Lending Limits, 37930-37946 [2013-15174]
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apply to this final rule. Therefore, a
backfit analysis is not required.
§ 72.214 List of approved spent fuel
storage casks.
XII. Congressional Review Act
Under the Congressional Review Act
of 1996, the NRC has determined that
this action is not a major rule and has
verified this determination with the
Office of Information and Regulatory
Affairs of OMB.
*
List of Subjects in 10 CFR Part 72
Administrative practice and
procedure, Criminal penalties,
Manpower training programs, Nuclear
materials, Occupational safety and
health, Penalties, Radiation protection,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Security measures, Spent
fuel, Whistleblowing.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble and under the authority of the
Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended;
the Energy Reorganization Act of 1974,
as amended; the Nuclear Waste Policy
Act of 1982, as amended; and 5 U.S.C.
552 and 553; the NRC is adopting the
following amendments to 10 CFR part
72.
PART 72—LICENSING
REQUIREMENTS FOR THE
INDEPENDENT STORAGE OF SPENT
NUCLEAR FUEL, HIGH–LEVEL
RADIOACTIVE WASTE AND
REACTOR-RELATED GREATER THAN
CLASS C WASTE
1. The authority citation for part 72
continues to read as follows:
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[FR Doc. 2013–15127 Filed 6–24–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency
12 CFR Parts 32, 159 and 160
RIN 1557–AD59
Authority: Atomic Energy Act secs. 51, 53,
57, 62, 63, 65, 69, 81, 161, 182, 183, 184, 186,
187, 189, 223, 234, 274 (42 U.S.C. 2071, 2073,
2077, 2092, 2093, 2095, 2099, 2111, 2201,
2232, 2233, 2234, 2236, 2237, 2238, 2273,
2282, 2021); Energy Reorganization Act sec.
201, 202, 206, 211 (42 U.S.C. 5841, 5842,
5846, 5851); National Environmental Policy
Act sec. 102 (42 U.S.C. 4332); Nuclear Waste
Policy Act secs. 131, 132, 133, 135, 137, 141,
148 (42 U.S.C. 10151, 10152, 10153, 10155,
10157, 10161, 10168); sec. 1704, 112 Stat.
2750 (44 U.S.C. 3504 note); Energy Policy Act
of 2005, Pub. L. No. 109–58, 119 Stat. 549
(2005).
Section 72.44(g) also issued under secs.
Nuclear Waste Policy Act 142(b) and 148(c),
(d) (42 U.S.C. 10162(b), 10168(c), (d)).
Section 72.46 also issued under Atomic
Energy Act sec. 189 (42 U.S.C. 2239); Nuclear
Waste Policy Act sec. 134 (42 U.S.C. 10154).
Section 72.96(d) also issued under Nuclear
Waste Policy Act sec. 145(g) (42 U.S.C.
10165(g)). Subpart J also issued under
Nuclear Waste Policy Act secs. 117(a), 141(h)
(42 U.S.C. 10137(a), 10161(h)). Subpart K is
also issued under sec. 218(a) (42 U.S.C.
10198).
2. In § 72.214, Certificate of
Compliance 1031 is revised to read as
follows:
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 12th day
of June 2013.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
R.W. Borchardt,
Executive Director for Operations.
[Docket ID OCC–2012–0007]
■
■
*
*
*
*
Certificate Number: 1031.
Initial Certificate Effective Date:
February 4, 2009.
Amendment Number 1 Effective Date:
August 30, 2010.
Amendment Number 2 Effective Date:
January 30, 2012.
Amendment Number 3 Effective Date:
July 25, 2013.
SAR Submitted by: NAC
International, Inc.
SAR Title: Final Safety Analysis
Report for the MAGNASTOR® System.
Docket Number: 72–1031.
Certificate Expiration Date: February
4, 2029.
Model Number: MAGNASTOR.
*
*
*
*
*
Lending Limits
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency, Treasury.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The Office of the Comptroller
of the Currency (OCC) is finalizing its
lending limits interim final rule, with
revisions. The interim final rule
consolidated the lending limits rules
applicable to national banks and savings
associations, removed the separate OCC
regulation governing lending limits for
savings associations, and implemented
section 610 of the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection
Act, which amends the statutory
definition of ‘‘loans and extensions of
credit’’ to include certain credit
exposures arising from derivative
transactions, repurchase agreements,
reverse repurchase agreements,
securities lending transactions, and
securities borrowing transactions.
DATES: The effective date of amendatory
instruction 2b of this final rule is June
25, 2013. The effective date of the
SUMMARY:
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remaining amendments made by this
final rule is October 1, 2013. The
effective date of amendatory instruction
3a. of the interim final rule published
on June 21, 2012, 77 FR 37277, and
extended on December 31, 2012, 77 FR
76841, is delayed from July 1, 2013 to
October 1, 2013.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jonathan Fink, Assistant Director, Bank
Activities and Structure Division, (202)
649–5500; Heidi M. Thomas, Special
Counsel, Legislative and Regulatory
Activities Division, (202) 649–5490; or
Kurt Wilhelm, Director for Financial
Markets, (202) 649–6437, Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency,
Washington, DC, 20219.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Section 5200 of the Revised Statutes,
12 U.S.C. 84, provides that the total
loans and extensions of credit by a
national bank to a person outstanding at
one time shall not exceed 15 percent of
the unimpaired capital and unimpaired
surplus of the bank if the loan or
extension of credit is not fully secured,
plus an additional 10 percent of
unimpaired capital and unimpaired
surplus if the loan is fully secured.
Section 5(u)(1) of the Home Owners’
Loan Act (HOLA), 12 U.S.C. 1464(u)(1),
provides that section 5200 of the
Revised Statutes ‘‘shall apply to savings
associations in the same manner and to
the same extent as it applies to national
banks.’’ In addition, section 5(u)(2) of
HOLA, 12 U.S.C. 1464(u)(2), includes
exceptions to the lending limits for
certain loans made by savings
associations. These HOLA provisions
apply to both Federal and statechartered savings associations.
Section 610 of the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection
Act 1 (Dodd-Frank Act) amends section
5200 of the Revised Statutes to provide
that the definition of ‘‘loans and
extensions of credit’’ includes any credit
exposure to a person arising from a
derivative transaction, repurchase
agreement, reverse repurchase
agreement, securities lending
transaction, or securities borrowing
transaction between a national bank and
that person. This amendment was
effective July 21, 2012. By virtue of
section 5(u)(1) of the HOLA, this new
definition of ‘‘loans and extensions of
credit’’ applies to all savings
associations as well as to national
banks.
On June 21, 2012, the OCC published
in the Federal Register an interim final
1 Public
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rule 2 that amended the OCC’s lending
limits regulation for national banks, 12
CFR part 32, by consolidating the
lending limits rules applicable to
national banks and savings
associations 3 and implementing section
610 of the Dodd-Frank Act. The interim
final rule also removed the separate
OCC regulation at 12 CFR 160.93 that
governed lending limits for savings
associations.4
II. Description of the Final Rule and
Public Comments
The OCC received numerous public
comments from interested parties. These
comments, the provisions of the interim
final rule they address, and the resulting
amendments to the interim final rule are
discussed below.
A. Integration of Savings Associations
The OCC received no public
comments in response to the
amendments included in the interim
final rule that integrate savings
associations into part 32.5 However,
upon further review, the OCC is making
the following technical amendments
relating to the scope of the rule with
respect to savings associations in order
2 77
FR 37265 (June 21, 2012).
OCC has rulemaking authority for lending
limits regulations applicable to national banks and
to all savings associations, both state- and
Federally-chartered. However, the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC), not the OCC, is the
appropriate Federal banking agency for state
savings associations and enforces these rules as to
state savings associations.
4 Section 160.93 specifically applied 12 U.S.C. 84
and the lending limits regulations and
interpretations promulgated by the OCC for national
banks to Federal and state savings associations.
Section 160.93 also implemented specific statutory
lending limits exceptions unique to Federal and
state savings associations.
5 The OCC notes that the interim final rule’s
integration of savings associations into part 32
applied the existing definition for national banks of
‘‘capital and surplus’’ set forth at § 32.2(b) to
savings associations. This definition differs from
the definition of ‘‘unimpaired capital and
unimpaired surplus’’ included in former § 160.93.
Under former § 160.93, savings associations could
add back any deductions to capital made for
investments in non-includable subsidiaries, thereby
increasing their capital calculation for lending
limits and, thus, the amount they could loan to one
borrower. However, this add-back is not permitted
under the definition of ‘‘capital and surplus’’ in
§ 32.2(b). This change resulted in a reduction in the
lending limits previously applicable to savings
associations’ investments in non-includable service
corporations. This result is consistent with the
treatment of a non-includable subsidiary capital
deduction in the transaction with affiliates
regulation (Regulation W), 12 CFR part 223, revised
by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System (Federal Reserve Board) on September 13,
2011. Part 223 applies to savings associations in
place of former 12 CFR 563.41, which had
permitted this deduction. See generally 76 FR
56508.
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to avoid unintended or anomalous
results.
1. Loans to Non-Consolidated
Subsidiaries
The former lending limits rule
applicable to savings associations,
§ 160.93(a), excluded loans made by
savings associations and their
subsidiaries consolidated in accordance
with generally accepted accounting
principles (GAAP-consolidated
subsidiaries) to all subordinate
organizations and savings association
affiliates. Rules applicable in these
situations were set forth in part 159.
Specifically, § 159.5(b) established
lending limits for loans by a Federal
savings association and its GAAPconsolidated subsidiaries to nonconsolidated subsidiaries. Section
159.5(b) did not set a specific lending
limit for loans to GAAP-consolidated
subsidiaries but provided that such a
limit could be established if warranted
by safety and soundness considerations.
The interim final rule carried over the
existing exclusion from the lending
limits rule for loans to GAAPconsolidated subsidiaries but did not
exclude from the coverage of part 32
loans made to non-consolidated
subsidiaries. Therefore, loans to nonconsolidated subsidiaries of Federal
savings associations were made subject
to the lending limits in part 32, but no
corresponding change was made to the
limits set forth in part 159. As a result,
the interim final rule subjected loans to
non-consolidated subsidiaries of Federal
savings associations to the lending
limits set forth in both parts 32 and 159,
which differ. This result was not
intended.
This final rule corrects this overlap by
replacing the lending limits set forth in
§ 159.5(b) with a cross-reference to part
32; by removing, as unnecessary, the
reference to ‘‘loans’’ within § 159.5(c);
and by making a conforming change to
§ 159.3(k)(2). This amendment also
removes the provision in § 159.5(b)(2)
that provides that the OCC may limit the
amount of loans to GAAP-consolidated
subsidiaries where safety and soundness
considerations warrant such action.
This language merely restates the OCC’s
statutory authority to apply prudential
standards to loans by both national
banks and Federal savings associations
for safety and soundness reasons.
Therefore, removal of § 159.5(b)(2) does
not affect this authority.
2. Loans by Service Corporations
The interim final rule did not revise
part 32 to address the aggregation of
loans made by a service corporation
with loans made by the parent savings
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37931
association. For Federal savings
associations, such aggregation is
currently addressed by § 159.3(k)(2),
which provides that loans made by a
service corporation controlled by a
Federal savings association are
aggregated with the loans made by that
savings association for purposes of the
lending limits of part 32. For purposes
of § 159.3(k)(2), ‘‘control’’ is defined by
reference to 12 CFR part 174.6 The
control standard in part 174 is a broad
standard that could potentially result in
the aggregation of loans by nonconsolidated service corporations with
those of the parent savings association.
The final rule avoids this result by
revising the scope of part 32 to aggregate
loans by GAAP-consolidated service
corporations with those of the parent
savings association. The final rule also
makes conforming changes to
§ 159.3(k)(2).
3. Loans by Foreign Subsidiaries of
Federal Savings Associations
Prior to the interim final rule,
pursuant to former §§ 160.93(a) and
159.3(k), loans made by foreign and
domestic subsidiaries, as defined by
part 159, of a Federal savings
association were aggregated with loans
made by the parent savings association.
The interim final rule amended part 32
to narrow the scope of the aggregation
to encompass loans by domestic
operating subsidiaries of savings
associations only, the same standard
that applied to national banks. The
interim final rule did not amend the
aggregation standard in § 159.3(k). As a
result, part 32 and § 159.3(k) set forth
different aggregation rules for loans
made by foreign subsidiaries of Federal
savings association.
To correct this anomaly, the final rule
revises the scope section of part 32 to
aggregate loans made by operating
subsidiaries and GAAP-consolidated
service corporations of savings
associations with loans made by the
parent institution. Loans by such
subsidiaries will be aggregated with
loans made by the parent savings
association regardless of whether the
subsidiary is foreign or domestic. Loans
made by foreign subsidiaries of national
banks will continue to be governed by
the separate lending limits set forth in
Regulation K.7 Regulation K is not
applicable to savings associations and,
therefore, addressing loans made by
foreign subsidiaries of savings
associations in part 32 is appropriate.
The OCC also is removing the words
‘‘bank’s or savings association’s’’ in
6 12
CFR 159.2.
12 CFR 211.12(b).
7 See
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§ 32.1(c)(1)(ii), as these words are
redundant, and is making other
conforming changes to § 32.1.
B. Section 610 of the Dodd-Frank Act
To implement the requirements of
section 610 of the Dodd-Frank Act, the
interim final rule amended the
definition of ‘‘loans and extensions of
credit’’ in § 32.2 to include certain
credit exposure arising from a derivative
transaction or a securities financing
transaction, i.e., a repurchase
agreement, reverse repurchase
agreement, securities lending
transaction, or securities borrowing
transaction. The interim final rule
defined ‘‘derivative transaction’’ to
include 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.
The interim final rule amended part
32 to provide national banks and
savings associations with different
options for measuring the credit
exposures of derivative transactions and
securities financing transactions for
purposes of the lending limits rules.
Providing these options was intended to
reduce regulatory burden, particularly
for smaller and mid-size banks and
savings associations.
All of the comment letters received by
the OCC on the interim final rule
addressed the amendments
implementing section 610. These
comments, and any resulting
amendments to part 32 made by this
final rule, are discussed below.
We note that the OCC had extended,
though a separate rulemaking,8 the
temporary exception period for the
application of the section 610-related
provisions of part 32 from January 1,
2013, as contained in the interim final
rule, to July 1, 2013. As a result,
national banks and savings associations
are not currently required to comply
with these provisions. However, the
OCC has determined that a further
extension of this temporary exception
period is appropriate in light of the
publication date of this final rule and in
order to allow institutions that wish to
use the Model Methods sufficient time
to develop a model, receive approval for
its use, and implement the model.
Moreover, the other methods provided
by the rule to measure credit exposure
would not be appropriate for many
institutions with large portfolios, as
8 77
FR 76841 (Dec. 31, 2012).
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compared with the more risk-sensitive
method of measuring credit exposures.
Therefore, this final rule extends this
temporary exception period through
October 1, 2013. As a result, national
banks and savings associations will not
be required to comply with the section
610-related provisions as amended by
the final rule until this date. As
indicated in the preamble to the interim
final rule, notwithstanding this
extension, the OCC retains full authority
to address credit exposures that present
undue concentrations on a case-by-case
basis through our existing safety and
soundness authorities.
1. Scope of Rule
Some commenters requested
clarification of, or changes to, the
application of the section 610-related
provisions of the interim final rule to
specific types of transactions.
Specifically, three financial trade
associations requested that the rule
clarify that options sold and fully paid
for are not covered by the rule because
these types of exposures have no
ongoing credit exposure beyond
settlement, i.e., when an option is paidup, there is no further performance
obligation by the counterparty and no
further credit exposure. The OCC agrees
that these transactions do not give rise
to credit exposure for the purpose of the
lending limits. When a bank sells an
option and that option is fully paid,
there is no counterparty credit risk
because the bank is not entitled to
anything further from the counterparty.
This fact is evident from the nature of
the transaction, and it is not necessary
to amend the final rule.
Another commenter, a nonprofit
organization, requested that the final
rule not exempt securities financing
transactions involving Federal- and
state-related securities from the lending
limits 9 because this exemption is not
explicitly required by section 610 and
such transactions are not free from the
risk to the institution of counterparty
default. The OCC disagrees with this
recommendation. These types of
transactions typically involve less risk
than other securities financing
transactions. Moreover, this exception is
consistent with the longstanding
exceptions in sections 5200(c)(4) and (5)
and § 32.3(c)(3), through (c)(5), which
provide exceptions for loans secured by
U.S. obligations, loans to or guaranteed
9 The interim final rule exempts Type I securities,
as defined in 12 CFR 1.2(j), in the case of national
banks; and securities listed in section 5(c)(1)(C), (D),
(E), and (F) of HOLA and general obligations of a
state or subdivision as listed in section 5(c)(1)(H) of
HOLA, 12 U.S.C. 1464(c)(1)(C), (D), (E), (F), and (H),
in the case of savings associations.
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by Federal agencies, or loans to or
guaranteed by state or local
governments. In addition, section
5200(d) grants the OCC the authority to
establish limits or requirements other
than those specified in the statute for
particular classes or categories of loans
or extensions of credit. Furthermore, an
exemption for these types of securities
financing transactions is consistent with
the treatment of reverse repurchase
agreements in § 32.2(q)(1)(vii), under
which such transactions are treated as
loans subject to an exception for
transactions relating to Type I securities
as defined in 12 CFR part 1.10 We
therefore decline to remove this
exemption in the final rule.
2. Methods To Measure Credit Exposure
In general. The interim final rule
provides three methods for calculating
credit exposure of derivative
transactions other than credit
derivatives, and two methods for
securities financing transactions.11
Unless required to use a specific method
by the appropriate Federal banking
agency for safety and soundness
reasons, a national bank or savings
association may choose which of these
methods it will use.12 However, under
the interim final rule, a national bank or
savings association must use the same
method for calculating credit exposure
arising from all derivative transactions
and the same method for all securities
financing transactions.13
A number of financial institution
trade associations requested that the
OCC apply the requirement to use a
specific method as determined by the
appropriate Federal banking agency
only prospectively and to phase it in
over time. These commenters also asked
the OCC to set forth the factors it might
use in exercising discretion to impose
this requirement. The OCC declines to
limit this provision only to future
transactions. We find that the discretion
of the appropriate Federal banking
agency to require, on a case-by-case
basis, application of a specific method
to prior and/or future transactions is a
necessary supervisory tool for safety and
10 This specific provision will be removed when
the rule’s temporary exception period for derivative
and securities financing transactions expires, as it
will then be unnecessary.
11 We note that the Basel Committee on Banking
Supervision has established a working group to
examine the risks associated with weaknesses and
inconsistencies in large exposure limit regimes
across jurisdictions and to decide whether an
international agreement on large exposure limits is
warranted. If such an agreement is reached, the
OCC would consider whether further amendments
to part 32 are necessary and appropriate.
12 See § 32.9(b)(3), renumbered as § 32.9(b)(4) in
the final rule, and § 32.9(c)(2).
13 See §§ 32.9(b)(1) and 32.9(c)(1).
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soundness purposes. This discretion
would permit the agency to phase in the
required method, as appropriate.
Examiners will coordinate with the
bank or savings association to ensure
any change in methods is managed
fairly and is consistent with safety and
soundness.
Commenters also requested that the
OCC permit these institutions to apply
different calculation methods based on
transaction or product type, and that the
rule should provide guidance with
respect to transitioning between
methods. While the OCC does not
intend to permit institutions to exercise
unlimited discretion to pick and choose
among the calculation methods for
different derivative or securities
financing transactions, we recognize
that there may be circumstances in
which the use of only one calculation
method for all transactions may present
safety and soundness concerns or may
not be practically feasible. For example,
an institution may develop a new
transaction type after it has developed,
and received approval for the use of, its
model. As discussed above, examiners
already have the flexibility under the
interim final rule to require that a
particular measurement method for a
particular subset of derivative or
securities financing transactions be used
to calculate credit exposure. However,
in order to clarify that an institution
may request to use a specific method,
and that the OCC may permit a specific
method to be used for one or more
transactions or transaction types, we
have amended both § 32.9(b)(3)
(renumbered in the final rule as
§ 32.9(b)(4)) and § 32.9(c)(2) to provide
that the appropriate Federal banking
agency may, at its discretion, permit a
national bank or savings association to
use a specific method to calculate credit
exposure, and that this method may
apply to all or specific transactions if
the appropriate Federal banking agency
finds that such method is consistent
with the safety and soundness of the
bank or savings association. Institutions
obtaining permission to use an
alternative method should work with
their examiners to ensure a proper
transition to use of the new method.
Internal Model for Derivative
Transactions and Securities Financing
Transactions. The interim final rule
permits national banks and savings
associations to calculate credit exposure
for derivative transactions and securities
financing transactions through the use
of an internal model. For derivative
transactions, § 32.9(b)(1)(i) provides that
counterparty credit exposure is
measured by adding the current credit
exposure (the greater of zero or the
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mark-to-market (MTM) value) of the
transaction and the potential future
exposure (PFE) of the transaction. Under
§ 32.9(b)(1)(i)(C) of the interim final
rule, a bank or savings association must
calculate its PFE by using an internal
model that has been approved for
purposes of Section 53 of the InternalRatings-Based and Advanced
Measurement Approaches Appendix
(Advanced Approaches Appendix) of
the appropriate Federal banking
agency’s capital rules 14 or any other
appropriate model approved by the
appropriate Federal banking agency.
Section 32.9(b)(1)(i)(D) provides that a
national bank or savings association that
calculates its credit exposure arising
from derivative transactions by using an
internal model may net exposures
arising under the same qualifying
master netting agreement, thereby
reducing the institution’s exposure to
the borrower to the net exposure under
the master netting agreement.
Similarly, for securities financing
transactions, § 32.9(c)(1)(i) of the
interim final rule permits an institution
to calculate credit exposure by using an
internal model approved by the
appropriate Federal banking agency for
purposes of Section 32(d) of the
Internal-Ratings-Based Appendices of
the appropriate Federal banking
agency’s capital rules,15 as appropriate,
or any other appropriate model
approved by the appropriate Federal
banking agency.
Most commenters discussed this
modeling option. One commenter, a
nonprofit organization, stated that
institutions should not be permitted to
use internal models for lending limits
purposes. The OCC disagrees with this
comment and is retaining the modeling
option in the final rule. The use of an
internal model, with the safeguards
described below, improves the accuracy
of the calculation of the institution’s
credit exposures to derivative and
securities financing transactions. Not
including such a modeling option, as
advocated by the commenter, would
result in a rule that would not
accurately reflect counterparty exposure
for certain banks. Importantly, the rule
applies appropriate supervisory
safeguards to a national bank’s or
savings association’s use of an internal
14 12 CFR part 3, Appendix C, Section 53 for
national banks; 12 CFR part 167, Appendix C,
Section 53 for Federal savings associations; and 12
CFR 390, subpart Z, Appendix A, Section 53 for
state savings associations.
15 12 CFR part 3, Appendix C, Section 32(d) for
national banks; 12 CFR part 167, Appendix C,
Section 32(d) for Federal savings associations; and
12 CFR 390, subpart Z, Appendix A, Section 32(d)
for state savings associations.
