Self-Regulatory Organizations; The Depository Trust Company; Order Approving a Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by Amendment No. 1, To Adopt a Recovery & Wind-Down Plan and Related Rules, 44964-44977 [2018-19054]
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44964
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procedures reasonably designed to
ensure the covered clearing agency has
the authority to take timely action to
contain losses and liquidity demands
and continue to meet its obligations.53
As described above, the proposal
would establish a more detailed and
structured loss allocation process by (1)
applying a defined and mandatory
Corporate Contribution to a loss; (2)
introducing an Event Period; (3)
introducing a loss allocation round and
notice process; (4) modifying the
termination process and the cap of
terminating Participant’s loss allocation
exposure; and (5) providing the
governance around a non-default loss.
The Commission believes that each of
these proposed changes helps establish
a more transparent and clear loss
allocation process and authority of DTC
to take certain actions, such as
announcing a Declared Non-Default
Loss Event, within the loss allocation
process. Further, having a more
transparent and clear loss allocation
process as proposed would provide
clear authority to DTC to allocate losses
from Default Loss Events and Declared
Non-Default Loss Events and take timely
actions to contain losses, and continue
to meet its clearance and settlement
obligations.
Therefore, the Commission believes
that DTC’s proposal is consistent with
Rule 17Ad–22(e)(13) under the Act.54
E. Consistency With Rule 17Ad–
22(e)(23)(i) and (ii)
Rule 17Ad–22(e)(23)(i) under the Act
requires that a covered clearing agency
establish, implement, maintain and
enforce written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to publicly disclose
all relevant rules and material
procedures, including key aspects of its
default rules and procedures.55 Rule
17Ad–22(e)(23)(ii) under the Act
requires that a covered clearing agency
establish, implement, maintain and
enforce written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to provide
sufficient information to enable
participants to identify and evaluate the
risks, fees, and other material costs they
incur by participating in the covered
clearing agency.56
As described above, the proposal
would publicly disclose how DTC’s
Corporate Contribution would be
calculated and applied. In addition, the
proposal would establish and publicly
disclose a detailed procedure in the
Rules for loss allocation. More
53 17
CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(13).
54 Id.
55 17
56 17
CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(23)(i).
CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(23)(ii).
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specifically, the proposed changes
would establish an Event Period, loss
allocation rounds, a termination process
followed by a settlement charge process
or loss allocation process, and a Loss
Allocation Cap that would apply to
Participants after termination.
Additionally, the proposal would align
the loss allocation rules across the
DTCC Clearing Agencies, to help
provide consistent treatment, and clarify
that non-default losses would trigger
loss allocation to Participants. The
proposal would also provide for and
make known to members the procedures
to trigger a loss allocation procedure,
contribute DTC’s Corporate
Contribution, allocate losses, and
withdraw and limit Participant’s loss
exposure. Accordingly, the Commission
believes that the proposal is reasonably
designed to (1) publicly disclose all
relevant rules and material procedures
concerning key aspects of DTC’s default
rules and procedures, and (2) provide
sufficient information to enable
Participants to identify and evaluate the
risks by participating in DTC.
Therefore, the Commission believes
that DTC’s proposal is consistent with
Rules 17Ad–22(e)(23)(i) and (ii) under
the Act.57
III. Conclusion
On the basis of the foregoing, the
Commission finds that the proposal is
consistent with the requirements of the
Act and in particular with the
requirements of Section 17A of the
Act 58 and the rules and regulations
thereunder.
It is therefore ordered, pursuant to
Section 19(b)(2) of the Act,59 that
proposed rule change SR–DTC–2017–
022, as modified by Amendment No. 1,
be, and it hereby is, approved 60 as of
the date of this order or the date of a
notice by the Commission authorizing
DTC to implement advance notice SR–
DTC–2017–804, as modified by
Amendment No. 1, whichever is later.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.61
Eduardo A. Aleman,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018–19061 Filed 8–31–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
57 17
CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(23)(i) and (ii).
U.S.C. 78q–1.
59 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
60 In approving the Proposed Rule Change, the
Commission has considered the Proposed Rule
Change’s impact on efficiency, competition, and
capital formation. See 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
61 17 CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
58 15
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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–83972; File No. SR–DTC–
2017–021]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The
Depository Trust Company; Order
Approving a Proposed Rule Change,
as Modified by Amendment No. 1, To
Adopt a Recovery & Wind-Down Plan
and Related Rules
August 28, 2018.
On December 18, 2017, The
Depository Trust Company (‘‘DTC’’)
filed with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (‘‘Commission’’) proposed
rule change SR–DTC–2017–021
pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’) 1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder 2 to
adopt a recovery and wind-down plan
and related rules.3 The proposed rule
1 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
CFR 240.19b–4.
3 On December 18, 2017, DTC filed the proposed
rule change as advance notice SR–DTC–2017–803
with the Commission pursuant to Section 806(e)(1)
of Title VIII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act entitled the Payment,
Clearing, and Settlement Supervision Act of 2010
(‘‘Clearing Supervision Act’’) and Rule 19b–
4(n)(1)(i) of the Act (‘‘Advance Notice’’). 12 U.S.C.
5465(e)(1) and 17 CFR 240.19b–4(n)(1)(i),
respectively. The Advance Notice was published for
comment in the Federal Register on January 30,
2018. In that publication, the Commission also
extended the review period of the Advance Notice
for an additional 60 days, pursuant to Section
806(e)(1)(H) of the Clearing Supervision Act. 12
U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(H); Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 82579 (January 24, 2018), 83 FR 4310
(January 30, 2018) (SR–DTC–2017–803). On April
10, 2018, the Commission required additional
information from DTC pursuant to Section
806(e)(1)(D) of the Clearing Supervision Act, which
tolled the Commission’s period of review of the
Advance Notice until 60 days from the date the
information required by the Commission was
received by the Commission. 12 U.S.C.
5465(e)(1)(D); see 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(E)(ii) and
(G)(ii); see Memorandum from the Office of
Clearance and Settlement Supervision, Division of
Trading and Markets, titled ‘‘Commission’s Request
for Additional Information,’’ available at https://
www.sec.gov/rules/sro/dtc-an.shtml. On June 28,
2018, DTC filed Amendment No. 1 to the Advance
Notice to amend and replace in its entirety the
Advance Notice as originally filed on December 18,
2017. Securities Exchange Act Release No. 83743
(July 31, 2018), 83 FR 38344 (August 6, 2018) (SR–
DTC–2017–803). DTC submitted a courtesy copy of
Amendment No. 1 to the Advance Notice through
the Commission’s electronic public comment letter
mechanism. Accordingly, Amendment No. 1 to the
Advance Notice has been publicly available on the
Commission’s website at https://www.sec.gov/rules/
sro/dtc-an.shtml since June 29, 2018. On July 6,
2018, the Commission received a response to its
request for additional information in consideration
of the Advance Notice, which, in turn, added a
further 60-days to the review period pursuant to
Section 806(e)(1)(E) and (G) of the Clearing
Supervision Act. 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(E) and (G);
see Memorandum from the Office of Clearance and
Settlement Supervision, Division of Trading and
Markets, titled ‘‘Response to the Commission’s
Request for Additional Information,’’ available at
2 17
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change was published for comment in
the Federal Register on January 8,
2018.4 On February 8, 2018, the
Commission designated a longer period
within which to approve, disapprove, or
institute proceedings to determine
whether to approve or disapprove the
proposed rule change.5 On March 20,
2018, the Commission instituted
proceedings to determine whether to
approve or disapprove the proposed
rule change.6 On June 25, 2018, the
Commission designated a longer period
for Commission action on the
proceedings to determine whether to
approve or disapprove the proposed
rule change.7 On June 28, 2018, DTC
filed Amendment No. 1 to the proposed
rule change to amend and replace in its
entirety the proposed rule change as
originally submitted on December 18,
2017.8 The Commission did not receive
any comments. This order approves the
proposed rule change, as modified by
Amendment No. 1 (hereinafter
‘‘Proposed Rule Change’’).
I. Description
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In the Proposed Rule Change, DTC
proposes to (1) adopt an R&W Plan; and
(2) amend the Rules, By-Laws and
Organization Certificate of DTC
(‘‘Rules’’) 9 to adopt Rule 32(A) (Winddown of the Corporation) and Rule 38
(Market Disruption and Force Majeure)
(each proposed Rule 32(A) and
proposed Rule 38, a ‘‘Proposed Rule’’
and, collectively, the ‘‘Proposed
Rules’’).
DTC states that the R&W Plan would
be used by the Board of Directors of
https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro/dtc-an.shtml. The
Commission did not receive any comments. The
proposal, as set forth in both the Advance Notice
and the proposed rule change, each as modified by
Amendments No. 1, shall not take effect until all
required regulatory actions are completed.
4 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 82432
(January 2, 2018), 83 FR 884 (January 8, 2018) (SR–
DTC–2017–021).
5 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 82669
(February 8, 2018), 83 FR 6653 (February 14, 2018)
(SR–DTC–2017–021, SR–FICC–2017–021, SR–
NSCC–2017–017).
6 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 82912
(March 20, 2018), 83 FR 12999 (March 26, 2018)
(SR–DTC–2017–021).
7 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 83509
(June 25, 2018), 83 FR 30785 (June 29, 2018) (SR–
DTC–2017–021, SR–FICC–2017–021, SR–NSCC–
2017–017).
8 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 83628 (July
13, 2018), 83 FR 34263 (July 19, 2018) (SR–DTC–
2017–021). DTC submitted a courtesy copy of
Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule change
through the Commission’s electronic public
comment letter mechanism. Accordingly,
Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule change has
been publicly available on the Commission’s
website at https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro/dtc.htm
since June 29, 2018.
9 Capitalized terms used herein and not otherwise
defined herein are defined in the Rules.
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DTC (‘‘Board’’) and DTC’s management
in the event DTC encounters scenarios
that could potentially prevent it from
being able to provide its critical services
as a going concern.
DTC states that the Proposed Rules
are designed to (1) facilitate the
implementation of the R&W Plan when
necessary and, in particular, allow DTC
to effectuate its strategy for winding
down and transferring its business; (2)
provide Participants with transparency
around critical provisions of the R&W
Plan that relate to their rights,
responsibilities and obligations; and (3)
provide DTC with the legal basis to
implement those provisions of the R&W
Plan when necessary.
A. DTC R&W Plan
The R&W Plan would be structured to
provide a roadmap, define the strategy,
and identify the tools available to DTC
to either (i) recover, in the event it
experiences losses that exceed its
prefunded resources (such strategies
and tools referred to herein as the
‘‘Recovery Plan’’) or (ii) wind-down its
business in a manner designed to permit
the continuation of its critical services
in the event that such recovery efforts
are not successful (such strategies and
tools referred to herein as the ‘‘Winddown Plan’’).
The R&W Plan would identify (i) the
recovery tools available to DTC to
address the risks of (a) uncovered losses
or liquidity shortfalls resulting from the
default of one or more of its
Participants, and (b) losses arising from
non-default events, such as damage to
its physical assets, a cyber-attack, or
custody and investment losses, and (ii)
the strategy for implementation of such
tools. The R&W Plan would also
establish the strategy and framework for
the orderly wind-down of DTC and the
transfer of its business in the remote
event the implementation of the
available recovery tools does not
successfully return DTC to financial
viability.
As discussed in greater detail below,
the R&W Plan would provide, among
other matters, (i) an overview of the
business of DTC and its parent, The
Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation
(‘‘DTCC’’); 10 (ii) an analysis of DTC’s
intercompany arrangements and critical
links to other financial market
10 DTCC is a user-owned and user-governed
holding company and is the parent company of
DTC and its affiliates, National Securities Clearing
Corporation (‘‘NSCC’’) and Fixed Income Clearing
Corporation (‘‘FICC,’’ and, together with NSCC and
DTC, the ‘‘Clearing Agencies’’). The R&W Plan
would describe how corporate support services are
provided to DTC from DTCC and DTCC’s other
subsidiaries through intercompany agreements
under a shared services model.
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44965
infrastructure (‘‘FMI’’); (iii) a
description of DTC’s services, and the
criteria used to determine which
services are considered critical; (iv) a
description of the DTC and DTCC
governance structure; (v) a description
of the governance around the overall
recovery and wind-down program; (vi) a
discussion of tools available to DTC to
mitigate credit/market 11 risks and
liquidity risks, including recovery
indicators and triggers, and the
governance around management of a
stress event along a Crisis Continuum
timeline; (vii) a discussion of potential
non-default losses and the resources
available to DTC to address such losses,
including recovery triggers and tools to
mitigate such losses; (viii) an analysis of
the recovery tools’ characteristics,
including how they are designed to be
comprehensive, effective, and
transparent, how the tools provide
incentives to Participants to, among
other things, control and monitor the
risks they may present to DTC, and how
DTC seeks to minimize the negative
consequences of executing its recovery
tools; and (ix) the framework and
approach for the orderly wind-down
and transfer of DTC’s business,
including an estimate of the time and
costs to effect a recovery or orderly
wind-down of DTC.
Certain recovery tools that would be
identified in the R&W Plan are based in
the Rules (including the Proposed
Rules); therefore, descriptions of those
tools in the R&W Plan would include
descriptions of, and reference to, the
applicable Rules and any related
internal policies and procedures. Other
recovery tools that would be identified
in the R&W Plan are based in
contractual arrangements to which DTC
is a party, including, for example,
existing committed or pre-arranged
liquidity arrangements. Further, the
R&W Plan would state that DTC may
develop further supporting internal
guidelines and materials that may
provide operational support for matters
described in the R&W Plan, and that
such documents would be supplemental
and subordinate to the R&W Plan.
DTC states that many of the tools
available to DTC that would be
described in the R&W Plan are DTC’s
existing, business-as-usual risk
management and default management
tools, which would continue to be
applied in scenarios of increasing stress.
In addition to these existing, businessas-usual tools, the R&W Plan would
11 DTC states that it uses the term ‘‘credit/market’’
risks in the R&W Plan because, for DTC, credit risk
and market risk are closely related. See infra note
22.
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describe DTC’s other principal recovery
tools, which include, for example, (i)
identifying, monitoring and managing
general business risk and holding
sufficient liquid net assets funded by
equity (‘‘LNA’’) to cover potential
general business losses pursuant to the
Clearing Agency Policy on Capital
Requirements (‘‘Capital Policy’’),12 (ii)
maintaining the Clearing Agency Capital
Replenishment Plan (‘‘Replenishment
Plan’’) as a viable plan for the
replenishment of capital should DTC’s
equity fall close to or below the amount
being held pursuant to the Capital
Policy,13 and (iii) the process for the
allocation of losses among Participants
as provided in Rule 4 (Participants Fund
and Participants Investment).14 The
R&W Plan would provide governance
around the selection and
implementation of the recovery tool or
tools most relevant to mitigate a stress
scenario and any applicable loss or
liquidity shortfall.
The development of the R&W Plan is
facilitated by the Office of Recovery &
Resolution Planning (‘‘R&R Team’’) of
DTCC.15 The R&R Team reports to the
DTCC Management Committee
(‘‘Management Committee’’) and is
responsible for maintaining the R&W
Plan and for the development and
ongoing maintenance of the overall
recovery and wind-down planning
process. The Board, or such committees
as may be delegated authority by the
Board from time to time pursuant to its
charter, would review and approve the
R&W Plan biennially, and would also
review and approve any changes that
are proposed to the R&W Plan outside
of the biennial review.
As discussed in greater detail below,
the Proposed Rules would define the
procedures that may be employed in the
event of a DTC wind-down, and would
provide for DTC’s authority to take
certain actions on the occurrence of a
Market Disruption Event, as defined
therein. DTC states that the Proposed
Rules are designed to provide
Participants with transparency and
certainty with respect to these matters.
DTC also states that the Proposed Rules
are designed to facilitate the
implementation of the R&W Plan,
12 See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 81105
(July 7, 2017), 82 FR 32399 (July 13, 2017) (SR–
DTC–2017–003, SR–FICC–2017–007, SR–NSCC–
2017–004).
13 See id.
14 See supra note 9.
15 DTCC operates on a shared services model with
respect to DTC and its other subsidiaries. Most
corporate functions are established and managed on
an enterprise-wide basis pursuant to intercompany
agreements under which it is generally DTCC that
provides a relevant service to a subsidiary,
including DTC.
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particularly DTC’s strategy for winding
down and transferring its business, and
are designed to provide DTC with the
legal basis to implement those aspects of
the R&W Plan.
1. Business Overview, Critical Services,
and Governance
The introduction to the R&W Plan
would identify the document’s purpose
and its regulatory background, and
would outline a summary of the R&W
Plan. The stated purpose of the R&W
Plan is that it is to be used by the Board
and DTC management in the event DTC
encounters scenarios that could
potentially prevent it from being able to
provide its critical services as a going
concern.
The R&W Plan would describe
DTCC’s business profile, provide a
summary of DTC’s services, and identify
the intercompany arrangements and
critical links between DTC and other
FMIs. DTC states that the overview
section would provide a context for the
R&W Plan by describing DTC’s business,
organizational structure and critical
links to other entities. DTC also states
that by providing this context, this
section would facilitate the analysis of
the potential impact of utilizing the
recovery tools set forth in later sections
of the Recovery Plan, and the analysis
of the factors that would be addressed
in implementing the Wind-down Plan.
The R&W Plan would provide a
description of established links between
DTC and other FMIs, both domestic and
foreign, including central securities
depositories (‘‘CSDs’’) and central
counterparties (‘‘CCPs’’), as well as the
twelve U.S. Federal Reserve Banks. DTC
states that this section of the R&W Plan,
which identifies and briefly describes
DTC’s established links, is designed to
provide a mapping of critical
connections and dependencies that may
need to be relied on or otherwise
addressed in connection with the
implementation of either the Recovery
Plan or the Wind-down Plan.
The R&W Plan would define the
criteria for classifying certain of DTC’s
services as ‘‘critical,’’ and would
identify those critical services and the
rationale for their classification. This
section of the R&W Plan would provide
an analysis of the potential systemic
impact from a service disruption, which
DTC states is important for evaluating
how the recovery tools and the winddown strategy would facilitate and
provide for the continuation of DTC’s
critical services to the markets it serves.
The criteria that would be used to
identify a DTC service or function as
critical would include (1) whether there
is a lack of alternative providers or
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products; (2) whether failure of the
service could impact DTC’s ability to
perform its book-entry and settlement
services; (3) whether failure of the
service could impact DTC’s ability to
perform its payment system functions;
and (4) whether the service is
interconnected with other participants
and processes within the U.S. financial
system, for example, with other FMIs,
settlement banks and broker-dealers.
The R&W Plan would then list each of
those services, functions or activities
that DTC has identified as ‘‘critical’’
based on the applicability of these four
criteria. The R&W Plan would also
include a non-exhaustive list of DTC
services that are not deemed critical.
