Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation Funding and Fiscal Affairs; Farmer Mac Risk-Based Capital Stress Test, Version 5.0, 35138-35141 [2011-14985]
Download as PDF
35138
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 116 / Thursday, June 16, 2011 / Proposed Rules
301–415–4737, or by e-mail to
pdr.resource@nrc.gov.
Federal Rulemaking Site: Public
comments and supporting materials
related to this notice can be found at
https://www.regulations.gov by searching
on Docket ID: NRC–2009–0558.
Availability of Services:
The NRC provides reasonable
accommodations to individuals with
disabilities where appropriate. If you
need a reasonable accommodation to
participate in this meeting (e.g., sign
language), or need this meeting notice or
other information from the meeting in
another format, please notify the NRC
meeting contact, Dennis Andrukat at
301–415–3561 by July 5, 2011, so that
arrangements can be made.
All expected attendees must register
with the NRC meeting contact by close
of business on July 12, 2011. Attendees
must provide their full name, company/
organization, last four of social security
number, phone number,
acknowledgement of current access to
Classified Information (minimum ‘‘L’’
clearance), and basis for need-to-know
in order to verify that attendees are
cleared for access to the information.
No electronic devices will be allowed
in the Commissioners’ Conference Room
during the meeting, this includes cell
phones, laptops, pagers, PDAs, etc. No
food or drink is allowed in the
Commissioners’ Conference Room.
All attendees are to use the One White
Flint North temporary entrance located
on Marinelli Street. The NRC is
accessible to the White Flint Metro
Station. Visitor parking near the NRC
buildings is limited. Parking is available
at the White Flint Metro Station using
the Metro Smart Card.
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 7th day
of June 2011.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Sandra L. Wastler,
Branch Chief, Division of Security Policy,
Office of Nuclear Security and Incident
Response.
[FR Doc. 2011–14666 Filed 6–15–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590–01–P
FARM CREDIT ADMINISTRATION
12 CFR Part 652
emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
RIN 3052–AC70
Federal Agricultural Mortgage
Corporation Funding and Fiscal
Affairs; Farmer Mac Risk-Based
Capital Stress Test, Version 5.0
Farm Credit Administration.
Advance notice of proposed
rulemaking.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:12 Jun 15, 2011
Jkt 223001
In this advance notice of
proposed rulemaking (ANPRM), the
Farm Credit Administration (FCA, we,
us, our) is requesting comments on
alternatives to using credit ratings
issued by nationally recognized
statistical ratings organizations (NRSRO
or credit rating agency) in regulations
addressing the Risk-Based Capital Stress
Test (RBCST or stress test) for the
Federal Agricultural Mortgage
Corporation (Farmer Mac or FAMC).
Recent legislation requires every Federal
agency to remove any references to
credit ratings from its regulations and to
substitute them with other standards of
creditworthiness considered
appropriate. Additionally, in response
to this same legislative emphasis on
ensuring appropriate prudential
oversight of derivatives transactions, we
are considering whether the RBCST
should include a more explicit and
comprehensive capital charge for
counterparty risk stemming from
derivative transactions. Lastly, through
the ANPRM we are seeking public input
on how we might revise the operational
and strategic business planning
requirements for FAMC to place greater
emphasis on diversity and inclusion.
DATES: You may send comments on or
before August 15, 2011.
ADDRESSES: We offer a variety of
methods for you to submit comments.
For accuracy and efficiency reasons,
commenters are encouraged to submit
comments by e-mail or through the
FCA’s Web site. As facsimiles (fax) are
difficult for us to process and achieve
compliance with section 508 of the
Rehabilitation Act, we no longer accept
comments submitted by fax. Regardless
of the method you use, please do not
submit your comment multiple times
via different methods. You may submit
comments by any of the following
methods:
• E-mail: Send us an e-mail at regcomm@fca.gov.
• FCA Web site: https://www.fca.gov.
Select ‘‘Public Commenters’’, then
‘‘Public Comments’’, and follow the
directions for ‘‘Submitting a Comment’’.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Mail: Laurie A. Rea, Director, Office
of Secondary Market Oversight, Farm
Credit Administration, 1501 Farm
Credit Drive, McLean, VA 22102–5090.
You may review copies of all
comments we receive at our office in
McLean, Virginia, or on our Web site at
https://www.fca.gov. Once you are in the
Web site, select ‘‘Public Commenters’’,
then ‘‘Public Comments’’, and follow
the directions for ‘‘Reading Submitted
SUMMARY:
PO 00000
Frm 00002
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Public Comments’’. We will show your
comments as submitted, including any
supporting data provided, but for
technical reasons we may omit items
such as logos and special characters.
Identifying information that you
provide, such as phone numbers and
addresses, will be publicly available.
However, we will attempt to remove
e-mail addresses to help reduce Internet
spam.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Joseph T. Connor, Associate Director for
Policy and Analysis, Office of
Secondary Market Oversight, Farm
Credit Administration, McLean, VA
22102–5090, (703) 883–4280, TTY
(703) 883–4434,
Or
Laura McFarland, Senior Counsel,
Office of the General Counsel, Farm
Credit Administration, McLean, VA
22102–5090, (703) 883–4020, TTY
(703) 883–4020.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Objective
The purpose of this ANPRM is to
gather public input on how FCA might:
• Revise existing Farmer Mac RBCST
regulations to replace data from credit
rating agencies.
