Organization; Funding and Fiscal Affairs, Loan Policies and Operations, and Funding Operations; Investment Eligibility, 43301-43318 [2014-17493]
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 143 / Friday, July 25, 2014 / Proposed Rules
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370801721.
Joe
Hagerman, Senior Advisor, Building
Technologies Office, U.S. Department of
Energy (DOE), Office of Energy
Efficiency and Renewable Energy, 950
L’Enfant Plaza SW., Washington, DC
20024. Phone: 202–586–4549; Email:
asrac@ee.doe.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Purpose of Meeting
The purpose of the working group
will be to discuss and, if possible, reach
consensus on a proposed rule for the
energy efficiency of manufactured
homes, as authorized by section 413 of
the Energy Independence and Security
Act of 2007 (EISA). Tentative Agenda:
(Subject to change):
• Overview of Working Group’s Task
• Discussion and formation of a work
plan for the MH Working Group to
accomplish its objectives.
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
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Monday, July 28, 2014. Anyone
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statements on the agenda. The co-chairs
of the Committee will make every effort
to hear the views of all interested parties
and to facilitate the orderly conduct of
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Participation in the meeting is not a
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comments. ASRAC invites written
comments from all interested parties
during the course of the negotiations. If
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meeting. Electronic copy of written
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Minutes: All notices, public
comments, public meeting transcripts,
and supporting documents associated
with this working group are included in
Docket No. EERE–2009–BT–BC–0021.
Issued in Washington, DC on July 15, 2014.
Kathleen B. Hogan,
Deputy Assistant Secretary for Energy
Efficiency, Energy Efficiency and Renewable
Energy.
[FR Doc. 2014–17557 Filed 7–24–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6450–01–P
FARM CREDIT ADMINISTRATION
12 CFR Parts 611 and 615
RIN 3052–AC84
Organization; Funding and Fiscal
Affairs, Loan Policies and Operations,
and Funding Operations; Investment
Eligibility
Farm Credit Administration.
Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Farm Credit
Administration (FCA, Agency, us, our,
or we) proposes to amend our
regulations governing the eligibility of
investments held by Farm Credit banks.
We propose to strengthen these
regulations by reinforcing that only high
quality investments may be purchased
and held. We also propose to revise
these regulations to comply with section
939A of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act
(Dodd-Frank Act or DFA) by removing
references to and requirements relating
to credit ratings and substituting other
appropriate standards of
creditworthiness. The FCA also
proposes to revise its regulatory
approach to Farm Credit System
(System) association investments in
order to limit the type and amount of
investments that an association may
hold. The proposed rule also addresses
investment and risk management
SUMMARY:
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43301
practices at associations and funding
bank supervision of association
investments.
You may send us comments by
October 23, 2014.
DATES:
We offer a variety of
methods for you to submit comments on
this proposed rule. For accuracy and
efficiency reasons, commenters are
encouraged to submit comments by
email or through the Agency’s Web site.
As facsimiles (fax) are difficult for us to
process and achieve compliance with
section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act, we
are no longer accepting comments
submitted by fax. Regardless of the
method you use, please do not submit
your comment multiple times via
different methods. You may submit
comments by any of the following
methods:
• Email: Send us an email at regcomm@fca.gov.
• FCA Web site: https://www.fca.gov.
Select ‘‘Public Commenters,’’ then
‘‘Public Comments,’’ and follow the
directions for ‘‘Submitting a Comment.’’
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Mail: Barry F. Mardock, Deputy
Director, Office of Regulatory Policy,
Farm Credit Administration, 1501 Farm
Credit Drive, McLean, VA 22102–5090.
You may review copies of all
comments we receive at our office in
McLean, Virginia, or on our Web site at
https://www.fca.gov. Once you are in the
Web site, select ‘‘Public Commenters,’’
then ‘‘Public Comments,’’ and follow
the directions for ‘‘Reading Submitted
Public Comments.’’ We will show your
comments as submitted, but for
technical reasons we may omit items
such as logos and special characters.
Identifying information that you
provide, such as phone numbers and
addresses, will be publicly available.
However, we will attempt to remove
email addresses to help reduce Internet
spam.
ADDRESSES:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Paul K. Gibbs, Senior Accountant, or
Timothy T. Nerdahl, Senior Financial
Analyst, Office of Regulatory Policy,
Farm Credit Administration, McLean,
VA 22102–5090, (703) 883–4414, TTY
(703) 883–4056; or
Jennifer A. Cohn, Senior Counsel, or
Richard A. Katz, Senior Counsel,
Office of General Counsel, Farm
Credit Administration, McLean, VA
22102–5090, (703) 883–4020, TTY
(703) 883–4056.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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I. Objectives
The objectives of this proposed rule
are to:
• Strengthen the safety and
soundness of Farm Credit banks 1 and
associations; 2
• Ensure that Farm Credit banks hold
sufficient liquidity to continue
operations and pay maturing obligations
in the event of market disruption;
• Enhance the ability of the Farm
Credit banks to supply credit to
agricultural and aquatic producers;
• Comply with the requirements of
section 939A of the Dodd-Frank Act;
• Modernize the investment
eligibility criteria for Farm Credit banks;
and
• Revise the investment regulation for
associations to improve their investment
management practices so they are more
resilient to risk.
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II. Background
Congress created System institutions,
including Farm Credit banks and
associations, to provide permanent,
stable, and reliable sources of credit and
related services to American agricultural
and aquatic producers.3 Associations
obtain funds from Farm Credit banks to
provide short-, intermediate-, and longterm credit and related services to
farmers, ranchers, producers and
harvesters of aquatic products, to rural
residents for housing, and to farmrelated businesses.4
Farm Credit banks depend on
investments to provide liquidity and to
fulfill other needs,5 and investments
also enable associations to manage the
risks they confront.6 Although Farm
1 Section 619.9140 of FCA regulations defines
‘‘Farm Credit bank’’ to include Farm Credit Banks,
agricultural credit banks, and banks for
cooperatives.
2 Section 619.9050 of FCA regulations defines the
term ‘‘association’’ to include (individually or
collectively) a Federal land bank association, a
Federal land credit association, a production credit
association, and an agricultural credit association.
3 The Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation
(Farmer Mac), also a System institution, provides a
secondary market for agricultural real estate
mortgage loans, rural housing mortgage loans, and
rural utility cooperative loans. Farmer Mac is not
affected by this rulemaking, and the use of the term
‘‘System institution’’ in this preamble and proposed
rule does not include Farmer Mac.
4 One Farm Credit bank, known as an agricultural
credit bank, also provides lending and other
financial services to farmer-owned cooperatives,
rural utilities (electric and telephone), and rural
sewer and water systems, and it is also authorized
to finance U.S. agricultural exports and provide
international banking services for farmer-owned
cooperatives.
5 Section 615.5132(a) authorizes a Farm Credit
bank to hold eligible investments to comply with
its liquidity requirements, to manage surplus shortterm funds, and to manage interest rate risk.
6 As discussed below, proposed 615.5142 would
enable associations, under specified conditions, to
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Credit banks obtain their funding
primarily through the issuance of
System-wide debt securities,7 they must
have enough available funds, including
investments, to continue operations and
pay maturing obligations if access to the
debt market becomes temporarily
impeded.
FCA regulations, at subpart E of part
615, impose comprehensive
requirements regarding the investments
of System institutions. We have recently
revised many of these requirements,
particularly those guiding prudent
investment management practices.8 This
rulemaking proposes to revise the
requirements governing the eligibility of
investments for Farm Credit banks and
associations, which have been largely
unchanged since 1999, as well as the
permissible investment amounts and
purposes for associations.9 The
regulations this rulemaking proposes to
amend should not be viewed in
isolation, but rather as part of a
comprehensive set of rules guiding the
System’s liquidity and investment
management.
Investment products are becoming
increasingly complex, and the financial
crisis that began in 2007 made clear that
some investments are riskier and less
liquid than were previously believed. In
addition, in July 2010 the President
signed into law the Dodd-Frank Act to
strengthen regulation of the financial
industry in the wake of the financial
crisis. Section 939A of the DFA requires
each Federal agency to review all of its
regulations that refer to or require the
use of credit ratings to assess the
creditworthiness of an instrument; to
remove the reference or requirement;
and to substitute other appropriate
creditworthiness standards. FCA’s
existing investment eligibility
regulations use credit ratings as a
determinant of eligibility of some
investments.
We now propose to comply with the
DFA by eliminating the regulations’
reliance on credit ratings. The financial
crisis that began in 2007 identified flaws
in relying on credit ratings to determine
hold eligible investments to manage risk. Under
§ 611.1135(a), which we do not propose to revise,
service corporations may hold investments for the
purposes authorized for their organizers.
7 Farm Credit banks use the Federal Farm Credit
Banks Funding Corporation (Funding Corporation)
to issue and market System-wide debt securities.
The Funding Corporation is owned by the Farm
Credit banks.
8 77 FR 66362, Nov. 5, 2012.
9 Currently, § 615.5140 identifies eligible
investments for both Farm Credit banks and
associations. Section 615.5142 governs investment
purposes for associations, and the amount of
association investments is not prescribed by
regulation.
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credit risk, as many investments with
similar labels and ratings exhibited
substantially differing underlying risk
characteristics, ultimately impacting
marketability of the investments.
Investment eligibility would no longer
depend on external credit ratings, thus
enhancing safety and soundness. We
also propose other amendments to the
provisions governing Farm Credit banks
that would strengthen the safety and
soundness of their investment activities
by more accurately reflecting the risk in
particular investments.
Finally, we propose amendments to
§ 615.5142, which governs the
investment activities of associations. We
recognize that many associations may
need to hold investments for purposes
other than managing surplus short-term
funds and reducing interest rate risk,
which are the only investment purposes
authorized by the existing regulations.
For this reason, the proposed rule
would grant associations greater
flexibility to hold investments for other
risk management purposes. At the same
time, we propose to limit the types and
amount of investments that associations
may hold.
We first considered revisions to our
Farm Credit bank and association
investment regulations in 2011.10 As
discussed above, we adopted many of
these revisions in 2012, but we did not
revise the provisions governing
investment eligibility and association
investments, which we are now
proposing to revise. The revisions we
now propose take into consideration the
comments we received in response to
the earlier rulemaking, as well as the
approaches some of the other Federal
banking regulatory agencies have taken
toward compliance with the DFA credit
ratings elimination requirement.11
III. Section-by-Section Description of
the Proposed Rule
The proposed rule enhances the credit
quality standards for eligible
investments that Farm Credit banks may
hold and revises the regulation
governing association investment
activities. It also contains conforming
amendments to other regulations in
parts 611 and 615.
A. Section 615.5131—Definitions
We propose to define asset class as a
group of securities that exhibit similar
characteristics and behave similarly in
the marketplace. Asset classes include,
but are not limited to, money market
10 76
FR 51289, Aug. 18, 2011.
of the Comptroller of the Currency
(OCC), 77 FR 35253 and 35259, June 13, 2012;
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), 77
FR 43151 and 43155, July 24, 2012.
11 Office
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instruments, municipal securities,
corporate bond securities, mortgagebacked securities (MBS), asset-backed
securities (ABS) (excluding MBS), and
any other asset class as determined by
the FCA. We discuss this definition later
in this preamble.
We propose to define a collateralized
debt obligation (CDO) as a debt security
collateralized by MBS, ABS, or trustpreferred securities.
One of our proposed criteria for Farm
Credit bank investments with an obligor
located outside of the United States is
a high Country Risk Classification (CRC)
(a 0 or a 1) as published by the
Organization for Economic Cooperation
and Development (OECD).12 We
propose to define CRC, with respect to
a sovereign, as the most recent
consensus CRC published by the OECD
as of December 31 of the prior calendar
year that provides a view of the
likelihood that the sovereign will
service its external debt. This definition
is identical to that adopted by the other
Federal banking regulators in their
capital rules to implement Basel III.13
We proposed the same definition in the
proposed revisions to our regulatory
capital rule that the FCA Board adopted
on May 8, 2014.14
We propose to define a diversified
investment fund as an investment
company registered under section 8 of
the Investment Company Act of 1940,
15 U.S.C. 80a–8. This is consistent with
our usage of the term in existing
§ 615.5140(a)(8).
We propose to replace the definitions
for the existing terms ‘‘Governmentsponsored agency’’ and ‘‘Government
agency’’ with definitions for the new
terms ‘‘Government-sponsored
enterprise (GSE)’’ and ‘‘United States
(U.S.) Government agency,’’
respectively. We would define GSE as
an entity established or chartered by the
U.S. Government to serve public
purposes specified by the U.S. Congress
but whose debt obligations are not
explicitly guaranteed by the full faith
and credit of the U.S. Government. We
would define U.S. Government agency
as an instrumentality of the U.S.
Government whose obligations are fully
guaranteed as to the timely payment of
principal and interest by the full faith
and credit of the U.S. Government.
12 See proposed § 615.5140(a)(3). We explain this
criterion in the preamble discussion of that
proposed provision.
13 OCC and the Federal Reserve System, Final
Rule, 78 FR 62018, Oct. 11, 2013; FDIC, Interim
Final Rule, 78 FR 55340, Sept. 10, 2013,
substantively adopted as final at 79 FR 20754, April
14, 2014.
14 The proposed capital rule has not yet been
published in the Federal Register.
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These terminology changes would have
no substantive effect.15
We propose to replace the defined
term ‘‘mortgage securities’’ with
‘‘mortgage-backed securities’’ or ‘‘MBS.’’
We also propose to change ‘‘mortgage
securities’’ to ‘‘mortgage-backed
securities’’ in the definition of ABS.
These technical changes are for
consistency with other FCA regulations
and would have no substantive effect.
We propose to add a new definition
for the term ‘‘obligor.’’ Our existing
regulations use this term, as do
provisions that we propose to add or
revise, but we have no definition for this
term. We propose to define the term to
ensure a common understanding of its
meaning.
We would define obligor as an issuer,
guarantor, or other person or entity who
has an obligation to pay a debt,
including interest due, by a specified
date or when payment is demanded.
This definition would include the
debtor or immediate party that is
obligated to pay a debt, as well as a
guarantor of the debt. The definition
would not include the sponsor (as we
propose to define the term) of an
investment, unless the sponsor has an
obligation to pay the debt.
We propose to define ‘‘sponsor’’ as a
person or entity that initiates a
transaction by selling or pledging to a
specially created issuing entity, such as
a trust, a group of financial assets that
the sponsor either has originated itself
or has purchased; the sponsor may
retain the obligation to repay or may
transfer that obligation to the trust. An
example of a sponsor would be an entity
such as a commercial bank that transfers
financial assets, such as loans that it has
originated or purchased, to a bankruptcy
remote trust known as a special purpose
vehicle (SPV). In this example, the SPV
services the debt and has the obligation
to repay.
We propose to delete the following
definitions because they will no longer
be used in this subpart. We propose to
delete ‘‘eurodollar time deposits,’’ ‘‘final
maturity,’’ ‘‘general obligations,’’
‘‘liquid investments,’’ ‘‘nationally
recognized statistical rating
organization,’’ ‘‘revenue bond,’’ and
‘‘weighted average life’’.
B. Section 615.5134—Liquidity Reserve
We propose to make technical, nonsubstantive revisions by adding the new
15 We propose to delete the word ‘‘explicitly’’
from our existing definition because all obligations
guaranteed or insured by the U.S. Government are
backed by the full faith and credit of the United
States unless the law or the obligation itself
provides otherwise. For this reason, the word
‘‘explicitly’’ is superfluous.
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terms ‘‘Government-sponsored
enterprise (GSE)’’ and ‘‘U.S.
Government agency’’ to our liquidity
reserve regulation at § 615.5134, to
conform to changes we made to those
defined terms in § 615.5131. In addition,
we propose changes to clarify that MBS
must be fully guaranteed by a U.S.
Government agency to qualify for Level
2 liquidity and fully guaranteed by a
GSE to qualify for Level 3 liquidity.
C. Section 615.5140—Eligible
Investments for Farm Credit Banks
Our existing investment eligibility
regulation at § 615.5140 contains a
detailed listing of eligible investment
asset classes and types of investments
within each asset class. The regulation
imposes final maturity limits,
investment portfolio limits, and other
requirements for many of these
investments. It also imposes credit
rating requirements, based on NRSRO 16
credit ratings, for a number of the
investments. The regulation currently
applies to both Farm Credit banks and
associations.
In revised § 615.5140, we propose to
revise the investment eligibility
requirements governing Farm Credit
banks to strengthen their safety and
soundness by more accurately reflecting
the risk in particular investments based
on recent experience in the
marketplace.17 In addition, to comply
with section 939A of the DFA, we
propose to replace the regulations’
NRSRO credit ratings requirements with
other standards of creditworthiness.
1. Paragraph (a)—Investment Eligibility
Criteria
We propose the following criteria for
Farm Credit banks to determine whether
an investment is eligible. These criteria
would replace the listing of eligible
investments in our existing regulations.
a. Paragraph (a)(1)—Purpose
We propose to formalize our existing
requirement that for an investment to be
eligible, it must be purchased and held
for an authorized purpose as set forth in
§ 615.5132(a). A Farm Credit bank must
be able to identify the authorized
purpose or purposes for which each
investment is held.
b. Paragraph (a)(2)—Eligible
Investments
The proposed regulation would
specify the general requirements that
16 Nationally Recognized Statistical Rating
Organization.
17 Revised § 615.5140 would apply to Farm Credit
banks only. As discussed below, all association
eligibility requirements would be located in revised
§ 615.5142.
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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 143 / Friday, July 25, 2014 / Proposed Rules
investments must satisfy to be eligible.
Limiting investments to those that
satisfy these general requirements will
ensure that investments are of high
quality.
i. Paragraph (a)(2)(i)—Non-convertible
Senior Debt Securities
Investments in senior debt securities
that cannot be converted to any other
type of securities would be eligible
under the proposed rule. This
investment category would include nonconvertible U.S. Government agency
senior debt securities, including U.S.
Treasury securities, and senior nonconvertible GSE bonds. Senior debt
securities are those securities that have
priority of claim over other securities
issued. Senior debt securities may be
secured by a specific pool of collateral
or may be unsecured with priority of
claims over other types of debt
securities such as subordinated debt,
preferred stock, or common equity. To
be eligible under this criterion, a senior
debt security must not be convertible
into a non-senior security or an equity
security.18
Currently authorized investments
such as municipal securities and
corporate debt securities would be
eligible under this criterion, as long as
they are non-convertible senior debt
securities. Other non-convertible senior
debt securities would also be eligible
under this criterion.
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ii. Paragraph (a)(2)(ii)—Money Market
Instruments
As under our existing rule,
investments in money market
instruments would be eligible under the
proposed rule. The existing rule lists
short-term instruments such as Federal
funds, negotiable certificates of deposit,
bankers acceptances, commercial paper,
non-callable term Federal funds and
Eurodollar time deposits, master notes,
and repurchase agreements
collateralized by eligible investments as
money market instruments. The
proposed rule’s use of the term money
market contemplates these instruments
as well as other short-term instruments.
For an investment to be eligible as a
money market instrument, it must have
a maturity of 1 year or less.
18 Since at least 1993, FCA has stated its belief
that it is generally inappropriate for System
institutions to maintain ownership interests in
commercial enterprises by holding equity
securities. See 58 FR 63034, 63049–50, Nov. 30,
1993.
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iii. Paragraph (a)(2)(iii)—MortgageBacked Securities and Asset-Backed
Securities Guaranteed by U.S.
Government Agencies
We propose that MBS and ABS that
are fully guaranteed as to the timely
payment of principal and interest by a
U.S. Government agency would be
eligible securities because of their high
credit quality. MBS and ABS that are
partially guaranteed by a U.S.
Government agency would not be
eligible under this criterion (although
they could be eligible under other
criteria). Securities labeled ‘‘government
guaranteed’’ satisfy this criterion only if
they are fully guaranteed as to the
timely payment of principal and
interest.
iv. Paragraph (a)(2)(iv)—MortgageBacked Securities and Asset-Backed
Securities Guaranteed by GSEs
Under the proposed rule, MBS and
ABS that are fully and explicitly
guaranteed as to the timely payment of
principal and interest by GSEs would be
eligible investments. Farmer Mac MBS
would be excluded from eligibility
under this provision because they are
separately authorized and governed by
§ 615.5174.
Securities are eligible under this
provision only if a GSE fully guarantees
the timely payment of both the principal
and interest due. A GSE ‘‘wrap’’
(guarantee) does not make a security
eligible under this provision unless it is
a guarantee of all principal and interest.
When considering whether to purchase
a security with a GSE guarantee or wrap,
an institution must ensure that it is fully
guaranteed. This provision carries over
and clarifies the existing authorities.
v. Paragraph (a)(2)(v)—Senior-Most
Positions of Mortgage-Backed Securities
and Asset-Backed Securities Not
Guaranteed by U.S. Government
Agencies or GSEs
In our 2011 proposed rule on
investment management,19 we proposed
that a position in a mortgage security
that is not guaranteed by a Government
agency or Government-sponsored
agency would be eligible only if it is the
senior-most position at the time of
purchase. In that proposed rule, we said
that we consider a position in such a
mortgage security to be the senior-most
position only if it currently meets both
of the following criteria:
• No other remaining position in the
securitization has priority in
liquidation. Remaining positions that
are the last to experience losses in the
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19 76
FR 51289, Aug. 18, 2011.
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event of default and which share those
losses pro rata meet this criterion.
• No other remaining position in the
securitization has a higher priority
claim to any contractual cash flows.
Remaining positions that have the first
priority claim to contractual cash flows
(including planned amortization
classes), as well as those that share on
a pro rata basis a first priority claim to
cash flows meet this criterion.
In their comments on the 2011
proposed rule, CoBank, ACB, the Farm
Credit Bank of Texas, and The Farm
Credit Council commented that the
market understands the term ‘‘seniormost’’ to relate to liquidation preference
rather than to the priority of claims to
contractual cash flows prior to default.
This is because investors, such as
System institutions, are concerned with
whether they receive a pro rata share of
cash flows in the event of depleted
credit support or issuer/borrower
default, not with whether contractual
cash flows are paid first in the ordinary
course of business. Institutions are able
to successfully and safely invest in
securities that are not the first priority
with respect to contractual cash flows.
These commenters, therefore, asked us
to delete the second criterion from our
understanding of the term ‘‘seniormost.’’ 20
We agree with these comments and
eliminate the second criterion. The first
criterion set forth above remains.
In addition, as in the existing rule, we
propose to retain the requirement that
for a position in an MBS to be eligible,
the MBS must satisfy the definition of
‘‘mortgage related security’’ in 15 U.S.C.
78c(a)(41). We propose to delete the
alternative that the MBS could instead
comply with 15 U.S.C. 77d(5), because
that statutory provision was repealed by
the Dodd-Frank Act. We note that
commercial MBS are included under
this proposed eligibility provision.
Private placements may be eligible
under this proposed criterion (or other
criteria), as long as they satisfy all of the
proposed investment eligibility
requirements. Private placement refers
to the sale of securities to a relatively
small number of sophisticated investors
without registration with the Securities
and Exchange Commission and, in
many cases, without the disclosure of
detailed financial information or a
prospectus. Even private placements
that may be eligible are generally not
liquid. Farm Credit banks must be able
to identify a permissible purpose for
holding a private placement.
20 Farmer Mac made similar comments in
response to the 2011 proposed rule governing
Farmer Mac investment management. 76 FR 91798,
Nov. 18, 2011.
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Our existing eligibility rules limit
investments in ABS to those secured by
specified assets and with specified
weighted average lives. We propose to
permit investments in the senior-most
position of any ABS, regardless of the
secured asset or the weighted average
life.21
In sum, the proposed rule would
permit Farm Credit banks to invest in
the senior-most position of any MBS
that satisfies the statutory definition of
‘‘mortgage related security’’ and the
senior-most position of any ABS.
vi. Paragraph (a)(2)(vi)—International
and Multilateral Development Bank
Obligations
We retain the authority for Farm
Credit banks to invest in obligations of
international and multilateral
development banks, as long as the
United States is a voting shareholder.
vii. Paragraph (a)(2)(vii)—Shares of a
Diversified Investment Fund
Under the proposal, shares of a
diversified investment fund (DIF) would
be eligible if the DIF’s portfolio consists
solely of securities that are eligible
under these eligibility criteria or under
§ 615.5174.22 The investment
company’s risk and return objectives
and use of derivatives must be
consistent with the investment policies
of the Farm Credit bank. This DIF
eligibility is unchanged from the
existing regulation. As discussed below,
however, we propose more restrictive
portfolio diversification limits on DIF
investments than those that currently
exist.
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
c. Paragraph (a)(3)—Obligors’ Capacity
To Meet Financial Commitment
Existing § 615.5140 imposes credit
rating requirements, based on NRSRO
credit ratings, to determine the
eligibility of investments in a number of
asset classes, including municipal
securities, certain money market
instruments, non-agency mortgagebacked securities, asset-backed
securities, and corporate debt
securities.23
21 Both existing and proposed § 615.5133(c)
require the investment policies of each institution
to establish risk limits for different types of
investments based on all relevant factors, including
the institution’s objectives, capital position,
earnings, and quality and reliability of risk
management systems.