DTC states that the evaluation of
which services provided by DTC are
deemed critical is important for
purposes of determining how the R&W
Plan would facilitate the continuity of
those services. While DTC’s Wind-down
Plan would provide for the transfer of
all critical services to a transferee in the
event DTC’s wind-down is
implemented, it would anticipate that
any non-critical services that are
ancillary and beneficial to a critical
service, or that otherwise have
substantial user demand from the
continuing membership, would also be
transferred.
The R&W Plan would describe the
governance structure of both DTCC and
DTC. This section of the R&W Plan
would identify the ownership and
governance model of these entities at
both the Board and management levels.
The R&W Plan would state that the
stages of escalation required to manage
recovery under the Recovery Plan or to
invoke DTC’s wind-down under the
Wind-down Plan would range from
relevant business line managers up to
the Board through DTC’s governance
structure. The R&W Plan would then
identify the parties responsible for
certain activities under both the
Recovery Plan and the Wind-down Plan,
and would describe their respective
roles. The R&W Plan would identify the
Risk Committee of the Board (‘‘Board
Risk Committee’’) as being responsible
for oversight of risk management
activities at DTC, which include
focusing on both oversight of risk
management systems and processes
designed to identify and manage various
risks faced by DTC as well as oversight
of DTC’s efforts to mitigate systemic
risks that could impact those markets
and the broader financial system.16 The
16 The DTCC, DTC, NSCC, FICC Risk Committee
Charter is available at https://www.dtcc.com/∼/
media/Files/Downloads/legal/policy-andcompliance/DTCC-BOD-Risk-CommitteeCharter.pdf.
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R&W Plan would identify the DTCC
Management Risk Committee
(‘‘Management Risk Committee’’) as
primarily responsible for general, dayto-day risk management through
delegated authority from the Board Risk
Committee. The R&W Plan would state
that the Management Risk Committee
has delegated specific day-to-day risk
management, including management of
risks addressed through margining
systems and related activities, to the
DTCC Group Chief Risk Office
(‘‘GCRO’’), which works with staff
within the DTCC Financial Risk
Management group. Finally, the R&W
Plan would describe the role of the
Management Committee, which
provides overall direction for all aspects
of DTC’s business, technology, and
operations and the functional areas that
support these activities.
The R&W Plan would describe the
governance of recovery efforts in
response to both default losses and nondefault losses under the Recovery Plan,
identifying the groups responsible for
those recovery efforts. Specifically, the
R&W Plan would state that the
Management Risk Committee provides
oversight of actions relating to the
default of a Participant, which would be
reported and escalated to it through the
GCRO, and the Management Committee
provides oversight of actions relating to
non-default events that could result in
a loss, which would be reported and
escalated to it from the DTCC Chief
Financial Officer (‘‘CFO’’) and the DTCC
Treasury group that reports to the CFO,
and from other relevant subject matter
experts based on the nature and
circumstances of the non-default
event.17 More generally, the R&W Plan
would state that the type of loss and the
nature and circumstances of the events
that lead to the loss would dictate the
components of governance to address
that loss, including the escalation path
to authorize those actions. Both the
Recovery Plan and the Wind-down Plan
would describe the governance of
escalations, decisions, and actions
under each of those plans.
Finally, the R&W Plan would describe
the role of the R&R Team in managing
the overall recovery and wind-down
program and plans for each of the
Clearing Agencies.
17 The R&W Plan would state that these groups
would be involved to address how to mitigate the
financial impact of non-default losses, and in
recommending mitigating actions, the Management
Committee would consider information and
recommendations from relevant subject matter
experts based on the nature and circumstances of
the non-default event. Any necessary operational
response to these events, however, would be
managed in accordance with applicable incident
response/business continuity process.
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2. DTC Recovery Plan
DTC states that the Recovery Plan is
intended to be a roadmap of those
actions that DTC may employ to
monitor and, as needed, stabilize its
financial condition. DTC also states that
as each event that could lead to a
financial loss could be unique in its
circumstances, DTC proposes that the
Recovery Plan would not be prescriptive
and would permit DTC to maintain
flexibility in its use of identified tools
and in the sequence in which such tools
are used, subject to any conditions in
the Rules or the contractual arrangement
on which such tool is based. DTC’s
Recovery Plan would consist of (1) a
description of the risk management
surveillance, tools, and governance that
DTC would employ across evolving
stress scenarios that it may face as it
transitions through a Crisis Continuum,
described below; (2) a description of
DTC’s risk of losses that may result from
non-default events, and the financial
resources and recovery tools available to
DTC to manage those risks and any
resulting losses; and (3) an evaluation of
the characteristics of the recovery tools
that may be used in response to either
losses arising out of a Participant
Default (as defined below) or nondefault losses. In all cases, DTC states
that it would act in accordance with the
Rules, within the governance structure
described in the R&W Plan, and in
accordance with applicable regulatory
oversight to address each situation to
best protect DTC, its Participants and
the markets in which it operates.
(i) Managing Participant Default Losses
and Liquidity Needs Through the Crisis
Continuum
The Recovery Plan would describe the
risk management surveillance, tools,
and governance that DTC may employ
across an increasing stress environment,
which is referred to as the Crisis
Continuum. This description would
identify those tools that can be
employed to mitigate losses, and
mitigate or minimize liquidity needs, as
the market environment becomes
increasingly stressed. The phases of the
Crisis Continuum would include (1) a
stable market phase, (2) a stress market
phase, (3) a phase commencing with
DTC’s decision to cease to act for a
Participant or Affiliated Family of
Participants 18 (referred to in the R&W
Plan as the ‘‘Participant Default phase’’),
and (4) a recovery phase. In the R&W
Plan, the term ‘‘cease to act’’ and the
actions that may lead to such decision
18 The R&W Plan would define an ‘‘Affiliated
Family’’ of Participants as a number of affiliated
entities that are all Participants of DTC.
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are used within the context of the
Rules.19 The R&W Plan would, for
purposes of the R&W Plan, use the term
‘‘Participant Default Losses’’ to refer to
losses that arise out of or relate to the
Participant Default and resulting cease
to act (including any losses that arise
from liquidation of the Participant’s
Collateral).
DTC states that the Recovery Plan
would provide context to its roadmap
through this Crisis Continuum by
describing DTC’s ongoing management
of credit, market, and liquidity risk, and
its existing process for measuring and
reporting its risks as they align with
established thresholds for its tolerance
of those risks. DTC also states that the
Recovery Plan would discuss the
management of credit/market risk and
liquidity exposures together because the
tools that address these risks can be
deployed either separately or in a
coordinated approach in order to
address both exposures. DTC states that
it manages these risk exposures
collectively to limit their overall impact
on DTC and its Participants. DTC states
that it has built-in mechanisms to limit
exposures and replenish financial
resources used in a stress event, in order
to continue to operate in a safe and
sound manner. DTC states that it is a
closed, collateralized system in which
liquidity resources are matched against
risk management controls, so, at any
time, the potential net settlement
obligation of the Participant or
Affiliated Family of Participants with
the largest net settlement obligation
cannot exceed the amount of liquidity
resources.20 DTC states that while
Collateral securities are subject to
market price risk, DTC manages its
liquidity and market risks through the
calculation of the required deposits to
the Participants Fund 21 and risk
management controls, i.e., collateral
19 See Rule 4 (Participants Fund and Participants
Investment), Rule 9(A) (Transactions in Securities
and Money Payments), Rule 9(B) (Transactions in
Eligible Securities), Rule 9(C) (Transactions in MMI
Securities), Rule 10 (Discretionary Termination),
Rule 11 (Mandatory Termination) and Rule 12
(Insolvency), supra note 9. Further, the term
‘‘Participant Default’’ would also be used in the
R&W Plan as such term is defined in Rule 4
(Participants Fund and Participants Investment),
see supra note 9.
20 DTC’s liquidity risk management strategy,
including the manner in which DTC would deploy
liquidity tools as well as its intraday use of
liquidity, is described in the Clearing Agency
Liquidity Risk Management Framework. See
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 82377
(December 21, 2017), 82 FR 61617 (December 28,
2017) (SR–DTC–2017–004, SR–FICC–2017–008,
SR–NSCC–2017–005).
21 See Rule 4 (Participants Fund and Participants
Investment), supra note 9.
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haircuts, the Collateral Monitor 22 and
Net Debit Cap.23
The Recovery Plan would outline the
metrics and indicators that DTC has
developed to evaluate a stress situation
against established risk tolerance
thresholds. Each risk mitigation tool
identified in the Recovery Plan would
include a description of the escalation
thresholds that allow for effective and
timely reporting to the appropriate
internal management staff and
committees, or to the Board. DTC states
that the Recovery Plan is designed to
make clear that these tools and
escalation protocols would be calibrated
across each phase of the Crisis
Continuum. The Recovery Plan would
also establish that DTC would retain the
flexibility to deploy such tools either
separately or in a coordinated approach,
and to use other alternatives to these
actions and tools as necessitated by the
circumstances of a particular Participant
Default event, in accordance with the
Rules. Therefore, DTC states that the
Recovery Plan would both provide DTC
with a roadmap to follow within each
phase of the Crisis Continuum, and
would permit it to adjust its risk
management measures to address the
unique circumstances of each event.
The Recovery Plan would describe the
conditions that mark each phase of the
Crisis Continuum, and would identify
actions that DTC could take as it
transitions through each phase in order
to both prevent losses from
materializing through active risk
management, and to restore the
financial health of DTC during a period
of stress.
The stable market phase of the Crisis
Continuum would describe active risk
management activities in the normal
course of business. These activities
would include performing (1) backtests
to evaluate the adequacy of the
collateral level and the haircut
sufficiency for covering market price
volatility and (2) stress testing to cover
market price moves under real historical
and hypothetical scenarios to assess the
22 See Rule 1 (Definitions; Governing Law),
Section 1, supra note 9. DTC states that credit risk
and market risk are closely related for DTC, because
DTC monitors credit exposures from Participants
through these risk management controls, which
limit Participant settlement obligations to the
amount of available liquidity resources and require
those obligations to be fully collateralized. The
pledge or liquidation of collateral in an amount
sufficient to restore liquidity resources depends on
market values and demand, i.e., market risk
exposure. DTC states that such risk management
controls are part of DTC’s market risk management
strategy and are designed to comply with Rule
17Ad–22(e)(4) under the Act, where these risks are
referred to as ‘‘credit risks.’’ See 17 CFR 240.17Ad–
22(e)(4).
23 Id.
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haircut adequacy under extreme but
plausible market conditions. The
backtesting and stress testing results are
escalated, as necessary, to internal and
Board committees.24
The Recovery Plan would describe
some of the indicators of the stress
market phase of the Crisis Continuum,
which would include, for example,
volatility in market prices of certain
assets where there is increased
uncertainty among market participants
about the fundamental value of those
assets. This phase would involve
general market stresses, when no
Participant Default would be imminent.
Within the description of this phase, the
Recovery Plan would provide that DTC
may take targeted, routine risk
management measures as necessary and
as permitted by the Rules.
Within the Participant Default phase
of the Crisis Continuum, the Recovery
Plan would provide a roadmap for the
existing procedures that DTC would
follow in the event of a Participant
Default and any decision by DTC to
cease to act for that Participant.25 The
Recovery Plan would provide that the
objectives of DTC’s actions upon a
Participant Default are to (1) minimize
losses and market exposure, and (2), to
the extent practicable, minimize
disturbances to the affected markets.
The Recovery Plan would describe
tools, actions, and related governance
for both market risk monitoring and
liquidity risk monitoring through this
phase. Management of liquidity risk
through this phase would involve
ongoing monitoring of, among other
things, the adequacy of the Participants
Fund and risk controls, and the
Recovery Plan would identify certain
actions DTC may deploy as it deems
necessary to mitigate a potential
liquidity shortfall. The Recovery Plan
would state that, throughout this phase,
relevant information would be escalated
and reported to both internal
management committees and the Board
Risk Committee.
The Recovery Plan would also
identify financial resources available to
DTC, pursuant to the Rules, to address
losses arising out of a Participant
Default. Specifically, Rule 4
(Participants Fund and Participants
Investment) provides that losses
remaining after application of the
24 DTC’s stress testing practices are described in
the Clearing Agency Stress Testing Framework
(Market Risk). See Securities Exchange Act Release
No. 82638 (December 19, 2017), 82 FR 61082
(December 26, 2017) (SR–DTC–2017–005, SR–
FICC–2017–009, SR–NSCC–2017–006).
25 See Rule 10 (Discretionary Termination); Rule
11 (Mandatory Termination); Rule 12 (Insolvency),
supra note 9.
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Defaulting Participant’s resources be
satisfied first by applying a Corporate
Contribution, and then, if necessary, by
allocating remaining losses among the
membership in accordance with Rule 4
(Participants Fund and Participants
Investment).26
In order to provide for an effective
and timely recovery, the Recovery Plan
would describe the period of time that
would occur near the end of the
Participant Default phase, during which
DTC may experience stress events or
observe early warning indicators that
allow it to evaluate its options and
prepare for the recovery phase (referred
to in the R&W Plan as the Recovery
Corridor). The Recovery Plan would
then describe the recovery phase of the
Crisis Continuum, which would begin
on the date that DTC issues the first
Loss Allocation Notice of the second
loss allocation round with respect to a
given Event Period.27 The recovery
phase would describe actions that DTC
may take to avoid entering into a winddown of its business.
DTC states that it expects that
significant deterioration of liquidity
resources would cause it to enter the
Recovery Corridor. Therefore, the R&W
Plan would describe the actions DTC
may take aimed at replenishing those
resources. Throughout the Recovery
Corridor, DTC would monitor the
adequacy of its resources and the
expected timing of replenishment of
those resources, and would do so
through the monitoring of certain
corridor indicator metrics.
26 See supra note 9. Rule 4 (Participants Fund and
Participants Investment) defines the amount DTC
would contribute to address a loss resulting from
either a Participant Default or a non-default event
as the Corporate Contribution. This amount is 50
percent of the General Business Risk Capital
Requirement, which is calculated pursuant to the
Capital Policy and, which DTC states is an amount
sufficient to cover potential general business losses
so that DTC can continue operations and services
as a going concern if those losses materialize, in an
effort to comply with Rule 17Ad–22(e)(15) under
the Act. See supra note 12 (concerning the Capital
Policy); 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(15).
27 As provided for in Rule 4 (Participants Fund
and Participants Investment), the ‘‘Event Period’’ is
ten Business Days beginning on (i) with respect to
a Participant Default, the day on which DTC
notifies Participants that it has ceased to act for a
Participant, or (ii) with respect to a non-default loss,
the day that DTC notifies Participants of the
determination by the Board that there is a nondefault loss event. Rule 4 (Participants Fund and
Participants Investment) defines a ‘‘round’’ as a
series of loss allocations relating to an Event Period,
and provides that the first Loss Allocation Notice
in a first, second, or subsequent round shall
expressly state that such notice reflects the
beginning of a first, second, or subsequent round.
The maximum allocable loss amount of a round is
equal to the sum of the Loss Allocation Caps of
those Participants included in the round. See Rule
4 (Participants Fund and Participants Investment),
supra note 9.
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DTC states that the majority of the
corridor indicators, as identified in the
Recovery Plan, relate directly to
conditions that may require DTC to
adjust its strategy for hedging and
liquidating Collateral securities, and any
such changes would include an
assessment of the status of the corridor
indicators. For each corridor indicator,
the Recovery Plan would identify (1)
measures of the indicator, (2)
evaluations of the status of the
indicator, (3) metrics for determining
the status of the deterioration or
improvement of the indicator, and (4)
Corridor Actions, which are steps that
may be taken to improve the status of
the indicator,28 as well as management
escalations required to authorize those
steps. DTC states that because DTC has
never experienced the default of
multiple Participants, it has not,
historically, measured the deterioration
or improvements metrics of the corridor
indicators. Therefore, DTC states that
these metrics were chosen based on the
business judgment of DTC management.
The Recovery Plan would also
describe the reporting and escalation of
the status of the corridor indicators
throughout the Recovery Corridor.
Significant deterioration of a corridor
indicator, as measured by the metrics
set out in the Recovery Plan, would be
escalated to the Board. DTC
management would review the corridor
indicators and the related metrics at
least annually, and would modify these
metrics as necessary in light of
observations from simulations of
Participant Defaults and other analyses.
Any proposed modifications would be
reviewed by the Management Risk
Committee and the Board Risk
Committee. The Recovery Plan would
estimate that DTC may remain in the
Recovery Corridor stage between one
day and two weeks. DTC states that this
estimate is based on historical data
observed in past Participant Default
events, the results of simulations of
Participant Defaults, and periodic
liquidity analyses conducted by DTC.
DTC states that the actual length of a
Recovery Corridor would vary based on
actual market conditions observed at the
time, and DTC would expect the
Recovery Corridor to be shorter in
market conditions of increased stress.
The Recovery Plan would outline
steps by which DTC may allocate its
28 The Corridor Actions that would be identified
in the R&W Plan are designed to be indicative, but
not prescriptive; therefore, if DTC needs to consider
alternative actions due to the applicable facts and
circumstances, the escalation of those alternative
actions would follow the same escalation protocol
identified in the R&W Plan for the Corridor
Indicator to which the action relates.
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losses, which would occur when and in
the order provided in Rule 4
(Participants Fund and Participants
Investment).29 The Recovery Plan
would also identify tools that may be
used to address foreseeable shortfalls of
DTC’s liquidity resources following a
Participant Default, and would provide
that these tools may be used as
appropriate during the Crisis
Continuum to address liquidity
shortfalls if they arise. DTC states that
the goal in managing DTC’s liquidity
resources is to maximize resource
availability in an evolving stress
situation, to maintain flexibility in the
order and use of sources of liquidity,
and to repay any third party lenders in
a timely manner. DTC states that the
Recovery Plan would state that the
availability and capacity of these
liquidity tools cannot be accurately
predicted and are dependent on the
circumstances of the applicable stress
period, including market price
volatility, actual or perceived
disruptions in financial markets, the
costs to DTC of utilizing these tools, and
any potential impact on DTC’s credit
rating.
The Recovery Plan would state that
DTC will have entered the recovery
phase on the date that it issues the first
Loss Allocation Notice of the second
loss allocation round with respect to a
given Event Period. The Recovery Plan
would provide that, during the recovery
phase, DTC would continue and, as
needed, enhance, the monitoring and
remedial actions already described in
connection with previous phases of the
Crisis Continuum, and would remain in
the recovery phase until its financial
resources are expected to be or are fully
replenished, or until the Wind-down
Plan is triggered.
The Recovery Plan would describe
governance for the actions and tools that
may be employed within each phase of
the Crisis Continuum, which would be
dictated by the facts and circumstances
applicable to the situation being
addressed. Such facts and
circumstances would be measured by
the various indicators and metrics
applicable to that phase of the Crisis
Continuum, and would follow relevant
escalation protocol that would be
described in the Recovery Plan. The
Recovery Plan would also describe the
governance procedures around a
decision to cease to act for a Participant,
pursuant to the Rules, and around the
management and oversight of the
subsequent liquidation of Collateral
securities. The Recovery Plan would
state that, overall, DTC would retain
29 See
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44969
flexibility in accordance with the Rules,
its governance structure, and its
regulatory oversight, to address a
particular situation in order to best
protect DTC and its Participants, and to
meet the primary objectives, throughout
the Crisis Continuum, of minimizing
losses and, where consistent and
practicable, minimizing disturbance to
affected markets.