• Comprehensively address
derivative counterparty exposure in the
RBCST; and
• Revise operational and strategic
business planning requirements to place
greater emphasis on diversity and
inclusion.
II. Background
Farmer Mac is an institution of the
Farm Credit System, regulated by FCA
through the FCA Office of Secondary
Market Oversight (OSMO). Farmer Mac
was established and chartered by
Congress to create a secondary market
for agricultural real estate mortgage
loans, rural housing mortgage loans, and
rural utilities loans, and it is a
stockholder-owned instrumentality of
the United States. Title VIII of the Farm
Credit Act of 1971, as amended, (Act)
governs Farmer Mac.1
On July 21, 2010, the Dodd-Frank
Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act of 2010 (Dodd-Frank Act)
was enacted.2 Section 939A of the
Dodd-Frank Act requires Federal
agencies to review all regulatory
references to NRSRO credit ratings and
replace those references with other
appropriate standards for determining
creditworthiness. The Dodd-Frank Act
1 Public Law 92 181, 85 Stat. 583, 12 U.S.C. 2001
et seq. (December 10, 1971).
2 Public Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376, (H.R. 4173),
July 21, 2010.
E:\FR\FM\16JNP1.SGM
16JNP1
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 116 / Thursday, June 16, 2011 / Proposed Rules
emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
further provides that, to the extent
feasible, agencies should adopt a
uniform standard of creditworthiness
for use in regulations, taking into
account the entities regulated and the
purposes for which such regulated
entities would rely on the
creditworthiness standard.
The FCA uses credit rating agency
data in its RBCST regulations for Farmer
Mac. Section 8.32 of the Act required
FCA to establish a risk-based capital
stress test for Farmer Mac’s portfolio.3
This stress test determines the level of
regulatory capital necessary for Farmer
Mac to maintain positive capital during
a 10-year period where stressful credit
and interest rate conditions occur. We
first published regulations on the stress
test, and other requirements related to
section 8.32 of the Act, in the Federal
Register at 66 FR 19048 (April 12,
2001). Since then, we revised the stress
test several times, most recently to
capture capital requirements for Farmer
Mac’s rural utilities authorities. The
existing RBCST for Farmer Mac is
contained in 12 CFR part 652, subpart
B, and it currently relies, in part, on
NRSRO credit ratings when calculating
regulatory minimum capital
requirements.
We have comprehensively reviewed
our regulations that use or rely on credit
ratings, including other sections in part
652 which govern Farmer Mac’s nonprogram investments and liquidity
reserve requirements. This ANPRM is
one of several notices and proposed
rules on which we will be seeking
public input relating to use of credit
ratings in our rules.
A. Farmer Mac Programs
Under the Farmer Mac I program,
FAMC guarantees prompt payment of
principal and interest on securities
representing interests in, or obligations
backed by, mortgage loans secured by
first liens on agricultural real estate or
rural housing. It also purchases, or
commits to purchase, qualified loans or
securities backed by qualified loans
directly from lenders. Under the Farmer
Mac II program, FAMC purchases and
securitizes portions of certain loans
guaranteed by the U.S. Department of
Agriculture, including farm ownership
and operating loans and rural business
and community development loans.
Farmer Mac also guarantees the timely
payment of principal and interest on the
securities created from these loans. In
2008, Congress granted Farmer Mac the
authority to purchase and guarantee
securities backed by loans to rural
electric and telephone utility
3 12
U.S.C. 2279bb–1.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:12 Jun 15, 2011
Jkt 223001
cooperatives as program business.4
Farmer Mac also provides a secondary
market for USDA-guaranteed farm
program and rural development loans.
B. Risk-Based Capital and Credit
Ratings
Under our rules, Farmer Mac’s
regulatory capital must be sufficient so
that it would remain positive during the
10-year time horizon of the stress test.
One component of the RBCST accounts
for the risk of loss on specific types of
program investments (i.e., investments
backed by agricultural real estate
mortgage loans, rural housing loans, or
rural utility cooperative loans) that
include credit enhancement features. In
this context, credit risk is adjusted
downward based on the whole-letter
credit rating of the counterparty on
AgVantage and similarly structured
assets. The adjustment is made to
recognize the risk-reducing strength of
the counterparty’s general obligation
backing of these securities. These
securities are further backed by eligible
loan collateral.
Another component of the RBCST
estimates counterparty risk associated
with non-program investments, e.g.,
corporate debt, asset-backed securities
and mortgage-related securities. In this
context, the RBCST reduces earnings at
rates related to the cumulative historical
default and recovery rates of corporate
debt by whole-letter credit rating
category as published by Moody’s
Investor Services.5 The RBCST’s
calculations in each of these two
components use five whole-letter rating
categories. It then assigns counterparties
into these categories by referencing
ratings issued by an NRSRO for the
counterparty. The regulations, in turn,
specify the change in expected cash
flows during the stress period to reflect
the risk of default by a counterparty
based in part on the assigned ratings
category. The changes in cash flows
decrease projected losses on program
assets and decrease earnings on nonprogram investments, which then
translate to changes in equity over the
modeling horizon and affect the
required minimum regulatory capital
calculated by the stress test.
