Organization; Funding and Fiscal Affairs, Loan Policies and Operations, and Funding Operations; Investment Eligibility, 27486-27503 [2018-12366]
Download as PDF
27486
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 113 / Tuesday, June 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
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.
Final rule.
AGENCY:
ACTION:
The Farm Credit
Administration (FCA, Agency, us, our,
or we) adopts a final rule that amends
our regulations governing investments
of both Farm Credit System (FCS or
System) banks and associations. The
final rule strengthens eligibility criteria
for investments that FCS banks
purchase and hold, and implements
section 939A of the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection
Act (Dodd-Frank Act or DFA) by
removing references to and
requirements for credit ratings and
substituting other appropriate standards
of creditworthiness. The final rule
revises FCA’s regulatory approach to
investments by FCS associations by
limiting the type and amount of
investments that an association may
hold for risk management purposes.
DATES: This regulation shall become
effective on January 1, 2019.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
David J. Lewandrowski, Senior Policy
Analyst, Office of Regulatory Policy,
(703) 883–4414, TTY (703) 883–4212,
lewandrowskid@fca.gov;
J.C. Floyd, Associate Director of Finance
and Capital Market Team, Office of
Regulatory Policy, (703) 883–4321,
TTY (703) 883–4212, floydjc@fca.gov;
or
Richard A. Katz, Senior Counsel, Office
of General Counsel, (703) 883–4020,
TTY (703) 883–4056, katzr@fca.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
pmangrum on DSK30RV082PROD with RULES4
I. Objectives
The final rule objectives are to:
• Strengthen investment practices at
Farm Credit banks 1 and associations 2 to
enhance their safety and soundness;
• Ensure that Farm Credit banks hold
sufficient high-quality liquid
investments for liquidity purposes;
• Enhance the ability of the Farm
Credit banks and associations to supply
1 Section 619.9140 of FCA regulations defines
‘‘Farm Credit banks’’ 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) Federal land bank associations,
Federal land credit associations, production credit
associations, and agricultural credit associations.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:02 Jun 11, 2018
Jkt 244001
credit to agricultural and aquatic
producers and their cooperatives in
times of financial stress;
• Comply with 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 the Farm Credit
System, which consists of Farm Credit
banks, associations, service
corporations,3 and the Federal Farm
Credit Banks Funding Corporation to
provide permanent, stable, affordable,
and reliable sources of credit and
related services to American agricultural
and aquatic producers.4 Farm Credit
banks issue System-wide consolidated
debt obligations in capital markets,
which enable associations to fund
short-, intermediate-, and long-term
credit and related services to farmers,
ranchers, producers and harvesters of
aquatic products, rural residents for
housing, and farm-related businesses.5
Farm Credit banks depend on
investments to provide liquidity and to
manage surplus short-term funds and
interest rate risk. Investments also help
enable associations to manage the risks
they confront.6 Although Farm Credit
banks get their funding through issuing
System-wide consolidated debt
securities, they must have enough
available funds, cash and investments,
to continue paying maturing obligations
if access to the debt market becomes
temporarily impeded.
FCA regulations in subpart E of part
615 impose comprehensive
requirements on investment practices at
all System institutions except Farmer
Mac. We first proposed revisions to our
3 A service corporation cannot extend credit or
provide insurance services.
4 The Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation
(Farmer Mac), also a System institution, operates a
secondary market for agricultural real estate
mortgage loans, rural housing mortgage loans, and
rural utility cooperative loans. This rulemaking
does not affect Farmer Mac, and the use of the term
‘‘System institution’’ in this preamble and the final
rule does not include Farmer Mac.
5 One Farm Credit bank, is an agricultural credit
bank, which lends to, and provides other financial
services to farmer-owned cooperatives, rural
utilities (electric and telephone), and rural water
and waste water disposal systems. It also finances
U.S. agricultural exports and imports, and provides
international banking services to cooperatives and
other eligible borrowers.
6 Under § 611.1135(a), which we do not propose
to revise, service corporations may hold
investments for the purposes authorized for their
organizers.
PO 00000
Frm 00002
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
investment regulations in 2011.7 In
2012, we issued a final rule that adopted
many of these proposed requirements,
particularly those guiding prudent
investment management practices at
System banks.8 However, that final rule
did not substantively revise the rules
governing investment eligibility in
§ 615.5140, or association investments
in § 615.5142. In 2014, we proposed
amendments to §§ 615.5140 and
615.5142 to address comments from
System institutions.9 More specifically,
the proposed rule revised the eligibility
criteria for System bank investments. In
addition, proposed § 615.5142 would:
(1) Impose a portfolio limit on
association investments; (2) limit
association investments to certain
securities issued or guaranteed as to
principal and interest by the United
States Government and its Agencies;
and, (3) delete the specific investment
purposes of reducing interest rate risk
and managing surplus short-term
funds.10
A major reason that we engaged in
this rulemaking is that investment
products are becoming increasingly
complex, and some investments are
riskier and less liquid than previously
believed. Section 939A of the DFA
requires each Federal agency to review
all its regulations that reference or
require the use of credit ratings issued
by a Nationally Recognized Statistical
Rating Organization (NRSRO) to assess
the creditworthiness of an instrument.
Under this provision of the Dodd-Frank
Act, Federal agencies must also remove
references to NRSRO credit ratings from
their regulations and substitute other
appropriate creditworthiness standards
in their place. As a result, FCA is
removing the actual references to
NRSRO credit ratings in our regulations
in subpart E of part 615.
FCA received over 1250 comment
letters about our 2014 proposed
regulations. FCS banks and associations
submitted 12 comment letters, and we
received separate comment letters from
a System trade association and Farmer
Mac. Commercial banks, and their
various trade associations, as well as
their directors, officers, and employees
submitted the remaining comment
letters. Most of the letters from bank
commenters were form letters, and
several individuals associated with the
same bank submitted multiple or
7 76
FR 51289, August 18, 2011.
FR 66362, November 5, 2012.
9 See 79 FR 43301, July 25, 2014.
10 Final § 615.5140 identifies eligible investments
for both Farm Credit banks and associations.
Former § 615.5142 governs investment purposes for
associations, but it did not prescribe the amount of
association investments.
8 77
E:\FR\FM\12JNR4.SGM
12JNR4
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 113 / Tuesday, June 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
duplicate copies of the same letter.
System and Farmer Mac commenters
sought revisions to the bank and
association regulations to clarify
specific provisions, or to address their
concerns. The bank commenters
opposed all provisions of the proposed
rule, except the provisions
implementing section 939A of the DFA.
All the bankers asked FCA to withdraw
the rule, and to refrain from revising the
investment regulations for System banks
and associations, unless the
amendments implemented new
statutory authority.
pmangrum on DSK30RV082PROD with RULES4
III. Final Rule
After reviewing and considering the
comment letters, FCA now enacts a final
rule that governs investment activities at
System banks, associations, and service
corporations. The final rule: (1)
Implements section 939A of the DFA;
(2) strengthens investment management
practices at FCS institutions, other than
Farmer Mac; (3) improves the quality of
System bank investments and
streamlines the list of eligible
investments; (4) revises the investment
purposes and types associations may
hold; and (5) clarifies the rules of
divestiture of ineligible investments,
and establishes new transition rules.
Additionally, we updated the
definitions for investments in subpart E
of part 615, and we made conforming
amendments to other regulations. FCA
plans to rescind two Informational
Memoranda, revise a third Informational
Memorandum, and updating FCA
Bookletter BL–064 so that FCA guidance
conforms with this final rule.
FCA notes that all regulations in part
615, subpart E, together create a
regulatory investment management
framework for System institutions. In
this context, System institutions need to
consider and follow all requirements
specified in §§ 615.5132, 615.5133,
615.5134, and 615.5140, as applicable.
A System institution’s decision to
purchase and hold investments must be
driven by an internal assessment of their
risk tolerances and liquidity needs, plus
eligible investments held.
A. Definitions
The definitions in § 615.5131 apply to
all our investment regulations in
subpart E of part 615. We proposed to
remove or revise several definitions in
§ 615.5131 that pertain to eligible
investments and credit ratings. These
amendments align the definitions in
FCA’s investment regulations with other
FCA regulations, or with the definitions
that other Federal agencies, such as the
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, the Office of the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:02 Jun 11, 2018
Jkt 244001
Comptroller of the Currency, the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation, and
Securities and Exchange Commission
use in their regulations.
We received a comment from a bank
trade association about the proposed
definition of ‘‘asset class.’’ Under the
proposal, ‘‘asset class means a group of
securities that exhibit similar
characteristics and behave similarly in
the marketplace.’’ As we noted in the
preamble to the proposed rule, asset
classes for bank investments include,
but are not limited, to money market
instruments, municipal securities,
corporate bonds, mortgage-backed
securities (MBS), asset-backed securities
(ABS) (excluding MBS), and ‘‘any other
asset class as determined by FCA.’’ The
commenter opposed this provision
because it authorizes FCA to approve
other asset class types. The commenter
asserted that FCA should not approve
new asset classes except through a
formal rulemaking. FCA responds that it
has authority under various provisions
of section 5.17 of the Farm Credit Act
of 1971, as amended, (Act) to approve
new investments, including new asset
classes. As appropriate, FCA will decide
how best to approve any new asset
classes based on the circumstances and
characteristics of the instrument when
the issue arises. Sometimes, a notice
and comment rulemaking is
appropriate, while at other times, FCA
may decide to issue a bookletter or
informational memorandum, or approve
such instruments under case-by-case
authority. We adopt this definition as
proposed.
The same bank trade association also
commented on the definition of
‘‘obligor’’ in the proposed regulation.
The commenter expressed concerns that
the definition of ‘‘obligor’’ would permit
System institutions to make loans to
ineligible persons, businesses, agencies,
or corporations under their investment
authorities. Our investment regulations
cannot confer authority on System
institutions that exceed their powers
under the Act. The Act separates the
System’s lending authorities from its
investment authorities. Therefore, our
investment regulations cannot authorize
System institutions to make loans to
ineligible borrowers disguised as
investments. We adopt this definition as
proposed.
We proposed to define a collateralized
debt obligation (CDO) as a debt security
collateralized by mortgage-backed
securities (MBS) or asset-backed
securities (ABS, or trust-preferred
securities). Farmer Mac claimed that
this definition was inconsistent with
how the security markets defined CDOs.
FCA agrees with the commenter. We
PO 00000
Frm 00003
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
27487
addressed this concern by deleting the
term ‘‘collateralized debt obligation’’ in
final § 615.5131, and adding the term
‘‘resecuritization.’’ Section 628.2
already defines ‘‘resecuritization’’ to
mean ‘‘a securitization which has more
than one underlying exposure and in
which one or more of the underlying
exposures is a securitization exposure.’’
We will further discuss in greater detail
why resecuritizations are ineligible
investments for System banks below.
We proposed to delete the definition
of ‘‘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)’’ in § 615.5131. We received
no comments on these revisions.
Accordingly, the final rule deletes these
definitions for the reasons explained in
the preamble to the proposed rule.
The proposal added definitions of
‘‘asset-backed securities (ABS)’’,
‘‘Country risk classification (CRC)’’,
‘‘Diversified investment fund (DIF)’’,
‘‘Government-sponsored enterprise
(GSE)’’, ‘‘Mortgage-backed securities
(MBS)’’, ‘‘sponsor’’, and ‘‘United States
(U.S.) Government agency.’’ We
received no comments on these new
definitions, and we incorporate them
into final § 615.5131 without revision.
However, we made a technical, nonsubstantive revision by replacing the
definition of ‘‘Country risk classification
(CRC)’’ in final § 615.5131 with a crossreference to the identical definition in
our Capital Adequacy regulations,
§ 628.2. The preamble to the proposed
rule explains our reasoning for adopting
these definitions.
B. Section 615.5132—Investments
Purposes
Under the existing rule, System banks
may continue to buy and hold eligible
investments to fulfill liquidity
requirements, manage short-term funds,
and manage interest rate risk, under
§ 615.5132(a). A System trade
association and a Farm Credit Bank
interpret our regulations as requiring
each System bank to designate a specific
purpose under § 615.5132(a) for every
investment it purchases and holds. The
commenter claims that this is
inconsistent with the approach that FCA
proposed for System associations, and
the approach that the Federal Banking
Regulatory Agencies (FBRAs) 11
11 The FBRAs are the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, the Office of the
E:\FR\FM\12JNR4.SGM
Continued
12JNR4
27488
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 113 / Tuesday, June 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
pmangrum on DSK30RV082PROD with RULES4
followed in their liquidity coverage ratio
regulation, which recognized that
securities often serve multiple
purposes.12 Accordingly, the
commenter asserted that FCA should
not require FCS banks to hold an
investment for only one of the purposes
identified in § 615.5132(a). The
commenter urged FCA to grant System
banks greater flexibility to decide the
authorized purposes and allow them to
change the designated purpose as
circumstances warrant.
FCA responds to this comment even
though we proposed no change to
§ 615.5132. We note that § 615.5132(a)
does not restrict System banks to
holding each investment for only one
purpose. In fact, § 615.5140(a)(1)(i)
states that eligible investments may be
held for one or more of the investment
purposes authorized in § 615.5132(a).
However, the preamble to the proposed
rule notes that certain investments, such
as private placements, are not suitable
for liquidity and, therefore, a System
bank would need to document the
specific purpose or reason for holding
such investments. FCA finds no reason
to revise either § 615.5132(a) or
§ 615.5140(a)(1) to address the
commenters concerns.
C. Section 615.5133—Investment
Management
Section 615.5133 governs investment
management practices at Farm Credit
banks, associations, and service
corporations. System institutions hold
investments for different purposes and,
therefore, investment practices will
vary. This regulation requires the boards
of directors of System institutions to
adopt an internal control framework
that protects their institutions from
potential losses. Under this regulation,
the policies must establish risk
tolerance parameters that address credit,
market, liquidity and operational risks.
Additionally, this regulation requires
the institution to set up delegations of
authority, internal controls, portfolio
diversification requirements, obligor
limits, due diligence requirements, and
to report regularly to the board of
directors.
Except for a few minor stylistic
changes, we proposed no substantive
changes to § 615.5133(a), (b), (d), and
(e), which respectively addresses the
responsibilities of the boards of
directors, general requirements for
investment policies, delegation of
authority, and internal controls. We
received no comments on these
Comptroller of the Currency, and the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation.
12 See 79 FR 61440, October 10, 2014.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:02 Jun 11, 2018
Jkt 244001
provisions, which we now adopt as a
final rule. We proposed to redesignate
§ 615.5133(f), which addresses due
diligence, and § 615.5133(g), which
address reports to the board, as
§ 615.5133(h) and (i), respectively. We
proposed to enhance the portfolio
diversification and the counterparty
(i.e., obligor) limits for Farm Credit
banks, which were previously in
§ 615.5133(c)(1)(i), and establish them
as free-standing provisions in
redesignated § 615.5133(f) and (g),
respectively. We received comments
about risk tolerance requirements in
§ 615.5133(c), portfolio diversification
in redesignated § 615.5133(f), and the
obligor limits in redesignated
§ 615.5133(g), which we will now
address.
1. Risk Tolerance
Proposed § 615.5133(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 proposed to add
sponsors and unsecured investments to
this regulatory provision because we
believe undue concentration in a
sponsor or unsecured investments could
present excessive risk. Concentration
limits should be commensurate with the
types and complexity of investments
that an institution holds.
We received a comment about
proposed § 615.5133(c)(1)(ii) from a
bank trade association. This commenter
opined that FCA should establish a
specific concentration limit by
regulation, rather than allowing FCS
institutions to set their own
concentration limits. Both FCA and the
FBRAs no longer prescribe
concentration limits by regulation
because each financial institution has its
own business model and risk appetite.
Financial institution regulators examine
each regulated institution for robust risk
management practices. The commenter
has not identified any compelling
reasons FCS institutions should not be
subject to the same supervisory
framework as banks.
2. Liquidity Risk
FCA proposed to revise
§ 615.5133(c)(3), which governs how
System institutions manage the liquidity
characteristics of investments they hold.
Specifically, we proposed to separately
address the different liquidity needs of
System banks and associations.
Proposed § 615.5133(c)(3)(i) would
address liquidity in the investment
PO 00000
Frm 00004
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
policies of Farm Credit banks, while
proposed § 615.5133(c)(3)(ii) would
address the liquid characteristics of
investments that associations hold. We
proposed this revision because of the
differences in how Farm Credit banks
and associations manage liquidity. Farm
Credit banks hold liquidity reserves to
manage funding and liquidity risks for
themselves, their affiliated associations,
and certain service corporations. In
contrast, System associations have more
limited funding and liquidity risk
exposure because their only substantial
liability is their debt obligation to their
funding bank. We received no
comments on proposed § 615.5133(c)(3),
and we now adopt it as a final rule with
minor stylistic changes.
3. Farm Credit Bank Portfolio
Diversification
As discussed above, proposed
§ 615.5133(f) emphasized the
importance of a well-diversified
investment portfolio. This provision
would require System banks to adopt
policies that prevent their investment
portfolios from posing significant risk of
loss due to excessive concentrations in
asset classes, maturities, industries,
geographic areas, and obligors. The
proposed rule retained the provisions of
the previous regulations that imposed
no concentration limits on securities
issued or guaranteed by the U.S.
government and its agencies, and kept a
50-percent cap on MBS securities issued
or guaranteed by a Governmentsponsored enterprise (GSE). In 2014, we
proposed a 15-percent portfolio cap on
all other eligible asset classes. Under
our proposal, no Farm Credit bank
could invest more than 10 percent of
total capital in a single obligor, and the
securities of a single obligor could not
exceed 3 percent of the bank’s total
outstanding investments.
System commenters asked us to
remove the portfolio limit on money
market funds. The commenters stressed
that money market funds are diversified
in nature and they are an effective
vehicle for liquidity risk management,
and the short-term maturities make
these investments self-liquidating,
which provide the banks with a reliable
source of liquidity during periods of
market stress. We are persuaded by this
logic and, therefore, we omit the
portfolio limit on money market funds
in final § 615.5133(f)(3)(iii).
System commenters also claimed that
the limit of 3 percent in the overall
investment portfolio for each obligor is
unnecessary because the proposed rule
reduced the regulatory obligor limit
from 20 percent to 10 percent of total
capital. According to the commenters,
E:\FR\FM\12JNR4.SGM
12JNR4
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 113 / Tuesday, June 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
obligor exposure limits based on capital
provides sufficient protection for
System banks, and the proposed,
additional 3-percent obligor limit on the
overall investment portfolio does not
add meaningful protection from a risk
management perspective. We agree with
the commenters, and therefore, we have
deleted this limit from the final
regulation.
D. Section 615.5134—Liquidity Reserve
We proposed technical, nonsubstantive revisions to the terms
‘‘Government-sponsored enterprise
(GSE)’’ and ‘‘U.S. Government agency’’
in our liquidity reserve regulation in
§ 615.5134. These changes conform to
the definitions in § 615.5131. We
received no comments about this
change. This change is consistent with
recent changes to FCA’s capital
regulations as well as guidance from the
FBRAs. For these reasons, we adopt the
proposed provision as a final rule
without change.
We proposed to clarify that MBS fully
guaranteed by a U.S. Government
agency qualify for Level 2 liquidity and
MBS fully guaranteed by a GSE qualify
for Level 3 liquidity. A System
commenter requested that we treat the
MBS of a GSE in conservatorship as full
faith and credit obligations of the
United States and, therefore, qualifying
for Level 2 of the Liquidity Reserve.
FCA declined this request. Our
approach is consistent with FCA’s
capital regulations and that of the
FBRAs, which points to the uncertainty
of the future government support of
GSEs in conservatorship.
We made a clarifying change to the
table ‘‘to omit two lines: In Level 2
‘‘Additional Levels 1 investments’’, and
in Level 3 ‘‘Additional Level 1 or 2
investments’’ as well as the
accompanying discount factors. We
determined these two provisions are
confusing and difficult to follow and are
redundant given the preceding section
of the regulation dealing with day
counts.
pmangrum on DSK30RV082PROD with RULES4
E. Section 615.5140(a)—Eligible
Investments for Farm Credit Banks
Proposed § 615.5140(a)(2) sets forth
the types of eligible investments that
Farm Credit banks may purchase and
hold. The intent of this provision is to
ensure that System banks invest only in
high-quality investments. We received
comments on each investment type,
which we now discuss.13
13 Revised § 615.5140(a) would apply to Farm
Credit banks only. As discussed below, all
association eligibility requirements would be in
revised § 615.5140(b).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:02 Jun 11, 2018
Jkt 244001
27489
1. Non-Convertible Senior Debt
Securities
redesignate it as § 615.5140(a)(1)(ii)(A)
without substantive change.
The proposed rule would continue to
authorize FCS banks to invest in nonconvertible senior debt securities. A
bank trade association questioned
whether System institutions should
have authority to invest in corporate
bonds. The commenter claims that
corporate bonds are not as high quality
as government bonds, and expose
investors to greater interest rate risk.
The commenter’s concern is that a
corporate bond could allow System
banks to become the only, or the
majority, investor, which the
commenter believes could enable the
System to exceed the lending
constraints in the Act.
FCA is not willing to ban investments
in all corporate bonds, as the
commenter requests. Our regulations
have allowed FCS institutions to invest
in high-quality corporate bonds since
1993. System institutions use these
high-quality corporate bonds to build
and diversify their liquidity portfolios.
This regulatory provision imposes high
credit quality standards, portfolio and
obligor limits, and purpose restrictions
on non-convertible senior debt
securities. These restrictions mean that
the FCS may purchase and hold only
publicly traded debt securities. Under
proposed § 615.5140(a)(2)(i), which is
redesignated as final
§ 615.5140(a)(1)(ii)(A), investments in
corporate debt securities fall under an
institution’s investment authority and,
therefore, they do not violate the
lending restrictions of the Act.
Accordingly, final § 615.5140(a)(1)(ii)(A)
will allow FCS banks to buy and hold
a non-convertible, senior debt security,
which includes corporate bonds.
Under proposed § 615.5140(a)(2)(i),
System banks could not invest in senior
debt securities that can convert into
another debt or equity security.14 FCA
received no comments on nonconvertible senior debt securities, and it
adopts this provision as final and
2. Money Market Instruments
14 As noted in the preamble to the proposed rule,
non-convertible senior debt includes: (1) U.S.
Government and U.S. Government agencies debt
securities, (2) Government-sponsored enterprises
debt securities, (3) municipal (debt) securities, (4)
corporate debt securities, and (4) other senior debt
securities. Senior debt securities may be secured by
a specific pool of collateral or may be unsecured
with priority of claims over junior types of debt or
equity securities. To be eligible under this criterion,
a senior debt security must not be convertible into
a non-senior debt security or an equity security. See
79 FR 43301, 43304, July 25, 2014. Since 1993, FCA
has stated it is generally inappropriate for System
institutions to maintain an ownership interest in
commercial enterprises by holding equity
securities. See 58 FR 63059, 63049–50, November
30, 1993.