(ii) Non-Default Losses
The Recovery Plan would outline how
DTC may address losses that result from
events other than a Participant Default.
While these matters are addressed in
greater detail in other documents, this
section of the R&W Plan would provide
a roadmap to those documents and an
outline for DTC’s approach to
monitoring and managing losses that
could result from a non-default event.
The R&W Plan would first identify some
of the risks DTC faces that could lead to
these losses, which include, for
example, (1) the business and profit/loss
risks of unexpected declines in revenue
or growth of expenses; (2) the
operational risks of disruptions to
systems or processes that could lead to
large losses, including those resulting
from, for example, a cyber-attack; and
(3) custody or investment risks that
could lead to financial losses. The
Recovery Plan would describe DTC’s
overall strategy for the management of
these risks, which includes a ‘‘three
lines of defense’’ approach to risk
management that allows for
comprehensive management of risk
across the organization.30 The Recovery
Plan would also describe DTC’s
approach to financial risk and capital
management. The R&W Plan would
identify key aspects of this approach,
including, for example, an annual
budget process, business line
30 DTC states that the ‘‘three lines of defense’’
approach to risk management includes (1) a first
line of defense comprised of the various business
lines and functional units that support the products
and services offered by DTC; (2) a second line of
defense comprised of control functions that support
DTC, including the risk management, legal and
compliance areas; and (3) a third line of defense,
which is performed by an internal audit group. The
Clearing Agency Risk Management Framework
includes a description of this ‘‘three lines of
defense’’ approach to risk management, and
addresses how DTC comprehensively manages
various risks, including operational, general
business, investment, custody, and other risks that
arise in or are borne by it. Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 81635 (September 15, 2017), 82 FR
44224 (September 21, 2017) (SR–DTC–2017–013,
SR–FICC–2017–016, SR–NSCC–2017–012). The
Clearing Agency Operational Risk Management
Framework describes the manner in which DTC
manages operational risks, as defined therein.
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 81745
(September 28, 2017), 82 FR 46332 (October 4,
2017) (SR–DTC–2017–014, SR–FICC–2017–017,
SR–NSCC–2017–013).
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performance reviews with management,
and regular review of capital
requirements against LNA. These risk
management strategies are collectively
intended to allow DTC to effectively
identify, monitor, and manage risks of
non-default losses.
The R&W Plan would identify the two
categories of financial resources DTC
maintains to cover losses and expenses
arising from non-default risks or events
as (1) LNA, maintained, monitored, and
managed pursuant to the Capital Policy,
which include (a) amounts held in
satisfaction of the General Business Risk
Capital Requirement,31 (b) the Corporate
Contribution,32 and (c) other amounts
held in excess of DTC’s capital
requirements pursuant to the Capital
Policy; and (2) resources available
pursuant to the loss allocation
provisions of Rule 4 (Participants Fund
and Participants Investment).33
The R&W Plan would address the
process by which the CFO and the
DTCC Treasury group would determine
which available LNA resources are most
appropriate to cover a loss that is caused
by a non-default event. This
determination involves an evaluation of
a number of factors, including the
current and expected size of the loss,
the expected time horizon over when
the loss or additional expenses would
materialize, the current and projected
available LNA, and the likelihood LNA
could be successfully replenished
pursuant to the Replenishment Plan, if
triggered.34 Finally the R&W Plan would
discuss how DTC would apply its
resources to address losses resulting
from a non-default event, including the
order of resources it would apply if the
loss or liability is expected to exceed
DTC’s excess LNA amounts, or is large
relative thereto, and the Board has
declared the event a Declared NonDefault Loss Event pursuant to Rule 4
(Participants Fund and Participants
Investment).35
The R&W Plan would also describe
proposed Rule 38 (Market Disruption
and Force Majeure), which DTC is
proposing to adopt in the Rules. DTC
states that this Proposed Rule is
designed to provide transparency
around how DTC would address
extraordinary events that may occur
outside its control. Specifically, the
Proposed Rule would define a Market
Disruption Event and the governance
around a determination that such an
31 See
supra note 26.
32 See supra note 26.
33 See supra note 9.
34 See supra note 12 (concerning the Capital
Policy).
35 See supra note 9.
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event has occurred. The Proposed Rule
would also describe DTC’s authority to
take actions during the pendency of a
Market Disruption Event that it deems
appropriate to address such an event
and facilitate the continuation of its
services, if practicable.
The R&W Plan would describe the
interaction between the Proposed Rule
and DTC’s existing processes and
procedures addressing business
continuity management and disaster
recovery (generally, the ‘‘BCM/DR
procedures’’). DTC states that the intent
is to make clear that the Proposed Rule
is designed to support those BCM/DR
procedures and to address
circumstances that may be exogenous to
DTC and not necessarily addressed by
the BCM/DR procedures. Finally, the
R&W Plan would describe that, because
the operation of the Proposed Rule is
specific to each applicable Market
Disruption Event, the Proposed Rule
does not define a time limit on its
application. However, the R&W Plan
would note that actions authorized by
the Proposed Rule would be limited to
the pendency of the applicable Market
Disruption Event, as made clear in the
Proposed Rule. DTC states that, overall,
the Proposed Rule is designed to
mitigate risks caused by Market
Disruption Events and, thereby,
minimize the risk of financial loss that
may result from such events.
(iii) Recovery Tool Characteristics
The Recovery Plan would describe
DTC’s evaluation of the tools identified
within the Recovery Plan, and its
rationale for concluding that such tools
are comprehensive, effective, and
transparent, and that such tools provide
incentives to Participants and minimize
negative impact on Participants and the
financial system.
3. DTC Wind-Down Plan
The Wind-down Plan would provide
the framework and strategy for the
orderly wind-down of DTC if the use of
the recovery tools described in the
Recovery Plan do not successfully
return DTC to financial viability. DTC
states that, while DTC believes that such
event is extremely unlikely, given the
comprehensive nature of the recovery
tools, DTC is proposing a wind-down
strategy that provides for (1) the transfer
of DTC’s business, assets, securities
inventory, and membership to another
legal entity, (2) such transfer being
effected in connection with proceedings
under Chapter 11 of the U.S.
Bankruptcy Code,36 and (3) after
effectuating this transfer, DTC
36 11
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liquidating any remaining assets in an
orderly manner in bankruptcy
proceedings. DTC states that the
proposed transfer approach to a winddown would meet its objectives of (1)
assuring that DTC’s critical services will
be available to the market as long as
there are Participants in good standing,
and (2) minimizing disruption to the
operations of Participants and financial
markets generally that might be caused
by DTC’s failure.
In describing the transfer approach to
DTC’s Wind-down Plan, the R&W Plan
would identify the factors that DTC
considered in developing this approach,
including the fact that DTC does not
own material assets that are unrelated to
its clearance and settlement activities.
Therefore, a business reorganization or
‘‘bail-in’’ of debt approach would be
unlikely to mitigate significant losses.
Additionally, DTC states that its
approach was developed in
consideration of its critical and unique
position in the U.S. markets, which
precludes any approach that would
cause DTC’s critical services to no
longer be available.
First, the Wind-down Plan would
describe the potential scenarios that
could lead to the wind-down of DTC,
and the likelihood of such scenarios.
The Wind-down Plan would identify
the time period leading up to a decision
to wind-down DTC as the Runway
Period. DTC states that this period
would follow the implementation of any
recovery tools, as it may take a period
of time, depending on the severity of the
market stress at that time, for these tools
to be effective or for DTC to realize a
loss sufficient to cause it to be unable
to borrow to complete settlement and to
repay such borrowings.37 The Winddown Plan would identify some of the
indicators that DTC has entered the
Runway Period.
The trigger for implementing the
Wind-down Plan would be a
determination by the Board that
recovery efforts have not been, or are
unlikely to be, successful in returning
DTC to viability as a going concern. As
described in the R&W Plan, DTC states
that this is an appropriate trigger
because it is both broad and flexible
enough to cover a variety of scenarios,
and would align incentives of DTC and
Participants to avoid actions that might
undermine DTC’s recovery efforts.
37 The Wind-down Plan would state that, given
DTC’s position as a user-governed financial market
utility, it is possible that its Participants might
voluntarily elect to provide additional support
during the recovery phase leading up to a potential
trigger of the Wind-down Plan, but would also be
designed to make clear that DTC cannot predict the
willingness of Participants to do so.
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Additionally, DTC states that this
approach takes into account the
characteristics of DTC’s recovery tools
and enables the Board to consider (1)
the presence of indicators of a
successful or unsuccessful recovery, and
(2) potential for knock-on effects of
continued iterative application of DTC’s
recovery tools.
The Wind-down Plan would describe
the general objectives of the transfer
strategy, and would address
assumptions regarding the transfer of
DTC’s critical services, business, assets,
securities inventory, and membership 38
to another legal entity that is legally,
financially, and operationally able to
provide DTC’s critical services to
entities that wish to continue their
membership following the transfer
(‘‘Transferee’’). The Wind-down Plan
would provide that the Transferee
would be either (1) a third party legal
entity, which may be an existing or
newly established legal entity or a
bridge entity formed to operate the
business on an interim basis to enable
the business to be transferred
subsequently (‘‘Third Party
Transferee’’); or (2) an existing, debt-free
failover legal entity established ex-ante
by DTCC (‘‘Failover Transferee’’) to be
used as an alternative Transferee in the
event that no viable or preferable Third
Party Transferee timely commits to
acquire DTC’s business. DTC would
seek to identify the proposed
Transferee, and negotiate and enter into
transfer arrangements during the
Runway Period and prior to making any
filings under Chapter 11 of the U.S.
Bankruptcy Code.39 The Wind-down
Plan would anticipate that the transfer
to the Transferee, including the transfer
and establishment of the Participant and
Pledgee securities accounts on the books
of the Transferee, be effected in
connection with proceedings under
Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code,
and pursuant to a bankruptcy court
order under Section 363 of the
Bankruptcy Code, with the intent that
the transfer be free and clear of claims
against, and interests in, DTC, except to
the extent expressly provided in the
court’s order.40
DTC states that in order to effect a
timely transfer of its services and
minimize the market and operational
disruption of such transfer, DTC would
expect to transfer all of its critical
38 Arrangements with FAST Agents and DRS
Agents (each as defined in proposed Rule 32(A))
and with Settling Banks would also be assigned to
the Transferee, so that the approach would be
transparent to issuers and their transfer agents, as
well as to Settling Banks.
39 11 U.S.C. 101 et seq.
40 See 11 U.S.C. 363.
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services and any non-critical services
that are ancillary and beneficial to a
critical service, or that otherwise have
substantial user demand from the
continuing membership. Given the
transfer of the securities inventory and
the establishment on the books of the
Transferee Participant and Pledgee
securities accounts, DTC anticipates
that, following the transfer, it would not
itself continue to provide any services,
critical or not. Following the transfer,
the Wind-down Plan would anticipate
that the Transferee and its continuing
membership would determine whether
to continue to provide any transferred
non-critical service on an ongoing basis,
or terminate the non-critical service
following some transition period. DTC’s
Wind-down Plan would anticipate that
the Transferee would enter into a
transition services agreement with
DTCC so that DTCC would continue to
provide the shared services it currently
provides to DTC, including staffing,
infrastructure and operational support.
The Wind-down Plan would also
anticipate the assignment of DTC’s
‘‘inbound’’ link arrangements to the
Transferee. The Wind-down Plan would
provide that in the case of ‘‘outbound’’
links, DTC would seek to have the
linked FMIs agree, at a minimum, to
accept the Transferee as a link party for
a transition period.41
The Wind-down Plan would provide
that, following the effectiveness of the
transfer to the Transferee, the winddown of DTC would involve addressing
any residual claims against DTC through
the bankruptcy process and liquidating
the legal entity. The Wind-down Plan
does not contemplate DTC continuing to
provide services in any capacity
following the transfer time, and any
services not transferred would be
terminated.
The Wind-down Plan would also
identify the key dependencies for the
effectiveness of the transfer, which
include regulatory approvals that would
permit the Transferee to be legally
qualified to provide the transferred
services from and after the transfer, and
approval by the applicable bankruptcy
court of, among other things, the
41 The proposed transfer arrangements outlined in
the Wind-down Plan do not contemplate the
transfer of any credit or funding agreements, which
are generally not assignable by DTC. However, to
the extent the Transferee adopts rules substantially
identical to those DTC has in effect prior to the
transfer, DTC states that it would have the benefit
of any rules-based liquidity funding. The Winddown Plan contemplates that no Participants Fund
would be transferred to the Transferee, as it is not
held in a bankruptcy remote manner and it is the
primary prefunded liquidity resource to be accessed
in the recovery phase.
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44971
proposed sale, assignments, and
transfers to the Transferee.
The Wind-down Plan would address
governance matters related to the
execution of the transfer of DTC’s
business and its wind-down. The Winddown Plan would address the duties of
the Board to execute the wind-down of
DTC in conformity with (1) the Rules,
(2) the Board’s fiduciary duties, which
mandate that it exercise reasonable
business judgment in performing these
duties, and (3) DTC’s regulatory
obligations under the Act as a registered
clearing agency. The Wind-down Plan
would also identify certain factors the
Board may consider in making these
decisions, which would include, for
example, whether DTC could safely
stabilize the business and protect its
value without seeking bankruptcy
protection, and DTC’s ability to
continue to meet its regulatory
requirements.
The Wind-down Plan would describe
(1) actions DTC or DTCC may take to
prepare for wind-down in the period
before DTC experiences any financial
distress, (2) actions DTC would take
both during the recovery phase and the
Runway Period to prepare for the
execution of the Wind-down Plan, and
(3) actions DTC would take upon
commencement of bankruptcy
proceedings to effectuate the Winddown Plan.
Finally, the Wind-down Plan would
include an analysis of the estimated
time and costs to effectuate the R&W
Plan, and would provide that this
estimate be reviewed and approved by
the Board annually. In order to estimate
the length of time it might take to
achieve a recovery or orderly winddown of DTC’s critical operations, as
contemplated by the R&W Plan, the
Wind-down Plan would include an
analysis of the possible sequencing and
length of time it might take to complete
an orderly wind-down and transfer of
critical operations, as described in
earlier sections of the R&W Plan. The
Wind-down Plan would also include in
this analysis consideration of other
factors, including the time it might take
to complete any further attempts at
recovery under the Recovery Plan. The
Wind-down Plan would then multiply
this estimated length of time by DTC’s
average monthly operating expenses,
including adjustments to account for
changes to DTC’s profit and expense
profile during these circumstances, over
the previous twelve months to
determine the amount of LNA that it
should hold to achieve a recovery or
orderly wind-down of DTC’s critical
operations. The estimated wind-down
costs would constitute the Recovery/
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Wind-down Capital Requirement under
the Capital Policy.42 Under that policy,
the General Business Risk Capital
Requirement is calculated as the greatest
of three estimated amounts, one of
which is this Recovery/Wind-down
Capital Requirement.43
DTC states that the R&W Plan is
designed as a roadmap, and the types of
actions that may be taken both leading
up to and in connection with
implementation of the Wind-down Plan
would be primarily addressed in other
supporting documentation referred to
therein.
The Wind-down Plan would address
proposed Rule 32(A) (Wind-down of the
Corporation), which would be adopted
to facilitate the implementation of the
Wind-down Plan, as discussed below.
B. Proposed Rules
In connection with the adoption of
the R&W Plan, DTC proposes to adopt
the Proposed Rules, each of which is
described below. DTC states that the
Proposed Rules are designed to facilitate
the execution of the R&W Plan and are
designed to provide Participants with
transparency as to critical aspects of the
R&W Plan, particularly as they relate to
the rights and responsibilities of both
DTC and its Participants. DTC also
states that the Proposed Rules are
designed to provide a legal basis to
these aspects of the R&W Plan.
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1. Rule 32(A) (Wind-Down of the
Corporation)
DTC states that the proposed Rule
32(A) (‘‘Wind-down Rule’’) is designed
to facilitate the execution of the Winddown Plan. The Wind-down Rule would
include a proposed set of defined terms
that would be applicable only to the
provisions of this Proposed Rule. DTC
states that the Wind-down Rule is
designed to make clear that a winddown of DTC’s business would occur
(1) after a decision is made by the
Board, and (2) in connection with the
transfer of DTC’s services to a
Transferee, as described therein. DTC
states that, generally, the proposed
Wind-down Rule is designed to create
clear mechanisms for the transfer of
Eligible Participants and Pledgees,
Settling Banks, DRS Agents, and FAST
Agents (as these terms would be defined
in the Wind-down Rule), and DTC’s
inventory of financial assets in order to
provide for continued access to critical
services and to minimize disruption to
the markets in the event the Wind-down
Plan is initiated.
42 See
43 See
supra note 12.
supra note 12.
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(i) Wind-Down Trigger
First, DTC states that the Proposed
Rule is designed to make clear that the
Board is responsible for initiating the
Wind-down Plan, and would identify
the criteria the Board would consider
when making this determination. As
provided for in the Wind-down Plan
and in the proposed Wind-down Rule,
the Board would initiate the Winddown Plan if, in the exercise of its
business judgment and subject to its
fiduciary duties, it has determined that
the execution of the Recovery Plan has
not or is not likely to restore DTC to
viability as a going concern, and the
implementation of the Wind-down Plan,
including the transfer of DTC’s business,
is in the best interests of DTC, its
Participants and Pledgees, its
shareholders and creditors, and the U.S.
financial markets.
(ii) Identification of Critical Services;
Designation of Dates and Times for
Specific Actions
The Proposed Rule would provide
that, upon making a determination to
initiate the Wind-down Plan, the Board
would identify the critical and noncritical services that would be
transferred to the Transferee at the
Transfer Time (as defined in the
Proposed Rule), as well as any noncritical services that would not be
transferred to the Transferee. The
proposed Wind-down Rule would
establish that any services transferred to
the Transferee will only be provided by
the Transferee as of the Transfer Time,
and that any non-critical services that
are not transferred to the Transferee
would be terminated at the Transfer
Time. The Proposed Rule would also
provide that the Board would establish
(1) an effective time for the transfer of
DTC’s business to a Transferee
(‘‘Transfer Time’’), and (2) the last day
that instructions in respect of securities
and other financial products may be
effectuated through the facilities of DTC
(the ‘‘Last Activity Date’’). DTC states
that the Proposed Rule is designed to
make clear that DTC would not accept
any transactions for settlement after the
Last Activity Date. Any transactions to
be settled after the Transfer Time would
be required to be submitted to the
Transferee, and would not be DTC’s
responsibility.