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37933
model. Specifically, a national bank or
savings association may not use an
internal model unless the use of the
model has been approved by the
appropriate Federal banking agency for
purposes of the Advanced Approaches
Appendix of the agency’s capital rule
(and, as discussed below, the institution
has provided prior written notice to the
agency of its use of the model for part
32 purposes) or specifically approved by
the agency for purposes of the lending
limits rule. Furthermore, also as
discussed below, this final rule provides
that the use of the model for lending
limits purposes following any
subsequent substantive change to it
must be approved by the appropriate
Federal banking agency.
Some commenters requested the OCC
to clarify the nature of the internal
model approval process, including the
standards for approval and duration of
the process. For the use of a model not
previously approved pursuant to the
Advanced Approaches Appendix, the
OCC intends that the OCC approval
process will include a thorough
institution and OCC review of the
model’s specific use for part 32 and the
institution’s ability to monitor the risks
associated with the transactions, and
will be separate and apart from any
approval of the use of a model for other
purposes. In addition, the approval of
the use of the model will be in writing.
We have amended § 32.9 to specify
these criteria. National banks or Federal
savings associations that seek approval
for the use of a model pursuant to part
32 should contact their examiner-incharge to begin the approval process.16
As indicated above, we also have
amended § 32.9 to require a bank or
savings association to provide prior
written notice to the appropriate Federal
banking agency before using an internal
model for lending limits purposes the
use of which has been previously
approved by the agency for purposes of
the Advanced Approaches Appendix.17
Also as indicated above, we have added
16 We note that this preamble discusses the OCC’s
process for approval of the use of internal models
for national banks and Federal savings associations.
The FDIC, in the case of state savings associations,
and the Federal Reserve Board, in the case of statelicensed branches of foreign banking organizations,
will have their own internal processes for
approving the use of such models. Some
commenters requested that the OCC coordinate
with the FDIC and Federal Reserve Board to ensure
that such agencies will be in a position to approve
internal models by the expiration of the temporary
exception for compliance. The OCC will, as
appropriate, consult with both the FDIC and
Federal Reserve Board. However, these agencies are
responsible for implementing this rule for their
regulated institutions.
17 12 CFR 32.9(b)(1)(i)(C)(1)(i) and 12 CFR
32.9(c)(1)(i)(A)(1) of the final rule.
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to the final rule a requirement that if a
national bank or savings association
makes a substantive revision to a model
after the appropriate Federal banking
agency’s approval, either pursuant to
the Advanced Approaches Appendix or
part 32, the use of the revised model
must be approved by the agency before
it may be used for purposes of part 32.18
Commenters also requested that in the
event that the use of a bank’s internal
model is not yet approved, or approved
and not yet implemented, by the end of
the temporary exception period, the
appropriate Federal banking agency
should approve on a provisional basis a
bank’s or savings association’s
calculation of credit exposures using
existing internal models. Furthermore,
these commenters said that the agency
should approve for lending limits
purposes on a provisional basis, if
appropriate, the use of models that are
in the process of being approved. The
OCC disagrees. As discussed above, to
appropriately support the determination
that a model is appropriate for
measuring the credit exposure of a
derivative transaction or securities
financing transaction under part 32 and
adequately addresses the risks of the
transaction, approval of the use of a
model must be made specifically for
part 32 and must be obtained prior to
the model’s use for this purpose, unless
the use of the model has already been
approved for purposes of the Advanced
Approaches Appendix. Therefore, in
order to ensure the safety and
soundness of a national bank or Federal
savings association, for part 32 purposes
the OCC will not approve the use of a
model on a provisional basis and will
not permit the model’s use before final
approval. However, we do not intend
that this approval requirement
necessitate the development of a new
model specifically for use under part 32.
A national bank or Federal savings
association may present an existing
internal model for approval by the OCC
for use as a lending limits model. For
example, an institution may present an
internal model it has developed for use
under the Advanced Approaches
Appendix but which has not yet been
approved for that use. Because most
complex banks have developed such
models that address counterparty risk,
we believe compliance with the
approval requirement will be possible
prior to the end of the extended
exception period.
Commenters also requested
clarification regarding the interim final
rule’s reference in §§ 32.9(b)(1)(i)(C) and
18 12 CFR 32.9(b)(1)(i)(C)(2) and 12 CFR
32.9(c)(1)(i)(B) of the final rule.
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32.9(c)(1)(i) to an internal model that
has been approved by the appropriate
Federal banking agency for purposes of
the Advanced Approaches Appendix.
Technically, pursuant to the Advanced
Approaches Appendix, the agency does
not separately approve the use of the
institution’s model but instead approves
the institution’s exit from parallel run
and its use of the Advanced
Approaches, for which the institution
has developed the internal model.19 We
confirm that this approval to exit
parallel run constitutes ‘‘approval’’ of
the use of the institution’s model for
purposes of part 32, and have added
language to §§ 32.9(b)(1)(i)(C) and
32.9(c)(1)(i) of the final rule to clarify
this point.
We also have further clarified the rule
by changing the name of the method
provided by §§ 32.9(b)(1)(i) and
32.9(c)(1)(i) in the final rule from
‘‘Internal Model Method’’ to ‘‘Model
Method.’’ This change should alleviate
confusion with the Internal Models
Approach for calculating the riskweighted asset amount for equity
exposures included in the agencies’
capital rules.
Furthermore, we have replaced the
provisions of the Advanced Approaches
Appendix referenced in the model
methods. For derivative transactions, in
response to a commenter, we have
amended § 32.9(b)(1)(i)(C) to replace the
reference to Section 53 of the Advanced
Approaches Appendix with a reference
to Section 32(d) of the Appendix.
Section 53 refers to the modeling of
equity risk (a form of market risk) rather
than counterparty risk and is more
general in nature. Section 32(d) more
appropriately refers to the modeling of
counterparty credit exposure arising
from derivatives, i.e. credit risk, and
specifically accounts for collateral.
Likewise, for securities financing
transactions, we have amended
§ 32.9(c)(1)(i) so that it references
Section 32(b) of the Advanced
Approaches Appendix instead of
Section 32(d) of the Appendix. The OCC
finds that the model provided for by
Section 32(b) of this Appendix is the
more appropriate model for measuring
credit exposure of securities financing
transactions for the lending limits rule.
Non-Model Methods. The interim
final rule provides two non-model
measurement methods for credit
exposures arising from derivative
transactions and one non-model
measurement method for credit
19 See 12 CFR part 3, Appendix C, Section 21 for
national banks; 12 CFR part 167, Appendix C,
Section 21 for Federal savings associations; and 12
CFR 390, subpart Z, Appendix A, Section 21 for
state savings associations.
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exposures arising from securities
financing transactions.
For derivative transactions, national
banks and savings associations may
choose either the Conversion Factor
Matrix Method, set forth in
§ 32.9(b)(1)(ii), or the Remaining
Maturity Method, as set forth in
§ 32.9(b)(1)(iii). Under the Conversion
Factor Matrix Method, the credit
exposure is equal to, and remains fixed
at, the PFE of the derivative transaction,
as determined at execution of the
transaction by reference to a simple
look-up table (Table 1 of the interim
final rule). To clarify this calculation,
the OCC has made a technical
amendment to the rule to provide that
the PFE of the derivative transaction
under this method equals the product of
the notional amount of the derivative
transaction and a fixed multiplicative
factor determined by reference to Table
1 of this section.
The credit exposure for derivative
transactions calculated under the
Remaining Maturity Method
incorporates both the current MTM and
the transaction’s remaining maturity
(measured in years) as well as a fixed
add-on for each year of the transaction’s
remaining life by adding the current
MTM value of the transaction to the
product of the notional amount of the
transaction, the remaining maturity of
the transaction, and a fixed
multiplicative factor. These
multiplicative factors differ based on
product type and are determined by a
look-up table (Table 2 of the interim
final rule).
One commenter stated that the credit
exposures under the Conversion Factor
Matrix Method for derivative
transactions should be marked-tomarket rather than fixed at inception in
order to properly value the amount of
credit risk. Because the market value of
these transactions can change
significantly from the time of execution,
the commenter notes that this approach
could cause an institution’s exposure to
a borrower to exceed the lending limits
on a MTM basis routinely without being
required to reduce the exposure. The
OCC disagrees. As noted in the
preamble to the interim final rule, we
are aware that, under the Conversion
Factor Matrix Method, the actual MTM
value at a given point in the life of a
derivative contract may exceed the
initially estimated PFE, and that it
would be possible for a bank to make a
new loan that, combined with the actual
exposure (were such exposure based on
current MTM value), could exceed the
lending limits. However, the OCC
believes that the risks in such case are
limited and can be addressed in the
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institutions likely to use this method
(smaller, less complex institutions)
during the supervisory process by
examiners appropriately responding to
transactions or concentrations that raise
safety and soundness concerns. For
example, examiners could require the
bank or savings association to measure
credit exposure by means of a different
method if doing so is appropriate for
safety and soundness purposes.
Allowing non-complex banks and
savings associations to ‘‘lock-in’’ the
attributable exposure at the execution of
the contract provides for certainty and
simplicity, with limited risk.20
A number of trade association and
financial institution commenters also
recommended that the OCC amend the
final rule to permit the use of the
‘‘Current Exposure Methodology’’
(‘‘CEM’’) as an additional option for
measuring credit exposure of derivative
transactions. The CEM is used under the
Federal banking agencies’ current
regulatory capital rules, both Basel I and
II capital regimes, and would be
retained under the Standardized and
Advanced Approaches Basel III-related
proposals released by the OCC and the
other Federal banking agencies.21 Under
the CEM, a bank calculates the credit
exposure for derivative transactions by
adding the current exposure (the greater
of zero or the MTM value) and the PFE
(calculated by multiplying the notional
amount by a specified conversion factor
which varies based on the type and
remaining maturity of the contract) of
the derivative transactions. In
particular, the commenters note that the
CEM incorporates additional
calculations for netting arrangements
and collateral and uses multipliers that
are more tailored to computing the PFE
of derivative transactions. The CEM,
they reason, would provide a more
refined analysis of credit exposure than
either the Conversion Factor Matrix
Method or the Remaining Maturity
Method. In addition, because of its use
20 We have revised Table 1 in the final rule to
conform the format of its content; there are no
substantive changes.
21 See 12 CFR part 3, Appendix C, Sections
32(c)(5)–(7), 12 CFR part 167, Appendix C, Sections
32(c)(5)–(7), or 12 CFR part 390, subpart Z,
Appendix A, Sections 32(c)(5)–(7), as appropriate.
Regulatory Capital Rules: Regulatory Capital,
Implementation of Basel III, Minimum Regulatory
Capital Ratios, Capital Adequacy, Transition
Provisions, and Prompt Corrective Action, Joint
Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 77 FR 52792
(August 30, 2012). Regulatory Capital Rules:
Standardized Approach for Risk-weighted Assets;
Market Discipline and Disclosure Requirements,
Joint Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 77 FR 52888
(August 30, 2012). Regulatory Capital Rules:
Advanced Approaches Risk-based Capital Rule;
Market Risk Capital Rule, Joint Notice of Proposed
Rulemaking, 77 FR 52978 (August 30, 2012).
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in the capital rules, these commenters
note that the CEM is familiar to both the
industry and regulators as an available
measure of derivative exposures and its
use for measuring credit exposure under
the lending limits rule would therefore
introduce less burden and operational
risk than would the use of a new and
different methodology for a narrow
regulatory purpose.
The OCC agrees with these
commenters that the CEM should be
permitted for use by national banks and
savings associations in calculating
credit exposure arising from derivative
transactions (other than credit
derivative transactions). For the reasons
noted above, it is superior to the
Remaining Maturity Method for
institutions that do not model exposures
but want to adopt a more risk-sensitive
method than that provided by the
Conversion Factor Matrix Method.
Therefore, the OCC is amending part 32
to replace the Remaining Maturity
Method option with a CEM option.
A number of commenters
recommended that, as with the Model
Method, the OCC should permit banks
and savings associations using the nonmodel approaches to net transactions
under a qualifying master netting
agreement and to recognize collateral in
measuring credit exposure. These
commenters note that the capital rules,
payment system risk reduction efforts,
and the current lending limits rule
recognizes the beneficial effects of
netting or collateral in reducing credit
exposure. Additionally, the commenters
request that the rule outline the forms
of collateral the bank may rely on to
offset credit exposure and suggest that
this collateral should reduce the credit
exposure as long as the collateral is
permissible and appropriate under a
valid and legally enforceable agreement.
The OCC notes that the CEM option as
added by this final rule provides for
some netting of PFEs and, therefore,
along with the presence in the rule of
the Model Method option, addresses the
commenters’ netting concerns. The OCC
also notes that part 32 already provides
for exemptions for loans and extensions
of credit secured by certain types of
collateral, and, as noted above, the CEM
incorporates additional calculations for
collateral.22 These exemptions apply to
the credit exposures arising from
derivative transactions, as well as
securities financing transactions, now
covered by the lending limits rule just
as they do to other loans and extensions
of credit. Therefore, no amendment is
necessary to recognize collateral that
22 E.g.
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may reduce credit exposure for
derivative transactions.
Some commenters noted that the nonmodel methods for derivative
transactions do not differentiate
between the credit exposures of interest
rate swaps that are amortized from those
that are not amortized. These
commenters suggest that the final rule
should reflect amortization in any
calculation of the PFE of these swaps
because the risk associated with a swap
that is amortized is reduced as the
notional amount decreases over the life
of the swap. While we acknowledge the
commenters’ concerns, we do not agree
that a change to the rule text to address
this comment is needed. The
Conversion Factor Matrix Method and
the CEM provide institutions with a
simple, albeit more conservative,
approach to measuring credit exposure.
Preserving the simplicity of these nonmodel methods outweighs any added
accuracy that may be achieved by
distinguishing between amortized and
non-amortized instruments.
Additionally, the CEM included in the
current regulatory capital rules does not
distinguish between an amortizing swap
and a non-amortizing swap; therefore,
we believe that it is reasonable to
preserve this treatment for purposes of
the legal lending limits. Further, we
note that institutions may use the Model
Method to account for credit exposures
arising from derivative transactions,
including amortizing interest rate
swaps, should they so desire.
For securities financing transactions,
the calculation of the credit exposure
under the Non-Model Method in the
interim final rule is based on the type
of securities financing transaction at
issue. For a repurchase agreement or a
securities loan where the collateral is
cash, exposure under the lending limits
is equal to and remains fixed at the net
current exposure, i.e., the market value
at execution of the transaction of
securities transferred to the other party,
less cash received from the other
party.23 For securities lending
transactions where the collateral is other
securities (i.e., not cash), the exposure is
equal to and remains fixed at the
product of the higher of the two haircuts
associated with the securities, as
determined by a look-up table included
in the regulation (Table 3 in the interim
final rule, renamed Table 2 in the final
rule), and the higher of the two par
values of the securities.24 The credit
23 12 CFR 32.9(c)(1)(ii)(A) and 12 CFR
32.9(c)(1)(ii)(B)(1).
24 12 CFR 32.9(c)(1)(ii)(B)(2). The haircuts in this
table are consistent with the standard supervisory
12 CFR 32.3(c)(3), (4) and (5).
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exposure arising from a reverse
repurchase agreement, also known as an
asset repo, or a securities borrowing
transaction where the collateral is cash,
equals and remains fixed at the product
of the haircut associated with the
collateral received, as determined in
this same table, and the amount of cash
transferred to the other party.25 For a
securities borrowing transaction where
the collateral is other securities (i.e., not
cash), the credit exposure equals and
remains fixed at the product of the
higher of the two haircuts associated
with the securities, as determined in the
table, and the higher of the two par
values of the securities.26
Commenters requested that the OCC
permit banks to measure credit exposure
of securities financing transactions by
applying the standard supervisory
haircuts for such transactions using the
current risk-based capital rules of the
appropriate Federal banking agency’s
capital rules 27 or the proposed Basel III
Advanced Approaches rules 28 once
finalized (collectively, the Basel
Collateral Haircut Approach) as an
additional non-model approach. These
commenters note that under the Basel
Collateral Haircut Approach, exposure
value changes as the market value of the
securities changes, while under the
Non-Model Method in the interim final
rule, exposure remains fixed at the
inception of the securities financing
transaction. Furthermore, the Basel
Collateral Haircut Approach applies
haircuts to the market value of the
securities for both repurchase/securities
lending transactions and reverse
repurchases/securities borrowing
transactions, while the Non-Model
Method of the interim final rule applies
haircuts only to the cash amount of a
reverse repurchase agreement/securities
borrowing transaction. In addition,
these commenters note that not allowing
banks to use the Basel Collateral Haircut
Approach means that banks would be
required to perform two separate
calculations, one for the lending limits
rule and one for Basel II/III, even though
the different calculations would not
result in materially different exposure
amounts.
The OCC agrees with these
commenters and has included in the
market price volatility haircuts in 12 CFR part 3,
Appendix C, Section 32(b)(2)(ii).
25 12 CFR 32.9(c)(1)(ii)(C) and 12 CFR
32.9(c)(1)(ii)(D)(1).
26 12 CFR 32.9(c)(1)(ii)(D)(2).
27 12 CFR part 3, Appendix C, Section 32(b)(2)(i)
and (ii); 12 CFR part 167, Appendix C, Section
32(b)(2)(i) and (ii); or 12 CFR part 390, subpart Z,
Appendix A, Section 32(b)(2)(i) and (ii), as
appropriate.
28 See footnote 21.
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final rule this additional method of
measuring credit exposure for securities
financing transactions, named in the
rule as the Basel Collateral Haircut
Method, as a new § 32.9(c)(1)(iii). We
find that this approach permits a more
accurate characterization of the true
exposure over the life of the transaction
for those national banks or savings
associations that do not use an internal
model and for which the existing nonmodel approach in the interim final rule
is not optimal. In addition, because this
approach is currently used by certain
national banks and savings associations
for purposes of the capital rules, it will
eliminate redundancy and associated
regulatory burden for these institutions.
As a result of adding this new nonmodel method for securities financing
transactions, the final rule changes the
name of the ‘‘Non-Model Method’’
included in the interim rule to ‘‘Basic
Method.’’ The final rule also makes a
technical correction to renamed Table 2
to describe the correct length of
maturity for sovereign entities with
maturities of more than 5 years.
3. Exposures to Central Counterparties
Under the interim final rule,
exposures to central counterparties are
credit exposures subject to the lending
limits. Industry commenters to the
interim final rule recommended that the
OCC either exclude these exposures
from an institution’s lending limits or
assign the exposures a higher lending
limit. These commenters believe that
the OCC should not subject these
exposures to the lending limits because
the Dodd-Frank Act has mandated the
migration of many derivative
transactions to central counterparties,
and those parties will be subject to
regulation. In addition, the commenters
note that applying the lending limits
rule to central counterparty exposures
could reduce the incentive to use
central counterparties or prevent some
institutions from engaging in certain
transactions, thus limiting the
availability of certain products to
customers. One commenter also notes
that applying the lending limits to
exposures to central counterparties is
unnecessary because central
counterparties are more akin to a group
of borrowers than ‘‘one borrower,’’ with
the central counterparty insulating each
clearing member and clearing customer
from risks associated with the default of
an individual counterparty.
Commenters also addressed the issue
of applying the lending limits rule to an
institution’s contributions to a central
counterparty’s guaranty fund. Some
commenters stated that the lending
limits rule should apply to these
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contributions because they are
equivalent to committed lines of credit.
Others argued that the rule should not
apply, or its application should be
tailored.
The OCC does not agree that the
lending limits rule should exclude
credit exposures to central
counterparties or central counterparty
guaranty funds given the concentrated
nature of these exposures. The lending
limits serve the purpose of preventing
an undue concentration of credit risk to
one party, including an institution’s
credit exposures to central
counterparties. Furthermore, permitting
banks to use models to measure their
exposure to central counterparties,
combined with prudent credit risk
management practices by clearing
member banks, makes it unlikely that
applying the rule to such credit
exposures will cause an institution’s
exposures to one borrower to reach the
institution’s legal limit. To clarify how
banks and savings associations must
measure counterparty exposures to
central counterparties, we have added a
new § 32.9(b)(3). This new provision
says that, in addition to the amount
calculated under § 32.9(b), the measure
of exposure to a central counterparty
shall include the sum of the initial
margin posted, plus any contributions to
a guaranty fund at the time such
contribution is made, if not already
reflected in the calculation. This new
provision is generally consistent with
interpretive positions taken by the
OCC.29 However, the OCC recognizes
that the role of central counterparties in
the domestic and international financial
industry is dynamic and that
uncertainties exist as to how this role
will evolve, especially given the role
assigned to central clearinghouses by
the Dodd-Frank Act and choices of the
bank’s or savings association’s client as
to using certain central counterparties.30
Therefore, the OCC will continue to
monitor the role of central
counterparties and will revisit our
lending limits rule for exposures to such
entities if necessary.
4. Credit Derivatives
The OCC received a number of
comments on the interim final rule’s
treatment of credit exposures arising
from credit derivatives. Section
32.9(b)(2) of the interim final rule
applies a special rule for calculating the
credit exposure of credit derivatives, a
transaction in which a national bank or
29 See, e.g., OCC Interpretive Letter No. 1113,
March 4, 2009.
30 In general, section 723 of the Dodd-Frank Act
requires the central clearing of certain derivatives.
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savings association buys or sells credit
protection against loss on a third-party
reference entity. Specifically, a
protection purchaser that uses one of
the non-model methods for derivative
transactions, or that uses a model
without entering an effective margining
arrangement with its counterparty as
defined in § 32.2(l) of the interim final
rule, calculates the counterparty credit
exposure arising from credit derivatives
by adding the net notional value of all
protection purchased from the
counterparty across all reference
entities.31 In addition, a protection
seller calculates the credit exposure to
a reference entity arising from credit
derivatives by adding the notional value
of all protection sold on that reference
entity.32 However, the protection seller
may reduce its exposure to a reference
entity by the amount of any eligible
credit derivative, which is defined in
§ 32.2(m) of the interim final rule as a
single-name credit derivative or
standard, non-tranched index credit
derivative that meets certain
requirements, purchased on that
reference entity from an eligible
protection provider, as defined in
§ 32.2(o).
Some commenters requested that the
OCC amend the definition of ‘‘eligible
credit derivative’’ to allow banks to
obtain relief for the purchase of credit
protection using standard tranched
index credit derivatives in addition to
standard non-tranched index credit
derivatives. As both tranched and nontranched index credit derivatives are
highly standardized, rely on the same
triggering events for payments, and
calculate payments from the protection
provider on the basis of the same
auction-determined prices, the
commenters do not believe that an
institution’s ability to reduce its
exposures under the rule should be
limited to only non-tranched index
credit derivatives. The OCC disagrees
with these comments and has not
31 The protection buyer is exposed to the
counterparty risk of the seller; the buyer expects
payment from the seller if there is a default.
Technically, the seller also bears a degree of
counterparty credit risk; this risk is not being
captured by the lending limits.
