective of the
proposed rules.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
Request for Comment on Proposed
Information Collection
In accordance with section 3512 of
the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) of
1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501–3521), agencies
may not conduct or sponsor, and a
respondent is not required to respond
to, an information collection unless it
displays a currently valid Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) control
number. The information collection
requirements contained in this joint
notice have been submitted by the FDIC,
OCC, OTS, NCUA, and SEC to OMB for
review and approval under section 3506
of the PRA and § 1320.11 of OMB’s
implementing regulations (5 CFR 1320).
For the FHFA, the proposed rule does
not contain any information collected
from Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the
Federal Home Loan Banks, including
the Office of Finance, that requires the
approval of OMB under the Paperwork
Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
The Board reviewed the proposed rule
under the authority delegated to the
Board by OMB. The proposed rule
contains requirements subject to the
PRA. The reporting requirements are
found in § __.4 and the recordkeeping
requirements are found in
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§§ __.5(b)(3)(ii)(B), __.6(a), and
__.6(b)(5).
Comments are invited on:
(a) Whether the collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the agencies’ functions,
including whether the information has
practical utility;
(b) The accuracy of the estimate of the
burden of the information collection,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
(c) Ways to enhance the quality,
utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected;
(d) Ways to minimize the burden of
information collection on respondents,
including through the use of automated
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology; and
(e) Estimates of capital or startup costs
and costs of operation, maintenance,
and purchase of services to provide
information.
All comments will become a matter of
public record. Comments should be
addressed to:
FDIC: You may submit written
comments, identified by the RIN, by any
of the following methods:
• Agency Web Site: https://
www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal/
propose.html. Follow the instructions
for submitting comments on the FDIC
Web site.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• E-mail: Comments@FDIC.gov.
Include RIN 3064–AD56 on the subject
line of the message.
• Mail: Robert E. Feldman, Executive
Secretary, Attention: Comments, FDIC,
550 17th Street, NW., Washington, DC
20429.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: Comments
may be hand delivered to the guard
station at the rear of the 550 17th Street
Building (located on F Street) on
business days between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Public Inspection: All comments
received will be posted without change
to https://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/
federal/propose.html including any
personal information provided.
Comments may be inspected at the FDIC
Public Information Center, Room E–
1002, 3501 Fairfax Drive, Arlington, VA
22226, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. on
business days.
OCC: You should direct all written
comments to: Communications
Division, Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency, Public Information Room,
Mailstop 2–3, Attention: 1557–NEW,
250 E Street, SW., Washington, DC
20219. In addition, comments may be
sent by fax to 202–874–5274, or by
electronic mail to
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regs.comments@occ.treas.gov. You may
personally inspect and photocopy
comments at the OCC, 250 E Street,
SW., Washington, DC 20219. For
security reasons, the OCC requires that
visitors make an appointment to inspect
comments. You may do so by calling
202–874–4700. Upon arrival, visitors
will be required to present valid
government-issued photo identification
and submit to security screening in
order to inspect and photocopy
comments.
OTS: Information Collection
Comments, Chief Counsel’s Office,
Office of Thrift Supervision, 1700 G
Street, NW., Washington, DC 20552;
send a facsimile transmission to 202–
906–6518; or send an e-mail to
infocollection.comments@ots.treas.gov.
OTS will post comments and the related
index on the OTS Internet site at
https://www.ots.treas.gov. In addition,
interested persons may inspect the
comments at the Public Reading Room,
1700 G Street, NW., by appointment. To
make an appointment, call 202–906–
5922, send an e-mail to
public.info@ots.treas.gov, or send a
facsimile transmission to 202–906–
7755.
NCUA: You may submit comments by
any of the following methods (Please
send comments by one method only):
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Agency Web site: https://
www.ncua.gov/
RegulationsOpinionsLaws/
proposedregs/proposedregs.html.
Follow the instructions for submitting
comments.
• E-mail: Address to
regcomments@ncua.gov. Include ‘‘[Your
name] Comments on Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking Incentive-based
Compensation Arrangements’’ in the email subject line.
• Fax: 703–518–6319. Use the subject
line described above for e-mail.
• Mail: Address to David Chow,
Deputy Chief Information Officer,
National Credit Union Administration,
1775 Duke Street, Alexandria, VA
22314–3428.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: Same as
mail address.
Additionally, you should send a copy
of your comments to the OMB Desk
Officer for the NCUA, by mail to U.S.
Office of Management and Budget, 725
17th Street, NW., 10235, Washington,
DC 20503, or by fax to 202–395–6974.
The Paperwork Reduction Act requires
OMB to make a decision concerning the
collection of information contained in
the proposed regulation between 30 and
60 days after publication of this
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document in the Federal Register.
Therefore, a comment to OMB is best
assured of having its full effect if OMB
receives it within 30 days of
publication. This does not affect the
deadline for the public to comment to
the NCUA on the proposed regulation.
SEC: Comments should be directed to
the Office of Management and Budget,
Attention: Desk Officer for the
Securities and Exchange Commission,
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs, Room 10102, New Executive
Office Building, Washington, DC 20503,
and commenters also should send a
copy of their comments to Elizabeth M.
Murphy, Secretary, Securities and
Exchange Commission, 100 F Street,
NE., Washington, DC 20549–1090, and
refer to File No. S7–12–11. We will post
all public comments we receive without
change, including any personal
information you provide, such as your
name and address, on the SEC Web site
at https://www.sec.gov. Requests for
materials submitted to OMB by the
Commission with regard to this
collection of information should be in
writing, refer to File No. S7–12–11, and
be submitted to the Securities and
Exchange Commission, Office of
Investor Education and Advocacy, 100 F
Street, NE., Washington, DC 20549–
0213. OMB is required to make a
decision concerning the collection of
information between 30 and 60 days
after publication of this release in the
Federal Register. A comment to OMB is
best assured of having full effect if OMB
receives it within 30 days after
publication of this release.
Board: You may submit comments,
identified by Docket No. R–1410, by any
of the following methods:
• Agency Web site: https://
www.federalreserve.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments
on the https://www.federalreserve.gov/
generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• E-mail:
regs.comments@federalreserve.gov.
Include docket number in the subject
line of the message.
• FAX: 202–452–3819 or 202–452–
3102.
• Mail: Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary,
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, 20th Street and
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington,
DC 20551.
All public comments are available
from the Board’s Web site at https://
www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/
foia/ProposedRegs.cfm as submitted,
unless modified for technical reasons.
Accordingly, your comments will not be
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edited to remove any identifying or
contact information. Public comments
may also be viewed electronically or in
paper in Room MP–500 of the Board’s
Martin Building (20th and C Streets,
NW.) between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. on
weekdays.
Proposed Information Collection
Title of Information Collection:
Reporting and Recordkeeping
Requirements Associated with
Incentive-based Compensation
Arrangements.
Frequency of Response: Annual.
Affected Public: Businesses or other
for-profit.
Respondents:
FDIC: State nonmember banks or an
insured U.S. branch of a foreign bank
that has total consolidated assets of $1
billion or more.
OCC: National banks and Federal
branches and agencies of foreign banks
with $1 billion or more in total assets.
OTS: Savings associations and savings
and loan holding companies with $1
billion or more in total assets.
NCUA: Credit unions with $1 billion
or more in total assets.
SEC: Broker-dealers registered under
section 15 of the Securities Exchange
Act of 1934 39 with $1 billion or more
in total assets and investment advisers,
as such term is defined in section
202(a)(11) of the Investment Advisers
Act of 1940, with $1 billion or more in
total assets 40 (collectively ‘‘covered BDs
and IAs’’).
Board: State member banks, bank
holding companies, and state-licensed
uninsured branches and agencies of
foreign banks with more than $1 billion
in total assets, and the U.S. operations
of foreign banking organizations with $1
billion or more in U.S. assets.
Abstract: Section 956 of the DoddFrank Act requires that the agencies
prohibit incentive-based payment
arrangements at a covered financial
institution that encourage inappropriate
risks by a financial institution by
providing excessive compensation or
that could lead to material financial
loss. Under the Dodd-Frank Act, a
covered financial institution also must
disclose to its appropriate Federal
regulator the structure of its incentive-
kgrant on DSK8KYBLC1PROD with PROPOSALS2
39 15
U.S.C. 78o.
U.S.C. 80b–2(a)(11). By its terms, the
definition of ‘‘covered financial institution’’ in
Section 956 includes any firm that meets the
definition of ‘‘investment adviser’’ under the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (‘‘Investment
Advisers Act’’), regardless of whether the firm is
registered as an investment adviser under the Act.
Banks and bank holding companies are generally
excluded from the definition of ‘‘investment
adviser’’ under section 202(a)(11) of the Investment
Advisers Act.
40 15
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based compensation arrangements
sufficient to determine whether the
structure provides ‘‘excessive
compensation, fees, or benefits’’ or
‘‘could lead to material financial loss’’ to
the institution. The Dodd-Frank Act
does not require a covered financial
institution to disclose compensation of
individuals as part of this requirement.
Section __.4(a) would require covered
financial institutions that have total
consolidated assets of $1 billion or more
to submit a report annually to the
Agency that describes the structure of
the covered financial institution’s
incentive-based compensation
arrangements for covered persons and
that is sufficient to allow an assessment
of whether the structure or features of
those arrangements provide or are likely
to provide covered persons with
excessive compensation, fees, or
benefits to covered persons or could
lead to material financial loss to the
institution. Section __.4(b) would
require the following minimum
standards:
(1) A clear narrative description of the
components of the covered financial
institution’s incentive-based
compensation arrangements applicable
to covered persons;
(2) A succinct description of the
covered financial institution’s policies
and procedures governing its incentivebased compensation arrangements;
(3) If the covered financial institution
has total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more,39 an additional succinct
description of incentive-based
compensation policies and procedures
specific to the covered financial
institution’s:
(i) Executive officers; and
(ii) Other covered persons who the
board of directors, or a committee
thereof, of the institution has identified
and determined under § ___.5(b)(3)(ii) of
this part individually have the ability to
expose the institution to possible losses
that are substantial in relation to the
institution’s size, capital, or overall risk
tolerance;
(4) Any material changes to the
covered financial institution’s incentivebased compensation arrangements and
policies and procedures made since the
covered financial institution’s last
report submitted under paragraph (a)(1)
of this section; and
(5) The specific reasons why the
covered financial institution believes
the structure of its incentive-based
compensation plan: (i) Does not provide
covered persons incentives to engage in
behavior that is likely to cause the
covered financial institution to suffer
39 For
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Frm 00019
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21187
material financial loss; and (ii) does not
provide covered persons with excessive
compensation.
Section __.5(b)(3)(ii)(B) would require
the board of directors of covered
financial institutions that have total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more to approve and document the
identification of those covered persons
that individually have the ability to
expose the institution to possible losses
that are substantial in relation to the
institution’s size, capital, or overall risk
tolerance.
Section __.6(b)(5) would ensure that
documentation of the institution’s
processes for establishing,
implementing, modifying, and
monitoring incentive-based
compensation arrangements is
maintained that is sufficient to enable
the Agency to determine the
institution’s compliance with 12 U.S.C.
5641.
Estimated Burden:
FDIC
Number of respondents: 301 (12
institutions with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more and 289
institutions with total consolidated
assets between $1 billion and $50
billion; 4,466 institutions with total
consolidated assets below $1 billion are
exempt).
Burden per respondent for initial set
up: 180 hours for institutions with $50
billion or more in total assets (80 hours
for reporting requirements and 100
hours for recordkeeping requirements)
and 70 hours for institutions between $1
billion and $50 billion in total assets (30
hours for reporting requirements and 40
hours for recordkeeping requirements).
Burden per respondent for ongoing
compliance: 70 hours for institutions
with $50 billion or more in total assets
(40 hours for reporting requirements
and 30 hours for recordkeeping
requirements) and 25 hours for
institutions between $1 billion and $50
billion in total assets (15 hours for
reporting requirements and 10 hours for
recordkeeping requirements).
Total FDIC annual burden: 30,455
hours (22,390 hours for initial set-up
and 8,065 hours for ongoing
compliance).
OCC
Number of respondents: 158 (18
institutions with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more and 140
institutions with total consolidated
assets between $1 billion and $50
billion; 1,215 institutions and 67 trust
companies with total consolidated
assets below $1 billion are exempt).
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Burden per respondent for initial set
up: 180 hours for institutions with $50
billion or more in total assets (80 hours
for reporting requirements and 100
hours for recordkeeping requirements)
and 70 hours for institutions between $1
billion and $50 billion in total assets (30
hours for reporting requirements and 40
hours for recordkeeping requirements).
Burden per respondent for ongoing
compliance: 70 hours for institutions
with $50 billion or more in total assets
(40 hours for reporting requirements
and 30 hours for recordkeeping
requirements) and 25 hours for
institutions between $1 billion and $50
billion in total assets (15 hours for
reporting requirements and 10 hours for
recordkeeping requirements).
Total OCC annual burden: 17,800
hours (13,040 hours for initial set-up
and 4,760 hours for ongoing
compliance).
kgrant on DSK8KYBLC1PROD with PROPOSALS2
OTS
Number of respondents: 163 (17
institutions with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more and 146
institutions with total consolidated
assets between $1 billion and $50
billion.
Burden per respondent for initial set
up: 180 hours for institutions with $50
billion or more in total assets (80 hours
for reporting requirements and 100
hours for recordkeeping requirements)
and 70 hours for institutions between $1
billion and $50 billion in total assets (30
hours for reporting requirements and 40
hours for recordkeeping requirements).
Burden per respondent for ongoing
compliance: 70 hours for institutions
with $50 billion or more in total assets
(40 hours for reporting requirements
and 30 hours for recordkeeping
requirements) and 25 hours for
institutions between $1 billion and $50
billion in total assets (15 hours for
reporting requirements and 10 hours for
recordkeeping requirements).
Total OTS annual burden: 18,120
hours (13,280 hours for initial set-up
and 4,840 hours for ongoing
compliance).
NCUA
Number of respondents: 184 (6
institutions with total consolidated
assets of $10 billion or more and 178
institutions with total consolidated
assets between $1 billion and $10
billion).
Burden per respondent for initial set
up: 180 hours for institutions with $10
billion or more in total assets (80 hours
for reporting requirements and 100
hours for recordkeeping requirements)
and 70 hours for institutions between $1
billion and $10 billion in total assets (30
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hours for reporting requirements and 40
hours for recordkeeping requirements).
Burden per respondent for ongoing
compliance: 70 hours for institutions
with $10 billion or more in total assets
(40 hours for reporting requirements
and 30 hours for recordkeeping
requirements) and 25 hours for
institutions between $1 billion and $10
billion in total assets (15 hours for
reporting requirements and 10 hours for
recordkeeping requirements).
Total NCUA annual burden: 18,410
hours (13,540 hours for initial set-up
and 4,870 hours for ongoing
compliance).
SEC
Number of respondents: The proposed
rule would establish additional
reporting and recordkeeping burdens for
broker-dealers that are covered financial
institutions (‘‘covered BDs and IAs’’)
with assets of at least $50 billion, as
compared to covered BDs and IAs with
assets between $1 billion and $50
billion. The Commission estimates that
approximately 200 respondents
(approximately 130 broker-dealers and
approximately 70 investment advisers)
would be affected generally by the
proposed rules, and that approximately
30 of the 200 respondents would be
affected by proposed §§ 248.204(c)(3)
and 248.205(b)(3)(ii)(B).40
(A) Proposed Section 248.204 (Required
Reports)
The Commission, jointly with the
other Agencies, proposes that covered
BDs and IAs be required to describe the
40 Each Federal regulator has proposed how to
calculate a firm’s ‘‘total consolidated assets’’. For
broker-dealers, the determination of whether the
broker-dealer had $1 billion in assets would be
made by reference to the broker-dealer’s year-end
audited consolidated statement of financial
condition filed with the Commission pursuant to
Rule 17a–5. For investment advisers, asset size
would be determined by the adviser’s total assets
shown on the balance sheet for the adviser’s most
recent fiscal year end. Data from the SEC’s Office
of Risk, Strategy and Financial Innovation indicates
that there are 132 registered broker-dealers with
assets of $1 billion or more and 18 broker-dealers
with assets of at least $50 billion. Most investment
advisers currently do not report to the Commission
the amount of their own assets, so the Commission
is unable to determine how many have $1 billion
or more in assets and $50 billion or more in total
consolidated assets. See Form ADV, Part 1A, Item
12. The Commission estimates that advisers with
assets under management of $100 billion or more
would have total consolidated assets of $1 billion
or more. Based on data from the Investment Adviser
Registration Depository (‘‘IARD’’), the SEC’s
Division of Investment Management estimates that
68 registered advisers with assets under
management of at least $100 billion would have
assets of $1 billion or more, and 7 registered
advisers with assets under management of at least
$500 billion would have total consolidated assets of
at least $50 billion. The Commission has rounded
these numbers to 70 and 10 for purposes of its
analysis.
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4701
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structure of the firms’ incentive-based
compensation arrangements for covered
persons in a manner that is sufficient to
allow an assessment of whether the
structure or features of those
arrangements provide or are likely to
provide covered persons with excessive
compensation, fees, or benefits to
covered persons or could lead to
material financial loss to the firm.
Proposed § 248.204(c)(1) would require
a narrative description of the
components of the incentive-based
compensation arrangements applicable
to covered persons, specifying the types
of covered persons to which they apply.
Proposed § 248.204(c)(2) would require
that covered BDs and IAs provide a
succinct description of their incentivebased compensation policies and
procedures. Proposed § 248.204(c)(3)
would require that covered BDs and IAs
with total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more provide the Commission
with a succinct description of incentivebased compensation policies and
procedures applicable to executive
officers and other covered persons
whom the board of directors, or a
committee thereof, has identified as
having the ability to expose the
institution to possible losses that are
substantial in relation to the firm’s size,
capital, or overall risk tolerance.
Proposed § 248.204(c)(4) would require
covered BDs and IAs to describe the
material changes to the firm’s incentive
based compensation arrangements.
Proposed § 248.204(c)(5) would require
each covered BD and IA to describe the
specific reasons why it believes the
structure of its incentive-based
compensation does not encourage
inappropriate risks by the covered
financial institution by providing
covered persons with excessive
compensation or incentive-based
compensation that could lead to
material financial loss to the covered
financial institution.
Based on the initial and ongoing
burden the Commission estimated in
connection with the adoption of the
executive compensation reporting
requirements for public companies
filing Form 10–Ks under the Exchange
Act (i.e. Item 402 of Regulation S–K),
the Commission estimates that the
burden for the covered BD and IA
respondents imposed by the proposed
reporting requirements would be 100
hours.41 Since the proposed rule does
41 The Commission estimated that public
company respondents would incur approximately
95 hours of annual burden in connection with the
adoption of Item 402 of Regulation S–K. See
Securities Act of 1933 Release No. 8432A and
Securities Exchange Act Release No.
54302A.(August 29, 2006), 71 FR 53158, 53217
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not provide for different reporting
requirements for smaller covered BDs
and IAs with assets between $1 billion
and $50 billion and for larger firms with
assets of at least $50 billion, the
Commission has not estimated separate
reporting burdens for larger covered BDs
and IAs. Therefore, the Commission
estimates a collective reporting burden
of 20,000 hours for covered BDs and
IAs.42
(B) Documentation of Determining
Designated Persons (Section
248.205(b)(3)(ii)(B))
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For covered BDs and IAs with assets
of at least $50 billion, proposed
§ 248.205(b)(3)(ii)(B) would require a
firm’s board of directors, or a committee
thereof, to identify those covered
persons (other than executive officers)
that individually have the ability to
expose the institution to possible losses
that are substantial in relation to the
institution’s size, capital, or overall risk
tolerance. These covered persons may
include, for example, traders with large
position limits relative to the
institution’s overall risk tolerance and
other individuals that have the authority
to place at risk a substantial part of the
capital of the covered financial
institution. The Agencies propose that
the compensation decisions applicable
to such persons must be approved by
the firm’s board of directors or a
committee of the board and that the
covered BD or IA document the
compensation decisions made by the
board or its committee.
The Commission estimates that each
covered BD and IA with assets of at least
$50 billion would incur 20 hours of
burden initially to comply with the
proposed recordkeeping requirements
associated with the proposed rule and
10 hours of burden on an ongoing basis.
Therefore, the Commission estimates an
initial collective recordkeeping burden
in connection with the documentation
requirement provided in
§ 248.205(b)(3)(ii)(B) is 600 hours for
covered BDs and IAs with assets of at
least $50 billion.43 The Commission
estimates the ongoing collective
recordkeeping burden in connection
with this requirement to be 300 hours
for covered BDs and IAs with assets of
at least $50 billion.44
(September 8, 2006) (S7–03–06). The Commission
is rounding this number up to 100 for the instant
proposed rule estimate.
42 200 covered BDs and IAs x 100 hours = 20,000
hours.
43 30 covered BDs and IAs with assets of at least
$50 billion × 20 hours = 600 hours.
44 30 covered BDs and IAs with assets of at least
$50 billion × 10 hours = 300 hours.
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(C) Required Policies and Procedures
Proposed § 248.206(a) would require
covered financial institutions to adopt
and maintain policies and procedures
reasonably designed to ensure and
monitor compliance with 12 U.S.C.
5641, commensurate with the size and
complexity of the organization and the
scope and nature of its use of incentivebased compensation. As described in
further detail above, proposed
§ 248.206(b) would require that the
policies and procedures, at a minimum,
are consistent with the disclosure
requirements and prohibitions in other
parts of the proposed rule, ensure that
risk management or oversight personnel
have a role in designing and assessing
incentive-based compensation
arrangements, provide for independent
monitoring of the incentive-based
compensation awards, risks taken and
actual outcomes, require that a covered
financial institution’s board receive data
and analysis from management and
other sources sufficient to enable the
board to assess whether the incentivebased compensation arrangements are
consistent with 12 U.S.C. 5641, and
require sufficient documentation of the
covered financial institution’s incentivebased compensation arrangements to
enable the Commission to determine the
covered BDs or IAs compliance with 12
U.S.C. 5641. In addition, the proposal
would require that the covered BDs’ and
IAs’ policies and procedures include
certain features when a firm uses
deferral in connection with an
incentive-based compensation
arrangement, and that the policies and
procedures subject incentive-based
compensation arrangements to a
corporate governance framework.
Many covered BDs and IAs are
already conforming to the incentivebased compensation standards reflected
in the Guidance because they are
affiliated with banking organizations
supervised by the FRB, OCC, OTS or
FDIC that have already altered their
incentive-based compensation
arrangements and policies and
procedures following the publication of
the Guidance. The Guidance applies to
all banking organizations supervised by
the FRB, OCC, OTS or FDIC, including
national banks, State member banks,
State nonmember banks, savings
associations, U.S. bank holding
companies, savings and loan holding
companies, the U.S. operations of
foreign banks with a branch, agency or
commercial lending company in the
United States, and Edge and agreement
corporations (collectively ‘‘banking
PO 00000
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Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4702
21189
organizations’’).45 Based upon
information filed with the Commission
and the staff’s discussions with a
number of BDs and its review of the
public filings of covered BDs, IAs and
certain parent companies, the
Commission believes that covered BDs
and IAs affiliated with banking
organizations (‘‘covered bank BDs and
IAs’’) have already altered their
incentive-based compensation policies
and procedures and corresponding
arrangements in conjunction with their
affiliated banking organizations that are
subject to the Guidance. Based on
public filings with the Commission, the
SEC estimates that there are
approximately 25 covered bank BDs and
IAs with total consolidated assets of at
least $50 billion and approximately 85
covered bank BDs and IAs with total
consolidated assets between $1 billion
and $50 billion.46 Therefore, covered
bank BDs and IAs should bear
significantly less burden than those
covered BDs and IAs not already subject
to the Guidance (‘‘covered non-bank BDs
and IAs’’) to develop and maintain
policies and procedures as required in
the proposed rules. The Commission
requests comment on its estimated
number of covered bank BDs and IAs.
The Commission believes that the
covered bank BDs and IAs would incur
approximately the same recordkeeping
burden as the banking organizations.
Based on the initial estimates of
recordkeeping burden provided by FRB,
OCC, FDIC and OTS for proposed
§ 248.206, the Commission estimates an
initial recordkeeping burden of 80 hours
for each covered bank BD and IA with
$50 billion or more in total consolidated
assets and 40 hours of initial
recordkeeping burden for each covered
bank BD and IA with total consolidated
assets between $1 billion and $50
billion. Based on the ongoing estimates
of recordkeeping burden provided by
FRB, OCC, FDIC and OTS, the
Commission believes that each covered
bank BD and IA respondent with total
consolidated assets of at least $50
billion would incur approximately 30
hours of ongoing recordkeeping burden
45 See
Guidance 75 FR at 36398.
Commission estimates that there are
approximately 20 covered bank BDs with assets of
at least $50 billion and 35 covered bank BDs with
assets between $1 billion and $50 billion. The
Commission bases the estimates for covered bank
BDs upon data submitted to the Commission in
FOCUS reports (i.e. Form X–17A–5 Part II). The
Commission estimates that there are approximately
5 covered bank IAs with assets of at least $50
billion and 50 covered bank IAs with assets
between $1 billion and $50 billion. The estimates
for covered bank IAs are based upon data submitted
to the Commission in Form ADV (i.e. Form ADV
Part 1A, Items 6.A.(6) and 7.A.(5)).
46 The
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and each covered bank BD and IA
respondent with total consolidated
assets between $1 billion and $50
billion would incur approximately 10
hours of recordkeeping burden on an
ongoing basis.
For covered non-bank BDs and IAs,
the Commission estimates a
significantly higher burden, namely the
amount of burden that the banking
agencies originally estimated in the
Guidance (480 hours of initial burden,
rounded up to 500 in the instant
proposal and 40 hours of ongoing
burden) 47 in addition to the amounts
that the FRB, OTS, FDIC and OCC
estimated in connection with the instant
proposed rule. The Commission
estimates that there are approximately
75 covered non-bank BDs with assets
between $1 billion and $50 billion, 10
covered non-bank IAs with assets
between $1 billion and $50 billion and
5 covered non-bank IAs with assets of
at least $50 billion.48
Therefore, for covered non-bank BDs
and IAs, the Commission estimates an
initial recordkeeping burden estimate of
580 hours 49 for covered BDs and IAs
with $50 billion or more in total
consolidated assets and 540 hours 50 of
recordkeeping burden for covered BDs
and IAs with total consolidated assets
between $1 billion and $50 billion. The
Commission estimates that covered nonbank BD and IA respondents with total
consolidated assets of at least $50
billion would incur approximately 70
hours 51 of ongoing recordkeeping
burden while those covered non-Bank
BDs and IAs with total consolidated
assets between $1 billion and $50
billion would incur approximately 50
hours 52 of ongoing recordkeeping
burden.
Total SEC initial and annual
recordkeeping and reporting burdens
(from proposed Section
248.205(b)(iii)(2)(B) and proposed
Section 248.206):
Covered bank
BDs and IAs
($50B +)
(hours)
Covered bank
BDs and IAs
($1B–$50B)
(hours)
53 2,500
54 8,500
55 500
56 8,500
57 2,500
58 3,400
59 3,000
60 46,000
61 2,500
62 8,500
63 500
64 8,500
65 1,000
66 1,000
67 400
68 4,300
Initial Reporting ............................................................................................
Initial Recordkeeping ...................................................................................
Ongoing Reporting .......................................................................................
Ongoing Recordkeeping ..............................................................................
D. External Costs
The Commission also believes that the
proposed rules would likely generate
external costs to the covered BDs and
IAs, particularly at the stage of
preparing the initial reports required by
§ 248.204 and initially developing and
implementing the policies and
procedures in compliance with
§ 248.206. Covered BDs and IAs may
elect to hire various types of
professionals, including attorneys,
47 See
Guidance, 75 FR at 36403.
Commission estimates that there are
approximately 75 covered non-bank BDs with assets
between $1 billion and $50 billion . The
Commission estimates that there are approximately
5 covered non-bank IAs with assets of at least $50
billion and 10 covered non-bank IAs with assets
between $1 billion and $50 billion. The
Commission bases these estimates upon data
submitted to the Commission in FOCUS reports (i.e.
Form X–17A–5 Part II) and in Form ADV (i.e. Form
ADV Part 1A, Items 6.A.(6) and 7.A.(5)). See supra
note 46. It is difficult to determine whether any
unregistered advisers are non-bank IAs that are not
subject to the Guidance.
49 500 hours (from Guidance) + 80 hours (from
the estimate provided by the Fed, OCC, FDIC and
OTS in instant proposed rule) = 580 hours.
50 500 hours (from Guidance) + 40 hours (from
the estimate provided by the Fed, OCC, FDIC and
OTS in instant proposed rule) = 540 hours.
51 40 hours (from Guidance) + 30 hours (from the
estimate provided by the Fed, OCC, FDIC and OTS
in instant proposed rule) = 70 hours.
52 40 hours (from Guidance) + 10 hours (from the
estimate provided by the Fed, OCC, FDIC and OTS
in instant proposed rule) = 50 hours.
53 (20 covered bank BDs with assets of at least
$50B + 5 covered bank IAs with assets of at least
$50B) × 100 hours = 2,500 hours.
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Covered nonbank BDs and
IAs ($50B +)
(hours)
Covered nonbank BDs and
IAs ($1B–$50B)
(hours)
benefits consultants, and accountants.
The Commission estimates that the
covered BDs and IAs would hire
professionals to prepare the necessary
reports and develop and maintain the
necessary policies and procedures at
approximately the same hourly level as
the covered BDs and IAs assume
internally (e.g. covered bank BDs and
IAs with at least $50 billion in assets
would collectively use approximately
the equivalent of 2,500 hours worth of
professionals’ time to prepare the
required reports, in addition to the
covered bank BDs’ and IAs’ internal
burden to prepare them).