(iii) Notice Provisions
The proposed Wind-down Rule
would provide that, upon a decision to
implement the Wind-down Plan, DTC
would provide its Participants,
Pledgees, DRS Agents, FAST Agents,
Settling Banks and regulators with a
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notice that includes material
information relating to the Wind-down
Plan and the anticipated transfer of
DTC’s Participants and business,
including, for example, (1) a brief
statement of the reasons for the decision
to implement the Wind-down Plan; (2)
identification of the Transferee and
information regarding the transaction by
which the transfer of DTC’s business
would be effected; (3) the Transfer Time
and Last Activity Date; and (4)
identification of Participants and the
critical and non-critical services that
would be transferred to the Transferee at
the Transfer Time, as well as those NonEligible Participants (as defined below
and in the Proposed Rule) and any noncritical services that would not be
included in the transfer. DTC would
also make available the rules and
procedures and membership agreements
of the Transferee.
(iv) Transfer of Membership
The proposed Wind-down Rule
would address the expected transfer of
DTC’s membership to the Transferee,
which DTC would seek to effectuate by
entering into an arrangement with a
Failover Transferee, or by using
commercially reasonable efforts to enter
into such an arrangement with a Third
Party Transferee. Thus, under the
proposal, in connection with the
implementation of the Wind-down Plan
and with no further action required by
any party:
(1) Each Eligible Participant would
become (i) a Participant of the
Transferee and (ii) a party to a
Participants agreement with the
Transferee;
(2) each Participant that is delinquent
in the performance of any obligation to
DTC or that has provided notice of its
election to withdraw as a Participant (a
‘‘Non-Eligible Participant’’) as of the
Transfer Time would become (i) the
holder of a transition period securities
account maintained by the Transferee
on its books (‘‘Transition Period
Securities Account’’) and (ii) a party to
a Transition Period Securities Account
agreement of the Transferee;
(3) each Pledgee would become (i) a
Pledgee of the Transferee and (ii) a party
to a Pledgee agreement with the
Transferee;
(4) each DRS Agent would become (i)
a DRS Agent of the Transferee and (ii)
a party to a DRS Agent agreement with
the Transferee;
(5) each FAST Agent would become
(i) a FAST Agent of the Transferee and
(ii) a party to a FAST Agent agreement
with the Transferee; and
(6) each Settling Bank for Participants
and Pledgees would become (i) a
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Settling Bank for Participants and
Pledgees of the Transferee and (ii) a
party to a Settling Bank Agreement with
the Transferee.
Further, DTC states that the Proposed
Rule is designed to make clear that it
would not prohibit (1) Non-Eligible
Participants from applying for
membership with the Transferee, (2)
Non-Eligible Participants that have
become holders of Transition Period
Securities Accounts (‘‘Transition Period
Securities Account Holders’’) of the
Transferee from withdrawing as a
Transition Period Securities Account
Holder from the Transferee, subject to
the rules and procedures of the
Transferee, and (3) Participants,
Pledgees, DRS Agents, FAST Agents,
and Settling Banks that would be
transferred to the Transferee from
withdrawing from membership with the
Transferee, subject to the rules and
procedures of the Transferee. Under the
Proposed Rule, Non-Eligible
Participants that have become
Transition Period Securities Account
Holders of the Transferee shall have the
rights and be subject to the obligations
of Transition Period Securities Account
Holders set forth in special provisions of
the rules and procedures of the
Transferee applicable to such Transition
Period Securities Account Holder.
Specifically, Non-Eligible Participants
that become Transition Period
Securities Account Holders must,
within the Transition Period (as defined
in the Proposed Rule), instruct the
Transferee to transfer the financial
assets credited to its Transition Period
Securities Account (i) to a Participant of
the Transferee through the facilities of
the Transferee or (ii) to a recipient
outside the facilities of the Transferee,
and no additional financial assets may
be delivered versus payment to a
Transition Period Securities Account
during the Transition Period.
(v) Transfer of Inventory of Financial
Assets
The proposed Wind-down Rule
would provide that DTC would enter
into arrangements with a Failover
Transferee, or would use commercially
reasonable efforts to enter into
arrangements with a Third Party
Transferee, providing that, in either
case, at Transfer Time:
(1) DTC would transfer to the
Transferee (i) its rights with respect to
its nominee Cede & Co. (‘‘Cede’’) (and
thereby its rights with respect to the
financial assets owned of record by
Cede), (ii) the financial assets held by it
at the FRBNY, (iii) the financial assets
held by it at other CSDs, (iv) the
financial assets held in custody for it
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with FAST Agents, (v) the financial
assets held in custody for it with other
custodians and (vi) the financial assets
it holds in physical custody.
(2) The Transferee would establish
security entitlements on its books for
Eligible Participants of DTC that become
Participants of the Transferee that
replicate the security entitlements that
DTC maintained on its books
immediately prior to the Transfer Time
for such Eligible Participants, and DTC
would simultaneously eliminate such
security entitlements from its books.
(3) The Transferee would establish
security entitlements on its books for
Non-Eligible Participants of DTC that
become Transition Period Securities
Account Holders of the Transferee that
replicate the security entitlements that
DTC maintained on its books
immediately prior to the Transfer Time
for such Non-Eligible Participants, and
DTC would simultaneously eliminate
such security entitlements from its
books.
(4) The Transferee would establish
pledges on its books in favor of Pledgees
that become Pledgees of the Transferee
that replicate the pledges that DTC
maintained on its books immediately
prior to the Transfer Time in favor of
such Pledgees, and DTC shall
simultaneously eliminate such pledges
from its books.
(vi) Comparability Period
DTC states that the proposed
automatic mechanism for the transfer of
DTC’s membership is intended to
provide DTC’s membership with
continuous access to critical services in
the event of DTC’s wind-down, and to
facilitate the continued prompt and
accurate clearance and settlement of
securities transactions. The proposed
Wind-down Rule would provide that
DTC would enter into arrangements
with a Failover Transferee, or would use
commercially reasonable efforts to enter
into arrangements with a Third Party
Transferee, providing that, in either
case, with respect to the critical services
and any non-critical services that are
transferred from DTC to the Transferee,
for at least a period of time to be agreed
upon (‘‘Comparability Period’’), the
business transferred from DTC to the
Transferee would be operated in a
manner that is comparable to the
manner in which the business was
previously operated by DTC.
Specifically, the proposed Wind-down
Rule would provide that: (1) The rules
of the Transferee and terms of
Participant, Pledgee, DRS Agent, FAST
Agent and Settling Bank agreements
would be comparable in substance and
effect to the analogous Rules and
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44973
agreements of DTC, (2) the rights and
obligations of any Participants,
Pledgees, DRS Agents, FAST Agents,
and Settling Banks that are transferred
to the Transferee would be comparable
in substance and effect to their rights
and obligations as to DTC, and (3) the
Transferee would operate the
transferred business and provide any
services that are transferred in a
comparable manner to which such
services were provided by DTC.
DTC states that the purpose of these
provisions and the intended effect of the
proposed Wind-down Rule is to
facilitate a smooth transition of DTC’s
business to a Transferee and to provide
that, for at least the Comparability
Period, the Transferee (1) would operate
the transferred business in a manner
that is comparable in substance and
effect to the manner in which the
business was operated by DTC, and (2)
would not require sudden and
disruptive changes in the systems,
operations and business practices of the
new Participants, Pledgees, DRS Agents,
FAST Agents, and Settling Banks of the
Transferee.
(vii) Subordination of Claims Provisions
and Miscellaneous Matters
The proposed Wind-down Rule
would include a provision addressing
the subordination of unsecured claims
against DTC of its Participants who fail
to participate in DTC’s recovery efforts
(i.e., firms delinquent in their
obligations to DTC or elect to retire from
DTC in order to minimize their
obligations with respect to the
allocation of losses, pursuant to the
Rules). DTC states that this provision is
designed to incentivize Participants to
participate in DTC’s recovery efforts.44
The proposed Wind-down Rule
would address other ex-ante matters,
including provisions providing that its
Participants, Pledgees, DRS Agents,
FAST Agents and Settling Banks (1) will
assist and cooperate with DTC to
effectuate the transfer of DTC’s business
to a Transferee, (2) consent to the
provisions of the rule, and (3) grant DTC
power of attorney to execute and deliver
on their behalf documents and
instruments that may be requested by
the Transferee. Finally, the Proposed
Rule would include a limitation of
liability for any actions taken or omitted
44 Nothing in the proposed Wind-down Rule
would seek to prevent a Participant that retired its
membership at DTC from applying for membership
with the Transferee. Once its DTC membership is
terminated, however, such firm would not be able
to benefit from the membership assignment that
would be effected by this proposed Wind-down
Rule, and it would have to apply for membership
directly with the Transferee, subject to its
membership application and review process.
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to be taken by DTC pursuant to the
Proposed Rule.
DTC states that the purpose of the
limitation of liability is to facilitate and
protect DTC’s ability to act
expeditiously in response to
extraordinary events. Such limitation of
liability would be available only
following triggering of the Wind-down
Plan. In addition, and as a separate
matter, DTC states that the limitation of
liability provides Participants with
transparency for the unlikely situation
when those extraordinary events could
occur, as well as supporting the legal
framework within which DTC would
take such actions. DTC states that these
provisions, collectively, are designed to
enable DTC to take such acts as the
Board determines necessary to
effectuate an orderly transfer and winddown of its business should recovery
efforts prove unsuccessful.
2. Rule 38 (Market Disruption and Force
Majeure)
The proposed Rule 38 (‘‘Force
Majeure Rule’’) would address DTC’s
authority to take certain actions upon
the occurrence, and during the
pendency, of a Market Disruption Event,
as defined therein. DTC states that the
Proposed Rule is designed to clarify
DTC’s ability to take actions to address
extraordinary events outside of the
control of DTC and of its membership,
and to mitigate the effect of such events
by facilitating the continuity of services
(or, if deemed necessary, the temporary
suspension of services). To that end,
under the proposed Force Majeure Rule,
DTC would be entitled, during the
pendency of a Market Disruption Event,
to (1) suspend the provision of any or
all services, and (2) take, or refrain from
taking, or require its Participants and
Pledgees to take, or refrain from taking,
any actions it considers appropriate to
address, alleviate, or mitigate the event
and facilitate the continuation of DTC’s
services as may be practicable.
The proposed Force Majeure Rule
would identify the events or
circumstances that would be considered
a Market Disruption Event. The
proposed Force Majeure Rule would
define the governance procedures for
how DTC would determine whether,
and how, to implement the provisions
of the rule. A determination that a
Market Disruption Event has occurred
would generally be made by the Board,
but the Proposed Rule would provide
for limited, interim delegation of
authority to a specified officer or
management committee if the Board
would not be able to take timely action.
In the event such delegated authority is
exercised, the proposed Force Majeure
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Rule would require that the Board be
convened as promptly as practicable, no
later than five Business Days after such
determination has been made, to ratify,
modify, or rescind the action. The
proposed Force Majeure Rule would
also provide for prompt notification to
the Commission, and advance
consultation with Commission staff,
when practicable, including notification
when an event is no longer continuing
and the relevant actions are terminated.
The Proposed Rule would require
Participants and Pledgees to notify DTC
immediately upon becoming aware of a
Market Disruption Event, and, likewise,
would require DTC to notify its
Participants and Pledgees if it has
triggered the Proposed Rule and of
actions taken or intended to be taken
thereunder.
Finally, the Proposed Rule would
address other related matters, including
a limitation of liability for any failure or
delay in performance, in whole or in
part, arising out of the Market
Disruption Event. DTC states that the
purpose of the limitation of liability
would be similar to the purpose of the
analogous provision in the proposed
Wind-down Rule, which is to facilitate
and protect DTC’s ability to act
expeditiously in response to
extraordinary events.
II. Discussion and Commission
Findings
Section 19(b)(2)(C) of the Act 45
directs the Commission to approve a
proposed rule change of a selfregulatory organization if it finds that
the proposed rule change is consistent
with the requirements of the Act and the
rules and regulations thereunder
applicable to such organization. After
careful review, the Commission finds
that the Proposed Rule Change is
consistent with the requirements of the
Act and the rules and regulations
thereunder applicable to DTC. In
particular, the Commission finds that
the Proposed Rule Change is consistent
with Section 17A(b)(3)(F) of the Act,46
Rules 17Ad–22(e)(2)(i), (iii), and (v)
under the Act,47 Rule 17Ad–22(e)(3)(ii)
under the Act,48 and Rules 17Ad–
22(e)(15)(i) and (ii) under the Act.49
A. Consistency With Section
17A(b)(3)(F) of the Act
Section 17A(b)(3)(F) of the Act
requires, in part, that a registered
clearing agency have rules designed to
45 15
U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(C).
U.S.C. 78q–1(b)(3)(F).
47 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(2)(i), (iii), and (v).
48 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(3)(ii).
49 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(15)(i) and (ii).
46 15
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promote the prompt and accurate
clearance and settlement of securities
transactions and to assure the
safeguarding of securities and funds
which are in the custody or control of
the clearing agency or for which it is
responsible.50
First, the Commission believes that
the R&W Plan, generally, is designed to
help DTC promote the prompt and
accurate clearance and settlement of
securities transactions and assure the
safeguarding of securities and funds
which are in the custody or control of
DTC or for which it is responsible by
providing DTC with a roadmap for
actions it may employ to monitor and
manage its risks, and, as needed, to
stabilize its financial condition in the
event those risks materialize.
Specifically, as described above, the
Recovery Plan would establish a
number of triggers for the potential
application of a number of recovery
tools described in the Recovery Plan.
The Commission believes that
establishing such triggers alongside a
list of available recovery tools would
help DTC to more promptly determine
when and how it may need to manage
a significant stress event, and, as
needed, stabilize its financial condition.
Similarly, the Force Majeure Rule is
designed to provide a roadmap to
address extraordinary events that may
occur outside of DTC’s control.
Specifically, as described above, the
Force Majeure Rule would define a
Market Disruption Event and provide
governance around determining when
such an event has occurred. The Force
Majeure Rule also would describe DTC’s
authority to take actions during the
pendency of a Market Disruption Event
that it deems appropriate to address
such an event and facilitate the
continuation of DTC’s services, if
practicable. By defining a Market
Disruption Event and providing such
governance and authority, the
Commission believes that the Force
Majeure Rule would help DTC improve
its ability to identify and manage a force
majeure event, and, as needed, to
stabilize its financial condition so that
DTC can continue to operate.
The Commission believes that the
Recovery Plan and the Force Majeure
Rule would allow for a more considered
and comprehensive evaluation by DTC
of a stressed market situation and the
ways in which DTC could apply
available recovery tools in a manner
intended to minimize the potential
negative effects of the stress situation for
DTC, its membership, and the broader
financial system. Therefore, the
50 15
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Commission believes that the Recovery
Plan and the Force Majeure Rule are
designed to help DTC promote the
prompt and accurate clearance and
settlement of securities transactions and
assure the safeguarding of securities and
funds which are in the custody or
control of DTC or for which it is
responsible by establishing a means for
DTC to best determine the most
appropriate way to address such stress
situations in an effective manner.
Second, the Commission believes that
the R&W Plan, generally, is designed to
help DTC to promote the prompt and
accurate clearance and settlement of
securities transactions and to assure the
safeguarding of securities and funds
which are in the custody or control of
DTC or for which it is responsible by
providing a roadmap to wind-down that
is designed to ensure the availability of
DTC’s critical services to the
marketplace, while reducing disruption
to the operations of Participants and
financial markets that might be caused
by DTC’s failure. Specifically, as
described above, the Wind-down Plan,
as facilitated by the Wind-down Rule,
would provide for the wind-down of
DTC’s business and transfer of
membership and critical services if the
recovery tools do not successfully return
DTC to financial viability. Accordingly,
critical services, such as services that
lack alternative providers or products as
well as services that are interconnected
with other participants and processes
within the U.S. financial system would
be able to continue in an orderly
manner while DTC is seeking to winddown its services. By designing the
Wind-down Plan and the Wind-down
Rule to enable the continuity of DTC’s
critical services and membership in an
orderly manner while DTC is seeking to
wind-down its services, the Commission
believes these proposed changes would
help DTC to promote the prompt and
accurate clearance and settlement of
securities transactions and to assure the
safeguarding of securities and funds
which are in the custody or control of
DTC or for which it is responsible in the
event the Wind-down Plan is
implemented.
By better enabling DTC to promote the
prompt and accurate clearance and
settlement of securities transactions and
to assure the safeguarding of securities
and funds which are in the custody or
control of DTC or for which it is
responsible, as described above, the
Commission finds that the Proposed
Rule Change is consistent with Section
17A(b)(3)(F) of the Act.51
51 15
U.S.C. 78q–1(b)(3)(F).
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B. Consistency With Rules 17Ad–
22(e)(2)(i), (iii), and (v) Under the Act
Rule 17Ad–22(e)(2)(i) under the Act
requires a covered clearing agency 52 to
establish, implement, maintain, and
enforce written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to provide for
governance arrangements that are clear
and transparent.53 Rule 17Ad–
22(e)(2)(iii) under the Act requires a
covered clearing agency to establish,
implement, maintain, and enforce
written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to provide for
governance arrangements that support
the public interest requirements in
Section 17A of the Act 54 applicable to
clearing agencies, and the objectives of
owners and participants.55 Rule 17Ad–
22(e)(2)(v) under the Act requires a
covered clearing agency to establish,
implement, maintain, and enforce
written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to provide for
governance arrangements that specify
clear and direct lines of responsibility.56
As described above, the R&W Plan is
designed to identify clear lines of
responsibility concerning the R&W Plan
including (1) the ongoing development
of the R&W Plan; (2) ongoing
maintenance of the R&W Plan; (3)
reviews and approval of the R&W Plan;
and (4) the functioning and
implementation of the R&W Plan. As
described above, the R&R Team, which
reports to the Management Committee,
is responsible for maintaining the R&W
Plan and for the development and
ongoing maintenance of the overall
recovery and wind-down planning
process. Meanwhile, the Board, or such
committees as may be delegated
authority by the Board from time to time
pursuant to its charter, would review
and approve the R&W Plan biennially,
and also would review and approve any
changes that are proposed to the R&W
Plan outside of the biennial review.
Moreover, the R&W Plan would state the
stages of escalation required to manage
recovery under the Recovery Plan or to
52 A
‘‘covered clearing agency’’ means, among
other things, a clearing agency registered with the
Commission under Section 17A of the Exchange
Act (15 U.S.C. 78q–1 et seq.) that is designated
systemically important by the Financial Stability
Oversight Counsel (‘‘FSOC’’) pursuant to the
Clearing Supervision Act (12 U.S.C. 5461 et seq.).
See 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(a)(5)–(6). On July 18,
2012, FSOC designated DTC as systemically
important. U.S. Department of the Treasury, ‘‘FSOC
Makes First Designations in Effort to Protect Against
Future Financial Crises,’’ available at https://
www.treasury.gov/press-center/press-releases/
Pages/tg1645.aspx. Therefore, DTC is a covered
clearing agency.
53 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(2)(i).
54 15 U.S.C. 78q–1.
55 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(2)(iii).
56 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(2)(v).
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44975
invoke DTC’s wind-down under the
Wind-down Plan, which would range
from relevant business line managers up
to the Board. The R&W Plan would
identify the parties responsible for
certain activities under both the
Recovery Plan and the Wind-down Plan,
and would describe their respective
roles. The R&W Plan also would specify
the process DTC would take to receive
input from various parties at DTC,
including management committees and
the Board.