32 Section 610 of the Dodd-Frank Act applies the
lending limits to counterparty credit exposures
arising from derivative transactions (‘‘credit
exposure to a person arising from a . . . transaction
between the national banking association and the
person’’) (emphasis added). Section 610 (a)(1), as
codified at 12 U.S.C. 84(b)(1)(C). The OCC’s
authority to apply the lending limits to exposures
to reference entities in credit derivatives derives
from 12 U.S.C. 84(b)(1)(B) (loans subject to the
lending limits include ‘‘to the extent specified by
the Comptroller of the Currency, any liability . . .
to advance funds to or on behalf of a person
pursuant to a contractual commitment’’).
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amended the final rule to define
‘‘eligible credit derivative’’ to include
standard tranched index credit
derivatives at this time. We will address
this issue if we later determine, after
experience implementing this rule, that
such a change is warranted.
Commenters also recommended that
the OCC clarify that the definition of
‘‘eligible credit derivative’’ includes, in
the case of sovereign or municipality
reference obligors, contracts in which
the credit event is a restructuring.
Because bankruptcy and insolvency
regimes generally do not exist for these
types of reference obligors, standard
credit default swap (CDS) contracts on
sovereign and municipal reference
exposures instead cover the buyer of
protection for restructurings that, while
not conducted by a bankruptcy court or
receiver, nonetheless bind the holders of
the sovereign or municipal debt to
changes in principal, interest, or similar
economic terms of the debt. It was not
the OCC’s intent to exclude
restructurings of such obligors in this
definition. Therefore, we have amended
the definition of ‘‘eligible credit
derivative,’’ at § 32.2(m)(3)(ii), by
specifically including a restructuring for
obligors not subject to bankruptcy or
insolvency as a credit event for a CDS.
Some commenters opposed the
provision in the interim final rule,
§ 32.9(b)(2), that requires a national
bank or savings association to enter an
effective margining arrangement in
order to use an internal model approach
to calculate counterparty exposure
arising from a credit derivative. Absent
the effective margining arrangement, the
bank or savings association must
calculate its counterparty credit risk
exposure by adding notional amounts
across all reference entities for each
counterparty. The interim final rule
defines ‘‘effective margining
arrangement’’ as a master legal
agreement governing derivative
transactions between a bank or savings
association and a counterparty that
requires the counterparty to post, on a
daily basis, variation margin to fully
collateralize that amount of the bank’s
net credit exposure to the counterparty
that exceeds $1 million created by the
derivative transactions covered by the
agreement. These commenters stated
that selection of a $1 million threshold
is arbitrary and unnecessary because an
effective model should take into account
whatever threshold is applicable for a
particular margining arrangement. The
OCC does not agree with this comment
and finds that variation margin is an
important credit risk mitigation tool for
prudent participation in over-thecounter derivatives markets. Beyond a
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37937
prudently established variation margin
threshold, the OCC does not believe it
is appropriate to permit an institution to
use the Model Method for credit
derivatives transactions. Many large
institutions currently require, or likely
soon will require, that all credit
exposures from derivative transactions
be fully collateralized. Therefore, we
believe defining ‘‘effective margining
arrangement’’ to include a threshold is
appropriate from a safety and soundness
perspective, conforms with current and
evolving industry standards, and is
consistent with efforts to prevent the
type of uncollateralized credit
derivatives exposures that proved
problematic during the financial crisis.
After further review of this issue,
however, we believe that it is
appropriate to increase the threshold
amount in the definition of effective
margining arrangement to reflect any
existing agreements with thresholds
above $1 million. This change would
allow banks and savings associations
with such existing margining
agreements to use the Model Method
without having to renegotiate and
modify the agreements. We have limited
this increase to $25 million, an amount
that we believe adequately covers the
bulk of these existing agreements. To
help ensure that this increase in
threshold amount will not raise new
safety and soundness concerns, we have
adjusted the rule to provide that the
amount of the threshold under an
effective margining arrangement is
added to the amount of counterparty
exposure calculated by the Model
Method. Thus, the amount of the
threshold would be subject to the
lending limit. Of course, this adjustment
to the rule in no way obviates or
modifies the ongoing requirement that
an institution’s margining arrangements,
including as to the threshold amounts
that do not exceed the threshold used in
the lending limits rule, must be
consistent with safe and sound banking
practices.
Commenters also requested that the
OCC permit national banks to purchase
credit protection, such as default or total
return swaps, to reduce all types of
credit exposure to a borrower.33 Under
the interim final rule, the purchase of
credit protection can only reduce credit
derivative exposure to a reference
obligor, not other exposures such as
traditional loans and extensions of
credit. The commenters note that the
purchase of credit protection is a well33 The OCC notes that a national bank or savings
association may only purchase such credit
protection if the transaction is otherwise permitted
under applicable law. See e.g., 12 U.S.C. 1851 and
any implementing regulations.
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accepted risk management technique
and is recognized in the Comptroller’s
Handbook on Concentrations of Credit
as a useful strategy for managing credit
concentration risk.34 They recommend
that where the protection contract
maturity is as long as the maturity for
the other exposure, protection
purchased from an eligible protection
provider should be permitted under the
rule to be used to reduce all types of
covered credit exposure.
After careful consideration, the OCC
agrees that credit protection purchased
should be allowed to offset other types
of credit exposures, under certain
circumstances as suggested by the
commenters, but only on a limited basis.
Specifically, we have added a new
§ 32.2(q)(2)(vii) to exclude from the
lending limits rule that part of a loan or
extension of credit for which a national
bank or savings association has
purchased protection if: that protection
is by way of a single-name credit
derivative that meets the requirements
for an eligible credit derivative
contained in § 32.2(m)(1) through (7);
the credit derivative is purchased from
an eligible protection provider; the
reference obligor is the same legal entity
as the borrower in the loan or extension
of credit; and the amount and maturity
of the protection purchased equals or
exceeds the amount and maturity of the
loan or extension of credit. However,
even if all of these requirements are
satisfied, the total amount of such
exclusion may not exceed 10 percent of
the bank’s or savings association’s
capital and surplus.35 We believe this
policy strikes an appropriate balance by
conforming the lending limits rule to
existing agency policy on the purchase
of credit protection (such as the policy
cited by the commenters) while placing
a ceiling on a bank’s ability to obtain
relief from the lending limits in this
manner.
Three financial trade associations
stated that the interim final rule is not
clear as to whether, and, if so, how, it
covers credit exposures arising from
tranched index credit derivatives. The
commenters noted that the rule requires
banks to use ‘‘notional value’’ to
calculate credit exposure on protection
sold, but there are several different
notional amounts identified in tranched
index CDS documentation, and none of
these can reasonably be understood as a
proxy for credit exposure.
34 See Comptroller’s Handbook, Concentration of
Credit, December 2011, p. 13.
35 Where a protection seller reduces its credit
derivative exposure under § 32.9(b)(2)(ii) by
purchasing protection, such reduction is not subject
to the 10 percent limit.
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The OCC understands that the interim
final rule does not resolve questions
regarding the measurement of exposures
arising from tranched credit derivatives,
whether they are standard index or
bespoke tranches. However, because
there are different notional amounts that
could apply to tranched exposures,
none of which may be indicative of the
risk to a particular reference entity, it is
difficult to apply a specific rule for all
situations. Instead, we intend to address
this issue through OCC interpretations.
This approach will allow the OCC to
more thoroughly examine the
transactions at issue and apply
approaches that most accurately
calculate the notional amount
attributable to each reference entity in a
specific tranche.
5. Securities Financing TransactionSpecific Provisions
A number of comments were directed
specifically to the interim final rule’s
treatment of securities financing
transactions.
Some commenters asked the OCC to
clarify that ‘‘repurchase agreement’’ and
‘‘reverse repurchase agreement’’ as used
in the definition of ‘‘securities financing
transaction’’ are limited to transactions
in securities. The lack of a definition for
these specific terms could result in the
impression that the same lending limits
rule applicable to securities financing
transactions in § 32.9 applies to other
types of repurchase agreements and
reverse repurchase agreements that do
not involve securities. It does not.36
However, to address this concern we
have added a definition of ‘‘security’’ to
the final rule, which cross-references to
the definition of this term in section
3(a)(10) of the Securities Exchange Act
of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(10)). This
definition clarifies that the transactions
that are referred to as ‘‘securities
financing transactions’’ are transactions
that involve securities.
As indicated above, under the
renamed Basic Method, the credit
exposure arising from either a securities
lending transaction or a securities
borrowing transaction where the
collateral is other securities will equal
and remain fixed as the product of the
higher of the two haircuts associated
with the two securities, as determined
in Table 2 of the final rule (formerly
Table 3 of the interim final rule), and
36 Instead, the other provisions of part 32 should
be consulted. For example, extensions of credit
secured by loans, whether effected by reverse
repurchase agreements or otherwise, have always
been within the scope of the general lending limits
rules (including any applicable exceptions) and
continue to be so after the enactment of the DoddFrank Act and promulgation of this rule.
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the higher of the two par values of the
securities. Commenters questioned how
the credit exposure would be calculated
when more than one type of securities
collateral is provided in these
transactions. We agree that this
circumstance should be addressed in
the rule. Accordingly, we have amended
the provisions in the rule regarding
these non-cash collateral transactions,
§§ 32.9(c)(1)(ii)(B)(2) and
32.9(c)(1)(ii)(D)(2), to provide that
where more than one security is
provided as collateral, the applicable
haircut is the higher of the haircut
associated with the security borrowed
and the notional-weighted average of
the haircuts associated with the
securities provided as collateral.
Commenters also requested that the
OCC clarify that the securities lending
transactions secured by Federal and
state (or political subdivision)
obligations should receive the same
treatment as ‘‘cash collateralized’’
transactions under the rule when
calculating credit exposure. The OCC
notes that the rule currently provides
that credit exposures arising from
securities financing transactions in
which the securities financed are type I
securities, as defined in 12 CFR 1.2(j),
in the case of national banks (generally
Federal and state securities), or
securities listed in sections 5(c)(1)(C),
(D), (E), and (F) of HOLA and general
obligations of a state or subdivision as
listed in section 5(c)(1)(H) of HOLA,37
in the case of savings associations, are
exempt from the lending limits.
Therefore, no further change is needed.
6. Nonconforming Loans and Extensions
of Credit
The interim final rule added a new
paragraph (a)(3) to § 32.6 to provide that
a credit exposure arising from a
derivative transaction or securities
financing transaction and determined by
a model pursuant to § 32.9(b)(1)(i) or
§ 32.9(c)(1)(i), respectively, will not be
deemed a violation of the lending limits
statute or regulation and will be treated
as nonconforming if the extension of
credit was within the national bank’s or
savings association’s legal lending limits
at execution and is no longer in
conformity because the exposure has
increased since execution. One
commenter requested that credit
exposures that exceed the limits after
inception of the derivative transaction
should be treated as violations of the
lending limits rule rather than as
nonconforming, asserting that otherwise
there would be an incentive to game the
limits. We disagree with this comment.
37 12
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Because of the nature of these
transactions, it would not be possible
for an institution to predict with any
certainty the maximum exposure
amount at the execution of a
transaction. Furthermore, once a
transaction becomes nonconforming, the
rule requires the institution to use
reasonable efforts to bring it into
conformity with the lending limits
unless doing so would be inconsistent
with safety and soundness. The OCC
enforces this provision accordingly.
Other commenters requested that
derivative transactions calculated using
a non-model method also should be
treated as ‘‘nonconforming’’ if credit
exposure arising from the derivative
transaction increases after execution of
the transaction. Without this change,
institutions choosing a non-model
method could face violations of the
lending limits due to increases in credit
exposure post-execution, while banks
using internal models, in similar
circumstances, would only be subject to
an instance of nonconformance with the
opportunity to correct the
nonconformance before it is deemed a
violation. We agree that the provision
on nonconforming loans and extensions
of credit should apply to transactions
calculated using a non-model method.
Although the OCC intended this
treatment when issuing the interim final
rule, the text of the rule did not
accomplish it. We therefore have made
this technical change by adding
reference to the Current Exposure
Method as well as the Basel Collateral
Haircut Method, which we have added
as an additional non-model method for
securities financing transactions, to
§ 32.6(a)(3) of the final rule.38
7. Other Provisions
Unless specifically noted in the rule,
all provisions of part 32 apply to credit
exposures arising from a derivative
transaction or a securities financing
transaction, including the lending limits
calculation rules of § 32.4 and the
combination rules of § 32.5. Some
commenters took issue with the
application of the direct benefit test in
§ 32.5, which provides for the
attribution and combination of loans
and extensions of credit under certain
circumstances, to derivative and
securities financing transactions. They
stated that the direct benefit test would
be difficult to monitor in these
transactions because of the complexity
of these transactions and would likely
require significant changes to market
practices or revisions to standard
Transaction type
Credit exposure
37939
documentation to implement. Instead
they recommend that for these
transactions the direct benefit test
should be limited by its terms to
situations of evasion. The OCC has
carefully considered this comment. The
direct benefit test is dependent on the
facts of a particular case, and the OCC
understands that the nature of
derivative and securities financing
transactions may raise factual issues not
found in traditional loan transactions.
However, the OCC has determined not
to make changes to the long-established
text of the direct benefit test at this time.
The OCC will continue to apply the test
sensibly to these transactions in light of
their facts and circumstances and will
review the direct benefit test once it has
experience with its application to the
exposures arising from derivative
transactions and securities financing
transactions.
III. Explanatory Table
The table below is provided as an aid
in understanding the final rule. A prior
version was included in the interim
final rule and we have revised it to
simplify it and to reflect the changes
included in the final rule. It is not a
substitute for the final rule itself.
Calculation examples under Final Rule
Derivatives
Interest Rate Swap
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Credit Derivative
Institutions that have an approved model can use the
model to determine the attributable credit exposure.
If no model, institutions must use either the Conversion Factor Matrix Method or the Current Exposure
Method.
Conversion Factor Matrix Method: Attributable credit
exposure is locked-in or fixed at the PFE on day 1
by simply multiplying notional principal amount by
a conversion factor provided in table. No requirement to calculate daily mark-to-market or re-calculate PFE.
Current Exposure Method: Attributable credit exposure is calculated by adding the current exposure
(the greater of zero or the MTM value) and the
PFE (calculated by multiplying the notional amount
by a specified conversion factor taken from Table 4
of the Advanced Approaches Appendix of the capital rules, which varies based on the type and remaining maturity of the contract) of the derivative
transaction.
To Counterparty 39 Institutions that model derivatives
exposures determine the attributable exposure
based on the model, provided there is an effective
margining arrangement. They add in to the amount
calculated under the model any net credit exposure
under an effective margining arrangement with respect to which the counterparty is not required to
fully collaterize.
38 It is not necessary to include the Conversion
Factor Matrix method for derivative transactions or
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Non-modeled bank: Bank A without an approved
model executes a $10 million, 5-year, interest rate
swap. It receives a fixed rate and pays floating.
The current mark-to-market is $0.
Under the Conversion Factor Matrix Method, the PFE
factor for this swap is 6%. Bank A ‘‘locks-in’’ attributable exposure of $600,000 ($10 million × 6%),
the day-one PFE amount.
Under the Current Exposure Method (CEM), exposure is equal to the current mark-to-market, plus
an ‘‘add-on’’ determined by multiplying the notional
amount times a factor appropriate for the swap’s
maturity. The factor for a 5-year swap is 0.5 percent. Bank A’s attributable exposure would be
$50,000 (0 + ($10 million × 0.5%)).
Modeled bank with effective margining arrangement:
Bank A buys and sells credit protection from and to
Bank B on Firms X, Y and Z. There is an effective
margining arrangement between the banks with a
collateralization threshold of $2,000,000. Banks A
and B use their models to determine their
counterparty credit exposures and add to the calculation $2,000,000.
the Basic Method for securities financing
transactions in § 32.6(a)(3) because the measured
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credit exposure of a transaction for lending limits
purposes remains fixed under these methods.
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Transaction type
Credit exposure
Calculation examples under Final Rule
Institutions that use the Conversion Factor Matrix
Method or CEM for other derivative transactions, or
that model but do not have an effective margining
arrangement, calculate the attributable exposure as
the sum of all net notional protection purchased
amounts across reference entities.
To Reference Entities 40
Institutions calculate the exposure as the net notional protection sold amount. The net protection sold amount is the gross notional protection sold on a reference entity less the amount
of any eligible credit derivative purchased on
that reference entity from an eligible protection
provider.
Non-modeled bank or bank without effective
margining arrangement:
Example 1
Bank A buys and sells credit protection from
and to Bank B on Firms X, Y and Z. Bank
A’s net notional protection purchased from
Bank B is $50 for Firm X and $100 for
Firm Y. Bank A’s net protection sold to
Bank B is $35 for Firm Z. The lending limits exposure of Bank A to Bank B is a
counterparty credit exposure of $150.
(Bank A also has a lending limits exposure to Firm Z of $35 due to reference entity exposure.)
Example 2
Bank C sells credit protection on Firms 1
and 2. Bank C’s gross notional protection
sold is $100 for Firm 1 and $200 for Firm
2. Bank C also purchases $25 of protection on Firm 2 from an eligible protection
provider (EPP) via an eligible credit derivative. The lending limits exposure of Bank
C to Firm 1 is $100 and to Firm 2 is $175.
If Bank C models its exposures and has
an effective margining agreement with the
EPP, its counterparty exposure to the
EPP for this transaction, as well as all
other derivatives transactions in the same
netting set, is calculated by the model. If
Bank C has no effective margining agreement with the EPP or does not model, its
counterparty exposure to the EPP is $25.
Example 3
Bank D funds a loan to Borrower Inc. in the
amount of $100,000. Bank D purchases
protection on Borrower Inc. in the amount
of $40,000 from an eligible protection provider (EPP) via a single-name credit derivative that meets the requirements of
§ 32.2(m)(1) through (7). The amount of
$40,000 does not exceed 10% of Bank
D’s capital and surplus. Bank D’s
counterparty exposure to Borrower Inc. is
$60,000 for lending limits purposes
($100,000 ¥ $40,000). Bank D, a bank
whose use of models for legal lending limits purposes has been approved by the
appropriate Federal banking agency, has
an effective margining agreement with the
EPP and so will model the counterparty
exposure to the EPP on this credit derivative transaction as part of a portfolio of
derivative transactions with the EPP.
Securities Financing
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Reverse Repurchase Agreement
(asset repo)
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Institutions that have an approved model can use the
model to determine the attributable credit exposure.
Banks that do not have an approved model can determine attributable credit exposure using either
the Basic Method or the Basel Collateral Haircut
Method.
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Using the Basic Method:
Bank executes a reverse repo in which it lends
$100 and receives as collateral 7-year Treasury securities worth $102 that have a haircut,
based on Table 2 of the final rule, of 4%. Attributable exposure is $4 ($100 × 4%).
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Transaction type
37941
Credit exposure
Basic Method:
Attributable credit exposure for lending limit purposes is the product of the haircut associated
with the collateral received and the amount of
cash transferred.
Basel Collateral Haircut Method:
Attributable credit exposure for lending limit purposes is determined pursuant to Sections
32(b)(2)(i) and (ii) of the Advanced Approaches Appendix of the capital rules.
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Securities Borrowing Transaction
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Using the Basel Collateral Haircut Method:
Bank executes a reverse repo in which it lends
$100 and receives as collateral 7-year Treasury securities worth $102 that have a haircut
of 4%, based on Table 3 of Section 32(b)(2) of
the Advanced Approaches Appendix of the
capital rules. Attributable exposure is ($100 ¥
$102) + ($100 × 0%) + ($102 × 4%) = $2.08.
Institutions that have an approved model can use the
model to determine the attributable credit exposure.
Banks that do not have an approved model can determine attributable credit exposure using either
the Basic Method or the Basel Collateral Haircut
Method.
Basic Method:
Attributable credit exposure for lending limit purposes is the difference between the market
value of securities transferred less cash received (i.e., the net current credit exposure).
Basel Collateral Haircut Method: Attributable credit
exposure for lending limit purposes is determined
pursuant to Sections 32(b)(2)(i) and (ii) of the Advanced Approaches Appendix of the capital rules.
Repurchase Agreement
Calculation examples under Final Rule
Using the Basic Method:
Bank executes a repo in which it borrows $100,
pledging 7-year Treasury securities worth
$102. Attributable exposure is $2, the amount
of net current credit exposure.
Institutions that have an approved model can use the
model to determine the attributable credit exposure.
Banks that do not have an approved model can determine attributable credit exposure using either
the Basic Method or the Basel Collateral Haircut
Method.
Basic Method:
If collateral is cash, treat the same as reverse
repo: Attributable credit exposure for lending
purposes is the product of the haircut associated with the collateral received and the
amount of cash transferred.
If collateral is securities:
Attributable credit exposure for lending limit purposes is the product of the higher of the two
haircuts associated with the two securities and
the higher of the two par values of the securities.
Basel Collateral Haircut Method:
Attributable credit exposure for lending limit purposes is determined pursuant to Sections
32(b)(2)(i) and (ii) of the Advanced Approaches Appendix of the capital rules.
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Using the Basel Collateral Haircut Method:
Bank executes a repo in which it borrows $100,
pledging 7-year Treasury securities worth
$102 that have a haircut of 4%, based on
Table 3 of Section 32(b)(2) of the Advanced
Approaches Appendix of the capital rules. Attributable exposure is ($102 ¥ $100) + ($100
× 0%) + ($102 × 4%) = $6.08.
Using the Basic Method, cash as collateral:
Bank borrows $100 par value 7-year Treasury
securities that have a fair value of $102. The
bank pledges $100 in cash. The haircut associated with the security is 4%, based on Table
2 of the final rule. The attributable exposure is
$4 ($100 × 4%).
Using the Basic Method, securities as collateral:
Bank borrows $100 par value 7-year Treasury
securities (with fair value $101) and pledges 5year bank eligible corporate bonds with a par
value of $100 and fair value of $102. The haircut on the borrowed security is 4% and the
haircut on the pledged security is 6%, based
on Table 2 of the final rule. The attributable
exposure is $6 ($100 × 6%), based upon the
higher of the two security haircuts and the
higher of the two par values (here the par values were the same).
Using the Basel Collateral Haircut Method, cash as
collateral:
Bank borrows $100 par value 7-year Treasury
securities that have a fair value of $102. The
bank pledges $100 in cash. The haircut associated with the security is 4%, based on Table
3 of Section 32(b)(2) of the Advanced Approaches Appendix of the capital rules. The attributable exposure is ($100 ¥ $102) + ($100
× 0%) + ($102 × 4%) = $2.08.
Using the Basel Collateral Haircut Method, securities
as collateral:
Bank borrows $100 par value 7-year Treasury
securities (with fair value $101) and pledges 5year bank eligible corporate bonds with a par
value of $100 and a fair value of the $102.
The haircut on the borrowed security is 4%
and the haircut on the pledged security is 6%,
based on Table 3 of Section 32(b)(2) of the
Advanced Approaches Appendix of the capital
rules. The attributable exposure is: ($102 ¥
$101) + ($102 × 6%) + ($101 × 4%) = $11.16.