22 Section 615.5174 authorizes Farm Credit banks
to purchase and hold MBS that are issued or
guaranteed as to both principal and interest by
Farmer Mac.
23 Existing § 615.5140 imposes no credit rating
requirements on investments in obligations of U.S.
Government agencies, GSEs, and international and
multilateral development banks, and in DIFs and
certain money market instruments.
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Section 939A of the DFA requires
each Federal agency to revise all of its
regulations that refer to or require
reliance on credit ratings to assess
creditworthiness of an instrument to
remove the reference or requirement
and to substitute other appropriate
creditworthiness standards.
We propose to comply with this
requirement in a manner consistent
with the approach of some of the
Federal banking regulatory agencies.
The OCC, for example, previously
required national banks to determine
whether a security was ‘‘investment
grade’’ in order to determine whether
purchasing the security was
permissible. Under the previous
definition of ‘‘investment grade,’’ a
security could be characterized as
‘‘investment grade’’ if it was rated in the
top four ‘‘investment grade’’ NRSRO
ratings.
In its revised regulations to comply
with the DFA requirement, the OCC
retained the term ‘‘investment grade’’
but eliminated the rating standard.
Instead, it defined the term to mean ‘‘the
issuer of a security has an adequate
capacity to meet financial commitments
under the security for the projected life
of the asset or exposure.’’
The OCC stated that it did not intend
for the elimination of references to
credit ratings to change substantively
the standards national banks must
follow when deciding whether a
security is investment grade. Its new
rule permits a national bank to consider
credit ratings as part of its ‘‘investment
grade’’ determination and due diligence,
but the credit rating must be
supplemented by the bank’s own
analysis. And the new rule does not
require a national bank to use NRSRO
credit ratings to make the ‘‘investment
grade’’ determination.24
The OCC previously permitted
national banks to invest in securities
that were rated in one of the top four
ratings. The OCC intends that its new
definition—the issuer of a security has
an adequate capacity to meet financial
commitments under the security for the
projected life of the asset or exposure—
is substantively unchanged from its
previous standards.
Except for investments in a few asset
classes such as U.S. Government agency
and GSE obligations, as discussed
above, FCA’s existing regulations
require that in order to be eligible,
investments must meet the highest or
the second highest NRSRO rating,
24 77 FR 35253, June 13, 2012 (OCC rule); 77 FR
35259, June 13, 2012 (OCC guidance). See also 77
FR 43151, July 24, 2012 (FDIC rule); 77 FR 43155,
July 24, 2012 (FDIC guidance).
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depending on the asset class. We want
to retain high creditworthiness
standards for Farm Credit bank
investments. Accordingly, we propose
to require that for an investment to be
eligible for Farm Credit banks, at least
one obligor (whether debtor or
guarantor) must have very strong
capacity to meet its financial
commitment for the expected life of the
investment. Obligors that exhibit very
strong capacity to meet financial
commitments generally have very low
probability of default. This standard
would apply to all investments,
including those that are currently not
subject to a credit rating requirement.
Like the OCC’s regulations, our
proposal permits but does not require
Farm Credit banks to consider credit
ratings. If a Farm Credit bank does
consider credit ratings, it must still
conduct its own due diligence to
determine whether an investment
satisfies this standard. An investment
does not automatically satisfy this
standard by virtue of its credit rating.
We propose an additional standard for
investments if a Farm Credit bank is
relying upon the capacity of a non-U.S.
obligor to meet the ‘‘very strong
capacity’’ standard. Unless such an
investment is fully guaranteed as to the
timely payment of principal and interest
by a U.S. Government agency, the
sovereign host country of the obligor
whose capacity is being relied upon
must have the highest Country Risk
Classification (CRC) (a 0 or a 1) as
published by the OECD or must be an
OECD member that is unrated. If the
Farm Credit bank is not relying upon
the capacity of a non-U.S. obligor to
satisfy the ‘‘very strong capacity’’
standard, then the proposal establishes
no requirements regarding that obligor’s
sovereign host country.
The OECD’s CRCs are an assessment
of a country’s credit risk, used to set
interest rate charges for transactions
covered by the OECD arrangement on
export credits. The OECD uses a scale of
0 to 7 with 0 being the lowest possible
risk and 7 being the highest possible
risk. Furthermore, the OECD no longer
assigns CRCs to certain high income
countries that are members of the OECD
and that have previously received a CRC
of 0.25 OECD member countries that are
no longer assigned a CRC exhibit a
similar degree of country risk as that of
a jurisdiction with a CRC of 0.
In their capital rules to implement
Basel III, the Federal banking regulators
adopted provisions basing risk weights
for sovereign exposures on OECD CRCs
(and on OECD membership, for
25 See
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countries without a CRC).26 Like these
other regulators, we believe that use of
CRCs in this manner is permissible
under section 939A of the Dodd-Frank
Act and that section 939A was not
intended to apply to assessments of
creditworthiness of organizations such
as the OECD. As discussed in those
rules, section 939A was targeted at
addressing the role, and the conflicts of
interest, of commercial credit rating
agencies that provide governmentsanctioned credit ratings to their feepaying clients. The OECD is not a
commercial entity that produces credit
assessments for fee-paying clients, nor
does it provide the sort of evaluative
and analytical services as credit rating
agencies. Additionally, we propose to
use CRCs only for this limited purpose.
d. Paragraph (a)(4)—Credit and Other
Risk in the Investment
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In addition to imposing standards on
obligors, we also propose to require that
for an investment to be eligible, it must
itself exhibit low credit risk and other
risk characteristics consistent with the
purposes for which it is held. The other
risks that institutions must consider
include, but are not limited to, those
listed in § 615.5133(c).
We believe that all investments held
by Farm Credit banks must have low
credit risk. We do not propose to require
that other risks in the investment be low
in all cases. Instead, the risk
characteristics in the investment must
be consistent with the purposes for
which the investment is held.
Accordingly, Farm Credit banks must
understand the purpose for which they
purchase and hold an investment.
For instance, if an investment is held
for the purpose of liquidity, it would
have to be marketable or liquid 27 and
would generally have to have low price
volatility. On the other hand, an
investment that is high quality but has
high price volatility and questionable
marketability or liquidity would not be
appropriate for a liquidity investment,
but it might be used effectively to
manage interest rate risk, which is a
permissible purpose for Farm Credit
banks under § 615.5132(a). Farm Credit
banks must also consider whether other
26 OCC
and the Federal Reserve System, Final
Rule, 78 FR 62018, Oct. 11, 2013; FDIC, Interim
Final Rule, 78 FR 55340, Sept. 10, 2013,
substantively adopted as final at 79 FR 20754, April
14, 2014.
27 Under § 615.5134(d), investments used to
satisfy the liquidity reserve requirement must be
‘‘marketable,’’ as defined by that provision. Under
§ 615.5134(e), investments held in the liquidity
buffer must be ‘‘liquid,’’ as explained in that
provision.
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risks are consistent with the purpose for
which an investment is held.
e. Paragraph (a)(5)—Denomination
As in our existing rule, the
denomination of all investments must
be in U.S. dollars. We propose no
change from our existing rule.
2. Paragraph (b)—Investments That Do
Not Satisfy Requirements
We propose technical revisions to the
regulatory provision authorizing
institutions to hold other investments
with FCA’s prior approval. We intend
no substantive change with these
revisions.
3. Paragraph (c)—Ineligible Investments
We propose to prohibit Farm Credit
banks from purchasing CDOs, as that
term is defined in § 615.5131. Based on
the experience of CDO investors during
the recent financial crisis, we believe
investments in CDOs pose unacceptable
risk to System institutions.
4. Paragraph (d)—Reservation of
Authority
We propose to make explicit our
authority, on a case-by-case basis, to
determine that a particular investment
imposes inappropriate risk,
notwithstanding that it satisfies the
investment eligibility criteria. The
proposal also provides that FCA will
notify a Farm Credit bank as to the
proper treatment of any such
investment.
5. Application of Investment Eligibility
Criteria to Existing Farm Credit Bank
Investments
As discussed below, the FCA is
contemplating that Farm Credit banks
would have to comply with the rule’s
requirements pertaining to their own
investments 6 months after the effective
date of the rule. New Farm Credit bank
investments made after that compliance
date would be subject to the investment
eligibility criteria in § 615.5140(a).
Existing Farm Credit bank
investments (investments made before
the compliance date) that were not
eligible under the investment eligibility
criteria that were in effect at the time of
purchase (or that the FCA did not
approve) would continue to be subject
to the requirements of § 615.5143(a),
which governs the treatment of
investments that are ineligible when
purchased.
Existing Farm Credit bank
investments (investments made before
the compliance date) that were eligible
under the investment eligibility criteria
that were in effect at the time of
purchase but that are ineligible under
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the revised § 615.5140(a) investment
eligibility criteria would be treated as
follows, unless the FCA specified
different treatment. If an investment is
not eligible because it does not satisfy
the criteria in revised § 615.5140(a)(2)—
that is, it is a type of investment that
was eligible under the previous criteria
but is not eligible under the revised
criteria—the Farm Credit bank may
continue to hold the investment with no
restriction. If an investment is not
eligible because it does not satisfy the
criteria in revised § 615.5140(a)(1),
(a)(3), or (a)(4)—which pertain to
permissible investment purposes and to
credit quality—the Farm Credit bank
may continue to hold the investment
subject to § 615.5143(b), which governs
the treatment of investments that were
eligible to purchase but that no longer
satisfy the eligibility criteria.
We remind the Farm Credit banks that
under § 615.5143(c), the FCA would
retain the authority to require
divestiture of any investment at any
time for failure to comply with
§ 615.5132(a) or for safety and
soundness reasons.
D. Section 615.5133—Investment
Management
1. Overview
Existing § 615.5133 applies to all
System institutions—Farm Credit banks,
associations, and service corporations.
Most of proposed revised § 615.5133
would also apply to all System
institutions. However, as discussed in
greater detail below, proposed
§ 615.5133(f) and (g), which govern
portfolio diversification requirements
and obligor limits, would apply only to
Farm Credit banks. Additionally, we
propose to modify § 615.5133(c), which
addresses risk tolerance in investment
policies, so it clearly distinguishes how
liquidity is managed at Farm Credit
banks from its treatment at associations.
The investment management provisions
of proposed § 615.5133 would apply to
service corporations to the extent they
are appropriate to the size, complexity,
and risks of their investments.
2. Appropriate Use of Off-Balance Sheet
Derivatives
Off-balance sheet derivatives can be
appropriate and useful for the purposes
of hedging and risk management. While
our regulations do not prohibit a System
bank from using off-balance sheet
derivatives to build an investment
portfolio, use of these derivatives must
be consistent with an authorized
investment purpose and not be for
speculative purposes. We note that such
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derivatives generally do not provide a
significant source of liquidity.
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
3. Paragraph (a)—Responsibilities of
Board of Directors and Paragraph (b)—
Investment Policies—General
Requirements
The FCA proposes no changes to
§ 615.5133(a), which governs the
responsibilities of the boards of
directors of System institutions. We
propose only minor stylistic and nonsubstantive changes to § 615.5133(b),
which identifies the general
requirements that System institutions
must address in their investment
policies.
4. Paragraph (c)—Investment Policies—
Risk Tolerance
We propose several technical
modifications to § 615.5133(c) that
would enhance its clarity and provide
better guidance to System institutions
about compliance with it. For example,
we propose a technical change to
paragraph (c) to clarify that while
operational risk must be addressed in
investment policies, the policies do not
need to establish quantitative risk limits
for operational risk. Quantitative risk
limits would continue to be required for
the other identified risks—credit,
market, and liquidity.
We propose to split the requirements
regarding credit quality standards and
concentration risk in existing paragraph
(c)(1)(i) into two paragraphs. We
propose to incorporate the existing
general requirements regarding risk
diversification standards and
counterparty (obligor) risk limits into
more specific requirements contained in
proposed paragraphs (f) and (g). We
propose these revisions in order to
clarify our requirements in this area and
ensure that institutions are considering
risk appropriately.
Proposed paragraph (c)(1)(i) would
address credit quality standards. It
would require that an institution’s
investment policies establish credit
quality standards for single or related
obligors, sponsors, secured and
unsecured exposures, and asset classes
or obligations with similar
characteristics. We propose to add
sponsors to the existing requirements
because, even though sponsors have no
obligation to pay the debt (unless they
are also obligors), we are concerned that
a sponsor of low credit quality could
present risk in a transaction that it
initiates. We propose to add secured
and unsecured investments to the
existing requirements because we
believe institutions should consider the
differing levels of risk that these
investments present.
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Proposed paragraph (c)(1)(ii) would
address concentration risk. It would
require that an institution’s investment
policies establish concentration limits
for single or related obligors, sponsors,
geographical areas, industries,
unsecured exposures, and asset classes
or obligations with similar
characteristics. We propose to add
sponsors to the existing requirements
because we believe undue concentration
in a sponsor could present excessive
risk. We propose to add unsecured
investments to the existing requirements
because institutions should carefully
consider the amount of unsecured
investments they are prepared to hold.
Concentration limits should be
commensurate with the types and
complexity of investments that an
institution holds.
We propose to revise
§ 615.5133(c)(1)(iv), which addresses
collateral margin requirements on
repurchase agreements. Currently, this
provision requires System institutions
to regularly mark collateral to market
and to ensure that they maintain
appropriate control over collateral that
they hold. We propose to modify
§ 615.5133(c)(1)(iv) to clarify that this
provision would apply only to System
institutions that engage in repurchase
agreements.
We propose to revise § 615.5133(c),
which governs investment policies
pertaining to liquidity, into two separate
paragraphs. We propose this revision to
take into account the differences in how
liquidity is managed at Farm Credit
banks from its treatment at associations.
Generally, Farm Credit banks hold
liquidity reserves and manage liquidity
risks for themselves, their affiliated
associations, and certain service
corporations. In contrast, System
associations are not exposed to the same
liquidity risks and they do not manage
liquidity in the same way as their
funding banks because their only
substantial liability is their debt
obligation to their funding bank.
Existing § 615.5133(c)(3) requires
investment policies of all System
institutions to describe the liquidity
characteristics of eligible investments
that the institutions will hold to meet
their liquidity needs and other
institutional objectives. Under proposed
§ 615.5133(c)(3)(i), Farm Credit banks
would remain subject to this existing
requirement. This requirement is
appropriate because of the liquidity
needs and liquidity risk of Farm Credit
banks.
Under proposed § 615.5133(c)(3)(ii),
the investment policies of System
associations would have to describe the
liquid characteristics of their
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investments. Although System
associations do not have the same
liquidity needs and liquidity risk as
Farm Credit banks do, if they invest
their funds in investments authorized
by § 615.5142 they must be aware of the
liquid characteristics of the assets that
they purchase and hold. Proposed
conforming changes throughout
§ 615.5133(c) would require System
institutions to consider and address
how investment decisions affect their
liquidity risk, if and when applicable.
Except for other minor stylistic and
technical changes, we propose no other
changes to paragraph (c).
5. Paragraph (d)—Delegation of
Authority and Paragraph (e)—Internal
Controls
We propose no changes to paragraphs
(d) and (e).
6. Paragraph (f)—Farm Credit Bank
Portfolio Diversification
We propose to add a new paragraph
(f) to govern investment portfolio
diversification. This paragraph would
apply only to Farm Credit banks.
a. Paragraph (f)(1)—Well Diversified
Portfolio
Portfolio diversification is a key
concept in ensuring the safety and
soundness of investors such as Farm
Credit banks. We propose requirements
to ensure, at a minimum, that the
investment portfolios of these
institutions do not pose significant risk
of loss due to excessive concentrations
among asset classes, maturities,
industries, geographic areas, and
obligors. We also propose exemptions
for certain investments from these
portfolio diversification requirements.
These exemptions would apply where
the level of risk from concentration is
low.
b. Paragraph (f)(2)—Exemptions
We propose that certain investments
would not be subject to our
diversification requirements. In this
preamble, we refer to investments that
are not subject to diversification
requirements as ‘‘exempt’’ investments.
We refer to all other investments as
‘‘covered’’ investments, because they are
subject to our proposed diversification
requirements.
i. Paragraph (f)(2)(i)—Investments
Guaranteed by U.S. Government
Agencies
Under the proposal, investments that
are fully guaranteed as to the timely
payment of principal and interest by a
U.S. Government agency would be
exempt from the proposed
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diversification requirements. We
propose this exemption because we
believe these types of investments are of
the highest quality. Our existing rules
impose no portfolio diversification
requirements on such investments.
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
ii. Paragraph (f)(2)(ii)—Investments
Guaranteed by GSEs
Under the proposal, investments,
other than MBS, that are fully and
explicitly guaranteed as to the timely
payment of principal and interest by a
GSE would be exempt from the
proposed portfolio diversification
requirements. No more than 50 percent
of an institution’s investment portfolio
could be comprised of GSE MBS. These
provisions are substantively unchanged
from our existing regulations with
respect to the Federal National Mortgage
Association (Fannie Mae) and the
Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corporation (Freddie Mac) MBS.
Investments in Farmer Mac securities
are governed by § 615.5174 and would
not be subject to this limitation.
Our 2011 proposed investment
management rule had also proposed to
retain our 50-percent portfolio limit on
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac MBS. The
Farm Credit Council, the Farm Credit
Bank of Texas and CoBank, ACB
commented in response to that proposal
that this limit was too restrictive in light
of the safe and liquid nature of these
investments (especially since those
GSEs were under U.S. Government
conservatorship) and the positive yield
that those investments provide. They
asked us to eliminate portfolio limits for
investments in these GSEs. The Council
also expressed concern with language in
our preamble suggesting that we might
consider further restrictions on MBS
investments in these GSEs in the future.
We believe no portfolio limits are
needed for non-MBS investments in
GSEs, such as general obligations. We
are concerned, however, about
concentration in housing-related
investments, and accordingly we
propose to retain the 50-percent limit on
GSE MBS.28 We do not contemplate
further restrictions on investments in
GSE MBS at this time.
c. Paragraph (f)(3)—Investment Portfolio
Diversification Requirements
We are proposing investment
portfolio diversification requirements
for covered investments. Under the
proposal, a well-diversified investment
portfolio would mean that, at a
minimum, covered investments are
28 Under our recently finalized revisions to our
liquidity rule (78 FR 23438, April 18, 2013), it is
extremely unlikely that Farm Credit banks could
approach 100 percent in GSE MBS.
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comprised of different asset classes,
maturities, industries, geographic areas,
and obligors.
Although we are not proposing
specific maturity, industry, or
geographic area requirements, the
regulation would require each Farm
Credit bank to diversify its investments
by maturity, industry, and geographic
area based on its risk profile.
Covered investments would have to
satisfy specified asset class and obligor
diversification requirements. These
diversification requirements would be
calculated based on the entire
investment portfolio. This means that
both exempt and covered investments
would be included in the denominator.
The numerator would consist only of
those investments that are covered
investments for the asset class and
obligor diversification requirements.
These diversification parameters would
be based on the portfolio valued at
amortized cost.
We note that these diversification
requirements are regulatory maximums;
each Farm Credit bank should establish
diversification limits that fit its risk
profile and that may be more restrictive
than regulatory requirements.
Our current regulations impose no
investment portfolio limits on
investments in DIFs, as long as an
institution’s shares in each DIF
comprise 10 percent or less of its
investment portfolio. Otherwise, the
portfolio limits for each asset class
apply. As discussed below, we now
propose different treatment for DIF
investments.
i. Paragraph (f)(3)(i)—Asset Class
Diversification
We propose to require Farm Credit
banks to diversify their investment
portfolios among various asset classes;
no more than 15 percent of their
investment portfolios could be invested
in any one asset class.29 As discussed
above, we propose to define an asset
class as a group of securities that exhibit
similar characteristics and behave
similarly in the marketplace.
For purposes of this proposed asset
class diversification requirement, we
consider MBS to be an asset class. We
also consider ABS (excluding MBS) to
be an asset class that includes
instruments such as student loans and
29 As discussed above, ‘‘exempt’’ investments
would not be subject to this asset class
diversification requirement, although under
proposed § 615.5133(f)(2)(ii), MBS that are fully and
explicitly guaranteed by GSEs could only comprise
up to 50 percent of the total investment portfolio.
Investments in Farmer Mac securities are governed
by § 615.5174 and also would not be subject to this
requirement.
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car loans. In addition, we consider
money market securities to be an asset
class that includes securities such as
federal funds and commercial paper.
Other asset classes would include
municipal securities, corporate bond
securities, and any other asset class as
determined by the FCA. Each of these
asset classes is limited to 15 percent of
the investment portfolio of a Farm
Credit bank, regardless of the different
types of instruments that comprise the
asset class.
For purposes of this proposed asset
class diversification requirement, we do
not consider DIFs to be an asset class,
and therefore this requirement would
impose no restrictions on the relative
amount of DIF investments a Farm
Credit bank could hold.30 The securities
within DIFs, however, would be subject
to the asset class diversification
requirements.
Our existing rule imposes portfolio
limits of 15 percent, 20 percent, or 50
percent, depending on the asset class. In
our proposed rule in 2011 for banks and
associations, we proposed asset class
limits for investments that were similar
to but generally more restrictive than
our existing regulations. To simplify the
rule, we are proposing a 15-percent
limit for all asset classes.
We believe that diversification of
investments is a fundamental part of
risk management and that a 15-percent
portfolio limit for asset classes is
appropriate. Because the vast majority
of System investments are in exempt
securities, a 15-percent limit on
investments in each asset class should
provide sufficient flexibility for
institutions to manage their investment
portfolios.
We seek comment on the
reasonableness of this proposed
limitation.
ii. Paragraph (f)(3)(ii)—Obligor
Diversification
We propose to require Farm Credit
banks to diversify their investment
portfolios among various obligors; no
more than 3 percent of their investment
portfolios could be invested in any one
obligor.31 As discussed above, we
30 We believe that the obligor diversification
requirements discussed next in this preamble, along
with the obligor limit in proposed paragraph (g) of
this section, would provide sufficient
diversification among DIFs themselves.
31 As discussed above, ‘‘exempt’’ investments
would not be subject to this obligor diversification
requirement, although under proposed
§ 615.5133(f)(2)(ii), MBS that are fully and
explicitly guaranteed by GSEs could only comprise
up to 50 percent of the total investment portfolio.
Investments in Farmer Mac securities are governed
by § 615.5174 and also would not be subject to this
requirement.
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propose to define obligor as an issuer,
guarantor, or other person or entity who
has an obligation to pay a debt,
including interest due, by a specified
date or when payment is demanded.
This definition would include the
debtor or immediate party that is
obligated to pay a debt, as well as a
guarantor of the debt. Under this
requirement, a Farm Credit bank must
consider both the DIF itself and the
entity or entities obligated to pay the
underlying debt to be obligors. This
requirement would ensure that an
institution would not be able to use DIF
investments to hold an excessively
concentrated investment portfolio.
Our existing regulations contain no
portfolio diversification requirements by
obligor (although, as discussed below,
they do limit the amount of total capital
that institutions can invest in a single
obligor). We propose this diversification
requirement because we believe that
concentration among obligors could
lead to significant risk.
We believe that this proposal would
likely not require changes in the current
investment portfolios of Farm Credit
banks, although it might have required
changes to those portfolios in the past.
We believe that this requirement would
provide these institutions with
sufficient flexibility to manage their
investment portfolios while ensuring
adequate diversification to further safety
and soundness. We seek comment on
the reasonableness of this proposed
limitation.
7. Paragraph (g)—Farm Credit Bank
Obligor Limit
We propose to limit the amount of
capital that Farm Credit banks may
invest in any one obligor. For Farm
Credit banks, the limit would be 10
percent of total capital. This obligor
limit would not apply to investments in
obligations that are fully guaranteed as
to the payment of principal and interest
by a U.S. Government agency or fully
and explicitly guaranteed as to the
payment of principal and interest by a
GSE. Under this requirement, a Farm
Credit bank must consider both the DIF
itself and the entity or entities obligated
to pay the underlying debt to be
obligors.
Our existing regulations allow Farm
Credit banks to invest up to 20 percent
of their total capital in eligible
investments issued by any single
institution, issuer, or obligor; this
obligor limit does not apply to
obligations, including mortgage
securities, that are issued or guaranteed
as to interest and principal by the
United States, its agencies,
instrumentalities, or corporations.
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The lower obligor limit that we
propose for Farm Credit banks would
enhance safety and soundness by
ensuring that if an obligor were to
default, only a small portion of capital
would be at risk. For simplicity, we
propose to continue to base the Farm
Credit bank investment amount on total
capital. As discussed above, however,
the FCA Board adopted proposed
revisions to our regulatory capital rule
on May 8, 2014, and we may revise the
basis for the obligor limit to incorporate
any revisions to our regulatory capital
rule that are adopted in final in the
future.32
We note that this obligor limit would
be a regulatory maximum; each Farm
Credit bank should establish obligor
limits that fit its overall risk profile and
risk-bearing capacity, including
earnings capacity, as well as the risks in
individual types and classes of
investments. For example, more
restrictive obligor limits may be
warranted on unsecured investments.
