Enhanced Prudential Standards and Early Remediation Requirements for Covered Companies, 594-663 [2011-33364]
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594
Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 3 / Thursday, January 5, 2012 / Proposed Rules
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 252
[Regulation YY; Docket No. 1438]
RIN 7100–AD–86
Enhanced Prudential Standards and
Early Remediation Requirements for
Covered Companies
Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System (Board).
ACTION: Proposed rule; request for
public comment.
AGENCY:
The Board is requesting
comment on proposed rules that would
implement the enhanced Prudential
standards required to be established
under section 165 of the Dodd-Frank
Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act or Act)
and the early remediation requirements
established under section 166 of the
Act. The enhanced standards include
risk-based capital and leverage
requirements, liquidity standards,
requirements for overall risk
management (including establishing a
risk committee), single-counterparty
credit limits, stress test requirements,
and a debt-to-equity limit for companies
that the Financial Stability Oversight
Council has determined pose a grave
threat to financial stability.
DATES: Comments: Comments should be
received on or before March 31, 2012.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments,
identified by Docket No. 1438 and RIN
7100–AD–86 by any of the following
methods:
• Agency Web Site: https://
www.federalreserve.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments at
https://www.federalreserve.gov/
generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Email:
regs.comments@federalreserve.gov.
Include docket and RIN numbers in the
subject line of the message.
• Fax: (202) 452–3819 or (202) 452–
3102.
• Mail: Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary,
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, 20th Street and
Constitution Avenue NW., Washington,
DC 20551.
All public comments are available
from the Board’s Web site at https://
www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/
foia/ProposedRegs.cfm as submitted,
unless modified for technical reasons.
Accordingly, your comments will not be
edited to remove any identifying or
contact information. Public comments
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SUMMARY:
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may also be viewed electronically or in
paper form in Room MP–500 of the
Board’s Martin Building (20th and C
Streets NW.) between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
on weekdays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Mark Van Der Weide, Senior Associate
Director, (202) 452–2263, or Molly E.
Mahar, Senior Supervisory Financial
Analyst, (202) 973–7360, Division of
Banking Supervision and Regulation; or
Laurie Schaffer, Associate General
Counsel, (202) 452–2272, or Dominic A.
Labitzky, Senior Attorney, (202) 452–
3428, Legal Division.
Risk-Based Capital Requirements and
Leverage Limits: Anna Lee Hewko,
Assistant Director, (202) 530–6260, or
Meg Donovan, Supervisory Financial
Analyst, (202) 872–7542, Division of
Banking Supervision and Regulation; or
April C. Snyder, Senior Counsel, (202)
452–3099, or Benjamin W. McDonough,
Senior Counsel, (202) 452–2036, Legal
Division.
Liquidity Requirements: Mary Aiken,
Manager, (202) 721–4534, or Chris
Powell, Financial Analyst, (202) 921–
4353, Division of Banking Supervision
and Regulation; or April C. Snyder,
Senior Counsel, (202) 452–3099, Legal
Division.
Single-Counterparty Credit Limits:
Mark Van Der Weide, Senior Associate
Director, (202) 452–2263, or Molly E.
Mahar, Senior Supervisory Financial
Analyst, (202) 973–7360, Division of
Banking Supervision and Regulation; or
Pamela G. Nardolilli, Senior Counsel,
(202) 452–3289, Patricia P. Yeh,
Counsel, (202) 912–4304, or Anna M.
Harrington, Attorney, (202) 452–6406,
Legal Division.
Risk Management and Risk
Committee Requirements: Pamela A.
Martin, Senior Supervisory Financial
Analyst, (202) 452–3442, Division of
Banking Supervision and Regulation; or
Jonathan D. Stoloff, Senior Counsel,
(202) 452–3269, or Jeremy C. Kress,
Attorney, (202) 872–7589, Legal
Division.
Stress Test Requirements: Tim Clark,
Senior Adviser, (202) 452–5264, Lisa
Ryu, Assistant Director, (202) 263–4833,
Constance Horsley, Manager, (202) 452–
5239 or David Palmer, Senior
Supervisory Financial Analyst, (202)
452–2904, Division of Banking
Supervision and Regulation; Dominic A.
Labitzky, Senior Attorney, (202) 452–
3428, or Christine E. Graham, Senior
Attorney, (202) 452–3005, Legal
Division.
Debt-to-Equity Limits for Certain
Covered Companies: Robert Motyka,
Senior Project Manager, (202) 452–5231,
Division of Banking Supervision and
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Regulation; or April C. Snyder, Senior
Counsel, (202) 452–3099, or Benjamin
W. McDonough, Senior Counsel, (202)
452–2036, Legal Division.
Early Remediation Framework:
Barbara J. Bouchard, Senior Associate
Director, (202) 452–3072, or Molly E.
Mahar, Senior Supervisory Financial
Analyst, (202) 973–7360, Division of
Banking Supervision and Regulation; or
Paul F. Hannah, Counsel, (202) 452–
2810, or Jay R. Schwarz, Counsel, (202)
452–2970, Legal Division.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
II. Overview of the Proposal
A. Scope of Application
B. Risk-Based Capital Requirements and
Leverage Limits
C. Liquidity Requirements
D. Single-Counterparty Credit Limits
E. Risk Management and Risk Committee
Requirements
F. Stress Testing Requirements
G. Debt-to-Equity Limits for Certain
Covered Companies
H. Early Remediation Framework
I. Transition Arrangements and Ongoing
Compliance
J. Reservation of Authority
K. Common Definitions
III. Risk-Based Capital Requirements and
Leverage Limits
A. Background
B. Overview of the Proposed Rule
1. Capital Planning and Minimum Capital
Requirements
2. Quantitative Risk-Based Capital
Surcharge
IV. Liquidity Requirements
A. Background
B. Overview of the Proposed Rule
1. Key Definitions
2. Corporate Governance Provisions
3. Liquidity Requirements
V. Single Counterparty Exposure Limits
A. Background
B. Overview of the Proposed Rule
VI. Risk Management and Risk Committee
Requirements
A. Background
B. Overview of the Proposed Rule
1. Risk Committee Requirements
2. Additional Enhanced Risk Management
Standards for Covered Companies
VII. Stress Test Requirements
A. Background
B. Overview of the Proposed Rule
1. Annual Supervisory Stress Tests
Conducted by the Board
2. Annual and Additional Stress Tests
Conducted by the Companies
C. Request for Comments
VIII. Debt-to-Equity Limit for Certain Covered
Companies
A. Background
B. Overview of the Proposed Rule
IX. Early Remediation
A. Background
B. Overview of the Proposed Rule
1. Early Remediation Requirements
2. Early Remediation Triggering Events
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X. Administrative Law Matters
A. Solicitation of Comments and Use of
Plain Language
B. Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
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I. Introduction
The recent financial crisis showed
that some financial companies had
grown so large, leveraged, and
interconnected that their failure could
pose a threat to overall financial
stability. The sudden collapses or nearcollapses of major financial companies
were among the most destabilizing
events of the crisis. The crisis also
demonstrated weaknesses in the
existing framework for supervising,
regulating and otherwise constraining
the risks of major financial companies,
as well as deficiencies in the
government’s toolkit for managing their
failure.
As a result of the imprudent risk
taking of major financial companies and
the severe consequences to the financial
system and the economy associated
with the disorderly failure of these
interconnected companies, the U.S.
government (and many foreign
governments in their home countries)
intervened on an unprecedented scale to
reduce the impact of, or prevent, the
failure of these companies and the
attendant consequences for the broader
financial system. Market participants
before the crisis had assumed some
probability that major financial
companies would receive government
assistance if they became troubled. But
the actions taken by the government in
response to the crisis, although
necessary, have solidified that market
view.
The market perception that some
companies are ‘‘too big to fail’’ poses
threats to the financial system. First, it
reduces the incentives of shareholders,
creditors and counterparties of these
companies to discipline excessive risktaking. Second, it produces competitive
distortions because companies
perceived as ‘‘too big to fail’’ can often
fund themselves at a lower cost than
other companies. This distortion is
unfair to smaller companies, damaging
to competition, and tends to artificially
encourage further consolidation and
concentration in the financial system.
A major thrust of the Dodd-Frank
Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act of 2010 (Dodd-Frank Act
or Act) 1 is mitigating the threat to
financial stability posed by systemically
important financial companies. The
Dodd-Frank Act addresses this problem
with a multi-pronged approach: a new
1 Public
Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010).
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orderly liquidation authority for
financial companies (other than banks
and insurance companies); the
establishment of the Financial Stability
Oversight Council (Council) empowered
with the authority to designate nonbank
financial companies for Board oversight;
stronger regulation of major bank
holding companies and nonbank
financial companies designated for
Board oversight; and enhanced
regulation of over-the-counter (OTC)
derivatives, other core financial
markets, and financial market utilities.
Overview of Statutory Requirements
The focus of this proposal is stronger
regulation of major bank holding
companies and nonbank financial
companies designated by the Council
for Board supervision. In particular,
sections 165 and 166 of the Dodd-Frank
Act require the Board to impose a
package of enhanced prudential
standards on bank holding companies
with total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more 2 and nonbank financial
companies the Council has designated,
pursuant to section 113 of the DoddFrank Act,3 for supervision by the Board
(together, covered companies and each
a covered company). By their terms,
sections 165 and 166 of the Act apply
to any foreign nonbank financial
company designated by the Council for
supervision by the Board 4 and any
foreign banking organization with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more that is or is treated as a bank
holding company for purposes of the
Bank Holding Company Act of 1956
pursuant to section 8(a) of the
International Banking Act of 1978.5
However, as explained in greater detail
below, this proposal does not apply to
foreign banking organizations, and the
Board expects to issue a separate
proposal shortly that would apply the
enhanced standards of sections 165 and
166 of the Act to foreign banking
2 The Board, pursuant to a Council
recommendation, may raise the $50 billion asset
threshold for bank holding companies with respect
to the application of certain enhanced standards.
See 12 U.S.C. 5365(a)(2)(B).
3 See 12 U.S.C. 5323. The Council proposed rules
to implement its authority under section 113 in
January 2011 and October 2011. See 76 FR 4555
(January 26, 2011) and 76 FR 64264 (October 18,
2011).
4 See 12 U.S.C. 5323(b). Section 102(c) limits the
application of section 165 to only the U.S. activities
and subsidiaries of a foreign nonbank financial
company. 12 U.S.C. 5311(c).
5 See 12 U.S.C. 5311(a)(1) (defining the term
‘‘bank holding company’’ for purposes of Title I of
the Dodd-Frank Act). A foreign banking
organization is treated as a bank holding company
pursuant to section 8(a) of the International Banking
Act if the foreign banking organization operates a
branch, agency or commercial lending company in
the United States.
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organizations. The definition of
‘‘covered company’’ for purposes of the
proposal would nonetheless include a
foreign banking organization’s U.S.based bank holding company subsidiary
that on its own has total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more.6 This
proposal would not extend to the U.S.
operations of a foreign banking
organization that are conducted outside
of a U.S.-based bank holding company
subsidiary.
The prudential standards for covered
companies required under section 165
of the Dodd-Frank Act must include
enhanced risk-based capital and
leverage requirements, enhanced
liquidity requirements, enhanced risk
management and risk committee
requirements, a requirement to submit a
resolution plan, single-counterparty
credit limits, stress tests, and a debt-toequity limit for covered companies that
the Council has determined pose a grave
threat to financial stability. In general,
the Act directs the Board to implement
enhanced prudential standards that
strengthen existing micro-prudential
supervision 7 and regulation of
individual companies and incorporate
macro-prudential considerations so as to
reduce threats posed by covered
companies to the stability of the
financial system as a whole. Section 166
of the Act requires the Board to
establish a regulatory framework for the
early remediation of financial
weaknesses of covered companies in
order to minimize the probability that
such companies will become insolvent
and the potential harm of such
insolvencies to the financial stability of
the United States.8
In addition to the required standards,
the Act authorizes but does not require
the Board to establish additional
enhanced standards for covered
companies relating to (i) contingent
capital; (ii) public disclosures; (iii)
short-term debt limits; and (iv) such
other prudential standards as the Board
6 With the exception of the proposed liquidity
and enterprise-wide risk management requirements
and the debt-to-equity limit for covered companies
that the Council has determined pose a grave threat,
the proposed rule would not apply to any bank
holding company subsidiary of a foreign banking
organization that has relied on Supervision and
Regulation Letter SR 01–01 issued by the Board of
Governors (as in effect on May 19, 2010) until July
21, 2015. This is consistent with the phase-in
period for the imposition of minimum risk-based
and leverage capital requirements established in
section 171 of the Dodd-Frank Act.
7 Micro-prudential supervision focuses on
surveillance of the safety and soundness of
individual companies, whereas macro-prudential
supervision focuses on the surveillance of systemic
risk posed by individual companies and systemic
risks posed by interconnectedness among
companies.
8 See 12 U.S.C. 5366(b).
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determines appropriate.9 The Board is
not proposing any of these
supplemental standards at this time but
continues to consider whether adopting
any of these standards would be
appropriate.
The Act requires the enhanced
standards established by the Board for
covered companies under section 165 to
be more stringent than those standards
applicable to other bank holding
companies and nonbank financial
companies that do not present similar
risks to U.S. financial stability.10
Section 165 also requires that the
enhanced standards established
pursuant to that section increase in
stringency based on the systemic
footprint and risk characteristics of
individual covered companies.11
In prescribing prudential standards
under section 165(b)(1) 12 to covered
companies, the Board is required to take
into account differences among bank
holding companies covered by the rule
and nonbank financial companies
supervised by the Board, based on
certain considerations.13 The Board also
has authority under section 165 to tailor
the application of the standards,
including differentiating among covered
companies on an individual basis or by
category.14 When differentiating among
companies for purposes of applying the
standards established under section 165,
the Board may consider the companies’
size, capital structure, riskiness,
complexity, financial activities, and any
9 See
12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(1)(B).
12 U.S.C. 5365(a)(1)(A).
11 See 12 U.S.C. 5365(a)(1)(B). Under section
165(a)(1)(B), the enhanced standards must increase
in stringency, based on the considerations listed in
section 165(b)(3). These considerations are
summarized in note 13, infra.
12 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(1). The Board is separately
required to issue regulations to implement the risk
committee and stress test enhanced standards
pursuant to sections 165(h) and 165(i), respectively.
13 See 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(3). The factors the Board
must consider include—(i) The factors described in
sections 113(a) and (b) of the Dodd-Frank Act (12
U.S.C. 5313(a) and (b)); (ii) whether the company
owns an insured depository institution; (iii)
nonfinancial activities and affiliations of the
company; and (iv) any other risk-related factors that
the Board determines appropriate. 12 U.S.C.
5365(b)(3)(A). The Board must, as appropriate,
adapt the required standards in light of any
predominant line business of a nonbank financial
company for which particular standards may not be
appropriate. 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(3)(D). Section
165(b)(3) also requires the Board, to the extent
possible, to ensure that small changes in the factors
listed in sections 113(a) and 113(b) of the DoddFrank Act would not result in sharp, discontinuous
changes in the prudential standards established by
the Board under section 165(b)(1). 12 U.S.C.
5365(b)(3)(B). The statute also directs the Board to
take into account any recommendations made by
the Council pursuant to its authority under section
115 of the Dodd-Frank Act. 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(3)(C).
14 See 12 U.S.C. 5365(a)(2)(A).
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10 See
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other risk-related factor the Board
deems appropriate.
II. Overview of the Proposal
The Board is requesting comment on
proposed rules to implement certain
requirements of sections 165 and 166 of
the Dodd-Frank Act.15 The Board
consulted with the Council, including
by providing periodic updates to
members of the Council and their staff
on the development of the proposed
enhanced standards. The proposal
reflects comments provided to the Board
as a part of this consultation process.
The Board also intends, before imposing
prudential standards or any other
requirements pursuant to section 165
that are likely to have a significant
impact on a functionally regulated
subsidiary or depository institution
subsidiary of a covered company, to
consult with each Council member that
primarily supervises any such
subsidiary.16
This proposal includes rules to
implement the requirements under
section 165 related to (i) risk-based
capital and leverage; (ii) liquidity; (iii)
single-counterparty credit limits; (iv)
overall risk management and risk
committees; (v) stress tests; and (vi) a
debt-to-equity limit for covered
companies that the Council has
determined pose a grave threat to
financial stability. The proposal also
includes rules to implement the early
remediation requirements in section 166
of the Act related to establishing
measures of financial condition and
remediation requirements that increase
in stringency as the financial condition
of a covered company declines.
Section 165(d) of the Act also
establishes requirements that each
covered company submit periodically to
the Board and Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC) a plan for
rapid and orderly resolution under the
Bankruptcy Code in the event of its
material financial distress or failure, as
well as a periodic report regarding
credit exposures between each covered
company and other significant financial
companies. The Board and FDIC jointly
issued a final rule to implement the
resolution plan requirement that became
effective on November 30, 2011 and
expect to implement periodic reporting
of credit exposures at a later date.17
15 12
U.S.C. 5365 and 5366.
12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(4).
17 See 76 FR 67323 (November 1, 2011). In
response to significant concerns expressed by
commenters about the clarity of key definitions and
the scope of the reporting requirement of the
proposed credit exposure reporting requirement,
the Board and FDIC postponed finalizing the credit
exposure reporting requirement. The Board believes
16 See
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By setting forth comprehensive
enhanced prudential standards and an
early remediation framework for
covered companies, the proposal would
create an integrated set of requirements
that seeks to meaningfully reduce the
probability of failure of systemically
important companies and minimize
damage to the financial system and the
broader economy in the event such a
company fails. The proposed rules,
which increase in stringency with the
level of systemic risk posed by and the
risk characteristics of the covered
company, would provide incentives for
covered companies to reduce their
systemic footprint and encourage
covered companies to consider the
external costs that their failure or
distress would impose on the broader
financial system, thus helping to offset
any implicit subsidy they may have
enjoyed as a result of market
perceptions of implicit government
support.
This proposal provides a core set of
concrete rules to complement the
Federal Reserve’s existing efforts to
enhance the supervisory framework for
covered companies. The Federal
Reserve, since before the passage of the
Dodd-Frank Act, has been taking steps
to strengthen its supervision of the
largest, most complex banking
companies. For example, the Federal
Reserve created a centralized
multidisciplinary body called the Large
Institution Supervision Coordinating
Committee (LISCC) to oversee the
supervision of these companies. This
committee uses horizontal, or crosscompany, evaluations to monitor
interconnectedness and common
practices among companies that could
lead to greater systemic risk. The
committee also uses additional and
improved quantitative methods for
evaluating the financial condition of
companies and the risks they might
pose to each other and to the broader
financial system.
A. Scope of Application
The Dodd-Frank Act requires the
Board to apply enhanced standards
established under section 165(b)(1) and
early remediation requirements under
that robust reporting of a covered company’s credit
exposures to other significant bank holding
companies and financial companies is critical to
ongoing risk management by covered companies, as
well as to the Board’s ongoing supervision of
covered companies and financial stability
responsibilities, and the FDIC’s responsibility to
resolve failed covered companies. However, the
agencies also recognize that these reports would be
most useful and complete if developed in
conjunction with the Dodd-Frank Act’s single
counterparty credit exposure limits. See 12 U.S.C.
5365(e).
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section 166 of the Dodd-Frank Act to
covered companies. As noted above,
covered companies are described in the
Act as bank holding companies with
total consolidated assets of $50 billion
or more (which would include any
foreign banking organization that has
banking operations in the United States
and that has global consolidated assets
of $50 billion or more) and nonbank
financial companies the Council has
designated for supervision by the Board.
The proposal incorporates this
definition but, for reasons described
below, at this time only covers U.S.
bank holding companies and nonbank
financial companies the Council has
designated.
Under section 165(i)(2), the
requirements to conduct annual stress
tests apply to any financial company
with more than $10 billion in total
consolidated assets and that is regulated
by a primary federal financial regulatory
agency.18 The Board, as the primary
Federal financial regulatory agency for
bank holding companies, savings and
loan holding companies, and state
member banks, proposes to apply the
annual company-run stress test
requirements to any bank holding
company, savings and loan holding
company,19 and state member bank with
more than $10 billion in total
consolidated assets. Moreover, the
requirement to establish a risk
committee under section 165(h) of the
Act applies to any publicly traded bank
holding company with $10 billion or
more in total consolidated assets.20
For purposes of the definition of a
covered company, a bank holding
company is deemed to have met the $50
billion asset criterion based on the
average of the company’s total
consolidated assets as reported on its
four most recent quarterly reports to the
Board, i.e., the Consolidated Financial
Statements for Bank Holding Companies
(Federal Reserve Form FR Y–9C).21 This
18 12 U.S.C. 5365(i)(2). The Dodd-Frank Act
defines primary financial regulatory agency in
section 2 of the Act. See 12 U.S.C. 5301(12). The
Board, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency,
and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation have
consulted on rules implementing section 165(i)(2).
19 As discussed below, the Board proposes to
delay the effective date of the portion of the
proposal implementing section 165(i)(2) for savings
and loan holding companies until such time as the
Board has implemented consolidated capital rules
for savings and loan holding companies.
20 12 U.S.C. 5365(h).
21 With respect to a company that has been a bank
holding company for less than four quarters, the
Board would refer to the company’s financial
statements from quarters preceding the time that it
began reporting on the FR Y–9C. For example, if a
bank holding company had been reporting on the
FR Y–9C for only one quarter, the Board would
refer to its GAAP financial statements for the prior
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calculation will be effective as of the
due date of the bank holding company’s
most recent FR Y–9C.22 Under the
proposal, a bank holding company that
becomes a covered company would
remain a covered company until its total
consolidated assets, as reported to the
Board on a quarterly basis on the FR Y–
9C, fall and remain below $50 billion for
four consecutive quarters.
This proposal would apply the same
set of enhanced prudential standards to
covered companies that are bank
holding companies and covered
companies that are nonbank financial
companies. As noted above, however, in
applying the enhanced prudential
standards to covered companies, the
Board may determine, on its own or in
response to a recommendation by the
Council, to tailor the application of the
enhanced standards to different
companies on an individual basis or by
category, taking into consideration their
capital structure, riskiness, complexity,
financial activities, size, and any other
risk-related factors that the Board deems
appropriate.23
The Board notes that this authority
will be particularly important in
applying the enhanced standards to
specific nonbank financial companies
designated by the Council that are
organized and operated differently from
banking organizations.24 Under the
Act,25 the Council generally may
determine that a nonbank financial
company, i.e., a company
predominantly engaged in financial
activities, should be subject to
supervision by the Board and the
enhanced standards established
pursuant to section 165 and the early
remediation requirements established
pursuant to section 166, if material
financial distress at such company, or
the nature, scope, size, scale,
concentration, interconnectedness, or
mix of the activities of the nonbank
financial company, could pose a threat
to the financial stability of the United
States. As such, the types of business
models, capital structures, and risk
three quarters for purposes of calculating its average
total consolidated assets.
22 For purposes of subpart E of the proposed rule,
the same calculation approach would be applied to
any bank holding company in determining when it
becomes an over $10 billion bank holding company.
For purposes of subpart G of the proposed rule, the
same calculation approach would be applied to any
bank holding company, savings and loan holding
company, or state member bank in determining
when it becomes an over $10 billion company.
23 12 U.S.C. 5365(a)(2).
24 To date, the Council has not designated any
nonbank financial company for supervision by the
Board.
25 See 12 U.S.C. 5315. See also 76 FR 64264 (Oct.
18, 2011) (proposing to implement the Council’s
authority under section 113 of the Dodd-Frank).
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profiles of companies that would be
subject to designation by the Council
could vary significantly.
While this proposal was largely
developed with large, complex bank
holding companies in mind, some of the
standards nonetheless provide sufficient
flexibility to be readily implemented by
covered companies that are not bank
holding companies. In prescribing
prudential standards under section
165(b)(1), the Board would to take into
account differences among bank holding
companies and nonbank financial
companies supervised by the Board.26
Following designation of a nonbank
financial company by the Council, the
Board would thoroughly assess the
business model, capital structure, and
risk profile of the designated company
to determine how the proposed
enhanced prudential standards and
early remediation requirements should
apply. The Board may, by order or
regulation, tailor the application of the
enhanced standards to designated
nonbank financial companies on an
individual basis or by category, as
appropriate.27
The Board solicits comment on
alternative approaches for applying the
enhanced prudential standards and the
early remediation requirements the
Dodd-Frank Act requires to nonbank
covered companies.
Question 1: What additional
characteristics of a nonbank covered
company—in addition to its business
model, capital structure, and risk
profile—should the Board consider
when determining how to apply the
enhanced standards and the early
remediation requirements to such a
company?
Question 2: What are the potential
unintended consequences and burdens
associated with subjecting a nonbank
covered company to the enhanced
prudential standards and the early
remediation requirements?
The current proposal would apply
only to U.S.-based bank holding
companies that are covered companies
and to nonbank covered companies, and
would not apply to foreign banking
26 See 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(3). The factors the Board
must take into consideration in prescribing the
enhanced standards under section 165(b)(1) are
described above. See supra note 13. Under section
171 of the Dodd-Frank Act, the Board is required
to impose the same minimum risk-based and
leverage capital requirements on bank holding
companies and nonbank covered company as it
imposes on insured depository institutions. 12
U.S.C. 5371.
27 Following designation of nonbank financial
companies by the FSOC, the Board also would
consider the appropriate risk-based capital
treatment of asset types with no explicit treatment
under the current risk-based capital rules. See
generally 76 FR 37620 (June 28, 2011).
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organizations. As discussed above,
however, foreign banking organizations
that have U.S. banking operations
(whether a U.S. branch, a U.S. agency,
or a U.S. subsidiary bank holding
company or bank) and have global total
consolidated assets 28 of $50 billion or
more are subject to sections 165 and 166
of the Dodd-Frank Act. Section 165
instructs the Board, in applying the
enhanced prudential standards of
section 165 to foreign financial
companies, to give due regard to the
principle of national treatment and
equality of competitive opportunity, and
to take into account the extent to which
the foreign company is subject, on a
consolidated basis, to home country
standards that are comparable to those
applied to financial companies in the
United States.
Determining how to apply the
enhanced prudential standards and
early remediation framework
established by the Dodd-Frank Act to
foreign banking organizations in a
manner consistent with the purposes of
the statute and the Board’s existing
framework of supervising foreign
banking organizations is difficult. The
scope of enhanced prudential standards
required under sections 165 and 166
extends beyond the set of prudential
standards that are part of existing
international agreements, and foreign
banking organizations are subject to
home country regulatory and
supervisory regimes that employ a wide
variety of approaches to prudential
regulation. Further, foreign banking
organizations operate in the United
States through diverse structures,
complicating the consistent application
of the enhanced standards to the U.S.
operations of a foreign banking
organization. Finally, the risk posed to
U.S. financial stability by foreign
banking organizations that are subject to
sections 165 and 166 varies widely. The
Board is actively developing a proposed
framework for applying the Act’s
enhanced prudential standards and
early remediation requirement to foreign
banking organizations, and expects to
issue this framework for public
comment shortly.
While sections 165 and 166 generally
do not apply to savings and loan
holding companies, section 165(i)(2)
requires the Board to issue regulations
pursuant to which any financial
company for which the Board is the
primary federal financial regulatory
28 For a foreign banking organization subject to
section 165 of the Dodd-Frank Act, total
consolidated assets would be based on the foreign
banking organization’s Capital and Asset Reports
for Foreign Banking Organizations (Federal Reserve
Form FR Y–7Q).
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agency and that has more than $10
billion in total consolidated assets must
conduct an annual stress test.29 Thus,
the proposal would apply annual
company-run stress test requirements to
any savings and loan holding company
with more than $10 billion in
consolidated assets. However, because
the annual stress test requirement, as
proposed, is predicated on a company
being subject to consolidated capital
requirements, this proposal would delay
the effective date of the company-run
stress test requirements for savings and
loan holding companies until the Board
has established risk-based capital
requirements for savings and loan
holding companies.
While the remaining parts of section
165 and section 166 do not specifically
apply to savings and loan holding
companies, the Board, as the primary
supervisor of savings and loan holding
companies, has the authority under the
Home Owners’ Loan Act to apply the
enhanced standards to savings and loan
holding companies to ensure their safety
and soundness.30 The Board intends to
issue a separate proposal for notice and
comment to initially apply the
enhanced standards and early
remediation requirements to all savings
and loan holding companies with
substantial banking activities—i.e., any
savings and loan holding company that
(i) has total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more; and (ii)(A) has savings
association subsidiaries which comprise
25 percent or more of such savings and
loan holding company’s total
consolidated assets, or (B) controls one
or more savings associations with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more. The Board believes that applying
the enhanced prudential standards of
this proposal to savings and loan
holding companies that satisfy these
criteria is an important aspect of
ensuring their safety and soundness.
The Board also may determine to apply
the enhanced standards to any savings
and loan holding company, if
appropriate to ensure the safety and
soundness of such company, on a caseby-case basis.
As is the case with stress testing,
many of the other enhanced standards
are predicated on a covered company
being subject to consolidated capital
29 Among entities covered by this part of the
Dodd-Frank are state member banks, bank holding
companies, and savings and loan holding
companies with total consolidated assets of $10
billion or more.
30 See 12 U.S.C. 1467a(g) (authorizing the Board
to issue such regulations and orders as the Board
deems necessary or appropriate to administer and
carry out the purposes of section 10 of the Home
Owners’ Loan Act).
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requirements. Therefore, similar to the
approach with respect to applying the
annual company-run stress test
requirement to savings and loan holding
companies, the Board intends to impose
enhanced prudential standards and
early remediation requirements on
savings and loan holding companies
with substantial banking activities once
the Board has established risk-based
capital requirements for savings and
loan holding companies.
Question 3: The Board seeks comment
on its proposed approach to the
application of the company-run stress
test requirements, including the delayed
effective date, to savings and loan
holding companies. Also, what
additional or alternative criteria should
the Board consider for determining
which savings and loan holding
companies initially would be subject to
the enhanced prudential standards and
early remediation requirements?
B. Risk-Based Capital Requirements and
Leverage Limits
The recent financial crisis exposed
significant weaknesses in the regulatory
capital requirements for large banking
companies. The amount of capital held
by many large, complex banking
companies proved to be inadequate to
cover the risks that had accumulated in
the companies. For certain exposure
types, such as trading positions, OTC
derivatives, and securitization and resecuritization exposures, it became
evident that capital requirements did
not adequately cover the risk of loss
from those activities. In addition, it
became apparent that some of the
instruments that qualified as tier 1
capital for banking companies, the core
measure of capital adequacy, were not
truly loss absorbing.
Section 165(b)(1)(A)(i) of the Act
directs the Board to establish enhanced
risk-based capital and leverage
standards for covered companies to
address these weaknesses. The Board
plans to meet this statutory requirement
with a two-part effort. Under this
proposal, the Board would subject all
covered companies to the Board’s
capital plan rule, which currently
requires all bank holding companies
with $50 billion or more in consolidated
assets to submit an annual capital plan
to the Board for review (capital plan
rule).31 Under the capital plan rule,
covered companies would have to
demonstrate to the Board that they have
robust, forward-looking capital planning
processes that account for their unique
risks and that permit continued
operations during times of economic
31 12
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and financial stress. The supervisory
and company-run stress tests that are
part of this proposal and discussed in
detail below are important aspects of
this forward-looking process.32 The
Board expects that a covered company
will integrate into its capital plan, as
one part of the underlying analysis, the
results of the company-run stress tests
conducted in accordance with section
165(i)(2) of the Dodd-Frank Act and the
Board’s proposed implementing rules.
The results of those stress tests, as well
as the annual supervisory stress test
conducted by the Board under section
165(i)(1) of the Dodd-Frank, will be
considered in the evaluation of a
covered company’s capital plan.
Under the capital plan rule, covered
companies would be required to
demonstrate to the Board their ability to
maintain capital above existing
minimum regulatory capital ratios and
above a tier 1 common ratio of 5 percent
under both expected and stressed
conditions over a minimum ninequarter planning horizon.33 Covered
companies with unsatisfactory capital
plans would face limits on their ability
to make capital distributions.
The Board intends to supplement the
enhanced risk-based capital and
leverage requirements included in this
proposal with a subsequent proposal to
implement a quantitative risk-based
capital surcharge for covered companies
or a subset of covered companies. Over
the past few years, the Federal Reserve
and other U.S. federal banking agencies
32 In June 2011, the Board, along with the OCC
and FDIC, issued for comment proposed
supervisory guidance on stress testing for banking
organizations with more than $10 billion in total
assets. 76 FR 35072 (June 15, 2011). That proposed
guidance contains principles for an effective stress
testing framework that would cover an
organization’s various stress testing activities,
including capital and liquidity stress testing. The
agencies issued the proposed guidance for comment
separately from this proposal because the proposed
guidance is intended to apply broadly to
organizations’ use of stress testing in overall risk
management, not just to capital and liquidity stress
testing, as is the case for the requirements of this
proposed rule. The agencies are considering
comments on the proposed guidance and expect to
issue a final version shortly. The Board expects that
companies would follow the principles set forth in
the final stress testing guidance—as well as with
other relevant supervisory guidance—when
conducting capital and liquidity stress testing in
accordance with requirements in this proposed
rule.
33 Under the capital plan rule, tier 1 common is
defined as tier 1 capital less non-common elements
in tier 1 capital, including perpetual preferred stock
and related surplus, minority interest in
subsidiaries, trust preferred securities and
mandatory convertible preferred securities.
Specifically, non-common elements include the
following items captured in the FR Y–9C reporting
form: Schedule HC, line item 23 net of Schedule
HC–R, line item 5; and Schedule HC–R, line items
6a, 6b, and 6c.
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have worked together with other
members of the Basel Committee on
Banking Supervision (BCBS) to
strengthen the regulatory capital regime
for internationally active banks and
develop a framework for a risk-based
capital surcharge for the world’s largest,
most interconnected banking
companies. The new regime for
internationally active banks, known as
Basel III,34 materially improves the
quality of regulatory capital and
introduces a new minimum common
equity requirement. Basel III also raises
the numerical minimum capital
requirements and introduces capital
conservation and countercyclical buffers
to induce banking organizations to hold
capital in excess of regulatory
minimums. In addition, Basel III
establishes for the first time an
international leverage standard for
internationally active banks. The Board
is working with the other U.S. banking
regulators to implement the Basel III
capital reforms in the United States.
Building on the Basel III reforms, the
BCBS published a document in
November 2011 entitled Global
systemically important banks:
Assessment methodology and the
additional loss absorbency requirement
(BCBS framework), which set forth an
additional capital requirement for global
systemically important banks (G–
SIBs).35
The Basel III and BCBS frameworks,
once implemented in the United States,
are expected to significantly enhance
risk-based capital and constrain the
leverage of covered companies and will
be a key part of the Board’s overall
approach to enhancing the risk-based
capital and leverage standards
applicable to these companies in
accordance with section 165 of the
Dodd-Frank Act. The Board intends to
propose a quantitative risk-based capital
surcharge in the United States based on
the BCBS approach consistent with the
BCBS’s implementation timeframe. The
forthcoming proposal would
contemplate adopting implementing
rules in 2014, and requiring G–SIBs to
meet the capital surcharges on a phasedin basis from 2016–2019.
C. Liquidity Requirements
The financial crisis revealed
significant weaknesses in liquidity
buffers and liquidity risk management
practices throughout the financial
system that directly contributed to the
failure or near failure of many
companies and exacerbated the crisis.
Section 165(b)(1)(A)(ii) addresses
inadequacies in the existing regulatory
liquidity requirements by directing the
Board to establish liquidity standards
for covered companies. Similar to
enhanced risk-based capital and
leverage requirements, the Federal
Reserve intends to implement this
statutory requirement through a multistage approach.
This proposal would subject covered
companies to a set of enhanced liquidity
risk management standards, including
liquidity stress testing.36 The proposal
builds on guidance previously adopted
by the Board and other U.S. federal
banking agencies and proposes higher
liquidity risk management standards for
covered companies.37
The proposal would require covered
companies to conduct internal stress
tests at least monthly to measure their
liquidity needs at 30-day, 90-day and
one-year intervals during times of
instability in the financial markets and
to hold liquid assets that would be
sufficient to cover 30-day stressed net
cash outflows under their internal stress
scenarios. Covered companies also
would be required to meet specified
corporate governance requirements
around liquidity risk management, to
project cash flow needs over various
time horizons, to establish internal
limits on certain liquidity metrics, and
36 See
supra note 32.
and Regulation Letter SR 10–6,
Interagency Policy Statement on Funding and
Liquidity Risk Management (March 17, 2010),
available at https://www.federalreserve.gov/
boarddocs/srletters/2010/sr1006.pdf; 75 FR 13656
(March 22, 2010). The Board, the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), the FDIC, the
Office of Thrift Supervision, the National Credit
Union Administration, and the Conference of State
Bank Supervisors jointly issued the Interagency
Liquidity Risk Policy Statement. The Interagency
Liquidity Risk Policy Statement incorporates
principles of sound liquidity risk management that
the agencies have issued in the past, and
supplements them with the principles of sound
liquidity risk management established by the Basel
Committee on Bank Supervision (Basel Committee)
in its document entitled ‘‘Principles for Sound
Liquidity Management and Supervision.’’ Principles
for Sound Liquidity Risk Management and
Supervision (September 2008), available at https://
ww.bis.org/publ/bcbs144.htm.
37 Supervision
34 See Basel Committee on Banking Supervision,
Basel III: A global regulatory framework for more
resilient banks and banking systems (revised June
2011), available at https://www.bis.org/publ/
bcbs189.htm (hereinafter Basel III framework). See
also Basel Committee on Banking Supervision,
Basel III: International framework for liquidity risk
measurement, standards and monitoring (December
2010), available at www.bis.org/publ/bcbs188.htm
(hereinafter Basel III liquidity framework);
Enhancements to the Basel II framework (July
2009), available at www.bis.org/publ/bcbs157.htm;
and Revisions to the Basel II market risk framework
(July 2009), available at www.bis.org/publ/
bcbs158.htm.
35 See Basel Committee on Banking Supervision,
Global systemically important banks: Assessment
methodology and the additional loss absorbency
requirement (November 2011), available at https://
www.bis.org/publ/bcbs207.htm (hereinafter BCBS
capital surcharge framework).
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to maintain a contingency funding plan
(CFP) that identifies potential sources of
liquidity strain and alternative sources
of funding when usual sources of
liquidity are unavailable.
In addition to the enhanced liquidity
risk management standards included in
this proposal, the Federal Reserve and
other U.S. federal banking agencies have
been working with the BCBS over the
past few years to develop quantitative
liquidity requirements to increase the
capacity of internationally active
banking firms to absorb shocks to
funding relative to the liquidity risks
they face. The BCBS approved two new
liquidity rules as part of the Basel III
reforms in December 2010. The first rule
is a Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR),
which would require banks to hold an
amount of high-quality liquid assets
sufficient to meet expected net cash
outflows over a 30-day time horizon
under a supervisory stress scenario. The
second rule is the Net Stable Funding
Ratio (NSFR), which would require
banks to enhance their liquidity risk
resiliency out to one year. Under the
terms of Basel III, global banks are
required to comply with the LCR by
2015 and with the NSFR by 2018.
The Basel III liquidity rules are
currently in an international observation
period as the U.S. federal banking
agencies and other BCBS members
assess the potential impact of the rules
on banks and various financial markets.
The Board intends, in conjunction with
other federal banking agencies, to
implement these standards in the
United States through one or more
separate rulemakings. Through
implementation of these standards in
the United States, the Board anticipates
that the Basel III liquidity rules would
then become a central component of the
enhanced liquidity requirements for
covered companies, or a subset of
covered companies, under section 165
of the Dodd-Frank Act.
D. Single-Counterparty Credit Limits
As demonstrated in the crisis,
interconnectivity among major financial
companies poses risks to financial
stability. The effects of one large
financial company’s failure or near
collapse may be transmitted and
amplified by the bilateral credit
exposures between large, systemically
important companies. The financial
crisis also revealed inadequacies in the
structure of the U.S. regulatory
framework for single-counterparty credit
limits. Although banks were subject to
single-borrower lending and investment
limits, these limits did not apply to
bank holding companies on a
consolidated basis and did not
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adequately cover credit exposures
generated by derivatives and some
securities financing transactions.38
In an effort to address concentration
risk among large financial institutions,
section 165(e) of the Dodd-Frank Act
directs the Board to establish singlecounterparty credit limits for covered
companies in order to limit the risks
that the failure of any individual
company could pose to a covered
company.39 This section directs the
Board to prescribe regulations that
prohibit covered companies from having
credit exposure to any unaffiliated
company that exceeds 25 percent of the
capital stock and surplus of the covered
company.40 This section also authorizes
the Board to lower the 25 percent
threshold if necessary to mitigate risks
to the financial stability of the United
States.41
Credit exposure to a company is
defined broadly in section 165(e) of the
Act to cover all extensions of credit to
the company; all repurchase and reverse
repurchase agreements, and securities
borrowing and lending transactions,
with the company; all guarantees and
letters of credit issued on behalf of the
company; all investments in securities
issued by the company; counterparty
credit exposure to the company in
connection with derivative transactions;
and any other similar transaction that
the Board determines to be a credit
exposure for purposes of section
165(e).42 Section 165(e) also grants
authority to the Board to exempt
transactions from the definition of the
term ‘‘credit exposure’’ if the Board
finds that the exemption is in the public
interest and consistent with the
purposes of the subsection.43
The proposal implements these
statutory provisions by defining key
terms, such as covered company,
unaffiliated counterparty, and capital
stock and surplus. The proposal also
targets the mutual interconnectedness of
the largest financial companies by
setting a stricter 10 percent limit for
credit exposure between a covered
38 Section 610 of the Dodd-Frank Act amends the
term ‘‘loans and extensions of credit’’ for purposes
of the lending limits applicable to national banks
to include any credit exposure arising from a
derivative transaction, repurchase agreement,
reverse repurchase agreement, securities lending
transaction, or securities borrowing transaction. See
Dodd-Frank Act, Public Law 111–203, § 610, 124
Stat. 1376, 1611 (2010). As discussed in more detail
below, these types of transactions are also all made
subject to the single counterparty credit limits of
section 165(e). 12 U.S.C. 5365(e)(3).
39 See 12 U.S.C. 5365(e)(1).
40 12 U.S.C. 5365(e)(2).
41 See id.
42 See 12 U.S.C. 5365(e)(3).
43 See 12 U.S.C. 5365(e)(5)–(6).
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company and a counterparty that each
either have more than $500 billion in
total consolidated assets or are a
nonbank covered company. In addition,
the proposal provides rules for
measuring the amount of credit
exposure generated by the various types
of credit transactions. Notably, the
proposal would allow covered
companies to reduce their credit
exposure to a counterparty for purposes
of the limit by obtaining credit risk
mitigants such as collateral, guarantees,
and credit derivative hedges. The
proposal describes the types of
collateral, guarantees and derivative
hedges that are eligible under the rule
and provides valuation rules for
reflecting such credit risk mitigants.
E. Risk Management and Risk
Committee Requirements
Sound, enterprise-wide risk
management by covered companies
reduces the likelihood of their material
distress or failure and thus promotes
financial stability. In addition to
adopting enhanced risk management
standards for covered companies, the
Board is directed by section 165(h) to
require publicly traded covered
companies and publicly traded bank
holding companies with $10 billion or
more in total consolidated assets to
establish a risk committee of the board
of directors that is responsible for
oversight of enterprise-wide risk
management, is comprised of an
appropriate number of independent
directors, and includes at least one risk
management expert.
The proposal would require all
covered companies to implement robust
enterprise-wide risk management
practices that are overseen by a risk
committee of the board of directors and
chief risk officer with appropriate levels
of independence, expertise and stature.
The proposal also would require any
publicly traded bank holding company
with $10 billion or more in total
consolidated assets and that is not a
covered company to establish a risk
committee.
F. Stress Testing Requirements
The crisis also revealed weaknesses in
the stress testing practices of large
banking organizations, as well as gaps in
the regulatory community’s approach to
assessing capital adequacy. During the
height of the crisis, the Federal Reserve
began stress testing the capital adequacy
of large, complex bank holding
companies as a forward-looking exercise
designed to estimate losses, revenues,
regulatory capital ratios, and reserve
needs under various macroeconomic
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scenarios.44 By looking at the broad
needs of the financial system and the
specific needs of individual companies,
these stress tests provided valuable
information to market participants and
had an overall stabilizing effect.
Section 165(i)(1) directs the Board to
implement rules requiring the Federal
Reserve, in coordination with the
appropriate primary Federal regulatory
agencies and the Federal Insurance
Office, to conduct an annual evaluation
of whether each covered company has
sufficient capital to absorb losses as a
result of adverse economic conditions
(supervisory stress tests). The Board is
also required to publish a summary of
the results of the supervisory stress
tests. In addition, section 165(i)(2)
directs the Board to implement rules
requiring each covered company to
conduct its own semi-annual stress tests
and any state member bank, bank
holding company or savings and loan
holding company with more than $10
billion in total consolidated assets (that
is not a covered company) to conduct its
own annual stress tests (company-run
stress tests). Companies must also
publish a summary of the results of the
company-run stress tests.
The proposal would implement these
statutory provisions by requiring the
Federal Reserve to conduct annual
supervisory stress tests of covered
companies under baseline, adverse, and
severely adverse scenarios and by
requiring companies that are subject to
company-run stress test requirements to
conduct their own capital adequacy
stress tests on an annual or semi-annual
basis, as applicable. Under the proposal,
the Board would publicly disclose
information on the company-specific
results of the supervisory stress tests.
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G. Debt-to-Equity Limits for Certain
Covered Companies
Section 165(j) of the Dodd-Frank Act
provides that the Board must require a
covered company to maintain a debt-toequity ratio of no more than 15-to-1,
upon a determination by the Council
44 In early 2009, the Federal Reserve led the
Supervisory Capital Assessment Program (SCAP) as
a key element of the plan to stabilize the U.S.
financial system. Building on SCAP and other
supervisory work coming out of the crisis, the
Federal Reserve initiated the Comprehensive
Capital Analysis and Review (CCAR) in late 2010
to evaluate the internal capital planning processes
of large, complex bank holding companies. The
CCAR represented a substantial strengthening of
previous approaches to ensuring that large firms
have thorough and robust processes for managing
and allocating their capital resources. The CCAR
also focused on the risk measurement and
management practices supporting firms’ capital
adequacy assessments, including their ability to
deliver credible inputs to their loss estimation
techniques.
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that (i) such company poses a grave
threat to the financial stability of the
United States and (ii) the imposition of
such a requirement is necessary to
mitigate the risk that the company poses
to U.S. financial stability. The proposal
establishes procedures to notify a
covered company that the Council has
made a determination under section
165(j) that the company must comply
with the 15-to-1 debt-to-equity ratio
requirement, defines ‘‘debt’’ and
‘‘equity’’ for purposes of calculating
compliance with the ratio, and provides
an affected company with a transition
period to come into compliance with
the ratio.
H. Early Remediation Framework
The financial crisis revealed that the
condition of large banking organizations
can deteriorate rapidly even during
periods when their reported regulatory
capital ratios are well above minimum
requirements. The crisis also revealed
that financial companies that addressed
incipient financial problems swiftly and
decisively performed much better than
companies that delayed remediation
work.
Section 166 of the Dodd-Frank Act
directs the Board to prescribe
regulations to provide for the early
remediation of financial distress at
covered companies so as to minimize
the probability that the company will
become insolvent and to reduce the
potential harm of the insolvency of a
covered company to the financial
stability of the United States. The
regulation must use measures of the
financial condition of a covered
company, including regulatory capital
ratios, liquidity measures, and other
forward-looking indicators as triggers
for remediation actions. Remediation
requirements must increase in
stringency as the financial condition of
a covered company deteriorates.
Remedies must include, in the initial
stages of financial decline of the covered
company, limits on capital
distributions, acquisitions, and asset
growth. Remedies in the later stages of
financial decline of the covered
company must include a capital
restoration plan and capital-raising
requirements, limits on transactions
with affiliates, management changes,
and asset sales.
The proposed rule implementing
section 166 establishes a regime for the
early remediation of financial distress at
covered companies that includes several
forward-looking triggers designed to
identify emerging or potential issues
before they develop into larger
problems. In addition to regulatory
capital triggers, the proposed rule
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601
includes triggers based on supervisory
stress test results, market indicators and
weaknesses in enterprise-wide and
liquidity risk management. The
proposed rule also describes the
regulatory restrictions that a covered
company must comply with in each
remedial stage.
I. Transition Arrangements and Ongoing
Compliance
Another important aspect of the
proposal is the timing of initial
compliance and ongoing reporting to the
Board in conjunction with the proposed
enhanced standards. In order to reduce
the burden on covered companies of
coming into initial compliance with the
standards, the Board is proposing to
provide meaningful phase-in periods. In
general, a company that is a covered
company on the effective date of the
final rule would be subject to the
enhanced prudential standards
beginning on the first day of the fifth
quarter following the effective date of
the final rule. A company that becomes
a covered company after the effective
date of the final rule generally would
become subject to the enhanced
standards beginning on the first day of
the fifth quarter following the date that
it became a covered company. For a
variety of reasons, the proposed rule
provides different transition
arrangements for enhanced risk-based
capital and leverage requirements,
single-counterparty credit limits and
stress testing requirements. Transition
arrangements for these standards are
discussed in the relevant sections of the
preamble below.
To reduce the burden of ongoing
compliance with the enhanced
standards, the Board is also proposing to
sequence the timing of required
submissions. For example, the
requirement that covered companies
conduct stress tests is specifically timed
to coordinate with the reporting
requirements associated with the capital
plan, and the capital plan and stress test
requirements are specifically timed to
minimize overlap with resolution plan
update requirements.45
Question 4: Are there alternative
approaches the Board should consider
to phase in the proposed enhanced
prudential standards for either bank
holding companies or nonbank financial
companies?
J. Reservation of Authority
To address situations where
compliance with the requirements of the
proposed rule would not sufficiently
mitigate the risks to U.S. financial
45 See
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stability posed by the failure or material
financial distress of a covered company,
the proposed rule includes a reservation
of authority provision. This reservation
of authority would permit the Board to
implement additional or further
enhanced prudential standards for a
covered company, including, but not
limited to, additional capital or liquidity
requirements, corporate governance
standards, concentration limits, stress
testing requirements, activity limits, or
other requirements or restrictions that
the Board may deem necessary to carry
out the purposes of the proposal or
section 165 of the Dodd-Frank Act.46
The proposed rule also specifies that the
Board may determine that a bank
holding company that is not a covered
company shall be subject to one or more
of the standards established under the
proposed rule if the Board determines
that doing so is necessary or appropriate
to protect the safety and soundness of
the company or to promote financial
stability.
In addition, the proposed rule would
specifically state that nothing in the rule
would limit the authority of the Board
under any other provision of law or
regulation to take supervisory or
enforcement action, including action to
address unsafe and unsound practices
or conditions, deficient capital or
liquidity levels, or violations of law.
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K. Common Definitions
A number of terms are used
throughout the proposed rule. Some of
these terms are generally given the same
meaning as their definitions under other
regulations issued by the Board. For
example, under the proposal, the term
‘‘company’’ would be defined as a
corporation, partnership, limited
liability company, depository
institution, business trust, special
purpose entity, association, or similar
organization. The term ‘‘bank holding
company’’ generally would have the
same meaning as in section 2 of the
Bank Holding Company Act, as
amended (12 U.S.C. 1841), and the
Board’s Regulation Y (12 CFR part
225).47 Additional common definitions
are detailed in the proposed rule.
The Board solicits comment on these
proposed definitions.
III. Risk-Based Capital Requirements
and Leverage Limits
A. Background
Section 165 of the Dodd-Frank Act
directs the Board to establish risk-based
46 12
U.S.C. 5365(b)(1)(B)(iv).
would have a different meaning under
the proposed rules concerning single-counterparty
credit limits.
47 Control
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capital and leverage standards for
covered companies that are more
stringent than the risk-based capital and
leverage standards applicable to
nonbank financial companies and bank
holding companies that do not present
similar risks to the financial stability of
the United States and increase in
stringency based on the systemic
footprint of the company.
As discussed above, in addition to
implementing the broader Basel III
capital reforms, the Board seeks to
implement enhanced risk-based capital
and leverage standards for covered
companies in a two-stage process: (i) In
this proposal, the application of the
Board’s capital plan rule to covered
companies, including the requirement
for covered companies to maintain
capital above 5 percent tier 1 common
risk-based capital ratio under both
expected and stressed conditions; and
(ii) in a separate future proposal, the
introduction of a quantitative risk-based
capital surcharge for covered companies
or a subset of covered companies based
on the BCBS capital surcharge
framework for G–SIBs.
B. Overview of the Proposed Rule
1. Capital Planning and Minimum
Capital Requirements
Under the proposal, all covered
companies would be required to comply
with, and hold capital commensurate
with, the requirements of any
regulations adopted by the Board
relating to capital plans and stress tests.
Thus, in addition to the stress testing
requirements that are part of this
proposal, this subpart would require all
covered companies to comply with the
capital plan rule recently adopted by the
Board.48 In addition, the Board is
proposing that nonbank covered
companies be subject to the same
minimum risk-based and leverage
capital requirements that apply to
covered companies that are bank
holding companies.
As discussed further below, the
capital plan rule would enhance
minimum capital standards for covered
companies in several dimensions,
including requiring firms to
demonstrate capital adequacy over a
minimum nine-quarter planning
horizon under both expected and
stressed conditions.49 The Board
48 12 CFR 225.8. See 76 FR 74631 (December 1,
2011). The capital plan rule currently applies to all
U.S. bank holding companies with $50 billion or
more in total consolidated assets (large bank
holding companies).
49 At present, the Board’s rules for calculating
minimum capital requirements are found at 12 CFR
part 225, appendix A (general risk-based capital
rule), 12 CFR part 225, appendix D (leverage rule),
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believes that the safety and soundness
rationale that underlies the capital plan
rule’s enhanced risk-based capital and
leverage standards for bank holding
companies is also applicable to nonbank
covered companies, and that
compliance with this rule by such
companies would help to promote their
ongoing financial stability. By requiring
covered companies to have robust
capital plans and to hold capital
commensurate with the risks they
would face under stressful financial
conditions, and by limiting capital
distributions under certain
circumstances, the proposed rule would
reduce the probability of the failure of
a covered company.
The current capital plan rule imposes
enhanced risk-based and leverage
requirements on large bank holding
companies in several ways. The rule
requires such companies to submit
board-approved annual capital plans to
the Federal Reserve in which they
demonstrate their ability to maintain
capital above the Board’s minimum riskbased capital ratios (total capital ratio of
8 percent, tier 1 capital ratio of 4
percent) and tier 1 leverage ratio (4
percent) under both baseline and
stressed conditions over a minimum
nine-quarter, forward-looking planning
horizon. Each such plan must include a
discussion of the bank holding
company’s sources and uses of capital
reflecting the risk profile of the firm
over the planning horizon. In addition,
these bank holding companies must
demonstrate the ability to maintain a
minimum tier 1 common risk-based
capital ratio of 5 percent over the same
planning horizon (under both baseline
and stressed conditions).50 The stressed
scenarios must include any scenarios
provided by the Federal Reserve (such
as those discussed in section VII of this
preamble) as well as at least one
stressed scenario developed by the bank
holding company appropriate to its
business model. A capital plan must
12 CFR part 225, appendix E (market risk rule), and
12 CFR part 225, appendix G (advanced approaches
risk-based capital rule). A firm that met the
applicability thresholds under the market risk rule
or the advanced approaches risk-based capital rule
would be required to use those rules to calculate its
minimum risk-based capital requirements in
addition to the general risk-based capital
requirements and the leverage rule.