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Transaction type
Securities Lending Transaction
Credit exposure
Calculation examples under Final Rule
Institutions that have an approved model can use the
model to determine the attributable credit exposure.
Banks that do not have an approved model can determine attributable credit exposure using either
the Basic Method or the Basel Collateral Haircut
Method.
Basic Method:
If collateral received is cash, treat the same as a
repo: The attributable credit exposure for lending limit purposes is the net current credit exposure.
If the collateral received is other securities: The
attributable credit exposure for lending limit
purposes is the product of the higher of the
two haircuts associated with the two securities
and the higher of the two par values of the securities.
Using the Basic Method, cash as collateral:
Bank lends $100 par value 7-year Treasury securities with fair value of $102 and receives
$100 in cash collateral. Attributable exposure
is $2, the net current credit exposure.
Basel Collateral Haircut Method:
Attributable credit exposure for lending limit purposes is determined pursuant to Sections
32(b)(2)(i) and (ii) of the Advanced Approaches Appendix of the capital rules.
Using the Basic Method, securities as collateral:
Bank lends $100 par value 7-year Treasury securities with fair value of $101 and receives as
collateral a 5-year bank eligible corporate
bond with a $100 par value and $102 fair
value. The haircuts on the loaned and borrowed securities are 4% and 6%, respectively,
based on Table 2 of the final rule. Attributable
exposure is $6 ($100 × 6%), based upon the
higher of the two security haircuts and the
higher of the two par values (here the par values were the same).
Using the Basel Collateral Haircut Method cash as
collateral:
Bank lends $100 par value 7-year Treasury securities with fair value of $102 and receives
$100 in cash collateral. The haircut on the security is 4%, based on Table 3 of Section
32(b)(2) of the Advanced Approaches Appendix of the capital rules. Attributable exposure is
($102 ¥ $100) + ($100 × 0%) + ($102 × 4%)
= $6.08.
Using the Basel Collateral Haircut Method, securities
as collateral:
Bank lends a $100 par value 7-year Treasury
security with a fair value of $101 and receives
a 5-year bank eligible corporate bond as collateral, with a $100 par value and $102 fair
value. The haircuts on the loaned and borrowed securities are 4% and 6%, respectively,
based on Table 3 of Section 32(b)(2) of the
Advanced Approaches Appendix of the capital
rules. Attributable exposure is ($101 ¥ $102)
+ ($102 × 6%) + ($101 × 4%) = $9.16.
39 The protection buyer is exposed to the counterparty risk of the seller; the buyer expects payment from the seller if there is a default. Technically, the seller also bears a degree of counterparty credit risk; this risk is not being captured by the lending limits.
40 Upon default of the reference entity, the protection seller must make a payment to the buyer.
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IV. Effective and Compliance Dates
The Administrative Procedure Act
(APA) requires that a substantive rule
must be published not less than 30 days
before its effective date, unless, among
other things, the rule grants or
recognizes an exemption or relieves a
restriction.41 Current 12 CFR 32.1(d)
provides a temporary exception period
for the application of the section 610related provisions of part 32 that expires
on July 1, 2013. This final rule amends
§ 32.1(d) to extend this temporary
exception period through October 1,
2013. Because this amendment
postpones the application of the section
610-related provisions to national banks
and savings associations, thereby
relieving banks and savings associations
from compliance with the section 610related provisions on July 1, 2013, the
amendment may take effect less than 30
days from publication. Because this
41 5
U.S.C. 553(d)(1).
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extension must take effect before July 1,
2013 to prevent the current exception
period from expiring, we have made the
amendment to 12 CFR 32.1(d) contained
in this final rule effective on June 25,
2013.
Section 302 of the Riegle Community
Development and Regulatory
Improvement Act of 1994 (12 U.S.C.
4802) (RCDRIA) requires that
regulations imposing additional
reporting, disclosure, or other
requirements on insured depository
institutions take effect on the first day
of the calendar quarter after publication
of the final rule, unless, among other
things, the agency determines for good
cause that the regulations should
become effective before such time.
Because the amendment to extend the
temporary compliance period does not
impose any additional reporting,
disclosure, or other requirements, the
OCC finds good cause to dispense with
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the delayed effective date otherwise
required by RCDRIA for this provision.
All other amendments made by this
final rule will take effect on the first day
of the calendar quarter after publication
of the final rule, October 1, 2013.
V. Regulatory Analysis
Regulatory Flexibility Act
Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility
Act (RFA),42 5 U.S.C. 603, an agency
must prepare a regulatory flexibility
analysis for all proposed and final rules
that describe the impact of the rule on
small entities, unless the head of an
agency certifies that the rule will not
have ‘‘a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.’’
However, the RFA applies only to rules
for which an agency publishes a general
notice of proposed rulemaking pursuant
to 5 U.S.C. 553(b).43 Because the OCC
42 Public
43 5
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Law 96–354, Sept. 19, 1980.
U.S.C. 603(a), 604(a).
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did not publish a notice of proposed
rulemaking pursuant to 5 U.S.C.
553(b)(B),44 the RFA does not apply to
this final rule.
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Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995, Public
Law 104–4 (2 U.S.C. 1532) (Unfunded
Mandates Act), requires that an agency
prepare a budgetary impact statement
before promulgating any rule likely to
result in a Federal mandate that may
result in the expenditure by state, local,
and tribal governments, in the aggregate,
or by the private sector, of $100 million
or more in any one year. If a budgetary
impact statement is required, section
205 of the Unfunded Mandates Act also
requires an agency to identify and
consider a reasonable number of
regulatory alternatives before
promulgating a rule. The OCC has
determined that there is no Federal
mandate imposed by this rulemaking
that may result in the expenditure by
state, local, and tribal governments, in
the aggregate, or by the private sector, of
$100 million or more in any one year.
Accordingly, final rule is not subject to
section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates
Act.
Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the requirements
of the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA)
of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501–3521), the OCC
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. Part 32 contains information
collection requirements under the PRA,
which have been previously approved
by OMB under OMB Control No. 1557–
0221. The OCC is seeking renewal of
OMB PRA approval separately from this
rulemaking for these requirements. The
OCC now is seeking OMB approval of
the model approval process contained
in § 32.9 of this final rule.
In response to comments received, we
have clarified the model approval
process in § 32.9(b)(1)(i)(C). The use of
a model (other than the model approved
for purposes of the Advanced
Measurement Approach in the capital
rules) must be approved by the OCC
specifically for part 32 purposes and
must be approved in writing. If a
national bank or Federal savings
association proposes to use an internal
44 Section 553(b)(B) provides that general notice
and an opportunity for public comment are not
required prior to the issuance of a final rule when
an agency, for good cause, finds that ‘‘notice and
public procedure thereon are impracticable,
unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest.’’
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model that has been approved by the
OCC for purposes of the Advanced
Measurement Approach, the institution
must provide prior written notification
to the OCC prior to use of the model for
lending limits purposes. OCC approval
is also required before substantive
revisions are made to a model that is
used for lending limits purposes.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
238.
Estimated Burden per Respondent: 1
hour per model; 2 models per
respondent.
Estimated Total Burden: 476 hours.
Comments are invited on:
(a) Whether the collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the OCC’s functions,
including whether the information has
practical utility;
(b) The accuracy of the estimates of
the burden of the information
collection, including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
(c) Ways to enhance the quality,
utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected;
(d) Ways to minimize the information
collection burden, 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.
Because paper mail in the
Washington, DC area and at the OCC is
subject to delay, commenters are
encouraged to submit comments by
email if possible. Comments may be
sent to: Legislative and Regulatory
Activities Division, Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency, Suite 3E–
218, Mail Stop 9W–11, Attention: 1557–
NEW, 400 7th Street SW., Washington,
DC 20219. In addition, comments may
be sent by fax to (571) 465–4326 or by
electronic mail to
regs.comments@occ.treas.gov. You may
personally inspect and photocopy
comments at the OCC, 400 7th Street
SW., Washington, DC 20219. For
security reasons, the OCC requires that
visitors make an appointment to inspect
comments. You may do so by calling
(202) 649–6700. Upon arrival, visitors
will be required to present valid
government-issued photo identification
and to submit to security screening in
order to inspect and photocopy
comments.
All comments received, including
attachments and other supporting
materials, are part of the public record
and subject to public disclosure. Do not
enclose any information in your
comment or supporting materials that
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37943
you consider confidential or
inappropriate for public disclosure.
Additionally, please send a copy of
your comments by mail to: OCC Desk
Officer, 1557–NEW, U.S. Office of
Management and Budget, 725 17th
Street NW., #10235, Washington, DC
20503, or by email to: oira
submission@omb.eop.gov.
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 32
National banks, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
12 CFR Part 159
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Savings associations.
12 CFR Part 160
Consumer protection, Investments,
Mortgages, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Savings associations,
Securities.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the interim final rule
amending chapter I of title 12 of the
Code of Federal Regulations that was
published at 77 FR 37265 on June 21,
2012 is adopted as final with the
following amendments.
PART 32—LENDING LIMITS
1. The authority citation for part 32
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1 et seq., 84, 93a,
1462a, 1463, 1464(u), and 5412(b)(2)(B).
2. Section 32.1 is amended by:
a. Revising paragraphs (a) through (c);
and
■ b. Amending paragraph (d) by
removing ‘‘July 1, 2013’’ and adding in
its place ‘‘October 1, 2013’’.
The revision reads as follows:
■
■
§ 32.1
Authority, purpose and scope.
(a) Authority. This part is issued
pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1 et seq., 12 U.S.C.
84, 93a, 1462a, 1463, 1464(u), and
5412(b)(2)(B).
(b) Purpose. The purpose of this part
is to protect the safety and soundness of
national banks and savings associations
by preventing excessive loans to one
person, or to related persons that are
financially dependent, and to promote
diversification of loans and equitable
access to banking services.
(c) Scope. (1) Except as provided by
paragraphs (c) and (d) of this section,
this part applies to all loans and
extensions of credit made by national
banks and their domestic operating
subsidiaries and to all loans and
extensions of credit made by savings
associations, their operating
subsidiaries, and their service
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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 122 / Tuesday, June 25, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
corporations that are consolidated under
Generally Accepted Accounting
Principles (GAAP). For purposes of this
part, the term ‘‘savings association’’
includes Federal savings associations
and state savings associations, as those
terms are defined in 12 U.S.C. 1813(b).
(2) This part does not apply to loans
or extensions of credit made to the
bank’s or savings association’s:
(i) Affiliates, as that term is defined in
12 U.S.C. 371c(b)(1) and (e), as
implemented by 12 CFR 223.2(a)
(Regulation W);
(ii) Operating subsidiaries;
(iii) Edge Act or Agreement
Corporation subsidiaries; or
(iv) Any other subsidiary consolidated
with the bank or savings association
under GAAP.
(3) The lending limits in this part are
separate and independent from the
investment limits prescribed by 12
U.S.C. 24 (Seventh) or 12 U.S.C. 1464(c),
as applicable, and 12 CFR Part 1 and 12
CFR 160.30, and a national bank or
savings association may make loans or
extensions of credit to one borrower up
to the full amount permitted by this part
and also hold eligible securities of the
same obligor up to the full amount
permitted under 12 U.S.C. 24 (Seventh)
or 12 U.S.C. 1464(c), as applicable, and
12 CFR Part 1 and 12 CFR 160.30.
(4) Loans and extensions of credit to
executive officers, directors and
principal shareholders of national
banks, savings associations, and their
related interests are subject to limits
prescribed by 12 U.S.C. 375a and 375b
in addition to the lending limits
established by 12 U.S.C. 84 or 12 U.S.C.
1464(u) as applicable, and this part.
(5) In addition to the foregoing, loans
and extensions of credit must be
consistent with safe and sound banking
practices.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Section 32.2 is amended by:
■ a. Revising paragraph (l);
■ b. In paragraph (m)(3)(ii), adding after
‘‘insolvency,’’ the phrase ‘‘restructuring
(for obligors not subject to bankruptcy
or insolvency),’’ and adding a comma
after the phrase ‘‘as they become due’’;
■ c. Removing the ‘‘and’’ at the end of
paragraph (q)(2)(v),
■ d. Removing the period at the end of
paragraph (q)(2)(vi)(A)(3) and adding in
its place ‘‘; and’’;
■ e. Adding new paragraph (q)(2)(vii);
and
■ f. Redesignating paragraphs (bb), (cc)
and (dd) as paragraphs (cc), (dd) and
(ee), respectively, and adding new
paragraph (bb).
The additions and revisions read as
follows:
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§ 32.2
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
(l) Effective margining arrangement
means a master legal agreement
governing derivative transactions
between a bank or savings association
and a counterparty that requires the
counterparty to post, on a daily basis,
variation margin to fully collateralize
that amount of the bank’s or savings
association’s net credit exposure to the
counterparty that exceeds $25 million
created by the derivative transactions
covered by the agreement.
*
*
*
*
*
(q) * * *
(2) * * *
(vii) That portion of one or more loans
or extensions of credit, not to exceed 10
percent of capital and surplus, with
respect to which the national bank or
savings association has purchased
protection in the form of a single-name
credit derivative that meets the
requirements of § 32.2(m)(1) through (7)
from an eligible protection provider if
the reference obligor is the same legal
entity as the borrower in the loan or
extension of credit and the maturity of
the protection purchased equals or
exceeds the maturity of the loan or
extension of credit.
*
*
*
*
*
(bb) Security has the same meaning as
in section 3(a)(10) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C.
78c(a)(10)).
*
*
*
*
*
§ 32.6
[Amended]
4. Section 32.6(a)(3) is amended by:
a. Removing the word ‘‘Internal’’; and
b. Adding ‘‘the Current Exposure
Method specified in § 32.9(b)(1)(iii), or
the Basel Collateral Haircut Method
specified in § 32.9(c)(1)(iii)’’ after
‘‘Model Method specified in
§ 32.9(b)(1)(i) or § 32.9(c)(1)(i)’’.
■
■
■
5. Section 32.9 is amended by:
a. In paragraph (b)(1):
i. In the first sentence, removing the
phrase ‘‘paragraphs (b)(2) and (b)(3) of
this section’’ and adding in its place the
phrase ‘‘paragraphs (b)(2), (b)(3) and
(b)(4) of this section’’; and
■ ii. In the second sentence, removing
the phrase ‘‘Subject to paragraph (b)(3)’’
and adding in its place ‘‘Subject to
paragraph (b)(4)’’;
■ b. Revising the heading in paragraph
(b)(1)(i);
■ c. Revising paragraph (b)(1)(i)(C);
■ d. Revising paragraph (b)(1)(ii);
■ e. Revising Table 1 in paragraph
(b)(1)(ii);
■ f. Revising paragraph (b)(1)(iii);
■ g. Removing Table 2;
■ h. Revising paragraph (b)(2);
■
■
■
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i. Redesignating paragraph (b)(3) as
paragraph (b)(4), and revising it;
■ j. Adding a new paragraph (b)(3);
■ k Revising paragraph (c)(1)(i);
■ l. Revising the heading in paragraph
(c)(1)(ii);
■ m. Adding a sentence at the end of
paragraphs (c)(1)(ii)(B)(2) and
(c)(1)(ii)(D)(2);
■ n. In paragraph (c)(1)(ii)(B) through
(D), removing the phrase ‘‘Table 3’’ each
time it appears and adding in its place
the phrase ‘‘Table 2’’;
■ o. Redesignating Table 3 as Table 2,
and revising newly redesignated Table
2;
■ p. Adding a new paragraph (c)(1)(iii);
and
■ q. Revising paragraph (c)(2).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
■
*
Sfmt 4700
§ 32.9 Credit exposure arising from
derivative and securities financing
transactions.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) Model Method. * * *
(C) Calculation of potential future
credit exposure. (1) A bank or savings
association shall calculate its potential
future credit exposure by using either:
(i) An internal model the use of which
has been approved in writing for
purposes of 12 CFR Part 3, Appendix C,
Section 32(d), 12 CFR Part 167,
Appendix C, Section 32(d), or 12 CFR
Part 390, subpart Z, Appendix A,
Section 32(d), as appropriate, provided
that the bank or savings association
provides prior written notice to the
appropriate Federal banking agency of
its use for purposes of this section; or
(ii) Any other appropriate model the
use of which has been approved in
writing for purposes of this section by
the appropriate Federal banking agency.
(2) Any substantive revisions to a
model made after the bank or savings
association has provided notice of the
use of the model to the appropriate
Federal banking agency pursuant to
paragraph (b)(1)(i)(C)(1)(i) of this section
or after the appropriate Federal banking
agency has approved the use of the
model pursuant to paragraph
(b)(1)(i)(C)(1)(ii) of this section must be
approved by the agency before a bank or
savings association may use the revised
model for purposes of this part.
*
*
*
*
*
(ii) Conversion Factor Matrix Method.
The credit exposure arising from a
derivative transaction under the
Conversion Factor Matrix Method shall
equal and remain fixed at the potential
future credit exposure of the derivative
transaction which shall equal the
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product of the notional amount of the
derivative transaction and a fixed
multiplicative factor determined by
reference to Table 1 of this section.
TABLE 1—CONVERSION FACTOR MATRIX FOR CALCULATING POTENTIAL FUTURE CREDIT EXPOSURE 1
Original maturity 2
Interest rate
1 year or less .............................................................................................
Over 1 to 3 years .......................................................................................
Over 3 to 5 years .......................................................................................
Over 5 to 10 years .....................................................................................
Over ten years ...........................................................................................
Foreign exchange rate
and gold
.015
.03
.06
.12
.30
.015
.03
.06
.12
.30
Other 3 (includes commodities and
precious metals
except gold)
Equity
.20
.20
.20
.20
.20
.06
.18
.30
.60
1.0
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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 Transactions not explicitly covered by any other column in the Table are to be treated as ‘‘Other.’’
(iii) Current Exposure Method. The
credit exposure arising from a derivative
transaction (other than a credit
derivative transaction) under the
Current Exposure Method shall be
calculated pursuant to 12 CFR Part 3,
Appendix C, Sections 32(c)(5), (6) and
(7); 12 CFR Part 167, Appendix C,
Sections 32(c)(5), (6), and (7); or 12 CFR
Part 390, subpart Z, Appendix A,
Sections 32(c)(5), (6) and (7), as
appropriate.
(2) Credit Derivatives. (i) Counterparty
exposure. (A) In general.
Notwithstanding paragraph (b)(1) of this
section and subject to paragraph
(b)(2)(i)(B) of this section, a national
bank or savings association that uses the
Conversion Factor Matrix Method or the
Current Exposure Method, or that uses
the Model Method without entering an
effective margining arrangement as
defined in § 32.2(l), shall calculate the
counterparty credit exposure arising
from credit derivatives entered by the
bank or savings association by adding
the net notional value of all protection
purchased from the counterparty on
each reference entity.
(B) Special rule for certain effective
margining arrangements. A bank or
savings association must add the EMA
threshold amount to the counterparty
credit exposure arising from credit
derivatives calculated under the Model
Method. The EMA threshold is the
amount under an effective margining
arrangement with respect to which the
counterparty is not required to post
variation margin to fully collateralize
the amount of the bank’s or savings
association’s net credit exposure to the
counterparty.
(ii) Reference entity exposure. A
national bank or savings association
shall calculate the credit exposure to a
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reference entity arising from credit
derivatives entered into by the bank or
savings association by adding the net
notional value of all protection sold on
the reference entity. A bank or savings
association may reduce its exposure to
a reference entity by the amount of any
eligible credit derivative purchased on
that reference entity from an eligible
protection provider.
(3) Special rule for central
counterparties. (i) In addition to
amounts calculated under § 32.9(b)(1)
and (2), the measure of counterparty
exposure to a central counterparty shall
also include the sum of the initial
margin posted by the bank or savings
association, plus any contributions
made by it to a guaranty fund at the time
such contribution is made.
(ii) Paragraph (b)(3)(i) of this section
does not apply to a national bank or
saving association that uses an internal
model pursuant to paragraph (b)(1)(i) of
this section if such model reflects the
initial margin and any contributions to
a guaranty fund.
(4) Mandatory or alternative method.
The appropriate Federal banking agency
may in its discretion require or permit
a national bank or savings association to
use a specific method or methods set
forth in paragraph (b)(1) of this section
to calculate the credit exposure arising
from all derivative transactions or any
specific, or category of, derivative
transactions if it finds, in its discretion,
that such method is consistent with the
safety and soundness of the bank or
savings association.
(c) * * * (1) * * *
(i) Model Method. (A) A national bank
or savings association may calculate the
credit exposure of a securities financing
transaction by using either:
(1) An internal model the use of
which has been approved in writing by
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the appropriate Federal banking agency
for purposes of 12 CFR Part 3, Appendix
C, Section 32(b); 12 CFR Part 167,
Appendix C, Section 32(b); or 12 CFR
Part 390, subpart Z, Appendix A,
Section 32(b), as appropriate, provided
the bank or savings association provides
prior written notice to the appropriate
Federal banking agency of its use for
purposes of this section; or
(2) Any other appropriate model the
use of which has been approved in
writing for purposes of this section by
the appropriate Federal banking agency.
(B) Any substantive revisions to a
model made after the bank or savings
association has provided notice of the
use of the model to the appropriate
Federal banking agency pursuant to
paragraph (c)(1)(i)(A)(1) of this section
or after the appropriate Federal banking
agency has approved the use of the
model pursuant to paragraph
(c)(1)(i)(A)(2) of this section must be
approved by the agency before a bank or
savings association may use the revised
model for purposes of part 32.
(ii) Basic Method. * * *
(B) * * *
(2) * * * Where more than one
security is provided as collateral, the
applicable haircut is the higher of the
haircut associated with the security lent
and the notional-weighted average of
the haircuts associated with the
securities provided as collateral.
*
*
*
*
*
(D) * * *
(2) * * * Where more than one
security is provided as collateral, the
applicable haircut is the higher of the
haircut associated with the security
borrowed and the notional-weighted
average of the haircuts associated with
the securities provided as collateral.
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TABLE 2—COLLATERAL HAIRCUTS
SOVEREIGN ENTITIES
Haircut without currency mismatch 1
Residual maturity
OECD Country Risk Classification 2 0–1 ....................................
OECD Country Risk Classification 2–3 ......................................
< = 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 ................................................................................................
<=1 year ..................................
>1 year, <=5 years ..................
>5 years ..................................
Haircut without currency mismatch
0.02.
0.06.
0.12.
OTHER ELIGIBLE COLLATERAL
Main index 3 equities (including convertible bonds) .........................................................................
Other publicly-traded equities (including convertible bonds) ...........................................................
Mutual funds .....................................................................................................................................
Cash collateral held ..........................................................................................................................
0.15.
0.25.
Highest haircut applicable to any security in
which the fund can invest.
0.
1 In cases where the currency denomination of the collateral differs from the currency denomination of the credit transaction, an additional 8
percent haircut will apply.