The Commission believes that there
would be approximately an equal
balance of attorneys,69 benefits
54 (35 covered bank BDs with assets between $1B
and $50B + 50 covered bank IAs with assets
between $1B and $50B) × 100 hours = 8,500 hours.
55 5 covered non-bank IAs with assets of at least
$50B × 100 hours = 500 hours.
56 (75 covered non-bank BDs with assets between
$1B and $50B + 10 covered non-bank IAs with
assets between $1B and $50B) × 100 hours = 8,500
hours.
57 (20 covered bank BDs with assets of at least
$50B + 5 covered bank IAs with assets of at least
$50B) × 80 hours + ((20 covered bank BDs + 5
covered bank IAs) × 20 hours in connection with
proposed Section 248.205(b)(3)(ii)(B)) = 2,500
hours.
58 (35 covered bank BDs with assets between $1B
and $50B + 50 covered bank IAs with assets
between $1B and $50B) × 40 hours = 3,400 hours.
59 5 covered non-bank IAs with assets of at least
$50B × 580 hours + ((5 covered non-bank IAs with
assets of at least $50B) × 20 hours in connection
with proposed Section 248.205(b)(3)(ii)(B)) = 3,000
hours.
60 (75 covered non-bank BDs with assets between
$1B and $50B + 10 covered non-bank IAs with
assets between $1B and $50B) × 540 hours = 45,900
hours.
61 (20 covered bank BDs with assets of at least
$50B + 5 covered bank IAs with assets of at least
$50B) × 100 hours = 2,500 hours.
62 (35 covered bank BDs with assets between $1B
and $50B + 50 covered bank IAs with assets
between $1B and $50B) × 100 hours = 8,500 hours.
63 5 covered non-bank IAs with assets of at least
$50B × 100 hours = 500 hours.
64 (75 covered non-bank BDs with assets between
$1B and $50B + 10 covered non-bank IAs with
assets between $1B and $50B) × 100 hours = 8,500
hours.
65 (20 covered bank BDs with assets of at least
$50B + 5 covered bank IAs with assets of at least
$50B) × 30 hours + ((20 covered bank BDs + 5
covered bank IAs) × 10 hours in connection with
proposed Section 248.205(b)(3)(ii)(B)) = 900 hours.
66 (35 covered bank BDs with assets between $1B
and $50B + 50 covered bank IAs with assets
between $1B and $50B) × 10 hours = 850 hours.
67 5 covered non-bank IAs with assets of at least
$50B × 70 hours + ((5 covered non-bank IAs with
assets of at least $50B) × 10 hours in connection
with proposed Section 248.205(b)(3)(ii)(B)) = 400
hours.
68 (75 covered non-bank BDs with assets between
$1B and $50B + 10 covered non-bank IAs with
assets between $1B and $50B) × 50 hours = 4,250
hours.
69 An outside attorney’s salary range is estimated
at $400 an hour based on industry sources. See
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 62174 (May
26, 2010) at note 510, 75 FR 32556 (June 8, 2010)
(S7–15–09). The Commission requests comment on
this estimate.
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consultants,70 actuaries 71 and
accountants 72 that are hired at each
covered BD or IA. The chart below
summarizes the external costs that the
Commission estimates covered BDs and
IAs would assume collectively in
connection with the proposed rule. The
Commission requests comments on
these external cost estimates, including
the hourly rate that the Commission
21191
estimates for external attorneys, benefits
consultants, actuaries and accountants.
Total SEC estimated external
recordkeeping costs:
Covered bank
BDs and IAs
($50B +)
(million)
Initial Reporting ............................................................................................
Initial Recordkeeping ...................................................................................
Ongoing Reporting .......................................................................................
Ongoing Recordkeeping ..............................................................................
Board
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Number of respondents: 664 (59
institutions with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more and 605
institutions with total consolidated
assets between $1 billion and $50
billion).
Burden per respondent for initial set
up: 180 hours for institutions with $50
billion or more in total consolidated
assets (80 hours for reporting
requirements and 100 hours for
recordkeeping requirements) and 70
hours for institutions between $1 billion
and $50 billion in total consolidated
assets (30 hours for reporting
requirements and 40 hours for
recordkeeping requirements).
Burden per respondent for ongoing
compliance: 70 hours for institutions
with $50 billion or more in total
consolidated assets (40 hours for
reporting requirements and 30 hours for
recordkeeping requirements) and 25
hours for institutions between $1 billion
and $50 billion in total consolidated
assets (15 hours for reporting
requirements and 10 hours for
recordkeeping requirements).
70 An outside management consultant’s salary
range (national averages) is available from https://
www.payscale.com. Using their data from the 75th
percentile, adjusting it for an 1800-hour work year,
and multiplying by the 5.35 factor which normally
is used to include benefits but here is used as an
approximation to offset the fact that New York
salaries are typically higher than the rest of the
country, the result is $596 per hour (rounded to
$600). The Commission requests comment on this
estimate.
71 An outside actuary’s salary range (national
averages) is available from https://
www.payscale.com. Using their data from the 75th
percentile, adjusting it for an 1800-hour work year,
and multiplying by the 5.35 factor which normally
is used to include benefits but here is used as an
approximation to offset the fact that New York
salaries are typically higher than the rest of the
country, the result is $330 per hour. The
Commission requests comment on this estimate.
72 An outside accountant’s salary range is
available from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics,
Occupational Employment Statistics Web site.
Using their data for median salaries from New York
State, which has the highest rates in the country,
and multiplying by the 5.35 factor which is used
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Covered bank
BDs and IAs
($1B–$50B)
(million)
Covered nonbank BDs and
IAs ($50B +)
(million)
Covered nonbank BDs and
IAs ($1B–$50B)
(million)
73 $1
74 $3.4
75 $200,000
77 1
78 1.3
79 1.2
80 18
81 1
82 3.4
83 200,000
84 3.4
85 400,000
86 400,000
87 150,000
88 1.7
76 $3.4
Executive Order 13563, ‘‘Improving
Regulation and Regulatory Review,’’
affirms and supplements Executive
Order 12866, ‘‘Regulatory Planning and
Review,’’ which requires Federal
agencies to prepare a regulatory impact
analysis for agency actions that are
found to be ‘‘significant regulatory
actions.’’ Significant regulatory action
means any regulatory action that is
likely to result in a rule that may:
(1) Have an annual effect on the
economy of $100 million or more or
adversely affect in a material way the
economy, a sector of the economy,
productivity, competition, jobs, the
environment, public health or safety, or
State, local, or tribal governments or
communities;
(2) Create a serious inconsistency or
otherwise interfere with an action taken
or planned by another agency;
(3) Materially alter the budgetary
impact of entitlements, grants, user fees,
or loan programs or the rights and
obligations of recipients thereof; or
(4) Raise novel legal or policy issues
arising out of legal mandates, the
President’s priorities, or the principles
set forth in the Executive order.89
Based on its initial assessment, OTS
anticipates that the proposed rule (if the
final rule is the same as the proposed
rule) would not be economically
significant. Nonetheless, OTS solicits
comment on the economic impact.
OTS does not anticipate that the
proposal would create a serious
inconsistency or otherwise interfere
with an action taken or planned by
another agency. OTS’s proposal is
essentially the same as the proposal of
every other Federal agency regulating
the financial services industry. Thus,
rather than creating any inconsistency,
by being part of this joint interagency
proposal, OTS’s portion adds to the
consistency of regulations on incentivebased compensation that will
encompass the financial services
industry.
to include benefits, the result is $250 per hour. The
Commission requests comment on this estimate.
73 2,500 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $987,500.
74 8,500 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $3,357,500.
75 500 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% × $600/
hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/hour)]
= $197,500.
76 8,500 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $3,357,500.
77 2,500 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $987,500.
78 3,400 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $1,343,000.
79 3,000 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $1,185,000.
80 46,000 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $18,170,000.
81 2,500 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $987,500.
82 8,500 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $3,357,500.
83 500 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% × $600/
hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/hour)]
= $197,500.
84 8,500 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $3,357,500.
85 1,000 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $395,000.
86 1,000 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $395,000.
87 400 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% × $600/
hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/hour)]
= $158,000.
88 4,300 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $1,698,500.
89 See 58 FR 51735 (Oct. 4, 1993), as amended.
Total Board annual burden: 72,225
hours (52,970 hours for initial set-up
and 19,255 hours for ongoing
compliance).
C. OTS Executive Orders 12866 and
13563 Determination
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OTS does not anticipate that the
proposal would materially alter the
budgetary impact of entitlements,
grants, user fees, or loan programs or the
rights and obligations of recipients
thereof. The proposal does not have any
provisions related to those subjects.
The Office of Management and
Budget’s Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs has designated this
proposed rule to be a significant
regulatory action that is likely to result
in a rule that may raise novel legal or
policy issues arising out of legal
mandates, the President’s priorities, or
the principles set forth in Executive
Orders 12866 and 13563. OTS notes that
the proposal does raise some similar
issues as were raised by the Banking
Agency Guidance issued June 25, 2010,
and the 1995 Federal banking agency
guidelines implementing the
compensation-related and other safety
and soundness standards in section 39
of the FDIA (codified at 12 CFR pt. 570,
App. A).
Need for Regulatory Action
The proposed rule is required by
section 956 of the Dodd-Frank Act.
Thus, the proposal is needed to fulfill
the statutory mandate that OTS and the
other agencies participating in this joint
rulemaking prescribe regulations or
guidelines that:
1. Prohibit incentive-based payment
arrangements, or any feature of any such
arrangement, at a covered financial
institution that the Agencies determine
encourage inappropriate risks by a
financial institution by providing
excessive compensation or that could
lead to a material financial loss.
2. Require covered financial
institutions to disclose to its appropriate
Federal regulator the structure of its
incentive-based compensation
arrangements sufficient to determine
whether the structure provides
‘‘excessive compensation, fees, or
benefits’’ or ‘‘could lead to material
financial loss’’ to the institution.
3. Are comparable to the existing
compensation-related safety and
soundness standards applicable to
insured depository institutions under
section 39 of the FDIA (12 U.S.C.
1831p–1(c)) (12 CFR pt. 570, App. A for
OTS).
The legislative history of the DoddFrank Act describes the reasons
Congress believed section 956 of the
Dodd-Frank Act was needed.90 Further
90 See H.R. Rep. 111–236, Corporate and
Financial Institution Compensation Fairness Act of
2009, at 6 (2009). For additional legislative history,
see Compensation Structure and Systemic Risk:
Hearing Before the H. Comm. on Financial Services,
111th Cong. (2009).
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information and analysis is contained in
the Final Report of the Financial Crisis
Inquiry Commission.91 OTS’s portion of
the proposed rule is intended to
enhance the regulatory oversight of
incentive compensation schemes at
larger OTS-regulated savings
associations and savings and loan
holding companies so as to help ensure
that compensation at such institutions is
neither excessive in itself nor
encourages excessive risk taking.
Scope of Proposed Rule
Section 956 of the Dodd-Frank Act
defines ‘‘covered financial institutions’’
to include depository institutions and
depository institution holding
companies, as defined in section 3 of
the FDIA, with assets of $1 billion or
more. OTS’s portion of the proposed
rule applies to savings associations and
savings and loan holding companies
with $1 billion or more in total
consolidated assets that have incentivebased compensation programs.
With regard to savings associations, as
of December 31, 2010, OTS supervised
731 savings associations with a
combined total of $932 billion in assets.
The largest savings association had
assets of $88 billion. Only three other
savings associations had assets greater
than $50 billion. The smallest savings
association had assets of $3.5 million.
Of the 731 savings associations, 103
have more than a $1 billion each in total
assets and thus are covered by the
proposed rule (assuming they all have
incentive-based compensation
programs). Those 103 savings
associations represent 85% of all thrift
industry assets ($793 billion of the total
$932 billion). To put this in context,
however, the latest available data on
commercial banks (dated September 30,
2010) show 508 commercial banks with
assets of $1 billion or more, but with
combined total assets of $11 trillion,
more than eleven times the amount of
assets compared to OTS supervised
savings associations of $1 billion or
more.
With regard to savings and loan
holding companies, as of December 31,
2010, OTS supervised 102 savings and
loan holding companies. Savings and
loan holding companies are companies
that own or control one or more savings
associations. Excluding 42 shell holding
companies that do not have incentive91 Final Report of the National Commission on
the Causes of the Financial and Economic Crisis in
the United States, January 2011, available at
https://
c0182732.cdn1.cloudfiles.rackspacecloud.com/
fcic_final_report_full.pdf. The report contains
discussion of financial sector executive
compensation practices, including on pages 61–65.
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based compensation programs, there are
60 savings and loan holding companies
with aggregate consolidated assets of
$3.1 trillion dollars that are covered by
the proposed rule (assuming they all
have incentive-based compensation
programs). Individually, these
companies have consolidated assets
ranging from $1 billion to over $750
billion, and vary in complexity as well
as size. They conduct a wide range of
activities beyond those conducted by
the saving association(s) they control.
These range from activities closely
related to banking, such as insurance
and securities brokerage, to activities
conducted by large, multinational
corporations, such as retailing and
manufacturing.
Therefore, altogether, OTS’s portion
of the proposed rule would affect a
maximum of 163 OTS-supervised
institutions (103 savings associations
and 60 savings and loan holding
companies).
OTS further notes that the Board,
OCC, and FDIC will assume supervisory
and rulemaking responsibility for
entities currently supervised and
regulated by OTS on the transfer date
provided in Title III of the Dodd-Frank
Act. That date is expected to be July 21,
2011. These agencies expect to adopt, or
incorporate, as appropriate, any final
rule adopted by OTS as part of this
rulemaking for relevant covered
financial institutions that come under
their respective supervisory authority
after the transfer date.
Types of Impact of Proposed Rule
OTS reviewed existing practices at a
subset of these 163 institutions to
determine how much the rule would
add to the current cost of administering
incentive-based compensation
programs. A covered financial
institution would have to:
1. Submit an annual report to OTS
describing the structure of its incentivebased compensation program in
sufficient detail for OTS to determine
whether the program provides excessive
compensation or compensation that
could lead to material loss to the
institution. The annual report would
have to include an analysis of the
characteristics of the incentive-based
compensation program that prevent
excessive compensation and/or mitigate
risk of material financial loss.
2. Review and, if necessary, redesign
its incentive-based compensation
system to ensure it has the elements
necessary to adequately manage the
risks arising from incentive-based
compensation. The rule would contain
a list of the minimum elements to be
included in the policies and procedures.
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3. Conduct ongoing monitoring and,
as appropriate, auditing of the
incentive-based compensation program
to ensure that it does, in fact, allocate
incentive-based compensation in a way
that is not excessive and does not
encourage inappropriate risks.
In estimating the implementation
costs to covered financial institutions,
OTS assumed that costs would generally
fall in four areas:
1. Initially reviewing incentive-based
compensation programs to determine
whether program modifications are
needed;
2. Modifying incentive-based
compensation programs, where needed;
3. Ongoing monitoring of incentivebased compensation programs to ensure
continued compliance; and
4. Preparing and submitting required
annual reports on the programs to OTS.
Almost all of the covered financial
institutions have incentive-based
compensation programs. Each covered
financial institution, therefore, would
need to perform an initial review to
determine whether modifications would
be needed. This initial review would
also include the analysis necessary to
prepare the first report to OTS.
Those institutions needing
modifications would have to expend
further resources to design and
implement compliant systems that fit
the institution’s business strategy and
internal structure. The complexity and
length of this process would vary
depending on the size of the institution,
the scope of the institution’s incentivebased compensation program, and the
extent of necessary modifications.
The rule’s burden would be
minimized by granting covered financial
institutions the latitude to employ a
variety of means to mitigate the risks
posed by their current incentive-based
compensation programs. While
institutions would have to develop
policies and procedures that provide
clear expectations, institutions could
choose the incentive-based
compensation risk balancing measures
that best address their employees and
their risks.92
OTS’s provisional assessment is that
most covered financial institutions
would have to make minimal changes to
their systems covering:
1. Compensation to executives;
2. The oversight exercised by the
board and compensation committee;
3. The scope of risk management; and
4. The role of internal audit.
Some of the key restrictions in the
proposed rule are restrictions that
covered financial institutions are
already observing. Section 563h.5(a)
would provide that a covered financial
institution must not establish or
maintain any type of incentive-based
compensation arrangement, or any
feature of any such arrangement, that
encourages inappropriate risks by the
covered financial institution by
providing a covered person with
excessive compensation. Section
563h.5(b) would provide that a covered
financial institution must not establish
or maintain any type of incentive-based
compensation arrangement, or any
feature of any such arrangement, that
encourages inappropriate risks by the
covered financial institution, by
providing incentive-based
compensation to covered persons, either
individually or as part of a group of
persons who are subject to the same or
similar incentive-based compensation
arrangements, that could lead to
material financial loss to the covered
financial institution.
OTS and the other Federal banking
regulators have long required depository
institutions to conform their
compensation practices to principles of
safety and soundness.93 Since 1995,
OTS and the other Federal banking
regulators have specifically prohibited
depository institutions from paying
compensation, fees, and benefits that are
excessive or that could lead to material
financial loss to the institutions.94 Since
1995, OTS and the other Federal
banking regulators have also specified
that compensation that could lead to
material financial loss to an institution
is prohibited as an unsafe and unsound
practice.95 The standards specified in
§ 563h.5(a)(2) for determining whether
an incentive-based compensation
arrangement provides excessive
compensation are taken directly from
the existing 1995 guidelines.96
Since June 25, 2010, OTS and the
other Federal banking regulators have
maintained guidance designed to help
ensure that incentive-based
compensation policies at banking
organizations do not encourage
imprudent risk-taking and are consistent
with the safety and soundness of the
organization, including guidance on
methods such as deferral that make
compensation more sensitive to risk.
The requirements specified in
§ 563h.5(b)(2) for avoiding incentivebased compensation arrangements that
could lead to material financial loss are
93 See
section 39(c) of FDIA, 12 U.S.C. 1831p–
1(c).
94 See
92 The
Federal Banking Agency Guidance
presents and discusses these measures.
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12 CFR part 570, App. A, paragraph II.I.
12 CFR part 570, App. A, paragraph III.B.
96 See 12 CFR part 570, App. A, paragraph III.A.
95 See
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taken directly from the guidance.97 Most
covered financial institutions, therefore,
already have the listed elements in
place. Further, a recent report of the
Basel Committee on Banking
Supervision (BCBS) noted that most
larger institutions already use
management accounting to map
company performance to business units,
and largely employ risk-adjusted return
to capital and other economic efficiency
measures to assess performance when
making incentive-based compensation
allocation decisions.98
Even the reporting requirements of
§ 563h.4 of the proposed rule would not
be completely new for many
institutions. Publicly listed institutions
already disclose their incentive-based
compensation systems.99
As a group, covered financial
institutions are likely to make more
significant changes to incentive-based
compensation programs for nonexecutive employees and, to some
degree, principal shareholders. While
institutions have in place most of the
internal policies and procedures
necessary to run an incentive-based
compensation program for these two
groups, modifications would likely be
necessary to ensure full compliance.
Larger institutions, defined as having
total consolidated assets of $50 billion
or more, would have to defer at least 50
percent of the annual incentive-based
compensation of executive officers for at
least three years. These institutions
would also apply special review and
approval requirements for the incentivebased compensation arrangements for
material risk takers. Among OTSsupervised institutions, 13 holding
companies and 4 thrifts would be
subject to this requirement. These 17
institutions would likely need to make
changes to their compensation
programs, as it appears that none of
them currently defers the required
percentage of incentive-based
compensation for the required amount
of time.
Finally, institutions have an ongoing
requirement to prepare annual reports
and administer their incentive-based
compensation program in compliance
with the rule. The administration of the
program would include calculating the
amount of compensation subject to riskbased adjustment (e.g., deferral),
97 75
FR at 36405.
Consultative paper: Range of
Methodologies for Risk and Performance Alignment
of Remuneration, available at https://www.bis.org/
publ/bcbs178.pdf.
99 SEC regulation 17 CFR 229.402(a)(2) requires
listed companies to disclose all elements of the
compensation provided to ‘‘named executive
officers’’ and ‘‘directors.’’
98 BCBS
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calculating the performance metrics
upon which incentive compensation are
based, ensuring that independent
review of compensation awards is
conducted, and assessing the
effectiveness of risk-based adjustments
to incentive-based compensation
payouts. As previously mentioned,
institutions generally take these actions
to comply with existing safety and
soundness regulations and guidance.
To assist the public in understanding
how OTS’s proposed rule (12 CFR part
563h) compares with Federal Banking
Agency Guidelines from 1995 (12 CFR
part 570, App. A), and the Federal
Banking Agency Guidance from 2010
(75 FR 36395), OTS provides the
following summary in bullet form:
1. Applicability
• Proposed Rule—Applies to those
savings associations and savings and
loan holding companies that have total
consolidated assets of $1 billion or more
and offer incentive-based compensation
arrangements to covered persons
(§§ 563h.2 and 563h.3).
• 1995 Guidelines—Applies to all
savings associations (¶ I.i).
• 2010 Guidance—Applies to all
savings associations (p. 36405 n.2).
2. Reports
• Proposed Rule—Requires annual
reports to OTS describing the structure
of incentive-based compensation
arrangements; sets minimum standards
for the reports. (§ 563h.4)
• 1995 Guidelines—No comparable
provision.
• 2010 Guidance—No comparable
provision.
3. Excessive compensation
• Proposed Rule—Prohibits
establishing or maintaining any type of
incentive-based compensation
arrangement, or any feature of any such
arrangement, for covered persons that
encourages inappropriate risks by
providing excessive compensation
(§ 563h.5(a)(1)). Sets a standard that an
incentive-based compensation
arrangement provides excessive
compensation when amounts paid are
unreasonable or disproportionate to the
services performed, taking into
consideration seven factors listed in the
proposed rule (§ 563h.5(a)(2)).
• 1995 Guidelines—Prohibits
excessive compensation as an unsafe
and unsound practice. Sets a standard
that compensation is excessive when
amounts paid are unreasonable or
disproportionate to the services
performed by taking into consideration
seven factors listed in the guidelines.
Covers the same categories of persons
and lists the same seven factors as the
proposed rule. (¶ III.A)
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• 2010 Guidance—No comparable
provision.
4. Material financial loss
Generally; Requirements for all
covered financial institutions
• Proposed Rule—Prohibits
establishing or maintaining any type of
incentive-based compensation
arrangement, or any feature of any such
arrangement, that encourages
inappropriate risks by the covered
financial institution, by providing
incentive-based compensation to
covered persons, either individually or
as part of a group of persons who are
subject to the same or similar incentivebased compensation arrangements, that
could lead to material financial loss to
the covered financial institution
(§ 563h.5(b)(1)). Specifies that an
incentive-based compensation
arrangement established or maintained
by a covered financial institution for
one or more covered persons must meet
three criteria listed in the proposed rule
(§ 563h.5(b)(2)).
• 1995 Guidelines—Prohibits
compensation that could lead to
material financial loss as an unsafe and
unsound practice (¶ III.B).
• 2010 Guidance—Provides that
incentive compensation arrangements,
to be consistent with safety and
soundness, should meet three criteria
(p. 36405). The criteria listed are the
same as in the proposed rule.
Specific requirements for covered
financial institutions with $50 billion or
more in total consolidated assets;
Deferral required for executive officers
• Proposed Rule—Specifies that at
least 50% of the incentive-based
compensation for an executive officer at
an institution with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more must be
deferred over a period of no less than
three years, with the release of deferred
amounts to occur no faster than on a pro
rata basis, and with the adjustment of
the deferred amount to reflect actual
losses or other measures or aspects of
performance that are realized or become
better known during the deferral period
(§ 563h.5(b)(3)(i)).
• 1995 Guidelines—No comparable
provision.
• 2010 Guidance—No comparable
provision.
Specific requirements for covered
financial institutions with $50 billion or
more in total consolidated assets;
additional requirement for covered
persons presenting particular loss
exposure
• Proposed Rule—Contains special
procedures and restrictions on the
incentive-based compensation of
covered persons (other than executive
officers) who the institution’s board
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identifies as having the ability to expose
the institution to possible losses that are
substantial in relation to the
institution’s size, capital, or overall risk
tolerance (§ 563h.5(b)(3)(ii)).
• 1995 Guidelines—No comparable
provision.
• 2010 Guidance—No comparable
provision.
5. Policies and procedures
• Proposed Rule—Sets minimum
standards for policies and procedures
on incentive compensation (§ 563h.6).
• 1995 Guidelines—No comparable
provision.
• 2010 Guidance—No comparable
provision. But see discussion of other
policy and procedure requirements (pp.
36403–05).
6. Evasions
• Proposed Rule—Anti-evasion
provision prohibits, doing indirectly or
through or by any other person, any act
or thing that would be unlawful to do
directly (§ 563h.7).
• 1995 Guidelines—No comparable
provision.
• 2010 Guidance—No comparable
provision.
Assessment of Impact of Proposed Rule
OTS believes that an institution
would spend several hundred person
hours conducting an initial review of its
incentive-based compensation program
and making any necessary
modifications. All institutions of $1
billion in total consolidated assets or
more would have to conduct the review,
and most institutions would have to
make some modification to their
incentive-based compensation
programs.
OTS estimates that smaller
institutions (those with less than $50
billion in assets) would spend, at most,
eight weeks (320 person hours) to
perform the initial steps necessary to
comply. Among the covered financial
institutions, 146 fall into this category.
Using $150 as an estimate of hourly
cost,100 the total cost to the smaller
institutions as a group would be $7
million ($150 × 320 hours × 146
institutions). At larger institutions, these
modifications would be more extensive
because of the number of individuals
involved and the amount the institution
would have to expand and/or adjust risk
sensitivity measures. The larger
institutions may require as much as
twice the time as smaller institutions to
implement the rule, for an estimated
cost of $1.6 million ($150 × 640 hours
× 17 institutions). The total initial
100 OTS estimates that legal and administrative
expenses would average, at most, $150 per hour.
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implementation costs, therefore, should
come to approximately $8.6 million.
The subsequent ongoing costs
associated with monitoring and
managing incentive-based compensation
programs, once established, are unlikely
to be significantly greater than the costs
associated with the administration of
current incentive-based programs. OTS,
therefore, believes that the ongoing
annual costs of the rule would not
exceed $100 million. As previously
discussed, institutions already have in
place most of the mechanisms necessary
to implement the rule’s requirements.
Once the institution makes adjustments
indicated by its initial analysis, these
mechanisms would continue to function
as they do now.
Any ongoing costs in addition to
those already incurred would be for:
1. Production of an annual report;
2. Administration of incentive-based
compensation for a broader range of
employees;
3. Administration of a more complex
deferral scheme at some institutions;
and
4. More sophisticated risk sensitivity
mechanisms.
With respect to item 1, OTS believes
that the costs of the annual report would
be minimal. Reports after the first
submitted would only need to
document significant changes to the
incentive-based compensation program.
Human resource departments maintain
descriptions of their incentive-based
compensation programs for internal
administrative purposes; these
descriptions could serve as the basis for
regulatory reporting.
With respect to items 2, 3, and 4, OTS
anticipates that institutions would use
some additional human resources and
risk management expertise to administer
the programs. For the 17 larger
institutions, OTS estimates that the cost
of these additional resources would be
about $24,000 per institution annually.
For the 146 smaller institutions, the
additional resources would entail
additional personnel and other expenses
of less than $12,000 per institution per
year.101 Therefore, OTS estimates the
annual cost to be about $2.2 million (17
larger institutions × $24,000 = $0.4
million; 146 smaller institutions ×
$12,000 = $1.8 million).
In summary, OTS estimates the costs
to the institutions of implementing the
rule as proposed as follow:
101 OTS estimates that for institutions with assets
between $1 billion and $50 billion, the costs of
managing the additional elements of the program
would entail some personnel and Information
Technology (IT) support. As institutions already
have personnel management software systems in
place, either in house or contracted out, the
incremental costs of IT support would be negligible.
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First year: $8.6 million + $2.2 million
= $10.8 million.
Second and subsequent years: $2.2
million.
Beyond the costs of implementation,
OTS assumes that the broader economic
impact of the rule would be negligible.
The overall level of compensation, as set
by the forces of supply and demand in
the labor market, is unlikely to change.
Any variations in compensation levels
that may occur would be minimal and,
given the small number of covered
financial institutions, have no effect on
overall demand in the economy.
If the rule has its desired effect,
institutions will take a more measured
approach in their assessment of risk and
return. As a result, the amount of
lending in some excessively risky
business areas may be reduced, which
in turn may have an economic impact
on the areas served by the 163 OTSsupervised covered financial
institutions. Incentive-based
compensation programs that
appropriately balance risk and reward
will entail reductions only of economic
activity that is unsound and which,
ultimately, entails more cost than
benefit to the economy as a whole. Any
reduction in inappropriately risky
lending brought about by the rule,
therefore, would be a benefit of the rule.
The recent crisis in financial markets
demonstrated the significant costs that
can arise from financial instability; the
purpose of the rule is to enhance the
financial stability of the financial sector
by diminishing incentives for
inappropriate risk taking. Because the
benefits of financial stability are largely
intangible, OTS made no attempt to
quantify them here.
Conclusion
OTS’s preliminary estimates of the
annualized cost of this rule to the 163
OTS-supervised covered financial
institutions as a group would be
substantially less than $100 million.
Moreover, the overall annual economic
impact would not be significant. OTS
seeks comment on this economic impact
assessment.
D. OCC Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 Determination
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (2 U.S.C.