50 Under the capital plan rule, tier 1 common is
defined as tier 1 capital less non-common elements
in tier 1 capital, including perpetual preferred stock
and related surplus, minority interest in
subsidiaries, trust preferred securities and
mandatory convertible preferred securities.
Specifically, non-common elements include the
following items captured in the FR Y–9C reporting
form: Schedule HC, line item 23 net of Schedule
HC–R, line item 5; and Schedule HC–R, line items
6a, 6b, and 6c.
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also include a description of all planned
capital actions over the planning
horizon.
In its capital plan, a large bank
holding company must provide a
detailed description of its process for
assessing capital adequacy, including a
description of how it will, under
stressful conditions, maintain capital
commensurate with its risks and
continue its operations by maintaining
ready access to funding, meeting its
obligations to creditors and other
counterparties, and continuing to serve
as a credit intermediary. A large bank
holding company that is unable to
satisfy these requirements generally may
not make any capital distributions until
it provides a satisfactory capital plan to
the Federal Reserve.51
In addition, a large bank holding
company must obtain prior approval
from the Federal Reserve before making
a capital distribution in certain
circumstances where the Federal
Reserve had provided a non-objection to
the large bank holding company’s
capital plan. The bank holding company
would be required to include certain
information in the request, which may
include, among other things, an
assessment of the bank holding
company’s capital adequacy under a
revised stress scenario provided by the
Federal Reserve, a revised capital plan,
and supporting data.
As stated above, a nonbank covered
company would be subject to the capital
plan rule under this proposal. While a
bank holding company that becomes a
covered company over time is subject to
the requirements of the capital plan rule
as provided for in that rule,52 a nonbank
covered company would become subject
to the requirements of the capital plan
rule in the calendar year that it was
designated by the Council, if the
nonbank covered company was
designated by the Council more than
180 days before September 30 of that
calendar year.
51 See section VII supra on the enhanced
prudential requirement that a covered company
conduct certain stress tests for explanation of the
relation between this enhanced prudential capital
requirement and the stress test requirement under
section 165.
52 See generally 12 CFR 225.8(b). The final capital
plan rule provides that a bank holding company
that becomes subject to the final rule by operation
of the asset threshold after the 5th of January of a
calendar year will not be subject until January 1 of
the next calendar year to the final rule’s
requirement to file a capital plan with the Federal
Reserve, resubmit a capital plan under certain
circumstances, or to obtain prior approval of capital
distributions in excess of those described in the
firm’s capital plan. A bank holding company would
be subject to all other requirements under the
capital plan rule immediately upon becoming
subject to that rule.
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In addition, 180 days following its
designation by the Council, a nonbank
covered company would be subject to
minimum risk-based capital and
leverage requirements. A nonbank
covered company would be required to
calculate its minimum risk-based and
leverage capital requirements as if it
were a bank holding company in
accordance with any minimum capital
requirements established by the Board
for bank holding companies.53
Accordingly, the nonbank covered
company would be required to hold
capital sufficient to meet (i) a tier 1 risk
based capital ratio of 4 percent and a
total risk-based capital ratio of 8
percent, as calculated according to the
Board’s risk-based capital rules,54 and
(ii) a tier 1 leverage ratio of 4 percent as
calculated under the leverage rule.55
Finally, each nonbank covered company
would be required to report to the Board
on a quarterly basis its risk-based capital
and leverage ratios. Upon ascertaining
that it had failed to meet any of its
minimum risk-based or leverage
requirements, a nonbank covered
company would be required to notify
the Board immediately.56
Under the proposed rules’ reservation
of authority, the Board may require any
covered company to hold additional
capital or be subject to other
requirements or restrictions if it
determines that compliance with the
requirements of the proposal does not
sufficiently mitigate risks to U.S.
financial stability posted by the failure
or material financial distress of the
covered company.
The Board seeks comment on all
aspects of the proposed enhanced riskbased capital and leverage requirements.
In particular, the Board seeks
comment on the appropriateness of
requiring nonbank covered companies
to have the same capital planning and
stress testing, and regulatory capital
requirements as bank holding
companies.
53 See
supra note 49.
CFR part 225, appendix A and G.
55 12 CFR part 225, appendix D, section II.
56 Under section 171 of the Dodd-Frank Act, the
Board is required to impose minimum risk-based
and leverage capital requirements on bank holding
companies and nonbank covered companies that
are not less than the generally applicable capital
requirements it imposes on insured depository
institutions. 12 U.S.C. 5371. The Board recognizes
that some aspects of its capital requirements may
not take into account the characteristics of activities
and assets of nonbank covered companies that are
impermissible for banks and bank holding
companies. When a nonbank covered company is
designated by the Council, the Board may consider
whether any adjustments to the minimum capital
requirements applicable to the nonbank covered
company may be appropriate, within the limits of
section 171 of the Dodd-Frank Act.
54 12
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603
Question 5: What factors should the
Board consider in deciding whether to
impose different capital planning or
stress testing requirements on nonbank
covered companies?
Question 6: What alternative
enhanced capital requirements for
nonbank covered companies should the
Board consider? Should the Board
consider a longer or shorter phase-in
period for capital requirements for
nonbank covered companies?
Conforming Amendment to Section
225.8 of Regulation Y
To make the applicability of the
Board’s capital plan rule consistent with
the applicability of the proposed
enhanced capital standards under this
proposed rule, the Board is considering
whether to amend the capital plan rule
to provide that a bank holding company
subject to that rule would remain
subject to that rule until its total
consolidated assets fall below $50
billion for four consecutive calendar
quarters.
2. Quantitative Risk-Based Capital
Surcharge
In November 2011, the BCBS agreed
to require G–SIBs to hold an additional
amount of common equity above the
regulatory minimums to enhance their
resiliency and ability to absorb losses
under difficult economic conditions.
The recently finalized BCBS framework
establishes five capital surcharge
categories, ranging from 100 to 350 basis
points,57 and allocates G–SIBs to a
specific surcharge category based on a
twelve-factor formula. The formula
includes measures of size,
interconnectedness, complexity, lack of
substitutes and cross-border activity.
The capital surcharge must be met with
common equity only and would operate
to expand the Basel III capital
conservation buffer. The BCBS
framework would phase-in the G–SIB
surcharge requirement in equal
increments from 2016 to 2019, in
parallel with the capital conservation
buffer.
Approximately 30 global banks would
be subject initially to the G–SIB
surcharge under the BCBS framework.
The BCBS has noted that the number of
banks subject to the framework, and the
surcharge category associated with
different banks, would evolve over time
as the systemic risk profiles of different
57 Initially, G–SIBs would be placed in 1 of 4
categories, with surcharges ranging from 100 to 250
basis points and the fifth category, with an
associated surcharge of 350 basis points, would be
left empty in order to leave room to apply higher
surcharges to G–SIBs that increase their systemic
footprint further over time.
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banks change. The BCBS expects to
refine and update the framework in the
coming years as additional analysis is
performed.
The Board and other U.S. federal
banking agencies worked closely with
other members of the BCBS to develop
the BCBS framework and the Board
believes that it is consistent with the
financial stability objectives of section
165 of the Dodd-Frank Act, including
minimizing the threat to U.S. financial
stability posed by systemically
important financial companies. The
Board believes that a U.S. capital
surcharge framework based on the BCBS
framework would meaningfully reduce
the probability of failure of the largest,
most complex financial companies and
would minimize losses to the U.S.
financial system and the economy if
such a company should fail. A capital
surcharge would help require that these
companies account for the costs they
impose on the broader financial system
and would reduce the implicit subsidy
they enjoy due to market perceptions of
their systemic importance. The Board
intends to issue a concrete proposal for
implementation of a quantitative riskbased capital surcharge for covered
companies, or a subset thereof, based on
the BCBS approach consistent with the
BCBS’s implementation timeframe. The
forthcoming proposal would
contemplate adopting implementing
rules in 2014, and requiring G–SIBs to
meet the capital surcharges on a phasedin basis from 2016–2019.
Question 7: How should the Board
implement the BCBS framework
discussed above, or are there
alternatives to the BCBS framework the
Board should consider?
Question 8: What is the appropriate
scope of application of a quantitative
capital surcharge in the United States in
light of section 165 of the Dodd-Frank
Act? What adaptations to the BCBS
framework, or alternative surcharge
assessment methodologies, would be
appropriate for determining a
quantitative capital surcharge for
covered companies that are not
identified as global systemically
important banks in the BCBS
framework?
Question 9: If the BCBS framework
were to be applied to nonbank covered
companies, how should the framework
be modified to capture the systemic
footprint of those companies?
IV. Liquidity Requirements
A. Background
During the financial crisis that began
in 2007, many solvent financial
companies experienced significant
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financial stress because they did not
manage their liquidity in a prudent
manner. In some cases, these companies
had difficulty in meeting their
obligations as they became due because
sources of funding became severely
restricted. These events followed several
years of ample liquidity in the financial
system, during which liquidity risk
management did not receive the same
level of priority and scrutiny as
management of other sources of risk.
The rapid reversal in market conditions
and availability of liquidity during the
crisis illustrated how quickly liquidity
can evaporate, and that illiquidity can
last for an extended period, leading to
a company’s insolvency before its assets
experience significant deterioration in
value.
Many of the liquidity-related
difficulties experienced by financial
companies were due to lapses in basic
principles of liquidity risk management.
This problem was evident from the
horizontal reviews of financial
companies conducted by the Senior
Supervisors Group (‘‘SSG’’), which
comprises senior financial supervisors
from seven countries.58 The SSG found
that failure of liquidity risk management
practices contributed significantly to the
financial crisis. In particular, the SSG
noted that firms’ inappropriate reliance
on short-term sources of funding and in
some cases, the repo market, as well as
inaccurate measurements of funding
needs and lack of effective contingency
funding were key factors in the liquidity
crises many firms faced.59
Given the direct link between
liquidity risk management failures and
the many strains on firms and the
financial system experienced during the
recent crisis, the Board believes that
strong liquidity risk management is
crucial to ensuring a company’s
resiliency during periods of financial
market stress and that covered
companies should be held to the highest
liquidity standards, as well as capital
standards.
The Board also believes establishing
minimum quantitative liquidity
standards will improve the capacity of
firms to remain viable during a liquidity
stress. The Basel III Liquidity
Framework establishes minimum
58 See Senior Supervisors Group, Observations on
Risk Management Practices During the Recent
Market Turbulence (March 2008), available at
https://www.newyorkfed.org/newsevents/news/
banking/2008/SSG_Risk_Mgt_doc_final.pdf
(hereinafter 2008 SSG Report).
59 See Senior Supervisors Group, Risk
Management Lessons from the Global Banking
Crisis of 2008 (October 2009), available at https://
www.newyorkfed.org/newsevents/news_archive/
banking/2009/SSG_report.pdf (hereinafter 2009
SSG Report).
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requirements for funding liquidity that
are designed to promote the resilience of
a banking organization’s liquidity risk
profile.60 These minimum requirements
are imposed through two ratios:
• A liquidity coverage ratio (LCR),
which is designed to promote the shortterm resiliency of a banking
organization’s liquidity risk profile by
ensuring that it has sufficient high
quality liquid resources to survive an
acute stress scenario lasting for one
month; and
• A net stable funding ratio (NSFR),
which is designed to promote liquidity
risk resilience over a longer time period
and to create incentives for a banking
organization to fund its activities with
medium- and longer-term funding
sources. The NSFR has a time horizon
of one year, and is designed to provide
a sustainable maturity structure of assets
and liabilities.
Under the terms of Basel III, the LCR
and NSFR are to be implemented by
Basel Committee member countries by
2015 and 2018, respectively.
The Board intends to institute a
liquidity regime for covered companies
through a multi-stage process that
would include a regulatory framework
for strong liquidity risk management
and quantitative liquidity requirements
based on the Basel III liquidity ratios. In
the first stage, covered companies
would be subject to enhanced liquidity
risk management standards under this
proposal. The proposal builds on the
core provisions of the Board’s
Supervision and Regulation (SR) letter
10–6, Interagency Policy Statement on
Funding and Liquidity Risk
Management issued in March 2010
(Interagency Liquidity Risk Policy
Statement).61 As discussed in detail
below, the proposed rules would require
a covered company to take a number of
prudential steps to manage liquidity
risk. Significantly, the proposed rules
introduce liquidity stress test
requirements for covered companies
and require them to maintain liquid
assets sufficient to meet projected net
cash flows under the stress tests. The
proposed rules would also require a
covered company to generate
comprehensive cash flow projections, to
establish and monitor its liquidity risk
tolerance, and maintain contingency
plans for funding where normal sources
of funding may not be available.
The Board believes liquidity
requirements are vitally important to the
60 Basel Committee on Bank Supervision, Basel
III: International Framework for Liquidity Risk
Measurement, Standards, and Monitoring
(December 20, 2010), available at www.bis.org/
publ/bcbs188.htm.
61 See supra note 37.
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overall goals of section 165 of the DoddFrank Act, to prevent or mitigate risks
to the financial stability of the United
States that could arise from the material
financial distress or failure, or ongoing
activities, of large, interconnected
financial companies. The liquidity
requirements in this proposal are also
more stringent than liquidity standards
applied to nonbank financial companies
and bank holding companies that do not
present similar risks to financial
stability. Currently, the Board oversees
liquidity risk management at bank
holding companies primarily through
supervisory guidance, and generally
does not impose specific regulatory
liquidity requirements on bank holding
companies. The proposed rules would
require covered companies to
implement liquidity risk management
practices that are encouraged, but not
required, for non-covered companies.
The requirements of the proposed rule
are also designed to increase in
stringency based on the systemic
footprint of a company. For example, a
covered company’s capital structure,
risk profile, complexity, activities, size,
and other appropriate risk related
factors would be considered in: (i)
Setting the liquidity risk tolerance of the
covered company; (ii) determining the
amount of detail provided in cash flow
projections; (iii) tailoring liquidity stress
testing to the covered company; (iv)
setting the size of the liquidity buffer;
(v) formulating the contingency funding
plan; and (vi) setting the size of the
specific limits on potential sources of
liquidity risk. In addition, the Board
would reserve its authority to require a
covered company to be subject to
additional or further enhanced
prudential standards if it determines
that compliance with the rule does not
sufficiently mitigate the risks to U.S.
financial stability posed by the failure or
material financial distress of the covered
company.
In addition to the enhanced liquidity
risk management requirements of this
proposal, the Board intends to
implement the second stage of
establishing a regulatory liquidity
framework for covered companies
through one or more future proposals
that would require covered companies
(or a subset of covered companies) to
satisfy specific quantitative liquidity
requirements that are derived from, or
consistent with, the international
liquidity standards incorporated into
Basel III. The Board believes that the
eventual introduction of the Basel III
liquidity standards will be important to
establish a rigorous liquidity framework
and should further the important goal of
buttressing systemically important
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companies from the possibility of failure
due to liquidity shortfalls. These metrics
are currently undergoing observation by
the BCBS and may be modified
depending on the results of that
observation. The Board and other
federal banking agencies have been
working with banking organizations and
other members of the BCBS to gather
data and study the impact of the
proposed standards on the banking
system. The Board is carefully
considering what changes to the
standards it may recommend to the
BCBS based on the results of this
observation. The Board also is currently
considering, along with the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency and the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation,
one or more joint rulemakings that
would implement the Basel Liquidity
Framework in the United States.
Question 10: Is the Board’s approach
to enhanced liquidity standards for
covered companies appropriate? Why or
why not?
Question 11: Are there other
approaches that would effectively
enhance liquidity standards for covered
companies? If so, provide detailed
examples and explanations.
Question 12: The Dodd-Frank Act
contemplates additional enhanced
prudential standards, including a limit
on short-term debt. Should the Board
adopt a short-term debt limit in addition
to or in place of the LCR and NSFR?
Discuss why or why not?
B. Overview of the Proposed Rule
1. Key Definitions
Under the proposed rule, liquidity is
defined as a covered company’s
capacity to efficiently meet its expected
and unexpected cash flows and
collateral needs at a reasonable cost
without adversely affecting the daily
operations or the financial condition of
the covered company. Liquidity risk is
defined as the risk that a covered
company’s financial condition or safety
and soundness will be adversely
affected by its inability or perceived
inability to meet its cash and collateral
obligations.
2. Corporate Governance Provisions
A critical element of sound liquidity
risk management is effective corporate
governance, consisting of oversight of
the covered company’s liquidity risk
management by its board of directors, as
well as senior management, and an
independent review function. The
proposed rule includes provisions
addressing these aspects of a covered
company’s corporate governance with
respect liquidity risk management.
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605
a. Board of Directors and Risk
Committee Responsibilities (§ 252.52)
A covered company’s board of
directors is ultimately responsible for
the liquidity risk assumed by the
covered company. Accordingly, the
proposed rule at § 252.52(a) would
require that the board of directors (or
the risk committee) 62 must oversee the
covered company’s liquidity risk
management processes, and must
review and approve the liquidity risk
management strategies, policies, and
procedures established by senior
management.
The proposed rule would impose
several specific duties on the board of
directors. First, the board of directors
would be required to establish the
covered company’s liquidity risk
tolerance at least annually. The
proposed rule would define liquidity
risk tolerance as the acceptable level of
liquidity risk the covered company may
assume in connection with its operating
strategies. In determining the liquidity
risk tolerance, the board of directors
would be required to consider the
covered company’s capital structure,
risk profile, complexity, activities, size,
and other appropriate risk related
factors. These considerations should
help to ensure that the established
liquidity risk tolerance will be
appropriate for the business strategy of
the covered company and its role in the
financial system, and will reflect the
covered company’s financial condition
and funding capacity on an ongoing
basis.
The liquidity risk tolerance should
reflect the board of directors’ assessment
of tradeoffs between the costs and
benefits of liquidity. That is, inadequate
liquidity can expose the covered
company to significant financial stress
and endanger its ability to meet
contractual obligations. Conversely, too
much liquidity can entail substantial
opportunity costs and have a negative
impact on the covered company’s
profitability. In establishing the covered
company’s liquidity risk tolerance, the
Board would expect a covered
company’s board of directors to
articulate the liquidity risk tolerance in
such a way that all levels of
management clearly would: (i)
Understand the board of director’s
policy for managing the trade-offs
between the risk of insufficient liquidity
and generating profit; and (ii) properly
apply this approach to all aspects of
62 The risk committee would be defined as the
enterprise-wide committee established by a covered
company’s board of directors under proposed
section 252.126 of the risk management rules
subpart of this proposal.
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liquidity risk management throughout
the organization.63 To ensure that a
covered company is managed in
accordance with the liquidity risk
tolerance, the proposed rule would
require the board of directors to review
information provided by senior
management at least semi-annually to
determine whether the covered
company is managed in accordance
with the established liquidity risk
tolerance.
Second, the risk committee or a
designated subcommittee of the risk
committee would be required to review
and approve the liquidity costs,
benefits, and risk of each significant
new business line and each significant
new product before the covered
company may implement the line or
offer the product. In connection with
this review, the risk committee or a
designated subcommittee would be
required to consider whether the
liquidity risk of the new strategy or
product under current conditions and
under a liquidity stress is within the
established liquidity risk tolerance. At
least annually, the risk committee or a
designated subcommittee would be
required to review approved significant
business lines and products to
determine whether each line or product
has created any unanticipated liquidity
risk, and to determine whether the
liquidity risk of each line or product
continues to be within the established
liquidity risk tolerance.
Third, the proposed rule would
require the board of directors to review
and approve the covered company’s
CFP at least annually and whenever the
covered company materially revises the
plan. As discussed below, the CFP is the
covered company’s compilation of
policies, procedures, and action plans
for managing liquidity stress events.
Fourth, the risk committee or a
designated subcommittee would be
required to conduct the following
reviews and approvals at least quarterly:
(i) A review of cash flow projections
produced under section 252.55 of the
proposed rule that use time periods in
excess of 30 days to ensure that the
covered company’s liquidity risk is
within the covered company’s
established liquidity risk tolerance;
(ii) A review and approval of the
liquidity stress testing described in
section 252.56 of the proposed rule,
63 Under the proposed rule, the established
liquidity risk tolerance would be considered in
assessing new business strategies and products
(proposed § 252.52(b)(2)), in setting the size of the
liquidity buffer (proposed § 252.57(b)), in
developing the CFP (proposed § 252.58(a)), and in
setting the specific limits on sources of liquidity
(proposed § 252.59(b)).
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including the covered company’s stress
testing practices, methodologies, and
assumptions. The risk committee or a
designated subcommittee would also be
required to conduct this review and
approval whenever the covered
company materially revises its liquidity
stress testing;
(iii) A review of the liquidity stress
testing results produced under section
252.56 of the proposed rule;
(iv) Approval of the size and
composition of the liquidity buffer
established under section 252.57 of the
proposed rule;
(v) A review and approval of the
specific limits on potential sources of
liquidity risk established under section
252.59 of the proposed rule, and a
review of the covered company’s
compliance with those limits; and
(iv) A review of liquidity risk
management information necessary to
identify, measure, monitor, and control
liquidity risk and to comply with the
new liquidity rules.
In addition, the risk committee or a
designated subcommittee would be
required to periodically review the
independent validation of the stress
tests produced under section
252.56(c)(2)(ii) of the proposed rule.
The proposed rule establishes
minimum requirements governing the
frequency of certain reviews and
approvals. It also would require the
board of directors (or the risk
committee) to conduct more frequent
reviews and approvals as market and
idiosyncratic conditions warrant.64 The
risk committee or a designated
subcommittee would also be required to
establish procedures governing the
content of senior management reports
on the liquidity risk profile of the
covered company and other information
described in the senior management
responsibilities section below.
b. Senior Management Responsibilities
(§ 252.53)
Under the proposed rule, senior
management of a covered company
would be required to establish and
implement liquidity risk management
strategies, policies and procedures. This
would include overseeing the
development and implementation of
liquidity risk measurement and
reporting systems, the cash flow
projections, the liquidity stress testing,
the liquidity buffer, the CFP, the
specific limits, and the monitoring
64 As used in this preamble, idiosyncratic
conditions or events refer to conditions or events
that are unique to the covered company. Market
conditions or events refer to conditions or events
that are market-wide.
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procedures required under the proposed
rule.
Senior management would also be
required to report regularly to the risk
committee or designated subcommittee
thereof on the liquidity risk profile of
the covered company, and to provide
other relevant and necessary
information to the board of directors (or
risk committee) to facilitate its oversight
of the liquidity risk management
process. As noted above, the proposed
rule would require the risk committee or
a designated subcommittee to establish
procedures governing the content of
management reports on the liquidity
risk profile of the covered company and
other information regarding compliance
with the proposed rule. The Board
expects that management would be
required under these procedures to
report as frequently as conditions
warrant, but no less frequently than
quarterly.
c. Independent Review (§ 252.54)
Under the proposed rule, a covered
company would be required to establish
and maintain an independent review
function to evaluate its liquidity risk
management. Under the proposal, this
review function must be independent of
management functions that execute
funding (the treasury function). The
independent review function would be
required to review and evaluate the
adequacy and effectiveness of the
covered company’s liquidity risk
management processes regularly, but no
less frequently than annually. It would
also be required to assess whether the
covered company’s liquidity risk
management complies with applicable
laws, regulations, supervisory guidance,
and sound business practices, and to
report statutory and regulatory
noncompliance and other material
liquidity risk management issues to the
board of directors (or the risk
committee) in writing for corrective
action.
An appropriate internal review
conducted by the independent review
function should address all relevant
elements of a covered company’s risk
management process, including
adherence to its own policies and
procedures, and the adequacy of its risk
identification, measurement, and
reporting processes. Personnel
conducting these reviews should seek to
understand, test, document, and
evaluate the risk management processes,
and recommend solutions to any
identified weaknesses.
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3. Liquidity Requirements
a. Cash Flow Projections (§ 252.55)
Comprehensive projections of a
covered company’s cash flows from the
company’s various operations are a
critical tool for managing liquidity risk.
To ensure that a covered company has
a sound process for identifying and
measuring liquidity risk, the proposed
rule would require a covered company
to produce comprehensive projections
that forecast cash flows arising from
assets, liabilities, and off-balance sheet
exposures over appropriate time
periods, and to identify and quantify
discrete and cumulative cash flow
mismatches over these time periods.
The proposed rule would specifically
require the covered company to provide
cash flow projections over the shortterm and long-term time horizons that
are appropriate to the covered
company’s capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, size and other
risk-related factors.65
To make sure that the cash flow
projections will analyze liquidity risk
exposure to contingent events, the
proposed rule would require that
projections must include cash flows
arising from contractual maturities, as
well as cash flows from new business,
funding renewals, customer options,
and other potential events that may
impact liquidity. Static projections
based on the contractual cash flows of
assets, liabilities, and off-balance sheet
items are helpful in identifying liquidity
gaps. However, such static projections
may inadequately quantify important
aspects of potential liquidity risk
because these projections ignore new
business, funding renewals, customer
options, and other contingent events
that have a significant impact on a
covered company’s liquidity risk
profile. A dynamic analysis that
incorporates management’s reasoned
assumptions regarding the future
behavior of assets, liabilities, and offbalance sheet items in projected cash
flows is far more useful than a static
projection in identifying potential
liquidity risk exposure.
Under the proposed rule, a covered
company would be required to develop
cash flow projections that provide
sufficient detail to reflect its capital
structure, risk profile, complexity,
activities, size, and other appropriate
risk related factors. Such detail may
include projections broken down by
business line, legal entity, or
jurisdiction, and cash flow projections
65 A covered company would be required to
update short-term cash flow projections daily, and
update long-term cash flow projections at least
monthly.
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that use more time periods than the two
minimum time periods that would be
required under the rule.
The proposed rule states that a
covered company must establish a
robust methodology for making its cash
flow projections,66 and must use
reasonable assumptions regarding the
future behavior of assets, liabilities, and
off-balance sheet exposures in the
projections. Given the critical
importance that the methodology and
underlying assumptions play in
liquidity risk measurement, the covered
company would also be required to
adequately document the methodology
and assumptions.67 In addition, the
Board expects senior management to
periodically review and approve the
assumptions used in the cash flow
projections to make sure that they are
reasonable and appropriate.
b. Liquidity Stress Testing (§ 252.56)
While financial companies typically
manage their liquidity under normal
circumstances with regular sources of
liquidity readily available, they should
also be prepared to manage liquidity
under adverse conditions in which
liquidity sources may be limited or
nonexistent. Insufficient consideration
of liquidity management under the
conditions that arose during the
financial crisis was a major contributor
to the severe liquidity problems many
financial companies faced at the time.
Accordingly, rigorous and regular stress
testing and scenario analysis, combined
with comprehensive information about
an institution’s funding position, is an
important tool for effective liquidity risk
management that should reduce the risk
of a firm’s failure due to adverse
liquidity conditions.
To promote preparedness for adverse
liquidity conditions, the proposed rule
would require the covered company to
regularly stress test its cash flow
projections by identifying liquidity
66 In its most basic form, a cash-flow-projection
may be a worksheet-table with columns denoting
the selected time periods or buckets for which cash
flows are to be projected. The rows of this table may
consist of various types of assets, liabilities, and offbalance sheet items, often grouped by their cashflow characteristics. Different groupings may be
used to achieve different objectives of the cash-flow
projection. For each row, net cash flows arising
from the particular asset, liability, or off-balance
sheet activity may be projected across the time
buckets. The detail and granularity of the rows, and
thus the projections, should depend on the
sophistication and complexity of the institution.
Complex companies generally provide more detail,
while less complex companies use higher levels of
aggregation.
67 See section 252.61 of the proposed rule, which
states that a covered company must document all
material aspects of its liquidity risk management
process and its compliance with the requirements
in the rule.
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stress scenarios and assessing the effects
of these scenarios on the covered
company’s cash flow and liquidity. By
considering how adverse events,
conditions, and outcomes, including
extremes, affect the covered company’s
exposure to liquidity risk, a covered
company can identify vulnerabilities,
quantify the depth, source, and degree
of potential liquidity strain, and analyze
the possible impacts. Under the
proposed rule, the covered company
would use the results of the stress
testing to determine the size of its
liquidity buffer, and would incorporate
information generated by stress testing
in the quantitative component of the
CFP.
The proposed rule would require that
liquidity stress testing comprehensively
address a covered company’s activities,
exposures, and risks, including offbalance sheet exposures. To satisfy this
requirement, stress testing would have
to address the covered company’s full
set of activities, exposures and risks,
both on- and off-balance sheet, and
address non-contractual sources of risks,
such as reputational risks. For example,
stress testing should address potential
liquidity issues arising from the covered
company’s use of sponsored vehicles
that issue debt instruments periodically
to the markets, such as asset-backed
commercial paper and similar conduits.
Under stress scenarios, the covered
company may be contractually required,
or compelled in the interest of
mitigating reputational risk, to provide
liquidity support to such a vehicle.
The proposed rule would require a
covered company to conduct the
liquidity stress testing at least monthly.
In addition to monthly stress testing, a
covered company should have the
flexibility to conduct ‘‘ad hoc’’ stress
testing to address rapidly emerging risks
or consider the impact of sudden events.
Accordingly, the proposed rule specifies
that the covered company must have the
ability to perform stress testing more
frequently than monthly, and the ability
to vary underlying assumptions as
conditions change. To facilitate effective
supervision of the sufficiency of a
covered company’s liquidity
management, under the proposed rule, a
covered company may be required by
the Federal Reserve to perform
additional stress testing as conditions
relating to the institution or the markets
generally may warrant, or to address
other supervisory concerns. The Federal
Reserve may, for example, require a
covered company to perform additional
stress testing where there has been a
significant deterioration in the covered
company’s earnings, asset quality, or
overall financial condition; are negative
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trends or heighten risk associated with
a particular product line; or are
increased concerns over the covered
company’s funding of off-balance sheet
exposures.
Effective stress testing should include
scenario analysis that uses historical
and hypothetical scenarios to assess the
impact on liquidity of various events
and circumstances, including extremes.
Effective liquidity stress testing should
also employ a range of stress scenarios
involving macroeconomic, market-wide,
and idiosyncratic events, and consider
interactions and feedback effects.
Accordingly, the proposed rule states
that a covered company’s stress testing
must incorporate a range of stress
scenarios that may significantly affect
the covered company’s liquidity, taking
into consideration its on- and offbalance sheet exposures, business lines,
organizational structure, and other
characteristics. At a minimum, the
proposed rule would require a covered
company to incorporate stress scenarios
to account for market stress,
idiosyncratic stress, and combined
market and idiosyncratic stresses.
Additional scenarios should be used as
needed to ensure that all of the
significant aspects of liquidity risks to
the covered company have been
modeled. The proposed rule would also
require that the stress scenarios address
the potential impact of market
disruptions on the covered company,
and the potential actions of market
participants experiencing liquidity
stresses under the same market
disruption.
Under the proposed rule, a covered
company’s liquidity stress scenarios
must be forward-looking and
incorporate a range of potential changes
to a covered company’s exposures,
activities, and risks as well as changes
to the broader economic and financial
environment. To meet this standard, the
stress tests would need to be sufficiently
dynamic to incorporate changes in the
covered company’s on- and off-balance
sheet activities, portfolio composition,
asset quality, operating environment,
business strategy, and other risks that
may arise over time from idiosyncratic
events, macroeconomic and financial
market developments, or some
combination of thereof. The stress tests
should look beyond assumptions based
only on historical data, and incorporate
new events and challenge conventional
assumptions.
Effective liquidity stress testing
should be conducted over a variety of
different time horizons to adequately
capture rapidly developing events, and
other conditions and outcomes that may
materialize in the near or long term. To
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make sure that a covered company’s
stress testing captures such events,
condition, and outcomes, the proposed
rule would require that the covered
company’s stress scenarios use a
minimum of four time horizons
including an overnight, a 30-day, a 90day, and a one-year time horizon. A
covered company may be required to
use more time horizons where necessary
to reflect the covered company’s capital
structure, risk profile, complexity,
activities, size, and other appropriate
risk-related factors.
The proposed rule further provides
that liquidity stress testing must be
tailored to, and provide sufficient detail
to reflect a covered company’s capital
structure, risk profile, complexity,
activities, size, and other appropriate
risk-related factors. This requirement is
intended to ensure that stress testing
will be tied directly to the covered
company’s business profile and the
regulatory environment in which the
covered company operates,68 and will
address relevant risk areas, provide for
the appropriate level of aggregation, and
capture all appropriate risk drivers,
internal and external influences, and
other key considerations that may affect
the covered company’s liquidity
position. This may require analyses by
business line, legal entity, or
jurisdiction, or stress scenarios that use
time horizons in addition to the
minimum number described above.
The proposed rule would require a
covered company to incorporate certain
assumptions designed to ensure that
stress testing will provide relevant
information to support the
establishment of the liquidity buffer (see
section 252.56(b)(4) of the proposed
rule). As discussed below, the liquidity
buffer is composed of highly liquid
assets that are unencumbered, and is
designed to meet projected net cash
outflows and the projected loss or
impairment of existing funding sources
for 30 days during a range of liquidity
stress scenarios. To reflect this design,
the proposed rule would require that the
covered company must assume that, for
the first 30 days of a liquidity stress
scenario, only highly liquid assets that
are unencumbered may be used as cash
flow sources to meet projected funding
needs. For time periods beyond the first
30 days of a liquidity stress scenario,
68 For example, applicable statutory and
regulatory restrictions on covered companies,
including restrictions on the transferability of assets
between legal entities, would need to be
incorporated. For bank holding companies these
restrictions include sections 23A and 23B of the
Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 371c and 371c–1)
and Regulation W (12 CFR part 223), which govern
covered transactions between banks and their
affiliates.
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highly liquid assets that are
unencumbered and other appropriate
funding sources may be used.69
A covered company’s liquidity stress
testing should account for deteriorations
in asset valuations when there is market
stress. Accordingly, the proposed rule
would require the covered company to
impose a discount to the fair market
value of an asset that is used as a cash
flow source to offset projected funding
needs in order to reflect any credit risk
and market volatility of the asset. The
proposed rule would also require that
sources of funding used to generate cash
to offset projected funding needs be
sufficiently diversified throughout each
stress test time horizon. Thus, if a
covered company holds high quality
assets other than cash and securities
issued by the U.S. government, a U.S.
government agency,70 or a U.S.
government-sponsored entity,71 the
assets should be diversified by
collateral, counterparty, or borrowing
capacity, and other liquidity risk
identifiers.
The proposed rule would impose
various process and system
requirements for stress testing.
Specifically, a covered company would
be required to establish and maintain
policies and procedures that outline its
liquidity stress testing practices,
methodologies, and assumptions; detail
the use of each stress test employed; and
provide for the enhancement of stress
testing as risks change and techniques
evolve. The proposed rule also states
that a covered company must have an
effective system of control and oversight
over the stress test function to ensure
that each stress test is designed in
accordance with the rule, and the stress
process and assumptions are validated.
The validation function must be
independent of functions that develop
or design the liquidity stress testing, and
independent of management functions
that execute funding (e.g., the treasury
function).
In addition, the proposed rule would
require a covered company to rely on
reasonably high-quality data and
information to produce creditable
69 The liquidity buffer is discussed more fully
below, as are the definitions of ‘‘unencumbered’’
and ‘‘highly liquid asset.’’
70 A U.S. government agency is defined in the
proposed rule as an agency or instrumentality of the
U.S. government whose obligations are fully and
explicitly guaranteed as to the timely payment of
principal and interest by the full faith and credit of
the U.S. government.
71 A U.S. government-sponsored entity is defined
in the proposed rule as an entity originally
established or chartered by the U.S. government to
serve public purposes specified by the U.S.
Congress, but whose obligations are not explicitly
guaranteed by the full faith and credit of the U.S.
government.
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outcomes. Specifically, the proposed
rule would require that the covered
company must maintain management
information systems and data processes
sufficient to enable it to effectively and
reliably collect, sort, and aggregate data
and other information related to
liquidity stress testing.
Question 13: What challenges will
covered companies face in formulating
and implementing liquidity stress
testing described in the proposed rule?
What changes, if any, should be made
to the proposed liquidity stress testing
requirements (including the stress
scenario requirements and required
assumptions) to ensure that analyses of
the stress testing will provide useful
information for the management of a
covered company’s liquidity risk? What
alternatives to the proposed liquidity
stress testing requirements, including
the stress scenario requirements and
required assumptions, should the Board
consider? What additional parameters
for the liquidity stress tests should the
Board consider defining?
c. Liquidity Buffer (§ 252.57)
To withstand liquidity stress under
adverse conditions, a company
generally needs a sufficient supply of
liquid assets that can be sold or pledged
to obtain funds. During the financial
crisis, financial companies that
experienced severe liquidity difficulties
often held insufficient liquid assets to
meet their liquidity needs as market
sources of funding were severely
curtailed. The BCBS’s LCR standard was
developed to promote short-term
resilience of a bank’s liquidity risk
profile by ensuring that it has sufficient
high-quality liquid assets to survive an
adverse stress scenario lasting for one
month, providing time for appropriate
corrective actions to be taken by
management or supervisors, or to allow
the institution to be resolved in an
orderly way.72
Consistent with the effort towards
developing a comprehensive liquidity
framework that would eventually
incorporate the LCR standard, the
proposed rule, in addition to requiring
stress tests as described above, would
require a covered company to
continuously maintain a liquidity buffer
of unencumbered highly liquid assets
sufficient to meet projected net cash
outflows and the projected loss or
impairment of existing funding sources
for 30 days over a range of liquidity
stress scenarios.
In addition to using the results of the
liquidity stress testing to size a covered
72 See Basel III liquidity framework at paragraphs
4 and 15.
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company’s liquidity buffer, the
proposed rule would require that the
liquidity buffer would also be aligned to
reflect the covered company’s capital
structure, risk profile, complexity,
activities, size, and other appropriate
risk related factors, as well as the
covered company’s established liquidity
risk tolerance. These factors, however,
could not justify reducing the buffer to
a point where it would be insufficient
to meet projected net cash outflows and
the projected impairment of existing
funding sources for 30 days under the
range of liquidity stress scenarios
incorporated into its stress testing. As
explained above, under the proposal,
the risk committee or a designated
subcommittee of the risk committee
would be required to approve the size
and composition of the liquidity buffer
at least quarterly.
The proposed rule limits the type of
assets that may be included in the buffer
to highly liquid assets that are
unencumbered. The definition of highly
liquid assets would ensure that the
assets in the liquidity buffer can easily
and immediately be converted to cash
with little or no loss of value. Thus,
cash or securities issued or guaranteed
by the U.S. government, a U.S.
government agency, or a U.S.
government-sponsored entity are
included in the proposed definition of
highly liquid assets. In addition, the
proposed rule includes criteria that may
be used to identify other assets that
could be included in the buffer as
highly liquid assets. Specifically, the
proposed definition of highly liquid
assets includes any other asset that a
covered company demonstrates to the
satisfaction of the Federal Reserve:
(i) Has low credit risk (low risk of
default) and low market risk (little or no
price volatility); 73
(ii) Is traded in an active secondary
two-way market 74 that has observable
market prices, committed market
makers, a large number of market
participants, and a high trading volume;
and
(iii) Is a type of asset that investors
historically have purchased in periods
73 Generally, market risk is the risk of loss that
could result from broad market movements, such as
changes in the general level of interest rates, credit
spreads, equity prices, foreign exchange rates, or
commodity prices.
74 A two-way market would be defined as a
market with independent bona fide offers to buy
and sell so that a price reasonably related to the last
sales price or current bona fide competitive bid and
offer quotations can be determined within one day
and settled at that price within a reasonable time
period conforming to trade custom. This definition
is consistent with the definition of ‘‘two-way
market’’ contained in the interagency proposed rule
on Risk-Based Capital Guidelines; Market Risk, 76
FR 1890 (January 11, 2011) (Market Risk NPR).
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of financial market distress during
which liquidity is impaired (flight to
quality). For example, certain ‘‘plain
vanilla’’ corporate bonds (that is, bonds
that are neither structured products nor
subordinated debt) issued by a nonfinancial company with a strong
financial profile have been reliable
sources of liquidity in the repurchase
and sale market during past stressed
conditions. Assets with the above
characteristics could, as proposed, meet
the definition of a highly liquid asset.
The highly liquid assets in the
liquidity buffer should be readily
available at all times to meet a covered
company’s liquidity needs. Accordingly,
the assets must be unencumbered.
Under the proposed rule,
unencumbered would be defined to
mean, with respect to an asset, that: (i)
The asset is not pledged, does not
secure, collateralize or provide credit
enhancement to any transaction, and is
not subject to any lien; (ii) the asset is
not designated as a hedge on a trading
position; 75 and (iii) there are no legal or
contractual restrictions on the ability of
the covered company to promptly
liquidate, sell, transfer, or assign the
asset.
Generally, an asset would be
designated as a hedge on a trading
position if the asset is held by a covered
company directly to offset the market
risk of another trading asset or group of
trading assets held by the covered
company. For example, if a covered
company holds a position in a corporate
bond index in its trading account,
corporate bonds that hedge that index
position may not be included in the
liquidity buffer.
To account for deteriorations in asset
valuations when there is market stress,
the proposed rule also would require a
covered company to impose a discount
to the fair market value of an asset
included in the liquidity buffer to reflect
the credit risk and market volatility of
the asset. In addition, to ensure that the
liquidity buffer is not concentrated in a
particular type of highly liquid assets,
the proposed rule requires that the pool
of assets included in the liquidity buffer
must be sufficiently diversified, as
discussed above. Thus, these highly
liquid assets should be diversified by
instrument type, counterparties,
geographic market, and other liquidity
risk identifiers.
75 A trading position would be defined as a
position that is held by a covered company for the
purpose of short-term resale or with the intent of
benefiting from actual or expected short-term price
movements, or to lock-in arbitrage profits. This
definition is based on the definition of trading
position in the Market Risk NPR.
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Question 14: The Board requests
comment on all aspects of the proposed
definitions of ‘‘highly liquid assets’’ and
‘‘unencumbered.’’ What, if any, other
assets should be specifically listed in
the definition of highly liquid assets?
Why should these other assets be
included (that is, describe how the asset
is easily and immediately convertible
into cash with little or no loss in value
during liquidity stress events)? Are the
criteria for identifying additional assets
for inclusion in the definition of highly
liquid assets appropriate? If not, how
and why should the Board revise the
criteria?
Question 15: What changes, if any,
should the Board make to the proposed
definition of unencumbered to make
sure that assets in the buffer will be
readily available at all times to meet a
covered company’s liquidity needs? The
rule would require a covered company
to discount the fair market value of
assets that are included in the liquidity
buffer. Please describe the process that
covered company will use to determine
the amount of the discount.
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d. Contingency Funding Plan (§ 252.58)
The proposed rule would require a
covered company to establish and
maintain a CFP. A CFP is a compilation
of policies, procedures, and action plans
for managing liquidity stress events. The
objectives of the CFP are to provide a
plan for responding to a liquidity crisis,
to identify alternate liquidity sources
that a covered company can access
during liquidity stress events, and to
describe steps that should be taken to
ensure that the covered company’s
sources of liquidity are sufficient to
fund its operating costs and meet its
commitments while minimizing
additional costs and disruption.
The proposed rule states that a
covered company must establish and
maintain a CFP that sets out the covered
company’s strategies for addressing
liquidity needs during liquidity stress
events. Under the proposed rule, the
CFP would be required to be
commensurate with the covered
company’s capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, size, and other
appropriate risk related factors, and
established liquidity risk tolerance. A
covered company would be required to
update the CFP at least annually or
whenever changes to market and
idiosyncratic conditions warrant an
update.
Under the proposed rule, the CFP
includes four components: a
quantitative assessment, an event
management process, monitoring
requirements, and testing requirements.
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These components are discussed in
detail below.
a. Quantitative Assessment
The first component of the CFP is the
quantitative assessment of liquidity
needs and funding sources. A covered
company would be required to
incorporate information generated by
liquidity stress testing into this
component of the CFP. The proposed
rule would provide that the stress tests
are used to: (i) Identify liquidity stress
events that have a significant impact on
the covered company’s liquidity; (ii)
assess the level and nature of impact on
the covered company’s liquidity that
may occur during identified liquidity
events; (iii) assess available funding
sources and needs during the identified
liquidity stress events; and (iv) identify
alternative funding sources that may be
used during the liquidity stress events.
i. Identification of stress events. A
covered company would be required to
identify stress events that have a
significant impact on the covered
company’s liquidity. Possible stress
events may include deterioration in
asset quality, ratings downgrades,
widening of credit default swap spreads,
operating losses, declining financial
institution equity prices, negative press
coverage, or other events that call into
question the covered company’s ability
to meet its obligations.
ii. Assessing the level and nature of
impact. Once the liquidity stress events
are identified, a covered company’s CFP
would incorporate an assessment of the
level and nature of impact on the
covered company’s liquidity that may
occur during the identified liquidity
stress event. The CFP would delineate
the various levels of stress severity that
can occur during the stress event, and
identify the various stages for each type
of event. The events, stages, and severity
levels should include temporary
disruptions, as well as those that might
be intermediate or longer term. The
covered company may use the different
levels of severity to design early
warning indicators, to assess potential
funding needs at various points in a
developing crisis, and to specify
comprehensive action plans.
iii. Assessing available funding
sources and needs. To meet the
requirement of the proposal, the CFP
must assess available funding sources
and needs during identified liquidity
stress events. This would require an
analysis of the potential erosion of
available funding at alternative stages or
severity levels of each stress event, as
well as the identification of potential
cash flow mismatches that may occur
during the various stress levels. A
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covered company is expected to base its
analysis on realistic assessments of the
behavior of funds providers during the
event, and should incorporate
alternative funding sources. The
analysis should include all material onand off-balance sheet cash flows and
their related effects. The result should
be a realistic analysis of the covered
company’s cash inflows, outflows, and
funds availability at different time
intervals during the identified liquidity
stress event, which should permit the
covered company to measure its ability
to fund operations.
iv. Identifying alternative funding
sources. Liquidity pressures are likely to
spread from one funding source to
another during significant liquidity
stress events. Accordingly, the proposed
rule would require a covered company
to identify alternative funding sources
that may be accessed during identified
liquidity stress events. Since some of
these alternative funding sources will
rarely be used in the normal course of
business, a covered company should
conduct advance planning and periodic
testing (see discussion below) to make
sure that the funding sources are
available when needed. Administrative
procedures and agreements are expected
to also be in place before the covered
company needs to access the alternative
funding sources.
Discount window credit may be
incorporated into CFPs as a potential
source of funds in a manner consistent
with the terms provided by the Federal
Reserve Banks. For example, primary
credit is currently available on a
collateralized basis for financially sound
depository institutions as a backup
source of funds for short-term funding
needs. CFPs that incorporate borrowing
from the discount window should
specify the actions that the covered
company will take to replace discount
window borrowing with more
permanent funding, including the
proposed time frame for these actions.
b. Event Management Process
Under the proposed rule, the CFP
must also include an event management
process that sets out its procedures for
managing liquidity during identified
liquidity stress events. This process
must include an action plan that clearly
describes the strategies the covered
company would use to respond to
liquidity shortfalls for identified
liquidity stress events, including the
methods that the covered company
would use to access the alternative
funding sources identified in the
quantitative assessment.
Under the proposed rule, the event
management process must also identify
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a liquidity stress event management
team and specify the process,
responsibilities, and triggers for
invoking the CFP, escalating the
responses described in the action plan,
decision-making during the identified
liquidity stress events, and executing
contingency measures identified in the
action plan.
In addition, to promote the flow of
necessary information during a liquidity
stress, the proposed rule would require
the event management process to
include a mechanism that ensures
effective reporting and communication
within the covered company and with
outside parties, including the Federal
Reserve and other relevant supervisors,
counterparties, and other stakeholders.
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c. Monitoring
The proposal would also impose
monitoring requirements on covered
companies so that they are able to
proactively position themselves into
progressive states of readiness as
liquidity stress events evolve.
Specifically, the proposed rule would
require the CFP to include procedures
for monitoring emerging liquidity stress
events, and for identifying early
warning indicators of emerging liquidity
stress events that are tailored to a
covered company’s capital structure,
risk profile, complexity, activities, size,
and other appropriate risk-related
factors. Such early warning indicators
may include, but are not limited to,
negative publicity concerning an asset
class owned by covered company,
potential deterioration in the covered
company’s financial condition,
widening debt or credit default swap
spreads, and increased concerns over
the funding of off-balance-sheet items.
d. Testing
The proposed rule would require a
covered company to periodically test
the components of the CFP to assess its
reliability during liquidity stress events.
Such testing would include trial runs of
the operational elements of the CFP to
ensure that they work as intended
during a liquidity stress event. These
tests would include operational
simulations to test communications,
coordination, and decision making
involving relevant managers, including
managers at relevant legal entities
within the corporate structure.
A covered company would also be
required to periodically test the
methods it will use to access alternate
funding to determine whether these
sources of funding will be readily
available when needed. For example,
the Board expects that a covered
company would test the operational
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elements of a CFP that are associated
with lines of credit, the Federal Reserve
discount window, or other secured
borrowings, since efficient collateral
processing during a liquidity stress
event is especially important for such
funding sources.
Question 16: Are the proposed CFP
requirements appropriate for all covered
companies? What alternative
approaches to the CFP requirements
outlined above should the Board
consider? If not, how should the Board
amend the requirements to make them
appropriate for any covered company?
Are there additional modifications the
Board should make to the proposed rule
to enhance the ability of a covered
company to comply with the CFP and
establish a viable and effective plan for
the management of liquidity stress
events?
e. Specific Limits (§ 252.59)
To enhance management of liquidity
risk, the proposed rule would require a
covered company to establish and
maintain limits on potential sources of
liquidity risk, including three specified
sources of liquidity risk. The size of
each limit must reflect the covered
company’s capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, size, and other
appropriate risk related factors, and
established liquidity risk tolerance. The
covered company would be required to
establish limits on:
(i) Concentrations of funding by
instrument type, single counterparty,
counterparty type, secured and
unsecured funding, and other liquidity
risk identifiers.
(ii) The amount of specified liabilities
that mature within various time
horizons.
(iii) Off-balance sheet exposures and
other exposures that could create
funding needs during liquidity stress
events. Such exposures may be
contractual or non-contractual
exposures, and include such liabilities
as unfunded loan commitments, lines of
credit supporting asset sales or
securitizations, collateral requirements
for derivative transactions, and a letter
of credit supporting a variable demand
note.
Question 17: Should covered
companies be required to establish and
maintain limits on other potential
sources of liquidity risk in addition to
the three specific sources listed in the
proposed rule? If so, identify these
additional sources of liquidity risk.
f. Monitoring (§ 252.60)
The proposed rule would require a
covered company to monitor liquidity
risk related to collateral positions,
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611
liquidity risks across the enterprise, and
intraday liquidity positions. In addition,
the covered company would be required
to monitor compliance with the specific
limits established under § 252.59.
a. Collateral Positions
Under the proposed rule, a covered
company would be required to establish
and maintain procedures for monitoring
assets it has pledged as collateral for an
obligation or position, and assets that
are available to be pledged. The
procedures must address the covered
company’s ability to:
(i) Calculate all of the covered
company’s collateral positions in a
timely manner, including the value of
assets pledged relative to the amount of
security required under the contract
governing the obligation for which the
collateral was pledged, and the
unencumbered assets available to be
pledged;
(ii) Monitor the levels of available
collateral by legal entity, jurisdiction,
and currency exposure;
(iii) Monitor shifts between intraday,
overnight, and term pledging of
collateral; and
(iv) Track operational and timing
requirements associated with accessing
collateral at its physical location (for
example, the custodian or securities
settlement system that holds the
collateral).
b. Legal Entities, Currencies, and
Business Lines
Regardless of its organizational
structure, it is critical that a covered
company actively monitor and control
liquidity risks at the level of individual
legal entities and the group as a whole.
This requires processes that aggregate
data across multiple systems to develop
an enterprise-wide view of liquidity risk
exposure and identify constraints on the
transferability of liquidity within the
organization.
To promote effective monitoring
across the enterprise, the proposed rule
would require a covered company to
establish and maintain procedures for
monitoring and controlling liquidity
risk exposures and funding needs
within and across significant legal
entities, currencies, and business lines.
In addition, the proposed rule would
require the covered company to
maintain sufficient liquidity with
respect to each significant legal entity in
light of legal and regulatory restrictions
on the transfer of liquidity between legal
entities.76 The covered company should
76 For example, for bank holding companies such
restrictions include sections 23A and 23B of the
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ensure that legal distinctions and
possible obstacles to cash movements
between specific legal entities or
between separately regulated entities are
recognized. The Board expects a
covered company to maintain sufficient
liquidity to ensure such compliance in
normal times and during liquidity stress
events.
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c. Intraday Liquidity Positions
Intraday liquidity monitoring is an
important component of the liquidity
risk management process for a covered
company engaged in significant
payment, settlement, and clearing
activities. Given the interdependencies
that exist among payment systems, large
complex organizations’ inabilities to
meet critical payments have the
potential to lead to systemic disruptions
that can prevent the smooth functioning
of payments systems and money
markets.
The proposed rule would require a
covered company to establish and
maintain procedures for monitoring
their intraday liquidity risk exposure.
These procedures would address how
the covered company will:
(i) Monitor and measure expected
daily gross liquidity inflows and
outflows;
(ii) Manage and transfer collateral
when necessary to obtain intraday
credit;
(iii) Identify and prioritize timespecific obligations so that the covered
company can meet these obligations as
expected;
(iv) Settle less critical obligations as
soon as possible;
(v) Control the issuance of credit to
customers where necessary; and
(vi) Consider the amounts of collateral
and liquidity needed to meet payment
systems obligations when assessing its
overall liquidity needs.
The monitoring of intraday cash flows
generally is an operational risk
management function. To ensure that
liquidity risk is also appropriately
monitored, the Board expects a covered
company to provide for integrated
oversight of intraday exposures within
the operational risk and liquidity risk
functions. The Board also expects the
procedures for monitoring and
managing intraday liquidity positions to
reflect in stringency and complexity,
and scope of operations of the covered
company.
Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 371c and 371c–1)
and Regulation W (12 CFR part 223), which govern
covered transactions between banks and their
affiliates.
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d. Specific Limits
The proposed rule would require a
covered company to monitor
compliance with the specific limits on
potential sources of liquidity risk
established under § 252.59.
