Federal Home Loan Bank Investments, 29147-29153 [2011-12358]
Download as PDF
29147
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
Vol. 76, No. 98
Friday, May 20, 2011
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains regulatory documents having general
applicability and legal effect, most of which
are keyed to and codified in the Code of
Federal Regulations, which is published under
50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by
the Superintendent of Documents. Prices of
new books are listed in the first FEDERAL
REGISTER issue of each week.
FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE BOARD
12 CFR Part 956
FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE
AGENCY
12 CFR Part 1267
RIN 2590–AA32
Federal Home Loan Bank Investments
Federal Housing Finance
Agency; Federal Housing Finance
Board.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Federal Housing Finance
Agency (FHFA) is re-organizing and readopting existing investment
regulations that apply to the Federal
Home Loan Banks (Banks) and that were
previously adopted by the Federal
Housing Finance Board (Finance Board).
The regulation is being adopted as a
new part in FHFA’s regulations. As part
of this rulemaking, FHFA will
incorporate limits on the Banks’
investment in mortgage-backed
securities (MBS) and certain assetbacked securities (ABS) that were
previously set forth in the Finance
Board’s Financial Management Policy
(FMP). The FMP will terminate as of the
effective date of this rule.
DATES: This rule is effective on June 20,
2011.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Christina Muradian, Division of Federal
Home Loan Bank Regulation, Federal
Housing Finance Agency, 202–408–
2584, 1625 Eye Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20006; or Thomas E.
Joseph, Senior Attorney-Advisor, 202–
414–3095, Office of General Counsel,
Federal Housing Finance Agency,
Fourth Floor, 1700 G Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20552. The telephone
number for the Telecommunications
Device for the Deaf is (800) 877–8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with RULES
SUMMARY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:40 May 19, 2011
Jkt 223001
I. Background
A. Creation of the Federal Housing
Finance Agency and Recent Legislation
Effective July 30, 2008, the Housing
and Economic Recovery Act of 2008
(HERA), Public Law 110–289, 122 Stat.
2654, created FHFA as a new
independent agency of the Federal
Government, and transferred to FHFA
the supervisory and oversight
responsibilities of the Office of Federal
Housing Enterprise Oversight (OFHEO)
over the Enterprises, the supervisory
and oversight responsibilities of the
Federal Housing Finance Board
(Finance Board) over the Banks and the
Office of Finance (OF) (which acts as
the Banks’ fiscal agent) and certain
functions of the Department of Housing
and Urban Development. See id. at
section 1101, 122 Stat. 2661–62. FHFA
is responsible for ensuring that the
Enterprises and the Banks operate in a
safe and sound manner, including that
they maintain adequate capital and
internal controls, that their activities
foster liquid, efficient, competitive and
resilient national housing finance
markets, and that they carry out their
public policy missions through
authorized activities. See id. at section
1102, 122 Stat. 2663–64. The
Enterprises, the Banks, and the OF
continue to operate under regulations
promulgated by OFHEO and the
Finance Board until such regulations are
superseded by regulations issued by
FHFA. See id. at sections 1302, 1312,
122 Stat. 2795, 2798.
B. Investment Requirements and the
FMP
Under sections 11(g), 11(h) and 16(a)
of the Bank Act, 12 U.S.C. 1431(g),
1431(h), 1436(a), a Bank is specifically
authorized, subject to the rules of FHFA,
to invest in: (1) Obligations of the
United States; (2) deposits in banks and
trust companies; (3) obligations,
participations or other instruments of,
or issued by, Fannie Mae or Government
National Mortgage Association (Ginnie
Mae); (4) mortgages, obligations or other
securities that are or ever have been sold
by Freddie Mac; (5) stock of Fannie
Mae; (6) stock, obligations or other
securities of any small business
investment company (SBIC) formed
pursuant to 15 U.S.C. 681, to the extent
the investment is made for purposes of
aiding a Bank member; and (7)
instruments that a Bank has determined
PO 00000
Frm 00001
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
are permissible investments for
fiduciary and trust funds under the laws
of the state in which the Bank is located.
Part 956 of the Finance Board
regulations authorized the Banks to
invest in all the instruments specifically
identified in the statute, except for stock
in Fannie Mae, subject to certain safety
and soundness limitations that are also
set forth in the regulation. See 12 CFR
956.2 and 956.3. The part 956
regulations also allowed the Banks to
enter into derivative transactions,
standby letters of credit which conform
to other regulations, forward asset
purchases and sales and commitments
to make advances or commitments to
make or purchase other loans. See 12
CFR 956.5. The regulations further
allowed the Banks to enter into
derivative contracts only for hedging or
other documented, non-speculative
purposes, such as intermediating
derivative transactions for members,
and subjected the Banks to prudential
and safety and soundness requirements
with regard to derivative transactions.
See 12 CFR 956.6.
The FMP evolved from a series of
policies and guidelines initially adopted
by the former Federal Home Loan Bank
Board, predecessor agency to the
Finance Board, in the 1970s and revised
a number of times thereafter. The
Finance Board adopted the FMP in
1991, consolidating into one document
the previously separate policies on
funds management, hedging and
interest-rate swaps, and adding new
guidelines on the management of
unsecured credit and interest-rate risk.1
Prior to the adoption of the part 956
regulations in 2000, the FMP governed
how the Banks implemented their
financial management strategies by
specifying the types of investments the
Banks could purchase. See Proposed
Rule: Federal Home Loan Bank
Acquired Member Assets, Core Mission
Activities, Investments and Advances,
65 FR 25676, 25686 (May 3, 2000). The
FMP also established guidelines relating
to the funding and hedging practices of
the Banks, the management of their
credit, interest-rate, and liquidity risks,
and the liquidity requirements for the
1 See Fin. Bd. Res. No. 96–45 (July 3, 1996), as
amended by Fin. Bd. Res. No. 96–90 (Dec. 6, 1996),
Fin. Bd. Res. No. 97–05 (Jan. 14, 1997), and Fin. Bd.
Res. No. 97–86 (Dec. 17, 1997). See also 62 FR
13146 (Mar. 19, 1997)).
E:\FR\FM\20MYR1.SGM
20MYR1
29148
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 98 / Friday, May 20, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with RULES
Banks in addition to those required by
statute.
Beginning in 2000, many of the
provisions contained in the FMP were
superseded by regulations adopted by
the Finance Board including regulations
that implemented the new capital
structure for the Banks that had been
mandated by the Gramm-Leach-Bliley
Act of 1999, Public Law No. 106–102,
113 Stat. 1338 (Nov. 12, 1999) (GLB
Act). Among other things, the new
capital structure incorporated risk-based
capital requirements to support the risks
in the Banks’ activities, and therefore
eliminated the need for most of the FMP
restrictions on investments. See 12 CFR
part 932. In approving the capital plans
that each Bank was required to adopt
under provisions of the GLB Act, the
Finance Board issued separate orders
providing that upon a Bank’s
implementation of its capital plan and
its full coverage by the capital regime in
part 932 of the regulations, the Bank
would be exempted from future
compliance with all provisions of the
FMP except for a few specific
restrictions related to the Bank’s
investment in mortgage-backed and
certain asset-backed securities along
with some related restrictions on
entering into some derivative
transactions.2 See, e.g., Fin. Bd. Res. No.
2002–11 (Mar. 13, 2002). Currently, all
the Banks but the Federal Home Loan
Bank of Chicago (Chicago Bank) have
implemented their capital plans and are
fully subject to the part 932 capital
provisions.3 Thus, only a few of the
2 The restrictions in question are found in
sections II.C.2., 3., 4. and 5. and section V.C.5. of
the FMP. These limits, among other things, prohibit
investment in residual interest and interest accrual
classes of securities and in interest-only and
principal-only stripped securities, and limit a
Bank’s investment in MBS and ABS to 300 percent
of a Bank’s total capital. The provisions also limit
an increase in a Bank’s holdings of MBS and ABS
to no more than 50 percent of its total capital in
any calendar quarter. The restrictions also prohibit
the Bank from entering into swap transactions that
would amortize similar to residual interest or
interest accrual classes of securities or to interestonly and principal-only stripped securities.
In March 2008, the Finance Board temporarily
expanded the Banks’ authority to invest in MBS
guaranteed by the Enterprises by an additional three
times total capital, subject to certain conditions. See
Fin. Bd. Res. No. 2008–08 (Mar. 24, 2008). The
temporary authority expired on March 31, 2010.
The Finance Board believed that the temporary
increase in the Banks’ investment authority would
help address severe liquidity and other constraints
that were affecting the housing finance markets in
early 2008.
3 In addition to the FMP provisions already
discussed and applicable to all the Banks, the
Chicago Bank remains subject to FMP provisions
related to prudential limits on investments (other
than MBS or ABS) and interest rate risk guidelines.
The latter have been subsumed into the risk
management and hedging guidelines that the
Chicago Bank was required to submit for review
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:40 May 19, 2011
Jkt 223001
provisions of the FMP remain
applicable to all the Banks.
C. Considerations of Differences
Between the Banks and the Enterprises
Section 1201 of HERA requires the
Director, when promulgating regulations
relating to the Banks, to consider the
following differences between the Banks
and the Enterprises: Cooperative
ownership structure; mission of
providing liquidity to members;
affordable housing and community
development mission; capital structure;
and joint and several liability. See
section 1201 Public Law 110–289, 122
Stat. 2782–83 (amending 12 U.S.C.
4513). The Director also may consider
any other differences that are deemed
appropriate. In preparing this rule,
FHFA considered the differences
between the Banks and the Enterprises
as they relate to the above factors.
Section 1201 also specifically
provides that its requirements shall not
apply if the Director is reissuing any
regulation, advisory document or
examination guidance previously issued
by the Finance Board. While most of
this final rule is re-issuance of existing
Finance Board regulations, the rule also
incorporates into regulations provisions
from the FMP. The FMP itself is not a
substantive rule or interpretative
guidance on existing regulations issued
by the Finance Board, but instead has
been described as a list of general
guidelines. See, Texas Savings. v.
Federal Housing Finance Bd., 201 F.3d
551, 556 (5th Cir., 2000). Therefore,
incorporation of the FMP guidelines
into regulations does not firmly fit
within the section 1201 exception for
reissuance of existing Finance Board
rules or advisory documents.
FHFA therefore has considered the
differences between the Banks and the
Enterprises as required by section 1201
of HERA in developing this final rule.