1532), requires the OCC to prepare a
budgetary impact statement before
promulgating a rule that includes a
Federal mandate that may result in the
expenditure by State, local, and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100 million or more
in any one year (adjusted annually for
inflation). OCC has determined that this
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proposed rule will not result in
expenditures by State, local, and tribal
governments, or the private sector, of
$100 million or more in any one year.
Accordingly, OCC has not prepared a
budgetary impact statement.
E. OTS Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 Determination
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995, Public
Law 104–4 (Unfunded Mandates Act)
requires that an agency prepare a
budgetary impact statement before
promulgating a rule that includes a
Federal mandate that may result in
expenditure by State, local, and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100 million or more
(adjusted annually for inflation) in any
one year. (The inflation adjusted
threshold for 2011 is $142 million or
more.) If a budgetary impact statement
is required, section 205 of the Unfunded
Mandates Act also requires an agency to
identify and consider a reasonable
number of regulatory alternatives before
promulgating a rule.
OTS has determined that this
proposed rule will not result in
expenditures by State, local, and tribal
governments, or the private sector, in
excess of the threshold. Accordingly,
OTS has not prepared a budgetary
impact statement.
F. NCUA Executive Order 13132
Determination
Executive Order 13132 encourages
independent regulatory agencies to
consider the impact of their actions on
state and local interests. In adherence to
fundamental federalism principles, the
NCUA, an independent regulatory
agency as defined in 44 U.S.C. 3502(5)
voluntarily complies with the Executive
Order. The Proposed Rule applies to
credit unions with $1 billion in assets
and over and would not have
substantial direct effects on the states,
on the connection between the national
government and the states, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government. The NCUA has
determined that the Proposed Rule does
not constitute a policy that has
federalism implications for purposes of
the Executive Order.
G. NCUA and FDIC: The Treasury and
General Government Appropriations
Act, 1999—Assessment of Federal
Regulations and Policies on Families
The NCUA and FDIC have determined
that this Proposed Rule would not affect
family well-being within the meaning of
section 654 of the Treasury and General
Government Appropriations Act, 1999,
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Public Law 105–277, 112 Stat. 2681
(1998).
H. SEC Economic Analysis
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Economic Analysis
As discussed above, 12 U.S.C. 5641
requires the Commission, jointly with
other appropriate Federal regulators, to
prescribe regulations or guidelines to
require covered financial institutions to
disclose information about their
incentive-based compensation
arrangements sufficient for the Agencies
to determine whether their
compensation structure provides an
executive officer, employee, director or
principal shareholder with excessive
compensation, fees or benefits or could
lead to material financial loss to the
firm.102 12 U.S.C. 5641 also requires the
Agencies to prescribe joint regulations
or guidelines that prohibit any type of
incentive-based compensation
arrangements that the Agencies
determine encourages inappropriate
risks by covered financial institutions
by providing excessive compensation to
officers, employees, directors, or
principal shareholders (‘‘covered
persons’’) or that could lead to material
financial loss to the covered financial
institution.103
The Agencies have determined that it
is appropriate to propose rules, instead
of guidelines, as permitted under 12
U.S.C. 5641. The Commission believes
that broker-dealers and investment
advisers would benefit from the greater
predictability afforded by rules. Such
greater predictability would facilitate
broker-dealers’ and investment advisers’
ability to design compliance policies
and procedures. The rule being
proposed by the Agencies consists of a
reporting section, a prohibition section,
and a policies and procedures section.
The reporting section requires enhanced
reporting of incentive-based
compensation arrangements for covered
persons by a covered financial
institution to such institution’s
appropriate Federal regulator. The
prohibition section forbids incentivebased compensation arrangements that
encourage covered persons to expose
the institution to inappropriate risks by
providing the covered person excessive
compensation and prohibits incentivebased compensation arrangements that
encourage covered persons to expose
the covered financial institutions to
inappropriate risks that could lead to a
material financial loss. The policies and
procedures section requires that the
covered financial institutions maintain
102 12
103 12
U.S.C. 5641(a).
U.S.C. 5641(b).
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policies and procedures to ensure
compliance with these requirements
and prohibitions. The Commission is
sensitive to the costs and benefits
imposed on broker-dealers registered
with the Commission under section 15
of the Securities Exchange Act
(‘‘registered broker-dealers’’) and
investment advisers, as defined in
section 202(a)(11) of the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940 (‘‘investment
advisers’’). The discussion below
focuses on the costs and benefits
applicable to registered broker-dealers
and investment advisers that meet the
definition of ‘‘covered financial
institution’’ under the proposed rule
(collectively ‘‘covered BDs and IAs’’).
The discussion addresses the decisions
made jointly by the Agencies to fulfill
the mandates of the Dodd-Frank Act
within the Agencies’ permitted
discretion, rather than the costs and
benefits of the mandates of the DoddFrank-Act itself. However, to the extent
that the Commission’s discretion is
exercised to realize the benefits
intended by the Dodd-Frank Act or to
impose the costs associated with the
Dodd-Frank Act, the two types of
benefits and costs are not entirely
separable. Therefore, the Paperwork
Reduction Act (‘‘PRA’’) hourly burden
estimates made in accordance with the
requirements of the PRA, and their
corresponding dollar cost estimates, are
included in the calculations below.
categories of covered persons to which
they apply;
• A succinct description of the
covered financial institution’s policies
and procedures governing its incentivebased compensation arrangements;
• For covered financial institutions
with total consolidated assets of at least
$50 billion, an additional succinct
description of incentive-based
compensation policies and procedures
specific to the covered financial
institution’s executive officers and other
covered persons who the institution’s
board of directors (or a committee of the
board) has identified and determined
have the ability to expose the institution
to possible losses that are substantial in
relation to the institution’s size, capital,
or overall risk tolerance;
• A description of any material
changes to the covered financial
institution’s incentive-based
compensation arrangements and
policies and procedures made since the
covered financial institution’s last
report submitted this section; and
• The specific reasons the covered
financial institution believes the
structure of its incentive-based
compensation arrangements does not
provide covered persons incentives to
engage in behavior that is likely to cause
the covered financial institution to
suffer a material financial loss and does
not provide covered persons with
excessive compensation.
A. Report of Incentive-Based
Compensation Arrangements
In order to fulfill the requirement
imposed by 12 U.S.C. 5641(a) relating to
the disclosure of incentive-based
compensation arrangements, the
proposal would require a covered
financial institution to submit a report
annually to, and in the format directed
by, its regulator, that describes the
structure of the covered financial
institution’s incentive-based
compensation arrangements for covered
persons. Similar to the policies and
procedures requirements under the
proposed rule, the annual report would
be commensurate with the size and
complexity of the organization, as well
as the scope and nature of its use of
incentive-based compensation
arrangements. As such, institutions with
no incentive-based compensation
arrangements or arrangements that affect
only a few covered persons, would need
to submit only limited information. The
report would be required to contain:
• A clear narrative description of the
components of the covered financial
institution’s incentive-based
compensation arrangements applicable
to covered persons, specifying the
1. Benefits
The Commission believes that the
information that would be required to
be reported to the Commission under
proposed § 248.205 would assist
Commission examiners to determine
whether covered BDs and IAs are
fulfilling the requirements of section
956 of the Dodd-Frank Act. The report
is designed to elicit pointed, succinct
explanations about issues that would
likely be of high interest to an examiner,
such as a clear narrative description of
the firm’s incentive-based compensation
plan, a succinct description of the firm’s
incentive-based compensation policies
and procedures and any changes
thereto, and reasons that the
compensation structure will not
encourage behavior that violates the
principles of 12 U.S.C. 5641. The
Commission anticipates that examiners
would find these descriptions a useful
starting point in an examination to make
a risk-assessment as to which areas of a
firm’s incentive-based compensation
arrangements merit further examination.
Persons within covered BDs and IAs
responsible for determining
compensation levels, as well as persons
receiving incentive-based compensation
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would be able to review the incentivebased compensation policies, which
should promote the balance of the
incentive-based compensation process
at covered BDs and IAs. The
Commission also believes that the
reporting of incentive-based
compensation information would foster
a climate of accountability at covered
BDs and IAs by raising the profile of
incentive-based compensation at firms,
and thereby improving the care with
which the firms design their incentivebased compensation programs. By
including persons who individually
have the ability to expose a firm with
total consolidated assets of at least $50
billion to possible losses that are
substantial in relation to the firm’s size,
capital, or overall risk tolerance as
persons whose compensation should be
subject to the requirements of the statute
(designated risk takers), the proposed
rule should encourage executives to
consider more carefully those
compensation arrangements that could
potentially lead to activities that could
expose the covered institution to
significant risks. Properly incentivizing
designated risk takers could limit the
risk exposure of covered financial
institutions.
The reporting provisions of the
proposed rule are designed to elicit
qualitative statements from the covered
financial institution, including covered
BDs and IAs, regarding, among other
things, the specific reasons the covered
financial institution believes the
structure of its incentive-based
compensation plan does not provide
covered persons incentives to engage in
behavior that is likely to cause the
covered financial institution to suffer a
material financial loss and does not
provide covered persons with excessive
compensation. The proposed rule is
designed to elicit a meaningful
discussion of the firm’s incentive-based
compensation arrangements. In all
cases, covered BDs and IAs should
report to the Commission the
comprehensive descriptions relating to
each of the required disclosures
described below.
2. Costs
The Commission is aware that
requiring companies to file reports on
the structure of their incentive-based
compensation arrangements could
impose costs on covered financial
institutions. For example, by requiring
covered financial institutions to report
the information in the proposed rule, it
is possible that this could serve as a
disincentive for covered financial
institutions to re-visit or otherwise
revise their incentive-based
compensation plans, because doing so
would create additional regulatory
burdens for the covered financial
institution. Further, while the
Commission intends to keep the
reported information confidential to the
full extent it is permitted to do so under
the Freedom of Information Act
(‘‘FOIA’’), the Commission understands
21197
that firms may nonetheless have
concerns about potential disclosure of
information that could be competitively
sensitive, as incentive-based
compensation plans and arrangements
are. The Commission believes that not
including information regarding the
individual compensation levels of
covered persons may mitigate some
confidentiality concerns. Accordingly,
the Commission is aware of these
potential costs and seeks comment on
them generally, as well as on any
specific methods that could be used to
minimize these costs and concerns.
The Commission is also aware that
the proposed rule would generate
compliance-related costs associated
with, among other things, collecting the
necessary information and preparing the
reports, as well as hiring outside
professionals, such as attorneys,
compensation or benefits consultants,
accountants and/or actuaries. In the
charts below, the Commission estimates
the internal and external costs
associated with the proposed reporting
requirements. In order to arrive at the
internal cost estimates, the Commission
multiplied the hourly burden estimates
provided in the PRA Section by the
estimated hourly rate for a securities
attorney.104 The Commission is using
the same external cost estimates for the
reporting requirement that it used in the
PRA Section of this proposed rule. The
Commission seeks comment on all these
cost estimates.
INTERNAL COSTS
Covered bank
BDs and IAs
($50B +)
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Initial Reporting ..............................................................
Ongoing Reporting .........................................................
104 The Commission estimates $354 per hour for
a securities attorney, based on SIFMA’s
Management & Professional Earnings in the
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Covered bank
BDs and IAs
($1B–$50B)
Covered non-bank
BDs and IAs
($50B +)
$900,000 105 ...........
900,000 109 .............
$3 million 106 ..........
3 million 110 ............
$175,000 107 ...........
175,000 111 .............
Securities Industry 2010, modified by Commission
staff to account for an 1800-hour work-year and
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Covered non-bank
BDs and IAs
($1B–$50B)
$3 million.108
3 million.112
multiplied by 5.35 to account for bonuses, firm size,
employee benefits and overhead.
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EXTERNAL COSTS
Covered bank
BDs and IAs
($50B +)
Initial Reporting ..............................................................
Ongoing Reporting .........................................................
B. Prohibition on Certain IncentiveBased Compensation Arrangements
The proposed rule states that a
covered financial institution may not
establish or maintain any incentivebased compensation arrangement, or
any feature of any such arrangement,
that encourages a covered person to
expose the institution to inappropriate
risks by providing that person with
excessive compensation. Under the
proposed rule, compensation would be
considered excessive when amounts
paid are unreasonable or
disproportionate to the services
performed by a covered person. In
determining whether incentive-based
compensation is unreasonable or
disproportionate to the services
performed, the covered BDs and IAs
would consider those factors set forth in
the section 39(c) of the FDIA.121
hours × $354/hour = $885,000.
hours × $354/hour = $3,009,000.
107 500 hours × $354 = $177,000.
108 8,500 hours × $354/hour = $3,009,000.
109 2,500 hours × $354/hour = $885,000.
110 8,500 hours × $354/hour = $3,009,000.
111 500 hours × $354 = $177,000.
112 8,500 hours × $354/hour = $3,009,000.
113 2,500 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $987,500.
114 8,500 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $3,357,500.
115 500 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $197,500.
116 8,500 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $3,357,500.
117 2,500 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $987,500.
118 8,500 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $3,357,500.
119 500 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $197,500.
120 8,500 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $3,357,500.
121 Under Section 248.205(a)(2) of the proposed
rule, an incentive-based compensation arrangement
provides excessive compensation when amounts
paid are unreasonable or disproportionate to the
services performed by a covered person, taking into
consideration:
(i) The combined value of all cash and non-cash
benefits provided to the covered person;
(ii) The compensation history of the covered
person and other individuals with comparable
expertise at the covered financial institution;
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Covered bank
BDs and IAs
($1B–$50B)
Covered non-bank
BDs and IAs
($50B +)
$1 million 113 ..........
1 million 117 ............
$3.4 million 114 .......
3.4 million 118 .........
$200,000 115 ...........
200,000 119 .............
To address the prohibition against
arrangements that potentially encourage
inappropriate risks that could lead to a
material financial loss at the covered
financial institution, the Agencies
propose to deem incentive-based
compensation arrangements for all
covered persons to encourage
inappropriate risks that could lead to
material financial loss at the institution
unless the arrangement or feature:
(i) Balances risk and financial results,
for example, by using deferral of
payments, risk adjustment of awards,
longer performance periods, or reduced
sensitivity to short-term performance;
(ii) is compatible with effective controls
and risk management; and (iii) is
supported by strong oversight by a
covered BD’s or IA’s board of directors.
These principles are substantially
identical to the principles published in
the Guidance.122
The proposed rule would require
additional measures for certain covered
persons working for covered financial
institutions with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more. For
executive officers and heads of major
business lines of such firms, at least
50% of their incentive-based
compensation would be required to be
deferred on a pro-rata basis over a
period of at least three years. Such
executive officers’ and business line
heads’ deferred incentive-based
compensation would be required to be
adjusted downward to reflect actual
losses or other measures or aspects of
performance that are realized or become
better known during the deferral period
(the ‘‘look-back’’).
(iii) The financial condition of the covered
financial institution;
(iv) Comparable compensation practices at
comparable institutions, based upon such factors as
asset size, geographic location, and the complexity
of the institution’s operations and assets;
(v) For postemployment benefits, the projected
total cost and benefit to the covered financial
institution;
(vi) Any connection between the individual and
any fraudulent act or omission, breach of trust or
fiduciary duty, or insider abuse with regard to the
covered financial institution; and
(vii) Any other factors the Commission
determines to be relevant.
122 See Guidance on Sound Incentive
Compensation Policies, 75 FR 36395 (June 25, 2010)
(jointly adopted by the OCC, the FRB, the FDIC and
OTS).
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Covered non-bank
BDs and IAs
($1B–$50B)
$3.4 million.116
3.4 million.120
The Agencies also propose for a
covered financial institution with $50
billion or more in assets that for certain
classes of covered person whose
activities, by their nature, expose the
covered financial institution to a risk of
significant loss (designated risk takers),
that such firm’s board of directors, or a
committee thereof, perform individual
review of each such person’s incentivebased compensation against certain
factors and that each such person’s
incentive-based compensation be
approved by the board of directors, or
committee thereof.
1. Benefits
The Commission believes that the
proposed prohibitions related to the
incentive-based compensation
arrangements would help ensure that
covered financial institutions avoid
incentive-based compensation
arrangements that would threaten the
safety and soundness of the covered
financial institution or otherwise have
serious adverse effects on economic
conditions or financial stability of
covered BDs and IAs. In order to
address the adverse effects that
incentive-based compensation
arrangements may have on covered
financial institutions’ financial
condition, the proposed rules would
mandate the application of the
principles described in the Guidance
(provide incentives that appropriately
balance risk and reward, compatibility
with effective controls and riskmanagement, and the support of strong
corporate governance) to all covered
financial institutions, including covered
BDs and IAs. The Commission believes
that applying these principles to
covered BDs and IAs should promote
sound incentive-based compensation
practices and discourage incentivebased compensation arrangements that
contributed to the recent financial crisis.
The proposed elements defining when
an incentive-based compensation
arrangement provides excessive
compensation or could result in a
material financial loss would benefit
covered financial institutions by
identifying specific factors to determine
whether certain arrangements are
prohibited. Abiding by the standards
reflected in section 39(c) of the FDIA
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and the principles described in the
Guidance, which already apply to
banking institutions, should help to
promote the safety and soundness of the
covered BD or IA and by extension
protect investors and promote the
public interest. The proposed rule also
should give firms the discretion to
reward the most productive employees
because the definition of ‘‘excessive
compensation’’ should be sufficiently
broad so as to permit covered financial
institutions the flexibility to reward
productive employees.
Moreover, by not prescribing
mandatory deferral for covered BDs and
IAs with assets under $50 billion, but
rather by requiring non-specific
standards for these arrangements (i.e.,
that they balance risk and return, are
compatible with effective controls and
risk management, etc.), the proposed
rule would provide smaller covered BDs
and IAs with significant flexibility to
tailor their compensation packages to
their covered persons. The proposed
rule would permit covered BDs and IAs
with assets below $50 billion to
determine their respective incentivebased compensation arrangements
within the parameters of meeting certain
goals (i.e., that the payments balance
risk and return, are compatible with
effective risk controls and risk
management) set forth in the proposed
rule.
The Commission believes that the
proposed rule should curb excessive
risk taking, which should lead to more
effective capital allocation. The rule
should discourage compensation
incentives that encouraged capital flow
into investments that were unprofitable
on the whole. Hereafter, the flow of
capital into less risky investments
should result in capital being put to
more effective use. More efficient
capital allocation, in turn, should
improve the quality of the firms’
financial services and products, as firms
employ capital to its most productive
use. Since higher quality service and
products are ordinarily associated with
increased competition, it is possible that
competition among covered BDs and
IAs would be more robust.
By requiring that the incentive-based
compensation arrangements of covered
BDs and IAs with more than $50 billion
in total assets defer at least 50% of the
compensation of covered executives and
chiefs of major business lines for at least
three years, and requiring firms to adjust
any amount deferred to reflect actual
losses or other measures of performance
that are realized or become better
known only during the deferral period,
the proposed rule should help align the
interests of those covered persons with
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the greatest ability to influence the risk
profile of the covered financial
institution with the interests of the
covered financial institution. The
deferral requirement for executive
officers and chiefs of major business
lines at the largest covered financial
institutions reflects the previously
acknowledged benefit for deferral of
certain high-level employees whose
activities present broad, and potentially
lengthy, risk exposure to an institution,
and whose activities do not lend
themselves as easily to risk
quantification and assessment through
ex ante or other predictive risk
adjustment measures. Requiring deferral
for this discrete group of individuals at
particularly large institutions, where upfront or ex ante risk adjustment
measures are less likely to be effective,
is a useful risk adjustment tool. It
permits time for risks not previously
discerned or quantifiable to ultimately
materialize and permits adjustment of
unreleased deferral payments on the
basis of observed consequences as
opposed to mere predicted results. The
Commission believes that the
heightened standards for the largest
covered BDs and IAs is particularly
appropriate because decisions made at
the largest covered BDs and IAs can
greatly impact the fair and orderly
operation of the financial markets.
These deferral restrictions should
weaken the incentive for executive
officers and chiefs of major business
lines to make decisions that create short
term gain at the expense of increased
long term risk. The Commission also
expects that by example, an express
deferral requirement for executive
officers and heads of major business
lines would have a broader beneficial
impact on the structure of compensation
used throughout a company.123 The
required look-back mechanism included
in the proposed rule is a means by
which the covered financial institution
may reduce previously awarded
compensation over the deferred period
of time. Thus, the required look-back
adds to the power of deferring
compensation in that previously
awarded compensation may actually not
be awarded if the firm finds that such
compensation does not reflect actual
123 Certain recent studies provide empirical
evidence consistent with deferred compensation
helping reduce the probability of corporate default.
See e.g. Wei and Yermack (2010). In one study, the
authors conclude that bank CEOs with large
amounts of inside debt in the form of pensions and
deferred compensation exposed their firms to less
risk and obtained greater performance during the
recent financial crisis. (https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/
papers.cfm?abstract_id=1519252).
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losses or other measures better realized
during the deferral period.
As with the deferral requirement and
the look-back mechanism, the
Commission preliminarily believes that
these provisions of the proposed rule
relating to designated risk takers would
help to strengthen board oversight of
covered persons’ incentive-based
compensation. The Commission
believes that promoting strong corporate
governance oversight of a covered BD’s
or IA’s incentive-based compensation
arrangements would promote sound
practices and foster a high quality
process regarding incentive-based
compensation decisions at a covered
financial institution. Moreover, the
additional oversight of designated risk
takers’ incentive-based compensation
should help to provide proper
incentives to these persons and thus
limit the risk exposure of covered BDs
and IAs. In addition, requiring the board
of directors, or a committee of the board,
to identify designated risk takers other
than executive officers and to approve
their incentive-based compensation
should help to improve the board’s
understanding of the risk profile of
certain firm activities or divisions that
have the ability to expose the institution
to possible substantial losses. It would
also encourage the board to spend more
time considering the compensation
arrangements of important employees
who are not executives but who have
the ability to materially impact the risk
profile of the firm. The proposed rule
also provides covered financial
institutions the flexibility to determine
who the relevant potential excessive
risk takers are.
2. Costs
a. All Covered BDs and IAs
The Commission also anticipates that
the proposed rule may entail certain
costs. For example, in a case where a
firm elects to defer an excessive portion
of covered persons’ compensation, such
deferral may reduce effort expended by
covered persons and the willingness of
covered persons to take even measured
risks. The Commission understands that
it is necessary for covered financial
institutions to take a certain amount of
risk in order to operate their businesses.
Accordingly, the Commission desires to
carefully balance the need for covered
financial institutions to take risk against
the possibility that if the wrong
regulatory balance is struck, covered
persons may have the incentive to
actually take less risk than is optimal in
order to ensure that, on a personal level,
the covered employee has sufficient
cash flow. In the event that employees
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are induced to take less than optimal
risk, then there might be a negative
effect on the efficiency of capital
allocation. The Commission
preliminarily believes that the proposed
rule strikes an appropriate balance in
this regard but requests comment
generally on this issue.
Based on its experience in the area,
staff conversations with covered BDs
and filings by publicly-traded covered
BDs, IAs and certain parent companies,
the Commission believes that the
elements of the prohibition applicable
to all covered BDs and IAs related to
excessive compensation and material
financial loss to the firms already
generally represent the practices of
many covered BDs and IAs. Therefore,
the Commission believes that covered
BDs and IAs generally already consider
factors consistent with those referenced
in section 39(c) of the FDIA and the
principles in the Guidance in designing
and administering their incentive-based
compensation programs. Nonetheless,
the Commission recognizes that some
covered BDs and IAs may not conform
to incentive-based compensation
standards consistent with section 39(c)
of the FDIA and the principles in the
Guidance.
In addition, the Commission
acknowledges the possibility that the
proposed rules may reduce the
incentive for certain covered persons to
switch jobs because would-be new
employers that are covered financial
institutions would be bound to offer
such covered persons compensation
packages that comply with the proposed
rules. If a lack of turnover results, it
might adversely impact competitiveness
among firms, but it may also promote
institutional stability within firms. The
Commission believes the proposed rule
strikes an appropriate balance in this
regard, but requests comment generally
on this issue.
The Commission seeks comment on
whether the proposed prohibitions
applicable to covered BDs and IAs
(which include only those brokerdealers and investment advisers with
assets of more than $1 billion) may
disadvantage covered financial
institutions as compared to financial
institutions not covered under the
proposed rules because covered
financial institutions would be required
to assume costs in designing,
implementing, monitoring and
maintaining a regulatory program
reasonably designed to address the
requirements of the proposed rules,
whereas broker-dealers and investment
advisers with total consolidated assets
less than $1 billion would not be subject
to such costs. The Commission also
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seeks comment on whether it is possible
that covered BDs and IAs would have
more difficulty recruiting qualified
individuals to work for their firms if
such individuals fear that added
scrutiny of their incentive-based
compensation may lead to lower
aggregate pay.
b. Covered BDs and IAs With Assets of
$50 Billion or More
In addition to the costs imposed upon
all covered BDs and IAs, described
above, the proposed rule would impose
additional costs on firms with assets of
$50 billion or more. The Commission
anticipates that it is possible that
covered BDs and IAs with assets of $50
billion or more may have to pay more
in base salary to compensate their
executive officers and heads of a major
business line for the uncertainty
associated with the ultimate receipt of
deferred compensation. However, it is
also possible that increases in salaries
would be offset by decreases in deferred
incentive-based compensation. The
Commission requests comment on
whether covered BDs and IAs should
expect to incur the cost of increased
salaries that may result from the
implementation of required deferred
compensation and look-back policies for
certain covered persons.
As stated above, the Commission also
recognizes that the firms with assets of
at least $50 billion may have more
difficulty recruiting individuals for
those positions than a firm not subject
to the deferral requirement. In addition,
such firms may have difficulty
recruiting individuals who object to
having their compensation specifically
approved and monitored by the covered
BD’s or IA’s board of directors or
committee thereof. To the extent that
this adversely affects the quality of
employees that firms of that size are
able to attract, it may negatively affect
the business of larger covered financial
institutions.
To the extent that the proposal relies
on an assumption that a covered person
understands the risks inherent in a
particular business decision but chooses
to disregard them because the covered
person would not bear the costs
associated with those risks being
realized, the proposal may not be
effective at promoting a more accurate
or realistic assessment of a business
decision as to which neither the
executive officer nor the covered
financial institution grasps the inherent
risk. To the extent, however, that the
proposal relies on an assumption that
covered persons do not always fully
understand the risks inherent in
particular business decisions and have
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had inadequate incentives to ensure that
they comprehend these risks, the
proposal would be more effective. It is
not clear what, if any, other regulatory
steps could be taken to promote a better
comprehension of risk, and mandatory
deferral as provided in the proposed
rule would at least provide some
required measure of risk adjustment in
cases where such risks are understood
by executive officers at large covered
financial institutions. If, however, the
risks that covered persons take are very
long term (i.e., beyond 5 years), the
proposed compensation deferral might
not prove to be effective at deferring
covered persons’ taking on
inappropriate risk for the firm.
As stated above, the Commission also
believes there would be compliancerelated costs associated with the
proposed rule. Based upon experience
of the Commission staff, the
Commission understands that although
mandatory deferral of a significant
percentage of firms’ incentive-based
compensation to executive officers and
chiefs of major business lines is the
existing practice among many covered
BDs and IAs, it would represent a new
practice for some firms. Even for firms
with existing deferral practices, there
would be costs to conform their deferral
practices to the requirements of
proposed § 248.205(b)(3). For example,
based on staff’s discussions with the
industry, its review of information in
public filings, and its experience in the
area, the Commission believes that the
practice of adjusting deferred amounts
of compensation to reflect actual losses
or other measures that are realized or
become known during the deferral
period (administering a look-back)
exists in comparatively fewer firms than
does the practice of deferral itself. The
Commission also believes that many
firms may provide deferral or vesting
periods of less than the three years
under the proposed rule. The
Commission believes, based upon its
experience and the filings submitted by
publicly-traded covered BDs, IAs and
certain public companies, that some, but
not all boards or board committees of
covered BDs and IAs with assets of at
least $50 billion already have a role in
approving the compensation for highlypaid individuals, including most people
that would be defined as designated risk
takers under the proposed rule.
Accordingly, the Commission
anticipates that covered BDs and IAs
would experience costs in
implementing the deferral, look-back
and designated risk takers components
of the requirements for firms with assets
of $50 billion or more.
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The requirement under proposed
§ 248.205(b)(3)(ii)(B) to require the
board of directors (or committee of the
board) of covered financial institutions
that have total consolidated assets of
$50 billion or more to approve and
document the identification of those
covered persons that individually have
the ability to expose the institution to
possible losses that are substantial in
relation to the institution’s size, capital,
or overall risk tolerance would create
new burden for such larger covered
financial institutions. Based on staff
experience and conversations with
larger covered BDs and the filings
submitted by publicly-traded covered
IAs and certain parent companies, the
Commission does not believe that the
boards of larger covered BDs and IAs
generally identify and approve the
compensation of such designated risk
takers.
The Commission believes that the
most significant ongoing cost that
covered BDs and IAs would assume to
comply with proposed
§ 248.205(b)(3)(ii)(B) is the cost of
having appropriate senior personnel
administer the deferred compensation,
look-back and designated risk takers
provisions. As with all matters related
to incentive-based compensation,
covered BDs and IAs would be required
to administer their incentive-based
compensation arrangements in a manner
that is compatible with effective
controls and risk management and is
supported by strong corporate
governance, including active and
effective oversight by the covered
financial institution’s board of directors.
The Commission anticipates that firms
would use an appropriate mix of senior
risk management personnel along with
the firms’ board of directors, or
committee thereof, to administer the
identification of designated risk takers
and approval of their compensation, as
required under the proposed rule.