In considering the above, the
Commission believes that the R&W Plan
would help contribute to establishing,
implementing, maintaining, and
enforcing written policies and
procedures reasonably designed to
provide for governance arrangements
that are clear and transparent because it
would specify lines of control. The
Commission also believes that the R&W
Plan would help contribute to
establishing, implementing,
maintaining, and enforcing written
policies and procedures reasonably
designed to provide for governance
arrangements that support the public
interest requirements in Section 17A of
the Act 57 applicable to clearing
agencies, and the objectives of owners
and participants because the R&W Plan
specifies the process DTC would take to
receive input from various DTC
stakeholders. In addition, the
Commission believes that the R&W Plan
would help contribute to establishing,
implementing, maintaining, and
enforcing written policies and
procedures reasonably designed to
provide for governance arrangements
that specify clear and direct lines of
responsibility because it specifies who
is responsible for the ongoing
development, maintenance, reviews,
approval, functioning, and
implementation of the R&W Plan.
Therefore, the Commission finds that
the R&W Plan is consistent with Rules
17Ad–22(e)(2)(i), (iii), and (v) under the
Act.58
C. Consistency With Rule 17Ad–
22(e)(3)(ii) Under the Act
Rule 17Ad–22(e)(3)(ii) under the Act
requires a covered clearing agency to
establish, implement, maintain, and
enforce written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to maintain a
sound risk management framework for
comprehensively managing legal, credit,
liquidity, operational, general business,
investment, custody, and other risks
that arise in or are borne by the covered
clearing agency, which includes plans
57 15
58 17
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U.S.C. 78q–1.
CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(2)(i), (iii), and (v).
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for the recovery and orderly wind-down
of the covered clearing agency
necessitated by credit losses, liquidity
shortfalls, losses from general business
risk, or any other losses.59
As described above, the R&W Plan’s
Recovery Plan provides a plan for DTC’s
recovery necessitated by credit losses,
liquidity shortfalls, losses from general
business risk, or any other losses by
defining the risk management activities,
stress conditions and indicators, and
tools that DTC may use to address stress
scenarios that could eventually prevent
DTC from being able to provide its
critical services as a going concern.
More specifically, through the
framework of the Crisis Continuum,
which identifies tools that can be
employed to mitigate losses and
mitigate or minimize liquidity needs as
the market environment becomes
increasingly stressed, the Recovery Plan
would identify measures that DTC may
take to manage risks of credit losses and
liquidity shortfalls, and other losses that
could arise from a Participant Default.
The Recovery Plan also would address
DTC’s management of general business
risks and other non-default risks that
could lead to losses by identifying
potential non-default losses and the
resources available to DTC to address
such losses, including recovery triggers
and tools to mitigate such losses.
Therefore, the Commission believes that
the R&W Plan’s Recovery Plan helps
DTC establish, implement, maintain,
and enforce written policies and
procedures reasonably designed to
maintain a sound risk management
framework for comprehensively
managing legal, credit, liquidity,
operational, general business,
investment, custody, and other risks
that arise in or are borne by DTC, which
includes a recovery plan necessitated by
credit losses, liquidity shortfalls, losses
from general business risk, or any other
losses.
As described above, the R&W Plan’s
Wind-down Plan provides a plan for
orderly wind-down of DTC, which
would be triggered by a determination
by the Board that recovery efforts have
not been, or are unlikely to be,
successful in returning DTC to viability
as a going concern. Once triggered, the
Wind-down Plan sets forth mechanisms
for the transfer of DTC’s membership
and business, and it is designed to
maintain continued access to DTC’s
critical services and to minimize market
impact of the transfer while DTC is
seeking to ultimately wind-down its
services. Specifically, the Wind-down
Plan would provide for the transfer of
59 17
CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(3)(ii).
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DTC’s business, assets, securities
inventory, and membership to another
legal entity with such transfer being
effected in connection with proceedings
under Chapter 11 of the U.S.
Bankruptcy Code.60 After effectuating
this transfer, DTC would liquidate any
remaining assets in an orderly manner
in bankruptcy proceedings.
Although the Commission is not
opining on the Wind-down Plan’s
consistency with the U.S. Bankruptcy
Code, in reviewing the proposed
changes, the Commission believes that
DTC’s intent to use bankruptcy
proceedings to achieve an orderly
liquidation of assets after any transfer of
DTC’s business appears reasonable, in
light of the provisions of the Bankruptcy
Code that address the liquidation and
distribution of a debtor’s property
among creditors and interest holders.61
Under many circumstances, Section 363
of the Bankruptcy Code provides for the
sale of property ‘‘free and clear of any
interest in such property of an entity
other than the estate[.]’’ 62 The
Commission believes that DTC’s
analysis regarding the applicability of
these provisions, while not free from
doubt, presents a reasonable approach
to liquidation in light of the
circumstances and the available
alternatives.63 Therefore, the
Commission believes that the R&W
Plan’s Wind-down Plan helps DTC
establish, implement, maintain, and
enforce written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to maintain a
sound risk management framework for
comprehensively managing legal, credit,
liquidity, operational, general business,
investment, custody, and other risks
that arise in or are borne by DTC, which
includes a wind-down plan necessitated
by credit losses, liquidity shortfalls,
losses from general business risk, or any
other losses.
Therefore, the Commission finds that
the R&W Plan is consistent with Rule
17Ad–22(e)(3)(ii) under the Act.64
D. Consistency With Rules 17Ad–
22(e)(15)(i)–(ii) Under the Act
Rule 17Ad–22(e)(15)(i) under the Act
requires a covered clearing agency to
establish, implement, maintain, and
enforce written policies and procedures
60 11
U.S.C. 101 et seq.
e.g., 11 U.S.C. 363, 726, and 1129(a)(7).
62 See 11 U.S.C. 363(f).
63 The Wind-down Plan would identify certain
factors the Board may consider in evaluating
alternatives, which would include, for example,
whether DTC could safely stabilize the business and
protect its value without seeking bankruptcy
protection, and DTC’s ability to continue to meet its
regulatory requirements.
64 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(3)(ii).
61 See,
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reasonably designed to identify,
monitor, and manage its general
business risk and hold sufficient liquid
net assets funded by equity to cover
potential general business losses so that
the covered clearing agency can
continue operations and services as a
going concern if those losses
materialize, including by determining
the amount of liquid net assets funded
by equity based upon its general
business risk profile and the length of
time required to achieve a recovery or
orderly wind-down, as appropriate, of
its critical operations and services if
such action is taken.65 Rule 17Ad–
22(e)(15)(ii) under the Act requires a
covered clearing agency to establish,
implement, maintain, and enforce
written policies and procedures
reasonably designed to identify,
monitor, and manage its general
business risk and hold sufficient liquid
net assets funded by equity to cover
potential general business losses so that
the covered clearing agency can
continue operations and services as a
going concern if those losses
materialize, including by holding liquid
net assets funded by equity equal to the
greater of either (x) six months of the
covered clearing agency’s current
operating expenses, or (y) the amount
determined by the board of directors to
be sufficient to ensure a recovery or
orderly wind-down of critical
operations and services of the covered
clearing agency, as contemplated by the
plans established under Rule 17Ad–
22(e)(3)(ii) under the Act,66 discussed
above.67
As discussed above, DTC’s Capital
Policy is designed to address how DTC
holds LNA in compliance with these
requirements,68 while the Wind-down
Plan would include an analysis to
estimate the amount of time and cost to
achieve a recovery or orderly winddown of DTC’s critical operations and
services, and would provide that the
Board review and approve this analysis
and estimation annually. The Winddown Plan also would provide that the
estimate would be the Recovery/Winddown Capital Requirement under the
Capital Policy. Under that policy, the
General Business Risk Capital
Requirement, which is the amount of
LNA that DTC plans to hold to cover
potential general business losses so that
it can continue operations and services
as a going concern if those losses
materialize, is calculated as the greatest
of three estimated amounts, one of
65 17
CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(15)(i).
CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(3)(ii).
67 17 CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(15)(ii).
68 Supra note 12.
66 17
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which is this Recovery/Wind-down
Capital Requirement. Therefore, the
Commission finds that the R&W Plan is
consistent with Rules 17Ad–22(e)(15)(i)
and (ii) under the Act.69
III. Conclusion
On the basis of the foregoing, the
Commission finds that the proposal is
consistent with the requirements of the
Act and in particular with the
requirements of Section 17A of the
Act 70 and the rules and regulations
thereunder.
It is therefore ordered, pursuant to
Section 19(b)(2) of the Act,71 that
proposed rule change SR–DTC–2017–
021, as modified by Amendment No. 1,
be, and it hereby is, approved 72 as of
the date of this order or the date of a
notice by the Commission authorizing
DTC to implement advance notice SR–
DTC–2017–803, as modified by
Amendment No. 1, whichever is later.
For the Commission, by the Division of
Trading and Markets, pursuant to delegated
authority.73
Eduardo A. Aleman,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018–19054 Filed 8–31–18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011–01–P
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
[Release No. 34–83971; File No. SR–NSCC–
2017–018]
Self-Regulatory Organizations;
National Securities Clearing
Corporation; Order Approving a
Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by
Amendment No. 1, To Amend the Loss
Allocation Rules and Make Other
Changes
August 28, 2018.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES
On December 18, 2017, National
Securities Clearing Corporation
(‘‘NSCC’’) filed with the Securities and
Exchange Commission (‘‘Commission’’)
proposed rule change SR–NSCC–2017–
018 pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(‘‘Act’’) 1 and Rule 19b–4 thereunder 2 to
amend its loss allocation rules and make
other conforming and technical
69 17
CFR 240.17Ad–22(e)(15)(i) and (ii).
U.S.C. 78q–1.
71 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
72 In approving the Proposed Rule Change, the
Commission has considered the Proposed Rule
Change’s impact on efficiency, competition, and
capital formation. See 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
73 17 CFR 200.30–3(a)(12).
1 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
2 17 CFR 240.19b–4.
70 15
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changes.3 The proposed rule change was
published for comment in the Federal
Register on January 8, 2018.4 On
February 8, 2018, the Commission
designated a longer period within which
to approve, disapprove, or institute
proceedings to determine whether to
approve or disapprove the proposed
rule change.5 On March 20, 2018, the
Commission instituted proceedings to
determine whether to approve or
3 On December 18, 2017, NSCC filed the proposed
rule change as advance notice SR–NSCC–2017–806
with the Commission pursuant to Section 806(e)(1)
of Title VIII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act entitled the Payment,
Clearing, and Settlement Supervision Act of 2010
(‘‘Clearing Supervision Act’’) and Rule 19b–
4(n)(1)(i) of the Act (‘‘Advance Notice’’). 12 U.S.C.
5465(e)(1) and 17 CFR 240.19b–4(n)(1)(i),
respectively. The Advance Notice was published for
comment in the Federal Register on January 30,
2018. In that publication, the Commission also
extended the review period of the Advance Notice
for an additional 60 days, pursuant to Section
806(e)(1)(H) of the Clearing Supervision Act. 12
U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(H); Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 82584 (January 24, 2018), 83 FR 4377
(January 30, 2018) (SR–NSCC–2017–806). On April
10, 2018, the Commission required additional
information from NSCC pursuant to Section
806(e)(1)(D) of the Clearing Supervision Act, which
tolled the Commission’s period of review of the
Advance Notice until 60 days from the date the
information required by the Commission was
received by the Commission. 12 U.S.C.
5465(e)(1)(D); see 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(E)(ii) and
(G)(ii); see Memorandum from the Office of
Clearance and Settlement Supervision, Division of
Trading and Markets, titled ‘‘Commission’s Request
for Additional Information,’’ available at https://
www.sec.gov/rules/sro/nscc-an.htm. On June 28,
2018, NSCC filed Amendment No. 1 to the Advance
Notice to amend and replace in its entirety the
Advance Notice as originally filed on December 18,
2017, which was published in the Federal Register
on August 6, 2018. Securities Exchange Act Release
No. 83748 (July 31, 2018), 83 FR 38375 (August 6,
2018) (SR–NSCC–2017–806). NSCC submitted a
courtesy copy of Amendment No. 1 to the Advance
Notice through the Commission’s electronic public
comment letter mechanism. Accordingly,
Amendment No. 1 to the Advance Notice has been
publicly available on the Commission’s website at
https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro/nscc-an.htm since
June 29, 2018. On July 6, 2018, the Commission
received a response to its request for additional
information in consideration of the Advance Notice,
which, in turn, added a further 60 days to the
review period pursuant to Section 806(e)(1)(E) and
(G) of the Clearing Supervision Act. 12 U.S.C.
5465(e)(1)(E) and (G); see Memorandum from the
Office of Clearance and Settlement Supervision,
Division of Trading and Markets, titled ‘‘Response
to the Commission’s Request for Additional
Information,’’ available at https://www.sec.gov/
rules/sro/nscc-an.htm. The Commission did not
receive any comments. The proposal, as set forth in
both the Advance Notice and the proposed rule
change, each as modified by Amendments No. 1,
shall not take effect until all required regulatory
actions are completed.
4 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 82428
(January 2, 2018), 83 FR 897 (January 8, 2018) (SR–
NSCC–2017–018).
5 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 82670
(February 8, 2018), 83 FR 6626 (February 14, 2018)
(SR–DTC–2017–022, SR–FICC–2017–022, SR–
NSCC–2017–018).
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44977
disapprove the proposed rule change.6
On June 25, 2018, the Commission
designated a longer period for
Commission action on the proceedings
to determine whether to approve or
disapprove the proposed rule change.7
On June 28, 2018, NSCC filed
Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule
change to amend and replace in its
entirety the proposed rule change as
originally filed on December 18, 2017.8
The Commission did not receive any
comments. This order approves the
proposed rule change, as modified by
Amendment No. 1 (hereinafter,
‘‘Proposed Rule Change’’).
I. Description
The Proposed Rule Change consists of
proposed changes to NSCC’s Rules and
Procedures (‘‘Rules’’) 9 in order to (1)
modify the loss allocation process; (2)
align NSCC’s loss allocation rule among
the three clearing agencies of The
Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation
(‘‘DTCC’’)—The Depository Trust
Company (‘‘DTC’’), Fixed Income
Clearing Corporation (‘‘FICC’’)
(including the Government Securities
Division (‘‘FICC/GSD’’) and the
Mortgage-Backed Securities Division
(‘‘FICC/MBSD’’)), and NSCC
(collectively, the ‘‘DTCC Clearing
Agencies’’); 10 (3) reduce the time within
which NSCC is required to return a
former Member’s Clearing Fund deposit;
and (4) make conforming and technical
changes. Each of these proposed
changes is described below. A detailed
description of the specific rule text
changes proposed in this Advance
6 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 82910
(March 20, 2018), 83 FR 12968 (March 26, 2018)
(SR–NSCC–2017–018).
7 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 83510
(June 25, 2018), 83 FR 30791 (June 29, 2018) (SR–
DTC–2017–022, SR–FICC–2017–022, SR–NSCC–
2017–018).
8 Securities Exchange Act Release No. 83633 (July
13, 2018), 83 FR 34227 (July 19, 2018) (SR–NSCC–
2017–018) (‘‘Notice of Amendment No. 1’’). NSCC
submitted a courtesy copy of Amendment No. 1 to
the proposed rule change through the Commission’s
electronic public comment letter mechanism.
Accordingly, Amendment No. 1 to the proposed
rule change has been publicly available on the
Commission’s website at https://www.sec.gov/rules/
sro/nscc-an.htm since June 29, 2018.
9 Each capitalized term not otherwise defined
herein has its respective meaning as set forth in the
Rules, available at https://www.dtcc.com/∼/media/
Files/Downloads/legal/rules/nscc_rules.pdf.
10 DTCC is a user-owned and user-governed
holding company and is the parent company of
DTC, FICC, and NSCC. DTCC operates on a shared
services model with respect to the DTCC Clearing
Agencies. Most corporate functions are established
and managed on an enterprise-wide basis pursuant
to intercompany agreements under which it is
generally DTCC that provides a relevant service to
a DTCC Clearing Agency.
E:\FR\FM\04SEN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 171 (Tuesday, September 4, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 44964-44977]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2018-19054]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
[Release No. 34-83972; File No. SR-DTC-2017-021]
Self-Regulatory Organizations; The Depository Trust Company;
Order Approving a Proposed Rule Change, as Modified by Amendment No. 1,
To Adopt a Recovery & Wind-Down Plan and Related Rules
August 28, 2018.
On December 18, 2017, The Depository Trust Company (``DTC'') filed
with the Securities and Exchange Commission (``Commission'') proposed
rule change SR-DTC-2017-021 pursuant to Section 19(b)(1) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (``Act'') \1\ and Rule 19b-4 thereunder
\2\ to adopt a recovery and wind-down plan and related rules.\3\ The
proposed rule
[[Page 44965]]
change was published for comment in the Federal Register on January 8,
2018.\4\ On February 8, 2018, the Commission designated a longer period
within which to approve, disapprove, or institute proceedings to
determine whether to approve or disapprove the proposed rule change.\5\
On March 20, 2018, the Commission instituted proceedings to determine
whether to approve or disapprove the proposed rule change.\6\ On June
25, 2018, the Commission designated a longer period for Commission
action on the proceedings to determine whether to approve or disapprove
the proposed rule change.\7\ On June 28, 2018, DTC filed Amendment No.
1 to the proposed rule change to amend and replace in its entirety the
proposed rule change as originally submitted on December 18, 2017.\8\
The Commission did not receive any comments. This order approves the
proposed rule change, as modified by Amendment No. 1 (hereinafter
``Proposed Rule Change'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(1).
\2\ 17 CFR 240.19b-4.
\3\ On December 18, 2017, DTC filed the proposed rule change as
advance notice SR-DTC-2017-803 with the Commission pursuant to
Section 806(e)(1) of Title VIII of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act entitled the Payment, Clearing, and
Settlement Supervision Act of 2010 (``Clearing Supervision Act'')
and Rule 19b-4(n)(1)(i) of the Act (``Advance Notice''). 12 U.S.C.
5465(e)(1) and 17 CFR 240.19b-4(n)(1)(i), respectively. The Advance
Notice was published for comment in the Federal Register on January
30, 2018. In that publication, the Commission also extended the
review period of the Advance Notice for an additional 60 days,
pursuant to Section 806(e)(1)(H) of the Clearing Supervision Act. 12
U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(H); Securities Exchange Act Release No. 82579
(January 24, 2018), 83 FR 4310 (January 30, 2018) (SR-DTC-2017-803).
On April 10, 2018, the Commission required additional information
from DTC pursuant to Section 806(e)(1)(D) of the Clearing
Supervision Act, which tolled the Commission's period of review of
the Advance Notice until 60 days from the date the information
required by the Commission was received by the Commission. 12 U.S.C.