PO 00000
Frm 00005
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
As under our previous rule,
investments in money market
instruments would be eligible under the
proposed rule. Money market
instruments include short-term
instruments such as (1) Federal funds,
(2) negotiable certificates of deposit, (3)
bankers’ acceptances, (4) commercial
paper, (5) non-callable term Federal
funds (6) Eurodollar time deposits, (7)
master notes, and (8) repurchase
agreements collateralized by eligible
investments as money market
instruments. A money market
instrument is an eligible security if it
matures in 1 year or less.
Two System commenters asked that
we remove the asset class limit for
money market instruments because their
short-term maturities make them selfliquidating. FCA agrees with the
commenters that money market
instruments are liquid due to their short
maturities and, therefore, no longer
warrant a portfolio limit. However, the
10-percent obligor limit would still
apply for these investments.
Accordingly, FCA has removed the 15percent portfolio diversification
requirement for money market
instruments in final § 615.5133(f)(3)(iii).
3. Mortgage-Backed Securities and
Asset-Backed Securities Guaranteed by
the U.S. Government and U.S.
Government Agencies
Under proposed § 615.5140(a)(2)(iii),
MBS and ABS that are fully guaranteed
as to the timely payment of principal
and interest by a U.S. Government
agency would remain eligible securities
because of their high credit quality. As
we explained in the preamble to the
proposed rule, securities labeled
‘‘government guaranteed’’ satisfy this
criterion only if they are fully
guaranteed as to the timely payment of
principal and interest.15 We received no
comments on proposed
§ 615.5140(a)(2)(iii) and, therefore, we
adopt this provision as final and
redesignated § 615.5140(a)(1)(ii)(C)
without substantive change.
4. 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
15 See
E:\FR\FM\12JNR4.SGM
79 FR 43301, 43304, July 25, 2014.
12JNR4
27490
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 113 / Tuesday, June 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
remain eligible investments.16 Section
615.5174 authorize Farmer Mac AMBSs.
As already noted in the liquidity reserve
preamble discussion, a System
commenter asked that the final rule treat
securities of GSEs under
conservatorship in the same fashion as
though they were full faith and credit
obligations of the U.S. Government. For
the reasons explained earlier, we do not
agree with the commenter, and we do
not change this provision of the final
rule.
5. Senior-most Positions of Non-Agency
Mortgage-Backed Securities and AssetBacked Securities
Previous § 615.5140(a)(5) and (6)
classified non-agency mortgage-backed
securities (including non-agency
commercial mortgage-backed securities),
and asset-backed securities as eligible
investments. In 2014, FCA proposed
restricting that provision by only
allowing an institution to buy the
senior-most position of a tranched nonagency MBS or ABS as an eligible
security.17 A non-agency MBS or ABS,
which is not tranched, and which
payments are made on a pro-rata basis
would be eligible securities under the
proposed rule. Under proposed
§ 615.5140(a)(2)(v), an eligible MBS
must satisfy the definition of ‘‘mortgage
related security’’ in 15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(41).
Non-agency commercial MBS (CMBS)
that meet these requirements are eligible
investments for System banks under this
regulatory provision. Non-agency MBSs
and CMBS must also meet the criteria in
the Secondary Market Mortgage
Enhancement Act of 1984 (SMMEA).
We received no comments on the
eligibility of the senior-most position of
non-agency securities and, therefore, we
adopt this provision as final and
redesignate it as § 615.5140(a)(1)(i)(E).
pmangrum on DSK30RV082PROD with RULES4
6. Private Placement Securities
During this rulemaking, FCA used the
term ‘‘private placement’’ securities
when referring to privately placed
bonds or debt securities. Private
placement refers to the sale of securities
to a few sophisticated investors without
16 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.
17 In 2011, we originally proposed that one of the
criteria for senior-most MBSs was that no other
remaining position in the securitization had a
higher priority claim to any contractual cashflows.
76 FR 51289, August 18, 2011. In response to
System comment letters, we deleted this criterion
in our 2014 proposed rule.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:02 Jun 11, 2018
Jkt 244001
registration with the Securities and
Exchange Commission, and often
without a prospectus. As a result, a
private placement security normally is
not a liquid security and not held for
liquidity purposes; however, they may
be appropriate for risk management. A
bank trade association opined that FCA
should not authorize any System
institution to purchase private
placement securities. This comment
letter, however, focused on FCA
approval of private placement securities
on a case-by case basis. Since private
placements are not liquid, they need to
be approved by FCA on a case-by-case
basis under § 615.5140(e). We discuss
this issue in greater detail below.
7. International and Multilateral
Development Bank Obligations
Proposed § 615.5140(a)(2)(vi) retained
the previous authority of Farm Credit
banks to invest in obligations of
international and multilateral
development banks, if the United States
is a voting shareholder. We received no
comment on this provision and,
therefore, we adopt this provision as
final and redesignate it as
§ 615.5140(a)(1)(i)(F).
8. Shares of a Diversified Investment
Fund
For many years, these regulations
have authorized System banks to invest
in several types of money market funds
offered by investment companies
registered under section 8 of the
Investment Company Act of 1940, 15
U.S.C. 80a–1 et seq. The proposed rule
retained this original authority,
although FCA updated and modified
some of the terminology. Under
proposed § 615.5140(a)(2)(vii), shares of
a diversified investment fund (DIF)
would remain an eligible investment if
the DIF’s portfolio consists solely of
eligible investments under any other
paragraph of proposed § 615.5140(a)(2),
or § 615.5174. The investment
company’s risk and return objectives
and use of derivatives must be
consistent with the investment policies
of the Farm Credit bank. FCA proposed,
however, more restrictive portfolio
diversification limits on DIF
investments than those that now exist.
FCA received no comments about
what constitutes a DIF. However, we
wish to clarify that a diversified
investment fund consists of any of three
categories of investment funds, which
are mutual funds,18 closed-end funds or
unit investment trusts registered under
18 The Investment Company Act of 1940 does not
define the term ‘‘mutual fund’’ but SEC literature
uses it interchangeably with an open-end fund,
which that statute defines.
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
the Investment Company Act of 1940. A
diversified investment fund also
includes exchanged-traded funds 19 and
money market funds.20 ExchangeTraded Funds (ETFs) while considered
mutual funds or unit investment trusts,
differ from traditional mutual funds and
unit investment trusts (UITs). An
investor’s investment consists of
purchased shares in these investment
funds. All these investment funds meet
the criteria of this regulation provision,
which we redesignate as
§ 615.5140(a)(1)(i)(G).
A bank trade association objected to
DIFs as eligible investments for FCS
institutions. The commenter claimed
that the proposed rule did not limit the
scope of investments in DIFs, so this
authority could be very broad and
exceed the lending constraints of the
Act. FCA disagrees and points out that
both §§ 615.5134 and 615.5140 impose
very stringent criteria for investments in
DIFs. Furthermore, our regulations have
allowed investments in DIFs for over 20
years, and the proposed rule did not
expand this authority, or permit System
banks to invest in DIFs for purposes that
are beyond managing liquidity, shortterm surplus funds, or interest rate risks.
Additionally, this regulation still
requires the portfolio of any eligible DIF
to be comprised solely of investments
authorized by §§ 615.5140 and
615.5174. System banks can only invest
in DIFs by buying shares of investment
companies registered under section 8 of
the Investment Company Act of 1940.
Contrary to the commenter’s claim, DIFs
are eligible only if System banks
exclusively hold the liquid, low-risk
assets found in final and redesignated
§ 615.5140(a)(1)(ii)(G). Because DIFs are
investments, they do not enable the FCS
to exceed the lending constraints of the
Act.
9. Obligors’ Creditworthiness Standard
Previous § 615.5140 relied on NRSRO
credit ratings to determine the eligibility
of investments in many asset classes,
including municipal securities, certain
money market instruments, non-agency
mortgage-backed securities, assetbacked securities, and corporate debt
securities.21 As noted earlier, section
939A of the DFA requires each Federal
19 Exchange-traded funds are investment funds
that are legally classified as open-end funds or unit
investment trusts under the Investment Company
Act of 1940.
20 A money market fund is a special type of
mutual fund under the Investment Company Act of
1940 and 17 CFR 270.2a–7—Money market funds.
21 Our regulation has not imposed credit rating
requirements on investments in obligations of
United States. U.S. Government agencies, GSEs, and
international and multilateral development banks,
and in DIFs and certain money market instruments.
E:\FR\FM\12JNR4.SGM
12JNR4
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 113 / Tuesday, June 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
agency to revise all 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.
FCA proposed § 615.5140(a)(3) to
implement section 939A of the DFA by
addressing the creditworthiness of the
obligor of securities that System banks
buy and hold as investments.
Our proposed rule would have
required at least one obligor of the
investment to have ‘‘very strong
capacity’’ to meet its financial
commitment for the expected life of the
investment. If a Farm Credit bank is
relying upon an obligor located outside
of the United States to meet its financial
commitment, the proposal required:
pmangrum on DSK30RV082PROD with RULES4
That obligor’s sovereign host country to
have the highest or second-highest consensus
Country Risk Classification (CRC) (a 0 or a 1)
as published by the Organization of
Economic Cooperation Development (OECD
or must be an OECD member that is unrated;
or the investment must be fully guaranteed
as to the timely payment of principle and
interest.22
A System trade association, an FCS
association, and Farmer Mac
commented that the proposed
creditworthiness standard for obligors
was too stringent. These commenters
suggested that the final rule should
require at least one obligor to have a
‘‘strong’’ capacity to meet its financial
commitment for the expected life of the
investment, rather than the ‘‘very
strong’’ capacity referred to in the
proposed rule. One of these commenters
asked FCA to provide further
clarification about how ‘‘very strong
capacity to meet its financial
commitments’’ is related to a ‘‘very low
probability of default.’’ These
commenters also urged FCA to adopt
the FBRA’s creditworthiness standard of
‘‘investment grade.’’
FCA declined the commenters’
request to relax the creditworthiness
standard for obligors. FCA believes a
security with ‘‘low credit risk’’ is one
where the Farm Credit bank determines
the issuer has a ‘‘very strong’’ capacity
to meet all financial commitments
under the security’s projected life even
under adverse economic conditions.
Securities that exhibit these
characteristics are liquid and
marketable. Farm Credit banks primarily
hold securities for liquidity purposes
and, therefore, the creditworthiness
standards for these securities ensure
that they are marketable and readily
convertible into cash in a crisis at
minimum costs.
22 https://www.oecd.org/trade/xcred/crc.htm.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:02 Jun 11, 2018
Jkt 244001
We recognize our regulations
governing margin and capital
requirements for covered swap entities,
and capital adequacy for all System
institutions use the ‘‘investment grade’’
standard. However, we determine that
‘‘investment grade’’ is not appropriate
for these investment regulations. FCA
believes not all securities that meet the
‘‘investment grade’’ requirements would
be of suitable high credit quality and
marketable for liquidity purposes.
Therefore, FCA declines to lower its
proposed investment creditworthiness
standard.
We now respond to the comment
requesting clarification about the
relationship between ‘‘very strong
capacity to meet its financial
commitments’’ and a ‘‘very low
probability of default.’’ In evaluating the
creditworthiness of a security, a Farm
Credit bank should consider any of the
following factors as well as any
additional factors it deems appropriate:
• Credit spreads (i.e., whether it is
possible to demonstrate that a security
is subject to an amount of credit risk
based on the spread between the
security’s yield and the yield of
Treasury or other securities);
• Securities-related research (i.e.,
whether providers of securities-related
research believe the issuer of the
security will be able to meet its financial
commitments, generally or specifically,
with respect to the securities held by the
Farm Credit bank);
• Internal or external credit risk
assessments;
• Default statistics (i.e., whether
providers of credit information relating
to securities express a view that specific
securities have a probability of default
consistent with other securities with an
amount of credit risk);
• Inclusion on an index (i.e., whether
a security, or issuer of the security, is
included as a component of a
recognized index of instruments that are
subject to a specific amount of credit
risk);
• Priorities and enhancements (i.e.,
the extent to which credit
enhancements, such as
overcollateralization and reserve
accounts cover a security)
• Price, yield, and volume (i.e.,
whether the price and yield of a security
are consistent with other securities that
the institution has determined are
subject to an amount of credit risk and
whether the price resulted from active
trading); and
• Asset class-specific factors (e.g., in
the case of structured finance products,
the quality of the underlying assets).
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
27491
10. Credit and Other Risk in the
Investment
In addition to imposing
creditworthiness standards on obligors,
we also proposed that an eligible
investment must exhibit low credit risk
and other risk characteristics consistent
with the purposes for which it is held,
such as interest rate risk. Institutions
must consider other risks but are not
limited to just those listed in
§ 615.5133(c). FCA received a System
comment that proposed § 615.5140(a)(4)
limits the ability of System banks to use
an investment for more than one
investment purpose. We already
responded to that comment above in the
preamble discussion of final § 615.5132.
In addition, our discussion in the
preamble about the creditworthiness of
the obligor explains our position of
credit quality, and this provision
requires no revision. Therefore, we
adopt this provision as final and
redesignate it as § 615.5140(a)(1)(iv).
11. Currency Denomination
Since 1993, § 615.5140(a) has required
all investments at System institutions to
be denominated in U.S. dollars. We
proposed no change to this requirement,
and we received no comments about it.
Accordingly, we retain this requirement
in the final rule without revision, but
redesignate it as § 615.5140(a)(v).
12. Ineligible Investments
The proposed rule, § 615.5140(c),
would have prohibited Farm Credit
banks from purchasing collateralized
debt obligations (CDOs), as originally
defined in § 615.5131. As discussed in
the preamble to the definitions section
above, Farmer Mac objected to our
definition of ‘‘CDO,’’ and we responded
by substituting the term
‘‘resecuritization’’ for ‘‘CDO.’’
However, the final rule would
prohibit System banks from purchasing
and holding resecuritizations as we
originally proposed. During the
financial crisis of 2008–2009, many
risky securitization exposures were
resecuritized into new complex
securities where not all buyers fully
understood the risks in the different
tranches of these new resecuritization
exposures. These securities, which were
sometimes known as CDO-squared,
CDO-cubed, or reperformers, exposed
investors to higher risk than the basic
securitization structure. Basel III and the
FBRAs recognized the higher risk posed
by resecuritizations, and assigned a
higher risk weight to them than basic
E:\FR\FM\12JNR4.SGM
12JNR4
27492
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 113 / Tuesday, June 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
securitization exposure.23 FCA strongly
believes the complex nature of the risks
within these resecuritization exposures
are inappropriate investments for
System banks. Therefore, we consider
these resecuritization exposures to be
ineligible investments for the purposes
authorized in § 615.5132. FCA also
believes certain pools of previously
delinquent or reperforming loans that
were once part of a different
securitization exposure exhibit similar
risks as a resecuritization exposure. The
final rule prohibits System banks from
purchasing resecuritizations without
FCA’s approval under final
§ 615.5140(e), except when both
principal and interest are fully and
explicitly guaranteed by the U.S.
Government or a GSE.
pmangrum on DSK30RV082PROD with RULES4
13. Reservation of Authority
Proposed § 615.5140(d) would have
made explicit our authority, on a caseby-case basis, to determine that an
investment poses inappropriate risk,
notwithstanding that it satisfies the
investment eligibility criteria. The
proposal also provides that FCA would
notify a Farm Credit bank as to the
proper treatment of any such
investment. We received no comment
on this provision. We retain this
provision to safeguard the safety and
soundness of banks, and we redesignate
it as § 615.5140(c).
F. Association Investments
FCA proposed to substantially revise
§ 615.5142, which governed association
investments. Previously, § 615.5142 did
not impose a portfolio limit on the total
amount of association investments.
Additionally, our former regulation
permitted 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 (interest rate) risks as their
funding banks. Previously, § 615.5142
authorized 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 regulation
also required each Farm Credit bank to
review annually the investment
portfolio of every association it funds.
The proposed rule would limit
association investments to securities
that are issued or fully guaranteed or
insured as to the timely payment of
23 See § 628.43(b)(5)—A supervisory calibration
parameter, p, is equal to 0.5 for securitization
exposures that are not resecuritization exposures
and equal to 1.5 for resecuritization exposures.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:02 Jun 11, 2018
Jkt 244001
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)
Investment and risk management
practices at System associations; (2)
funding bank supervision of association
investments; (3) requests by associations
to FCA to hold other investments; and
(4) transition requirements for System
associations to come into compliance
with the new rule.
We proposed these changes because
most System associations have
increased in size and complexity over
the past two decades, offering a
diversity of products and services to
adapt to 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 remain
concentrated in agriculture and have
limited ability to manage concentration
risk. Although the previous regulation
allowed the associations to use
investments for managing surplus shortterm funds and reducing interest rate
risk, they could not use investments to
manage concentration risk. For these
reasons, we designed the proposed rule
to strike a balance by granting
associations greater flexibility in the
purposes for which they may hold
investments, while placing new limits
on the amounts and types of
investments they may hold. Under the
proposed rule, associations would have
the flexibility to manage concentration
risks with securities that are issued or
fully guaranteed or insured as to the
timely payment of principal and interest
by the U.S. Government or its agencies.
The 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 FCA.24
Before we address the substantive
comments that we have received, we
notify the public that we have
consolidated all the provisions
governing eligible investments for all
System institutions into a single
regulation, § 615.5140. Accordingly,
FCA has removed § 615.5142
concerning association investments, and
24 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.
PO 00000
Frm 00008
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
redesignated it as final § 615.5140(b).
Proposed § 615.5142(d) would have
redesignated, but not substantively
changed, § 615.5140(e) concerning other
association investments approved by
FCA. The final rule restores case-by case
approvals for both banks and
associations to § 615.5140(e). Although
we received, no comments about
restructuring final § 615.5140, we
consolidated the two sections for greater
uniformity in the rule. Addressing
eligible investments in a single
regulation will make it easier for both
FCA examiners and System institutions
to use and apply this rule.
1. Association Investment Purposes
The proposed rule would remove the
requirements in the previous regulation
that authorize associations to hold
investments for the purposes of
reducing interest rate risk and managing
surplus short-term funds. The preamble
to the proposed rule explained that
these requirements may be too
restrictive and too inflexible for
associations to effectively manage their
risks in today’s environment. For many
associations, a limited portfolio of highquality investments could help diversify
risks they experience as lenders that
primarily lend to a single-industry
agriculture.
We invited comments about whether
this rule should identify specific
purposes for associations to purchase
and hold investments, and we asked the
commenters to expressly identify any
specific purposes that the final
regulation should retain or require, and
why. Two bank trade associations stated
that the final rule should identify
specific risk management purposes for
associations to purchase and hold
investments. One commenter asked if
associations are no longer required to
manage surplus short-term funds and
reduce interest rate risks, what is the
reason for these investments?
FCA responded that System
institutions face four broad types of
risks: (1) Credit; (2) market (interest
rate); (3) liquidity; and (4) operational.
Although the previous regulation
allowed associations to hold
investments only for managing surplus
short-term funds (liquidity), and
reducing interest rate risk (market risk),
the associations remain exposed to
broader risk both in individual
investments and in their overall
portfolios. Additionally, the prior
regulation permitted associations to
hold the same investments as FCS
banks, which exposed them to the same
four risks. For this reason, § 615.5133
requires all FCS banks and association
to address these four risks in their
E:\FR\FM\12JNR4.SGM
12JNR4
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 113 / Tuesday, June 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
pmangrum on DSK30RV082PROD with RULES4
investment policies. The investment
policies must be commensurate with the
size and complexity of the institution’s
investment portfolio. As discussed in
greater detail below, this final rule
retains and strengthens the investment
management requirements in
§ 615.5133. Additionally, new limits on
the amount and types of investments in
our proposal would counterbalance the
greater flexibility in investment
purposes.
As stated above, FCA seeks to grant
associations greater flexibility in
investment purposes, while placing
more restrictions on the types and
amount of investments they may hold.
Contrary to claims in banker comment
letters, this rule restricts, rather than
expands the types of investments that
associations may purchase and hold.
This rule no longer authorizes
associations to hold the same
investments as FCS banks, such as
money market instruments, corporate
bonds, and certain asset-backed
securities.
In contrast, a System association
asked FCA to retain the investment list
in the previous regulation, which it
claims associations need to manage
‘‘prepayment [extension or contraction]
risk, credit risk, liquidity risk and yield
risk.’’ However, FCA determines that
the new regulation provides sufficient
risk management tools for associations,
and their need for investments is
different from their funding banks. By
only authorizing associations to hold
securities issued or unconditionally
guaranteed by the U.S. Government and
its agencies, the regulation eliminates
most credit risk associated with such
assets, and helps mitigate risk in their
overall portfolios. Securities issued or
unconditionally guaranteed by the U.S
Government and its agencies still
present market (interest rate), liquidity,
and operational risks to associations. As
discussed elsewhere in this preamble,
placing a 10-percent portfolio cap on
associations for the first time, and
limiting the types of investments that
associations may hold, result in a
conservative and risk-adverse regulatory
approach. The low credit risk in these
investments offer the opportunity to
diversify the balance sheet credit risks
for those associations that choose to
exercise their investment authorities.
2. Eligible Association Investments
Proposed § 615.5142(a) would
authorize System associations to invest
solely in obligations that the United
States Government and its agencies
issue, fully guarantee, or insure as to the
timely payment of principal and
interest. Sections 2.2(11) and 2.2(17)
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:02 Jun 11, 2018
Jkt 244001
expressly authorize System associations
to invest in such obligations of the
United States and its agencies. Such
obligations are usually liquid and
marketable. Although MBS issued by
the U.S. Government and its agencies
pose almost no credit risk to investors,
they potentially expose investors to
other risks, especially market (interest
rate and prepayment risk). We find that
these investments are suitable for
managing risk at associations because
they have no credit risk and they enable
associations to diversify their portfolios.
Additionally, all System institutions
may hold Farmer Mac AMBS as eligible
investments.25
Bankers and their trade associations
commented that this provision would
allow System associations to buy
ineligible loans that are guaranteed by
the United States and its agencies in
contravention of the Act. FCA revised
this provision to address these concerns.
FCA has addressed the commenters’
concerns by changing the term
‘‘obligations’’ to ‘‘securities’’ in the third
sentence of the final rule. If an
association purchases the governmentguaranteed portions of individual loans,
such purchases do not meet the criteria
for an investment security under the
final rule.26 FCA has added rule text to
clarify that only securities that the U.S.
Government and its agencies
unconditionally guarantee are eligible
investments for associations. Under the
final regulation, only investments
defined and booked as securities under
GAAP qualify as authorized investments
under the final rule.
For further clarification, FCA notes
that pool assemblers purchase
guaranteed portions of loans in the
secondary market, and securitize these
assets. In this context, not all these
securitizations will be eligible
investments for associations. We
anticipate that System associations most
likely will purchase and hold either
securities guaranteed by SBA or issued
by Farmer Mac.27 The SBA and Farmer
25 Investments in Farmer Mac AMBS are covered
by § 615.5174. Investments in Farmer Mac AMBS
cannot exceed the total amount of outstanding loans
of a System bank or association.
26 For Generally Accepted Accounting Principles’
(GAAP) purposes, the association should treat the
purchase of an individual loan as purchase of an
interest in an assignment in a loan participation.
System institutions, when purchasing the
guaranteed portion of an individual loan, also must
comply with the lending eligibility and loan
purpose of parts 613 and 614, as if they originated
the loan.