2 OECD Country Risk Classification means the country risk classification as defined in Article 25 of the OECD’s February 2011 Arrangement
on Officially Supported Export Credits Arrangement.
3 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 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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(iii) Basel Collateral Haircut Method.
A national bank or savings association
may calculate the credit exposure of a
securities financing transaction
pursuant to 12 CFR Part 3, Appendix C,
Sections 32(b)(2)(i) and (ii); 12 CFR Part
167, Appendix C, Sections 32(b)(2)(i)
and (ii); or 12 CFR Part 390, subpart Z,
Appendix A, Sections 32(b)(2)(i) and
(ii), as appropriate.
(2) Mandatory or alternative method.
The appropriate Federal banking agency
may in its discretion require or permit
a national bank or savings association to
use a specific method or methods set
forth in paragraph (c)(1) of this section
to calculate the credit exposure arising
from all securities financing
transactions or any specific, or category
of, securities financing transactions if
the appropriate Federal banking agency
finds, in its discretion, that such method
is consistent with the safety and
soundness of the bank or savings
association.
PART 159—SUBORDINATE
ORGANIZATIONS
6. The authority citation for part 159
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1462, 1462a, 1463,
1464, 1828, 5412(b)(2)(B).
16:29 Jun 24, 2013
§ 159.3 What are the characteristics of,
and what requirements apply to,
subordinate organizations of Federal
savings associations?
*
*
*
*
*
(k) * * *
(2) The LTOB regulation does not
apply to loans from you to your GAAPconsolidated service corporation or from
your GAAP-consolidated service
corporation to you. However, part 32
imposes restrictions on the amount of
loans you may make to nonconsolidated service corporations.
Loans made by a GAAP-consolidated
service corporation are aggregated with
your loans for LTOB purposes.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 8. Section 159.5 is amended by
revising paragraphs (b) and (c) to read
as follows:
§ 159.5 How much may a Federal savings
association invest in service corporations
or lower-tier entities?
*
■
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7. Section 159.3 is amended by
revising paragraph (k)(2) to read as
follows:
■
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*
*
*
*
(b) In addition to the amounts you
may invest under paragraph (a) of this
section, and to the extent that you have
authority under other provisions of
section 5(c) of the HOLA and part 160
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of this chapter, and available capacity
within any applicable investment limits,
you may make loans to any nonconsolidated subsidiary, subject to the
lending limits in part 32 of this chapter.
(c) For purposes of this section, the
term ‘‘obligations’’ includes all loans
and other debt instruments (except
accounts payable incurred in the
ordinary course of business and paid
within 60 days) and all guarantees or
take-out commitments of such loans or
debt instruments.
Dated: June 19, 2013.
Thomas J. Curry,
Comptroller of the Currency.
[FR Doc. 2013–15174 Filed 6–24–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–33–P
NATIONAL CREDIT UNION
ADMINISTRATION
12 CFR Parts 701 and 741
RIN 3133–AEOO
Loan Participations; Purchase, Sale
and Pledge of Eligible Obligations;
Purchase of Assets and Assumption of
Liabilities
National Credit Union
Administration (NCUA).
AGENCY:
E:\FR\FM\25JNR1.SGM
25JNR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 122 (Tuesday, June 25, 2013)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 37930-37946]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-15174]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
12 CFR Parts 32, 159 and 160
[Docket ID OCC-2012-0007]
RIN 1557-AD59
Lending Limits
AGENCY: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Treasury.
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) is
finalizing its lending limits interim final rule, with revisions. The
interim final rule consolidated the lending limits rules applicable to
national banks and savings associations, removed the separate OCC
regulation governing lending limits for savings associations, and
implemented section 610 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act, which amends the statutory definition of
``loans and extensions of credit'' to include certain credit exposures
arising from derivative transactions, repurchase agreements, reverse
repurchase agreements, securities lending transactions, and securities
borrowing transactions.
DATES: The effective date of amendatory instruction 2b of this final
rule is June 25, 2013. The effective date of the remaining amendments
made by this final rule is October 1, 2013. The effective date of
amendatory instruction 3a. of the interim final rule published on June
21, 2012, 77 FR 37277, and extended on December 31, 2012, 77 FR 76841,
is delayed from July 1, 2013 to October 1, 2013.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Jonathan Fink, Assistant Director,
Bank Activities and Structure Division, (202) 649-5500; Heidi M.
Thomas, Special Counsel, Legislative and Regulatory Activities
Division, (202) 649-5490; or Kurt Wilhelm, Director for Financial
Markets, (202) 649-6437, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency,
Washington, DC, 20219.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Section 5200 of the Revised Statutes, 12 U.S.C. 84, provides that
the total loans and extensions of credit by a national bank to a person
outstanding at one time shall not exceed 15 percent of the unimpaired
capital and unimpaired surplus of the bank if the loan or extension of
credit is not fully secured, plus an additional 10 percent of
unimpaired capital and unimpaired surplus if the loan is fully secured.
Section 5(u)(1) of the Home Owners' Loan Act (HOLA), 12 U.S.C.
1464(u)(1), provides that section 5200 of the Revised Statutes ``shall
apply to savings associations in the same manner and to the same extent
as it applies to national banks.'' In addition, section 5(u)(2) of
HOLA, 12 U.S.C. 1464(u)(2), includes exceptions to the lending limits
for certain loans made by savings associations. These HOLA provisions
apply to both Federal and state-chartered savings associations.
Section 610 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act \1\ (Dodd-Frank Act) amends section 5200 of the Revised
Statutes to provide that the definition of ``loans and extensions of
credit'' includes any credit exposure to a person arising from a
derivative transaction, repurchase agreement, reverse repurchase
agreement, securities lending transaction, or securities borrowing
transaction between a national bank and that person. This amendment was
effective July 21, 2012. By virtue of section 5(u)(1) of the HOLA, this
new definition of ``loans and extensions of credit'' applies to all
savings associations as well as to national banks.
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\1\ Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010).
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On June 21, 2012, the OCC published in the Federal Register an
interim final
[[Page 37931]]
rule \2\ that amended the OCC's lending limits regulation for national
banks, 12 CFR part 32, by consolidating the lending limits rules
applicable to national banks and savings associations \3\ and
implementing section 610 of the Dodd-Frank Act. The interim final rule
also removed the separate OCC regulation at 12 CFR 160.93 that governed
lending limits for savings associations.\4\
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\2\ 77 FR 37265 (June 21, 2012).
\3\ The OCC has rulemaking authority for lending limits
regulations applicable to national banks and to all savings
associations, both state- and Federally-chartered. However, the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), not the OCC, is the
appropriate Federal banking agency for state savings associations
and enforces these rules as to state savings associations.
\4\ Section 160.93 specifically applied 12 U.S.C. 84 and the
lending limits regulations and interpretations promulgated by the
OCC for national banks to Federal and state savings associations.
Section 160.93 also implemented specific statutory lending limits
exceptions unique to Federal and state savings associations.
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II. Description of the Final Rule and Public Comments
The OCC received numerous public comments from interested parties.
These comments, the provisions of the interim final rule they address,
and the resulting amendments to the interim final rule are discussed
below.
A. Integration of Savings Associations
The OCC received no public comments in response to the amendments
included in the interim final rule that integrate savings associations
into part 32.\5\ However, upon further review, the OCC is making the
following technical amendments relating to the scope of the rule with
respect to savings associations in order to avoid unintended or
anomalous results.
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\5\ The OCC notes that the interim final rule's integration of
savings associations into part 32 applied the existing definition
for national banks of ``capital and surplus'' set forth at Sec.
32.2(b) to savings associations. This definition differs from the
definition of ``unimpaired capital and unimpaired surplus'' included
in former Sec. 160.93. Under former Sec. 160.93, savings
associations could add back any deductions to capital made for
investments in non-includable subsidiaries, thereby increasing their
capital calculation for lending limits and, thus, the amount they
could loan to one borrower. However, this add-back is not permitted
under the definition of ``capital and surplus'' in Sec. 32.2(b).
This change resulted in a reduction in the lending limits previously
applicable to savings associations' investments in non-includable
service corporations. This result is consistent with the treatment
of a non-includable subsidiary capital deduction in the transaction
with affiliates regulation (Regulation W), 12 CFR part 223, revised
by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Federal
Reserve Board) on September 13, 2011. Part 223 applies to savings
associations in place of former 12 CFR 563.41, which had permitted
this deduction. See generally 76 FR 56508.
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1. Loans to Non-Consolidated Subsidiaries
The former lending limits rule applicable to savings associations,
Sec. 160.93(a), excluded loans made by savings associations and their
subsidiaries consolidated in accordance with generally accepted
accounting principles (GAAP-consolidated subsidiaries) to all
subordinate organizations and savings association affiliates. Rules
applicable in these situations were set forth in part 159.
Specifically, Sec. 159.5(b) established lending limits for loans by a
Federal savings association and its GAAP-consolidated subsidiaries to
non-consolidated subsidiaries. Section 159.5(b) did not set a specific
lending limit for loans to GAAP-consolidated subsidiaries but provided
that such a limit could be established if warranted by safety and
soundness considerations.
The interim final rule carried over the existing exclusion from the
lending limits rule for loans to GAAP-consolidated subsidiaries but did
not exclude from the coverage of part 32 loans made to non-consolidated
subsidiaries. Therefore, loans to non-consolidated subsidiaries of
Federal savings associations were made subject to the lending limits in
part 32, but no corresponding change was made to the limits set forth
in part 159. As a result, the interim final rule subjected loans to
non-consolidated subsidiaries of Federal savings associations to the
lending limits set forth in both parts 32 and 159, which differ. This
result was not intended.
This final rule corrects this overlap by replacing the lending
limits set forth in Sec. 159.5(b) with a cross-reference to part 32;
by removing, as unnecessary, the reference to ``loans'' within Sec.
159.5(c); and by making a conforming change to Sec. 159.3(k)(2). This
amendment also removes the provision in Sec. 159.5(b)(2) that provides
that the OCC may limit the amount of loans to GAAP-consolidated
subsidiaries where safety and soundness considerations warrant such
action. This language merely restates the OCC's statutory authority to
apply prudential standards to loans by both national banks and Federal
savings associations for safety and soundness reasons. Therefore,
removal of Sec. 159.5(b)(2) does not affect this authority.
2. Loans by Service Corporations
The interim final rule did not revise part 32 to address the
aggregation of loans made by a service corporation with loans made by
the parent savings association. For Federal savings associations, such
aggregation is currently addressed by Sec. 159.3(k)(2), which provides
that loans made by a service corporation controlled by a Federal
savings association are aggregated with the loans made by that savings
association for purposes of the lending limits of part 32. For purposes
of Sec. 159.3(k)(2), ``control'' is defined by reference to 12 CFR
part 174.\6\ The control standard in part 174 is a broad standard that
could potentially result in the aggregation of loans by non-
consolidated service corporations with those of the parent savings
association. The final rule avoids this result by revising the scope of
part 32 to aggregate loans by GAAP-consolidated service corporations
with those of the parent savings association. The final rule also makes
conforming changes to Sec. 159.3(k)(2).
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\6\ 12 CFR 159.2.
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3. Loans by Foreign Subsidiaries of Federal Savings Associations
Prior to the interim final rule, pursuant to former Sec. Sec.
160.93(a) and 159.3(k), loans made by foreign and domestic
subsidiaries, as defined by part 159, of a Federal savings association
were aggregated with loans made by the parent savings association. The
interim final rule amended part 32 to narrow the scope of the
aggregation to encompass loans by domestic operating subsidiaries of
savings associations only, the same standard that applied to national
banks. The interim final rule did not amend the aggregation standard in
Sec. 159.3(k). As a result, part 32 and Sec. 159.3(k) set forth
different aggregation rules for loans made by foreign subsidiaries of
Federal savings association.
To correct this anomaly, the final rule revises the scope section
of part 32 to aggregate loans made by operating subsidiaries and GAAP-
consolidated service corporations of savings associations with loans
made by the parent institution. Loans by such subsidiaries will be
aggregated with loans made by the parent savings association regardless
of whether the subsidiary is foreign or domestic. Loans made by foreign
subsidiaries of national banks will continue to be governed by the
separate lending limits set forth in Regulation K.\7\ Regulation K is
not applicable to savings associations and, therefore, addressing loans
made by foreign subsidiaries of savings associations in part 32 is
appropriate.
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\7\ See 12 CFR 211.12(b).
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The OCC also is removing the words ``bank's or savings
association's'' in
[[Page 37932]]
Sec. 32.1(c)(1)(ii), as these words are redundant, and is making other
conforming changes to Sec. 32.1.
B. Section 610 of the Dodd-Frank Act
To implement the requirements of section 610 of the Dodd-Frank Act,
the interim final rule amended the definition of ``loans and extensions
of credit'' in Sec. 32.2 to include certain credit exposure arising
from a derivative transaction or a securities financing transaction,
i.e., a repurchase agreement, reverse repurchase agreement, securities
lending transaction, or securities borrowing transaction. The interim
final rule defined ``derivative transaction'' to include 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.
The interim final rule amended part 32 to provide national banks
and savings associations with different options for measuring the
credit exposures of derivative transactions and securities financing
transactions for purposes of the lending limits rules. Providing these
options was intended to reduce regulatory burden, particularly for
smaller and mid-size banks and savings associations.
All of the comment letters received by the OCC on the interim final
rule addressed the amendments implementing section 610. These comments,
and any resulting amendments to part 32 made by this final rule, are
discussed below.
We note that the OCC had extended, though a separate rulemaking,\8\
the temporary exception period for the application of the section 610-
related provisions of part 32 from January 1, 2013, as contained in the
interim final rule, to July 1, 2013. As a result, national banks and
savings associations are not currently required to comply with these
provisions. However, the OCC has determined that a further extension of
this temporary exception period is appropriate in light of the
publication date of this final rule and in order to allow institutions
that wish to use the Model Methods sufficient time to develop a model,
receive approval for its use, and implement the model. Moreover, the
other methods provided by the rule to measure credit exposure would not
be appropriate for many institutions with large portfolios, as compared
with the more risk-sensitive method of measuring credit exposures.
Therefore, this final rule extends this temporary exception period
through October 1, 2013. As a result, national banks and savings
associations will not be required to comply with the section 610-
related provisions as amended by the final rule until this date. As
indicated in the preamble to the interim final rule, notwithstanding
this extension, the OCC retains full authority to address credit
exposures that present undue concentrations on a case-by-case basis
through our existing safety and soundness authorities.
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\8\ 77 FR 76841 (Dec. 31, 2012).
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1. Scope of Rule
Some commenters requested clarification of, or changes to, the
application of the section 610-related provisions of the interim final
rule to specific types of transactions. Specifically, three financial
trade associations requested that the rule clarify that options sold
and fully paid for are not covered by the rule because these types of
exposures have no ongoing credit exposure beyond settlement, i.e., when
an option is paid-up, there is no further performance obligation by the
counterparty and no further credit exposure. The OCC agrees that these
transactions do not give rise to credit exposure for the purpose of the
lending limits. When a bank sells an option and that option is fully
paid, there is no counterparty credit risk because the bank is not
entitled to anything further from the counterparty. This fact is
evident from the nature of the transaction, and it is not necessary to
amend the final rule.
Another commenter, a nonprofit organization, requested that the
final rule not exempt securities financing transactions involving
Federal- and state-related securities from the lending limits \9\
because this exemption is not explicitly required by section 610 and
such transactions are not free from the risk to the institution of
counterparty default. The OCC disagrees with this recommendation. These
types of transactions typically involve less risk than other securities
financing transactions. Moreover, this exception is consistent with the
longstanding exceptions in sections 5200(c)(4) and (5) and Sec.
32.3(c)(3), through (c)(5), which provide exceptions for loans secured
by U.S. obligations, loans to or guaranteed by Federal agencies, or
loans to or guaranteed by state or local governments. In addition,
section 5200(d) grants the OCC the authority to establish limits or
requirements other than those specified in the statute for particular
classes or categories of loans or extensions of credit. Furthermore, an
exemption for these types of securities financing transactions is
consistent with the treatment of reverse repurchase agreements in Sec.
32.2(q)(1)(vii), under which such transactions are treated as loans
subject to an exception for transactions relating to Type I securities
as defined in 12 CFR part 1.\10\ We therefore decline to remove this
exemption in the final rule.
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\9\ The interim final rule exempts Type I securities, as defined
in 12 CFR 1.2(j), in the case of national banks; and securities
listed in section 5(c)(1)(C), (D), (E), and (F) of HOLA and general
obligations of a state or subdivision as listed in section
5(c)(1)(H) of HOLA, 12 U.S.C. 1464(c)(1)(C), (D), (E), (F), and (H),
in the case of savings associations.
\10\ This specific provision will be removed when the rule's
temporary exception period for derivative and securities financing
transactions expires, as it will then be unnecessary.
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2. Methods To Measure Credit Exposure
In general. The interim final rule provides three methods for
calculating credit exposure of derivative transactions other than
credit derivatives, and two methods for securities financing
transactions.\11\ Unless required to use a specific method by the
appropriate Federal banking agency for safety and soundness reasons, a
national bank or savings association may choose which of these methods
it will use.\12\ However, under the interim final rule, a national bank
or savings association must use the same method for calculating credit
exposure arising from all derivative transactions and the same method
for all securities financing transactions.\13\
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\11\ We note that the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision has
established a working group to examine the risks associated with
weaknesses and inconsistencies in large exposure limit regimes
across jurisdictions and to decide whether an international
agreement on large exposure limits is warranted. If such an
agreement is reached, the OCC would consider whether further
amendments to part 32 are necessary and appropriate.
\12\ See Sec. 32.9(b)(3), renumbered as Sec. 32.9(b)(4) in the
final rule, and Sec. 32.9(c)(2).
\13\ See Sec. Sec. 32.9(b)(1) and 32.9(c)(1).
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A number of financial institution trade associations requested that
the OCC apply the requirement to use a specific method as determined by
the appropriate Federal banking agency only prospectively and to phase
it in over time. These commenters also asked the OCC to set forth the
factors it might use in exercising discretion to impose this
requirement. The OCC declines to limit this provision only to future
transactions. We find that the discretion of the appropriate Federal
banking agency to require, on a case-by-case basis, application of a
specific method to prior and/or future transactions is a necessary
supervisory tool for safety and
[[Page 37933]]
soundness purposes. This discretion would permit the agency to phase in
the required method, as appropriate. Examiners will coordinate with the
bank or savings association to ensure any change in methods is managed
fairly and is consistent with safety and soundness.
Commenters also requested that the OCC permit these institutions to
apply different calculation methods based on transaction or product
type, and that the rule should provide guidance with respect to
transitioning between methods. While the OCC does not intend to permit
institutions to exercise unlimited discretion to pick and choose among
the calculation methods for different derivative or securities
financing transactions, we recognize that there may be circumstances in
which the use of only one calculation method for all transactions may
present safety and soundness concerns or may not be practically
feasible. For example, an institution may develop a new transaction
type after it has developed, and received approval for the use of, its
model. As discussed above, examiners already have the flexibility under
the interim final rule to require that a particular measurement method
for a particular subset of derivative or securities financing
transactions be used to calculate credit exposure. However, in order to
clarify that an institution may request to use a specific method, and
that the OCC may permit a specific method to be used for one or more
transactions or transaction types, we have amended both Sec.
32.9(b)(3) (renumbered in the final rule as Sec. 32.9(b)(4)) and Sec.
32.9(c)(2) to provide that the appropriate Federal banking agency may,
at its discretion, permit a national bank or savings association to use
a specific method to calculate credit exposure, and that this method
may apply to all or specific transactions if the appropriate Federal
banking agency finds that such method is consistent with the safety and
soundness of the bank or savings association. Institutions obtaining
permission to use an alternative method should work with their
examiners to ensure a proper transition to use of the new method.
Internal Model for Derivative Transactions and Securities Financing
Transactions. The interim final rule permits national banks and savings
associations to calculate credit exposure for derivative transactions
and securities financing transactions through the use of an internal
model. For derivative transactions, Sec. 32.9(b)(1)(i) provides that
counterparty credit exposure is measured by adding the current credit
exposure (the greater of zero or the mark-to-market (MTM) value) of the
transaction and the potential future exposure (PFE) of the transaction.
Under Sec. 32.9(b)(1)(i)(C) of the interim final rule, a bank or
savings association must calculate its PFE by using an internal model
that has been approved for purposes of Section 53 of the Internal-
Ratings-Based and Advanced Measurement Approaches Appendix (Advanced
Approaches Appendix) of the appropriate Federal banking agency's
capital rules \14\ or any other appropriate model approved by the
appropriate Federal banking agency. Section 32.9(b)(1)(i)(D) provides
that a national bank or savings association that calculates its credit
exposure arising from derivative transactions by using an internal
model may net exposures arising under the same qualifying master
netting agreement, thereby reducing the institution's exposure to the
borrower to the net exposure under the master netting agreement.
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\14\ 12 CFR part 3, Appendix C, Section 53 for national banks;
12 CFR part 167, Appendix C, Section 53 for Federal savings
associations; and 12 CFR 390, subpart Z, Appendix A, Section 53 for
state savings associations.
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Similarly, for securities financing transactions, Sec.
32.9(c)(1)(i) of the interim final rule permits an institution to
calculate credit exposure by using an internal model approved by the
appropriate Federal banking agency for purposes of Section 32(d) of the
Internal-Ratings-Based Appendices of the appropriate Federal banking
agency's capital rules,\15\ as appropriate, or any other appropriate
model approved by the appropriate Federal banking agency.
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\15\ 12 CFR part 3, Appendix C, Section 32(d) for national
banks; 12 CFR part 167, Appendix C, Section 32(d) for Federal
savings associations; and 12 CFR 390, subpart Z, Appendix A, Section
32(d) for state savings associations.
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Most commenters discussed this modeling option. One commenter, a
nonprofit organization, stated that institutions should not be
permitted to use internal models for lending limits purposes. The OCC
disagrees with this comment and is retaining the modeling option in the
final rule. The use of an internal model, with the safeguards described
below, improves the accuracy of the calculation of the institution's
credit exposures to derivative and securities financing transactions.
Not including such a modeling option, as advocated by the commenter,
would result in a rule that would not accurately reflect counterparty
exposure for certain banks. Importantly, the rule applies appropriate
supervisory safeguards to a national bank's or savings association's
use of an internal model. Specifically, a national bank or savings
association may not use an internal model unless the use of the model
has been approved by the appropriate Federal banking agency for
purposes of the Advanced Approaches Appendix of the agency's capital
rule (and, as discussed below, the institution has provided prior
written notice to the agency of its use of the model for part 32
purposes) or specifically approved by the agency for purposes of the
lending limits rule. Furthermore, also as discussed below, this final
rule provides that the use of the model for lending limits purposes
following any subsequent substantive change to it must be approved by
the appropriate Federal banking agency.