We seek comment on whether our
proposed 10-percent obligor limit is
appropriate. If you believe it is not
appropriate, what should the regulatory
maximum be, and why?
8. Paragraph (h)—Due Diligence
We propose to redesignate existing
paragraph (f) as paragraph (h).
In paragraph (h)(1)(iii), we propose
that a System institution must
document its assessment of each
investment at the time of purchase.
While the assessment must be
commensurate with the type of each
investment, at a minimum the
assessment must include an evaluation
of the credit risk, liquidity risk as
applicable, market risk, interest rate
risk, and underlying collateral of the
investment.
The nature and degree of due
diligence and documentation that is
required under this provision to assess
eligibility varies based on the risks
inherent in different types of securities.
For example, institutions should assess
securities that they believe are
guaranteed by a U.S. Government
agency or a GSE to ensure they satisfy
our definitions and eligibility
requirements for such securities. As
another example, institutions do not
need to assess the creditworthiness of
U.S. Government agency securities,
because they exhibit low sovereign
default (credit) risk; however,
institutions should assess and document
all other potential risks associated with
these securities. Securities that are not
32 The proposed capital rule has not yet been
published in the Federal Register.
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43309
guaranteed by a U.S. Government
agency generally present varying
degrees of credit risk as well as other
types of risk, and the assessment and
level of documentation should be
sufficient to support the investment
decision.
All other changes that we propose to
this paragraph are non-substantive.
9. Paragraph (i)—Reports to the Board of
Directors
We propose to redesignate existing
paragraph (g) as paragraph (i). We also
propose to add the word ‘‘risk’’ to
redesignated § 615.5133(i)(3) so it would
require quarterly reports to the board or
a designated board committee to address
the current composition, quality, and
the risk and liquidity profiles of the
investment portfolio. This revision
would ensure more comprehensive
reporting to the board about how the
current composition and quality of
investments affect the risk and liquidity
profile of the bank or association, which
would enhance safety and soundness.
We propose no other changes to this
provision.
E. Section 615.5142—Association
Investments
The FCA proposes to revise
§ 615.5142, which governs association
investments. Existing § 615.5142 does
not impose a portfolio limit on the total
amount of investments that each
association is authorized to hold.
Additionally, existing § 615.5140
permits associations to hold the same
types of investments as Farm Credit
banks even though associations are not
subject to the liquidity reserve
requirement in § 615.5134, and they are
not exposed to the same liquidity and
market risks as their funding banks.
Accordingly, the FCA proposes to revise
its regulatory approach to association
investments in order to limit the type
and amount of investments that an
association may hold.
As discussed in more detail below,
the proposed rule generally would limit
association investments to obligations
that are issued or fully guaranteed or
insured as to the timely payment of
principal and interest by the United
States or any of its agencies in an
amount that does not exceed 10 percent
of its total outstanding loans. The
proposed rule also addresses: (1) Core
investment and risk management
practices at System associations; (2)
funding bank supervision of association
investments; (3) requests by associations
to the FCA to hold other investments;
and (4) transition requirements for
System associations to come into
compliance with the new rule.
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Currently, § 615.5142 authorizes each
association to hold eligible investments
listed in § 615.5140, with the approval
of its funding bank, for the purposes of
reducing interest rate risk and managing
surplus short-term funds. The existing
regulation also requires each Farm
Credit bank to review annually the
investment portfolio of every
association it funds.
Most System associations have
increased in size and complexity over
the past two decades, offering a
diversity of products and services to
accommodate a changing and
increasingly competitive agricultural
sector. The changes in agriculture have
introduced new risks to the
associations. For example, while the
associations have adopted adequate risk
management strategies to effectively
adapt to this changing environment,
they are concentrated in agriculture and
have limited ability to manage
concentration risk. The associations
currently can use investments to
manage surplus short-term funds and
reduce interest rate risk but cannot use
investments to manage concentration
risk. The proposed rule strikes a balance
by granting associations greater
flexibility in the purposes for which
they may hold investments, while
placing more limits on the amounts and
types of investments they may hold.
Accordingly, the proposed changes
would provide the associations the
flexibility to use full faith and credit
instruments to manage concentration
risk by diversifying assets. We believe
the proposed change would help
improve association risk management
practices and, therefore, strengthen the
safety and soundness of the System.
The Farm Credit Act of 1971, as
amended, (Farm Credit Act) specifically
authorizes System associations to buy
and sell obligations of, or insured by,
the United States or any agency thereof,
and make other investments as may be
approved by their respective funding
banks under regulations issued by the
Farm Credit Administration.33
1. Paragraph (a)—Investment Eligibility
Criteria
The proposed rule would: (1) Revise
the investment purposes for System
associations; (2) limit the types of
investments that associations may
purchase and hold; and (3) impose a cap
on the amount of such enumerated
investments that each association may
33 See sections 2.2(10) and (11), and 2.12(17) and
(18) of the Act. Additionally, sections 2.2(10) and
2.12(18) of the Act authorize System associations to
deposit funds with any member bank of the Federal
Reserve System, or with any bank insured by the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
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hold. Specifically, proposed
§ 615.5142(a) would authorize each
System association, with the approval of
its funding bank, to manage risk by
purchasing and holding obligations that
are issued by, or are fully guaranteed or
insured as to the timely payment of
principal and interest by, the United
States or any of its agencies in an
amount that does not exceed 10 percent
of its total outstanding loans.
We are proposing to eliminate our
requirements in the existing regulation,
which authorize associations to hold
investments for the purposes of
reducing interest rate risks and
managing surplus short-term funds,
because we believe these requirements
are: (1) Too restrictive; and (2) do not
provide associations flexibility to
manage their risks in today’s
environment.
As a result of mergers and
consolidations, and the evolution of
agricultural credit and financial
management practices, System
associations encounter various risk
management environments. A few larger
associations now have the capacity to
manage interest rate risk separately from
their funding banks. For many
associations, a small portfolio of high
quality investments could help diversify
risks they experience as lenders that
primarily lend to a single industry—
agriculture.
Whereas the existing rule authorizes
associations to hold investments for the
purposes of reducing interest rate risks
and managing surplus short-term funds,
the proposed rule authorizes
associations to hold investments to
manage risks. We invite your comments
about whether this proposed rule
should identify specific purposes for
associations to purchase and hold
investments. If you believe that our rule
should expressly identify and require
specific purposes, please state which
ones and why.
Proposed § 615.5142(a) would
authorize System associations to invest
solely in obligations that are issued, or
are fully guaranteed or insured as to the
timely payment of principal and interest
by the United States or of any of its
agencies. Obligations issued, insured, or
guaranteed by the United States are
expressly mentioned in the provisions
of the Act governing association
investments. Obligations issued or fully
guaranteed or insured as to the timely
payment of principal and interest by the
United States and its agencies are
usually liquid and many are actively
traded, although MBS issued by Federal
agencies could expose investors to
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significant market risks.34 These
obligations pose virtually no credit risk
to investors because they are backed by
the full faith and credit of the United
States, although they may expose
investors to other risks, especially
market risks. For these reasons,
obligations issued or fully guaranteed or
insured as to the timely payment of
principal and interest by the United
States and its agencies are suitable for
risk management at System associations.
Proposed § 615.5142(a) limits
association investments to 10 percent of
total outstanding loans. This portfolio
limit would ensure that loans to eligible
borrowers always constitute the vast
majority of System assets, which is
consistent with the mission of each
association. In this context, the FCA is
imposing portfolio limits on
investments so that loans to eligible
borrowers always constitute a majority
of assets at all System banks and
associations. Our regulations authorize
Farm Credit banks to hold significantly
larger investment portfolios than System
associations because the: (1) Banks
maintain liquidity and manage interest
rate risk for all System institutions
operating in the district; and (2)
associations borrow exclusively from
their funding banks.
At the same time, the proposed 10percent portfolio limit on investments
should be sufficient to enable
associations to develop robust strategies
to manage risks, as long as association
investment activities are supported by
strong investment policies, management
practices and procedures, and
appropriate internal controls.
Furthermore, the proposed 10-percent
limit should help associations manage
their concentration risk as singleindustry lenders. The policies at some
System associations with active
investment programs typically establish
a 15-percent portfolio limit for
investments, while in practice,
investments at most associations rarely
equal or exceed 10 percent of total
outstanding loans. For all these reasons,
the FCA believes that the proposed 10percent portfolio limit on investments
strikes an appropriate balance by
enabling associations to appropriately
manage and diversify risks while
continuing to serve their primary
mission of funding agriculture and rural
America.
We are proposing that the 10-percent
limit be computed based upon the 30day average daily balance of
34 Farmer Mac MBS are covered by § 615.5174,
not § 615.5142. Investments in Farmer Mac MBS
cannot exceed the total amount of outstanding loans
of a System bank or association.
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investments divided by loans.
Investments would be calculated at
amortized cost. Loans would be
calculated as defined in § 615.5131,
which provides that loans are calculated
quarterly (as of the last day of March,
June, September, and December) by
using the average daily balance of loans
during the quarter. For the purpose of
this calculation, loans would include
accrued interest and not include any
allowance for loan loss adjustments.
Compliance with the calculation would
be measured on the last day of every
month.
We also request your comments on
whether using the average daily balance
of loans during the quarter for
computing the limit is adequate to limit
any distortions caused by seasonality
fluctuations in the amount of total
loans.
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2. Paragraph (b)—Risk Management
Requirements
The following provisions would help
to ensure that System associations
comply with prudent investment
management practices. Therefore, we
are proposing to require that each
association evaluate its investment
management policies, and determine
and document how its investment
activities are conducted in accordance
with the risk management processes and
procedures identified in proposed
§ 615.5142(b)(1), (b)(2), and (b)(3).
3. Paragraph (b)(1)—Compliance With
Investment Management Requirements
Proposed § 615.5142(b)(1) would
require each association to comply with
proposed § 615.5133(a), (b), (c), (d), (e),
(h), and (i), which govern investment
management practices at all System
institutions.35 From the FCA’s
perspective, these provisions of
proposed § 615.5133 would ensure that
System associations always follow
prudent investment management
practices. Additionally, compliance
with these provisions of § 615.5133
would instill discipline in investment
management practices at each System
association, which protects its safety
and soundness. Therefore, we are
proposing to require that each
association document its compliance
with the applicable provisions of
§ 615.5133.
Under proposed § 615.5142(b)(1),
each association’s investment
management processes must be
appropriate for the size, risk
characteristics, and complexity of the
35 Proposed § 615.5142(b)(1) would not require
System associations to comply with proposed
§ 615.5133(f) and (g) because those two provisions
explicitly apply only to System banks.
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association and its investment portfolio.
These risk management processes must
take into account the association’s
unique circumstances, risk tolerances,
and objectives. An association’s board
would not need to develop an
investment policy if it elects not to hold
investments authorized under
§ 615.5142(a).
We are particularly interested in
comments on how the FCA can
structure the documentation
requirements so they do not impose
undue regulatory burden on funding
banks or associations.
4. Paragraph (b)(2)—Compliance With
Interest Rate Risk Management
Requirements
Proposed § 615.5142(b)(2) would
require any association with significant
interest rate risk exposure to comply
with §§ 615.5180 and 615.5182. More
specifically, § 615.5182 requires any
association with interest rate risk that
could lead to significant declines in net
income or in the market value of capital
to comply with § 615.5180, which
establishes specific criteria for System
banks to follow for managing interest
rate risk. Under this regulatory
framework, the interest rate risk
management program must be
commensurate with the level of interest
rate risk at the association.
The fiduciary responsibilities of
association boards of directors obligate
them to develop appropriate investment
management policies and practices to
manage interest rate risk. Additionally,
it is incumbent upon each association’s
investment managers to fully
understand the risks of its investments
and make independent and objective
evaluations of investments prior to
purchase.
Interest rate risk management is an
important part of the overall financial
management of investments at an
association, and includes involvement
by both senior management and the
association’s board of directors. To the
extent an association has investments,
its board must develop and implement
an interest rate risk management
program that is tailored to the
association’s needs and establishes a
risk management process that effectively
identifies, measures, monitors, and
controls interest rate risk.
5. Paragraph (b)(3)—Other Relevant
Factors
Proposed § 615.5142(b)(3) would
require each association to consider and
evaluate other relevant factors that are
unique to its circumstances or to the
nature of investments that could affect
its risk-bearing capacity. Such factors
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43311
include, but are not limited to, its
management experience and capability
to understand and manage complex
structures and unique risks in the
investments it purchases and holds. In
this context, the size, risk
characteristics, and complexity of the
investment portfolio are other relevant
factors that could affect an association’s
risk-bearing capacity when its unique
circumstances, risk tolerance, and
objectives are taken into account.
Associations are authorized to purchase
and hold investments only for the
purpose of managing risks. Although the
FCA does not expect associations to
suffer losses or break even on
investments, using investments
primarily for speculative purposes or
generating gains from trading is an
impermissible activity. Likewise, the
intentional mismatched funding of
investments and the resulting increase
in interest rate risk would typically be
inappropriate unless used as an
effective hedge against other risks in the
balance sheet. Other factors that
associations should consider and
evaluate include option, premium and
call risks of certain investments that
they may acquire.
6. Paragraph (c)—Funding Bank
Supervision of Association Investments
Sections 2.2(10) and 2.12(18) of the
Farm Credit Act require each
association to obtain its funding bank’s
approval of the association’s investment
activities in accordance with FCA
regulations. Accordingly, proposed
§ 615.5142(c) addresses funding bank
review, approval, and oversight of the
investment activities of its affiliated
associations. As required by statute,
each association must request from its
funding bank prior approval to buy and
hold investments under this section.
This proposed provision would not
require that an association request
approval for each and every investment.
Instead, this proposed provision would
provide flexibility for each association
to choose whether it would prefer to
request funding bank approval for each
specific investment or instead request
approval of a type or class of
investments.
7. Paragraph (c)(1)—Funding Bank
Review, and Approval or Denial of
Association Investments
Proposed § 615.5142(c)(1) would
require each funding bank to review and
approve or deny requests by its
affiliated associations to buy and hold
investments. Additionally, the proposed
rule would require the bank to explain
in writing its reasons for approving or
denying the association’s request. Once
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an association has established a
satisfactory investment management
program under § 615.5142(b), which has
been approved by its funding bank, the
association would be permitted to buy
and hold obligations that are issued, or
are fully guaranteed or insured as to the
timely payment of principal and interest
by the United States government or any
of its agencies. The intent of this
proposed provision is to balance the
funding needs of the associations with
the funding capacity of the funding
bank.
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
8. Paragraph (c)(2)—Bank Approval
Process
As part of the approval process, the
funding bank must evaluate, determine
and document that the association has:
(1) Adequate policies, procedures,
internal controls, and accounting and
reporting systems for its investments; (2)
the capability and expertise to
effectively manage risks in investments;
and (3) complied with requirements of
§ 615.5142(b). Any existing System
association investment management
program previously reviewed and
approved by the funding bank would
need to be re-reviewed and re-approved
if proposed § 615.5142 becomes final
and effective.
The intent of this proposed provision
is to balance the risk management needs
of the associations with the funding and
oversight role of the funding bank. A
number of satisfactory methods exist for
System banks to oversee association
investment activities under our
regulatory framework. A bank may take
an active role in advising and approving
an association’s investment decisions
and strategies. For example, banks may
provide research, analytical or advisory
services that help associations to
manage their investment portfolios.
9. Paragraph (c)(3)—Annual Review of
Investment Portfolio
Proposed § 615.5142(c)(3) also retains
the existing requirement that each
System bank annually review the
investment portfolio of every
association that it funds. As part of its
annual review, the bank must evaluate
whether the association’s: (1)
Investments mitigate and manage its
risks; and (2) risk management practices
continue to be adequate.
The FCA notes that the General
Financing Agreement (GFA) (including
any attached, referenced, or related
documents) could establish covenants
governing the investment activities of an
affiliated association. As such, the GFA
can be a useful tool for funding banks
to review and monitor the investment
activities of their affiliated associations.
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10. Paragraph (d)—Other Investments
Approved by the FCA
Proposed § 615.5142(d) would
continue to allow an association to
request the FCA’s approval to purchase
and hold other investments. We note
that this provision represents no
substantive change from current
§ 615.5140(e), which allows all System
institutions to hold other investments
that the FCA approves on a case-by-case
basis. Consistent with current practice,
the request for our approval must
explain the risk characteristics of the
investment and the purpose and
objectives for making the investment.
These other investments approved by
the FCA under proposed § 615.5142(d)
would be subject to the portfolio limit
on association investments under
proposed § 615.5142(a) unless otherwise
provided for by the FCA. Furthermore,
these other investments could also be
subject to specific conditions of
approval and subject to other limits on
a case-by-case basis.
11. Paragraph (e)(1)—Transition and
Divestiture Issues for Association
Investments
Under proposed § 615.5142(e)(1), an
association would not be required to
divest of any investments held on or
before the date this rule becomes
effective if they were previously
authorized under former § 615.5140 or
otherwise authorized by official written
Agency action that allowed the
association to continue to hold such
investments. This transition rule would
permit an association to continue to
hold pre-existing investments that
would no longer be authorized if
proposed § 615.5142 is adopted as a
final rule and becomes effective.
However, after this proposed rule is
effective, once such investments mature,
the association would not be permitted
to renew them unless they are
authorized pursuant to proposed
§ 615.5142(a) or (d).
12. Paragraph (e)(2)—Impact on Existing
Investments of Subsequent Declines in
Total Outstanding Loans
Under proposed § 615.5142(e)(2), an
association would not be required to
divest of investments purchased on or
after the date this proposed rule
becomes effective if a subsequent
decline in total outstanding loans causes
it to exceed the 10-percent portfolio
limit in § 615.5142(a).
Accordingly, once an association
purchases an eligible investment, it
would not be required to dispose of
such investment just because of a
subsequent decline in total outstanding
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loans. This provision would help to
ensure that an association would not
have to divest of a previously purchased
asset when loan demand is reduced.
13. Paragraph (e)(3)—Management of
Ineligible Investments and Divestiture
Under § 615.5143
Proposed § 615.5142(e)(3) would
apply to all investments that an
association acquires after the new
regulation becomes effective. More
specifically, all investments that an
association purchases after proposed
§ 615.5142 becomes effective as a final
rule would be subject to § 615.5143 of
this part, which governs the
management and divestiture of
ineligible investments. As a result, an
association would need to comply with
§ 615.5143 if any investment acquired
after the effective date of this rule did
not meet the investment criteria in
§ 615.5142(a) on or after the date of
purchase, if it was not approved by the
FCA pursuant to § 615.5142(d), or if it
was approved by the FCA pursuant to
§ 615.5142(d) but later failed to satisfy
the conditions of approval.
F. Section 615.5143—Management of
Ineligible Investments and Reservation
of Authority To Require Divestiture
We propose to revise § 615.5143 to
add references to proposed § 615.5142,
to reflect that associations are generally
governed by the requirements of
§ 615.5143. In addition, we propose to
tailor § 615.5143 to the investment and
other authorities of Farm Credit banks
as compared to associations.
Specifically, we clarify that an
association that purchases an ineligible
investment would not be subject to the
requirements relating to liquidity,
collateral, and net collateral, because
associations have no regulatory
requirements in those areas. In addition,
we propose to clarify that no investment
is ineligible if it has been approved by
the FCA, but an FCA-approved
investment would be subject to the
requirements of § 615.5143(b) if it no
longer satisfied the conditions of
approval.
G. Conforming Changes to Other
Regulation Sections
We propose conforming changes to
references in §§ 611.1153, 611.1155,
615.5174, and 615.5180.
IV. Compliance Date
We recognize that Farm Credit banks
may require time to bring their policies
and procedures into compliance with
the new requirements in the proposed
rule. Accordingly, we are contemplating
that Farm Credit banks would be
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required to comply with the
requirements governing their
investments 6 months after the effective
date of the rule, if it is adopted as
final.36 We invite your comments as to
whether this delayed compliance
timeframe is appropriate. We also invite
your comments on whether a delayed
compliance date would be appropriate
for associations as well.
V. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Pursuant to section 605(b) of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601
et seq.), the FCA hereby certifies that the
proposed rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Each of the
banks in the System, considered
together with its affiliated associations,
has assets and annual income in excess
of the amounts that would qualify them
as small entities. Therefore, System
institutions are not ‘‘small entities’’ as
defined in the Regulatory Flexibility
Act.
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 611
Agriculture, Banks, banking, Rural
areas.
PART 611—ORGANIZATION
1. The authority citation for part 611
continues to read as follows:
■
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Authority: Secs. 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 1.5, 1.12,
1.13, 2.0, 2.1, 2.2, 2.10, 2.11, 2.12, 3.0, 3.1,
3.2, 3.3, 3.7, 3.8, 3.9, 3.21, 4.3A, 4.12, 4.12A,
4.15, 4.20, 4.21, 4.25, 4.26, 4.27, 4.28A, 5.9,
5.17, 5.25, 7.0–7.13, 8.5(e) of the Farm Credit
Act (12 U.S.C. 2002, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2020,
2021, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2091, 2092, 2093,
2121, 2122, 2123, 2124, 2128, 2129, 2130,
2142, 2154a, 2183, 2184, 2203, 2208, 2209,
2211, 2212, 2213, 2214, 2243, 2252, 2261,
2279a–2279f–1, 2279aa–5(e)); secs. 411 and
412 of Pub. L. 100–233, 101 Stat. 1568, 1638;
sec. 414 of Pub. L. 100–399, 102 Stat. 989,
1004.
[Amended]
2. Section 611.1153 is amended by
removing in paragraph (i)(1) the
reference ‘‘§ 615.5140(e)’’ and adding in
■
36 Farm Credit bank compliance with
requirements pertaining to their supervision of
association investments would be required at the
time associations are required to comply with this
rule.
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§ 611.1155
[Amended]
3. Section 611.1155 is amended by
removing in paragraph (a)(1) the
reference ‘‘§ 615.5140(e)’’ and adding in
its place the reference ‘‘§ 615.5140(b) or
§ 615.5142(d)’’.
■
PART 615—FUNDING AND FISCAL
AFFAIRS, LOAN POLICIES AND
OPERATIONS, AND FUNDING
OPERATIONS
4. The authority citation for part 615
is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: Secs. 1.5, 1.7, 1.10, 1.11, 1.12,
2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 2.5, 2.12, 3.1, 3.7, 3.11, 3.25, 4.3,
4.3A, 4.9, 4.14B, 4.25, 5.9, 5.17, 6.20, 6.26,
8.0, 8.3, 8.4, 8.6, 8.7, 8.8, 8.10, 8.12 of the
Farm Credit Act (12 U.S.C. 2013, 2015, 2018,
2019, 2020, 2073, 2074, 2075, 2076, 2093,
2122, 2128, 2132, 2146, 2154, 2154a, 2160,
2202b, 2211, 2243, 2252, 2278b, 2278b–6,
2279aa, 2279aa–3, 2279aa–4, 2279aa–6,
2279aa–7, 2279aa–8, 2279aa–10, 2279aa–12);
sec. 301(a), Pub. L. 100–233, 101 Stat. 1568,
1608; sec. 939A, Pub. L. 111–203, 124 Stat.
1326, 1887 (15 U.S.C. 78o–7 note).
§ 615.5131
12 CFR Part 615
Accounting, Agriculture, Banks,
banking, Government securities,
Investments, Rural areas.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, parts 611 and 615 of chapter
VI, title 12 of the Code of Federal
Regulations are proposed to be amended
as follows:
§ 611.1153
its place, the reference ‘‘§ 615.5140(b) or
§ 615.5142(d)’’.
[Amended]
5. Section 615.5131 is amended by:
a. Removing the definitions for
‘‘eurodollar time deposit’’, ‘‘final
maturity’’, ‘‘general obligations’’,
‘‘Government agency’’, ‘‘Governmentsponsored agency’’, ‘‘liquid
investments’’, ‘‘mortgage securities’’,
‘‘Nationally Recognized Statistical
Rating Organization (NRSRO)’’,
‘‘revenue bond’’, and ‘‘weighted average
life (WAL)’’;
■ b. In the definition of ‘‘asset-backed
securities (ABS)’’, remove the words
‘‘mortgage securities’’ and add in their
place, the words ‘‘mortgage-backed
securities;’’
■ c. Adding in alphabetical order the
new definitions for ‘‘Asset class’’,
‘‘Collateralized debt obligation (CDO)’’,
‘‘Country risk classification (CRC)’’,
‘‘Diversified investment fund (DIF)’’,
‘‘Government-sponsored enterprise
(GSE)’’, ‘‘Mortgage-backed securities
(MBS)’’, ‘‘Obligor’’, ‘‘Sponsor’’, and
‘‘United States (U.S.) Government
agency’’ to read as follows:
■
■
§ 615.5131
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Asset class means a group of
securities that exhibit similar
characteristics and behave similarly in
the marketplace. Asset classes include,
but are not limited to, money market
instruments, municipal securities,
corporate bond securities, MBS, ABS
(excluding MBS), and any other asset
class as determined by the FCA.