FCA initially chose to use NRSRO
ratings in the RBCST as a source of
objective and neutral third-party
assessments of the credit risk for
particular instruments and
4 Section 5406 of Public Law 110–246, 122 Stat.
1651 (June 18, 2008) (repealing and replacing Pub.
L. 110–234).
5 Emery K., Ou S., Tennant, J., Kim F., Cantor R.,
‘‘Corporate Default and Recovery Rates, 1920–
2009,’’ published by Moody’s Investors Service,
February 2010.
PO 00000
Frm 00003
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
35139
counterparties. We used ratings because
they were readily and publicly
available. The use of NRSRO ratings was
also, at the time, believed to offer
enhanced consistency in credit
evaluation across different components
of the RBCST. In 2010, the Dodd-Frank
Act addressed, in part, the structure of
credit rating agencies, requiring
revisions and imposing other
requirements in an effort to resolve the
conflicts of interest and other
difficulties believed to be at the center
of the 2008–2009 financial market crisis.
The Dodd-Frank Act also questioned the
value of these ratings when used as the
primary data source in the assessment of
the creditworthiness of a security or
money market instrument. In
connection with that, the Dodd-Frank
Act requires every Federal agency to
remove any reference to, or reliance on,
credit rating agencies in its regulations
and replace any such reference with an
alternative standard of credit worthiness
considered appropriate for the
regulatory purpose. As a result, we are
seeking suggestions on what alternative
data sources would be most appropriate
for the RBCST.
C. Considerations and Objectives for a
New Approach to Quantifying Relative
Creditworthiness
FCA believes that any new standard
of creditworthiness should distinguish
between different levels of credit risk, in
an accurate and timely manner, and be
transparent in its approach. We believe
it should also be applied consistently
across the multiple components of the
RBCST and be reasonably simple, while
not unduly burdensome to apply and
not be easily subject to manipulation.
FCA recognizes that any resulting
system will likely involve trade-offs
among these objectives, e.g., simple
versus accurate and timely, accurate and
timely versus not burdensome to apply.
To eliminate the use of NRSRO
ratings in calculating risk-based capital
requirements for Farmer Mac, we need
to develop an alternative basis to assess
counterparty risk. One approach may be
to identify objective criteria that Farmer
Mac could apply to categorize credit
exposures into different risk classes and
assess counterparty risk accordingly.
The criteria may be broadly designated.
For example, credit exposures could be
divided into government and nongovernment, secured and unsecured, or
other categories, such as maturity. Such
a broad approach, however, may not be
able to sufficiently and consistently
account for difference in relative risk
among exposures that fall into the same
category. FCA may also consider
adopting criteria that reference certain
E:\FR\FM\16JNP1.SGM
16JNP1
35140
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 116 / Thursday, June 16, 2011 / Proposed Rules
emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
financial or other metrics related to the
obligor or counterparty. To be
meaningful, the criteria would need to
account for or bear a reasonable
correlation to the potential riskiness of
default among different obligors or
counterparties. Any criteria would also
need to be readily obtainable for all
relevant counterparties by FCA, Farmer
Mac and the public or it might not be
sufficiently transparent and objective.
The standards would need to ensure
that the investment or position is not
speculative, and carries credit risk
appropriate for Farmer Mac’s risk
profile and the authorized purposes for
non-program investments. As any new
counterparty risk evaluation approach is
initiated, there is the potential for
increased risk as the new system is
implemented.
FCA might also consider an approach
that builds on Farmer Mac’s internal
credit review process and allows it to
assign risk ratings to various categories
and assess risk based on qualitative and
quantitative standards set by FCA
regulations. For example, FCA could
assign loss rate estimates based on
Farmer Mac’s internal ratings or some
modification of such, as reviewed or
approved by FCA—or simply review or
approve Farmer Mac’s mapping of its
assigned risk ratings to estimated loss
rates. This approach would be more
subjective than the alternative discussed
above but could allow FCA to leverage
the data collection and analysis already
performed by Farmer Mac. Under this
approach, FCA would likely rely
heavily on the supervisory process to
make sure that Farmer Mac is strictly
following its internal guidelines and not
assuming high levels of credit risk.
Questions (1) through (11) of Section
III of this ANPRM address this topic.
D. Counterparty Risk on Derivatives
As part of our Dodd-Frank Act review
and the increasing emphasis by the
financial industry on ensuring
appropriate prudential oversight of
derivatives transactions, we are also
considering whether the RBCST should
include a more explicit and
comprehensive capital charge for
counterparty risk stemming from
derivative transactions.