As part of its proposed rulemaking,
FHFA also specifically requested
comments from the public about
whether differences related to these
factors should result in any revisions to
the proposal, but received no specific
comments in response to that request.
II. The Final Rule
A. The Proposed Rule
On May 4, 2010, FHFA published for
comment a proposed rule that would reorganize the investment regulation and
re-adopt it as part 1267 of FHFA’s
and approval (and update as necessary) under
Article III of the Consent Order to Cease and Desist
entered into with the Finance Board on October 10,
2007, and which remains in effect. See 2007–SUP–
01.
PO 00000
Frm 00002
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
regulations. It also would have
incorporated into the rule certain limits
that are now set forth in the FMP and
made other conforming changes. See
Proposed Rule: Federal Home Loan
Bank Investments, 75 FR 23631 (May 4,
2010) (hereinafter Proposed Rule). The
rule, as proposed, would not have
substantively altered regulatory
requirements applicable to Bank
investments.
In the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION to
the proposed rule, however, FHFA
noted its concern with the financial
condition of some Banks and the
negative performance of the Banks’
private-label MBS (PLMBS), in part
because the Banks’ investment policies
and pre-purchase analytics were
deficient. As a result, FHFA requested
comments on whether it should adopt
additional restrictions, or lower the
overall limit, on the Banks’ investment
in MBS generally, and in PLMBS in
particular, as part of the final rule. Id.
at 23633–34. Among other things FHFA
asked if there should be a separate limit
or additional restriction on the purchase
of PLMBS (e.g., a limit of one or two
times capital, or a separate limit linked
to retained earnings or some other
basis), including whether FHFA should
prohibit the purchase of PLMBS in the
final rule, or if FHFA should restrict
purchases of PLMBS based on collateral
characteristics. Id.
FHFA received 10 comment letters on
the proposed rule. Nine of the Banks
submitted comments, and one comment
letter was submitted by a trade
association. Except for a suggested
clarification made by some of the Banks
on the calculation of the proposed 300
percent of capital investment limit for
MBS, the comments mainly addressed
FHFA’s questions concerning additional
restrictions on MBS investment. The
letters also provided some general
comments on the Banks’ authority to
invest in MBS. The comments are
discussed more fully below.
B. Final Rule Provisions
1. Incorporation of the FMP Provisions
Into the Investment Regulation
Most comments indicated that it was
important for the Banks to maintain
their current authority to invest in MBS.
These commenters believed that the
Banks’ investment in MBS was
consistent with the Banks’ mission and
provided support for mortgage market
liquidity and stability especially in the
period of current market stress. A
number of commenters also thought that
continued Bank investment in PLMBS
could play a limited but important role
in helping to revive the private label
E:\FR\FM\20MYR1.SGM
20MYR1
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 98 / Friday, May 20, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
secondary mortgage market. One Bank
agreed with FHFA’s stated concern with
the performance of some Banks’ MBS
investment portfolios and believed it
was important to continue to limit Bank
investment in MBS and require
adequate retained earnings as a cushion
against potential losses from such
investments. Another Bank specifically
supported a prohibition on future
investment in PLMBS investment,
although most other comment letters
specifically objected to such a ban.
Almost all comments also supported
the incorporation of the FMP limits,
including the 300 percent of capital
limit, into the investment rule. A
number of commenters also felt that it
would be premature to institute
additional restrictions on Banks’ MBS
investment at this time, given the
extensive regulatory and market changes
now taking place. One commenter,
however, believed the 300 percent of
capital limit on MBS investment was
inflexible and out of date and believed
it should be reconsidered or eliminated,
especially when applied to investment
in agency MBS.
FHFA also received a number of
comments supporting a limit on MBS
investment based on retained earnings
to either supplement or replace the
current limit based on a Bank’s total
capital. Some comments suggested that
FHFA undertake a study to identify an
appropriate retained earnings limit or
that FHFA consider such a limit only as
part of a future rulemaking.
A number of commenters supported
incorporating limits on MBS based on
the underlying characteristics of the
loans if such requirements incorporated
the principles in FHFA Advisory
Bulletins 2007–AB–01 and 2008–AB–
02 4 and in the interagency guidance
published by Federal banking
regulators, Interagency Guidance on
Nontraditional Mortgage Product Risks
(71 FR 58609 (Oct. 4, 2006)), and
Statement on Subprime Mortgage
Lending (72 FR 37569 (July 10, 2007)).
emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with RULES
4 Advisory
Bulletin 2007–AB–01 (Apr. 12, 2007)
established expectations for the Banks’ prepurchase analysis and periodic reviews of MBS
investments. It advised the Banks’ boards of
directors to establish: (1) Limits on the level of MBS
with underlying nontraditional or subprime
mortgage collateral; (2) requirements for the level of
credit protection for particular credit tranches when
purchased at the time of original issuance of the
security, and (3) limits on concentrations by
geographic area, issuer, servicer, and size. Advisory
Bulletin 2008–AB–02 (July 1, 2008) set forth the
expectation that the Banks’ purchases of PLMBS
would be limited to securities in which the
underlying mortgage loans complied with all
aspects of the Federal banking agencies’ Interagency
Guidance on Nontraditional Mortgage Product
Risks, and Statement on Subprime Mortgage
Lending.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
15:03 May 19, 2011
Jkt 223001
Other commenters, however, felt that
given the new standards being
implemented for the secondary
mortgage markets and the changes that
this market is expected to undergo, it
ultimately may prove unnecessary to
incorporate this prior guidance into the
regulation. Nevertheless, commenters
felt that collateral backing future Bank
purchases of MBS should be expected to
comply with the highest standards of
prudent and sustainable lending and
that the current FHFA Advisory
Bulletins on this issue should remain in
effect.
After consideration of all these
comments, FHFA has determined to
adopt the 300 percent of capital limit
from the FMP into its regulations.
Contrary to suggestions that the 300
percent of capital limit was inflexible
and out-dated, FHFA believes the limit
reasonably serves to control Bank
investment activity that does not
directly advance the Banks’ primary
statutory mission of making advances to
members, as well as limit the potential
losses that can arise from this type of
investment. As FHFA noted when
proposing this rule, this FMP limit
addressed both mission and safety and
soundness concerns, 75 FR at 23633,
and FHFA believes that it would be
reasonable to adopt this longstanding
limit into its regulations at this time in
consideration of these concerns.
New § 1267.3(c)(1) incorporates the
restriction in section II.C.2 of the FMP
that limited a Bank’s level of investment
in authorized MBS or ABS to 300
percent of its total capital.5 It clarifies
that a Bank is not required to divest
securities solely to bring the level of its
holdings into compliance with the limit,
provided that the original purchase of
the securities complied with these
limits. New § 1267.3(c)(2) further
restricts a Bank’s purchase of authorized
MBS or ABS in any calendar quarter
such that a Bank’s total holdings of
allowable MBS cannot increase by more
than 50 percent of its total capital as of
the beginning of such quarter, a limit
that also was set forth in section II.C.2
of the FMP.
Although FHFA is adopting the 300
percent of capital limit as part of its
regulations and has determined not to
place additional limits on Bank
5 As adopted, § 1267.3(c)(1) refers to MBS or ABS
‘‘otherwise authorized under this part’’. FHFA
intends this reference to encompass future
purchases of agency or government guaranteed MBS
or ABS that are authorized under part 1267 as well
as Banks’ existing holdings of MBS or ABS to the
extent that they were authorized by part 956. Thus,
in calculating compliance with the limits under
§ 1267.3(c), Banks will be expected to include all
MBS and ABS purchased and currently held under
the authority that had existed in part 956.
PO 00000
Frm 00003
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
29149
investment in MBS at this time, it
continues to have concerns with Bank
investment in MBS from both a safety
and soundness and mission stand point.
With regard to the latter issue, despite
the suggestions of some commenters to
the contrary, FHFA still questions the
extent to which Bank investment in
MBS furthers the System’s housing
finance mission. FHFA considers it
more appropriate to take into account
the mission aspect of the Bank
investment authority overall and not in
segments by addressing only one class
of investment.6
FHFA is likely, therefore, to
reconsider questions related to Bank
investment in MBS as part of a future
rulemaking that would address and
consider all aspects of the Banks’
investment authority, including the
mission relevance of various types of
investments that are allowed under
existing rules. Such considerations are
beyond this current rulemaking, which
was more modest in its scope and
intended only to incorporate the
remaining provisions of the FMP into
the regulations and to transfer the
existing Finance Board’s investment
rules into the FHFA’s regulations.
FHFA also is incorporating into the
regulations the other restrictions on
MBS investment now set forth in the
FMP, generally as proposed. Thus, new
§ 1267.3(a)(5) through (7) sets forth
restrictions found in section II.C.3
through C.5 of the FMP related to
investment in MBS, including the
prohibition on investment in residual
interest and interest accrual classes of
securities and interest-only and
principal-only stripped MBS. The final
rule also adopts new § 1267.4(b) which
incorporates the remaining applicable
limitations on derivative transaction
found in section V.C.5 of the FMP.
These FMP restrictions prevent the
Banks from using derivatives to create
exposures or investments similar to
residual interest and interest accrual
6 An overall re-consideration of the investment
authority in light of the Bank System’s mission was
also raised by the United States Department of the
Treasury and the United States Department of
Housing and Urban Development in a recent report
to Congress:
Similar to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, several
of the FHLB[anks] were allowed to build up large
investment portfolios. These portfolios should be
reduced and their composition altered to better
serve the FHLB[anks’] mission of providing
liquidity and access to capital for insured
depository institutions. We support FHFA’s efforts
to address this issue, and we will work with
Congress to provide clarity to the FHLB[ank’s]
investment authority.
The Department of the Treasury and U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development,
‘‘Reforming America’s Housing Finance Market: A
Report to Congress,’’ p. 15 (Feb. 2011).
E:\FR\FM\20MYR1.SGM
20MYR1
29150
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 98 / Friday, May 20, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
classes of securities, interest-only and
principal-only stripped MBS and ABS,
or other investments that are currently
prohibited by Section II.C of the FMP
(and continue to be prohibited by new
§ 1267.3(a)(5) through (7)).
2. Clarification of the Calculation of the
300 Percent of Capital Limit on MBS
Seven commenters requested that the
wording of the provision adopting the
300 percent of capital limit be amended
to clarify how the limit will be
calculated. Specifically, the commenters
requested that the value of the securities
in question be based on amortized
historical cost for held-to-maturity
(HTM) and available-for-sale (AFS)
securities and fair value for trading
securities, and total capital used for the
calculation of the limit should be as
defined in FHFA regulation § 1229.1.