27 The SBA issues a ‘‘SBA Guaranteed Pool
Certificate’’ to those securitizations created by
third-party issuers. In effect, the SBA
unconditionally guarantees the security. Farmer
Mac issues Farmer Mac 2 AMBSs whose underlying
PO 00000
Frm 00009
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
27493
Mac guarantee the timely payment of
principal and interest to investors.28
Under GAAP, such assets are reported
as investments. System banks and
associations purchase Farmer Mac 2
AMBSs under § 615.5174, not under
§ 615.5140. Farmer Mac 2 AMBSs and
guaranteed SBA securities are eligible
investments for associations under the
final regulation. We have redesignated
proposed § 615.5142(a) as final
§ 615.5140(b)(1).
3. Association Portfolio Limits
Proposed § 615.5142(a) limits
association investments to 10 percent of
total outstanding loans. This portfolio
limit ensures that loans to eligible
borrowers always comprise most of the
assets of FCS associations, which is
consistent with the System’s mission.
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 but a few affiliated
associations; and (2) associations
borrow almost exclusively from their
funding banks.
The proposed 10-percent portfolio
limit on investments should be
sufficient to enable associations to
develop robust strategies to manage
risks if association investment policies,
management practices and procedures,
and appropriate internal controls
support those investment activities.
Furthermore, the proposed 10-percent
limit should help associations manage
their concentration risk as singleindustry lenders. 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 lending to farmers
and other eligible borrowers.
We received comments about the
proposed portfolio limits from both
System and non-System commenters.
The principal concerns raised by the
commenters focused on: (1) How FCA
would apply the 10-percent limit; (2)
which investments the portfolio limit
covered, and (3) whether the 10-percent
limit is prudent.
System commenters raised three
primary issues about the proposed
portfolio limit for association
investments. Several System
commenters inquired whether the 10percent limit on investments applies to
assets consist of the guaranteed portions of USDA
loans.
28 SBA is a Government agency while Farmer Mac
is a GSE.
E:\FR\FM\12JNR4.SGM
12JNR4
pmangrum on DSK30RV082PROD with RULES4
27494
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 113 / Tuesday, June 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
both investments authorized under
§ 615.5142(a) and those approved by
FCA on a case-by-case basis.
Additionally, some System commenters
opined that the 10-percent limit was too
restrictive, and that FCA should
increase it to 15-percent. Others
suggested that a limit based on ‘‘total
outstanding loans’’ would be too
restrictive. These commenters suggested
that the final rule tie the portfolio cap
to a broader array of assets including;
‘‘earning assets,’’ ‘‘loans plus missionrelated investments plus UBEs plus
RBICs plus [Farmer Mac] MBS’’ or ‘‘total
assets.’’
Bankers and their trade associations
commenters opposed the proposed
portfolio limit on association
investments for other reasons. First,
these commenters wanted FCA to base
the portfolio limit on association capital
levels, not total outstanding loans. One
of the bank trade association
commenters misinterpreted the
proposed portfolio limit for associations
by assuming that it established two
separate 10-percent limits; one for U.S.
Government-guaranteed investments,
and one for ‘‘all other association
investments.’’ This commenter
requested that FCA limit eligible
investments to 10 percent of capital (5
percent for guaranteed investments and
5 percent for non-guaranteed
investments), which would include 1
percent of capital for ‘‘other
investments’’ which are ‘‘for purposes
that are [consistent] with the Act’s
lending constraints.’’ Second, these
commenters claim that the proposed
portfolio limit was too high because
investments at most associations would
rarely equal or exceed 10 percent of
total outstanding loans. Third, bank
commenters claimed that if loan volume
declines at an association, it should
then liquidate investments to comply
with the portfolio limit, which would
expose it to losses on their required sale
due to their presumed illiquidity.
We now respond to requests that we
either increase or decrease the portfolio
limit for investments. As stated above,
System commenters claimed that a 10percent limit was too restrictive, and
they request that we increase it to 15
percent. System commenters have not
convinced us that the 10-percent limit is
too restrictive. FCA notes that the
policies at some System associations
with active investment programs
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. In contrast, bank
trade associations commenters asked us
to significantly lower the proposed 10-
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:02 Jun 11, 2018
Jkt 244001
percent limit. However, a lower limit
would not provide meaningful risk
diversification, or the necessary
economies of scale for associations to
justify the added costs of establishing
and maintaining the infrastructure and
internal controls for holding and
managing an investment portfolio of
securities unconditionally guaranteed
by the United States Government and its
agencies. Reducing the portfolio limit
below 10 percent could hamper
associations from holding such
investments, thereby denying them
more diversified and better quality asset
portfolios. For this reason, we decline
both requests.
We now address requests from bank
commenters that FCA change the
denominator for the portfolio limit
calculation from total outstanding loans
to capital. These commenters stated that
all FRBAs impose investment limits that
are based on references to capital, rather
than loans or other assets. Additionally,
these commenters assert that a limit tied
to capital would more effectively reduce
the risk exposure to System
associations. FCA responds that the
purpose of the portfolio limit is to
ensure that most association assets are
loans to eligible agricultural and aquatic
producers while promoting portfolio
diversity. Under the final rule,
associations may hold only securities
that are unconditionally guaranteed by
the U.S. Government and its agencies
for risk management purposes, which
effectively eliminates the credit risk
exposure that the commenters fear.
Furthermore, § 615.5182 requires
associations to manage interest rate risk
associated with such Governmentguaranteed investments. For these
reasons, a portfolio limit based on a
reference to capital is unnecessary. In
this context, the statutory framework for
the FCS is different than that for banks.
FBRAs do not tie investments at banks
to loans or other assets because their
statutes do not limit their lending
activity to a single economic sector.
As noted earlier, a bank trade
association asked that the final rule
limit non-guaranteed investments to 5
percent of capital, and ‘‘other
investments’’ to 1 percent of capital.
The commenter also suggested that the
final rule prohibit associations from
holding non-guaranteed and ‘‘other
investments’’ for purposes that are
inconsistent with the Act’s lending
constraints. FCA already addressed the
comment about using capital as the
reference for a portfolio limit. More
importantly, the final rule does not
allow associations to disguise ineligible
loans as investments in violation of the
Act, and as explained elsewhere in this
PO 00000
Frm 00010
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
preamble, we amended the final rule to
address this specific concern.
We now respond to System
commenters who asked us to change the
portfolio limit from ‘‘total outstanding
loans’’ to either ‘‘earning assets,’’ or
‘‘total assets.’’ We decline this request
because ‘‘total outstanding loans’’ is a
standard that provides associations with
a sufficient level of investments to
manage their risks prudently and
economically. Our investment
regulations use the same standard for
calculating the limit for Farm Credit
banks, which play a far greater role in
managing liquidity and market risk for
the entire System than associations.
Under the circumstances, FCA finds no
compelling reason for enacting a
permissive standard for System
associations, and a more stringent one
for Farm Credit banks. Separately, FCA
has consistently held that the principal
statutory mission of the System is
lending to agricultural and aquatic
producers, and their cooperatives. A
portfolio limit tied to loans ensures that
agricultural credits remain the primary
assets of all System banks and
associations. A portfolio limit based on
either ‘‘earning’’ or ‘‘total’’ assets could
permit associations to hold a greater
amount of assets that are unrelated to
agriculture.
Several System commenters asked
that the portfolio limit calculation
exclude equity investments in Rural
Business Investment Companies
(RBICs), an Unincorporated Business
Entities (UBEs), or Farmer Mac Class B
stock (held only by System investors)
from its numerator. FCA agrees with
System commenters, and the final rule
excludes both debt and equity
investments in these three entities from
the calculation of the 10-percent limit.
The amount that System institutions,
either alone or together, may invest in
RBICs are limited by statute.29
Investments in UBEs are subject to
limits in § 611.1153(h). FCA does not
intend to place any limitations on either
the purchase of Farmer Mac Class B
equity or Farmer Mac issued
Agricultural Mortgage Backed Securities
(AMBS) because it would discourage
System institutions from using Farmer
Mac in its risk management strategies. A
System bank or association may
purchase Farmer Mac Class B equity
under § 615.5173 and Farmer Mac
AMBSs under § 615.5174.
Several System institutions suggested
that the calculation for the portfolio
limit revealed a potential conflict
because the numerator would use a 3029 See section 384J of the Consolidated Farm and
Rural Development Act, 7 U.S.C. 2009cc–9.
E:\FR\FM\12JNR4.SGM
12JNR4
pmangrum on DSK30RV082PROD with RULES4
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 113 / Tuesday, June 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
day average while the denominator
would use a 90-day average. These
commenters requested that the final
regulation set a 90-day average daily
balance for both the numerator and
denominator. FCA disagrees with the
commenter that a 10-percent limit
calculation should use a 90-day average
balance for both the numerator and the
denominator. FCA believes that the
commenter’s approach could favorably
influence the association’s calculation
of the numerator of the 90-day average,
and thus periodically exceed the 10percent portfolio limit. After
considering various alternatives, FCA
decides that using a date-specific total
investment amount for the numerator
best achieves our objective that each
association never exceeds the 10percent portfolio limit. This approach
simplifies the calculation by removing
one of the two averages proposed. FCA
will keep the denominator calculation at
a 90-day average because FCA’s capital
regulations and call report instructions
already require FCS institutions to
calculate 90-day average daily balances
for loans outstanding.
The final rule requires System
associations to compute the 10-percent
limit based upon a total amount for
investments on a specific date in the
numerator, divided by a 90-day average
daily balance of loans outstanding in the
denominator. This calculation values
investments at amortized cost. Loans, as
defined in § 615.5131, 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 this calculation,
loans would include accrued interest,
but would not include allowances for
loan loss adjustments.
FCA changes the 30-day average daily
balance in proposed § 615.5142(a) to a
date specific amount in final and
redesignated § 615.5140(b)(3). FCA has
made a conforming change to the final
rule, which requires associations to
compute the limit using for the
numerator, the date-specific amount of
investments divided by the
denominator, using the amount of the
90-day average balance reported in the
most recent call report. Unless
otherwise directed by FCA, associations
should calculate this limit quarterly.
A bank trade association asserted that
if loan volume declines at an
association, the association should
liquidate investments to stay within the
10-percent limitation. FCA notes that
proposed § 615.5142(e)(2) expressly
stated that an association would not
need to divest of investments that were
eligible when purchased even if a
decline in total outstanding loans causes
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:02 Jun 11, 2018
Jkt 244001
it to exceed the 10-percent portfolio
limit. However, the rule would prohibit
associations from purchasing additional
investments until their total amount is
equal to or less than the 10-percent
limit. FCA retains this approach in the
final rule and redesignate it as
§ 615.5140(b)(5). Requiring liquidation
of investments when total outstanding
loans decline could expose associations
to unnecessary losses due to
fluctuations in investment prices and
associated transaction costs.30 The
commenter also claimed that it is
unclear whether association
investments authorized by the proposed
rule would be liquid, and this could
increase risk to an association in the
event it had to liquidate eligible
investments. Given that this regulation
limits association investments for risk
management purposes to securities that
are issued, or unconditionally
guaranteed or insured by the U.S.
Government or its agencies, the
commenter’s concern lacks merit.
After reviewing all the comments,
FCA has decided to retain the proposed
portfolio limit of 10 percent of total
outstanding loans, although the final
rule contains some minor adjustments,
which we explained earlier. This new
regulation imposes a portfolio limit on
association investments, whereas the
former regulation had none. As we
explained in the preamble to the
proposed rule, the 10-percent limit on
investments ensures that loans to
agricultural producers and other eligible
borrowers constitute most of association
assets. In this context, the primary
purpose of the portfolio limit is to
ensure that System associations adhere
to their statutory mission as a GSE to
finance agriculture. Additionally, the
10-percent portfolio limit strikes an
appropriate balance that enables
associations to effectively manage and
diversify risks while staying within the
boundaries of the Act. Since
associations may hold only investments
issued, guaranteed or insured by the
United States Government and its
agencies, and investments approved by
FCA on a case-by-case basis, a portfolio
limit that does not exceed 10 percent of
loans allows an appropriate economy of
scale based on expected overhead costs
and compliance with investment
management requirements in
§ 615.5133.
30 Although we received no similar comment
about the bank investment portfolio limit, we note
that the same rationale applies. A System bank
would not need to divest of investments that were
eligible when purchased even if a decline in total
outstanding loans causes it to exceed the 35-percent
portfolio limit. However, System banks could not
purchase additional investments.
PO 00000
Frm 00011
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
27495
Both System institutions and bank
commenters asked whether the 10percent limit applied to investments
that FCA approves on a case-by-case
basis. FCA confirms that the final
regulation will apply an aggregate limit
of 10 percent to investments authorized
in § 615.5140.
4. Association Risk Management
Requirements
The proposed rule addressed risk
management practices that associations
must follow if they select, purchase, and
hold investments. We designed these
provisions to ensure that System
associations comply with prudent
investment management practices. The
proposed rule would have required each
association to evaluate its investment
management policies, and determine
and document how its investment
activities adhere to prudent risk
management processes and procedures.
Under the proposed rule, each
association must comply with proposed
§ 615.5133(a), (b), (c), (d), (e), (h), and
(i), which govern investment
management practices at all System
institutions.31 From FCA’s perspective,
compliance with these provisions of
§ 615.5133 would instill discipline in
investment management practices at
each System association, which protects
its safety and soundness. Additionally,
each association’s investment
management must be appropriate for the
size, risk characteristics, and complexity
of the association and its investment
portfolio. Investment management must
consider the association’s unique
circumstances, risk tolerances, and
objectives.
We asked for comments on whether
these new requirements would impose
undue regulatory burden on System
associations and their funding banks.
FCA received no comments about risk
management practices at associations.
Since these risk management practices
enhance safety and soundness at System
associations, we adopt the proposed
regulatory requirements without
substantive revision.
The rule requires each association to
assess how investments that they
purchase and hold impact the
association’s credit risk profile, and
affect its risk-bearing capacity. Such
factors that associations should consider
and evaluate include, but are not
limited to, its management experience
31 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. Proposed
§ 615.5142(b) has been redesignated as final
§ 615.5140(b)(2)(i). FCA did not redesignate
§ 615.5133(f) and (g).
E:\FR\FM\12JNR4.SGM
12JNR4
27496
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 113 / Tuesday, June 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
pmangrum on DSK30RV082PROD with RULES4
and capability to understand and
manage complex structures and unique
risks in the investments it purchases
and holds. Associations may purchase
and hold investments in final
§ 615.5140(b)(1) only for managing risks.
Although FCA does not expect
associations to suffer losses or breakeven 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 on the
balance sheet. Other risks that
associations should consider and
evaluate include prepayment (extension
and contraction) risks and interest rate
cap risks and how these risks
potentially impact earnings.
5. 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 under FCA regulations.
Proposed § 615.5142(c) sets forth the
requirements for funding banks to
review, approve, and oversee 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.
FCA structured the proposed rule to
provide flexibility so that funding banks
could approve types or classes of
investments, rather than each individual
investment. However, the proposed
rule, would require funding banks to
review and approve prospective
association investments, prior to
submission to FCA for case-by-case
approval. The FCA Board continues to
be the final authority for approving all
association case-by-case investments.
The proposed rule would require each
bank to explain in writing its reasons for
approving or denying the association’s
investment requests.
Once an association has established a
satisfactory investment management
program that its funding bank has
approved, the association could
purchase and hold investments that the
Act and this regulation authorize. The
intent of this provision is to balance the
association investment activities with
the funding and oversight role of the
bank. As part of the approval, the
funding bank must evaluate, determine
and document that the association has:
(1) Adequate policies, procedures,
internal controls, and accounting and
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:02 Jun 11, 2018
Jkt 244001
reporting systems for its investments; (2)
the capability and expertise to
effectively manage risks in investments;
and (3) complied with requirements of
proposed § 615.5142(b). Any prior
System association investment
management program that the funding
bank previously approved would need
to be reviewed and re-approved once
proposed § 615.5142 becomes final and
effective. 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.
Finally, the proposed rule would keep
the previous requirement that each
System bank annually review the
investment portfolio of every affiliated
association.32 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.
FCA received comments from System
institutions and commercial banks
about funding bank approval of
investments on a program rather than
individual basis. We have already
addressed this issue in a preceding
section. Commercial bank trade
associations claimed that FCA was
abdicating its responsibilities by
authorizing the funding banks to
approve classes of association
investments. We respond that sections
2.2(10) and 2.12(18) of the Act authorize
associations to hold investments as may
be approved by their funding bank
under the regulations of FCA. This
regulation meets this statutory
requirement. Additionally, the final
regulation only allows associations to
invest in obligations issued, guaranteed,
or insured by the U.S. Government and
its agencies. As stated above, case-bycase investments must be approved by
FCA. For these reasons, we adopt
proposed § 615.5142(c)(1) as final and
redesignate it as § 615.5140(b)(4).
6. Transition Issues From Previous to
New Investment Regulations
Proposed § 615.5142(e)(1), would not
require an association to divest of any
investments held before the effective
date of this rule provided we previously
authorized the investment under former
32 FCA notes that the General Financing
Agreement (including any attached, referenced, or
related documents) can be a useful tool for funding
banks to review and monitor the investment
activities of their affiliated associations. See
§ 614.4125.
PO 00000
Frm 00012
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
§ 615.5140 or by official written Agency
action. As we explained in the preamble
to the proposed rule, this transition rule
would allow an association to continue
to hold previous investments that would
no longer be authorized by the final
rule. After this final rule is effective,
institutions may not extend or renew
investments past their maturity unless
they are authorized by regulation or
FCA approval.
Proposed § 615.5142(e)(3) would
apply to all investments that an
association acquires after the new
regulation becomes effective.
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 managing
and divesting of ineligible investments.
A bank trade association opposed this
provision because it believes that FCA
should not permit associations to hold
investments that the final rule no longer
authorizes. The commenter claimed that
FCA should require immediate
divestiture of these readily marketable
investments. FCA responds that these
investments were eligible when
purchased under regulations and a pilot
program that were then in effect. It is
customary and accepted practice among
financial institution regulators to allow
institutions to retain investments until
maturity, if prior regulations or agency
action authorized their purchase unless
a statute requires immediate divestiture
or there is a compelling safety and
soundness reason. As noted above,
institutions cannot renew or extend
such investments after they mature.
Accordingly, we adopt proposed
§ 615.5142(e)(1) as final and redesignate
it as § 615.5140(b)(5).
G. Other Investments Approved by FCA
Since 1999, our investment
regulations have allowed all System
institutions to purchase and hold other
investments (not listed in our
regulation) that FCA approves. The
regulation requires that all requests for
our approval must explain the risk
characteristics of the investment and the
institution’s purpose and objectives for
making the investment. We proposed no
changes to this provision of our
regulation, which still can be found at
§ 615.5140(e), and the final rule retains
this authority without revision. Case-by
case approvals enable System
institutions to purchase and hold other
investments that are consistent with
their statutory authorities and the
objectives of the Act. Currently, FCA
requires System institutions to submit
information and analysis with each
approval request that demonstrates that
E:\FR\FM\12JNR4.SGM
12JNR4
pmangrum on DSK30RV082PROD with RULES4
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 113 / Tuesday, June 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
the asset is accounted for as an
investment under GAAP,33 and not a
loan to an ineligible borrower.
The bankers and their trade
associations opposed the case-by-case
approval authority. These commenters
claim that the case-by-case approval
authority in the regulation goes beyond
the investment provisions in the Act
and Congressional intent. They further
claimed that this regulatory provision
enables FCA to approve ‘‘illegal’’ loans
to ineligible borrowers and classify
them as investments. Specifically, these
commenters claim that the proposed
rule and guidance provided by the
Informational Memorandum dated
September 4, 2014, would permit FCS
institutions to evade lending restrictions
by buying instruments that are
improperly labeled as ‘‘debt securities,’’
‘‘obligations,’’ or ‘‘bonds.’’ The
commenters state that the proposed rule
and the Information Memorandum
dated September 4, 2014, does not state
that ‘‘investments’’ explicitly exclude
commercial business loans. A related
complaint was that the proposed rule
did not identify specific criteria that
FCA would use to distinguish loans
from investments and that the approval
of private placements would further
blur this distinction. According to the
commenters, such approvals would
enable System institutions to
impermissibly compete with tax-paying
banks. Another concern of banks and
their trade associations is that the caseby-case approvals lack transparency.
FCA proposed no changes to the
regulation governing case-by-case
approvals of investments by System
banks and associations. Accordingly,
this final rule makes no changes to this
existing regulatory provision. Therefore,
FCA is not required to respond to the
issues raised above by commercial
bankers because they are not relevant to
this rulemaking. However, FCA will
address each of these issues to be
responsive to the bankers and their
trade associations, and transparent to
the public.
Several provisions of the Farm Credit
Act allow FCA to approve new
investments at the request of System
institutions. Sections 1.5(15), 2.2(10),
2.12(18), and 3.0(13)(A) expressly
authorize Farm Credit banks and
associations to make other investments
as may be authorized under FCA
regulations.34 Additionally, section
33 See Information Memorandum of September 4,
2014, (Appendix B, requirement 15).
34 More specifically, the Act expressly allows
Farm Credit banks and associations, ‘‘to buy and
sell obligations of, or insured by, the United States
or any agency thereof, or securities backed by the
full faith and credit of any such agency, and make
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:02 Jun 11, 2018
Jkt 244001
5.17(a)(5) authorizes FCA to ‘‘grant
approvals provided for under this Act
either on a case-by-case basis or through
regulations that confer approval on
actions of System institutions.’’
Pursuant to these statutory provisions,
FCA regulations have for many years
permitted System institutions to request
Agency approval of new investments
that are not specifically covered in our
regulations. This regulatory approach
provides flexibility so System
institutions can adapt to changing
market conditions within their statutory
authority. Financial markets often
respond to economic and financial
changes by creating new types of
investments. By approving new
investments under this case-by-case
authority, FCA enables the System to
react to evolving conditions in the
marketplace.
In exercising its explicit statutory
authority to approve System
investments, FCA remains within the
Act. The statute grants System
institutions both lending and
investment authorities, although it does
not always establish specific criteria
that distinguish loans from investments.
As the Agency charged with
interpreting, administering, and
implementing the Act, FCA must look to
caselaw, other statutes, accounting
conventions, and guidance from the
FBRAs to properly distinguish loans
from investments. FCA does not have
authority to approve, nor does it
approve, ‘‘illegal’’ loans to ineligible
borrowers and classify them as
investments, as the commenters allege.
As stated earlier, FCA, pursuant to the
Informational Memorandum of
September 4, 2014, only approves
obligations that qualify as investments
under GAAP. Additionally, FCA will
also analyze whether a proposed
investment meets the necessary criteria
under Federal Securities statutes, such
as the Securities Act of 1933, the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and
the Investment Company Act of 1940.
As part of its analysis, FCA will also
consider relevant Federal caselaw such
as Reves v. Ernest & Young,35 and SEC
v. W.J. Howey Co.36 Finally, FCA uses
the Federal Financial Institution
Examination Council’s call report
instructions on investments and loans
as additional guidance.