The RBCST produces a single
comprehensive capital requirement for
Farmer Mac by modeling changes in
cash flows under a specific statutory
stress scenario. We believe there may be
opportunities to revise the RBCST to
add a representation of counterparty
default exposure on derivatives
transactions by considering both net
replacement cost as well as current
exposure to individual cash flows based
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:12 Jun 15, 2011
Jkt 223001
on an assessment of the counterparty’s
creditworthiness.
Questions (12) and (13) of Section III.
of this ANPRM address this topic.
E. Capital and Business Planning
As part of this ANPRM, we are
seeking input on how we might revise
§ 652.60(b) on operational and strategic
business planning requirements to place
greater emphasis on diversity and
inclusion in both Farmer Mac’s
personnel as well as the borrowers and
lenders who benefit from its secondary
market activities.
We believe an integral part of
promoting and achieving inclusion and
diversity can be accomplished through
an effective operational plan that
includes strategies to seek out qualified
loans from a diverse group of sources
and provides rural lenders with
financing products that serve a diverse
array of borrowers, such as small,
beginning, new, disabled, female, and
minority farmers, ranchers, and rural
homeowners, as well as cooperatives
with diversity of ownership. We believe
promotion of inclusion and diversity
should also extend to non-traditional
agricultural producers, such as local
food systems, organic or specialty crop
farmers, and community-supported
agriculture.
Additionally, we are considering
whether Farmer Mac’s operational and
strategic plans should include strategies
and actions to achieve diversity and
inclusion within FAMC’s workforce,
management, and governance structure,
as well as an assessment of the progress
FAMC has made in this area. We are
also contemplating whether the plans
should describe FAMC’s succession
programs.
Questions (14) and (15) of Section III.
of this ANPRM address this topic.
III. Request for Comments
FCA regulations governing the Farmer
Mac RBCST contain specific references
to credit ratings issued by NRSROs for
purposes of calculating regulatory
minimum capital requirements. FCA is
issuing this ANPRM to identify
standards that may be appropriate
replacements for credit ratings issued by
NRSROs, which maintain compliance
with statutory design requirements for
the RBCST. Other regulatory agencies
have also issued ANPRMs as part of
their process to address references to
credit ratings in their capital regulations
and prudential standards.6 We
encourage any interested person(s) to
submit comments on the following
6 See 75 FR 49423 (Aug. 13, 2010), 75 FR 52283
(Aug. 25, 2010), and 76 FR 5292 (Jan. 31, 2011).
PO 00000
Frm 00004
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
questions and ask that you support your
comments with relevant data or
examples. We remind commenters that
comments and data submitted in
support of a comment are available to
the public through our rulemaking files.
1. What core principles would be
most important in FCA’s development
of new standards of creditworthiness?
2. What qualitative and quantitative
standards would FCA need to set to
implement an approach that relied on
the Farmer Mac to generate internal
estimates of counterparty risk
exposures? What are the strengths and
weaknesses of such an approach?
3. Is it important that FCA’s approach
to replacing its reliance on credit rating
agency data be consistent with that of
other financial regulators or with those
of other Farm Credit System
institutions? If so, how important and
why?
4. What specific creditworthiness or
investment criteria should FCA use in
its RBCST regulation?
5. What types of objective criteria
should be used to differentiate credit
exposures and apply meaningful
counterparty risk estimates in the
RBCST?
6. Should different criteria be used for
different broad classes of investments or
exposures? If so, what perverse
incentives or other unintended
consequences could that lead to? For
example, could criteria that are
perceived to be more flexible or
subjective for a given asset class incent
the regulated entity to accept a
proportion of exposure to that asset
class relative to its entire program (or
non-program) portfolio that it might
deem excessive without that incentive?
7. What approach would estimate a
meaningful and consistent level of
counterparty risk for a variety of
exposures by employing publicly
available qualitative and quantitative
metrics, such as individual obligor
credit spreads and/or financial ratio
analysis to estimate probability of
default and recovery rates?
8. Alternatively, could such estimates
be reasonably made at the level of the
market (e.g., identifying an index of
industry sector spreads and stratifying
spreads into certain ranges) and mapped
to loss rates set by FCA?
9. How might a set of loss rates be
developed for each spread stratum?
10. Are there any existing objective
tools or approaches that could readily
replace references to ratings issued by
NRSROs in the RBCST?
11. What other approaches or
methodologies not discussed above
should FCA consider?
E:\FR\FM\16JNP1.SGM
16JNP1
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 116 / Thursday, June 16, 2011 / Proposed Rules
emcdonald on DSK2BSOYB1PROD with PROPOSALS
12. What methodologies or
approaches should FCA consider to
more explicitly incorporate a derivatives
counterparty exposure charge into the
RBCST?
13. What is the best manner of
evaluating minimum capital
requirements on derivative counterparty
exposures in the RBCST and should a
pre-processing model be constructed
(i.e., a sub-model used to derive inputs
into the RBCST) to represent this risk—
both in terms of missed individual
contractual cash flows as well the
replacement cost on defaulted
derivatives? If so, how should
replacement costs be estimated?