Larger covered financial institutions
with total consolidated assets of at least
$50 billion may experience a
disadvantage relative to smaller
financial institutions on account of the
proposed required deferral for executive
officers and board-level review of the
incentive-based compensation of
designated risk takers. In addition to the
added costs that such larger financial
institutions would incur to implement
the deferral and board-level review of
designated risk takers’ compensation,
the Commission believes that some
executive officers may have
disincentives from working for a
covered financial institution whereby
their compensation would be required
to be deferred or in firms where their
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incentive-based compensation is subject
to board-level scrutiny.
In order to help the Commission
better understand all the costs
associated with this aspect of the
proposed rule, the Commission requests
comment on them generally. The
Commission is also soliciting comment
on the following specific issues:
• Do commenters believe that
requiring a minimum deferral period of
three years for at least 50% of the
compensation for executive officers and
chiefs of major business lines at large
covered financial institutions would
place such financial institutions at an
unjustified disadvantage in the hiring of
and retaining qualified personnel as
compared to smaller covered financial
institutions? If commenters believe that
this is the case, what would commenters
do to modify the proposed rule while
reasonably ensuring that there is useful
and meaningful risk adjustment of
incentive-based compensation for
executives at large covered financial
institutions? Do commenters believe
that requiring a different minimum
deferral period or minimum deferred
percentage would promote better
incentive-based compensation
practices? Should the required
minimum deferral provisions be
extended to smaller covered financial
institutions?
• Do commenters believe that there is
a substantial risk that covered financial
institutions would reconfigure their
operations, structure, or assets in such
a manner so as to circumvent being
classified as a large covered financial
institution?
• Do commenters believe that
mandating deferral as a risk adjustment
tool for executive officers at large
covered financial institutions would
inhibit the development of other
potentially more effective risk
adjustment tools? Are there other risk
adjustment tools that are more effective
than deferral, and why are those tools
more effective?
C. Required Policies and Procedures
and Documentation of the
Compensation of Certain Covered
Persons
The proposal would require covered
financial institutions to adopt policies
and procedures reasonably designed to
ensure and monitor compliance with 12
U.S.C. 5641 commensurate with the size
and complexity of the organization and
the scope and nature of its use of
incentive-based compensation. As
described in further detail above, the
proposed rule would require that the
policies and procedures, at a minimum,
be consistent with the disclosure
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21201
requirements and prohibitions in other
parts of the proposed rule, ensure that
risk management or oversight personnel
have a role in designing and assessing
incentive-based compensation
arrangements, provide for independent
monitoring of the incentive-based
compensation awards, risks taken and
actual outcomes, require that a covered
financial institution’s board receive data
and an analysis to enable the board to
assess whether the incentive-based
compensation arrangements are
consistent with 12 U.S.C. 5641, and
require sufficient documentation of the
covered financial institution’s incentivebased compensation arrangements to
enable the Commission to determine the
covered BDs’ or IAs’ compliance with
12 U.S.C. 5641. In addition, the
proposal would require that the covered
BDs’ and IAs’ policies and procedures
include certain features for when a firm
uses deferral in connection with an
incentive-based compensation
arrangement, and that the policies and
procedures subject incentive-based
compensation arrangements to an
appropriate corporate governance
framework.
In addition, for covered BDs and IAs
with assets of at least $50 billion,
proposed § 248.205(b)(3)(ii)(B) would
require a firm’s board of directors, or a
committee thereof, to identify those
covered persons (other than executive
officers) that individually have the
ability to expose the institution to
possible losses that are substantial in
relation to the institution’s size, capital,
or overall risk tolerance. These covered
persons may include, for example,
traders with large position limits
relative to the institution’s overall risk
tolerance and other individuals that
have the authority to place at risk a
substantial part of the capital of the
covered financial institution. The
Agencies propose that the compensation
decisions applicable to such persons
must be approved by the firm’s board of
directors or a committee of the board
and that the covered BD or IA document
the compensation decisions made by the
board or its committee.
1. Benefits
The Commission believes that
requiring covered financial institutions
to adopt and enforce the policies and
procedures described above would
foster the Agencies’ understanding of
the covered financial institutions’
incentive-based compensation practices
and would promote compliance and
accountability regarding the practices
that the Agencies propose to prohibit.
The rule is designed to ensure that
covered BDs and IAs establish adequate
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procedures and controls to ensure
compliance with 12 U.S.C 5641. The
Commission preliminarily believes that
the policies and procedures section of
the proposed rule would help to ensure
that boards receive data to monitor
incentive-based compensation
arrangements. Further, the Commission
believes that, at a minimum, the
proposed rule should help to ensure
that incentive-based compensation
arrangements would be designed with
more careful consideration of its effects
on risk. The Commission also believes
that the proposed rule would provide
greater board of director and risk
management/risk oversight personnel
supervision of incentive-based
compensation arrangements and
practices at the covered financial
institution because boards would
receive data and analysis from
management to support a finding that
the incentive-based compensation
arrangements are consistent with 12
U.S.C. 5641. Moreover, riskmanagement/risk-oversight personnel
would help to design and assess the
effectiveness of the covered BD’s or IA’s
incentive-based compensation
arrangement. The Commission believes
that these provisions of the proposed
rule would help to strengthen the
supervision of covered persons’
incentive-based compensation
arrangements by the board of directors.
The proposed rule would help increase
the importance of the compensationsetting function at covered financial
institutions, including covered BDs and
IAs. The Commission preliminarily
believes that this increased internal
importance would result in a higher
quality process regarding incentivebased compensation decisions at a
covered financial institution. For
example, the proposed rule would help
to ensure that information is received by
the relevant decision makers and other
persons acting in an internal
supervisory role within the covered
financial institution. This development
should strengthen the supervision of the
board with respect to incentive-based
compensation arrangements.
The recordkeeping requirement in
proposed in § 248.206(b)(5) should
ensure that Commission staff members
are able to properly examine covered
BDs’ and IAs’ incentive-based
compensation practices in the context of
an examination. The proposal also
would require that a covered BD or IA
have policies and procedures that
provide that compensation payments
are reduced to reflect adverse risk
outcomes or high levels of risk taken.
This should help ensure that the
compensation contracts are accurately
followed and diminish the adverse
effect of deferred compensation that
proves to be unwarranted once the risks
associated with the covered person’s
activities are realized over time.
2. Costs
As described more fully in the PRA
Section, the Commission believes that
covered individual bank BDs and IAs
would be subject to significantly less
initial and ongoing costs than non-bank
BDs and IAs because bank BDs and IAs
are already subject to the Guidance. The
Commission is also aware that the
proposed rule would generate
compliance-related costs associated
with, among other things, collecting the
necessary information and preparing the
reports, as well as hiring outside
professionals, such as attorneys,
compensation or benefits consultants,
accountants and/or actuaries. In the
chart below, the Commission estimates
the internal costs associated with the
proposed recordkeeping requirements.
In order to arrive at these internal cost
estimates, the Commission multiplied
the hourly burden estimates provided in
the PRA Section by the estimated hourly
rate for a securities attorney.124 The
Commission is using the same external
cost estimates for the recordkeeping
requirement that it used in the PRA
Section of this proposed rule. The
Commission seeks comment on all these
cost estimates.
TOTAL INTERNAL RECORDKEEPING COST
Covered bank
BDs and IAs
($50B +)
Initial Recordkeeping ......................................................
Ongoing Recordkeeping .................................................
Covered bank
BDs and IAs
($1B–$50B)
Covered non-bank
BDs and IAs
($50B +)
$900,000 125 ...........
$400,000 129 ...........
$1.2 million 126 .......
$400,000 130 ...........
$1.1 million 127 .......
$150,000 131 ...........
Covered non-bank
BDs and IAs
($1B–$50B)
$16 million.128
$1.5 million.132
TOTAL EXTERNAL RECORDKEEPING COST
Covered bank
BDs and IAs
($50B +)
Initial Recordkeeping ......................................................
Ongoing Recordkeeping .................................................
Covered bank
BDs and IAs
($1B–$50B)
Covered non-bank
BDs and IAs
($50B +)
$1 million 133 ..........
$400,000 137 ...........
$1.3 million 134 .......
$400,000 138 ...........
$1.2 million 135 .......
$250,000 139 ...........
Covered non-bank
BDs and IAs
($1B–$50B)
$18 million.136
$1.7 million.140
Solicitation of Comment
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In enacting this section of the DoddFrank Act, Congress has made the
124 The Commission estimates $354 per hour for
a securities attorney, based on SIFMA’s
Management & Professional Earnings in the
Securities Industry 2010, modified by Commission
staff to account for an 1800-hour work-year and
multiplied by 5.35 to account for bonuses, firm size,
employee benefits and overhead.
125 2,500 hours × $354 = $885,000.
126 3,400 hours × $354 = $1,203,600.
127 3,000 hours × $354 = $1,062,000.
128 46,000 hours × $354 = $16,284,000.
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hours × $354 = $354,000.
hours × $354 = $354,000.
131 400 hours × $354 = $141,600.
132 4,300 hours × $354 = $1,522,200.
133 2,500 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $987,500.
134 3,400 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $1,343,000.
129 1,000
130 1,000
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135 3,000 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $1,185,000.
136 46,000 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $18,170,000.
137 1,000 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $395,000.
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judgment that regulation entailing
potential burdens and impacts of the
type discussed below is justified so as
to prevent covered financial institutions
from utilizing incentive-based
compensation arrangements that could
threaten the health of financial
institutions or have serious effects on
economic conditions or financial
stability.141 The Commission generally
solicits comment on all the costs,
benefits, and analyses set forth in this
economic analysis. The Commission
also specifically requests comment on
the following issues:
• The Commission requests
comments on the anticipated impact of
the proposal on the competitiveness of
covered financial institutions as
compared to broker-dealers and
investment advisers that do not meet the
definition of covered financial
institution as well as the impact of the
proposal on the competitiveness of
covered BDs and IAs with assets of at
least $50 billion as compared to covered
BDs and IAs with assets between
$1 billion and $50 billion.
• Could the proposed rule be
modified so as to implement the
mandate of 12 U.S.C. 5641 in a manner
that improves the efficiency of covered
financial institution and imposes less of
a burden on competition? If so, what
specific changes would commenters
suggest? Would the impact be improved
with a different deferral threshold
(currently 50% of incentive-based
compensation) or deferral period
(currently no faster than pro rata over
3 years)? Is there a better way to design
or apply the ‘‘look-back’’ period?
• The Commission solicits public
comment on the degree to which
commenters believe that the proposal
would encourage covered employees to
take optimal risk and/or discourage
covered employees from taking
inappropriate levels of risk. If
commenters believe the proposal would
lead to covered employees undertaking
less than optimal risk (e.g., make
decisions that are too conservative for
the firm), then please elaborate why that
is the case.
• If commenters believe a different
approach is warranted, do commenters
believe that a different approach would
138 1,000 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $395,000.
139 600 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $237,000.
140 4,300 hours × [(25% × $400/hour) + (25% ×
$600/hour) + (25% × $330/hour) + (25% × $250/
hour)] = $1,698,500.
141 See Joint Explanatory Statement of the
committee of Conference Accompanying H.R. 4173,
H.R. Rep. No. 111–517, at 873.
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be equally effective at helping to ensure,
particularly at large covered financial
institutions, that incentive-based
compensation arrangements do not
result in excessive compensation or a
material financial loss to the covered
financial institution? What alternative
would commenters propose and why do
commenters believe that it would be as
effective, or more effective?
• Does the proposed rule promote
greater internal discipline and controls
by covered financial institutions with
respect to incentive-based compensation
arrangements? Similarly, does the
proposed rule help to promote that
discipline upon a greater number of
persons at the covered financial
institution, including not only the
executive officers (or comparable
persons) at a covered financial
institution, but also those persons
whose activities subject the covered
financial institution to significant risk?
I. SEC Consideration of Impact on the
Economy
For purposes of the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of
1996, or ‘‘SBREFA,’’ 142 the Commission
must advise OMB whether a proposed
regulation constitutes a major rule.
Under SBREFA, a rule is ‘‘major’’ if it
has resulted in, or is likely to result in:
• An annual effect on the economy of
$100 million or more
• a major increase in costs or prices
for consumers or individual industries;
or
• a significant adverse effect on
competition, investment, or innovation.
If a rule is ‘‘major,’’ its effectiveness will
generally be delayed for 60 days
pending Congressional review. The
Commission requests comment on the
potential impact of each of the proposed
rules and rule amendments on the
economy on an annual basis, on the
costs or prices for consumers or
individual industries, and on
competition, investment, or innovation.
Commenters are requested to provide
empirical data and other factual support
for their views to the extent possible.
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 42
Compensation, Banks, Banking,
National banks, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
12 CFR Part 236
Compensation, Banks, Bank Holding
Companies, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
142 Pub. L. 104–121, Title II, 110 Stat. 857 (1996)
(codified in various sections of 5 U.S.C., 15 U.S.C.
and as a note to 5 U.S.C. 601).
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12 CFR Part 372
Banks, Banking, Compensation,
Foreign Banking.
12 CFR Part 563h
Compensation, Holding companies,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Savings associations.
12 CFR Parts 741 and 751
Compensation, Credit Unions,
Reporting and recording requirements.
12 CFR Part 1232
Administrative practice and
procedure, Banks, Compensation,
Confidential business information,
Government-sponsored enterprises,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
17 CFR Part 248
Incentive-based Compensation
Arrangements, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements; Securities.
Department of the Treasury
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency
12 CFR Chapter I
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the joint
preamble, the OCC proposes to amend
12 CFR Chapter I of the Code of Federal
Regulations as follows:
1. Add part 42 to read as follows:
PART 42—INCENTIVE-BASED
COMPENSATION ARRANGEMENTS
Sec.
42.1
42.2
42.3
42.4
42.5
42.6
42.7
Authority.
Scope and purpose.
Definitions.
Required reports to regulators.
Prohibitions.
Policies and procedures.
Evasion.
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1 et seq. 1, 93a, and
5641.
§ 42.1
Authority.
This part is issued pursuant to section
956 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act
(12 U.S.C. 5641).
§ 42.2
Scope and purpose.
This part applies to a covered
financial institution that has total
consolidated assets of $1 billion or more
and offers incentive-based
compensation arrangements to covered
persons. Nothing in this part in any way
limits the authority of the OCC under
other provisions of applicable law and
regulations.
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Definitions.
For purposes of this part, the
following definitions apply unless
otherwise specified:
(a) Board of directors means the
governing body of any covered financial
institution performing functions similar
to a board of directors. For Federal
branches and agencies, ‘‘board of
directors’’ means parent foreign bank
senior management.
(b) Compensation means all direct
and indirect payments, fees or benefits,
both cash and non-cash, awarded to,
granted to, or earned by or for the
benefit of, any covered person in
exchange for services rendered to the
covered financial institution, including,
but not limited to, payments or benefits
pursuant to an employment contract,
compensation or benefit agreement, fee
arrangement, perquisite, stock option
plan, postemployment benefit, or other
compensatory arrangement.
(c) Covered financial institution
means a national bank or a Federal
branch or agency of a foreign bank that
has total consolidated assets of $1
billion or more.
(d) Covered person means any
executive officer, employee, director, or
principal shareholder of a covered
financial institution.
(e) Director of a covered financial
institution means a member of the board
of directors of the covered financial
institution, or of a board or committee
performing a similar function to a board
of directors.
(f) Executive officer of a covered
financial institution means a person
who holds the title or, without regard to
title, salary, or compensation, performs
the function of one or more of the
following positions: president, chief
executive officer, executive chairman,
chief operating officer, chief financial
officer, chief investment officer, chief
legal officer, chief lending officer, chief
risk officer, or head of a major business
line.
(g) Incentive-based compensation
means any variable compensation that
serves as an incentive for performance.
(h) Principal shareholder means an
individual who directly or indirectly, or
acting through or in concert with one or
more persons, owns, controls, or has the
power to vote 10 percent or more of any
class of voting securities of a covered
financial institution.
(i) Total consolidated assets means:
(1) For a national bank, calculating
the average of the total assets reported
in the bank’s four most recent
Consolidated Reports of Condition and
Income (‘‘Call Report’’); and
(2) For a Federal branch and agency,
calculating the average of the total assets
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reported in the Federal branch or
agency’s four most recent Reports of
Assets and Liabilities of U.S. Branches
and Agencies of Foreign Banks—FFIEC
002.
§ 42.4
Required reports to regulators.
(a) In general. A covered financial
institution must submit a report
annually to, and in the format directed
by, the OCC, that describes the structure
of the covered financial institution’s
incentive-based compensation
arrangements for covered persons and
that is sufficient to allow an assessment
of whether the structure or features of
those arrangements provide or are likely
to provide covered persons with
excessive compensation, fees, or
benefits to covered persons or could
lead to material financial loss to the
covered financial institution.
(b) Individual compensation. A
covered financial institution is not
required to report the actual
compensation of particular covered
persons as part of the report required by
paragraph (a) of this section.
(c) Minimum standards. The
information submitted by the covered
financial institution pursuant to
paragraph (a) of this section must
include the following:
(1) A clear narrative description of the
components of the covered financial
institution’s incentive-based
compensation arrangements applicable
to covered persons and specifying the
types of covered persons to which they
apply;
(2) A succinct description of the
covered financial institution’s policies
and procedures governing its incentivebased compensation arrangements for
covered persons;
(3) If the covered financial institution
has total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more, an additional succinct
description of incentive-based
compensation policies and procedures
specific to the covered financial
institution’s:
(i) Executive officers; and
(ii) Other covered persons who the
board of directors, or a committee
thereof, of the covered financial
institution has identified and
determined under § 42.5(b)(3)(ii) of this
part individually have the ability to
expose the covered financial institution
to possible losses that are substantial in
relation to the institution’s size, capital,
or overall risk tolerance;
(4) Any material changes to the
covered financial institution’s incentivebased compensation arrangements and
policies and procedures made since the
covered financial institution’s last
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report submitted under paragraph (a) of
this section; and
(5) The specific reasons why the
covered financial institution believes
the structure of its incentive-based
compensation plan does not encourage
inappropriate risks by the covered
financial institution by providing
covered persons with:
(i) Excessive compensation; or
(ii) Incentive-based compensation that
could lead to a material financial loss to
the covered financial institution.
§ 42.5
Prohibitions.
(a) Excessive compensation
prohibition. (1) In general. A covered
financial institution must not establish
or maintain any type of incentive-based
compensation arrangement, or any
feature of any such arrangement, that
encourages inappropriate risks by the
covered financial institution by
providing a covered person with
excessive compensation.
(2) Standards. An incentive-based
compensation arrangement provides
excessive compensation when amounts
paid are unreasonable or
disproportionate to the services
performed by a covered person, taking
into consideration:
(i) The combined value of all cash and
non-cash benefits provided to the
covered person;
(ii) The compensation history of the
covered person and other individuals
with comparable expertise at the
covered financial institution;
(iii) The financial condition of the
covered financial institution;
(iv) Comparable compensation
practices at comparable institutions,
based upon such factors as asset size,
geographic location, and the complexity
of the covered financial institution’s
operations and assets;
(v) For postemployment benefits, the
projected total cost and benefit to the
covered financial institution;
(vi) Any connection between the
individual and any fraudulent act or
omission, breach of trust or fiduciary
duty, or insider abuse with regard to the
covered financial institution; and
(vii) Any other factors the OCC
determines to be relevant.
(b) Material financial loss prohibition.
(1) Generally. A covered financial
institution must not establish or
maintain any type of incentive-based
compensation arrangement, or any
feature of any such arrangement, that
encourages inappropriate risks by the
covered financial institution, by
providing incentive-based
compensation to covered persons, either
individually or as part of a group of
persons who are subject to the same or
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similar incentive-based compensation
arrangements, that could lead to
material financial loss to the covered
financial institution.
(2) Requirements for all covered
financial institutions. An incentivebased compensation arrangement
established or maintained by a covered
financial institution for one or more
covered persons does not comply with
paragraph (b)(1) of this section unless it:
(i) Balances risk and financial
rewards, for example by using deferral
of payments, risk adjustment of awards,
reduced sensitivity to short-term
performance, or longer performance
periods;
(ii) Is compatible with effective
controls and risk management; and
(iii) Is supported by strong corporate
governance, including active and
effective oversight by the covered
financial institution’s board of directors
or a committee thereof.
(3) Specific requirements for covered
financial institutions with $50 billion or
more in total consolidated assets. (i)
Deferral required for executive officers.
As part of appropriately balancing risk
and financial rewards pursuant to
paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section, any
incentive-based compensation
arrangement for any executive officer
established or maintained by a covered
financial institution that has total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more must provide for:
(A) At least 50 percent of the annual
incentive-based compensation of the
executive officer to be deferred over a
period of no less than three years, with
the release of deferred amounts to occur
no faster than on a pro rata basis; and
(B) The adjustment of the amount
required to be deferred under paragraph
(b)(3)(i)(A) of this section to reflect
actual losses or other measures or
aspects of performance that are realized
or become better known during the
deferral period.
(ii) Additional requirement for
covered persons presenting particular
loss exposure. As part of appropriately
balancing risk and financial rewards
pursuant to paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this
section, if a covered financial institution
has total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more—
(A) The board of directors, or a
committee thereof, of the covered
financial institution shall identify those
covered persons (other than executive
officers) who individually have the
ability to expose the institution to
possible losses that are substantial in
relation to the institution’s size, capital,
or overall risk tolerance. These covered
persons may include, for example,
traders with large position limits
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relative to the institution’s overall risk
tolerance and other individuals who
have the authority to place at risk a
substantial part of the capital of the
covered financial institution;
(B) The incentive-based compensation
arrangement for any covered person
identified pursuant to paragraph
(b)(3)(ii)(A) of this section must be
approved by the board of directors, or a
committee thereof, of the covered
financial institution and such approval
must be documented;
(C) The board of directors, or
committee thereof, may not approve the
incentive-based compensation
arrangement for any covered person
identified pursuant to paragraph
(b)(3)(ii)(A) of this section unless the
board or committee determines that the
arrangement, including the method of
paying compensation under the
arrangement, effectively balances the
financial rewards to the covered person
and the range and time horizon of risks
associated with the covered person’s
activities, employing appropriate
methods for ensuring risk sensitivity
such as deferral of payments, risk
adjustment of awards, reduced
sensitivity to short-term performance, or
longer performance periods; and
(D) In fulfilling its duties under
paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(C) of this section,
the board of directors or committee
thereof must evaluate the overall
effectiveness of the balancing methods
used in the identified covered person’s
incentive-based compensation
arrangements in reducing incentives for
inappropriate risk taking by the
identified covered person considering
the methods’ suitability for balancing
the full range of risks presented by that
covered person’s activities, and the
methods’ ability to make payments
sensitive to all the risks arising from the
covered person’s activities, including
those that may be difficult to predict,
measure or model.
§ 42.6
Policies and procedures.
(a) In general. Any incentive-based
compensation arrangement, or any
feature of any such arrangement, is
prohibited under § 42.5 of this part,
unless adopted pursuant to policies and
procedures developed and maintained
by each covered financial institution
and approved by its board of directors,
or a committee thereof, reasonably
designed to ensure and monitor
compliance with the requirements set
forth in 12 U.S.C. 5641 and this part and
commensurate with the size and
complexity of the organization, as well
as the scope and nature of its use of
incentive-based compensation.
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(b) Standards. The policies and
procedures must, at a minimum:
(1) Be consistent with the reporting
requirements in § 42.4 of this part and
prohibitions in § 42.5 of this part;
(2) Ensure that risk-management, riskoversight, and internal control
personnel have an appropriate role in
the covered financial institution’s
processes for designing incentive-based
compensation arrangements and for
assessing their effectiveness in
restraining inappropriate risk-taking;
(3) Provide for the monitoring by a
group or person independent of the
covered person, where practicable in
light of the covered financial
institution’s size and complexity, of
incentive-based compensation awards
and payments, risks taken, and actual
risk outcomes to determine whether
incentive-based compensation payments
for covered persons, or groups of
covered persons, are reduced to reflect
adverse risk outcomes or high levels of
risk taken;
(4) Provide for the covered financial
institution’s board of directors, or
committee thereof, to receive data and
analysis from management and other
sources sufficient to allow the board, or
committee thereof, to assess whether the
overall design and performance of the
institution’s incentive-based
compensation arrangements are
consistent with 12 U.S.C. 5641;
(5) Ensure that documentation of the
covered financial institution’s processes
for establishing, implementing,
modifying, and monitoring incentivebased compensation arrangements is
maintained that is sufficient to enable
the OCC to determine the institution’s
compliance with 12 U.S.C. 5641 and
this part;
(6) Consistent with § 42.5(b)(3) of this
part, where deferral is used in
connection with an incentive-based
compensation arrangement, provide for
deferral of incentive-based
compensation awards in amounts and
for periods of time appropriate to the
duties and responsibilities of the
covered financial institution’s covered
persons, the risks associated with those
duties and responsibilities, and the size
and complexity of the covered financial
institution and provide that the deferral
amounts paid are adjusted to reflect
actual losses or other measures or
aspects of performance that are realized
or become better known during the
deferral period; and
(7) Subject any incentive-based
compensation arrangement to a
corporate governance framework that
provides for ongoing oversight by the
board of directors or a committee
thereof, including the approval by the
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board of directors or a committee
thereof of incentive-based compensation
to executive officers.
§ 42.7
Evasion.
A covered financial institution is
prohibited, for the purpose of evading
the restrictions of this part, from doing
indirectly or through or by any other
person, any act or thing that it would be
unlawful for such covered financial
institution to do directly under this part.
Federal Reserve Board
12 CFR Chapter II
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the joint
preamble, the Board proposes to amend
12 CFR Chapter II as follows:
2. Add new part 236 to read as
follows:
PART 236—Incentive-Based
Compensation Arrangements
(Regulation JJ)
Sec.
236.1
236.2
236.3
236.4
236.5
236.6
236.7
Authority.
Scope and purpose.
Definitions.
Required reports to regulators.
Prohibitions.
Policies and procedures.
Evasion.
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 24, 321–338a, 1818,
1844(b), 3108 and 5641.
§ 236.1
Authority.
This part is issued pursuant to section
956 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act
(12 U.S.C. 5641).
§ 236.2
Scope and purpose.
This part applies to a covered
financial institution that has total
consolidated assets of $1 billion or more
and offers incentive-based
compensation arrangements to covered
persons. Nothing in this part in any way
limits the authority of the Board under
other provisions of applicable law and
regulations.
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§ 236.3
Definitions.
For purposes of this part, the
following definitions apply unless
otherwise specified:
(a) Board of directors means the
governing body of any covered financial
institution performing functions similar
to a board of directors. For a foreign
banking organization, ‘‘board of
directors’’ refers to the relevant oversight
body for the firm’s U.S. branch, agency
or operations, consistent with the
foreign banking organization’s overall
corporate and management structure.
(b) Compensation means all direct
and indirect payments, fees or benefits,
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both cash and non-cash, awarded to,
granted to, or earned by or for the
benefit of, any covered person in
exchange for services rendered to the
covered financial institution, including,
but not limited to, payments or benefits
pursuant to an employment contract,
compensation or benefit agreement, fee
arrangement, perquisite, stock option
plan, postemployment benefit, or other
compensatory arrangement.
(c) Covered financial institution (1) In
general. The term ‘‘covered financial
institution’’ means:
(i) A state member bank, as defined in
12 CFR 208.2(g), that has total
consolidated assets of $1 billion or
more;
(ii) A bank holding company, as
defined in 12 CFR 225.2(c), that has
total consolidated assets of $1 billion or
more;
(iii) A state-licensed uninsured
branch or agency of a foreign bank, as
such terms are defined in section 3 of
the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12
USC 1813), that has total consolidated
assets of $1 billion or more; and
(iv) The U.S. operations of a foreign
bank that is treated as a bank holding
company pursuant to section 8(a) of the
International Banking Act of 1978 (12
USC 3106(a)) that has total consolidated
U.S. assets of $1 billion or more.
(2) Scope of term. A covered financial
institution includes the subsidiaries of
the institution.
(d) Covered person means any
executive officer, employee, director, or
principal shareholder of a covered
financial institution.
(e) Director of a covered financial
institution means a member of the board
of directors of the covered financial
institution, or of a board or committee
performing a similar function to a board
of directors.
(f) Executive officer of a covered
financial institution means a person
who holds the title or, without regard to
title, salary, or compensation, performs
the function of one or more of the
following positions: president, chief
executive officer, executive chairman,
chief operating officer, chief financial
officer, chief investment officer, chief
legal officer, chief lending officer, chief
risk officer, or head of a major business
line.
(g) Incentive-based compensation
means any variable compensation that
serves as an incentive for performance.
(h) Principal shareholder means an
individual who directly or indirectly, or
acting through or in concert with one or
more persons, owns, controls, or has the
power to vote 10 percent or more of any
class of voting securities of a covered
financial institution.
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(i) Total consolidated assets means:
(1) For a state member bank, total
consolidated assets as determined based
on the average of the bank’s four most
recent Consolidated Reports of
Condition and Income (‘‘Call Report’’);
(2) For a bank holding company, total
consolidated assets as determined based
on the average of the company’s four
most recent Consolidated Financial
Statements for Bank Holding Companies
(‘‘FR Y–9C’’);
(3) For a state-licensed uninsured
branch or agency of a foreign bank, total
consolidated assets as determined based
on the average of the branch or agency’s
four most recent Call Reports; and
(4) For the U.S. operations of a foreign
bank total consolidated U.S. assets as
determined by the Board.
§ 236.4
Required reports to regulators.
(a) In general. A covered financial
institution must submit a report
annually to, and in the format directed
by, the Board, that describes the
structure of the covered financial
institution’s incentive-based
compensation arrangements for covered
persons and that is sufficient to allow an
assessment of whether the structure or
features of those arrangements provide
or are likely to provide covered persons
with excessive compensation, fees, or
benefits to covered persons or could
lead to material financial loss to the
covered financial institution.