Question 18: Should the Board
require a covered company to monitor
other areas of liquidity risk in addition
to collateral positions, risk across
entities, currencies, and business lines,
and intraday liquidity positions? If so,
what areas should be added to the list
and why?
g. Documentation (§ 252.61)
Comprehensive documentation is
necessary to achieve good liquidity risk
management and to support the
supervisory process. The proposed rule
would require a covered company to
adequately document all material
aspects of its liquidity risk management
processes and its compliance with the
requirements of the proposed rule, and
submit such documentation to the risk
committee. Material aspects of its
liquidity risk management process
would include, but would not be
limited to, the methodologies and
material assumptions used in cash flow
projections and the liquidity stress
testing, and all elements of the
comprehensive CFP. The covered
company must make this
documentation available to the Federal
Reserve upon request.
Question 19: The Board requests
comment on all aspects of the proposed
rule. Specifically, what aspects of the
proposed rule present implementation
challenges and why? What alternative
approaches to liquidity risk
management should the Board consider?
Are the liquidity management
requirements of this proposal too
specific or too narrowly defined? If, so
explain how. Responses should be
detailed as to the nature and impact of
these challenges and should address
whether the Board should consider
implementing transitional arrangements
in the rule to address these challenges.
V. Single-Counterparty Exposure Limits
A. Background
During the recent financial crisis,
some of the largest financial firms in the
world collapsed or nearly did so,
demonstrating the risk that the failure of
large financial companies poses to the
financial stability of the United States
and the global financial system. The
effect of one large financial institution’s
failure or near collapse was amplified
by the interconnectedness of large,
systemically important firms–the degree
to which they extended each other
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credit and served as over-the-counter
derivative counterparties to each other.
Counterparties of a failing firm were
placed under severe strain when the
failing firm could not meet its financial
obligations resulting in the
counterparties’ inability to meet their
own obligations.
The financial crisis also revealed
inadequacies in the U.S. supervisory
approach to single-counter party credit
concentration limits, which failed to
limit the interconnectedness among and
concentration of similar risks within
large financial companies that
contributed to a rapid escalation of the
crisis. While banks were subject to
single-borrower lending and investment
limits, these limits were applied at the
bank level, rather than holding company
level, and excluded credit exposures
generated by derivatives and some
securities financing transactions.77
In an effort to address singlecounterparty concentration risk among
large financial companies, section
165(e) of the Dodd-Frank Act directs the
Board to establish single-counterparty
credit concentration limits for covered
companies in order to limit the risks
that the failure of any individual firm
could pose to a covered company.78
This section directs the Board to
prescribe regulations that prohibit
covered companies from having credit
exposure to any unaffiliated company
that exceeds 25 percent of the capital
stock and surplus of the covered
company.79 This section also authorizes
the Board to lower the 25 percent
threshold if necessary to mitigate the
risks to the financial stability of the
United States.80
Credit exposure to a company is
defined in section 165(e) of the DoddFrank Act to mean all extensions of
credit to the company, including loans,
deposits, and lines of credit; all
repurchase agreements, reverse
repurchase agreements, securities
borrowing and lending transactions
with the company (to the extent that
such transactions create credit exposure
for the covered company); all
guarantees, acceptances, or letters of
77 Section 610 of the Dodd-Frank Act amends the
term ‘‘loans and extensions of credit’’ for purposes
of the lending limits applicable to national banks
to include any credit exposure arising from a
derivative transaction, repurchase agreement,
reverse repurchase agreement, securities lending
transaction, or securities borrowing transaction. See
Dodd-Frank Act, Public Law 111–203, § 610, 124
Stat. 1376, 1611 (2010). As discussed in more detail
below, these types of transactions are also all made
subject to the single counterparty credit limits of
section 165(e). 12 U.S.C. 5365(e)(3).
78 See 12 U.S.C. 5365(e)(1).
79 12 U.S.C. 5365(e)(2).
80 See id.
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credit (including endorsement or
standby letters of credit) issued on
behalf of the company; all purchases of
or investments in securities issued by
the company; counterparty credit
exposure to the company in connection
with a derivative transaction between
the covered company and the company;
and any other similar transaction that
the Board, by regulation, determines to
be a credit exposure for purposes of
section 165.81
Section 165(e) also grants authority to
the Board (i) to issue such regulations
and orders, including definitions
consistent with section 165(e), as may
be necessary to administer and carry out
that section; and (ii) to exempt
transactions, in whole or in part, from
the definition of the term ‘‘credit
exposure,’’ if the Board finds that the
exemption is in the public interest and
consistent with the purposes of section
165(e).82 Section 165(e) states that its
provisions and any implementing
regulations and orders of the Board will
not be effective until 3 years after the
date of enactment of the Dodd-Frank
Act, and the Board is authorized to
extend the transition period for up to an
additional 2 years.83
The concept of single-counterparty
credit limits for covered companies is
similar to, but also broader than,
existing limits that operate at the
depository institution level of banking
organizations, including the investment
securities limits and the lending limits
imposed on depository institutions.84 A
depository institution generally is
limited, subject to certain exceptions, in
the total amount of investment
securities of any one obligor that it may
purchase for its own account to no more
than 10 percent of its capital stock and
surplus.85 In addition, a depository
institution’s total outstanding loans and
extensions of credit to one borrower
may not exceed 15 percent of the bank’s
capital stock and surplus, plus an
additional 10 percent of the bank’s
capital and surplus, if the amount that
exceeds the bank’s 15 percent general
limit is fully secured by readily
marketable collateral.86
Section 165(e) is a separate and
independent limit from the investment
securities limits and lending limits in
the National Bank Act, and a covered
company must comply with all of the
81 See
12 U.S.C. 5365(e)(3).
12 U.S.C. 5365(e)(5)–(6).
83 See 12 U.S.C. 5365(e)(7).
84 See, e.g., 12 U.S.C. 24(7); 12 U.S.C. 84; 12 CFR
parts 1 and 32; see also 12 U.S.C. 335 (applying the
provisions of 12 U.S.C. 24(7) to state member
banks).
85 See 12 U.S.C. 24(7); 12 CFR part 1.
86 See 12 U.S.C. 84(a); 12 CFR part 32.
82 See
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limits that are applicable to it and its
subsidiaries. The Board believes that a
covered company should be able to
comply with section 165(e) and the
proposed rule implementing it on a
consolidated basis, in addition to
complying, as appropriate, with the
investment securities limits and lending
limits applicable to a bank subsidiary.
Question 20: How would the limits of
section 165(e) and the proposed rule
interact with the other existing limits
such as the investment and lending
limits applicable to banks and what
other conflicts might arise in complying
with these different regimes?
The financial crisis also revealed
weaknesses in the large exposure limits
in place in other major financial
markets. These limits also failed to
restrict interconnectedness among large
global financial companies. In response,
the BCBS has established a working
group to examine challenges posed by
weaknesses and inconsistencies in large
exposure limit regimes across
jurisdictions and to carefully evaluate
the merits of reaching an international
agreement on large exposure limits. If an
international agreement on large
exposure limits for banking firms is
reached, the Board may amend this
proposed rule, as necessary, to achieve
consistency with the international
approach.
B. Overview of the Proposed Rule
The Board’s proposal to implement
section 165(e) introduces a two-tier
single-counterparty credit limit, with a
more stringent single-counterparty
credit limit applied to the largest
covered companies. The proposed rule
includes limits on the exposures of the
covered company as well as its
subsidiaries—i.e., any company the
parent company directly or indirectly
controls. ‘‘Control’’, for purposes of this
proposed rule, would exist when a
covered company directly or indirectly
owns or controls 25 percent or more of
a class of a company’s voting securities
or 25 percent or more of a company’s
total equity, or consolidates the
company for financial reporting
purposes. The proposal would establish
a general limit that prohibits a covered
company from having aggregate net
credit exposure to any single
unaffiliated counterparty in excess of 25
percent of the covered company’s
capital stock and surplus.87 In addition,
87 See proposed rule § 252.93(a). This general
limit in the proposed rule follows the 25 percent
limit contained in section 165(e) of the Dodd-Frank
Act. See 12 U.S.C. 5365(e)(2). Section 165(e) of the
Dodd-Frank Act limits credit exposure of a covered
company to any unaffiliated company. 12 U.S.C.
5365(e)(2). The proposed rule implements the
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the proposed rule would establish a
more stringent net credit exposure limit
between a major covered company and
any major counterparty, i.e., a major
covered company’s aggregate net credit
exposure to any major counterparty
would be limited to 10 percent of the
capital stock and surplus of the major
covered company.88 The proposal
would define a ‘‘major covered
company’’ as any nonbank covered
company or any bank holding company
with total consolidated assets of $500
billion or more.89 A ‘‘major
counterparty’’ would be defined as any
major covered company, as well as any
foreign banking organization that is or is
treated as a bank holding company and
that has total consolidated assets of
$500 billion or more.90
The proposed definition of a
counterparty would include a natural
person (including the person’s
immediate family), a company
(including its subsidiaries); the United
States (including all of its agencies and
instrumentalities, but not including any
State or political subdivision of a State);
a State (including all of its agencies,
instrumentalities, and political
subdivisions); and a foreign sovereign
entity (including its agencies,
instrumentalities, political
subdivisions). Under the proposal,
credit exposures to sovereign entities
are made subject to the credit exposure
limits (unless specifically exempted) in
the same manner as credit exposures to
companies. As explained further below,
the Board proposes to include sovereign
entities in the definition of counterparty
because the Board believes that credit
exposures of a covered company to such
governmental entities create risks to the
covered company similar to those
created by large exposures to other types
of entities, e.g., privately owned
companies.
Both the general and more stringent
credit limits would be measured in
terms of a covered company’s capital
stock and surplus. The proposed rule
would define ‘‘capital stock and
surplus’’ of a covered company as its
total regulatory capital plus excess loan
loss reserves. Under the proposed rule,
the single-counterparty credit limit
statute by limiting the credit exposure of a covered
company to an unaffiliated ‘‘counterparty’’ as
defined in the proposed rule and as discussed
further below. See proposed rule § 252.92(k)
(defining ‘‘counterparty’’).
88 See proposed rule § 252.93(b). Section 165(e)(2)
grants the Board authority to lower the limit on net
credit exposure below 25 percent if necessary to
mitigate risks to the financial stability of the United
States. See 12 U.S.C. 5365(e)(2).
89 See proposed rule § 252.92(aa) (defining ‘‘major
covered company’’).
90 See proposed rule § 252.92(z).
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would apply to a broad range of
transactions with a counterparty, such
as extensions of credit (including loans,
deposits, and lines of credit), securities
lending or securities borrowing
transactions, as well as credit derivative
or equity derivative transactions in
which the covered company has sold
protection to a third party referencing
the counterparty. The proposed rule
also would allow the Board to
determine that any similar transaction
should be a ‘‘credit transaction’’.
The proposal also specifies how the
gross credit exposure on a credit
transaction should be calculated for
each type of credit transaction defined
in the proposed rule. For example, the
proposed rule would require that the
gross credit exposure of a securities
borrowing transaction be valued at the
amount of cash collateral plus the
market value of securities collateral
transferred by the covered company to
the counterparty.
The general limit (25 percent of
capital stock and surplus) and the more
stringent limit between major covered
companies and major counterparties (10
percent of capital stock and surplus)
apply to the aggregate net credit
exposure between the covered company
and the counterparty, or between major
covered companies and major
counterparties. The rule would specify
how gross credit exposure amounts are
converted to net credit exposure
amounts by taking into account eligible
collateral, eligible guarantees, eligible
credit and equity derivative hedges,
other eligible hedges (i.e., a short
position in the counterparty’s debt or
equity security), and for securities
financing transaction, the effect of
bilateral netting agreements. Under the
proposed rule, ‘‘eligible collateral’’ is
generally defined to include cash on
deposit with a covered company
(including cash held for the covered
company by a third-party custodian or
trustee); debt securities (other than
mortgage- or asset-backed securities)
that are bank-eligible investments;
equity securities that are publicly
traded; or convertible bonds that are
publicly traded.
An ‘‘eligible guarantee’’ is a guarantee
that meets certain criteria described in
the proposed rule, including being
written by an eligible protection
provider. Similarly, eligible credit or
equity derivative hedges would also be
required to be written by an eligible
protection provider and meet certain
other criteria. For example, an eligible
credit derivative hedge would have to
be in simple form, including singlename or standard, non-tranched index
credit derivatives. Moreover, an eligible
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equity derivative hedge would only
include an equity-linked total return
swap and would not include other,
more complex equity derivatives, e.g.,
purchased equity-linked options.
Section-by-Section Analysis
a. Section 252.91: Applicability
Section 252.91 states that, in general,
the proposed rule would apply to a
company on the first day of the fifth
quarter following the date on which it
became a covered company. Initially,
the proposed rule would not apply to
any covered company until October 1,
2013.91
Question 21: Should the Board
consider a longer phase-in for all or a
subset of covered companies?
b. Section 252.92: Definitions
Section 252.92 of the proposed rule
defines the key terms used in the rule.
As discussed above, the limits of the
proposed rule apply to credit exposure
of a covered company, including its
subsidiaries to any unaffiliated
counterparty. A ‘‘subsidiary’’ of a
specified company means a company
that is directly or indirectly controlled
by the specified company.92 A company
would control another company if it (i)
Owns or controls with the power to vote
25 percent or more of a class of voting
securities of the company; (ii) owns or
controls 25 percent or more of the total
equity of the company; or (iii)
consolidates the company for financial
reporting purposes.93 The proposed
rule’s definition of control would differ
from that in the Bank Holding Company
Act and the Board’s Regulation Y.94 The
Board proposes to vary from the Bank
Holding Company Act/Regulation Y
definition of control for purposes of this
proposed regulation because a simpler,
more objective definition of control is
more consistent with the objectives of
single-counterparty credit limits.
Question 22: Is the approach of
including all subsidiaries of a covered
company in the definition of covered
91 See
proposed rule § 252.91(a)(2); see also 12
U.S.C. 5365(e)(7)(A) (stating that regulations and
orders under section 165(e) shall not be effective
until 3 years after the date of enactment of the
Dodd-Frank Act).
92 See proposed rule § 252.92(jj).
93 See proposed rule § 252.92(i). This definition of
control is similar to that in Appendix G of
Regulation Y which states that a person or company
controls a company if it (i) owns, controls, or holds
with the power to vote 25 percent or more of a class
of voting securities of the company; or (ii)
consolidates the company for financial reporting
purposes. See 12 CFR 225, App. G. The only
difference between the definition from Appendix G
and the proposed rule’s definition of control is the
addition of the prong to capture total equity in the
proposed rule.
94 See 12 U.S.C. 1841(a)(2); 12 CFR 225.2(e)(1).
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company for purposes of the proposed
rule appropriate? 95 If not, explain why
not.
Question 23: Should the Bank
Holding Company Act/Regulation Y
definition of ‘‘control’’ be adopted for
purposes of the proposed rule? Are
there alternative approaches to defining
when a company is a subsidiary of
another the Board should consider?
Under the proposed rule, a fund or
vehicle that is sponsored or advised by
a covered company would not be
considered a subsidiary of the covered
company unless it was ‘‘controlled’’ by
that covered company. A covered
company would not control a fund or
vehicle that is sponsored or advised by
the covered company if (i) it did not
own or control more than 25 percent of
the voting securities or total equity of
the fund or vehicle; and (ii) the fund or
vehicle would not be consolidated with
the covered company for financial
reporting purposes.96 If a fund or
vehicle is not controlled by a covered
company, the exposures of such fund or
vehicle to its counterparties would not
be aggregated with those of the covered
company.97 Such arm’s length
treatment, however, may be at odds
with the support that some companies
provided during the financial crisis to
the funds they advised and sponsored.
For example, many money market
mutual fund (MMMF) sponsors,
including banking organizations,
supported their MMMFs during the
crisis in order to enable those funds to
meet investor redemption requests
without having to sell assets into thenfragile and illiquid markets.
Question 24: Since a covered
company may have strong incentives to
provide support in times of distress to
MMMFs and certain other funds or
vehicles that it sponsors or advises, the
Board seeks comment on whether such
funds or vehicles should be included as
part of the covered company for
purposes of this rule.98 Is the proposed
95 As described below, the same approach to
subsidiaries is used for counterparties that are
companies. Such counterparties are defined to
include a company and its subsidiaries, thus
requiring aggregation of the entire organization’s
credit exposures to the covered company it faces.
96 Financial Accounting Standards Board, ASC
Section 810, Consolidation. Further, these
requirements are currently under review. The Board
may review the effect any change made to these
consolidation requirements has on whether a
covered company is required to consolidate such
fund or vehicle for financial reporting purposes and
amend this rule, as necessary.
97 Instead, a non-controlled fund or vehicle would
be treated as a counterparty of the covered company
and any exposure or transaction between those
entities would be subject to the limits of the
proposed rule.
98 The same issued is raised with respect to the
treatment of funds sponsored and advised by
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rule’s definition of ‘‘control’’ effective,
and should the proposal’s definition of
‘‘subsidiary’’ be expanded to include
any investment fund or vehicle advised
or sponsored by a covered company or
any other entity?
The proposed rule would establish
limits on the credit exposure of a
covered company to a single
‘‘counterparty’’.99 ‘‘Counterparty’’
would be defined to mean (i) With
respect to a natural person, the person
and members of the person’s immediate
family, collectively; 100 (ii) with respect
to a company, the company and all of
its subsidiaries, collectively; (iii) with
respect to the United States, the United
States and all of its agencies and
instrumentalities (but not including any
State or political subdivision of a State),
collectively; (iv) with respect to a State,
the State and all of its agencies,
instrumentalities, and political
subdivisions (including municipalities),
collectively; and (v) with respect to a
foreign sovereign entity, the foreign
sovereign entity and all of its agencies,
instrumentalities, and political
subdivisions, collectively.101
Section 165(e) directs the Board to
limit credit exposure of a covered
company to ‘‘any unaffiliated
company’’.102 The Board included
sovereign entities in the definition of
counterparty to limit the vulnerability of
a covered company to default by a
single sovereign state, because the Board
believes that credit exposures of a
covered company to such governmental
entities create risks to the covered
company that are similar to those
created by large exposures to other types
of entities. The severe distress or failure
of a sovereign entity could have effects
on a covered company that are
comparable to those caused by the
failure of a financial firm or
nonfinancial corporation to which the
covered company has a large credit
exposure. For these reasons, credit
exposures to sovereign governments are
made subject to the credit exposure
limits in the same manner as credit
exposures to companies. The Board
counterparties. Such funds or vehicles similarly
would not be considered to be part of the
counterparty under the proposed rule’s definition of
control.
99 See proposed rule § 252.93.
100 ‘‘Immediate family’’ is defined in section
252.92(y) of the proposed rule.
101 See proposed rule § 252.92(k); see also
proposed rule § 252.92(hh) (defining ‘‘sovereign
entity’’).
102 12 U.S.C. 5365(e)(2)–(3). ‘‘Company’’ is
defined for purposes of the proposed rule to mean
a corporation, partnership, limited liability
company, depository institution, business trust,
special purpose entity, association, or similar
organization. See proposed rule § 252.92(h).
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believes that the authority in the DoddFrank Act and the Board’s general safety
and soundness authority in associated
banking laws are sufficient to
encompass sovereign governments in
the definition of counterparty in this
manner.103
As discussed below, certain credit
exposures of a covered company to the
U.S. government are exempt from the
credit exposure limits.104 There is no
similar exemption, however, for
exposures to U.S. state or local
governments or foreign sovereigns.
Accordingly, credit exposures to U.S.
state and local governments and foreign
sovereigns would be subject to the
proposed limits.
Question 25: Should the definition of
‘‘counterparty’’ differentiate between
types of exposures to a foreign sovereign
entity including exposures to local
governments? Should exposures to a
company controlled by a foreign
sovereign entity be included in the
exposure to that foreign sovereign
entity?
Question 26: Should certain credit
exposures to foreign sovereign entities
be exempted from the limitations of the
proposed rule—for example, exposures
to foreign central banks necessary to
facilitate the operation of a foreign
banking business by a covered
company?
The Board also notes that difficult
issues are raised in connection with the
valuation of credit exposure arising
from direct investments in or indirect
exposures to a collateralized debt
obligation (CDO) or other obligation
issued by a special purpose vehicle
(SPV). The failure to look through an
103 See 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(1)(B)(iv) (allowing the
Board to establish additional prudential standards
for covered companies as the Board, on its own or
pursuant to a recommendation made by the Council
in accordance with section 115, determines are
appropriate) and 5368 (providing the Board with
general rulemaking authority); see also section 5(b)
of the BHC Act of 1956, as amended (12 U.S.C.
1844(b)); and section 8(b) of FDI Act (12 U.S.C.
1818(b)). Section 5(b) of the BHC Act provides the
Board with the authority to issue such regulations
and orders as may be necessary to enable it to
administer and carry out the purposes of the BHC
Act. Section 8(b) of the FDI Act allows the Board
to issue to bank holding companies an order to
cease and desist from unsafe and unsound
practices.
104 See generally proposed rule § 252.97
(exempting direct claims on, and portions of claims
that are directly and fully guaranteed as to principal
and interest by, the United States and its agencies
and direct claims on, and portions of claims that are
directly and fully guaranteed as to principal and
interest by, the Federal National Mortgage
Association and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corporation, only while operating under the
conservatorship or receivership of the Federal
Housing Finance Agency, and any additional
obligations by a U.S. government sponsored entity
as determined by the Board.)
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615
SPV to its sponsor or to the issuer of the
underlying assets may serve at times to
improperly mask a covered company’s
exposure to those parties. Accordingly,
under the proposed reservation of
authority, the Board may look through
some SPVs either to the issuer of the
underlying assets in the vehicle or to the
sponsor. In the alternative, the Board
may require covered companies to look
through to the underlying assets of an
SPV but only if the SPV failed certain
discrete concentration tests (such as
having more than 20 underlying
exposures).
Question 27: How should exposures
to SPVs and their underlying assets and
sponsors be treated? What other
alternatives should the Board consider?
The credit exposure of a covered
company to an unaffiliated counterparty
is limited to a percentage of the capital
stock and surplus of the covered
company.105 Under the proposed rule,
‘‘capital stock and surplus’’ of a bank
holding company is the sum of the
company’s total regulatory capital as
calculated under the risk-based capital
adequacy guidelines applicable to that
bank holding company under
Regulation Y (12 CFR part 225) and the
balance of the allowance for loan and
lease losses of the bank holding
company not included in tier 2 capital
under the capital adequacy guidelines
applicable to that bank holding
company under Regulation Y (12 CFR
part 225).106 This definition of capital
stock and surplus is generally consistent
with the definition of the same term in
the Board’s Regulations O and W and
the OCC’s national bank lending limit
regulation.107 For a nonbank covered
company, ‘‘capital stock and surplus’’
includes the total regulatory capital of
such company on a consolidated basis,
as determined under the risk-based
capital rules the company is subject to
by rule or order of the Board.108
An alternative measure of ‘‘capital
stock and surplus’’ might focus on
common equity and, in that respect, be
consistent with the post-crisis global
regulatory move toward tier 1 common
equity as the primary measure of loss
absorbing capital for internationally
active banking firms. For example, Basel
III introduces for the first time a specific
tier 1 common equity requirement and
uses tier 1 common equity measures in
its capital conservation buffer and
105 See 12 U.S.C. 5365(e)(2); see also proposed
rule § 252.93.
106 See proposed rule § 252.92(g); see also
proposed rule § 252.92(kk) (defining ‘‘total
capital’’).
107 See 12 CFR 12 CFR 215.3(i); 223.3(d); see also
12 CFR 32.2(b).
108 See proposed rule § 252.92(g).
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countercyclical buffer.109 In addition
the, the BCBS capital surcharge
framework for G–SIBs builds on the tier
1 common equity requirement in Basel
III.110 In addition, the Federal Reserve
focused on tier 1 common equity in the
SCAP conducted in early 2009 and
again in the CCAR conducted in early
2011 to assess the capacity of bank
holding companies to absorb projected
losses.111
Question 28: Are the measures of
‘‘capital stock and surplus’’ in the
proposed rule effective in light of the
intent and purpose of section 165(e) or
would a measure of ‘‘capital stock and
surplus’’ that focuses on tier 1 common
equity be more effective? What other
alternatives to the proposed definition
of ‘‘capital stock and surplus’’ should
the Board consider?
c. Section 252.93: Credit Exposure Limit
Section 252.93 of the proposed rule
contains the key quantitative limitations
on credit exposure of a covered
company to a single counterparty.112 As
noted above, the Board has determined
to limit the ‘‘aggregate net credit
exposure’’ of a covered company to a
counterparty. ‘‘Aggregate net credit
exposure’’ is defined to mean the sum
of all net credit exposures of a covered
company to a single counterparty.113 As
described in detail below, sections
252.94 and 252.95 of the proposed rule
explain how to calculate gross and net
credit exposure in order to arrive at the
aggregate net credit exposure relevant to
the single-counterparty credit limit in
section 252.93.114
There are two separate limits
contained in section 252.93 of the
proposed rule. The general limit
provides that no covered company may
have aggregate net credit exposure to
any unaffiliated counterparty that
exceeds 25 percent of the capital stock
and surplus of the covered company.115
There is also a second, more stringent
limit for aggregate net credit exposure
between major covered companies and
major counterparties. Specifically, no
major covered company may have
aggregate net credit exposure to any
unaffiliated major counterparty that
exceeds 10 percent of the capital stock
109 See
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110 See
Basel III framework, supra note 34.
BCBS capital surcharge framework, supra
note 35.
111 See, e.g., The Supervisory Capital Assessment
Program: Overview of Results (May 7, 2009),
available at https://www.federalreserve.gov/
newsevents/press/bcreg/bcreg20090507a1.pdf
(hereinafter SCAP Overview of Results); and 76 FR
74631, 74636 (December 1, 2011).
112 See proposed rule § 252.93.
113 See proposed rule § 252.92(c).
114 See proposed rule §§ 252.94 & 252.95.
115 See proposed rule § 252.93(a).
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and surplus of the major covered
company.116 As discussed above, the
Dodd-Frank Act grants the Board
authority to impose stricter limits on
covered companies with a larger
systemic footprint and indeed requires
the Board to impose stricter singlecounterparty credit limits on covered
companies with a larger systemic
footprint.
Question 29: What other limits or
modifications to the proposed limits on
aggregate net credit exposure should the
Board consider?
In accord with the directive of section
165, the proposed rule imposes a more
conservative limit on larger covered
companies that have a larger systemic
footprint.117 The Board recognizes,
however, that size is only a rough proxy
for the systemic footprint of a company.
Additional factors specific to a firm,
including the nature, scope, scale,
concentration, interconnectedness, mix
of its activities, its leverage, and its offbalance-sheet exposures, among other
factors, may be determinative of a
company’s systemic footprint.118 The
BCBS proposal on capital surcharges for
systemically important banking
organizations, for example, uses a
twelve factor approach to determine the
systemic importance of a global banking
organization.119 Moreover, the Board
recognizes that drawing one line
through the covered company
population and imposing stricter limits
on exposures between major covered
companies and major counterparties
may not take into account nuances that
might be captured by other approaches.
Question 30: Should the Board adopt
a more nuanced approach, like the
BCBS approach, in determining which
covered companies should be treated as
major covered companies or which
counterparties should be considered
major counterparties?
Question 31: Should the Board
introduce more granular categories of
covered companies to determine to
appropriate net credit exposure limit? If
so, how could such granularity best be
accomplished?
Section 165(e) provides the Board
with discretion to determine how a
covered company measures the amount
of credit exposure in various transaction
types. As noted above, the proposed
rule limits aggregate net credit exposure
of a covered company to an unaffiliated
counterparty. ‘‘Aggregate net credit
exposure’’ is defined in the proposed
116 See
proposed rule § 252.93(b).
12 U.S.C. 5365(a).
118 See, e.g., 12 U.S.C. 5323(a).
119 See BCBS capital surcharge framework, supra
note 35.
117 See
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rule to be a measure that recognizes
certain credit risk mitigants, including
netting agreements for certain types of
transactions, most forms of collateral
with a haircut, and guarantees and other
forms of credit protection.120 The Board
recognizes that while net credit
exposure limits reduce the risk that the
failure of a single counterparty could
significantly undermine the financial
strength of a covered company, net
limits also understate the level of
interconnectedness among financial
companies. While gross credit exposure
limits might more effectively capture
interconnectedness among financial
companies, the Board has not proposed
supplementary gross limits at this time
due to the tendency of gross limits to
significantly overstate the credit risk
inherent in any given transaction.
Question 32: Should the Board
supplement the net credit exposure
limit with limits on gross credit
exposure for all covered companies or a
subset of covered company, i.e., major
covered companies? Explain why or
why not.
d. Section 252.94: Gross Credit
Exposure
Section 252.94 of the proposed rule
explains how a covered company would
be required calculate its ‘‘gross credit
exposure’’ on a credit transaction with
a counterparty. ‘‘Gross credit exposure’’
is defined to mean, with respect to any
credit transaction, the credit exposure of
the covered company to the
counterparty before adjusting for the
effect of qualifying master netting
agreements, eligible collateral, eligible
guarantees, eligible credit derivatives
and eligible equity derivatives, and
other eligible hedges, i.e., a short
position in the counterparty’s debt or
equity security.121 Consistent with the
statutory definition of credit exposure,
the proposed rule defines ‘‘credit
transaction’’ to mean, with respect to a
counterparty, any (i) Extension of credit
to the counterparty, including loans,
deposits, and lines of credit, but
excluding advised or other
uncommitted lines of credit; (ii)
repurchase or reverse repurchase
agreement with the counterparty; (iii)
securities lending or securities
borrowing transaction with the
counterparty; (iv) guarantee, acceptance,
or letter of credit (including any
120 See proposed rule § 252.92(c) (defining
‘‘aggregate net credit exposure’’) and § 252.95
(describing how to calculate aggregate net credit
exposure taking into accounting netting, collateral,
guarantees and other forms of credit protection).
121 See proposed rule § 252.92(x). Section 252.95
of the proposed rule explains how these
adjustments are made.
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confirmed letter of credit or standby
letter of credit) issued on behalf of the
counterparty; (v) purchase of, or
investment in, securities issued by the
counterparty; (vi) credit exposure to the
counterparty in connection with a
derivative transaction between the
covered company and the counterparty;
(vii) credit exposure to the counterparty
in connection with a credit derivative or
equity derivative transaction between
the covered company and a third party,
the reference asset of which is an
obligation or equity security issued by
the counterparty; 122 and (viii) any
transaction that is the functional
equivalent of the above, and any similar
transaction that the Board determines to
be a credit transaction for purposes of
this subpart.123
Question 33: Are the definitions of
‘‘credit transaction’’ appropriate in light
of the purpose and intent of the DoddFrank Act? If not, explain why not?
Question 34: What transactions, if
any, should be exempt from the
definition of credit transaction?
Section 252.94 describes how the
gross credit exposure of a covered
company to a counterparty on a credit
transaction should be calculated for
each type of credit transaction described
above.124 In particular, section 252.94(a)
of the proposed rule provides that, for
purposes of calculating gross credit
exposure:
(i) The value of loans by a covered
company to a counterparty (and leases
in which the covered company is the
lessor and the counterparty is the lessee)
is equal to the amount owed by the
counterparty to the covered company
under the transaction.
(ii) The value of debt securities held
by the covered company that are issued
by the counterparty is equal to the
greater of (i) the amortized purchase
price or market value for trading and
available for sale securities, or (ii) the
amortized purchase price for securities
held to maturity.
(iii) The value of equity securities
held by the covered company that are
issued by the counterparty is equal to
the greater of the purchase price or
market value.
(iv) The value of repurchase
agreements is equal to (i) the market
value of the securities transferred by the
covered company to the counterparty
122 ‘‘Credit derivative’’ and ‘‘equity derivative’’
are defined in sections 252.92(m) and (v) of the
proposed rule, respectively.
123 See proposed rule § 252.92 (n). The definition
of ‘‘credit transaction’’ in the proposed rule is
similar to the definition of ‘‘credit exposure’’ in
section 165(e) of the Dodd-Frank Act. See 12 U.S.C.
5365(e)(3).
124 See proposed rule § 252.94(a)(1)–(12).
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plus (ii) an add-on equal to the market
value of the securities transferred
multiplied by the collateral haircut set
forth in section 252.95 (Table 2) that is
applicable to the securities transferred.
(v) The value of reverse repurchase
agreements is equal to the amount of
cash transferred by the covered
company to the counterparty.
(vi) Securities borrowing transactions
are valued at the amount of cash
collateral plus the market value of
securities collateral transferred by the
covered company to the counterparty.
(vii) Securities lending transactions
are valued at (i) the market value of the
securities lent by the covered company
to the counterparty plus (ii) an add-on
equal to the market value of the
securities lent multiplied by the
collateral haircut set forth in section
252.95 (Table 2) that is applicable to the
securities lent.
(viii) Committed credit lines extended
by a covered company to the
counterparty are valued at the face
amount of the credit line.
(ix) Guarantees and letters of credit
issued by a covered company on behalf
of the counterparty are equal to the
maximum potential loss to the covered
company on the transaction.
(x) Derivative transactions between
the covered company and the
counterparty not subject to a qualifying
master netting agreement, are valued in
an amount equal to the sum of (i) the
current exposure of the derivatives
contract equal to the greater of the markto-market value of the derivative
contract or zero and (ii) the potential
future exposure of the derivatives
contract, calculated by multiplying the
notional principal amount of the
derivative contract by the appropriate
conversion factor, set forth in section
252.94 (Table 1).
(xi) Derivative transactions between
the covered company and the
counterparty subject to a qualifying
master netting agreement, are valued in
an amount equal to the exposure at
default amount calculated under 12 CFR
part 225, appendix G, § 32(c)(6).
(xii) Credit or equity derivative
transactions between the covered
company and a third party where the
covered company is the protection
provider and the reference asset is an
obligation or equity security of the
counterparty, are valued in an amount
equal to the lesser of the face amount of
the transaction or the maximum
potential loss to the covered company
on the transaction.
Question 35: What alternative or
additional valuation rules should the
Board consider for calculating gross
credit exposure?
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617
Question 36: What impediments to
calculating gross credit exposure in the
manner described above would covered
companies face?
In the valuation rules described
above, trading and available-for-sale
debt securities held by the covered
company are valued at the greater of
amortized purchase price or market
value in section 252.94(a)(2) of the
proposed rule. Similarly, equity
securities held by the covered company
are valued at the greater of purchase
price or market value in section
252.94(a)(3) of the proposed rule. The
valuation rule for these types of
securities requires a covered company
to revalue upwards the amount of an
investment in such securities when the
market value of the securities increases.
In these circumstances, the valuation
rule merely reflects the covered
company’s greater financial exposure to
the counterparty and reduces the
covered company’s ability to engage in
additional transactions with a
counterparty as the covered company’s
exposure to the counterparty increases.
The valuation rules also provide that
the amount of the covered company’s
investment in these securities can be no
less than the purchase price paid by the
covered company for the securities,
even if the market value of the securities
declines below the purchase price.
Using the purchase price of the
securities as a floor for valuing them
would appear to be appropriate for
several reasons. First, it ensures that the
value of the securities never falls below
the amount of funds actually transferred
by the covered company to the
counterparty in connection with the
investment. Second, the purchase price
floor would limit the ability of a covered
company to provide additional funding
to a counterparty as the counterparty
approaches insolvency. If the proposed
rule were to value investments in
securities issued by a counterparty
strictly at market value, the covered
company could lend substantially more
funds to the counterparty as the
counterparty’s financial condition
worsened. As the financial condition of
the counterparty declines, the market
value of the counterparty’s securities
held by the covered company would
also likely decline, allowing the covered
company to provide additional funding
to the counterparty under the proposed
rule. This type of increasing support for
a counterparty in distress could vitiate
the public policy goals of section 165(e)
by permitting a covered company to
exceed the regulatory singlecounterparty limits through serial credit
extensions to a collapsing counterparty.
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Question 37: Does the requirement to
use the greater of purchase price or
market value introduce significant
burden for covered companies? Would
the use of the market value alone be
consistent with the purposes of section
165(e)?
The add-on included in the gross
valuation rule for repurchase
agreements and securities lending
transactions (set forth in sections
252.94(a)(4) and 252.94(a)(7)) of the
proposed rule is intended to capture the
market volatility (and associated
potential increase in counterparty
exposure amount) of the securities
transferred or lent by the covered
company in these transactions.
The final gross credit exposure
calculation amounts noted in sections
252.94(a)(10)–(12) of the proposed rule
address derivative transactions. The
proposed rule addresses both credit
exposure of a covered company to a
derivative counterparty, which is valued
as the sum of the current exposure and
the potential future exposure of the
contract, and credit exposure of a
covered company to the issuer of the
reference obligation of certain credit and
equity derivatives when the covered
company is the protection provider,
which is valued on a notional basis.125
Question 38: The Board seeks
comment on all aspects of the proposed
approach to calculating gross credit
exposures for securities financing and
derivative transactions, including the
add-on in the proposed gross valuation
rule for repurchase agreements and
securities lending transactions.
• The Board recognizes that the credit
risk targeted by the valuation rule for
securities lending transactions and
repurchase agreements—i.e., that a
counterparty would fail at the same time
that the underlying securities are rising
in value—may be smaller than the credit
risk associated with reverse repurchase
agreements or securities borrowing
transactions. Should the Board consider
a lower add-on than the haircuts in
section 252.95 (Table 2) to reflect this
difference? If so, how should the Board
calibrate the add-on?
• Will the proposed add-on approach
to valuing credit exposure for securities
lending transactions and repurchase
agreements lead to significant changes
in current practices in those markets?
125 See proposed rule § 252.94(a)(10)–(12).
‘‘Credit derivative’’ is defined in section 252.92(m)
of the proposed rule, and ‘‘equity derivative’’ is
defined in section 252.92(v) of the proposed rule.
‘‘Derivative transaction’’ is defined in section
252.92(p) of the proposed rule in the same manner
as it is defined in section 610 of the Dodd-Frank
Act. See Dodd-Frank Act, Public Law 111–203,
§ 610, 124 Stat. 1376, 1611 (2010).
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• Is the valuation approach for a
derivative transaction between a
covered company and a counterparty—
i.e., a combination of the current
exposure and a measure of potential
future exposure of the contract—
appropriate? What alternative valuation
approaches for derivative transactions
should the Board consider?
• Is the valuation approach for a
derivative transaction between a
covered company and a third party
appropriate in the case of a derivative
transaction where the covered company
is the protection provider and the
reference asset is issued by the
counterparty?
The proposed rule generally allows
covered companies to calculate gross
credit exposure to a counterparty for
derivatives contracts with that
counterparty subject to a qualifying
master netting agreement by using the
Basel II-based exposure at default
calculation set forth in the Board’s
advanced approaches capital rules (12
CFR part 225, appendix G, § 32(c)(6)).126
With respect to cleared and uncleared
derivatives, the amount of initial margin
and excess variation margin (i.e.,
variation margin in excess of that
needed to secure the mark-to-market
value of a derivative) posted to a
counterparty should be treated as credit
exposure to the counterparty unless the
margin is held in a segregated account
at a third party custodian. In the case of
cleared derivatives, a covered
company’s contributions to the guaranty
fund of a central counterparty (CCP)
would be considered a credit exposure
to the CCP and valued at notional
amount.127
Question 39: Should margin posted
and contributions to a CCP guaranty
fund be considered a credit exposure for
purposes of the proposed rule? The
Board recognizes that there are
competing policy concerns in
considering whether to limit a covered
company’s exposure to central
counterparties. The Board seeks
comment on the benefits and drawbacks
of such limits.
Section 252.94(b) of the proposed rule
includes the statutory attribution rule
that provides that a covered company
126 See proposed rule § 252.95(a). ‘‘Qualifying
master netting agreement’’ is defined in section
252.92(ee) of the proposed rule in a manner
consistent with the Board’s advanced risk-based
capital rules for bank holding companies.
127 The Board notes that it has the authority to
deem margin posted to be a credit exposure as such
exposure is part of counterparty credit exposure to
the covered company arising in connection with a
derivative transaction. The Board also has broad
authority in section 165(e) to determine that any
similar transaction is a credit exposure. 12 U.S.C.
5365(e)(3)(E)–(F).
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must treat a transaction with any person
as a credit exposure to a counterparty to
the extent the proceeds of the
transaction are used for the benefit of,
or transferred to, that counterparty.128
The Board notes that an overly broad
interpretation of the attribution rule in
the context of section 165(e) would lead
to inappropriate results and would
create a daunting tracking exercise for
covered companies. For example, if a
covered company makes a loan to a
counterparty that in turn uses the loan
to purchase goods from a third party,
the attribution rule could be read to
mean that the covered company would
have a credit exposure to that third
party, because the proceeds of the loan
with the counterparty are used for the
benefit of, or transferred to, the third
party. The Board recognizes the
difficulty in monitoring such
transactions and the limited value in
tracking such money flows for purposes
of maintaining the integrity of the
single-counterparty credit limit regime.
The Board thus proposes to minimize
the scope of application of this
attribution rule consistent with
preventing evasion of the singlecounterparty credit limit.
Question 40: The Board requests
comment on whether the proposed
scope of the attribution rule is
appropriate or whether additional
regulatory clarity around the attribution
rule would be appropriate. What
alternative approaches to applying the
attribution rule should the Board
consider? What is the potential cost or
burden of applying the attribution rule
as described above?
e. Section 252.95: Net Credit Exposure
As discussed above, the proposed rule
imposes limits on a covered company’s
net credit exposure to a counterparty.
‘‘Net credit exposure’’ is defined to
mean, with respect to any credit
transaction, the gross credit exposure of
a covered company calculated under
section 252.94, as adjusted in
accordance with section 252.95.129
Section 252.95 of the proposed rule
explains how to convert gross credit
exposure amounts to net credit exposure
amounts by taking into account eligible
collateral, eligible guarantees, eligible
credit and equity derivatives, other
eligible hedges (i.e., a short position in
the counterparty’s debt or equity
security), and for securities financing
transactions, the effect of bilateral
netting agreements.130
128 See proposed rule § 252.94(b); see also 12
U.S.C. 5365(e)(4).
129 See proposed rule § 252.92(bb).
130 See proposed rule § 252.95.
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Collateral
Section 252.95(b) of the proposed rule
explains the impact of eligible collateral
when calculating net credit exposure.
‘‘Eligible collateral’’ is defined to
include (i) Cash on deposit with a
covered company (including cash held
for the covered company by a thirdparty custodian or trustee); (ii) debt
securities (other than mortgage- or assetbacked securities) that are bank-eligible
investments; (iii) equity securities that
are publicly traded; or (iv) convertible
bonds that are publicly traded.131 For
any of these asset types to count as
eligible collateral for a credit
transaction, the covered company
generally must have a perfected, first
priority security interest in the collateral
(or, if outside of the United States, the
legal equivalent thereof). This list of
eligible collateral is similar to the list of
eligible collateral in the Basel II
standardized capital rules.
Question 41: Should the list of eligible
collateral be broadened or narrowed?
In computing its net credit exposure
to a counterparty for a credit
transaction, a covered company may
reduce its gross credit exposure on a
transaction by the adjusted market value
of any eligible collateral.132 ‘‘Adjusted
market value’’ is defined in section
252.92(a) of the proposed rule to mean,
with respect to any eligible collateral,
the fair market value of the eligible
collateral after application of the
applicable haircut specified in section
252.95 (Table 2) for that type of eligible
collateral. The haircuts in Table 2 are
consistent with the standard
supervisory market price volatility
haircuts in Appendix G to Regulation Y.
Question 42: Should a covered
company be able to use its own internal
estimates for collateral haircuts as
permitted under Appendix G to
Regulation Y?
A covered company has the choice of
whether to reduce its gross credit
exposure to a counterparty by the
adjusted market value of any eligible
collateral.133 If a covered company
chooses to reduce its gross credit
exposure by the adjusted market value
of eligible collateral, however, the
covered company would be required to
include the adjusted market value of the
eligible collateral when calculating its
131 See proposed rule § 252.92(q); see also
proposed rule § 252.92(dd) (defining ‘‘publicly
traded’’).
132 See proposed rule § 252.95(b).
133 The Board notes that it has the authority to
treat eligible collateral as a gross credit exposure to
the collateral issuer as a consequence of the broad
grant of authority to the Board in section 165(e) to
determine that any other similar transaction is a
credit exposure. See 12 U.S.C. 5365(e)(3)(F).
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gross credit exposure to the issuer of the
collateral. In effect, the covered
company would have shifted its credit
exposure from the original counterparty
to the issuer of the eligible collateral.
The amount of credit exposure to the
original counterparty and the issuer of
the eligible collateral will fluctuate over
time based on the adjusted market value
of the eligible collateral. Collateral that
previously met the definition of eligible
collateral under the proposed rule but
over time ceases to do so would no
longer be eligible to reduce gross credit
exposure.
A covered company would have the
option of whether or not to use eligible
collateral as a credit risk mitigation tool
in recognition of the fact that tracking
the market movements of a diverse pool
of collateral can, in some circumstances,
be operationally burdensome. In this
respect, a covered company may opt not
to recognize eligible collateral and thus
avoiding potentially burdensome
tracking of collateral.
Question 43: Is recognizing the
fluctuations in the value of eligible
collateral the correct approach, and
what would be the burden on covered
companies in calculating such changes
on a daily basis?
Question 44: What is the burden on a
covered company associated with the
proposed rule’s approach to changes in
the eligibility of collateral? Should the
Board instead consider introducing
stricter collateral haircuts for collateral
that ceases to be eligible collateral?
So as not to dis-incentivize
overcollateralization, the credit
exposure to the collateral issuer is
capped so that it will never exceed the
credit exposure to the original
counterparty.134 A covered company
would, in every case, continue to have
credit exposure to the original
counterparty to the extent that the
adjusted market value of the eligible
collateral does not equal the full amount
of the credit exposure to the original
counterparty.
For example, under the proposed rule,
the treatment of eligible collateral
would work as follows. Assume a
covered company makes a $1,000 loan
to a counterparty, creating $1,000 of
gross credit exposure to that
counterparty, and the counterparty
provides eligible collateral issued by a
third party that has $700 of adjusted
market value. The covered company
may choose to reduce its credit
exposure to the original counterparty by
the adjusted market value of the eligible
collateral. As a result, the covered
company would have gross credit
134 See
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619
exposure of $700 to the issuer of the
collateral and $300 net credit exposure
to the original counterparty that posted
the collateral.
As noted above, the amount of credit
exposure to the original counterparty
and the issuer of the eligible collateral
will fluctuate over time based on
movements in the adjusted market value
of the eligible collateral. For example, if
the adjusted market value of the eligible
collateral decreases to $400 in the
previous example, the covered
company’s net credit exposure to the
original counterparty would increase to
$600, and its gross credit exposure to
the collateral issuer would decrease to
$400. By contrast, in the event of an
increase in the adjusted market value of
the eligible collateral to $800, the
covered company’s gross credit
exposure to the issuer of the eligible
collateral would increase to $800 and its
net credit exposure to the original
counterparty would decline to $200. In
each case, the covered company’s credit
exposure would be capped at the
original amount of the exposure created
by the loan or $1,000—even if the
adjusted market value of the eligible
collateral exceeded $1,000.
Question 45: Is the approach to
eligible collateral that allows the
covered company to choose whether or
not to recognize eligible collateral and
shift credit exposure to the issuer of
eligible collateral appropriate? What
alternatives to this approach should the
Board consider?
Question 46: Alternatively, should
eligible collateral be treated the same
way eligible guarantees and eligible
credit and equity derivative hedges are
treated (as described below), thus
requiring a mandatory look-through to
eligible collateral?
Unused Credit Lines
Section 252.95(c) of the proposed rule
concerns the unused portion of certain
extensions of credit. In computing its
net credit exposure to a counterparty for
a credit line or revolving credit facility,
a covered company may reduce its gross
credit exposure by the amount of the
unused portion of the credit extension
to the extent that the covered company
does not have any legal obligation to
advance additional funds under the
facility until the counterparty provides
qualifying collateral equal to or greater
than the entire used portion of the
facility.135 To qualify for this reduction,
the credit contract must specify that any
used portion of the credit extension
must be fully secured at all times by
collateral that is either (i) Cash; (ii)
135 See
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obligations of the United States or its
agencies; or (iii) obligations directly and
fully guaranteed as to principal and
interest by, the Federal National
Mortgage Association or the Federal
Home Loan Mortgage Corporation, only
while operating under the
conservatorship or receivership of the
Federal Housing Finance Agency, and
any additional obligations issued by a
U.S. government sponsored entity as
determined by the Board.136
Question 47: What alternative
approaches, if any, to the proposed
treatment of the unused portion of
certain credit facilities should the Board
consider?
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Eligible Guarantees
Section 252.95(d) of the proposed rule
describes how to reflect eligible
guarantees in calculations of net credit
exposure to a counterparty.137 Eligible
guarantees are guarantees that meet
certain conditions, including having
been written by an eligible protection
provider.138 An eligible protection
provider includes a sovereign entity, the
Bank for International Settlements, the
International Monetary Fund, the
European Central Bank, the European
Commission, a multilateral
development bank, a Federal Home
Loan Bank, the Federal Agricultural
Mortgage Corporation, a depository
institution, a bank holding company, a
savings and loan holding company, a
securities broker or dealer registered
with the SEC, an insurance company
that is subject to supervision by a State
insurance regulator, a foreign banking
organization, a non-U.S.-based
securities firm or non-U.S.-based
insurance company that is subject to
consolidated supervision and regulation
comparable to that imposed on U.S.
depository institutions, securities
broker-dealers, or insurance companies
(as the case may be), and a qualifying
central counterparty.139
Question 48: In what ways should the
definition of eligible protection provider
be expanded or narrowed?
Question 49: Are there any additional
or alternative requirements the Board
should place on eligible protection
providers to ensure their capacity to
perform on their guarantee obligations?
In calculating its net credit exposure
to the counterparty, a covered company
136 Id.
137 See
proposed rule § 252.95(d).
proposed rule § 252.92(t) for the definition
of ‘‘eligible guarantee’’ and for a description of the
requirements of an eligible guarantee.
139 See proposed rule § 252.29(u). Eligible credit
and equity derivatives, as described below, also
must be written by eligible protection providers.
‘‘Qualifying central counterparty’’ is defined in
section 252.92(ee) of the proposed rule.
138 See
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would be required to reduce its gross
credit exposure to the counterparty by
the amount of any eligible guarantee
from an eligible protection provider.140
The covered company would then have
to include the amount of the eligible
guarantee when calculating its gross
credit exposure to the eligible protection
provider.141 Also, as is the case with
eligible collateral, in no event would a
covered company’s gross credit
exposure to an eligible protection
provider with respect to an eligible
guarantee be in excess of its gross credit
exposure to the original counterparty on
the credit transaction prior to the
recognition of the eligible guarantee.142
The exposure to the eligible protection
provider is effectively capped at the
amount of the credit exposure to the
original counterparty even if the amount
of the eligible guarantee is larger than
the original exposure. A covered
company would continue to have credit
exposure to the original counterparty to
the extent that the eligible guarantee
does not equal the full amount of the
credit exposure to the original
counterparty.
For example, assume a covered
company makes a $1,000 loan to an
unaffiliated counterparty and obtains a
$700 eligible guarantee on the loan from
an eligible protection provider. The
covered company would have gross
credit exposure of $700 to the protection
provider as a result of the eligible
guarantee and $300 net credit exposure
to the original counterparty. As a second
example, assume a covered company
makes a $1,000 loan to an unaffiliated
counterparty and obtains a $1,500
eligible guarantee from an eligible
protection provider. The covered
company would have $1,000 gross
credit exposure to the protection
provider (capped at the amount of the
original exposure), but the covered
company would have no net credit
exposure to the original counterparty as
a result of the eligible guarantee.
The Board proposes to require a
covered company to reduce its gross
exposure to a counterparty by the
amount of an eligible guarantee in order
to ensure that concentrations in
exposures to guarantors are captured by
the regime. This requirement is meant to
limit the ability of a covered company
to extend loans or other forms of credit
to a large number of high risk borrowers
that are guaranteed by a single
guarantor. The proposed rule also
would narrow the set of eligible
protection providers to sovereign
140 See
proposed rule § 252.95(d).
proposed rule § 252.95(d)(1).
142 See proposed rule § 252.95(d)(2).
141 See
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entities and regulated financial
companies in order to limit the ability
of covered companies to arbitrage the
rule by obtaining multiple small
guarantees (each beneath the covered
company’s limit) from high-risk
guarantors to offset a large exposure
(exceeding the covered company’s limit)
to a single counterparty.
Question 50: Should covered
companies have the choice of whether
or not to fully shift exposures to eligible
protection providers in the case of
eligible guarantees or to divide an
exposure between the original
counterparty and the eligible protection
provider in some manner?
Question 51: Would a more
conservative approach to eligible
guarantees be more appropriate to
penalize financial sector
interconnectedness–for example, one in
which the covered company would be
required to recognize gross credit
exposure both to the original
counterparty and the eligible protection
provider in the full amount of the
original credit exposure? What other
alternative approaches to the treatment
of eligible guarantees should the Board
consider?
Eligible Credit and Equity Derivative
Hedges
Section 252.95(e) describes the
treatment of eligible credit and equity
derivatives in the case where the
covered company is the protection
purchaser.143 In the case where a
covered company is a protection
purchaser, such derivatives can be used
to mitigate gross credit exposure and are
treated in the same manner as an
eligible guarantee. A covered company
may only recognize eligible credit and
equity derivative hedges for purposes of
calculating net credit exposure.144
These derivatives must meet certain
criteria, including having been written
by an eligible protection provider.145 An
eligible credit derivative hedge must be
simple in form, including single-name
or standard, non-tranched index credit
derivatives. An eligible equity
derivative hedge may only include an
143 See
proposed rule § 252.95(e).
contrast, in section 252.94(a)(12) of the
proposed rule, where the covered company is the
protection provider, any credit or equity derivative
written by the covered company is included in the
calculation of the covered company’s gross credit
exposure to the reference obligor.
145 See proposed rule § 252.92(r) and (s) defining
‘‘eligible credit derivative’’ and ‘‘eligible equity
derivative’’, respectively. ‘‘Eligible protection
provider’’ is defined in § 252.92(u) of the proposed
rule. The same types of organizations that are
eligible protection providers for the purposes of
eligible guarantees are eligible protection providers
for purposes of eligible credit and equity
derivatives.
144 By
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equity-linked total return swap and does
not include other more, complex forms
of equity derivatives, such as purchased
equity-linked options.
Question 52: What types of
derivatives should be eligible for
mitigating gross credit exposure and, in
particular, are there are more complex
forms of derivatives that should be
eligible hedges?
The treatment of eligible credit and
equity derivative hedges in the
proposed rule is much like that of
guarantees. A covered company would
be required to reduce its gross credit
exposure to a counterparty by the
notional amount of any eligible credit or
equity derivative hedge that references
the counterparty if the covered company
obtains the derivative from an eligible
protection provider.146 In these
circumstances, the covered company
would be required to include the
notional amount of the eligible credit or
equity derivative hedge in calculating
its gross credit exposure to the eligible
protection provider.147 As is the case for
eligible collateral and eligible
guarantees, the gross exposure to the
eligible protection provider may in no
event be greater than it was to the
original counterparty prior to
recognition of the eligible credit or
equity derivative.148
For example, a covered company
holds $1,000 in bonds issued by
Company A, and the covered company
purchases an eligible credit derivative
in a notional amount of $800 from
Protection Provider X, which is an
eligible protection provider, to hedge its
exposure to Company A. The covered
company would now treat Protection
Provider X as its counterparty, and has
an $800 credit exposure to it. The
covered company also continues to have
credit exposure of $200 to Company A.