Section 1267.1 of the rule, both as
proposed and as being adopted, already
defines total capital as having the same
meaning as set forth in § 1229.1 of
FHFA regulations and thus, FHFA
already made clear that the investment
limits in § 1267.3(c) are to be calculated
based on regulatory total capital.7
After considering the comments,
FHFA also agrees that it would be
appropriate to clarify how the value of
relevant MBS and ABS will be
calculated for purposes of the limit and,
therefore, is adopting the suggestions of
the commenters in § 1267.3(c)(3) of the
final rule. This provision provides that
for purposes of applying the limits in
§ 1267.3(c), the value of a Bank’s MBS
and ABS shall be calculated based on
amortized historical costs for securities
classified as HTM or AFS 8 and on fair
value for trading securities.
The approach being adopted in the
final rule differs somewhat from how
these securities would be valued under
generally accepted accounting
principles (GAAP) in that under GAAP,
AFS securities would be recorded at fair
value, with changes in value (not related
to other-than-temporary credit
impairment charges) run through
accumulated other comprehensive
emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with RULES
7 Section
1229.1 defines ‘‘total capital’’ as:
The sum of the Bank’s permanent capital, the
amount paid-in for its Class A stock, the amount of
any general allowances for losses, and the amount
of any other instruments identified in a Bank’s
capital plan that the Director has determined to be
available to absorb losses incurred by such Bank.
For a Bank that has issued neither Class A nor Class
B stock, the Bank’s total capital shall be the
measure of capital used to determine compliance
with its minimum capital requirement.
8 The amortized historical cost for the HTM and
AFS securities would generally be calculated as the
sum of the initial investment, less cash collected,
less write-downs plus yield accreted to date. See
Master Glossary of FASB Accounting Standards
Codification 2009.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
15:03 May 19, 2011
Jkt 223001
income (AOCI).9 However, because the
Bank’s regulatory total capital is not
adjusted for AOCI, the total capital
component of the limit would not
reflect changes in the value of AFS. This
can lead to certain paradoxical results in
applying the limit, if GAAP standards
were used to value the ASF securities
when applying the investment limit.
For example, as the market value of
AFS securities declines, the Banks
would have more ‘‘room’’ under the
limit to make new investments in MBS/
ABS relative to the actual pay down in
their current portfolio as a result of such
market value losses. At the same time,
in periods of rising market values, the
Banks’ investment limits would become
more restrictive relative to the pay down
in the portfolio, restricting their ability
to replace their existing investments as
they pay down. Similarly, the same
security held by different Banks would
be valued differently in the calculation
of the limit depending on whether a
Bank classifies the security as HTM or
AFS, creating an opportunity to game
the limit. The clarification being
adopted should help eliminate these
outcomes as well as provide greater
certainty for Banks in planning and
implementing long term investment
strategies, as the limit and the Banks’
abilities to invest in allowable MBS/
ABS will not be affected by (non-credit
related) price volatility in securities
classified as AFS.
FHFA has also added language to
§ 1267.3(c)(1) and § 1267.3(c)(2) to
clarify that for purposes of determining
compliance with the restrictions in
these sections, the Banks shall
determine the aggregate value of its
investment in MBS and ABS as of the
transaction trade date for any new
purchase of such securities.10
3. Reorganization of the Investment Rule
The final rule also reorganizes the
investment regulation as proposed. The
final rule will combine into new
§ 1267.2 former § 956.2 and § 956.5,
9 While the FMP does not specify how securities
should be valued for purposes of the three times
capital limit, this limit has generally been applied
based on the carrying value of the securities
calculated under GAAP.
10 The language in § 1267(c)(1) has also been
revised to clarify that for purposes of determining
compliance with this provision total capital shall be
based on the amount most recently reported by a
Bank to FHFA. Currently, the Banks report their
regulatory total capital to FHFA in their monthly
call reports. These clarifications are consistent with
how compliance had been determined under the
FMP. No further clarification was needed with
regard to the measure of total capital in § 1267(c)(2),
given that the provision, as proposed and adopted,
states clearly that compliance is determined based
on total capital as of the beginning of each calendar
quarter.
PO 00000
Frm 00004
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
which respectively provided a list of
authorized investments and
authorization for derivative and other
transactions. This will consolidate all
authority for investments and other
transactions into a single section but
does not otherwise substantially alter
the former part 956 provisions. The final
rule will also carry over former § 956.3,
which set forth a list of prohibited
investments and other prudential
requirements, as new § 1267.3, and
incorporate into this new section the
restrictions on MBS investment from the
FMP, as previously highlighted. It will
adopt former § 956.6 as new § 1267.4,
and former § 956.4 as new § 1267.5.
4. References to Credit Ratings and
Credit Rating Organizations
Section 939A of the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection
Act (Dodd-Frank Act) requires Federal
agencies to review regulations that
require the use of an assessment of the
credit-worthiness of a security or money
market instrument, or any references to,
or requirements in, such regulations
regarding credit ratings issued by
NRSROs, and to remove such references
or requirements. See section 939A,
Public Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1887
(July 21, 2010)). This provision also
requires an agency, to the extent
feasible, to adopt uniform standards of
credit-worthiness in its regulations,
taking into account the entities
regulated by it and the purpose for
which such regulated entities would
rely on the credit-worthiness standard.
Id.
The Proposed Rule was published
prior to the passage of the Dodd-Frank
Act. FHFA did not seek comment on
replacing references to or requirements
based on specific credit ratings in those
investment rules that it proposed to
carry over from the existing Finance
Board regulations. Among those
references or requirements are those
included in § 1267.3(a)(3),
§ 1267.3(a)(4)(iii) and § 1267.5, as well
as certain definitions in § 1267.1. Such
references and requirements will need
to be removed pursuant to section 939A
of the Dodd-Frank Act.
To that end, FHFA recently issued an
advance notice of proposed rulemaking
(ANPR) that sought comments on a
range of issues related to
implementation of section 939A of the
Dodd-Frank Act, including what
standards would be appropriate to
replace existing credit rating references
and requirements in the investment
rule. See Advance Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking; Alternatives to Use of
Credit Ratings in Regulations Governing
the Federal National Mortgage
E:\FR\FM\20MYR1.SGM
20MYR1
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 98 / Friday, May 20, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
Association, the Federal Home Loan
Mortgage Corporation and the Federal
Home Loan Banks, 76 FR 5292, 5295
(Jan. 31, 2011). FHFA has determined to
carry over the investment rules as
proposed on a temporary basis, pending
completion of the ANPR process, rather
than attempt to adopt changes at this
time to provisions in part 1267 that
continue to reference specific credit
ratings or base their requirements on
such ratings. FHFA believes that this
approach will best allow it to
implement the Dodd-Frank
requirements that it adopt uniform
standards of credit-worthiness in its
regulations while not delaying the
completion of this rulemaking process.
Thus, FHFA will propose changes to
relevant sections of part 1267 as part of
a future rulemaking designed to remove
references to, or requirements based on,
specific credit ratings, as required by the
Dodd-Frank Act.
5. Cancellation of the FMP
Finally, FHFA confirms that the FMP
is hereby cancelled and rescinded as of
the effective date of this final rule, and
thereafter, none of its provisions will be
applicable to any Bank.
III. Paperwork Reduction Act
The rule applies only to the Banks,
which do not come within the meaning
of small entities as defined in the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA). See 5
U.S.C. 601(6). Therefore, in accordance
with section 605(b) of the RFA, FHFA
certifies that this final rule will not have
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 956
Federal home loan banks,
Investments.
emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with RULES
12 CFR Part 1267
Community development, Credit,
Federal home loan bank, Housing,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
Accordingly, for reasons stated in the
preamble and under the authority of 12
U.S.C. 1429, 1430, 1430b, 1431, 1436,
4511, 4513, 4526, FHFA is amending
subchapter G of chapter IX and
subchapter D of chapter XII of title 12
Jkt 223001
Subchapter G—Federal Home Loan Bank
Assets and Off-Balance Sheet Items
PART 956—[REMOVED]
■
1. Remove part 956.
CHAPTER XII—FEDERAL HOUSING
FINANCE AGENCY
Subchapter D—Federal Home Loan Banks
2. Add part 1267 to subchapter D to
read as follows:
■
PART 1267—FEDERAL HOME LOAN
BANK INVESTMENTS
Sec.
1267.1 Definitions.
1267.2 Authorized investments and
transactions.
1267.3 Prohibited investments and
prudential rules.
1267.4 Limitations and prudential
requirements on use of derivative
instruments.
1267.5 Risk-based capital requirements for
investments.
§ 1267.1
IV. Regulatory Flexibility Act
15:03 May 19, 2011
CHAPTER IX—FEDERAL HOUSING
FINANCE BOARD
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1429, 1430, 1430b,
1431, 1436, 4511, 4513, 4526.
The rule does not contain any
collections of information pursuant to
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.). Therefore,
FHFA has not submitted any
information to the Office of
Management and Budget for review.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
of the Code of Federal Regulations as
follows:
Definitions.
As used in this part:
Asset-backed security means a debt
instrument backed by loans, but does
not include debt instruments that meet
the definition of a mortgage-backed
security.
Bank, written in title case, means a
Federal Home Loan Bank established
under section 12 of the Bank Act, as
amended (12 U.S.C. 1432).
Bank Act means the Federal Home
Loan Bank Act, as amended (12 U.S.C.
1421 through 1449).
Consolidated obligation means any
bond, debenture or note on which the
Banks are jointly and severally liable
and which was issued under section 11
of the Bank Act (12 U.S.C. 1431) and in
accordance with any implementing
regulations, whether or not such
instrument was originally issued jointly
by the Banks or by the Federal Housing
Finance Board on behalf of the Banks.
Deposits in banks or trust companies
means:
(1) A deposit in another Bank;
(2) A demand account in a Federal
Reserve Bank;
(3) A deposit in or sale of Federal
funds to:
(i) An insured depository institution,
as defined in section 2(9) of the Bank
PO 00000
Frm 00005
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
29151
Act, that is designated by the Bank’s
board of directors;
(ii) A trust company that is a member
of the Federal Reserve System or
insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation and is designated
by the Bank’s board of directors; or
(iii) A U.S. branch or agency of a
foreign Bank as defined in the
International Banking Act of 1978, as
amended, (12 U.S.C. 3101 et seq.) that
is subject to supervision of the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System and is designated by the Bank’s
board of directors.