(b) Individual compensation. A
covered financial institution is not
required to report the actual
compensation of particular covered
persons as part of the report required by
paragraph (a) of this section.
(c) Minimum standards. The
information submitted by the covered
financial institution pursuant to
paragraph (a) of this section must
include the following:
(1) A clear narrative description of the
components of the covered financial
institution’s incentive-based
compensation arrangements applicable
to covered persons and specifying the
types of covered persons to which they
apply;
(2) A succinct description of the
covered financial institution’s policies
and procedures governing its incentivebased compensation arrangements for
covered persons;
(3) If the covered financial institution
has total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more, an additional succinct
description of incentive-based
compensation policies and procedures
specific to the covered financial
institution’s:
(i) Executive officers; and
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(ii) Other covered persons who the
board of directors, or a committee
thereof, of the covered financial
institution has identified and
determined under § 236.5(b)(3)(ii) of
this part individually have the ability to
expose the covered financial institution
to possible losses that are substantial in
relation to the institution’s size, capital,
or overall risk tolerance;
(4) Any material changes to the
covered financial institution’s incentivebased compensation arrangements and
policies and procedures made since the
covered financial institution’s last
report submitted under paragraph (a) of
this section; and
(5) The specific reasons why the
covered financial institution believes
the structure of its incentive-based
compensation plan does not encourage
inappropriate risks by the covered
financial institution by providing
covered persons with:
(i) Excessive compensation; or
(ii) Incentive-based compensation that
could lead to a material financial loss to
the covered financial institution.
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§ 236.5
Prohibitions.
(a) Excessive compensation
prohibition. (1) In general. A covered
financial institution must not establish
or maintain any type of incentive-based
compensation arrangement, or any
feature of any such arrangement, that
encourages inappropriate risks by the
covered financial institution by
providing a covered person with
excessive compensation.
(2) Standards. An incentive-based
compensation arrangement provides
excessive compensation when amounts
paid are unreasonable or
disproportionate to the services
performed by a covered person, taking
into consideration:
(i) The combined value of all cash and
non-cash benefits provided to the
covered person;
(ii) The compensation history of the
covered person and other individuals
with comparable expertise at the
covered financial institution;
(iii) The financial condition of the
covered financial institution;
(iv) Comparable compensation
practices at comparable institutions,
based upon such factors as asset size,
geographic location, and the complexity
of the covered financial institution’s
operations and assets;
(v) For postemployment benefits, the
projected total cost and benefit to the
covered financial institution;
(vi) Any connection between the
individual and any fraudulent act or
omission, breach of trust or fiduciary
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duty, or insider abuse with regard to the
covered financial institution; and
(vii) Any other factors the Board
determines to be relevant.
(b) Material financial loss prohibition.
(1) Generally. A covered financial
institution must not establish or
maintain any type of incentive-based
compensation arrangement, or any
feature of any such arrangement, that
encourages inappropriate risks by the
covered financial institution, by
providing incentive-based
compensation to covered persons, either
individually or as part of a group of
persons who are subject to the same or
similar incentive-based compensation
arrangements, that could lead to
material financial loss to the covered
financial institution.
(2) Requirements for all covered
financial institutions. An incentivebased compensation arrangement
established or maintained by a covered
financial institution for one or more
covered persons does not comply with
paragraph (b)(1) of this section unless it:
(i) Balances risk and financial
rewards, for example by using deferral
of payments, risk adjustment of awards,
reduced sensitivity to short-term
performance, or longer performance
periods;
(ii) Is compatible with effective
controls and risk management; and
(iii) Is supported by strong corporate
governance, including active and
effective oversight by the covered
financial institution’s board of directors
or a committee thereof.
(3) Specific requirements for covered
financial institutions with $50 billion or
more in total consolidated assets. (i)
Deferral required for executive officers.
As part of appropriately balancing risk
and financial rewards pursuant to
paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section, any
incentive-based compensation
arrangement for any executive officer
established or maintained by a covered
financial institution that has total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more must provide for:
(A) At least 50 percent of the annual
incentive-based compensation of the
executive officer to be deferred over a
period of no less than three years, with
the release of deferred amounts to occur
no faster than on a pro rata basis; and
(B) The adjustment of the amount
required to be deferred under paragraph
(b)(3)(i)(A) of this section to reflect
actual losses or other measures or
aspects of performance that are realized
or become better known during the
deferral period.
(ii) Additional requirement for
covered persons presenting particular
loss exposure. As part of appropriately
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balancing risk and financial rewards
pursuant to paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this
section, if a covered financial institution
has total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more—
(A) The board of directors, or a
committee thereof, of the covered
financial institution shall identify those
covered persons (other than executive
officers) who individually have the
ability to expose the institution to
possible losses that are substantial in
relation to the institution’s size, capital,
or overall risk tolerance. These covered
persons may include, for example,
traders with large position limits
relative to the institution’s overall risk
tolerance and other individuals who
have the authority to place at risk a
substantial part of the capital of the
covered financial institution;
(B) The incentive-based compensation
arrangement for any covered person
identified pursuant to paragraph
(b)(3)(ii)(A) of this section must be
approved by the board of directors, or a
committee thereof, of the covered
financial institution and such approval
must be documented;
(C) The board of directors, or
committee thereof, may not approve the
incentive-based compensation
arrangement for any covered person
identified pursuant to paragraph
(b)(3)(ii)(A) of this section unless the
board or committee determines that the
arrangement, including the method of
paying compensation under the
arrangement, effectively balances the
financial rewards to the covered person
and the range and time horizon of risks
associated with the covered person’s
activities, employing appropriate
methods for ensuring risk sensitivity
such as deferral of payments, risk
adjustment of awards, reduced
sensitivity to short-term performance, or
longer performance periods; and
(D) In fulfilling its duties under
paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(C) of this section,
the board of directors or committee
thereof must evaluate the overall
effectiveness of the balancing methods
used in the identified covered person’s
incentive-based compensation
arrangements in reducing incentives for
inappropriate risk taking by the
identified covered person considering
the methods’ suitability for balancing
the full range of risks presented by that
covered person’s activities, and the
methods’ ability to make payments
sensitive to all the risks arising from the
covered person’s activities, including
those that may be difficult to predict,
measure or model.
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§ 236.6
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 72 / Thursday, April 14, 2011 / Proposed Rules
Policies and procedures.
(a) In general. Any incentive-based
compensation arrangement, or any
feature of any such arrangement, is
prohibited under § 236.5 of this part,
unless adopted pursuant to policies and
procedures developed and maintained
by each covered financial institution
and approved by its board of directors,
or a committee thereof, reasonably
designed to ensure and monitor
compliance with the requirements set
forth in 12 U.S.C. 5641 and this part and
commensurate with the size and
complexity of the organization, as well
as the scope and nature of its use of
incentive-based compensation.
(b) Standards. The policies and
procedures must, at a minimum:
(1) Be consistent with the reporting
requirements in § 236.4 of this part and
prohibitions in § 236.5 of this part;
(2) Ensure that risk-management, riskoversight, and internal control
personnel have an appropriate role in
the covered financial institution’s
processes for designing incentive-based
compensation arrangements and for
assessing their effectiveness in
restraining inappropriate risk-taking;
(3) Provide for the monitoring by a
group or person independent of the
covered person, where practicable in
light of the covered financial
institution’s size and complexity, of
incentive-based compensation awards
and payments, risks taken, and actual
risk outcomes to determine whether
incentive compensation payments for
covered persons, or groups of covered
persons, are reduced to reflect adverse
risk outcomes or high levels of risk
taken;
(4) Provide for the covered financial
institution’s board of directors, or
committee thereof, to receive data and
analysis from management and other
sources sufficient to allow the board, or
committee thereof, to assess whether the
overall design and performance of the
institution’s incentive-based
compensation arrangements are
consistent with 12 U.S.C. 5641;
(5) Ensure that documentation of the
covered financial institution’s processes
for establishing, implementing,
modifying, and monitoring incentivebased compensation arrangements is
maintained that is sufficient to enable
the Board to determine the institution’s
compliance with 12 U.S.C. 5641 and
this part;
(6) Consistent with § 236.5(b)(3) of
this part, where deferral is used in
connection with an incentive-based
compensation arrangement, provide for
deferral of incentive-based
compensation awards in amounts and
for periods of time appropriate to the
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duties and responsibilities of the
covered financial institution’s covered
persons, the risks associated with those
duties and responsibilities, and the size
and complexity of the covered financial
institution and provide that the deferral
amounts paid are adjusted to reflect
actual losses or other measures or
aspects of performance that are realized
or become better known during the
deferral period; and
(7) Subject any incentive-based
compensation arrangement to a
corporate governance framework that
provides for ongoing oversight by the
board of directors or a committee
thereof, including the approval by the
board of directors or a committee
thereof of incentive-based compensation
to executive officers.
§ 236.7
Evasion.
A covered financial institution is
prohibited, for the purpose of evading
the restrictions of this part, from doing
indirectly or through or by any other
person, any act or thing that it would be
unlawful for such covered financial
institution to do directly under this part.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
12 CFR CHAPTER III
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation proposes to amend chapter
III of title 12 of the Code of Federal
Regulations as follows:
3. Add new part 372 to read as
follows:
PART 372—INCENTIVE-BASED
COMPENSATION ARRANGEMENTS
Sec.
372.1
372.2
372.3
372.4
372.5
372.6
372.7
Authority.
Scope and purpose.
Definitions.
Required reports to regulators.
Prohibitions.
Policies and procedures.
Evasion.
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1819 Tenth, 12 U.S.C.
5641.
§ 372.1
Authority.
This part is issued pursuant to section
956 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act
(12 U.S.C. 5641).
§ 372.2
Scope and purpose.
This part applies to a covered
financial institution that has total
consolidated assets of $1 billion or more
and offers incentive-based
compensation arrangements to covered
persons. Nothing in this part in any way
limits the authority of the Corporation
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under other provisions of applicable law
and regulations.
§ 372.3
Definitions.
For purposes of this part, the
following definitions apply unless
otherwise specified:
(a) Board of directors means the
governing body of any covered financial
institution performing functions similar
to a board of directors. For an insured
U.S. branch of a foreign bank, ‘‘board of
directors’’ means the senior management
of its parent foreign bank.
(b) Compensation means all direct
and indirect payments, fees or benefits,
both cash and non-cash, awarded to,
granted to, or earned by or for the
benefit of, any covered person in
exchange for services rendered to the
covered financial institution, including,
but not limited to, payments or benefits
pursuant to an employment contract,
compensation or benefit agreement, fee
arrangement, perquisite, stock option
plan, postemployment benefit, or other
compensatory arrangement.
(c) Covered financial institution
means a state nonmember bank and an
insured U.S. branch of a foreign bank
that has total consolidated assets of $1
billion or more.
(d) Covered person means any
executive officer, employee, director, or
principal shareholder of a covered
financial institution.
(e) Director of a covered financial
institution means a member of the board
of directors of the covered financial
institution, or of a board or committee
performing a similar function to a board
of directors.
(f) Executive officer of a covered
financial institution means a person
who holds the title or, without regard to
title, salary, or compensation, performs
the function of one or more of the
following positions: President, chief
executive officer, executive chairman,
chief operating officer, chief financial
officer, chief investment officer, chief
legal officer, chief lending officer, chief
risk officer, or head of a major business
line.
(g) Incentive-based compensation
means any variable compensation that
serves as an incentive for performance.
(h) Principal shareholder means an
individual who directly or indirectly, or
acting through or in concert with one or
more persons, owns, controls, or has the
power to vote 10 percent or more of any
class of voting securities of a covered
financial institution.
(i) Total consolidated assets means:
(1) For a state nonmember bank, the
average of the total assets reported in
the bank’s four most recent
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Consolidated Reports of Condition and
Income; and
(2) For an insured U.S. branch of a
foreign bank, the average of the total
assets reported in the branch’s four most
recent Reports of Assets and Liabilities
of U.S. Branches and Agencies of
Foreign Banks.
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§ 372.4
Required reports to regulators.
(a) In general. A covered financial
institution must submit a report
annually to, and in the format directed
by, the Corporation, that describes the
structure of the covered financial
institution’s incentive-based
compensation arrangements for covered
persons and that is sufficient to allow an
assessment of whether the structure or
features of those arrangements provide
or are likely to provide covered persons
with excessive compensation, fees, or
benefits to covered persons or could
lead to material financial loss to the
covered financial institution.
(b) Individual compensation. A
covered financial institution is not
required to report the actual
compensation of particular covered
persons as part of the report required by
paragraph (a) of this section.
(c) Minimum standards. The
information submitted by the covered
financial institution pursuant to
paragraph (a) of this section must
include the following:
(1) A clear narrative description of the
components of the covered financial
institution’s incentive-based
compensation arrangements applicable
to covered persons and specifying the
types of covered persons to which they
apply;
(2) A succinct description of the
covered financial institution’s policies
and procedures governing its incentivebased compensation arrangements for
covered persons;
(3) If the covered financial institution
has total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more, an additional succinct
description of incentive-based
compensation policies and procedures
specific to the covered financial
institution’s:
(i) Executive officers; and
(ii) Other covered persons who the
board of directors, or a committee
thereof, of the covered financial
institution has identified and
determined under § 372.5(b)(3)(ii) of
this part individually have the ability to
expose the covered financial institution
to possible losses that are substantial in
relation to the institution’s size, capital,
or overall risk tolerance;
(4) Any material changes to the
covered financial institution’s incentivebased compensation arrangements and
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policies and procedures made since the
covered financial institution’s last
report submitted under paragraph (a) of
this section; and
(5) The specific reasons why the
covered financial institution believes
the structure of its incentive-based
compensation plan does not encourage
inappropriate risks by the covered
financial institution by providing
covered persons with:
(i) Excessive compensation; or
(ii) Incentive-based compensation that
could lead to a material financial loss to
the covered financial institution.
§ 372.5
Prohibitions.
(a) Excessive compensation
prohibition. (1) In general. A covered
financial institution must not establish
or maintain any type of incentive-based
compensation arrangement, or any
feature of any such arrangement, that
encourages inappropriate risks by the
covered financial institution by
providing a covered person with
excessive compensation.
(2) Standards. An incentive-based
compensation arrangement provides
excessive compensation when amounts
paid are unreasonable or
disproportionate to the services
performed by a covered person, taking
into consideration:
(i) The combined value of all cash and
non-cash benefits provided to the
covered person;
(ii) The compensation history of the
covered person and other individuals
with comparable expertise at the
covered financial institution;
(iii) The financial condition of the
covered financial institution;
(iv) Comparable compensation
practices at comparable institutions,
based upon such factors as asset size,
geographic location, and the complexity
of the covered financial institution’s
operations and assets;
(v) For postemployment benefits, the
projected total cost and benefit to the
covered financial institution;
(vi) Any connection between the
individual and any fraudulent act or
omission, breach of trust or fiduciary
duty, or insider abuse with regard to the
covered financial institution; and
(vii) Any other factors the Corporation
determines to be relevant.
(b) Material financial loss prohibition.
(1) Generally. A covered financial
institution must not establish or
maintain any type of incentive-based
compensation arrangement, or any
feature of any such arrangement, that
encourages inappropriate risks by the
covered financial institution, by
providing incentive-based
compensation to covered persons, either
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21209
individually or as part of a group of
persons who are subject to the same or
similar incentive-based compensation
arrangements, that could lead to
material financial loss to the covered
financial institution.
(2) Requirements for all covered
financial institutions. An incentivebased compensation arrangement
established or maintained by a covered
financial institution for one or more
covered persons does not comply with
paragraph (b)(1) of this section unless it:
(i) Balances risk and financial
rewards, for example by using deferral
of payments, risk adjustment of awards,
reduced sensitivity to short-term
performance, or longer performance
periods;
(ii) Is compatible with effective
controls and risk management; and
(iii) Is supported by strong corporate
governance, including active and
effective oversight by the covered
financial institution’s board of directors
or a committee thereof.
(3) Specific requirements for covered
financial institutions with $50 billion or
more in total consolidated assets. (i)
Deferral required for executive officers.
As part of appropriately balancing risk
and financial rewards pursuant to
paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section, any
incentive-based compensation
arrangement for any executive officer
established or maintained by a covered
financial institution that has total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more must provide for:
(A) At least 50 percent of the annual
incentive-based compensation of the
executive officer to be deferred over a
period of no less than three years, with
the release of deferred amounts to occur
no faster than on a pro rata basis; and
(B) The adjustment of the amount
required to be deferred under paragraph
(b)(3)(i)(A) of this section to reflect
actual losses or other measures or
aspects of performance that are realized
or become better known during the
deferral period.
(ii) Additional requirement for
covered persons presenting particular
loss exposure. As part of appropriately
balancing risk and financial rewards
pursuant to paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this
section, if a covered financial institution
has total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more—
(A) The board of directors, or a
committee thereof, of the covered
financial institution shall identify those
covered persons (other than executive
officers) who individually have the
ability to expose the institution to
possible losses that are substantial in
relation to the institution’s size, capital,
or overall risk tolerance. These covered
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persons may include, for example,
traders with large position limits
relative to the institution’s overall risk
tolerance and other individuals who
have the authority to place at risk a
substantial part of the capital of the
covered financial institution;
(B) The incentive-based compensation
arrangement for any covered person
identified pursuant to paragraph
(b)(3)(ii)(A) of this section must be
approved by the board of directors, or a
committee thereof, of the covered
financial institution and such approval
must be documented;
(C) The board of directors, or
committee thereof, may not approve the
incentive-based compensation
arrangement for any covered person
identified pursuant to paragraph
(b)(3)(ii)(A) of this section unless the
board or committee determines that the
arrangement, including the method of
paying compensation under the
arrangement, effectively balances the
financial rewards to the covered person
and the range and time horizon of risks
associated with the covered person’s
activities, employing appropriate
methods for ensuring risk sensitivity
such as deferral of payments, risk
adjustment of awards, reduced
sensitivity to short-term performance, or
longer performance periods; and
(D) In fulfilling its duties under
paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(C) of this section,
the board of directors or committee
thereof must evaluate the overall
effectiveness of the balancing methods
used in the identified covered person’s
incentive compensation arrangements in
reducing incentives for inappropriate
risk taking by the identified covered
person considering the methods’
suitability for balancing the full range of
risks presented by that covered person’s
activities, and the methods’ ability to
make payments sensitive to all the risks
arising from the covered person’s
activities, including those that may be
difficult to predict, measure or model.
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§ 372.6
Policies and procedures.
(a) In general. Any incentive-based
compensation arrangement, or any
feature of any such arrangement, is
prohibited under § 372.5 of this part,
unless adopted pursuant to policies and
procedures developed and maintained
by each covered financial institution
and approved by its board of directors,
or a committee thereof, reasonably
designed to ensure and monitor
compliance with the requirements set
forth in 12 U.S.C. 5641 and this part and
commensurate with the size and
complexity of the organization, as well
as the scope and nature of its use of
incentive-based compensation.
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(b) Standards. The policies and
procedures must, at a minimum:
(1) Be consistent with the reporting
requirements in § 372.4 of this part and
prohibitions in § 372.5 of this part;
(2) Ensure that risk-management, riskoversight, and internal control
personnel have an appropriate role in
the covered financial institution’s
processes for designing incentive-based
compensation arrangements and for
assessing their effectiveness in
restraining inappropriate risk-taking;
(3) Provide for the monitoring by a
group or person independent of the
covered person, where practicable in
light of the covered financial
institution’s size and complexity, of
incentive-based compensation awards
and payments, risks taken, and actual
risk outcomes to determine whether
incentive compensation payments for
covered persons, or groups of covered
persons, are reduced to reflect adverse
risk outcomes or high levels of risk
taken;
(4) Provide for the covered financial
institution’s board of directors, or
committee thereof, to receive data and
analysis from management and other
sources sufficient to allow the board, or
committee thereof, to assess whether the
overall design and performance of the
covered financial institution’s incentivebased compensation arrangements are
consistent with 12 U.S.C. 5641;
(5) Ensure that documentation of the
covered financial institution’s processes
for establishing, implementing,
modifying, and monitoring incentivebased compensation arrangements is
maintained that is sufficient to enable
the Corporation to determine the
institution’s compliance with 12 U.S.C.
5641 and this part;
(6) Consistent with § 372.5(b)(3) of
this part, where deferral is used in
connection with an incentive-based
compensation arrangement, provide for
deferral of incentive-based
compensation awards in amounts and
for periods of time appropriate to the
duties and responsibilities of the
covered financial institution’s covered
persons, the risks associated with those
duties and responsibilities, and the size
and complexity of the covered financial
institution and provide that the deferral
amounts paid are adjusted to reflect
actual losses or other measures or
aspects of performance that are realized
or become better known during the
deferral period; and
(7) Subject any incentive-based
compensation arrangement to a
corporate governance framework that
provides for ongoing oversight by the
board of directors or a committee
thereof, including the approval by the
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board of directors or a committee
thereof of incentive-based compensation
to executive officers.
§ 372.7
Evasion.
A covered financial institution is
prohibited, for the purpose of evading
the restrictions of this part, from doing
indirectly or through or by any other
person, any act or thing that it would be
unlawful for such covered financial
institution to do directly under this part.
Department of the Treasury
12 CFR Chapter V
For the reasons set forth in the joint
preamble, the Office of Thrift
Supervision proposes to amend chapter
V of title 12 of the Code of Federal
Regulations as follows:
4. Add part 563h to read as follows:
PART 563h—INCENTIVE-BASED
COMPENSATION ARRANGEMENTS
Sec.
563h.1
563h.2
563h.3
563h.4
563h.5
563h.6
563h.7
Authority.
Scope and purpose.
Definitions.
Required reports to regulators.
Prohibitions.
Policies and procedures.
Evasion.
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1462a, 1463, 1464,
1467a, and 5641.
§ 563h.1
Authority.
This part is issued pursuant to section
956 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act
(12 U.S.C. 5641).
§ 563h.2
Scope and purpose.
This part applies to a covered
financial institution that has total
consolidated assets of $1 billion or more
and offers incentive-based
compensation arrangements to covered
persons. Nothing in this part in any way
limits the authority of the OTS under
other provisions of applicable law and
regulations.
§ 563h.3
Definitions.
For purposes of this part, the
following definitions apply unless
otherwise specified:
(a) Board of directors means the
governing body of any covered financial
institution performing functions similar
to a board of directors.
(b) Compensation means all direct
and indirect payments, fees or benefits,
both cash and non-cash, awarded to,
granted to, or earned by or for the
benefit of, any covered person in
exchange for services rendered to the
covered financial institution, including,
but not limited to, payments or benefits
pursuant to an employment contract,
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compensation or benefit agreement, fee
arrangement, perquisite, stock option
plan, postemployment benefit, or other
compensatory arrangement.
(c) Covered financial institution
means a savings association as defined
in 12 U.S.C. 1813(b) and a savings and
loan holding company as defined in 12
U.S.C. 1467a(a), that has total
consolidated assets of $1 billion or
more.
(d) Covered person means any
executive officer, employee, director, or
principal shareholder of a covered
financial institution.
(e) Director of a covered financial
institution means a member of the board
of directors of the covered financial
institution, or of a board or committee
performing a similar function to a board
of directors.
(f) Executive officer of a covered
financial institution means a person
who holds the title or, without regard to
title, salary, or compensation, performs
the function of one or more of the
following positions: president, chief
executive officer, executive chairman,
chief operating officer, chief financial
officer, chief investment officer, chief
legal officer, chief lending officer, chief
risk officer, or head of a major business
line.
(g) Incentive-based compensation
means any variable compensation that
serves as an incentive for performance.
(h) Principal shareholder means an
individual who directly or indirectly, or
acting through or in concert with one or
more persons, owns, controls, or has the
power to vote 10 percent or more of any
class of voting securities of a covered
financial institution.
(i) Total consolidated assets means
total consolidated assets determined
based on the average of the covered
financial institution’s four most recent
Thrift Financial Reports.
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§ 563h.4
Required reports to regulators.
(a) In general. A covered financial
institution must submit a report
annually to, and in the format directed
by, the OTS, that describes the structure
of the covered financial institution’s
incentive-based compensation
arrangements for covered persons and
that is sufficient to allow an assessment
of whether the structure or features of
those arrangements provide or are likely
to provide covered persons with
excessive compensation, fees, or
benefits to covered persons or could
lead to material financial loss to the
covered financial institution.
(b) Individual compensation. A
covered financial institution is not
required to report the actual
compensation of particular covered
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persons as part of the report required by
paragraph (a) of this section.
(c) Minimum standards. The
information submitted by the covered
financial institution pursuant to
paragraph (a) of this section must
include the following:
(1) A clear narrative description of the
components of the covered financial
institution’s incentive-based
compensation arrangements applicable
to covered persons and specifying the
types of covered persons to which they
apply;
(2) A succinct description of the
covered financial institution’s policies
and procedures governing its incentivebased compensation arrangements for
covered persons;
(3) If the covered financial institution
has total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more, an additional succinct
description of incentive-based
compensation policies and procedures
specific to the covered financial
institution’s:
(i) Executive officers; and
(ii) Other covered persons who the
board of directors, or a committee
thereof, of the covered financial
institution has identified and
determined under § 563h.5(b)(3)(ii) of
this part individually have the ability to
expose the covered financial institution
to possible losses that are substantial in
relation to the institution’s size, capital,
or overall risk tolerance;
(4) Any material changes to the
covered financial institution’s incentivebased compensation arrangements and
policies and procedures made since the
covered financial institution’s last
report submitted under paragraph (a) of
this section; and
(5) The specific reasons why the
covered financial institution believes
the structure of its incentive-based
compensation plan does not encourage
inappropriate risks by the covered
financial institution by providing
covered persons with:
(i) Excessive compensation; or
(ii) Incentive-based compensation that
could lead to material financial loss to
the covered financial institution.
§ 563h.5
Prohibitions.
(a) Excessive compensation
prohibition. (1) In general. A covered
financial institution must not establish
or maintain any type of incentive-based
compensation arrangement, or any
feature of any such arrangement, that
encourages inappropriate risks by the
covered financial institution by
providing a covered person with
excessive compensation.
(2) Standards. An incentive-based
compensation arrangement provides
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excessive compensation when amounts
paid are unreasonable or
disproportionate to the services
performed by a covered person, taking
into consideration:
(i) The combined value of all cash and
non-cash benefits provided to the
covered person;
(ii) The compensation history of the
covered person and other individuals
with comparable expertise at the
covered financial institution;
(iii) The financial condition of the
covered financial institution;
(iv) Comparable compensation
practices at comparable institutions,
based upon such factors as asset size,
geographic location, and the complexity
of the covered financial institution’s
operations and assets;
(v) For postemployment benefits, the
projected total cost and benefit to the
covered financial institution;
(vi) Any connection between the
individual and any fraudulent act or
omission, breach of trust or fiduciary
duty, or insider abuse with regard to the
covered financial institution; and
(vii) Any other factors the OTS
determines to be relevant.
(b) Material financial loss prohibition.
(1) Generally. A covered financial
institution must not establish or
maintain any type of incentive-based
compensation arrangement, or any
feature of any such arrangement, that
encourages inappropriate risks by the
covered financial institution, by
providing incentive-based
compensation to covered persons, either
individually or as part of a group of
persons who are subject to the same or
similar incentive-based compensation
arrangements, that could lead to
material financial loss to the covered
financial institution.
(2) Requirements for all covered
financial institutions. An incentivebased compensation arrangement
established or maintained by a covered
financial institution for one or more
covered persons does not comply with
paragraph (b)(1) of this section unless it:
(i) Balances risk and financial
rewards, for example by using deferral
of payments, risk adjustment of awards,
reduced sensitivity to short-term
performance, or longer performance
periods;
(ii) Is compatible with effective
controls and risk management; and
(iii) Is supported by strong corporate
governance, including active and
effective oversight by the covered
financial institution’s board of directors
or a committee thereof.
(3) Specific requirements for covered
financial institutions with $50 billion or
more in total consolidated assets. (i)
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Deferral required for executive officers.
As part of appropriately balancing risk
and financial rewards pursuant to
paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section, any
incentive-based compensation
arrangement for any executive officer
established or maintained by a covered
financial institution that has total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more must provide for:
(A) At least 50 percent of the annual
incentive-based compensation of the
executive officer to be deferred over a
period of no less than three years, with
the release of deferred amounts to occur
no faster than on a pro rata basis; and
(B) The adjustment of the amount
required to be deferred under paragraph
(b)(3)(i)(A) of this section to reflect
actual losses or other measures or
aspects of performance that are realized
or become better known during the
deferral period.
(ii) Additional requirement for
covered persons presenting particular
loss exposure. As part of appropriately
balancing risk and financial rewards
pursuant to paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this
section, if a covered financial institution
has total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more—
(A) The board of directors, or a
committee thereof, of the covered
financial institution shall identify those
covered persons (other than executive
officers) who individually have the
ability to expose the institution to
possible losses that are substantial in
relation to the institution’s size, capital,
or overall risk tolerance. These covered
persons may include, for example,
traders with large position limits
relative to the institution’s overall risk
tolerance and other individuals who
have the authority to place at risk a
substantial part of the capital of the
covered financial institution;
(B) The incentive-based compensation
arrangement for any covered person
identified pursuant to paragraph
(b)(3)(ii)(A) of this section must be
approved by the board of directors, or a
committee thereof, of the covered
financial institution and such approval
must be documented;
(C) The board of directors, or
committee thereof, may not approve the
incentive-based compensation
arrangement for any covered person
identified pursuant to paragraph
(b)(3)(ii)(A) of this section unless the
board or committee determines that the
arrangement, including the method of
paying compensation under the
arrangement, effectively balances the
financial rewards to the covered person
and the range and time horizon of risks
associated with the covered person’s
activities, employing appropriate
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methods for ensuring risk sensitivity
such as deferral of payments, risk
adjustment of awards, reduced
sensitivity to short-term performance, or
longer performance periods; and
(D) In fulfilling its duties under
paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(C) of this section,
the board of directors, or committee
thereof, must evaluate the overall
effectiveness of the balancing methods
used in the identified covered person’s
incentive-based compensation
arrangements in reducing incentives for
inappropriate risk taking by the
identified covered person considering
the methods’ suitability for balancing
the full range of risks presented by that
covered person’s activities, and the
methods’ ability to make payments
sensitive to all the risks arising from the
covered person’s activities, including
those that may be difficult to predict,
measure, or model.