Similarly, consider the case of an
eligible equity derivative, where a
covered company holds $1,000 in equity
securities issued by Company B and
purchases an eligible equity-linked total
return swap in a notional amount of
$700 from Protection Provider Y, an
eligible protection provider, to hedge its
exposure to Company B. The covered
company would now treat Protection
Provider Y as its counterparty, and has
a credit exposure to it of $700. The
covered company also has credit
exposure to Company B of $300.
The proposed rule generally treats
eligible credit and equity derivatives in
the same manner as non-derivative
credit enhancement instruments such as
146 See
proposed rule § 252.95(e).
proposed rule § 252.95(e)(1).
148 See proposed rule § 252.95(e)(2).
147 See
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eligible guarantees, and requires
covered companies generally to
consider themselves as having credit
exposure to the protection provider in
an amount equal to the notional or face
value of the hedge instrument. In
essence, the rule only recognizes simple
derivative hedges on a transaction-totransaction basis. The rule does not
accommodate proxy hedging or
portfolio hedging and uses a simple
substitution approach of guarantor for
obligor.
Question 53: What alternative
approaches, if any, should the Board
consider to capture the risk mitigation
benefits of proxy or portfolio hedges or
to permit covered companies to use
internal models to measure potential
exposures to sellers of credit protection?
Question 54: Should covered
companies have the choice to recognize
and shift exposures to protection
providers in the case of eligible credit or
equity derivative hedges or to apportion
the exposure between the original
counterparty and the eligible protection
provider?
Question 55: Would a more
conservative approach to eligible credit
or equity derivative hedges be more
appropriate, such as one in which the
covered company would be required to
recognize gross notional credit exposure
both to the original counterparty and the
eligible protection provider?
Other Eligible Hedges
In addition to eligible credit and
equity derivatives, a covered company
may reduce exposure to a counterparty
by the face amount of a short sale of the
counterparty’s debt or equity security.
Question 56: Rather than requiring
firms to calculate gross trading
exposures and offset that exposure with
eligible credit and equity derivatives or
short positions, should the Board allow
covered companies to use internal
pricing models to calculate the net
mark-to-market loss impact of an issuer
default, applying a zero percent
recovery rate assumption, to all
instruments and positions in the trading
book? Under this approach, gains and
losses would be estimated using full
revaluation to the greatest extent
possible, and simply summed. For
derivatives products, all pricing inputs
other than those directly related to the
default of the issuer would remain
constant. Similar to the proposed
approach, only single-name and index
credit default swaps, total return swaps,
or equity derivatives would be included
in this valuation. Would such a modelsbased approach better reflect traded
credit exposures? If so, why?
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621
Netting of Securities Financing
Transactions
In calculating its credit exposure to a
counterparty, a covered company may
net the gross credit exposure amounts of
(i) its repurchase and reverse repurchase
transactions with a counterparty, and
(ii) its securities lending and borrowing
transactions with a counterparty, in
each case, where the transactions are
subject to a bilateral netting agreement
with that counterparty.
e. Section 252.96: Compliance
Section 252.96(a) of the proposed rule
indicates that a covered company must
comply with the requirements of the
proposed rule on a daily basis as of the
end of each business day and must
submit a monthly compliance report.149
Section 252.96(b) addresses the
consequences if a covered company fails
to comply with the proposed rule.150
This section states that if a covered
company is not in compliance with
respect to a counterparty due to a
decrease in the covered company’s
capital, the merger of a covered
company with another covered
company, or the merger of two
unaffiliated counterparties of the
covered company, the covered company
will not be subject to enforcement
actions with respect to such
noncompliance for a period of 90 days
(or such shorter or longer period
determined by the Board to be
appropriate to preserve the safety and
soundness of the covered company or
financial stability) if the company uses
reasonable efforts to return to
compliance with the proposed rule
during this period. The covered
company may not engage in any
additional credit transactions with such
a counterparty in contravention of this
rule during the compliance period,
except in cases where the Board
determines that such additional credit
transactions are necessary or
appropriate to preserve the safety and
soundness of the covered company or
financial stability. In granting approval
for any such special temporary
exceptions, the Board may impose
supervisory oversight and reporting
measures that it determines are
appropriate to monitor compliance with
the foregoing standards. The Board
notes that section 165(e) of the DoddFrank Act contains a provision allowing
the Board to exempt transactions, in
whole or part, from the definition of the
term ‘‘credit exposure’’ if the Board
finds that the exemption is in the public
149 See proposed rule § 252.96(a). Also, see supra
note 17.
150 See proposed rule § 252.96(b).
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interest and is consistent with the
purposes of this subsection.151
Question 57: Are there additional
non-compliance circumstances for
which some cure period should be
provided?
Question 58: Is the 90-day cure period
appropriate and is it appropriate to
generally prohibit additional credit
transactions with the affected
counterparty during the cure period? If
not, why not?
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Section 252.97: Exemptions
Section 252.97 of the proposed rule
sets forth certain exemptions.152 Section
165(e)(6) of the Dodd-Frank Act states
that the Board may, by regulation or
order, exempt transactions, in whole or
in part, from the definition of the term
‘‘credit exposure’’ for purposes of this
subsection, if the Board finds that the
exemption is in the public interest and
is consistent with the purposes of this
subsection.153
The first exemption is for direct
claims on, and the portions of claims
that are directly and fully guaranteed as
to principal and interest by the United
States and its agencies.154 The
exemption in section 252.97 of the
proposed rule clarifies that, despite the
fact that the United States is defined as
a counterparty, a covered company’s
credit exposures to the U.S. government
are exempt. Thus, exposures to the U.S.
government will not be subject to the
limits of the proposed rule. This
includes direct holdings of securities
issued by the U.S. government and
indirect exposure such as the case
where U.S. government securities are
pledged as collateral. Section 252.95(b)
of the proposed rule provides a covered
company with the option to shift credit
exposure to the issuer of eligible
collateral.155 Where the eligible
collateral pledged is U.S. government
securities that are directly and fully
guaranteed as to principal and interest
by the United States and its agencies,
the credit exposure would be exempted.
Question 59: Is the scope of the
exemption for direct claims on, and the
portions of claims that are directly and
fully guaranteed as to principal and
interest by, the United States and it
agencies appropriate? If not, explain the
reasons why in detail and indicate
whether there are alternatives the Board
should consider. Are there other
governmental entities that should
151 See
12 U.S.C. 5365(e)(6).
proposed rule § 252.97.
153 See 12 U.S.C. 5365(e)(6).
154 See proposed rule § 252.97(a)(1).
155 See proposed rule § 252.95(b).
152 See
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receive an exemption from the limits of
the proposed rule?
A second exemption from the
proposed rule is for direct claims on,
and the portions of claims that are
directly and fully guaranteed as to
principal and interest by, the Federal
National Mortgage Association and the
Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corporation, while these entities are
operating under the conservatorship or
receivership of the Federal Housing
Finance Agency.156 This provision
reflects a policy decision that credit
exposures to these governmentsponsored entities should not be subject
to a regulatory limit for so long as the
entities are in the conservatorship or
receivership of the U.S. government. As
determined by the Board, obligations
issued by another U.S. governmentsponsored entity would also be exempt.
The Board requests comment on
whether these exemptions are
appropriate.
The third exemption from the
proposed rule is for intraday credit
exposure to a counterparty.157 As noted
above, the proposed rule requires
compliance on a daily end-of-business
day basis.158 This exemption would
help minimize the impact of the rule on
the payment and settlement of financial
transactions. The Board requests
comment on whether the exemption for
intraday transactions is appropriate in
light of the intent and purpose of the
proposed rule.
The fourth exemption implements
section 165(e)(6) of the Dodd-Frank Act
and provides a catchall category to
exempt any transaction which the Board
determines to be in the public interest
and consistent with the purposes of
section 165(e).159
Question 60: Should other credit
exposures be exempted from the
limitations of the proposed rule. If so,
explain why?
Section 252.97(b) of the proposed rule
implements section 165(e)(6) of the
Dodd-Frank Act, which provides an
exemption for Federal Home Loan
Banks.
VI. Risk Management
A. Background
The recent financial crisis highlighted
the need for large, complex financial
companies to have more robust,
enterprise-wide risk management. A
number of companies that experienced
material financial distress or failed
156 See
proposed rule § 252.97(a)(2).
proposed rule § 252.97(a)(3).
158 See proposed rule § 252.96(a).
159 See 12 U.S.C. 5365(e)(6); proposed rule
§ 252.97(a)(4).
157 See
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during the crisis had significant
deficiencies in key areas of risk
management. Two recent reviews of risk
management practices of banking
companies conducted by the Senior
Supervisors Group (SSG) illustrated
these deficiencies.160
The SSG found that effective
oversight of an organization as a whole
is one of the most fundamental
requirements of prudent risk
management. For example, the SSG
found that business line and senior risk
managers did not jointly act to address
a company’s risks on an enterprise-wide
basis; business line managers made
decisions in isolation and at times
increased, rather than mitigated, risk;
and treasury functions were not closely
aligned with risk management
processes, preventing market and
counterparty risk positions from being
readily assessed on an enterprise-wide
basis.161
The SSG reviews also revealed that
solid senior management oversight and
engagement was a key factor that
differentiated companies’ performance
during the crisis. Senior managers at
successful companies were actively
involved in risk management, which
includes determining the company’s
overall risk preferences and creating the
incentives and controls to induce
employees to abide by those
preferences. Successful risk
management also depends on senior
managers having access to adaptive
management information systems to
identify and assess risks based on a
range of dynamic measures and
assumptions. In addition, the SSG found
that active involvement of the board of
directors in determining a company’s
risk tolerance was critical to effective
risk management and curbing of
excessive risk taking. The SSG reported
that ‘‘firms are more likely to maintain
a risk profile consistent with the board
and senior management’s tolerance for
risk if they establish risk management
committees that discuss all significant
risk exposures across the firm * * *
[and] meet on a frequent basis
* * *.’’ 162
Section 165(b)(1)(A) of the DoddFrank Act requires the Board to
establish overall risk management
requirements as part of the prudential
standards to ensure that strong risk
management standards are part of the
regulatory and supervisory framework
160 See 2008 SSG Report and 2009 SSG, supra
notes 58 and 59.
161 See 2008 SSG Report, supra note 58, at 3–5.
162 See 2008 SSG Report, supra note 58, at 8; see
also 2009 SSG Report, supra note 59, at 2–5.
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for covered companies.163 More
generally, section 165(h) of the DoddFrank Act directs the Board to issue
regulations requiring publicly traded
nonbank covered companies and
publicly traded bank holding companies
with total consolidated assets of $10
billion or more to establish risk
committees.164 Under the statute, a risk
committee required by section 165(h)
must be responsible for the oversight of
enterprise-wide risk management
practices of the company, include such
number of independent directors as the
Board may determine appropriate, and
include at least one risk management
expert having experience in identifying,
assessing, and managing risk exposures
of large, complex financial firms.
The Board is proposing to address the
risk management weaknesses observed
during the recent crisis and implement
the risk management requirements of
the Dodd-Frank Act by establishing risk
management standards for all covered
companies that would (i) Require
oversight of enterprise-wide risk
management by a stand-alone risk
committee of the board of directors and
chief risk officer (CRO); (ii) reinforce the
independence of a firm’s risk
management function; and (iii) ensure
appropriate expertise and stature for the
chief risk officer. The proposal would
also require bank holding companies
with total consolidated assets of $10
billion or more that are publicly traded
and are not covered companies (over
$10 billion bank holding companies) to
establish an enterprise-wide risk
committee of the board of directors.
Over $10 billion bank holding
companies that are not covered
companies and are not publicly traded
would not be subject to the risk
management requirements in this
proposal.
The proposed rule seeks to address
the risk management problems noted by
the SSG and others by mandating the
major responsible parties within a
company for its enterprise-wide risk
management: the risk committee and the
CRO. The proposal sets out certain
responsibilities of a risk committee,
which include the oversight and
documentation of the enterprise-wide
risk management practices of the
company. The proposal also would
establish various requirements for a risk
committee, including membership with
appropriate risk management expertise
and an independent chair. The
proposed rule also requires a covered
company to employ a CRO who will
implement appropriate enterprise-wide
163 12
164 12
U.S.C. 5365(b)(1)(A).
U.S.C. 5365(h).
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risk management practices and report to
the covered company’s risk committee
and chief executive officer.
These standards should help address
the risk management failures observed
during the crisis and their potential
contribution to the failure or instability
of financial companies by mandating an
enterprise-wide structure for managing
risk and identifying the responsible
parties that supervisors will look to
when evaluating a company’s risk
management practices. This should
facilitate more effective identification
and management of the company’s risk
as well as supervisors’ ability to monitor
the risk management of companies
subject to the rule.
In addition, the proposed standards
seek to meet the requirements of the
Dodd-Frank Act by imposing regulatory
standards for risk management on
covered companies and over $10 billion
bank holding companies that are
publicly traded. The Board does not
currently impose regulatory risk
management standards on bank holding
companies generally; the Board
traditionally has addressed risk
management through supervisory
guidance. The proposed standards
would be more stringent for risk
committees of covered companies than
for risk committees of over $10 billion
bank holding companies. The Board
expects the expertise of the risk
committee membership to be
commensurate with the complexity and
risk profile of the organizations. Thus,
the requirements of the proposed rule
would increase in stringency with the
systemic footprint of the company.
The Board emphasizes that the risk
committee and overall risk management
requirements contained in the proposed
rule supplement the Board’s existing
risk management guidance and
supervisory expectations.165 All banking
organizations supervised by the Board
should continue to follow such
guidance to ensure appropriate
oversight of and limitations on risk.
B. Overview of the Proposed Rule
1. Risk Committee Requirements
The proposed rule would require that
each covered company and each over
$10 billion bank holding company
establish a risk committee of the board
of directors to document and oversee,
on an enterprise-wide basis, the risk
management practices of the company’s
165 See Supervision and Regulation Letter SR 08–
8 (Oct. 16, 2008), available at https://
www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/srletters/2008/
SR0808.htm, and Supervision and Regulation Letter
SR 08–9 (Oct. 16, 2008), available at https://
www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/srletters/2008/
SR0809.htm.
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623
worldwide operations. Additional
proposed requirements relating to the
structure and responsibilities of such
risk committees are described below.
a. Structure of Risk Committee
Section 252.126(b) of the proposed
rule establishes requirements governing
the membership and proceedings of a
company’s risk committee. Consistent
with section 165(h)(3)(B) of the Act, the
Board proposes that a covered company
and over $10 billion bank holding
company’s risk committee must be
chaired by an independent director. The
Board views the active involvement of
independent directors as vital to robust
oversight of risk management and
encourages companies generally to
include additional independent
directors as members of their risk
committees.
The concept of director independence
is a concept familiar in federal securities
law. To promote consistency, the Board
proposes to refer to the definition of
‘‘independent director’’ in the Securities
and Exchange Commission’s (SEC)
Regulation S–K for companies that are
publicly traded in the United States.
Under this definition, the Board would
not consider a director to be
independent unless the company
indicates in its securities filings,
pursuant to the SEC’s Regulation S–K,
that the director satisfies the applicable
independence requirements of the
securities exchange on which the
company’s securities are listed. These
independence requirements generally
include limitations on compensation
paid to the director or director’s family
members by the company and
prohibitions on material business
relationships between the director and
the company. In all cases, and
consistent with the listing standards of
many securities exchanges, the
proposed rule excludes from the
definition of ‘‘independent director’’ a
director who is or recently was
employed by the company or whose
immediate family member is or recently
was an executive officer of the
company.
In the case of a director of a covered
company that is not publicly traded in
the United States, the proposed rule
would provide that the director is
independent only if the company
demonstrates to the satisfaction of the
Federal Reserve that such director
would qualify as an independent
director under the listing standards of a
securities exchange, if the company
were publicly traded on such an
exchange. The Board proposes to make
these determinations on a case-by-case
basis, as appropriate. At a minimum, the
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proposed rule provides that the Board
would not find a director to be
independent if the director or a member
of the director’s immediate family
member is or recently was an executive
officer of the company. In making
independence determinations, the
Board expects to analyze other indicia
of independence, including
compensation limitations and business
relationship prohibitions discussed
above.
In addition to the independent
director requirements, the proposed rule
would require at least one member of a
company’s risk committee to have risk
management expertise that is
commensurate with the company’s
capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, size, and other
appropriate risk-related factors.
However, given the importance of risk
management oversight, the Board
expects that a risk committee’s members
generally will have an understanding of
risk management principles and
practices relevant to the company. Risk
committee members should also have
experience developing and applying
risk management practices and
procedures, measuring and identifying
risks, and monitoring and testing risk
controls with respect to banking
organizations (or, if applicable, nonbank
financial companies).
The Board believes that the requisite
level of risk management expertise for a
company’s risk committee can vary
depending on the risks posed by the
company to the stability of the U.S.
financial system. The Board expects that
a company’s risk committee members
should have risk management expertise
commensurate with the company’s
capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, size and other
appropriate risk-related factors. Thus,
the Board expects that the risk
committees of covered companies that
pose greater risks to the U.S. financial
system would have members with
commensurately greater risk
management expertise than the risk
committees of other companies that
pose less risk.
The proposed rule also would
establish certain procedural
requirements for risk committees.
Specifically, the proposed rule would
require a company’s risk committee to
have a formal, written charter that is
approved by the company’s board of
directors. In addition, the proposed rule
would require that a risk committee
meet regularly and as needed, and that
the company fully document and
maintain records of such proceedings,
including risk management decisions.
The Board expects that these procedural
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requirements will help ensure that a
company’s risk management has the
appropriate stature within the
company’s corporate governance
framework.
Question 61: Should the Board
consider specifying by regulation
additional qualifications for director
independence? If so, what factors
should the Board consider in
establishing these qualifications?
Question 62: Would it be appropriate
for the Board to require the membership
of a risk committee to include more than
one independent director under certain
circumstances? If so, what factors
should the Board consider in
establishing these requirements?
Question 63: Should the Board
consider specifying by regulation the
minimum qualifications, including
educational attainment and professional
experience, for risk management
expertise on a risk committee?
Question 64: What alternatives to the
requirements for the structure of the risk
committee and related requirements
should the Board consider?
b. Responsibilities of Risk Committee
Section 252.126(c) of the proposed
rule sets out certain responsibilities of a
risk committee. The proposed rule
would generally require a company’s
risk committee to document and oversee
the enterprise-wide risk management
policies and practices of the company.
Consistent with the enterprise-wide risk
management requirement in section
165(h)(3)(A) of the Act, a company’s risk
committee would be required to take
into account both its U.S. and foreign
operations as part of its risk
management oversight.
The proposed rule would require a
risk committee to review and approve
an appropriate risk management
framework that is commensurate with
the company’s capital structure, risk
profile, complexity, activities, size, and
other appropriate risk-related factors.
The proposed rule specifies that a
company’s risk management framework
must include: Risk limitations
appropriate to each business line of the
company; appropriate policies and
procedures relating to risk management
governance, risk management practices,
and risk control infrastructure;
processes and systems for identifying
and reporting risks, including emerging
risks; monitoring compliance with the
company’s risk limit structure and
policies and procedures relating to risk
management governance, practices, and
risk controls; effective and timely
implementation of corrective actions;
specification of management’s authority
and independence to carry out risk
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management responsibilities; and
integration of risk management and
control objectives in management goals
and the company’s compensation
structure.
In general, the Board believes that
larger and more complex companies
should have more robust risk
management practices and frameworks
than smaller, less complex companies.
Accordingly, as a company grows or
increases in complexity, the company’s
risk committee should ensure that its
risk management practices and
framework adapt to changes in the
company’s operations and the inherent
level of risk posed by the company to
the U.S. financial system.
Question 65: What is the appropriate
role of the members of the risk
committee in overseeing enterprisewide risk management practices at the
company and is that role effectively
addressed by this proposal?
Question 66: Is the scope of review of
enterprise-wide risk management that
this proposal would require appropriate
for a committee of the board of
directors? Why or why not?
Question 67: How can the Board
ensure that risk committees at
companies have sufficient resources to
effectively carry out the oversight role
described in this proposal?
2. Additional Enhanced Risk
Management Standards for Covered
Companies
Consistent with section
165(b)(1)(A)(iii) of the Dodd-Frank Act,
the proposed rule establishes certain
overall risk management standards for
covered companies. These enhanced
standards are in addition to, and in
some cases expand upon, the risk
committee requirements discussed
above that apply to covered companies
and over $10 billion bank holding
companies.
a. Appointment of CRO
The Board believes that, in light of the
complexity and size of a covered
company’s operations, it is important
for each covered company to have a
designated executive officer in charge of
implementing and maintaining the risk
management framework and practices
approved by the risk committee.
Accordingly, section 252.126(d) of the
proposed rule directs each covered
company to appoint a CRO to
implement and maintain appropriate
enterprise-wide risk management
practices for the company.
The proposed rule provides that the
specific responsibilities of a covered
company’s CRO must include direct
oversight for: allocating delegated risk
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limits and monitoring compliance with
such limits; establishing appropriate
policies and procedures relating to risk
management governance, practices, and
risk controls; developing appropriate
processes and systems for identifying
and reporting risks, including emerging
risks; managing risk exposures and risk
controls; monitoring and testing risk
controls; reporting risk management
issues and emerging risks; and ensuring
that risk management issues are
effectively resolved in a timely manner.
The proposed rule specifies that these
responsibilities are to be executed on an
enterprise-wide basis.
Under the proposed rule, a CRO
would be required to have risk
management expertise that is
commensurate with the covered
company’s capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, size, and other
appropriate risk related factors. For
example, the Board would expect that
an executive whose qualifications and
experience are highly focused in a
specific area (e.g., an executive whose
primary skills relate to the risks taken
by a firm engaged predominantly in
consumer or commercial lending)
would be unlikely to possess the
expertise necessary to effectively
manage the risks taken by a firm
engaged in more diverse activities (e.g.,
a large, more complex universal banking
organization).
In light of the CRO’s central role in
ensuring the effective implementation of
a covered company’s risk management
practices, the proposed rule would
require a covered company’s CRO to
report directly to the risk committee and
the chief executive officer. Further, the
proposed rule would require that the
compensation of a covered company’s
CRO be appropriately structured to
provide for an objective assessment of
the risks taken by the covered company.
This requirement supplements existing
Board guidance on incentive
compensation.
Question 68: Should the Board
consider specifying by regulation the
minimum qualifications, including
educational attainment and professional
experience, for a CRO? If so, what type
of additional experience or education is
generally expected in the industry for
positions of this importance?
Question 69: What alternative
approaches to implementing the risk
committee requirements established
pursuant to the Dodd-Frank Act should
the Board consider?
b. Additional Risk Committee
Requirements for Covered Companies
The Board proposes that risk
committees of covered companies
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should meet certain additional
requirements beyond those described
above to ensure that covered companies’
risk committees are appropriately
structured to oversee the risk of a
company with a significant role in the
U.S. financial system. Specifically, the
Board believes that best practices for
covered companies require a risk
committee that reports directly to the
Board and not as part of or combined
with another committee. Thus, section
252.126(b)(5)(i) of the proposed rule
would require that a covered company’s
risk committee not be housed within
another committee or be part of a joint
committee. In addition, section
252.126(b)(5)(ii) of the proposed rule
would require a covered company’s risk
committee to report directly to the
covered company’s board of directors.
As mentioned above, the proposed
rule requires a covered company’s CRO
to report to the company’s risk
committee. To ensure that a covered
company’s risk committee appropriately
considers and evaluates the information
it obtains from the CRO, the proposed
rule would direct a covered company’s
risk committee to receive and review
regular reports from the covered
company’s CRO.
Request for Comment
The Board requests comment on all
aspects of this proposal.
VII. Stress Test Requirements
A. Background
As part of the effort during the recent
crisis to stabilize the U.S. financial
system, the Federal Reserve began stress
testing large, complex bank holding
companies as a forward-looking exercise
designed to estimate losses, revenues,
allowance for loan losses and capital
needs under various economic and
financial market scenarios. In early
2009, the Federal Reserve led the
Supervisory Capital Assessment
Program (SCAP) as a key element of the
plan to stabilize the U.S. financial
system. By looking at the broad capital
needs of the financial system and the
specific needs of individual companies,
these stress tests provided valuable
information to market participants and
had an overall stabilizing effect.
Building on SCAP and other
supervisory work coming out of the
crisis, the Federal Reserve initiated the
annual Comprehensive Capital Analysis
and Review (CCAR) in late 2010 to
assess the capital adequacy and evaluate
the internal capital planning processes
of large, complex bank holding
companies. The CCAR represents a
substantial strengthening of previous
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approaches to assessing capital
adequacy and aiming to ensure that
large organizations have thorough and
robust processes for managing and
allocating their capital resources. The
CCAR also focuses on the risk
measurement and management practices
supporting organizations’ capital
adequacy assessments, including their
ability to deliver credible inputs to their
loss estimation techniques.
Building on the SCAP and CCAR, the
Board proposes to implement section
165(i)(1) of the Dodd-Frank Act, which
requires the Board to conduct annual
analyses of the financial condition of
covered companies to evaluate the
potential effect of adverse economic and
financial market conditions on the
capital of these companies (supervisory
stress tests). The Board also proposes to
implement section 165(i)(2) of the Act,
which requires the Board to issue
regulations that (i) require financial
companies with total consolidated
assets of more than $10 billion and for
which the Board is the primary federal
financial regulatory agency to conduct
stress tests on an annual basis, and (ii)
require covered companies to conduct
semi-annual stress tests (together
company-run stress tests).
The supervisory stress tests involve
the Board’s analyses of the capital of
each covered company, on a total
consolidated basis, and an evaluation of
the ability of the covered company to
absorb losses as a result of adverse
economic and financial conditions. The
Act requires the Board to provide for at
least three different possible sets of
conditions—baseline, adverse, and
severely adverse conditions—under
which the Board would conduct this
evaluation.166 The Act also requires the
Board to publish a summary of the
supervisory stress test results.167
For the company-run stress tests, the
Act requires that the Board issue
regulations that: (i) Define the term
‘‘stress test’’ for purposes of the
regulations; (ii) establish methodologies
for the conduct of the company-run
stress tests that provide for at least three
different sets of conditions, including
baseline, adverse, and severely adverse
conditions; (iii) establish the form and
content of a required report on the
company-run stress tests that companies
subject to the regulation must submit to
the Board; and (iv) require subject
companies to publish a summary of the
results of the required stress tests.168
166 See
12 U.S.C. 5365(i)(1).
167 Id.
168 See
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B. Overview of the Proposed Rule
1. Annual Supervisory Stress Tests
Conducted by the Board
a. Purpose
The Board has long held the view that
bank holding companies generally
should operate with capital positions
well above the minimum regulatory
capital ratios, with an amount of capital
that is commensurate with each bank
holding company’s risk profile.169 Bank
holding companies should have internal
processes for assessing their capital
adequacy that reflect a full
understanding of the risks associated
with all aspects of their operations and
ensure that they hold capital
commensurate with those risks.170
Stress testing is one tool that helps both
supervisors and supervised companies
ensure that there is adequate capital
through periods of stress.
The stress testing requirements
described below are designed to work in
tandem with the Board’s capital plan
rule 171 to allow the Federal Reserve and
covered companies to better understand
the full range of their risks and the
potential impact of stressful events and
circumstances on their overall capital
adequacy and financial condition. The
Board and the other federal banking
agencies previously have highlighted
the use of stress testing as a means to
better understand the range of a banking
organization’s potential risk
exposures.172 The 2007–2009 financial
crisis further underscored the need for
banking organizations to incorporate
stress testing into their risk
management, as banking organizations
that are unprepared for stressful events
and circumstances are more vulnerable
to acute threats to their financial
condition and viability.173
The supervisory stress tests would
provide supervisors with forwardlooking information to help them
identify downside risks and the
potential impact of adverse outcomes on
capital adequacy at covered companies.
Supervisory stress tests would also
provide a means to assess capital
adequacy across companies more fully
and support the Board’s financial
stability efforts. In addition, the
publication of summary results from
supervisory stress tests would enhance
public disclosure of information about
covered companies’ financial condition
and the ability of those companies to
absorb losses as a result of adverse
economic and financial conditions.
Inputs from the supervisory stress tests,
along with the results of any companyrun stress tests, would be used by the
Federal Reserve in its supervisory
evaluation of a covered company’s
capital plan.
TABLE 1—PROCESS OVERVIEW OF ANNUAL SUPERVISORY STRESS TEST AND CAPITAL PLAN CYCLE
Supervisory stress test steps
Capital plan steps
Regulatory reports submitted (using data as of Sept. 30
and other required information).
................................................................................................
..............................................................................................
By Mid-November.
Capital plan submitted (including individual results of company-run stress tests).
..............................................................................................
Federal Reserve response to capital plan ..........................
..............................................................................................
By January 5.
Board communicates results to each covered company ......
................................................................................................
Board publishes summary results of the supervisory stress
test.
Proposed timeframe
By early March.
By March 31.
By Mid-April.
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The design of the supervisory stress
tests focuses on determining post-stress
capital positions at covered companies
to inform assessments of capital
adequacy. Because the Board’s
supervisory stress tests would be
standardized across covered companies
and not adjusted for each company, they
are not expected to fully capture all
potential risks that may affect a specific
company’s capital position. Supervisory
stress tests are one of several
supervisory assessment tools,
accordingly, a full assessment of a
company’s capital adequacy should be
informed by a broad range of
information including a covered
company’s internal capital adequacy
processes and the results of its own
internal stress tests. In particular, a full
assessment of a company’s capital
adequacy must take into account a range
of factors, including idiosyncratic
aspects of individual companies that a
standardized supervisory stress test
applicable across companies cannot be
expected to cover as sufficiently as the
companies’ internal stress testing
practices. Idiosyncratic factors would
include evaluation of a company’s
internal stress testing results, its capital
planning processes, the governance over
those processes, regulatory capital
measures, and market assessments. As
the parties primarily responsible for the
financial condition of a covered
company, its board of directors and
senior management bear the primary
responsibility for developing,
implementing, and monitoring a
covered company’s capital planning
strategies and internal capital adequacy
processes and are in the best position to
oversee these processes. Thus, along
with the results of a covered company’s
capital plan, any company-run stress
tests, and other supervisory information,
the Board would use the results of the
supervisory stress tests as one factor in
the overall supervisory assessment of a
covered company’s capital adequacy.174
169 See 12 CFR part 225, appendix A; see also
Supervision and Regulation Letter SR 99–18 (July
1, 1999), available at https://
www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/srletters/1999/
SR9918.htm (hereinafter SR 99–18).
170 See Supervision and Regulation Letter SR 09–
4 (revised March 27, 2009), available at https://
www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/srletters/2009/
SR0904.htm (hereinafter SR 09–4).
171 See 12 CFR 225.8.
172 See, e.g., 76 FR 35072 (June 15, 2011);
Supervision and Regulation Letter SR 10–6,
Interagency Policy Statement on Funding and
Liquidity Risk Management (March 17, 2010),
available at https://www.federalreserve.gov/
boarddocs/srletters/2010/sr1006.htm; Supervision
and Regulation Letter SR 10–1, Interagency
Advisory on Interest Rate Risk (January 11, 2010),
available at https://www.federalreserve.gov/
boarddocs/srletters/2010/sr1001.htm; SR 09–4,
supra note 170; Supervision and Regulation Letter
SR 07–1, Interagency Guidance on Concentrations
in Commercial Real Estate (January 4, 2007),
available at https://www.federalreserve.gov/
boarddocs/srletters/2007/SR0701.htm; SR 99–18,
supra note 169; Supervisory Guidance: Supervisory
Review Process of Capital Adequacy (Pillar 2)
Related to the Implementation of the Basel II
Advanced Capital Framework, 73 FR 44620 (July
31, 2008); SCAP Overview of Results, supra note
111; and Comprehensive Capital Analysis and
Review: Objectives and Overview (March 18, 2011),
available at https://www.federalreserve.gov/
newsevents/press/bcreg/bcreg20110318a1.pdf.
173 See Basel Committee on Banking Supervision,
Principles for Sound Stress Testing Practices and
Supervision (May 2009), available at https://
www.bis.org/publ/bcbs155.htm.
174 The Board notes that the design of the
supervisory stress tests focuses on capital adequacy
and does not focus on all aspects of financial
condition.
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b. Applicability
Except as otherwise provided in the
proposed rule, a bank holding company
that becomes a covered company no less
than 90 days before September 30 of a
calendar year must comply with the
requirements of the proposed rule
regarding stress tests, including the
timing of required submissions to the
Board, from that September 30 forward.
With respect to initial applicability, a
bank holding company that is a covered
company on the effective date of the
proposed rule must comply with the
proposed requirements as of the
effective date of the rule, including the
timing of required submissions to the
Board. A company that the Council
designates for supervision by the Board
on a date 180 days before September 30
of a calendar year must comply with the
requirements of the proposed rule
regarding stress tests, including the
timing of required submissions to the
Board, from that September 30 forward.
Question 70: Are the timing
requirements of this proposal sufficient
to allow a covered company or nonbank
covered company to prepare, collect,
and submit to the Board the information
necessary to support the supervisory
stress test? If not, what alternative
timing should the Board consider?
c. Process Overview of Annual
Supervisory Stress Test Cycle
The Board expects to use the
following general process and
timetables in connection with the
supervisory stress tests.
i. Information Collection From Covered
Companies
For a supervisory stress test
conducted within any given calendar
year, covered companies would be
required to submit to the Board data and
other information to support the
conduct of that year’s tests. To the
greatest extent possible, the data
schedules, and any other data requests,
would be designed to minimize burden
on the covered company and to avoid
duplication, particularly in light of
other reporting requirements that may
be imposed by the Board. The Board
envisions collecting the requisite
information from covered companies
primarily through the regulatory
reporting process, and these reports may
change from time to time. The
confidentiality of any information
submitted to the Board for the
supervisory stress tests will be
determined in accordance with the
Board’s rules regarding availability of
information.175 As discussed below in
section e.iv., the Board proposes to
publish a summary of the results the
supervisory stress test, as required by
the Dodd-Frank Act.176 The Board may
obtain supplemental information, as
needed, through the supervisory
process. The Board plans to publish for
notice and comment any new or revised
data requirements and related reporting
instructions in a separate information
collection proposal.177
Question 71: What is the potential
burden on covered companies stemming
from the requirements to submit
internal data to support the supervisory
stress tests?
ii. Publication of Scenarios and
Methodologies
The Board plans to publish the
scenarios in advance of conducting the
annual stress tests. The Board also plans
to publish an overview of its related
stress testing methodologies.
627
iii. Conducting Stress Tests
The Board intends to conduct the
supervisory stress tests using data
collected from covered companies as
well as supplemental information. In
the course of conducting the stress tests,
the Board intends to consult with
covered companies as necessary
throughout the process, particularly if
the company’s data submissions or
other information provided are unclear
or the supervisory stress test raises
questions more generally. After
conducting its analyses, the Board plans
to communicate to each covered
company the results within a reasonable
period of time.
iv. Publishing Results
Subsequent to communicating results
of the analyses to each covered
company, the Board would publish a
summary of the supervisory stress test
results, as discussed further below.
v. Proposed Steps for Annual and
Additional Stress Tests
Table 2 describes proposed steps in
the Board’s annual supervisory stress
test cycle, including proposed general
timeframes for each step. The Board
devised this proposed process in
conjunction with the proposed process
outlined below for the company-run
stress tests, given the overlap in
applicability for certain companies. As
noted above, the timeline is also
intended to facilitate the use of
supervisory stress tests to inform the
Board’s analysis of companies’ capital
plan submissions under the annual
CCAR process, where applicable. The
proposed timeframes are illustrative and
are subject to change.
TABLE 2—PROCESS OVERVIEW OF ANNUAL SUPERVISORY STRESS TESTING CYCLE
[Using data collected as of September 30, except for trading and counterparty data, for a planning horizon of at least nine calendar quarters]
Step
Proposed timeframe
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1. Board publishes scenarios for upcoming annual cycle .........................................................................................
2. Covered companies submit regulatory reports and any other required information .............................................
3. Board completes supervisory stress tests and compiles results ...........................................................................
175 See generally 12 CFR part 261; see also 5
U.S.C. 552(b).
176 12 U.S.C. 5365(i)(1)(B)(v).
177 To minimize burden on covered companies,
the Board plans to leverage, to the extent possible,
any pre-existing data collections that are relevant
for the proposed rule’s stress testing purposes (for
example, see the proposed agency information
collection available at https://
www.federalreserve.gov/reportforms/formsreview/
FRY14Q_FRY14A_20110907_ifr.pdf).
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No later than mid-November.
By mid-November.
By mid-February.
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TABLE 2—PROCESS OVERVIEW OF ANNUAL SUPERVISORY STRESS TESTING CYCLE—Continued
[Using data collected as of September 30, except for trading and counterparty data, for a planning horizon of at least nine calendar quarters]
Step
Proposed timeframe
4. Board communicates individual company results to covered companies .............................................................
5. Board publishes a summary of the supervisory stress test results .......................................................................
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d. General Approach to Supervisory
Stress Tests
The Board anticipates that its
framework for conducting its annual
stress test of covered companies would
assess the impact of different economic
and financial market scenarios on the
consolidated capital of each covered
company over a forward-looking
planning horizon, taking into account
all relevant exposures and activities of
that company. The proposed rule
defines the planning horizon as the
period of time over which the
supervisory stress test projections
would extend, specifically at least nine
quarters. The key feature of this
framework would be an estimate of
projected net income and other factors
affecting capital in each quarter of the
stress test planning horizon, leading to
an estimate of how each covered
company’s capital resources would be
affected under the scenarios. The
primary outputs produced under the
framework would be pro forma
projections of capital positions
(including capital levels and regulatory
and other capital ratios) for each
quarter-end over the planning horizon.
i. Scenarios
Under the proposed rule, prior to
conducting the analyses of covered
companies, the Board would publish a
minimum of three different sets of
economic and financial conditions,
including baseline, adverse, and
severely adverse conditions
(‘‘scenarios’’), under which the Board
would conduct its annual analyses. As
discussed above, the Board would
update, make additions to, or otherwise
revise these scenarios as appropriate,
and would publish any such changes to
the scenarios in advance of conducting
each year’s analyses. The Board expects
that the stress test framework would
produce at least three sets of projections
using quarterly intervals over the
planning horizon based upon the
scenarios specified by the Board. The
Board envisions that the scenarios
would consist of future paths of a series
of economic and financial variables over
the stress test planning horizon,
including projections for a range of
macroeconomic and financial
indicators, such as real GDP, the
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unemployment rate, equity and property
prices, and various other key financial
variables. The Board recognizes that
certain trading positions and tradingrelated exposures are highly sensitive to
adverse market events, potentially
leading to large short-term volatility in
covered companies’ earnings. As a
result, to address these scenarios, the
Board would supplement the scenarios
in some cases with market price and
rate ‘‘shocks’’ that are consistent with
historical or other adverse market events
specified by the Board. The scenarios, in
some cases, may also include stress
factors that may not be directly
correlated to macroeconomic or
financial assumptions but nevertheless
can materially affect covered
companies’ risks, such as factors that
affect operational risks.
Each year, the scenarios specified by
the Board would reflect changes in the
outlook for economic and financial
conditions. In general, the baseline
scenario would consider the most
recently available views of the
macroeconomic outlook expressed by
government agencies, other publicsector organizations, and private-sector
forecasters as of the beginning of the
annual stress-test cycle. The adverse
scenario could include economic and
financial conditions consistent with a
recession of at least moderate intensity,
including a shortfall of economic
activity and increase in unemployment
relative to the baseline scenario,
weakness in household incomes,
declines in asset prices (including
equities, corporate bonds, and property
prices) and changes in short- and longterm yields on government bonds. The
severely adverse scenario would consist
of economic and financial conditions
that are more unfavorable than those of
the adverse scenario and that also
include, in some instances, salient
factors that are likely to place notable
strains on at least some lines of
business. For example, such severely
adverse conditions could include
precipitous declines in property or other
asset prices; shifts in the shape of the
yield curve; marked changes in the
propensity of households or firms to
enter bankruptcy; or strains on
households, businesses, or real property
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By early March.
By early April.
markets in particular regions of the
United States.
ii. Data and Information Requirements
of Covered Companies
The Board’s stress test framework
would rely on consolidated data and
other information supplied by each
covered company. The proposed rule
would require each covered company to
provide data and information to the
Board, generally no later than 40 days
after the end of each calendar quarter,
although some items may need to be
collected only on an annual basis and
others may need to be collected on a
monthly basis. For data related to
trading and counterparty exposures, the
Board expects to communicate the as-of
date for those exposures during the
fourth quarter of each year. Covered
companies would need to provide such
data and other information in the
manner and form prescribed by the
Board to enable the Board to estimate
net income, losses, and pro-forma
capital levels and ratios for those
companies over the planning horizon
under baseline, adverse, and severely
adverse scenarios (or other such
conditions as determined appropriate by
the Board). This data would include
information:
(i) Related to the covered company’s
on- and off-balance sheet exposures,
including in some cases information on
individual items (such as loans and
securities) held by the company, and
including exposures in the covered
company’s trading portfolio, other
trading-related exposures (such as
counterparty-credit risk exposures) or
other items sensitive to changes in
market factors, including, as
appropriate, information about the
sensitivity of positions in the trading
portfolio—including counterparty credit
exposures—to changes in market prices
and interest rates;
(ii) To assist the Board in estimating
the sensitivity of the covered company’s
revenues and expenses to changes in
economic and financial conditions; and
(iii) To assist the Board in estimating
the likely evolution of the covered
company’s balance sheet (such as the
composition of its loan and securities
portfolios) and allowance for loan
losses, in response to changes in
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economic and financial conditions in
each of the scenarios provided.
As noted above, the Board plans to
issue a separate information collection
proposal to support its annual
supervisory stress test analyses.178 The
specific data requirements would be
outlined in that proposal and the Board
would publish any updates to its
information requirements in a manner
that provides covered companies with
sufficient lead time to implement the
changes. In addition, under the
proposed rule, the Board may require a
covered company to submit any other
information the Board deems necessary
in order to: (i) Ensure that the Board has
sufficient information to conduct its
analysis; and (ii) derive robust
projections of a company’s losses, preprovision net revenues, allowance for
loan losses, and future pro forma capital
positions under the baseline, adverse,
and severely adverse scenarios (or other
such conditions as determined
appropriate by the Board). The
confidentiality of any information
submitted to the Board for the
supervisory stress tests will be
determined in accordance with the
Board’s rules regarding availability of
information.179 As discussed below in
section e.iv., the Board proposes to
publish a summary of the results of the
supervisory stress test, as required by
the Dodd-Frank Act.180
iii. Methodology for Estimating Losses
and Revenues
While the Board expects to publish an
overview of its methodology for the
supervisory stress tests, the Board
believes it is useful to provide, as part
of this proposal, a general overview of
the anticipated methodology in advance
of that publication. The Board would
calculate each covered company’s
projected losses, revenues, and other
factors affecting capital using a series of
models and estimation techniques that
relate the economic and financial
variables in the baseline, adverse, and
severely adverse scenarios to the
company’s losses and revenues. The
Board would develop a series of models
to estimate losses on various types of
loans and securities held by the covered
company, using data submitted by that
company. These models may be
adjusted over time. The Board would
178 To the greatest extent possible, the data
templates, and any other data requests, would be
designed to minimize burden on the bank holding
company and to avoid duplication, particularly in
light of potential new reporting requirements
arising from the Dodd-Frank Act.
179 See generally 12 CFR part 261; see also 5
U.S.C. 552(b).
180 12 U.S.C. 5365(i)(1)(B)(v).
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use a separate methodology or a
combination of methodologies—
potentially including covered
companies’ internal models, if
appropriate—to estimate projected
losses related to covered companies’
trading portfolio or counterparty creditrisk exposures in the event of an adverse
market shock, taking into account the
complexity and idiosyncrasy of each
covered company’s positions. The
framework may also incorporate an
approach to estimate potential losses
from stress factors specifically affecting
the covered companies’ other risks.
Finally, the framework would include a
set of methodologies to assess the
impact of losses, pre-provision net
revenue, allowance for loan losses, and
other factors on future pro forma capital
levels and ratios.
Another element of the framework
would be a set of models or rules to
describe how a covered company’s
balance sheet would change over time,
as well as a set of assumptions or
models for other actions or decisions by
the covered company that affect capital,
such as its provisioning, dividend, and
share repurchase policy. Information
about planned future acquisitions and
divestitures by the companies would
also be incorporated. These projections
would then be analyzed to assess their
combined impact on the company’s
capital positions, including projected
capital levels and capital ratios, at the
end of each quarter in the planning
horizon. The framework would thus
incorporate all minimum regulatory
capital requirements, including all
appropriate limits and deductions.
These projections used in the
supervisory stress tests also would
incorporate, as appropriate, any
significant changes in or the significant
effects of accounting requirements
during the planning period.
Question 72: What alternative models
or methodologies for estimating a
covered company’s losses and revenues
should the Board consider?
e. Results of Annual Analyses
i. Description of Supervisory
Assessment
The Board, through its annual
analyses, would evaluate each covered
company as to whether the covered
company has the capital, on a total
consolidated basis, necessary to absorb
losses under economic and financial
market conditions as contained in the
designated scenarios. This evaluation
would include, but would not be
limited to, a review of the covered
company’s estimated losses, preprovision net revenue, allowance for
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629
loan losses, and the extent of their
impact on the company’s capital levels
and ratios, including regulatory capital
ratios.
ii. Communication of Results to Covered
Companies
The Board notes that, under the DoddFrank Act, it is required to publish a
summary of the results of its annual
analyses.181 Under the proposed rule,
prior to publishing a summary of the
results of its annual analyses, the Board
would convey to each covered company
the results of the Board’s analyses of
that company and explain to the firms
information that the Board expects to
make public.
iii. Post-Assessment Actions by Covered
Companies
As a general matter, under the
proposed rule, subsequent to receiving
the results of the Board’s annual
analyses, each covered company must
take the results of the analysis
conducted by the Board under the
proposed rule into account in making
changes, as appropriate, to the
company’s capital structure (including
the level and composition of capital); its
exposures, concentrations, and risk
positions; any plans of the company for
recovery; and for improving overall risk
management. In addition, each covered
company must make such updates to its
resolution plan (required to be
submitted annually to the Board
pursuant to the Board’s Regulation QQ
(12 CFR part 243)) as the Board, based
on the results of its analyses of the
company under this subpart, determines
appropriate within 90 days of the Board
publishing the results of its analyses.
Additionally, each covered company
that is subject to the requirement to
submit a capital plan to the Board under
section 225.8 of the Board’s Regulation
Y (12 CFR 225.8) would be required to
consider the results of the analysis of
the company conducted by the Board
under the proposed rule when updating
its capital plan. Stress testing results
may also result in the application of
early remediation requirements as
described further below.
iv. Publication of Results by the Board
Under the proposed rule, within a
reasonable period of time after
completing the annual analyses of
covered companies (but no later than
mid-April of a calendar year), the Board
would publish a summary of the results
of such analyses. The Board emphasizes
that there are certain factors to bear in
mind when interpreting any published
181 12
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results from the Board’s annual analyses
under the proposed rule. For example,
the outputs of the analyses might not
align with those produced by other
parties conducting similar exercises,
even if a similar set of assumptions were
used. In addition, the outputs under the
adverse and severely adverse scenarios
should not be viewed as most likely
forecasts or expected outcomes or as a
measure of any covered company’s
solvency. Instead, those outputs are the
resultant estimates from forwardlooking exercises that consider possible
outcomes based on a set of different
hypothetical scenarios.
The Board proposes to publish a highlevel summary of supervisory stress test
results for each covered company, i.e.,
company-specific results. This will
support one of the key objectives of the
supervisory stress tests, namely to
enhance transparency of covered
companies’ risks and financial
condition and its ability to absorb loss
as a result of adverse economic and
financial conditions. The annual set of
published results for each company for
each quarter-end over the specified
planning horizon is expected to include:
• Estimated losses, including overall
losses on loans by subportfolio,
available-for-sale and held-to-maturity
securities, trading portfolios, and
counterparty exposures;
• Estimated pre-provision net
revenue;
• Estimated allowance for loan losses;
• Estimated pro forma regulatory and
other capital ratios.
The Board recognizes that there are
important considerations related to
disclosure of such information that must
be taken into account with respect to
publishing company-specific results
from supervisory stress tests, and has
carefully analyzed the issues
surrounding public disclosure of such
results in formulating this proposal. The
Board requests comment on its proposal
to publish company-specific results.
Question 73: What are the benefits
and drawbacks associated with
company-specific disclosures? What, if
any, company-specific items relating to
the supervisory stress tests would
present challenges or raise issues if
disclosed, and what is the nature of
those challenges or issues? What
specific concerns about the possible
release of a company’s proprietary
information exist? What alternatives to
the company-specific disclosures being
proposed should the Board consider?
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2. Annual and Additional Stress Tests
Conducted by the Companies
adequacy and do not focus on other
aspects of financial condition.
a. Purpose
The Board views the company-run
stress tests under the proposed rule as
having a shared purpose with the
supervisory stress tests. The companyrun stress tests would provide forwardlooking information to supervisors to
assist in their overall assessments of a
company’s capital adequacy, help to
better identify downside risks and the
potential impact of adverse outcomes on
the company’s capital adequacy, and
assist in achieving the financial stability
goals of the Dodd-Frank Act. Further,
the company-run stress tests are
expected to improve companies’ stress
testing practices with respect to their
own internal assessments of capital
adequacy and overall capital planning.
The proposed rule would apply to
two sets of companies: covered
companies and over $10 billion
companies, as defined below. Covered
companies would be required to
conduct semi-annual company-run
stress tests and over $10 billion
companies would be required to
conduct annual company-run stress
tests.
For purposes of the company-run
stress tests, the proposed rule defines a
stress test as a process to assess the
potential impact on a covered company
or an over $10 billion company of
economic and financial conditions
(scenarios) on the consolidated
earnings, losses and capital of the
company over a set planning horizon,
taking into account the current
condition of the company and the
company’s risks, exposures, business
strategies, and activities.
The Board expects that the companyrun stress tests required under the
proposed rule would be one component
of the broader stress testing activities
conducted by covered companies and
over $10 billion companies. The broader
stress testing activities should address
the impact of a broad range of
potentially adverse outcomes across a
wide set of risk types beyond capital
adequacy, affecting other aspects of a
company’s financial condition (e.g.,
liquidity risk). In addition, a full
assessment of a company’s capital
adequacy must take into account a range
of factors, including evaluation of its
capital planning processes, the
governance over those processes,
regulatory capital measures, results of
supervisory stress tests where
applicable, and market assessments,
among others. The Board notes that the
company-run stress tests described in
this proposed rule focus on capital
b. Applicability
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i. General
The proposed rule would apply to
covered companies and over $10 billion
companies. Over $10 billion companies
are defined as any bank holding
company (other than a bank holding
company that is a covered company),
any state member bank, or any savings
and loan holding company that (i) has
more than $10 billion in total
consolidated assets, as determined
based on the average of the total
consolidated assets as reported on the
bank holding company’s four most
recent FR Y–9C reports, the state
member bank’s four most recent
Consolidated Report of Condition and
Income (Call Report), or the savings and
loan holding company’s four most
recent relevant quarterly regulatory
reports; and (ii) since becoming an over
$10 billion company, has not had $10
billion or less in total consolidated
assets for four consecutive calendar
quarters as reported on the bank holding
company’s four most recent FR Y–9C
reports, the state member bank’s four
most recent Call Reports, or the savings
and loan holding company’s four most
recent relevant quarterly regulatory
reports.182 This calculation will be
effective as of the due date of the
company’s most recent regulatory
report.
c. Process Overview
Except as otherwise provided in the
proposed rule, a bank holding company
that becomes a covered company or a
bank holding company, savings and
loan holding company (subject to the
delayed effective date for savings and
loan holding companies) or state
member bank that becomes an over $10
billion company no less than 90 days
before September 30 of a calendar year
must comply with the requirements,
including the timing of required
submissions to the Board, of the
proposed rule from September 30
forward. In addition, except as
otherwise provided in the rule, a bank
holding company that becomes a
covered company no less than 90 days
before March 31 of a calendar year must
182 Under section 165(i)(2), the requirements to
conduct annual stress tests apply to any financial
company with more than $10 billion in total
consolidated assets and that is regulated by a
primary federal financial regulatory agency. 12
U.S.C. 5365(i)(2). The Dodd-Frank Act defines
primary financial regulatory agency in section 2 of
the Act. See 12 U.S.C. 5301(12). The Board, Office
of the Comptroller of the Currency, and Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation have consulted on
rules implementing section 165(i)(2).
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comply with the requirements,
including timing of required
submissions to the Board, of the
proposed rule from March 31 forward.
A company that the Council has
determined shall be supervised by the
Board on a date no less than 180 days
before September 30 of a calendar year
must comply with the requirements of
this subpart, including timing of
required submissions, from September
30 of that calendar year and thereafter.
Further, a company that the Council has
determined shall be supervised by the
Board on a date no less than 180 days
before March 31 of a calendar year must
comply with the requirements of this
subpart, including timing of the
required submissions from March 31 of
that calendar year and thereafter.
With respect to initial applicability, a
bank holding company that is a covered
company or a bank holding company or
state member bank that is an over $10
billion company on the effective date of
the proposed rule would be subject to
the proposed requirements as of the
effective date, including timing of
required submissions to the Board. Also
with respect to initial applicability, a
savings loan and holding company that
is an over $10 billion company on or
after the effective date of the rule would
not be subject to the proposed
requirements, including timing of
required submissions to the Board, until
savings and loan holding companies are
subject to minimum risk-based capital
and leverage requirements.
The Board expects to use the
following general process and
timetables in connection with the
company-run stress tests.
i. Reporting by Companies
Under this proposal, the Board would
collect the covered companies’ and over
$10 billion companies’ stress test results
and additional qualitative and
quantitative information about the tests
on a confidential basis and may require
companies to provide other information
on a supplemental basis. The Board
plans to publish for comment both
specific requirements for the report to
be submitted to the Board, as described
below, and related instructions in a
separate information collection proposal
before requiring companies to perform
the company-run stress tests that would
be required under the proposed rule.