Derivative contract means generally a
financial contract the value of which is
derived from the values of one or more
referenced assets, rates, or indices of
asset values, or credit-related events.
Derivative contracts include interest rate
derivative contracts, foreign exchange
rate derivative contracts, equity
derivative contracts, precious metals
derivative contracts, commodity
derivative contracts and credit
derivatives, and any other instruments
that pose similar risks.
GAAP means the United States
generally accepted accounting
principles.
Indexed principal swap means an
interest rate swap agreement in which
the notional principal balance amortizes
based upon the prepayment experience
of a specified group of mortgage-backed
securities or asset-backed securities or
the behavior of an interest rate index.
Interest-only stripped security means
a class of mortgage-backed or assetbacked security that is allocated only
the interest payments made on the
underlying mortgages or loans and
receives no principal payments.
Investment grade means:
(1) A credit quality rating in one of
the four highest credit rating categories
by an NRSRO and not below the fourth
highest credit rating category by any
NRSRO; or
(2) If there is no credit quality rating
by an NRSRO, a determination by a
Bank that the issuer, asset or instrument
is the credit equivalent of investment
grade using credit rating standards
available from an NRSRO or similar
standards.
Mortgage-backed security means a
security or instrument, including
collateralized mortgage obligations
(CMOs), and Real Estate Mortgage
Investment Trusts (REMICS), that
represents an interest in, or is secured
by, one or more pools of mortgage loans.
NRSRO means a credit rating
organization registered with the
Securities and Exchange Commission as
a nationally recognized statistical rating
organization.
E:\FR\FM\20MYR1.SGM
20MYR1
29152
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 98 / Friday, May 20, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
Principal-only stripped security
means a class of mortgage-backed or
asset-backed security that is allocated
only the principal payments made on
the underlying mortgages or loans and
receives no interest payments.
Total capital shall have the meaning
set forth in § 1229.1 of this chapter.
§ 1267.2 Authorized investments and
transactions.
(a) In addition to assets enumerated in
parts 1266 and 955 of this title and
subject to the applicable limitations set
forth in this part, and in part 1272 of
this chapter, each Bank may invest in:
(1) Obligations of the United States;
(2) Deposits in banks or trust
companies;
(3) Obligations, participations or other
instruments of, or issued by, the Federal
National Mortgage Association or the
Government National Mortgage
Association;
(4) Mortgages, obligations, or other
securities that are, or ever have been,
sold by the Federal Home Loan
Mortgage Corporation pursuant to
section 305 or 306 of the Federal Home
Loan Mortgage Corporation Act (12
U.S.C. 1454 or 1455);
(5) Stock, obligations, or other
securities of any small business
investment company formed pursuant
to 15 U.S.C. 681, to the extent such
investment is made for purposes of
aiding members of the Bank; and
(6) Instruments that the Bank has
determined are permissible investments
for fiduciary or trust funds under the
laws of the state in which the Bank is
located.
(b) Subject to any applicable
limitations set forth in this part and in
part 1272 of this chapter, a Bank also
may enter into the following types of
transactions:
(1) Derivative contracts;
(2) Standby letters of credit, pursuant
to the requirements of part 1269 of this
title;
(3) Forward asset purchases and sales;
(4) Commitments to make advances;
and
(5) Commitments to make or purchase
other loans.
emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with RULES
§ 1267.3 Prohibited investments and
prudential rules.
(a) Prohibited investments. A Bank
may not invest in:
(1) Instruments that provide an
ownership interest in an entity, except
for investments described in § 1265.3(e)
and (f) of this chapter;
(2) Instruments issued by non-United
States entities, except United States
branches and agency offices of foreign
commercial banks;
VerDate Mar<15>2010
15:03 May 19, 2011
Jkt 223001
(3) Debt instruments that are not rated
as investment grade, except:
(i) Investments described in
§ 1265.3(e) of this chapter; and
(ii) Debt instruments that were
downgraded to a below investment
grade rating after acquisition by the
Bank;
(4) Whole mortgages or other whole
loans, or interests in mortgages or loans,
except:
(i) Acquired member assets;
(ii) Investments described in
§ 1265.3(e) of this title;
(iii) Marketable direct obligations of
state, local, or Tribal government units
or agencies, having at least the second
highest credit rating from an NRSRO,
where the purchase of such obligations
by the Bank provides to the issuer the
customized terms, necessary liquidity,
or favorable pricing required to generate
needed funding for housing or
community lending;
(iv) Mortgage-backed securities, or
asset-backed securities collateralized by
manufactured housing loans or home
equity loans, that meet the definition of
the term ‘‘securities’’ under 15 U.S.C.
77b(a)(1) and are not otherwise
prohibited under paragraphs (a)(5)
through (a)(7) of this section, and
(v) Loans held or acquired pursuant to
section 12(b) of the Bank Act (12 U.S.C.
1432(b)).
(5) Residual interest and interest
accrual classes of securities;
(6) Interest-only and principal-only
stripped securities; and
(7) Fixed rate mortgage-backed
securities or eligible asset-backed
securities or floating rate mortgagebacked securities or eligible assetbacked securities that on the trade date
are at rates equal to their contractual
cap, with average lives that vary more
than six years under an assumed
instantaneous interest rate change of
300 basis points, unless the instrument
qualifies as an acquired member asset
under part 955 of this title.
(b) Foreign currency or commodity
positions prohibited. A Bank may not
take a position in any commodity or
foreign currency. The Banks may issue
consolidated obligations denominated
in a currency other than U.S. Dollars or
linked to equity or commodity prices,
provided that the Banks meet the
requirements of § 1270.9(d) of this
chapter, and all other applicable
requirements related to issuing
consolidated obligations.
(c) Limits on certain investments.—(1)
A purchase, otherwise authorized under
this part, of mortgage-backed securities
or asset-backed securities, may not
cause the aggregate value of all such
securities held by the Bank to exceed
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
300 percent of the Bank’s total capital.
For purposes of this limitation, such
aggregate value will be measured as of
the transaction trade date for such
purchase, and total capital will be the
most recent amount reported by a Bank
to FHFA. A Bank will not be required
to divest securities solely to bring the
level of its holdings into compliance
with the limits of this paragraph,
provided that the original purchase of
the securities complied with the limits
in this paragraph.
(2) A Bank’s purchase of any
mortgage-backed or asset-backed
security may not cause the value of its
total holdings of mortgage-backed and
asset-backed securities, measured as of
the transaction trade date for such
purchase, to increase in any calendar
quarter by more than 50 percent of its
total capital as of the beginning of such
quarter.
(3) For purposes of applying the limits
under this paragraph (c), the value of
relevant mortgage-backed or assetbacked securities shall be calculated
based on amortized historical costs for
securities classified as held-to-maturity
or available-for-sale and on fair value for
trading securities.
§ 1267.4 Limitations and prudential
requirements on use of derivative
instruments.
(a) Non-speculative use. Derivative
instruments that do not qualify as
hedging instruments pursuant to GAAP
may be used only if a non-speculative
use is documented by the Bank.
(b) Additional Prohibitions.—(1) A
Bank may not enter into interest rate
swaps that amortize according to
behavior of instruments described in
§ 1267.3(a)(5) or (6) of this part.
(2) A Bank may not enter into indexed
principal swaps that have average lives
that vary by more than six years under
an assumed instantaneous change in
interest rates of 300 basis points, unless
they are entered into in conjunction
with the issuance of consolidated
obligations or the purchase of
permissible investments or entry into a
permissible transaction in which all
interest rate risk is passed through to the
investor or counterparty.
(c) Documentation requirements.—(1)
Derivative transactions with a single
counterparty shall be governed by a
single master agreement when
practicable.
(2) A Bank’s agreement with the
counterparty for over-the-counter
derivative contracts shall include:
(i) A requirement that market value
determinations and subsequent
adjustments of collateral be made at
least on a monthly basis;
E:\FR\FM\20MYR1.SGM
20MYR1
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 98 / Friday, May 20, 2011 / Rules and Regulations
(ii) A statement that failure of a
counterparty to meet a collateral call
will result in an early termination event;
(iii) A description of early termination
pricing and methodology, with the
methodology reflecting a reasonable
estimate of the market value of the overthe-counter derivative contract at
termination (standard International
Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc.
language relative to early termination
pricing and methodology may be used
to satisfy this requirement); and
(iv) A requirement that the Bank’s
consent be obtained prior to the transfer
of an agreement or contract by a
counterparty.
§ 1267.5 Risk-based capital requirements
for investments.
Any Bank which is not subject to the
capital requirements set forth in part
932 of this title shall hold retained
earnings plus general allowance for
losses as support for the credit risk of all
investments that are not rated by an
NRSRO, or are rated or have a putative
rating below the second highest credit
rating, in an amount equal to or greater
than the outstanding balance of the
investments multiplied by:
(a) A factor associated with the credit
rating of the investments as determined
by FHFA on a case-by-case basis for
rated assets to be sufficient to raise the
credit quality of the asset to the second
highest credit rating category; and
(b) 0.08 for assets having neither a
putative nor actual rating.
Dated: May 13, 2011.
Edward J. DeMarco,
Acting Director, Federal Housing Finance
Agency.
FDA is reclassifying the topical oxygen
chamber for extremities (TOCE) from
class III to class II. The document
published inadvertently used outdated
contact information. This document
corrects that error.
DATES: Effective May 25, 2011.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Charles N. Durfor, Center for Devices
and Radiological Health, Food and Drug
Administration, 10903 New Hampshire
Ave., Bldg. 66, Rm. G424, Silver Spring,
MD 20993–0002, 301–796–6438.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In FR Doc.
2011–9899 appearing on page 22805 in
the Federal Register of Monday, April
25, 2011, the following correction is
made: 1. On page 22805, in the third
column, the FOR FURTHER INFORMATION
CONTACT section is corrected to read as
follows:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Charles
N. Durfor, Center for Devices and
Radiological Health, Food and Drug
Administration, Bldg. 66, Rm. G424, 10903
New Hampshire Ave., Silver Spring, MD
20993–0002, 301–796–6438.
Dated: May 17, 2011.
Nancy K. Stade,
Deputy Director for Policy, Center for Devices
and Radiological Health.