Some commenters requested the OCC to clarify the nature of the
internal model approval process, including the standards for approval
and duration of the process. For the use of a model not previously
approved pursuant to the Advanced Approaches Appendix, the OCC intends
that the OCC approval process will include a thorough institution and
OCC review of the model's specific use for part 32 and the
institution's ability to monitor the risks associated with the
transactions, and will be separate and apart from any approval of the
use of a model for other purposes. In addition, the approval of the use
of the model will be in writing. We have amended Sec. 32.9 to specify
these criteria. National banks or Federal savings associations that
seek approval for the use of a model pursuant to part 32 should contact
their examiner-in-charge to begin the approval process.\16\ As
indicated above, we also have amended Sec. 32.9 to require a bank or
savings association to provide prior written notice to the appropriate
Federal banking agency before using an internal model for lending
limits purposes the use of which has been previously approved by the
agency for purposes of the Advanced Approaches Appendix.\17\ Also as
indicated above, we have added
[[Page 37934]]
to the final rule a requirement that if a national bank or savings
association makes a substantive revision to a model after the
appropriate Federal banking agency's approval, either pursuant to the
Advanced Approaches Appendix or part 32, the use of the revised model
must be approved by the agency before it may be used for purposes of
part 32.\18\
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\16\ We note that this preamble discusses the OCC's process for
approval of the use of internal models for national banks and
Federal savings associations. The FDIC, in the case of state savings
associations, and the Federal Reserve Board, in the case of state-
licensed branches of foreign banking organizations, will have their
own internal processes for approving the use of such models. Some
commenters requested that the OCC coordinate with the FDIC and
Federal Reserve Board to ensure that such agencies will be in a
position to approve internal models by the expiration of the
temporary exception for compliance. The OCC will, as appropriate,
consult with both the FDIC and Federal Reserve Board. However, these
agencies are responsible for implementing this rule for their
regulated institutions.
\17\ 12 CFR 32.9(b)(1)(i)(C)(1)(i) and 12 CFR
32.9(c)(1)(i)(A)(1) of the final rule.
\18\ 12 CFR 32.9(b)(1)(i)(C)(2) and 12 CFR 32.9(c)(1)(i)(B) of
the final rule.
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Commenters also requested that in the event that the use of a
bank's internal model is not yet approved, or approved and not yet
implemented, by the end of the temporary exception period, the
appropriate Federal banking agency should approve on a provisional
basis a bank's or savings association's calculation of credit exposures
using existing internal models. Furthermore, these commenters said that
the agency should approve for lending limits purposes on a provisional
basis, if appropriate, the use of models that are in the process of
being approved. The OCC disagrees. As discussed above, to appropriately
support the determination that a model is appropriate for measuring the
credit exposure of a derivative transaction or securities financing
transaction under part 32 and adequately addresses the risks of the
transaction, approval of the use of a model must be made specifically
for part 32 and must be obtained prior to the model's use for this
purpose, unless the use of the model has already been approved for
purposes of the Advanced Approaches Appendix. Therefore, in order to
ensure the safety and soundness of a national bank or Federal savings
association, for part 32 purposes the OCC will not approve the use of a
model on a provisional basis and will not permit the model's use before
final approval. However, we do not intend that this approval
requirement necessitate the development of a new model specifically for
use under part 32. A national bank or Federal savings association may
present an existing internal model for approval by the OCC for use as a
lending limits model. For example, an institution may present an
internal model it has developed for use under the Advanced Approaches
Appendix but which has not yet been approved for that use. Because most
complex banks have developed such models that address counterparty
risk, we believe compliance with the approval requirement will be
possible prior to the end of the extended exception period.
Commenters also requested clarification regarding the interim final
rule's reference in Sec. Sec. 32.9(b)(1)(i)(C) and 32.9(c)(1)(i) to an
internal model that has been approved by the appropriate Federal
banking agency for purposes of the Advanced Approaches Appendix.
Technically, pursuant to the Advanced Approaches Appendix, the agency
does not separately approve the use of the institution's model but
instead approves the institution's exit from parallel run and its use
of the Advanced Approaches, for which the institution has developed the
internal model.\19\ We confirm that this approval to exit parallel run
constitutes ``approval'' of the use of the institution's model for
purposes of part 32, and have added language to Sec. Sec.
32.9(b)(1)(i)(C) and 32.9(c)(1)(i) of the final rule to clarify this
point.
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\19\ See 12 CFR part 3, Appendix C, Section 21 for national
banks; 12 CFR part 167, Appendix C, Section 21 for Federal savings
associations; and 12 CFR 390, subpart Z, Appendix A, Section 21 for
state savings associations.
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We also have further clarified the rule by changing the name of the
method provided by Sec. Sec. 32.9(b)(1)(i) and 32.9(c)(1)(i) in the
final rule from ``Internal Model Method'' to ``Model Method.'' This
change should alleviate confusion with the Internal Models Approach for
calculating the risk-weighted asset amount for equity exposures
included in the agencies' capital rules.
Furthermore, we have replaced the provisions of the Advanced
Approaches Appendix referenced in the model methods. For derivative
transactions, in response to a commenter, we have amended Sec.
32.9(b)(1)(i)(C) to replace the reference to Section 53 of the Advanced
Approaches Appendix with a reference to Section 32(d) of the Appendix.
Section 53 refers to the modeling of equity risk (a form of market
risk) rather than counterparty risk and is more general in nature.
Section 32(d) more appropriately refers to the modeling of counterparty
credit exposure arising from derivatives, i.e. credit risk, and
specifically accounts for collateral. Likewise, for securities
financing transactions, we have amended Sec. 32.9(c)(1)(i) so that it
references Section 32(b) of the Advanced Approaches Appendix instead of
Section 32(d) of the Appendix. The OCC finds that the model provided
for by Section 32(b) of this Appendix is the more appropriate model for
measuring credit exposure of securities financing transactions for the
lending limits rule.
Non-Model Methods. The interim final rule provides two non-model
measurement methods for credit exposures arising from derivative
transactions and one non-model measurement method for credit exposures
arising from securities financing transactions.
For derivative transactions, national banks and savings
associations may choose either the Conversion Factor Matrix Method, set
forth in Sec. 32.9(b)(1)(ii), or the Remaining Maturity Method, as set
forth in Sec. 32.9(b)(1)(iii). Under the Conversion Factor Matrix
Method, the credit exposure is equal to, and remains fixed at, the PFE
of the derivative transaction, as determined at execution of the
transaction by reference to a simple look-up table (Table 1 of the
interim final rule). To clarify this calculation, the OCC has made a
technical amendment to the rule to provide that the PFE of the
derivative transaction under this method equals the product of the
notional amount of the derivative transaction and a fixed
multiplicative factor determined by reference to Table 1 of this
section.
The credit exposure for derivative transactions calculated under
the Remaining Maturity Method incorporates both the current MTM and the
transaction's remaining maturity (measured in years) as well as a fixed
add-on for each year of the transaction's remaining life by adding the
current MTM value of the transaction to the product of the notional
amount of the transaction, the remaining maturity of the transaction,
and a fixed multiplicative factor. These multiplicative factors differ
based on product type and are determined by a look-up table (Table 2 of
the interim final rule).
One commenter stated that the credit exposures under the Conversion
Factor Matrix Method for derivative transactions should be marked-to-
market rather than fixed at inception in order to properly value the
amount of credit risk. Because the market value of these transactions
can change significantly from the time of execution, the commenter
notes that this approach could cause an institution's exposure to a
borrower to exceed the lending limits on a MTM basis routinely without
being required to reduce the exposure. The OCC disagrees. As noted in
the preamble to the interim final rule, we are aware that, under the
Conversion Factor Matrix Method, the actual MTM value at a given point
in the life of a derivative contract may exceed the initially estimated
PFE, and that it would be possible for a bank to make a new loan that,
combined with the actual exposure (were such exposure based on current
MTM value), could exceed the lending limits. However, the OCC believes
that the risks in such case are limited and can be addressed in the
[[Page 37935]]
institutions likely to use this method (smaller, less complex
institutions) during the supervisory process by examiners appropriately
responding to transactions or concentrations that raise safety and
soundness concerns. For example, examiners could require the bank or
savings association to measure credit exposure by means of a different
method if doing so is appropriate for safety and soundness purposes.
Allowing non-complex banks and savings associations to ``lock-in'' the
attributable exposure at the execution of the contract provides for
certainty and simplicity, with limited risk.\20\
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\20\ We have revised Table 1 in the final rule to conform the
format of its content; there are no substantive changes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A number of trade association and financial institution commenters
also recommended that the OCC amend the final rule to permit the use of
the ``Current Exposure Methodology'' (``CEM'') as an additional option
for measuring credit exposure of derivative transactions. The CEM is
used under the Federal banking agencies' current regulatory capital
rules, both Basel I and II capital regimes, and would be retained under
the Standardized and Advanced Approaches Basel III-related proposals
released by the OCC and the other Federal banking agencies.\21\ Under
the CEM, a bank calculates the credit exposure for derivative
transactions by adding the current exposure (the greater of zero or the
MTM value) and the PFE (calculated by multiplying the notional amount
by a specified conversion factor which varies based on the type and
remaining maturity of the contract) of the derivative transactions. In
particular, the commenters note that the CEM incorporates additional
calculations for netting arrangements and collateral and uses
multipliers that are more tailored to computing the PFE of derivative
transactions. The CEM, they reason, would provide a more refined
analysis of credit exposure than either the Conversion Factor Matrix
Method or the Remaining Maturity Method. In addition, because of its
use in the capital rules, these commenters note that the CEM is
familiar to both the industry and regulators as an available measure of
derivative exposures and its use for measuring credit exposure under
the lending limits rule would therefore introduce less burden and
operational risk than would the use of a new and different methodology
for a narrow regulatory purpose.
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\21\ See 12 CFR part 3, Appendix C, Sections 32(c)(5)-(7), 12
CFR part 167, Appendix C, Sections 32(c)(5)-(7), or 12 CFR part 390,
subpart Z, Appendix A, Sections 32(c)(5)-(7), as appropriate.
Regulatory Capital Rules: Regulatory Capital, Implementation of
Basel III, Minimum Regulatory Capital Ratios, Capital Adequacy,
Transition Provisions, and Prompt Corrective Action, Joint Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking, 77 FR 52792 (August 30, 2012). Regulatory
Capital Rules: Standardized Approach for Risk-weighted Assets;
Market Discipline and Disclosure Requirements, Joint Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking, 77 FR 52888 (August 30, 2012). Regulatory
Capital Rules: Advanced Approaches Risk-based Capital Rule; Market
Risk Capital Rule, Joint Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, 77 FR 52978
(August 30, 2012).
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The OCC agrees with these commenters that the CEM should be
permitted for use by national banks and savings associations in
calculating credit exposure arising from derivative transactions (other
than credit derivative transactions). For the reasons noted above, it
is superior to the Remaining Maturity Method for institutions that do
not model exposures but want to adopt a more risk-sensitive method than
that provided by the Conversion Factor Matrix Method. Therefore, the
OCC is amending part 32 to replace the Remaining Maturity Method option
with a CEM option.
A number of commenters recommended that, as with the Model Method,
the OCC should permit banks and savings associations using the non-
model approaches to net transactions under a qualifying master netting
agreement and to recognize collateral in measuring credit exposure.
These commenters note that the capital rules, payment system risk
reduction efforts, and the current lending limits rule recognizes the
beneficial effects of netting or collateral in reducing credit
exposure. Additionally, the commenters request that the rule outline
the forms of collateral the bank may rely on to offset credit exposure
and suggest that this collateral should reduce the credit exposure as
long as the collateral is permissible and appropriate under a valid and
legally enforceable agreement. The OCC notes that the CEM option as
added by this final rule provides for some netting of PFEs and,
therefore, along with the presence in the rule of the Model Method
option, addresses the commenters' netting concerns. The OCC also notes
that part 32 already provides for exemptions for loans and extensions
of credit secured by certain types of collateral, and, as noted above,
the CEM incorporates additional calculations for collateral.\22\ These
exemptions apply to the credit exposures arising from derivative
transactions, as well as securities financing transactions, now covered
by the lending limits rule just as they do to other loans and
extensions of credit. Therefore, no amendment is necessary to recognize
collateral that may reduce credit exposure for derivative transactions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ E.g. 12 CFR 32.3(c)(3), (4) and (5).
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Some commenters noted that the non-model methods for derivative
transactions do not differentiate between the credit exposures of
interest rate swaps that are amortized from those that are not
amortized. These commenters suggest that the final rule should reflect
amortization in any calculation of the PFE of these swaps because the
risk associated with a swap that is amortized is reduced as the
notional amount decreases over the life of the swap. While we
acknowledge the commenters' concerns, we do not agree that a change to
the rule text to address this comment is needed. The Conversion Factor
Matrix Method and the CEM provide institutions with a simple, albeit
more conservative, approach to measuring credit exposure. Preserving
the simplicity of these non-model methods outweighs any added accuracy
that may be achieved by distinguishing between amortized and non-
amortized instruments. Additionally, the CEM included in the current
regulatory capital rules does not distinguish between an amortizing
swap and a non-amortizing swap; therefore, we believe that it is
reasonable to preserve this treatment for purposes of the legal lending
limits. Further, we note that institutions may use the Model Method to
account for credit exposures arising from derivative transactions,
including amortizing interest rate swaps, should they so desire.
For securities financing transactions, the calculation of the
credit exposure under the Non-Model Method in the interim final rule is
based on the type of securities financing transaction at issue. For a
repurchase agreement or a securities loan where the collateral is cash,
exposure under the lending limits is equal to and remains fixed at the
net current exposure, i.e., the market value at execution of the
transaction of securities transferred to the other party, less cash
received from the other party.\23\ For securities lending transactions
where the collateral is other securities (i.e., not cash), the exposure
is equal to and remains fixed at the product of the higher of the two
haircuts associated with the securities, as determined by a look-up
table included in the regulation (Table 3 in the interim final rule,
renamed Table 2 in the final rule), and the higher of the two par
values of the securities.\24\ The credit
[[Page 37936]]
exposure arising from a reverse repurchase agreement, also known as an
asset repo, or a securities borrowing transaction where the collateral
is cash, equals and remains fixed at the product of the haircut
associated with the collateral received, as determined in this same
table, and the amount of cash transferred to the other party.\25\ For a
securities borrowing transaction where the collateral is other
securities (i.e., not cash), the credit exposure equals and remains
fixed at the product of the higher of the two haircuts associated with
the securities, as determined in the table, and the higher of the two
par values of the securities.\26\
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\23\ 12 CFR 32.9(c)(1)(ii)(A) and 12 CFR 32.9(c)(1)(ii)(B)(1).
\24\ 12 CFR 32.9(c)(1)(ii)(B)(2). The haircuts in this table are
consistent with the standard supervisory market price volatility
haircuts in 12 CFR part 3, Appendix C, Section 32(b)(2)(ii).
\25\ 12 CFR 32.9(c)(1)(ii)(C) and 12 CFR 32.9(c)(1)(ii)(D)(1).
\26\ 12 CFR 32.9(c)(1)(ii)(D)(2).
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Commenters requested that the OCC permit banks to measure credit
exposure of securities financing transactions by applying the standard
supervisory haircuts for such transactions using the current risk-based
capital rules of the appropriate Federal banking agency's capital rules
\27\ or the proposed Basel III Advanced Approaches rules \28\ once
finalized (collectively, the Basel Collateral Haircut Approach) as an
additional non-model approach. These commenters note that under the
Basel Collateral Haircut Approach, exposure value changes as the market
value of the securities changes, while under the Non-Model Method in
the interim final rule, exposure remains fixed at the inception of the
securities financing transaction. Furthermore, the Basel Collateral
Haircut Approach applies haircuts to the market value of the securities
for both repurchase/securities lending transactions and reverse
repurchases/securities borrowing transactions, while the Non-Model
Method of the interim final rule applies haircuts only to the cash
amount of a reverse repurchase agreement/securities borrowing
transaction. In addition, these commenters note that not allowing banks
to use the Basel Collateral Haircut Approach means that banks would be
required to perform two separate calculations, one for the lending
limits rule and one for Basel II/III, even though the different
calculations would not result in materially different exposure amounts.
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\27\ 12 CFR part 3, Appendix C, Section 32(b)(2)(i) and (ii); 12
CFR part 167, Appendix C, Section 32(b)(2)(i) and (ii); or 12 CFR
part 390, subpart Z, Appendix A, Section 32(b)(2)(i) and (ii), as
appropriate.
\28\ See footnote 21.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The OCC agrees with these commenters and has included in the final
rule this additional method of measuring credit exposure for securities
financing transactions, named in the rule as the Basel Collateral
Haircut Method, as a new Sec. 32.9(c)(1)(iii). We find that this
approach permits a more accurate characterization of the true exposure
over the life of the transaction for those national banks or savings
associations that do not use an internal model and for which the
existing non-model approach in the interim final rule is not optimal.
In addition, because this approach is currently used by certain
national banks and savings associations for purposes of the capital
rules, it will eliminate redundancy and associated regulatory burden
for these institutions.
As a result of adding this new non-model method for securities
financing transactions, the final rule changes the name of the ``Non-
Model Method'' included in the interim rule to ``Basic Method.'' The
final rule also makes a technical correction to renamed Table 2 to
describe the correct length of maturity for sovereign entities with
maturities of more than 5 years.
3. Exposures to Central Counterparties
Under the interim final rule, exposures to central counterparties
are credit exposures subject to the lending limits. Industry commenters
to the interim final rule recommended that the OCC either exclude these
exposures from an institution's lending limits or assign the exposures
a higher lending limit. These commenters believe that the OCC should
not subject these exposures to the lending limits because the Dodd-
Frank Act has mandated the migration of many derivative transactions to
central counterparties, and those parties will be subject to
regulation. In addition, the commenters note that applying the lending
limits rule to central counterparty exposures could reduce the
incentive to use central counterparties or prevent some institutions
from engaging in certain transactions, thus limiting the availability
of certain products to customers. One commenter also notes that
applying the lending limits to exposures to central counterparties is
unnecessary because central counterparties are more akin to a group of
borrowers than ``one borrower,'' with the central counterparty
insulating each clearing member and clearing customer from risks
associated with the default of an individual counterparty.
Commenters also addressed the issue of applying the lending limits
rule to an institution's contributions to a central counterparty's
guaranty fund. Some commenters stated that the lending limits rule
should apply to these contributions because they are equivalent to
committed lines of credit. Others argued that the rule should not
apply, or its application should be tailored.
The OCC does not agree that the lending limits rule should exclude
credit exposures to central counterparties or central counterparty
guaranty funds given the concentrated nature of these exposures. The
lending limits serve the purpose of preventing an undue concentration
of credit risk to one party, including an institution's credit
exposures to central counterparties. Furthermore, permitting banks to
use models to measure their exposure to central counterparties,
combined with prudent credit risk management practices by clearing
member banks, makes it unlikely that applying the rule to such credit
exposures will cause an institution's exposures to one borrower to
reach the institution's legal limit. To clarify how banks and savings
associations must measure counterparty exposures to central
counterparties, we have added a new Sec. 32.9(b)(3). This new
provision says that, in addition to the amount calculated under Sec.
32.9(b), the measure of exposure to a central counterparty shall
include the sum of the initial margin posted, plus any contributions to
a guaranty fund at the time such contribution is made, if not already
reflected in the calculation. This new provision is generally
consistent with interpretive positions taken by the OCC.\29\ However,
the OCC recognizes that the role of central counterparties in the
domestic and international financial industry is dynamic and that
uncertainties exist as to how this role will evolve, especially given
the role assigned to central clearinghouses by the Dodd-Frank Act and
choices of the bank's or savings association's client as to using
certain central counterparties.\30\ Therefore, the OCC will continue to
monitor the role of central counterparties and will revisit our lending
limits rule for exposures to such entities if necessary.
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\29\ See, e.g., OCC Interpretive Letter No. 1113, March 4, 2009.
\30\ In general, section 723 of the Dodd-Frank Act requires the
central clearing of certain derivatives.
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4. Credit Derivatives
The OCC received a number of comments on the interim final rule's
treatment of credit exposures arising from credit derivatives. Section
32.9(b)(2) of the interim final rule applies a special rule for
calculating the credit exposure of credit derivatives, a transaction in
which a national bank or
[[Page 37937]]
savings association buys or sells credit protection against loss on a
third-party reference entity. Specifically, a protection purchaser that
uses one of the non-model methods for derivative transactions, or that
uses a model without entering an effective margining arrangement with
its counterparty as defined in Sec. 32.2(l) of the interim final rule,
calculates the counterparty credit exposure arising from credit
derivatives by adding the net notional value of all protection
purchased from the counterparty across all reference entities.\31\ In
addition, a protection seller calculates the credit exposure to a
reference entity arising from credit derivatives by adding the notional
value of all protection sold on that reference entity.\32\ However, the
protection seller may reduce its exposure to a reference entity by the
amount of any eligible credit derivative, which is defined in Sec.
32.2(m) of the interim final rule as a single-name credit derivative or
standard, non-tranched index credit derivative that meets certain
requirements, purchased on that reference entity from an eligible
protection provider, as defined in Sec. 32.2(o).
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\31\ The protection buyer is exposed to the counterparty risk of
the seller; the buyer expects payment from the seller if there is a
default. Technically, the seller also bears a degree of counterparty
credit risk; this risk is not being captured by the lending limits.
\32\ Section 610 of the Dodd-Frank Act applies the lending
limits to counterparty credit exposures arising from derivative
transactions (``credit exposure to a person arising from a . . .
transaction between the national banking association and the
person'') (emphasis added). Section 610 (a)(1), as codified at 12
U.S.C. 84(b)(1)(C). The OCC's authority to apply the lending limits
to exposures to reference entities in credit derivatives derives
from 12 U.S.C. 84(b)(1)(B) (loans subject to the lending limits
include ``to the extent specified by the Comptroller of the
Currency, any liability . . . to advance funds to or on behalf of a
person pursuant to a contractual commitment'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Some commenters requested that the OCC amend the definition of
``eligible credit derivative'' to allow banks to obtain relief for the
purchase of credit protection using standard tranched index credit
derivatives in addition to standard non-tranched index credit
derivatives. As both tranched and non-tranched index credit derivatives
are highly standardized, rely on the same triggering events for
payments, and calculate payments from the protection provider on the
basis of the same auction-determined prices, the commenters do not
believe that an institution's ability to reduce its exposures under the
rule should be limited to only non-tranched index credit derivatives.
The OCC disagrees with these comments and has not amended the final
rule to define ``eligible credit derivative'' to include standard
tranched index credit derivatives at this time. We will address this
issue if we later determine, after experience implementing this rule,
that such a change is warranted.
Commenters also recommended that the OCC clarify that the
definition of ``eligible credit derivative'' includes, in the case of
sovereign or municipality reference obligors, contracts in which the
credit event is a restructuring. Because bankruptcy and insolvency
regimes generally do not exist for these types of reference obligors,
standard credit default swap (CDS) contracts on sovereign and municipal
reference exposures instead cover the buyer of protection for
restructurings that, while not conducted by a bankruptcy court or
receiver, nonetheless bind the holders of the sovereign or municipal
debt to changes in principal, interest, or similar economic terms of
the debt. It was not the OCC's intent to exclude restructurings of such
obligors in this definition. Therefore, we have amended the definition
of ``eligible credit derivative,'' at Sec. 32.2(m)(3)(ii), by
specifically including a restructuring for obligors not subject to
bankruptcy or insolvency as a credit event for a CDS.