14. Should Farmer Mac be required to
include strategies in its marketing plans
that address how its secondary market
programs and products will be offered
to all qualified borrowers, including:
(a) Minorities, the disabled, and
women;
(b) Young, beginning, small, and
family farms and cooperatives; or
(c) Non-traditional agricultural
producers, such as local food systems,
organic or specialty crop farmers and
the lenders who serve them? Why or
why not?
15. Should Farmer Mac’s marketing
plans set quantitative goals to increase
purchases of, or commitments to
purchase, loans to young, beginning,
small, and family farms, and those
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:12 Jun 15, 2011
Jkt 223001
owned or operated by minorities, the
disabled, and women? If so, what would
be the best method to apply such goals
to rural utility cooperatives (e.g.,
minority-managed cooperatives or
cooperatives that serve predominantly
minority residential customers or
minority-owned commercial
customers)?
16. To what extent should FCA
regulations require Farmer Mac to
develop a human capital plan as part of
its strategic and operational business
plan to foster diversity in its workforce
and succession planning?
Dated: June 10, 2011.
Mary Alice Donner,
Acting Secretary, Farm Credit Administration
Board.
[FR Doc. 2011–14985 Filed 6–15–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6705–01–P
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING
COMMISSION
Notice of proposed rulemaking;
Correction.
ACTION:
This document corrects the
formatting of text and charts published
in the Federal Register of June 09, 2011
(76 FR 33818), regarding Protection of
Cleared Swaps Customer Contracts and
Collateral; Conforming Amendments to
the Commodity Broker Bankruptcy
Provisions.
SUMMARY:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Robert Wasserman, 202–418–5092 or M.
Laura Astrada, 202–418–7622.
Correction
In proposed rule document 2011–
10737, in the issue of Thursday, June
09, 2011, on page 33864, in the last
column, the text which begins ‘‘1.
Sufficient Funds to Meet Non-XM and
XM Customer Claims:’’ through to the
end of the chart on page 33877 should
be replaced with the following:
BILLING CODE–P
17 CFR Parts 22 and 190
RIN Number 3038–AC99
Protection of Cleared Swaps Customer
Contracts and Collateral; Conforming
Amendments to the Commodity Broker
Bankruptcy Provisions; Correction
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission.
AGENCY:
PO 00000
Frm 00005
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
35141
E:\FR\FM\16JNP1.SGM
16JNP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 116 (Thursday, June 16, 2011)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 35138-35141]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-14985]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FARM CREDIT ADMINISTRATION
12 CFR Part 652
RIN 3052-AC70
Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation Funding and Fiscal
Affairs; Farmer Mac Risk-Based Capital Stress Test, Version 5.0
AGENCY: Farm Credit Administration.
ACTION: Advance notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In this advance notice of proposed rulemaking (ANPRM), the
Farm Credit Administration (FCA, we, us, our) is requesting comments on
alternatives to using credit ratings issued by nationally recognized
statistical ratings organizations (NRSRO or credit rating agency) in
regulations addressing the Risk-Based Capital Stress Test (RBCST or
stress test) for the Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation (Farmer
Mac or FAMC). Recent legislation requires every Federal agency to
remove any references to credit ratings from its regulations and to
substitute them with other standards of creditworthiness considered
appropriate. Additionally, in response to this same legislative
emphasis on ensuring appropriate prudential oversight of derivatives
transactions, we are considering whether the RBCST should include a
more explicit and comprehensive capital charge for counterparty risk
stemming from derivative transactions. Lastly, through the ANPRM we are
seeking public input on how we might revise the operational and
strategic business planning requirements for FAMC to place greater
emphasis on diversity and inclusion.
DATES: You may send comments on or before August 15, 2011.
ADDRESSES: We offer a variety of methods for you to submit comments.
For accuracy and efficiency reasons, commenters are encouraged to
submit comments by e-mail or through the FCA's Web site. As facsimiles
(fax) are difficult for us to process and achieve compliance with
section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act, we no longer accept comments
submitted by fax. Regardless of the method you use, please do not
submit your comment multiple times via different methods. You may
submit comments by any of the following methods:
E-mail: Send us an e-mail at reg-comm@fca.gov.
FCA Web site: https://www.fca.gov. Select ``Public
Commenters'', then ``Public Comments'', and follow the directions for
``Submitting a Comment''.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Mail: Laurie A. Rea, Director, Office of Secondary Market
Oversight, Farm Credit Administration, 1501 Farm Credit Drive, McLean,
VA 22102-5090.
You may review copies of all comments we receive at our office in
McLean, Virginia, or on our Web site at https://www.fca.gov. Once you
are in the Web site, select ``Public Commenters'', then ``Public
Comments'', and follow the directions for ``Reading Submitted Public
Comments''. We will show your comments as submitted, including any
supporting data provided, but for technical reasons we may omit items
such as logos and special characters. Identifying information that you
provide, such as phone numbers and addresses, will be publicly
available. However, we will attempt to remove e-mail addresses to help
reduce Internet spam.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Joseph T. Connor, Associate Director for Policy and Analysis, Office of
Secondary Market Oversight, Farm Credit Administration, McLean, VA
22102-5090, (703) 883-4280, TTY (703) 883-4434,
Or
Laura McFarland, Senior Counsel, Office of the General Counsel, Farm
Credit Administration, McLean, VA 22102-5090, (703) 883-4020, TTY (703)
883-4020.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Objective
The purpose of this ANPRM is to gather public input on how FCA
might:
Revise existing Farmer Mac RBCST regulations to replace
data from credit rating agencies.