In response to bank concerns about
whether private placements are
investments or loans, FCA notes that the
other investments as may be authorized under
regulations issued by the Farm Credit
Administration.’’
35 494 U.S. 56 (1990).
36 328 U.S. 293 (1946).
PO 00000
Frm 00013
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
27497
same logic also applies to case-by-case
approval of private placements. We
observe that private placements are not
liquid, but they are often suitable for
other risk management purposes.
Private placement securities may be
appropriate in limited circumstances for
interest rate risk management purposes.
Bank commenters point out that private
placements are not widely sold to
public investors. FCA responds that it
has authority to approve such private
placement securities on a limited basis
under specific conditions provided they
meet the criteria of an investment. FCA
intends to look at all relevant facts when
it determines whether a private
placement is an investment, not a loan
to an ineligible borrower.
A bank trade association raised
concerns that investments approved on
a case-by-case basis would be subject to
a favorable tax treatment, which would
enable System banks and associations to
earn additional income. The arguments
of the bankers and their trade
associations have not persuaded us that
case-by-case approval of investments
allows System institutions to ‘‘unfairly’’
compete with tax-paying banks. We note
that many community banks, which
submitted comments, may organize as
Subchapter S corporations. The tax
treatment for System institutions under
the Internal Revenue Code for
subchapter T 37 is similar to the tax
treatment of small banks, with less than
or equal to 100 investors, that file under
subchapter S.
FCS debt usually trades close to
Treasuries. We note that commercial
banks may pay the same costs for funds
as the System by funding or discounting
their agricultural loans through two
GSEs—Farmer Mac or the Federal Home
Loan Banks. Also, System banks must
hold large liquidity portfolios consisting
of cash and high-quality investments.
Although System banks may deposit
cash at a Federal Reserve bank, they do
not earn interest on their deposits in
contrast to Federal Reserve member
banks. In addition, most Treasuries are
‘‘negative carry-trades’’ for System
institutions because they funded these
investments at a debt price slightly
above Treasury rates.
Commercial bankers also claimed that
case-by-case approvals lack
transparency. The FCA Board must
decide whether to approve any
investments that are not expressly
authorized by regulation. All resolutions
that the FCA Board votes on are public
37 Some System institutions may not elect to
follow subchapter T in the Internal Revenue Code.
Such institutions would pay taxes on retained net
income.
E:\FR\FM\12JNR4.SGM
12JNR4
27498
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 113 / Tuesday, June 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
pmangrum on DSK30RV082PROD with RULES4
documents, and FCA publishes
summaries of Board actions on its
website. Thus, the public can easily find
out information about investments that
FCA has approved on a case-by-case
basis. Such information includes the
investment type, investment amount,
the System institution(s) making the
investment, general obligor
characteristics, and the investment
location. Usually, institutions withdraw
requests for approval if during the
review process, FCA staff indicates that
the proposed transaction does not
qualify as an investment, or otherwise is
not within the applicants’ investment
authority.
Commercial bank commenters
requested that FCA publish a list of the
potential investments it would approve
on a case-by-case basis under the final
rule. We believe that the bankers’
approach would deny FCA and the
System the flexibility to respond to
changing market circumstances. As
discussed earlier, sections 1.5(15),
2.2(11), 2.12(18), 3.1(13)(A), and
5.17(a)(5) expressly authorize System
banks and associations to hold other
investments that FCA approves by
regulation. FCA exercises its express
statutory authority in a manner that is
consistent with law, and safety and
soundness.
Commercial bank commenters noted
that proposed § 615.5142(a) stated that
associations may hold investments only
for risk management purposes. They
disputed that investments approved by
FCA on a case-by-case purposes are for
risk management. Under existing
§ 615.5140(e), case-by-case approvals
have not been subject to the existing
purpose requirements for association
investments. This will continue
unchanged in this final rule because
FCA proposed no changes, and has
made no changes to the case-by-case
authority. We note, however, that the
purposes for the investments and the
risk characteristics of the investment are
part of what FCA evaluates in its
approval process.
H. Management of Ineligible
Investments and Reservation of
Authority To Require Divestiture
Our divestiture regulations have long
required System institutions to: (1)
Quickly divest of investments that were
ineligible when purchased; and (2)
effectively mitigate the risk associated
with investments that became ineligible
when their credit quality deteriorated.
FCA expects that System institutions
will rarely find themselves holding
ineligible investments in their portfolio
except potentially in times of a
widespread financial crisis. Under our
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:02 Jun 11, 2018
Jkt 244001
regulatory framework, institutions must
report investments that are ineligible
when purchased immediately to FCA
and divest within 60 calendar days or
pursuant to a divestiture plan approved
by FCA. If an eligible investment later
deteriorates and poses additional risk to
the institution, the focus of the
institution becomes risk mitigation. FCA
reserves authority to require divestiture
in specific circumstances.
The proposed rule would retain most
of the substantive divestiture
requirements in previous § 615.5143.
However, the proposed rule identified
which divestiture requirements apply to
banks, and which ones apply to
associations. More specifically, final
and redesignated § 615.5140(b)(5)
addresses how the new 10-percent
portfolio limit for associations pertains
to these divestiture requirements.
A bank trade association commented
that FCA should not allow System
institutions to hold any investment that
becomes ineligible. This commenter
asked FCA to require System
institutions to divest of such
investments within 6 months. FCA finds
this suggestion to be unduly inflexible.
Requiring automatic divestiture within
6 months seems punitive because it may
not allow FCA to consider the least
costly remedy for the institution. The
commenter’s suggestion that the final
regulation should require institutions to
divest of investments that later became
ineligible due to a credit downgrade
does not consider that some of these
investments may later experience a
credit upgrade. In these cases,
mandatory divestiture within 6 months
may expose the System institution to
unnecessary losses.
A comment from a bank trade
association asked whether FCA is
requiring FCS institutions to divest of
investments approved under the
Investment in Rural America—Pilot
Programs after discontinuing those
programs. The commenter also
questioned why FCA would allow a
System institution to continue to hold
any investment approved under the
pilot program after the program ended.
Investments held under the Pilot
Programs were designated as rural
community investments that furthered
the System’s mission to increase the
flow of funds into rural areas. In
response to the commenter’s question,
we cite the FCA News Release NR 13–
15(11–14–13) which states:
‘‘ . . . [T]he Farm Credit Administration
Board voted to conclude effective December
31, 2014, each pilot program approved after
2004 as part of the investments in Rural
America program. The Board’s action permits
each Farm Credit System (System) institution
PO 00000
Frm 00014
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
that is participating in a pilot program to
continue to hold its investments through the
maturity dates for the investments, provided
the institution continues to meet all
conditions.’’
As stated above, the FCA Board
permitted System institutions to hold
these investments until maturity, and
this approach mitigated potential losses
to institutions that held these
investments.
For these reasons, FCA adopts
proposed § 615.5143 as a final
regulation without substantive change.
However, we made some minor stylistic
changes which primarily included
revising cross references to association
investments which are now in final
§ 615.5140 instead of § 615.5142.
H. Miscellaneous
1. Appropriate Use of Derivatives
Derivatives can be appropriate and
useful for hedging and risk
management. While our regulations do
not prohibit a System bank from using
derivatives to build an investment
portfolio, use of these derivatives must
be consistent with an authorized
investment purpose and not used for
speculative purposes. We note that most
cleared derivative contracts are very
liquid, while many non-cleared
derivative contracts are less liquid.
2. Conforming Changes to Other
Regulation Sections
We received no comments about
provisions in the proposed rule that
made conforming changes to references
in §§ 611.1153, 611.1155, 615.5174, and
615.5180. Accordingly, we will
incorporate these changes into the final
rule.
IV. Effective Date
We recognize that Farm Credit banks
may require time to bring their policies
and procedures into compliance with
the new requirements of the final rule.
A passage in the preamble to the
proposed rule stated that we were
contemplating whether the compliance
date of the final rule for Farm Credit
banks should be 6 months after its
effective date. We invited comments as
to whether this delayed compliance
timeframe would be appropriate. We
also asked for comments on whether a
delayed compliance date would be
appropriate for associations.
An FCS bank claimed that System
institutions would need 12 months to
make the necessary changes to come
into compliance with the final rule. We
believe that the changes in this rule for
both banks and associations are not so
extensive that System institutions need
a full 12 months to come into
E:\FR\FM\12JNR4.SGM
12JNR4
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 113 / Tuesday, June 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
compliance. We also believe that a more
prolonged delay would be detrimental
to the safe and sound operations of
System institutions. For these reasons,
we believe that 6 months is sufficient
time for all System institutions to bring
their policies, procedures, and internal
controls into compliance with the final
rule. Accordingly, the final rule will
become effective on January 1, 2019.
V. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Pursuant to section 605(b) of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601
et seq.), FCA hereby certifies that the
final 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 more than
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 amended as follows:
PART 611—ORGANIZATION
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.
§ 611.1153
[Amended]
2. Section 611.1153 is amended by
removing in paragraph (i)(1) the
reference ‘‘§ 615.5140(e)’’ and adding in
its place the reference ‘‘§ 615.5140(b) or
§ 615.5142(d)’’.
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 Pub.
L. 92–181, 85 Stat. 583 (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).
5. Section 615.5131 is amended by:
a. In the definition of ‘‘Asset-backed
securities (ABS)’’, removing the words
‘‘mortgage securities’’ and adding in
their place the words ‘‘mortgage-backed
securities’’;
■ b. Adding in alphabetical order
definitions for ‘‘Asset class’’, ‘‘Country
risk classification (CRC)’’, and
‘‘Diversified investment fund (DIF)’’;
■ c. Removing the definitions for
‘‘Eurodollar time deposit’’, ‘‘Final
maturity’’, ‘‘General obligations’’,
‘‘Government agency’’, and
‘‘Government-sponsored agency’’;
■ d. Adding in alphabetical order a
definition for ‘‘Government-sponsored
enterprise (GSE)’’;
■ e. Removing the definition for ‘‘Liquid
investments’’ and ‘‘Mortgage securities’’;
■ f. Adding in alphabetical order a
definition for ‘‘Mortgage-backed
securities (MBS)’’;
■ g. Removing the definition for
‘‘Nationally Recognized Statistical
Rating Organization (NRSRO)’’;
■ h. Adding in alphabetical order
definitions for ‘‘Obligor’’ and
‘‘Resecuritization’’;
■ i. Removing the definition for
‘‘Revenue bond’’;
■ j. Adding in alphabetical order
definitions for ‘‘Sponsor’’ and ‘‘United
States (U.S.) Government agency’’; and
■ k. Removing the definitions for
‘‘Weighted average life (WAL)’’.
The additions read as follows:
■
■
pmangrum on DSK30RV082PROD with RULES4
■
§ 611.1155
[Amended]
3. Section 611.1155 is amended by
removing in paragraph (a)(1) the
■
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:02 Jun 11, 2018
Jkt 244001
§ 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,
PO 00000
Frm 00015
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
27499
corporate bond securities, MBS, ABS,
and any other asset class as determined
by FCA.
Country risk classification (CRC) as
defined in § 628.2 of this chapter.
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 MBSs.
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.
Resecuritization as defined in § 628.2
of this chapter.
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. The board of directors must
adopt written policies for managing the
institution’s investment activities. The
board must also ensure that
management complies with these
policies and that appropriate internal
controls are in place to prevent loss. At
E:\FR\FM\12JNR4.SGM
12JNR4
pmangrum on DSK30RV082PROD with RULES4
27500
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 113 / Tuesday, June 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
least annually, the board, or a
designated committee of the board, must
review the sufficiency of these
investment policies.
(b) Investment policies—general
requirements. Investment policies must
address the purposes and objectives of
investments; risk tolerance; delegations
of authority; internal controls; due
diligence; and reporting requirements.
The investment policies must fully
address the extent of pre-purchase
analysis that management must perform
for various classes of investments. The
investment policies must also address
the means for reporting, and approvals
needed for, exceptions to established
policies. A Farm Credit banks
investment policy 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 its
investments.
(c) Investment policies—risk
tolerance. Investment policies must
establish risk limits for eligible
investments and for the entire
investment portfolio. The 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 the
institution’s 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.
Investment policies must identify the
types and quantity of investments that
the institution will hold to achieve its
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, asset classes or
obligations with similar characteristics.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:02 Jun 11, 2018
Jkt 244001
(iii) Criteria for selecting brokers and,
dealers. Each institution must buy and
sell eligible investments with more than
one securities firm. The institution must
define its criteria for selecting brokers
and dealers used in buying and selling
investments.
(iv) Collateral margin requirements on
repurchase agreements. To the extent
the institution engages in repurchase
agreements, it must regularly mark the
collateral to fair market value 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 risk—(i) Liquidity at
Farm Credit banks. Investment policies
must describe the liquidity
characteristics of eligible investments
that the bank will hold to meet its
liquidity needs and other institutional
objectives.
(ii) Liquidity at associations.
Investment policies must describe the
liquid characteristics of eligible
investments that the association will
hold.
(4) Operational risk. Investment
policies must address operational risks,
including delegations of authority and
internal controls under 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. Each institution
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 the
institution’s investment activities.
(4) Implement an effective internal
audit program to review, at least
annually, the investment management
practices including internal controls,
reporting processes, and compliance
with FCA regulations. This annual
review’s scope 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)(3) of this section,
PO 00000
Frm 00016
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
each Farm Credit bank must maintain a
well-diversified investment portfolio as
set forth in paragraph (f)(2) of this
section.
(2) 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 the Farm Credit bank holds
within a DIF. In addition, except as
exempted by paragraph (f)(3) of this
section, 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. Measurement of this
diversification requirement must be
based on the portfolio valued at
amortized cost.
(3) Exemptions from investment
portfolio diversification requirements.
The following investments are not
subject to the 15-percent investment
portfolio diversification requirement
specified in paragraph (f)(2) of this
section:
(i) Investments that are fully
guaranteed as to the timely payment of
principal and interest by a U.S.
Government agency;
(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; and
(iii) Money market instruments
identified in § 615.5131.
(g) Farm Credit bank obligor limit. No
more than 10 percent of a Farm Credit
bank’s total capital (Tier 1 and Tier 2)
as defined by § 628.2 of this chapter
may be invested in 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
purchasing an investment, the
institution must conduct sufficient due
diligence to determine whether the
investment is eligible under § 615.5140
and complies with its board’s
investment policies. The institution
E:\FR\FM\12JNR4.SGM
12JNR4
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 113 / Tuesday, June 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
must document its assessment and
retain any supporting information used
in that assessment. The institution may
hold an investment that does not
comply with its investment policies
only with the prior approval of its
board.
(ii) Valuation. Prior to purchase, the
institution must verify the fair market
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. At purchase, the
institution must at a minimum include
an evaluation of the credit risk
(including country risk when
applicable), liquidity risk, market risk,
interest rate risk, and underlying
collateral of the investment, as
applicable. This assessment must be
commensurate with the complexity and
type of the investment. The institution
must also perform stress testing on any
structured investment that has uncertain
cash flows, including all MBS and ABS,
before purchase. The stress test must be
commensurate with the type and
complexity of the investment and must
enable the institution to determine that
the investment does not expose its
capital, earnings, or liquidity if
applicable, to risks that are greater than
those specified in its investment
policies. The stress testing must comply
with the requirements in paragraph
(h)(4)(ii) of this section. The institution
must document and retain its risk
assessment and stress tests conducted
on investments purchased.
(2) Ongoing value determination. At
least monthly, the institution must
determine the fair market value of each
investment in its portfolio and the fair
market value of its whole investment
portfolio.
(3) Ongoing analysis of credit risk.
The institution must establish and
maintain processes to monitor and
evaluate changes in the credit quality of
each investment in its portfolio and in
its whole investment portfolio on an
ongoing basis.
(4) Quarterly stress testing. (i) The
institution must stress test its entire
investment portfolio, including stress
tests of each investment individually
and the whole portfolio, at the end of
each quarter. The stress tests must
enable the institution to determine that
its investment securities, both
individually and on a portfolio-wide
basis, do not expose its capital,
earnings, or liquidity if applicable, to
risks that exceed the risk tolerance
specified in its investment policies. If
the institution’s portfolio risk exceeds
its investment policy limits, the
institution must develop a plan to
comply with those limits.
(ii) The institution’s stress tests must
be defined in a board-approved policy
and must include defined parameters
for the security types purchased. The
stress tests must be comprehensive and
appropriate for the institution’s risk
profile. At a minimum, the stress tests
must be able to measure the price
sensitivity of investments over a range
of possible interest rates and yield curve
scenarios. The stress test methodology
must be appropriate for the complexity,
structure, and cash flows of the
investments in the institution’s
portfolio. The institution must rely to
the maximum extent practicable on
verifiable information to support all its
stress test assumptions, including
prepayment and interest rate volatility
assumptions. The institution must
document the basis for all assumptions
used to evaluate the security and its
underlying collateral. The institution
must also document all subsequent
changes in its assumptions.
(5) Presale value verification. Before
the institution sells an investment, it
must verify its fair market value with an
independent source not connected with
the sale transaction.
Liquidity level
pmangrum on DSK30RV082PROD with RULES4
Level 1 .....................................
Level 2 .....................................
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:02 Jun 11, 2018
(i) Reports to the board of directors.
At least quarterly, the institution’s
management must report on the
following to its 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 the
institution 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
its investment holdings;
(6) How investments affect its 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 the institution’s
investment policies; including the
expected effect of these investments on
its 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
*
Liquidity reserve.
*
*
(b) * * *
Instruments
........................
........................
Jkt 244001
Frm 00017
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\12JNR4.SGM
*
*
Discount (multiply by)
• Cash, including cash due from traded but not yet settled
debt.
• Overnight money market investment ...................................
• 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.
• 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.
PO 00000
27501
12JNR4
100 percent
100 percent
97 percent
95 percent
95 percent
97 percent
95 percent
95 percent
27502
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 113 / Tuesday, June 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
Liquidity level
Level 3 .....................................
Instruments
........................
*
*
*
*
*
8. Section 615.5140 is revised to read
as follows:
■
pmangrum on DSK30RV082PROD with RULES4
§ 615.5140
Eligible investments.
(a) Farm Credit banks—(1) Investment
eligibility criteria. A Farm Credit bank
may purchase an investment only if it
satisfies the following investment
eligibility criteria:
(i) The investment must be purchased
and held for one or more investment
purposes authorized in § 615.5132.
(ii) The investment must be one of the
following:
(A) A non-convertible senior debt
security;
(B) A money market instrument with
a maturity of 1 year or less;
(C) 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;
(D) 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;
(E) The senior-most position of an
MBS or ABS that a U.S. Government
agency does not fully guarantee as to the
timely payment of principal and interest
or a GSE does not fully and explicitly
guarantee as to the timely payment of
principal and interest, provided that the
MBS satisfies the definition of
‘‘mortgage related security’’ in 15 U.S.C.
78c(a)(41);
(F) An obligation of an international
or multilateral development bank in
which the U.S. is a voting member; or
(G) Shares of a diversified investment
fund registered under the Investment
Company Act of 1940, if its portfolio
consists solely of securities that satisfy
paragraph (a)(1)(ii)(A), (B), (C), (D), (E),
or (F) of this section, or are eligible
under § 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.
(iii) 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
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:02 Jun 11, 2018
Jkt 244001
Discount (multiply by)
• 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.
commitment is being relied upon to
satisfy this requirement is located
outside the U.S., either:
(A) 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
(B) The investment must be fully
guaranteed as to the timely payment of
principal and interest by a U.S.
Government agency.
(iv) The investment must exhibit low
credit risk and other risk characteristics
consistent with the purpose or purposes
for which it is held.
(v) The investment must be
denominated in U.S. dollars.
(2) Resecuritizations. Notwithstanding
any other provision of this section,
System banks may not purchase
resecuritizations (except when both
principal and interest are fully and
explicitly guaranteed by the U.S.
Government or a GSE) without approval
under paragraph (e) of this section.
(b) Farm Credit associations—(1) Risk
management investments. Each Farm
Credit System association, with the
approval of its funding bank, may
purchase and hold investments to
manage risks. Each association must
identify and evaluate how the
investments that it purchases
contributes to management of its risks.
Only securities that are issued by, or are
unconditionally guaranteed or insured
as to the timely payment of principal
and interest by, the United States
Government or its agencies are
investments that associations may
acquire for risk management purposes
under this paragraph (b).
(2) Secondary market Governmentguaranteed loans. Loans purchased in
the secondary market that are
unconditionally guaranteed or insured
by the U.S. Government or its agencies
as to principal and interest are not
eligible risk management investments
under this paragraph (b).
(3) Risk management requirements.
Each association that purchases
investments for risk management must
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 4700
93 percent for all Level 3 instruments
document how its investment activities
contribute to managing risks as required
by paragraph (b)(1) of this section. Such
documentation must address and
evidence that the association:
(i) Complies with § 615.5133(a), (b),
(c), (d), and (e). These investment
management processes must be
appropriate for the size, risk and
complexity of the association’s
investment portfolio.
(ii) Complies with § 615.5182 for
investments that exhibit interest rate
risk that could lead to significant
declines in net income or in the market
value of capital.
(iii) Assesses how these investments
impact the association’s overall credit
risk profile and how these investment
purchases aid in diversifying, hedging,
or mitigating overall credit risk.
(iv) Considers and evaluates any other
relevant factors unique to the
association or to the nature of the
investments that could affect the
association’s overall risk-bearing
capacity, including but not limited to
management experience and capability
to understand and manage unique risks
in investments purchased.
(4) Association investment portfolio
limit. The total amount of investments
purchased and held under this section
must not exceed 10 percent of the
association’s total outstanding loans. In
computing this limit:
(i) Include in the numerator the daily
(point-in-time) balance of all
investments purchased and held under
this section. Unless otherwise directed
by FCA, associations must use the
investment balance on the last business
day of the quarter when calculating the
numerator of the portfolio limit under
this paragraph. For this calculation,
value investments at amortized cost and
accrued interest.
(ii) Include in the denominator the 90day average daily balance of total
outstanding loans as defined in
§ 615.5132. For this calculation, value
loans at amortized cost and include
accrued interest. The denominator does
not include any allowance for loan loss
adjustments.
(iii) Exclude from the numerator the
following:
E:\FR\FM\12JNR4.SGM
12JNR4
pmangrum on DSK30RV082PROD with RULES4
Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 113 / Tuesday, June 12, 2018 / Rules and Regulations
(A) Equity investments in
unincorporated business entities
authorized in § 611.1150 of this chapter;
(B) Equity investments in Rural
Business Investment Companies
organized under 7 U.S.C. 2009cc et seq.;
(C) Equity investments in Class B
Farmer Mac stock authorized in
§ 615.5173; and
(D) Farmer Mac agricultural mortgagebacked securities under § 615.5174.
(5) Funding bank supervision of
association investments. (i) The
association must not purchase and hold
investments without the funding bank’s
prior approval. The bank must review
the association’s prior approval requests
and explain in writing its reasons for
approving or denying the request. The
prior approval is required before the
association engages in investment
activities and with any significant
change(s) in investment strategy.