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Collateralized debt obligation (CDO)
means a debt security collateralized by
MBS, ABS, or trust-preferred securities.
Country risk classification (CRC) with
respect to a sovereign, means the most
recent consensus CRC published by the
Organization for Economic Cooperation
and Development (OECD) as of
December 31 of the prior calendar year
that provides a view of the likelihood
that the sovereign will service its
external debt.
Diversified investment fund (DIF)
means an investment company
registered under section 8 of the
Investment Company Act of 1940.
Government-sponsored enterprise
(GSE) means an entity established or
chartered by the United States
Government to serve public purposes
specified by the United States Congress
but whose debt obligations are not
explicitly guaranteed by the full faith
and credit of the United States
Government.
*
*
*
*
*
Mortgage-backed securities (MBS)
means securities that are either:
(1) Pass-through securities or
participation certificates that represent
ownership of a fractional undivided
interest in a specified pool of residential
(excluding home equity loans),
multifamily or commercial mortgages,
or
(2) A multiclass security (including
collateralized mortgage obligations and
real estate mortgage investment
conduits) that is backed by a pool of
residential, multifamily or commercial
real estate mortgages, pass through
MBS, or other multiclass MBS.
Obligor means an issuer, guarantor, or
other person or entity who has an
obligation to pay a debt, including
interest due, by a specified date or when
payment is demanded.
Sponsor means a person or entity that
initiates a transaction by selling or
pledging to a specially created issuing
entity, such as a trust, a group of
financial assets that the sponsor either
has originated itself or has purchased.
United States (U.S.) Government
agency means an instrumentality of the
U.S. Government whose obligations are
fully guaranteed as to the timely
payment of principal and interest by the
full faith and credit of the U.S.
Government.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 6. Section 615.5133 is revised to read
as follows:
§ 615.5133
Investment management.
(a) Responsibilities of board of
directors. Your board of directors must
adopt written policies for managing
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your investment activities. Your board
must also ensure that management
complies with these policies and that
appropriate internal controls are in
place to prevent loss. At least annually,
the board, or a designated committee of
the board, must review the sufficiency
of these investment policies. Any
changes to the policies must be adopted
by the board and be documented.
(b) Investment policies—general
requirements. Your board’s written
investment policies must address the
purposes and objectives of investments;
risk tolerance; delegations of authority;
internal controls; due diligence; and
reporting requirements. Your
investment policies must fully address
the extent of pre-purchase analysis that
management must perform for various
classes of investments. Your investment
policies must also address the means for
reporting, and approvals needed for,
exceptions to established policies. If you
are a Farm Credit bank, your investment
policies must address portfolio
diversification and obligor limits under
paragraphs (f) and (g) of this section.
Investment policies must be sufficiently
detailed, consistent with, and
appropriate for the amounts, types, and
risk characteristics of your investments.
(c) Investment policies—risk
tolerance. Your investment policies
must establish risk limits for eligible
investments and for the entire
investment portfolio. Your investment
policies must include concentration
limits to ensure prudent diversification
of credit, market, and, as applicable,
liquidity risks in the investment
portfolio. Risk limits must be based on
all relevant factors, including your
institutional objectives, capital position,
earnings, and quality and reliability of
risk management systems and must take
into consideration the interest rate risk
management program required by
§ 615.5180 or § 615.5182, as applicable.
Your investment policies must identify
the types and quantity of investments
that you will hold to achieve your
objectives and control credit risk,
market risk, and liquidity risk as
applicable. Each association or service
corporation that holds significant
investments and each Farm Credit bank
must establish risk limits in its
investment policies, as applicable, for
the following types of risk:
(1) Credit risk. Investment policies
must establish:
(i) Credit quality standards. Credit
quality standards must be established
for single or related obligors, sponsors,
secured and unsecured exposures, and
asset classes or obligations with similar
characteristics.
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(ii) Concentration limits.
Concentration limits must be
established for single or related obligors,
sponsors, geographical areas, industries,
unsecured exposures, and asset classes
or obligations with similar
characteristics.
(iii) Criteria for selecting brokers,
dealers, and investment bankers
(collectively, securities firms). You must
buy and sell eligible investments with
more than one securities firm. As part
of your review of your investment
policies required under paragraph (a) of
this section, your board of directors, or
a designated committee of the board,
must review the criteria for selecting
securities firms. Any changes to the
criteria must be approved by the board.
(iv) Collateral margin requirements on
repurchase agreements. To the extent
you engage in repurchase agreements,
you must regularly mark the collateral
to market and ensure appropriate
controls are maintained over collateral
held.
(2) Market risk. Investment policies
must set market risk limits for specific
types of investments and for the
investment portfolio.
(3) Liquidity.
(i) Liquidity risk at Farm Credit banks.
Investment policies must describe the
liquidity characteristics of eligible
investments that you will hold to meet
your liquidity needs and other
institutional objectives.
(ii) Liquidity at associations.
Investment policies must describe the
liquid characteristics of eligible
investments that you will hold.
(4) Operational risk. Investment
policies must address operational risks,
including delegations of authority and
internal controls in accordance with
paragraphs (d) and (e) of this section.
(d) Delegation of authority. All
delegations of authority to specified
personnel or committees must state the
extent of management’s authority and
responsibilities for investments.
(e) Internal controls. You must:
(1) Establish appropriate internal
controls to detect and prevent loss,
fraud, embezzlement, conflicts of
interest, and unauthorized investments.
(2) Establish and maintain a
separation of duties between personnel
who supervise or execute investment
transactions and personnel who
supervise or engage in all other
investment-related functions.
(3) Maintain records and management
information systems that are appropriate
for the level and complexity of your
investment activities.
(4) Implement an effective internal
audit program to review, at least
annually, your investment management
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function, controls, processes, and
compliance with FCA regulations. The
scope of the annual review must be
appropriate for the size, risk and
complexity of the investment portfolio.
(f) Farm Credit bank portfolio
diversification.
(1) Well-diversified portfolio. Subject
to the exemptions set forth in paragraph
(f)(2) of this section, a Farm Credit bank
must maintain a well-diversified
investment portfolio as set forth in
paragraph (f)(3) of this section.
(2) Exemptions from investment
portfolio diversification requirements.
The following investments are not
subject to the investment portfolio
diversification requirements specified in
paragraph (f)(3) of this section:
(i) Investments that are fully
guaranteed as to the timely payment of
principal and interest by a U.S.
Government agency; and
(ii) Investments that are fully and
explicitly guaranteed as to the timely
payment of principal and interest by a
GSE, except that no more than 50
percent of the investment portfolio may
be comprised of GSE MBS. Investments
in Farmer Mac securities are governed
by § 615.5174 and are not subject to this
limitation.
(3) Investment portfolio
diversification requirements. A welldiversified investment portfolio means
that, at a minimum, investments are
comprised of different asset classes,
maturities, industries, geographic areas,
and obligors. These diversification
requirements apply to each individual
security that a Farm Credit bank holds
within a DIF. To satisfy the asset class
and obligor diversification
requirements, a Farm Credit bank must,
at a minimum, comply with the
following requirements, except as
exempted by paragraph (f)(2) of this
section. These diversification
parameters must be based on the
portfolio valued at amortized cost.
(i) Asset class diversification. The
investment portfolio must be diversified
among various asset classes. No more
than 15 percent of the investment
portfolio may be invested in any one
asset class. Securities within each DIF
count toward the appropriate asset
class.
(ii) Obligor diversification. The
investment portfolio must be diversified
among various obligors. No more than 3
percent of the investment portfolio may
be invested in any one obligor. For a
DIF, both the DIF itself and the entities
obligated to pay the underlying debt are
obligors.
(g) Farm Credit bank obligor limit. No
more than 10 percent of a Farm Credit
bank’s total capital may be invested in
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any one obligor. This obligor limit does
not apply to investments in obligations
that are fully guaranteed as to the timely
payment of principal and interest by
U.S. Government agencies or fully and
explicitly guaranteed as to the timely
payment of principal and interest by
GSEs. For a DIF, both the DIF itself and
the entities obligated to pay the
underlying debt are obligors.
(h) Due diligence.
(1) Pre-purchase analysis.
(i) Eligibility and compliance with
investment policies. Before you
purchase an investment, you must
conduct sufficient due diligence to
determine whether it is eligible under
§ 615.5140 or § 615.5142, as applicable,
and complies with your board’s
investment policies. You must
document your assessment and the
information used in your assessment.
You may hold an investment that does
not comply with your investment
policies only with the prior approval of
your board.
(ii) Valuation. Prior to purchase, you
must verify the value of the investment
(unless it is a new issue) with a source
that is independent of the broker,
dealer, counterparty or other
intermediary to the transaction.
(iii) Risk assessment. Your assessment
of each investment at the time of
purchase must at a minimum include an
evaluation of the credit risk, liquidity
risk as applicable, market risk, interest
rate risk, and underlying collateral of
the investment, as applicable. This
assessment must be documented and
commensurate with the complexity and
type of the investment. You must
perform stress testing on any investment
that is structured or that has uncertain
cash flows, including all MBS and ABS,
before you purchase it. The stress test
must be commensurate with the type
and complexity of the investment and
must enable you to determine that the
investment does not expose your
capital, earnings, or liquidity, if
applicable, to risks that are greater than
those specified in your investment
policies. The stress testing must comply
with the requirements in paragraph
(h)(4)(ii) of this section.
(2) Ongoing value determination. At
least monthly, you must determine the
fair market value of each investment in
your portfolio and the fair market value
of your whole investment portfolio.
(3) Ongoing analysis of credit risk.
You must establish and maintain
processes to monitor and evaluate
changes in the credit quality of each
investment in your portfolio and in your
whole investment portfolio on an
ongoing basis.
(4) Quarterly stress testing.
(i) You must stress test your entire
investment portfolio, including stress
tests of all investments individually and
stress tests of the portfolio as a whole,
at the end of each quarter. The stress
tests must enable you to determine that
your investment securities, both
individually and on a portfolio-wide
basis, do not expose your capital,
earnings, or liquidity, if applicable, to
risks that exceed the risk tolerance
specified in your investment policies. If
your portfolio risk exceeds your
investment policy limits, you must
develop a plan to comply with those
limits.
(ii) Your stress tests must be defined
in a board-approved policy and must
include defined parameters for the types
of securities you purchase. The stress
tests must be comprehensive and
appropriate for the risk profile of your
institution. At a minimum, the stress
tests must be able to measure the price
sensitivity of investments over a range
of possible interest rate/yield curve
scenarios. The methodology that you
use to analyze investment securities
must be appropriate for the complexity,
structure, and cash flows of the
investments in your portfolio. You must
rely to the maximum extent practicable
on verifiable information to support all
your assumptions, including
prepayment and interest rate volatility
assumptions, when you apply your
stress tests. You must document the
basis for all assumptions that you use to
evaluate the security and its underlying
collateral. You must also document all
subsequent changes in your
assumptions.
(5) Presale value verification. Before
you sell an investment, you must verify
its value with a source that is
independent of the broker, dealer,
counterparty, or other intermediary to
the transaction.
(i) Reports to the board of directors.
At least quarterly, your management
must report on the following to your
board of directors or a designated board
committee:
(1) Plans and strategies for achieving
the board’s objectives for the investment
portfolio;
(2) Whether the investment portfolio
effectively achieves the board’s
objectives;
(3) The current composition, quality,
and the risk and liquidity profiles of the
investment portfolio;
(4) The performance of each class of
investments and the entire investment
portfolio, including all gains and losses
realized during the quarter on
individual investments that you sold
before maturity and why they were
liquidated;
(5) Potential risk exposure to changes
in market interest rates as identified
through quarterly stress testing and any
other factors that may affect the value of
your investment holdings;
(6) How investments affect your
capital, earnings, and overall financial
condition;
(7) Any deviations from the board’s
policies (must be specifically
identified);
(8) The status and performance of
each investment described in
§ 615.5143(a) and (b) or that does not
comply with your investment policies;
including the expected effect of these
investments on your capital, earnings,
liquidity, as applicable, and collateral
position; and
(9) The terms and status of any
required divestiture plan or risk
reduction plan.
■ 7. In § 615.5134 paragraph (b) is
amended by revising the table to read as
follows:
§ 615.5134
*
*
*
*
(b) Liquidity reserve requirement.
*
*
*
*
*
Instruments
Level 1 ..........
• Cash, including cash due from traded but not yet settled debt .......................
• Overnight money market investments .............................................................
• Obligations of U.S. Government agencies with a final remaining maturity of
3 years or less.
• GSE senior debt securities that mature within 60 days, excluding securities
issued by the Farm Credit System.
• Diversified investment funds comprised exclusively of Level 1 instruments ...
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Liquidity reserve.
*
Discount
(multiply by)
Liquidity level
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100 percent.
100 percent.
97 percent.
95 percent.
95 percent.
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Discount
(multiply by)
Liquidity level
Instruments
Level 2 ..........
• Additional Level 1 investments ........................................................................
• Obligations of U.S. Government agencies with a final remaining maturity of
more than 3 years.
• MBS that are fully guaranteed by a U.S. Government agency as to the timely repayment of principal and interest.
• Diversified investment funds comprised exclusively of Levels 1 and 2 instruments.
• Additional Level 1 or Level 2 investments .......................................................
Level 3 ..........
• GSE senior debt securities with maturities exceeding 60 days, excluding
senior debt securities of the Farm Credit System.
• MBS that are fully guaranteed by a GSE as to the timely repayment of principal and interest.
• Money market instruments maturing within 90 days.
• Diversified investment funds comprised exclusively of levels 1, 2, and 3 instruments.
*
*
*
*
*
8. Section 615.5140 is revised to read
as follows:
■
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§ 615.5140 Eligible investments for Farm
Credit banks.
(a) Investment eligibility criteria. A
Farm Credit bank may purchase an
investment only if it satisfies the
following investment eligibility criteria:
(1) The investment must be purchased
and held for one or more investment
purposes authorized in § 615.5132.
(2) The investment must be one of the
following:
(i) A non-convertible senior debt
security;
(ii) A money market instrument with
a maturity of 1 year or less;
(iii) A portion of an MBS or ABS that
is fully guaranteed as to the timely
payment of principal and interest by a
U. S. Government agency;
(iv) A portion of an MBS or ABS that
is fully and explicitly guaranteed as to
the timely payment of principal and
interest by a GSE, except a security
permitted under § 615.5174 of this part;
(v) The senior-most position of an
MBS or ABS that is not fully guaranteed
as to the timely payment of principal
and interest by a U.S. Government
agency or fully and explicitly
guaranteed as to the timely payment of
principal and interest by a GSE,
provided that the MBS satisfies the
definition of ‘‘mortgage related security’’
in 15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(41);
(vi) An obligation of an international
or multilateral development bank in
which the U.S. is a voting member; or
(vii) Shares of a diversified
investment fund, if its portfolio consists
solely of securities that satisfy
paragraphs (a)(2)(i), (a)(2)(ii), (a)(2)(iii),
(a)(2)(iv), (a)(2)(v), or (a)(2)(vi) of this
section or that are eligible under
§ 615.5174. The investment company’s
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risk and return objectives and use of
derivatives must be consistent with the
Farm Credit bank’s investment policies.
(3) At least one obligor of the
investment must have very strong
capacity to meet its financial
commitment for the expected life of the
investment. If any obligor whose
capacity to meet its financial
commitment is being relied upon to
satisfy this requirement is located
outside the U.S., either:
(i) That obligor’s sovereign host
country must have the highest or
second-highest consensus Country Risk
Classification (0 or 1) as published by
the Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development (OECD)
or be an OECD member that is unrated,
or
(ii) The investment must be fully
guaranteed as to the timely payment of
principal and interest by a U.S.
Government agency.
(4) The investment must exhibit low
credit risk and other risk characteristics
consistent with the purpose or purposes
for which it is held.
(5) The investment must be
denominated in U.S. dollars.
(b) Investments that do not satisfy
requirements. Farm Credit banks may
request our approval to purchase and
hold other investments that do not
satisfy the requirements of this section.
Farm Credit banks may purchase and
hold such investments as approved. A
Farm Credit bank’s request for our
approval must explain the risk
characteristics of the investment and the
purpose and objectives for making the
investment.
(c) Ineligible investments.
Notwithstanding any other provision of
this section, Farm Credit banks may not
purchase CDOs without approval under
paragraph (b) of this section.
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Discount for each Level 1 investment applies.
97 percent.
95 percent.
95 percent.
Discount for each Level 1 or Level 2 investment applies.
93 percent for all instruments in Level 3.
(d) Reservation of authority. FCA
may, on a case-by-case basis, determine
that a particular investment of a Farm
Credit bank poses inappropriate risk,
notwithstanding that it satisfies the
investment eligibility criteria. If so, we
will notify the Farm Credit bank as to
the proper treatment of the investment.
■ 9. Section 615.5142 is revised to read
as follows:
§ 615.5142 Eligible investments for System
associations.
(a) Subject to the conditions,
restrictions and limits set forth in this
section, each Farm Credit System
association, with the approval of its
funding bank, may only purchase and
hold investments to manage risk. Each
System association that purchases
investments must identify and evaluate
how investments contribute to the
management of its risks. Each
investment purchased must be an
obligation issued, or fully guaranteed or
insured as to the timely payment of
principal and interest, by the United
States or its agencies and the total
amount of investments held must not
exceed 10 percent of the association’s
total outstanding loans. In computing
the 10-percent limit for association
investments, the 30-day average daily
balance of investments is divided by
loans. Investments are calculated at
amortized cost. Loans are calculated as
defined in § 615.5131. For the purpose
of this calculation, loans include
accrued interest and do not include any
allowance for loan loss adjustments.
Compliance with the calculation is
measured on the last day of every
month.
(b) Risk management requirements.
Each System association that purchases
investments must evaluate its
investment management policies, and
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determine and document how its
investment activities are conducted in
accordance with the following risk
management processes and procedures:
(1) Investment management
requirements. Each association that
purchases investments must comply
with § 615.5133(a), (b), (c), (d), (e), (h)
and (i) of this part. These investment
management processes must be
appropriate for the size, risk and
complexity of the association’s
investment portfolio.
(2) Interest rate risk management
requirements. If interest rate risk in
investments could lead to significant
declines in net income or in the market
value of capital, the association must
comply with §§ 615.5180 and 615.5182.
(3) Other relevant risk management
factors. Each association that purchases
investments must consider and evaluate
any other relevant factors unique to the
association or to the nature of the
investments that could affect such
association’s risk-bearing capacity,
including but not limited to
management experience and capability
to understand and manage complex
structures and unique risks in
investments purchased.
(c) Funding bank supervision of
association investments.
(1) An association must not purchase
and hold an investment without the
prior approval of its funding bank. The
bank must review each affiliated
association’s request to buy and hold
investments and explain in writing the
bank’s reasons for approving or denying
the request.
(2) In deciding whether or not to
approve an association’s request to buy
and hold investments, the bank must
evaluate, and document that the
association:
(i) Has adequate policies, procedures,
internal controls, and accounting and
reporting systems for its investments;
(ii) Has the capability and expertise to
effectively manage the risks in
investments; and
(iii) Complies with paragraph (b) of
this section.
(3) The bank must review annually
the investment portfolio of every
association that it funds. This annual
review must evaluate whether the
association’s investments mitigate and
manage risk over time, and the
continued adequacy of the associations’
risk management practices.
(d) Other investments approved by the
FCA. An association may purchase and
hold other investments that we approve.
The request for our approval must
explain the risk characteristics of the
investment and the purpose and
objectives for making the investment.
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18:28 Jul 24, 2014
Jkt 232001
These other investments are subject to
the funding bank’s approval and if
approved by the FCA are subject to the
portfolio limit on association
investments in paragraph (a) of this
section unless otherwise provided for by
the FCA.
(e) Transition and divestiture for
association investments.
(1) No association is required to divest
any investments held on the date this
rule becomes effective that were
previously authorized under former
§ 615.5140 or otherwise authorized by
official written FCA action that allowed
the association to continue to hold such
investments. Once such investments
mature, the association must not renew
them unless they are authorized
pursuant to paragraphs (a) or (d) of this
section.
(2) An association is not required to
divest of investments if a decline in
total outstanding loans causes it to
exceed the portfolio limit in paragraph
(a) of this section. However, the
association must not purchase new
investments unless after they are
purchased, the total amount of
investments held falls within the
portfolio limit in paragraph (a) of this
section.
(3) Section 615.5143 of this part
applies to investments that an
association acquires after the date that
this rule becomes effective, if such
investments:
(i) Do not comply with the investment
criteria in paragraph (a) of this section
on or after the date of purchase;
(ii) Have not been approved by the
FCA pursuant to paragraph (d) of this
section; or
(iii) Were approved by the FCA
pursuant to paragraph (d) of this section
but no longer satisfy the conditions of
approval.
■ 10. Section 615.5143 is revised to read
as follows:
§ 615.5143 Management of ineligible
investments and reservation of authority to
require divestiture.
(a) Investments ineligible when
purchased. Investments that do not
satisfy the eligibility criteria set forth in
§ 615.5140(a) or the investment criteria
set forth in § 615.5142(a) or that have
not been approved by the FCA pursuant
to § 615.5140(b) or § 615.5142(d), as
applicable, at the time of purchase are
ineligible. You must not purchase
ineligible investments. If you determine
that you have purchased an ineligible
investment, you must notify us within
15 calendar days after the
determination. You must divest of the
investment no later than 60 calendar
days after you determine that the
PO 00000
Frm 00037
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
43317
investment is ineligible unless we
approve, in writing, a plan that
authorizes you to divest the investment
over a longer period of time. Until you
divest of the investment:
(1) If you are a Farm Credit bank, it
must not be used to satisfy your
liquidity requirement(s) under
§ 615.5134;
(2) It must continue to be included in
the § 615.5132 Farm Credit bank
investment portfolio limit calculation or
in the § 615.5142(a) association portfolio
limit, as applicable; and
(3) If you are a Farm Credit bank, it
must be excluded as collateral under
§ 615.5050 and net collateral under
§ 615.5301(c).
(b) Investments that no longer satisfy
investment eligibility criteria. If you
determine that an investment (that
satisfied the eligibility criteria set forth
in § 615.5140(a) or the investment
criteria set forth in § 615.5142(a), as
applicable, when purchased) no longer
satisfies the criteria, or that an
investment that the FCA approved
pursuant to § 615.5140(b) or
§ 615.5142(d), as applicable, no longer
satisfies the conditions of approval, you
may continue to hold the investment,
subject to the following requirements:
(1) You must notify us within 15
calendar days after such determination;
(2) If you are a Farm Credit bank, you
must not use the investment to satisfy
your liquidity requirement(s) under
§ 615.5134;
(3) You must continue to include the
investment in the § 615.5132 Farm
Credit bank investment portfolio limit
calculation or in the § 615.5142(a)
association portfolio limit, as
applicable;
(4) If you are a Farm Credit bank, you
may continue to include the investment
as collateral under § 615.5050 and net
collateral under § 615.5301(c) at the
lower of cost or market value; and
(5) You must develop a plan to reduce
the investment’s risk to you.
(c) Reservation of authority. FCA
retains the authority to require you to
divest of any investment at any time for
failure to comply with § 615.5132(a) or
§ 615.5142 or for safety and soundness
reasons. The timeframe set by FCA will
consider the expected loss on the
transaction (or transactions) and the
effect on your financial condition and
performance.
§ 615.5174
[Amended]
11. Section 615.5174 paragraph (d) is
amended by removing the reference
‘‘§ 615.5133(f)(1)(iii) and
§ 615.5133(f)(4)’’ and adding in its
place, ‘‘§ 615.5133(h)(1)(iii) and
§ 615.5133(h)(4)’’.
■
E:\FR\FM\25JYP1.SGM
25JYP1
43318
§ 615.5180
Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 143 / Friday, July 25, 2014 / Proposed Rules
[Amended]
12. Section 615.5180 paragraph (c)(3)
is amended by removing the reference
‘‘§ 615.5133(f)(4)’’ and adding in its
place, the reference ‘‘§ 615.5133(h)(4)’’.
■
Dated: July 21, 2014.
Dale L. Aultman,
Secretary, Farm Credit Administration Board.
[FR Doc. 2014–17493 Filed 7–24–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6705–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 25
[Docket No. FAA–2014–0383; Notice No. 25–
14–05–SC]
Special Conditions: Bombardier
Aerospace, Models BD–500–1A10 and
BD–500–1A11 Series Airplanes;
Alternate Fuel Tank Structural
Lightning Protection Requirements
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice of proposed special
conditions.