Comprehensively address derivative counterparty exposure
in the RBCST; and
Revise operational and strategic business planning
requirements to place greater emphasis on diversity and inclusion.
II. Background
Farmer Mac is an institution of the Farm Credit System, regulated
by FCA through the FCA Office of Secondary Market Oversight (OSMO).
Farmer Mac was established and chartered by Congress to create a
secondary market for agricultural real estate mortgage loans, rural
housing mortgage loans, and rural utilities loans, and it is a
stockholder-owned instrumentality of the United States. Title VIII of
the Farm Credit Act of 1971, as amended, (Act) governs Farmer Mac.\1\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Public Law 92 181, 85 Stat. 583, 12 U.S.C. 2001 et seq.
(December 10, 1971).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
On July 21, 2010, the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act of 2010 (Dodd-Frank Act) was enacted.\2\ Section 939A of
the Dodd-Frank Act requires Federal agencies to review all regulatory
references to NRSRO credit ratings and replace those references with
other appropriate standards for determining creditworthiness. The Dodd-
Frank Act
[[Page 35139]]
further provides that, to the extent feasible, agencies should adopt a
uniform standard of creditworthiness for use in regulations, taking
into account the entities regulated and the purposes for which such
regulated entities would rely on the creditworthiness standard.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376, (H.R. 4173), July 21,
2010.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FCA uses credit rating agency data in its RBCST regulations for
Farmer Mac. Section 8.32 of the Act required FCA to establish a risk-
based capital stress test for Farmer Mac's portfolio.\3\ This stress
test determines the level of regulatory capital necessary for Farmer
Mac to maintain positive capital during a 10-year period where
stressful credit and interest rate conditions occur. We first published
regulations on the stress test, and other requirements related to
section 8.32 of the Act, in the Federal Register at 66 FR 19048 (April
12, 2001). Since then, we revised the stress test several times, most
recently to capture capital requirements for Farmer Mac's rural
utilities authorities. The existing RBCST for Farmer Mac is contained
in 12 CFR part 652, subpart B, and it currently relies, in part, on
NRSRO credit ratings when calculating regulatory minimum capital
requirements.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ 12 U.S.C. 2279bb-1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We have comprehensively reviewed our regulations that use or rely
on credit ratings, including other sections in part 652 which govern
Farmer Mac's non-program investments and liquidity reserve
requirements. This ANPRM is one of several notices and proposed rules
on which we will be seeking public input relating to use of credit
ratings in our rules.
A. Farmer Mac Programs
Under the Farmer Mac I program, FAMC guarantees prompt payment of
principal and interest on securities representing interests in, or
obligations backed by, mortgage loans secured by first liens on
agricultural real estate or rural housing. It also purchases, or
commits to purchase, qualified loans or securities backed by qualified
loans directly from lenders. Under the Farmer Mac II program, FAMC
purchases and securitizes portions of certain loans guaranteed by the
U.S. Department of Agriculture, including farm ownership and operating
loans and rural business and community development loans. Farmer Mac
also guarantees the timely payment of principal and interest on the
securities created from these loans. In 2008, Congress granted Farmer
Mac the authority to purchase and guarantee securities backed by loans
to rural electric and telephone utility cooperatives as program
business.\4\ Farmer Mac also provides a secondary market for USDA-
guaranteed farm program and rural development loans.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Section 5406 of Public Law 110-246, 122 Stat. 1651 (June 18,
2008) (repealing and replacing Pub. L. 110-234).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Risk-Based Capital and Credit Ratings
Under our rules, Farmer Mac's regulatory capital must be sufficient
so that it would remain positive during the 10-year time horizon of the
stress test. One component of the RBCST accounts for the risk of loss
on specific types of program investments (i.e., investments backed by
agricultural real estate mortgage loans, rural housing loans, or rural
utility cooperative loans) that include credit enhancement features. In
this context, credit risk is adjusted downward based on the whole-
letter credit rating of the counterparty on AgVantage and similarly
structured assets. The adjustment is made to recognize the risk-
reducing strength of the counterparty's general obligation backing of
these securities. These securities are further backed by eligible loan
collateral.