§ 563h.6
Policies and procedures.
(a) In general. Any incentive-based
compensation arrangement, or any
feature of any such arrangement, is
prohibited under § 563h.5 of this part,
unless adopted pursuant to policies and
procedures developed and maintained
by each covered financial institution
and approved by its board of directors,
or a committee thereof, reasonably
designed to ensure and monitor
compliance with the requirements set
forth in 12 U.S.C. 5641 and this part and
commensurate with the size and
complexity of the organization, as well
as the scope and nature of its use of
incentive-based compensation.
(b) Standards. The policies and
procedures must, at a minimum:
(1) Be consistent with the reporting
requirements in § 563h.4 of this part and
prohibitions in § 563h.5 of this part;
(2) Ensure that risk-management, riskoversight, and internal control
personnel have an appropriate role in
the covered financial institution’s
processes for designing incentive-based
compensation arrangements and for
assessing their effectiveness in
restraining inappropriate risk-taking;
(3) Provide for the monitoring by a
group or person independent of the
covered person, where practicable in
light of the covered financial
institution’s size and complexity, of
incentive-based compensation awards
and payments, risks taken, and actual
risk outcomes to determine whether
incentive compensation payments for
covered persons, or groups of covered
persons, are reduced to reflect adverse
risk outcomes or high levels of risk
taken;
(4) Provide for the covered financial
institution’s board of directors, or
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committee thereof, to receive data and
analysis from management and other
sources sufficient to allow the board, or
committee thereof, to assess whether the
overall design and performance of the
institution’s incentive-based
compensation arrangements are
consistent with 12 U.S.C. 5641;
(5) Ensure that documentation of the
covered financial institution’s processes
for establishing, implementing,
modifying, and monitoring incentivebased compensation arrangements is
maintained that is sufficient to enable
the OTS to determine the institution’s
compliance with 12 U.S.C. 5641 and
this part;
(6) Consistent with § 563h.5(b)(3) of
this part, where deferral is used in
connection with an incentive-based
compensation arrangement, provide for
deferral of incentive-based
compensation awards in amounts and
for periods of time appropriate to the
duties and responsibilities of the
covered financial institution’s covered
persons, the risks associated with those
duties and responsibilities, and the size
and complexity of the covered financial
institution and provide that the deferral
amounts paid are adjusted to reflect
actual losses or other measures or
aspects of performance that are realized
or become better known during the
deferral period; and
(7) Subject any incentive-based
compensation arrangement to a
corporate governance framework that
provides for ongoing oversight by the
board of directors or a committee
thereof, including the approval by the
board of directors or a committee
thereof of incentive-based compensation
to executive officers.
§ 563h.7
Evasion.
A covered financial institution is
prohibited, for the purpose of evading
the restrictions of this part, from doing
indirectly or through or by any other
person, any act or thing that it would be
unlawful for such covered financial
institution to do directly under this part.
National Credit Union Administration
12 CFR Chapter VII
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, the National Credit Union
Administration proposes to amend
chapter VII of title 12 of the Code of
Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 741—REQUIREMENTS FOR
INSURANCE
5. The authority citation for part 741
continues to read as follows:
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Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1757, 1766, 1781–
1790, and 1790d.
6. Add a new § 741.225 to read as
follows:
§ 741.225 Incentive-based compensation
arrangements.
Any credit union which is insured
pursuant to Title II of the Act must
adhere to the requirements stated in part
751 of this chapter.
7. Add a new part 751 to subchapter
A to read as follows:
Part 751 Incentive-Based
Compensation Arrangements
Sec.
751.1
751.2
751.3
751.4
751.5
751.6
751.7
Authority.
Scope and purpose.
Definitions.
Required reports to regulators.
Prohibitions.
Policies and procedures.
Evasion.
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1751 et seq. and
5641.
§ 751.1
Authority.
This part is issued pursuant to section
956 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act
(12 U.S.C. 5641).
§ 751.2
Scope and purpose.
This part applies to any federally
insured credit union, or credit union
eligible to make application to become
an insured credit union under 12 U.S.C.
1781, with total consolidated assets of
$1 billion or more, and offers incentivebased compensation arrangements to
covered persons. Nothing in this part in
any way limits the authority of the
NCUA under other provisions of
applicable law and regulations.
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§ 751.3
Definitions.
For purposes of this part, the
following definitions apply unless
otherwise specified:
(a) Board of directors means the
governing body of any credit union.
(b) Compensation means all direct
and indirect payments, fees or benefits,
both cash and non-cash, awarded to,
granted to, or earned by or for the
benefit of, any covered person in
exchange for services rendered to the
credit union, including, but not limited
to, payments or benefits pursuant to an
employment contract, compensation or
benefit agreement, fee arrangement,
perquisite, post-employment benefit, or
other compensatory arrangement.
Consistent with § 701.33 of this chapter,
the term compensation specifically
excludes reimbursement for reasonable
and proper costs incurred by covered
persons in carrying out official credit
union business; provision of reasonable
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health, accident and related types of
personal insurance protection; and
indemnification.
(c) [Reserved]
(d) Covered person means any
executive officer, employee, or director
of a credit union.
(e) [Reserved]
(f) Executive officer of a credit union
means a person who holds the title or,
without regard to title, salary, or
compensation, performs the function of
one or more of the following positions:
president, chief executive officer,
executive chairman, chief operating
officer, chief financial officer, chief
investment officer, chief legal officer,
chief lending officer, chief risk officer,
or head of a major business line.
(g) Incentive-based compensation
means any variable compensation that
serves as an incentive for performance.
(h) [Reserved]
(i) Total consolidated assets means
calculating the average of the total assets
reported in the credit union’s four most
recent 5300 Call Reports.
(i) Executive officers; and
(ii) Other covered persons who the
board of directors, or a committee
thereof, of the credit union has
identified and determined under
§ 751.5(b)(3)(ii) of this part individually
have the ability to expose the credit
union to possible losses that are
substantial in relation to the credit
union’s size, capital, or overall risk
tolerance;
(4) Any material changes to the credit
union’s incentive-based compensation
arrangements and policies and
procedures made since the credit
union’s last report submitted under
paragraph (a) of this section; and
(5) The specific reasons why the
credit union believes the structure of its
incentive-based compensation plan does
not encourage inappropriate risks by the
credit union by providing covered
persons with:
(i) Excessive compensation; or
(ii) Incentive-based compensation that
could lead to material financial loss to
the credit union.
§ 751.4
§ 751.5
Required reports to regulators.
(a) In general. A credit union must
submit a report annually to, and in the
format directed by, the NCUA, that
describes the structure of the credit
union’s incentive-based compensation
arrangements for covered persons and
that is sufficient to allow an assessment
of whether the structure or features of
those arrangements provide or are likely
to provide covered persons with
excessive compensation, fees, or
benefits to covered persons or could
lead to material financial loss to the
credit union.
(b) Individual compensation. A credit
union is not required to report the
actual compensation of particular
covered persons as part of the report
required by paragraph (a) of this section.
(c) Minimum standards. The
information submitted by the credit
union pursuant to paragraph (a) of this
section must include the following:
(1) A clear narrative description of the
components of the credit union’s
incentive-based compensation
arrangements applicable to covered
persons and specifying the types of
covered persons to which they apply;
(2) A succinct description of the
credit union’s policies and procedures
governing its incentive-based
compensation arrangements for covered
persons;
(3) If the credit union has total
consolidated assets of $10 billion or
more, an additional succinct description
of incentive-based compensation
policies and procedures specific to the
credit union’s:
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Prohibitions.
(a) Excessive compensation
prohibition. (1) In general. A credit
union must not establish or maintain
any type of incentive-based
compensation arrangement, or any
feature of any such arrangement, that
encourages inappropriate risks by the
credit union by providing a covered
person with excessive compensation.
(2) Standards. An incentive-based
compensation arrangement provides
excessive compensation when amounts
paid are unreasonable or
disproportionate to the services
performed by a covered person, taking
into consideration:
(i) The combined value of all cash and
non-cash benefits provided to the
covered person;
(ii) The compensation history of the
covered person and other individuals
with comparable expertise at the credit
union;
(iii) The financial condition of the
credit union;
(iv) Comparable compensation
practices at comparable institutions,
based upon such factors as asset size,
geographic location, and the complexity
of the credit union’s operations and
assets;
(v) For postemployment benefits, the
projected total cost and benefit to the
credit union;
(vi) Any connection between the
individual and any fraudulent act or
omission, breach of trust or fiduciary
duty, or insider abuse with regard to the
credit union; and
(vii) Any other factors the NCUA
determines to be relevant.
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(b) Material financial loss prohibition.
(1) Generally. A credit union must not
establish or maintain any type of
incentive-based compensation
arrangement, or any feature of any such
arrangement, that encourages
inappropriate risks by the credit union,
by providing incentive-based
compensation to covered persons, either
individually or as part of a group of
persons who are subject to the same or
similar incentive-based compensation
arrangements, that could lead to
material financial loss to the credit
union.
(2) Requirements for all credit unions.
An incentive-based compensation
arrangement established or maintained
by a credit union for one or more
covered persons does not comply with
paragraph (b)(1) of this section unless it:
(i) Balances risk and financial
rewards, for example by using deferral
of payments, risk adjustment of awards,
reduced sensitivity to short-term
performance, or longer performance
periods;
(ii) Is compatible with effective
controls and risk management; and
(iii) Is supported by strong corporate
governance, including active and
effective oversight by the credit union’s
board of directors or a committee
thereof.
(3) Specific requirements for credit
unions with $10 billion or more in total
consolidated assets.
(i) Deferral required for executive
officers. As part of appropriately
balancing risk and financial rewards
pursuant to paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this
section, any incentive-based
compensation arrangement for any
executive officer, established or
maintained by a credit union that has
total consolidated assets of $10 billion
or more, must provide for:
(A) At least 50 percent of the annual
incentive-based compensation of the
executive officer to be deferred over a
period of no less than three years, with
the release of deferred amounts to occur
no faster than on a pro rata basis; and
(B) The adjustment of the amount
required to be deferred under paragraph
(b)(3)(i)(A) of this section to reflect
actual losses or other measures or
aspects of performance that are realized
or become better known during the
deferral period.
(ii) Additional requirement for
covered persons presenting particular
loss exposure. As part of appropriately
balancing risk and financial rewards
pursuant to paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this
section, if a credit union has total
consolidated assets of $10 billion or
more—
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(A) The board of directors, or a
committee thereof, of the credit union
shall identify those covered persons
(other than executive officers) who
individually have the ability to expose
the credit union to possible losses that
are substantial in relation to the credit
union’s size, capital, or overall risk
tolerance. These covered persons may
include, for example, individuals who
have the authority to place at risk a
substantial part of the credit union’s
capital;
(B) The incentive-based compensation
arrangement for any covered person
identified pursuant to paragraph
(b)(3)(ii)(A) of this section must be
approved by the board of directors, or a
committee thereof, of the credit union
and such approval must be documented;
(C) The board of directors, or
committee thereof, may not approve the
incentive-based compensation
arrangement for any covered person
identified pursuant to paragraph
(b)(3)(ii)(A) of this section unless the
board or committee determines that the
arrangement, including the method of
paying compensation under the
arrangement, effectively balances the
financial rewards to the covered person
and the range and time horizon of risks
associated with the covered person’s
activities, employing appropriate
methods for ensuring risk sensitivity,
such as deferral of payments, risk
adjustment of awards, reduced
sensitivity to short-term performance, or
longer performance periods; and
(D) In fulfilling its duties under
paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(C) of this section,
the board of directors, or committee
thereof, must evaluate the overall
effectiveness of the balancing methods
used in the identified covered person’s
incentive-based compensation
arrangements in reducing incentives for
inappropriate risk taking by the
identified covered person considering
the methods’ suitability for balancing
the full range of risks presented by that
covered person’s activities, and the
methods’ ability to make payments
sensitive to all the risks arising from the
covered person’s activities, including
those that may be difficult to predict,
measure, or model.
§ 751.6
Policies and procedures.
(a) In general. Any incentive-based
compensation arrangement, or any
feature of any such arrangement, is
prohibited under § 751.5 of this part,
unless adopted pursuant to policies and
procedures developed and maintained
by each credit union and approved by
its board of directors, or a committee
thereof, reasonably designed to ensure
and monitor compliance with the
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requirements set forth in 12 U.S.C. 5641
and this part and commensurate with
the size and complexity of the credit
union, as well as the scope and nature
of its use of incentive-based
compensation.
(b) Standards. The policies and
procedures must, at a minimum:
(1) Be consistent with the reporting
requirements in § 751.4 of this part and
prohibitions in § 751.5 of this part;
(2) Ensure that risk-management, riskoversight, and internal control
personnel have an appropriate role in
the credit union’s processes for
designing incentive-based compensation
arrangements and for assessing their
effectiveness in restraining
inappropriate risk-taking;
(3) Provide for the monitoring by a
group or person independent of the
covered person, where practicable in
light of the credit union’s size and
complexity, of incentive-based
compensation awards and payments,
risks taken, and actual risk outcomes to
determine whether incentive
compensation payments for covered
persons, or groups of covered persons,
are reduced to reflect adverse risk
outcomes or high levels of risk taken;
(4) Provide for the credit union’s
board of directors, or committee thereof,
to receive data and analysis from
management and other sources
sufficient to allow the board, or
committee thereof, to assess whether the
overall design and performance of the
credit union’s incentive-based
compensation arrangements are
consistent with 12 U.S.C. 5641;
(5) Ensure that documentation of the
credit union’s processes for establishing,
implementing, modifying, and
monitoring incentive-based
compensation arrangements is
maintained that is sufficient to enable
the NCUA to determine the credit
union’s compliance with 12 U.S.C. 5641
and this part;
(6) Consistent with § 751.5(b)(3) of
this part, where deferral is used in
connection with an incentive-based
compensation arrangement, provide for
deferral of incentive-based
compensation awards in amounts and
for periods of time appropriate to the
duties and responsibilities of the credit
union’s covered persons, the risks
associated with those duties and
responsibilities, and the size and
complexity of the credit union, and
provide that the deferral amounts paid
are adjusted to reflect actual losses or
other measures or aspects of
performance that are realized or become
better known during the deferral period;
and
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(7) Subject any incentive-based
compensation arrangement to a
corporate governance framework that
provides for ongoing oversight by the
board of directors or a committee
thereof, including the approval by the
board of directors or a committee
thereof of incentive-based compensation
to executive officers.
§ 751.7
Evasion.
A credit union is prohibited, for the
purpose of evading the restrictions of
this part, from doing indirectly or
through or by any other person, any act
or thing that it would be unlawful for
such credit union to do directly under
this part.
Securities and Exchange Commission
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Commission proposes to
amend Title 17, Chapter II of the Code
of Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 248—REGULATION S–P,
REGULATION S–AM, AND INCENTIVEBASED COMPENSATION
ARRANGEMENTS
8. The authority citation for part 248
is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 15 U.S.C. 78q, 78q–1, 78w,
78mm, 80a–30, 80a–37, 80b–4, 80b–11,
1681s–3 and note, 1681w(a)(1), 6801–6809,
and 6825, and 12 U.S.C. 5641.
9. Add a new subpart C (consisting of
§§ 248.201 through § 248.207) to read as
follows:
Subpart C—Incentive-based Compensation
Arrangements
Sec.
248.201 Authority.
248.202 Scope and purpose.
248.203 Definitions.
248.204 Required reports to the
Commission.
248.205 Prohibitions.
248.206 Policies and procedures.
248.207 Evasion.
Subpart C—Incentive-based
Compensation Arrangements
§ 248.201
Authority.
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This subpart is issued pursuant to
section 956 of the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection
Act (12 U.S.C. 5641).
§ 248.202
Scope and purpose.
This subpart applies to a covered
financial institution that has total
consolidated assets of $1 billion or more
and offers incentive-based
compensation arrangements to covered
persons. Nothing in this subpart in any
way limits the authority of the
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Commission under other provisions of
applicable law and regulations.
§ 248.203
Definitions.
For purposes of this subpart, the
following definitions apply unless
otherwise specified:
(a) Board of directors means the
governing body of any covered financial
institution performing functions similar
to a board of directors.
(b) Compensation means all direct
and indirect payments, fees or benefits,
both cash and non-cash, awarded to,
granted to, or earned by or for the
benefit of, any covered person in
exchange for services rendered to the
covered financial institution, including,
but not limited to, payments or benefits
pursuant to an employment contract,
compensation or benefit agreement, fee
arrangement, perquisite, stock option
plan, postemployment benefit, or other
compensatory arrangement.
(c) Covered financial institution
means: a broker or dealer registered
under Section 15 of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78o)
and an investment adviser as such term
is defined in section 202(a)(11) of the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (15
U.S.C. 80b–2(a)(11)) that has total
consolidated assets of $1 billion or
more.
(d) Covered person means any
executive officer, employee, director, or
principal shareholder of a covered
financial institution.
(e) Director of a covered financial
institution means a member of the board
of directors of the covered financial
institution, or of a board or committee
performing a similar function to a board
of directors.
(f) Executive officer of a covered
financial institution means a person
who holds the title or, without regard to
title, salary, or compensation, performs
the function of one or more of the
following positions: president, chief
executive officer, executive chairman,
chief operating officer, chief financial
officer, chief investment officer, chief
legal officer, chief lending officer, chief
risk officer, or head of a major business
line.
(g) Incentive-based compensation
means any variable compensation that
serves as an incentive for performance.
(h) Principal shareholder means an
individual who directly or indirectly, or
acting through or in concert with one or
more persons, owns, controls, or has the
power to vote 10 percent or more of any
class of voting securities of a covered
financial institution.
(i) Total consolidated assets means:
(1) For a broker or dealer registered
under Section 15 of the Securities
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Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78o)
total assets reported in the firm’s most
recent year-end audited Consolidated
Statement of Financial Condition filed
pursuant to Rule 17a–5 under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934; and
(2) For an investment adviser, as such
term is defined in section 202(a)(11) of
the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (15
U.S.C. 80b–2(a)(11)) the adviser’s total
assets shown on the balance sheet for
the adviser’s most recent fiscal year end.
§ 248.204 Required reports to the
Commission.
(a) In general. A covered financial
institution must submit a report
annually to, and in the format directed
by, the Commission, that describes the
structure of the covered financial
institution’s incentive-based
compensation arrangements for covered
persons and that is sufficient to allow an
assessment of whether the structure or
features of those arrangements provide
or are likely to provide covered persons
with excessive compensation, fees, or
benefits to covered persons or could
lead to material financial loss to the
covered financial institution.
(b) Individual compensation. A
covered financial institution is not
required to report the actual
compensation of particular covered
persons as part of the report required by
paragraph (a) of this section.
(c) Minimum standards. The
information submitted by the covered
financial institution pursuant to
paragraph (a) of this section must
include the following:
(1) A clear narrative description of the
components of the covered financial
institution’s incentive-based
compensation arrangements applicable
to covered persons and specifying the
types of covered persons to which they
apply;
(2) A succinct description of the
covered financial institution’s policies
and procedures governing its incentivebased compensation arrangements for
covered persons;
(3) If the covered financial institution
has total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more, an additional succinct
description of incentive-based
compensation policies and procedures
specific to the covered financial
institution’s:
(i) Executive officers; and
(ii) Other covered persons who the
board of directors, or a committee
thereof, of the covered financial
institution has identified and
determined under § 248.205(b)(3)(ii) of
subpart C of this part individually have
the ability to expose the covered
financial institution to possible losses
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that are substantial in relation to the
covered financial institution’s size,
capital, or overall risk tolerance;
(4) Any material changes to the
covered financial institution’s incentivebased compensation arrangements and
policies and procedures made since the
covered financial institution’s last
report submitted under paragraph (a) of
this section; and
(5) The specific reasons why the
covered financial institution believes
the structure of its incentive-based
compensation plan does not encourage
inappropriate risks by the covered
financial institution by providing
covered persons with:
(i) Excessive compensation; or
(ii) Incentive-based compensation that
could lead to a material financial loss to
the covered financial institution.
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§ 248.205
Prohibitions.
(a) Excessive compensation
prohibition.
(1) In general. A covered financial
institution must not establish or
maintain any type of incentive-based
compensation arrangement, or any
feature of any such arrangement, that
encourages inappropriate risks by the
covered financial institution by
providing a covered person with
excessive compensation.
(2) Standards. An incentive-based
compensation arrangement provides
excessive compensation when amounts
paid are unreasonable or
disproportionate to the services
performed by a covered person, taking
into consideration:
(i) The combined value of all cash and
non-cash benefits provided to the
covered person;
(ii) The compensation history of the
covered person and other individuals
with comparable expertise at the
covered financial institution;
(iii) The financial condition of the
covered financial institution;
(iv) Comparable compensation
practices at comparable covered
financial institutions, based upon such
factors as asset size, geographic location,
and the complexity of the covered
financial institution’s operations and
assets;
(v) For postemployment benefits, the
projected total cost and benefit to the
covered financial institution;
(vi) Any connection between the
individual and any fraudulent act or
omission, breach of trust or fiduciary
duty, or insider abuse with regard to the
covered financial institution; and
(vii) Any other factors the
Commission determines to be relevant.
(b) Material financial loss prohibition.
(1) Generally. A covered financial
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institution must not establish or
maintain any type of incentive-based
compensation arrangement, or any
feature of any such arrangement, that
encourages inappropriate risks by the
covered financial institution, by
providing incentive-based
compensation to covered persons, either
individually or as part of a group of
persons who are subject to the same or
similar incentive-based compensation
arrangements, that could lead to
material financial loss to the covered
financial institution.
(2) Requirements for all covered
financial institutions. An incentivebased compensation arrangement
established or maintained by a covered
financial institution for one or more
covered persons does not comply with
paragraph (b)(1) of this section unless it:
(i) Balances risk and financial
rewards, for example by using deferral
of payments, risk adjustment of awards,
reduced sensitivity to short-term
performance, or longer performance
periods;
(ii) Is compatible with effective
controls and risk management; and
(iii) Is supported by strong corporate
governance, including active and
effective oversight by the covered
financial institution’s board of directors
or a committee thereof.
(3) Specific requirements for covered
financial institutions with $50 billion or
more in total consolidated assets.
(i) Deferral required for executive
officers. As part of appropriately
balancing risk and financial rewards
pursuant to paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this
section, any incentive-based
compensation arrangement for any
executive officer established or
maintained by a covered financial
institution that has total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more must
provide for:
(A) At least 50 percent of the annual
incentive-based compensation of the
executive officer to be deferred over a
period of no less than three years, with
the release of deferred amounts to occur
no faster than on a pro rata basis; and
(B) The adjustment of the amount
required to be deferred under paragraph
(b)(3)(i)(A) of this section to reflect
actual losses or other measures or
aspects of performance that are realized
or become better known during the
deferral period.
(ii) Additional requirement for
covered persons presenting particular
loss exposure. As part of appropriately
balancing risk and financial rewards
pursuant to paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this
section, if a covered financial institution
has total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more—
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(A) The board of directors, or a
committee thereof, of the covered
financial institution shall identify those
covered persons (other than executive
officers) who individually have the
ability to expose the covered financial
institution to possible losses that are
substantial in relation to the covered
financial institution’s size, capital, or
overall risk tolerance. These covered
persons may include, for example,
traders with large position limits
relative to the covered financial
institution’s overall risk tolerance and
other individuals who have the
authority to place at risk a substantial
part of the capital of the covered
financial institution;
(B) The incentive-based compensation
arrangement for any covered person
identified pursuant to paragraph
(b)(3)(ii)(A) of this section must be
approved by the board of directors, or a
committee thereof, of the covered
financial institution and such approval
must be documented;
(C) The board of directors, or
committee thereof, may not approve the
incentive-based compensation
arrangement for any covered person
identified pursuant to paragraph
(b)(3)(ii)(A) of this section unless the
board or committee determines that the
arrangement, including the method of
paying compensation under the
arrangement, effectively balances the
financial rewards to the covered person
and the range and time horizon of risks
associated with the covered person’s
activities, employing appropriate
methods for ensuring risk sensitivity
such as deferral of payments, risk
adjustment of awards, reduced
sensitivity to short-term performance, or
longer performance periods; and
(D) In fulfilling its duties under
paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(C) of this section,
the board of directors or committee
thereof must evaluate the overall
effectiveness of the balancing methods
used in the identified covered person’s
incentive-based compensation
arrangements in reducing incentives for
inappropriate risk taking by the
identified covered person considering
the methods’ suitability for balancing
the full range of risks presented by that
covered person’s activities, and the
methods’ ability to make payments
sensitive to all the risks arising from the
covered person’s activities, including
those that may be difficult to predict,
measure or model.
§ 248.206
Policies and procedures.
(a) In general. Any incentive-based
compensation arrangement, or any
feature of any such arrangement, is
prohibited under § 248.205 of this
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subpart, unless adopted pursuant to
policies and procedures developed and
maintained by each covered financial
institution and approved by its board of
directors, or a committee thereof,
reasonably designed to ensure and
monitor compliance with the
requirements set forth in 12 U.S.C. 5641
and subpart C of this part and
commensurate with the size and
complexity of the organization, as well
as the scope and nature of its use of
incentive-based compensation.
(b) Standards. The policies and
procedures must, at a minimum:
(1) Be consistent with the reporting
requirements in § 248.204 of subpart C
of this part and prohibitions in
§ 248.205 of subpart C of this part;
(2) Ensure that risk-management, riskoversight, and internal control
personnel have an appropriate role in
the covered financial institution’s
processes for designing incentive-based
compensation arrangements and for
assessing their effectiveness in
restraining inappropriate risk-taking;
(3) Provide for the monitoring by a
group or person independent of the
covered person, where practicable in
light of the covered financial
institution’s size and complexity, of
incentive-based compensation awards
and payments, risks taken, and actual
risk outcomes to determine whether
incentive-based compensation payments
for covered persons, or groups of
covered persons, are reduced to reflect
adverse risk outcomes or high levels of
risk taken;
(4) Provide for the covered financial
institution’s board of directors, or
committee thereof, to receive data and
analysis from management and other
sources sufficient to allow the board, or
committee thereof, to assess whether the
overall design and performance of the
covered financial institution’s incentivebased compensation arrangements are
consistent with 12 U.S.C. 5641;
(5) Ensure that documentation of the
covered financial institution’s processes
for establishing, implementing,
modifying, and monitoring incentivebased compensation arrangements is
maintained that is sufficient to enable
the Commission to determine the
covered financial institution’s
compliance with 12 U.S.C. 5641 and
subpart C of this part;
(6) Consistent with § 248.205(b)(3) of
subpart C, where deferral is used in
connection with an incentive-based
compensation arrangement, provide for
deferral of incentive-based
compensation awards in amounts and
for periods of time appropriate to the
duties and responsibilities of the
covered financial institution’s covered
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persons, the risks associated with those
duties and responsibilities, and the size
and complexity of the covered financial
institution and provide that the deferral
amounts paid are adjusted to reflect
actual losses or other measures or
aspects of performance that are realized
or become better known during the
deferral period; and
(7) Subject any incentive-based
compensation arrangement to a
corporate governance framework that
provides for ongoing oversight by the
board of directors or a committee
thereof, including the approval by the
board of directors or a committee
thereof of incentive-based compensation
to executive officers.
§ 248.207
Evasion.
A covered financial institution is
prohibited, for the purpose of evading
the restrictions of this subpart, from
doing indirectly or through or by any
other person, any act or thing that it
would be unlawful for such covered
financial institution to do directly under
this subpart.
Federal Housing Finance Agency
Authority and Issuance
Accordingly, for the reasons stated in
the preamble, under the authority of 12
U.S.C. 4526 and 5641, FHFA proposes
to amend Chapter XII of title 12 of the
Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
10. Add part 1232 to read as follows:
PART 1232—INCENTIVE-BASED
COMPENSATION AGREEMENTS
Sec.
1232.1
1232.2
1232.3
1232.4
1232.5
1232.6
1232.7
Authority.
Scope and purpose.
Definitions.
Required reports to regulators.
Prohibitions.
Policies and procedures.
Evasion.
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 4511(b), 4513, 4514,
4526, and 5641.
§ 1232.1
Authority.
This part is issued pursuant to section
956 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act
(12 U.S.C. 5641), and, with respect to
the Office of Finance, under section
1311(b)(2) of the Federal Housing
Enterprises Financial Safety and
Soundness Act (12 U.S.C. 4511(b)(2)).
§ 1232.2
Scope and purpose.
This part applies to a covered entity
that offers incentive-based
compensation arrangements to covered
persons. Nothing in this part in any way
limits the authority of the Federal
Housing Finance Agency under other
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21217
provisions of applicable law and
regulations.
§ 1232.3
Definitions.
For purposes of this part, the
following definitions apply unless
otherwise specified:
Board of directors means the
governing body of any covered entity
performing functions similar to a board
of directors.