[FR Doc. 2011–12410 Filed 5–19–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4160–01–P
ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
AGENCY
40 CFR Part 52
[EPA–R09–OAR–2011–0030; FRL–9308–3]
Revisions to the California State
Implementation Plan, Mojave Desert
Air Quality Management District
[FR Doc. 2011–12358 Filed 5–19–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8070–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA).
ACTION: Direct final rule.
Food and Drug Administration
SUMMARY:
AGENCY:
21 CFR Part 878
[Docket No. FDA–2006–N–0045; Formerly
Docket No. 2006N–0109]
Medical Devices; Reclassification of
the Topical Oxygen Chamber for
Extremities; Correction
emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with RULES
AGENCY:
Food and Drug Administration,
HHS.
ACTION:
Final rule; correction.
The Food and Drug
Administration (FDA) is correcting a
final rule that appeared in the Federal
Register of April 25, 2011 (76 FR
22805). The document announced that
SUMMARY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
15:03 May 19, 2011
Jkt 223001
EPA is taking direct final
action to approve revisions to the
Mojave Desert Air Quality Management
District (MDAQMD) portion of the
California State Implementation Plan
(SIP). These revisions concern negative
declarations for volatile organic
compound (VOC) source categories for
the MDAQMD. We are approving these
negative declarations under the Clean
Air Act as amended in 1990 (CAA or the
Act).
DATES: This rule is effective on July 19,
2011 without further notice, unless EPA
receives adverse comments by June 20,
2011. If we receive such comments, we
will publish a timely withdrawal in the
Federal Register to notify the public
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
29153
that this direct final rule will not take
effect.
ADDRESSES: Submit comments,
identified by docket number EPA–R09–
OAR–2011–0030, by one of the
following methods:
1. Federal eRulemaking Portal:
https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
on-line instructions.
2. E-mail: steckel.andrew@epa.gov.
3. Mail or deliver: Andrew Steckel
(Air-4), U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency Region IX, 75 Hawthorne Street,
San Francisco, CA 94105–3901.
Instructions: All comments will be
included in the public docket without
change and may be made available
online at https://www.regulations.gov,
including any personal information
provided, unless the comment includes
Confidential Business Information (CBI)
or other information whose disclosure is
restricted by statute. Information that
you consider CBI or otherwise protected
should be clearly identified as such and
should not be submitted through
https://www.regulations.gov or e-mail.
https://www.regulations.gov is an
‘‘anonymous access’’ system, and EPA
will not know your identity or contact
information unless you provide it in the
body of your comment. If you send
e-mail directly to EPA, your e-mail
address will be automatically captured
and included as part of the public
comment. If EPA cannot read your
comment due to technical difficulties
and cannot contact you for clarification,
EPA may not be able to consider your
comment.
Docket: The index to the docket for
this action is available electronically at
https://www.regulations.gov and in hard
copy at EPA Region IX, 75 Hawthorne
Street, San Francisco, California. While
all documents in the docket are listed in
the index, some information may be
publicly available only at the hard copy
location (e.g., copyrighted material), and
some may not be publicly available in
either location (e.g., CBI). To inspect the
hard copy materials, please schedule an
appointment during normal business
hours with the contact listed in the FOR
FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT section.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Cynthia Allen, EPA Region IX,
(415) 947–4120, allen.cynthia@epa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Throughout this document, ‘‘we,’’ ‘‘us’’
and ‘‘our’’ refer to EPA.
Table of Contents
I. The State’s Submittal
A. What negative declarations did the State
submit?
B. Are there other versions of these
negative declarations?
E:\FR\FM\20MYR1.SGM
20MYR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 98 (Friday, May 20, 2011)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 29147-29153]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-12358]
========================================================================
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains regulatory documents
having general applicability and legal effect, most of which are keyed
to and codified in the Code of Federal Regulations, which is published
under 50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by the Superintendent of Documents.
Prices of new books are listed in the first FEDERAL REGISTER issue of each
week.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 98 / Friday, May 20, 2011 / Rules and
Regulations
[[Page 29147]]
FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE BOARD
12 CFR Part 956
FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE AGENCY
12 CFR Part 1267
RIN 2590-AA32
Federal Home Loan Bank Investments
AGENCY: Federal Housing Finance Agency; Federal Housing Finance Board.
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) is re-organizing and
re-adopting existing investment regulations that apply to the Federal
Home Loan Banks (Banks) and that were previously adopted by the Federal
Housing Finance Board (Finance Board). The regulation is being adopted
as a new part in FHFA's regulations. As part of this rulemaking, FHFA
will incorporate limits on the Banks' investment in mortgage-backed
securities (MBS) and certain asset-backed securities (ABS) that were
previously set forth in the Finance Board's Financial Management Policy
(FMP). The FMP will terminate as of the effective date of this rule.
DATES: This rule is effective on June 20, 2011.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Christina Muradian, Division of
Federal Home Loan Bank Regulation, Federal Housing Finance Agency, 202-
408-2584, 1625 Eye Street, NW., Washington, DC 20006; or Thomas E.
Joseph, Senior Attorney-Advisor, 202-414-3095, Office of General
Counsel, Federal Housing Finance Agency, Fourth Floor, 1700 G Street,
NW., Washington, DC 20552. The telephone number for the
Telecommunications Device for the Deaf is (800) 877-8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
A. Creation of the Federal Housing Finance Agency and Recent
Legislation
Effective July 30, 2008, the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of
2008 (HERA), Public Law 110-289, 122 Stat. 2654, created FHFA as a new
independent agency of the Federal Government, and transferred to FHFA
the supervisory and oversight responsibilities of the Office of Federal
Housing Enterprise Oversight (OFHEO) over the Enterprises, the
supervisory and oversight responsibilities of the Federal Housing
Finance Board (Finance Board) over the Banks and the Office of Finance
(OF) (which acts as the Banks' fiscal agent) and certain functions of
the Department of Housing and Urban Development. See id. at section
1101, 122 Stat. 2661-62. FHFA is responsible for ensuring that the
Enterprises and the Banks operate in a safe and sound manner, including
that they maintain adequate capital and internal controls, that their
activities foster liquid, efficient, competitive and resilient national
housing finance markets, and that they carry out their public policy
missions through authorized activities. See id. at section 1102, 122
Stat. 2663-64. The Enterprises, the Banks, and the OF continue to
operate under regulations promulgated by OFHEO and the Finance Board
until such regulations are superseded by regulations issued by FHFA.
See id. at sections 1302, 1312, 122 Stat. 2795, 2798.
B. Investment Requirements and the FMP
Under sections 11(g), 11(h) and 16(a) of the Bank Act, 12 U.S.C.
1431(g), 1431(h), 1436(a), a Bank is specifically authorized, subject
to the rules of FHFA, to invest in: (1) Obligations of the United
States; (2) deposits in banks and trust companies; (3) obligations,
participations or other instruments of, or issued by, Fannie Mae or
Government National Mortgage Association (Ginnie Mae); (4) mortgages,
obligations or other securities that are or ever have been sold by
Freddie Mac; (5) stock of Fannie Mae; (6) stock, obligations or other
securities of any small business investment company (SBIC) formed
pursuant to 15 U.S.C. 681, to the extent the investment is made for
purposes of aiding a Bank member; and (7) instruments that a Bank has
determined are permissible investments for fiduciary and trust funds
under the laws of the state in which the Bank is located. Part 956 of
the Finance Board regulations authorized the Banks to invest in all the
instruments specifically identified in the statute, except for stock in
Fannie Mae, subject to certain safety and soundness limitations that
are also set forth in the regulation. See 12 CFR 956.2 and 956.3. The
part 956 regulations also allowed the Banks to enter into derivative
transactions, standby letters of credit which conform to other
regulations, forward asset purchases and sales and commitments to make
advances or commitments to make or purchase other loans. See 12 CFR
956.5. The regulations further allowed the Banks to enter into
derivative contracts only for hedging or other documented, non-
speculative purposes, such as intermediating derivative transactions
for members, and subjected the Banks to prudential and safety and
soundness requirements with regard to derivative transactions. See 12
CFR 956.6.
The FMP evolved from a series of policies and guidelines initially
adopted by the former Federal Home Loan Bank Board, predecessor agency
to the Finance Board, in the 1970s and revised a number of times
thereafter. The Finance Board adopted the FMP in 1991, consolidating
into one document the previously separate policies on funds management,
hedging and interest-rate swaps, and adding new guidelines on the
management of unsecured credit and interest-rate risk.\1\ Prior to the
adoption of the part 956 regulations in 2000, the FMP governed how the
Banks implemented their financial management strategies by specifying
the types of investments the Banks could purchase. See Proposed Rule:
Federal Home Loan Bank Acquired Member Assets, Core Mission Activities,
Investments and Advances, 65 FR 25676, 25686 (May 3, 2000). The FMP
also established guidelines relating to the funding and hedging
practices of the Banks, the management of their credit, interest-rate,
and liquidity risks, and the liquidity requirements for the
[[Page 29148]]
Banks in addition to those required by statute.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ See Fin. Bd. Res. No. 96-45 (July 3, 1996), as amended by
Fin. Bd. Res. No. 96-90 (Dec. 6, 1996), Fin. Bd. Res. No. 97-05
(Jan. 14, 1997), and Fin. Bd. Res. No. 97-86 (Dec. 17, 1997). See
also 62 FR 13146 (Mar. 19, 1997)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Beginning in 2000, many of the provisions contained in the FMP were
superseded by regulations adopted by the Finance Board including
regulations that implemented the new capital structure for the Banks
that had been mandated by the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act of 1999, Public
Law No. 106-102, 113 Stat. 1338 (Nov. 12, 1999) (GLB Act). Among other
things, the new capital structure incorporated risk-based capital
requirements to support the risks in the Banks' activities, and
therefore eliminated the need for most of the FMP restrictions on
investments. See 12 CFR part 932. In approving the capital plans that
each Bank was required to adopt under provisions of the GLB Act, the
Finance Board issued separate orders providing that upon a Bank's
implementation of its capital plan and its full coverage by the capital
regime in part 932 of the regulations, the Bank would be exempted from
future compliance with all provisions of the FMP except for a few
specific restrictions related to the Bank's investment in mortgage-
backed and certain asset-backed securities along with some related
restrictions on entering into some derivative transactions.\2\ See,
e.g., Fin. Bd. Res. No. 2002-11 (Mar. 13, 2002). Currently, all the
Banks but the Federal Home Loan Bank of Chicago (Chicago Bank) have
implemented their capital plans and are fully subject to the part 932
capital provisions.\3\ Thus, only a few of the provisions of the FMP
remain applicable to all the Banks.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ The restrictions in question are found in sections II.C.2.,
3., 4. and 5. and section V.C.5. of the FMP. These limits, among
other things, prohibit investment in residual interest and interest
accrual classes of securities and in interest-only and principal-
only stripped securities, and limit a Bank's investment in MBS and
ABS to 300 percent of a Bank's total capital. The provisions also
limit an increase in a Bank's holdings of MBS and ABS to no more
than 50 percent of its total capital in any calendar quarter. The
restrictions also prohibit the Bank from entering into swap
transactions that would amortize similar to residual interest or
interest accrual classes of securities or to interest-only and
principal-only stripped securities.