Following the stress test, each covered
company and each over $10 billion
company would be required to publish
a summary of its results as described
further below.
ii. Annual Company-Run Stress Test
Each year, in advance of the annual
company-run stress test required of all
covered companies and over $10 billion
companies on a schedule to be
established, the Board would provide to
such companies at least three scenarios,
631
including baseline, adverse, and
severely adverse, that each covered
company and each over $10 billion
company must use to conduct its annual
stress test required under the proposed
rule. The Board expects that these will
be the same scenarios published for use
in supervisory stress tests also required
by the Act.
iii. Additional Company-Run Stress Test
Cycle for Covered Companies
Within a given year, covered
companies (but not over $10 billion
companies) would be required to
conduct one company-run stress test in
addition to the annual stress test
described above. For this additional
company-run test, each covered
company would be required to develop
and employ scenarios reflecting a
minimum of three sets of economic and
financial conditions, including baseline,
adverse, and severely adverse scenarios,
and such additional conditions as the
Board determines appropriate.
iv. Proposed Steps for Annual and
Additional Company-Run Stress Tests
Table 3 below describes proposed
steps for the company-run stress test
cycle for covered companies and over
$10 billion companies, including
proposed general timeframes for each
step. The proposed timeframes are
illustrative and are subject to change.
TABLE 3—PROCESS OVERVIEW OF ANNUAL AND ADDITIONAL COMPANY-RUN STRESS TEST CYCLES
[With annual test using data as of September 30 and additional test using data as of March 31]
Step
Proposed timeframe
Annual company-run stress test cycle for all covered companies and over $10 billion companies
1. Board provides covered companies and over $10 billion companies with scenarios for annual stress tests ......
2. Covered companies and over $10 billion companies submit required regulatory report to the Board on their
stress tests.
3. Covered companies and over $10 billion companies make required public disclosures .....................................
No later than mid-November.
By January 5.
By early April.
Additional company-run stress test cycle for covered companies
4. Covered companies submit required regulatory report to the Board on their additional stress tests ..................
5. Covered companies make required public disclosures .........................................................................................
d. Overview of Stress Test Requirements
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i. General Requirements for CompanyRun Stress Tests
Under the proposed rule, each
covered company and each over $10
billion company would be required to
conduct annual stress tests using the
company’s financial data as of
September 30 of that year, with the
exception of trading and counterparty
exposures, to assess the potential impact
of different scenarios on the
consolidated earnings and capital of that
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company and certain related items over
at least a nine-quarter forward-looking
planning horizon taking into account all
relevant exposures and activities.183 The
Board would communicate the required
as of date for data related to trading and
counterparty exposures of a company
during the fourth quarter of each
calendar year. Each covered company
would also be required to conduct an
183 The Board expects to communicate the as-of
date for data on trading and counterparty exposures
sometime in the fourth quarter of each year.
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By July 5.
By early October.
additional stress test using the
company’s financial data as of March 31
of that year.
The Board recognizes that certain
parent company structures of covered
companies and over $10 billion
companies may include one or more
subsidiary banks, each with total
consolidated assets greater than $10
billion. The company-run stress test
requirements of Section 165(i)(2) would
apply to the parent company and to
each subsidiary regulated by a primary
federal financial regulatory agency that
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has more than $10 billion in total
consolidated assets. To minimize any
undue burden associated with multiple
entities within one parent structure
having to meet the proposed rule’s
requirements, the Board intends to
coordinate with the other federal
financial regulatory agencies, as
appropriate. For example, the Board
would aim to coordinate with the other
federal financial regulatory agencies in
providing scenarios to be used by
multiple entities within a holding
company structure when meeting the
requirements of the annual stress tests
described in the proposed rule.
ii. Scenarios
The proposed rule would require each
covered company and each over $10
billion company to use a minimum of
three sets of economic and financial
conditions (scenarios), including
baseline, adverse, and severely adverse
conditions, or such additional
conditions as the Board determines
appropriate.
(1) Annual Company-Run Stress Tests
In advance of the annual stress tests,
the Board would provide at least three
scenarios (baseline, adverse, and
severely adverse) that all covered
companies and over $10 billion
companies would be required to use to
conduct the stress tests required under
the proposed rule. These scenarios
would be expected to be the same as the
scenarios used by the Board in
conducting the supervisory stress tests.
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(2) Additional Company-Run Stress
Tests for Covered Companies
The Board would not provide
scenarios to covered companies for the
additional company-run stress tests.
Rather, for the additional stress test, a
covered company would be required to
develop and employ its own scenarios
reflecting a minimum of three sets of
economic and financial conditions—
baseline, adverse, and severely adverse
conditions—or such additional
conditions as the Board determines
appropriate.
iii. Methodologies and Practices
Under the proposed rule, each
covered company and each over $10
billion company would be required to
use the applicable scenarios discussed
above in conducting its stress tests to
calculate, for each quarter-end within
the planning horizon, potential losses,
pre-provision revenues, allowance for
loan losses, and future pro forma capital
positions over the planning horizon,
including the impact on capital levels
and ratios. Each covered company and
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over $10 billion company would also be
required to calculate, for each quarterend within the planning horizon, the
potential impact of the specific
scenarios on its capital ratios, including
regulatory and any other capital ratios
specified by the Board.
The proposed rule would require each
covered company and over $10 billion
company to establish and maintain a
system of controls, oversight, and
documentation, including policies and
procedures, designed to ensure that the
stress testing processes used by the
company are effective in meeting the
requirements of the proposed rule. The
company’s policies and procedures
must, at a minimum, outline the
company’s stress testing practices and
methodologies, validation, use of stress
test results and processes for updating
the company’s stress testing practices
consistent with relevant supervisory
guidance. Each covered company would
also need to include in its policies
information describing its processes for
scenario development for the additional
stress test required under the proposed
rule. The board of directors and senior
management of each covered company
and each over $10 billion company
must approve and annually review the
controls, oversight, and documentation,
including policies and procedures, of
the company established pursuant to the
proposed rule.
iv. Stress Test Information and Results
1. Required Report to the Board of Stress
Test Results and Related Information
On or before January 5 each year, each
covered company and each over $10
billion company would be required to
report to the Board, in the manner and
form prescribed in the proposed rule,
the results of the stress tests conducted
by the company. To the extent possible
and where relevant, a covered company
would be able to refer to information
submitted in connection with capital
plan rule requirements when submitting
the report required under this rule. The
Board plans to publish for comment a
description of items to be included in
the required report to the Board. The
Board anticipates that the report would
include (but not necessarily be limited
to) the following qualitative and
quantitative information.
Qualitative information:
• A general description of the use of
stress tests required by the proposed
rule in the company’s capital planning
and capital adequacy assessments;
• A description of the types of risks
(e.g., credit, market, operational, etc.)
being captured in the stress test;
• A general description of the
methodologies employed to estimate
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losses, pre-provision net revenues,
allowance for loan losses, changes in
capital levels and ratios, and changes in
the company’s balance sheet over the
planning horizon;
• Assumptions about potential capital
distributions over the planning horizon;
• For covered companies subject to
additional stress tests, a description of
scenarios developed by the company for
its additional test, including key
variables used; and
• Any other relevant qualitative
information to facilitate supervisory
assessment of the tests, upon request by
the Board.
Quantitative information under each
scenario:
• Estimated pro forma capital levels
and capital ratios, including regulatory
and any other capital ratios specified by
the Board;
• Estimated losses by exposure
category;
• Estimated pre-provision net
revenue;
• Estimated allowance for loan losses;
• Estimated total assets and riskweighted assets;
• Estimated aggregate loan balances;
• Potential capital distributions over
the planning horizon; and
• Any other relevant quantitative
information to facilitate supervisory
understanding of the tests, upon request
by the Board.
A covered company subject to an
additional stress test would also be
required to report to the Board the
results of its additional test on or before
July 5 each year, in a manner similar to
its report required for its annual stress
test. The Board may also request
supplemental information as needed.
Under the Dodd-Frank Act, companies
are required to publish a summary of
their stress test results (see discussion in
section 3. below).184
2. Supervisory Review of Companies’
Stress Test Processes and Results
Based on information submitted by a
covered company or an over $10 billion
company in the required report to the
Board described above as well as other
relevant information, the Board would
conduct an analysis of the quality of the
company’s stress tests processes and
related results. The Board envisions that
feedback about such analysis would be
provided to a company through the
supervisory process. In addition, each
covered company and each over $10
billion company would be required to
take the results of the annual stress test
(or additional stress tests in the case of
a covered company), in conjunction
184 12
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U.S.C. 5365(i)(2)(C)(iv).
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with the Board’s analyses of those
results, into account in making changes,
as appropriate, to the company’s capital
structure (including the level and
composition of capital); its exposures,
concentrations, and risk positions; any
plans of the company for recovery and
resolution; and to improve the overall
risk management of the company.
Additionally, each covered company
would be required to consider the
results of its company-run stress tests in
developing and updating its capital
plan. The Board may also require other
actions consistent with safety and
soundness of the company.
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3. Publication of Results by the
Company
Consistent with the requirements of
the Act, the proposed rule would
require each covered company and each
over $10 billion company to publish a
summary of the results of its annual
company-run stress tests within 90 days
of submitting its required report to the
Board. A covered company subject to
the additional stress test would also be
required to publish a summary of the
results of its additional test within 90
days of submitting its required report to
the Board for that test. The summary
may be published on a covered
company’s or an over $10 billion
company’s Web site or in any other
forum that is reasonably accessible to
the public; further, it is expected that an
over $10 billion company that is a
subsidiary of another covered company
or another over $10 billion company
could publish its summary on the
parent company’s Web site or in another
form along with the parent company’s
summary. The required information
publicly disclosed by each covered
company and each over $10 billion
company, as applicable, would, at a
minimum, include:
(i) A description of the types of risks
being included in the stress test;
(ii) For each covered company, a highlevel description of scenarios developed
by the company for its additional stress
test, including key variables used (such
as GDP, unemployment rate, housing
prices);
(iii) A general description of the
methodologies employed to estimate
losses, revenues, allowance for loan
losses, and changes in capital positions
over the planning horizon;
(iv) Aggregate losses, pre-provision
net revenue, allowance for loan losses,
net income, and pro forma capital levels
and capital ratios (including regulatory
and any other capital ratios specified by
the Board) over the planning horizon
under each scenario;
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Question 74: What alternative to the
public disclosure requirements of the
proposed rule should the Board
consider? What are the potential
consequences of the proposed public
disclosures of the company-run stress
test results?
C. Request for Comments
The Board requests comment on all
aspects of the proposed rule for the
annual and additional company-run
stress testing cycles.
Question 75: Is the proposed timing of
stress testing appropriate, and why? If
not, what alternatives would be more
appropriate? What, if any, specific
challenges exist with respect to the
proposed steps and timeframes? What
specific alternatives exist to address
these challenges that still allow the
Board to meet its statutory
requirements? Please comment on the
use of the ‘‘as of’’ date of September 30
(and March 31 for additional stress
tests), the January 5 reporting date (and
July 5 for additional stress test) the
publication date, and the sufficiency of
time for completion of the stress tests.
Question 76: Does the immediate
effectiveness of the proposed rule
provide sufficient time for an institution
that is covered at the effective date of
the rule to conduct its first annual stress
test? Would over $10 billion companies,
in particular, have sufficient time to
prepare for the first annual stress test,
under either the proposed initial or
proposed ongoing applicability rules?
VIII. Debt-to-Equity Limits for Certain
Covered Companies
A. Background
Section 165(j) provides that the Board
must require a covered company to
maintain a debt-to-equity ratio of no
more than 15-to-1, upon a determination
by the Council that such company poses
a grave threat to the financial stability
of the United States and that the
imposition of such requirement is
necessary to mitigate the risk that such
company poses to the financial stability
of the Unites States.185 The Act requires
that, in making its determination, the
Council must take into consideration
the criteria in Dodd-Frank Act sections
113(a) and (b). These criteria include,
among other things, the extent of the
leverage of the company, the nature,
scope, size, scale, concentration,
interconnectedness, and mix of the
activities of the company, and the
importance of the company as a source
of credit for U. S. households,
185 The statute expressly exempts any federal
home loan bank from the debt-to-equity ratio
requirement. See 12 U.S.C. 5366(j)(1).
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633
businesses, and State and local
governments and as a source of liquidity
for the U.S. financial system. The Board
is required to promulgate regulations to
establish procedures and timelines for
compliance with section 165(j).186
The Board seeks comment on this
proposed rule that would establish
procedures to notify a covered company
that the Council has made a
determination under section 165(j) that
the company must comply with the 15to-1 debt-to-equity ratio requirement
(identified company), as well as
procedures for terminating the
requirement. The proposed rule also
defines the components of the debt-toequity requirement and establishes a
time period of 180 days for an identified
company to comply with the debt-toequity ratio requirement, and provides
that the time for compliance may be
extended if an extension would be in
the public interest.
B. Overview of the Proposed Rule
The debt-to-equity limitation in
section 165(j) applies to any covered
company where the Council makes two
findings: (i) That the covered company
poses a grave threat to the financial
stability of the United States; and (ii)
that the imposition of the specified
debt-to-equity requirement is necessary
to mitigate that systemic risk. Under the
proposal, ‘‘debt’’ and ‘‘equity’’ would
have the same meaning as ‘‘total
liabilities’’ and ‘‘total equity capital’’
respectively, as calculated in an
identified company’s reports of
financial condition. The 15-to-1 debt-toequity would be calculated as the ratio
of total liabilities to total equity capital
minus goodwill.
Section 252.152(a) provides for notice
to the identified company and
establishes the maximum debt-to-equity
ratio requirement for an identified
company. An identified company would
receive written notice from the Board
that the Council has made a
determination under section 165(j) that
the company poses a grave threat to the
financial stability of the United States
and that the imposition of the statutory
debt-to-equity ratio requirement is
necessary. An identified company
would be permitted 180 calendar days
from the date of receipt of the notice to
comply with the 15-to-1 debt-to-equity
ratio requirement. The proposed rule
does not establish a specific set of
actions to be taken by a company in
order to comply with the debt-to-equity
ratio requirement; however, the Board
would expect a company to come into
compliance with the ratio in a manner
186 12
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U.S.C. 5366(j)(3).
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that is consistent with the company’s
safe and sound operation and
preservation of financial stability. For
example, a company generally would be
expected to make a good faith effort to
increase equity capital through limits on
distributions, share offerings, or other
capital raising efforts prior to
liquidating margined assets in order to
achieve the required ratio.
While it is important that a company
that presents a grave threat to U.S.
financial stability take prompt action to
reduce risks to financial stability,
section 252.152(b) provides that an
identified company may request an
extension of time to comply with the
debt-to-equity ratio requirement for up
to two additional periods of 90 days
each. Requests for an extension of time
to comply must be received in writing
by the Board not less than 30 days prior
to the expiration of the existing time
period for compliance, and must
provide information sufficient to
demonstrate that the company has made
good faith efforts to comply with the
debt-to-equity ratio requirement and
that each extension would be in the
public interest. The proposed 180-day
period is intended to provide sufficient
time for an identified company to take
appropriate action to comply with the
debt-to-equity ratio requirement. In the
event that an extension of time is
requested, the Board would review the
request in light of the relevant facts and
circumstances, including the extent of
the identified company’s efforts to
comply with the ratio and whether the
extension would be in the public
interest.
Section 252.152(c) provides that an
identified company would no longer be
subject to the debt-to-equity ratio
requirement of this subpart as of the
date it receives notice of a
determination by the Council that the
company no longer poses a grave threat
to the financial stability of the United
States and that the imposition of a debtto-equity requirement is no longer
necessary.
The Board requests comment on all
aspects of the proposed rule, and
specifically on the definitions of debt
and equity and on whether the proposed
180-day time period for compliance is
appropriate.
Question 77: What alternatives to the
definitions and procedural aspects of
this proposed rule should the Board
consider?
IX. Early Remediation
A. Background
The recent financial crisis revealed
that the condition of large banking
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organizations can deteriorate rapidly
even during periods when their reported
capital ratios are well above minimum
requirements. The crisis also revealed
fundamental weaknesses in the U.S.
regulatory community’s tools to deal
promptly with emerging issues. As
detailed in the Government
Accountability Office’s (GAO) June 2011
study on the effectiveness of the prompt
corrective action (PCA) regime, the PCA
regime’s triggers, based primarily on
regulatory capital ratios, limited its
ability to promptly address problems at
insured depository intuitions.187 The
study also concluded that the PCA
regime failed to prevent widespread
losses to the deposit insurance fund,
and that while supervisors had the
discretion to act more quickly, they did
not consistently do so.188
Section 166 of the Dodd-Frank Act
was designed to address these problems
by directing the Board to promulgate
regulations providing for the early
remediation of financial weaknesses at
covered companies. The Dodd-Frank
Act requires the Board to define
measures of a covered company’s
financial condition, including, but not
limited to, regulatory capital, liquidity
measures and other forward-looking
indicators that would trigger remedial
action. The Act also mandates that
remedial action requirements increase
in stringency as the financial condition
of a covered company deteriorates and
include: (i) limits on capital
distributions, acquisitions and asset
growth in the early stages of financial
decline; and (ii) capital restoration
plans, capital raising requirements,
limits on transactions with affiliates,
management changes and asset sales in
the later stages of financial decline.189
B. Overview of the Proposed Rule
The proposed rule establishes a
regime for the early remediation of
financial distress at covered companies
that includes four levels of remediation
requirements and several forwardlooking triggers designed to identify
emerging or potential issues before they
develop into larger problems. The four
levels of remediation are: (i) Heightened
supervisory review, in which the Board
would conduct a targeted review of the
covered company to determine if it
187 See Government Accountability Office,
Modified Prompt Corrective Action Framework
Would Improve Effectiveness, GAO–11–612 (June
23, 2011), available at https://www.gao.gov/
new.items/d11612.pdf (hereinafter GAO Study).
PCA is required by section 38 of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act. 12 U.S.C. 1831(o). PCA applies only
to insured depository institutions, rather than to
consolidated banking organizations.
188 See id.
189 12 U.S.C. 5366.
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should be moved to the next level of
remediation; (ii) initial remediation, in
which a covered company would be
subject to restrictions on growth and
capital distributions; (iii) recovery, in
which a firm would be subject to a
prohibition on growth and capital
distributions, limits on executive
compensation, and requirements to raise
additional capital, and additional
requirements on a case-by-case basis;
and (iv) recommended resolution, in
which the Board would consider
whether to recommend to the Treasury
Department and the FDIC that the firm
be resolved under the orderly
liquidation authority provided for in
Title II of the Dodd-Frank Act.
While the proposed framework
includes regulatory capital triggers,
which the Board recognizes can be a
lagging indicator, non-discretionary
restrictions on growth and capital
distributions would occur once a
covered company’s capital levels fall
below the ‘‘well capitalized’’ threshold.
In contrast, similar actions do not occur
under the PCA regime until a depository
institution falls below the ‘‘adequately
capitalized’’ level.190
Further, in December 2010, the BCBS
adopted a series of reforms directed at
improving the quantity and quality of
capital held by internationally active
banking organizations. Specifically, the
Basel III reforms introduce a minimum
tier 1 common risk-based capital ratio,
heighten the qualification standards for
regulatory capital, introduce a capital
conservation buffer on top of minimum
regulatory capital ratios, and raise the
minimum tier 1 capital risk-based
requirement. In addition, under the
Basel II-based advanced approaches
rule, companies are required to estimate
expected credit losses and deduct from
capital the amount by which expected
credit losses exceed eligible credit
reserves, as defined in the rule.191 The
reforms are expected to result in
regulatory capital ratios that provide a
more accurate reflection of a company’s
condition. As noted above, the Board
and the other federal banking agencies
are in the process of developing a
proposal to implement the Basel III
framework in the United States. The
Board expects to evaluate the
interaction between the early
remediation framework for covered
companies and any revised capital
standards as those standards are
incorporated into U.S. regulation, and
may propose conforming changes to the
190 See
191 See
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early remediation framework at that
time.
In addition to regulatory capital-based
triggers, the proposed rule includes
forward-looking triggers based on (i)
supervisory stress tests, which provide
an assessment of the covered company’s
ability to withstand adverse economic
and financial market conditions; and (ii)
market indicators, which provide a
third-party assessment of the covered
company’s financial position. The Board
also has sought to harmonize the
proposed rule with the risk management
and risk committee requirements as well
as the liquidity risk management
standards that would be applicable to
covered companies under this proposed
rule. Identified weakness in any of the
enhanced risk management and
liquidity risk management standards
may also trigger supervisory actions,
including non-discretionary actions
specified in the early remediation
regime.
The Board considered including an
explicit quantitative liquidity trigger in
the proposal, but is concerned that such
a trigger could exacerbate funding
pressures at affected covered
companies, rather than provide for early
remediation of issues. The Board also
considered including certain balance
sheet measures as triggers, including
nonperforming loans and loan
concentrations, in the early remediation
regime. In its recent study, the GAO
identified asset quality as an important
predictor of future bank failure.192
However, the Board is concerned that
such triggers would be inappropriate for
firms engaged predominantly in
activities other than commercial
banking, and therefore would provide
limited value in an early remediation
regime applicable to all covered
companies.
In implementing the proposed rule,
the Board expects to notify the primary
regulators of a covered company’s
subsidiaries and the FDIC as the covered
company enters into or changes
remediation levels.
Question 78: The Board recognizes
that liquidity ratios can provide an early
indication of difficulties at a covered
company and seeks comment on the
costs and benefits of including a
quantitative liquidity trigger in the early
remediation regime. If the Board were to
include a quantitative liquidity trigger
in the regime, what quantitative
liquidity trigger should be used and
how should it be calibrated?
Question 79: The Board also seeks
comment on the value of including
balance sheet measures, such as
nonperforming loans and loan
concentrations, in the early remediation
regime as triggers. What balance sheet
measures, if any, should the Board
include, and how should they be
calibrated?
Tables 4 and 5 below provide a
summary of all triggers and associated
remediation actions in this proposed
rule.
TABLE 4—EARLY REMEDIATION TRIGGERS
Enhanced risk management and risk
committee standards
Enhanced liquidity
risk management
standards
Market indicators
Covered company’s
regulatory capital
ratios exceed minimum requirements
under the supervisory stress test
severely adverse
scenario but it is
otherwise in noncompliance with the
Board’s capital plan
or stress testing
rules.
Covered company
has manifested
signs of weakness
in meeting enhanced risk management or risk
committee requirements for covered
companies.
Covered company
has manifested
signs of weakness
in meeting the enhanced liquidity risk
management
standards for covered companies.
The median value of
any of the covered
company’s market
indicators exceeds
the trigger threshold for the entire
breach period.
Under the supervisory
stress test severely
adverse scenario,
the company’s Tier
1 common RBC
ratio falls below 5%
during any quarter
of the nine quarter
planning horizon.
Covered company
has demonstrated
multiple deficiencies in meeting
the enhanced risk
management and
risk committee requirements for covered companies.
Covered company
has demonstrated
multiple deficiencies in meeting
the enhanced liquidity risk management standards
for covered companies.
n.a.
Risk-based capital/leverage
Level 1 (Heightened
Supervisory Review
(HSR)).
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Level 2 (Initial Remediation).
192 See
Stress tests
Meets all risk-based
and leverage requirements for a
well capitalized
covered company:
Tier 1 RBC ratio
> 6.0%.
Total RBC ratio
> 10.0%.
Tier 1 Leverage
ratio > 5.0%.
However, the
covered company has demonstrated capital structure or
capital planning weaknesses.
Fails to meet any one
of the Level 1 capital levels and
maintains:
Tier 1 RBC ratio
> 4.0%
Total RBC ratio
> 8.0%
Tier 1 Leverage
ratio > 4.0%
GAO Study, supra note 187, at 2.
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TABLE 4—EARLY REMEDIATION TRIGGERS—Continued
Risk-based capital/leverage
Level 3 (Recovery) .....
Level 4 (Recommended resolution).
Stress tests
Enhanced risk management and risk
committee standards
Enhanced liquidity
risk management
standards
Fails to meet any one
of the Level 2 capital levels and
maintains:
Tier 1 RBC ratio
> 3.0%
Total RBC ratio
> 6.0%
Tier 1 Leverage
ratio > 3.0%
Or institution’s
risk-based capital ratios remain below
6.0% Tier 1
RBC, 10.0%
Total RBC, or
5.0% Leverage, for more
than two complete consecutive calendar
quarters.
Covered company’s
regulatory capital
ratios are below
any of the following
thresholds:
3.0% Tier 1 RBC
6.0% Total RBC
3.0% Tier 1 Leverage ratio
Under the severely
adverse scenario,
the covered company’s Tier 1 common RBC ratio falls
below 3% during
any quarter of the
nine quarter planning horizon.
Covered company is
in substantial noncompliance with
enhanced risk management and risk
committee requirements for covered
companies.
Covered company is
in substantial noncompliance with
enhanced liquidity
risk management
standards for covered companies.
n.a.
n.a .............................
n.a .............................
n.a .............................
n.a.
Market indicators
TABLE 5—REMEDIATION ACTIONS
Stress tests
Enhanced risk management and risk
committee requirements
Enhanced liquidity
risk management
standards
HSR ..........................
HSR ..........................
HSR ..........................
Risk-based capital/
leverage
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Level 1 (Heightened
Heightened SuperSupervisory Review).
visory Review
(HSR):
The Board will
produce an internal report on
the elements
evidencing deterioration within 30 days of a
Level 1 trigger
breach and determine whether the institution should be
elevated to a
higher level of
remediation.
Level 2 (Initial Remediation).
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All capital distributions (e.g., dividends and buybacks) are restricted to no more than 50% of
the average of the covered company’s net income in the previous two quarters.
Covered company faces restrictions on growth (no more than 5% growth in total assets or total
RWA per quarter or per annum), and is generally prohibited from directly or indirectly acquiring
controlling interest in any company.
Covered company will be subject to a non-public MOU.
Covered company may be subject to other limitations and conditions on its conduct or activities
as the Board deems appropriate.
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HSR.
n.a.
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TABLE 5—REMEDIATION ACTIONS—Continued
Risk-based capital/
leverage
Stress tests
Enhanced risk management and risk
committee requirements
Enhanced liquidity
risk management
standards
Market indicators
Level 3 (Recovery) .....
Covered company is placed under a written agreement that prohibits all capital distributions,
any quarterly growth of total assets or RWA, and material acquisitions. The written agreement
will also include a requirement to raise additional capital to restore the covered company’s capital level to or above regulatory minimums. If written agreement timeframes are not met, the
covered company may be subject to divestiture requirements.
Covered company will also be subject to a prohibition on discretionary bonus payments and restrictions on pay increases.
Supervisors may also remove culpable senior management and limit transactions between affiliates.
Covered company may be subject to other limitations and conditions on its conduct or activities
as the Board deems appropriate.
n.a.
Level 4 (Recommended Resolution).
The Board will consider whether to
recommend to the
Treasury Department and the FDIC
that the covered
company be resolved under the
orderly liquidation
authority provided
for in Title II of the
Dodd-Frank Act.
n.a.
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1. Early Remediation Requirements
a. Level 1 Remediation (Heightened
Supervisory Review)
The proposed rule provides that the
first level of remediation consists of
heightened supervisory review. Level 1
remediation would be triggered when a
covered company first shows signs of
financial distress or material risk
management weaknesses such that
further decline of the company is
probable. Level 1 remediation would
require the Board to produce a report on
the elements evidencing deterioration
within 30 days and determine whether
the institution should be elevated to a
higher level of remediation.
In determining whether to elevate the
covered company to a higher level of
remediation, the Board would consider
the extent to which the factors giving
rise to a triggering event were caused by
financial weakness or material risk
management weaknesses at the covered
company, such that further decline of
the company is probable. The Board
may also use other supervisory
authority to cause the covered company
to take appropriate actions to address
the problems reviewed by the Board
under level 1 remediation.
b. Level 2 Remediation (Initial
Remediation)
The Dodd-Frank Act provides that
remedial actions required of covered
companies in the initial stages of
financial decline shall include limits on
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n.a.
capital distributions, acquisitions and
asset growth. The proposed rule
provides that a covered company that
triggers level 2 remediation (because it
does not meet certain risk-based capital,
leverage, or stress test thresholds, or has
ongoing weaknesses in multiple
requirements under the enhanced
liquidity risk management standards
and enterprise-wide risk management
requirements included in this proposal)
would be prohibited from distributing
in any calendar quarter more than 50
percent of the average of its net income
for the preceding two calendar quarters.
The company would also be prohibited
from permitting (i) its daily average total
assets and daily average total riskweighted assets in any calendar quarter
to exceed daily average total assets and
daily average total risk-weighted assets,
respectively, during the preceding
calendar quarter by more than 5 percent;
and (ii) its daily average total assets and
daily average total risk-weighted assets
in any calendar year to exceed daily
average total assets and daily average
total risk-weighted assets, respectively,
during the preceding calendar year by
more than 5 percent.
The covered company would also be
prohibited from directly or indirectly
acquiring a controlling interest in any
company without the prior approval of
the Board. This includes controlling
interests in any nonbank company and
the establishment or acquisition of any
office or place of business. Non-
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controlling acquisitions, such as the
acquisition of less than 5 percent of the
voting shares of a company, generally
would not require prior approval. The
covered company would also be
required to enter into a non-public
memorandum of understanding or
undergo another enforcement action
acceptable to the Board.
As part of level 2 remediation, the
Board would also be able to impose
limitations or conditions on the conduct
or activities of the covered company or
any of its affiliates as the Board deems
appropriate and consistent with the
purposes of Title I of the Dodd-Frank
Act, including limitations or conditions
deemed necessary to improve the safety
and soundness of the covered company,
promote financial stability, or limit the
external costs of the potential failure of
the covered company.
The restriction on capital
distributions under level 2 remediation
would apply to all capital distributions
(common stock dividends and share
repurchases) and would help to ensure
that covered companies preserve capital
through retained earnings during the
earliest periods of financial stress,
thereby building a capital cushion to
absorb losses that the covered company
may continue to accrue due to the
weaknesses that caused it to enter level
2 remediation. This cushion is
important to making the covered
company’s failure less likely, and also to
minimize the external costs that the
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covered company’s distress or possible
failure could impose on markets and the
economy generally.
In developing this proposed rule, the
Board considered the impact of the
proposed restriction on capital
distributions under level 2 remediation.
According to data reviewed by the
Board, prohibiting a weakened covered
company from distributing more than 50
percent of its recent earnings should
promote the important purpose of
building a capital cushion at the
covered company to absorb potential
additional losses while still allowing the
firm some room to pay dividends and
repurchase shares. The Board notes that
the capital conservation buffer under
Basel III is similarly designed to impose
increasingly stringent restrictions on
capital distributions and employee
bonus payments by banking
organizations as their capital ratios
approach regulatory minima.193
Furthermore, the level 2 remediation
restrictions on asset growth is intended
to prevent covered companies that are
encountering the initial stages of
financial difficulties from growing at a
rate inconsistent with preserving capital
and focusing on resolving material
financial or risk management
weaknesses. A 5 percent limit should
generally be consistent with reasonable
growth in the normal course of a
covered company’s business.
The level 2 remediation restriction on
acquisitions of controlling interests in
other companies without prior Board
approval is also intended to prevent
covered companies that are
experiencing initial stages of financial
difficulties from materially increasing
their size or systemic
interconnectedness. A company in early
stages of financial stress needs to focus
its energies on improving its financial
condition, not on seeking major
acquisition opportunities or integrating
major new acquisitions. Under this
provision, the Board would evaluate the
materiality of acquisitions on a case-bycase basis to determine whether
approval is warranted. Acquisition of
non-controlling interests would
continue to be permitted to allow
covered companies to proceed with
ordinary business functions (such as
equity securities dealing) that may
involve acquisitions of shares in other
companies that do not rise to the level
of control.
The proposed rule would also require
covered companies that are subject to
level 2 remediation to enter into a nonpublic memorandum of understanding
with the Federal Reserve in order to
193 See
Basel III framework, supra note 34, at 60.
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facilitate the establishment of a
reasonable action plan for the covered
company to improve its condition.
c. Level 3 Remediation (Recovery)
The Act provides that remediation
actions required of covered companies
in advanced stages of financial stress
shall include a capital restoration plan
and capital raising requirements, limits
on transactions with affiliates,
management changes and asset sales.
Accordingly, under the proposed rule, a
covered company that has entered level
3 remediation (because the covered
company did not meet certain riskbased capital, leverage or stress test
thresholds, or is in substantial noncompliance with the enhanced risk
management or enhanced liquidity
standards of this proposal) would be
subject to a number of fixed limitations.
The covered company would be
prohibited from making any capital
distributions and from increasing the
compensation of, or paying any bonus
to, its senior executive officers or
directors. Additionally, the covered
company could not permit its average
total assets or average total riskweighted assets during any calendar
quarter to exceed average total assets or
average total risk-weighted assets during
the previous quarter. The covered
company would also be prohibited from
(i) directly or indirectly acquiring any
interest in any company; (ii)
establishing or acquiring any office or
other place of business; or (iii) engaging
in any new line of business.
Furthermore, the covered company
would be required to enter into a
written agreement or other form of
formal enforcement action with the
Board that would specify that it must
raise capital and take other actions to
improve capital adequacy. If the covered
company subsequently did not satisfy
the requirements of the written
agreement, the Board could require the
company to divest assets identified by
the Board as contributing to the covered
company’s financial decline or that pose
substantial risk of contributing to the
company’s further financial decline.
Under the proposal, the Board could
also require a covered company under
level 3 remediation to conduct new
elections for its board of directors,
dismiss directors or senior executive
officers that have been in office for more
than 180 days, hire senior executive
officers approved by the Board, or limit
transactions with its affiliates.
The Board believes that these
restrictions would appropriately limit a
covered company’s ability to increase its
risk profile and ensure maximum
capital conservation when its condition
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or risk management failures have
deteriorated to the point that it is
subject to this level of remediation.
These restrictions, while potentially
disruptive to aspects of the company’s
business, are consistent with the
purpose of section 166 of the DoddFrank Act: to arrest a covered
company’s decline and help to mitigate
external costs associated with its
potential failure.
Furthermore, to the extent that a
covered company’s management is a
primary cause of its level 3 remediation
status, the proposal would allow the
Board to take appropriate action to
ensure that such management could not
increase the risk profile of the company
or make its failure more likely. Taken
together, the mandatory and optional
restrictions and actions of level 3
remediation provide the Board with
important tools to make a covered
company’s failure less likely and if
failure were to occur, less costly to the
financial system.
d. Level 4 Remediation (Resolution
Assessment)
Under the proposed rule, if level 4
remediation is triggered (because the
covered company did not meet certain
risk-based capital or leverage
requirements), the Board would
consider whether to recommend to the
Treasury Department and the FDIC that
the firm be resolved under the orderly
liquidation authority provided for in
Title II of the Dodd-Frank Act, based on
whether the covered company is in
default or in danger of default and poses
a risk to the stability of the U.S.
financial system pursuant to section 203
of the Dodd-Frank Act.
Question 80: The Board seeks
comment on the proposed mandatory
actions that would occur at each level
of remediation. What, if any, additional
or different restrictions should the
Board impose on distressed covered
companies?
2. Early Remediation Triggering Events
The proposed rule provides triggering
events based on the Board’s existing
definitions of minimum risk-based
capital and leverage ratios, the results of
the Board’s supervisory stress tests
under this proposed rule, weaknesses in
complying with enhanced risk
management and liquidity standards
under this proposed rule and market
indicators.
a. Risk-Based Capital and Leverage
The Act specifies that capital and
leverage will be among the elements
used to evaluate the financial condition
of a covered company under the early
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remediation framework. The risk-based
capital and leverage ratios for each
covered company would be measured
using periodic statements, in connection
with inspections of a covered company,
or upon request of the Board.
Although there is no fixed capitalrelated threshold for level 1
remediation, weaknesses in a covered
company’s capital structure or capital
planning processes could lead to level 1
remediation, even where the covered
company’s capital ratios exceed the
minimum levels for level 2 remediation.
Thus, if a covered company maintains a
total risk-based capital ratio of 10.0
percent or greater, a tier 1 risk-based
capital ratio of 6.0 percent or greater,
and a tier 1 leverage ratio of 5.0 percent
or greater, but the Board determines that
its financial condition is not
commensurate with the risks posed by
its activities, then level 1 remediation
would apply. Level 2 remediation
(initial remediation) would apply if a
covered company has a total risk-based
capital ratio of less than 10.0 percent
and greater than or equal to 8.0 percent,
a tier 1 risk-based capital ratio of less
than 6.0 percent and greater than or
equal to 4.0 percent, or a tier 1 leverage
ratio of less than 5.0 percent and greater
than or equal to 4.0 percent.
A covered company would be subject
to level 3 remediation (recovery) if:
(i) For two complete consecutive
quarters, the covered company has a
total risk-based capital ratio of less than
10.0 percent, a tier 1 risk-based capital
ratio of less than 6.0 percent, or a tier
1 leverage ratio of less than 5.0 percent;
or
(ii) The covered company has a total
risk-based capital ratio of less than 8.0
percent and greater than or equal to 6.0
percent, a tier 1 risk-based capital ratio
of less than 4.0 percent and greater than
or equal to 3.0 percent or a tier 1
leverage ratio of less than 4.0 percent
and greater than or equal to 3.0 percent.
Finally, a covered company would be
subject to level 4 remediation
(resolution assessment) if it has a total
risk-based capital ratio of less than 6.0
percent, a tier 1 risk-based capital ratio
of less than 3.0 percent or a tier 1
leverage ratio of less than 3.0 percent.
The Board believes that the remediation
requirements listed above are reasonable
restraints on covered companies that are
unable to meet these regulatory capital
thresholds.
Question 81: The Board seeks
comment on the proposed risk-based
capital and leverage triggers. What
alternative or additional risk-based
capital or leverage triggering events, if
any, should the Board adopt? Provide a
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detailed explanation of such alternative
triggering events with supporting data.
b. Stress Tests
As discussed more fully in section VII
of this proposal, the supervisory stress
test gauges a covered company’s capital
adequacy under baseline, adverse and
severely adverse scenarios. The
proposed rule would use the results of
the stress test under the severely
adverse scenario to trigger early
remediation. A covered company whose
tier 1 common risk-based capital ratio
falls below certain minimum thresholds
under the severely adverse scenario
during any quarter of the planning
horizon (which extends for at least nine
quarters) would be subject to early
remediation. Under the rule as
proposed, the lower the tier 1 common
risk-based capital ratio under the stress
test, the more stringent the required
remedial actions would be. Specifically:
(i) Level 1 remediation. A covered
company would be subject to level 1
remediation if it is not in compliance
with any regulations adopted by the
Board relating to capital plans and stress
tests.194 The Board believes that even if
a covered company meets the minimum
regulatory capital requirements under
the severely adverse stress scenario,
noncompliance with the Board’s capital
plan or stress testing regulations is
sufficient to warrant level 1
remediation.
(ii) Level 2 remediation. A covered
company would be subject to level 2
remediation if, under the results of the
severely adverse stress test in any
quarter of the planning horizon, the
covered company’s tier 1 common riskbased capital ratio fell below 5.0 percent
and remained above 3.0 percent.
(iii) Level 3 remediation. A covered
company would be subject to level 3
remediation if, under the results of the
severely adverse stress test in any
quarter of the planning horizon, the
covered company’s tier 1 common riskbased capital ratio fell below 3.0
percent.
Question 82: What additional factors
should the Board consider when
incorporating stress test results into the
early remediation framework? Is the
severely adverse scenario appropriately
incorporated as a triggering event? Why
or why not?
c. Risk Management
The Board believes that material
weaknesses and deficiencies in risk
management could contribute
significantly to a firm’s decline and
ultimate failure. The proposed rule
194 See
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639
provides that, if the Board determines
that a covered company has failed to
comply with the enhanced risk
management provisions of Subpart E of
this proposed rule, it would be subject
to level 1, 2, or 3 remediation,
depending on the severity of the
compliance failure.
Thus, for example, level 1
remediation would be appropriate if a
covered company has manifested signs
of weakness in meeting the proposal’s
enhanced risk management and risk
committee requirements. Similarly,
level 2 remediation would be
appropriate if a covered company has
demonstrated multiple deficiencies in
meeting the enhanced risk management
or risk committee requirements, and
level 3 remediation would be
appropriate if the covered company is in
substantial noncompliance with the
enhanced risk management and risk
committee requirements.
Question 83: The Board seeks
comment on triggers tied to risk
management weaknesses. Should the
Board consider specific risk
management triggers tied to particular
events? If so, what might such triggers
involve? How should failure to
promptly address material risk
management weaknesses be addressed
by the early remediation regime? Under
such circumstances, should companies
be moved to progressively more
stringent levels of remediation, or are
other actions more appropriate? Provide
a detailed explanation.
d. Liquidity
The Dodd-Frank Act provides that the
measures of financial condition to be
included in the early remediation
framework shall include liquidity
measures. Under the proposal, a covered
company would be subject to level 1,
level 2, or level 3 remediation if the
Board determines that the company’s
measurement or management of its
liquidity risks is not in compliance with
the requirements of Subpart C of this
proposed rule. The level of remediation
to which a covered company would be
subject shall vary, at the discretion of
the Board, depending on the severity of
the compliance failure.
Thus, for example, level 1
remediation would be appropriate if a
covered company has manifested signs
of weakness in meeting the proposal’s
enhanced liquidity risk management
standards. Similarly, level 2
remediation would be appropriate if a
covered company has demonstrated
multiple deficiencies in meeting the
enhanced liquidity risk management
standards, and level 3 remediation
would be appropriate if the covered
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company is in substantial
noncompliance with the enhanced
liquidity risk management standards.
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e. Market Indicators
Section 166(c)(1) of the Dodd-Frank
Act directs the Board, in defining
measures of a covered company’s
condition, to utilize ‘‘other forwardlooking indicators’’. A review of market
indicators in the lead up to the recent
financial crisis reveals that marketbased data often provided an early
signal of deterioration in a company’s
financial condition. Moreover,
numerous academic studies have
concluded that market information is
complementary to supervisory
information in uncovering problems at
financial companies.195 Accordingly,
the Board proposes to use a variety of
market-based triggers designed to
capture both emerging idiosyncratic and
systemic risk across covered companies
in the early remediation regime. The
Board proposes to implement a system
of market-based triggers that prompts a
heightened supervisory review (level 1
remediation) of a covered company’s
financial condition and risk
management. The Board would produce
a report on the elements evidencing
deterioration within 30 days of a
covered company hitting a market
indicator trigger and determine whether
the institution should be elevated to a
higher level of remediation. In
determining whether to elevate the
covered company to a higher level of
remediation, the Board would consider
the extent the factors giving rise to a
triggering event were caused by
financial weakness or material risk
management weaknesses at the covered
company such that further decline of
the company is probable. The Board
may also use other supervisory
authority to cause the covered company
to take appropriate actions to address
the problems reviewed by the Board
under level 1 remediation.
The Board recognizes that marketbased early remediation triggers—like
all early warning metrics—have the
potential to trigger remediation for firms
that have no material weaknesses (false
positives) and fail to trigger remediation
for firms whose financial condition has
195 See, e.g., Berger, Davies, and Flannery,
Comparing Market and Supervisory Assessments of
Bank Performance: Who Knows What When?
Journal of Money, Credit, and Banking, 32 (3), at
641–667 (2000). Krainer and Lopez, How Might
Financial Market Information Be Used for
Supervisory Purposes?, FRBSF Economic Review, at
29–45 (2003). Furlong and Williams, Financial
Market Signals and Banking Supervision: Are
Current Practices Consistent with Research
Findings?, FRBSF Economics Review, at 17–29
(2006).
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deteriorated (false negatives), depending
on the sample, time period and
thresholds chosen. Further, the Board
notes that if market indicators are used
to trigger corrective actions in a
regulatory framework, market prices
may adjust to reflect this use and
potentially become less revealing over
time. Accordingly, the Board is not
proposing to use market-based triggers
to subject a covered company directly to
early remediation levels 2, 3, or 4 at this
time. The Board expects to review this
approach after gaining additional
experience with the use of market data
in the supervisory process.
Given that the informational content
and availability of market data will
change over time, the Board also
proposes to publish for notice and
comment the market-based triggers and
thresholds on an annual basis (or less
frequently depending on whether the
Board determines that changes to an
existing regime would be appropriate),
rather than specifying these triggers in
this rule. In order to ensure
transparency, the Board’s disclosure of
market-based triggers would include
sufficient detail to allow the process to
be replicated in general form by market
participants. The Board seeks comment
on the use of market indicators
described below. Before commencing
use of any particular market-based
indicator the Board intends to publish
such indicators for notice and comment.
i. Proposed Market Indicators
In selecting market indicators to
incorporate into the early remediation
regime, the Board focused on indicators
that have significant information
content, i.e. for which prices quotes are
available, and provide a sufficiently
early indication of emerging or potential
issues. The Board proposes to use the
following or similar market-based
indicators in its early remediation
framework:
1. Equity-Based Indicators
Expected default frequency (EDF).
The EDF measures the expected
probability of default in the next 365
days. The Board uses EDFs calculated
using Moody’s KMV RISKCALC model.
Marginal expected shortfall (MES).
The MES of a financial institution is
defined as the expected loss on its
equity when the overall market declines
by more than a certain amount. Each
financial institution’s MES depends on
the volatility of its stock price, the
correlation between its stock price and
the market return, and the co-movement
of the tails of the distributions for its
stock price and for the market return.
The Board uses MES calculated
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following the methodology of Acharya,
Pederson, Phillipon, and Richardson
(2010). MES data are available at https://
vlab.stern.nyu.edu/welcome/risk.
Market Equity Ratio. The market
equity ratio is defined as the ratio of
market value of equity to market value
of equity plus book value of debt.
Option-implied volatility. The optionimplied volatility of a firm’s stock price
is calculated from out-of-the-money
option prices using a standard option
pricing model, reported as an
annualized standard deviation in
percentage points by Bloomberg.
2. Debt-Based Indicators
Credit default swaps (CDS). The
Board uses CDS offering protection
against default on a 5-year maturity,
senior unsecured bond by a financial
institution.
Subordinated debt (bond) spreads.
The Board uses financial companies’
subordinated bond spreads with a
remaining maturity of at least 5 years
over the Treasury rate with the same
maturity or the LIBOR swap rate
published by Bloomberg.
The Board recognizes that all market
indicators for different covered
companies are not traded with the same
frequency and therefore may not contain
the same level of informational content.
Question 84: The Board seeks
comment on the proposed approach to
market-based triggers detailed below,
alternative specifications of marketbased indicators, and the potential
benefits and challenges of introducing
additional market-based triggers for
levels 2, 3, or 4 of the proposed early
remediation regime. In addition, the
Board seeks comment on the sufficiency
of information content in market-based
indicators generally.
ii. Proposed Trigger Design
The Board’s proposed market
indicator-based regime would trigger
heightened supervisory review when
any of the covered company’s indicators
cross a threshold based on different
percentiles of historical distributions.
The Board seeks comment on the use of
both time-variant and time-invariant
triggers, as follows:
Time-variant triggers capture changes
in the value of a company’s marketbased indicator relative to its own past
performance and the past performance
of its peers. Peer groups would be
determined on an annual basis. Current
values of indicators, measured in levels
and changes, would be evaluated
relative to a covered company’s own
time series (using a rolling 5-year
window) and relative to the median of
a group of predetermined low-risk peers
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(using a rolling 5-year window), and
after controlling for market or
systematic effects.196 The value
represented by the percentiles for each
signal varies over time as data is
updated for each indicator.
For all time-variant triggers,
heightened supervisory review would
be required when the median value of
at least one market indicator over a
period of 22 consecutive business days,
either measured as its level, its 1-month
change, or its 3-month change, both
absolute and relative to the median of a
group of predetermined low-risk peers,
is above the 95th percentile of the firm’s
or the median peer’s market indicator 5year rolling window time series. The
Board proposes to use time-variant
triggers based on all six market
indicators listed above.
Time-invariant triggers capture
changes in the value of a company’s
market-based indicators relative to the
historical distribution of market-based
variables over a specific fixed period of
time and across a predetermined peer
group. Time-invariant triggers are used
to complement time-variant triggers
since time-variant triggers could lead to
excessively low or high thresholds in
cases where the rolling window covers
only an extremely benign period or a
highly disruptive financial period. The
Board acknowledges that a timeinvariant threshold should be subject to
subsequent revisions when warranted
by circumstances.
As currently contemplated, the Board
would consider all pre-crisis panel data
for the peer group (January 2000–
December 2006), which contain
observations from the subprime crisis in
the late 1990s and early 2000s as well
as the tranquil period of 2004–2006. For
each market indicator, percentiles of the
historical distributions would be
computed to calibrate time-invariant
thresholds. The Board would focus on
five indicators for time-invariant
triggers, calibrated to balance between
their propensity to produce false
positives and false negatives: CDS
prices, subordinated debt spreads,
option-implied volatility, EDF and MES.
The market equity ratio is not used in
the time-invariant approach because the
cross-sectional variation of this variable
was not found to be informative of early
issues across financial companies.
Time-invariant thresholds would trigger
heightened supervisory review if the
median value for a covered company
over 22 consecutive business days was
196 Market or systemic effects are controlled by
subtracting the median of corresponding changes
from the peer group.
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above the threshold for any of the
market indicators used in the regime.
In considering all thresholds for each
time-invariant trigger, the Board
evaluated the tradeoff between early
signals and supervisory burden
associated with potentially false signals.
Data limitations in the time-invariant
approach also require the construction
of different thresholds for different
market indicators. The Board proposes
the following calibration:
CDS. The CDS price data used to
create the distribution consist of an
unbalanced panel of daily CDS price
observations for 25 financial companies
over the 2001- 2006 period. Taking the
skewed distribution of CDS prices in the
sample and persistent outliers into
account, the threshold was set at 44
basis points, which corresponds to the
80th percentile of the distribution.
Subordinated debt (bond) spreads.
The data covered an unbalanced panel
of daily subordinated debt spread
observations for 30 financial companies.
Taking the skewed distribution into
account, the threshold was set to 124
basis points, which corresponds to the
90th percentile of the distribution.
MES. The data covered a balanced
panel of daily observations for 29
financial companies. The threshold was
set to 4.7 percent, which corresponds to
the 95th percentile of the distribution.
Option-implied volatility. The data
covered a balanced panel of daily
option-implied volatility observations
for 29 financial companies. The
threshold was set to 45.6 percent, which
corresponds to the 90th percentile of the
distribution.
EDF. The monthly EDF data cover a
balanced panel of 27 financial
companies. The threshold was set to
0.57 percent, which corresponds to the
90th percentile of the distribution.
The Board invites comment on the
use of market indicators to prompt early
remediation actions.
Question 85: Should the Board
include market indicators described
above in the early remediation regime?
If not, what other forward-looking
indicators should the Board include?
Question 86: Are the indicators
outlined above the correct set of
indicators to consider? Should other
market-based triggers be considered?
Question 87: How should the Board
consider the liquidity of an underlying
security when it chooses indicators?
Question 88: The Board proposes
using both absolute levels and changes
in indicators. Over what period should
changes be calculated?
Question 89: Should the Board use
both time-variant and time-invariant
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641
indicators? What are the comparative
advantages of using one or the other?
Question 90: Is the proposed trigger
time (when the median value over a
period of 22 consecutive business days
crosses the predetermined threshold) to
trigger heightened supervisory review
appropriate? What periods should be
considered and why?
Question 91: Should the Board use a
statistical threshold to trigger
heightened supervisory review or some
other framework?
Question 92: Should the Board
consider using market indicators to
move covered companies directly to
level 2 (initial remediation)? If so, what
time thresholds should be considered
for such a trigger? What would be the
drawbacks of such a second trigger?
Question 93: To what extent do these
indicators convey different information
about the short-term and long-term
performance of covered companies that
should be taken into account for the
supervisory review?
Question 94: Should the Board use
peer comparisons to trigger heightened
supervisory review? If so, should the
Board consider only low-risk covered
companies for the peer group or a
broader range of financial companies? If
a broader a range is more appropriate,
how should the peer group be defined?
Question 95: How should the Board
account for overall market movements
in order to isolate idiosyncratic risk of
covered companies?
C. Notice and Remedies
The proposed rule provides that the
initiation of early remediation and the
transfer of a covered company from one
level of remediation to another would
occur upon notice from the Board.
Similarly, a covered company shall
remain subject to the requirements
imposed by early remediation until the
Board notifies the covered company that
its financial condition no longer
warrants application of the requirement.
Covered companies have an affirmative
duty to notify the Board of triggering
events and other changes in
circumstances that could result in
changes to the early remediation
provisions that apply to it.
D. Relationship to Other Laws and
Requirements
The early remediation regime that
would be established by the proposed
rule would supplement rather than
replace the Board’s other supervisory
processes with respect to covered
companies. The proposed rule would
not limit the existing supervisory
authority vested in the Board, including
the Federal Reserve’s authority to
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initiate supervisory actions to address
deficiencies, unsafe or unsound
conduct, practices, or conditions, or
violations of law. For example, the
Board may respond to signs of a covered
company’s financial stress by requiring
corrective measures in addition to
remedial actions required under the
proposed rule. The Board also may use
other supervisory authority to cause a
covered company to take remedial
actions enumerated in the early
remediation regime on a basis other
than a triggering event.
X. Administrative Law Matters
A. Solicitation of Comments on the Use
of Plain Language
Section 722 of the Gramm-LeachBliley Act (Pub. L. 106–102, 113 Stat.
1338, 1471, 12 U.S.C. 4809) requires the
Federal banking agencies to use plain
language in all proposed and final rules
published after January 1, 2000. The
Board has sought to present the
proposed rule in a simple and
straightforward manner, and invites
comment on the use of plain language.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis
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Request for Comment on Proposed
Information Collection
In accordance with section 3512 of
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501–3521) (PRA), the Board
may not conduct or sponsor, and a
respondent is not required to respond
to, an information collection unless it
displays a currently valid Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) control
number. The Board reviewed the
proposed rule under the authority
delegated to the Board by OMB.
The proposed rule contains
requirements subject to the PRA. The
reporting requirements are found in
section 252.164(b); the recordkeeping
requirements are found in sections
252.61 197 and 252.145(b)(1); 198 and the
disclosure requirements are found in
section 252.148. The recordkeeping
burden for the following sections is
accounted for in the section 252.61
burden: 252.52(b)(3), 252.56, 252.58,
252.60(a), and 252.60(c). These
197 Most of the recordkeeping requirements for
Subpart C—Liquidity Requirements have been
addressed in the Funding and Liquidity Risk
Management Guidance (FR 4198; OMB No. 7100–
0326). Only new recordkeeping requirements are
being addressed with this proposed rulemaking.
198 Some of the recordkeeping requirements for
Subpart G—Company-Run Stress Test
Requirements have been addressed in the proposed
Recordkeeping and Disclosure Provisions
Associated with Stress Testing Guidance (FR 4202).
See the Federal Register notice published on June
15, 2011 (76 FR 35072). Only new recordkeeping
requirements are being addressed with this
proposed rulemaking.
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information collection requirements
would implement section 165 and 166
of the Dodd-Frank Act, as mentioned in
the Abstract below.
The reporting requirements found in
section 252.136(b) have been addressed
in the Resolution Plans Required
Regulation (Reg QQ).199 The reporting
requirements found in sections
252.13(a), 252.96(a), 252.134(a),
252.146(a), and 252.146(b) will be
addressed in a separate Federal Register
notice at a later date.
Comments are invited on:
(a) Whether the proposed collections
of information are necessary for the
proper performance of the Federal
Reserve’s functions, including whether
the information has practical utility;
(b) The accuracy of the Federal
Reserve’s estimate of the burden of the
proposed information collections,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
(c) Ways to enhance the quality,
utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected;
(d) Ways to minimize the burden of
the information collections on
respondents, including through the use
of automated collection techniques or
other forms of information technology;
and
(e) Estimates of capital or start up
costs and costs of operation,
maintenance, and purchase of services
to provide information.