(ii) In deciding whether to approve an
association’s request to purchase and
hold investments, the bank must
evaluate and document that the
association:
(A) Has adequate policies, procedures,
and controls, in place for its investment
accounting and reporting;
(B) Has capable staff with the
necessary expertise to manage the risks
in investments; and
(C) Complies with paragraph (b)(3) of
this section.
(iii) The bank must review annually
the investment portfolio of every
association that it funds. This annual
review must evaluate whether the
association’s investments manage risks
over time, and the continued adequacy
of the associations’ risk management
practices.
(6) Transition for association
investments. (i) An association is not
required to divest of any investment
held on January 1, 2019 that was
authorized under § 615.5140 as
contained in 12 CFR part 615 revised as
of January 1, 2018 or otherwise by
official written FCA action that allowed
the association to continue to hold such
investment. Once such investment
matures, the association must not renew
it unless the investment is authorized
pursuant to this section.
(ii) No association is required to
divest of investments if a decline in
total outstanding loans causes it to
exceed the portfolio limit in paragraph
(b)(3) of this section. However, the
VerDate Sep<11>2014
15:02 Jun 11, 2018
Jkt 244001
institution must not purchase new
investments unless, after they are
purchased, the total amount of
investments held falls within the
portfolio limit.
(c) Reservation of authority. FCA may,
on a case-by-case basis, determine that
a particular investment you are holding
poses inappropriate risk,
notwithstanding that it satisfies the
investment eligibility criteria. If so, we
will notify you as to the proper
treatment of the investment.
(d) [Reserved]
(e) Other investments approved by
FCA. You may purchase and hold
investments that we approve. Your
request for our approval must explain
the risk characteristics of the investment
and your purpose and objectives for
making the investment.
§ 615.5142
[Removed and reserved]
9. Section 615.5142 is removed and
reserved.
■ 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 (b) or investments FCA
had not approved under § 615.5140(e),
as applicable, at the time of purchase
are ineligible. System institutions must
not purchase ineligible investments. If
the institution determines that it has
purchased an ineligible investment, it
must notify FCA within 15 calendar
days after the determination. The
institution must divest of the
investment no later than 60 calendar
days after determining that the
investment is ineligible unless FCA
approves, in writing, a plan that
authorizes the institution to divest the
investment over a longer period. Until
the institution divests of the ineligible
investment:
(1) A Farm Credit bank must not use
the ineligible investment to satisfy its
liquidity requirement(s) under
§ 615.5134;
(2) The institution must include the
ineligible investment in the portfolio
limit calculation defined in § 615.5132
or § 615.5140(b)(3), as applicable; and
(3) A Farm Credit bank must exclude
the ineligible investment as collateral
under § 615.5050.
PO 00000
Frm 00019
Fmt 4701
Sfmt 9990
27503
(b) Investments that no longer satisfy
investment eligibility criteria. If the
institution determines that an
investment (that satisfied the eligibility
criteria set forth in § 615.5140(a) or (b),
as applicable, when purchased) no
longer satisfies the criteria, or that an
investment that FCA approved pursuant
to § 615.5140(e), no longer satisfies the
conditions of approval, the institution
may continue to hold the investment,
subject to the following requirements:
(1) The institution must notify FCA
within 15 calendar days after such
determination;
(2) A Farm Credit bank must not use
the ineligible investment to satisfy its
liquidity requirement(s) under
§ 615.5134;
(3) The institution must include the
ineligible investment in the portfolio
limit calculation defined in § 615.5132
or § 615.5140(b)(3), as applicable;
(4) A Farm Credit bank may continue
to include the investment as collateral
under § 615.5050 at the lower of cost or
market value; and
(5) The institution must develop a
plan to reduce the investment’s risk to
the institution.
(c) Reservation of authority. FCA
retains the authority to require the
institution to divest of any investment at
any time for failure to comply with
§ 615.5132(a) or § 615.5140(a), (b), or (e),
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 the
institution’s financial condition and
performance.
§ 615.5174
[Amended]
11. In § 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 (h)(4)’’.
■
§ 615.5180
[Amended]
12. In § 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: June 5, 2018.
Dale L. Aultman,
Secretary, Farm Credit Administration Board.
[FR Doc. 2018–12366 Filed 6–11–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6705–01–P
E:\FR\FM\12JNR4.SGM
12JNR4
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 113 (Tuesday, June 12, 2018)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 27486-27503]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-12366]
[[Page 27485]]
Vol. 83
Tuesday,
No. 113
June 12, 2018
Part V
Farm Credit Administration
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
12 CFR Parts 611 and 615
Organization; Funding and Fiscal Affairs, Loan Policies and
Operations, and Funding Operations; Investment Eligibility; Final Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 83 , No. 113 / Tuesday, June 12, 2018 / Rules
and Regulations
[[Page 27486]]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
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: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Farm Credit Administration (FCA, Agency, us, our, or we)
adopts a final rule that amends our regulations governing investments
of both Farm Credit System (FCS or System) banks and associations. The
final rule strengthens eligibility criteria for investments that FCS
banks purchase and hold, and implements section 939A of the Dodd-Frank
Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act or DFA)
by removing references to and requirements for credit ratings and
substituting other appropriate standards of creditworthiness. The final
rule revises FCA's regulatory approach to investments by FCS
associations by limiting the type and amount of investments that an
association may hold for risk management purposes.
DATES: This regulation shall become effective on January 1, 2019.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
David J. Lewandrowski, Senior Policy Analyst, Office of Regulatory
Policy, (703) 883-4414, TTY (703) 883-4212, [email protected];
J.C. Floyd, Associate Director of Finance and Capital Market Team,
Office of Regulatory Policy, (703) 883-4321, TTY (703) 883-4212,
[email protected]; or
Richard A. Katz, Senior Counsel, Office of General Counsel, (703) 883-
4020, TTY (703) 883-4056, [email protected].
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Objectives
The final rule objectives are to:
Strengthen investment practices at Farm Credit banks \1\
and associations \2\ to enhance their safety and soundness;
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Section 619.9140 of FCA regulations defines ``Farm Credit
banks'' 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) Federal
land bank associations, Federal land credit associations, production
credit associations, and agricultural credit associations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ensure that Farm Credit banks hold sufficient high-quality
liquid investments for liquidity purposes;
Enhance the ability of the Farm Credit banks and
associations to supply credit to agricultural and aquatic producers and
their cooperatives in times of financial stress;
Comply with 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 the Farm Credit System, which consists of Farm
Credit banks, associations, service corporations,\3\ and the Federal
Farm Credit Banks Funding Corporation to provide permanent, stable,
affordable, and reliable sources of credit and related services to
American agricultural and aquatic producers.\4\ Farm Credit banks issue
System-wide consolidated debt obligations in capital markets, which
enable associations to fund short-, intermediate-, and long-term credit
and related services to farmers, ranchers, producers and harvesters of
aquatic products, rural residents for housing, and farm-related
businesses.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ A service corporation cannot extend credit or provide
insurance services.
\4\ The Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation (Farmer Mac),
also a System institution, operates a secondary market for
agricultural real estate mortgage loans, rural housing mortgage
loans, and rural utility cooperative loans. This rulemaking does not
affect Farmer Mac, and the use of the term ``System institution'' in
this preamble and the final rule does not include Farmer Mac.
\5\ One Farm Credit bank, is an agricultural credit bank, which
lends to, and provides other financial services to farmer-owned
cooperatives, rural utilities (electric and telephone), and rural
water and waste water disposal systems. It also finances U.S.
agricultural exports and imports, and provides international banking
services to cooperatives and other eligible borrowers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Farm Credit banks depend on investments to provide liquidity and to
manage surplus short-term funds and interest rate risk. Investments
also help enable associations to manage the risks they confront.\6\
Although Farm Credit banks get their funding through issuing System-
wide consolidated debt securities, they must have enough available
funds, cash and investments, to continue paying maturing obligations if
access to the debt market becomes temporarily impeded.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Under Sec. 611.1135(a), which we do not propose to revise,
service corporations may hold investments for the purposes
authorized for their organizers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FCA regulations in subpart E of part 615 impose comprehensive
requirements on investment practices at all System institutions except
Farmer Mac. We first proposed revisions to our investment regulations
in 2011.\7\ In 2012, we issued a final rule that adopted many of these
proposed requirements, particularly those guiding prudent investment
management practices at System banks.\8\ However, that final rule did
not substantively revise the rules governing investment eligibility in
Sec. 615.5140, or association investments in Sec. 615.5142. In 2014,
we proposed amendments to Sec. Sec. 615.5140 and 615.5142 to address
comments from System institutions.\9\ More specifically, the proposed
rule revised the eligibility criteria for System bank investments. In
addition, proposed Sec. 615.5142 would: (1) Impose a portfolio limit
on association investments; (2) limit association investments to
certain securities issued or guaranteed as to principal and interest by
the United States Government and its Agencies; and, (3) delete the
specific investment purposes of reducing interest rate risk and
managing surplus short-term funds.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ 76 FR 51289, August 18, 2011.
\8\ 77 FR 66362, November 5, 2012.
\9\ See 79 FR 43301, July 25, 2014.
\10\ Final Sec. 615.5140 identifies eligible investments for
both Farm Credit banks and associations. Former Sec. 615.5142
governs investment purposes for associations, but it did not
prescribe the amount of association investments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A major reason that we engaged in this rulemaking is that
investment products are becoming increasingly complex, and some
investments are riskier and less liquid than previously believed.
Section 939A of the DFA requires each Federal agency to review all its
regulations that reference or require the use of credit ratings issued
by a Nationally Recognized Statistical Rating Organization (NRSRO) to
assess the creditworthiness of an instrument. Under this provision of
the Dodd-Frank Act, Federal agencies must also remove references to
NRSRO credit ratings from their regulations and substitute other
appropriate creditworthiness standards in their place. As a result, FCA
is removing the actual references to NRSRO credit ratings in our
regulations in subpart E of part 615.
FCA received over 1250 comment letters about our 2014 proposed
regulations. FCS banks and associations submitted 12 comment letters,
and we received separate comment letters from a System trade
association and Farmer Mac. Commercial banks, and their various trade
associations, as well as their directors, officers, and employees
submitted the remaining comment letters. Most of the letters from bank
commenters were form letters, and several individuals associated with
the same bank submitted multiple or
[[Page 27487]]
duplicate copies of the same letter. System and Farmer Mac commenters
sought revisions to the bank and association regulations to clarify
specific provisions, or to address their concerns. The bank commenters
opposed all provisions of the proposed rule, except the provisions
implementing section 939A of the DFA. All the bankers asked FCA to
withdraw the rule, and to refrain from revising the investment
regulations for System banks and associations, unless the amendments
implemented new statutory authority.
III. Final Rule
After reviewing and considering the comment letters, FCA now enacts
a final rule that governs investment activities at System banks,
associations, and service corporations. The final rule: (1) Implements
section 939A of the DFA; (2) strengthens investment management
practices at FCS institutions, other than Farmer Mac; (3) improves the
quality of System bank investments and streamlines the list of eligible
investments; (4) revises the investment purposes and types associations
may hold; and (5) clarifies the rules of divestiture of ineligible
investments, and establishes new transition rules. Additionally, we
updated the definitions for investments in subpart E of part 615, and
we made conforming amendments to other regulations. FCA plans to
rescind two Informational Memoranda, revise a third Informational
Memorandum, and updating FCA Bookletter BL-064 so that FCA guidance
conforms with this final rule.
FCA notes that all regulations in part 615, subpart E, together
create a regulatory investment management framework for System
institutions. In this context, System institutions need to consider and
follow all requirements specified in Sec. Sec. 615.5132, 615.5133,
615.5134, and 615.5140, as applicable. A System institution's decision
to purchase and hold investments must be driven by an internal
assessment of their risk tolerances and liquidity needs, plus eligible
investments held.
A. Definitions
The definitions in Sec. 615.5131 apply to all our investment
regulations in subpart E of part 615. We proposed to remove or revise
several definitions in Sec. 615.5131 that pertain to eligible
investments and credit ratings. These amendments align the definitions
in FCA's investment regulations with other FCA regulations, or with the
definitions that other Federal agencies, such as the Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System, the Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and Securities and
Exchange Commission use in their regulations.
We received a comment from a bank trade association about the
proposed definition of ``asset class.'' Under the proposal, ``asset
class means a group of securities that exhibit similar characteristics
and behave similarly in the marketplace.'' As we noted in the preamble
to the proposed rule, asset classes for bank investments include, but
are not limited, to money market instruments, municipal securities,
corporate bonds, mortgage-backed securities (MBS), asset-backed
securities (ABS) (excluding MBS), and ``any other asset class as
determined by FCA.'' The commenter opposed this provision because it
authorizes FCA to approve other asset class types. The commenter
asserted that FCA should not approve new asset classes except through a
formal rulemaking. FCA responds that it has authority under various
provisions of section 5.17 of the Farm Credit Act of 1971, as amended,
(Act) to approve new investments, including new asset classes. As
appropriate, FCA will decide how best to approve any new asset classes
based on the circumstances and characteristics of the instrument when
the issue arises. Sometimes, a notice and comment rulemaking is
appropriate, while at other times, FCA may decide to issue a bookletter
or informational memorandum, or approve such instruments under case-by-
case authority. We adopt this definition as proposed.
The same bank trade association also commented on the definition of
``obligor'' in the proposed regulation. The commenter expressed
concerns that the definition of ``obligor'' would permit System
institutions to make loans to ineligible persons, businesses, agencies,
or corporations under their investment authorities. Our investment
regulations cannot confer authority on System institutions that exceed
their powers under the Act. The Act separates the System's lending
authorities from its investment authorities. Therefore, our investment
regulations cannot authorize System institutions to make loans to
ineligible borrowers disguised as investments. We adopt this definition
as proposed.
We proposed to define a collateralized debt obligation (CDO) as a
debt security collateralized by mortgage-backed securities (MBS) or
asset-backed securities (ABS, or trust-preferred securities). Farmer
Mac claimed that this definition was inconsistent with how the security
markets defined CDOs. FCA agrees with the commenter. We addressed this
concern by deleting the term ``collateralized debt obligation'' in
final Sec. 615.5131, and adding the term ``resecuritization.'' Section
628.2 already defines ``resecuritization'' to mean ``a securitization
which has more than one underlying exposure and in which one or more of
the underlying exposures is a securitization exposure.'' We will
further discuss in greater detail why resecuritizations are ineligible
investments for System banks below.
We proposed to delete the definition of ``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)'' in Sec. 615.5131. We received no comments on these revisions.
Accordingly, the final rule deletes these definitions for the reasons
explained in the preamble to the proposed rule.
The proposal added definitions of ``asset-backed securities
(ABS)'', ``Country risk classification (CRC)'', ``Diversified
investment fund (DIF)'', ``Government-sponsored enterprise (GSE)'',
``Mortgage-backed securities (MBS)'', ``sponsor'', and ``United States
(U.S.) Government agency.'' We received no comments on these new
definitions, and we incorporate them into final Sec. 615.5131 without
revision. However, we made a technical, non-substantive revision by
replacing the definition of ``Country risk classification (CRC)'' in
final Sec. 615.5131 with a cross-reference to the identical definition
in our Capital Adequacy regulations, Sec. 628.2. The preamble to the
proposed rule explains our reasoning for adopting these definitions.
B. Section 615.5132--Investments Purposes
Under the existing rule, System banks may continue to buy and hold
eligible investments to fulfill liquidity requirements, manage short-
term funds, and manage interest rate risk, under Sec. 615.5132(a). A
System trade association and a Farm Credit Bank interpret our
regulations as requiring each System bank to designate a specific
purpose under Sec. 615.5132(a) for every investment it purchases and
holds. The commenter claims that this is inconsistent with the approach
that FCA proposed for System associations, and the approach that the
Federal Banking Regulatory Agencies (FBRAs) \11\
[[Page 27488]]
followed in their liquidity coverage ratio regulation, which recognized
that securities often serve multiple purposes.\12\ Accordingly, the
commenter asserted that FCA should not require FCS banks to hold an
investment for only one of the purposes identified in Sec.
615.5132(a). The commenter urged FCA to grant System banks greater
flexibility to decide the authorized purposes and allow them to change
the designated purpose as circumstances warrant.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ The FBRAs are the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
\12\ See 79 FR 61440, October 10, 2014.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FCA responds to this comment even though we proposed no change to
Sec. 615.5132. We note that Sec. 615.5132(a) does not restrict System
banks to holding each investment for only one purpose. In fact, Sec.
615.5140(a)(1)(i) states that eligible investments may be held for one
or more of the investment purposes authorized in Sec. 615.5132(a).
However, the preamble to the proposed rule notes that certain
investments, such as private placements, are not suitable for liquidity
and, therefore, a System bank would need to document the specific
purpose or reason for holding such investments. FCA finds no reason to
revise either Sec. 615.5132(a) or Sec. 615.5140(a)(1) to address the
commenters concerns.
C. Section 615.5133--Investment Management
Section 615.5133 governs investment management practices at Farm
Credit banks, associations, and service corporations. System
institutions hold investments for different purposes and, therefore,
investment practices will vary. This regulation requires the boards of
directors of System institutions to adopt an internal control framework
that protects their institutions from potential losses. Under this
regulation, the policies must establish risk tolerance parameters that
address credit, market, liquidity and operational risks. Additionally,
this regulation requires the institution to set up delegations of
authority, internal controls, portfolio diversification requirements,
obligor limits, due diligence requirements, and to report regularly to
the board of directors.
Except for a few minor stylistic changes, we proposed no
substantive changes to Sec. 615.5133(a), (b), (d), and (e), which
respectively addresses the responsibilities of the boards of directors,
general requirements for investment policies, delegation of authority,
and internal controls. We received no comments on these provisions,
which we now adopt as a final rule. We proposed to redesignate Sec.
615.5133(f), which addresses due diligence, and Sec. 615.5133(g),
which address reports to the board, as Sec. 615.5133(h) and (i),
respectively. We proposed to enhance the portfolio diversification and
the counterparty (i.e., obligor) limits for Farm Credit banks, which
were previously in Sec. 615.5133(c)(1)(i), and establish them as free-
standing provisions in redesignated Sec. 615.5133(f) and (g),
respectively. We received comments about risk tolerance requirements in
Sec. 615.5133(c), portfolio diversification in redesignated Sec.
615.5133(f), and the obligor limits in redesignated Sec. 615.5133(g),
which we will now address.
1. Risk Tolerance
Proposed Sec. 615.5133(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 proposed to add
sponsors and unsecured investments to this regulatory provision because
we believe undue concentration in a sponsor or unsecured investments
could present excessive risk. Concentration limits should be
commensurate with the types and complexity of investments that an
institution holds.
We received a comment about proposed Sec. 615.5133(c)(1)(ii) from
a bank trade association. This commenter opined that FCA should
establish a specific concentration limit by regulation, rather than
allowing FCS institutions to set their own concentration limits. Both
FCA and the FBRAs no longer prescribe concentration limits by
regulation because each financial institution has its own business
model and risk appetite. Financial institution regulators examine each
regulated institution for robust risk management practices. The
commenter has not identified any compelling reasons FCS institutions
should not be subject to the same supervisory framework as banks.
2. Liquidity Risk
FCA proposed to revise Sec. 615.5133(c)(3), which governs how
System institutions manage the liquidity characteristics of investments
they hold. Specifically, we proposed to separately address the
different liquidity needs of System banks and associations. Proposed
Sec. 615.5133(c)(3)(i) would address liquidity in the investment
policies of Farm Credit banks, while proposed Sec. 615.5133(c)(3)(ii)
would address the liquid characteristics of investments that
associations hold. We proposed this revision because of the differences
in how Farm Credit banks and associations manage liquidity. Farm Credit
banks hold liquidity reserves to manage funding and liquidity risks for
themselves, their affiliated associations, and certain service
corporations. In contrast, System associations have more limited
funding and liquidity risk exposure because their only substantial
liability is their debt obligation to their funding bank. We received
no comments on proposed Sec. 615.5133(c)(3), and we now adopt it as a
final rule with minor stylistic changes.
3. Farm Credit Bank Portfolio Diversification
As discussed above, proposed Sec. 615.5133(f) emphasized the
importance of a well-diversified investment portfolio. This provision
would require System banks to adopt policies that prevent their
investment portfolios from posing significant risk of loss due to
excessive concentrations in asset classes, maturities, industries,
geographic areas, and obligors. The proposed rule retained the
provisions of the previous regulations that imposed no concentration
limits on securities issued or guaranteed by the U.S. government and
its agencies, and kept a 50-percent cap on MBS securities issued or
guaranteed by a Government-sponsored enterprise (GSE). In 2014, we
proposed a 15-percent portfolio cap on all other eligible asset
classes. Under our proposal, no Farm Credit bank could invest more than
10 percent of total capital in a single obligor, and the securities of
a single obligor could not exceed 3 percent of the bank's total
outstanding investments.
System commenters asked us to remove the portfolio limit on money
market funds. The commenters stressed that money market funds are
diversified in nature and they are an effective vehicle for liquidity
risk management, and the short-term maturities make these investments
self-liquidating, which provide the banks with a reliable source of
liquidity during periods of market stress. We are persuaded by this
logic and, therefore, we omit the portfolio limit on money market funds
in final Sec. 615.5133(f)(3)(iii).
System commenters also claimed that the limit of 3 percent in the
overall investment portfolio for each obligor is unnecessary because
the proposed rule reduced the regulatory obligor limit from 20 percent
to 10 percent of total capital. According to the commenters,
[[Page 27489]]
obligor exposure limits based on capital provides sufficient protection
for System banks, and the proposed, additional 3-percent obligor limit
on the overall investment portfolio does not add meaningful protection
from a risk management perspective. We agree with the commenters, and
therefore, we have deleted this limit from the final regulation.
D. Section 615.5134--Liquidity Reserve
We proposed technical, non-substantive revisions to the terms
``Government-sponsored enterprise (GSE)'' and ``U.S. Government
agency'' in our liquidity reserve regulation in Sec. 615.5134. These
changes conform to the definitions in Sec. 615.5131. We received no
comments about this change. This change is consistent with recent
changes to FCA's capital regulations as well as guidance from the
FBRAs. For these reasons, we adopt the proposed provision as a final
rule without change.
We proposed to clarify that MBS fully guaranteed by a U.S.
Government agency qualify for Level 2 liquidity and MBS fully
guaranteed by a GSE qualify for Level 3 liquidity. A System commenter
requested that we treat the MBS of a GSE in conservatorship as full
faith and credit obligations of the United States and, therefore,
qualifying for Level 2 of the Liquidity Reserve. FCA declined this
request. Our approach is consistent with FCA's capital regulations and
that of the FBRAs, which points to the uncertainty of the future
government support of GSEs in conservatorship.
We made a clarifying change to the table ``to omit two lines: In
Level 2 ``Additional Levels 1 investments'', and in Level 3
``Additional Level 1 or 2 investments'' as well as the accompanying
discount factors. We determined these two provisions are confusing and
difficult to follow and are redundant given the preceding section of
the regulation dealing with day counts.