Some commenters opposed the provision in the interim final rule,
Sec. 32.9(b)(2), that requires a national bank or savings association
to enter an effective margining arrangement in order to use an internal
model approach to calculate counterparty exposure arising from a credit
derivative. Absent the effective margining arrangement, the bank or
savings association must calculate its counterparty credit risk
exposure by adding notional amounts across all reference entities for
each counterparty. The interim final rule defines ``effective margining
arrangement'' as a master legal agreement governing derivative
transactions between a bank or savings association and a counterparty
that requires the counterparty to post, on a daily basis, variation
margin to fully collateralize that amount of the bank's net credit
exposure to the counterparty that exceeds $1 million created by the
derivative transactions covered by the agreement. These commenters
stated that selection of a $1 million threshold is arbitrary and
unnecessary because an effective model should take into account
whatever threshold is applicable for a particular margining
arrangement. The OCC does not agree with this comment and finds that
variation margin is an important credit risk mitigation tool for
prudent participation in over-the-counter derivatives markets. Beyond a
prudently established variation margin threshold, the OCC does not
believe it is appropriate to permit an institution to use the Model
Method for credit derivatives transactions. Many large institutions
currently require, or likely soon will require, that all credit
exposures from derivative transactions be fully collateralized.
Therefore, we believe defining ``effective margining arrangement'' to
include a threshold is appropriate from a safety and soundness
perspective, conforms with current and evolving industry standards, and
is consistent with efforts to prevent the type of uncollateralized
credit derivatives exposures that proved problematic during the
financial crisis.
After further review of this issue, however, we believe that it is
appropriate to increase the threshold amount in the definition of
effective margining arrangement to reflect any existing agreements with
thresholds above $1 million. This change would allow banks and savings
associations with such existing margining agreements to use the Model
Method without having to renegotiate and modify the agreements. We have
limited this increase to $25 million, an amount that we believe
adequately covers the bulk of these existing agreements. To help ensure
that this increase in threshold amount will not raise new safety and
soundness concerns, we have adjusted the rule to provide that the
amount of the threshold under an effective margining arrangement is
added to the amount of counterparty exposure calculated by the Model
Method. Thus, the amount of the threshold would be subject to the
lending limit. Of course, this adjustment to the rule in no way
obviates or modifies the ongoing requirement that an institution's
margining arrangements, including as to the threshold amounts that do
not exceed the threshold used in the lending limits rule, must be
consistent with safe and sound banking practices.
Commenters also requested that the OCC permit national banks to
purchase credit protection, such as default or total return swaps, to
reduce all types of credit exposure to a borrower.\33\ Under the
interim final rule, the purchase of credit protection can only reduce
credit derivative exposure to a reference obligor, not other exposures
such as traditional loans and extensions of credit. The commenters note
that the purchase of credit protection is a well-
[[Page 37938]]
accepted risk management technique and is recognized in the
Comptroller's Handbook on Concentrations of Credit as a useful strategy
for managing credit concentration risk.\34\ They recommend that where
the protection contract maturity is as long as the maturity for the
other exposure, protection purchased from an eligible protection
provider should be permitted under the rule to be used to reduce all
types of covered credit exposure.
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\33\ The OCC notes that a national bank or savings association
may only purchase such credit protection if the transaction is
otherwise permitted under applicable law. See e.g., 12 U.S.C. 1851
and any implementing regulations.
\34\ See Comptroller's Handbook, Concentration of Credit,
December 2011, p. 13.
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After careful consideration, the OCC agrees that credit protection
purchased should be allowed to offset other types of credit exposures,
under certain circumstances as suggested by the commenters, but only on
a limited basis. Specifically, we have added a new Sec.
32.2(q)(2)(vii) to exclude from the lending limits rule that part of a
loan or extension of credit for which a national bank or savings
association has purchased protection if: that protection is by way of a
single-name credit derivative that meets the requirements for an
eligible credit derivative contained in Sec. 32.2(m)(1) through (7);
the credit derivative is purchased from an eligible protection
provider; the reference obligor is the same legal entity as the
borrower in the loan or extension of credit; and the amount and
maturity of the protection purchased equals or exceeds the amount and
maturity of the loan or extension of credit. However, even if all of
these requirements are satisfied, the total amount of such exclusion
may not exceed 10 percent of the bank's or savings association's
capital and surplus.\35\ We believe this policy strikes an appropriate
balance by conforming the lending limits rule to existing agency policy
on the purchase of credit protection (such as the policy cited by the
commenters) while placing a ceiling on a bank's ability to obtain
relief from the lending limits in this manner.
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\35\ Where a protection seller reduces its credit derivative
exposure under Sec. 32.9(b)(2)(ii) by purchasing protection, such
reduction is not subject to the 10 percent limit.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Three financial trade associations stated that the interim final
rule is not clear as to whether, and, if so, how, it covers credit
exposures arising from tranched index credit derivatives. The
commenters noted that the rule requires banks to use ``notional value''
to calculate credit exposure on protection sold, but there are several
different notional amounts identified in tranched index CDS
documentation, and none of these can reasonably be understood as a
proxy for credit exposure.
The OCC understands that the interim final rule does not resolve
questions regarding the measurement of exposures arising from tranched
credit derivatives, whether they are standard index or bespoke
tranches. However, because there are different notional amounts that
could apply to tranched exposures, none of which may be indicative of
the risk to a particular reference entity, it is difficult to apply a
specific rule for all situations. Instead, we intend to address this
issue through OCC interpretations. This approach will allow the OCC to
more thoroughly examine the transactions at issue and apply approaches
that most accurately calculate the notional amount attributable to each
reference entity in a specific tranche.
5. Securities Financing Transaction-Specific Provisions
A number of comments were directed specifically to the interim
final rule's treatment of securities financing transactions.
Some commenters asked the OCC to clarify that ``repurchase
agreement'' and ``reverse repurchase agreement'' as used in the
definition of ``securities financing transaction'' are limited to
transactions in securities. The lack of a definition for these specific
terms could result in the impression that the same lending limits rule
applicable to securities financing transactions in Sec. 32.9 applies
to other types of repurchase agreements and reverse repurchase
agreements that do not involve securities. It does not.\36\ However, to
address this concern we have added a definition of ``security'' to the
final rule, which cross-references to the definition of this term in
section 3(a)(10) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C.
78c(a)(10)). This definition clarifies that the transactions that are
referred to as ``securities financing transactions'' are transactions
that involve securities.
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\36\ Instead, the other provisions of part 32 should be
consulted. For example, extensions of credit secured by loans,
whether effected by reverse repurchase agreements or otherwise, have
always been within the scope of the general lending limits rules
(including any applicable exceptions) and continue to be so after
the enactment of the Dodd-Frank Act and promulgation of this rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As indicated above, under the renamed Basic Method, the credit
exposure arising from either a securities lending transaction or a
securities borrowing transaction where the collateral is other
securities will equal and remain fixed as the product of the higher of
the two haircuts associated with the two securities, as determined in
Table 2 of the final rule (formerly Table 3 of the interim final rule),
and the higher of the two par values of the securities. Commenters
questioned how the credit exposure would be calculated when more than
one type of securities collateral is provided in these transactions. We
agree that this circumstance should be addressed in the rule.
Accordingly, we have amended the provisions in the rule regarding these
non-cash collateral transactions, Sec. Sec. 32.9(c)(1)(ii)(B)(2) and
32.9(c)(1)(ii)(D)(2), to provide that where more than one security is
provided as collateral, the applicable haircut is the higher of the
haircut associated with the security borrowed and the notional-weighted
average of the haircuts associated with the securities provided as
collateral.
Commenters also requested that the OCC clarify that the securities
lending transactions secured by Federal and state (or political
subdivision) obligations should receive the same treatment as ``cash
collateralized'' transactions under the rule when calculating credit
exposure. The OCC notes that the rule currently provides that credit
exposures arising from securities financing transactions in which the
securities financed are type I securities, as defined in 12 CFR 1.2(j),
in the case of national banks (generally Federal and state securities),
or securities listed in sections 5(c)(1)(C), (D), (E), and (F) of HOLA
and general obligations of a state or subdivision as listed in section
5(c)(1)(H) of HOLA,\37\ in the case of savings associations, are exempt
from the lending limits. Therefore, no further change is needed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ 12 U.S.C. 1464(c)(1)(C), (D), (E), (F), and (H).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
6. Nonconforming Loans and Extensions of Credit
The interim final rule added a new paragraph (a)(3) to Sec. 32.6
to provide that a credit exposure arising from a derivative transaction
or securities financing transaction and determined by a model pursuant
to Sec. 32.9(b)(1)(i) or Sec. 32.9(c)(1)(i), respectively, will not
be deemed a violation of the lending limits statute or regulation and
will be treated as nonconforming if the extension of credit was within
the national bank's or savings association's legal lending limits at
execution and is no longer in conformity because the exposure has
increased since execution. One commenter requested that credit
exposures that exceed the limits after inception of the derivative
transaction should be treated as violations of the lending limits rule
rather than as nonconforming, asserting that otherwise there would be
an incentive to game the limits. We disagree with this comment.
[[Page 37939]]
Because of the nature of these transactions, it would not be possible
for an institution to predict with any certainty the maximum exposure
amount at the execution of a transaction. Furthermore, once a
transaction becomes nonconforming, the rule requires the institution to
use reasonable efforts to bring it into conformity with the lending
limits unless doing so would be inconsistent with safety and soundness.
The OCC enforces this provision accordingly.
Other commenters requested that derivative transactions calculated
using a non-model method also should be treated as ``nonconforming'' if
credit exposure arising from the derivative transaction increases after
execution of the transaction. Without this change, institutions
choosing a non-model method could face violations of the lending limits
due to increases in credit exposure post-execution, while banks using
internal models, in similar circumstances, would only be subject to an
instance of nonconformance with the opportunity to correct the
nonconformance before it is deemed a violation. We agree that the
provision on nonconforming loans and extensions of credit should apply
to transactions calculated using a non-model method. Although the OCC
intended this treatment when issuing the interim final rule, the text
of the rule did not accomplish it. We therefore have made this
technical change by adding reference to the Current Exposure Method as
well as the Basel Collateral Haircut Method, which we have added as an
additional non-model method for securities financing transactions, to
Sec. 32.6(a)(3) of the final rule.\38\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ It is not necessary to include the Conversion Factor Matrix
method for derivative transactions or the Basic Method for
securities financing transactions in Sec. 32.6(a)(3) because the
measured credit exposure of a transaction for lending limits
purposes remains fixed under these methods.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
7. Other Provisions
Unless specifically noted in the rule, all provisions of part 32
apply to credit exposures arising from a derivative transaction or a
securities financing transaction, including the lending limits
calculation rules of Sec. 32.4 and the combination rules of Sec.
32.5. Some commenters took issue with the application of the direct
benefit test in Sec. 32.5, which provides for the attribution and
combination of loans and extensions of credit under certain
circumstances, to derivative and securities financing transactions.
They stated that the direct benefit test would be difficult to monitor
in these transactions because of the complexity of these transactions
and would likely require significant changes to market practices or
revisions to standard documentation to implement. Instead they
recommend that for these transactions the direct benefit test should be
limited by its terms to situations of evasion. The OCC has carefully
considered this comment. The direct benefit test is dependent on the
facts of a particular case, and the OCC understands that the nature of
derivative and securities financing transactions may raise factual
issues not found in traditional loan transactions. However, the OCC has
determined not to make changes to the long-established text of the
direct benefit test at this time. The OCC will continue to apply the
test sensibly to these transactions in light of their facts and
circumstances and will review the direct benefit test once it has
experience with its application to the exposures arising from
derivative transactions and securities financing transactions.
III. Explanatory Table
The table below is provided as an aid in understanding the final
rule. A prior version was included in the interim final rule and we
have revised it to simplify it and to reflect the changes included in
the final rule. It is not a substitute for the final rule itself.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Transaction type Credit exposure Calculation examples under Final Rule
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Derivatives
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Interest Rate Swap Institutions that have an approved model Non-modeled bank: Bank A without an
can use the model to determine the approved model executes a $10 million,
attributable credit exposure. 5-year, interest rate swap. It receives
If no model, institutions must use a fixed rate and pays floating.
either the Conversion Factor Matrix The current mark-to-market is $0.
Method or the Current Exposure Method.
Conversion Factor Matrix Method: Under the Conversion Factor Matrix
Attributable credit exposure is locked- Method, the PFE factor for this swap is
in or fixed at the PFE on day 1 by 6%. Bank A ``locks-in'' attributable
simply multiplying notional principal exposure of $600,000 ($10 million x
amount by a conversion factor provided 6%), the day-one PFE amount.
in table. No requirement to calculate
daily mark-to-market or re-calculate
PFE.
Current Exposure Method: Attributable Under the Current Exposure Method (CEM),
credit exposure is calculated by adding exposure is equal to the current mark-
the current exposure (the greater of to-market, plus an ``add-on''
zero or the MTM value) and the PFE determined by multiplying the notional
(calculated by multiplying the notional amount times a factor appropriate for
amount by a specified conversion factor the swap's maturity. The factor for a 5-
taken from Table 4 of the Advanced year swap is 0.5 percent. Bank A's
Approaches Appendix of the capital attributable exposure would be $50,000
rules, which varies based on the type (0 + ($10 million x 0.5%)).
and remaining maturity of the contract)
of the derivative transaction.
Credit Derivative To Counterparty \39\ Institutions that Modeled bank with effective margining
model derivatives exposures determine arrangement: Bank A buys and sells
the attributable exposure based on the credit protection from and to Bank B on
model, provided there is an effective Firms X, Y and Z. There is an effective
margining arrangement. They add in to margining arrangement between the banks
the amount calculated under the model with a collateralization threshold of
any net credit exposure under an $2,000,000. Banks A and B use their
effective margining arrangement with models to determine their counterparty
respect to which the counterparty is credit exposures and add to the
not required to fully collaterize. calculation $2,000,000.
[[Page 37940]]
Institutions that use the Conversion Non-modeled bank or bank without
Factor Matrix Method or CEM for other effective margining arrangement:
derivative transactions, or that model Example 1
but do not have an effective margining Bank A buys and sells credit protection
arrangement, calculate the attributable from and to Bank B on Firms X, Y and Z.
exposure as the sum of all net notional Bank A's net notional protection
protection purchased amounts across purchased from Bank B is $50 for Firm X
reference entities. and $100 for Firm Y. Bank A's net
To Reference Entities \40\ protection sold to Bank B is $35 for
Institutions calculate the exposure as Firm Z. The lending limits exposure of
the net notional protection sold Bank A to Bank B is a counterparty
amount. The net protection sold amount credit exposure of $150. (Bank A also
is the gross notional protection sold has a lending limits exposure to Firm Z
on a reference entity less the amount of $35 due to reference entity
of any eligible credit derivative exposure.)
purchased on that reference entity from Example 2
an eligible protection provider. Bank C sells credit protection on Firms
1 and 2. Bank C's gross notional
protection sold is $100 for Firm 1 and
$200 for Firm 2. Bank C also purchases
$25 of protection on Firm 2 from an
eligible protection provider (EPP) via
an eligible credit derivative. The
lending limits exposure of Bank C to
Firm 1 is $100 and to Firm 2 is $175.
If Bank C models its exposures and has
an effective margining agreement with
the EPP, its counterparty exposure to
the EPP for this transaction, as well
as all other derivatives transactions
in the same netting set, is calculated
by the model. If Bank C has no
effective margining agreement with the
EPP or does not model, its counterparty
exposure to the EPP is $25.
Example 3
Bank D funds a loan to Borrower Inc. in
the amount of $100,000. Bank D
purchases protection on Borrower Inc.
in the amount of $40,000 from an
eligible protection provider (EPP) via
a single-name credit derivative that
meets the requirements of Sec.
32.2(m)(1) through (7). The amount of
$40,000 does not exceed 10% of Bank D's
capital and surplus. Bank D's
counterparty exposure to Borrower Inc.
is $60,000 for lending limits purposes
($100,000 - $40,000). Bank D, a bank
whose use of models for legal lending
limits purposes has been approved by
the appropriate Federal banking agency,
has an effective margining agreement
with the EPP and so will model the
counterparty exposure to the EPP on
this credit derivative transaction as
part of a portfolio of derivative
transactions with the EPP.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Securities Financing
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Reverse Repurchase Agreement Institutions that have an approved model Using the Basic Method:
(asset repo) can use the model to determine the Bank executes a reverse repo in which it
attributable credit exposure. lends $100 and receives as collateral 7-
Banks that do not have an approved model year Treasury securities worth $102
can determine attributable credit that have a haircut, based on Table 2
exposure using either the Basic Method of the final rule, of 4%. Attributable
or the Basel Collateral Haircut Method. exposure is $4 ($100 x 4%).
[[Page 37941]]
Basic Method: Using the Basel Collateral Haircut
Attributable credit exposure for lending Method:
limit purposes is the product of the Bank executes a reverse repo in which it
haircut associated with the collateral lends $100 and receives as collateral 7-
received and the amount of cash year Treasury securities worth $102
transferred. that have a haircut of 4%, based on
Basel Collateral Haircut Method: Table 3 of Section 32(b)(2) of the
Attributable credit exposure for lending Advanced Approaches Appendix of the
limit purposes is determined pursuant capital rules. Attributable exposure is
to Sections 32(b)(2)(i) and (ii) of the ($100 - $102) + ($100 x 0%) + ($102 x
Advanced Approaches Appendix of the 4%) = $2.08.
capital rules.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Repurchase Agreement Institutions that have an approved model Using the Basic Method:
can use the model to determine the Bank executes a repo in which it borrows
attributable credit exposure. $100, pledging 7-year Treasury
Banks that do not have an approved model securities worth $102. Attributable
can determine attributable credit exposure is $2, the amount of net
exposure using either the Basic Method current credit exposure.
or the Basel Collateral Haircut Method.
Basic Method: Using the Basel Collateral Haircut
Attributable credit exposure for lending Method:
limit purposes is the difference Bank executes a repo in which it borrows
between the market value of securities $100, pledging 7-year Treasury
transferred less cash received (i.e., securities worth $102 that have a
the net current credit exposure). haircut of 4%, based on Table 3 of
Basel Collateral Haircut Method: Section 32(b)(2) of the Advanced
Attributable credit exposure for Approaches Appendix of the capital
lending limit purposes is determined rules. Attributable exposure is ($102 -
pursuant to Sections 32(b)(2)(i) and $100) + ($100 x 0%) + ($102 x 4%) =
(ii) of the Advanced Approaches $6.08.
Appendix of the capital rules.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Securities Borrowing Institutions that have an approved model Using the Basic Method, cash as
Transaction can use the model to determine the collateral:
attributable credit exposure. Bank borrows $100 par value 7-year
Banks that do not have an approved model Treasury securities that have a fair
can determine attributable credit value of $102. The bank pledges $100 in
exposure using either the Basic Method cash. The haircut associated with the
or the Basel Collateral Haircut Method. security is 4%, based on Table 2 of the
final rule. The attributable exposure
is $4 ($100 x 4%).
Basic Method: Using the Basic Method, securities as
If collateral is cash, treat the same as collateral:
reverse repo: Attributable credit Bank borrows $100 par value 7-year
exposure for lending purposes is the Treasury securities (with fair value
product of the haircut associated with $101) and pledges 5-year bank eligible
the collateral received and the amount corporate bonds with a par value of
of cash transferred. $100 and fair value of $102. The
If collateral is securities: haircut on the borrowed security is 4%
Attributable credit exposure for lending and the haircut on the pledged security
limit purposes is the product of the is 6%, based on Table 2 of the final
higher of the two haircuts associated rule. The attributable exposure is $6
with the two securities and the higher ($100 x 6%), based upon the higher of
of the two par values of the the two security haircuts and the
securities. higher of the two par values (here the
par values were the same).
Basel Collateral Haircut Method: Using the Basel Collateral Haircut
Attributable credit exposure for lending Method, cash as collateral:
limit purposes is determined pursuant Bank borrows $100 par value 7-year
to Sections 32(b)(2)(i) and (ii) of the Treasury securities that have a fair
Advanced Approaches Appendix of the value of $102. The bank pledges $100 in
capital rules. cash. The haircut associated with the
security is 4%, based on Table 3 of
Section 32(b)(2) of the Advanced
Approaches Appendix of the capital
rules. The attributable exposure is
($100 - $102) + ($100 x 0%) + ($102 x
4%) = $2.08.
........................................ Using the Basel Collateral Haircut
Method, securities as collateral:
Bank borrows $100 par value 7-year
Treasury securities (with fair value
$101) and pledges 5-year bank eligible
corporate bonds with a par value of
$100 and a fair value of the $102. The
haircut on the borrowed security is 4%
and the haircut on the pledged security
is 6%, based on Table 3 of Section
32(b)(2) of the Advanced Approaches
Appendix of the capital rules. The
attributable exposure is: ($102 - $101)
+ ($102 x 6%) + ($101 x 4%) = $11.16.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 37942]]
Securities Lending Institutions that have an approved model Using the Basic Method, cash as
Transaction can use the model to determine the collateral:
attributable credit exposure. Bank lends $100 par value 7-year
Banks that do not have an approved model Treasury securities with fair value of
can determine attributable credit $102 and receives $100 in cash
exposure using either the Basic Method collateral. Attributable exposure is
or the Basel Collateral Haircut Method. $2, the net current credit exposure.
Basic Method: Using the Basic Method, securities as
If collateral received is cash, treat collateral:
the same as a repo: The attributable Bank lends $100 par value 7-year
credit exposure for lending limit Treasury securities with fair value of
purposes is the net current credit $101 and receives as collateral a 5-
exposure. year bank eligible corporate bond with
If the collateral received is other a $100 par value and $102 fair value.
securities: The attributable credit The haircuts on the loaned and borrowed
exposure for lending limit purposes is securities are 4% and 6%, respectively,
the product of the higher of the two based on Table 2 of the final rule.
haircuts associated with the two Attributable exposure is $6 ($100 x
securities and the higher of the two 6%), based upon the higher of the two
par values of the securities. security haircuts and the higher of the
two par values (here the par values
were the same).
Basel Collateral Haircut Method: Using the Basel Collateral Haircut
Attributable credit exposure for lending Method cash as collateral:
limit purposes is determined pursuant Bank lends $100 par value 7-year
to Sections 32(b)(2)(i) and (ii) of the Treasury securities with fair value of
Advanced Approaches Appendix of the $102 and receives $100 in cash
capital rules. collateral. The haircut on the security
is 4%, based on Table 3 of Section
32(b)(2) of the Advanced Approaches
Appendix of the capital rules.
Attributable exposure is ($102 - $100)
+ ($100 x 0%) + ($102 x 4%) = $6.08.