Compensation means all direct and
indirect payments, fees or benefits, both
cash and non-cash, awarded to, granted
to, or earned by or for the benefit of, any
covered person in exchange for services
rendered to the covered entity,
including, but not limited to, payments
or benefits pursuant to an employment
contract, compensation or benefit
agreement, fee arrangement, perquisite,
stock option plan, postemployment
benefit, or other compensatory
arrangement.
Covered entity means the Federal
National Mortgage Association (Fannie
Mae); the Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corporation (Freddie Mac); any Federal
Home Loan Bank (Bank); and the
Federal Home Loan Bank System’s
Office of Finance.
Covered person means any executive
officer, employee, director, or principal
shareholder of a covered entity.
Director of a covered entity means a
member of the board of directors of the
covered entity, or of a board or
committee performing a similar function
to a board of directors.
Executive officer of a covered entity
means:
(1) With respect to Fannie Mae or
Freddie Mac:
(i) The chairman of the board of
directors, chief executive officer, chief
financial officer, chief operating officer,
president, vice chairman, any executive
vice president, any senior vice president
in charge of a principal business unit,
division, or function and any individual
who performs functions similar to such
positions whether or not the individual
has an official title; and
(ii) Any other officer as identified by
the Director.
(2) With respect to a Bank:
(i) The president, the chief financial
officer, and the three other most highly
compensated officers; and
(ii) Any other officer as identified by
the Director.
(3) With respect to the Office of
Finance:
(i) The chief executive officer, chief
financial officer, and chief operating
officer; and
(ii) Any other officer identified by the
Director.
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Incentive-based compensation means
any variable compensation that serves
as an incentive for performance.
Principal shareholder means an
individual who directly or indirectly, or
acting through or in concert with one or
more persons, owns, controls, or has the
power to vote 10 percent or more of any
class of voting securities of a covered
entity.
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§ 1232.4
Required reports to regulators.
(a) In general. A covered entity must
submit a report annually to, and in the
format directed by, the Federal Housing
Finance Agency that describes the
structure of the covered entity’s
incentive-based compensation
arrangements for covered persons and
that is sufficient to allow an assessment
of whether the structure or features of
those arrangements provide or are likely
to provide covered persons with
excessive compensation, fees, or
benefits to covered persons or could
lead to material financial loss to the
covered entity.
(b) Individual compensation. A
covered entity is not required to report
the actual compensation of particular
covered persons as part of the report
required by paragraph (a) of this section.
(c) Minimum standards. The
information submitted by the covered
entity pursuant to paragraph (a) of this
section must include the following:
(1) A clear narrative description of the
components of the covered entity’s
incentive-based compensation
arrangements applicable to covered
persons specifying the types of covered
persons to which they apply;
(2) A succinct description of the
covered entity’s policies and procedures
governing its incentive-based
compensation arrangements for covered
persons;
(3) A succinct description of
incentive-based compensation policies
and procedures specific to the covered
entity’s:
(i) Executive officers; and
(ii) Other covered persons who the
board of directors, or a committee
thereof, of the entity has identified and
determined under § 1232.5(b)(3)(ii) of
this part individually have the ability to
expose the entity to possible losses that
are substantial in relation to the entity’s
size, capital, or overall risk tolerance;
(4) Any material changes to the
covered entity’s incentive-based
compensation arrangements and
policies and procedures made since the
covered entity’s last report submitted
under paragraph (a) of this section; and
(5) The specific reasons why the
covered entity believes the structure of
its incentive-based compensation plan
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does not encourage inappropriate risks
by the covered entity by providing
covered persons with:
(i) Excessive compensation; or
(ii) Incentive-based compensation that
could lead to material financial loss to
the covered entity.
§ 1232.5
Prohibitions.
(a) Excessive compensation
prohibition. (1) In general. A covered
entity must not establish or maintain
any type of incentive-based
compensation arrangement, or any
feature of any such arrangement, that
encourages inappropriate risks by the
covered entity by providing a covered
person with excessive compensation.
(2) Standards. An incentive-based
compensation arrangement provides
excessive compensation when amounts
paid are unreasonable or
disproportionate to the services
performed by a covered person, taking
into consideration:
(i) The combined value of all cash and
non-cash benefits provided to the
covered person;
(ii) The compensation history of the
covered person and other individuals
with comparable expertise at the
covered entity;
(iii) The financial condition of the
covered entity;
(iv) Comparable compensation
practices at comparable institutions,
based upon such factors as asset size,
geographic location, and the complexity
of the institution’s operations and
assets;
(v) For postemployment benefits, the
projected total cost and benefit to the
covered entity;
(vi) Any connection between the
individual and any fraudulent act or
omission, breach of trust or fiduciary
duty, or insider abuse with regard to the
covered entity; and
(vii) Any other factors that the Federal
Housing Finance Agency determines to
be relevant.
(b) Material financial loss prohibition.
(1) Generally. A covered entity must not
establish or maintain any type of
incentive-based compensation
arrangement, or any feature of any such
arrangement, that encourages
inappropriate risks by the covered
entity, by providing incentive-based
compensation to covered persons, either
individually, or as part of a group of
persons who are subject to the same or
similar incentive-based compensation
arrangements, that could lead to
material financial loss to the covered
entity.
(2) Requirements for all incentivebased compensation arrangements. An
incentive-based compensation
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arrangement established or maintained
by a covered entity for one or more
covered persons does not comply with
paragraph (b)(1) of this section unless it:
(i) Balances risk and financial
rewards, for example by using deferral
of payments, risk adjustment of awards,
reduced sensitivity to short-term
performance, or longer performance
periods;
(ii) Is compatible with effective
controls and risk management; and
(iii) Is supported by strong corporate
governance, including active and
effective oversight by the covered
entity’s board of directors, or a
committee thereof.
(3) Requirements for executive officers
and covered persons presenting
particular loss exposure.
(i) Deferral required for executive
officers. As part of appropriately
balancing risk and financial rewards
pursuant to paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this
section, any incentive-based
compensation arrangement for any
executive officer established or
maintained by a covered entity (except
for covered entities in conservatorship
or receivership, and limited-life
regulated entities) must provide for:
(A) At least 50 percent of the annual
incentive-based compensation of the
executive officer to be deferred over a
period of no less than three years, with
the release of deferred amounts to occur
no faster than on a pro rata basis; and
(B) The adjustment of the amount
required to be deferred under paragraph
(b)(3)(i)(A) of this section to reflect
actual losses or other measures or
aspects of performance that are realized
or become better known during the
deferral period.
(ii) Additional requirement for
covered persons presenting particular
loss exposure. As part of appropriately
balancing risk and financial rewards
pursuant to paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this
section:
(A) The board of directors, or a
committee thereof, of the covered entity
shall identify those covered persons
(other than executive officers) who
individually have the ability to expose
the entity to possible losses that are
substantial in relation to the entity’s
size, capital, or overall risk tolerance.
These covered persons may include, for
example, traders with large position
limits relative to the entity’s overall risk
tolerance and other individuals who
have the authority to place at risk a
substantial part of the capital of the
covered entity;
(B) The incentive-based compensation
arrangement for any covered person
identified pursuant to paragraph
(b)(3)(ii)(A) of this section must be
E:\FR\FM\14APP2.SGM
14APP2
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 72 / Thursday, April 14, 2011 / Proposed Rules
approved by the board of directors, or a
committee thereof, of the covered entity
and such approval must be documented;
(C) The board of directors, or a
committee thereof, may not approve the
incentive-based compensation
arrangement for any covered person
identified pursuant to paragraph
(b)(3)(ii)(A) of this section unless the
board or committee determines that the
arrangement, including the method of
paying compensation under the
arrangement, effectively balances the
financial rewards to the covered person
and the range and time horizon of risks
associated with the covered person’s
activities, employing appropriate
methods for ensuring risk sensitivity
such as deferral of payments, risk
adjustment of awards, reduced
sensitivity to short-term performance, or
longer performance periods; and
(D) In fulfilling its duties under
paragraph (b)(3)(ii)(C) of this section,
the board of directors, or a committee
thereof, must evaluate the overall
effectiveness of the balancing methods
used in the identified covered person’s
incentive compensation arrangements in
reducing incentives for inappropriate
risk taking by the identified covered
person considering the methods’
suitability for balancing the full range of
risks presented by that covered person’s
activities, and the methods’ ability to
make payments sensitive to all the risks
arising from the covered person’s
activities, including those that may be
difficult to predict, measure or model.
§ 1232.6
Policies and procedures.
kgrant on DSK8KYBLC1PROD with PROPOSALS2
(a) In general. Any incentive-based
compensation arrangement, or any
feature of any such arrangement, is
prohibited under § 1232.5 of this part,
unless adopted pursuant to policies and
procedures developed and maintained
by each covered entity and approved by
its board of directors, or a committee
thereof, reasonably designed to ensure
and monitor compliance with the
requirements set forth in 12 U.S.C. 5641
and this part and commensurate with
the size and complexity of the
organization, as well as the scope and
nature of its use of incentive-based
compensation.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
21:35 Apr 13, 2011
Jkt 223001
(b) Standards. The policies and
procedures must, at a minimum:
(1) Be consistent with the reporting
requirements in § 1232.4 of this part and
prohibitions in § 1232.5 of this part;
(2) Ensure that risk-management, riskoversight, and internal control
personnel have an appropriate role in
the covered entity’s processes for
designing incentive-based compensation
arrangements and for assessing their
effectiveness in restraining
inappropriate risk-taking;
(3) Provide for the monitoring by a
group or person independent of the
covered person, where practicable in
light of the covered entity’s size and
complexity, of incentive-based
compensation awards and payments,
risks taken, and actual risk outcomes to
determine whether incentive
compensation payments for covered
persons, or groups of covered persons,
are reduced to reflect adverse risk
outcomes or high levels of risk taken;
(4) Provide for the covered entity’s
board of directors, or committee thereof,
to receive data and analysis from
management and other sources
sufficient to allow the board, or
committee thereof, to assess whether the
overall design and performance of the
entity’s incentive-based compensation
arrangements are consistent with 12
U.S.C. 5641;
(5) Ensure that documentation of the
entity’s processes for establishing,
implementing, modifying, and
monitoring incentive-based
compensation arrangements is
maintained that is sufficient to enable
the Federal Housing Finance Agency to
determine the entity’s compliance with
12 U.S.C. 5641 and this part;
(6) Consistent with § 1232.5(b)(3) of
this part, where deferral is used in
connection with an incentive-based
compensation arrangement, provide for
deferral of incentive-based
compensation awards in amounts and
for periods of time appropriate to the
duties and responsibilities of the
covered entity’s covered persons, the
risks associated with those duties and
responsibilities, and the size and
complexity of the covered entity and
provide that the deferral amounts paid
PO 00000
Frm 00051
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
21219
are adjusted to reflect actual losses or
other measures or aspects of
performance that are realized or become
better known during the deferral period;
and
(7) Subject any incentive-based
compensation arrangement to a
corporate governance framework that
provides for ongoing oversight by the
board of directors, or a committee
thereof, including the approval by the
board of directors, or a committee
thereof, of incentive-based
compensation to executive officers.
§ 1232.7
Evasion.
A covered entity is prohibited, for the
purpose of evading the restrictions of
this part, from doing indirectly or
through or by any other person, any act
or thing that it would be unlawful for
such covered entity to do directly under
this part.
Dated:
John Walsh,
Acting Comptroller of the Currency.
By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, March 30, 2011.
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.
Dated at Washington, DC, this 7th day of
February 2011.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Robert E. Feldman,
Executive Secretary.
Dated: February 18, 2011.
By the Office of Thrift Supervision,
John E. Bowman,
Acting Director.
By the National Credit Union
Administration Board on February 17, 2011.
Mary F. Rupp,
Secretary of the Board.
By the Securities and Exchange
Commission.
Dated: March 29, 2011.
Elizabeth M. Murphy,
Secretary.
Edward J. Demarco,
Acting Director, Federal Housing Finance
Agency.
[FR Doc. 2011–7937 Filed 4–13–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6741–01–P; 7535–01–P; 8070–01–P
E:\FR\FM\14APP2.SGM
14APP2
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 72 (Thursday, April 14, 2011)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 21170-21219]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-7937]
[[Page 21169]]
Vol. 76
Thursday,
No. 72
April 14, 2011
Part III
Department of the Treasury
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Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
12 CFR Part 42
Federal Reserve System
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12 CFR Part 236
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
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12 CFR Part 272
Department of the Treasury
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Office of Thrift Supervision
12 CFR Part 563h
National Credit Union Administration
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12 CFR Parts 741 and 751
Securities and Exchange Commission
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17 CFR Part 248
Federal Housing Finance Agency
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12 CFR Part 1232
Incentive-Based Compensation Arrangements; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 72 / Thursday, April 14, 2011 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 21170]]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
12 CFR Part 42
[Docket No. OCC-2011-0001]
RIN 1557-AD39
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 236
[Docket No. R-1410]
RIN 7100-AD69
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
12 CFR Part 372
RIN 3064-AD56
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of Thrift Supervision
12 CFR Part 563h
[Docket No. OTS-2011-0004]
RIN 1550-AC49
NATIONAL CREDIT UNION ADMINISTRATION
12 CFR Parts 741 and 751
RIN 3133-AD88
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
17 CFR Part 248
[Release No. 34-64140; File no. S7-12-11]
RIN 3235-AL06
FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE AGENCY
12 CFR Part 1232
RIN 2590-AA42
Incentive-Based Compensation Arrangements
AGENCY: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Treasury (OCC);
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board); Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC); Office of Thrift Supervision,
Treasury (OTS); National Credit Union Administration (NCUA); U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC); and Federal Housing Finance
Agency (FHFA).
ACTION: Proposed Rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The OCC, Board, FDIC, OTS, NCUA, SEC, and FHFA (the Agencies)
are proposing rules to implement section 956 of the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. The proposed rule would
require the reporting of incentive-based compensation arrangements by a
covered financial institution and prohibit incentive-based compensation
arrangements at a covered financial institution that provide excessive
compensation or that could expose the institution to inappropriate
risks that could lead to material financial loss.
DATES: Comments must be received by May 31, 2011.
ADDRESSES: Although the Agencies will jointly review all the comments
submitted, it would facilitate review of the comments if interested
parties send comments to the Agency that is the appropriate Federal
regulator, as defined in section 956(e) of the Dodd-Frank Act for the
type of covered financial institution addressed in the comments.
Commenters are encouraged to use the title ``Incentive-based
Compensation Arrangements'' to facilitate the organization and
distribution of comments among the Agencies. Interested parties are
invited to submit written comments to:
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency: Because paper mail in
the Washington, DC area and at the OCC is subject to delay, commenters
are encouraged to submit comments by the Federal eRulemaking Portal or
e-mail, if possible. Please use the title ``Incentive-based
Compensation Arrangements'' to facilitate the organization and
distribution of the comments. You may submit comments by any of the
following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal--Regulations.gov: Go to https://www.regulations.gov. Select ``Document Type'' of ``Proposed Rule'', and
in ``Enter Keyword or ID Box'', enter Docket ID ``OCC-2011-0001'', and
click ``Search.'' On ``View By Relevance'' tab at bottom of screen, in
the ``Agency'' column, locate the proposed rule for OCC, in the
``Action'' column, click on ``Submit a Comment'' or ``Open Docket
Folder'' to submit or view public comments and to view supporting and
related materials for this proposed rule.
Click on the ``Help'' tab on the Regulations.gov home page
to get information on using Regulations.gov, including instructions for
submitting or viewing public comments, viewing other supporting and
related materials, and viewing the docket after the close of the
comment period.
E-mail: regs.comments@occ.treas.gov.
Mail: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, 250 E
Street, SW., Mail Stop 2-3, Washington, DC 20219.
Fax: (202) 874-5274.
Hand Delivery/Courier: 250 E Street, SW., Mail Stop 2-3,
Washington, DC 20219.
Instructions: You must include ``OCC'' as the agency name and
``Docket ID OCC-2011-0001'' in your comment. In general, OCC will enter
all comments received into the docket and publish them on the
Regulations.gov Web site without change, including any business or
personal information that you provide such as name and address
information, e-mail addresses, or phone numbers. Comments received,
including attachments and other supporting materials, are part of the
public record and subject to public disclosure. Do not enclose any
information in your comment or supporting materials that you consider
confidential or inappropriate for public disclosure.
You may review comments and other related materials that pertain to
this proposed rule by any of the following methods:
Viewing Comments Electronically: Go to https://www.regulations.gov. Select ``Document Type'' of ``Public Submission,''
in ``Enter Keyword or ID Box,'' enter Docket ID ``OCC-2011-0001'', and
click ``Search.'' Comments will be listed under ``View By Relevance''
tab at bottom of screen. If comments from more than one agency are
listed, the ``Agency'' column will indicate which comments were
received by the OCC.
Viewing Comments Personally: You may personally inspect
and photocopy comments at the OCC, 250 E Street, SW., Washington, DC.
For security reasons, the OCC requires that visitors make an
appointment to inspect comments. You may do so by calling (202) 874-
4700. Upon arrival, visitors will be required to present valid
government-issued photo identification and to submit to security
screening in order to inspect and photocopy comments.
Docket: You may also view or request available background
documents and project summaries using the methods described above.
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System: You may submit
comments, identified by Docket No. R-1410 and RIN No. 7100-AD69, by any
of the following methods:
Agency Web Site: https://www.federalreserve.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments at https://www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm.
[[Page 21171]]
Federal eRulemaking Portal:https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
E-mail: regs.comments@federalreserve.gov. Include the
docket number and RIN number in the subject line of the message.
Fax: (202) 452-3819 or (202) 452-3102.
Mail: Address to Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary, Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 20th Street and Constitution
Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20551.
All public comments will be made available on the Board's Web site
at https://www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm as
submitted, unless modified for technical reasons. Accordingly, comments
will not be edited to remove any identifying or contact information.
Public comments may also be viewed electronically or in paper in Room
MP-500 of the Board's Martin Building (20th and C Streets, NW.) between
9 a.m. and 5 p.m. on weekdays.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation: You may submit comments,
identified by RIN number, by any of the following methods:
Agency Web Site: https://www.FDIC.gov/regulations/laws/federal/propose.html. Follow instructions for submitting comments on
the Agency Web Site.
E-mail: Comments@FDIC.gov. Include the RIN number on the
subject line of the message.
Mail: Robert E. Feldman, Executive Secretary, Attention:
Comments, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20429.
Hand Delivery: Comments may be hand delivered to the guard
station at the rear of the 550 17th Street Building (located on F
Street) on business days between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Instructions: All comments received must include the agency name
and RIN for this rulemaking and will be posted without change to http:/
/www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/Federal/propose.html, including any
personal information provided.
Office of Thrift Supervision: You may submit comments, identified
by OTS-2011-0004, by any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal--Regulations.gov: Go to https://www.regulations.gov and follow the directions.
E-mail: regs.comments@ots.treas.gov. Please include OTS-
2011-0004 in the subject line of the message and include your name and
telephone number in the message.
Mail: Regulation Comments, Chief Counsel's Office, Office
of Thrift Supervision, 1700 G Street, NW., Washington, DC 20552,
Attention: OTS-2011-0004.
Facsimile: (202) 906-6518.
Hand Delivery/Courier: Guard's Desk, East Lobby Entrance,
1700 G Street, NW., from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on business days, Attention:
Regulation Comments, Chief Counsel's Office, Attention: OTS-2011-0004.
Instructions: All submissions received must include the
agency name and docket number for this rulemaking. All comments
received will be entered into the docket and posted on Regulations.gov
without change, including any personal information provided. Comments,
including attachments and other supporting materials received, are part
of the public record and subject to public disclosure. Do not enclose
any information in your comment or supporting materials that you
consider confidential or inappropriate for public disclosure.
Viewing Comments On-Site: You may inspect comments at the
Public Reading Room, 1700 G Street, NW., by appointment. To make an
appointment for access, call (202) 906-5922, send an e-mail to
public.info@ots.treas.gov">public.info@ots.treas.gov, or send a facsimile transmission to (202)
906-6518. (Prior notice identifying the materials you will be
requesting will assist us in serving you.) We schedule appointments on
business days between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. In most cases, appointments
will be available the next business day following the date we receive a
request.
National Credit Union Administration: You may submit comments by
any of the following methods (please send comments by one method only):
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
Agency Web site: https://www.ncua.gov/Resources/RegulationsOpinionsLaws/ProposedRegulations.aspx. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
E-mail: Address to regcomments@ncua.gov. Include ``[Your
name] Comments on ``Notice of Proposed Rulemaking for Incentive-based
Compensation Arrangements'' in the e-mail subject line.
Fax: (703) 518-6319. Use the subject line described above
for e-mail.
Mail: Address to Mary Rupp, Secretary of the Board,
National Credit Union Administration, 1775 Duke Street, Alexandria,
Virginia 22314-3428.
Hand Delivery/Courier: Same as mail address.
Public Inspection: All public comments are available on
the agency's Web site at https://www.ncua.gov/Resources/RegulationsOpinionsLaws/ProposedRegulations.aspx as submitted, except
when not possible for technical reasons. Public comments will not be
edited to remove any identifying or contact information. Paper copies
of comments may be inspected in NCUA's law library at 1775 Duke Street,
Alexandria, Virginia 22314, by appointment weekdays between 9 a.m. and
3 p.m. To make an appointment, call (703) 518-6546 or send an e-mail to
OGCMail@ncua.gov.
Securities and Exchange Commission: You may submit comments by the
following method:
Electronic Comments
Use the Commission's Internet comment form (https://www.sec.gov/rules/exorders.shtml); or
Send an e-mail to rule-comments@sec.gov Please include
File Number S7-12-11 on the subject line; or
Use the Federal eRulemaking Portal (https://www.regulations.gov). Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Paper Comments
Send paper comments in triplicate to Elizabeth M. Murphy,
Secretary, Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street, NE.,
Washington, DC 20549.
All submissions should refer to File Number S7-12-11. This file number
should be included on the subject line if e-mail is used. To help us
process and review your comments more efficiently, please use only one
method. The Commission will post all comments on the Commission's
Internet Web site (https://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed.shtml). Comments
are also available for Web site viewing and printing in the
Commission's Public Reference Room, 100 F St., NE., Washington, DC
20549 on official business days between the hours of 10 a.m. and 3 p.m.
All comments received will be posted without change; the Commission
does not edit personal identifying information from submissions. You
should submit only information that you wish to make available
publicly.
Federal Housing Finance Agency: You may submit your written
comments on the proposed rulemaking, identified by RIN number 2590-
AA42, by any of the following methods:
[[Page 21172]]
E-mail: Comments to Alfred M. Pollard, General Counsel,
may be sent by e-mail at RegComments@fhfa.gov. Please include ``RIN
2590-AA42'' in the subject line of the message.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments. If you submit your
comment to the Federal eRulemaking Portal, please also send it by e-
mail to FHFA at RegComments@fhfa.gov to ensure timely receipt by the
Agency. Please include ``RIN 2590-AA42'' in the subject line of the
message.
U.S. Mail, United Parcel Service, Federal Express, or
Other Mail Service: The mailing address for comments is: Alfred M.
Pollard, General Counsel, Attention: Comments/RIN 2590-AA42, Federal
Housing Finance Agency, Fourth Floor, 1700 G Street, NW., Washington,
DC 20552.
Hand Delivery/Courier: The hand delivery address is:
Alfred M. Pollard, General Counsel, Attention: Comments/RIN 2590-AA42,
Federal Housing Finance Agency, Fourth Floor, 1700 G Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20552. A hand-delivered package should be logged at the
Guard Desk, First Floor, on business days between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
All comments received by the deadline will be posted for public
inspection on the FHFA Web site at https://www.fhfa.gov. Copies of all
comments timely received will be available for public inspection and
copying at the address above on government-business days between the
hours of 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. To make an appointment to inspect comments
please call the Office of General Counsel at (202) 414-6924.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
OCC: Michele Meyer, Assistant Director, and Patrick Tierney, Counsel,
Legislative and Regulatory Activities, (202) 874-5090, and Karen
Kwilosz, Director, Operational Risk Policy, (202) 874-5350, Office of
the Comptroller of the Currency, 250 E Street, SW., Washington, DC
20219.
Board: Michael Waldron, Counsel, (202) 452-2798, or Amanda Allexon,
Counsel, (202) 452-3818, Legal Division; William F. Treacy, Advisor,
(202) 452-3859, or Meg Donovan, Supervisory Financial Analyst, (202)
452-7542, Division of Banking Supervision and Regulation; Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 20th and C Streets, NW.,
Washington, DC 20551.
FDIC: Steven D. Fritts, Associate Director, Risk Management Policy
Branch, DSC, (202) 898-3723; Melinda West, Chief, Policy & Program
Development, DSC, (202) 898-7221, George Parkerson, Senior Policy
Analyst, (202) 898-3648; Rose Kushmeider, Senior Financial Economist,
(202) 898-3861; Daniel Lonergan, Counsel, (202) 898-6791, Rodney Ray,
Counsel, (202) 898-3556, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550
17th Street, NW., Washington, DC 20429.
OTS: Mary Jo Johnson, Senior Project Manager, Examination Programs,
(202) 906-5739, Richard Bennett, Senior Compliance Counsel, Regulations
and Legislation Division, (202) 906-7409; Robyn Dennis, Director,
Examination Programs, (202) 906-5751; James Caton, Managing Director,
Economic and Industry Analysis, (202) 906-5680, Office of Thrift
Supervision, 1700 G Street, NW., Washington, DC 20552.
NCUA: Regina Metz, Staff Attorney, Office of General Counsel, (703)
518-6561; or Vickie Apperson, Program Officer, Office of Examination &
Insurance, (703) 518-6385, National Credit Union Administration, 1775
Duke Street, Alexandria, Virginia 22314.
SEC: Raymond A. Lombardo, Branch Chief, Division of Trading & Markets,
(202) 551-5755; Timothy C. Fox, Special Counsel, Division of Trading &
Markets, (202) 551-5687; Nadya B. Roytblat, Assistant Chief Counsel,
Division of Investment Management, (202) 551-6823; or Jennifer R.
Porter, Attorney-Advisor, Division of Investment Management, (202) 551-
6787, United States Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street
NE., Washington, DC 20549.
FHFA: Alfred M. Pollard, General Counsel, (202) 414-3788 or Patrick J.
Lawler, Associate Director and Chief Economist (202) 414-3746, Federal
Housing Finance Agency, Fourth Floor, 1700 G Street NW., Washington, DC
20552. The telephone number of the Telecommunications Device for the
Deaf is (800) 877-8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Dodd-Frank Act
The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (the
``Dodd-Frank Act'' or the ``Act'') (Pub. L. 111-203, section 956, 124
Stat. 1376, 2011-2018 (2010)), which was signed into law on July 21,
2010, requires the Agencies to jointly prescribe regulations or
guidelines with respect to incentive-based compensation practices at
covered financial institutions. Specifically, section 956 of the Dodd-
Frank Act (codified at 12 U.S.C. 5641) requires that the Agencies
prohibit incentive-based payment arrangements, or any feature of any
such arrangement, at a covered financial institution that the Agencies
determine encourages inappropriate risks by a financial institution by
providing excessive compensation or that could lead to material
financial loss. Under the Act, a covered financial institution also
must disclose to its appropriate Federal regulator the structure of its
incentive-based compensation arrangements sufficient to determine
whether the structure provides ``excessive compensation, fees, or
benefits'' or ``could lead to material financial loss'' to the
institution. The Dodd-Frank Act does not require a covered financial
institution to report the actual compensation of particular individuals
as part of this requirement.
The Act defines ``covered financial institution'' to include any of
the following types of institutions that have $1 billion or more in
assets: (A) A depository institution or depository institution holding
company, as such terms are defined in section 3 of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act (``FDIA'') (12 U.S.C. 1813); (B) a broker-dealer
registered under section 15 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15
U.S.C. 78o); (C) a credit union, as described in section
19(b)(1)(A)(iv) of the Federal Reserve Act; (D) an investment adviser,
as such term is defined in section 202(a)(11) of the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C. 80b-2(a)(11)); (E) the Federal National
Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae); (F) the Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corporation (Freddie Mac); and (G) any other financial institution that
the appropriate Federal regulators, jointly, by rule, determine should
be treated as a covered financial institution for these purposes.
The Act also requires the Agencies to ensure that any standards
adopted with regard to excessive compensation under section 956 of the
Act are comparable to the compensation-related safety and soundness
standards applicable to insured depository institutions under section
39 of the FDIA (12 U.S.C. 1831p- 1(c)),\1\ and to take the compensation
standards described in section 39 of the FDIA into consideration in
establishing
[[Page 21173]]
compensation standards under section 956 of the Act.
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\1\ The Federal banking agencies each have adopted guidelines
implementing the compensation-related and other safety and soundness
standards in section 39 of the FDIA. See 12 CFR part 30, Appendix A
(OCC); 12 CFR part 208, Appendix D-1 (Board); 12 CFR part 364,
Appendix A (FDIC); 12 CFR part 570, Appendix A (OTS).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Compensation arrangements are critical tools in the successful
management of financial institutions. These arrangements serve several
important objectives, including attracting and retaining skilled staff,
promoting better organizational and individual employee performance,
and providing retirement security to employees.
At the same time, improperly structured compensation arrangements
can provide executives and employees with incentives to take imprudent
risks that are not consistent with the long-term health of the
organization. The Agencies believe that flawed incentive compensation
practices in the financial industry were one of many factors
contributing to the financial crisis that began in 2007.