E. Section 615.5140(a)--Eligible Investments for Farm Credit Banks
Proposed Sec. 615.5140(a)(2) sets forth the types of eligible
investments that Farm Credit banks may purchase and hold. The intent of
this provision is to ensure that System banks invest only in high-
quality investments. We received comments on each investment type,
which we now discuss.\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ Revised Sec. 615.5140(a) would apply to Farm Credit banks
only. As discussed below, all association eligibility requirements
would be in revised Sec. 615.5140(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. Non-Convertible Senior Debt Securities
The proposed rule would continue to authorize FCS banks to invest
in non-convertible senior debt securities. A bank trade association
questioned whether System institutions should have authority to invest
in corporate bonds. The commenter claims that corporate bonds are not
as high quality as government bonds, and expose investors to greater
interest rate risk. The commenter's concern is that a corporate bond
could allow System banks to become the only, or the majority, investor,
which the commenter believes could enable the System to exceed the
lending constraints in the Act.
FCA is not willing to ban investments in all corporate bonds, as
the commenter requests. Our regulations have allowed FCS institutions
to invest in high-quality corporate bonds since 1993. System
institutions use these high-quality corporate bonds to build and
diversify their liquidity portfolios. This regulatory provision imposes
high credit quality standards, portfolio and obligor limits, and
purpose restrictions on non-convertible senior debt securities. These
restrictions mean that the FCS may purchase and hold only publicly
traded debt securities. Under proposed Sec. 615.5140(a)(2)(i), which
is redesignated as final Sec. 615.5140(a)(1)(ii)(A), investments in
corporate debt securities fall under an institution's investment
authority and, therefore, they do not violate the lending restrictions
of the Act. Accordingly, final Sec. 615.5140(a)(1)(ii)(A) will allow
FCS banks to buy and hold a non-convertible, senior debt security,
which includes corporate bonds.
Under proposed Sec. 615.5140(a)(2)(i), System banks could not
invest in senior debt securities that can convert into another debt or
equity security.\14\ FCA received no comments on non-convertible senior
debt securities, and it adopts this provision as final and redesignate
it as Sec. 615.5140(a)(1)(ii)(A) without substantive change.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ As noted in the preamble to the proposed rule, non-
convertible senior debt includes: (1) U.S. Government and U.S.
Government agencies debt securities, (2) Government-sponsored
enterprises debt securities, (3) municipal (debt) securities, (4)
corporate debt securities, and (4) other senior debt securities.
Senior debt securities may be secured by a specific pool of
collateral or may be unsecured with priority of claims over junior
types of debt or equity securities. To be eligible under this
criterion, a senior debt security must not be convertible into a
non-senior debt security or an equity security. See 79 FR 43301,
43304, July 25, 2014. Since 1993, FCA has stated it is generally
inappropriate for System institutions to maintain an ownership
interest in commercial enterprises by holding equity securities. See
58 FR 63059, 63049-50, November 30, 1993.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
2. Money Market Instruments
As under our previous rule, investments in money market instruments
would be eligible under the proposed rule. Money market instruments
include short-term instruments such as (1) Federal funds, (2)
negotiable certificates of deposit, (3) bankers' acceptances, (4)
commercial paper, (5) non-callable term Federal funds (6) Eurodollar
time deposits, (7) master notes, and (8) repurchase agreements
collateralized by eligible investments as money market instruments. A
money market instrument is an eligible security if it matures in 1 year
or less.
Two System commenters asked that we remove the asset class limit
for money market instruments because their short-term maturities make
them self-liquidating. FCA agrees with the commenters that money market
instruments are liquid due to their short maturities and, therefore, no
longer warrant a portfolio limit. However, the 10-percent obligor limit
would still apply for these investments. Accordingly, FCA has removed
the 15-percent portfolio diversification requirement for money market
instruments in final Sec. 615.5133(f)(3)(iii).
3. Mortgage-Backed Securities and Asset-Backed Securities Guaranteed by
the U.S. Government and U.S. Government Agencies
Under proposed Sec. 615.5140(a)(2)(iii), MBS and ABS that are
fully guaranteed as to the timely payment of principal and interest by
a U.S. Government agency would remain eligible securities because of
their high credit quality. As we explained in the preamble to the
proposed rule, securities labeled ``government guaranteed'' satisfy
this criterion only if they are fully guaranteed as to the timely
payment of principal and interest.\15\ We received no comments on
proposed Sec. 615.5140(a)(2)(iii) and, therefore, we adopt this
provision as final and redesignated Sec. 615.5140(a)(1)(ii)(C) without
substantive change.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ See 79 FR 43301, 43304, July 25, 2014.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
4. 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
[[Page 27490]]
remain eligible investments.\16\ Section 615.5174 authorize Farmer Mac
AMBSs. As already noted in the liquidity reserve preamble discussion, a
System commenter asked that the final rule treat securities of GSEs
under conservatorship in the same fashion as though they were full
faith and credit obligations of the U.S. Government. For the reasons
explained earlier, we do not agree with the commenter, and we do not
change this provision of the final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ 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.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
5. Senior-most Positions of Non-Agency Mortgage-Backed Securities and
Asset-Backed Securities
Previous Sec. 615.5140(a)(5) and (6) classified non-agency
mortgage-backed securities (including non-agency commercial mortgage-
backed securities), and asset-backed securities as eligible
investments. In 2014, FCA proposed restricting that provision by only
allowing an institution to buy the senior-most position of a tranched
non-agency MBS or ABS as an eligible security.\17\ A non-agency MBS or
ABS, which is not tranched, and which payments are made on a pro-rata
basis would be eligible securities under the proposed rule. Under
proposed Sec. 615.5140(a)(2)(v), an eligible MBS must satisfy the
definition of ``mortgage related security'' in 15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(41).
Non-agency commercial MBS (CMBS) that meet these requirements are
eligible investments for System banks under this regulatory provision.
Non-agency MBSs and CMBS must also meet the criteria in the Secondary
Market Mortgage Enhancement Act of 1984 (SMMEA). We received no
comments on the eligibility of the senior-most position of non-agency
securities and, therefore, we adopt this provision as final and
redesignate it as Sec. 615.5140(a)(1)(i)(E).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ In 2011, we originally proposed that one of the criteria
for senior-most MBSs was that no other remaining position in the
securitization had a higher priority claim to any contractual
cashflows. 76 FR 51289, August 18, 2011. In response to System
comment letters, we deleted this criterion in our 2014 proposed
rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
6. Private Placement Securities
During this rulemaking, FCA used the term ``private placement''
securities when referring to privately placed bonds or debt securities.
Private placement refers to the sale of securities to a few
sophisticated investors without registration with the Securities and
Exchange Commission, and often without a prospectus. As a result, a
private placement security normally is not a liquid security and not
held for liquidity purposes; however, they may be appropriate for risk
management. A bank trade association opined that FCA should not
authorize any System institution to purchase private placement
securities. This comment letter, however, focused on FCA approval of
private placement securities on a case-by case basis. Since private
placements are not liquid, they need to be approved by FCA on a case-
by-case basis under Sec. 615.5140(e). We discuss this issue in greater
detail below.
7. International and Multilateral Development Bank Obligations
Proposed Sec. 615.5140(a)(2)(vi) retained the previous authority
of Farm Credit banks to invest in obligations of international and
multilateral development banks, if the United States is a voting
shareholder. We received no comment on this provision and, therefore,
we adopt this provision as final and redesignate it as Sec.
615.5140(a)(1)(i)(F).
8. Shares of a Diversified Investment Fund
For many years, these regulations have authorized System banks to
invest in several types of money market funds offered by investment
companies registered under section 8 of the Investment Company Act of
1940, 15 U.S.C. 80a-1 et seq. The proposed rule retained this original
authority, although FCA updated and modified some of the terminology.
Under proposed Sec. 615.5140(a)(2)(vii), shares of a diversified
investment fund (DIF) would remain an eligible investment if the DIF's
portfolio consists solely of eligible investments under any other
paragraph of proposed Sec. 615.5140(a)(2), or Sec. 615.5174. The
investment company's risk and return objectives and use of derivatives
must be consistent with the investment policies of the Farm Credit
bank. FCA proposed, however, more restrictive portfolio diversification
limits on DIF investments than those that now exist.
FCA received no comments about what constitutes a DIF. However, we
wish to clarify that a diversified investment fund consists of any of
three categories of investment funds, which are mutual funds,\18\
closed-end funds or unit investment trusts registered under the
Investment Company Act of 1940. A diversified investment fund also
includes exchanged-traded funds \19\ and money market funds.\20\
Exchange-Traded Funds (ETFs) while considered mutual funds or unit
investment trusts, differ from traditional mutual funds and unit
investment trusts (UITs). An investor's investment consists of
purchased shares in these investment funds. All these investment funds
meet the criteria of this regulation provision, which we redesignate as
Sec. 615.5140(a)(1)(i)(G).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ The Investment Company Act of 1940 does not define the term
``mutual fund'' but SEC literature uses it interchangeably with an
open-end fund, which that statute defines.
\19\ Exchange-traded funds are investment funds that are legally
classified as open-end funds or unit investment trusts under the
Investment Company Act of 1940.
\20\ A money market fund is a special type of mutual fund under
the Investment Company Act of 1940 and 17 CFR 270.2a-7--Money market
funds.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A bank trade association objected to DIFs as eligible investments
for FCS institutions. The commenter claimed that the proposed rule did
not limit the scope of investments in DIFs, so this authority could be
very broad and exceed the lending constraints of the Act. FCA disagrees
and points out that both Sec. Sec. 615.5134 and 615.5140 impose very
stringent criteria for investments in DIFs. Furthermore, our
regulations have allowed investments in DIFs for over 20 years, and the
proposed rule did not expand this authority, or permit System banks to
invest in DIFs for purposes that are beyond managing liquidity, short-
term surplus funds, or interest rate risks. Additionally, this
regulation still requires the portfolio of any eligible DIF to be
comprised solely of investments authorized by Sec. Sec. 615.5140 and
615.5174. System banks can only invest in DIFs by buying shares of
investment companies registered under section 8 of the Investment
Company Act of 1940. Contrary to the commenter's claim, DIFs are
eligible only if System banks exclusively hold the liquid, low-risk
assets found in final and redesignated Sec. 615.5140(a)(1)(ii)(G).
Because DIFs are investments, they do not enable the FCS to exceed the
lending constraints of the Act.
9. Obligors' Creditworthiness Standard
Previous Sec. 615.5140 relied on NRSRO credit ratings to determine
the eligibility of investments in many asset classes, including
municipal securities, certain money market instruments, non-agency
mortgage-backed securities, asset-backed securities, and corporate debt
securities.\21\ As noted earlier, section 939A of the DFA requires each
Federal
[[Page 27491]]
agency to revise all 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. FCA proposed Sec. 615.5140(a)(3) to
implement section 939A of the DFA by addressing the creditworthiness of
the obligor of securities that System banks buy and hold as
investments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ Our regulation has not imposed credit rating requirements
on investments in obligations of United States. U.S. Government
agencies, GSEs, and international and multilateral development
banks, and in DIFs and certain money market instruments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Our proposed rule would have required at least one obligor of the
investment to have ``very strong capacity'' to meet its financial
commitment for the expected life of the investment. If a Farm Credit
bank is relying upon an obligor located outside of the United States to
meet its financial commitment, the proposal required:
That obligor's sovereign host country to have the highest or
second-highest consensus Country Risk Classification (CRC) (a 0 or a
1) as published by the Organization of Economic Cooperation
Development (OECD or must be an OECD member that is unrated; or the
investment must be fully guaranteed as to the timely payment of
principle and interest.\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ https://www.oecd.org/trade/xcred/crc.htm.
A System trade association, an FCS association, and Farmer Mac
commented that the proposed creditworthiness standard for obligors was
too stringent. These commenters suggested that the final rule should
require at least one obligor to have a ``strong'' capacity to meet its
financial commitment for the expected life of the investment, rather
than the ``very strong'' capacity referred to in the proposed rule. One
of these commenters asked FCA to provide further clarification about
how ``very strong capacity to meet its financial commitments'' is
related to a ``very low probability of default.'' These commenters also
urged FCA to adopt the FBRA's creditworthiness standard of ``investment
grade.''
FCA declined the commenters' request to relax the creditworthiness
standard for obligors. FCA believes a security with ``low credit risk''
is one where the Farm Credit bank determines the issuer has a ``very
strong'' capacity to meet all financial commitments under the
security's projected life even under adverse economic conditions.
Securities that exhibit these characteristics are liquid and
marketable. Farm Credit banks primarily hold securities for liquidity
purposes and, therefore, the creditworthiness standards for these
securities ensure that they are marketable and readily convertible into
cash in a crisis at minimum costs.
We recognize our regulations governing margin and capital
requirements for covered swap entities, and capital adequacy for all
System institutions use the ``investment grade'' standard. However, we
determine that ``investment grade'' is not appropriate for these
investment regulations. FCA believes not all securities that meet the
``investment grade'' requirements would be of suitable high credit
quality and marketable for liquidity purposes. Therefore, FCA declines
to lower its proposed investment creditworthiness standard.
We now respond to the comment requesting clarification about the
relationship between ``very strong capacity to meet its financial
commitments'' and a ``very low probability of default.'' In evaluating
the creditworthiness of a security, a Farm Credit bank should consider
any of the following factors as well as any additional factors it deems
appropriate:
Credit spreads (i.e., whether it is possible to
demonstrate that a security is subject to an amount of credit risk
based on the spread between the security's yield and the yield of
Treasury or other securities);
Securities-related research (i.e., whether providers of
securities-related research believe the issuer of the security will be
able to meet its financial commitments, generally or specifically, with
respect to the securities held by the Farm Credit bank);
Internal or external credit risk assessments;
Default statistics (i.e., whether providers of credit
information relating to securities express a view that specific
securities have a probability of default consistent with other
securities with an amount of credit risk);
Inclusion on an index (i.e., whether a security, or issuer
of the security, is included as a component of a recognized index of
instruments that are subject to a specific amount of credit risk);
Priorities and enhancements (i.e., the extent to which
credit enhancements, such as overcollateralization and reserve accounts
cover a security)
Price, yield, and volume (i.e., whether the price and
yield of a security are consistent with other securities that the
institution has determined are subject to an amount of credit risk and
whether the price resulted from active trading); and
Asset class-specific factors (e.g., in the case of
structured finance products, the quality of the underlying assets).
10. Credit and Other Risk in the Investment
In addition to imposing creditworthiness standards on obligors, we
also proposed that an eligible investment must exhibit low credit risk
and other risk characteristics consistent with the purposes for which
it is held, such as interest rate risk. Institutions must consider
other risks but are not limited to just those listed in Sec.
615.5133(c). FCA received a System comment that proposed Sec.
615.5140(a)(4) limits the ability of System banks to use an investment
for more than one investment purpose. We already responded to that
comment above in the preamble discussion of final Sec. 615.5132. In
addition, our discussion in the preamble about the creditworthiness of
the obligor explains our position of credit quality, and this provision
requires no revision. Therefore, we adopt this provision as final and
redesignate it as Sec. 615.5140(a)(1)(iv).
11. Currency Denomination
Since 1993, Sec. 615.5140(a) has required all investments at
System institutions to be denominated in U.S. dollars. We proposed no
change to this requirement, and we received no comments about it.
Accordingly, we retain this requirement in the final rule without
revision, but redesignate it as Sec. 615.5140(a)(v).
12. Ineligible Investments
The proposed rule, Sec. 615.5140(c), would have prohibited Farm
Credit banks from purchasing collateralized debt obligations (CDOs), as
originally defined in Sec. 615.5131. As discussed in the preamble to
the definitions section above, Farmer Mac objected to our definition of
``CDO,'' and we responded by substituting the term ``resecuritization''
for ``CDO.''
However, the final rule would prohibit System banks from purchasing
and holding resecuritizations as we originally proposed. During the
financial crisis of 2008-2009, many risky securitization exposures were
resecuritized into new complex securities where not all buyers fully
understood the risks in the different tranches of these new
resecuritization exposures. These securities, which were sometimes
known as CDO-squared, CDO-cubed, or reperformers, exposed investors to
higher risk than the basic securitization structure. Basel III and the
FBRAs recognized the higher risk posed by resecuritizations, and
assigned a higher risk weight to them than basic
[[Page 27492]]
securitization exposure.\23\ FCA strongly believes the complex nature
of the risks within these resecuritization exposures are inappropriate
investments for System banks. Therefore, we consider these
resecuritization exposures to be ineligible investments for the
purposes authorized in Sec. 615.5132. FCA also believes certain pools
of previously delinquent or reperforming loans that were once part of a
different securitization exposure exhibit similar risks as a
resecuritization exposure. The final rule prohibits System banks from
purchasing resecuritizations without FCA's approval under final Sec.
615.5140(e), except when both principal and interest are fully and
explicitly guaranteed by the U.S. Government or a GSE.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ See Sec. 628.43(b)(5)--A supervisory calibration
parameter, p, is equal to 0.5 for securitization exposures that are
not resecuritization exposures and equal to 1.5 for resecuritization
exposures.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
13. Reservation of Authority
Proposed Sec. 615.5140(d) would have made explicit our authority,
on a case-by-case basis, to determine that an investment poses
inappropriate risk, notwithstanding that it satisfies the investment
eligibility criteria. The proposal also provides that FCA would notify
a Farm Credit bank as to the proper treatment of any such investment.
We received no comment on this provision. We retain this provision to
safeguard the safety and soundness of banks, and we redesignate it as
Sec. 615.5140(c).
F. Association Investments
FCA proposed to substantially revise Sec. 615.5142, which governed
association investments. Previously, Sec. 615.5142 did not impose a
portfolio limit on the total amount of association investments.
Additionally, our former regulation permitted 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 (interest
rate) risks as their funding banks. Previously, Sec. 615.5142
authorized 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 regulation also required each Farm Credit bank to review annually
the investment portfolio of every association it funds.
The proposed rule would limit association investments to securities
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) Investment and risk
management practices at System associations; (2) funding bank
supervision of association investments; (3) requests by associations to
FCA to hold other investments; and (4) transition requirements for
System associations to come into compliance with the new rule.
We proposed these changes because most System associations have
increased in size and complexity over the past two decades, offering a
diversity of products and services to adapt to 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 remain
concentrated in agriculture and have limited ability to manage
concentration risk. Although the previous regulation allowed the
associations to use investments for managing surplus short-term funds
and reducing interest rate risk, they could not use investments to
manage concentration risk. For these reasons, we designed the proposed
rule to strike a balance by granting associations greater flexibility
in the purposes for which they may hold investments, while placing new
limits on the amounts and types of investments they may hold. Under the
proposed rule, associations would have the flexibility to manage
concentration risks with securities that are issued or fully guaranteed
or insured as to the timely payment of principal and interest by the
U.S. Government or its agencies. The 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
FCA.\24\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ 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.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Before we address the substantive comments that we have received,
we notify the public that we have consolidated all the provisions
governing eligible investments for all System institutions into a
single regulation, Sec. 615.5140. Accordingly, FCA has removed Sec.
615.5142 concerning association investments, and redesignated it as
final Sec. 615.5140(b). Proposed Sec. 615.5142(d) would have
redesignated, but not substantively changed, Sec. 615.5140(e)
concerning other association investments approved by FCA. The final
rule restores case-by case approvals for both banks and associations to
Sec. 615.5140(e). Although we received, no comments about
restructuring final Sec. 615.5140, we consolidated the two sections
for greater uniformity in the rule. Addressing eligible investments in
a single regulation will make it easier for both FCA examiners and
System institutions to use and apply this rule.
1. Association Investment Purposes
The proposed rule would remove the requirements in the previous
regulation that authorize associations to hold investments for the
purposes of reducing interest rate risk and managing surplus short-term
funds. The preamble to the proposed rule explained that these
requirements may be too restrictive and too inflexible for associations
to effectively manage their risks in today's environment. For many
associations, a limited portfolio of high-quality investments could
help diversify risks they experience as lenders that primarily lend to
a single-industry agriculture.
We invited comments about whether this rule should identify
specific purposes for associations to purchase and hold investments,
and we asked the commenters to expressly identify any specific purposes
that the final regulation should retain or require, and why. Two bank
trade associations stated that the final rule should identify specific
risk management purposes for associations to purchase and hold
investments. One commenter asked if associations are no longer required
to manage surplus short-term funds and reduce interest rate risks, what
is the reason for these investments?
FCA responded that System institutions face four broad types of
risks: (1) Credit; (2) market (interest rate); (3) liquidity; and (4)
operational. Although the previous regulation allowed associations to
hold investments only for managing surplus short-term funds
(liquidity), and reducing interest rate risk (market risk), the
associations remain exposed to broader risk both in individual
investments and in their overall portfolios. Additionally, the prior
regulation permitted associations to hold the same investments as FCS
banks, which exposed them to the same four risks. For this reason,
Sec. 615.5133 requires all FCS banks and association to address these
four risks in their
[[Page 27493]]
investment policies. The investment policies must be commensurate with
the size and complexity of the institution's investment portfolio. As
discussed in greater detail below, this final rule retains and
strengthens the investment management requirements in Sec. 615.5133.
Additionally, new limits on the amount and types of investments in our
proposal would counterbalance the greater flexibility in investment
purposes.
As stated above, FCA seeks to grant associations greater
flexibility in investment purposes, while placing more restrictions on
the types and amount of investments they may hold. Contrary to claims
in banker comment letters, this rule restricts, rather than expands the
types of investments that associations may purchase and hold. This rule
no longer authorizes associations to hold the same investments as FCS
banks, such as money market instruments, corporate bonds, and certain
asset-backed securities.
In contrast, a System association asked FCA to retain the
investment list in the previous regulation, which it claims
associations need to manage ``prepayment [extension or contraction]
risk, credit risk, liquidity risk and yield risk.'' However, FCA
determines that the new regulation provides sufficient risk management
tools for associations, and their need for investments is different
from their funding banks. By only authorizing associations to hold
securities issued or unconditionally guaranteed by the U.S. Government
and its agencies, the regulation eliminates most credit risk associated
with such assets, and helps mitigate risk in their overall portfolios.
Securities issued or unconditionally guaranteed by the U.S Government
and its agencies still present market (interest rate), liquidity, and
operational risks to associations. As discussed elsewhere in this
preamble, placing a 10-percent portfolio cap on associations for the
first time, and limiting the types of investments that associations may
hold, result in a conservative and risk-adverse regulatory approach.
The low credit risk in these investments offer the opportunity to
diversify the balance sheet credit risks for those associations that
choose to exercise their investment authorities.
2. Eligible Association Investments
Proposed Sec. 615.5142(a) would authorize System associations to
invest solely in obligations that the United States Government and its
agencies issue, fully guarantee, or insure as to the timely payment of
principal and interest. Sections 2.2(11) and 2.2(17) expressly
authorize System associations to invest in such obligations of the
United States and its agencies. Such obligations are usually liquid and
marketable. Although MBS issued by the U.S. Government and its agencies
pose almost no credit risk to investors, they potentially expose
investors to other risks, especially market (interest rate and
prepayment risk). We find that these investments are suitable for
managing risk at associations because they have no credit risk and they
enable associations to diversify their portfolios. Additionally, all
System institutions may hold Farmer Mac AMBS as eligible
investments.\25\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ Investments in Farmer Mac AMBS are covered by Sec.