Another component of the RBCST estimates counterparty risk
associated with non-program investments, e.g., corporate debt, asset-
backed securities and mortgage-related securities. In this context, the
RBCST reduces earnings at rates related to the cumulative historical
default and recovery rates of corporate debt by whole-letter credit
rating category as published by Moody's Investor Services.\5\ The
RBCST's calculations in each of these two components use five whole-
letter rating categories. It then assigns counterparties into these
categories by referencing ratings issued by an NRSRO for the
counterparty. The regulations, in turn, specify the change in expected
cash flows during the stress period to reflect the risk of default by a
counterparty based in part on the assigned ratings category. The
changes in cash flows decrease projected losses on program assets and
decrease earnings on non-program investments, which then translate to
changes in equity over the modeling horizon and affect the required
minimum regulatory capital calculated by the stress test.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Emery K., Ou S., Tennant, J., Kim F., Cantor R., ``Corporate
Default and Recovery Rates, 1920-2009,'' published by Moody's
Investors Service, February 2010.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FCA initially chose to use NRSRO ratings in the RBCST as a source
of objective and neutral third-party assessments of the credit risk for
particular instruments and counterparties. We used ratings because they
were readily and publicly available. The use of NRSRO ratings was also,
at the time, believed to offer enhanced consistency in credit
evaluation across different components of the RBCST. In 2010, the Dodd-
Frank Act addressed, in part, the structure of credit rating agencies,
requiring revisions and imposing other requirements in an effort to
resolve the conflicts of interest and other difficulties believed to be
at the center of the 2008-2009 financial market crisis. The Dodd-Frank
Act also questioned the value of these ratings when used as the primary
data source in the assessment of the creditworthiness of a security or
money market instrument. In connection with that, the Dodd-Frank Act
requires every Federal agency to remove any reference to, or reliance
on, credit rating agencies in its regulations and replace any such
reference with an alternative standard of credit worthiness considered
appropriate for the regulatory purpose. As a result, we are seeking
suggestions on what alternative data sources would be most appropriate
for the RBCST.
C. Considerations and Objectives for a New Approach to Quantifying
Relative Creditworthiness
FCA believes that any new standard of creditworthiness should
distinguish between different levels of credit risk, in an accurate and
timely manner, and be transparent in its approach. We believe it should
also be applied consistently across the multiple components of the
RBCST and be reasonably simple, while not unduly burdensome to apply
and not be easily subject to manipulation. FCA recognizes that any
resulting system will likely involve trade-offs among these objectives,
e.g., simple versus accurate and timely, accurate and timely versus not
burdensome to apply.
To eliminate the use of NRSRO ratings in calculating risk-based
capital requirements for Farmer Mac, we need to develop an alternative
basis to assess counterparty risk. One approach may be to identify
objective criteria that Farmer Mac could apply to categorize credit
exposures into different risk classes and assess counterparty risk
accordingly. The criteria may be broadly designated. For example,
credit exposures could be divided into government and non-government,
secured and unsecured, or other categories, such as maturity. Such a
broad approach, however, may not be able to sufficiently and
consistently account for difference in relative risk among exposures
that fall into the same category. FCA may also consider adopting
criteria that reference certain
[[Page 35140]]
financial or other metrics related to the obligor or counterparty. To
be meaningful, the criteria would need to account for or bear a
reasonable correlation to the potential riskiness of default among
different obligors or counterparties. Any criteria would also need to
be readily obtainable for all relevant counterparties by FCA, Farmer
Mac and the public or it might not be sufficiently transparent and
objective. The standards would need to ensure that the investment or
position is not speculative, and carries credit risk appropriate for
Farmer Mac's risk profile and the authorized purposes for non-program
investments. As any new counterparty risk evaluation approach is
initiated, there is the potential for increased risk as the new system
is implemented.
FCA might also consider an approach that builds on Farmer Mac's
internal credit review process and allows it to assign risk ratings to
various categories and assess risk based on qualitative and
quantitative standards set by FCA regulations. For example, FCA could
assign loss rate estimates based on Farmer Mac's internal ratings or
some modification of such, as reviewed or approved by FCA--or simply
review or approve Farmer Mac's mapping of its assigned risk ratings to
estimated loss rates. This approach would be more subjective than the
alternative discussed above but could allow FCA to leverage the data
collection and analysis already performed by Farmer Mac. Under this
approach, FCA would likely rely heavily on the supervisory process to
make sure that Farmer Mac is strictly following its internal guidelines
and not assuming high levels of credit risk.
Questions (1) through (11) of Section III of this ANPRM address
this topic.
D. Counterparty Risk on Derivatives
As part of our Dodd-Frank Act review and the increasing emphasis by
the financial industry on ensuring appropriate prudential oversight of
derivatives transactions, we are also considering whether the RBCST
should include a more explicit and comprehensive capital charge for
counterparty risk stemming from derivative transactions.
The RBCST produces a single comprehensive capital requirement for
Farmer Mac by modeling changes in cash flows under a specific statutory
stress scenario. We believe there may be opportunities to revise the
RBCST to add a representation of counterparty default exposure on
derivatives transactions by considering both net replacement cost as
well as current exposure to individual cash flows based on an
assessment of the counterparty's creditworthiness.
Questions (12) and (13) of Section III. of this ANPRM address this
topic.
E. Capital and Business Planning
As part of this ANPRM, we are seeking input on how we might revise
Sec. 652.60(b) on operational and strategic business planning
requirements to place greater emphasis on diversity and inclusion in
both Farmer Mac's personnel as well as the borrowers and lenders who
benefit from its secondary market activities.