In March 2008, the Finance Board temporarily expanded the Banks'
authority to invest in MBS guaranteed by the Enterprises by an
additional three times total capital, subject to certain conditions.
See Fin. Bd. Res. No. 2008-08 (Mar. 24, 2008). The temporary
authority expired on March 31, 2010. The Finance Board believed that
the temporary increase in the Banks' investment authority would help
address severe liquidity and other constraints that were affecting
the housing finance markets in early 2008.
\3\ In addition to the FMP provisions already discussed and
applicable to all the Banks, the Chicago Bank remains subject to FMP
provisions related to prudential limits on investments (other than
MBS or ABS) and interest rate risk guidelines. The latter have been
subsumed into the risk management and hedging guidelines that the
Chicago Bank was required to submit for review and approval (and
update as necessary) under Article III of the Consent Order to Cease
and Desist entered into with the Finance Board on October 10, 2007,
and which remains in effect. See 2007-SUP-01.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Considerations of Differences Between the Banks and the Enterprises
Section 1201 of HERA requires the Director, when promulgating
regulations relating to the Banks, to consider the following
differences between the Banks and the Enterprises: Cooperative
ownership structure; mission of providing liquidity to members;
affordable housing and community development mission; capital
structure; and joint and several liability. See section 1201 Public Law
110-289, 122 Stat. 2782-83 (amending 12 U.S.C. 4513). The Director also
may consider any other differences that are deemed appropriate. In
preparing this rule, FHFA considered the differences between the Banks
and the Enterprises as they relate to the above factors.
Section 1201 also specifically provides that its requirements shall
not apply if the Director is reissuing any regulation, advisory
document or examination guidance previously issued by the Finance
Board. While most of this final rule is re-issuance of existing Finance
Board regulations, the rule also incorporates into regulations
provisions from the FMP. The FMP itself is not a substantive rule or
interpretative guidance on existing regulations issued by the Finance
Board, but instead has been described as a list of general guidelines.
See, Texas Savings. v. Federal Housing Finance Bd., 201 F.3d 551, 556
(5th Cir., 2000). Therefore, incorporation of the FMP guidelines into
regulations does not firmly fit within the section 1201 exception for
reissuance of existing Finance Board rules or advisory documents.
FHFA therefore has considered the differences between the Banks and
the Enterprises as required by section 1201 of HERA in developing this
final rule. As part of its proposed rulemaking, FHFA also specifically
requested comments from the public about whether differences related to
these factors should result in any revisions to the proposal, but
received no specific comments in response to that request.
II. The Final Rule
A. The Proposed Rule
On May 4, 2010, FHFA published for comment a proposed rule that
would re-organize the investment regulation and re-adopt it as part
1267 of FHFA's regulations. It also would have incorporated into the
rule certain limits that are now set forth in the FMP and made other
conforming changes. See Proposed Rule: Federal Home Loan Bank
Investments, 75 FR 23631 (May 4, 2010) (hereinafter Proposed Rule). The
rule, as proposed, would not have substantively altered regulatory
requirements applicable to Bank investments.
In the Supplementary Information to the proposed rule, however,
FHFA noted its concern with the financial condition of some Banks and
the negative performance of the Banks' private-label MBS (PLMBS), in
part because the Banks' investment policies and pre-purchase analytics
were deficient. As a result, FHFA requested comments on whether it
should adopt additional restrictions, or lower the overall limit, on
the Banks' investment in MBS generally, and in PLMBS in particular, as
part of the final rule. Id. at 23633-34. Among other things FHFA asked
if there should be a separate limit or additional restriction on the
purchase of PLMBS (e.g., a limit of one or two times capital, or a
separate limit linked to retained earnings or some other basis),
including whether FHFA should prohibit the purchase of PLMBS in the
final rule, or if FHFA should restrict purchases of PLMBS based on
collateral characteristics. Id.
FHFA received 10 comment letters on the proposed rule. Nine of the
Banks submitted comments, and one comment letter was submitted by a
trade association. Except for a suggested clarification made by some of
the Banks on the calculation of the proposed 300 percent of capital
investment limit for MBS, the comments mainly addressed FHFA's
questions concerning additional restrictions on MBS investment. The
letters also provided some general comments on the Banks' authority to
invest in MBS. The comments are discussed more fully below.
B. Final Rule Provisions
1. Incorporation of the FMP Provisions Into the Investment Regulation
Most comments indicated that it was important for the Banks to
maintain their current authority to invest in MBS. These commenters
believed that the Banks' investment in MBS was consistent with the
Banks' mission and provided support for mortgage market liquidity and
stability especially in the period of current market stress. A number
of commenters also thought that continued Bank investment in PLMBS
could play a limited but important role in helping to revive the
private label
[[Page 29149]]
secondary mortgage market. One Bank agreed with FHFA's stated concern
with the performance of some Banks' MBS investment portfolios and
believed it was important to continue to limit Bank investment in MBS
and require adequate retained earnings as a cushion against potential
losses from such investments. Another Bank specifically supported a
prohibition on future investment in PLMBS investment, although most
other comment letters specifically objected to such a ban.
Almost all comments also supported the incorporation of the FMP
limits, including the 300 percent of capital limit, into the investment
rule. A number of commenters also felt that it would be premature to
institute additional restrictions on Banks' MBS investment at this
time, given the extensive regulatory and market changes now taking
place. One commenter, however, believed the 300 percent of capital
limit on MBS investment was inflexible and out of date and believed it
should be reconsidered or eliminated, especially when applied to
investment in agency MBS.
FHFA also received a number of comments supporting a limit on MBS
investment based on retained earnings to either supplement or replace
the current limit based on a Bank's total capital. Some comments
suggested that FHFA undertake a study to identify an appropriate
retained earnings limit or that FHFA consider such a limit only as part
of a future rulemaking.
A number of commenters supported incorporating limits on MBS based
on the underlying characteristics of the loans if such requirements
incorporated the principles in FHFA Advisory Bulletins 2007-AB-01 and
2008-AB-02 \4\ and in the interagency guidance published by Federal
banking regulators, Interagency Guidance on Nontraditional Mortgage
Product Risks (71 FR 58609 (Oct. 4, 2006)), and Statement on Subprime
Mortgage Lending (72 FR 37569 (July 10, 2007)). Other commenters,
however, felt that given the new standards being implemented for the
secondary mortgage markets and the changes that this market is expected
to undergo, it ultimately may prove unnecessary to incorporate this
prior guidance into the regulation. Nevertheless, commenters felt that
collateral backing future Bank purchases of MBS should be expected to
comply with the highest standards of prudent and sustainable lending
and that the current FHFA Advisory Bulletins on this issue should
remain in effect.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Advisory Bulletin 2007-AB-01 (Apr. 12, 2007) established
expectations for the Banks' pre-purchase analysis and periodic
reviews of MBS investments. It advised the Banks' boards of
directors to establish: (1) Limits on the level of MBS with
underlying nontraditional or subprime mortgage collateral; (2)
requirements for the level of credit protection for particular
credit tranches when purchased at the time of original issuance of
the security, and (3) limits on concentrations by geographic area,
issuer, servicer, and size. Advisory Bulletin 2008-AB-02 (July 1,
2008) set forth the expectation that the Banks' purchases of PLMBS
would be limited to securities in which the underlying mortgage
loans complied with all aspects of the Federal banking agencies'
Interagency Guidance on Nontraditional Mortgage Product Risks, and
Statement on Subprime Mortgage Lending.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After consideration of all these comments, FHFA has determined to
adopt the 300 percent of capital limit from the FMP into its
regulations. Contrary to suggestions that the 300 percent of capital
limit was inflexible and out-dated, FHFA believes the limit reasonably
serves to control Bank investment activity that does not directly
advance the Banks' primary statutory mission of making advances to
members, as well as limit the potential losses that can arise from this
type of investment. As FHFA noted when proposing this rule, this FMP
limit addressed both mission and safety and soundness concerns, 75 FR
at 23633, and FHFA believes that it would be reasonable to adopt this
longstanding limit into its regulations at this time in consideration
of these concerns.
New Sec. 1267.3(c)(1) incorporates the restriction in section
II.C.2 of the FMP that limited a Bank's level of investment in
authorized MBS or ABS to 300 percent of its total capital.\5\ It
clarifies that a Bank is not required to divest securities solely to
bring the level of its holdings into compliance with the limit,
provided that the original purchase of the securities complied with
these limits. New Sec. 1267.3(c)(2) further restricts a Bank's
purchase of authorized MBS or ABS in any calendar quarter such that a
Bank's total holdings of allowable MBS cannot increase by more than 50
percent of its total capital as of the beginning of such quarter, a
limit that also was set forth in section II.C.2 of the FMP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ As adopted, Sec. 1267.3(c)(1) refers to MBS or ABS
``otherwise authorized under this part''. FHFA intends this
reference to encompass future purchases of agency or government
guaranteed MBS or ABS that are authorized under part 1267 as well as
Banks' existing holdings of MBS or ABS to the extent that they were
authorized by part 956. Thus, in calculating compliance with the
limits under Sec. 1267.3(c), Banks will be expected to include all
MBS and ABS purchased and currently held under the authority that
had existed in part 956.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Although FHFA is adopting the 300 percent of capital limit as part
of its regulations and has determined not to place additional limits on
Bank investment in MBS at this time, it continues to have concerns with
Bank investment in MBS from both a safety and soundness and mission
stand point. With regard to the latter issue, despite the suggestions
of some commenters to the contrary, FHFA still questions the extent to
which Bank investment in MBS furthers the System's housing finance
mission. FHFA considers it more appropriate to take into account the
mission aspect of the Bank investment authority overall and not in
segments by addressing only one class of investment.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ An overall re-consideration of the investment authority in
light of the Bank System's mission was also raised by the United
States Department of the Treasury and the United States Department
of Housing and Urban Development in a recent report to Congress:
Similar to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, several of the FHLB[anks]
were allowed to build up large investment portfolios. These
portfolios should be reduced and their composition altered to better
serve the FHLB[anks'] mission of providing liquidity and access to
capital for insured depository institutions. We support FHFA's
efforts to address this issue, and we will work with Congress to
provide clarity to the FHLB[ank's] investment authority.