AGENCY:
This action proposes special
conditions for the Bombardier
Aerospace Models BD–500–1A10 and
BD–500–1A11 series airplanes. These
airplanes will have a novel or unusual
design feature that will incorporate a
nitrogen generation system (NGS) for all
fuel tanks that actively reduce
flammability exposure within the fuel
tanks significantly below that required
by the fuel tank flammability
regulations. Among other benefits, the
NGS significantly reduces the potential
for fuel vapor ignition caused by
lightning strikes. The applicable
airworthiness regulations do not contain
adequate or appropriate safety standards
for this design feature. These proposed
special conditions contain the
additional safety standards that the
Administrator considers necessary to
establish a level of safety equivalent to
that established by the existing
airworthiness standards.
DATES: Send your comments on or
before September 8, 2014.
ADDRESSES: Send comments identified
by docket number FAA–2014–0383
using any of the following methods:
• Federal eRegulations Portal: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov/ and follow
the online instructions for sending your
comments electronically.
• Mail: Send comments to Docket
Operations, M–30, U.S. Department of
Transportation (DOT), 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Room W12–140, West
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
SUMMARY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:28 Jul 24, 2014
Jkt 232001
Building Ground Floor, Washington,
DC, 20590–0001.
• Hand Delivery or Courier: Take
comments to Docket Operations in
Room W12–140 of the West Building
Ground Floor at 1200 New Jersey
Avenue SE., Washington, DC, between 9
a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through
Friday, except federal holidays.
• Fax: Fax comments to Docket
Operations at 202–493–2251.
Privacy: The FAA will post all
comments it receives, without change,
to https://www.regulations.gov/,
including any personal information the
commenter provides. Using the search
function of the docket Web site, anyone
can find and read the electronic form of
all comments received into any FAA
docket, including the name of the
individual sending the comment (or
signing the comment for an association,
business, labor union, etc.). DOT’s
complete Privacy Act Statement can be
found in the Federal Register published
on April 11, 2000 (65 FR 19477–19478),
as well as at https://DocketsInfo
.dot.gov/.
Docket: Background documents or
comments received may be read at
https://www.regulations.gov/ at any time.
Follow the online instructions for
accessing the docket or go to the Docket
Operations in Room W12–140 of the
West Building Ground Floor at 1200
New Jersey Avenue SE., Washington,
DC, between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday
through Friday, except federal holidays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Margaret Langsted, FAA, Propulsion
and Mechanical Systems Branch, ANM–
112, Transport Airplane Directorate,
Aircraft Certification Service, 1601 Lind
Avenue SW., Renton, Washington,
98057–3356; telephone 425–227–2677;
facsimile 425–227–1149.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Comments Invited
We invite interested people to take
part in this rulemaking by sending
written comments, data, or views. The
most helpful comments reference a
specific portion of the special
conditions, explain the reason for any
recommended change, and include
supporting data.
We will consider all comments we
receive on or before the closing date for
comments. We may change these special
conditions based on the comments we
receive.
Background
On December 10, 2009, Bombardier
Aerospace applied for a type certificate
for their new Models BD–500–1A10 and
BD–500–1A11 series airplanes (hereafter
PO 00000
Frm 00038
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
collectively referred to as ‘‘CSeries’’).
The CSeries airplanes are swept-wing
monoplanes with a composite wing fuel
tank structure and an aluminum alloy
fuselage sized for 5-abreast seating.
Passenger capacity is designated as 110
for the Model BD–500–1A10 and 125 for
the Model BD–500–1A11. Maximum
takeoff weight is 131,000 pounds for the
Model BD–500–1A10 and 144,000
pounds for the Model BD–500–1A11.
Type Certification Basis
Under the provisions of Title 14, Code
of Federal Regulations (14 CFR) 21.17,
Bombardier Aerospace must show that
the CSeries airplanes meet the
applicable provisions of part 25 as
amended by Amendments 25–1 through
25–129.
If the Administrator finds that the
applicable airworthiness regulations
(i.e., 14 CFR part 25) do not contain
adequate or appropriate safety standards
for the CSeries airplanes because of a
novel or unusual design feature, special
conditions are prescribed under the
provisions of § 21.16.
Special conditions are initially
applicable to the model for which they
are issued. Should the type certificate
for that model be amended later to
include any other model that
incorporates the same or similar novel
or unusual design feature, the special
conditions would also apply to the other
model under § 21.101.
In addition to the applicable
airworthiness regulations and special
conditions, the CSeries airplanes must
comply with the fuel vent and exhaust
emission requirements of 14 CFR part
34 and the noise certification
requirements of 14 CFR part 36, and the
FAA must issue a finding of regulatory
adequacy under section 611 of Public
Law 92–574, the ‘‘Noise Control Act of
1972.’’
The FAA issues special conditions, as
defined in 14 CFR 11.19, in accordance
with § 11.38, and they become part of
the type certification basis under
§ 21.17.
Novel or Unusual Design Features
The CSeries airplanes will incorporate
the following novel or unusual design
features: A fuel tank nitrogen generation
system (NGS) that is intended to control
fuel tank flammability for all fuel tanks.
This NGS is designed to provide a level
of performance that applies the more
stringent standard for warm day
flammability performance applicable to
normally emptied tanks within the
fuselage contour from § 25.981(b) and
appendix M to part 25 to all fuel tanks
of the CSeries airplanes. This high level
of NGS performance for all fuel tanks is
E:\FR\FM\25JYP1.SGM
25JYP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 79, Number 143 (Friday, July 25, 2014)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 43301-43318]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2014-17493]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FARM CREDIT ADMINISTRATION
12 CFR Parts 611 and 615
RIN 3052-AC84
Organization; Funding and Fiscal Affairs, Loan Policies and
Operations, and Funding Operations; Investment Eligibility
AGENCY: Farm Credit Administration.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Farm Credit Administration (FCA, Agency, us, our, or we)
proposes to amend our regulations governing the eligibility of
investments held by Farm Credit banks. We propose to strengthen these
regulations by reinforcing that only high quality investments may be
purchased and held. We also propose to revise these regulations to
comply with section 939A of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act or DFA) by removing references
to and requirements relating to credit ratings and substituting other
appropriate standards of creditworthiness. The FCA also proposes to
revise its regulatory approach to Farm Credit System (System)
association investments in order to limit the type and amount of
investments that an association may hold. The proposed rule also
addresses investment and risk management practices at associations and
funding bank supervision of association investments.
DATES: You may send us comments by October 23, 2014.
ADDRESSES: We offer a variety of methods for you to submit comments on
this proposed rule. For accuracy and efficiency reasons, commenters are
encouraged to submit comments by email or through the Agency's Web
site. As facsimiles (fax) are difficult for us to process and achieve
compliance with section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act, we are no longer
accepting comments submitted by fax. Regardless of the method you use,
please do not submit your comment multiple times via different methods.
You may submit comments by any of the following methods:
Email: Send us an email at reg-comm@fca.gov.
FCA Web site: https://www.fca.gov. Select ``Public
Commenters,'' then ``Public Comments,'' and follow the directions for
``Submitting a Comment.''
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Mail: Barry F. Mardock, Deputy Director, Office of
Regulatory Policy, Farm Credit Administration, 1501 Farm Credit Drive,
McLean, VA 22102-5090.
You may review copies of all comments we receive at our office in
McLean, Virginia, or on our Web site at https://www.fca.gov. Once you
are in the Web site, select ``Public Commenters,'' then ``Public
Comments,'' and follow the directions for ``Reading Submitted Public
Comments.'' We will show your comments as submitted, but for technical
reasons we may omit items such as logos and special characters.
Identifying information that you provide, such as phone numbers and
addresses, will be publicly available. However, we will attempt to
remove email addresses to help reduce Internet spam.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Paul K. Gibbs, Senior Accountant, or Timothy T. Nerdahl, Senior
Financial Analyst, Office of Regulatory Policy, Farm Credit
Administration, McLean, VA 22102-5090, (703) 883-4414, TTY (703) 883-
4056; or
Jennifer A. Cohn, Senior Counsel, or Richard A. Katz, Senior Counsel,
Office of General Counsel, Farm Credit Administration, McLean, VA
22102-5090, (703) 883-4020, TTY (703) 883-4056.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
[[Page 43302]]
I. Objectives
The objectives of this proposed rule are to:
Strengthen the safety and soundness of Farm Credit banks
\1\ and associations; \2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Section 619.9140 of FCA regulations defines ``Farm Credit
bank'' to include Farm Credit Banks, agricultural credit banks, and
banks for cooperatives.
\2\ Section 619.9050 of FCA regulations defines the term
``association'' to include (individually or collectively) a Federal
land bank association, a Federal land credit association, a
production credit association, and an agricultural credit
association.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ensure that Farm Credit banks hold sufficient liquidity to
continue operations and pay maturing obligations in the event of market
disruption;
Enhance the ability of the Farm Credit banks to supply
credit to agricultural and aquatic producers;
Comply with the requirements of section 939A of the Dodd-
Frank Act;
Modernize the investment eligibility criteria for Farm
Credit banks; and
Revise the investment regulation for associations to
improve their investment management practices so they are more
resilient to risk.
II. Background
Congress created System institutions, including Farm Credit banks
and associations, to provide permanent, stable, and reliable sources of
credit and related services to American agricultural and aquatic
producers.\3\ Associations obtain funds from Farm Credit banks to
provide short-, intermediate-, and long-term credit and related
services to farmers, ranchers, producers and harvesters of aquatic
products, to rural residents for housing, and to farm-related
businesses.\4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ The Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation (Farmer Mac),
also a System institution, provides a secondary market for
agricultural real estate mortgage loans, rural housing mortgage
loans, and rural utility cooperative loans. Farmer Mac is not
affected by this rulemaking, and the use of the term ``System
institution'' in this preamble and proposed rule does not include
Farmer Mac.
\4\ One Farm Credit bank, known as an agricultural credit bank,
also provides lending and other financial services to farmer-owned
cooperatives, rural utilities (electric and telephone), and rural
sewer and water systems, and it is also authorized to finance U.S.
agricultural exports and provide international banking services for
farmer-owned cooperatives.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Farm Credit banks depend on investments to provide liquidity and to
fulfill other needs,\5\ and investments also enable associations to
manage the risks they confront.\6\ Although Farm Credit banks obtain
their funding primarily through the issuance of System-wide debt
securities,\7\ they must have enough available funds, including
investments, to continue operations and pay maturing obligations if
access to the debt market becomes temporarily impeded.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Section 615.5132(a) authorizes a Farm Credit bank to hold
eligible investments to comply with its liquidity requirements, to
manage surplus short-term funds, and to manage interest rate risk.
\6\ As discussed below, proposed 615.5142 would enable
associations, under specified conditions, to hold eligible
investments to manage risk. Under Sec. 611.1135(a), which we do not
propose to revise, service corporations may hold investments for the
purposes authorized for their organizers.
\7\ Farm Credit banks use the Federal Farm Credit Banks Funding
Corporation (Funding Corporation) to issue and market System-wide
debt securities. The Funding Corporation is owned by the Farm Credit
banks.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FCA regulations, at subpart E of part 615, impose comprehensive
requirements regarding the investments of System institutions. We have
recently revised many of these requirements, particularly those guiding
prudent investment management practices.\8\ This rulemaking proposes to
revise the requirements governing the eligibility of investments for
Farm Credit banks and associations, which have been largely unchanged
since 1999, as well as the permissible investment amounts and purposes
for associations.\9\ The regulations this rulemaking proposes to amend
should not be viewed in isolation, but rather as part of a
comprehensive set of rules guiding the System's liquidity and
investment management.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ 77 FR 66362, Nov. 5, 2012.
\9\ Currently, Sec. 615.5140 identifies eligible investments
for both Farm Credit banks and associations. Section 615.5142
governs investment purposes for associations, and the amount of
association investments is not prescribed by regulation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Investment products are becoming increasingly complex, and the
financial crisis that began in 2007 made clear that some investments
are riskier and less liquid than were previously believed. In addition,
in July 2010 the President signed into law the Dodd-Frank Act to
strengthen regulation of the financial industry in the wake of the
financial crisis. Section 939A of the DFA requires each Federal agency
to review all of its regulations that refer to or require the use of
credit ratings to assess the creditworthiness of an instrument; to
remove the reference or requirement; and to substitute other
appropriate creditworthiness standards. FCA's existing investment
eligibility regulations use credit ratings as a determinant of
eligibility of some investments.
We now propose to comply with the DFA by eliminating the
regulations' reliance on credit ratings. The financial crisis that
began in 2007 identified flaws in relying on credit ratings to
determine credit risk, as many investments with similar labels and
ratings exhibited substantially differing underlying risk
characteristics, ultimately impacting marketability of the investments.
Investment eligibility would no longer depend on external credit
ratings, thus enhancing safety and soundness. We also propose other
amendments to the provisions governing Farm Credit banks that would
strengthen the safety and soundness of their investment activities by
more accurately reflecting the risk in particular investments.
Finally, we propose amendments to Sec. 615.5142, which governs the
investment activities of associations. We recognize that many
associations may need to hold investments for purposes other than
managing surplus short-term funds and reducing interest rate risk,
which are the only investment purposes authorized by the existing
regulations. For this reason, the proposed rule would grant
associations greater flexibility to hold investments for other risk
management purposes. At the same time, we propose to limit the types
and amount of investments that associations may hold.
We first considered revisions to our Farm Credit bank and
association investment regulations in 2011.\10\ As discussed above, we
adopted many of these revisions in 2012, but we did not revise the
provisions governing investment eligibility and association
investments, which we are now proposing to revise. The revisions we now
propose take into consideration the comments we received in response to
the earlier rulemaking, as well as the approaches some of the other
Federal banking regulatory agencies have taken toward compliance with
the DFA credit ratings elimination requirement.\11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ 76 FR 51289, Aug. 18, 2011.
\11\ Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), 77 FR
35253 and 35259, June 13, 2012; Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC), 77 FR 43151 and 43155, July 24, 2012.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. Section-by-Section Description of the Proposed Rule
The proposed rule enhances the credit quality standards for
eligible investments that Farm Credit banks may hold and revises the
regulation governing association investment activities. It also
contains conforming amendments to other regulations in parts 611 and
615.
A. Section 615.5131--Definitions
We propose to define asset class as a group of securities that
exhibit similar characteristics and behave similarly in the
marketplace. Asset classes include, but are not limited to, money
market
[[Page 43303]]
instruments, municipal securities, corporate bond securities, mortgage-
backed securities (MBS), asset-backed securities (ABS) (excluding MBS),
and any other asset class as determined by the FCA. We discuss this
definition later in this preamble.
We propose to define a collateralized debt obligation (CDO) as a
debt security collateralized by MBS, ABS, or trust-preferred
securities.
One of our proposed criteria for Farm Credit bank investments with
an obligor located outside of the United States is a high Country Risk
Classification (CRC) (a 0 or a 1) as published by the Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).\12\ We propose to define
CRC, with respect to a sovereign, as the most recent consensus CRC
published by the OECD as of December 31 of the prior calendar year that
provides a view of the likelihood that the sovereign will service its
external debt. This definition is identical to that adopted by the
other Federal banking regulators in their capital rules to implement
Basel III.\13\ We proposed the same definition in the proposed
revisions to our regulatory capital rule that the FCA Board adopted on
May 8, 2014.\14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ See proposed Sec. 615.5140(a)(3). We explain this
criterion in the preamble discussion of that proposed provision.
\13\ OCC and the Federal Reserve System, Final Rule, 78 FR
62018, Oct. 11, 2013; FDIC, Interim Final Rule, 78 FR 55340, Sept.
10, 2013, substantively adopted as final at 79 FR 20754, April 14,
2014.
\14\ The proposed capital rule has not yet been published in the
Federal Register.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We propose to define a diversified investment fund as an investment
company registered under section 8 of the Investment Company Act of
1940, 15 U.S.C. 80a-8. This is consistent with our usage of the term in
existing Sec. 615.5140(a)(8).
We propose to replace the definitions for the existing terms
``Government-sponsored agency'' and ``Government agency'' with
definitions for the new terms ``Government-sponsored enterprise (GSE)''
and ``United States (U.S.) Government agency,'' respectively. We would
define GSE as an entity established or chartered by the U.S. Government
to serve public purposes specified by the U.S. Congress but whose debt
obligations are not explicitly guaranteed by the full faith and credit
of the U.S. Government. We would define U.S. Government agency as an
instrumentality of the U.S. Government whose obligations are fully
guaranteed as to the timely payment of principal and interest by the
full faith and credit of the U.S. Government. These terminology changes
would have no substantive effect.\15\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ We propose to delete the word ``explicitly'' from our
existing definition because all obligations guaranteed or insured by
the U.S. Government are backed by the full faith and credit of the
United States unless the law or the obligation itself provides
otherwise. For this reason, the word ``explicitly'' is superfluous.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We propose to replace the defined term ``mortgage securities'' with
``mortgage-backed securities'' or ``MBS.'' We also propose to change
``mortgage securities'' to ``mortgage-backed securities'' in the
definition of ABS. These technical changes are for consistency with
other FCA regulations and would have no substantive effect.
We propose to add a new definition for the term ``obligor.'' Our
existing regulations use this term, as do provisions that we propose to
add or revise, but we have no definition for this term. We propose to
define the term to ensure a common understanding of its meaning.
We would define obligor as an issuer, guarantor, or other person or
entity who has an obligation to pay a debt, including interest due, by
a specified date or when payment is demanded. This definition would
include the debtor or immediate party that is obligated to pay a debt,
as well as a guarantor of the debt. The definition would not include
the sponsor (as we propose to define the term) of an investment, unless
the sponsor has an obligation to pay the debt.
We propose to define ``sponsor'' as a person or entity that
initiates a transaction by selling or pledging to a specially created
issuing entity, such as a trust, a group of financial assets that the
sponsor either has originated itself or has purchased; the sponsor may
retain the obligation to repay or may transfer that obligation to the
trust. An example of a sponsor would be an entity such as a commercial
bank that transfers financial assets, such as loans that it has
originated or purchased, to a bankruptcy remote trust known as a
special purpose vehicle (SPV). In this example, the SPV services the
debt and has the obligation to repay.
We propose to delete the following definitions because they will no
longer be used in this subpart. We propose to delete ``eurodollar time
deposits,'' ``final maturity,'' ``general obligations,'' ``liquid
investments,'' ``nationally recognized statistical rating
organization,'' ``revenue bond,'' and ``weighted average life''.
B. Section 615.5134--Liquidity Reserve
We propose to make technical, non-substantive revisions by adding
the new terms ``Government-sponsored enterprise (GSE)'' and ``U.S.
Government agency'' to our liquidity reserve regulation at Sec.
615.5134, to conform to changes we made to those defined terms in Sec.
615.5131. In addition, we propose changes to clarify that MBS must be
fully guaranteed by a U.S. Government agency to qualify for Level 2
liquidity and fully guaranteed by a GSE to qualify for Level 3
liquidity.
C. Section 615.5140--Eligible Investments for Farm Credit Banks
Our existing investment eligibility regulation at Sec. 615.5140
contains a detailed listing of eligible investment asset classes and
types of investments within each asset class. The regulation imposes
final maturity limits, investment portfolio limits, and other
requirements for many of these investments. It also imposes credit
rating requirements, based on NRSRO \16\ credit ratings, for a number
of the investments. The regulation currently applies to both Farm
Credit banks and associations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ Nationally Recognized Statistical Rating Organization.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In revised Sec. 615.5140, we propose to revise the investment
eligibility requirements governing Farm Credit banks to strengthen
their safety and soundness by more accurately reflecting the risk in
particular investments based on recent experience in the
marketplace.\17\ In addition, to comply with section 939A of the DFA,
we propose to replace the regulations' NRSRO credit ratings
requirements with other standards of creditworthiness.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ Revised Sec. 615.5140 would apply to Farm Credit banks
only. As discussed below, all association eligibility requirements
would be located in revised Sec. 615.5142.
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1. Paragraph (a)--Investment Eligibility Criteria
We propose the following criteria for Farm Credit banks to
determine whether an investment is eligible. These criteria would
replace the listing of eligible investments in our existing
regulations.
a. Paragraph (a)(1)--Purpose
We propose to formalize our existing requirement that for an
investment to be eligible, it must be purchased and held for an
authorized purpose as set forth in Sec. 615.5132(a). A Farm Credit
bank must be able to identify the authorized purpose or purposes for
which each investment is held.
b. Paragraph (a)(2)--Eligible Investments
The proposed regulation would specify the general requirements that
[[Page 43304]]
investments must satisfy to be eligible. Limiting investments to those
that satisfy these general requirements will ensure that investments
are of high quality.
i. Paragraph (a)(2)(i)--Non-convertible Senior Debt Securities
Investments in senior debt securities that cannot be converted to
any other type of securities would be eligible under the proposed rule.
This investment category would include non-convertible U.S. Government
agency senior debt securities, including U.S. Treasury securities, and
senior non-convertible GSE bonds. Senior debt securities are those
securities that have priority of claim over other securities issued.
Senior debt securities may be secured by a specific pool of collateral
or may be unsecured with priority of claims over other types of debt
securities such as subordinated debt, preferred stock, or common
equity. To be eligible under this criterion, a senior debt security
must not be convertible into a non-senior security or an equity
security.\18\
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\18\ Since at least 1993, FCA has stated its belief that it is
generally inappropriate for System institutions to maintain
ownership interests in commercial enterprises by holding equity
securities. See 58 FR 63034, 63049-50, Nov. 30, 1993.
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Currently authorized investments such as municipal securities and
corporate debt securities would be eligible under this criterion, as
long as they are non-convertible senior debt securities. Other non-
convertible senior debt securities would also be eligible under this
criterion.
ii. Paragraph (a)(2)(ii)--Money Market Instruments
As under our existing rule, investments in money market instruments
would be eligible under the proposed rule. The existing rule lists
short-term instruments such as Federal funds, negotiable certificates
of deposit, bankers acceptances, commercial paper, non-callable term
Federal funds and Eurodollar time deposits, master notes, and
repurchase agreements collateralized by eligible investments as money
market instruments. The proposed rule's use of the term money market
contemplates these instruments as well as other short-term instruments.
For an investment to be eligible as a money market instrument, it must
have a maturity of 1 year or less.
iii. Paragraph (a)(2)(iii)--Mortgage-Backed Securities and Asset-Backed
Securities Guaranteed by U.S. Government Agencies
We propose that MBS and ABS that are fully guaranteed as to the
timely payment of principal and interest by a U.S. Government agency
would be eligible securities because of their high credit quality. MBS
and ABS that are partially guaranteed by a U.S. Government agency would
not be eligible under this criterion (although they could be eligible
under other criteria). Securities labeled ``government guaranteed''
satisfy this criterion only if they are fully guaranteed as to the
timely payment of principal and interest.
iv. Paragraph (a)(2)(iv)--Mortgage-Backed Securities and Asset-Backed
Securities Guaranteed by GSEs
Under the proposed rule, MBS and ABS that are fully and explicitly
guaranteed as to the timely payment of principal and interest by GSEs
would be eligible investments. Farmer Mac MBS would be excluded from
eligibility under this provision because they are separately authorized
and governed by Sec. 615.5174.
Securities are eligible under this provision only if a GSE fully
guarantees the timely payment of both the principal and interest due. A
GSE ``wrap'' (guarantee) does not make a security eligible under this
provision unless it is a guarantee of all principal and interest. When
considering whether to purchase a security with a GSE guarantee or
wrap, an institution must ensure that it is fully guaranteed. This
provision carries over and clarifies the existing authorities.
v. Paragraph (a)(2)(v)--Senior-Most Positions of Mortgage-Backed
Securities and Asset-Backed Securities Not Guaranteed by U.S.
Government Agencies or GSEs
In our 2011 proposed rule on investment management,\19\ we proposed
that a position in a mortgage security that is not guaranteed by a
Government agency or Government-sponsored agency would be eligible only
if it is the senior-most position at the time of purchase. In that
proposed rule, we said that we consider a position in such a mortgage
security to be the senior-most position only if it currently meets both
of the following criteria:
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\19\ 76 FR 51289, Aug. 18, 2011.
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No other remaining position in the securitization has
priority in liquidation. Remaining positions that are the last to
experience losses in the event of default and which share those losses
pro rata meet this criterion.
No other remaining position in the securitization has a
higher priority claim to any contractual cash flows. Remaining
positions that have the first priority claim to contractual cash flows
(including planned amortization classes), as well as those that share
on a pro rata basis a first priority claim to cash flows meet this
criterion.
In their comments on the 2011 proposed rule, CoBank, ACB, the Farm
Credit Bank of Texas, and The Farm Credit Council commented that the
market understands the term ``senior-most'' to relate to liquidation
preference rather than to the priority of claims to contractual cash
flows prior to default. This is because investors, such as System
institutions, are concerned with whether they receive a pro rata share
of cash flows in the event of depleted credit support or issuer/
borrower default, not with whether contractual cash flows are paid
first in the ordinary course of business. Institutions are able to
successfully and safely invest in securities that are not the first
priority with respect to contractual cash flows. These commenters,
therefore, asked us to delete the second criterion from our
understanding of the term ``senior-most.'' \20\
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\20\ Farmer Mac made similar comments in response to the 2011
proposed rule governing Farmer Mac investment management. 76 FR
91798, Nov. 18, 2011.