We believe an integral part of promoting and achieving inclusion
and diversity can be accomplished through an effective operational plan
that includes strategies to seek out qualified loans from a diverse
group of sources and provides rural lenders with financing products
that serve a diverse array of borrowers, such as small, beginning, new,
disabled, female, and minority farmers, ranchers, and rural homeowners,
as well as cooperatives with diversity of ownership. We believe
promotion of inclusion and diversity should also extend to non-
traditional agricultural producers, such as local food systems, organic
or specialty crop farmers, and community-supported agriculture.
Additionally, we are considering whether Farmer Mac's operational
and strategic plans should include strategies and actions to achieve
diversity and inclusion within FAMC's workforce, management, and
governance structure, as well as an assessment of the progress FAMC has
made in this area. We are also contemplating whether the plans should
describe FAMC's succession programs.
Questions (14) and (15) of Section III. of this ANPRM address this
topic.
III. Request for Comments
FCA regulations governing the Farmer Mac RBCST contain specific
references to credit ratings issued by NRSROs for purposes of
calculating regulatory minimum capital requirements. FCA is issuing
this ANPRM to identify standards that may be appropriate replacements
for credit ratings issued by NRSROs, which maintain compliance with
statutory design requirements for the RBCST. Other regulatory agencies
have also issued ANPRMs as part of their process to address references
to credit ratings in their capital regulations and prudential
standards.\6\ We encourage any interested person(s) to submit comments
on the following questions and ask that you support your comments with
relevant data or examples. We remind commenters that comments and data
submitted in support of a comment are available to the public through
our rulemaking files.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ See 75 FR 49423 (Aug. 13, 2010), 75 FR 52283 (Aug. 25,
2010), and 76 FR 5292 (Jan. 31, 2011).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. What core principles would be most important in FCA's
development of new standards of creditworthiness?
2. What qualitative and quantitative standards would FCA need to
set to implement an approach that relied on the Farmer Mac to generate
internal estimates of counterparty risk exposures? What are the
strengths and weaknesses of such an approach?
3. Is it important that FCA's approach to replacing its reliance on
credit rating agency data be consistent with that of other financial
regulators or with those of other Farm Credit System institutions? If
so, how important and why?
4. What specific creditworthiness or investment criteria should FCA
use in its RBCST regulation?
5. What types of objective criteria should be used to differentiate
credit exposures and apply meaningful counterparty risk estimates in
the RBCST?
6. Should different criteria be used for different broad classes of
investments or exposures? If so, what perverse incentives or other
unintended consequences could that lead to? For example, could criteria
that are perceived to be more flexible or subjective for a given asset
class incent the regulated entity to accept a proportion of exposure to
that asset class relative to its entire program (or non-program)
portfolio that it might deem excessive without that incentive?
7. What approach would estimate a meaningful and consistent level
of counterparty risk for a variety of exposures by employing publicly
available qualitative and quantitative metrics, such as individual
obligor credit spreads and/or financial ratio analysis to estimate
probability of default and recovery rates?
8. Alternatively, could such estimates be reasonably made at the
level of the market (e.g., identifying an index of industry sector
spreads and stratifying spreads into certain ranges) and mapped to loss
rates set by FCA?
9. How might a set of loss rates be developed for each spread
stratum?
10. Are there any existing objective tools or approaches that could
readily replace references to ratings issued by NRSROs in the RBCST?
11. What other approaches or methodologies not discussed above
should FCA consider?
[[Page 35141]]
12. What methodologies or approaches should FCA consider to more
explicitly incorporate a derivatives counterparty exposure charge into
the RBCST?
13. What is the best manner of evaluating minimum capital
requirements on derivative counterparty exposures in the RBCST and
should a pre-processing model be constructed (i.e., a sub-model used to
derive inputs into the RBCST) to represent this risk--both in terms of
missed individual contractual cash flows as well the replacement cost
on defaulted derivatives? If so, how should replacement costs be
estimated?
14. Should Farmer Mac be required to include strategies in its
marketing plans that address how its secondary market programs and
products will be offered to all qualified borrowers, including:
(a) Minorities, the disabled, and women;
(b) Young, beginning, small, and family farms and cooperatives; or
(c) Non-traditional agricultural producers, such as local food
systems, organic or specialty crop farmers and the lenders who serve
them? Why or why not?
15. Should Farmer Mac's marketing plans set quantitative goals to
increase purchases of, or commitments to purchase, loans to young,
beginning, small, and family farms, and those owned or operated by
minorities, the disabled, and women? If so, what would be the best
method to apply such goals to rural utility cooperatives (e.g.,
minority-managed cooperatives or cooperatives that serve predominantly
minority residential customers or minority-owned commercial customers)?
16. To what extent should FCA regulations require Farmer Mac to
develop a human capital plan as part of its strategic and operational
business plan to foster diversity in its workforce and succession
planning?
Dated: June 10, 2011.
Mary Alice Donner,
Acting Secretary, Farm Credit Administration Board.
[FR Doc. 2011-14985 Filed 6-15-11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6705-01-P