........................................ Using the Basel Collateral Haircut
Method, securities as collateral:
Bank lends a $100 par value 7-year
Treasury security with a fair value of
$101 and receives a 5-year bank
eligible corporate bond as collateral,
with a $100 par value and $102 fair
value. The haircuts on the loaned and
borrowed securities are 4% and 6%,
respectively, based on Table 3 of
Section 32(b)(2) of the Advanced
Approaches Appendix of the capital
rules. Attributable exposure is ($101 -
$102) + ($102 x 6%) + ($101 x 4%) =
$9.16.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ The protection buyer is exposed to the counterparty risk of the seller; the buyer expects payment from the
seller if there is a default. Technically, the seller also bears a degree of counterparty credit risk; this
risk is not being captured by the lending limits.
\40\ Upon default of the reference entity, the protection seller must make a payment to the buyer.
IV. Effective and Compliance Dates
The Administrative Procedure Act (APA) requires that a substantive
rule must be published not less than 30 days before its effective date,
unless, among other things, the rule grants or recognizes an exemption
or relieves a restriction.\41\ Current 12 CFR 32.1(d) provides a
temporary exception period for the application of the section 610-
related provisions of part 32 that expires on July 1, 2013. This final
rule amends Sec. 32.1(d) to extend this temporary exception period
through October 1, 2013. Because this amendment postpones the
application of the section 610-related provisions to national banks and
savings associations, thereby relieving banks and savings associations
from compliance with the section 610-related provisions on July 1,
2013, the amendment may take effect less than 30 days from publication.
Because this extension must take effect before July 1, 2013 to prevent
the current exception period from expiring, we have made the amendment
to 12 CFR 32.1(d) contained in this final rule effective on June 25,
2013.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\41\ 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 302 of the Riegle Community Development and Regulatory
Improvement Act of 1994 (12 U.S.C. 4802) (RCDRIA) requires that
regulations imposing additional reporting, disclosure, or other
requirements on insured depository institutions take effect on the
first day of the calendar quarter after publication of the final rule,
unless, among other things, the agency determines for good cause that
the regulations should become effective before such time. Because the
amendment to extend the temporary compliance period does not impose any
additional reporting, disclosure, or other requirements, the OCC finds
good cause to dispense with the delayed effective date otherwise
required by RCDRIA for this provision.
All other amendments made by this final rule will take effect on
the first day of the calendar quarter after publication of the final
rule, October 1, 2013.
V. Regulatory Analysis
Regulatory Flexibility Act
Pursuant to the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA),\42\ 5 U.S.C. 603,
an agency must prepare a regulatory flexibility analysis for all
proposed and final rules that describe the impact of the rule on small
entities, unless the head of an agency certifies that the rule will not
have ``a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities.'' However, the RFA applies only to rules for which an agency
publishes a general notice of proposed rulemaking pursuant to 5 U.S.C.
553(b).\43\ Because the OCC
[[Page 37943]]
did not publish a notice of proposed rulemaking pursuant to 5 U.S.C.
553(b)(B),\44\ the RFA does not apply to this final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ Public Law 96-354, Sept. 19, 1980.
\43\ 5 U.S.C. 603(a), 604(a).
\44\ Section 553(b)(B) provides that general notice and an
opportunity for public comment are not required prior to the
issuance of a final rule when an agency, for good cause, finds that
``notice and public procedure thereon are impracticable,
unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995, Public Law
104-4 (2 U.S.C. 1532) (Unfunded Mandates Act), requires that an agency
prepare a budgetary impact statement before promulgating any rule
likely to result in a Federal mandate that may result in the
expenditure by state, local, and tribal governments, in the aggregate,
or by the private sector, of $100 million or more in any one year. If a
budgetary impact statement is required, section 205 of the Unfunded
Mandates Act also requires an agency to identify and consider a
reasonable number of regulatory alternatives before promulgating a
rule. The OCC has determined that there is no Federal mandate imposed
by this rulemaking that may result in the expenditure by state, local,
and tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the private sector, of
$100 million or more in any one year. Accordingly, final rule is not
subject to section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Act.
Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act
(PRA) of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-3521), the OCC 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. Part 32 contains information
collection requirements under the PRA, which have been previously
approved by OMB under OMB Control No. 1557-0221. The OCC is seeking
renewal of OMB PRA approval separately from this rulemaking for these
requirements. The OCC now is seeking OMB approval of the model approval
process contained in Sec. 32.9 of this final rule.
In response to comments received, we have clarified the model
approval process in Sec. 32.9(b)(1)(i)(C). The use of a model (other
than the model approved for purposes of the Advanced Measurement
Approach in the capital rules) must be approved by the OCC specifically
for part 32 purposes and must be approved in writing. If a national
bank or Federal savings association proposes to use an internal model
that has been approved by the OCC for purposes of the Advanced
Measurement Approach, the institution must provide prior written
notification to the OCC prior to use of the model for lending limits
purposes. OCC approval is also required before substantive revisions
are made to a model that is used for lending limits purposes.
Estimated Number of Respondents: 238.
Estimated Burden per Respondent: 1 hour per model; 2 models per
respondent.
Estimated Total Burden: 476 hours.
Comments are invited on:
(a) Whether the collection of information is necessary for the
proper performance of the OCC's functions, including whether the
information has practical utility;
(b) The accuracy of the estimates of the burden of the information
collection, including the validity of the methodology and assumptions
used;
(c) Ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected;
(d) Ways to minimize the information collection burden, 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.
Because paper mail in the Washington, DC area and at the OCC is
subject to delay, commenters are encouraged to submit comments by email
if possible. Comments may be sent to: Legislative and Regulatory
Activities Division, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Suite
3E-218, Mail Stop 9W-11, Attention: 1557-NEW, 400 7th Street SW.,
Washington, DC 20219. In addition, comments may be sent by fax to (571)
465-4326 or by electronic mail to regs.comments@occ.treas.gov. You may
personally inspect and photocopy comments at the OCC, 400 7th Street
SW., Washington, DC 20219. For security reasons, the OCC requires that
visitors make an appointment to inspect comments. You may do so by
calling (202) 649-6700. Upon arrival, visitors will be required to
present valid government-issued photo identification and to submit to
security screening in order to inspect and photocopy comments.
All comments received, including attachments and other supporting
materials, are part of the public record and subject to public
disclosure. Do not enclose any information in your comment or
supporting materials that you consider confidential or inappropriate
for public disclosure.
Additionally, please send a copy of your comments by mail to: OCC
Desk Officer, 1557-NEW, U.S. Office of Management and Budget, 725 17th
Street NW., 10235, Washington, DC 20503, or by email to: oira
submission@omb.eop.gov.
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 32
National banks, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
12 CFR Part 159
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Savings associations.
12 CFR Part 160
Consumer protection, Investments, Mortgages, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Savings associations, Securities.
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the interim final rule
amending chapter I of title 12 of the Code of Federal Regulations that
was published at 77 FR 37265 on June 21, 2012 is adopted as final with
the following amendments.
PART 32--LENDING LIMITS
0
1. The authority citation for part 32 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1 et seq., 84, 93a, 1462a, 1463, 1464(u),
and 5412(b)(2)(B).
0
2. Section 32.1 is amended by:
0
a. Revising paragraphs (a) through (c); and
0
b. Amending paragraph (d) by removing ``July 1, 2013'' and adding in
its place ``October 1, 2013''.
The revision reads as follows:
Sec. 32.1 Authority, purpose and scope.
(a) Authority. This part is issued pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1 et seq.,
12 U.S.C. 84, 93a, 1462a, 1463, 1464(u), and 5412(b)(2)(B).
(b) Purpose. The purpose of this part is to protect the safety and
soundness of national banks and savings associations by preventing
excessive loans to one person, or to related persons that are
financially dependent, and to promote diversification of loans and
equitable access to banking services.
(c) Scope. (1) Except as provided by paragraphs (c) and (d) of this
section, this part applies to all loans and extensions of credit made
by national banks and their domestic operating subsidiaries and to all
loans and extensions of credit made by savings associations, their
operating subsidiaries, and their service
[[Page 37944]]
corporations that are consolidated under Generally Accepted Accounting
Principles (GAAP). For purposes of this part, the term ``savings
association'' includes Federal savings associations and state savings
associations, as those terms are defined in 12 U.S.C. 1813(b).
(2) This part does not apply to loans or extensions of credit made
to the bank's or savings association's:
(i) Affiliates, as that term is defined in 12 U.S.C. 371c(b)(1) and
(e), as implemented by 12 CFR 223.2(a) (Regulation W);
(ii) Operating subsidiaries;
(iii) Edge Act or Agreement Corporation subsidiaries; or
(iv) Any other subsidiary consolidated with the bank or savings
association under GAAP.
(3) The lending limits in this part are separate and independent
from the investment limits prescribed by 12 U.S.C. 24 (Seventh) or 12
U.S.C. 1464(c), as applicable, and 12 CFR Part 1 and 12 CFR 160.30, and
a national bank or savings association may make loans or extensions of
credit to one borrower up to the full amount permitted by this part and
also hold eligible securities of the same obligor up to the full amount
permitted under 12 U.S.C. 24 (Seventh) or 12 U.S.C. 1464(c), as
applicable, and 12 CFR Part 1 and 12 CFR 160.30.
(4) Loans and extensions of credit to executive officers, directors
and principal shareholders of national banks, savings associations, and
their related interests are subject to limits prescribed by 12 U.S.C.
375a and 375b in addition to the lending limits established by 12
U.S.C. 84 or 12 U.S.C. 1464(u) as applicable, and this part.
(5) In addition to the foregoing, loans and extensions of credit
must be consistent with safe and sound banking practices.
* * * * *
0
3. Section 32.2 is amended by:
0
a. Revising paragraph (l);
0
b. In paragraph (m)(3)(ii), adding after ``insolvency,'' the phrase
``restructuring (for obligors not subject to bankruptcy or
insolvency),'' and adding a comma after the phrase ``as they become
due'';
0
c. Removing the ``and'' at the end of paragraph (q)(2)(v),
0
d. Removing the period at the end of paragraph (q)(2)(vi)(A)(3) and
adding in its place ``; and'';
0
e. Adding new paragraph (q)(2)(vii); and
0
f. Redesignating paragraphs (bb), (cc) and (dd) as paragraphs (cc),
(dd) and (ee), respectively, and adding new paragraph (bb).
The additions and revisions read as follows:
Sec. 32.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
(l) Effective margining arrangement means a master legal agreement
governing derivative transactions between a bank or savings association
and a counterparty that requires the counterparty to post, on a daily
basis, variation margin to fully collateralize that amount of the
bank's or savings association's net credit exposure to the counterparty
that exceeds $25 million created by the derivative transactions covered
by the agreement.
* * * * *
(q) * * *
(2) * * *
(vii) That portion of one or more loans or extensions of credit,
not to exceed 10 percent of capital and surplus, with respect to which
the national bank or savings association has purchased protection in
the form of a single-name credit derivative that meets the requirements
of Sec. 32.2(m)(1) through (7) from an eligible protection provider if
the reference obligor is the same legal entity as the borrower in the
loan or extension of credit and the maturity of the protection
purchased equals or exceeds the maturity of the loan or extension of
credit.
* * * * *
(bb) Security has the same meaning as in section 3(a)(10) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(10)).
* * * * *
Sec. 32.6 [Amended]
0
4. Section 32.6(a)(3) is amended by:
0
a. Removing the word ``Internal''; and
0
b. Adding ``the Current Exposure Method specified in Sec.
32.9(b)(1)(iii), or the Basel Collateral Haircut Method specified in
Sec. 32.9(c)(1)(iii)'' after ``Model Method specified in Sec.
32.9(b)(1)(i) or Sec. 32.9(c)(1)(i)''.
0
5. Section 32.9 is amended by:
0
a. In paragraph (b)(1):
0
i. In the first sentence, removing the phrase ``paragraphs (b)(2) and
(b)(3) of this section'' and adding in its place the phrase
``paragraphs (b)(2), (b)(3) and (b)(4) of this section''; and
0
ii. In the second sentence, removing the phrase ``Subject to paragraph
(b)(3)'' and adding in its place ``Subject to paragraph (b)(4)'';
0
b. Revising the heading in paragraph (b)(1)(i);
0
c. Revising paragraph (b)(1)(i)(C);
0
d. Revising paragraph (b)(1)(ii);
0
e. Revising Table 1 in paragraph (b)(1)(ii);
0
f. Revising paragraph (b)(1)(iii);
0
g. Removing Table 2;
0
h. Revising paragraph (b)(2);
0
i. Redesignating paragraph (b)(3) as paragraph (b)(4), and revising it;
0
j. Adding a new paragraph (b)(3);
0
k Revising paragraph (c)(1)(i);
0
l. Revising the heading in paragraph (c)(1)(ii);
0
m. Adding a sentence at the end of paragraphs (c)(1)(ii)(B)(2) and
(c)(1)(ii)(D)(2);
0
n. In paragraph (c)(1)(ii)(B) through (D), removing the phrase ``Table
3'' each time it appears and adding in its place the phrase ``Table
2'';
0
o. Redesignating Table 3 as Table 2, and revising newly redesignated
Table 2;
0
p. Adding a new paragraph (c)(1)(iii); and
0
q. Revising paragraph (c)(2).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 32.9 Credit exposure arising from derivative and securities
financing transactions.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) * * *
(i) Model Method. * * *
(C) Calculation of potential future credit exposure. (1) A bank or
savings association shall calculate its potential future credit
exposure by using either:
(i) An internal model the use of which has been approved in writing
for purposes of 12 CFR Part 3, Appendix C, Section 32(d), 12 CFR Part
167, Appendix C, Section 32(d), or 12 CFR Part 390, subpart Z, Appendix
A, Section 32(d), as appropriate, provided that the bank or savings
association provides prior written notice to the appropriate Federal
banking agency of its use for purposes of this section; or
(ii) Any other appropriate model the use of which has been approved
in writing for purposes of this section by the appropriate Federal
banking agency.
(2) Any substantive revisions to a model made after the bank or
savings association has provided notice of the use of the model to the
appropriate Federal banking agency pursuant to paragraph
(b)(1)(i)(C)(1)(i) of this section or after the appropriate Federal
banking agency has approved the use of the model pursuant to paragraph
(b)(1)(i)(C)(1)(ii) of this section must be approved by the agency
before a bank or savings association may use the revised model for
purposes of this part.
* * * * *
(ii) Conversion Factor Matrix Method. The credit exposure arising
from a derivative transaction under the Conversion Factor Matrix Method
shall equal and remain fixed at the potential future credit exposure of
the derivative transaction which shall equal the
[[Page 37945]]
product of the notional amount of the derivative transaction and a
fixed multiplicative factor determined by reference to Table 1 of this
section.
Table 1--Conversion Factor Matrix for Calculating Potential Future Credit Exposure \1\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other \3\
(includes
Foreign commodities
Original maturity \2\ Interest rate exchange rate Equity and precious
and gold metals except
gold)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1 year or less.................................. .015 .015 .20 .06
Over 1 to 3 years............................... .03 .03 .20 .18
Over 3 to 5 years............................... .06 .06 .20 .30
Over 5 to 10 years.............................. .12 .12 .20 .60
Over ten years.................................. .30 .30 .20 1.0
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
\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\ Transactions not explicitly covered by any other column in the Table are to be treated as ``Other.''
(iii) Current Exposure Method. The credit exposure arising from a
derivative transaction (other than a credit derivative transaction)
under the Current Exposure Method shall be calculated pursuant to 12
CFR Part 3, Appendix C, Sections 32(c)(5), (6) and (7); 12 CFR Part
167, Appendix C, Sections 32(c)(5), (6), and (7); or 12 CFR Part 390,
subpart Z, Appendix A, Sections 32(c)(5), (6) and (7), as appropriate.
(2) Credit Derivatives. (i) Counterparty exposure. (A) In general.
Notwithstanding paragraph (b)(1) of this section and subject to
paragraph (b)(2)(i)(B) of this section, a national bank or savings
association that uses the Conversion Factor Matrix Method or the
Current Exposure Method, or that uses the Model Method without entering
an effective margining arrangement as defined in Sec. 32.2(l), shall
calculate the counterparty credit exposure arising from credit
derivatives entered by the bank or savings association by adding the
net notional value of all protection purchased from the counterparty on
each reference entity.
(B) Special rule for certain effective margining arrangements. A
bank or savings association must add the EMA threshold amount to the
counterparty credit exposure arising from credit derivatives calculated
under the Model Method. The EMA threshold is the amount under an
effective margining arrangement with respect to which the counterparty
is not required to post variation margin to fully collateralize the
amount of the bank's or savings association's net credit exposure to
the counterparty.
(ii) Reference entity exposure. A national bank or savings
association shall calculate the credit exposure to a reference entity
arising from credit derivatives entered into by the bank or savings
association by adding the net notional value of all protection sold on
the reference entity. A bank or savings association may reduce its
exposure to a reference entity by the amount of any eligible credit
derivative purchased on that reference entity from an eligible
protection provider.
(3) Special rule for central counterparties. (i) In addition to
amounts calculated under Sec. 32.9(b)(1) and (2), the measure of
counterparty exposure to a central counterparty shall also include the
sum of the initial margin posted by the bank or savings association,
plus any contributions made by it to a guaranty fund at the time such
contribution is made.
(ii) Paragraph (b)(3)(i) of this section does not apply to a
national bank or saving association that uses an internal model
pursuant to paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this section if such model reflects
the initial margin and any contributions to a guaranty fund.
(4) Mandatory or alternative method. The appropriate Federal
banking agency may in its discretion require or permit a national bank
or savings association to use a specific method or methods set forth in
paragraph (b)(1) of this section to calculate the credit exposure
arising from all derivative transactions or any specific, or category
of, derivative transactions if it finds, in its discretion, that such
method is consistent with the safety and soundness of the bank or
savings association.
(c) * * * (1) * * *
(i) Model Method. (A) A national bank or savings association may
calculate the credit exposure of a securities financing transaction by
using either:
(1) An internal model the use of which has been approved in writing
by the appropriate Federal banking agency for purposes of 12 CFR Part
3, Appendix C, Section 32(b); 12 CFR Part 167, Appendix C, Section
32(b); or 12 CFR Part 390, subpart Z, Appendix A, Section 32(b), as
appropriate, provided the bank or savings association provides prior
written notice to the appropriate Federal banking agency of its use for
purposes of this section; or
(2) Any other appropriate model the use of which has been approved
in writing for purposes of this section by the appropriate Federal
banking agency.
(B) Any substantive revisions to a model made after the bank or
savings association has provided notice of the use of the model to the
appropriate Federal banking agency pursuant to paragraph
(c)(1)(i)(A)(1) of this section or after the appropriate Federal
banking agency has approved the use of the model pursuant to paragraph
(c)(1)(i)(A)(2) of this section must be approved by the agency before a
bank or savings association may use the revised model for purposes of
part 32.
(ii) Basic Method. * * *
(B) * * *
(2) * * * Where more than one security is provided as collateral,
the applicable haircut is the higher of the haircut associated with the
security lent and the notional-weighted average of the haircuts
associated with the securities provided as collateral.
* * * * *
(D) * * *
(2) * * * Where more than one security is provided as collateral,
the applicable haircut is the higher of the haircut associated with the
security borrowed and the notional-weighted average of the haircuts
associated with the securities provided as collateral.
[[Page 37946]]
TABLE 2--Collateral Haircuts
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SOVEREIGN ENTITIES
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Residual maturity Haircut without
currency mismatch
\1\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
OECD Country Risk Classification < = 1 year........ 0.005.
\2\ 0-1.
>1 year, <= 5 0.02.
years.
>5 years.......... 0.04.
OECD Country Risk Classification <= 1 year......... 0.01.
2-3.
>1 year, <= 5 0.03.
years.
> 5 years......... 0.06.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
CORPORATE AND MUNICIPAL BONDS THAT ARE BANK-ELIGIBLE INVESTMENTS
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Residual maturity Haircut without
for debt currency mismatch
securities
------------------------------------------------------------------------
All............................. <=1 year.......... 0.02.
All............................. >1 year, <=5 years 0.06.
All............................. >5 years.......... 0.12.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
OTHER ELIGIBLE COLLATERAL
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Main index \3\ equities (including convertible 0.15.
bonds).
Other publicly-traded equities (including 0.25.
convertible bonds).
Mutual funds........................................ Highest haircut
applicable to any
security in which
the fund can
invest.
Cash collateral held................................ 0.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ In cases where the currency denomination of the collateral differs
from the currency denomination of the credit transaction, an
additional 8 percent haircut will apply.
\2\ OECD Country Risk Classification means the country risk
classification as defined in Article 25 of the OECD's February 2011
Arrangement on Officially Supported Export Credits Arrangement.
\3\ 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 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.
(iii) Basel Collateral Haircut Method. A national bank or savings
association may calculate the credit exposure of a securities financing
transaction pursuant to 12 CFR Part 3, Appendix C, Sections 32(b)(2)(i)
and (ii); 12 CFR Part 167, Appendix C, Sections 32(b)(2)(i) and (ii);
or 12 CFR Part 390, subpart Z, Appendix A, Sections 32(b)(2)(i) and
(ii), as appropriate.
(2) Mandatory or alternative method. The appropriate Federal
banking agency may in its discretion require or permit a national bank
or savings association to use a specific method or methods set forth in
paragraph (c)(1) of this section to calculate the credit exposure
arising from all securities financing transactions or any specific, or
category of, securities financing transactions if the appropriate
Federal banking agency finds, in its discretion, that such method is
consistent with the safety and soundness of the bank or savings
association.
PART 159--SUBORDINATE ORGANIZATIONS
0
6. The authority citation for part 159 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1462, 1462a, 1463, 1464, 1828,
5412(b)(2)(B).
0
7. Section 159.3 is amended by revising paragraph (k)(2) to read as
follows:
Sec. 159.3 What are the characteristics of, and what requirements
apply to, subordinate organizations of Federal savings associations?
* * * * *
(k) * * *
(2) The LTOB regulation does not apply to loans from you to your
GAAP-consolidated service corporation or from your GAAP-consolidated
service corporation to you. However, part 32 imposes restrictions on
the amount of loans you may make to non-consolidated service
corporations. Loans made by a GAAP-consolidated service corporation are
aggregated with your loans for LTOB purposes.
* * * * *
0
8. Section 159.5 is amended by revising paragraphs (b) and (c) to read
as follows:
Sec. 159.5 How much may a Federal savings association invest in
service corporations or lower-tier entities?
* * * * *
(b) In addition to the amounts you may invest under paragraph (a)
of this section, and to the extent that you have authority under other
provisions of section 5(c) of the HOLA and part 160 of this chapter,
and available capacity within any applicable investment limits, you may
make loans to any non-consolidated subsidiary, subject to the lending
limits in part 32 of this chapter.
(c) For purposes of this section, the term ``obligations'' includes
all loans and other debt instruments (except accounts payable incurred
in the ordinary course of business and paid within 60 days) and all
guarantees or take-out commitments of such loans or debt instruments.
Dated: June 19, 2013.
Thomas J. Curry,
Comptroller of the Currency.
[FR Doc. 2013-15174 Filed 6-24-13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810-33-P