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We agree with these comments and eliminate the second criterion.
The first criterion set forth above remains.
In addition, as in the existing rule, we propose to retain the
requirement that for a position in an MBS to be eligible, the MBS must
satisfy the definition of ``mortgage related security'' in 15 U.S.C.
78c(a)(41). We propose to delete the alternative that the MBS could
instead comply with 15 U.S.C. 77d(5), because that statutory provision
was repealed by the Dodd-Frank Act. We note that commercial MBS are
included under this proposed eligibility provision.
Private placements may be eligible under this proposed criterion
(or other criteria), as long as they satisfy all of the proposed
investment eligibility requirements. Private placement refers to the
sale of securities to a relatively small number of sophisticated
investors without registration with the Securities and Exchange
Commission and, in many cases, without the disclosure of detailed
financial information or a prospectus. Even private placements that may
be eligible are generally not liquid. Farm Credit banks must be able to
identify a permissible purpose for holding a private placement.
[[Page 43305]]
Our existing eligibility rules limit investments in ABS to those
secured by specified assets and with specified weighted average lives.
We propose to permit investments in the senior-most position of any
ABS, regardless of the secured asset or the weighted average life.\21\
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\21\ Both existing and proposed Sec. 615.5133(c) require the
investment policies of each institution to establish risk limits for
different types of investments based on all relevant factors,
including the institution's objectives, capital position, earnings,
and quality and reliability of risk management systems.
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In sum, the proposed rule would permit Farm Credit banks to invest
in the senior-most position of any MBS that satisfies the statutory
definition of ``mortgage related security'' and the senior-most
position of any ABS.
vi. Paragraph (a)(2)(vi)--International and Multilateral Development
Bank Obligations
We retain the authority for Farm Credit banks to invest in
obligations of international and multilateral development banks, as
long as the United States is a voting shareholder.
vii. Paragraph (a)(2)(vii)--Shares of a Diversified Investment Fund
Under the proposal, shares of a diversified investment fund (DIF)
would be eligible if the DIF's portfolio consists solely of securities
that are eligible under these eligibility criteria or under Sec.
615.5174.\22\ The investment company's risk and return objectives and
use of derivatives must be consistent with the investment policies of
the Farm Credit bank. This DIF eligibility is unchanged from the
existing regulation. As discussed below, however, we propose more
restrictive portfolio diversification limits on DIF investments than
those that currently exist.
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\22\ Section 615.5174 authorizes Farm Credit banks to purchase
and hold MBS that are issued or guaranteed as to both principal and
interest by Farmer Mac.
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c. Paragraph (a)(3)--Obligors' Capacity To Meet Financial Commitment
Existing Sec. 615.5140 imposes credit rating requirements, based
on NRSRO credit ratings, to determine the eligibility of investments in
a number of asset classes, including municipal securities, certain
money market instruments, non-agency mortgage-backed securities, asset-
backed securities, and corporate debt securities.\23\
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\23\ Existing Sec. 615.5140 imposes no credit rating
requirements on investments in obligations of U.S. Government
agencies, GSEs, and international and multilateral development
banks, and in DIFs and certain money market instruments.
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Section 939A of the DFA requires each Federal agency to revise all
of its regulations that refer to or require reliance on credit ratings
to assess creditworthiness of an instrument to remove the reference or
requirement and to substitute other appropriate creditworthiness
standards.
We propose to comply with this requirement in a manner consistent
with the approach of some of the Federal banking regulatory agencies.
The OCC, for example, previously required national banks to determine
whether a security was ``investment grade'' in order to determine
whether purchasing the security was permissible. Under the previous
definition of ``investment grade,'' a security could be characterized
as ``investment grade'' if it was rated in the top four ``investment
grade'' NRSRO ratings.
In its revised regulations to comply with the DFA requirement, the
OCC retained the term ``investment grade'' but eliminated the rating
standard. Instead, it defined the term to mean ``the issuer of a
security has an adequate capacity to meet financial commitments under
the security for the projected life of the asset or exposure.''
The OCC stated that it did not intend for the elimination of
references to credit ratings to change substantively the standards
national banks must follow when deciding whether a security is
investment grade. Its new rule permits a national bank to consider
credit ratings as part of its ``investment grade'' determination and
due diligence, but the credit rating must be supplemented by the bank's
own analysis. And the new rule does not require a national bank to use
NRSRO credit ratings to make the ``investment grade''
determination.\24\
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\24\ 77 FR 35253, June 13, 2012 (OCC rule); 77 FR 35259, June
13, 2012 (OCC guidance). See also 77 FR 43151, July 24, 2012 (FDIC
rule); 77 FR 43155, July 24, 2012 (FDIC guidance).
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The OCC previously permitted national banks to invest in securities
that were rated in one of the top four ratings. The OCC intends that
its new definition--the issuer of a security has an adequate capacity
to meet financial commitments under the security for the projected life
of the asset or exposure--is substantively unchanged from its previous
standards.
Except for investments in a few asset classes such as U.S.
Government agency and GSE obligations, as discussed above, FCA's
existing regulations require that in order to be eligible, investments
must meet the highest or the second highest NRSRO rating, depending on
the asset class. We want to retain high creditworthiness standards for
Farm Credit bank investments. Accordingly, we propose to require that
for an investment to be eligible for Farm Credit banks, at least one
obligor (whether debtor or guarantor) must have very strong capacity to
meet its financial commitment for the expected life of the investment.
Obligors that exhibit very strong capacity to meet financial
commitments generally have very low probability of default. This
standard would apply to all investments, including those that are
currently not subject to a credit rating requirement.
Like the OCC's regulations, our proposal permits but does not
require Farm Credit banks to consider credit ratings. If a Farm Credit
bank does consider credit ratings, it must still conduct its own due
diligence to determine whether an investment satisfies this standard.
An investment does not automatically satisfy this standard by virtue of
its credit rating.
We propose an additional standard for investments if a Farm Credit
bank is relying upon the capacity of a non-U.S. obligor to meet the
``very strong capacity'' standard. Unless such an investment is fully
guaranteed as to the timely payment of principal and interest by a U.S.
Government agency, the sovereign host country of the obligor whose
capacity is being relied upon must have the highest Country Risk
Classification (CRC) (a 0 or a 1) as published by the OECD or must be
an OECD member that is unrated. If the Farm Credit bank is not relying
upon the capacity of a non-U.S. obligor to satisfy the ``very strong
capacity'' standard, then the proposal establishes no requirements
regarding that obligor's sovereign host country.
The OECD's CRCs are an assessment of a country's credit risk, used
to set interest rate charges for transactions covered by the OECD
arrangement on export credits. The OECD uses a scale of 0 to 7 with 0
being the lowest possible risk and 7 being the highest possible risk.
Furthermore, the OECD no longer assigns CRCs to certain high income
countries that are members of the OECD and that have previously
received a CRC of 0.\25\ OECD member countries that are no longer
assigned a CRC exhibit a similar degree of country risk as that of a
jurisdiction with a CRC of 0.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ See https://www.oecd.org/tad/xcred/cat0.htm.
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In their capital rules to implement Basel III, the Federal banking
regulators adopted provisions basing risk weights for sovereign
exposures on OECD CRCs (and on OECD membership, for
[[Page 43306]]
countries without a CRC).\26\ Like these other regulators, we believe
that use of CRCs in this manner is permissible under section 939A of
the Dodd-Frank Act and that section 939A was not intended to apply to
assessments of creditworthiness of organizations such as the OECD. As
discussed in those rules, section 939A was targeted at addressing the
role, and the conflicts of interest, of commercial credit rating
agencies that provide government-sanctioned credit ratings to their
fee-paying clients. The OECD is not a commercial entity that produces
credit assessments for fee-paying clients, nor does it provide the sort
of evaluative and analytical services as credit rating agencies.
Additionally, we propose to use CRCs only for this limited purpose.
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\26\ OCC and the Federal Reserve System, Final Rule, 78 FR
62018, Oct. 11, 2013; FDIC, Interim Final Rule, 78 FR 55340, Sept.
10, 2013, substantively adopted as final at 79 FR 20754, April 14,
2014.
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d. Paragraph (a)(4)--Credit and Other Risk in the Investment
In addition to imposing standards on obligors, we also propose to
require that for an investment to be eligible, it must itself exhibit
low credit risk and other risk characteristics consistent with the
purposes for which it is held. The other risks that institutions must
consider include, but are not limited to, those listed in Sec.
615.5133(c).
We believe that all investments held by Farm Credit banks must have
low credit risk. We do not propose to require that other risks in the
investment be low in all cases. Instead, the risk characteristics in
the investment must be consistent with the purposes for which the
investment is held. Accordingly, Farm Credit banks must understand the
purpose for which they purchase and hold an investment.
For instance, if an investment is held for the purpose of
liquidity, it would have to be marketable or liquid \27\ and would
generally have to have low price volatility. On the other hand, an
investment that is high quality but has high price volatility and
questionable marketability or liquidity would not be appropriate for a
liquidity investment, but it might be used effectively to manage
interest rate risk, which is a permissible purpose for Farm Credit
banks under Sec. 615.5132(a). Farm Credit banks must also consider
whether other risks are consistent with the purpose for which an
investment is held.
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\27\ Under Sec. 615.5134(d), investments used to satisfy the
liquidity reserve requirement must be ``marketable,'' as defined by
that provision. Under Sec. 615.5134(e), investments held in the
liquidity buffer must be ``liquid,'' as explained in that provision.
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e. Paragraph (a)(5)--Denomination
As in our existing rule, the denomination of all investments must
be in U.S. dollars. We propose no change from our existing rule.
2. Paragraph (b)--Investments That Do Not Satisfy Requirements
We propose technical revisions to the regulatory provision
authorizing institutions to hold other investments with FCA's prior
approval. We intend no substantive change with these revisions.
3. Paragraph (c)--Ineligible Investments
We propose to prohibit Farm Credit banks from purchasing CDOs, as
that term is defined in Sec. 615.5131. Based on the experience of CDO
investors during the recent financial crisis, we believe investments in
CDOs pose unacceptable risk to System institutions.
4. Paragraph (d)--Reservation of Authority
We propose to make explicit our authority, on a case-by-case basis,
to determine that a particular investment imposes inappropriate risk,
notwithstanding that it satisfies the investment eligibility criteria.
The proposal also provides that FCA will notify a Farm Credit bank as
to the proper treatment of any such investment.
5. Application of Investment Eligibility Criteria to Existing Farm
Credit Bank Investments
As discussed below, the FCA is contemplating that Farm Credit banks
would have to comply with the rule's requirements pertaining to their
own investments 6 months after the effective date of the rule. New Farm
Credit bank investments made after that compliance date would be
subject to the investment eligibility criteria in Sec. 615.5140(a).
Existing Farm Credit bank investments (investments made before the
compliance date) that were not eligible under the investment
eligibility criteria that were in effect at the time of purchase (or
that the FCA did not approve) would continue to be subject to the
requirements of Sec. 615.5143(a), which governs the treatment of
investments that are ineligible when purchased.
Existing Farm Credit bank investments (investments made before the
compliance date) that were eligible under the investment eligibility
criteria that were in effect at the time of purchase but that are
ineligible under the revised Sec. 615.5140(a) investment eligibility
criteria would be treated as follows, unless the FCA specified
different treatment. If an investment is not eligible because it does
not satisfy the criteria in revised Sec. 615.5140(a)(2)--that is, it
is a type of investment that was eligible under the previous criteria
but is not eligible under the revised criteria--the Farm Credit bank
may continue to hold the investment with no restriction. If an
investment is not eligible because it does not satisfy the criteria in
revised Sec. 615.5140(a)(1), (a)(3), or (a)(4)--which pertain to
permissible investment purposes and to credit quality--the Farm Credit
bank may continue to hold the investment subject to Sec. 615.5143(b),
which governs the treatment of investments that were eligible to
purchase but that no longer satisfy the eligibility criteria.
We remind the Farm Credit banks that under Sec. 615.5143(c), the
FCA would retain the authority to require divestiture of any investment
at any time for failure to comply with Sec. 615.5132(a) or for safety
and soundness reasons.
D. Section 615.5133--Investment Management
1. Overview
Existing Sec. 615.5133 applies to all System institutions--Farm
Credit banks, associations, and service corporations. Most of proposed
revised Sec. 615.5133 would also apply to all System institutions.
However, as discussed in greater detail below, proposed Sec.
615.5133(f) and (g), which govern portfolio diversification
requirements and obligor limits, would apply only to Farm Credit banks.
Additionally, we propose to modify Sec. 615.5133(c), which addresses
risk tolerance in investment policies, so it clearly distinguishes how
liquidity is managed at Farm Credit banks from its treatment at
associations. The investment management provisions of proposed Sec.
615.5133 would apply to service corporations to the extent they are
appropriate to the size, complexity, and risks of their investments.
2. Appropriate Use of Off-Balance Sheet Derivatives
Off-balance sheet derivatives can be appropriate and useful for the
purposes of hedging and risk management. While our regulations do not
prohibit a System bank from using off-balance sheet derivatives to
build an investment portfolio, use of these derivatives must be
consistent with an authorized investment purpose and not be for
speculative purposes. We note that such
[[Page 43307]]
derivatives generally do not provide a significant source of liquidity.
3. Paragraph (a)--Responsibilities of Board of Directors and Paragraph
(b)--Investment Policies--General Requirements
The FCA proposes no changes to Sec. 615.5133(a), which governs the
responsibilities of the boards of directors of System institutions. We
propose only minor stylistic and non-substantive changes to Sec.
615.5133(b), which identifies the general requirements that System
institutions must address in their investment policies.
4. Paragraph (c)--Investment Policies--Risk Tolerance
We propose several technical modifications to Sec. 615.5133(c)
that would enhance its clarity and provide better guidance to System
institutions about compliance with it. For example, we propose a
technical change to paragraph (c) to clarify that while operational
risk must be addressed in investment policies, the policies do not need
to establish quantitative risk limits for operational risk.
Quantitative risk limits would continue to be required for the other
identified risks--credit, market, and liquidity.
We propose to split the requirements regarding credit quality
standards and concentration risk in existing paragraph (c)(1)(i) into
two paragraphs. We propose to incorporate the existing general
requirements regarding risk diversification standards and counterparty
(obligor) risk limits into more specific requirements contained in
proposed paragraphs (f) and (g). We propose these revisions in order to
clarify our requirements in this area and ensure that institutions are
considering risk appropriately.
Proposed paragraph (c)(1)(i) would address credit quality
standards. It would require that an institution's investment policies
establish credit quality standards for single or related obligors,
sponsors, secured and unsecured exposures, and asset classes or
obligations with similar characteristics. We propose to add sponsors to
the existing requirements because, even though sponsors have no
obligation to pay the debt (unless they are also obligors), we are
concerned that a sponsor of low credit quality could present risk in a
transaction that it initiates. We propose to add secured and unsecured
investments to the existing requirements because we believe
institutions should consider the differing levels of risk that these
investments present.
Proposed paragraph (c)(1)(ii) would address concentration risk. It
would require that an institution's investment policies establish
concentration limits for single or related obligors, sponsors,
geographical areas, industries, unsecured exposures, and asset classes
or obligations with similar characteristics. We propose to add sponsors
to the existing requirements because we believe undue concentration in
a sponsor could present excessive risk. We propose to add unsecured
investments to the existing requirements because institutions should
carefully consider the amount of unsecured investments they are
prepared to hold. Concentration limits should be commensurate with the
types and complexity of investments that an institution holds.
We propose to revise Sec. 615.5133(c)(1)(iv), which addresses
collateral margin requirements on repurchase agreements. Currently,
this provision requires System institutions to regularly mark
collateral to market and to ensure that they maintain appropriate
control over collateral that they hold. We propose to modify Sec.
615.5133(c)(1)(iv) to clarify that this provision would apply only to
System institutions that engage in repurchase agreements.
We propose to revise Sec. 615.5133(c), which governs investment
policies pertaining to liquidity, into two separate paragraphs. We
propose this revision to take into account the differences in how
liquidity is managed at Farm Credit banks from its treatment at
associations.
Generally, Farm Credit banks hold liquidity reserves and manage
liquidity risks for themselves, their affiliated associations, and
certain service corporations. In contrast, System associations are not
exposed to the same liquidity risks and they do not manage liquidity in
the same way as their funding banks because their only substantial
liability is their debt obligation to their funding bank.
Existing Sec. 615.5133(c)(3) requires investment policies of all
System institutions to describe the liquidity characteristics of
eligible investments that the institutions will hold to meet their
liquidity needs and other institutional objectives. Under proposed
Sec. 615.5133(c)(3)(i), Farm Credit banks would remain subject to this
existing requirement. This requirement is appropriate because of the
liquidity needs and liquidity risk of Farm Credit banks.
Under proposed Sec. 615.5133(c)(3)(ii), the investment policies of
System associations would have to describe the liquid characteristics
of their investments. Although System associations do not have the same
liquidity needs and liquidity risk as Farm Credit banks do, if they
invest their funds in investments authorized by Sec. 615.5142 they
must be aware of the liquid characteristics of the assets that they
purchase and hold. Proposed conforming changes throughout Sec.
615.5133(c) would require System institutions to consider and address
how investment decisions affect their liquidity risk, if and when
applicable.
Except for other minor stylistic and technical changes, we propose
no other changes to paragraph (c).
5. Paragraph (d)--Delegation of Authority and Paragraph (e)--Internal
Controls
We propose no changes to paragraphs (d) and (e).
6. Paragraph (f)--Farm Credit Bank Portfolio Diversification
We propose to add a new paragraph (f) to govern investment
portfolio diversification. This paragraph would apply only to Farm
Credit banks.
a. Paragraph (f)(1)--Well Diversified Portfolio
Portfolio diversification is a key concept in ensuring the safety
and soundness of investors such as Farm Credit banks. We propose
requirements to ensure, at a minimum, that the investment portfolios of
these institutions do not pose significant risk of loss due to
excessive concentrations among asset classes, maturities, industries,
geographic areas, and obligors. We also propose exemptions for certain
investments from these portfolio diversification requirements. These
exemptions would apply where the level of risk from concentration is
low.
b. Paragraph (f)(2)--Exemptions
We propose that certain investments would not be subject to our
diversification requirements. In this preamble, we refer to investments
that are not subject to diversification requirements as ``exempt''
investments. We refer to all other investments as ``covered''
investments, because they are subject to our proposed diversification
requirements.
i. Paragraph (f)(2)(i)--Investments Guaranteed by U.S. Government
Agencies
Under the proposal, investments that are fully guaranteed as to the
timely payment of principal and interest by a U.S. Government agency
would be exempt from the proposed
[[Page 43308]]
diversification requirements. We propose this exemption because we
believe these types of investments are of the highest quality. Our
existing rules impose no portfolio diversification requirements on such
investments.
ii. Paragraph (f)(2)(ii)--Investments Guaranteed by GSEs
Under the proposal, investments, other than MBS, that are fully and
explicitly guaranteed as to the timely payment of principal and
interest by a GSE would be exempt from the proposed portfolio
diversification requirements. No more than 50 percent of an
institution's investment portfolio could be comprised of GSE MBS. These
provisions are substantively unchanged from our existing regulations
with respect to the Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie Mae)
and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac) MBS.
Investments in Farmer Mac securities are governed by Sec. 615.5174 and
would not be subject to this limitation.
Our 2011 proposed investment management rule had also proposed to
retain our 50-percent portfolio limit on Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
MBS. The Farm Credit Council, the Farm Credit Bank of Texas and CoBank,
ACB commented in response to that proposal that this limit was too
restrictive in light of the safe and liquid nature of these investments
(especially since those GSEs were under U.S. Government
conservatorship) and the positive yield that those investments provide.
They asked us to eliminate portfolio limits for investments in these
GSEs. The Council also expressed concern with language in our preamble
suggesting that we might consider further restrictions on MBS
investments in these GSEs in the future.
We believe no portfolio limits are needed for non-MBS investments
in GSEs, such as general obligations. We are concerned, however, about
concentration in housing-related investments, and accordingly we
propose to retain the 50-percent limit on GSE MBS.\28\ We do not
contemplate further restrictions on investments in GSE MBS at this
time.
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\28\ Under our recently finalized revisions to our liquidity
rule (78 FR 23438, April 18, 2013), it is extremely unlikely that
Farm Credit banks could approach 100 percent in GSE MBS.
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c. Paragraph (f)(3)--Investment Portfolio Diversification Requirements
We are proposing investment portfolio diversification requirements
for covered investments. Under the proposal, a well-diversified
investment portfolio would mean that, at a minimum, covered investments
are comprised of different asset classes, maturities, industries,
geographic areas, and obligors.
Although we are not proposing specific maturity, industry, or
geographic area requirements, the regulation would require each Farm
Credit bank to diversify its investments by maturity, industry, and
geographic area based on its risk profile.
Covered investments would have to satisfy specified asset class and
obligor diversification requirements. These diversification
requirements would be calculated based on the entire investment
portfolio. This means that both exempt and covered investments would be
included in the denominator. The numerator would consist only of those
investments that are covered investments for the asset class and
obligor diversification requirements. These diversification parameters
would be based on the portfolio valued at amortized cost.
We note that these diversification requirements are regulatory
maximums; each Farm Credit bank should establish diversification limits
that fit its risk profile and that may be more restrictive than
regulatory requirements.
Our current regulations impose no investment portfolio limits on
investments in DIFs, as long as an institution's shares in each DIF
comprise 10 percent or less of its investment portfolio. Otherwise, the
portfolio limits for each asset class apply. As discussed below, we now
propose different treatment for DIF investments.
i. Paragraph (f)(3)(i)--Asset Class Diversification
We propose to require Farm Credit banks to diversify their
investment portfolios among various asset classes; no more than 15
percent of their investment portfolios could be invested in any one
asset class.\29\ As discussed above, we propose to define an asset
class as a group of securities that exhibit similar characteristics and
behave similarly in the marketplace.
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\29\ As discussed above, ``exempt'' investments would not be
subject to this asset class diversification requirement, although
under proposed Sec. 615.5133(f)(2)(ii), MBS that are fully and
explicitly guaranteed by GSEs could only comprise up to 50 percent
of the total investment portfolio. Investments in Farmer Mac
securities are governed by Sec. 615.5174 and also would not be
subject to this requirement.
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For purposes of this proposed asset class diversification
requirement, we consider MBS to be an asset class. We also consider ABS
(excluding MBS) to be an asset class that includes instruments such as
student loans and car loans. In addition, we consider money market
securities to be an asset class that includes securities such as
federal funds and commercial paper. Other asset classes would include
municipal securities, corporate bond securities, and any other asset
class as determined by the FCA. Each of these asset classes is limited
to 15 percent of the investment portfolio of a Farm Credit bank,
regardless of the different types of instruments that comprise the
asset class.
For purposes of this proposed asset class diversification
requirement, we do not consider DIFs to be an asset class, and
therefore this requirement would impose no restrictions on the relative
amount of DIF investments a Farm Credit bank could hold.\30\ The
securities within DIFs, however, would be subject to the asset class
diversification requirements.
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\30\ We believe that the obligor diversification requirements
discussed next in this preamble, along with the obligor limit in
proposed paragraph (g) of this section, would provide sufficient
diversification among DIFs themselves.
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Our existing rule imposes portfolio limits of 15 percent, 20
percent, or 50 percent, depending on the asset class. In our proposed
rule in 2011 for banks and associations, we proposed asset class limits
for investments that were similar to but generally more restrictive
than our existing regulations. To simplify the rule, we are proposing a
15-percent limit for all asset classes.
We believe that diversification of investments is a fundamental
part of risk management and that a 15-percent portfolio limit for asset
classes is appropriate. Because the vast majority of System investments
are in exempt securities, a 15-percent limit on investments in each
asset class should provide sufficient flexibility for institutions to
manage their investment portfolios.
We seek comment on the reasonableness of this proposed limitation.
ii. Paragraph (f)(3)(ii)--Obligor Diversification
We propose to require Farm Credit banks to diversify their
investment portfolios among various obligors; no more than 3 percent of
their investment portfolios could be invested in any one obligor.\31\
As discussed above, we
[[Page 43309]]
propose to define obligor as an issuer, guarantor, or other person or
entity who has an obligation to pay a debt, including interest due, by
a specified date or when payment is demanded. This definition would
include the debtor or immediate party that is obligated to pay a debt,
as well as a guarantor of the debt. Under this requirement, a Farm
Credit bank must consider both the DIF itself and the entity or
entities obligated to pay the underlying debt to be obligors. This
requirement would ensure that an institution would not be able to use
DIF investments to hold an excessively concentrated investment
portfolio.
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\31\ As discussed above, ``exempt'' investments would not be
subject to this obligor diversification requirement, although under
proposed Sec. 615.5133(f)(2)(ii), MBS that are fully and explicitly
guaranteed by GSEs could only comprise up to 50 percent of the total
investment portfolio. Investments in Farmer Mac securities are
governed by Sec. 615.5174 and also would not be subject to this
requirement.