5465(e)(1)(D); see 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(E)(ii) and (G)(ii); see
Memorandum from the Office of Clearance and Settlement Supervision,
Division of Trading and Markets, titled ``Commission's Request for
Additional Information,'' available at https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro/dtc-an.shtml. On June 28, 2018, DTC filed Amendment No. 1 to the
Advance Notice to amend and replace in its entirety the Advance
Notice as originally filed on December 18, 2017. Securities Exchange
Act Release No. 83743 (July 31, 2018), 83 FR 38344 (August 6, 2018)
(SR-DTC-2017-803). DTC submitted a courtesy copy of Amendment No. 1
to the Advance Notice through the Commission's electronic public
comment letter mechanism. Accordingly, Amendment No. 1 to the
Advance Notice has been publicly available on the Commission's
website at https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro/dtc-an.shtml since June 29,
2018. On July 6, 2018, the Commission received a response to its
request for additional information in consideration of the Advance
Notice, which, in turn, added a further 60-days to the review period
pursuant to Section 806(e)(1)(E) and (G) of the Clearing Supervision
Act. 12 U.S.C. 5465(e)(1)(E) and (G); see Memorandum from the Office
of Clearance and Settlement Supervision, Division of Trading and
Markets, titled ``Response to the Commission's Request for
Additional Information,'' available at https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro/dtc-an.shtml. The Commission did not receive any comments. The
proposal, as set forth in both the Advance Notice and the proposed
rule change, each as modified by Amendments No. 1, shall not take
effect until all required regulatory actions are completed.
\4\ Securities Exchange Act Release No. 82432 (January 2, 2018),
83 FR 884 (January 8, 2018) (SR-DTC-2017-021).
\5\ Securities Exchange Act Release No. 82669 (February 8,
2018), 83 FR 6653 (February 14, 2018) (SR-DTC-2017-021, SR-FICC-
2017-021, SR-NSCC-2017-017).
\6\ Securities Exchange Act Release No. 82912 (March 20, 2018),
83 FR 12999 (March 26, 2018) (SR-DTC-2017-021).
\7\ Securities Exchange Act Release No. 83509 (June 25, 2018),
83 FR 30785 (June 29, 2018) (SR-DTC-2017-021, SR-FICC-2017-021, SR-
NSCC-2017-017).
\8\ Securities Exchange Act Release No. 83628 (July 13, 2018),
83 FR 34263 (July 19, 2018) (SR-DTC-2017-021). DTC submitted a
courtesy copy of Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule change through
the Commission's electronic public comment letter mechanism.
Accordingly, Amendment No. 1 to the proposed rule change has been
publicly available on the Commission's website at https://www.sec.gov/rules/sro/dtc.htm since June 29, 2018.
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I. Description
In the Proposed Rule Change, DTC proposes to (1) adopt an R&W Plan;
and (2) amend the Rules, By-Laws and Organization Certificate of DTC
(``Rules'') \9\ to adopt Rule 32(A) (Wind-down of the Corporation) and
Rule 38 (Market Disruption and Force Majeure) (each proposed Rule 32(A)
and proposed Rule 38, a ``Proposed Rule'' and, collectively, the
``Proposed Rules'').
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\9\ Capitalized terms used herein and not otherwise defined
herein are defined in the Rules.
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DTC states that the R&W Plan would be used by the Board of
Directors of DTC (``Board'') and DTC's management in the event DTC
encounters scenarios that could potentially prevent it from being able
to provide its critical services as a going concern.
DTC states that the Proposed Rules are designed to (1) facilitate
the implementation of the R&W Plan when necessary and, in particular,
allow DTC to effectuate its strategy for winding down and transferring
its business; (2) provide Participants with transparency around
critical provisions of the R&W Plan that relate to their rights,
responsibilities and obligations; and (3) provide DTC with the legal
basis to implement those provisions of the R&W Plan when necessary.
A. DTC R&W Plan
The R&W Plan would be structured to provide a roadmap, define the
strategy, and identify the tools available to DTC to either (i)
recover, in the event it experiences losses that exceed its prefunded
resources (such strategies and tools referred to herein as the
``Recovery Plan'') or (ii) wind-down its business in a manner designed
to permit the continuation of its critical services in the event that
such recovery efforts are not successful (such strategies and tools
referred to herein as the ``Wind-down Plan'').
The R&W Plan would identify (i) the recovery tools available to DTC
to address the risks of (a) uncovered losses or liquidity shortfalls
resulting from the default of one or more of its Participants, and (b)
losses arising from non-default events, such as damage to its physical
assets, a cyber-attack, or custody and investment losses, and (ii) the
strategy for implementation of such tools. The R&W Plan would also
establish the strategy and framework for the orderly wind-down of DTC
and the transfer of its business in the remote event the implementation
of the available recovery tools does not successfully return DTC to
financial viability.
As discussed in greater detail below, the R&W Plan would provide,
among other matters, (i) an overview of the business of DTC and its
parent, The Depository Trust & Clearing Corporation (``DTCC''); \10\
(ii) an analysis of DTC's intercompany arrangements and critical links
to other financial market infrastructure (``FMI''); (iii) a description
of DTC's services, and the criteria used to determine which services
are considered critical; (iv) a description of the DTC and DTCC
governance structure; (v) a description of the governance around the
overall recovery and wind-down program; (vi) a discussion of tools
available to DTC to mitigate credit/market \11\ risks and liquidity
risks, including recovery indicators and triggers, and the governance
around management of a stress event along a Crisis Continuum timeline;
(vii) a discussion of potential non-default losses and the resources
available to DTC to address such losses, including recovery triggers
and tools to mitigate such losses; (viii) an analysis of the recovery
tools' characteristics, including how they are designed to be
comprehensive, effective, and transparent, how the tools provide
incentives to Participants to, among other things, control and monitor
the risks they may present to DTC, and how DTC seeks to minimize the
negative consequences of executing its recovery tools; and (ix) the
framework and approach for the orderly wind-down and transfer of DTC's
business, including an estimate of the time and costs to effect a
recovery or orderly wind-down of DTC.
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\10\ DTCC is a user-owned and user-governed holding company and
is the parent company of DTC and its affiliates, National Securities
Clearing Corporation (``NSCC'') and Fixed Income Clearing
Corporation (``FICC,'' and, together with NSCC and DTC, the
``Clearing Agencies''). The R&W Plan would describe how corporate
support services are provided to DTC from DTCC and DTCC's other
subsidiaries through intercompany agreements under a shared services
model.
\11\ DTC states that it uses the term ``credit/market'' risks in
the R&W Plan because, for DTC, credit risk and market risk are
closely related. See infra note 22.
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Certain recovery tools that would be identified in the R&W Plan are
based in the Rules (including the Proposed Rules); therefore,
descriptions of those tools in the R&W Plan would include descriptions
of, and reference to, the applicable Rules and any related internal
policies and procedures. Other recovery tools that would be identified
in the R&W Plan are based in contractual arrangements to which DTC is a
party, including, for example, existing committed or pre-arranged
liquidity arrangements. Further, the R&W Plan would state that DTC may
develop further supporting internal guidelines and materials that may
provide operational support for matters described in the R&W Plan, and
that such documents would be supplemental and subordinate to the R&W
Plan.
DTC states that many of the tools available to DTC that would be
described in the R&W Plan are DTC's existing, business-as-usual risk
management and default management tools, which would continue to be
applied in scenarios of increasing stress. In addition to these
existing, business-as-usual tools, the R&W Plan would
[[Page 44966]]
describe DTC's other principal recovery tools, which include, for
example, (i) identifying, monitoring and managing general business risk
and holding sufficient liquid net assets funded by equity (``LNA'') to
cover potential general business losses pursuant to the Clearing Agency
Policy on Capital Requirements (``Capital Policy''),\12\ (ii)
maintaining the Clearing Agency Capital Replenishment Plan
(``Replenishment Plan'') as a viable plan for the replenishment of
capital should DTC's equity fall close to or below the amount being
held pursuant to the Capital Policy,\13\ and (iii) the process for the
allocation of losses among Participants as provided in Rule 4
(Participants Fund and Participants Investment).\14\ The R&W Plan would
provide governance around the selection and implementation of the
recovery tool or tools most relevant to mitigate a stress scenario and
any applicable loss or liquidity shortfall.
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\12\ See Securities Exchange Act Release No. 81105 (July 7,
2017), 82 FR 32399 (July 13, 2017) (SR-DTC-2017-003, SR-FICC-2017-
007, SR-NSCC-2017-004).
\13\ See id.
\14\ See supra note 9.
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The development of the R&W Plan is facilitated by the Office of
Recovery & Resolution Planning (``R&R Team'') of DTCC.\15\ The R&R Team
reports to the DTCC Management Committee (``Management Committee'') and
is responsible for maintaining the R&W Plan and for the development and
ongoing maintenance of the overall recovery and wind-down planning
process. The Board, or such committees as may be delegated authority by
the Board from time to time pursuant to its charter, would review and
approve the R&W Plan biennially, and would also review and approve any
changes that are proposed to the R&W Plan outside of the biennial
review.
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\15\ DTCC operates on a shared services model with respect to
DTC and its other subsidiaries. Most corporate functions are
established and managed on an enterprise-wide basis pursuant to
intercompany agreements under which it is generally DTCC that
provides a relevant service to a subsidiary, including DTC.
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As discussed in greater detail below, the Proposed Rules would
define the procedures that may be employed in the event of a DTC wind-
down, and would provide for DTC's authority to take certain actions on
the occurrence of a Market Disruption Event, as defined therein. DTC
states that the Proposed Rules are designed to provide Participants
with transparency and certainty with respect to these matters. DTC also
states that the Proposed Rules are designed to facilitate the
implementation of the R&W Plan, particularly DTC's strategy for winding
down and transferring its business, and are designed to provide DTC
with the legal basis to implement those aspects of the R&W Plan.
1. Business Overview, Critical Services, and Governance
The introduction to the R&W Plan would identify the document's
purpose and its regulatory background, and would outline a summary of
the R&W Plan. The stated purpose of the R&W Plan is that it is to be
used by the Board and DTC management in the event DTC encounters
scenarios that could potentially prevent it from being able to provide
its critical services as a going concern.
The R&W Plan would describe DTCC's business profile, provide a
summary of DTC's services, and identify the intercompany arrangements
and critical links between DTC and other FMIs. DTC states that the
overview section would provide a context for the R&W Plan by describing
DTC's business, organizational structure and critical links to other
entities. DTC also states that by providing this context, this section
would facilitate the analysis of the potential impact of utilizing the
recovery tools set forth in later sections of the Recovery Plan, and
the analysis of the factors that would be addressed in implementing the
Wind-down Plan.
The R&W Plan would provide a description of established links
between DTC and other FMIs, both domestic and foreign, including
central securities depositories (``CSDs'') and central counterparties
(``CCPs''), as well as the twelve U.S. Federal Reserve Banks. DTC
states that this section of the R&W Plan, which identifies and briefly
describes DTC's established links, is designed to provide a mapping of
critical connections and dependencies that may need to be relied on or
otherwise addressed in connection with the implementation of either the
Recovery Plan or the Wind-down Plan.
The R&W Plan would define the criteria for classifying certain of
DTC's services as ``critical,'' and would identify those critical
services and the rationale for their classification. This section of
the R&W Plan would provide an analysis of the potential systemic impact
from a service disruption, which DTC states is important for evaluating
how the recovery tools and the wind-down strategy would facilitate and
provide for the continuation of DTC's critical services to the markets
it serves. The criteria that would be used to identify a DTC service or
function as critical would include (1) whether there is a lack of
alternative providers or products; (2) whether failure of the service
could impact DTC's ability to perform its book-entry and settlement
services; (3) whether failure of the service could impact DTC's ability
to perform its payment system functions; and (4) whether the service is
interconnected with other participants and processes within the U.S.
financial system, for example, with other FMIs, settlement banks and
broker-dealers. The R&W Plan would then list each of those services,
functions or activities that DTC has identified as ``critical'' based
on the applicability of these four criteria. The R&W Plan would also
include a non-exhaustive list of DTC services that are not deemed
critical.
DTC states that the evaluation of which services provided by DTC
are deemed critical is important for purposes of determining how the
R&W Plan would facilitate the continuity of those services. While DTC's
Wind-down Plan would provide for the transfer of all critical services
to a transferee in the event DTC's wind-down is implemented, it would
anticipate that any non-critical services that are ancillary and
beneficial to a critical service, or that otherwise have substantial
user demand from the continuing membership, would also be transferred.
The R&W Plan would describe the governance structure of both DTCC
and DTC. This section of the R&W Plan would identify the ownership and
governance model of these entities at both the Board and management
levels. The R&W Plan would state that the stages of escalation required
to manage recovery under the Recovery Plan or to invoke DTC's wind-down
under the Wind-down Plan would range from relevant business line
managers up to the Board through DTC's governance structure. The R&W
Plan would then identify the parties responsible for certain activities
under both the Recovery Plan and the Wind-down Plan, and would describe
their respective roles. The R&W Plan would identify the Risk Committee
of the Board (``Board Risk Committee'') as being responsible for
oversight of risk management activities at DTC, which include focusing
on both oversight of risk management systems and processes designed to
identify and manage various risks faced by DTC as well as oversight of
DTC's efforts to mitigate systemic risks that could impact those
markets and the broader financial system.\16\ The
[[Page 44967]]
R&W Plan would identify the DTCC Management Risk Committee
(``Management Risk Committee'') as primarily responsible for general,
day-to-day risk management through delegated authority from the Board
Risk Committee. The R&W Plan would state that the Management Risk
Committee has delegated specific day-to-day risk management, including
management of risks addressed through margining systems and related
activities, to the DTCC Group Chief Risk Office (``GCRO''), which works
with staff within the DTCC Financial Risk Management group. Finally,
the R&W Plan would describe the role of the Management Committee, which
provides overall direction for all aspects of DTC's business,
technology, and operations and the functional areas that support these
activities.
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\16\ The DTCC, DTC, NSCC, FICC Risk Committee Charter is
available at https://www.dtcc.com/~/media/Files/Downloads/legal/
policy-and-compliance/DTCC-BOD-Risk-Committee-Charter.pdf.
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The R&W Plan would describe the governance of recovery efforts in
response to both default losses and non-default losses under the
Recovery Plan, identifying the groups responsible for those recovery
efforts. Specifically, the R&W Plan would state that the Management
Risk Committee provides oversight of actions relating to the default of
a Participant, which would be reported and escalated to it through the
GCRO, and the Management Committee provides oversight of actions
relating to non-default events that could result in a loss, which would
be reported and escalated to it from the DTCC Chief Financial Officer
(``CFO'') and the DTCC Treasury group that reports to the CFO, and from
other relevant subject matter experts based on the nature and
circumstances of the non-default event.\17\ More generally, the R&W
Plan would state that the type of loss and the nature and circumstances
of the events that lead to the loss would dictate the components of
governance to address that loss, including the escalation path to
authorize those actions. Both the Recovery Plan and the Wind-down Plan
would describe the governance of escalations, decisions, and actions
under each of those plans.
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\17\ The R&W Plan would state that these groups would be
involved to address how to mitigate the financial impact of non-
default losses, and in recommending mitigating actions, the
Management Committee would consider information and recommendations
from relevant subject matter experts based on the nature and
circumstances of the non-default event. Any necessary operational
response to these events, however, would be managed in accordance
with applicable incident response/business continuity process.
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Finally, the R&W Plan would describe the role of the R&R Team in
managing the overall recovery and wind-down program and plans for each
of the Clearing Agencies.
2. DTC Recovery Plan
DTC states that the Recovery Plan is intended to be a roadmap of
those actions that DTC may employ to monitor and, as needed, stabilize
its financial condition. DTC also states that as each event that could
lead to a financial loss could be unique in its circumstances, DTC
proposes that the Recovery Plan would not be prescriptive and would
permit DTC to maintain flexibility in its use of identified tools and
in the sequence in which such tools are used, subject to any conditions
in the Rules or the contractual arrangement on which such tool is
based. DTC's Recovery Plan would consist of (1) a description of the
risk management surveillance, tools, and governance that DTC would
employ across evolving stress scenarios that it may face as it
transitions through a Crisis Continuum, described below; (2) a
description of DTC's risk of losses that may result from non-default
events, and the financial resources and recovery tools available to DTC
to manage those risks and any resulting losses; and (3) an evaluation
of the characteristics of the recovery tools that may be used in
response to either losses arising out of a Participant Default (as
defined below) or non-default losses. In all cases, DTC states that it
would act in accordance with the Rules, within the governance structure
described in the R&W Plan, and in accordance with applicable regulatory
oversight to address each situation to best protect DTC, its
Participants and the markets in which it operates.
(i) Managing Participant Default Losses and Liquidity Needs Through the
Crisis Continuum
The Recovery Plan would describe the risk management surveillance,
tools, and governance that DTC may employ across an increasing stress
environment, which is referred to as the Crisis Continuum. This
description would identify those tools that can be employed to mitigate
losses, and mitigate or minimize liquidity needs, as the market
environment becomes increasingly stressed. The phases of the Crisis
Continuum would include (1) a stable market phase, (2) a stress market
phase, (3) a phase commencing with DTC's decision to cease to act for a
Participant or Affiliated Family of Participants \18\ (referred to in
the R&W Plan as the ``Participant Default phase''), and (4) a recovery
phase. In the R&W Plan, the term ``cease to act'' and the actions that
may lead to such decision are used within the context of the Rules.\19\
The R&W Plan would, for purposes of the R&W Plan, use the term
``Participant Default Losses'' to refer to losses that arise out of or
relate to the Participant Default and resulting cease to act (including
any losses that arise from liquidation of the Participant's
Collateral).
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\18\ The R&W Plan would define an ``Affiliated Family'' of
Participants as a number of affiliated entities that are all
Participants of DTC.
\19\ See Rule 4 (Participants Fund and Participants Investment),
Rule 9(A) (Transactions in Securities and Money Payments), Rule 9(B)
(Transactions in Eligible Securities), Rule 9(C) (Transactions in
MMI Securities), Rule 10 (Discretionary Termination), Rule 11
(Mandatory Termination) and Rule 12 (Insolvency), supra note 9.
Further, the term ``Participant Default'' would also be used in the
R&W Plan as such term is defined in Rule 4 (Participants Fund and
Participants Investment), see supra note 9.
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DTC states that the Recovery Plan would provide context to its
roadmap through this Crisis Continuum by describing DTC's ongoing
management of credit, market, and liquidity risk, and its existing
process for measuring and reporting its risks as they align with
established thresholds for its tolerance of those risks. DTC also
states that the Recovery Plan would discuss the management of credit/
market risk and liquidity exposures together because the tools that
address these risks can be deployed either separately or in a
coordinated approach in order to address both exposures. DTC states
that it manages these risk exposures collectively to limit their
overall impact on DTC and its Participants. DTC states that it has
built-in mechanisms to limit exposures and replenish financial
resources used in a stress event, in order to continue to operate in a
safe and sound manner. DTC states that it is a closed, collateralized
system in which liquidity resources are matched against risk management
controls, so, at any time, the potential net settlement obligation of
the Participant or Affiliated Family of Participants with the largest
net settlement obligation cannot exceed the amount of liquidity
resources.\20\ DTC states that while Collateral securities are subject
to market price risk, DTC manages its liquidity and market risks
through the calculation of the required deposits to the Participants
Fund \21\ and risk management controls, i.e., collateral
[[Page 44968]]
haircuts, the Collateral Monitor \22\ and Net Debit Cap.\23\
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\20\ DTC's liquidity risk management strategy, including the
manner in which DTC would deploy liquidity tools as well as its
intraday use of liquidity, is described in the Clearing Agency
Liquidity Risk Management Framework. See Securities Exchange Act
Release No. 82377 (December 21, 2017), 82 FR 61617 (December 28,
2017) (SR-DTC-2017-004, SR-FICC-2017-008, SR-NSCC-2017-005).