The Department of the Treasury and U.S. Department of Housing
and Urban Development, ``Reforming America's Housing Finance Market:
A Report to Congress,'' p. 15 (Feb. 2011).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FHFA is likely, therefore, to reconsider questions related to Bank
investment in MBS as part of a future rulemaking that would address and
consider all aspects of the Banks' investment authority, including the
mission relevance of various types of investments that are allowed
under existing rules. Such considerations are beyond this current
rulemaking, which was more modest in its scope and intended only to
incorporate the remaining provisions of the FMP into the regulations
and to transfer the existing Finance Board's investment rules into the
FHFA's regulations.
FHFA also is incorporating into the regulations the other
restrictions on MBS investment now set forth in the FMP, generally as
proposed. Thus, new Sec. 1267.3(a)(5) through (7) sets forth
restrictions found in section II.C.3 through C.5 of the FMP related to
investment in MBS, including the prohibition on investment in residual
interest and interest accrual classes of securities and interest-only
and principal-only stripped MBS. The final rule also adopts new Sec.
1267.4(b) which incorporates the remaining applicable limitations on
derivative transaction found in section V.C.5 of the FMP. These FMP
restrictions prevent the Banks from using derivatives to create
exposures or investments similar to residual interest and interest
accrual
[[Page 29150]]
classes of securities, interest-only and principal-only stripped MBS
and ABS, or other investments that are currently prohibited by Section
II.C of the FMP (and continue to be prohibited by new Sec.
1267.3(a)(5) through (7)).
2. Clarification of the Calculation of the 300 Percent of Capital Limit
on MBS
Seven commenters requested that the wording of the provision
adopting the 300 percent of capital limit be amended to clarify how the
limit will be calculated. Specifically, the commenters requested that
the value of the securities in question be based on amortized
historical cost for held-to-maturity (HTM) and available-for-sale (AFS)
securities and fair value for trading securities, and total capital
used for the calculation of the limit should be as defined in FHFA
regulation Sec. 1229.1. Section 1267.1 of the rule, both as proposed
and as being adopted, already defines total capital as having the same
meaning as set forth in Sec. 1229.1 of FHFA regulations and thus, FHFA
already made clear that the investment limits in Sec. 1267.3(c) are to
be calculated based on regulatory total capital.\7\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ Section 1229.1 defines ``total capital'' as:
The sum of the Bank's permanent capital, the amount paid-in for
its Class A stock, the amount of any general allowances for losses,
and the amount of any other instruments identified in a Bank's
capital plan that the Director has determined to be available to
absorb losses incurred by such Bank. For a Bank that has issued
neither Class A nor Class B stock, the Bank's total capital shall be
the measure of capital used to determine compliance with its minimum
capital requirement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After considering the comments, FHFA also agrees that it would be
appropriate to clarify how the value of relevant MBS and ABS will be
calculated for purposes of the limit and, therefore, is adopting the
suggestions of the commenters in Sec. 1267.3(c)(3) of the final rule.
This provision provides that for purposes of applying the limits in
Sec. 1267.3(c), the value of a Bank's MBS and ABS shall be calculated
based on amortized historical costs for securities classified as HTM or
AFS \8\ and on fair value for trading securities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ The amortized historical cost for the HTM and AFS securities
would generally be calculated as the sum of the initial investment,
less cash collected, less write-downs plus yield accreted to date.
See Master Glossary of FASB Accounting Standards Codification 2009.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The approach being adopted in the final rule differs somewhat from
how these securities would be valued under generally accepted
accounting principles (GAAP) in that under GAAP, AFS securities would
be recorded at fair value, with changes in value (not related to other-
than-temporary credit impairment charges) run through accumulated other
comprehensive income (AOCI).\9\ However, because the Bank's regulatory
total capital is not adjusted for AOCI, the total capital component of
the limit would not reflect changes in the value of AFS. This can lead
to certain paradoxical results in applying the limit, if GAAP standards
were used to value the ASF securities when applying the investment
limit.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ While the FMP does not specify how securities should be
valued for purposes of the three times capital limit, this limit has
generally been applied based on the carrying value of the securities
calculated under GAAP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For example, as the market value of AFS securities declines, the
Banks would have more ``room'' under the limit to make new investments
in MBS/ABS relative to the actual pay down in their current portfolio
as a result of such market value losses. At the same time, in periods
of rising market values, the Banks' investment limits would become more
restrictive relative to the pay down in the portfolio, restricting
their ability to replace their existing investments as they pay down.
Similarly, the same security held by different Banks would be valued
differently in the calculation of the limit depending on whether a Bank
classifies the security as HTM or AFS, creating an opportunity to game
the limit. The clarification being adopted should help eliminate these
outcomes as well as provide greater certainty for Banks in planning and
implementing long term investment strategies, as the limit and the
Banks' abilities to invest in allowable MBS/ABS will not be affected by
(non-credit related) price volatility in securities classified as AFS.
FHFA has also added language to Sec. 1267.3(c)(1) and Sec.
1267.3(c)(2) to clarify that for purposes of determining compliance
with the restrictions in these sections, the Banks shall determine the
aggregate value of its investment in MBS and ABS as of the transaction
trade date for any new purchase of such securities.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ The language in Sec. 1267(c)(1) has also been revised to
clarify that for purposes of determining compliance with this
provision total capital shall be based on the amount most recently
reported by a Bank to FHFA. Currently, the Banks report their
regulatory total capital to FHFA in their monthly call reports.
These clarifications are consistent with how compliance had been
determined under the FMP. No further clarification was needed with
regard to the measure of total capital in Sec. 1267(c)(2), given
that the provision, as proposed and adopted, states clearly that
compliance is determined based on total capital as of the beginning
of each calendar quarter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Reorganization of the Investment Rule
The final rule also reorganizes the investment regulation as
proposed. The final rule will combine into new Sec. 1267.2 former
Sec. 956.2 and Sec. 956.5, which respectively provided a list of
authorized investments and authorization for derivative and other
transactions. This will consolidate all authority for investments and
other transactions into a single section but does not otherwise
substantially alter the former part 956 provisions. The final rule will
also carry over former Sec. 956.3, which set forth a list of
prohibited investments and other prudential requirements, as new Sec.
1267.3, and incorporate into this new section the restrictions on MBS
investment from the FMP, as previously highlighted. It will adopt
former Sec. 956.6 as new Sec. 1267.4, and former Sec. 956.4 as new
Sec. 1267.5.
4. References to Credit Ratings and Credit Rating Organizations
Section 939A of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act) requires Federal agencies to review
regulations that require the use of an assessment of the credit-
worthiness of a security or money market instrument, or any references
to, or requirements in, such regulations regarding credit ratings
issued by NRSROs, and to remove such references or requirements. See
section 939A, Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1887 (July 21, 2010)). This
provision also requires an agency, to the extent feasible, to adopt
uniform standards of credit-worthiness in its regulations, taking into
account the entities regulated by it and the purpose for which such
regulated entities would rely on the credit-worthiness standard. Id.
The Proposed Rule was published prior to the passage of the Dodd-
Frank Act. FHFA did not seek comment on replacing references to or
requirements based on specific credit ratings in those investment rules
that it proposed to carry over from the existing Finance Board
regulations. Among those references or requirements are those included
in Sec. 1267.3(a)(3), Sec. 1267.3(a)(4)(iii) and Sec. 1267.5, as
well as certain definitions in Sec. 1267.1. Such references and
requirements will need to be removed pursuant to section 939A of the
Dodd-Frank Act.
To that end, FHFA recently issued an advance notice of proposed
rulemaking (ANPR) that sought comments on a range of issues related to
implementation of section 939A of the Dodd-Frank Act, including what
standards would be appropriate to replace existing credit rating
references and requirements in the investment rule. See Advance Notice
of Proposed Rulemaking; Alternatives to Use of Credit Ratings in
Regulations Governing the Federal National Mortgage
[[Page 29151]]
Association, the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation and the Federal
Home Loan Banks, 76 FR 5292, 5295 (Jan. 31, 2011). FHFA has determined
to carry over the investment rules as proposed on a temporary basis,
pending completion of the ANPR process, rather than attempt to adopt
changes at this time to provisions in part 1267 that continue to
reference specific credit ratings or base their requirements on such
ratings. FHFA believes that this approach will best allow it to
implement the Dodd-Frank requirements that it adopt uniform standards
of credit-worthiness in its regulations while not delaying the
completion of this rulemaking process. Thus, FHFA will propose changes
to relevant sections of part 1267 as part of a future rulemaking
designed to remove references to, or requirements based on, specific
credit ratings, as required by the Dodd-Frank Act.
5. Cancellation of the FMP
Finally, FHFA confirms that the FMP is hereby cancelled and
rescinded as of the effective date of this final rule, and thereafter,
none of its provisions will be applicable to any Bank.
III. Paperwork Reduction Act
The rule does not contain any collections of information pursuant
to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
Therefore, FHFA has not submitted any information to the Office of
Management and Budget for review.
IV. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The rule applies only to the Banks, which do not come within the
meaning of small entities as defined in the Regulatory Flexibility Act
(RFA). See 5 U.S.C. 601(6). Therefore, in accordance with section
605(b) of the RFA, FHFA certifies that this final rule will not have
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 956
Federal home loan banks, Investments.
12 CFR Part 1267
Community development, Credit, Federal home loan bank, Housing,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Accordingly, for reasons stated in the preamble and under the
authority of 12 U.S.C. 1429, 1430, 1430b, 1431, 1436, 4511, 4513, 4526,
FHFA is amending subchapter G of chapter IX and subchapter D of chapter
XII of title 12 of the Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
CHAPTER IX--FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE BOARD
Subchapter G--Federal Home Loan Bank Assets and Off-Balance Sheet Items
PART 956--[REMOVED]
0
1. Remove part 956.
CHAPTER XII--FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE AGENCY
Subchapter D--Federal Home Loan Banks
0
2. Add part 1267 to subchapter D to read as follows:
PART 1267--FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK INVESTMENTS
Sec.