615.5174. Investments in Farmer Mac AMBS cannot exceed the total
amount of outstanding loans of a System bank or association.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bankers and their trade associations commented that this provision
would allow System associations to buy ineligible loans that are
guaranteed by the United States and its agencies in contravention of
the Act. FCA revised this provision to address these concerns. FCA has
addressed the commenters' concerns by changing the term ``obligations''
to ``securities'' in the third sentence of the final rule. If an
association purchases the government-guaranteed portions of individual
loans, such purchases do not meet the criteria for an investment
security under the final rule.\26\ FCA has added rule text to clarify
that only securities that the U.S. Government and its agencies
unconditionally guarantee are eligible investments for associations.
Under the final regulation, only investments defined and booked as
securities under GAAP qualify as authorized investments under the final
rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ For Generally Accepted Accounting Principles' (GAAP)
purposes, the association should treat the purchase of an individual
loan as purchase of an interest in an assignment in a loan
participation. System institutions, when purchasing the guaranteed
portion of an individual loan, also must comply with the lending
eligibility and loan purpose of parts 613 and 614, as if they
originated the loan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For further clarification, FCA notes that pool assemblers purchase
guaranteed portions of loans in the secondary market, and securitize
these assets. In this context, not all these securitizations will be
eligible investments for associations. We anticipate that System
associations most likely will purchase and hold either securities
guaranteed by SBA or issued by Farmer Mac.\27\ The SBA and Farmer Mac
guarantee the timely payment of principal and interest to
investors.\28\ Under GAAP, such assets are reported as investments.
System banks and associations purchase Farmer Mac 2 AMBSs under Sec.
615.5174, not under Sec. 615.5140. Farmer Mac 2 AMBSs and guaranteed
SBA securities are eligible investments for associations under the
final regulation. We have redesignated proposed Sec. 615.5142(a) as
final Sec. 615.5140(b)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ The SBA issues a ``SBA Guaranteed Pool Certificate'' to
those securitizations created by third-party issuers. In effect, the
SBA unconditionally guarantees the security. Farmer Mac issues
Farmer Mac 2 AMBSs whose underlying assets consist of the guaranteed
portions of USDA loans.
\28\ SBA is a Government agency while Farmer Mac is a GSE.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
3. Association Portfolio Limits
Proposed Sec. 615.5142(a) limits association investments to 10
percent of total outstanding loans. This portfolio limit ensures that
loans to eligible borrowers always comprise most of the assets of FCS
associations, which is consistent with the System's mission. 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 but a few
affiliated associations; and (2) associations borrow almost exclusively
from their funding banks.
The proposed 10-percent portfolio limit on investments should be
sufficient to enable associations to develop robust strategies to
manage risks if association investment policies, management practices
and procedures, and appropriate internal controls support those
investment activities. Furthermore, the proposed 10-percent limit
should help associations manage their concentration risk as single-
industry lenders. 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 lending to farmers and
other eligible borrowers.
We received comments about the proposed portfolio limits from both
System and non-System commenters. The principal concerns raised by the
commenters focused on: (1) How FCA would apply the 10-percent limit;
(2) which investments the portfolio limit covered, and (3) whether the
10-percent limit is prudent.
System commenters raised three primary issues about the proposed
portfolio limit for association investments. Several System commenters
inquired whether the 10-percent limit on investments applies to
[[Page 27494]]
both investments authorized under Sec. 615.5142(a) and those approved
by FCA on a case-by-case basis. Additionally, some System commenters
opined that the 10-percent limit was too restrictive, and that FCA
should increase it to 15-percent. Others suggested that a limit based
on ``total outstanding loans'' would be too restrictive. These
commenters suggested that the final rule tie the portfolio cap to a
broader array of assets including; ``earning assets,'' ``loans plus
mission-related investments plus UBEs plus RBICs plus [Farmer Mac]
MBS'' or ``total assets.''
Bankers and their trade associations commenters opposed the
proposed portfolio limit on association investments for other reasons.
First, these commenters wanted FCA to base the portfolio limit on
association capital levels, not total outstanding loans. One of the
bank trade association commenters misinterpreted the proposed portfolio
limit for associations by assuming that it established two separate 10-
percent limits; one for U.S. Government-guaranteed investments, and one
for ``all other association investments.'' This commenter requested
that FCA limit eligible investments to 10 percent of capital (5 percent
for guaranteed investments and 5 percent for non-guaranteed
investments), which would include 1 percent of capital for ``other
investments'' which are ``for purposes that are [consistent] with the
Act's lending constraints.'' Second, these commenters claim that the
proposed portfolio limit was too high because investments at most
associations would rarely equal or exceed 10 percent of total
outstanding loans. Third, bank commenters claimed that if loan volume
declines at an association, it should then liquidate investments to
comply with the portfolio limit, which would expose it to losses on
their required sale due to their presumed illiquidity.
We now respond to requests that we either increase or decrease the
portfolio limit for investments. As stated above, System commenters
claimed that a 10-percent limit was too restrictive, and they request
that we increase it to 15 percent. System commenters have not convinced
us that the 10-percent limit is too restrictive. FCA notes that the
policies at some System associations with active investment programs
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. In contrast, bank trade
associations commenters asked us to significantly lower the proposed
10-percent limit. However, a lower limit would not provide meaningful
risk diversification, or the necessary economies of scale for
associations to justify the added costs of establishing and maintaining
the infrastructure and internal controls for holding and managing an
investment portfolio of securities unconditionally guaranteed by the
United States Government and its agencies. Reducing the portfolio limit
below 10 percent could hamper associations from holding such
investments, thereby denying them more diversified and better quality
asset portfolios. For this reason, we decline both requests.
We now address requests from bank commenters that FCA change the
denominator for the portfolio limit calculation from total outstanding
loans to capital. These commenters stated that all FRBAs impose
investment limits that are based on references to capital, rather than
loans or other assets. Additionally, these commenters assert that a
limit tied to capital would more effectively reduce the risk exposure
to System associations. FCA responds that the purpose of the portfolio
limit is to ensure that most association assets are loans to eligible
agricultural and aquatic producers while promoting portfolio diversity.
Under the final rule, associations may hold only securities that are
unconditionally guaranteed by the U.S. Government and its agencies for
risk management purposes, which effectively eliminates the credit risk
exposure that the commenters fear. Furthermore, Sec. 615.5182 requires
associations to manage interest rate risk associated with such
Government-guaranteed investments. For these reasons, a portfolio limit
based on a reference to capital is unnecessary. In this context, the
statutory framework for the FCS is different than that for banks. FBRAs
do not tie investments at banks to loans or other assets because their
statutes do not limit their lending activity to a single economic
sector.
As noted earlier, a bank trade association asked that the final
rule limit non-guaranteed investments to 5 percent of capital, and
``other investments'' to 1 percent of capital. The commenter also
suggested that the final rule prohibit associations from holding non-
guaranteed and ``other investments'' for purposes that are inconsistent
with the Act's lending constraints. FCA already addressed the comment
about using capital as the reference for a portfolio limit. More
importantly, the final rule does not allow associations to disguise
ineligible loans as investments in violation of the Act, and as
explained elsewhere in this preamble, we amended the final rule to
address this specific concern.
We now respond to System commenters who asked us to change the
portfolio limit from ``total outstanding loans'' to either ``earning
assets,'' or ``total assets.'' We decline this request because ``total
outstanding loans'' is a standard that provides associations with a
sufficient level of investments to manage their risks prudently and
economically. Our investment regulations use the same standard for
calculating the limit for Farm Credit banks, which play a far greater
role in managing liquidity and market risk for the entire System than
associations. Under the circumstances, FCA finds no compelling reason
for enacting a permissive standard for System associations, and a more
stringent one for Farm Credit banks. Separately, FCA has consistently
held that the principal statutory mission of the System is lending to
agricultural and aquatic producers, and their cooperatives. A portfolio
limit tied to loans ensures that agricultural credits remain the
primary assets of all System banks and associations. A portfolio limit
based on either ``earning'' or ``total'' assets could permit
associations to hold a greater amount of assets that are unrelated to
agriculture.
Several System commenters asked that the portfolio limit
calculation exclude equity investments in Rural Business Investment
Companies (RBICs), an Unincorporated Business Entities (UBEs), or
Farmer Mac Class B stock (held only by System investors) from its
numerator. FCA agrees with System commenters, and the final rule
excludes both debt and equity investments in these three entities from
the calculation of the 10-percent limit. The amount that System
institutions, either alone or together, may invest in RBICs are limited
by statute.\29\ Investments in UBEs are subject to limits in Sec.
611.1153(h). FCA does not intend to place any limitations on either the
purchase of Farmer Mac Class B equity or Farmer Mac issued Agricultural
Mortgage Backed Securities (AMBS) because it would discourage System
institutions from using Farmer Mac in its risk management strategies. A
System bank or association may purchase Farmer Mac Class B equity under
Sec. 615.5173 and Farmer Mac AMBSs under Sec. 615.5174.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ See section 384J of the Consolidated Farm and Rural
Development Act, 7 U.S.C. 2009cc-9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Several System institutions suggested that the calculation for the
portfolio limit revealed a potential conflict because the numerator
would use a 30-
[[Page 27495]]
day average while the denominator would use a 90-day average. These
commenters requested that the final regulation set a 90-day average
daily balance for both the numerator and denominator. FCA disagrees
with the commenter that a 10-percent limit calculation should use a 90-
day average balance for both the numerator and the denominator. FCA
believes that the commenter's approach could favorably influence the
association's calculation of the numerator of the 90-day average, and
thus periodically exceed the 10-percent portfolio limit. After
considering various alternatives, FCA decides that using a date-
specific total investment amount for the numerator best achieves our
objective that each association never exceeds the 10-percent portfolio
limit. This approach simplifies the calculation by removing one of the
two averages proposed. FCA will keep the denominator calculation at a
90-day average because FCA's capital regulations and call report
instructions already require FCS institutions to calculate 90-day
average daily balances for loans outstanding.
The final rule requires System associations to compute the 10-
percent limit based upon a total amount for investments on a specific
date in the numerator, divided by a 90-day average daily balance of
loans outstanding in the denominator. This calculation values
investments at amortized cost. Loans, as defined in Sec. 615.5131, 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 this calculation, loans would include accrued interest,
but would not include allowances for loan loss adjustments.
FCA changes the 30-day average daily balance in proposed Sec.
615.5142(a) to a date specific amount in final and redesignated Sec.
615.5140(b)(3). FCA has made a conforming change to the final rule,
which requires associations to compute the limit using for the
numerator, the date-specific amount of investments divided by the
denominator, using the amount of the 90-day average balance reported in
the most recent call report. Unless otherwise directed by FCA,
associations should calculate this limit quarterly.
A bank trade association asserted that if loan volume declines at
an association, the association should liquidate investments to stay
within the 10-percent limitation. FCA notes that proposed Sec.
615.5142(e)(2) expressly stated that an association would not need to
divest of investments that were eligible when purchased even if a
decline in total outstanding loans causes it to exceed the 10-percent
portfolio limit. However, the rule would prohibit associations from
purchasing additional investments until their total amount is equal to
or less than the 10-percent limit. FCA retains this approach in the
final rule and redesignate it as Sec. 615.5140(b)(5). Requiring
liquidation of investments when total outstanding loans decline could
expose associations to unnecessary losses due to fluctuations in
investment prices and associated transaction costs.\30\ The commenter
also claimed that it is unclear whether association investments
authorized by the proposed rule would be liquid, and this could
increase risk to an association in the event it had to liquidate
eligible investments. Given that this regulation limits association
investments for risk management purposes to securities that are issued,
or unconditionally guaranteed or insured by the U.S. Government or its
agencies, the commenter's concern lacks merit.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ Although we received no similar comment about the bank
investment portfolio limit, we note that the same rationale applies.
A System bank would not need to divest of investments that were
eligible when purchased even if a decline in total outstanding loans
causes it to exceed the 35-percent portfolio limit. However, System
banks could not purchase additional investments.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After reviewing all the comments, FCA has decided to retain the
proposed portfolio limit of 10 percent of total outstanding loans,
although the final rule contains some minor adjustments, which we
explained earlier. This new regulation imposes a portfolio limit on
association investments, whereas the former regulation had none. As we
explained in the preamble to the proposed rule, the 10-percent limit on
investments ensures that loans to agricultural producers and other
eligible borrowers constitute most of association assets. In this
context, the primary purpose of the portfolio limit is to ensure that
System associations adhere to their statutory mission as a GSE to
finance agriculture. Additionally, the 10-percent portfolio limit
strikes an appropriate balance that enables associations to effectively
manage and diversify risks while staying within the boundaries of the
Act. Since associations may hold only investments issued, guaranteed or
insured by the United States Government and its agencies, and
investments approved by FCA on a case-by-case basis, a portfolio limit
that does not exceed 10 percent of loans allows an appropriate economy
of scale based on expected overhead costs and compliance with
investment management requirements in Sec. 615.5133.
Both System institutions and bank commenters asked whether the 10-
percent limit applied to investments that FCA approves on a case-by-
case basis. FCA confirms that the final regulation will apply an
aggregate limit of 10 percent to investments authorized in Sec.
615.5140.
4. Association Risk Management Requirements
The proposed rule addressed risk management practices that
associations must follow if they select, purchase, and hold
investments. We designed these provisions to ensure that System
associations comply with prudent investment management practices. The
proposed rule would have required each association to evaluate its
investment management policies, and determine and document how its
investment activities adhere to prudent risk management processes and
procedures. Under the proposed rule, each association must comply with
proposed Sec. 615.5133(a), (b), (c), (d), (e), (h), and (i), which
govern investment management practices at all System institutions.\31\
From FCA's perspective, 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.
Additionally, each association's investment management must be
appropriate for the size, risk characteristics, and complexity of the
association and its investment portfolio. Investment management must
consider the association's unique circumstances, risk tolerances, and
objectives.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ 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.
Proposed Sec. 615.5142(b) has been redesignated as final Sec.
615.5140(b)(2)(i). FCA did not redesignate Sec. 615.5133(f) and
(g).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
We asked for comments on whether these new requirements would
impose undue regulatory burden on System associations and their funding
banks. FCA received no comments about risk management practices at
associations. Since these risk management practices enhance safety and
soundness at System associations, we adopt the proposed regulatory
requirements without substantive revision.
The rule requires each association to assess how investments that
they purchase and hold impact the association's credit risk profile,
and affect its risk-bearing capacity. Such factors that associations
should consider and evaluate include, but are not limited to, its
management experience
[[Page 27496]]
and capability to understand and manage complex structures and unique
risks in the investments it purchases and holds. Associations may
purchase and hold investments in final Sec. 615.5140(b)(1) only for
managing risks. Although 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 on the balance sheet. Other risks that associations should
consider and evaluate include prepayment (extension and contraction)
risks and interest rate cap risks and how these risks potentially
impact earnings.
5. 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 under FCA regulations. Proposed Sec. 615.5142(c)
sets forth the requirements for funding banks to review, approve, and
oversee 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. FCA
structured the proposed rule to provide flexibility so that funding
banks could approve types or classes of investments, rather than each
individual investment. However, the proposed rule, would require
funding banks to review and approve prospective association
investments, prior to submission to FCA for case-by-case approval. The
FCA Board continues to be the final authority for approving all
association case-by-case investments. The proposed rule would require
each bank to explain in writing its reasons for approving or denying
the association's investment requests.
Once an association has established a satisfactory investment
management program that its funding bank has approved, the association
could purchase and hold investments that the Act and this regulation
authorize. The intent of this provision is to balance the association
investment activities with the funding and oversight role of the bank.
As part of the approval, 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 proposed
Sec. 615.5142(b). Any prior System association investment management
program that the funding bank previously approved would need to be
reviewed and re-approved once proposed Sec. 615.5142 becomes final and
effective. 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.
Finally, the proposed rule would keep the previous requirement that
each System bank annually review the investment portfolio of every
affiliated association.\32\ 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.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\32\ FCA notes that the General Financing Agreement (including
any attached, referenced, or related documents) can be a useful tool
for funding banks to review and monitor the investment activities of
their affiliated associations. See Sec. 614.4125.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FCA received comments from System institutions and commercial banks
about funding bank approval of investments on a program rather than
individual basis. We have already addressed this issue in a preceding
section. Commercial bank trade associations claimed that FCA was
abdicating its responsibilities by authorizing the funding banks to
approve classes of association investments. We respond that sections
2.2(10) and 2.12(18) of the Act authorize associations to hold
investments as may be approved by their funding bank under the
regulations of FCA. This regulation meets this statutory requirement.
Additionally, the final regulation only allows associations to invest
in obligations issued, guaranteed, or insured by the U.S. Government
and its agencies. As stated above, case-by-case investments must be
approved by FCA. For these reasons, we adopt proposed Sec.
615.5142(c)(1) as final and redesignate it as Sec. 615.5140(b)(4).
6. Transition Issues From Previous to New Investment Regulations
Proposed Sec. 615.5142(e)(1), would not require an association to
divest of any investments held before the effective date of this rule
provided we previously authorized the investment under former Sec.
615.5140 or by official written Agency action. As we explained in the
preamble to the proposed rule, this transition rule would allow an
association to continue to hold previous investments that would no
longer be authorized by the final rule. After this final rule is
effective, institutions may not extend or renew investments past their
maturity unless they are authorized by regulation or FCA approval.
Proposed Sec. 615.5142(e)(3) would apply to all investments that
an association acquires after the new regulation becomes effective.
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 managing and
divesting of ineligible investments.
A bank trade association opposed this provision because it believes
that FCA should not permit associations to hold investments that the
final rule no longer authorizes. The commenter claimed that FCA should
require immediate divestiture of these readily marketable investments.
FCA responds that these investments were eligible when purchased under
regulations and a pilot program that were then in effect. It is
customary and accepted practice among financial institution regulators
to allow institutions to retain investments until maturity, if prior
regulations or agency action authorized their purchase unless a statute
requires immediate divestiture or there is a compelling safety and
soundness reason. As noted above, institutions cannot renew or extend
such investments after they mature. Accordingly, we adopt proposed
Sec. 615.5142(e)(1) as final and redesignate it as Sec.
615.5140(b)(5).
G. Other Investments Approved by FCA
Since 1999, our investment regulations have allowed all System
institutions to purchase and hold other investments (not listed in our
regulation) that FCA approves. The regulation requires that all
requests for our approval must explain the risk characteristics of the
investment and the institution's purpose and objectives for making the
investment. We proposed no changes to this provision of our regulation,
which still can be found at Sec. 615.5140(e), and the final rule
retains this authority without revision. Case-by case approvals enable
System institutions to purchase and hold other investments that are
consistent with their statutory authorities and the objectives of the
Act. Currently, FCA requires System institutions to submit information
and analysis with each approval request that demonstrates that
[[Page 27497]]
the asset is accounted for as an investment under GAAP,\33\ and not a
loan to an ineligible borrower.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ See Information Memorandum of September 4, 2014, (Appendix
B, requirement 15).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The bankers and their trade associations opposed the case-by-case
approval authority. These commenters claim that the case-by-case
approval authority in the regulation goes beyond the investment
provisions in the Act and Congressional intent. They further claimed
that this regulatory provision enables FCA to approve ``illegal'' loans
to ineligible borrowers and classify them as investments. Specifically,
these commenters claim that the proposed rule and guidance provided by
the Informational Memorandum dated September 4, 2014, would permit FCS
institutions to evade lending restrictions by buying instruments that
are improperly labeled as ``debt securities,'' ``obligations,'' or
``bonds.'' The commenters state that the proposed rule and the
Information Memorandum dated September 4, 2014, does not state that
``investments'' explicitly exclude commercial business loans. A related
complaint was that the proposed rule did not identify specific criteria
that FCA would use to distinguish loans from investments and that the
approval of private placements would further blur this distinction.
According to the commenters, such approvals would enable System
institutions to impermissibly compete with tax-paying banks. Another
concern of banks and their trade associations is that the case-by-case
approvals lack transparency.
FCA proposed no changes to the regulation governing case-by-case
approvals of investments by System banks and associations. Accordingly,
this final rule makes no changes to this existing regulatory provision.
Therefore, FCA is not required to respond to the issues raised above by
commercial bankers because they are not relevant to this rulemaking.
However, FCA will address each of these issues to be responsive to the
bankers and their trade associations, and transparent to the public.
Several provisions of the Farm Credit Act allow FCA to approve new
investments at the request of System institutions. Sections 1.5(15),
2.2(10), 2.12(18), and 3.0(13)(A) expressly authorize Farm Credit banks
and associations to make other investments as may be authorized under
FCA regulations.\34\ Additionally, section 5.17(a)(5) authorizes FCA to
``grant approvals provided for under this Act either on a case-by-case
basis or through regulations that confer approval on actions of System
institutions.'' Pursuant to these statutory provisions, FCA regulations
have for many years permitted System institutions to request Agency
approval of new investments that are not specifically covered in our
regulations. This regulatory approach provides flexibility so System
institutions can adapt to changing market conditions within their
statutory authority. Financial markets often respond to economic and
financial changes by creating new types of investments. By approving
new investments under this case-by-case authority, FCA enables the
System to react to evolving conditions in the marketplace.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ More specifically, the Act expressly allows Farm Credit
banks and associations, ``to buy and sell obligations of, or insured
by, the United States or any agency thereof, or securities backed by
the full faith and credit of any such agency, and make other
investments as may be authorized under regulations issued by the
Farm Credit Administration.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In exercising its explicit statutory authority to approve System
investments, FCA remains within the Act. The statute grants System
institutions both lending and investment authorities, although it does
not always establish specific criteria that distinguish loans from
investments. As the Agency charged with interpreting, administering,
and implementing the Act, FCA must look to caselaw, other statutes,
accounting conventions, and guidance from the FBRAs to properly
distinguish loans from investments. FCA does not have authority to
approve, nor does it approve, ``illegal'' loans to ineligible borrowers
and classify them as investments, as the commenters allege. As stated
earlier, FCA, pursuant to the Informational Memorandum of September 4,
2014, only approves obligations that qualify as investments under GAAP.
Additionally, FCA will also analyze whether a proposed investment meets
the necessary criteria under Federal Securities statutes, such as the
Securities Act of 1933, the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and the
Investment Company Act of 1940. As part of its analysis, FCA will also
consider relevant Federal caselaw such as Reves v. Ernest & Young,\35\
and SEC v. W.J. Howey Co.\36\ Finally, FCA uses the Federal Financial
Institution Examination Council's call report instructions on
investments and loans as additional guidance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ 494 U.S. 56 (1990).
\36\ 328 U.S. 293 (1946).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In response to bank concerns about whether private placements are
investments or loans, FCA notes that the same logic also applies to
case-by-case approval of private placements. We observe that private
placements are not liquid, but they are often suitable for other risk
management purposes. Private placement securities may be appropriate in
limited circumstances for interest rate risk management purposes. Bank
commenters point out that private placements are not widely sold to
public investors. FCA responds that it has authority to approve such
private placement securities on a limited basis under specific
conditions provided they meet the criteria of an investment. FCA
intends to look at all relevant facts when it determines whether a
private placement is an investment, not a loan to an ineligible
borrower.