All comments will become a matter of
public record. Comments on aspects of
this notice that may affect reporting,
recordkeeping, or disclosure
requirements and burden estimates
should be sent to the addresses listed in
the ADDRESSES section. A copy of the
comments may also be submitted to the
OMB desk officer for the Federal
banking agencies: By mail to U.S. Office
of Management and Budget, 725 17th
Street, NW., #10235, Washington, DC
20503 or by facsimile to (202) 395–5806,
Attention, Commission and Federal
Banking Agency Desk Officer.
Proposed Information Collection
Title of Information Collection:
Reporting, Recordkeeping, and
Disclosure Requirements Associated
with Regulation YY.
Frequency of Response: Annual,
semiannual, and on occasion.
Affected Public: Businesses or other
for-profit.
Respondents: U.S. bank holding
companies, savings and loan holding
companies, nonbank financial
companies, and state member banks.
Abstract: Section 165 of the DoddFrank Act requires the Board to
199 See
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implement enhanced prudential
standards and section 166 requires the
Board to implement an early
remediation framework. The enhanced
standards include risk-based capital and
leverage requirements, liquidity
standards, requirements for overall risk
management (including establishing a
risk committee), single-counterparty
credit limits, stress test requirements,
and debt-to-equity limits for companies
that the Council has determined pose a
grave threat to financial stability.
Section 252.61 would require a
covered company to adequately
document all material aspects of its
liquidity risk management processes
and its compliance with the
requirements of Subpart C and submit
all such documentation to the risk
committee.
Section 252.145(b)(1) would require
that each covered company or over $10
billion company must establish and
maintain a system of controls, oversight,
and documentation, including policies
and procedures, designed to ensure that
the stress testing processes used by the
covered company or over $10 billion
company are effective in meeting the
requirements in Subpart G. These
policies and procedures must, at a
minimum, describe the covered
company’s or over $10 billion
company’s stress testing practices and
methodologies, validation and use of
stress tests results, and processes for
updating the company’s stress testing
practices consistent with relevant
supervisory guidance. Policies of
covered companies must describe
processes for scenario development for
the additional stress test required under
section 252.144.
Section 252.148 would require public
disclosure of results required for stress
tests of covered companies and over $10
billion companies. Within 90 days of
submitting a report for its required
stress test under section 252.143 and
section 252.144, as applicable, a covered
company and over $10 billion company
shall disclose publicly a summary of the
results of the stress tests required under
section 252.143 and section 252.144, as
applicable. The information disclosed
by each covered company and over $10
billion company, as applicable, shall, at
a minimum, include: (i) A description of
the types of risks being included in the
stress test; (ii) for each covered
company, a high-level description of
scenarios developed by the company
under section 252.144(b), including key
variables used (such as GDP,
unemployment rate, housing prices);
(iii) a general description of the
methodologies employed to estimate
losses, revenues, allowance for loan
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losses, and changes in capital positions
over the planning horizon; and (iv)
aggregate losses, pre-provision net
revenue, allowance for loan losses, net
income, and pro forma capital levels
and capital ratios (including regulatory
and any other capital ratios specified by
the Board) over the planning horizon,
under each scenario.
Section 252.164(b) would require that
when a covered company becomes
aware of (i) one or more triggering
events set forth in section 252.163; or
(ii) a change in condition that it believes
should result in a change in the
remediation provisions to which it is
subject, such covered company must
provide notice to the Board within 5
business days, identifying the nature of
the triggering event or change in
circumstances.
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Estimated Paperwork Burden
Estimated Burden per Response:
Section 252.61 recordkeeping—200
hours (Initial setup 160 hours).
Section 252.145(b)(1) recordkeeping—
40 hours (Initial setup 280 hours for
U.S. bank holding companies $50
billion and over in total consolidated
assets; 240 hours for institutions over
$10 million in total consolidated assets).
Section 252.148 disclosure—80 hour
(Initial setup 200 hours).
Section 252.164(b) reporting—2
hours.
Number of respondents: 34 U.S. bank
holding companies with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more, 39 U.S. bank holding companies
with total consolidated assets over $10
billion and less than $50 billion, 21
state member banks with total
consolidated assets over $10 billion, 39
savings and loan holding companies
with total consolidated assets over $10
billion.
Total estimated annual burden:
97,736 hours (72,188 hours for initial
setup and 25,548 hours for ongoing
compliance).
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
In accordance with section 3(a) of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act 200 (RFA), the
Board is publishing an initial regulatory
flexibility analysis of the proposed rule.
The RFA requires an agency either to
provide an initial regulatory flexibility
analysis with a proposed rule for which
a general notice of proposed rulemaking
is required or to certify that the
proposed rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Based on its
analysis and for the reasons stated
below, the Board believes that this
proposed rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Nevertheless,
the Board is publishing an initial
regulatory flexibility analysis. A final
regulatory flexibility analysis will be
conducted after comments received
during the public comment period have
been considered.
In accordance with sections 165 and
166 of the Dodd-Frank Act, the Board is
proposing to adopt Regulation YY (12
CFR 252 et seq.) to establish enhanced
prudential standards and early
remediation requirements applicable for
covered companies.201 The enhanced
standards include risk-based capital and
leverage requirements, liquidity
standards, requirements for overall risk
management (including establishing a
risk committee), single-counterparty
credit limits, stress test requirements,
and debt-to-equity limits for companies
that the Council has determined pose a
grave threat to financial stability.
Under regulations issued by the Small
Business Administration (SBA), a
‘‘small entity’’ includes those firms
within the ‘‘Finance and Insurance’’
sector with asset sizes that vary from $7
million or less in assets to $175 million
or less in assets.202 The Board believes
that the Finance and Insurance sector
constitutes a reasonable universe of
firms for these purposes because such
firms generally engage in actives that are
financial in nature. Consequently, bank
holding companies or nonbank financial
companies with assets sizes of $175
million or less are small entities for
purposes of the RFA.
As discussed in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION, the proposed rule
generally would apply to a covered
company, which includes only bank
holding companies with $50 billion or
more in total consolidated assets, and
nonbank financial companies that the
Council has determined under section
113 of the Dodd-Frank Act must be
supervised by the Board and for which
such determination is in effect.
However, the enterprise wide risk
committee requirements required under
section 165(h) of the Act would apply
to any publicly traded bank holding
company with total assets of $10 billion
or more. The company-run stress test
requirements part of the proposal being
established pursuant to section 165(i)(2)
of the Act also would apply to any bank
holding company, savings and loan
holding company, and state member
bank with more than $10 billion in total
assets. Companies that are subject to the
proposed rule therefore substantially
201 See
200 5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.
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17:41 Jan 04, 2012
202 13
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12 U.S.C. 5365 and 5366.
CFR 121.201.
Frm 00051
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643
exceed the $175 million asset threshold
at which a banking entity is considered
a ‘‘small entity’’ under SBA
regulations.203 The proposed rule would
apply to a nonbank financial company
designated by the Council under section
113 of the Dodd-Frank Act regardless of
such a company’s asset size. Although
the asset size of nonbank financial
companies may not be the determinative
factor of whether such companies may
pose systemic risks and would be
designated by the Council for
supervision by the Board, it is an
important consideration.204 It is
therefore unlikely that a financial firm
that is at or below the $175 million asset
threshold would be designated by the
Council under section 113 of the DoddFrank Act because material financial
distress at such firms, or the nature,
scope, size, scale, concentration,
interconnectedness, or mix of it
activities, are not likely to pose a threat
to the financial stability of the United
States.
As noted above, because the proposed
rule is not likely to apply to any
company with assets of $175 million or
less, if adopted in final form, it is not
expected to apply to any small entity for
purposes of the RFA. The Board does
not believe that the proposed rule
duplicates, overlaps, or conflicts with
any other Federal rules. In light of the
foregoing, the Board does not believe
that the proposed rule, if adopted in
final form, would have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities supervised.
Nonetheless, the Board seeks comment
on whether the proposed rule would
impose undue burdens on, or have
unintended consequences for, small
organizations, and whether there are
ways such potential burdens or
consequences could be minimized in a
manner consistent with sections 165
and 166 of the Dodd-Frank Act.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 252 and
12 CFR Chapter II
Administrative practice and
procedure, Banks, Banking, Federal
Reserve System, Holding companies,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Securities.
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons stated in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION, the Board
203 The Dodd-Frank Act provides that the Board
may, on the recommendation of the Council,
increase the $50 billion asset threshold for the
application of certain of the enhanced standards.
See 12 U.S.C. 5365(a)(2)(B). However, neither the
Board nor the Council has the authority to lower
such threshold.
204 See 76 FR 4555 (January 26, 2011).
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of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System proposes to add the text of the
rule as set forth at the end of the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION as part 252
to 12 CFR chapter II as follows:
PART 252—ENHANCED PRUDENTIAL
STANDARDS (REGULATION YY)
1. The authority citation for part 252
shall read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 321–338a, 1467a(g),
1818, 1831p–1, 1844(b), 5365, 5366.
2. Part 252 is added to read as follows:
PART 252—ENHANCED PRUDENTIAL
STANDARDS
Subpart A—General Provisions
Sec.
252.1 Authority, purpose, applicability, and
reservation of authority.
252.2 through 252.9 [Reserved]
Subpart B—Risk-Based Capital
Requirements and Leverage Limits
252.11 Applicability.
252.12 Definitions.
252.13 Enhanced risk-based capital and
leverage requirements.
252.14 Nonbank covered companies:
reporting and enforcement.
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Subpart E—Risk Management
252.125 Definitions.
252.126 Establishment of risk committee
and appointment of chief risk officer.
Subpart F—Supervisory Stress Test
Requirements
252.131 Applicability.
252.132 Definitions.
252.133 Annual analysis conducted by the
Board.
252.134 Data and information required to
be submitted in support of the Board’s
analyses.
252.135 Review of the Board’s analysis;
publication of summary results.
252.136 Post-assessment actions by covered
companies.
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Subpart I—Early Remediation Framework
252.161 Definitions.
252.162 Remediation Actions.
252.163 Remediation triggering events.
252.164 Notice and remedies.
§ 252.1 Authority, purpose, applicability,
and reservation of authority.
Subpart D—Single-Counterparty Credit
Limits
252.91 Applicability.
252.92 Definitions.
252.93 Credit exposure limit.
252.94 Gross credit exposure.
252.95 Net Credit Exposure.
252.96 Compliance.
252.97 Exemptions.
17:41 Jan 04, 2012
Subpart H—Debt-to-Equity Limits for
Certain Covered Companies
252.151 Definitions.
252.152 Debt-to-equity ratio limitation.
Subpart A—General Provisions
Subpart C—Liquidity Requirements
252.51 Definitions.
252.52 Board of directors and risk
committee responsibilities.
252.53 Senior management responsibilities.
252.54 Independent review.
252.55 Cash flow projections.
252.56 Liquidity stress testing.
252.57 Liquidity buffer.
252.58 Contingency funding plan.
252.59 Specific limits.
252.60 Monitoring.
252.61 Documentation.
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Subpart G—Company-Run Stress Test
Requirements
252.141 Applicability.
252.142 Definitions.
252.143 Annual stress test.
252.144 Additional stress test for covered
companies.
252.145 Methodologies and practices.
252.146 Required report to the Board of
stress test results and related
information.
252.147 Post-assessment actions by
covered companies.
252.148 Publication of results by covered
companies and over $10 billion
companies.
(a) Authority. This part is issued by
the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System (the Board) under
sections 165 and 166 of Title I of the
Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act of 2010 (the
Dodd-Frank Act) (Pub. L. 111–203, 124
Stat. 1376, 1423–32, 12 U.S.C. 5365 and
5366); section 9 of the Federal Reserve
Act (12 U.S.C. 321–338a); section 5(b) of
the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956,
as amended (12 U.S.C. 1844(b)); section
10(g) of the Home Owners’ Loan Act, as
amended (12 U.S.C. 1467a(g)); and
sections 8 and 39 of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1818(b) and
1831p–1).
(b) Purpose. This part implements
certain provisions of sections 165 and
166 of the Dodd-Frank Act (12 U.S.C.
5365 and 5366), which requires the
Board to establish enhanced prudential
standards for covered companies, as
defined herein.
(c) Applicability. (1) In general.
Except as otherwise provided in this
part, a covered company is subject to
the requirements of this part beginning
on the first day of the fifth quarter
following the date on which it became
a covered company.
(2) Initial applicability. Except as
provided in this part, a company that is
a covered company on the effective date
of this subpart is subject to the
requirements of this subpart beginning
on the first day of the fifth quarter
following the effective date.
(3) U.S. bank holding company
subsidiaries of foreign banking
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organizations. Except with respect to
the liquidity requirements in subpart C,
the risk management requirements of
subpart E, and the debt-to-equity limits
in subpart H, the requirements of this
part will not apply to any bank holding
company subsidiary of a foreign banking
organization that is currently relying on
Supervision and Regulation Letter SR
01–01 issued by the Board (as in effect
on May 19, 2010) until July 21, 2015.
(d) Reservation of authority. (1) In
general. If the Board determines that
compliance with the requirements of
this part does not sufficiently mitigate
the risks to U.S. financial stability posed
by the failure or material financial
distress of a covered company, the
Board may require the covered company
to be subject to additional or further
enhanced prudential standards,
including, but not limited to, additional
capital or liquidity requirements, limits
on exposures to single-counterparties,
risk management requirements, stress
tests, or other requirements or
restrictions the Board deems necessary
to carry out the purposes of this subpart
or Title I of the Dodd-Frank Act.
(2) Other supervisory authority.
Nothing in this part limits the authority
of the Board under any other provision
of law or regulation to take supervisory
or enforcement action, including action
to address unsafe and unsound practices
or conditions, or violations of law or
regulation.
(3) Application of enhanced
prudential standards to bank holding
companies in general. In order to
preserve the safety and soundness of a
bank holding company and thereby
mitigate risks to the stability of the U.S.
financial system, the Board may
determine that a bank holding company
that is not a covered company shall be
subject to one or more of the standards
established under this part based on the
company’s capital structure, size,
complexity, risk profile, scope of
operations, or financial condition and
any other risk related factors that the
Board deems appropriate.
Subpart B—Risk-Based Capital
Requirements and Leverage Limits
§ 252.11
Applicability.
(a) Applicability. A nonbank covered
company is subject to the requirements
of sections 252.13(b)(1) and (2) on the
later of the effective date of this subpart
or 180 days following the date on which
the Council determined that the
company shall be supervised by the
Board. A company the Council has
determined shall be supervised by the
Board on a date no less than 180 days
before September 30 of a calendar year
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must comply with the requirements of
sections 252.13(b)(3) from September 30
of that calendar year and thereafter.
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§ 252.12
Definitions.
For purposes of this subpart:
(a) Bank holding company is defined
as in section 2 of the Bank Holding
Company Act, as amended (12 U.S.C.
1841), and the Board’s Regulation Y (12
CFR part 225).
(b) Company means a corporation,
partnership, limited liability company,
depository institution, business trust,
special purpose entity, association, or
similar organization.
(c) Council means the Financial
Stability Oversight Council established
by section 111 of the Dodd-Frank Act
(12 U.S.C. 5321).
(d) Covered company means
(1) Any company organized under the
laws of the United States or any State
that the Council has determined under
section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Act (12
U.S.C. 5323) shall be supervised by the
Board and for which such determination
is still in effect (nonbank covered
company).
(2) Any bank holding company (other
than a foreign banking organization),
that has $50 billion or more in total
consolidated assets, as determined
based on:
(i) The average of the bank holding
company’s total consolidated assets in
the four most recent quarters as reported
quarterly on the bank holding
company’s Consolidated Financial
Statements for Bank Holding Companies
(the Federal Reserve’s FR Y–9C (FR Y–
9C)); or
(ii) The average of the bank holding
company’s total consolidated assets in
the most recent consecutive quarters as
reported quarterly on the bank holding
company’s FR Y–9Cs, if the bank
holding company has not filed an FR Y–
9C for each of the most recent four
quarters.
(3) Once a covered company meets
the requirements described in paragraph
(2), the company shall remain a covered
company for purposes of this part
unless and until the company has less
than $50 billion in total consolidated
assets as determined based on each of
the bank holding company’s four most
recent FR Y–9Cs.
(4) Nothing in paragraph (3) shall
preclude a company from becoming a
covered company pursuant to paragraph
(2).
(5) A bank holding that has ceased to
be a covered company under paragraph
(3) is not subject to the requirements of
this subpart beginning on the first day
of the calendar quarter following the
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reporting date on which it ceased to be
a covered company.
(e) Foreign banking organization
means any foreign bank or company that
is a bank holding company or is treated
as a bank holding company under
section 8(a) of the International Banking
Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3106(a)).
(f) Nonbank covered company means
any company organized under the laws
of the United States or any State that the
Council has determined under section
113 of the Dodd-Frank Act (12 U.S.C.
5323) shall be supervised by the Board
and for which such determination is
still in effect.
§ 252.13 Enhanced risk-based capital and
leverage requirements.
(a) Bank holding companies. A
covered company that is a bank holding
company must comply with, and hold
capital commensurate with the
requirements of any regulations adopted
by the Board relating to capital plans
and stress tests.
(b) Nonbank covered companies. A
nonbank covered company must:
(1) Calculate its minimum risk-based
and leverage capital requirements as if
it were a bank holding company in
accordance with any minimum capital
requirements established by the Board
for bank holding companies, including
12 CFR part 225, appendix A (general
risk-based capital rule), 12 CFR part
225, appendix D (leverage rule), 12 CFR
part 225, appendix E (market risk rule),
and 12 CFR part 225, appendix G
(advanced approaches risk-based capital
rule);
(2) Hold capital sufficient to meet (i)
a tier 1 risk based capital ratio of 4
percent and a total risk-based capital
ratio of 8 percent, as calculated
according to the general risk-based
capital rules, and (ii) a tier 1 leverage
ratio of 4 percent as calculated under
the leverage rule; 205 and
(3) Comply with, and hold capital
commensurate with, the requirements of
any regulations adopted by the Board
relating to capital plans and stress tests
as if the covered company were a bank
holding company, including but not
limited to section 225.8 of the Board’s
Regulation Y (12 CFR 225.8).
§ 252.14 Nonbank covered companies:
reporting and enforcement.
(a) Reporting. Each nonbank financial
company must report to the Board on a
quarterly basis its risk-based capital and
leverage ratios as calculated under
section 252.13(b).
(b) Notice of non-compliance. A
nonbank financial company must notify
205 12
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645
the Board immediately upon
ascertaining that it has failed to meet its
enhanced risk-based capital and
leverage requirements under section
252.13(b).
Subpart C—Liquidity Requirements
§ 252.51
Definitions.
For purposes of this subpart:
(a) Bank holding company is defined
as in section 2 of the Bank Holding
Company Act, as amended (12 U.S.C.
1841), and the Board’s Regulation Y (12
CFR part 225).
(b) Company means a corporation,
partnership, limited liability company,
depository institution, business trust,
special purpose entity, association, or
similar organization.
(c) Council means the Financial
Stability Oversight Council established
by section 111 of the Dodd-Frank Act
(12 U.S.C. 5321).
(d) Covered company means
(1) Any company organized under the
laws of the United States or any State
that the Council has determined under
section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Act (12
U.S.C. 5323) shall be supervised by the
Board and for which such determination
is still in effect (nonbank covered
company).
(2) Any bank holding company (other
than a foreign banking organization),
that has $50 billion or more in total
consolidated assets, as determined
based on:
(i) The average of the bank holding
company’s total consolidated assets in
the four most recent quarters as reported
quarterly on the bank holding
company’s Consolidated Financial
Statements for Bank Holding Companies
(the Federal Reserve’s FR Y–9C (FR Y–
9C)); or
(ii) The average of the bank holding
company’s total consolidated assets in
the most recent consecutive quarters as
reported quarterly on the bank holding
company’s FR Y–9Cs, if the bank
holding company has not filed an FR Y–
9C for each of the most recent four
quarters.
(3) Once a covered company meets
the requirements described in paragraph
(2), the company shall remain a covered
company for purposes of this subpart
unless and until the company has less
than $50 billion in total consolidated
assets as determined based on each of
the bank holding company’s four most
recent FR Y–9Cs.
(4) Nothing in paragraph (3) shall
preclude a company from becoming a
covered company pursuant to paragraph
(2).
(5) A bank holding that has ceased to
be a covered company under paragraph
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(3) is not subject to the requirements of
this subpart beginning on the first day
of the calendar quarter following the
reporting date on which it ceased to be
a covered company.
(e) Depository institution has the same
meaning as in section 3 of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act, 12 U.S.C.
1813(c).
(f) Foreign banking organization
means any foreign bank or company that
is a bank holding company or is treated
as a bank holding company under
section 8(a) of the International Banking
Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3106(a)).
(g) Highly liquid assets means:
(1) Cash;
(2) Securities issued or guaranteed by
the U.S. government, a U.S. government
agency, or a U.S. government-sponsored
entity; and
(3) Any other asset that the covered
company demonstrates to the
satisfaction of the Federal Reserve:
(i) Has low credit risk and low market
risk;
(ii) Is traded in an active secondary
two-way market that has observable
market prices, committed market
makers, a large number of market
participants, and a high trading volume;
and
(iii) Is a type of asset that investors
historically have purchased in periods
of financial market distress during
which market liquidity is impaired.
(h) Liquidity means, with respect to a
covered company, the covered
company’s capacity to efficiently meet
its expected and unexpected cash flows
and collateral needs at a reasonable cost
without adversely affecting the daily
operations or the financial condition of
the covered company.
(i) Liquidity risk means the risk that
a covered company’s financial condition
or safety and soundness will be
adversely affected by its inability or
perceived inability to meet its cash and
collateral obligations.
(j) Publicly traded means traded on:
(1) Any exchange registered with the
U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission as a national securities
exchange under section 6 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15
U.S.C. 78f); or
(2) Any non-U.S.-based securities
exchange that:
(i) Is registered with, or approved by,
a national securities regulatory
authority; and
(ii) Provides a liquid, two-way market
for the instrument in question, meaning
that there are enough independent bona
fide offers to buy and sell so that a sales
price reasonably related to the last sales
price or current bona fide competitive
bid and offer quotations can be
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determined promptly and a trade can be
settled at such a price within a
reasonable time period conforming with
trade custom.
(k) Risk committee means the
enterprise-wide risk committee
established by a covered company’s
board of directors under section 252.126
of subpart E of this part.
(l) Trading position means a position
that is held by a covered company for
the purpose of short-term resale or with
the intent of benefitting from actual or
expected short-term price movements,
or to lock-in arbitrage profits.
(m) Two-way market means a market
with independent bona fide offers to
buy and sell so that a price reasonably
related to the last sales price or current
bona fide competitive bid and offer
quotations can be determined within
one day and settled at that price within
a reasonable time period conforming
with trade custom.
(n) Unencumbered means, with
respect to an asset, that:
(1) The asset is not pledged, does not
secure, collateralize, or provide credit
enhancement to any transaction, and is
not subject to any lien;
(2) The asset is not designated as a
hedge on a trading position; and
(3) There are no legal or contractual
restrictions on the ability of the covered
company to promptly liquidate, sell,
transfer, or assign the asset.
(o) U.S. government agency means an
agency or instrumentality of the U.S.
government whose obligations are fully
and explicitly guaranteed as to the
timely payment of principal and interest
by the full faith and credit of the U.S.
government.
(p) U.S. government-sponsored entity
means an entity originally established or
chartered by the U.S. government to
serve public purposes specified by the
U.S. Congress, but whose obligations are
not explicitly guaranteed by the full
faith and credit of the U.S. government.
§ 252.52 Board of directors and risk
committee responsibilities.
(a) Oversight. The covered company’s
board of directors (or the risk
committee) must oversee the covered
company’s liquidity risk management
processes, and must review and approve
the liquidity risk management strategies,
policies, and procedures established by
senior management.
(b) Actions.
(1) Liquidity risk tolerance. (i) The
board of directors must establish the
covered company’s liquidity risk
tolerance at least annually. The liquidity
risk tolerance is the acceptable level of
liquidity risk the covered company may
assume in connection with its operating
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strategies. In determining the covered
company’s liquidity risk tolerance, the
board of directors must consider the
covered company’s capital structure,
risk profile, complexity, activities, size,
and other appropriate risk-related
factors.
(ii) The board of directors must
review information provided by senior
management at least semi-annually to
determine whether the covered
company is managed in accordance
with the established liquidity risk
tolerance.
(2) Business strategies and products.
(i) The risk committee or a designated
subcommittee thereof must review and
approve the liquidity costs, benefits,
and risks of each significant new
business line and each significant new
product before the covered company
implements the business line or offers
the product. In connection with this
review, the risk committee or a
designated subcommittee thereof must
consider whether the liquidity risk of
the new business line or product under
current conditions and under liquidity
stress is within the covered company’s
established liquidity risk tolerance.
(ii) At least annually, the risk
committee or designated subcommittee
thereof must review approved
significant business lines and products
to determine whether each line or
product has created any unanticipated
liquidity risk, and to determine whether
the liquidity risk of each strategy or
product continues to be within the
covered company’s established liquidity
risk tolerance.
(3) Contingency funding plan. The
board of directors must review and
approve the contingency funding plan
described in section 252.58 at least
annually, and whenever the covered
company materially revises the plan.
(4) Other reviews. (i) At least
quarterly, the risk committee or
designated subcommittee thereof must:
(A) Review the cash flow projections
produced under section 252.55 of this
subpart that use time periods in excess
of 30-days to ensure that the covered
company’s liquidity risk is within the
established liquidity risk tolerance;
(B) Review and approve liquidity
stress testing described in section
252.56 of this subpart, including stress
testing practices, methodologies, and
assumptions. The risk committee or
designated subcommittee thereof must
also review and approve liquidity stress
testing whenever the covered company
materially revises its liquidity stress
testing;
(C) Review liquidity stress testing
results produced under section 252.56
of this subpart;
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(D) Approve the size and composition
of the liquidity buffer established under
section 252.57 of this subpart;
(E) Review and approve the specific
limits established under section 252.59
of this subpart and review the covered
company’s compliance with those
limits; and
(F) Review liquidity risk management
information necessary to identify,
measure, monitor, and control liquidity
risk and to comply with this subpart.
(ii) The risk committee or designated
subcommittee thereof must periodically
review the independent validation of
the liquidity stress tests produced under
section 252.56(c)(2)(ii) of this subpart.
(iii) The risk committee or designated
subcommittee thereof must establish
procedures governing the content of
senior management reports on the
liquidity risk profile of the covered
company and other information
described at section 252.53(b) of this
subpart.
(c) Frequency of reviews. Paragraph
(b) of this section establishes minimum
requirements for the frequency of
certain reviews and approvals. The
board of directors (or the risk
committee) must conduct more frequent
reviews and approvals as market and
idiosyncratic conditions warrant.
§ 252.53 Senior management
responsibilities.
(a) Senior management of a covered
company must establish and implement
strategies, policies, and procedures for
managing liquidity risk. This includes
overseeing the development and
implementation of liquidity risk
measurement and reporting systems,
cash flow projections, liquidity stress
testing, liquidity buffer, contingency
funding plan, specific limits, and
monitoring procedures required under
this subpart.
(b) Senior management must regularly
report to the risk committee or
designated subcommittee thereof on the
liquidity risk profile of the covered
company and must provide other
relevant and necessary information to
the board of directors (or risk
committee) to facilitate its oversight of
the liquidity risk management process.
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§ 252.54
Independent review.
(a) The covered company must
establish and maintain a review
function, independent of management
functions that execute funding, to
evaluate its liquidity risk management.
(b) The independent review function
must:
(1) Regularly, but no less frequently
than annually, review and evaluate the
adequacy and effectiveness of the
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covered company’s liquidity risk
management processes;
(2) Assess whether the covered
company’s liquidity risk management
complies with applicable laws,
regulations, supervisory guidance, and
sound business practices; and
(3) Report statutory and regulatory
noncompliance and other material
liquidity risk management issues to the
board of directors or the risk committee
in writing for corrective action.
§ 252.55
Cash flow projections.
(a) Requirement. The covered
company must produce comprehensive
cash flow projections in accordance
with the requirements of this section.
The covered company must update
short-term cash flow projections daily
and must update long-term cash flow
projections at least monthly.
(b) Methodology. The covered
company must establish a robust
methodology for making cash flow
projections. The methodology must
include reasonable assumptions
regarding the future behavior of assets,
liabilities, and off-balance sheet
exposures.
(c) Cash flow projections. The covered
company must produce comprehensive
cash flow projections that:
(1) Project cash flows arising from
assets, liabilities, and off-balance sheet
exposures over short-term and long-term
periods that are appropriate to the
covered company’s capital structure,
risk profile, complexity, activities, size,
and other risk related factors;
(2) Identify and quantify discrete and
cumulative cash flow mismatches over
these time periods;
(3) Include cash flows arising from
contractual maturities, as well as cash
flows from new business, funding
renewals, customer options, and other
potential events that may impact
liquidity; and
(4) Provide sufficient detail to reflect
the covered company’s capital structure,
risk profile, complexity, activities, size,
and any other risk related factors that
are appropriate. Such detail may
include cash flow projections broken
down by business line, legal entity, or
jurisdiction, and cash flow projections
that use more time periods than the
minimum required under paragraph
(c)(1) of this section.
§ 252.56
Liquidity stress testing.
(a) Requirement. (1) The covered
company must regularly stress test its
cash flow projections in accordance
with the requirements of this section.
Stress test analysis consists of
identifying liquidity stress scenarios
and assessing the effects of these
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647
scenarios on the covered company’s
cash flow and liquidity. The covered
company must use the results of stress
testing to determine the size of its
liquidity buffer under section 252.57 of
this subpart, and must incorporate the
information generated by stress testing
in the quantitative component of the
contingency funding plan under section
252.58(b) of this subpart.
(2) The covered company must
conduct stress testing in accordance
with the requirements of this section at
least monthly. The covered company
must be able to perform stress testing
more frequently and to vary underlying
assumptions as conditions change or as
required by the Federal Reserve due to
deterioration in the company’s financial
condition, market conditions, or to
address other supervisory concerns.
(b) Stress testing requirements.
(1) Stress scenarios. (i) Stress testing
must incorporate a range of stress
scenarios that may significantly impact
the covered company’s liquidity, taking
into consideration the covered
company’s balance sheet exposures, offbalance sheet exposures, business lines,
organizational structure, and other
characteristics.
(ii) At a minimum, stress testing must
incorporate separate stress scenarios to
account for market stress, idiosyncratic
stress, and combined market and
idiosyncratic stresses.
(iii) The stress scenarios must address
the potential impact of market
disruptions on the covered company
and must address the potential actions
of other market participants
experiencing liquidity stresses under
the same market disruptions.
(iv) The stress scenarios must be
forward-looking and must incorporate a
range of potential changes in a covered
company’s activities, exposures, and
risks, as well as changes to the broader
economic and financial environment.
(v) The stress scenarios must use a
variety of time horizons. At a minimum,
these time horizons must include an
overnight time horizon, a 30-day time
horizon, 90-day time horizon, and a
one-year time horizon.
(2) Stress testing must
comprehensively address the covered
company’s activities, exposures, and
risks, including off-balance sheet
exposures.
(3) Stress testing must be tailored to,
and provide sufficient detail to reflect,
the covered company’s capital structure,
risk profile, complexity, activities, size,
and any other risk related factors that
are appropriate. This may require
analyses by business line, legal entity,
or jurisdiction, and stress scenarios that
use more time horizons than the
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minimum required under paragraph
(b)(1)(v) of this section.
(4) A covered company must
incorporate the following assumptions
in its stress testing:
(i) For the first 30 days of a liquidity
stress scenario, only highly liquid assets
that are unencumbered may be used as
cash flow sources to offset projected
funding needs.
(ii) For time periods beyond the first
30 days of a liquidity stress scenario,
highly liquid assets that are
unencumbered and other appropriate
funding sources may be used as cash
flow sources to offset projected funding
needs.
(iii) If an asset is used as a cash flow
source to offset projected funding needs,
the fair market value of the asset must
be discounted to reflect any credit risk
and market volatility of the asset.
(iv) Throughout each stress test time
horizon, assets used as sources of
funding must be sufficiently diversified.
(c) Process and systems requirements.
(1) The covered company must establish
and maintain policies and procedures
that outline its liquidity stress testing
practices, methodologies and
assumptions, detail the use of each
stress test employed, and provide for the
enhancement of stress testing practices
as risks change and as techniques
evolve.
(2) The covered company must have
an effective system of control and
oversight over the stress test function to
ensure that:
(i) Each stress test is designed in
accordance with the requirements of
this section; and
(ii) The stress process and
assumptions are validated. The
validation function must be
independent of functions that develop
or design the liquidity stress testing, and
independent of management functions
that execute funding.
(3) The covered company must
maintain management information
systems and data processes sufficient to
enable it to effectively and reliably
collect, sort, and aggregate data and
other information related to liquidity
stress testing.
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§ 252.57
Liquidity buffer.
(a) A covered company must maintain
a liquidity buffer of highly liquid assets
that are unencumbered. The liquidity
buffer must be sufficient to meet
projected net cash outflows and the
projected loss or impairment of existing
funding sources for 30 days over a range
of liquidity stress scenarios.
(b) The covered company must
determine the size of its liquidity buffer
requirement using the results of its
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liquidity stress testing under section
252.56 of this subpart, and must align
the size of the buffer to the covered
company’s capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, size, and any
other risk related factors that are
appropriate, and established liquidity
risk tolerance.
(c) In computing the amount of an
asset included in the liquidity buffer,
the covered company must discount the
fair market value of the asset to reflect
any credit risk and market volatility of
the asset.
(d) The pool of unencumbered highly
liquid assets included in the liquidity
buffer must be sufficiently diversified.
§ 252.58
Contingency funding plan.
(a) Contingency funding plan. The
covered company must establish and
maintain a contingency funding plan
that sets out the covered company’s
strategies for addressing liquidity needs
during liquidity stress events. The
contingency funding plan must be
commensurate with the covered
company’s capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, size, and any
other risk related factors that are
appropriate, and established liquidity
risk tolerance. The covered company
must update the contingency funding
plan at least annually, and must update
the plan when changes to market and
idiosyncratic conditions warrant an
update.
(b) Components of the contingency
funding plan. The contingency funding
plan must include the following
components:
(1) Quantitative Assessment. The
contingency funding plan must
incorporate information generated by
liquidity stress testing described in
section 252.56. The stress tests are used
to:
(i) Identify liquidity stress events that
have a significant impact on the covered
company’s liquidity;
(ii) Assess the level and nature of
impact on the covered company’s
liquidity that may occur during
identified liquidity stress events;
(iii) Assess available funding sources
and needs during the identified
liquidity stress events; and
(iv) Identify alternative funding
sources that may be used during the
liquidity stress events.
(2) Event management process. The
contingency funding plan must include
an event management process that sets
out the covered company’s procedures
for managing liquidity during identified
liquidity stress events. This process
must:
(i) Include an action plan that clearly
describes the strategies the covered
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company will use to respond to
liquidity shortfalls for identified
liquidity stress events, including the
methods that the covered company will
use to access alternative funding
sources;
(ii) Identify a liquidity stress event
management team;
(iii) Specify the process,
responsibilities, and triggers for
invoking the contingency funding plan,
escalating the responses described in
the action plan, decision-making during
the identified liquidity stress events,
and executing contingency measures
identified in the action plan; and
(iv) Provide a mechanism that ensures
effective reporting and communication
within the covered company and with
outside parties, including the Federal
Reserve and other relevant supervisors,
counterparties, and other stakeholders.
(3) Monitoring. The contingency
funding plan must include procedures
for monitoring emerging liquidity stress
events. The procedures must identify
early warning indicators that are
tailored to the covered company’s
capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, size, and other
appropriate risk related factors.
(4) Testing. The covered company
must periodically test the components
of the contingency funding plan to
assess the plan’s reliability during
liquidity stress events.
(i) The covered company must test the
operational elements of the contingency
funding plan to ensure that the plan
functions as intended. These tests must
include operational simulations to test
communications, coordination, and
decision-making involving relevant
managers, including managers at
relevant legal entities within the
corporate structure.
(ii) The covered company must
periodically test the methods it will use
to access alternative funding sources to
determine whether these funding
sources will be readily available when
needed.
§ 252.59
Specific limits.
(a) Required limits. The covered
company must establish and maintain
limits on potential sources of liquidity
risk including the following:
(1) Concentrations of funding by
instrument type, single counterparty,
counterparty type, secured and
unsecured funding, and other liquidity
risk identifiers;
(2) The amount of specified liabilities
that mature within various time
horizons; and
(3) Off-balance sheet exposures and
other exposures that could create
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funding needs during liquidity stress
events.
(b) Size of limits. The size of each
limit described in paragraph (a) of this
section must reflect the covered
company’s capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, size, other
appropriate risk related factors, and
established liquidity risk tolerance.
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§ 252.60
Monitoring.
(a) Collateral monitoring
requirements. The covered company
must establish and maintain procedures
for monitoring assets that it has pledged
as collateral for an obligation or
position, and assets that are available to
be pledged. These procedures must
address the covered company’s ability
to:
(1) Calculate all of the covered
company’s collateral positions in a
timely manner, including: (i) the value
of assets pledged relative to the amount
of security required under the contract
governing the obligation for which the
collateral was pledged; and (ii)
unencumbered assets available to be
pledged;
(2) Monitor the levels of available
collateral by legal entity, jurisdiction,
and currency exposure;
(3) Monitor shifts between intraday,
overnight, and term pledging of
collateral; and
(4) Track operational and timing
requirements associated with accessing
collateral at its physical location (for
example, the custodian or securities
settlement system that holds the
collateral).
(b) Legal entities, currencies and
business lines.
(1) The covered company must
establish and maintain procedures for
monitoring and controlling liquidity
risk exposures and funding needs
within and across significant legal
entities, currencies, and business lines.
(2) The covered company must
maintain sufficient liquidity with
respect to each significant legal entity in
light of legal and regulatory restrictions
on the transfer of liquidity between legal
entities.
(c) Intraday liquidity positions. The
covered company must establish and
maintain procedures for monitoring
intraday liquidity risk exposure. These
procedures must address how the
covered company will:
(1) Monitor and measure expected
daily gross liquidity inflows and
outflows;
(2) Manage and transfer collateral
when necessary to obtain intraday
credit;
(3) Identify and prioritize timespecific obligations so that the covered
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company can meet these obligations as
expected;
(4) Settle less critical obligations as
soon as possible;
(5) Control the issuance of credit to
customers where necessary; and
(6) Consider the amounts of collateral
and liquidity needed to meet payment
systems obligations when assessing the
covered company’s overall liquidity
needs.
(d) Monitoring of limits. The covered
company must monitor its compliance
with all limits established and
maintained under section 252.59 of this
subpart.
§ 252.61
Documentation.
The covered company must
adequately document all material
aspects of its liquidity risk management
processes and its compliance with the
requirements of this subpart and submit
all such documentation to the risk
committee.
Subpart D—Single-Counterparty Credit
Limits
§ 252.91
Applicability.
(a) Applicability. (1) In general.
Except as otherwise provided in this
subpart, a covered company is subject to
the requirements of this subpart
beginning on the first day of the fifth
quarter following the date on which it
became a covered company.
(2) Initial applicability. A company
that is a covered company on the
effective date of this subpart will be
subject to the requirements of this
subpart beginning on October 1, 2013. A
company that becomes a covered
company after the effective date of this
part and before September 30, 2012 will
be subject to the requirements of this
subpart beginning on October 1, 2013.
§ 252.92
Definitions.
For purposes of this subpart:
(a) Adjusted market value means,
with respect to any eligible collateral,
the fair market value of the eligible
collateral after application of the
applicable haircut specified in Table 2
of this subpart for that type of eligible
collateral.
(b) Affiliate means, with respect to a
company, any company that controls, is
controlled by, or is under common
control with, the company.
(c) Aggregate net credit exposure
means the sum of all net credit
exposures of a covered company to a
single counterparty.
(d) Applicable accounting standards
means U.S. generally applicable
accounting principles (GAAP),
international financial reporting
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649
standards (IFRS), or such other
accounting standards that a company
uses in the ordinary course of its
business in preparing its consolidated
financial statements.
(e) Bank eligible investments means
investment securities that a national
bank is permitted to purchase, sell, deal
in, underwrite, and hold under 12
U.S.C. 24 (Seventh) and 12 CFR part 1.
(f) Bank holding company is defined
as in section 2 of the Bank Holding
Company Act, as amended (12 U.S.C.
1841), and the Board’s Regulation Y (12
CFR part 225).
(g) Capital stock and surplus means
with respect to a bank holding
company, the sum of the following
amounts in each case as reported by the
bank holding company on the most
recent FR Y–9C report, or with respect
to a nonbank covered company, on the
most recent regulatory report required
by the Board:
(1) The company’s total capital, as
calculated under the capital adequacy
guidelines applicable to that bank
holding company under Regulation Y
(12 CFR part 225) or nonbank covered
company under this subpart; and
(2) The balance of the allowance for
loan and lease losses of the bank
holding company or nonbank covered
company not included in tier 2 capital
under the capital adequacy guidelines
applicable to that bank holding
company under Regulation Y (12 CFR
part 225) or that nonbank covered
company under this subpart.
(h) Company means a corporation,
partnership, limited liability company,
depository institution, business trust,
special purpose entity, association, or
similar organization.
(i) Control. A company controls
another company if it (1) owns, controls,
or holds with power to vote 25 percent
or more of a class of voting securities of
the company; (2) owns or controls 25
percent or more of the total equity of the
company; or (3) consolidates the
company for financial reporting
purposes.
(j) Council means the Financial
Stability Oversight Council established
by section 111 of the Dodd-Frank Act
(12 U.S.C. 5321).
(k) Counterparty means
(1) With respect to a natural person,
the person, and members of the person’s
immediate family;
(2) With respect to a company, the
company and all of its subsidiaries,
collectively;
(3) With respect to the United States,
the United States and all of its agencies
and instrumentalities (but not including
any State or political subdivision of a
State) collectively;
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(4) With respect to a State, the State
and all of its agencies, instrumentalities,
and political subdivisions (including
any municipalities) collectively; and
(5) With respect to a foreign sovereign
entity, the foreign sovereign entity and
all of its agencies, instrumentalities, and
political subdivisions, collectively;
(l) Covered company means:
(1) Any company organized under the
laws of the United States or any State
that the Council has determined under
section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Act (12
U.S.C. 5323) shall be supervised by the
Board and for which such determination
is still in effect (nonbank covered
company); and
(2) Any bank holding company (other
than a foreign banking organization),
that has $50 billion or more in total
consolidated assets, as determined
based on:
(i) The average of the bank holding
company’s total consolidated assets in
the four most recent quarters as reported
quarterly on the bank holding
company’s Consolidated Financial
Statements for Bank Holding Companies
(the Federal Reserve’s FR Y–9C (FR Y–
9C)); or
(ii) The average of the bank holding
company’s total consolidated assets in
the most recent consecutive quarters as
reported quarterly on the bank holding
company’s FR Y–9Cs, if the bank
holding company has not filed an FR Y–
9C for each of the most recent four
quarters.
(3) Once a covered company meets
the requirements described in paragraph
(2), the company shall remain a covered
company for purposes of this subpart
unless and until the company has less
than $50 billion in total consolidated
assets as determined based on each of
the bank holding company’s four most
recent FR Y–9Cs.
(4) Nothing in paragraph (3) shall
preclude a company from becoming a
covered company pursuant to paragraph
(2).
(5) A bank holding that has ceased to
be a covered company under paragraph
(3) is not subject to the requirements of
this subpart beginning on the first day
of the calendar quarter following the
reporting date on which it ceased to be
a covered company.
(m) Credit derivative means a
financial contract that allows one party
(the protection purchaser) to transfer the
credit risk of one or more exposures
(reference exposure) to another party
(the protection provider).
(n) Credit transaction means, with
respect to a counterparty:
(1) Any extension of credit to the
counterparty, including loans, deposits,
and lines of credit, but excluding
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advised or other uncommitted lines of
credit;
(2) Any repurchase or reverse
repurchase agreement with the
counterparty;
(3) Any securities lending or
securities borrowing transaction with
the counterparty;
(4) Any guarantee, acceptance, or
letter of credit (including any confirmed
letter of credit or standby letter of
credit) issued on behalf of the
counterparty;
(5) Any purchase of, or investment in,
securities issued by the counterparty;
(6) Any credit exposure to the
counterparty in connection with a
derivative transaction between the
covered company and the counterparty;
(7) Any credit exposure to the
counterparty in connection with a credit
derivative or equity derivative
transaction between the covered
company and a third party, the
reference asset of which is an obligation
or equity security of the counterparty;
and
(8) Any transaction that is the
functional equivalent of the above, and
any similar transaction that the Board
determines to be a credit transaction for
purposes of this subpart.
(o) Depository institution has the same
meaning as in section 3 of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act, 12 U.S.C.
1813(c).
(p) Derivative transaction means any
transaction that is a contract, agreement,
swap, warrant, note, or option that is
based, in whole or in part, on the value
of, any interest in, or any quantitative
measure or the occurrence of any event
relating to, one or more commodities,
securities, currencies, interest or other
rates, indices, or other assets.
(q) Eligible collateral means collateral
in which the covered company has a
perfected, first priority security interest
or, outside of the United States, the legal
equivalent thereof (with the exception
of cash on deposit and notwithstanding
the prior security interest of any
custodial agent) and is in the form of:
(1) Cash on deposit with the covered
company (including cash held for the
covered company by a third-party
custodian or trustee);
(2) Debt securities (other than
mortgage- or asset-backed securities)
that are bank eligible investments;
(3) Equity securities that are publicly
traded; or
(4) Convertible bonds that are
publicly traded.
(r) Eligible credit derivative means a
single-name credit derivative or a
standard, non-tranched index credit
derivative provided that:
(1) The derivative contract meets the
requirements of an eligible guarantee
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and has been confirmed by the
protection purchaser and the protection
provider;
(2) Any assignment of the derivative
contract has been confirmed by all
relevant parties;
(3) If the credit derivative is a credit
default swap, the derivative contract
includes the following credit events:
(i) Failure to pay any amount due
under the terms of the reference
exposure, subject to any applicable
minimal payment threshold that is
consistent with standard market
practice and with a grace period that is
closely in line with the grace period of
the reference exposure; and
(ii) Bankruptcy, insolvency, or
inability of the obligor on the reference
exposure to pay its debts, or its failure
or admission in writing of its inability
generally to pay its debts as they
become due and similar events;
(4) The terms and conditions dictating
the manner in which the derivative
contract is to be settled are incorporated
into the contract;
(5) If the derivative contract allows for
cash settlement, the contract
incorporates a robust valuation process
to estimate loss with respect to the
derivative reliably and specifies a
reasonable period for obtaining postcredit event valuations of the reference
exposure;
(6) If the derivative contract requires
the protection purchaser to transfer an
exposure to the protection provider at
settlement, the terms of at least one of
the exposures that is permitted to be
transferred under the contract provides
that any required consent to transfer
may not be unreasonably withheld; and
(7) If the credit derivative is a credit
default swap, the derivative contract
clearly identifies the parties responsible
for determining whether a credit event
has occurred, specifies that this
determination is not the sole
responsibility of the protection
provider, and gives the protection
purchaser the right to notify the
protection provider of the occurrence of
a credit event.
(s) Eligible equity derivative means an
equity-linked total return swap,
provided that:
(1) The derivative contract has been
confirmed by the counterparties;
(2) Any assignment of the derivative
contract has been confirmed by all
relevant parties; and
(3) The terms and conditions dictating
the manner in which the derivative
contract is to be settled are incorporated
into the contract.
(t) Eligible guarantee means a
guarantee from an eligible protection
provider that:
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(1) Is written and is either
unconditional or the enforceability of
the guarantee is contingent only to the
extent it is dependent upon affirmative
action on the part of the beneficiary of
the guarantee or a third party (for
example, servicing requirements);
(2) Covers all or a pro rata portion of
all contractual payments of the obligor
on the reference entity;
(3) Gives the beneficiary a direct
claim against the protection provider;
(4) Is not unilaterally cancelable by
the guarantor for reasons other than the
breach of the contract by the
beneficiary;
(5) Is legally enforceable against the
guarantor in a jurisdiction where the
guarantor has sufficient assets against
which a judgment may be attached and
enforced;
(6) Requires the guarantor to make
payment to the beneficiary on the
occurrence of a default (as defined in
the guarantee) of the obligor on the
reference entity in a timely manner
without the beneficiary first having to
take legal actions to pursue the obligor
for payment; and
(7) Does not increase the beneficiary’s
cost of credit protection on the
guarantee in response to deterioration in
the credit quality of the reference entity.
(u) Eligible protection provider means:
(1) A sovereign entity;
(2) The Bank for International
Settlements, the International Monetary
Fund, the European Central Bank, the
European Commission, or a multilateral
development bank;
(3) A Federal Home Loan Bank;
(4) The Federal Agricultural Mortgage
Corporation;
(5) A depository institution;
(6) A bank holding company;
(7) A savings and loan holding
company (as defined in 12 U.S.C.
1467a);
(8) A securities broker or dealer
registered with the SEC under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15
U.S.C. 78o et seq.);
(9) An insurance company that is
subject to the supervision by a State
insurance regulator;
(10) A foreign banking organization;
(11) A non-U.S.-based securities firm
or a non-U.S.-based insurance company
that is subject to consolidated
supervision and regulation comparable
to that imposed on U.S. depository
institutions, securities broker-dealers, or
insurance companies; and
(12) A qualifying central counterparty.
(v) Equity derivative means an equitylinked swap, purchased equity-linked
option, forward equity-linked contract,
or any other instrument linked to
equities that gives rise to similar
counterparty credit risks.
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(w) Foreign banking organization
means any foreign bank or company that
is a bank holding company or is treated
as a bank holding company under
section 8(a) of the International Banking
Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3106(a)).
(x) Gross credit exposure means, with
respect to any credit transaction, the
credit exposure of the covered company
before adjusting for the effect of
qualifying master netting agreements,
eligible collateral, eligible guarantees,
eligible credit derivatives and eligible
equity derivatives.
(y) Immediate family means the
spouse of an individual, the individual’s
minor children, and any of the
individual’s children (including adults)
residing in the individual’s home.
(z) Major counterparty is any
(1) Major covered company and all of
its subsidiaries, collectively; and
(2) Any foreign banking organization
(and all of its subsidiaries, collectively)
that has total consolidated assets equal
to or greater than $500 billion
determined based on the foreign
banking organization’s total
consolidated assets in the most recent
year, for annual filers, or the average of
the four most recent quarters, for
quarterly filers, as reported on the
foreign banking organization’s Capital
and Asset Reports for Foreign Banking
Organizations (Federal Reserve Form FR
Y–7Q).
(aa) Major covered company is any
(1) Covered company that is a bank
holding company and that has total
consolidated assets equal to or greater
than $500 billion determined based on
the average of the bank holding
company’s total consolidated assets in
the four most recent quarters as reported
quarterly on the bank holding
company’s FR Y–9C; and
(2) Nonbank covered company.
(bb) Net credit exposure means, with
respect to any credit transaction, the
gross credit exposure of a covered
company calculated under section
252.94, as adjusted in accordance with
section 252.95.
(cc) Nonbank covered company
means any company organized under
the laws of the United States or any
State that the Council has determined
under section 113 of the Dodd-Frank
Act (12 U.S.C. 5323) shall be supervised
by the Board and for which such
determination is still in effect.
(dd) Publicly traded means traded on:
(1) Any exchange registered with the
U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission as a national securities
exchange under section 6 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15
U.S.C. 78f); or
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651
(2) Any non-U.S.-based securities
exchange that:
(i) Is registered with, or approved by,
a national securities regulatory
authority; and
(ii) Provides a liquid, two-way market
for the instrument in question, meaning
that there are enough independent bona
fide offers to buy and sell so that a sales
price reasonably related to the last sales
price or current bona fide competitive
bid and offer quotations can be
determined promptly and a trade can be
settled at such a price within a
reasonable time period conforming with
trade custom.
(ee) Qualifying central counterparty
means an entity that
(1) Facilitates trades between
counterparties in one or more financial
markets by either guaranteeing trades or
novating contracts;
(2) Requires all participants in its
arrangements to be fully collateralized
on a daily basis; and
(3) Is subject to effective oversight by
a national supervisory authority.
(ff) Qualifying master netting
agreement means a legally enforceable
bilateral agreement such that:
(1) The agreement creates a single
legal obligation for all individual
transactions covered by the agreement
upon an event of default, including
bankruptcy, insolvency, or similar
proceeding of the counterparty;
(2) The agreement provides the
covered company the right to accelerate,
terminate, and close-out on a net basis
all transactions under the agreement
and to liquidate or set off collateral
promptly upon an event of default,
including upon event of bankruptcy,
insolvency, or similar proceeding, of the
counterparty, provided that, in any such
case, any exercise of rights under the
agreement will not be stayed or avoided
under applicable law in the relevant
jurisdiction;
(3) The covered company has
conducted sufficient legal review to
conclude with a well-founded basis
(and has maintained sufficient written
documentation of that legal review) that
the agreement meeting the requirements
of paragraph (2) of this definition and
that in the event of a legal challenge
(including one resulting from default or
from bankruptcy, insolvency or similar
proceeding) the relevant court and
administrative authorities would find
the agreement to be legal, valid, binding,
and enforceable under the law of the
relevant jurisdiction;
(4) The covered company establishes
and maintains procedures to monitor
possible changes in relevant law and to
ensure that the agreement continues to
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satisfy the requirements of this
definition; and
(5) The agreement does not contain a
walkaway clause (that is, a provision
that permits a non-defaulting
counterparty to make lower payments
than it would make otherwise under the
agreement, or no payment at all, to a
defaulter or the estate of a defaulter,
even if the defaulter is a net creditor
under the agreement).206
(gg) Short sale means any sale of a
security which the seller does not own
or any sale which is consummated by
the delivery of a security borrowed by,
or for the account of, the seller.
(hh) Sovereign entity means a central
government (including the U.S.
government) or an agency, department,
ministry, or central bank.
(ii) State means any State, territory or
possession of the United States, and the
District of Columbia.
(jj) Subsidiary of a specified company
means a company that is directly or
indirectly controlled by the specified
company.
(kk) Total capital means qualifying
total capital as defined in 12 CFR part
225, appendix A or total qualifying
capital as defined in 12 CFR part 225,
appendix G, as applicable, or any
successor regulation thereto.
§ 252.93
Credit exposure limit.
(a) General limit on aggregate net
credit exposure. No covered company
shall, together with its subsidiaries,
have an aggregate net credit exposure to
any unaffiliated counterparty that
exceeds 25 percent of the consolidated
capital stock and surplus of the covered
company.