\21\ See Rule 4 (Participants Fund and Participants Investment),
supra note 9.
\22\ See Rule 1 (Definitions; Governing Law), Section 1, supra
note 9. DTC states that credit risk and market risk are closely
related for DTC, because DTC monitors credit exposures from
Participants through these risk management controls, which limit
Participant settlement obligations to the amount of available
liquidity resources and require those obligations to be fully
collateralized. The pledge or liquidation of collateral in an amount
sufficient to restore liquidity resources depends on market values
and demand, i.e., market risk exposure. DTC states that such risk
management controls are part of DTC's market risk management
strategy and are designed to comply with Rule 17Ad-22(e)(4) under
the Act, where these risks are referred to as ``credit risks.'' See
17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(4).
\23\ Id.
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The Recovery Plan would outline the metrics and indicators that DTC
has developed to evaluate a stress situation against established risk
tolerance thresholds. Each risk mitigation tool identified in the
Recovery Plan would include a description of the escalation thresholds
that allow for effective and timely reporting to the appropriate
internal management staff and committees, or to the Board. DTC states
that the Recovery Plan is designed to make clear that these tools and
escalation protocols would be calibrated across each phase of the
Crisis Continuum. The Recovery Plan would also establish that DTC would
retain the flexibility to deploy such tools either separately or in a
coordinated approach, and to use other alternatives to these actions
and tools as necessitated by the circumstances of a particular
Participant Default event, in accordance with the Rules. Therefore, DTC
states that the Recovery Plan would both provide DTC with a roadmap to
follow within each phase of the Crisis Continuum, and would permit it
to adjust its risk management measures to address the unique
circumstances of each event.
The Recovery Plan would describe the conditions that mark each
phase of the Crisis Continuum, and would identify actions that DTC
could take as it transitions through each phase in order to both
prevent losses from materializing through active risk management, and
to restore the financial health of DTC during a period of stress.
The stable market phase of the Crisis Continuum would describe
active risk management activities in the normal course of business.
These activities would include performing (1) backtests to evaluate the
adequacy of the collateral level and the haircut sufficiency for
covering market price volatility and (2) stress testing to cover market
price moves under real historical and hypothetical scenarios to assess
the haircut adequacy under extreme but plausible market conditions. The
backtesting and stress testing results are escalated, as necessary, to
internal and Board committees.\24\
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\24\ DTC's stress testing practices are described in the
Clearing Agency Stress Testing Framework (Market Risk). See
Securities Exchange Act Release No. 82638 (December 19, 2017), 82 FR
61082 (December 26, 2017) (SR-DTC-2017-005, SR-FICC-2017-009, SR-
NSCC-2017-006).
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The Recovery Plan would describe some of the indicators of the
stress market phase of the Crisis Continuum, which would include, for
example, volatility in market prices of certain assets where there is
increased uncertainty among market participants about the fundamental
value of those assets. This phase would involve general market
stresses, when no Participant Default would be imminent. Within the
description of this phase, the Recovery Plan would provide that DTC may
take targeted, routine risk management measures as necessary and as
permitted by the Rules.
Within the Participant Default phase of the Crisis Continuum, the
Recovery Plan would provide a roadmap for the existing procedures that
DTC would follow in the event of a Participant Default and any decision
by DTC to cease to act for that Participant.\25\ The Recovery Plan
would provide that the objectives of DTC's actions upon a Participant
Default are to (1) minimize losses and market exposure, and (2), to the
extent practicable, minimize disturbances to the affected markets. The
Recovery Plan would describe tools, actions, and related governance for
both market risk monitoring and liquidity risk monitoring through this
phase. Management of liquidity risk through this phase would involve
ongoing monitoring of, among other things, the adequacy of the
Participants Fund and risk controls, and the Recovery Plan would
identify certain actions DTC may deploy as it deems necessary to
mitigate a potential liquidity shortfall. The Recovery Plan would state
that, throughout this phase, relevant information would be escalated
and reported to both internal management committees and the Board Risk
Committee.
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\25\ See Rule 10 (Discretionary Termination); Rule 11 (Mandatory
Termination); Rule 12 (Insolvency), supra note 9.
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The Recovery Plan would also identify financial resources available
to DTC, pursuant to the Rules, to address losses arising out of a
Participant Default. Specifically, Rule 4 (Participants Fund and
Participants Investment) provides that losses remaining after
application of the Defaulting Participant's resources be satisfied
first by applying a Corporate Contribution, and then, if necessary, by
allocating remaining losses among the membership in accordance with
Rule 4 (Participants Fund and Participants Investment).\26\
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\26\ See supra note 9. Rule 4 (Participants Fund and
Participants Investment) defines the amount DTC would contribute to
address a loss resulting from either a Participant Default or a non-
default event as the Corporate Contribution. This amount is 50
percent of the General Business Risk Capital Requirement, which is
calculated pursuant to the Capital Policy and, which DTC states is
an amount sufficient to cover potential general business losses so
that DTC can continue operations and services as a going concern if
those losses materialize, in an effort to comply with Rule 17Ad-
22(e)(15) under the Act. See supra note 12 (concerning the Capital
Policy); 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(15).
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In order to provide for an effective and timely recovery, the
Recovery Plan would describe the period of time that would occur near
the end of the Participant Default phase, during which DTC may
experience stress events or observe early warning indicators that allow
it to evaluate its options and prepare for the recovery phase (referred
to in the R&W Plan as the Recovery Corridor). The Recovery Plan would
then describe the recovery phase of the Crisis Continuum, which would
begin on the date that DTC issues the first Loss Allocation Notice of
the second loss allocation round with respect to a given Event
Period.\27\ The recovery phase would describe actions that DTC may take
to avoid entering into a wind-down of its business.
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\27\ As provided for in Rule 4 (Participants Fund and
Participants Investment), the ``Event Period'' is ten Business Days
beginning on (i) with respect to a Participant Default, the day on
which DTC notifies Participants that it has ceased to act for a
Participant, or (ii) with respect to a non-default loss, the day
that DTC notifies Participants of the determination by the Board
that there is a non-default loss event. Rule 4 (Participants Fund
and Participants Investment) defines a ``round'' as a series of loss
allocations relating to an Event Period, and provides that the first
Loss Allocation Notice in a first, second, or subsequent round shall
expressly state that such notice reflects the beginning of a first,
second, or subsequent round. The maximum allocable loss amount of a
round is equal to the sum of the Loss Allocation Caps of those
Participants included in the round. See Rule 4 (Participants Fund
and Participants Investment), supra note 9.
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DTC states that it expects that significant deterioration of
liquidity resources would cause it to enter the Recovery Corridor.
Therefore, the R&W Plan would describe the actions DTC may take aimed
at replenishing those resources. Throughout the Recovery Corridor, DTC
would monitor the adequacy of its resources and the expected timing of
replenishment of those resources, and would do so through the
monitoring of certain corridor indicator metrics.
[[Page 44969]]
DTC states that the majority of the corridor indicators, as
identified in the Recovery Plan, relate directly to conditions that may
require DTC to adjust its strategy for hedging and liquidating
Collateral securities, and any such changes would include an assessment
of the status of the corridor indicators. For each corridor indicator,
the Recovery Plan would identify (1) measures of the indicator, (2)
evaluations of the status of the indicator, (3) metrics for determining
the status of the deterioration or improvement of the indicator, and
(4) Corridor Actions, which are steps that may be taken to improve the
status of the indicator,\28\ as well as management escalations required
to authorize those steps. DTC states that because DTC has never
experienced the default of multiple Participants, it has not,
historically, measured the deterioration or improvements metrics of the
corridor indicators. Therefore, DTC states that these metrics were
chosen based on the business judgment of DTC management.
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\28\ The Corridor Actions that would be identified in the R&W
Plan are designed to be indicative, but not prescriptive; therefore,
if DTC needs to consider alternative actions due to the applicable
facts and circumstances, the escalation of those alternative actions
would follow the same escalation protocol identified in the R&W Plan
for the Corridor Indicator to which the action relates.
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The Recovery Plan would also describe the reporting and escalation
of the status of the corridor indicators throughout the Recovery
Corridor. Significant deterioration of a corridor indicator, as
measured by the metrics set out in the Recovery Plan, would be
escalated to the Board. DTC management would review the corridor
indicators and the related metrics at least annually, and would modify
these metrics as necessary in light of observations from simulations of
Participant Defaults and other analyses. Any proposed modifications
would be reviewed by the Management Risk Committee and the Board Risk
Committee. The Recovery Plan would estimate that DTC may remain in the
Recovery Corridor stage between one day and two weeks. DTC states that
this estimate is based on historical data observed in past Participant
Default events, the results of simulations of Participant Defaults, and
periodic liquidity analyses conducted by DTC. DTC states that the
actual length of a Recovery Corridor would vary based on actual market
conditions observed at the time, and DTC would expect the Recovery
Corridor to be shorter in market conditions of increased stress.
The Recovery Plan would outline steps by which DTC may allocate its
losses, which would occur when and in the order provided in Rule 4
(Participants Fund and Participants Investment).\29\ The Recovery Plan
would also identify tools that may be used to address foreseeable
shortfalls of DTC's liquidity resources following a Participant
Default, and would provide that these tools may be used as appropriate
during the Crisis Continuum to address liquidity shortfalls if they
arise. DTC states that the goal in managing DTC's liquidity resources
is to maximize resource availability in an evolving stress situation,
to maintain flexibility in the order and use of sources of liquidity,
and to repay any third party lenders in a timely manner. DTC states
that the Recovery Plan would state that the availability and capacity
of these liquidity tools cannot be accurately predicted and are
dependent on the circumstances of the applicable stress period,
including market price volatility, actual or perceived disruptions in
financial markets, the costs to DTC of utilizing these tools, and any
potential impact on DTC's credit rating.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ See supra note 9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Recovery Plan would state that DTC will have entered the
recovery phase on the date that it issues the first Loss Allocation
Notice of the second loss allocation round with respect to a given
Event Period. The Recovery Plan would provide that, during the recovery
phase, DTC would continue and, as needed, enhance, the monitoring and
remedial actions already described in connection with previous phases
of the Crisis Continuum, and would remain in the recovery phase until
its financial resources are expected to be or are fully replenished, or
until the Wind-down Plan is triggered.
The Recovery Plan would describe governance for the actions and
tools that may be employed within each phase of the Crisis Continuum,
which would be dictated by the facts and circumstances applicable to
the situation being addressed. Such facts and circumstances would be
measured by the various indicators and metrics applicable to that phase
of the Crisis Continuum, and would follow relevant escalation protocol
that would be described in the Recovery Plan. The Recovery Plan would
also describe the governance procedures around a decision to cease to
act for a Participant, pursuant to the Rules, and around the management
and oversight of the subsequent liquidation of Collateral securities.
The Recovery Plan would state that, overall, DTC would retain
flexibility in accordance with the Rules, its governance structure, and
its regulatory oversight, to address a particular situation in order to
best protect DTC and its Participants, and to meet the primary
objectives, throughout the Crisis Continuum, of minimizing losses and,
where consistent and practicable, minimizing disturbance to affected
markets.
(ii) Non-Default Losses
The Recovery Plan would outline how DTC may address losses that
result from events other than a Participant Default. While these
matters are addressed in greater detail in other documents, this
section of the R&W Plan would provide a roadmap to those documents and
an outline for DTC's approach to monitoring and managing losses that
could result from a non-default event. The R&W Plan would first
identify some of the risks DTC faces that could lead to these losses,
which include, for example, (1) the business and profit/loss risks of
unexpected declines in revenue or growth of expenses; (2) the
operational risks of disruptions to systems or processes that could
lead to large losses, including those resulting from, for example, a
cyber-attack; and (3) custody or investment risks that could lead to
financial losses. The Recovery Plan would describe DTC's overall
strategy for the management of these risks, which includes a ``three
lines of defense'' approach to risk management that allows for
comprehensive management of risk across the organization.\30\ The
Recovery Plan would also describe DTC's approach to financial risk and
capital management. The R&W Plan would identify key aspects of this
approach, including, for example, an annual budget process, business
line
[[Page 44970]]
performance reviews with management, and regular review of capital
requirements against LNA. These risk management strategies are
collectively intended to allow DTC to effectively identify, monitor,
and manage risks of non-default losses.
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\30\ DTC states that the ``three lines of defense'' approach to
risk management includes (1) a first line of defense comprised of
the various business lines and functional units that support the
products and services offered by DTC; (2) a second line of defense
comprised of control functions that support DTC, including the risk
management, legal and compliance areas; and (3) a third line of
defense, which is performed by an internal audit group. The Clearing
Agency Risk Management Framework includes a description of this
``three lines of defense'' approach to risk management, and
addresses how DTC comprehensively manages various risks, including
operational, general business, investment, custody, and other risks
that arise in or are borne by it. Securities Exchange Act Release
No. 81635 (September 15, 2017), 82 FR 44224 (September 21, 2017)
(SR-DTC-2017-013, SR-FICC-2017-016, SR-NSCC-2017-012). The Clearing
Agency Operational Risk Management Framework describes the manner in
which DTC manages operational risks, as defined therein. Securities
Exchange Act Release No. 81745 (September 28, 2017), 82 FR 46332
(October 4, 2017) (SR-DTC-2017-014, SR-FICC-2017-017, SR-NSCC-2017-
013).
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The R&W Plan would identify the two categories of financial
resources DTC maintains to cover losses and expenses arising from non-
default risks or events as (1) LNA, maintained, monitored, and managed
pursuant to the Capital Policy, which include (a) amounts held in
satisfaction of the General Business Risk Capital Requirement,\31\ (b)
the Corporate Contribution,\32\ and (c) other amounts held in excess of
DTC's capital requirements pursuant to the Capital Policy; and (2)
resources available pursuant to the loss allocation provisions of Rule
4 (Participants Fund and Participants Investment).\33\
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\31\ See supra note 26.
\32\ See supra note 26.
\33\ See supra note 9.
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The R&W Plan would address the process by which the CFO and the
DTCC Treasury group would determine which available LNA resources are
most appropriate to cover a loss that is caused by a non-default event.
This determination involves an evaluation of a number of factors,
including the current and expected size of the loss, the expected time
horizon over when the loss or additional expenses would materialize,
the current and projected available LNA, and the likelihood LNA could
be successfully replenished pursuant to the Replenishment Plan, if
triggered.\34\ Finally the R&W Plan would discuss how DTC would apply
its resources to address losses resulting from a non-default event,
including the order of resources it would apply if the loss or
liability is expected to exceed DTC's excess LNA amounts, or is large
relative thereto, and the Board has declared the event a Declared Non-
Default Loss Event pursuant to Rule 4 (Participants Fund and
Participants Investment).\35\
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\34\ See supra note 12 (concerning the Capital Policy).
\35\ See supra note 9.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The R&W Plan would also describe proposed Rule 38 (Market
Disruption and Force Majeure), which DTC is proposing to adopt in the
Rules. DTC states that this Proposed Rule is designed to provide
transparency around how DTC would address extraordinary events that may
occur outside its control. Specifically, the Proposed Rule would define
a Market Disruption Event and the governance around a determination
that such an event has occurred. The Proposed Rule would also describe
DTC's authority to take actions during the pendency of a Market
Disruption Event that it deems appropriate to address such an event and
facilitate the continuation of its services, if practicable.
The R&W Plan would describe the interaction between the Proposed
Rule and DTC's existing processes and procedures addressing business
continuity management and disaster recovery (generally, the ``BCM/DR
procedures''). DTC states that the intent is to make clear that the
Proposed Rule is designed to support those BCM/DR procedures and to
address circumstances that may be exogenous to DTC and not necessarily
addressed by the BCM/DR procedures. Finally, the R&W Plan would
describe that, because the operation of the Proposed Rule is specific
to each applicable Market Disruption Event, the Proposed Rule does not
define a time limit on its application. However, the R&W Plan would
note that actions authorized by the Proposed Rule would be limited to
the pendency of the applicable Market Disruption Event, as made clear
in the Proposed Rule. DTC states that, overall, the Proposed Rule is
designed to mitigate risks caused by Market Disruption Events and,
thereby, minimize the risk of financial loss that may result from such
events.
(iii) Recovery Tool Characteristics
The Recovery Plan would describe DTC's evaluation of the tools
identified within the Recovery Plan, and its rationale for concluding
that such tools are comprehensive, effective, and transparent, and that
such tools provide incentives to Participants and minimize negative
impact on Participants and the financial system.
3. DTC Wind-Down Plan
The Wind-down Plan would provide the framework and strategy for the
orderly wind-down of DTC if the use of the recovery tools described in
the Recovery Plan do not successfully return DTC to financial
viability. DTC states that, while DTC believes that such event is
extremely unlikely, given the comprehensive nature of the recovery
tools, DTC is proposing a wind-down strategy that provides for (1) the
transfer of DTC's business, assets, securities inventory, and
membership to another legal entity, (2) such transfer being effected in
connection with proceedings under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy
Code,\36\ and (3) after effectuating this transfer, DTC liquidating any
remaining assets in an orderly manner in bankruptcy proceedings. DTC
states that the proposed transfer approach to a wind-down would meet
its objectives of (1) assuring that DTC's critical services will be
available to the market as long as there are Participants in good
standing, and (2) minimizing disruption to the operations of
Participants and financial markets generally that might be caused by
DTC's failure.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ 11 U.S.C. 101 et seq.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In describing the transfer approach to DTC's Wind-down Plan, the
R&W Plan would identify the factors that DTC considered in developing
this approach, including the fact that DTC does not own material assets
that are unrelated to its clearance and settlement activities.
Therefore, a business reorganization or ``bail-in'' of debt approach
would be unlikely to mitigate significant losses. Additionally, DTC
states that its approach was developed in consideration of its critical
and unique position in the U.S. markets, which precludes any approach
that would cause DTC's critical services to no longer be available.
First, the Wind-down Plan would describe the potential scenarios
that could lead to the wind-down of DTC, and the likelihood of such
scenarios. The Wind-down Plan would identify the time period leading up
to a decision to wind-down DTC as the Runway Period. DTC states that
this period would follow the implementation of any recovery tools, as
it may take a period of time, depending on the severity of the market
stress at that time, for these tools to be effective or for DTC to
realize a loss sufficient to cause it to be unable to borrow to
complete settlement and to repay such borrowings.\37\ The Wind-down
Plan would identify some of the indicators that DTC has entered the
Runway Period.