1267.1 Definitions.
1267.2 Authorized investments and transactions.
1267.3 Prohibited investments and prudential rules.
1267.4 Limitations and prudential requirements on use of derivative
instruments.
1267.5 Risk-based capital requirements for investments.
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1429, 1430, 1430b, 1431, 1436, 4511, 4513,
4526.
Sec. 1267.1 Definitions.
As used in this part:
Asset-backed security means a debt instrument backed by loans, but
does not include debt instruments that meet the definition of a
mortgage-backed security.
Bank, written in title case, means a Federal Home Loan Bank
established under section 12 of the Bank Act, as amended (12 U.S.C.
1432).
Bank Act means the Federal Home Loan Bank Act, as amended (12
U.S.C. 1421 through 1449).
Consolidated obligation means any bond, debenture or note on which
the Banks are jointly and severally liable and which was issued under
section 11 of the Bank Act (12 U.S.C. 1431) and in accordance with any
implementing regulations, whether or not such instrument was originally
issued jointly by the Banks or by the Federal Housing Finance Board on
behalf of the Banks.
Deposits in banks or trust companies means:
(1) A deposit in another Bank;
(2) A demand account in a Federal Reserve Bank;
(3) A deposit in or sale of Federal funds to:
(i) An insured depository institution, as defined in section 2(9)
of the Bank Act, that is designated by the Bank's board of directors;
(ii) A trust company that is a member of the Federal Reserve System
or insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and is
designated by the Bank's board of directors; or
(iii) A U.S. branch or agency of a foreign Bank as defined in the
International Banking Act of 1978, as amended, (12 U.S.C. 3101 et seq.)
that is subject to supervision of the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System and is designated by the Bank's board of directors.
Derivative contract means generally a financial contract the value
of which is derived from the values of one or more referenced assets,
rates, or indices of asset values, or credit-related events. Derivative
contracts include interest rate derivative contracts, foreign exchange
rate derivative contracts, equity derivative contracts, precious metals
derivative contracts, commodity derivative contracts and credit
derivatives, and any other instruments that pose similar risks.
GAAP means the United States generally accepted accounting
principles.
Indexed principal swap means an interest rate swap agreement in
which the notional principal balance amortizes based upon the
prepayment experience of a specified group of mortgage-backed
securities or asset-backed securities or the behavior of an interest
rate index.
Interest-only stripped security means a class of mortgage-backed or
asset-backed security that is allocated only the interest payments made
on the underlying mortgages or loans and receives no principal
payments.
Investment grade means:
(1) A credit quality rating in one of the four highest credit
rating categories by an NRSRO and not below the fourth highest credit
rating category by any NRSRO; or
(2) If there is no credit quality rating by an NRSRO, a
determination by a Bank that the issuer, asset or instrument is the
credit equivalent of investment grade using credit rating standards
available from an NRSRO or similar standards.
Mortgage-backed security means a security or instrument, including
collateralized mortgage obligations (CMOs), and Real Estate Mortgage
Investment Trusts (REMICS), that represents an interest in, or is
secured by, one or more pools of mortgage loans.
NRSRO means a credit rating organization registered with the
Securities and Exchange Commission as a nationally recognized
statistical rating organization.
[[Page 29152]]
Principal-only stripped security means a class of mortgage-backed
or asset-backed security that is allocated only the principal payments
made on the underlying mortgages or loans and receives no interest
payments.
Total capital shall have the meaning set forth in Sec. 1229.1 of
this chapter.
Sec. 1267.2 Authorized investments and transactions.
(a) In addition to assets enumerated in parts 1266 and 955 of this
title and subject to the applicable limitations set forth in this part,
and in part 1272 of this chapter, each Bank may invest in:
(1) Obligations of the United States;
(2) Deposits in banks or trust companies;
(3) Obligations, participations or other instruments of, or issued
by, the Federal National Mortgage Association or the Government
National Mortgage Association;
(4) Mortgages, obligations, or other securities that are, or ever
have been, sold by the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation pursuant
to section 305 or 306 of the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation Act
(12 U.S.C. 1454 or 1455);
(5) Stock, obligations, or other securities of any small business
investment company formed pursuant to 15 U.S.C. 681, to the extent such
investment is made for purposes of aiding members of the Bank; and
(6) Instruments that the Bank has determined are permissible
investments for fiduciary or trust funds under the laws of the state in
which the Bank is located.
(b) Subject to any applicable limitations set forth in this part
and in part 1272 of this chapter, a Bank also may enter into the
following types of transactions:
(1) Derivative contracts;
(2) Standby letters of credit, pursuant to the requirements of part
1269 of this title;
(3) Forward asset purchases and sales;
(4) Commitments to make advances; and
(5) Commitments to make or purchase other loans.
Sec. 1267.3 Prohibited investments and prudential rules.
(a) Prohibited investments. A Bank may not invest in:
(1) Instruments that provide an ownership interest in an entity,
except for investments described in Sec. 1265.3(e) and (f) of this
chapter;
(2) Instruments issued by non-United States entities, except United
States branches and agency offices of foreign commercial banks;
(3) Debt instruments that are not rated as investment grade,
except:
(i) Investments described in Sec. 1265.3(e) of this chapter; and
(ii) Debt instruments that were downgraded to a below investment
grade rating after acquisition by the Bank;
(4) Whole mortgages or other whole loans, or interests in mortgages
or loans, except:
(i) Acquired member assets;
(ii) Investments described in Sec. 1265.3(e) of this title;
(iii) Marketable direct obligations of state, local, or Tribal
government units or agencies, having at least the second highest credit
rating from an NRSRO, where the purchase of such obligations by the
Bank provides to the issuer the customized terms, necessary liquidity,
or favorable pricing required to generate needed funding for housing or
community lending;
(iv) Mortgage-backed securities, or asset-backed securities
collateralized by manufactured housing loans or home equity loans, that
meet the definition of the term ``securities'' under 15 U.S.C.
77b(a)(1) and are not otherwise prohibited under paragraphs (a)(5)
through (a)(7) of this section, and
(v) Loans held or acquired pursuant to section 12(b) of the Bank
Act (12 U.S.C. 1432(b)).
(5) Residual interest and interest accrual classes of securities;
(6) Interest-only and principal-only stripped securities; and
(7) Fixed rate mortgage-backed securities or eligible asset-backed
securities or floating rate mortgage-backed securities or eligible
asset-backed securities that on the trade date are at rates equal to
their contractual cap, with average lives that vary more than six years
under an assumed instantaneous interest rate change of 300 basis
points, unless the instrument qualifies as an acquired member asset
under part 955 of this title.
(b) Foreign currency or commodity positions prohibited. A Bank may
not take a position in any commodity or foreign currency. The Banks may
issue consolidated obligations denominated in a currency other than
U.S. Dollars or linked to equity or commodity prices, provided that the
Banks meet the requirements of Sec. 1270.9(d) of this chapter, and all
other applicable requirements related to issuing consolidated
obligations.
(c) Limits on certain investments.--(1) A purchase, otherwise
authorized under this part, of mortgage-backed securities or asset-
backed securities, may not cause the aggregate value of all such
securities held by the Bank to exceed 300 percent of the Bank's total
capital. For purposes of this limitation, such aggregate value will be
measured as of the transaction trade date for such purchase, and total
capital will be the most recent amount reported by a Bank to FHFA. A
Bank will not be required to divest securities solely to bring the
level of its holdings into compliance with the limits of this
paragraph, provided that the original purchase of the securities
complied with the limits in this paragraph.
(2) A Bank's purchase of any mortgage-backed or asset-backed
security may not cause the value of its total holdings of mortgage-
backed and asset-backed securities, measured as of the transaction
trade date for such purchase, to increase in any calendar quarter by
more than 50 percent of its total capital as of the beginning of such
quarter.
(3) For purposes of applying the limits under this paragraph (c),
the value of relevant mortgage-backed or asset-backed securities shall
be calculated based on amortized historical costs for securities
classified as held-to-maturity or available-for-sale and on fair value
for trading securities.
Sec. 1267.4 Limitations and prudential requirements on use of
derivative instruments.
(a) Non-speculative use. Derivative instruments that do not qualify
as hedging instruments pursuant to GAAP may be used only if a non-
speculative use is documented by the Bank.
(b) Additional Prohibitions.--(1) A Bank may not enter into
interest rate swaps that amortize according to behavior of instruments
described in Sec. 1267.3(a)(5) or (6) of this part.
(2) A Bank may not enter into indexed principal swaps that have
average lives that vary by more than six years under an assumed
instantaneous change in interest rates of 300 basis points, unless they
are entered into in conjunction with the issuance of consolidated
obligations or the purchase of permissible investments or entry into a
permissible transaction in which all interest rate risk is passed
through to the investor or counterparty.
(c) Documentation requirements.--(1) Derivative transactions with a
single counterparty shall be governed by a single master agreement when
practicable.
(2) A Bank's agreement with the counterparty for over-the-counter
derivative contracts shall include:
(i) A requirement that market value determinations and subsequent
adjustments of collateral be made at least on a monthly basis;
[[Page 29153]]
(ii) A statement that failure of a counterparty to meet a
collateral call will result in an early termination event;
(iii) A description of early termination pricing and methodology,
with the methodology reflecting a reasonable estimate of the market
value of the over-the-counter derivative contract at termination
(standard International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc.
language relative to early termination pricing and methodology may be
used to satisfy this requirement); and
(iv) A requirement that the Bank's consent be obtained prior to the
transfer of an agreement or contract by a counterparty.
Sec. 1267.5 Risk-based capital requirements for investments.
Any Bank which is not subject to the capital requirements set forth
in part 932 of this title shall hold retained earnings plus general
allowance for losses as support for the credit risk of all investments
that are not rated by an NRSRO, or are rated or have a putative rating
below the second highest credit rating, in an amount equal to or
greater than the outstanding balance of the investments multiplied by:
(a) A factor associated with the credit rating of the investments
as determined by FHFA on a case-by-case basis for rated assets to be
sufficient to raise the credit quality of the asset to the second
highest credit rating category; and
(b) 0.08 for assets having neither a putative nor actual rating.
Dated: May 13, 2011.
Edward J. DeMarco,
Acting Director, Federal Housing Finance Agency.
[FR Doc. 2011-12358 Filed 5-19-11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8070-01-P