Shareholders and, for a credit union, members of a covered
financial institution have an interest in aligning the interests of
managers and other employees of the institution with its long-term
health. Aligning the interests of shareholders or members and
employees, however, is not always sufficient to protect the safety and
soundness of an organization, deter excessive compensation, or deter
behavior that could lead to material financial loss at the
organization. Managers and employees of a covered financial institution
may be willing to tolerate a degree of risk that is inconsistent with
broader public policy goals. In addition, particularly at larger
institutions, shareholders or members may have difficulty effectively
monitoring and controlling the incentive-based compensation
arrangements throughout the institution that may materially affect the
institution's risk profile, even with increased disclosure provisions.
As a result, supervision and regulation of incentive compensation, as
with other aspects of financial oversight, can play an important role
in helping ensure that incentive compensation practices at covered
financial institutions do not threaten their safety and soundness, are
not excessive, or do not lead to material financial loss.
II. Overview of the Proposed Rule
The Agencies have elected to propose rules, rather than guidelines,
in order to establish general requirements applicable to the incentive-
based compensation arrangements of all covered financial institutions
(``Proposed Rule''). The Proposed Rule would supplement existing rules,
guidance, and ongoing supervisory efforts of the Agencies.
The Proposed Rule has the following components:
The Proposed Rule would prohibit incentive-based
compensation arrangements at a covered financial institution that
encourage executive officers, employees, directors, or principal
shareholders (``covered persons'') to expose the institution to
inappropriate risks by providing the covered person excessive
compensation. As described further below, consistent with the directive
of section 956, the Agencies propose to use standards comparable to
those developed under section 39 of the FDIA for purposes of
determining whether incentive-based compensation is ``excessive'' in a
particular case.
The Proposed Rule would prohibit a covered financial
institution from establishing or maintaining any incentive-based
compensation arrangements for covered persons that encourage
inappropriate risks by the covered financial institution that could
lead to material financial loss. The Agencies propose to adopt
standards for determining whether an incentive-based compensation
arrangement may encourage inappropriate risk-taking that are consistent
with the key principles established for incentive compensation in the
Interagency Guidance on Sound Incentive Compensation Policies
(``Banking Agency Guidance'') adopted by the Federal banking
agencies.\2\ The Proposed Rule would also require deferral of a portion
of incentive-based compensation for executive officers of larger
covered financial institutions. The Proposed Rule would also require
that, at larger covered financial institutions, the board of directors
or a committee of such a board identify those covered persons (other
than executive officers) that have the ability to expose the
institution to possible losses that are substantial in relation to the
institution's size, capital, or overall risk tolerance. The Proposed
Rule would require that the board of directors, or a committee thereof,
of the institution approve the incentive-based compensation arrangement
for such individuals, and maintain documentation of such approval. The
term ``larger covered financial institution'' for the Federal banking
agencies and the SEC means those covered financial institutions with
total consolidated assets of $50 billion or more. For the NCUA, all
credit unions with total consolidated assets of $10 billion or more are
larger covered financial institutions. For the FHFA, all Federal Home
Loan Banks with total consolidated assets of $1 billion or more are
larger covered financial institutions.
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\2\ Guidance on Sound Incentive Compensation Policies, 75 FR
36395 (June 25, 2010), adopted by the Federal banking agencies,
meaning the OCC, Board, FDIC, and OTS.
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In connection with these restrictions, the Proposed Rule
would require covered financial institutions to maintain policies and
procedures appropriate to their size, complexity, and use of incentive-
based compensation to help ensure compliance with these requirements
and prohibitions.
The Proposed Rule also would require covered financial
institutions to provide certain information to their appropriate
Federal regulator(s) concerning their incentive-based compensation
arrangements for covered persons.
The Proposed Rule would supplement existing rules and guidance
adopted by the Agencies regarding compensation and incentive-based
compensation.\3\ These include the Banking Agency Guidance, the
Standards for Safety and Soundness adopted by the Federal banking
agencies,\4\ the compensation-related disclosure requirements adopted
by the SEC for public companies,\5\ the rules and guidance adopted by
the FHFA for regulatory oversight of the executive compensation
practices of its regulated entities \6\ and the compensation rules
adopted by the NCUA for institutions under its supervision.\7\ Each
Agency may issue
[[Page 21174]]
supplemental guidance specific to their regulated entities, including
guidance as necessary to clarify the regulatory requirements proposed
in this rulemaking. Covered financial institutions supervised by the
Federal banking agencies should continue to consult the Banking Agency
Guidance for additional information on how to balance risk and
financial rewards.
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\3\ See, e.g., Banking Agency Guidance, supra note 2.
\4\ 60 FR 35674 (July 10, 1995), as amended at 61 FR 43948 (Aug.
27, 1996).
\5\ See, e.g., Item 402(s) of Regulation S-K, 17 CFR 229.402(s),
adopted in Securities Act Release No. 9089 (Dec. 16, 2009), 74 FR
68334 (Dec. 23, 2009).
\6\ 12 CFR 1770.1 (b) (1) requires the FHFA Director to prohibit
the excessive compensation of executive officers. Section 1770.4
provides specific details as to the categories of information that
are required to be submitted to the FHFA pertaining to the
prohibition of excessive compensation (Sept. 12, 2001). FHFA's
examination guidance (PG-06-002), ``Examination for Compensation
Practices,'' sets forth the disclosure requirements pertaining to
the compensation and benefits programs of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
(together, the Enterprises) (Nov. 8, 2006). In carrying out its
corporate governance requirements, the FHFA is guided by the
provisions set forth in 12 CFR 1710.13. FHFA's Advisory Bulletin
(2009-AB-02), ``Principles for Executive Compensation at the Federal
Home Loan Banks and the Office of Finance,'' provides guidance to
the Home Loan Banks on reporting requirements (Oct. 27, 2009).
FHFA's proposed rule on executive compensation, 74 FR 26989 (June 5,
2009), includes incentive compensation in its prohibition on
excessive compensation. For the FHFA, the regulated entities are,
collectively: the Enterprises, the Federal Home Loan Banks, and the
Office of Finance.
\7\ See, e.g., 12 U.S.C. 1761a; 12 CFR 701.2 & 12 CFR part 701
App. A, Art. VII. Sec. 8; 12 CFR 701.21(c)(8)(i); 12 CFR 701.23(g)
(1); 12 CFR 701.33; 12 CFR 702.203 & 702.204; 12 CFR 703.17; 12 CFR
704.19 & 704.20; 12 CFR part 708a; 12 CFR 712.8; 12 CFR 721.7; 12
CFR part 750; and NCUA Examiners Guide Ch. 7 at https://www.ncua.gov/GenInfo/GuidesManuals/examiners_guide/chapters/Chapter07.pdf.
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The Agencies propose to make the terms of the Proposed Rule, if
adopted, effective six months after publication of the final rule in
the Federal Register, with annual reports due within 90 days of the end
of each covered financial institution's fiscal year. The Agencies
request specific comment on whether these dates will provide sufficient
time for covered financial institutions to comply with the rule and, if
not, why. Commenters are also asked to address whether the Agencies
should designate different compliance dates for different types of
covered financial institutions, or consider designating different
compliance dates for different parts of the Proposed Rule (e.g.,
disclosure, prohibition, and policies and procedures).
A detailed description of the Proposed Rule with a request for
comments is set forth below. Although this is a joint-interagency
rulemaking, each Agency will codify its version of the rule in its
specified portion of the Code of Federal Regulations in order to
accommodate differences between regulated entities as well as other
applicable statutory and regulatory requirements. Any significant
differences between the Proposed Rules issued by individual agencies
are noted below.\8\
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\8\ Since the Agencies' proposed rules use consistent section
numbering, relevant sections are cited, for example, as ``Sec. --
--.1.''
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III. Section-By-Section Description of the Proposed Rule
Sec. ----.1 Authority. Section ----.1 provides that this rule is
issued pursuant to section 956 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act (Pub. L. 111-203). Certain Agencies also have
listed their general rulemaking authority in their respective authority
citations.
Sec. ----.2 Scope and Purpose. Section ----.2 provides that this
rule applies to a covered financial institution that has total
consolidated assets of $1 billion or more that offers incentive-based
compensation arrangements to covered persons. This section also notes
that this rule would in no way limit the authority of any Agency under
other provisions of applicable law and regulations.
Sec. ----.3 Definitions. Section ----.3 defines the various terms
used in the Proposed Rule. If a term is defined in section 956 of the
Dodd-Frank Act, the Proposed Rule generally incorporates that
definition.\9\
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\9\ These definitions are proposed for purposes of administering
Section 956 and are not intended to affect the interpretation or
construction of the same or similar terms for purposes of any other
statute or regulation administered by the Agencies.
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Compensation. The Proposed Rule defines ``compensation'' to mean
all direct and indirect payments, fees or benefits, both cash and non-
cash, awarded to, granted to, or earned by or for the benefit of, any
covered person in exchange for services rendered to the covered
financial institution, including, but not limited to, payments or
benefits pursuant to an employment contract, compensation or benefit
agreement, fee arrangement, perquisite, stock option plan,
postemployment benefit, or other compensatory arrangement. For credit
unions, the definition of compensation specifically excludes
reimbursement for reasonable and proper costs incurred by covered
persons in carrying out official credit union business; provision of
reasonable health, accident and related types of personal insurance
protection; and indemnification. This is consistent with NCUA's
regulations at 12 CFR 701.33. The Agencies seek comment on this
proposed definition.
Covered Financial Institution. As noted above, only ``covered
financial institutions'' that have total consolidated assets of $1
billion or more would be subject to the Proposed Rule. Under the
Proposed Rule, a ``covered financial institution'' would include:
In the case of the OCC, a national bank and Federal branch
and agency of a foreign bank;
In the case of the Board, a state member bank; a bank
holding company; a state-licensed uninsured branch or agency of a
foreign bank; and the U.S. operations of a foreign bank with more than
$1 billion of U.S. assets that is treated as a bank holding company
pursuant to section 8(a) of the International Banking Act of 1978 (12
U.S.C. 3106(a)). A covered financial institution includes the
subsidiaries of the institution;
In the case of the FDIC, a state nonmember bank and an
insured U.S. branch of a foreign bank;
In the case of the OTS, a savings association as defined
in 12 U.S.C. 1813(b) and a savings and loan holding company as defined
in 12 U.S.C. 1467a(a). (A covered financial institution also includes
an operating subsidiary of a Federal savings association as defined in
12 CFR 559.2.) The Board, OCC, and FDIC will assume supervisory and
rulemaking responsibility for these entities on the transfer date
provided in Title III of the Dodd-Frank Act. These agencies expect to
adopt, or incorporate, as appropriate, any final rule adopted by OTS as
part of this rulemaking for relevant covered financial institutions
that come under their respective supervisory authority after the
transfer date;
In the case of the NCUA, a credit union, as described in
section 19(b)(1)(A)(iv) of the Federal Reserve Act, meaning an insured
credit union as defined under 12 U.S.C. 1752(7) or credit union
eligible to make application to become an insured credit union under 12
U.S.C. 1781. Instead of the term ``covered financial institution'', the
NCUA uses the term ``credit union'' throughout its proposed rule;
In the case of the SEC, a broker-dealer registered under
section 15 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, 15 U.S.C. 78o; and
an investment adviser, as such term is defined in section 202(a)(11) of
the Investment Advisers Act of 1940, 15 U.S.C. 80b-2(a)(11); \10\
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\10\ By its terms, the definition of ``covered financial
institution'' in section 956 includes any firm that meets the
definition of ``investment adviser'' under the Investment Advisers
Act of 1940 (``Investment Advisers Act''), regardless of whether the
firm is registered as an investment adviser under that Act. Banks
and bank holding companies are generally excluded from the
definition of ``investment adviser'' under section 202(a)(11) of the
Investment Advisers Act.
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The FHFA, because it proposes to extend the requirements
of the rule to the Federal Home Loan Bank System's Office of
Finance,\11\ which is not a financial institution, is not proposing to
use the term ``covered financial institution,'' but rather the term
``covered entity,'' defined to mean Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, the
Federal Home Loan Banks, and the Office of Finance.
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\11\ The Office of Finance is a joint agency of the twelve
Federal Home Loan Banks and is described and regulated in the FHFA's
rules at 12 CFR part 1273.
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As indicated in the above listing, the Agencies propose to expand
the definition of a covered financial institution beyond those
specifically identified in section 956, as authorized by section
956(e)(2)(G) of the Dodd-Frank Act. Consistent with the principle of
national treatment and equality of competitive opportunity, the
Agencies propose to include as covered financial institutions the
uninsured branches and
[[Page 21175]]
agencies of a foreign bank, as well as the other U.S. operations of
foreign banking organizations that are treated as bank holding
companies pursuant to section 8(a) of the International Banking Act of
1978. These offices and operations currently are subject to the Banking
Agency Guidance, and are subject to section 8 of the FDIA, which
prohibits institutions from engaging in unsafe or unsound practices to
the same extent as insured depository institutions and bank holding
companies.\12\
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\12\ See 12 U.S.C. 1813(c)(3) and 1818(b)(4).
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The Agencies also propose including the Federal Home Loan Banks
because they pose similar risks and should be subject to the same
regulatory regime. FHFA also proposes to subject the Office of Finance
to the Proposed Rule, using authority other than section 956.\13\
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\13\ The Office of Finance is an agent of the Federal Home Loan
Banks in issuing the hundreds of billions of dollars' worth of
Federal Home Loan Bank System obligations that are outstanding at
any time. It is not a financial institution, but because of its
critical role in the mortgage finance system, it is proposed to be
made subject to the provisions of the Proposed Rule that apply to
financial institutions with assets of over $50 billion. Because it
is not a financial institution and hence not within the scope of
section 956, FHFA bases its authority over the Office of Finance for
this purpose not on section 956 but on the Federal Housing
Enterprises Financial Safety and Soundness Act, which in section
1311(b)(2) (12 U.S.C. 4511(b)(2)) grants FHFA general regulatory
authority over the Office of Finance.
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Commenters are specifically asked to address whether there are
there other types of financial institutions, such as a credit union
service organization (``CUSO''), that the Agencies should treat as a
covered financial institution to better promote the purpose of section
956 and competitive equity. Currently no CUSOs wholly owned by a
federally insured credit union have total consolidated assets of $1
billion or more.
Covered Person. Only incentive-based compensation paid to ``covered
persons'' would be subject to the requirements of this Proposed Rule. A
``covered person'' would be any executive officer, employee, director,
or principal shareholder of a covered financial institution. No
specific categories of employees are excluded from the scope of the
Proposed Rule, although it is the underlying purpose of this rulemaking
to address those incentive-based compensation arrangements for covered
persons or groups of covered persons that encourage inappropriate risk
because they provide excessive compensation or pose a risk of material
financial loss to a covered financial institution. Accordingly, as will
be discussed later in this SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section, certain
prohibitions in the Proposed Rule apply only to a subset of covered
persons. As a result, the proposal contains separate definitions of
director, executive officer, and principal shareholder. For Federal
credit unions, only one director, if any, may be considered a covered
person since, under the Federal Credit Union Act section 112 (12 U.S.C.
1761a) and NCUA's regulations at 12 CFR 701.33, only one director may
be compensated as an officer of the board.
Director and Board of Directors. The Proposed Rule defines
``director'' of a covered financial institution as a member of the
board of directors of the covered financial institution or of a board
or committee performing a similar function to a board of directors. For
NCUA's proposed rule, the director is always a member of the credit
union's board of directors so the definition is omitted. The Proposed
Rule also defines ``board of directors'' as the governing body of any
covered financial institution performing functions similar to a board
of directors. For a foreign banking organization, ``board of
directors'' refers to the relevant senior management or oversight body
for the firm's U.S. branch, agency or operations, consistent with the
foreign banking organization's overall corporate and management
structure. The Agencies seek comment on these proposed definitions.
Executive Officer. As discussed in more detail later in this
Supplementary Information, the Proposed Rule would apply certain
restrictions to the incentive-based compensation of ``executive
officers'' of larger covered financial institutions.\14\ The Proposed
Rule defines ``executive officer'' of a covered financial institution
as a person who holds the title or performs the function (regardless of
title, salary or compensation) of one or more of the following
positions: President, chief executive officer, executive chairman,
chief operating officer, chief financial officer, chief investment
officer, chief legal officer, chief lending officer, chief risk
officer, or head of a major business line.\15\
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\14\ As discussed previously, the term ``larger covered
financial institution'' for the Federal banking agencies and the SEC
means those covered financial institutions with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more. For the NCUA, all credit unions with
total consolidated assets of $10 billion or more are larger covered
financial institutions. For the FHFA, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and
all of the Federal Home Loan Banks with total consolidated assets of
$1 billion or more are larger covered financial institutions. In
addition, the FHFA proposes to make the same requirements applicable
to the Office of Finance.
\15\ For the FHFA, the Safety and Soundness Act of 1992, as
reflected in 12 CFR 1770.3 (g)-(1), defines the term Executive
Officer to mean, for Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac: The Chairman of the
Board of Directors, chief executive officer, chief financial
officer, chief operating officer, president, vice chairman, any
executive vice president, and any individual who performs functions
similar to such positions whether or not the individual has an
official title; and any senior vice president or other individual
with similar responsibilities, without regard to title: (A) Who is
in charge of a principal business unit, division or function, or (B)
who reports directly to the chairman of the board of directors, vice
chairman, president or chief operating officer. The Proposed Rule
adopts a modified version of the definitions for Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac, and a definition for the Federal Home Loan Banks and
for the Office of Finance that the FHFA has determined is
appropriate for them.
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The Agencies seek comment on whether the types of
positions identified in this proposed definition are appropriate,
whether additional positions should be included, or if certain
positions should be removed.
Should the Agencies define ``head of a major business
line?''
Incentive-based Compensation. Consistent with section 956 of the
Dodd-Frank Act, the Proposed Rule would apply only to incentive-based
compensation arrangements. The Proposed Rule defines ``incentive-based
compensation'' to mean any variable compensation that serves as an
incentive for performance. The definition is broad and principles-based
to address the objectives of section 956 in a manner that provides for
flexibility as forms of compensation evolve. The form of payment,
whether it is cash, an equity award, or other property, does not affect
whether compensation meets the definition of ``incentive-based
compensation.''
There are types of compensation that would not fall within the
scope of this definition. Generally, compensation that is awarded
solely for, and the payment of which is solely tied to, continued
employment (e.g., salary) would not be considered incentive-based
compensation. Similarly, a compensation arrangement that provides
rewards solely for activities or behaviors that do not involve risk-
taking (for example, payments solely for achieving or maintaining a
professional certification or higher level of educational achievement)
would not be considered incentive-based compensation under the
proposal. In addition, the Agencies do not envision that this
definition would include compensation arrangements that are determined
based solely on the covered person's level of fixed compensation and do
not vary based on one or more performance metrics (e.g., employer
contributions to a 401(k) retirement savings plan computed based on a
fixed percentage of an employee's salary). The
[[Page 21176]]
proposed definition also would not include dividends paid and
appreciation realized on stock or other equity instruments that are
owned outright by a covered person. However, stock or other equity
instruments awarded to a covered person under a contract, arrangement,
plan, or benefit would not be considered owned outright while subject
to any vesting or deferral arrangement (irrespective of whether such
deferral is mandatory).
The Agencies request comment generally on this proposed definition.
Comment is also requested on the following questions:
Is the definition of incentive-based compensation
sufficiently broad to include all types of compensation that should be
covered under the rule?
Are there any particular forms of compensation that should
be specifically designated as incentive-based compensation?
Are there any other forms of compensation that the
Agencies should clarify are not incentive-based compensation?
Principal Shareholder. Under the Proposed Rule, a ``principal
shareholder'' means an individual that directly or indirectly, or
acting through or in concert with one or more persons, owns, controls,
or has the power to vote 10 percent or more of any class of voting
securities of a covered financial institution.\16\ The Agencies request
comment on this proposed definition. The NCUA's proposed rule does not
include this definition since credit unions are not-for-profit
financial cooperatives with member owners.
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\16\ The 10 percent threshold used in the definition of
``principal shareholder'' is also used in a number of bank
regulatory contexts. See e.g., 12 CFR 215.2(m), 12 CFR 225.2(n)(2),
12 CFR 225.41(c)(2).
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Total Consolidated Assets. As provided in section 956, the Proposed
Rule would apply to all covered financial institutions that have total
consolidated assets of $1 billion or more. Additional requirements
would apply to certain larger covered financial institutions. With the
exception of the FHFA, the Agencies have specified how total
consolidated assets should be calculated in their agency specific rule
text.
OCC: Total consolidated assets means (i) for a national
bank, calculating the average of the total assets reported in the
bank's four most recent Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income
(``Call Report'') and (ii) for a Federal branch and agency, calculating
the average of the total assets reported in the Federal branch or
agency's four most recent Reports of Assets and Liabilities of U.S.
Branches and Agencies of Foreign Banks--FFIEC 002.
Board: For a state member bank, total consolidated assets
as determined based on the average of the bank's four most recent
Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income (``Call Report''); for a
bank holding company, total consolidated assets as determined based on
the average of the company's four most recent Consolidated Financial
Statements for Bank Holding Companies (``FR Y-9C''); for a state-
licensed uninsured branch or agency of a foreign bank, total
consolidated assets as determined based on the average of the branch or
agency's four most recent Reports of Assets and Liabilities of U.S.
Branches and Agencies of Foreign Banks--FFIEC 002; and for the U.S.
operations of a foreign bank, total consolidated U.S. assets as
determined by the Board.
FDIC: For state nonmember banks, asset size would be
determined by calculating the average of the total assets reported in
the institution's four most recent Call Reports. For insured U.S.
branches of foreign banks, asset size will be determined by calculating
the average of the total assets reported in the branch's four most
recent Reports of Assets and Liabilities of U.S. Branches and Agencies
of Foreign Banks.
OTS: For covered financial institutions regulated by the
OTS, asset size will be determined by calculating the average of total
assets reported in the institution's four most recent Thrift Financial
Reports.
NCUA: For credit unions, asset size will be determined by
calculating the average of the total assets reported in the credit
union's four most recent 5300 Call Reports.
SEC: For brokers or dealers registered with the SEC, asset
size would be determined by the total consolidated assets reported in
the firm's most recent year-end audited Consolidated Statement of
Financial Condition filed pursuant to Rule 17a-5 under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934. For investment advisers, asset size would be
determined by the adviser's total assets shown on the balance sheet for
the adviser's most recent fiscal year end. The proposed method of
calculation for investment advisers is consistent with the SEC's recent
proposal that each investment adviser filing Form ADV Part 1A indicate
whether the adviser had $1 billion or more in ``assets,'' defined as
the total assets shown on the balance sheet for the adviser's most
recent fiscal year end.\17\ In connection with that proposal, the SEC
requested comment on the reporting requirement and the proposed method
that advisers would use to determine the amount of their assets (i.e.,
total assets as shown on the adviser's balance sheet). Commenters are
asked to provide additional comments on the proposed method of
determining asset size for investment advisers, and specifically to
address whether the determination of total assets should be further
tailored for certain types of advisers, such as advisers to hedge funds
or private equity funds, and if so, why and in what manner.
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\17\ See Rules Implementing Amendments to the Investment
Advisers Act of 1940, Investment Advisers Release No. 3110, nn. 194-
196 and related text (Nov. 19, 2010) 75 FR 77052 (Dec. 10, 2010).
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FHFA: The FHFA is not including a definition of total
consolidated assets in its proposed rule because it is proposing to
make all requirements of the rule applicable to all the entities it
regulates without regard to asset size.\18\
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\18\ Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Federal Home Loan Banks
are all far larger than the $1 billion asset threshold in section
956, while the FHFA is basing its regulatory authority over the
Office of Finance on a different statute. And, for policy reasons,
the FHFA is proposing not to distinguish ``larger'' entities from
others for purposes of this rule.
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The Agencies believe that by generally establishing a rolling
average for asset size (with the exception of the SEC and the FHFA),
the frequency that an institution may fall in or out of covered
financial institution status would be minimized. If a covered financial
institution has fewer than four reports, the institution must average
total assets from its existing reports for purposes of determining
total consolidated assets. If a covered financial institution has a mix
of two or more different types of reports covering the relevant period,
those should be averaged for purposes of determining asset size (e.g.,
an institution with two Call Reports and two Thrift Financial Reports
as its four most recent reports would have its total assets from all
four reports averaged).
Should all of the Agencies use a uniform method to determine
whether an institution has $1 billion or more in assets? If so, what
would commenters suggest as such a uniform method? If different
calculations are required for each type of institution, should any of
the Agencies define total consolidated assets differently than the
proposed calculations described above?
Sec. ----.4 Required Reports. Section 956(a)(1) of the Dodd-Frank
Act requires that a covered financial institution submit an annual
report to its
[[Page 21177]]
appropriate Federal regulator disclosing the structure of its
incentive-based compensation arrangements that is sufficient to
determine whether the incentive-based compensation structure provides
covered persons with excessive compensation, fees, or benefits, or
could lead to material financial loss to the covered financial
institution. In order to fulfill this requirement, the Proposed Rule
would establish the general rule that a covered financial institution
must submit a report annually to its appropriate regulator or
supervisor in a format specified by its appropriate Federal regulator
that describes the structure of the covered financial institution's
incentive-based compensation arrangements for covered persons. The
report must contain:
(1) A clear narrative description of the components of the covered
financial institution's incentive-based compensation arrangements
applicable to covered persons and specifying the types of covered
persons to which they apply;
(2) A succinct description of the covered financial institution's
policies and procedures governing its incentive-based compensation
arrangements for covered persons;
(3) For larger covered financial institutions, a succinct
description of any specific incentive compensation policies and
procedures for the institution's executive officers, and other covered
persons who the board, or a committee thereof determines under Sec. --
--.5(b)(3)(ii) of the Proposed Rule individually have the ability to
expose the institution to possible losses that are substantial in
relation to the institution's size, capital, or overall risk tolerance;
(4) Any material changes to the covered financial institution's
incentive-based compensation arrangements and policies and procedures
made since the covered financial institution's last report was
submitted; and
(5) The specific reasons why the covered financial institution
believes the structure of its incentive-based compensation plan does
not encourage inappropriate risks by the covered financial institution
by providing covered persons with excessive compensation or incentive-
based compensation that could lead to material financial loss to the
covered financial institution.
In developing the proposed reporting provisions, the Agencies have
taken into account that substantially all the covered financial
institutions are already supervised and/or subject to examination by
one or more of the Agencies. Accordingly, in the Proposed Rule, the
Agencies have tailored the annual reporting requirement to the types of
information that would most efficiently assist the relevant Agency in
determining whether there are any areas of potential concern with
respect to the structure of the covered financial institution's
incentive-based compensation arrangements. Generally, each Agency has
reporting, examination and enforcement authority for substantially all
of the covered financial institutions under its respective jurisdiction
that the Agency may use if the information provided under section 956
were to indicate that the structure of a covered financial
institution's incentive-based compensation arrangements may provide
excessive compensation or encourage inappropriate risk-taking.\19\ In
this way, the Proposed Rule seeks to achieve the objective of section
956 in a manner that limits unnecessary reporting burden on covered
financial institutions and leverages the existing supervisory framework
for institutions.
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\19\ NCUA would likely consult with the appropriate state
regulator in cases involving a state-chartered credit union.
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The Agencies note that they have intentionally chosen phrases like
``clear narrative description'' and ``succinct description'' to
describe the disclosures being sought. The Agencies also note that the
use of the word ``specific'' in the Proposed Rule is designed to elicit
statements that are direct and meaningful explanations of why a covered
financial institution believes its incentive-based compensation plan
properly addresses the ``excessive compensation'' and ``material
financial loss'' components of section 956. These provisions are
designed to help ensure that covered financial institutions will
provide the Agencies with a streamlined set of materials that will help
the Agencies promptly and effectively identify and address any areas of
concern, rather than with voluminous materials that may obfuscate the
actual structure and likely effects of an institution's incentive-based
compensation arrangements. Further, in light of the nature of the
information that will be provided to the Agencies under Sec. ----.4 of
the Proposed Rule, and the purposes for which the Agencies are
requiring the information, the Agencies generally will maintain the
confidentiality of the information submitted to the Agencies, and the
information will be nonpublic, to the extent permitted by law.\20\ The
nature of the reported information likely will be sensitive for a
variety of reasons, including competitive reasons.
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\20\ The Freedom of Information Act (``FOIA'') provides at least
two pertinent exemptions under which the Agencies have authority to
withhold certain information. FOIA Exemption 4 provides an exemption
for ``trade secrets and commercial or financial information obtained
from a person and privileged or confidential.'' 5 U.S.C. 552(b)(4).
FOIA Exemption 8 provides an exemption for matters that are
``contained in or related to examination, operating, or condition
reports prepared by, on behalf of, or for the use of an agency
responsible for the regulation or supervision of financial
institutions.'' 5 U.S.C. 552(b)(8).
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The volume and detail of information provided annually by a covered
financial institution should be commensurate with the size and
complexity of the institution, as well as the scope and nature of its
incentive-based compensation arrangements. As such, the Agencies expect
that the volume and detail of information provided by a large, complex
institution that uses incentive-based arrangements to a significant
degree would be substantially greater than that submitted by a smaller
institution that has only a few incentive-based compensation
arrangements or arrangements that affect only a limited number of
covered persons.
The Agencies request comment on all aspects of the reporting
provisions in the Proposed Rule. Specifically, the Agencies request
comment on the following:
Does the Proposed Rule fulfill the requirement to obtain
meaningful and useful descriptions of incentive-based compensation
arrangements for supervisory and compliance purposes?
Does the Proposed Rule impose a reasonable burden and
minimize the potential for voluminous boilerplate disclosure?
Is the language in the Proposed Rule sufficiently clear in
describing the kinds of information the Agencies intend to solicit from
covered financial institutions?
Are there simpler and less burdensome methods of reporting
to the Agencies that would still be sufficiently robust to help the
Agencies assess whether the institution's compensation arrangements
appropriately balance risk and financial rewards?