A bank trade association raised concerns that investments approved
on a case-by-case basis would be subject to a favorable tax treatment,
which would enable System banks and associations to earn additional
income. The arguments of the bankers and their trade associations have
not persuaded us that case-by-case approval of investments allows
System institutions to ``unfairly'' compete with tax-paying banks. We
note that many community banks, which submitted comments, may organize
as Subchapter S corporations. The tax treatment for System institutions
under the Internal Revenue Code for subchapter T \37\ is similar to the
tax treatment of small banks, with less than or equal to 100 investors,
that file under subchapter S.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ Some System institutions may not elect to follow subchapter
T in the Internal Revenue Code. Such institutions would pay taxes on
retained net income.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FCS debt usually trades close to Treasuries. We note that
commercial banks may pay the same costs for funds as the System by
funding or discounting their agricultural loans through two GSEs--
Farmer Mac or the Federal Home Loan Banks. Also, System banks must hold
large liquidity portfolios consisting of cash and high-quality
investments. Although System banks may deposit cash at a Federal
Reserve bank, they do not earn interest on their deposits in contrast
to Federal Reserve member banks. In addition, most Treasuries are
``negative carry-trades'' for System institutions because they funded
these investments at a debt price slightly above Treasury rates.
Commercial bankers also claimed that case-by-case approvals lack
transparency. The FCA Board must decide whether to approve any
investments that are not expressly authorized by regulation. All
resolutions that the FCA Board votes on are public
[[Page 27498]]
documents, and FCA publishes summaries of Board actions on its website.
Thus, the public can easily find out information about investments that
FCA has approved on a case-by-case basis. Such information includes the
investment type, investment amount, the System institution(s) making
the investment, general obligor characteristics, and the investment
location. Usually, institutions withdraw requests for approval if
during the review process, FCA staff indicates that the proposed
transaction does not qualify as an investment, or otherwise is not
within the applicants' investment authority.
Commercial bank commenters requested that FCA publish a list of the
potential investments it would approve on a case-by-case basis under
the final rule. We believe that the bankers' approach would deny FCA
and the System the flexibility to respond to changing market
circumstances. As discussed earlier, sections 1.5(15), 2.2(11),
2.12(18), 3.1(13)(A), and 5.17(a)(5) expressly authorize System banks
and associations to hold other investments that FCA approves by
regulation. FCA exercises its express statutory authority in a manner
that is consistent with law, and safety and soundness.
Commercial bank commenters noted that proposed Sec. 615.5142(a)
stated that associations may hold investments only for risk management
purposes. They disputed that investments approved by FCA on a case-by-
case purposes are for risk management. Under existing Sec.
615.5140(e), case-by-case approvals have not been subject to the
existing purpose requirements for association investments. This will
continue unchanged in this final rule because FCA proposed no changes,
and has made no changes to the case-by-case authority. We note,
however, that the purposes for the investments and the risk
characteristics of the investment are part of what FCA evaluates in its
approval process.
H. Management of Ineligible Investments and Reservation of Authority To
Require Divestiture
Our divestiture regulations have long required System institutions
to: (1) Quickly divest of investments that were ineligible when
purchased; and (2) effectively mitigate the risk associated with
investments that became ineligible when their credit quality
deteriorated. FCA expects that System institutions will rarely find
themselves holding ineligible investments in their portfolio except
potentially in times of a widespread financial crisis. Under our
regulatory framework, institutions must report investments that are
ineligible when purchased immediately to FCA and divest within 60
calendar days or pursuant to a divestiture plan approved by FCA. If an
eligible investment later deteriorates and poses additional risk to the
institution, the focus of the institution becomes risk mitigation. FCA
reserves authority to require divestiture in specific circumstances.
The proposed rule would retain most of the substantive divestiture
requirements in previous Sec. 615.5143. However, the proposed rule
identified which divestiture requirements apply to banks, and which
ones apply to associations. More specifically, final and redesignated
Sec. 615.5140(b)(5) addresses how the new 10-percent portfolio limit
for associations pertains to these divestiture requirements.
A bank trade association commented that FCA should not allow System
institutions to hold any investment that becomes ineligible. This
commenter asked FCA to require System institutions to divest of such
investments within 6 months. FCA finds this suggestion to be unduly
inflexible. Requiring automatic divestiture within 6 months seems
punitive because it may not allow FCA to consider the least costly
remedy for the institution. The commenter's suggestion that the final
regulation should require institutions to divest of investments that
later became ineligible due to a credit downgrade does not consider
that some of these investments may later experience a credit upgrade.
In these cases, mandatory divestiture within 6 months may expose the
System institution to unnecessary losses.
A comment from a bank trade association asked whether FCA is
requiring FCS institutions to divest of investments approved under the
Investment in Rural America--Pilot Programs after discontinuing those
programs. The commenter also questioned why FCA would allow a System
institution to continue to hold any investment approved under the pilot
program after the program ended. Investments held under the Pilot
Programs were designated as rural community investments that furthered
the System's mission to increase the flow of funds into rural areas. In
response to the commenter's question, we cite the FCA News Release NR
13-15(11-14-13) which states:
`` . . . [T]he Farm Credit Administration Board voted to
conclude effective December 31, 2014, each pilot program approved
after 2004 as part of the investments in Rural America program. The
Board's action permits each Farm Credit System (System) institution
that is participating in a pilot program to continue to hold its
investments through the maturity dates for the investments, provided
the institution continues to meet all conditions.''
As stated above, the FCA Board permitted System institutions to hold
these investments until maturity, and this approach mitigated potential
losses to institutions that held these investments.
For these reasons, FCA adopts proposed Sec. 615.5143 as a final
regulation without substantive change. However, we made some minor
stylistic changes which primarily included revising cross references to
association investments which are now in final Sec. 615.5140 instead
of Sec. 615.5142.
H. Miscellaneous
1. Appropriate Use of Derivatives
Derivatives can be appropriate and useful for hedging and risk
management. While our regulations do not prohibit a System bank from
using derivatives to build an investment portfolio, use of these
derivatives must be consistent with an authorized investment purpose
and not used for speculative purposes. We note that most cleared
derivative contracts are very liquid, while many non-cleared derivative
contracts are less liquid.
2. Conforming Changes to Other Regulation Sections
We received no comments about provisions in the proposed rule that
made conforming changes to references in Sec. Sec. 611.1153, 611.1155,
615.5174, and 615.5180. Accordingly, we will incorporate these changes
into the final rule.
IV. Effective Date
We recognize that Farm Credit banks may require time to bring their
policies and procedures into compliance with the new requirements of
the final rule. A passage in the preamble to the proposed rule stated
that we were contemplating whether the compliance date of the final
rule for Farm Credit banks should be 6 months after its effective date.
We invited comments as to whether this delayed compliance timeframe
would be appropriate. We also asked for comments on whether a delayed
compliance date would be appropriate for associations.
An FCS bank claimed that System institutions would need 12 months
to make the necessary changes to come into compliance with the final
rule. We believe that the changes in this rule for both banks and
associations are not so extensive that System institutions need a full
12 months to come into
[[Page 27499]]
compliance. We also believe that a more prolonged delay would be
detrimental to the safe and sound operations of System institutions.
For these reasons, we believe that 6 months is sufficient time for all
System institutions to bring their policies, procedures, and internal
controls into compliance with the final rule. Accordingly, the final
rule will become effective on January 1, 2019.
V. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Pursuant to section 605(b) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.), FCA hereby certifies that the final 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 more than 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 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 Pub. L. 92-
181, 85 Stat. 583 (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).
0
5. Section 615.5131 is amended by:
0
a. In the definition of ``Asset-backed securities (ABS)'', removing the
words ``mortgage securities'' and adding in their place the words
``mortgage-backed securities'';
0
b. Adding in alphabetical order definitions for ``Asset class'',
``Country risk classification (CRC)'', and ``Diversified investment
fund (DIF)'';
0
c. Removing the definitions for ``Eurodollar time deposit'', ``Final
maturity'', ``General obligations'', ``Government agency'', and
``Government-sponsored agency'';
0
d. Adding in alphabetical order a definition for ``Government-sponsored
enterprise (GSE)'';
0
e. Removing the definition for ``Liquid investments'' and ``Mortgage
securities'';
0
f. Adding in alphabetical order a definition for ``Mortgage-backed
securities (MBS)'';
0
g. Removing the definition for ``Nationally Recognized Statistical
Rating Organization (NRSRO)'';
0
h. Adding in alphabetical order definitions for ``Obligor'' and
``Resecuritization'';
0
i. Removing the definition for ``Revenue bond'';
0
j. Adding in alphabetical order definitions for ``Sponsor'' and
``United States (U.S.) Government agency''; and
0
k. Removing the definitions for ``Weighted average life (WAL)''.
The additions 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, and any other asset
class as determined by FCA.
Country risk classification (CRC) as defined in Sec. 628.2 of this
chapter.
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 MBSs.
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.
Resecuritization as defined in Sec. 628.2 of this chapter.
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. The board of directors
must adopt written policies for managing the institution's investment
activities. The board must also ensure that management complies with
these policies and that appropriate internal controls are in place to
prevent loss. At
[[Page 27500]]
least annually, the board, or a designated committee of the board, must
review the sufficiency of these investment policies.
(b) Investment policies--general requirements. Investment policies
must address the purposes and objectives of investments; risk
tolerance; delegations of authority; internal controls; due diligence;
and reporting requirements. The investment policies must fully address
the extent of pre-purchase analysis that management must perform for
various classes of investments. The investment policies must also
address the means for reporting, and approvals needed for, exceptions
to established policies. A Farm Credit banks investment policy 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 its investments.
(c) Investment policies--risk tolerance. Investment policies must
establish risk limits for eligible investments and for the entire
investment portfolio. The 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
the institution's 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. Investment policies
must identify the types and quantity of investments that the
institution will hold to achieve its 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, asset classes or obligations with
similar characteristics.
(iii) Criteria for selecting brokers and, dealers. Each institution
must buy and sell eligible investments with more than one securities
firm. The institution must define its criteria for selecting brokers
and dealers used in buying and selling investments.
(iv) Collateral margin requirements on repurchase agreements. To
the extent the institution engages in repurchase agreements, it must
regularly mark the collateral to fair market value 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 risk--(i) Liquidity at Farm Credit banks. Investment
policies must describe the liquidity characteristics of eligible
investments that the bank will hold to meet its liquidity needs and
other institutional objectives.
(ii) Liquidity at associations. Investment policies must describe
the liquid characteristics of eligible investments that the association
will hold.
(4) Operational risk. Investment policies must address operational
risks, including delegations of authority and internal controls under
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. Each institution 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 the institution's
investment activities.
(4) Implement an effective internal audit program to review, at
least annually, the investment management practices including internal
controls, reporting processes, and compliance with FCA regulations.
This annual review's scope 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)(3) of this section, each Farm Credit bank must maintain a well-
diversified investment portfolio as set forth in paragraph (f)(2) of
this section.
(2) 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 the Farm Credit bank holds
within a DIF. In addition, except as exempted by paragraph (f)(3) of
this section, 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. Measurement of this diversification
requirement must be based on the portfolio valued at amortized cost.
(3) Exemptions from investment portfolio diversification
requirements. The following investments are not subject to the 15-
percent investment portfolio diversification requirement specified in
paragraph (f)(2) of this section:
(i) Investments that are fully guaranteed as to the timely payment
of principal and interest by a U.S. Government agency;
(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; and
(iii) Money market instruments identified in Sec. 615.5131.
(g) Farm Credit bank obligor limit. No more than 10 percent of a
Farm Credit bank's total capital (Tier 1 and Tier 2) as defined by
Sec. 628.2 of this chapter may be invested in 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 purchasing an investment,
the institution must conduct sufficient due diligence to determine
whether the investment is eligible under Sec. 615.5140 and complies
with its board's investment policies. The institution
[[Page 27501]]
must document its assessment and retain any supporting information used
in that assessment. The institution may hold an investment that does
not comply with its investment policies only with the prior approval of
its board.
(ii) Valuation. Prior to purchase, the institution must verify the
fair market 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. At purchase, the institution must at a
minimum include an evaluation of the credit risk (including country
risk when applicable), liquidity risk, market risk, interest rate risk,
and underlying collateral of the investment, as applicable. This
assessment must be commensurate with the complexity and type of the
investment. The institution must also perform stress testing on any
structured investment that has uncertain cash flows, including all MBS
and ABS, before purchase. The stress test must be commensurate with the
type and complexity of the investment and must enable the institution
to determine that the investment does not expose its capital, earnings,
or liquidity if applicable, to risks that are greater than those
specified in its investment policies. The stress testing must comply
with the requirements in paragraph (h)(4)(ii) of this section. The
institution must document and retain its risk assessment and stress
tests conducted on investments purchased.
(2) Ongoing value determination. At least monthly, the institution
must determine the fair market value of each investment in its
portfolio and the fair market value of its whole investment portfolio.
(3) Ongoing analysis of credit risk. The institution must establish
and maintain processes to monitor and evaluate changes in the credit
quality of each investment in its portfolio and in its whole investment
portfolio on an ongoing basis.
(4) Quarterly stress testing. (i) The institution must stress test
its entire investment portfolio, including stress tests of each
investment individually and the whole portfolio, at the end of each
quarter. The stress tests must enable the institution to determine that
its investment securities, both individually and on a portfolio-wide
basis, do not expose its capital, earnings, or liquidity if applicable,
to risks that exceed the risk tolerance specified in its investment
policies. If the institution's portfolio risk exceeds its investment
policy limits, the institution must develop a plan to comply with those
limits.
(ii) The institution's stress tests must be defined in a board-
approved policy and must include defined parameters for the security
types purchased. The stress tests must be comprehensive and appropriate
for the institution's risk profile. At a minimum, the stress tests must
be able to measure the price sensitivity of investments over a range of
possible interest rates and yield curve scenarios. The stress test
methodology must be appropriate for the complexity, structure, and cash
flows of the investments in the institution's portfolio. The
institution must rely to the maximum extent practicable on verifiable
information to support all its stress test assumptions, including
prepayment and interest rate volatility assumptions. The institution
must document the basis for all assumptions used to evaluate the
security and its underlying collateral. The institution must also
document all subsequent changes in its assumptions.
(5) Presale value verification. Before the institution sells an
investment, it must verify its fair market value with an independent
source not connected with the sale transaction.
(i) Reports to the board of directors. At least quarterly, the
institution's management must report on the following to its 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 the institution 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 its investment holdings;
(6) How investments affect its 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 the
institution's investment policies; including the expected effect of
these investments on its 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 level Instruments Discount (multiply by)
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Level 1................................. .............. Cash, including 100 percent
cash due from traded but
not yet settled debt.
Overnight money 100 percent
market investment.
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.
Level 2................................. .............. 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.
[[Page 27502]]
Level 3................................. .............. GSE senior debt 93 percent for all Level 3
securities with instruments
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.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
0
8. Section 615.5140 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 615.5140 Eligible investments.
(a) Farm Credit banks--(1) Investment eligibility criteria. A Farm
Credit bank may purchase an investment only if it satisfies the
following investment eligibility criteria:
(i) The investment must be purchased and held for one or more
investment purposes authorized in Sec. 615.5132.
(ii) The investment must be one of the following:
(A) A non-convertible senior debt security;
(B) A money market instrument with a maturity of 1 year or less;
(C) 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;
(D) 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;
(E) The senior-most position of an MBS or ABS that a U.S.
Government agency does not fully guarantee as to the timely payment of
principal and interest or a GSE does not fully and explicitly guarantee
as to the timely payment of principal and interest, provided that the
MBS satisfies the definition of ``mortgage related security'' in 15
U.S.C. 78c(a)(41);
(F) An obligation of an international or multilateral development
bank in which the U.S. is a voting member; or
(G) Shares of a diversified investment fund registered under the
Investment Company Act of 1940, if its portfolio consists solely of
securities that satisfy paragraph (a)(1)(ii)(A), (B), (C), (D), (E), or
(F) of this section, or 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.
(iii) 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:
(A) 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
(B) The investment must be fully guaranteed as to the timely
payment of principal and interest by a U.S. Government agency.
(iv) The investment must exhibit low credit risk and other risk
characteristics consistent with the purpose or purposes for which it is
held.
(v) The investment must be denominated in U.S. dollars.
(2) Resecuritizations. Notwithstanding any other provision of this
section, System banks may not purchase resecuritizations (except when
both principal and interest are fully and explicitly guaranteed by the
U.S. Government or a GSE) without approval under paragraph (e) of this
section.
(b) Farm Credit associations--(1) Risk management investments. Each
Farm Credit System association, with the approval of its funding bank,
may purchase and hold investments to manage risks. Each association
must identify and evaluate how the investments that it purchases
contributes to management of its risks. Only securities that are issued
by, or are unconditionally guaranteed or insured as to the timely
payment of principal and interest by, the United States Government or
its agencies are investments that associations may acquire for risk
management purposes under this paragraph (b).
(2) Secondary market Government-guaranteed loans. Loans purchased
in the secondary market that are unconditionally guaranteed or insured
by the U.S. Government or its agencies as to principal and interest are
not eligible risk management investments under this paragraph (b).
(3) Risk management requirements. Each association that purchases
investments for risk management must document how its investment
activities contribute to managing risks as required by paragraph (b)(1)
of this section. Such documentation must address and evidence that the
association:
(i) Complies with Sec. 615.5133(a), (b), (c), (d), and (e). These
investment management processes must be appropriate for the size, risk
and complexity of the association's investment portfolio.
(ii) Complies with Sec. 615.5182 for investments that exhibit
interest rate risk that could lead to significant declines in net
income or in the market value of capital.
(iii) Assesses how these investments impact the association's
overall credit risk profile and how these investment purchases aid in
diversifying, hedging, or mitigating overall credit risk.
(iv) Considers and evaluates any other relevant factors unique to
the association or to the nature of the investments that could affect
the association's overall risk-bearing capacity, including but not
limited to management experience and capability to understand and
manage unique risks in investments purchased.
(4) Association investment portfolio limit. The total amount of
investments purchased and held under this section must not exceed 10
percent of the association's total outstanding loans. In computing this
limit:
(i) Include in the numerator the daily (point-in-time) balance of
all investments purchased and held under this section. Unless otherwise
directed by FCA, associations must use the investment balance on the
last business day of the quarter when calculating the numerator of the
portfolio limit under this paragraph. For this calculation, value
investments at amortized cost and accrued interest.
(ii) Include in the denominator the 90-day average daily balance of
total outstanding loans as defined in Sec. 615.5132. For this
calculation, value loans at amortized cost and include accrued
interest. The denominator does not include any allowance for loan loss
adjustments.
(iii) Exclude from the numerator the following:
[[Page 27503]]
(A) Equity investments in unincorporated business entities
authorized in Sec. 611.1150 of this chapter;
(B) Equity investments in Rural Business Investment Companies
organized under 7 U.S.C. 2009cc et seq.;
(C) Equity investments in Class B Farmer Mac stock authorized in
Sec. 615.5173; and
(D) Farmer Mac agricultural mortgage-backed securities under Sec.
615.5174.
(5) Funding bank supervision of association investments. (i) The
association must not purchase and hold investments without the funding
bank's prior approval. The bank must review the association's prior
approval requests and explain in writing its reasons for approving or
denying the request. The prior approval is required before the
association engages in investment activities and with any significant
change(s) in investment strategy.
(ii) In deciding whether to approve an association's request to
purchase and hold investments, the bank must evaluate and document that
the association:
(A) Has adequate policies, procedures, and controls, in place for
its investment accounting and reporting;
(B) Has capable staff with the necessary expertise to manage the
risks in investments; and
(C) Complies with paragraph (b)(3) of this section.
(iii) The bank must review annually the investment portfolio of
every association that it funds. This annual review must evaluate
whether the association's investments manage risks over time, and the
continued adequacy of the associations' risk management practices.
(6) Transition for association investments. (i) An association is
not required to divest of any investment held on January 1, 2019 that
was authorized under Sec. 615.5140 as contained in 12 CFR part 615
revised as of January 1, 2018 or otherwise by official written FCA
action that allowed the association to continue to hold such
investment. Once such investment matures, the association must not
renew it unless the investment is authorized pursuant to this section.
(ii) No association is required to divest of investments if a
decline in total outstanding loans causes it to exceed the portfolio
limit in paragraph (b)(3) of this section. However, the institution
must not purchase new investments unless, after they are purchased, the
total amount of investments held falls within the portfolio limit.
(c) Reservation of authority. FCA may, on a case-by-case basis,
determine that a particular investment you are holding poses
inappropriate risk, notwithstanding that it satisfies the investment
eligibility criteria. If so, we will notify you as to the proper
treatment of the investment.
(d) [Reserved]
(e) Other investments approved by FCA. You may purchase and hold
investments that we approve. Your request for our approval must explain
the risk characteristics of the investment and your purpose and
objectives for making the investment.
Sec. 615.5142 [Removed and reserved]
0
9. Section 615.5142 is removed and reserved.
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 (b)
or investments FCA had not approved under Sec. 615.5140(e), as
applicable, at the time of purchase are ineligible. System institutions
must not purchase ineligible investments. If the institution determines
that it has purchased an ineligible investment, it must notify FCA
within 15 calendar days after the determination. The institution must
divest of the investment no later than 60 calendar days after
determining that the investment is ineligible unless FCA approves, in
writing, a plan that authorizes the institution to divest the
investment over a longer period. Until the institution divests of the
ineligible investment:
(1) A Farm Credit bank must not use the ineligible investment to
satisfy its liquidity requirement(s) under Sec. 615.5134;
(2) The institution must include the ineligible investment in the
portfolio limit calculation defined in Sec. 615.5132 or Sec.
615.5140(b)(3), as applicable; and
(3) A Farm Credit bank must exclude the ineligible investment as
collateral under Sec. 615.5050.
(b) Investments that no longer satisfy investment eligibility
criteria. If the institution determines that an investment (that
satisfied the eligibility criteria set forth in Sec. 615.5140(a) or
(b), as applicable, when purchased) no longer satisfies the criteria,
or that an investment that FCA approved pursuant to Sec. 615.5140(e),
no longer satisfies the conditions of approval, the institution may
continue to hold the investment, subject to the following requirements:
(1) The institution must notify FCA within 15 calendar days after
such determination;
(2) A Farm Credit bank must not use the ineligible investment to
satisfy its liquidity requirement(s) under Sec. 615.5134;
(3) The institution must include the ineligible investment in the
portfolio limit calculation defined in Sec. 615.5132 or Sec.
615.5140(b)(3), as applicable;
(4) A Farm Credit bank may continue to include the investment as
collateral under Sec. 615.5050 at the lower of cost or market value;
and
(5) The institution must develop a plan to reduce the investment's
risk to the institution.
(c) Reservation of authority. FCA retains the authority to require
the institution to divest of any investment at any time for failure to
comply with Sec. 615.5132(a) or Sec. 615.5140(a), (b), or (e), 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 the institution's financial condition and performance.
Sec. 615.5174 [Amended]
0
11. In Sec. 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 (h)(4)''.
Sec. 615.5180 [Amended]
0
12. In Sec. 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: June 5, 2018.
Dale L. Aultman,
Secretary, Farm Credit Administration Board.
[FR Doc. 2018-12366 Filed 6-11-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6705-01-P