(b) Major covered company limits on
aggregate net credit exposure. No major
covered company shall, together with its
subsidiaries, have aggregate net credit
exposure to any unaffiliated
counterparty that is a major
counterparty that exceeds 10 percent of
the consolidated capital stock and
surplus of the major covered company.
§ 252.94
Gross credit exposure.
(a) Calculation of gross credit
exposure. Under this subpart, exposures
of a covered company to a counterparty
include the exposures of its subsidiaries
to the counterparty. The amount of gross
credit exposure of a covered company to
a counterparty with respect to credit
transactions is, in the case of:
(1) Loans by a covered company to the
counterparty and leases in which the
covered company is the lessor and the
counterparty is the lessee, equal to the
amount owed by the counterparty to the
covered company under the transaction.
(2) Debt securities held by the covered
company that are issued by the
counterparty, equal to:
(i) The greater of the amortized
purchase price or market value, for
trading and available for sale securities,
and
(ii) The amortized purchase price, for
securities held to maturity.
(3) Equity securities held by the
covered company that are issued by the
counterparty, equal to the greater of the
purchase price or market value.
(4) Repurchase agreements, equal to:
(i) The market value of securities
transferred by the covered company to
the counterparty; plus
(ii) The amount in paragraph (4)(i)
multiplied by the collateral haircut in
Table 2 applicable to the securities
transferred by the covered company to
the counterparty.
(5) Reverse repurchase agreements,
equal to the amount of cash transferred
by the covered company to the
counterparty.
(6) Securities borrowing transactions,
equal to the amount of cash collateral
plus the market value of securities
collateral transferred by the covered
company to the counterparty.
(7) Securities lending transactions,
equal to:
(i) The market value of securities lent
by the covered company to the
counterparty; plus
(ii) The amount in paragraph (7)(i)
multiplied by the collateral haircut in
Table 2 applicable to the securities lent
by the covered company to the
counterparty.
(8) Committed credit lines extended
by a covered company to a counterparty,
equal to the face amount of the credit
line.
(9) Guarantees and letters of credit
issued by a covered company on behalf
of a counterparty, equal to the lesser of
the face amount or the maximum
potential loss to the covered company
on the transaction.
(10) Derivative transactions between
the covered company and the
counterparty not subject to a qualifying
master netting agreement, in an amount
equal to the sum of (i) the current
exposure of the derivatives contract
equal to the greater of the mark-tomarket value of the derivative contract
or zero and (ii) the potential future
exposure of the derivatives contract,
calculated by multiplying the notional
principal amount of the derivative
contract by the appropriate conversion
factor, set forth in Table 1.
(11) Derivative transactions between
the covered company and the
counterparty subject to a qualifying
master netting agreement, in an amount
equal to the exposure at default amount
calculated under 12 CFR part 225,
appendix G, § 32(c)(6).
(12) Credit or equity derivative
transactions between the covered
company and a third party where the
covered company is the protection
provider and the reference asset is an
obligation or equity security of the
counterparty, equal to the lesser of the
face amount of the transaction or the
maximum potential loss to the covered
company on the transaction.
TABLE 1—CONVERSION FACTOR MATRIX FOR OTC DERIVATIVE CONTRACTS 1
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Remaining
maturity 2
Interest rate
One year or less ......
Greater than one
year and less than
or equal to five
years .....................
Foreign
exchange rate
17:41 Jan 04, 2012
Credit (nonbank-eligible
reference
obligor)
Precious
metals (except
gold)
Equity
Other
0.00
0.01
0.05
0.10
0.06
0.07
0.10
0.005
0.05
0.05
0.10
0.08
0.07
0.12
206 The Board considers the following
jurisdictions to be relevant for a qualifying master
netting agreement: The jurisdiction in which the
counterparty is chartered or equivalent location in
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obligor) 3
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the case of non-corporate entities, and if a branch
of a counterparty is involved, then also the
jurisdiction in which the branch is located; the
jurisdiction that governs the individual transactions
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covered by the agreement; and the jurisdiction that
governs the agreement.
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TABLE 1—CONVERSION FACTOR MATRIX FOR OTC DERIVATIVE CONTRACTS 1—Continued
Remaining maturity 2
Interest rate
Greater than 5 years
Foreign
exchange rate
0.015
Credit (bankeligible
investment
reference
obligor) 3
0.075
Credit (nonbank-eligible
reference
obligor)
0.05
Precious
metals (except
gold)
Equity
0.10
0.10
0.08
Other
0.15
1 For
an OTC derivative contract with multiple exchanges of principal, the conversion factor is multiplied by the number of remaining payments
in the derivative contract.
2 For an OTC derivative contract that is structured such that on specified dates any outstanding exposure is settled and the terms are reset so
that the market value of the contract is zero, the remaining maturity equals the time until the next reset date. For an interest rate derivative contract with a remaining maturity of greater than one year that meets these criteria, the minimum conversion factor is 0.005.
3 A company must use the column labeled ‘‘Credit (bank-eligible investment reference obligor)’’ for a credit derivative whose reference obligor
has an outstanding unsecured debt security that is a bank eligible investment. A company must use the column labeled ‘‘Credit (non-bank-eligible investment reference obligor)’’ for all other credit derivatives.
(b) Attribution rule. A covered
company must treat any of its
transactions with any person as a credit
exposure to a counterparty to the extent
the proceeds of the transaction are used
for the benefit of, or transferred to, that
counterparty.
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§ 252.95
Net credit exposure.
(a) Calculation of initial net credit
exposure for securities financing
transactions.
(1) Repurchase and reverse
repurchase transactions. For repurchase
and reverse repurchase transactions
with a counterparty that are subject to
a bilateral netting agreement with that
counterparty, a covered company may
use the net credit exposure associated
with the netting agreement.
(2) Securities lending and borrowing
transactions. For a securities lending
and borrowing transactions with a
counterparty that are subject to a
bilateral netting agreement with that
counterparty, a covered company may
use the net credit exposure associated
with the netting agreement.
(b) Market value adjustments. In
computing its net credit exposure to a
counterparty for any credit transaction
(including securities financing
transactions), a covered company may
reduce its gross credit exposure (or as
applicable, net credit exposure for
securities financing transactions
calculated under section 252.95(a)) on
the transaction by the adjusted market
value of any eligible collateral, provided
that:
(1) The covered company includes the
adjusted market value of the eligible
collateral when calculating its gross
credit exposure to the issuer of the
collateral;
(2) The collateral used to adjust the
covered company’s gross credit
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exposure to a counterparty cannot be
used to adjust the covered company’s
gross credit exposure to any other
counterparty; and
(3) In no event will the covered
company’s gross credit exposure to the
issuer of collateral be in excess of its
gross credit exposure to the
counterparty on the credit transaction.
(c) Unused portion of certain
extensions of credit. (1) In computing its
net credit exposure to a counterparty for
a credit line or revolving credit facility,
a covered company may reduce its gross
credit exposure by the amount of the
unused portion of the credit extension
to the extent that the covered company
does not have any legal obligation to
advance additional funds under the
extension of credit, until the
counterparty provides the amount of
adjusted market value of collateral
required with respect to the entire used
portion of the extension of credit.
(2) To qualify for this reduction, the
credit contract must specify that any
used portion of the credit extension
must be fully secured by collateral that
is (i) cash, (ii) obligations of the United
States or its agencies, or (iii) obligations
directly and fully guaranteed as to
principal and interest by, the Federal
National Mortgage Association and the
Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corporation, while operating under the
conservatorship or receivership of the
Federal Housing Finance Agency, and
any additional obligations issued by a
U.S. government sponsored entity as
determined by the Board.
(d) Eligible guarantees. In calculating
net credit exposure to a counterparty for
a credit transaction, a covered company
must reduce its gross credit exposure to
the counterparty by the amount of any
eligible guarantees from an eligible
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protection provider that covers the
transaction, provided that:
(1) The covered company includes the
amount of the eligible guarantees when
calculating its gross credit exposure to
the eligible protection provider; and
(2) In no event will the covered
company’s gross credit exposure to an
eligible protection provider with respect
to an eligible guarantee be in excess of
its gross credit exposure to the
counterparty on the credit transaction
prior to recognition of the eligible
guarantee.
(e) Eligible credit and equity
derivatives. In calculating net credit
exposure to a counterparty for a credit
transaction, a covered company must
reduce its gross credit exposure to the
counterparty by the notional amount of
any eligible credit or equity derivative
from an eligible protection provider that
references the counterparty, as
applicable, provided that:
(1) The covered company includes the
face amount of the eligible credit and
equity derivative when calculating its
gross credit exposure to the eligible
protection provider; and
(2) In no event will the covered
company’s gross credit exposure to an
eligible protection provider with respect
to an eligible credit or equity derivative
be in excess of its gross credit exposure
to the counterparty on the credit
transaction prior to recognition of the
eligible credit or equity derivative.
(f) Other eligible hedges. In
calculating net credit exposure to a
counterparty for a credit transaction, a
covered company may reduce its gross
credit exposure to the counterparty by
the face amount of a short sale of the
counterparty’s debt or equity security.
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TABLE 2—COLLATERAL HAIRCUTS
[Sovereign entities]
Residual maturity
OECD Country Risk Classification 208 0–1 .............................................................
OECD Country Risk Classification 2–3 ..................................................................
Haircut without currency mismatch 207
≤ 1 year ..................................................
>1 year, ≤ 5 years ..................................
> 5 years ................................................
≤ 1 year ..................................................
>1 year, ≤ 5 years ..................................
> 5 years ................................................
0.005
0.02
0.04
0.01
0.03
0.06
CORPORATE AND MUNICIPAL BONDS THAT ARE BANK-ELIGIBLE INVESTMENTS
Residual maturity for debt securities
All ..............................................................................................................................
All ..............................................................................................................................
All ..............................................................................................................................
Haircut without
currency mismatch
≤ 1 year ..................................................
>1 year, ≤ 5 years ..................................
> 5 years ................................................
0.02
0.06
0.12
OTHER ELIGIBLE COLLATERAL
Main index 209 equities (including convertible bonds) ..............................
Other publicly traded equities (including convertible bonds) ...................
Mutual funds .............................................................................................
Cash collateral held ..................................................................................
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§ 252.96
Compliance.
(a) Scope of compliance. Acovered
company must comply with the
requirements of this section on a daily
basis at the end of each business day
and submit on a monthly basis a report
demonstrating its daily compliance.
(b) Noncompliance. Except as
otherwise provided in this section, if a
covered company is not in compliance
with this subpart with respect to a
counterparty solely due to the
circumstances specified in this section
252.96, the covered company will not be
subject to enforcement actions for a
period of 90 days (or such other period
determined by the Board to be
appropriate to preserve the safety and
soundness of the covered company or
U.S. financial stability) if the company
uses reasonable efforts to return to
compliance with this subpart during
this period. The covered company may
not engage in any additional credit
transactions with such a counterparty in
contravention of this rule during the
compliance period, except in cases
where the Board determines that such
credit transactions are necessary or
207 In cases where the currency denomination of
the collateral differs from the currency
denomination of the credit transaction, an addition
8 percent haircut will apply.
208 OECD Country Risk Classification means the
country risk classification as defined in Article 25
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0.15.
0.25.
Highest haircut applicable to any security in which the fund can invest.
0.
appropriate to preserve the safety and
soundness of the covered company or
U.S. financial stability. In granting
approval for such a special temporary
credit exposure limit, the Board will
consider the following:
(1) A decrease in the covered
company’s capital stock and surplus.
(2) The merger of the covered
company with another covered
company.
(3) A merger of two unaffiliated
counterparties.
(4) Any other circumstance the Board
determines is appropriate.
The Board may impose supervisory
oversight and reporting measures that it
determines are appropriate to monitor
compliance with the foregoing
standards as set forth in this paragraph.
§ 252.97
Exemptions.
(a) Exempted exposure categories.
The following categories of credit
transactions are exempt from the limits
on credit exposure under this subpart:
(1) Direct claims on, and the portions
of claims that are directly and fully
guaranteed as to principal and interest
by, the United States and its agencies.
of the OECD’s February 2011 Arrangement on
Officially Supported Export Credits Arrangement.
209 Main index means the Standard & Poor’s 500
Index, the FTSE All-World Index, and any other
index for which the covered company can
demonstrate to the satisfaction of the Federal
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(2) Direct claims on, and the portions
of claims that are directly and fully
guaranteed as to principal and interest
by, the Federal National Mortgage
Association and the Federal Home Loan
Mortgage Corporation, only while
operating under the conservatorship or
receivership of the Federal Housing
Finance Agency, and any additional
obligations issued by a U.S. government
sponsored entity as determined by the
Board.
(3) Intraday credit exposure to a
counterparty.
(4) Any transaction that the Board
exempts if the Board finds that such
exemption is in the public interest and
is consistent with the purpose of this
subsection.
(b) Exemption for Federal Home Loan
Banks. For purposes of this subpart, a
covered company does not include any
Federal Home Loan Bank.
Subpart E—Risk Management
§ 252.125
Definitions.
For purposes of this subpart:
(a) Bank holding company is defined
as in section 2 of the Bank Holding
Reserve that the equities represented in the index
have comparable liquidity, depth of market, and
size of bid-ask spreads as equities in the Standard
& Poor’s 500 Index and FTSE All-World Index.
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Company Act, as amended (12 U.S.C.
1841), and the Board’s Regulation Y
(12 CFR part 225).
(b) Chief risk officer means a
management official of a covered
company who fulfills the
responsibilities described in section
252.126(d) of this subpart.
(c) Company means a corporation,
partnership, limited liability company,
depository institution, business trust,
special purpose entity, association, or
similar organization.
(d) Council means the Financial
Stability Oversight Council established
by section 111 of the Dodd-Frank Act
(12 U.S.C. 5321).
(e) Covered company means
(1) Any company organized under the
laws of the United States or any State
that the Council has determined under
section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Act (12
U.S.C. 5323) shall be supervised by the
Board and for which such determination
is still in effect (nonbank covered
company).
(2) Any bank holding company (other
than a foreign banking organization),
that has $50 billion or more in total
consolidated assets, as determined
based on:
(i) The average of the bank holding
company’s total consolidated assets in
the four most recent quarters as reported
quarterly on the bank holding
company’s Consolidated Financial
Statements for Bank Holding Companies
(the Federal Reserve’s FR Y–9C (FR Y–
9C)); or
(ii) The average of the bank holding
company’s total consolidated assets in
the most recent consecutive quarters as
reported quarterly on the bank holding
company’s FR Y–9Cs, if the bank
holding company has not filed an FR Y–
9C for each of the most recent four
quarters.
(3) Once a covered company meets
the requirements described in paragraph
(2), the company shall remain a covered
company for purposes of this subpart
unless and until the company has less
than $50 billion in total consolidated
assets as determined based on each of
the bank holding company’s four most
recent FR Y–9Cs.
(4) Nothing in paragraph (3) shall
preclude a company from becoming a
covered company pursuant to paragraph
(2).
(5) A bank holding that has ceased to
be a covered company under paragraph
(3) is not subject to the requirements of
this subpart beginning on the first day
of the calendar quarter following the
reporting date on which it ceased to be
a covered company.
(f) Depository institution has the same
meaning as in section 3 of the Federal
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Deposit Insurance Act, 12 U.S.C.
1813(c).
(g) Enterprise-wide risk committee
means a committee of a covered
company’s or over $10 billion bank
holding company’s board of directors
that oversees the risk management
practices of such company’s worldwide
operations.
(h) Foreign banking organization
means any foreign bank or company that
is a bank holding company or is treated
as a bank holding company under
section 8(a) of the International Banking
Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3106(a)).
(i) Independent director means
(1) In the case of a covered company
or over $10 billion bank holding
company that has a class of securities
outstanding that is traded on a national
securities exchange, a member of the
board such company who:
(i) Is not an officer or employee of the
company and has not been an officer or
employee of the company during the
previous three years; and
(ii) Is not a member of the immediate
family, as defined in section
225.41(a)(3) of the Board’s Regulation Y
(12 CFR 225.41(a)(3)), of a person who
is, or has been within the last three
years, an executive officer of the
company, as defined in section
215.2(e)(1) of the Board’s Regulation O
(12 CFR 215.2(e)(1)); and
(iii) Is an independent director under
Item 407 of the Securities and Exchange
Commission’s Regulation S–K, 17 CFR
229.407(a).
(2) In the case of a director of a
covered company or over $10 billion
bank holding company that does not
have a class of securities outstanding
that is traded on a national securities
exchange, a member of the board of
directors of such company who:
(i) Meets the requirements of
paragraphs (1)(i) and (ii) of this section;
and
(ii) The company demonstrates to the
satisfaction of the Federal Reserve
would qualify as an independent
director under the listing standards of a
national securities exchange if the
company were publicly traded on a
national securities exchange.
(j) National securities exchange
means any exchange registered with the
U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission as a national securities
exchange under section 6 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15
U.S.C. 78f).
(k) Publicly traded means traded on:
(1) A national securities exchange; or
(2) Any non-U.S.-based securities
exchange that:
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655
(i) Is registered with, or approved by,
a national securities regulatory
authority; and
(ii) Provides a liquid, two-way market
for the instrument in question, meaning
that there are enough independent bona
fide offers to buy and sell so that a sales
price reasonably related to the last sales
price or current bona fide competitive
bid and offer quotations can be
determined promptly and a trade can be
settled at such a price within a
reasonable time period conforming with
trade custom.
(l) Risk management expertise means
(1) An understanding of risk
management principles and practices
with respect to banking holding
companies or depository institutions, or,
if applicable, nonbank financial
companies, and the ability to assess the
general application of such principles
and practices; and
(2) Experience developing and
applying risk management practices and
procedures, measuring and identifying
risks, and monitoring and testing risk
controls with respect to banking
organizations or, if applicable, nonbank
financial companies.
(m) Over $10 billion bank holding
company means any bank holding
company (other than a foreign banking
organization) that is not a covered
company, and that:
(1) Has $10 billion or more in total
consolidated assets, as determined
based on:
(i) The average of the bank holding
company’s total consolidated assets in
the four most recent quarters as reported
quarterly on the bank holding
company’s Consolidated Financial
Statements for Bank Holding Companies
(the Federal Reserve’s FR Y–9C (FR Y–
9C)); or
(ii) The average of the bank holding
company’s total consolidated assets in
the most recent consecutive quarters as
reported quarterly on the bank holding
company’s FR Y–9Cs, if the bank
holding company has not filed an FR Y–
9C for each of the most recent four
quarters.
(2) Once an over $10 billion bank
holding company meets the
requirements described in paragraph (1),
the company shall remain an over $10
billion bank holding company for
purposes of this part unless and until
the company has less than $10 billion
in total consolidated assets as
determined based on each of the bank
holding company’s four most recent FR
Y–9Cs.
(3) Nothing in paragraph (2) shall
preclude a company from becoming an
over $10 billion bank holding company
pursuant to paragraph (1).
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(4) A bank holding that has ceased to
be an over $10 billion bank holding
company under paragraph (2) is not
subject to the requirements of this
subpart beginning on the first day of the
calendar quarter following the reporting
date on which it ceased to be an over
$10 billion bank holding company.
mstockstill on DSK4VPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS2
§ 252.126 Establishment of risk committee
and appointment of chief risk officer.
(a) Risk committee. Each covered
company and each publicly-traded over
$10 billion bank holding company, shall
maintain an enterprise-wide risk
committee consisting of members of its
board of directors, and, for each covered
company, that satisfies the requirements
of section 252.126(d).
(b) Structure of risk committee. An
enterprise-wide risk committee shall:
(1) Have a formal, written charter,
approved by the company’s board of
directors;
(2) Have at least one member with risk
management expertise that is
commensurate with the company’s
capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, size, and other
appropriate risk related factors;
(3) Be chaired by an independent
director;
(4) Meet with an appropriate
frequency and as needed, and fully
document and maintain records of its
proceedings, including risk management
decisions;
(5) In addition, in the case of a
covered company:
(i) Not be housed within another
committee or be part of a joint
committee;
(ii) Report directly to the covered
company’s board of directors; and
(iii) Receive and review regular
reports from the covered company’s
chief risk officer.
(c) Responsibilities of risk committee.
A risk committee shall document,
review and approve the enterprise-wide
risk management practices of the
company. Specifically, the risk
committee shall oversee the operation
of, on an enterprise wide-basis, an
appropriate risk management framework
commensurate with the company’s
capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, size, and other
appropriate risk-related factors. A
company’s risk management framework
shall include:
(1) Risk limitations appropriate to
each business line of the company;
(2) Appropriate policies and
procedures relating to risk management
governance, risk management practices,
and risk control infrastructure for the
enterprise as a whole;
(3) Processes and systems for
identifying and reporting risks and risk-
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management deficiencies, including
emerging risks, on an enterprise-wide
basis;
(4) Monitoring of compliance with the
company’s risk limit structure and
policies and procedures relating to risk
management governance, practices, and
risk controls across the enterprise;
(5) Effective and timely
implementation of corrective actions to
address risk management deficiencies;
(6) Specification of management and
employees’ authority and independence
to carry out risk management
responsibilities; and
(7) Integration of risk management
and control objectives in management
goals and the company’s compensation
structure.
(d) Chief risk officer. A covered
company shall employ a chief risk
officer who:
(1) Has risk management expertise
that is commensurate with the
company’s capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, size, and other
risk-related factors that are appropriate;
(2) Is appropriately compensated and
incentivized to provide an objective
assessment of the risks taken by the
company;
(3) Reports directly to both the risk
committee and chief executive officer of
the company; and
(4) Directly oversees the following
responsibilities on an enterprise-wide
basis:
(i) Allocating delegated risk limits and
monitoring compliance with such
limits;
(ii) Implementation of and ongoing
compliance with, appropriate policies
and procedures relating to risk
management governance, practices, and
risk controls and monitoring
compliance with such policies and
procedures;
(iii) Developing appropriate processes
and systems for identifying and
reporting risks and risk-management
deficiencies, including emerging risks,
on an enterprise-wide basis;
(iv) Managing risk exposures and risk
controls within the parameters of the
company’s risk control framework; and
(v) Monitoring and testing of the
company’s risk controls;
(vi) Reporting risk management
deficiencies and emerging risks to the
enterprise-wide risk committee; and
(vii) Ensuring that risk management
deficiencies are effectively resolved in a
timely manner.
Subpart F—Supervisory Stress Test
Requirements
§ 252.131
Applicability.
(a) Applicability. (1) In general. A
bank holding company that becomes a
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covered company no less than 90 days
before September 30 of a calendar year
must comply with the requirements of
this subpart from September 30 of that
calendar year and thereafter. A company
the Council has determined shall be
supervised by the Board on a date no
less than 180 days before September 30
of a calendar year must comply with the
requirements of this subpart from
September 30 of that calendar year and
thereafter.
(2) Initial applicability. A bank
holding company that is a covered
company on the effective date of this
subpart must immediately comply with
the requirements, including timing of
required submissions to the Board, of
this subpart.
§ 252.132
Definitions.
For purposes of this subpart:
(a) Bank holding company is defined
as in section 2 of the Bank Holding
Company Act, as amended (12 U.S.C.
1841), and the Board’s Regulation Y
(12 CFR part 225).
(b) Company means a corporation,
partnership, limited liability company,
depository institution, business trust,
special purpose entity, association, or
similar organization.
(c) Council means the Financial
Stability Oversight Council established
by section 111 of the Dodd-Frank Act
(12 U.S.C. 5321).
(d) Covered company means
(1) Any company organized under the
laws of the United States or any State
that the Council has determined under
section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Act (12
U.S.C. 5323) shall be supervised by the
Board and for which such determination
is still in effect (nonbank covered
company).
(2) Any bank holding company (other
than a foreign banking organization),
that has $50 billion or more in total
consolidated assets, as determined
based on:
(i) The average of the bank holding
company’s total consolidated assets in
the four most recent quarters as reported
quarterly on the bank holding
company’s Consolidated Financial
Statements for Bank Holding Companies
(the Federal Reserve’s FR Y–9C (FR Y–
9C)); or
(ii) The average of the bank holding
company’s total consolidated assets in
the most recent consecutive quarters as
reported quarterly on the bank holding
company’s FR Y–9Cs, if the bank
holding company has not filed an FR Y–
9C for each of the most recent four
quarters.
(3) Once a covered company meets
the requirements described in paragraph
(2), the company shall remain a covered
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company for purposes of this subpart
unless and until the company has less
than $50 billion in total consolidated
assets as determined based on each of
the bank holding company’s four most
recent FR Y–9Cs.
(4) Nothing in paragraph (3) shall
preclude a company from becoming a
covered company pursuant to paragraph
(2).
(5) A bank holding that has ceased to
be a covered company under paragraph
(3) is not subject to the requirements of
this subpart beginning on the first day
of the calendar quarter following the
reporting date on which it ceased to be
a covered company.
(e) Depository institution has the same
meaning as in section 3 of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act, 12 U.S.C.
1813(c).
(f) Foreign banking organization
means any foreign bank or company that
is a bank holding company or is treated
as a bank holding company under
section 8(a) of the International Banking
Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3106(a)).
(g) Planning horizon means the period
of time over which stress test
projections must extend. The planning
horizon cannot be less than nine
quarters.
(h) Publicly traded means traded on:
(1) Any exchange registered with the
U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission as a national securities
exchange under section 6 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15
U.S.C. 78f); or
(2) Any non-U.S.-based securities
exchange that:
(i) Is registered with, or approved by,
a national securities regulatory
authority; and
(ii) Provides a liquid, two-way market
for the instrument in question, meaning
that there are enough independent bona
fide offers to buy and sell so that a sales
price reasonably related to the last sales
price or current bona fide competitive
bid and offer quotations can be
determined promptly and a trade can be
settled at such a price within a
reasonable time period conforming with
trade custom.
(i) Scenarios are a set of economic and
financial conditions that the Board
publishes for the use in the supervisory
stress tests annually, including baseline,
adverse, and severely adverse.
§ 252.133 Annual analysis conducted by
the Board.
(a) In general. The Board, in
coordination with the appropriate
primary financial regulatory agencies, as
defined in section 2(12) of Dodd-Frank
Act (12 U.S.C. 5301(12)), and the
Federal Insurance Office, will, on an
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annual basis, conduct an analysis of the
capital, on a total consolidated basis and
taking into account all relevant
exposures and activities of each covered
company to evaluate the ability of the
covered company to absorb losses in
adverse economic and financial
conditions. The analysis will include
the projected net income, losses, and
pro forma, post-stress capital levels and
ratios for the covered company and use
the analytical techniques that the Board
determines are appropriate to identify,
measure, and monitor risks of the
covered company and to the financial
stability of the United States.
(b) Economic and financial scenarios
related to analyses. The Board will
conduct its analysis under section
252.133(a) using a minimum of three
different sets of economic and financial
conditions (scenarios), including
baseline, adverse, and severely adverse
conditions. The Board will notify
covered companies of the conditions the
Board will apply in advance of
conducting the analysis.
§ 252.134 Data and information required to
be submitted in support of the Board’s
analyses.
(a) Regular submissions. The Board
will require each covered company to
submit the data, on a consolidated basis,
that the Board determines is necessary
for it to estimate relevant pro forma
estimates discussed in 252.133(a), of the
covered company over a period of at
least 9 calendar quarters under baseline,
adverse, and severely adverse scenarios,
or other such conditions as determined
appropriate by the Board, including:
(1) Information related to the covered
company’s on- and off-balance sheet
exposures, including in some cases
information on individual items (such
as loans and securities) held by the
company, and including exposures in
the covered company’s trading portfolio,
other trading-related exposures (such as
counterparty-credit risk exposures) or
other items sensitive to changes in
market factors, including, as
appropriate, information about the
sensitivity of positions in the trading
portfolio to changes in market prices
and interest rates.
(2) Information to assist the Board in
estimating the sensitivity of the covered
company’s revenues and expenses to
changes in economic and financial
conditions.
(3) Information to assist the Board in
estimating the likely evolution of the
covered company’s balance sheet (such
as the composition of its loan and
securities portfolios) and allowance for
loan losses, in response to changes in
economic and financial conditions.
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(b) Additional submissions required
by the Board. The Board may require a
covered company to submit any other
information on a consolidated basis the
Board deems necessary in order to:
(1) Ensure that the Board has
sufficient information to conduct its
analysis under this subpart; and
(2) Derive robust projections of a
company’s losses, pre-provision net
revenue, allowance for loan losses, and
future pro forma capital positions under
the baseline, adverse, and severely
adverse scenarios, or other such
conditions as determined appropriate by
the Board.
(c) Confidential treatment of
information submitted. The
confidentiality of information submitted
to the Board under this subpart and
related materials shall be determined in
accordance with applicable exemptions
under the Freedom of Information Act
(5 U.S.C. 552(b)) and the Board’s Rules
Regarding Availability of Information
(12 CFR part 261).
§ 252.135 Review of the Board’s analysis;
publication of summary results.
(a) Review of results. Based on the
results of the analysis conducted under
this subpart, the Board will evaluate
each covered company to determine
whether the covered company has the
capital, on a total consolidated basis,
necessary to absorb losses and continue
to function as a credit intermediary as
a result of adverse and severely adverse
economic and financial market
conditions.
(b) Communication of results to
covered companies. The Board will
convey to each covered company the
results of the Board’s analyses of such
covered company within a reasonable
period of time.
(c) Publication of results by the Board.
Within a reasonable period of time after
completing the analyses of the covered
companies under this subpart, the Board
will publish a summary of the results of
such analyses.
§ 252.136 Post-assessment actions by
covered companies.
(a) In general. Each covered company
shall take the results of the analysis
conducted by the Board under this
subpart into account in making changes,
as appropriate, to the covered
company’s capital structure (including
the level and composition of capital); its
exposures, concentrations, and risk
positions; any plans of the covered
company for recovery; and for
improving overall risk management.
(b) Resolution plan updates. Each
covered company shall make such
updates to its resolution plan as the
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Board determines appropriate, based on
the results of its analyses of the covered
company under this subpart, within 90
days of the Board publishing the
summary results of its analyses.
Subpart G—Company-Run Stress Test
Requirements
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§ 252.141
Applicability.
(a) Applicability. (1) In general. (i) A
bank holding company that becomes a
covered company, or a bank holding
company, a state member bank, or
except as provided in paragraph (a)(2) of
this section, a savings and loan holding
company becomes an over $10 billion
company no less than 90 days before
September 30 of a calendar year must
comply with the requirements of this
subpart from September 30 of that
calendar year and thereafter. A company
that the Council has determined shall be
supervised by the Board on a date no
less than 180 days before September 30
of a calendar year must comply with the
requirements of this subpart from
September 30 of that calendar year and
thereafter.
(ii) A bank holding company that
becomes a covered company no less
than 90 days before March 31 of a
calendar year must comply with the
requirements of this subpart from March
31 of that calendar year and thereafter.
A company that the Council has
determined shall be supervised by the
Board on a date no less than 180 days
before March 31 of a calendar year must
comply with the requirements of this
subpart from March 31 of that calendar
year and thereafter.
(2) Initial applicability. (i) In general.
A bank holding company that is a
covered company or an over $10 billion
company on the effective date of this
subpart must immediately comply with
the requirements, including timing of
required submissions to the Board, of
this subpart.
(ii) Savings and loan holding
companies. A savings and loan holding
company that is an over $10 billion
company, before or after the effective
date of this subpart, would not be
subject to the proposed requirements,
including timing of required
submissions to the Board, until savings
and loan holding companies are subject
to minimum risk-based capital and
leverage requirements.
§ 252.142
Definitions.
For purposes of this subpart:
(a) Bank holding company is defined
as in section 2 of the Bank Holding
Company Act, as amended (12 U.S.C.
1841), and the Board’s Regulation Y (12
CFR part 225).
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(b) Company means a corporation,
partnership, limited liability company,
depository institution, business trust,
special purpose entity, association, or
similar organization.
(c) Council means the Financial
Stability Oversight Council established
by section 111 of the Dodd-Frank Act
(12 U.S.C. 5321).
(d) Covered company means
(1) Any company organized under the
laws of the United States or any State
that the Council has determined under
section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Act (12
U.S.C. 5323) shall be supervised by the
Board and for which such determination
is still in effect (nonbank covered
company).
(2) Any bank holding company (other
than a foreign banking organization),
that has $50 billion or more in total
consolidated assets, as determined
based on:
(i) The average of the bank holding
company’s total consolidated assets in
the four most recent quarters as reported
quarterly on the bank holding
company’s Consolidated Financial
Statements for Bank Holding Companies
(the Federal Reserve’s FR Y–9C (FR Y–
9C)); or
(ii) The average of the bank holding
company’s total consolidated assets in
the most recent consecutive quarters as
reported quarterly on the bank holding
company’s FR Y–9Cs, if the bank
holding company has not filed an FR Y–
9C for each of the most recent four
quarters.
(3) Once a covered company meets
the requirements described in paragraph
(2), the company shall remain a covered
company for purposes of this subpart
unless and until the company has less
than $50 billion in total consolidated
assets as determined based on each of
the bank holding company’s four most
recent FR Y–9Cs.
(4) Nothing in paragraph (3) shall
preclude a company from becoming a
covered company pursuant to paragraph
(2).
(5) A bank holding that has ceased to
be a covered company under paragraph
(3) is not subject to the requirements of
this subpart beginning on the first day
of the calendar quarter following the
reporting date on which it ceased to be
a covered company.
(e) Depository institution has the same
meaning as in section 3 of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act, 12 U.S.C.
1813(c).
(f) Foreign banking organization
means any foreign bank or company that
is a bank holding company or is treated
as a bank holding company under
section 8(a) of the International Banking
Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3106(a)).
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(g) Planning horizon means the period
of time over which stress test
projections must extend. The planning
horizon cannot be less than nine
quarters.
(h) Publicly traded means traded on:
(1) Any exchange registered with the
U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission as a national securities
exchange under section 6 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15
U.S.C. 78f); or
(2) Any non-U.S.-based securities
exchange that:
(i) Is registered with, or approved by,
a national securities regulatory
authority; and
(ii) Provides a liquid, two-way market
for the instrument in question, meaning
that there are enough independent bona
fide offers to buy and sell so that a sales
price reasonably related to the last sales
price or current bona fide competitive
bid and offer quotations can be
determined promptly and a trade can be
settled at such a price within a
reasonable time period conforming with
trade custom.
(i) Over $10 billion company means
any:
(1) Bank holding company (other than
a foreign banking organization) that is
not a covered company and that has
more than $10 billion in total
consolidated assets, as determined
based on:
(i) The average of the bank holding
company’s total consolidated assets in
the four most recent quarters as reported
quarterly on the bank holding
company’s FR Y–9C; or
(ii) The average of the bank holding
company’s total consolidated assets in
the most recent consecutive quarters as
reported quarterly on the bank holding
company’s FR Y–9Cs, if the bank
holding company has not filed an FR Y–
9C for each of the most recent four
quarters;
(2) Savings and loan holding company
that is not a covered company and that
has more than $10 billion in total
consolidated assets, as determined
based on:
(i) The average of the savings and loan
holding company’s total consolidated
assets in the four most recent quarters
as reported quarterly on the savings and
loan holding company’s relevant
regulatory report; or
(ii) The average of the savings and
loan holding company’s total
consolidated assets in the most recent
consecutive quarters as reported
quarterly on the savings and loan
holding company’s relevant regulatory
reports, if the savings and loan holding
company has not filed such a report for
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each of the most recent four quarters;
and
(3) State member bank that has more
than $10 billion in total consolidated
assets, as determined based on:
(i) The average of the state member
bank’s total consolidated assets in the
four most recent quarters as reported
quarterly on the state member bank’s
Consolidated Report of Condition and
Income (Call Report); or
(ii) The average of the state member
bank’s total consolidated assets in the
most recent consecutive quarters as
reported quarterly on the state member
bank’s Call Report, if the state member
bank has not filed a Call Report for each
of the most recent four quarters.
(4) Once a company or bank meets the
requirements described in paragraphs
(1), (2), or (3), the company shall remain
an over $10 billion company for
purposes of this part unless and until
the company has $10 billion or less in
total consolidated assets as determined
based on each of the bank holding
company’s four most recent FR Y–9Cs,
the savings and loan holding company’s
four most recent relevant regulatory
reports, or the bank’s four most recent
Call Reports.
(5) Nothing in paragraph (2) shall
preclude a company from becoming an
over $10 billion company pursuant to
paragraph (1).
(6) A company or bank that has
ceased to be an over $10 billion
company under paragraphs (1), (2), or
(3) is not subject to the requirements of
this subpart beginning on the first day
of the calendar quarter following the
reporting date on which it ceased to be
an over $10 billion company.
(j) Scenarios are sets of economic and
financial conditions used in the
companies’ stress tests, including
baseline, adverse, and severely adverse.
(k) State member bank has the same
meaning as in section 208.2(g) of the
Board’s Regulation H (12 CFR 208.2(g)).
(l) Stress test is a process to assess the
potential impact on a covered company
or an over $10 billion company of
economic and financial conditions
(scenarios) on the consolidated
earnings, losses and capital of the
company over a set planning horizon,
taking into account the current
condition of the company and the
company’s risks, exposures, strategies,
and activities.
§ 252.143
Annual stress test.
(a) In general.
(1) Each covered company and each
over $10 billion company shall
complete an annual stress test of itself
based on data of the covered company
or the over $10 billion company as of
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September 30 of that calendar year,
except for data related to the covered
company’s trading and counterparty
exposures for which the Board will
communicate the required as of date in
the fourth quarter of each year.
(2) The stress test shall be conducted
in accordance with this section and the
methodologies and practices described
in section 252.145.
(b) Scenarios provided by the Board.
In conducting its annual stress tests
under this section, each covered
company and each over $10 billion
company must use scenarios provided
by the Board that reflect a minimum of
three sets of economic and financial
conditions, including a baseline,
adverse, and severely adverse scenario.
In advance of these stress tests, the
Board will provide to all covered
companies and over $10 billion
companies a description of the baseline,
adverse, and severely adverse scenarios
that each covered company and each
over $10 billion company shall use to
conduct its annual stress tests under
this subpart.
§ 252.144 Additional stress test for
covered companies.
(a) Additional stress test requirement.
(1) Each covered company must
complete an additional stress test each
year based on data of that company as
of March 31 of that calendar year except
for data related to the covered
company’s trading and counterparty
exposures for which the Board will
communicate the required as of date in
the fourth quarter of each year.
(2) The stress test shall be conducted
in accordance with this section and the
methodologies and practices described
in section 252.145.
(b) Scenarios related to additional
stress tests.
(1) In general. Each company subject
to a stress test under this section
252.144 shall develop and employ
scenarios reflecting a minimum of three
sets of economic and financial
conditions, including a baseline,
adverse, and severely adverse scenario,
or such additional conditions as the
Board determines appropriate, in
conducting each stress test required
under this paragraph.
§ 252.145
Methodologies and practices.
(a) Potential impact on capital.
(1) In conducting a stress test under
section 252.143 and section 252.144,
each covered company and each over
$10 billion company shall calculate how
each of the following are impacted
during each quarter of the stress test
planning horizon, for each scenario:
(i) Potential losses, pre-provision net
revenues, allowance for loan losses, and
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659
future pro forma capital positions over
the planning horizon; and
(ii) Capital levels and capital ratios,
including regulatory and any other
capital ratios specified by the Board.
(b) Controls and oversight of stress
testing processes.
(1) Each covered company and each
over $10 billion company must establish
and maintain a system of controls,
oversight, and documentation,
including policies and procedures,
designed to ensure that the stress testing
processes used by the covered company
or over $10 billion company are
effective in meeting the requirements in
this subpart. These policies and
procedures must, at a minimum,
describe the covered company’s or over
$10 billion company’s stress testing
practices and methodologies, validation
and use of stress tests results, and
processes for updating the company’s
stress testing practices consistent with
relevant supervisory guidance. Policies
of covered companies must describe
processes for scenario development for
the additional stress test required under
section 252.144.
(2) The board of directors and senior
management of each covered company
and each over $10 billion company shall
approve and annually review the
controls, oversight, and documentation,
including policies and procedures, of
the covered company or the over $10
billion company established pursuant to
this subpart.
§ 252.146 Required report to the Board of
stress test results and related information.
(a) Report required for stress tests. On
or before January 5 of each year, each
covered company and each over $10
billion company must report the results
of the stress test required under section
252.143 to the Board in accordance with
section 252.146(b). On or before July 5
of each year, each covered company
must report the results of the stress test
required under section 252.144 to the
Board, in accordance with section
252.146(b).
(b) Content of report for both annual
and additional stress tests. Each covered
company and each over $10 billion
company must file a report in the
manner and form established by the
Board.
(c) Confidential treatment of
information submitted. The
confidentiality of information submitted
to the Board under this subpart and
related materials shall be determined in
accordance with applicable exemptions
under the Freedom of Information Act
(5 U.S.C. 552(b)) and the Board’s Rules
Regarding Availability of Information
(12 CFR part 261).
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§ 252.147 Post-assessment actions by
covered companies.
(a) Each covered company and each
over $10 billion company shall take the
results of the stress tests conducted
under section 252.143 and, if
applicable, section 252.144, into
account in making changes, as
appropriate, to the covered company’s
capital structure (including the level
and composition of capital); its
exposures, concentrations, and risk
positions; any plans for recovery and
resolution; and to improve overall risk
management.
§ 252.148 Publication of results by
covered companies and over $10 billion
companies.
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(a) Public disclosure of results
required for stress tests of covered
companies and of over $10 billion
companies. Within 90 days of
submitting a report for its required
stress test under section 252.143 and
section 252.144, as applicable, a covered
company and an over $10 billion
company shall disclose publicly a
summary of the results of the stress tests
required under section 252.143 and
section 252.144, as applicable.
(b) Information to be disclosed in the
summary. The information disclosed by
each covered company and each over
$10 billion company, as applicable,
shall, at a minimum, include—
(1) A description of the types of risks
being included in the stress test;
(2) For each covered company, a highlevel description of scenarios developed
by the company under section
252.144(b), including key variables used
(such as GDP, unemployment rate,
housing prices);
(3) A general description of the
methodologies employed to estimate
losses, pre-provision net revenue,
allowance for loan losses, and changes
in capital positions over the planning
horizon; and
(4) Aggregate losses, pre-provision net
revenue, allowance for loan losses, net
income, and pro forma capital levels
and capital ratios (including regulatory
and any other capital ratios specified by
the Board) over the planning horizon,
under each scenario.
Subpart H—Debt-to-Equity Limits for
Certain Covered Companies
§ 252.151
Definitions.
(a) Bank holding company is defined
as in section 2 of the Bank Holding
Company Act, as amended (12 U.S.C.
1841), and the Board’s Regulation Y (12
CFR part 225).
(b) Company means a corporation,
partnership, limited liability company,
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depository institution, business trust,
special purpose entity, association, or
similar organization.
(c) Council means the Financial
Stability Oversight Council established
by section 111 of the Dodd-Frank Act
(12 U.S.C. 5321).
(d) Covered company means
(1) Any company organized under the
laws of the United States or any State
that the Council has determined under
section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Act (12
U.S.C. 5323) shall be supervised by the
Board and for which such determination
is still in effect (nonbank covered
company).
(2) Any bank holding company (other
than a foreign banking organization),
that has $50 billion or more in total
consolidated assets, as determined
based on:
(i) The average of the bank holding
company’s total consolidated assets in
the four most recent quarters as reported
quarterly on the bank holding
company’s Consolidated Financial
Statements for Bank Holding Companies
(the Federal Reserve’s FR Y–9C (FR Y–
9C)); or
(ii) The average of the bank holding
company’s total consolidated assets in
the most recent consecutive quarters as
reported quarterly on the bank holding
company’s FR Y–9Cs, if the bank
holding company has not filed an FR Y–
9C for each of the most recent four
quarters.
(3) Once a covered company meets
the requirements described in paragraph
(2), the company shall remain a covered
company for purposes of this part
unless and until the company has less
than $50 billion in total consolidated
assets as determined based on each of
the bank holding company’s four most
recent FR Y–9Cs.
(4) Nothing in paragraph (3) shall
preclude a company from becoming a
covered company pursuant to paragraph
(2).
(5) A bank holding that has ceased to
be a covered company under paragraph
(3) is not subject to the requirements of
this subpart beginning on the first day
of the calendar quarter following the
reporting date on which it ceased to be
a covered company.
(e) Debt-to-equity ratio means the
ratio of a company’s total liabilities to
a company’s total equity capital less
goodwill.
(f) Debt and equity have the same
meaning as ‘‘total liabilities’’ and ‘‘total
equity capital’’, respectively, as
reported:
(1) In the case of a nonbank financial
company supervised by the Board, in a
report of financial condition filed
pursuant to section 161(a) of the Dodd-
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Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act (12 U.S.C. 5361(a)), or
otherwise as required by the Board.
(2) In the case of a bank holding
company (other than a foreign banking
organization), on the Federal Reserve’s
Form FR Y–9C (Consolidated Financial
Statements for Bank Holding
Companies) or any successor form.
(g) Depository institution has the same
meaning as in section 3 of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act, 12 U.S.C.
1813(c).
(h) Foreign banking organization
means any foreign bank or company that
is a bank holding company or is treated
as a bank holding company under
section 8(a) of the International Banking
Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3106(a)).
(i) Publicly traded means traded on:
(1) Any exchange registered with the
U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission as a national securities
exchange under section 6 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15
U.S.C. 78f); or
(2) Any non-U.S.-based securities
exchange that:
(i) Is registered with, or approved by,
a national securities regulatory
authority; and
(ii) Provides a liquid, two-way market
for the instrument in question, meaning
that there are enough independent bona
fide offers to buy and sell so that a sales
price reasonably related to the last sales
price or current bona fide competitive
bid and offer quotations can be
determined promptly and a trade can be
settled at such a price within a
reasonable time period conforming with
trade custom.
§ 252.152
Debt-to-equity ratio limitation.
(a) Notice and maximum debt-toequity ratio requirement. Beginning no
later than 180 days after receiving
written notice from the Council that it
has made a determination, pursuant to
section 165(j) of the Dodd-Frank Act
that a covered company poses a grave
threat to the financial stability of the
United States (identified company) and
that the imposition of a debt to equity
requirement is necessary to mitigate
such risk, an identified company shall
achieve and maintain a debt to equity
ratio of no more than 15-to-1.
(b) Extension. The Board may, upon
request by an identified company,
extend the time period for compliance
established under paragraph (a) for up
to two additional periods of 90 days
each, if the Board determines that the
identified company has made good faith
efforts to comply with the debt to equity
ratio requirement and that each
extension would be in the public
interest.
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(c) Termination. The debt to equity
ratio requirement in paragraph (a) shall
cease to apply to an identified company
as of the date it receives notice from the
Council of a determination, based on the
factors described in subsections (a) and
(b) of section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Act
(12 U.S.C. 5323), that the company no
longer poses a grave threat to the
financial stability of the United States
and that the imposition of a debt to
equity requirement is no longer
necessary.
Subpart I—Early Remediation
Framework
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§ 252.161
Definitions.
For purposes of this subpart:
(a) Affiliate means, with respect to a
company, any company that controls, is
controlled by, or is under common
control with, the company.
(b) Bank holding company is defined
as in section 2 of the Bank Holding
Company Act, as amended (12 U.S.C.
1841), and the Board’s Regulation Y (12
CFR part 225).
(c) Capital distribution means a
redemption or repurchase of any debt or
equity capital instrument, a payment of
common or preferred stock dividends, a
payment that may be temporarily or
permanently suspended by the issuer on
any instrument that is eligible for
inclusion in the numerator of any
minimum regulatory capital ratio, and
any similar transaction that the Board
determines to be in substance a
distribution of capital.
(d) Company means a corporation,
partnership, limited liability company,
depository institution, business trust,
special purpose entity, association, or
similar organization.
(e) Control is defined as in section 2
of the Bank Holding Company Act, as
amended (12 U.S.C. 1841), and the
Board’s Regulation Y (12 CFR part 225).
(f) Council means the Financial
Stability Oversight Council established
by section 111 of the Dodd-Frank Act
(12 U.S.C. 5321).
(g) Covered company means
(1) Any company organized under the
laws of the United States or any State
that the Council has determined under
section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Act (12
U.S.C. 5323) shall be supervised by the
Board and for which such determination
is still in effect (nonbank covered
company).
(2) Any bank holding company (other
than a foreign banking organization),
that has $50 billion or more in total
consolidated assets, as determined
based on:
(i) The average of the bank holding
company’s total consolidated assets in
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the four most recent quarters as reported
quarterly on the bank holding
company’s Consolidated Financial
Statements for Bank Holding Companies
(the Federal Reserve’s FR Y–9C (FR Y–
9C)); or
(ii) The average of the bank holding
company’s total consolidated assets in
the most recent consecutive quarters as
reported quarterly on the bank holding
company’s FR Y–9Cs, if the bank
holding company has not filed an FR Y–
9C for each of the most recent four
quarters.
(3) Once a covered company meets
the requirements described in paragraph
(2), the company shall remain a covered
company for purposes of this part
unless and until the company has less
than $50 billion in total consolidated
assets as determined based on each of
the bank holding company’s four most
recent FR Y–9Cs.
(4) Nothing in paragraph (3) shall
preclude a company from becoming a
covered company pursuant to paragraph
(2).
(5) A bank holding that has ceased to
be a covered company under paragraph
(3) is not subject to the requirements of
this subpart beginning on the first day
of the calendar quarter following the
reporting date on which it ceased to be
a covered company.
(h) Depository institution has the
same meaning as in section 3 of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act, 12
U.S.C. 1813(c).
(i) Foreign banking organization
means any foreign bank or company that
is a bank holding company or is treated
as a bank holding company under
section 8(a) of the International Banking
Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3106(a)).
(j) Net income means:
(1) For a bank holding company (other
than a foreign banking organization), the
net income as reported on line 14
schedule HI of the company’s FR Y–9C
report.
(2) For a nonbank covered company
that is publicly traded, the net income
as reported on the company’s quarterly
financial statements.
(3) For a nonbank covered company
that is not publicly traded, net income
as reported on the company’s most
recent audited financial statement.
(k) Planning horizon means the period
of time over which stress test
projections must extend. The planning
horizon cannot be less than nine
quarters.
(l) Publicly traded means traded on:
(1) Any exchange registered with the
U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission as a national securities
exchange under section 6 of the
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661
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15
U.S.C. 78f); or
(2) Any non-U.S.-based securities
exchange that:
(i) Is registered with, or approved by,
a national securities regulatory
authority; and
(ii) Provides a liquid, two-way market
for the instrument in question, meaning
that there are enough independent bona
fide offers to buy and sell so that a sales
price reasonably related to the last sales
price or current bona fide competitive
bid and offer quotations can be
determined promptly and a trade can be
settled at such a price within a
reasonable time period conforming with
trade custom.
(m) Risk-weighted assets means total
weighted risk assets, as calculated in
accordance with 12 CFR part 225,
appendix A or 12 CFR part 225,
appendix G, as applicable, or any
successor regulation thereto.
(n) Senior executive officer of a
covered company means a person who
holds the title or, without regard to title,
salary, or compensation, performs the
function of one or more of the following
positions: President, chief executive
officer, executive chairman, chief
operating officer, chief financial officer,
chief investment officer, chief legal
officer, chief lending officer, chief risk
officer, or head of a major business line.
(o) Severely adverse scenario has the
same meaning as defined in the context
of Subpart F of this part.
(p) Tier 1 capital means tier 1 capital
as defined in 12 CFR part 225, appendix
A or 12 CFR part 225, appendix G, as
applicable, or any successor regulation
thereto.
(q) Tier 1 common risk-based capital
ratio means the ratio of tier 1 capital less
the non-common elements of tier 1
capital, including perpetual preferred
stock and related surplus, minority
interest in subsidiaries, trust preferred
securities and mandatory convertible
preferred securities, to risk-weighted
assets.
(r) Tier 1 leverage ratio means the
ratio of tier 1 capital to total assets as
defined in 12 CFR part 225 appendix D,
or any successor regulation thereto.
(s) Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio
means the ratio of tier 1 capital to riskweighted assets, as calculated in
accordance with 12 CFR part 225,
appendix A or 12 CFR part 225,
appendix G, as applicable, or any
successor regulation thereto.
(t) Total capital means qualifying total
capital as defined in 12 CFR part 225,
appendix A or total qualifying capital as
defined in 12 CFR part 225, appendix G,
as applicable, or any successor
regulation thereto.
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(u) Total assets means:
(1) For a bank holding company (other
than a foreign banking organization),
total consolidated assets as reported
quarterly on the bank holding
company’s FR Y–9C.
(2) For a nonbank covered company
that is publicly traded, total
consolidated assets as reported nonbank
covered company’s quarterly financial
statements.
(3) For a nonbank covered company
that is not publicly traded, total
consolidated assets as determined based
on the company’s audited financial
statements.
(v) Total risk-based capital ratio
means the ratio of total capital to riskweighted assets, as calculated in
accordance with 12 CFR part 225,
appendix A or 12 CFR part 225,
appendix G, as applicable, or any
successor regulation thereto.
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§ 252.162
Remediation Actions.
(a) Level 1 remediation (heightened
supervisory review). Under level 1
remediation, the Board shall conduct a
targeted supervisory review of a covered
company to evaluate whether the
covered company is experiencing
financial distress or material risk
management weaknesses such that
further decline of the covered company
is probable and that the covered
company should be subject to initial
remediation (level 2 remediation).
(1) The review required by this
section 252.162(a) must be completed
within 30 days of the company’s
entrance into level one remediation.
(2) If, upon completion of the review,
the Board determines that the covered
company is experiencing financial
distress or material risk management
weaknesses such that further decline of
the covered company is probable, the
covered company shall be subject to
initial remediation (level 2
remediation).
(b) Level 2 remediation (initial
remediation). A covered company
subject to level 2 remediation:
(1) Shall not make capital
distributions during any calendar
quarter in an amount that exceeds 50
percent of the average of the covered
company’s net income in the preceding
two calendar quarters.
(2) Shall not:
(i) Permit its daily average total assets
during any calendar quarter to exceed
its daily average total assets during the
preceding calendar quarter by more than
5 percent; or
(ii) Permit its daily average total assets
during any calendar year to exceed its
daily average total assets during the
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17:41 Jan 04, 2012
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preceding calendar year by more than 5
percent; or
(iii) Permit its daily average riskweighted assets during any calendar
quarter to exceed its daily average riskweighted assets during the preceding
calendar quarter by more than 5 percent;
(iv) Permit its daily average riskweighted assets during any calendar
year to exceed its daily average riskweighted assets during the preceding
calendar year by more than 5 percent;
(v) Directly or indirectly acquire any
controlling interest in any company
(including an insured depository
institution, establish or acquire any
office or other place of business, or
engage in any new line of business),
without the prior approval the Board.
(3) Shall be required to enter into a
non-public memorandum of
understanding, or other enforcement
action acceptable to the Board.
(4) In addition, may be subject to the
following additional limitations
imposed by the Board:
(i) Limitations or conditions on the
conduct or activities of the company or
any of its affiliates that the Board finds
to be appropriate and consistent with
the purposes of Title I of the DoddFrank Act.
(c) Level 3 remediation (recovery). A
covered company subject to level 3
remediation:
(1) May not make any capital
distribution.