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Our existing regulations contain no portfolio diversification
requirements by obligor (although, as discussed below, they do limit
the amount of total capital that institutions can invest in a single
obligor). We propose this diversification requirement because we
believe that concentration among obligors could lead to significant
risk.
We believe that this proposal would likely not require changes in
the current investment portfolios of Farm Credit banks, although it
might have required changes to those portfolios in the past. We believe
that this requirement would provide these institutions with sufficient
flexibility to manage their investment portfolios while ensuring
adequate diversification to further safety and soundness. We seek
comment on the reasonableness of this proposed limitation.
7. Paragraph (g)--Farm Credit Bank Obligor Limit
We propose to limit the amount of capital that Farm Credit banks
may invest in any one obligor. For Farm Credit banks, the limit would
be 10 percent of total capital. This obligor limit would not apply to
investments in obligations that are fully guaranteed as to the payment
of principal and interest by a U.S. Government agency or fully and
explicitly guaranteed as to the payment of principal and interest by a
GSE. Under this requirement, a Farm Credit bank must consider both the
DIF itself and the entity or entities obligated to pay the underlying
debt to be obligors.
Our existing regulations allow Farm Credit banks to invest up to 20
percent of their total capital in eligible investments issued by any
single institution, issuer, or obligor; this obligor limit does not
apply to obligations, including mortgage securities, that are issued or
guaranteed as to interest and principal by the United States, its
agencies, instrumentalities, or corporations.
The lower obligor limit that we propose for Farm Credit banks would
enhance safety and soundness by ensuring that if an obligor were to
default, only a small portion of capital would be at risk. For
simplicity, we propose to continue to base the Farm Credit bank
investment amount on total capital. As discussed above, however, the
FCA Board adopted proposed revisions to our regulatory capital rule on
May 8, 2014, and we may revise the basis for the obligor limit to
incorporate any revisions to our regulatory capital rule that are
adopted in final in the future.\32\
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\32\ The proposed capital rule has not yet been published in the
Federal Register.
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We note that this obligor limit would be a regulatory maximum; each
Farm Credit bank should establish obligor limits that fit its overall
risk profile and risk-bearing capacity, including earnings capacity, as
well as the risks in individual types and classes of investments. For
example, more restrictive obligor limits may be warranted on unsecured
investments.
We seek comment on whether our proposed 10-percent obligor limit is
appropriate. If you believe it is not appropriate, what should the
regulatory maximum be, and why?
8. Paragraph (h)--Due Diligence
We propose to redesignate existing paragraph (f) as paragraph (h).
In paragraph (h)(1)(iii), we propose that a System institution must
document its assessment of each investment at the time of purchase.
While the assessment must be commensurate with the type of each
investment, at a minimum the assessment must include an evaluation of
the credit risk, liquidity risk as applicable, market risk, interest
rate risk, and underlying collateral of the investment.
The nature and degree of due diligence and documentation that is
required under this provision to assess eligibility varies based on the
risks inherent in different types of securities. For example,
institutions should assess securities that they believe are guaranteed
by a U.S. Government agency or a GSE to ensure they satisfy our
definitions and eligibility requirements for such securities. As
another example, institutions do not need to assess the
creditworthiness of U.S. Government agency securities, because they
exhibit low sovereign default (credit) risk; however, institutions
should assess and document all other potential risks associated with
these securities. Securities that are not guaranteed by a U.S.
Government agency generally present varying degrees of credit risk as
well as other types of risk, and the assessment and level of
documentation should be sufficient to support the investment decision.
All other changes that we propose to this paragraph are non-
substantive.
9. Paragraph (i)--Reports to the Board of Directors
We propose to redesignate existing paragraph (g) as paragraph (i).
We also propose to add the word ``risk'' to redesignated Sec.
615.5133(i)(3) so it would require quarterly reports to the board or a
designated board committee to address the current composition, quality,
and the risk and liquidity profiles of the investment portfolio. This
revision would ensure more comprehensive reporting to the board about
how the current composition and quality of investments affect the risk
and liquidity profile of the bank or association, which would enhance
safety and soundness. We propose no other changes to this provision.
E. Section 615.5142--Association Investments
The FCA proposes to revise Sec. 615.5142, which governs
association investments. Existing Sec. 615.5142 does not impose a
portfolio limit on the total amount of investments that each
association is authorized to hold. Additionally, existing Sec.
615.5140 permits associations to hold the same types of investments as
Farm Credit banks even though associations are not subject to the
liquidity reserve requirement in Sec. 615.5134, and they are not
exposed to the same liquidity and market risks as their funding banks.
Accordingly, the FCA proposes to revise its regulatory approach to
association investments in order to limit the type and amount of
investments that an association may hold.
As discussed in more detail below, the proposed rule generally
would limit association investments to obligations that are issued or
fully guaranteed or insured as to the timely payment of principal and
interest by the United States or any of its agencies in an amount that
does not exceed 10 percent of its total outstanding loans. The proposed
rule also addresses: (1) Core investment and risk management practices
at System associations; (2) funding bank supervision of association
investments; (3) requests by associations to the FCA to hold other
investments; and (4) transition requirements for System associations to
come into compliance with the new rule.
[[Page 43310]]
Currently, Sec. 615.5142 authorizes each association to hold
eligible investments listed in Sec. 615.5140, with the approval of its
funding bank, for the purposes of reducing interest rate risk and
managing surplus short-term funds. The existing regulation also
requires each Farm Credit bank to review annually the investment
portfolio of every association it funds.
Most System associations have increased in size and complexity over
the past two decades, offering a diversity of products and services to
accommodate a changing and increasingly competitive agricultural
sector. The changes in agriculture have introduced new risks to the
associations. For example, while the associations have adopted adequate
risk management strategies to effectively adapt to this changing
environment, they are concentrated in agriculture and have limited
ability to manage concentration risk. The associations currently can
use investments to manage surplus short-term funds and reduce interest
rate risk but cannot use investments to manage concentration risk. The
proposed rule strikes a balance by granting associations greater
flexibility in the purposes for which they may hold investments, while
placing more limits on the amounts and types of investments they may
hold. Accordingly, the proposed changes would provide the associations
the flexibility to use full faith and credit instruments to manage
concentration risk by diversifying assets. We believe the proposed
change would help improve association risk management practices and,
therefore, strengthen the safety and soundness of the System.
The Farm Credit Act of 1971, as amended, (Farm Credit Act)
specifically authorizes System associations to buy and sell obligations
of, or insured by, the United States or any agency thereof, and make
other investments as may be approved by their respective funding banks
under regulations issued by the Farm Credit Administration.\33\
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\33\ See sections 2.2(10) and (11), and 2.12(17) and (18) of the
Act. Additionally, sections 2.2(10) and 2.12(18) of the Act
authorize System associations to deposit funds with any member bank
of the Federal Reserve System, or with any bank insured by the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
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1. Paragraph (a)--Investment Eligibility Criteria
The proposed rule would: (1) Revise the investment purposes for
System associations; (2) limit the types of investments that
associations may purchase and hold; and (3) impose a cap on the amount
of such enumerated investments that each association may hold.
Specifically, proposed Sec. 615.5142(a) would authorize each System
association, with the approval of its funding bank, to manage risk by
purchasing and holding obligations that are issued by, or are fully
guaranteed or insured as to the timely payment of principal and
interest by, the United States or any of its agencies in an amount that
does not exceed 10 percent of its total outstanding loans.
We are proposing to eliminate our requirements in the existing
regulation, which authorize associations to hold investments for the
purposes of reducing interest rate risks and managing surplus short-
term funds, because we believe these requirements are: (1) Too
restrictive; and (2) do not provide associations flexibility to manage
their risks in today's environment.
As a result of mergers and consolidations, and the evolution of
agricultural credit and financial management practices, System
associations encounter various risk management environments. A few
larger associations now have the capacity to manage interest rate risk
separately from their funding banks. For many associations, a small
portfolio of high quality investments could help diversify risks they
experience as lenders that primarily lend to a single industry--
agriculture.
Whereas the existing rule authorizes associations to hold
investments for the purposes of reducing interest rate risks and
managing surplus short-term funds, the proposed rule authorizes
associations to hold investments to manage risks. We invite your
comments about whether this proposed rule should identify specific
purposes for associations to purchase and hold investments. If you
believe that our rule should expressly identify and require specific
purposes, please state which ones and why.
Proposed Sec. 615.5142(a) would authorize System associations to
invest solely in obligations that are issued, or are fully guaranteed
or insured as to the timely payment of principal and interest by the
United States or of any of its agencies. Obligations issued, insured,
or guaranteed by the United States are expressly mentioned in the
provisions of the Act governing association investments. Obligations
issued or fully guaranteed or insured as to the timely payment of
principal and interest by the United States and its agencies are
usually liquid and many are actively traded, although MBS issued by
Federal agencies could expose investors to significant market
risks.\34\ These obligations pose virtually no credit risk to investors
because they are backed by the full faith and credit of the United
States, although they may expose investors to other risks, especially
market risks. For these reasons, obligations issued or fully guaranteed
or insured as to the timely payment of principal and interest by the
United States and its agencies are suitable for risk management at
System associations.
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\34\ Farmer Mac MBS are covered by Sec. 615.5174, not Sec.
615.5142. Investments in Farmer Mac MBS cannot exceed the total
amount of outstanding loans of a System bank or association.
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Proposed Sec. 615.5142(a) limits association investments to 10
percent of total outstanding loans. This portfolio limit would ensure
that loans to eligible borrowers always constitute the vast majority of
System assets, which is consistent with the mission of each
association. In this context, the FCA is imposing portfolio limits on
investments so that loans to eligible borrowers always constitute a
majority of assets at all System banks and associations. Our
regulations authorize Farm Credit banks to hold significantly larger
investment portfolios than System associations because the: (1) Banks
maintain liquidity and manage interest rate risk for all System
institutions operating in the district; and (2) associations borrow
exclusively from their funding banks.
At the same time, the proposed 10-percent portfolio limit on
investments should be sufficient to enable associations to develop
robust strategies to manage risks, as long as association investment
activities are supported by strong investment policies, management
practices and procedures, and appropriate internal controls.
Furthermore, the proposed 10-percent limit should help associations
manage their concentration risk as single-industry lenders. The
policies at some System associations with active investment programs
typically establish a 15-percent portfolio limit for investments, while
in practice, investments at most associations rarely equal or exceed 10
percent of total outstanding loans. For all these reasons, the FCA
believes that the proposed 10-percent portfolio limit on investments
strikes an appropriate balance by enabling associations to
appropriately manage and diversify risks while continuing to serve
their primary mission of funding agriculture and rural America.
We are proposing that the 10-percent limit be computed based upon
the 30-day average daily balance of
[[Page 43311]]
investments divided by loans. Investments would be calculated at
amortized cost. Loans would be calculated as defined in Sec. 615.5131,
which provides that loans are calculated quarterly (as of the last day
of March, June, September, and December) by using the average daily
balance of loans during the quarter. For the purpose of this
calculation, loans would include accrued interest and not include any
allowance for loan loss adjustments. Compliance with the calculation
would be measured on the last day of every month.
We also request your comments on whether using the average daily
balance of loans during the quarter for computing the limit is adequate
to limit any distortions caused by seasonality fluctuations in the
amount of total loans.
2. Paragraph (b)--Risk Management Requirements
The following provisions would help to ensure that System
associations comply with prudent investment management practices.
Therefore, we are proposing to require that each association evaluate
its investment management policies, and determine and document how its
investment activities are conducted in accordance with the risk
management processes and procedures identified in proposed Sec.
615.5142(b)(1), (b)(2), and (b)(3).
3. Paragraph (b)(1)--Compliance With Investment Management Requirements
Proposed Sec. 615.5142(b)(1) would require each association to
comply with proposed Sec. 615.5133(a), (b), (c), (d), (e), (h), and
(i), which govern investment management practices at all System
institutions.\35\ From the FCA's perspective, these provisions of
proposed Sec. 615.5133 would ensure that System associations always
follow prudent investment management practices. Additionally,
compliance with these provisions of Sec. 615.5133 would instill
discipline in investment management practices at each System
association, which protects its safety and soundness. Therefore, we are
proposing to require that each association document its compliance with
the applicable provisions of Sec. 615.5133.
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\35\ Proposed Sec. 615.5142(b)(1) would not require System
associations to comply with proposed Sec. 615.5133(f) and (g)
because those two provisions explicitly apply only to System banks.
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Under proposed Sec. 615.5142(b)(1), each association's investment
management processes must be appropriate for the size, risk
characteristics, and complexity of the association and its investment
portfolio. These risk management processes must take into account the
association's unique circumstances, risk tolerances, and objectives. An
association's board would not need to develop an investment policy if
it elects not to hold investments authorized under Sec. 615.5142(a).
We are particularly interested in comments on how the FCA can
structure the documentation requirements so they do not impose undue
regulatory burden on funding banks or associations.
4. Paragraph (b)(2)--Compliance With Interest Rate Risk Management
Requirements
Proposed Sec. 615.5142(b)(2) would require any association with
significant interest rate risk exposure to comply with Sec. Sec.
615.5180 and 615.5182. More specifically, Sec. 615.5182 requires any
association with interest rate risk that could lead to significant
declines in net income or in the market value of capital to comply with
Sec. 615.5180, which establishes specific criteria for System banks to
follow for managing interest rate risk. Under this regulatory
framework, the interest rate risk management program must be
commensurate with the level of interest rate risk at the association.
The fiduciary responsibilities of association boards of directors
obligate them to develop appropriate investment management policies and
practices to manage interest rate risk. Additionally, it is incumbent
upon each association's investment managers to fully understand the
risks of its investments and make independent and objective evaluations
of investments prior to purchase.
Interest rate risk management is an important part of the overall
financial management of investments at an association, and includes
involvement by both senior management and the association's board of
directors. To the extent an association has investments, its board must
develop and implement an interest rate risk management program that is
tailored to the association's needs and establishes a risk management
process that effectively identifies, measures, monitors, and controls
interest rate risk.
5. Paragraph (b)(3)--Other Relevant Factors
Proposed Sec. 615.5142(b)(3) would require each association to
consider and evaluate other relevant factors that are unique to its
circumstances or to the nature of investments that could affect its
risk-bearing capacity. Such factors include, but are not limited to,
its management experience and capability to understand and manage
complex structures and unique risks in the investments it purchases and
holds. In this context, the size, risk characteristics, and complexity
of the investment portfolio are other relevant factors that could
affect an association's risk-bearing capacity when its unique
circumstances, risk tolerance, and objectives are taken into account.
Associations are authorized to purchase and hold investments only for
the purpose of managing risks. Although the FCA does not expect
associations to suffer losses or break even on investments, using
investments primarily for speculative purposes or generating gains from
trading is an impermissible activity. Likewise, the intentional
mismatched funding of investments and the resulting increase in
interest rate risk would typically be inappropriate unless used as an
effective hedge against other risks in the balance sheet. Other factors
that associations should consider and evaluate include option, premium
and call risks of certain investments that they may acquire.
6. Paragraph (c)--Funding Bank Supervision of Association Investments
Sections 2.2(10) and 2.12(18) of the Farm Credit Act require each
association to obtain its funding bank's approval of the association's
investment activities in accordance with FCA regulations. Accordingly,
proposed Sec. 615.5142(c) addresses funding bank review, approval, and
oversight of the investment activities of its affiliated associations.
As required by statute, each association must request from its funding
bank prior approval to buy and hold investments under this section.
This proposed provision would not require that an association request
approval for each and every investment. Instead, this proposed
provision would provide flexibility for each association to choose
whether it would prefer to request funding bank approval for each
specific investment or instead request approval of a type or class of
investments.
7. Paragraph (c)(1)--Funding Bank Review, and Approval or Denial of
Association Investments
Proposed Sec. 615.5142(c)(1) would require each funding bank to
review and approve or deny requests by its affiliated associations to
buy and hold investments. Additionally, the proposed rule would require
the bank to explain in writing its reasons for approving or denying the
association's request. Once
[[Page 43312]]
an association has established a satisfactory investment management
program under Sec. 615.5142(b), which has been approved by its funding
bank, the association would be permitted to buy and hold obligations
that are issued, or are fully guaranteed or insured as to the timely
payment of principal and interest by the United States government or
any of its agencies. The intent of this proposed provision is to
balance the funding needs of the associations with the funding capacity
of the funding bank.
8. Paragraph (c)(2)--Bank Approval Process
As part of the approval process, the funding bank must evaluate,
determine and document that the association has: (1) Adequate policies,
procedures, internal controls, and accounting and reporting systems for
its investments; (2) the capability and expertise to effectively manage
risks in investments; and (3) complied with requirements of Sec.
615.5142(b). Any existing System association investment management
program previously reviewed and approved by the funding bank would need
to be re-reviewed and re-approved if proposed Sec. 615.5142 becomes
final and effective.
The intent of this proposed provision is to balance the risk
management needs of the associations with the funding and oversight
role of the funding bank. A number of satisfactory methods exist for
System banks to oversee association investment activities under our
regulatory framework. A bank may take an active role in advising and
approving an association's investment decisions and strategies. For
example, banks may provide research, analytical or advisory services
that help associations to manage their investment portfolios.
9. Paragraph (c)(3)--Annual Review of Investment Portfolio
Proposed Sec. 615.5142(c)(3) also retains the existing requirement
that each System bank annually review the investment portfolio of every
association that it funds. As part of its annual review, the bank must
evaluate whether the association's: (1) Investments mitigate and manage
its risks; and (2) risk management practices continue to be adequate.
The FCA notes that the General Financing Agreement (GFA) (including
any attached, referenced, or related documents) could establish
covenants governing the investment activities of an affiliated
association. As such, the GFA can be a useful tool for funding banks to
review and monitor the investment activities of their affiliated
associations.
10. Paragraph (d)--Other Investments Approved by the FCA
Proposed Sec. 615.5142(d) would continue to allow an association
to request the FCA's approval to purchase and hold other investments.
We note that this provision represents no substantive change from
current Sec. 615.5140(e), which allows all System institutions to hold
other investments that the FCA approves on a case-by-case basis.
Consistent with current practice, the request for our approval must
explain the risk characteristics of the investment and the purpose and
objectives for making the investment.
These other investments approved by the FCA under proposed Sec.
615.5142(d) would be subject to the portfolio limit on association
investments under proposed Sec. 615.5142(a) unless otherwise provided
for by the FCA. Furthermore, these other investments could also be
subject to specific conditions of approval and subject to other limits
on a case-by-case basis.
11. Paragraph (e)(1)--Transition and Divestiture Issues for Association
Investments
Under proposed Sec. 615.5142(e)(1), an association would not be
required to divest of any investments held on or before the date this
rule becomes effective if they were previously authorized under former
Sec. 615.5140 or otherwise authorized by official written Agency
action that allowed the association to continue to hold such
investments. This transition rule would permit an association to
continue to hold pre-existing investments that would no longer be
authorized if proposed Sec. 615.5142 is adopted as a final rule and
becomes effective. However, after this proposed rule is effective, once
such investments mature, the association would not be permitted to
renew them unless they are authorized pursuant to proposed Sec.
615.5142(a) or (d).
12. Paragraph (e)(2)--Impact on Existing Investments of Subsequent
Declines in Total Outstanding Loans
Under proposed Sec. 615.5142(e)(2), an association would not be
required to divest of investments purchased on or after the date this
proposed rule becomes effective if a subsequent decline in total
outstanding loans causes it to exceed the 10-percent portfolio limit in
Sec. 615.5142(a).
Accordingly, once an association purchases an eligible investment,
it would not be required to dispose of such investment just because of
a subsequent decline in total outstanding loans. This provision would
help to ensure that an association would not have to divest of a
previously purchased asset when loan demand is reduced.
13. Paragraph (e)(3)--Management of Ineligible Investments and
Divestiture Under Sec. 615.5143
Proposed Sec. 615.5142(e)(3) would apply to all investments that
an association acquires after the new regulation becomes effective.
More specifically, all investments that an association purchases after
proposed Sec. 615.5142 becomes effective as a final rule would be
subject to Sec. 615.5143 of this part, which governs the management
and divestiture of ineligible investments. As a result, an association
would need to comply with Sec. 615.5143 if any investment acquired
after the effective date of this rule did not meet the investment
criteria in Sec. 615.5142(a) on or after the date of purchase, if it
was not approved by the FCA pursuant to Sec. 615.5142(d), or if it was
approved by the FCA pursuant to Sec. 615.5142(d) but later failed to
satisfy the conditions of approval.
F. Section 615.5143--Management of Ineligible Investments and
Reservation of Authority To Require Divestiture
We propose to revise Sec. 615.5143 to add references to proposed
Sec. 615.5142, to reflect that associations are generally governed by
the requirements of Sec. 615.5143. In addition, we propose to tailor
Sec. 615.5143 to the investment and other authorities of Farm Credit
banks as compared to associations. Specifically, we clarify that an
association that purchases an ineligible investment would not be
subject to the requirements relating to liquidity, collateral, and net
collateral, because associations have no regulatory requirements in
those areas. In addition, we propose to clarify that no investment is
ineligible if it has been approved by the FCA, but an FCA-approved
investment would be subject to the requirements of Sec. 615.5143(b) if
it no longer satisfied the conditions of approval.
G. Conforming Changes to Other Regulation Sections
We propose conforming changes to references in Sec. Sec. 611.1153,
611.1155, 615.5174, and 615.5180.
IV. Compliance Date
We recognize that Farm Credit banks may require time to bring their
policies and procedures into compliance with the new requirements in
the proposed rule. Accordingly, we are contemplating that Farm Credit
banks would be
[[Page 43313]]
required to comply with the requirements governing their investments 6
months after the effective date of the rule, if it is adopted as
final.\36\ We invite your comments as to whether this delayed
compliance timeframe is appropriate. We also invite your comments on
whether a delayed compliance date would be appropriate for associations
as well.
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\36\ Farm Credit bank compliance with requirements pertaining to
their supervision of association investments would be required at
the time associations are required to comply with this rule.
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V. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Pursuant to section 605(b) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.), the FCA hereby certifies that the proposed rule
will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities. Each of the banks in the System, considered together
with its affiliated associations, has assets and annual income in
excess of the amounts that would qualify them as small entities.
Therefore, System institutions are not ``small entities'' as defined in
the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 611
Agriculture, Banks, banking, Rural areas.
12 CFR Part 615
Accounting, Agriculture, Banks, banking, Government securities,
Investments, Rural areas.
For the reasons stated in the preamble, parts 611 and 615 of
chapter VI, title 12 of the Code of Federal Regulations are proposed to
be amended as follows:
PART 611--ORGANIZATION
0
1. The authority citation for part 611 continues to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 1.2, 1.3, 1.4, 1.5, 1.12, 1.13, 2.0, 2.1, 2.2,
2.10, 2.11, 2.12, 3.0, 3.1, 3.2, 3.3, 3.7, 3.8, 3.9, 3.21, 4.3A,
4.12, 4.12A, 4.15, 4.20, 4.21, 4.25, 4.26, 4.27, 4.28A, 5.9, 5.17,
5.25, 7.0-7.13, 8.5(e) of the Farm Credit Act (12 U.S.C. 2002, 2011,
2012, 2013, 2020, 2021, 2071, 2072, 2073, 2091, 2092, 2093, 2121,
2122, 2123, 2124, 2128, 2129, 2130, 2142, 2154a, 2183, 2184, 2203,
2208, 2209, 2211, 2212, 2213, 2214, 2243, 2252, 2261, 2279a-2279f-1,
2279aa-5(e)); secs. 411 and 412 of Pub. L. 100-233, 101 Stat. 1568,
1638; sec. 414 of Pub. L. 100-399, 102 Stat. 989, 1004.
Sec. 611.1153 [Amended]
0
2. Section 611.1153 is amended by removing in paragraph (i)(1) the
reference ``Sec. 615.5140(e)'' and adding in its place, the reference
``Sec. 615.5140(b) or Sec. 615.5142(d)''.
Sec. 611.1155 [Amended]
0
3. Section 611.1155 is amended by removing in paragraph (a)(1) the
reference ``Sec. 615.5140(e)'' and adding in its place the reference
``Sec. 615.5140(b) or Sec. 615.5142(d)''.