(2) Shall not:
(i) Permit its average total assets
during any calendar quarter to exceed
its average total assets during the
preceding calendar quarter; or
(ii) Permit its average total riskweighted assets during any calendar
quarter to exceed its average total riskweighted assets during the preceding
calendar quarter; or
(iii) Directly or indirectly acquire any
interest in any company (including any
insured depository institution),
establish or acquire any office (or other
place of business), or engage in any new
line of business;
(3) Must enter into a written
agreement or other form of enforcement
action with the Board that specifies that
the covered company must raise
additional capital and take other
appropriate actions to improve its
capital adequacy.
(i) If a covered company fails to
satisfy the requirements of such a
written agreement, the covered
company may be required to divest
assets identified by the Board as
contributing to the covered company’s
financial decline or posing substantial
risk of contributing to further financial
decline of the covered company.
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(4) Shall not increase the
compensation of, or pay any bonus to,
its senior executive officers or directors.
(5) May also be required by the Board
to:
(i) Conduct a new election for the
institution’s board of directors;
(ii) Dismiss from office any director or
senior executive officer of the covered
company who had held office for more
than 180 days immediately prior to
receipt of notice pursuant to section
252.164 that the covered company is
subject to level 3 remediation; or
(iii) Employ qualified senior executive
officers approved by the Board.
(6) The Board may place restrictions
on a covered company engaging in
transactions with its affiliates if it is
subject to level 3 remediation.
(d) Level 4 remediation (resolution
assessment). The Board shall consider
whether the covered company poses a
risk to the stability of the U.S. financial
system. If the Board determines, based
on the covered company’s financial
decline and the risk posed to U.S.
financial stability by the failure of the
covered company or other relevant
factors, that the covered company
should be placed into receivership
under Title II of the Dodd-Frank Act, the
Board shall make a written
recommendation that the covered
company be placed in resolution under
Title II of the Dodd-Frank Act.
§ 252.163
Remediation triggering events.
(a) Capital and leverage.
(1) Level 1 remediation triggering
events. A covered company that has a
total risk-based capital ratio of 10.0
percent or greater, a tier 1 risk-based
capital ratio of 6.0 percent or greater,
and a tier 1 leverage ratio of 5.0 percent
or greater, is subject to level 1
remediation (heightened supervisory
review) if the Board determines that the
covered company’s capital structure,
capital planning processes, or the
amount of capital it holds is not
commensurate with the level and nature
of the risks to which it is exposed.
(2) Level 2 remediation triggering
events. A covered company is subject to
level 2 remediation (initial remediation)
if it has a total risk-based capital ratio
of less than 10.0 percent and greater
than or equal to 8.0 percent, a tier 1 riskbased capital ratio of less than 6.0
percent and greater than or equal to 4.0
percent or a tier 1 leverage ratio of less
than 5.0 percent and greater than or
equal to 4.0 percent.
(3) Level 3 remediation triggering
events. A covered company is subject to
level 3 remediation (recovery) if:
(i) For two complete consecutive
quarters, the covered company has a
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total risk-based capital ratio of less than
10.0 percent, a tier 1 risk-based capital
ratio of less than 6.0 percent or a tier 1
leverage ratio of less than 5.0 percent; or
(ii) The covered company has a total
risk-based capital ratio of less than 8.0
percent and greater than or equal to 6.0
percent, a tier 1 risk-based capital ratio
of less than 4.0 percent and greater than
or equal to 3.0 percent or a tier 1
leverage ratio of less than 4.0 percent
and greater than or equal to 3.0 percent.
(iii) Level 4 remediation triggering
events. A covered company is subject to
level 4 remediation (resolution
assessment) if it has a total risk-based
capital ratio of less than 6.0 percent, a
tier 1 risk-based capital ratio of less than
3.0 percent or a tier 1 leverage ratio of
less than 3.0 percent.
(b) Stress Tests.
(1) Level 1 remedial triggering events.
A covered company is subject to level
1 remediation if it is not in compliance
with any regulations adopted by the
Board relating to capital plans pursuant
to 12 CFR 225.8 and stress tests
pursuant to Subparts F and G of this
part.
(2) Level 2 remediation triggering
events. A covered company is subject to
level 2 remediation (initial remediation)
if its results under the severely adverse
scenario in any quarter of the planning
horizon produced pursuant to a stress
test executed pursuant to Subpart F of
this part reflect a tier 1 common riskbased capital ratio of less than 5.0
percent and greater than or equal to 3.0
percent.
(3) Level 3 remediation triggering
events. A covered company is subject to
level 3 remediation (recovery) if its
results under the severely adverse
scenario in any quarter of the planning
horizon produced pursuant to a stress
test executed pursuant to Subpart F of
this part reflect a tier 1 common riskbased capital ratio of less than 3.0
percent.
(c) Risk Management.
(1) Level 1 remedial triggering events.
A covered company is subject to level
1 remediation if it has manifested signs
of weakness in meeting the enhanced
risk management and risk committee
requirements under Subpart E of this
part.
(2) Level 2 remediation triggering
events. A covered company is subject to
level 2 remediation if it has
demonstrated multiple deficiencies in
meeting the enhanced risk management
or risk committee requirements under
Subpart E of this part.
(3) Level 3 remediation triggering
events. A covered company is subject to
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level 3 remediation if it is in substantial
noncompliance with the enhanced risk
management and risk committee
requirements under Subpart E of this
part.
(d) Liquidity.
(1) Level 1 remedial triggering events.
A covered company is subject to level
1 remediation if it has manifested signs
of weakness in meeting the enhanced
liquidity risk management requirements
under Subpart C.
(2) Level 2 remediation triggering
events. A covered company is subject to
level 2 remediation if it has
demonstrated multiple deficiencies in
meeting the enhanced liquidity risk
management requirements under
Subpart C.
(3) Level 3 remediation triggering
events. A covered company is subject to
level 3 remediation if it is in substantial
noncompliance with the enhanced
liquidity risk management requirements
under Subpart C.
(e) Market indicators.
(1) Definitions.
(i) Market indicator means an
indicator based on publicly available
market data that is identified in the
annual indicator list, as specified by the
Board.
(ii) Indicator list means a list of the
market indicators and market indicator
thresholds that will be used during a
defined period, as specified by the
Board.
(iii) Breach period means the number
of consecutive business days, as
specified by the Board, over which the
median value of a market indicator must
exceed the market indicator threshold to
trigger remediation.
(iv) Market indicator threshold means,
with respect to each market indicator
described on the indicator list, the level,
as specified by the Board, indicating
that a covered company is experiencing
financial distress or material risk
management weaknesses such that
further decline of the covered company
is probable based on historic measures
of data.
(2) The Board shall publish for
comment annually, or less frequently as
appropriate, the indicator list, market
indicator thresholds, and breach period
that will be used during a twelve-month
period.
(3) A covered company shall be
subject to level 1 remediation upon
receipt of a notice indicating that the
Board has found that, with respect to
the covered company, any single market
indicator has exceeded the market
indicator threshold for the breach
period.
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663
(f) Measurement and timing of
remediation action events.
(1) Capital. For the purposes of this
subpart, the capital of a covered
company is deemed to have been
calculated as of the most recent of the
following:
(i) The FR Y–9C report;
(ii) Calculations of capital by the
covered company submitted to the
Board, pursuant to a Board request to
the covered company to calculate its
ratios;
(iii) A final inspection report is
delivered to the covered company that
includes capital ratios calculated more
recently than the most recent FR Y–9C
report submitted by the covered
company to the Board.
(2) Stress tests. For purposes of this
paragraph, the ratios calculated under
the supervisory stress test apply as of
the date the Board’s report of the test
results is transmitted to the covered
company pursuant to section 252.135(b)
of Subpart F.
§ 252.164
Notice and remedies.
(a) Notice to covered company of
remediation action event. If the Board
ascertains that a remediation triggering
event set forth in section 252.163 has
occurred with respect to a covered
company, the Board shall notify the
covered company of the event and the
remediation action under section
252.162 applicable to the covered
company as a result of the event.
(b) Notification of Change in Status. If
a covered company becomes aware of (i)
one or more triggering events set forth
in section 252.163; or (ii) a change in
condition that it believes should result
in a change in the remediation
provisions to which it is subject, such
covered company must provide notice
to the Board within 5 business days,
identifying the nature of the triggering
event or change in circumstances.
(c) Termination of remediation action.
A covered company subject to a
remediation action under this subpart
shall remain subject to the remediation
action until the Board provides written
notice to the covered company that its
financial condition or risk management
no longer warrants application of the
requirement.
By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, December 22, 2011.
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 2011–33364 Filed 1–4–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 77, Number 3 (Thursday, January 5, 2012)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 594-663]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-33364]
[[Page 593]]
Vol. 77
Thursday,
No. 3
January 5, 2012
Part III
Federal Reserve System
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12 CFR Part 252
Enhanced Prudential Standards and Early Remediation Requirements for
Covered Companies; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 77 , No. 3 / Thursday, January 5, 2012 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 594]]
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FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 252
[Regulation YY; Docket No. 1438]
RIN 7100-AD-86
Enhanced Prudential Standards and Early Remediation Requirements
for Covered Companies
AGENCY: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board).
ACTION: Proposed rule; request for public comment.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Board is requesting comment on proposed rules that would
implement the enhanced Prudential standards required to be established
under section 165 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act or Act) and the early remediation
requirements established under section 166 of the Act. The enhanced
standards include risk-based capital and leverage requirements,
liquidity standards, requirements for overall risk management
(including establishing a risk committee), single-counterparty credit
limits, stress test requirements, and a debt-to-equity limit for
companies that the Financial Stability Oversight Council has determined
pose a grave threat to financial stability.
DATES: Comments: Comments should be received on or before March 31,
2012.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments, identified by Docket No. 1438 and
RIN 7100-AD-86 by any of the following methods:
Agency Web Site: https://www.federalreserve.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments at https://www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Email: regs.comments@federalreserve.gov. Include docket
and RIN numbers in the subject line of the message.
Fax: (202) 452-3819 or (202) 452-3102.
Mail: Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary, Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System, 20th Street and Constitution Avenue NW.,
Washington, DC 20551.
All public comments are available from the Board's Web site at
https://www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm as
submitted, unless modified for technical reasons. Accordingly, your
comments will not be edited to remove any identifying or contact
information. Public comments may also be viewed electronically or in
paper form in Room MP-500 of the Board's Martin Building (20th and C
Streets NW.) between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. on weekdays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Mark Van Der Weide, Senior Associate
Director, (202) 452-2263, or Molly E. Mahar, Senior Supervisory
Financial Analyst, (202) 973-7360, Division of Banking Supervision and
Regulation; or Laurie Schaffer, Associate General Counsel, (202) 452-
2272, or Dominic A. Labitzky, Senior Attorney, (202) 452-3428, Legal
Division.
Risk-Based Capital Requirements and Leverage Limits: Anna Lee
Hewko, Assistant Director, (202) 530-6260, or Meg Donovan, Supervisory
Financial Analyst, (202) 872-7542, Division of Banking Supervision and
Regulation; or April C. Snyder, Senior Counsel, (202) 452-3099, or
Benjamin W. McDonough, Senior Counsel, (202) 452-2036, Legal Division.
Liquidity Requirements: Mary Aiken, Manager, (202) 721-4534, or
Chris Powell, Financial Analyst, (202) 921-4353, Division of Banking
Supervision and Regulation; or April C. Snyder, Senior Counsel, (202)
452-3099, Legal Division.
Single-Counterparty Credit Limits: Mark Van Der Weide, Senior
Associate Director, (202) 452-2263, or Molly E. Mahar, Senior
Supervisory Financial Analyst, (202) 973-7360, Division of Banking
Supervision and Regulation; or Pamela G. Nardolilli, Senior Counsel,
(202) 452-3289, Patricia P. Yeh, Counsel, (202) 912-4304, or Anna M.
Harrington, Attorney, (202) 452-6406, Legal Division.
Risk Management and Risk Committee Requirements: Pamela A. Martin,
Senior Supervisory Financial Analyst, (202) 452-3442, Division of
Banking Supervision and Regulation; or Jonathan D. Stoloff, Senior
Counsel, (202) 452-3269, or Jeremy C. Kress, Attorney, (202) 872-7589,
Legal Division.
Stress Test Requirements: Tim Clark, Senior Adviser, (202) 452-
5264, Lisa Ryu, Assistant Director, (202) 263-4833, Constance Horsley,
Manager, (202) 452-5239 or David Palmer, Senior Supervisory Financial
Analyst, (202) 452-2904, Division of Banking Supervision and
Regulation; Dominic A. Labitzky, Senior Attorney, (202) 452-3428, or
Christine E. Graham, Senior Attorney, (202) 452-3005, Legal Division.
Debt-to-Equity Limits for Certain Covered Companies: Robert Motyka,
Senior Project Manager, (202) 452-5231, Division of Banking Supervision
and Regulation; or April C. Snyder, Senior Counsel, (202) 452-3099, or
Benjamin W. McDonough, Senior Counsel, (202) 452-2036, Legal Division.
Early Remediation Framework: Barbara J. Bouchard, Senior Associate
Director, (202) 452-3072, or Molly E. Mahar, Senior Supervisory
Financial Analyst, (202) 973-7360, Division of Banking Supervision and
Regulation; or Paul F. Hannah, Counsel, (202) 452-2810, or Jay R.
Schwarz, Counsel, (202) 452-2970, Legal Division.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
II. Overview of the Proposal
A. Scope of Application
B. Risk-Based Capital Requirements and Leverage Limits
C. Liquidity Requirements
D. Single-Counterparty Credit Limits
E. Risk Management and Risk Committee Requirements
F. Stress Testing Requirements
G. Debt-to-Equity Limits for Certain Covered Companies
H. Early Remediation Framework
I. Transition Arrangements and Ongoing Compliance
J. Reservation of Authority
K. Common Definitions
III. Risk-Based Capital Requirements and Leverage Limits
A. Background
B. Overview of the Proposed Rule
1. Capital Planning and Minimum Capital Requirements
2. Quantitative Risk-Based Capital Surcharge
IV. Liquidity Requirements
A. Background
B. Overview of the Proposed Rule
1. Key Definitions
2. Corporate Governance Provisions
3. Liquidity Requirements
V. Single Counterparty Exposure Limits
A. Background
B. Overview of the Proposed Rule
VI. Risk Management and Risk Committee Requirements
A. Background
B. Overview of the Proposed Rule
1. Risk Committee Requirements
2. Additional Enhanced Risk Management Standards for Covered
Companies
VII. Stress Test Requirements
A. Background
B. Overview of the Proposed Rule
1. Annual Supervisory Stress Tests Conducted by the Board
2. Annual and Additional Stress Tests Conducted by the Companies
C. Request for Comments
VIII. Debt-to-Equity Limit for Certain Covered Companies
A. Background
B. Overview of the Proposed Rule
IX. Early Remediation
A. Background
B. Overview of the Proposed Rule
1. Early Remediation Requirements
2. Early Remediation Triggering Events
[[Page 595]]
X. Administrative Law Matters
A. Solicitation of Comments and Use of Plain Language
B. Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
I. Introduction
The recent financial crisis showed that some financial companies
had grown so large, leveraged, and interconnected that their failure
could pose a threat to overall financial stability. The sudden
collapses or near-collapses of major financial companies were among the
most destabilizing events of the crisis. The crisis also demonstrated
weaknesses in the existing framework for supervising, regulating and
otherwise constraining the risks of major financial companies, as well
as deficiencies in the government's toolkit for managing their failure.
As a result of the imprudent risk taking of major financial
companies and the severe consequences to the financial system and the
economy associated with the disorderly failure of these interconnected
companies, the U.S. government (and many foreign governments in their
home countries) intervened on an unprecedented scale to reduce the
impact of, or prevent, the failure of these companies and the attendant
consequences for the broader financial system. Market participants
before the crisis had assumed some probability that major financial
companies would receive government assistance if they became troubled.
But the actions taken by the government in response to the crisis,
although necessary, have solidified that market view.
The market perception that some companies are ``too big to fail''
poses threats to the financial system. First, it reduces the incentives
of shareholders, creditors and counterparties of these companies to
discipline excessive risk-taking. Second, it produces competitive
distortions because companies perceived as ``too big to fail'' can
often fund themselves at a lower cost than other companies. This
distortion is unfair to smaller companies, damaging to competition, and
tends to artificially encourage further consolidation and concentration
in the financial system.
A major thrust of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act of 2010 (Dodd-Frank Act or Act) \1\ is mitigating the
threat to financial stability posed by systemically important financial
companies. The Dodd-Frank Act addresses this problem with a multi-
pronged approach: a new orderly liquidation authority for financial
companies (other than banks and insurance companies); the establishment
of the Financial Stability Oversight Council (Council) empowered with
the authority to designate nonbank financial companies for Board
oversight; stronger regulation of major bank holding companies and
nonbank financial companies designated for Board oversight; and
enhanced regulation of over-the-counter (OTC) derivatives, other core
financial markets, and financial market utilities.
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\1\ Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010).
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Overview of Statutory Requirements
The focus of this proposal is stronger regulation of major bank
holding companies and nonbank financial companies designated by the
Council for Board supervision. In particular, sections 165 and 166 of
the Dodd-Frank Act require the Board to impose a package of enhanced
prudential standards on bank holding companies with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more \2\ and nonbank financial companies the
Council has designated, pursuant to section 113 of the Dodd-Frank
Act,\3\ for supervision by the Board (together, covered companies and
each a covered company). By their terms, sections 165 and 166 of the
Act apply to any foreign nonbank financial company designated by the
Council for supervision by the Board \4\ and any foreign banking
organization with total consolidated assets of $50 billion or more that
is or is treated as a bank holding company for purposes of the Bank
Holding Company Act of 1956 pursuant to section 8(a) of the
International Banking Act of 1978.\5\ However, as explained in greater
detail below, this proposal does not apply to foreign banking
organizations, and the Board expects to issue a separate proposal
shortly that would apply the enhanced standards of sections 165 and 166
of the Act to foreign banking organizations. The definition of
``covered company'' for purposes of the proposal would nonetheless
include a foreign banking organization's U.S.-based bank holding
company subsidiary that on its own has total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more.\6\ This proposal would not extend to the U.S.
operations of a foreign banking organization that are conducted outside
of a U.S.-based bank holding company subsidiary.
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\2\ The Board, pursuant to a Council recommendation, may raise
the $50 billion asset threshold for bank holding companies with
respect to the application of certain enhanced standards. See 12
U.S.C. 5365(a)(2)(B).
\3\ See 12 U.S.C. 5323. The Council proposed rules to implement
its authority under section 113 in January 2011 and October 2011.
See 76 FR 4555 (January 26, 2011) and 76 FR 64264 (October 18,
2011).
\4\ See 12 U.S.C. 5323(b). Section 102(c) limits the application
of section 165 to only the U.S. activities and subsidiaries of a
foreign nonbank financial company. 12 U.S.C. 5311(c).
\5\ See 12 U.S.C. 5311(a)(1) (defining the term ``bank holding
company'' for purposes of Title I of the Dodd-Frank Act). A foreign
banking organization is treated as a bank holding company pursuant
to section 8(a) of the International Banking Act if the foreign
banking organization operates a branch, agency or commercial lending
company in the United States.
\6\ With the exception of the proposed liquidity and enterprise-
wide risk management requirements and the debt-to-equity limit for
covered companies that the Council has determined pose a grave
threat, the proposed rule would not apply to any bank holding
company subsidiary of a foreign banking organization that has relied
on Supervision and Regulation Letter SR 01-01 issued by the Board of
Governors (as in effect on May 19, 2010) until July 21, 2015. This
is consistent with the phase-in period for the imposition of minimum
risk-based and leverage capital requirements established in section
171 of the Dodd-Frank Act.
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The prudential standards for covered companies required under
section 165 of the Dodd-Frank Act must include enhanced risk-based
capital and leverage requirements, enhanced liquidity requirements,
enhanced risk management and risk committee requirements, a requirement
to submit a resolution plan, single-counterparty credit limits, stress
tests, and a debt-to-equity limit for covered companies that the
Council has determined pose a grave threat to financial stability. In
general, the Act directs the Board to implement enhanced prudential
standards that strengthen existing micro-prudential supervision \7\ and
regulation of individual companies and incorporate macro-prudential
considerations so as to reduce threats posed by covered companies to
the stability of the financial system as a whole. Section 166 of the
Act requires the Board to establish a regulatory framework for the
early remediation of financial weaknesses of covered companies in order
to minimize the probability that such companies will become insolvent
and the potential harm of such insolvencies to the financial stability
of the United States.\8\
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\7\ Micro-prudential supervision focuses on surveillance of the
safety and soundness of individual companies, whereas macro-
prudential supervision focuses on the surveillance of systemic risk
posed by individual companies and systemic risks posed by
interconnectedness among companies.
\8\ See 12 U.S.C. 5366(b).
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In addition to the required standards, the Act authorizes but does
not require the Board to establish additional enhanced standards for
covered companies relating to (i) contingent capital; (ii) public
disclosures; (iii) short-term debt limits; and (iv) such other
prudential standards as the Board
[[Page 596]]
determines appropriate.\9\ The Board is not proposing any of these
supplemental standards at this time but continues to consider whether
adopting any of these standards would be appropriate.
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\9\ See 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(1)(B).
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The Act requires the enhanced standards established by the Board
for covered companies under section 165 to be more stringent than those
standards applicable to other bank holding companies and nonbank
financial companies that do not present similar risks to U.S. financial
stability.\10\ Section 165 also requires that the enhanced standards
established pursuant to that section increase in stringency based on
the systemic footprint and risk characteristics of individual covered
companies.\11\
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\10\ See 12 U.S.C. 5365(a)(1)(A).
\11\ See 12 U.S.C. 5365(a)(1)(B). Under section 165(a)(1)(B),
the enhanced standards must increase in stringency, based on the
considerations listed in section 165(b)(3). These considerations are
summarized in note 13, infra.
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In prescribing prudential standards under section 165(b)(1) \12\ to
covered companies, the Board is required to take into account
differences among bank holding companies covered by the rule and
nonbank financial companies supervised by the Board, based on certain
considerations.\13\ The Board also has authority under section 165 to
tailor the application of the standards, including differentiating
among covered companies on an individual basis or by category.\14\ When
differentiating among companies for purposes of applying the standards
established under section 165, the Board may consider the companies'
size, capital structure, riskiness, complexity, financial activities,
and any other risk-related factor the Board deems appropriate.
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\12\ 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(1). The Board is separately required to
issue regulations to implement the risk committee and stress test
enhanced standards pursuant to sections 165(h) and 165(i),
respectively.
\13\ See 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(3). The factors the Board must
consider include--(i) The factors described in sections 113(a) and
(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act (12 U.S.C. 5313(a) and (b)); (ii) whether
the company owns an insured depository institution; (iii)
nonfinancial activities and affiliations of the company; and (iv)
any other risk-related factors that the Board determines
appropriate. 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(3)(A). The Board must, as
appropriate, adapt the required standards in light of any
predominant line business of a nonbank financial company for which
particular standards may not be appropriate. 12 U.S.C.
5365(b)(3)(D). Section 165(b)(3) also requires the Board, to the
extent possible, to ensure that small changes in the factors listed
in sections 113(a) and 113(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act would not result
in sharp, discontinuous changes in the prudential standards
established by the Board under section 165(b)(1). 12 U.S.C.
5365(b)(3)(B). The statute also directs the Board to take into
account any recommendations made by the Council pursuant to its
authority under section 115 of the Dodd-Frank Act. 12 U.S.C.
5365(b)(3)(C).
\14\ See 12 U.S.C. 5365(a)(2)(A).
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II. Overview of the Proposal
The Board is requesting comment on proposed rules to implement
certain requirements of sections 165 and 166 of the Dodd-Frank Act.\15\
The Board consulted with the Council, including by providing periodic
updates to members of the Council and their staff on the development of
the proposed enhanced standards. The proposal reflects comments
provided to the Board as a part of this consultation process. The Board
also intends, before imposing prudential standards or any other
requirements pursuant to section 165 that are likely to have a
significant impact on a functionally regulated subsidiary or depository
institution subsidiary of a covered company, to consult with each
Council member that primarily supervises any such subsidiary.\16\
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\15\ 12 U.S.C. 5365 and 5366.
\16\ See 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(4).
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This proposal includes rules to implement the requirements under
section 165 related to (i) risk-based capital and leverage; (ii)
liquidity; (iii) single-counterparty credit limits; (iv) overall risk
management and risk committees; (v) stress tests; and (vi) a debt-to-
equity limit for covered companies that the Council has determined pose
a grave threat to financial stability. The proposal also includes rules
to implement the early remediation requirements in section 166 of the
Act related to establishing measures of financial condition and
remediation requirements that increase in stringency as the financial
condition of a covered company declines.
Section 165(d) of the Act also establishes requirements that each
covered company submit periodically to the Board and Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC) a plan for rapid and orderly resolution
under the Bankruptcy Code in the event of its material financial
distress or failure, as well as a periodic report regarding credit
exposures between each covered company and other significant financial
companies. The Board and FDIC jointly issued a final rule to implement
the resolution plan requirement that became effective on November 30,
2011 and expect to implement periodic reporting of credit exposures at
a later date.\17\
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\17\ See 76 FR 67323 (November 1, 2011). In response to
significant concerns expressed by commenters about the clarity of
key definitions and the scope of the reporting requirement of the
proposed credit exposure reporting requirement, the Board and FDIC
postponed finalizing the credit exposure reporting requirement. The
Board believes that robust reporting of a covered company's credit
exposures to other significant bank holding companies and financial
companies is critical to ongoing risk management by covered
companies, as well as to the Board's ongoing supervision of covered
companies and financial stability responsibilities, and the FDIC's
responsibility to resolve failed covered companies. However, the
agencies also recognize that these reports would be most useful and
complete if developed in conjunction with the Dodd-Frank Act's
single counterparty credit exposure limits. See 12 U.S.C. 5365(e).
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By setting forth comprehensive enhanced prudential standards and an
early remediation framework for covered companies, the proposal would
create an integrated set of requirements that seeks to meaningfully
reduce the probability of failure of systemically important companies
and minimize damage to the financial system and the broader economy in
the event such a company fails. The proposed rules, which increase in
stringency with the level of systemic risk posed by and the risk
characteristics of the covered company, would provide incentives for
covered companies to reduce their systemic footprint and encourage
covered companies to consider the external costs that their failure or
distress would impose on the broader financial system, thus helping to
offset any implicit subsidy they may have enjoyed as a result of market
perceptions of implicit government support.
This proposal provides a core set of concrete rules to complement
the Federal Reserve's existing efforts to enhance the supervisory
framework for covered companies. The Federal Reserve, since before the
passage of the Dodd-Frank Act, has been taking steps to strengthen its
supervision of the largest, most complex banking companies. For
example, the Federal Reserve created a centralized multidisciplinary
body called the Large Institution Supervision Coordinating Committee
(LISCC) to oversee the supervision of these companies. This committee
uses horizontal, or cross-company, evaluations to monitor
interconnectedness and common practices among companies that could lead
to greater systemic risk. The committee also uses additional and
improved quantitative methods for evaluating the financial condition of
companies and the risks they might pose to each other and to the
broader financial system.
A. Scope of Application
The Dodd-Frank Act requires the Board to apply enhanced standards
established under section 165(b)(1) and early remediation requirements
under
[[Page 597]]
section 166 of the Dodd-Frank Act to covered companies. As noted above,
covered companies are described in the Act as bank holding companies
with total consolidated assets of $50 billion or more (which would
include any foreign banking organization that has banking operations in
the United States and that has global consolidated assets of $50
billion or more) and nonbank financial companies the Council has
designated for supervision by the Board. The proposal incorporates this
definition but, for reasons described below, at this time only covers
U.S. bank holding companies and nonbank financial companies the Council
has designated.
Under section 165(i)(2), the requirements to conduct annual stress
tests apply to any financial company with more than $10 billion in
total consolidated assets and that is regulated by a primary federal
financial regulatory agency.\18\ The Board, as the primary Federal
financial regulatory agency for bank holding companies, savings and
loan holding companies, and state member banks, proposes to apply the
annual company-run stress test requirements to any bank holding
company, savings and loan holding company,\19\ and state member bank
with more than $10 billion in total consolidated assets. Moreover, the
requirement to establish a risk committee under section 165(h) of the
Act applies to any publicly traded bank holding company with $10
billion or more in total consolidated assets.\20\
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\18\ 12 U.S.C. 5365(i)(2). The Dodd-Frank Act defines primary
financial regulatory agency in section 2 of the Act. See 12 U.S.C.
5301(12). The Board, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation have consulted on rules
implementing section 165(i)(2).
\19\ As discussed below, the Board proposes to delay the
effective date of the portion of the proposal implementing section
165(i)(2) for savings and loan holding companies until such time as
the Board has implemented consolidated capital rules for savings and
loan holding companies.
\20\ 12 U.S.C. 5365(h).
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For purposes of the definition of a covered company, a bank holding
company is deemed to have met the $50 billion asset criterion based on
the average of the company's total consolidated assets as reported on
its four most recent quarterly reports to the Board, i.e., the
Consolidated Financial Statements for Bank Holding Companies (Federal
Reserve Form FR Y-9C).\21\ This calculation will be effective as of the
due date of the bank holding company's most recent FR Y-9C.\22\ Under
the proposal, a bank holding company that becomes a covered company
would remain a covered company until its total consolidated assets, as
reported to the Board on a quarterly basis on the FR Y-9C, fall and
remain below $50 billion for four consecutive quarters.
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\21\ With respect to a company that has been a bank holding
company for less than four quarters, the Board would refer to the
company's financial statements from quarters preceding the time that
it began reporting on the FR Y-9C. For example, if a bank holding
company had been reporting on the FR Y-9C for only one quarter, the
Board would refer to its GAAP financial statements for the prior
three quarters for purposes of calculating its average total
consolidated assets.
\22\ For purposes of subpart E of the proposed rule, the same
calculation approach would be applied to any bank holding company in
determining when it becomes an over $10 billion bank holding
company. For purposes of subpart G of the proposed rule, the same
calculation approach would be applied to any bank holding company,
savings and loan holding company, or state member bank in
determining when it becomes an over $10 billion company.
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This proposal would apply the same set of enhanced prudential
standards to covered companies that are bank holding companies and
covered companies that are nonbank financial companies. As noted above,
however, in applying the enhanced prudential standards to covered
companies, the Board may determine, on its own or in response to a
recommendation by the Council, to tailor the application of the
enhanced standards to different companies on an individual basis or by
category, taking into consideration their capital structure, riskiness,
complexity, financial activities, size, and any other risk-related
factors that the Board deems appropriate.\23\
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\23\ 12 U.S.C. 5365(a)(2).
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The Board notes that this authority will be particularly important
in applying the enhanced standards to specific nonbank financial
companies designated by the Council that are organized and operated
differently from banking organizations.\24\ Under the Act,\25\ the
Council generally may determine that a nonbank financial company, i.e.,
a company predominantly engaged in financial activities, should be
subject to supervision by the Board and the enhanced standards
established pursuant to section 165 and the early remediation
requirements established pursuant to section 166, if material financial
distress at such company, or the nature, scope, size, scale,
concentration, interconnectedness, or mix of the activities of the
nonbank financial company, could pose a threat to the financial
stability of the United States. As such, the types of business models,
capital structures, and risk profiles of companies that would be
subject to designation by the Council could vary significantly.
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\24\ To date, the Council has not designated any nonbank
financial company for supervision by the Board.
\25\ See 12 U.S.C. 5315. See also 76 FR 64264 (Oct. 18, 2011)
(proposing to implement the Council's authority under section 113 of
the Dodd-Frank).
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While this proposal was largely developed with large, complex bank
holding companies in mind, some of the standards nonetheless provide
sufficient flexibility to be readily implemented by covered companies
that are not bank holding companies. In prescribing prudential
standards under section 165(b)(1), the Board would to take into account
differences among bank holding companies and nonbank financial
companies supervised by the Board.\26\ Following designation of a
nonbank financial company by the Council, the Board would thoroughly
assess the business model, capital structure, and risk profile of the
designated company to determine how the proposed enhanced prudential
standards and early remediation requirements should apply. The Board
may, by order or regulation, tailor the application of the enhanced
standards to designated nonbank financial companies on an individual
basis or by category, as appropriate.\27\
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\26\ See 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(3). The factors the Board must take
into consideration in prescribing the enhanced standards under
section 165(b)(1) are described above. See supra note 13. Under
section 171 of the Dodd-Frank Act, the Board is required to impose
the same minimum risk-based and leverage capital requirements on
bank holding companies and nonbank covered company as it imposes on
insured depository institutions. 12 U.S.C. 5371.
\27\ Following designation of nonbank financial companies by the
FSOC, the Board also would consider the appropriate risk-based
capital treatment of asset types with no explicit treatment under
the current risk-based capital rules. See generally 76 FR 37620
(June 28, 2011).
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The Board solicits comment on alternative approaches for applying
the enhanced prudential standards and the early remediation
requirements the Dodd-Frank Act requires to nonbank covered companies.
Question 1: What additional characteristics of a nonbank covered
company--in addition to its business model, capital structure, and risk
profile--should the Board consider when determining how to apply the
enhanced standards and the early remediation requirements to such a
company?
Question 2: What are the potential unintended consequences and
burdens associated with subjecting a nonbank covered company to the
enhanced prudential standards and the early remediation requirements?
The current proposal would apply only to U.S.-based bank holding
companies that are covered companies and to nonbank covered companies,
and would not apply to foreign banking
[[Page 598]]
organizations. As discussed above, however, foreign banking
organizations that have U.S. banking operations (whether a U.S. branch,
a U.S. agency, or a U.S. subsidiary bank holding company or bank) and
have global total consolidated assets \28\ of $50 billion or more are
subject to sections 165 and 166 of the Dodd-Frank Act. Section 165
instructs the Board, in applying the enhanced prudential standards of
section 165 to foreign financial companies, to give due regard to the
principle of national treatment and equality of competitive
opportunity, and to take into account the extent to which the foreign
company is subject, on a consolidated basis, to home country standards
that are comparable to those applied to financial companies in the
United States.
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\28\ For a foreign banking organization subject to section 165
of the Dodd-Frank Act, total consolidated assets would be based on
the foreign banking organization's Capital and Asset Reports for
Foreign Banking Organizations (Federal Reserve Form FR Y-7Q).
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Determining how to apply the enhanced prudential standards and
early remediation framework established by the Dodd-Frank Act to
foreign banking organizations in a manner consistent with the purposes
of the statute and the Board's existing framework of supervising
foreign banking organizations is difficult. The scope of enhanced
prudential standards required under sections 165 and 166 extends beyond
the set of prudential standards that are part of existing international
agreements, and foreign banking organizations are subject to home
country regulatory and supervisory regimes that employ a wide variety
of approaches to prudential regulation. Further, foreign banking
organizations operate in the United States through diverse structures,
complicating the consistent application of the enhanced standards to
the U.S. operations of a foreign banking organization. Finally, the
risk posed to U.S. financial stability by foreign banking organizations
that are subject to sections 165 and 166 varies widely. The Board is
actively developing a proposed framework for applying the Act's
enhanced prudential standards and early remediation requirement to
foreign banking organizations, and expects to issue this framework for
public comment shortly.
While sections 165 and 166 generally do not apply to savings and
loan holding companies, section 165(i)(2) requires the Board to issue
regulations pursuant to which any financial company for which the Board
is the primary federal financial regulatory agency and that has more
than $10 billion in total consolidated assets must conduct an annual
stress test.\29\ Thus, the proposal would apply annual company-run
stress test requirements to any savings and loan holding company with
more than $10 billion in consolidated assets. However, because the
annual stress test requirement, as proposed, is predicated on a company
being subject to consolidated capital requirements, this proposal would
delay the effective date of the company-run stress test requirements
for savings and loan holding companies until the Board has established
risk-based capital requirements for savings and loan holding companies.
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\29\ Among entities covered by this part of the Dodd-Frank are
state member banks, bank holding companies, and savings and loan
holding companies with total consolidated assets of $10 billion or
more.
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While the remaining parts of section 165 and section 166 do not
specifically apply to savings and loan holding companies, the Board, as
the primary supervisor of savings and loan holding companies, has the
authority under the Home Owners' Loan Act to apply the enhanced
standards to savings and loan holding companies to ensure their safety
and soundness.\30\ The Board intends to issue a separate proposal for
notice and comment to initially apply the enhanced standards and early
remediation requirements to all savings and loan holding companies with
substantial banking activities--i.e., any savings and loan holding
company that (i) has total consolidated assets of $50 billion or more;
and (ii)(A) has savings association subsidiaries which comprise 25
percent or more of such savings and loan holding company's total
consolidated assets, or (B) controls one or more savings associations
with total consolidated assets of $50 billion or more. The Board
believes that applying the enhanced prudential standards of this
proposal to savings and loan holding companies that satisfy these
criteria is an important aspect of ensuring their safety and soundness.
The Board also may determine to apply the enhanced standards to any
savings and loan holding company, if appropriate to ensure the safety
and soundness of such company, on a case-by-case basis.
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\30\ See 12 U.S.C. 1467a(g) (authorizing the Board to issue such
regulations and orders as the Board deems necessary or appropriate
to administer and carry out the purposes of section 10 of the Home
Owners' Loan Act).
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As is the case with stress testing, many of the other enhanced
standards are predicated on a covered company being subject to
consolidated capital requirements. Therefore, similar to the approach
with respect to applying the annual company-run stress test requirement
to savings and loan holding companies, the Board intends to impose
enhanced prudential standards and early remediation requirements on
savings and loan holding companies with substantial banking activities
once the Board has established risk-based capital requirements for
savings and loan holding companies.
Question 3: The Board seeks comment on its proposed approach to the
application of the company-run stress test requirements, including the
delayed effective date, to savings and loan holding companies. Also,
what additional or alternative criteria should the Board consider for
determining which savings and loan holding companies initially would be
subject to the enhanced prudential standards and early remediation
requirements?
B. Risk-Based Capital Requirements and Leverage Limits
The recent financial crisis exposed significant weaknesses in the
regulatory capital requirements for large banking companies. The amount
of capital held by many large, complex banking companies proved to be
inadequate to cover the risks that had accumulated in the companies.
For certain exposure types, such as trading positions, OTC derivatives,
and securitization and re-securitization exposures, it became evident
that capital requirements did not adequately cover the risk of loss
from those activities. In addition, it became apparent that some of the
instruments that qualified as tier 1 capital for banking companies, the
core measure of capital adequacy, were not truly loss absorbing.
Section 165(b)(1)(A)(i) of the Act directs the Board to establish
enhanced risk-based capital and leverage standards for covered
companies to address these weaknesses. The Board plans to meet this
statutory requirement with a two-part effort. Under this proposal, the
Board would subject all covered companies to the Board's capital plan
rule, which currently requires all bank holding companies with $50
billion or more in consolidated assets to submit an annual capital plan
to the Board for review (capital plan rule).\31\ Under the capital plan
rule, covered companies would have to demonstrate to the Board that
they have robust, forward-looking capital planning processes that
account for their unique risks and that permit continued operations
during times of economic
[[Page 599]]
and financial stress. The supervisory and company-run stress tests that
are part of this proposal and discussed in detail below are important
aspects of this forward-looking process.\32\ The Board expects that a
covered company will integrate into its capital plan, as one part of
the underlying analysis, the results of the company-run stress tests
conducted in accordance with section 165(i)(2) of the Dodd-Frank Act
and the Board's proposed implementing rules. The results of those
stress tests, as well as the annual supervisory stress test conducted
by the Board under section 165(i)(1) of the Dodd-Frank, will be
considered in the evaluation of a covered company's capital plan.
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\31\ 12 CFR 225.8.
\32\ In June 2011, the Board, along with the OCC and FDIC,
issued for comment proposed supervisory guidance on stress testing
for banking organizations with more than $10 billion in total
assets. 76 FR 35072 (June 15, 2011). That proposed guidance contains
principles for an effective stress testing framework that would
cover an organization's various stress testing activities, including
capital and liquidity stress testing. The agencies issued the
proposed guidance for comment separately from this proposal because
the proposed guidance is intended to apply broadly to organizations'
use of stress testing in overall risk management, not just to
capital and liquidity stress testing, as is the case for the
requirements of this proposed rule. The agencies are considering
comments on the proposed guidance and expect to issue a final
version shortly. The Board expects that companies would follow the
principles set forth in the final stress testing guidance--as well
as with other relevant supervisory guidance--when conducting capital
and liquidity stress testing in accordance with requirements in this
proposed rule.
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Under the capital plan rule, covered companies would be required to
demonstrate to the Board their ability to maintain capital above
existing minimum regulatory capital ratios and above a tier 1 common
ratio of 5 percent under both expected and stressed conditions over a
minimum nine-quarter planning horizon.\33\ Covered companies with
unsatisfactory capital plans would face limits on their ability to make
capital distributions.
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\33\ Under the capital plan rule, tier 1 common is defined as
tier 1 capital less non-common elements in tier 1 capital, including
perpetual preferred stock and related surplus, minority interest in
subsidiaries, trust preferred securities and mandatory convertible
preferred securities. Specifically, non-common elements include the
following items captured in the FR Y-9C reporting form: Schedule HC,
line item 23 net of Schedule HC-R, line item 5; and Schedule HC-R,
line items 6a, 6b, and 6c.
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The Board intends to supplement the enhanced risk-based capital and
leverage requirements included in this proposal with a subsequent
proposal to implement a quantitative risk-based capital surcharge for
covered companies or a subset of covered companies. Over the past few
years, the Federal Reserve and other U.S. federal banking agencies have
worked together with other members of the Basel Committee on Banking
Supervision (BCBS) to strengthen the regulatory capital regime for
internationally active banks and develop a framework for a risk-based
capital surcharge for the world's largest, most interconnected banking
companies. The new regime for internationally active banks, known as
Basel III,\34\ materially improves the quality of regulatory capital
and introduces a new minimum common equity requirement. Basel III also
raises the numerical minimum capital requirements and introduces
capital conservation and countercyclical buffers to induce banking
organizations to hold capital in excess of regulatory minimums. In
addition, Basel III establishes for the first time an international
leverage standard for internationally active banks. The Board is
working with the other U.S. banking regulators to implement the Basel
III capital reforms in the United States.
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\34\ See Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, Basel III: A
global regulatory framework for more resilient banks and banking
systems (revised June 2011), available at https://www.bis.org/publ/bcbs189.htm (hereinafter Basel III framework). See also Basel
Committee on Banking Supervision, Basel III: International framework
for liquidity risk measurement, standards and monitoring (December
2010), available at www.bis.org/publ/bcbs188.htm (hereinafter Basel
III liquidity framework); Enhancements to the Basel II framework
(July 2009), available at www.bis.org/publ/bcbs157.htm; and
Revisions to the Basel II market risk framework (July 2009),
available at www.bis.org/publ/bcbs158.htm.
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Building on the Basel III reforms, the BCBS published a document in
November 2011 entitled Global systemically important banks: Assessment
methodology and the additional loss absorbency requirement (BCBS
framework), which set forth an additional capital requirement for
global systemically important banks (G-SIBs).\35\
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\35\ See Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, Global
systemically important banks: Assessment methodology and the
additional loss absorbency requirement (November 2011), available at
https://www.bis.org/publ/bcbs207.htm (hereinafter BCBS capital
surcharge framework).
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The Basel III and BCBS frameworks, once implemented in the United
States, are expected to significantly enhance risk-based capital and
constrain the leverage of covered companies and will be a key part of
the Board's overall approach to enhancing the risk-based capital and
leverage standards applicable to these companies in accordance with
section 165 of the Dodd-Frank Act. The Board intends to propose a
quantitative risk-based capital surcharge in the United States based on
the BCBS approach consistent with the BCBS's implementation timeframe.
The forthcoming proposal would contemplate adopting implementing rules
in 2014, and requiring G-SIBs to meet the capital surcharges on a
phased-in basis from 2016-2019.
C. Liquidity Requirements
The financial crisis revealed significant weaknesses in liquidity
buffers and liquidity risk management practices throughout the
financial system that directly contributed to the failure or near
failure of many companies and exacerbated the crisis. Section
165(b)(1)(A)(ii) addresses inadequacies in the existing regulatory
liquidity requirements by directing the Board to establish liquidity
standards for covered companies. Similar to enhanced risk-based capital
and leverage requirements, the Federal Reserve intends to implement
this statutory requirement through a multi-stage approach.
This proposal would subject covered companies to a set of enhanced
liquidity risk management standards, including liquidity stress
testing.\36\ The proposal builds on guidance previously adopted by the
Board and other U.S. federal banking agencies and proposes higher
liquidity risk management standards for covered companies.\37\
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\36\ See supra note 32.
\37\ Supervision and Regulation Letter SR 10-6, Interagency
Policy Statement on Funding and Liquidity Risk Management (March 17,
2010), available at https://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/srletters/2010/sr1006.pdf; 75 FR 13656 (March 22, 2010). The Board,
the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), the FDIC, the
Office of Thrift Supervision, the National Credit Union
Administration, and the Conference of State Bank Supervisors jointly
issued the Interagency Liquidity Risk Policy Statement. The
Interagency Liquidity Risk Policy Statement incorporates principles
of sound liquidity risk management that the agencies have issued in
the past, and supplements them with the principles of sound
liquidity risk management established by the Basel Committee on Bank
Supervision (Basel Committee) in its document entitled ``Principles
for Sound Liquidity Management and Supervision.'' Principles for
Sound Liquidity Risk Management and Supervision (September 2008),
available at https://ww.bis.org/publ/bcbs144.htm.
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The proposal would require covered companies to conduct internal
stress tests at least monthly to measure their liquidity needs at 30-
day, 90-day and one-year intervals during times of instability in the
financial markets and to hold liquid assets that would be sufficient to
cover 30-day stressed net cash outflows under their internal stress
scenarios. Covered companies also would be required to meet specified
corporate governance requirements around liquidity risk management, to
project cash flow needs over various time horizons, to establish
internal limits on certain liquidity metrics, and
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to maintain a contingency funding plan (CFP) that identifies potential
sources of liquidity strain and alternative sources of funding when
usual sources of liquidity are unavailable.
In addition to the enhanced liquidity risk management standards
included in this proposal, the Federal Reserve and other U.S. federal
banking agencies have been working with the BCBS over the past few
years to develop quantitative liquidity requirements to increase the
capacity of internationally active banking firms to absorb shocks to
funding relative to the liquidity risks they face. The BCBS approved
two new liquidity rules as part of the Basel III reforms in December
2010. The first rule is a Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR), which would
require banks to hold an amount of high-quality liquid assets
sufficient to meet expected net cash outflows over a 30-day time
horizon under a supervisory stress scenario. The second rule is the Net
Stable Funding Ratio (NSFR), which would require banks to enhance their
liquidity risk resiliency out to one year. Under the terms of Basel
III, global banks are required to comply with the LCR by 2015 and with
the NSFR by 2018.
The Basel III liquidity rules are currently in an international
observation period as the U.S. federal banking agencies and other BCBS
members assess the potential impact of the rules on banks and various
financial markets. The Board intends, in conjunction with other federal
banking agencies, to implement these standards in the United States
through one or more separate rulemakings. Through implementation of
these standards in the United States, the Board anticipates that the
Basel III liquidity rules would then become a central component of the
enhanced liquidity requirements for covered companies, or a subset of
covered companies, under section 165 of the Dodd-Frank Act.
D. Single-Counterparty Credit Limits
As demonstrated in the crisis, interconnectivity among major
financial companies poses risks to financial stability. The effects of
one large financial company's failure or near collapse may be
transmitted and amplified by the bilateral credit exposures between
large, systemically important companies. The financial crisis also
revealed inadequacies in the structure of the U.S. regulatory framework
for single-counterparty credit limits. Although banks were subject to
single-borrower lending and investment limits, these limits did not
apply to bank holding companies on a consolidated basis and did not
adequately cover credit exposures generated by derivatives and some
securities financing transactions.\38\
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\38\ Section 610 of the Dodd-Frank Act amends the term ``loans
and extensions of credit'' for purposes of the lending limits
applicable to national banks to include any credit exposure arising
from a derivative transaction, repurchase agreement, reverse
repurchase agreement, securities lending transaction, or securities
borrowing transaction. See Dodd-Frank Act, Public Law 111-203, Sec.
610, 124 Stat. 1376, 1611 (2010). As discussed in more detail below,
these types of transactions are also all made subject to the single
counterparty credit limits of section 165(e). 12 U.S.C. 5365(e)(3).
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In an effort to address concentration risk among large financial
institutions, section 165(e) of the Dodd-Frank Act directs the Board to
establish single-counterparty credit limits for covered companies in
order to limit the risks that the failure of any individual company
could pose to a covered company.\39\ This section directs the Board to
prescribe regulations that prohibit covered companies from having
credit exposure to any unaffiliated company that exceeds 25 percent of
the capital stock and surplus of the covered company.\40\ This section
also authorizes the Board to lower the 25 percent threshold if
necessary to mitigate risks to the financial stability of the United
States.\41\
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\39\ See 12 U.S.C. 5365(e)(1).
\40\ 12 U.S.C. 5365(e)(2).
\41\ See id.
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Credit exposure to a company is defined broadly in section 165(e)
of the Act to cover all extensions of credit to the company; all
repurchase and reverse repurchase agreements, and securities borrowing
and lending transactions, with the company; all guarantees and letters
of credit issued on behalf of the company; all investments in
securities issued by the company; counterparty credit exposure to the
company in connection with derivative transactions; and any other
similar transaction that the Board determines to be a credit exposure
for purposes of section 165(e).\42\ Section 165(e) also grants
authority to the Board to exempt transactions from the definition of
the term ``credit exposure'' if the Board finds that the exemption is
in the public interest and consistent with the purposes of the
subsection.\43\
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\42\ See 12 U.S.C. 5365(e)(3).
\43\ See 12 U.S.C. 5365(e)(5)-(6).
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The proposal implements these statutory provisions by defining key
terms, such as covered company, unaffiliated counterparty, and capital
stock and surplus. The proposal also targets the mutual
interconnectedness of the largest financial companies by setting a
stricter 10 percent limit for credit exposure between a covered company
and a counterparty that each either have more than $500 billion in
total consolidated assets or are a nonbank covered company. In
addition, the proposal provides rules for measuring the amount of
credit exposure generated by the various types of credit transactions.
Notably, the proposal would allow covered companies to reduce their
credit exposure to a counterparty for purposes of the limit by
obtaining credit risk mitigants such as collateral, guarantees, and
credit derivative hedges. The proposal describes the types of
collateral, guarantees and derivative hedges that are eligible under
the rule and provides valuation rules for reflecting such credit risk
mitigants.
E. Risk Management and Risk Committee Requirements
Sound, enterprise-wide risk management by covered companies reduces
the likelihood of their material distress or failure and thus promotes
financial stability. In addition to adopting enhanced risk management
standards for covered companies, the Board is directed by section
165(h) to require publicly traded covered companies and publicly traded
bank holding companies with $10 billion or more in total consolidated
assets to establish a risk committee of the board of directors that is
responsible for oversight of enterprise-wide risk management, is
comprised of an appropriate number of independent directors, and
includes at least one risk management expert.
The proposal would require all covered companies to implement
robust enterprise-wide risk management practices that are overseen by a
risk committee of the board of directors and chief risk officer with
appropriate levels of independence, expertise and stature. The proposal
also would require any publicly traded bank holding company with $10
billion or more in total consolidated assets and that is not a covered
company to establish a risk committee.
F. Stress Testing Requirements
The crisis also revealed weaknesses in the stress testing practices
of large banking organizations, as well as gaps in the regulatory
community's approach to assessing capital adequacy. During the height
of the crisis, the Federal Reserve began stress testing the capital
adequacy of large, complex bank holding companies as a forward-looking
exercise designed to estimate losses, revenues, regulatory capital
ratios, and reserve needs under various macroeconomic
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scenarios.\44\ By looking at the broad needs of the financial system
and the specific needs of individual companies, these stress tests
provided valuable information to market participants and had an overall
stabilizing effect.
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\44\ In early 2009, the Federal Reserve led the Supervisory
Capital Assessment Program (SCAP) as a key element of the plan to
stabilize the U.S. financial system. Building on SCAP and other
supervisory work coming out of the crisis, the Federal Reserve
initiated the Comprehensive Capital Analysis and Review (CCAR) in
late 2010 to evaluate the internal capital planning processes of
large, complex bank holding companies. The CCAR represented a
substantial strengthening of previous approaches to ensuring that
large firms have thorough and robust processes for managing and
allocating their capital resources. The CCAR also focused on the
risk measurement and management practices supporting firms' capital
adequacy assessments, including their ability to deliver credible
inputs to their loss estimation techniques.
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Section 165(i)(1) directs the Board to implement rules requiring
the Federal Reserve, in coordination with the appropriate primary
Federal regulatory agencies and the Federal Insurance Office, to
conduct an annual evaluation of whether each covered company has
sufficient capital to absorb losses as a result of adverse economic
conditions (supervisory stress tests). The Board is also required to
publish a summary of the results of the supervisory stress tests. In
addition, section 165(i)(2) directs the Board to implement rules
requiring each covered company to conduct its own semi-annual stress
tests and any state member bank, bank holding company or savings and
loan holding company with more than $10 billion in total consolidated
assets (that is not a covered company) to conduct its own annual stress
tests (company-run stress tests). Companies must also publish a summary
of the results of the company-run stress tests.
The proposal would implement these statutory provisions by
requiring the Federal Reserve to conduct annual supervisory stress
tests of covered companies under baseline, adverse, and severely
adverse scenarios and by requiring companies that are subject to
company-run stress test requirements to conduct their own capital
adequacy stress tests on an annual or semi-annual basis, as applicable.
Under the proposal, the Board would publicly disclose information on
the company-specific results of the supervisory stress tests.
G. Debt-to-Equity Limits for Certain Covered Companies
Section 165(j) of the Dodd-Frank Act provides that the Board must
require a covered company to maintain a debt-to-equity ratio of no more
than 15-to-1, upon a determination by the Council that (i) such company
poses a grave threat to the financial stability of the United States
and (ii) the imposition of such a requirement is necessary to mitigate
the risk that the company poses to U.S. financial stability. The
proposal establishes procedures to notify a covered company that the
Council has made a determination under section 165(j) that the company
must comply with the 15-to-1 debt-to-equity ratio requirement, defines
``debt'' and ``equity'' for purposes of calculating compliance with the
ratio, and provides an affected company with a transition period to
come into compliance with the ratio.
H. Early Remediation Framework
The financial crisis revealed that the condition of large banking
organizations can deteriorate rapidly even during periods when their
reported regulatory capital ratios are well above minimum requirements.
The crisis also revealed that financial companies that addressed
incipient financial problems swiftly and decisively performed much
better than companies that delayed remediation work.
Section 166 of the Dodd-Frank Act directs the Board to prescribe
regulations to provide for the early remediation of financial distress
at covered companies so as to minimize the probability that the company
will become insolvent and to reduce the potential harm of the
insolvency of a covered company to the financial stability of the
United States. The regulation must use measures of the financial
condition of a covered company, including regulatory capital ratios,
liquidity measures, and other forward-looking indicators as triggers
for remediation actions. Remediation req