PART 615--FUNDING AND FISCAL AFFAIRS, LOAN POLICIES AND OPERATIONS,
AND FUNDING OPERATIONS
0
4. The authority citation for part 615 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: Secs. 1.5, 1.7, 1.10, 1.11, 1.12, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4,
2.5, 2.12, 3.1, 3.7, 3.11, 3.25, 4.3, 4.3A, 4.9, 4.14B, 4.25, 5.9,
5.17, 6.20, 6.26, 8.0, 8.3, 8.4, 8.6, 8.7, 8.8, 8.10, 8.12 of the
Farm Credit Act (12 U.S.C. 2013, 2015, 2018, 2019, 2020, 2073, 2074,
2075, 2076, 2093, 2122, 2128, 2132, 2146, 2154, 2154a, 2160, 2202b,
2211, 2243, 2252, 2278b, 2278b-6, 2279aa, 2279aa-3, 2279aa-4,
2279aa-6, 2279aa-7, 2279aa-8, 2279aa-10, 2279aa-12); sec. 301(a),
Pub. L. 100-233, 101 Stat. 1568, 1608; sec. 939A, Pub. L. 111-203,
124 Stat. 1326, 1887 (15 U.S.C. 78o-7 note).
Sec. 615.5131 [Amended]
0
5. Section 615.5131 is amended by:
0
a. Removing the definitions for ``eurodollar time deposit'', ``final
maturity'', ``general obligations'', ``Government agency'',
``Government-sponsored agency'', ``liquid investments'', ``mortgage
securities'', ``Nationally Recognized Statistical Rating Organization
(NRSRO)'', ``revenue bond'', and ``weighted average life (WAL)'';
0
b. In the definition of ``asset-backed securities (ABS)'', remove the
words ``mortgage securities'' and add in their place, the words
``mortgage-backed securities;''
0
c. Adding in alphabetical order the new definitions for ``Asset
class'', ``Collateralized debt obligation (CDO)'', ``Country risk
classification (CRC)'', ``Diversified investment fund (DIF)'',
``Government-sponsored enterprise (GSE)'', ``Mortgage-backed securities
(MBS)'', ``Obligor'', ``Sponsor'', and ``United States (U.S.)
Government agency'' to read as follows:
Sec. 615.5131 Definitions.
* * * * *
Asset class means a group of securities that exhibit similar
characteristics and behave similarly in the marketplace. Asset classes
include, but are not limited to, money market instruments, municipal
securities, corporate bond securities, MBS, ABS (excluding MBS), and
any other asset class as determined by the FCA.
Collateralized debt obligation (CDO) means a debt security
collateralized by MBS, ABS, or trust-preferred securities.
Country risk classification (CRC) with respect to a sovereign,
means the most recent consensus CRC published by the Organization for
Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) as of December 31 of the
prior calendar year that provides a view of the likelihood that the
sovereign will service its external debt.
Diversified investment fund (DIF) means an investment company
registered under section 8 of the Investment Company Act of 1940.
Government-sponsored enterprise (GSE) means an entity established
or chartered by the United States Government to serve public purposes
specified by the United States Congress but whose debt obligations are
not explicitly guaranteed by the full faith and credit of the United
States Government.
* * * * *
Mortgage-backed securities (MBS) means securities that are either:
(1) Pass-through securities or participation certificates that
represent ownership of a fractional undivided interest in a specified
pool of residential (excluding home equity loans), multifamily or
commercial mortgages, or
(2) A multiclass security (including collateralized mortgage
obligations and real estate mortgage investment conduits) that is
backed by a pool of residential, multifamily or commercial real estate
mortgages, pass through MBS, or other multiclass MBS.
Obligor means an issuer, guarantor, or other person or entity who
has an obligation to pay a debt, including interest due, by a specified
date or when payment is demanded.
Sponsor means a person or entity that initiates a transaction by
selling or pledging to a specially created issuing entity, such as a
trust, a group of financial assets that the sponsor either has
originated itself or has purchased.
United States (U.S.) Government agency means an instrumentality of
the U.S. Government whose obligations are fully guaranteed as to the
timely payment of principal and interest by the full faith and credit
of the U.S. Government.
* * * * *
0
6. Section 615.5133 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 615.5133 Investment management.
(a) Responsibilities of board of directors. Your board of directors
must adopt written policies for managing
[[Page 43314]]
your investment activities. Your board must also ensure that management
complies with these policies and that appropriate internal controls are
in place to prevent loss. At least annually, the board, or a designated
committee of the board, must review the sufficiency of these investment
policies. Any changes to the policies must be adopted by the board and
be documented.
(b) Investment policies--general requirements. Your board's written
investment policies must address the purposes and objectives of
investments; risk tolerance; delegations of authority; internal
controls; due diligence; and reporting requirements. Your investment
policies must fully address the extent of pre-purchase analysis that
management must perform for various classes of investments. Your
investment policies must also address the means for reporting, and
approvals needed for, exceptions to established policies. If you are a
Farm Credit bank, your investment policies must address portfolio
diversification and obligor limits under paragraphs (f) and (g) of this
section. Investment policies must be sufficiently detailed, consistent
with, and appropriate for the amounts, types, and risk characteristics
of your investments.
(c) Investment policies--risk tolerance. Your investment policies
must establish risk limits for eligible investments and for the entire
investment portfolio. Your investment policies must include
concentration limits to ensure prudent diversification of credit,
market, and, as applicable, liquidity risks in the investment
portfolio. Risk limits must be based on all relevant factors, including
your institutional objectives, capital position, earnings, and quality
and reliability of risk management systems and must take into
consideration the interest rate risk management program required by
Sec. 615.5180 or Sec. 615.5182, as applicable. Your investment
policies must identify the types and quantity of investments that you
will hold to achieve your objectives and control credit risk, market
risk, and liquidity risk as applicable. Each association or service
corporation that holds significant investments and each Farm Credit
bank must establish risk limits in its investment policies, as
applicable, for the following types of risk:
(1) Credit risk. Investment policies must establish:
(i) Credit quality standards. Credit quality standards must be
established for single or related obligors, sponsors, secured and
unsecured exposures, and asset classes or obligations with similar
characteristics.
(ii) Concentration limits. Concentration limits must be established
for single or related obligors, sponsors, geographical areas,
industries, unsecured exposures, and asset classes or obligations with
similar characteristics.
(iii) Criteria for selecting brokers, dealers, and investment
bankers (collectively, securities firms). You must buy and sell
eligible investments with more than one securities firm. As part of
your review of your investment policies required under paragraph (a) of
this section, your board of directors, or a designated committee of the
board, must review the criteria for selecting securities firms. Any
changes to the criteria must be approved by the board.
(iv) Collateral margin requirements on repurchase agreements. To
the extent you engage in repurchase agreements, you must regularly mark
the collateral to market and ensure appropriate controls are maintained
over collateral held.
(2) Market risk. Investment policies must set market risk limits
for specific types of investments and for the investment portfolio.
(3) Liquidity.
(i) Liquidity risk at Farm Credit banks. Investment policies must
describe the liquidity characteristics of eligible investments that you
will hold to meet your liquidity needs and other institutional
objectives.
(ii) Liquidity at associations. Investment policies must describe
the liquid characteristics of eligible investments that you will hold.
(4) Operational risk. Investment policies must address operational
risks, including delegations of authority and internal controls in
accordance with paragraphs (d) and (e) of this section.
(d) Delegation of authority. All delegations of authority to
specified personnel or committees must state the extent of management's
authority and responsibilities for investments.
(e) Internal controls. You must:
(1) Establish appropriate internal controls to detect and prevent
loss, fraud, embezzlement, conflicts of interest, and unauthorized
investments.
(2) Establish and maintain a separation of duties between personnel
who supervise or execute investment transactions and personnel who
supervise or engage in all other investment-related functions.
(3) Maintain records and management information systems that are
appropriate for the level and complexity of your investment activities.
(4) Implement an effective internal audit program to review, at
least annually, your investment management function, controls,
processes, and compliance with FCA regulations. The scope of the annual
review must be appropriate for the size, risk and complexity of the
investment portfolio.
(f) Farm Credit bank portfolio diversification.
(1) Well-diversified portfolio. Subject to the exemptions set forth
in paragraph (f)(2) of this section, a Farm Credit bank must maintain a
well-diversified investment portfolio as set forth in paragraph (f)(3)
of this section.
(2) Exemptions from investment portfolio diversification
requirements. The following investments are not subject to the
investment portfolio diversification requirements specified in
paragraph (f)(3) of this section:
(i) Investments that are fully guaranteed as to the timely payment
of principal and interest by a U.S. Government agency; and
(ii) Investments that are fully and explicitly guaranteed as to the
timely payment of principal and interest by a GSE, except that no more
than 50 percent of the investment portfolio may be comprised of GSE
MBS. Investments in Farmer Mac securities are governed by Sec.
615.5174 and are not subject to this limitation.
(3) Investment portfolio diversification requirements. A well-
diversified investment portfolio means that, at a minimum, investments
are comprised of different asset classes, maturities, industries,
geographic areas, and obligors. These diversification requirements
apply to each individual security that a Farm Credit bank holds within
a DIF. To satisfy the asset class and obligor diversification
requirements, a Farm Credit bank must, at a minimum, comply with the
following requirements, except as exempted by paragraph (f)(2) of this
section. These diversification parameters must be based on the
portfolio valued at amortized cost.
(i) Asset class diversification. The investment portfolio must be
diversified among various asset classes. No more than 15 percent of the
investment portfolio may be invested in any one asset class. Securities
within each DIF count toward the appropriate asset class.
(ii) Obligor diversification. The investment portfolio must be
diversified among various obligors. No more than 3 percent of the
investment portfolio may be invested in any one obligor. For a DIF,
both the DIF itself and the entities obligated to pay the underlying
debt are obligors.
(g) Farm Credit bank obligor limit. No more than 10 percent of a
Farm Credit bank's total capital may be invested in
[[Page 43315]]
any one obligor. This obligor limit does not apply to investments in
obligations that are fully guaranteed as to the timely payment of
principal and interest by U.S. Government agencies or fully and
explicitly guaranteed as to the timely payment of principal and
interest by GSEs. For a DIF, both the DIF itself and the entities
obligated to pay the underlying debt are obligors.
(h) Due diligence.
(1) Pre-purchase analysis.
(i) Eligibility and compliance with investment policies. Before you
purchase an investment, you must conduct sufficient due diligence to
determine whether it is eligible under Sec. 615.5140 or Sec.
615.5142, as applicable, and complies with your board's investment
policies. You must document your assessment and the information used in
your assessment. You may hold an investment that does not comply with
your investment policies only with the prior approval of your board.
(ii) Valuation. Prior to purchase, you must verify the value of the
investment (unless it is a new issue) with a source that is independent
of the broker, dealer, counterparty or other intermediary to the
transaction.
(iii) Risk assessment. Your assessment of each investment at the
time of purchase must at a minimum include an evaluation of the credit
risk, liquidity risk as applicable, market risk, interest rate risk,
and underlying collateral of the investment, as applicable. This
assessment must be documented and commensurate with the complexity and
type of the investment. You must perform stress testing on any
investment that is structured or that has uncertain cash flows,
including all MBS and ABS, before you purchase it. The stress test must
be commensurate with the type and complexity of the investment and must
enable you to determine that the investment does not expose your
capital, earnings, or liquidity, if applicable, to risks that are
greater than those specified in your investment policies. The stress
testing must comply with the requirements in paragraph (h)(4)(ii) of
this section.
(2) Ongoing value determination. At least monthly, you must
determine the fair market value of each investment in your portfolio
and the fair market value of your whole investment portfolio.
(3) Ongoing analysis of credit risk. You must establish and
maintain processes to monitor and evaluate changes in the credit
quality of each investment in your portfolio and in your whole
investment portfolio on an ongoing basis.
(4) Quarterly stress testing.
(i) You must stress test your entire investment portfolio,
including stress tests of all investments individually and stress tests
of the portfolio as a whole, at the end of each quarter. The stress
tests must enable you to determine that your investment securities,
both individually and on a portfolio-wide basis, do not expose your
capital, earnings, or liquidity, if applicable, to risks that exceed
the risk tolerance specified in your investment policies. If your
portfolio risk exceeds your investment policy limits, you must develop
a plan to comply with those limits.
(ii) Your stress tests must be defined in a board-approved policy
and must include defined parameters for the types of securities you
purchase. The stress tests must be comprehensive and appropriate for
the risk profile of your institution. At a minimum, the stress tests
must be able to measure the price sensitivity of investments over a
range of possible interest rate/yield curve scenarios. The methodology
that you use to analyze investment securities must be appropriate for
the complexity, structure, and cash flows of the investments in your
portfolio. You must rely to the maximum extent practicable on
verifiable information to support all your assumptions, including
prepayment and interest rate volatility assumptions, when you apply
your stress tests. You must document the basis for all assumptions that
you use to evaluate the security and its underlying collateral. You
must also document all subsequent changes in your assumptions.
(5) Presale value verification. Before you sell an investment, you
must verify its value with a source that is independent of the broker,
dealer, counterparty, or other intermediary to the transaction.
(i) Reports to the board of directors.
At least quarterly, your management must report on the following to
your board of directors or a designated board committee:
(1) Plans and strategies for achieving the board's objectives for
the investment portfolio;
(2) Whether the investment portfolio effectively achieves the
board's objectives;
(3) The current composition, quality, and the risk and liquidity
profiles of the investment portfolio;
(4) The performance of each class of investments and the entire
investment portfolio, including all gains and losses realized during
the quarter on individual investments that you sold before maturity and
why they were liquidated;
(5) Potential risk exposure to changes in market interest rates as
identified through quarterly stress testing and any other factors that
may affect the value of your investment holdings;
(6) How investments affect your capital, earnings, and overall
financial condition;
(7) Any deviations from the board's policies (must be specifically
identified);
(8) The status and performance of each investment described in
Sec. 615.5143(a) and (b) or that does not comply with your investment
policies; including the expected effect of these investments on your
capital, earnings, liquidity, as applicable, and collateral position;
and
(9) The terms and status of any required divestiture plan or risk
reduction plan.
0
7. In Sec. 615.5134 paragraph (b) is amended by revising the table to
read as follows:
Sec. 615.5134 Liquidity reserve.
* * * * *
(b) Liquidity reserve requirement.
* * * * *
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Discount (multiply
Liquidity level Instruments by)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Level 1............... Cash, including 100 percent.
cash due from traded but
not yet settled debt.
Overnight money 100 percent.
market investments.
Obligations of 97 percent.
U.S. Government agencies
with a final remaining
maturity of 3 years or
less.
GSE senior debt 95 percent.
securities that mature
within 60 days, excluding
securities issued by the
Farm Credit System.
Diversified 95 percent.
investment funds
comprised exclusively of
Level 1 instruments.
[[Page 43316]]
Level 2............... Additional Level Discount for each
1 investments. Level 1 investment
applies.
Obligations of 97 percent.
U.S. Government agencies
with a final remaining
maturity of more than 3
years.
MBS that are 95 percent.
fully guaranteed by a
U.S. Government agency as
to the timely repayment
of principal and interest.
Diversified 95 percent.
investment funds
comprised exclusively of
Levels 1 and 2
instruments.
Level 3............... Additional Level Discount for each
1 or Level 2 investments. Level 1 or Level 2
investment applies.
GSE senior debt 93 percent for all
securities with instruments in
maturities exceeding 60 Level 3.
days, excluding senior
debt securities of the
Farm Credit System.
MBS that are
fully guaranteed by a GSE
as to the timely
repayment of principal
and interest.
Money market
instruments maturing
within 90 days.
Diversified
investment funds
comprised exclusively of
levels 1, 2, and 3
instruments.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
0
8. Section 615.5140 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 615.5140 Eligible investments for Farm Credit banks.
(a) Investment eligibility criteria. A Farm Credit bank may
purchase an investment only if it satisfies the following investment
eligibility criteria:
(1) The investment must be purchased and held for one or more
investment purposes authorized in Sec. 615.5132.
(2) The investment must be one of the following:
(i) A non-convertible senior debt security;
(ii) A money market instrument with a maturity of 1 year or less;
(iii) A portion of an MBS or ABS that is fully guaranteed as to the
timely payment of principal and interest by a U. S. Government agency;
(iv) A portion of an MBS or ABS that is fully and explicitly
guaranteed as to the timely payment of principal and interest by a GSE,
except a security permitted under Sec. 615.5174 of this part;
(v) The senior-most position of an MBS or ABS that is not fully
guaranteed as to the timely payment of principal and interest by a U.S.
Government agency or fully and explicitly guaranteed as to the timely
payment of principal and interest by a GSE, provided that the MBS
satisfies the definition of ``mortgage related security'' in 15 U.S.C.
78c(a)(41);
(vi) An obligation of an international or multilateral development
bank in which the U.S. is a voting member; or
(vii) Shares of a diversified investment fund, if its portfolio
consists solely of securities that satisfy paragraphs (a)(2)(i),
(a)(2)(ii), (a)(2)(iii), (a)(2)(iv), (a)(2)(v), or (a)(2)(vi) of this
section or that are eligible under Sec. 615.5174. The investment
company's risk and return objectives and use of derivatives must be
consistent with the Farm Credit bank's investment policies.
(3) At least one obligor of the investment must have very strong
capacity to meet its financial commitment for the expected life of the
investment. If any obligor whose capacity to meet its financial
commitment is being relied upon to satisfy this requirement is located
outside the U.S., either:
(i) That obligor's sovereign host country must have the highest or
second-highest consensus Country Risk Classification (0 or 1) as
published by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development
(OECD) or be an OECD member that is unrated, or
(ii) The investment must be fully guaranteed as to the timely
payment of principal and interest by a U.S. Government agency.
(4) The investment must exhibit low credit risk and other risk
characteristics consistent with the purpose or purposes for which it is
held.
(5) The investment must be denominated in U.S. dollars.
(b) Investments that do not satisfy requirements. Farm Credit banks
may request our approval to purchase and hold other investments that do
not satisfy the requirements of this section. Farm Credit banks may
purchase and hold such investments as approved. A Farm Credit bank's
request for our approval must explain the risk characteristics of the
investment and the purpose and objectives for making the investment.
(c) Ineligible investments. Notwithstanding any other provision of
this section, Farm Credit banks may not purchase CDOs without approval
under paragraph (b) of this section.
(d) Reservation of authority. FCA may, on a case-by-case basis,
determine that a particular investment of a Farm Credit bank poses
inappropriate risk, notwithstanding that it satisfies the investment
eligibility criteria. If so, we will notify the Farm Credit bank as to
the proper treatment of the investment.
0
9. Section 615.5142 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 615.5142 Eligible investments for System associations.
(a) Subject to the conditions, restrictions and limits set forth in
this section, each Farm Credit System association, with the approval of
its funding bank, may only purchase and hold investments to manage
risk. Each System association that purchases investments must identify
and evaluate how investments contribute to the management of its risks.
Each investment purchased must be an obligation issued, or fully
guaranteed or insured as to the timely payment of principal and
interest, by the United States or its agencies and the total amount of
investments held must not exceed 10 percent of the association's total
outstanding loans. In computing the 10-percent limit for association
investments, the 30-day average daily balance of investments is divided
by loans. Investments are calculated at amortized cost. Loans are
calculated as defined in Sec. 615.5131. For the purpose of this
calculation, loans include accrued interest and do not include any
allowance for loan loss adjustments. Compliance with the calculation is
measured on the last day of every month.
(b) Risk management requirements. Each System association that
purchases investments must evaluate its investment management policies,
and
[[Page 43317]]
determine and document how its investment activities are conducted in
accordance with the following risk management processes and procedures:
(1) Investment management requirements. Each association that
purchases investments must comply with Sec. 615.5133(a), (b), (c),
(d), (e), (h) and (i) of this part. These investment management
processes must be appropriate for the size, risk and complexity of the
association's investment portfolio.
(2) Interest rate risk management requirements. If interest rate
risk in investments could lead to significant declines in net income or
in the market value of capital, the association must comply with
Sec. Sec. 615.5180 and 615.5182.
(3) Other relevant risk management factors. Each association that
purchases investments must consider and evaluate any other relevant
factors unique to the association or to the nature of the investments
that could affect such association's risk-bearing capacity, including
but not limited to management experience and capability to understand
and manage complex structures and unique risks in investments
purchased.
(c) Funding bank supervision of association investments.
(1) An association must not purchase and hold an investment without
the prior approval of its funding bank. The bank must review each
affiliated association's request to buy and hold investments and
explain in writing the bank's reasons for approving or denying the
request.
(2) In deciding whether or not to approve an association's request
to buy and hold investments, the bank must evaluate, and document that
the association:
(i) Has adequate policies, procedures, internal controls, and
accounting and reporting systems for its investments;
(ii) Has the capability and expertise to effectively manage the
risks in investments; and
(iii) Complies with paragraph (b) of this section.
(3) The bank must review annually the investment portfolio of every
association that it funds. This annual review must evaluate whether the
association's investments mitigate and manage risk over time, and the
continued adequacy of the associations' risk management practices.
(d) Other investments approved by the FCA. An association may
purchase and hold other investments that we approve. The request for
our approval must explain the risk characteristics of the investment
and the purpose and objectives for making the investment. These other
investments are subject to the funding bank's approval and if approved
by the FCA are subject to the portfolio limit on association
investments in paragraph (a) of this section unless otherwise provided
for by the FCA.
(e) Transition and divestiture for association investments.
(1) No association is required to divest any investments held on
the date this rule becomes effective that were previously authorized
under former Sec. 615.5140 or otherwise authorized by official written
FCA action that allowed the association to continue to hold such
investments. Once such investments mature, the association must not
renew them unless they are authorized pursuant to paragraphs (a) or (d)
of this section.
(2) An association is not required to divest of investments if a
decline in total outstanding loans causes it to exceed the portfolio
limit in paragraph (a) of this section. However, the association must
not purchase new investments unless after they are purchased, the total
amount of investments held falls within the portfolio limit in
paragraph (a) of this section.
(3) Section 615.5143 of this part applies to investments that an
association acquires after the date that this rule becomes effective,
if such investments:
(i) Do not comply with the investment criteria in paragraph (a) of
this section on or after the date of purchase;
(ii) Have not been approved by the FCA pursuant to paragraph (d) of
this section; or
(iii) Were approved by the FCA pursuant to paragraph (d) of this
section but no longer satisfy the conditions of approval.
0
10. Section 615.5143 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 615.5143 Management of ineligible investments and reservation of
authority to require divestiture.
(a) Investments ineligible when purchased. Investments that do not
satisfy the eligibility criteria set forth in Sec. 615.5140(a) or the
investment criteria set forth in Sec. 615.5142(a) or that have not
been approved by the FCA pursuant to Sec. 615.5140(b) or Sec.
615.5142(d), as applicable, at the time of purchase are ineligible. You
must not purchase ineligible investments. If you determine that you
have purchased an ineligible investment, you must notify us within 15
calendar days after the determination. You must divest of the
investment no later than 60 calendar days after you determine that the
investment is ineligible unless we approve, in writing, a plan that
authorizes you to divest the investment over a longer period of time.
Until you divest of the investment:
(1) If you are a Farm Credit bank, it must not be used to satisfy
your liquidity requirement(s) under Sec. 615.5134;
(2) It must continue to be included in the Sec. 615.5132 Farm
Credit bank investment portfolio limit calculation or in the Sec.
615.5142(a) association portfolio limit, as applicable; and
(3) If you are a Farm Credit bank, it must be excluded as
collateral under Sec. 615.5050 and net collateral under Sec.
615.5301(c).
(b) Investments that no longer satisfy investment eligibility
criteria. If you determine that an investment (that satisfied the
eligibility criteria set forth in Sec. 615.5140(a) or the investment
criteria set forth in Sec. 615.5142(a), as applicable, when purchased)
no longer satisfies the criteria, or that an investment that the FCA
approved pursuant to Sec. 615.5140(b) or Sec. 615.5142(d), as
applicable, no longer satisfies the conditions of approval, you may
continue to hold the investment, subject to the following requirements:
(1) You must notify us within 15 calendar days after such
determination;
(2) If you are a Farm Credit bank, you must not use the investment
to satisfy your liquidity requirement(s) under Sec. 615.5134;
(3) You must continue to include the investment in the Sec.
615.5132 Farm Credit bank investment portfolio limit calculation or in
the Sec. 615.5142(a) association portfolio limit, as applicable;
(4) If you are a Farm Credit bank, you may continue to include the
investment as collateral under Sec. 615.5050 and net collateral under
Sec. 615.5301(c) at the lower of cost or market value; and
(5) You must develop a plan to reduce the investment's risk to you.
(c) Reservation of authority. FCA retains the authority to require
you to divest of any investment at any time for failure to comply with
Sec. 615.5132(a) or Sec. 615.5142 or for safety and soundness
reasons. The timeframe set by FCA will consider the expected loss on
the transaction (or transactions) and the effect on your financial
condition and performance.
Sec. 615.5174 [Amended]
0
11. Section 615.5174 paragraph (d) is amended by removing the reference
``Sec. 615.5133(f)(1)(iii) and Sec. 615.5133(f)(4)'' and adding in
its place, ``Sec. 615.5133(h)(1)(iii) and Sec. 615.5133(h)(4)''.
[[Page 43318]]
Sec. 615.5180 [Amended]
0
12. Section 615.5180 paragraph (c)(3) is amended by removing the
reference ``Sec. 615.5133(f)(4)'' and adding in its place, the
reference ``Sec. 615.5133(h)(4)''.
Dated: July 21, 2014.
Dale L. Aultman,
Secretary, Farm Credit Administration Board.
[FR Doc. 2014-17493 Filed 7-24-14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6705-01-P