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\37\ The Wind-down Plan would state that, given DTC's position
as a user-governed financial market utility, it is possible that its
Participants might voluntarily elect to provide additional support
during the recovery phase leading up to a potential trigger of the
Wind-down Plan, but would also be designed to make clear that DTC
cannot predict the willingness of Participants to do so.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The trigger for implementing the Wind-down Plan would be a
determination by the Board that recovery efforts have not been, or are
unlikely to be, successful in returning DTC to viability as a going
concern. As described in the R&W Plan, DTC states that this is an
appropriate trigger because it is both broad and flexible enough to
cover a variety of scenarios, and would align incentives of DTC and
Participants to avoid actions that might undermine DTC's recovery
efforts.
[[Page 44971]]
Additionally, DTC states that this approach takes into account the
characteristics of DTC's recovery tools and enables the Board to
consider (1) the presence of indicators of a successful or unsuccessful
recovery, and (2) potential for knock-on effects of continued iterative
application of DTC's recovery tools.
The Wind-down Plan would describe the general objectives of the
transfer strategy, and would address assumptions regarding the transfer
of DTC's critical services, business, assets, securities inventory, and
membership \38\ to another legal entity that is legally, financially,
and operationally able to provide DTC's critical services to entities
that wish to continue their membership following the transfer
(``Transferee''). The Wind-down Plan would provide that the Transferee
would be either (1) a third party legal entity, which may be an
existing or newly established legal entity or a bridge entity formed to
operate the business on an interim basis to enable the business to be
transferred subsequently (``Third Party Transferee''); or (2) an
existing, debt-free failover legal entity established ex-ante by DTCC
(``Failover Transferee'') to be used as an alternative Transferee in
the event that no viable or preferable Third Party Transferee timely
commits to acquire DTC's business. DTC would seek to identify the
proposed Transferee, and negotiate and enter into transfer arrangements
during the Runway Period and prior to making any filings under Chapter
11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code.\39\ The Wind-down Plan would anticipate
that the transfer to the Transferee, including the transfer and
establishment of the Participant and Pledgee securities accounts on the
books of the Transferee, be effected in connection with proceedings
under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy Code, and pursuant to a
bankruptcy court order under Section 363 of the Bankruptcy Code, with
the intent that the transfer be free and clear of claims against, and
interests in, DTC, except to the extent expressly provided in the
court's order.\40\
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\38\ Arrangements with FAST Agents and DRS Agents (each as
defined in proposed Rule 32(A)) and with Settling Banks would also
be assigned to the Transferee, so that the approach would be
transparent to issuers and their transfer agents, as well as to
Settling Banks.
\39\ 11 U.S.C. 101 et seq.
\40\ See 11 U.S.C. 363.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
DTC states that in order to effect a timely transfer of its
services and minimize the market and operational disruption of such
transfer, DTC would expect to transfer all of its critical services and
any non-critical services that are ancillary and beneficial to a
critical service, or that otherwise have substantial user demand from
the continuing membership. Given the transfer of the securities
inventory and the establishment on the books of the Transferee
Participant and Pledgee securities accounts, DTC anticipates that,
following the transfer, it would not itself continue to provide any
services, critical or not. Following the transfer, the Wind-down Plan
would anticipate that the Transferee and its continuing membership
would determine whether to continue to provide any transferred non-
critical service on an ongoing basis, or terminate the non-critical
service following some transition period. DTC's Wind-down Plan would
anticipate that the Transferee would enter into a transition services
agreement with DTCC so that DTCC would continue to provide the shared
services it currently provides to DTC, including staffing,
infrastructure and operational support. The Wind-down Plan would also
anticipate the assignment of DTC's ``inbound'' link arrangements to the
Transferee. The Wind-down Plan would provide that in the case of
``outbound'' links, DTC would seek to have the linked FMIs agree, at a
minimum, to accept the Transferee as a link party for a transition
period.\41\
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\41\ The proposed transfer arrangements outlined in the Wind-
down Plan do not contemplate the transfer of any credit or funding
agreements, which are generally not assignable by DTC. However, to
the extent the Transferee adopts rules substantially identical to
those DTC has in effect prior to the transfer, DTC states that it
would have the benefit of any rules-based liquidity funding. The
Wind-down Plan contemplates that no Participants Fund would be
transferred to the Transferee, as it is not held in a bankruptcy
remote manner and it is the primary prefunded liquidity resource to
be accessed in the recovery phase.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Wind-down Plan would provide that, following the effectiveness
of the transfer to the Transferee, the wind-down of DTC would involve
addressing any residual claims against DTC through the bankruptcy
process and liquidating the legal entity. The Wind-down Plan does not
contemplate DTC continuing to provide services in any capacity
following the transfer time, and any services not transferred would be
terminated.
The Wind-down Plan would also identify the key dependencies for the
effectiveness of the transfer, which include regulatory approvals that
would permit the Transferee to be legally qualified to provide the
transferred services from and after the transfer, and approval by the
applicable bankruptcy court of, among other things, the proposed sale,
assignments, and transfers to the Transferee.
The Wind-down Plan would address governance matters related to the
execution of the transfer of DTC's business and its wind-down. The
Wind-down Plan would address the duties of the Board to execute the
wind-down of DTC in conformity with (1) the Rules, (2) the Board's
fiduciary duties, which mandate that it exercise reasonable business
judgment in performing these duties, and (3) DTC's regulatory
obligations under the Act as a registered clearing agency. The Wind-
down Plan would also identify certain factors the Board may consider in
making these decisions, which would include, for example, whether DTC
could safely stabilize the business and protect its value without
seeking bankruptcy protection, and DTC's ability to continue to meet
its regulatory requirements.
The Wind-down Plan would describe (1) actions DTC or DTCC may take
to prepare for wind-down in the period before DTC experiences any
financial distress, (2) actions DTC would take both during the recovery
phase and the Runway Period to prepare for the execution of the Wind-
down Plan, and (3) actions DTC would take upon commencement of
bankruptcy proceedings to effectuate the Wind-down Plan.
Finally, the Wind-down Plan would include an analysis of the
estimated time and costs to effectuate the R&W Plan, and would provide
that this estimate be reviewed and approved by the Board annually. In
order to estimate the length of time it might take to achieve a
recovery or orderly wind-down of DTC's critical operations, as
contemplated by the R&W Plan, the Wind-down Plan would include an
analysis of the possible sequencing and length of time it might take to
complete an orderly wind-down and transfer of critical operations, as
described in earlier sections of the R&W Plan. The Wind-down Plan would
also include in this analysis consideration of other factors, including
the time it might take to complete any further attempts at recovery
under the Recovery Plan. The Wind-down Plan would then multiply this
estimated length of time by DTC's average monthly operating expenses,
including adjustments to account for changes to DTC's profit and
expense profile during these circumstances, over the previous twelve
months to determine the amount of LNA that it should hold to achieve a
recovery or orderly wind-down of DTC's critical operations. The
estimated wind-down costs would constitute the Recovery/
[[Page 44972]]
Wind-down Capital Requirement under the Capital Policy.\42\ Under that
policy, the General Business Risk Capital Requirement is calculated as
the greatest of three estimated amounts, one of which is this Recovery/
Wind-down Capital Requirement.\43\
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\42\ See supra note 12.
\43\ See supra note 12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
DTC states that the R&W Plan is designed as a roadmap, and the
types of actions that may be taken both leading up to and in connection
with implementation of the Wind-down Plan would be primarily addressed
in other supporting documentation referred to therein.
The Wind-down Plan would address proposed Rule 32(A) (Wind-down of
the Corporation), which would be adopted to facilitate the
implementation of the Wind-down Plan, as discussed below.
B. Proposed Rules
In connection with the adoption of the R&W Plan, DTC proposes to
adopt the Proposed Rules, each of which is described below. DTC states
that the Proposed Rules are designed to facilitate the execution of the
R&W Plan and are designed to provide Participants with transparency as
to critical aspects of the R&W Plan, particularly as they relate to the
rights and responsibilities of both DTC and its Participants. DTC also
states that the Proposed Rules are designed to provide a legal basis to
these aspects of the R&W Plan.
1. Rule 32(A) (Wind-Down of the Corporation)
DTC states that the proposed Rule 32(A) (``Wind-down Rule'') is
designed to facilitate the execution of the Wind-down Plan. The Wind-
down Rule would include a proposed set of defined terms that would be
applicable only to the provisions of this Proposed Rule. DTC states
that the Wind-down Rule is designed to make clear that a wind-down of
DTC's business would occur (1) after a decision is made by the Board,
and (2) in connection with the transfer of DTC's services to a
Transferee, as described therein. DTC states that, generally, the
proposed Wind-down Rule is designed to create clear mechanisms for the
transfer of Eligible Participants and Pledgees, Settling Banks, DRS
Agents, and FAST Agents (as these terms would be defined in the Wind-
down Rule), and DTC's inventory of financial assets in order to provide
for continued access to critical services and to minimize disruption to
the markets in the event the Wind-down Plan is initiated.
(i) Wind-Down Trigger
First, DTC states that the Proposed Rule is designed to make clear
that the Board is responsible for initiating the Wind-down Plan, and
would identify the criteria the Board would consider when making this
determination. As provided for in the Wind-down Plan and in the
proposed Wind-down Rule, the Board would initiate the Wind-down Plan
if, in the exercise of its business judgment and subject to its
fiduciary duties, it has determined that the execution of the Recovery
Plan has not or is not likely to restore DTC to viability as a going
concern, and the implementation of the Wind-down Plan, including the
transfer of DTC's business, is in the best interests of DTC, its
Participants and Pledgees, its shareholders and creditors, and the U.S.
financial markets.
(ii) Identification of Critical Services; Designation of Dates and
Times for Specific Actions
The Proposed Rule would provide that, upon making a determination
to initiate the Wind-down Plan, the Board would identify the critical
and non-critical services that would be transferred to the Transferee
at the Transfer Time (as defined in the Proposed Rule), as well as any
non-critical services that would not be transferred to the Transferee.
The proposed Wind-down Rule would establish that any services
transferred to the Transferee will only be provided by the Transferee
as of the Transfer Time, and that any non-critical services that are
not transferred to the Transferee would be terminated at the Transfer
Time. The Proposed Rule would also provide that the Board would
establish (1) an effective time for the transfer of DTC's business to a
Transferee (``Transfer Time''), and (2) the last day that instructions
in respect of securities and other financial products may be
effectuated through the facilities of DTC (the ``Last Activity Date'').
DTC states that the Proposed Rule is designed to make clear that DTC
would not accept any transactions for settlement after the Last
Activity Date. Any transactions to be settled after the Transfer Time
would be required to be submitted to the Transferee, and would not be
DTC's responsibility.
(iii) Notice Provisions
The proposed Wind-down Rule would provide that, upon a decision to
implement the Wind-down Plan, DTC would provide its Participants,
Pledgees, DRS Agents, FAST Agents, Settling Banks and regulators with a
notice that includes material information relating to the Wind-down
Plan and the anticipated transfer of DTC's Participants and business,
including, for example, (1) a brief statement of the reasons for the
decision to implement the Wind-down Plan; (2) identification of the
Transferee and information regarding the transaction by which the
transfer of DTC's business would be effected; (3) the Transfer Time and
Last Activity Date; and (4) identification of Participants and the
critical and non-critical services that would be transferred to the
Transferee at the Transfer Time, as well as those Non-Eligible
Participants (as defined below and in the Proposed Rule) and any non-
critical services that would not be included in the transfer. DTC would
also make available the rules and procedures and membership agreements
of the Transferee.
(iv) Transfer of Membership
The proposed Wind-down Rule would address the expected transfer of
DTC's membership to the Transferee, which DTC would seek to effectuate
by entering into an arrangement with a Failover Transferee, or by using
commercially reasonable efforts to enter into such an arrangement with
a Third Party Transferee. Thus, under the proposal, in connection with
the implementation of the Wind-down Plan and with no further action
required by any party:
(1) Each Eligible Participant would become (i) a Participant of the
Transferee and (ii) a party to a Participants agreement with the
Transferee;
(2) each Participant that is delinquent in the performance of any
obligation to DTC or that has provided notice of its election to
withdraw as a Participant (a ``Non-Eligible Participant'') as of the
Transfer Time would become (i) the holder of a transition period
securities account maintained by the Transferee on its books
(``Transition Period Securities Account'') and (ii) a party to a
Transition Period Securities Account agreement of the Transferee;
(3) each Pledgee would become (i) a Pledgee of the Transferee and
(ii) a party to a Pledgee agreement with the Transferee;
(4) each DRS Agent would become (i) a DRS Agent of the Transferee
and (ii) a party to a DRS Agent agreement with the Transferee;
(5) each FAST Agent would become (i) a FAST Agent of the Transferee
and (ii) a party to a FAST Agent agreement with the Transferee; and
(6) each Settling Bank for Participants and Pledgees would become
(i) a
[[Page 44973]]
Settling Bank for Participants and Pledgees of the Transferee and (ii)
a party to a Settling Bank Agreement with the Transferee.
Further, DTC states that the Proposed Rule is designed to make
clear that it would not prohibit (1) Non-Eligible Participants from
applying for membership with the Transferee, (2) Non-Eligible
Participants that have become holders of Transition Period Securities
Accounts (``Transition Period Securities Account Holders'') of the
Transferee from withdrawing as a Transition Period Securities Account
Holder from the Transferee, subject to the rules and procedures of the
Transferee, and (3) Participants, Pledgees, DRS Agents, FAST Agents,
and Settling Banks that would be transferred to the Transferee from
withdrawing from membership with the Transferee, subject to the rules
and procedures of the Transferee. Under the Proposed Rule, Non-Eligible
Participants that have become Transition Period Securities Account
Holders of the Transferee shall have the rights and be subject to the
obligations of Transition Period Securities Account Holders set forth
in special provisions of the rules and procedures of the Transferee
applicable to such Transition Period Securities Account Holder.
Specifically, Non-Eligible Participants that become Transition Period
Securities Account Holders must, within the Transition Period (as
defined in the Proposed Rule), instruct the Transferee to transfer the
financial assets credited to its Transition Period Securities Account
(i) to a Participant of the Transferee through the facilities of the
Transferee or (ii) to a recipient outside the facilities of the
Transferee, and no additional financial assets may be delivered versus
payment to a Transition Period Securities Account during the Transition
Period.
(v) Transfer of Inventory of Financial Assets
The proposed Wind-down Rule would provide that DTC would enter into
arrangements with a Failover Transferee, or would use commercially
reasonable efforts to enter into arrangements with a Third Party
Transferee, providing that, in either case, at Transfer Time:
(1) DTC would transfer to the Transferee (i) its rights with
respect to its nominee Cede & Co. (``Cede'') (and thereby its rights
with respect to the financial assets owned of record by Cede), (ii) the
financial assets held by it at the FRBNY, (iii) the financial assets
held by it at other CSDs, (iv) the financial assets held in custody for
it with FAST Agents, (v) the financial assets held in custody for it
with other custodians and (vi) the financial assets it holds in
physical custody.
(2) The Transferee would establish security entitlements on its
books for Eligible Participants of DTC that become Participants of the
Transferee that replicate the security entitlements that DTC maintained
on its books immediately prior to the Transfer Time for such Eligible
Participants, and DTC would simultaneously eliminate such security
entitlements from its books.
(3) The Transferee would establish security entitlements on its
books for Non-Eligible Participants of DTC that become Transition
Period Securities Account Holders of the Transferee that replicate the
security entitlements that DTC maintained on its books immediately
prior to the Transfer Time for such Non-Eligible Participants, and DTC
would simultaneously eliminate such security entitlements from its
books.
(4) The Transferee would establish pledges on its books in favor of
Pledgees that become Pledgees of the Transferee that replicate the
pledges that DTC maintained on its books immediately prior to the
Transfer Time in favor of such Pledgees, and DTC shall simultaneously
eliminate such pledges from its books.
(vi) Comparability Period
DTC states that the proposed automatic mechanism for the transfer
of DTC's membership is intended to provide DTC's membership with
continuous access to critical services in the event of DTC's wind-down,
and to facilitate the continued prompt and accurate clearance and
settlement of securities transactions. The proposed Wind-down Rule
would provide that DTC would enter into arrangements with a Failover
Transferee, or would use commercially reasonable efforts to enter into
arrangements with a Third Party Transferee, providing that, in either
case, with respect to the critical services and any non-critical
services that are transferred from DTC to the Transferee, for at least
a period of time to be agreed upon (``Comparability Period''), the
business transferred from DTC to the Transferee would be operated in a
manner that is comparable to the manner in which the business was
previously operated by DTC. Specifically, the proposed Wind-down Rule
would provide that: (1) The rules of the Transferee and terms of
Participant, Pledgee, DRS Agent, FAST Agent and Settling Bank
agreements would be comparable in substance and effect to the analogous
Rules and agreements of DTC, (2) the rights and obligations of any
Participants, Pledgees, DRS Agents, FAST Agents, and Settling Banks
that are transferred to the Transferee would be comparable in substance
and effect to their rights and obligations as to DTC, and (3) the
Transferee would operate the transferred business and provide any
services that are transferred in a comparable manner to which such
services were provided by DTC.
DTC states that the purpose of these provisions and the intended
effect of the proposed Wind-down Rule is to facilitate a smooth
transition of DTC's business to a Transferee and to provide that, for
at least the Comparability Period, the Transferee (1) would operate the
transferred business in a manner that is comparable in substance and
effect to the manner in which the business was operated by DTC, and (2)
would not require sudden and disruptive changes in the systems,
operations and business practices of the new Participants, Pledgees,
DRS Agents, FAST Agents, and Settling Banks of the Transferee.
(vii) Subordination of Claims Provisions and Miscellaneous Matters
The proposed Wind-down Rule would include a provision addressing
the subordination of unsecured claims against DTC of its Participants
who fail to participate in DTC's recovery efforts (i.e., firms
delinquent in their obligations to DTC or elect to retire from DTC in
order to minimize their obligations with respect to the allocation of
losses, pursuant to the Rules). DTC states that this provision is
designed to incentivize Participants to participate in DTC's recovery
efforts.\44\
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\44\ Nothing in the proposed Wind-down Rule would seek to
prevent a Participant that retired its membership at DTC from
applying for membership with the Transferee. Once its DTC membership
is terminated, however, such firm would not be able to benefit from
the membership assignment that would be effected by this proposed
Wind-down Rule, and it would have to apply for membership directly
with the Transferee, subject to its membership application and
review process.
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The proposed Wind-down Rule would address other ex-ante matters,
including provisions providing that its Participants, Pledgees, DRS
Agents, FAST Agents and Settling Banks (1) will assist and cooperate
with DTC to effectuate the transfer of DTC's business to a Transferee,
(2) consent to the provisions of the rule, and (3) grant DTC power of
attorney to execute and deliver on their behalf documents and
instruments that may be requested by the Transferee. Finally, the
Proposed Rule would include a limitation of liability for any actions
taken or omitted
[[Page 44974]]
to be taken by DTC pursuant to the Proposed Rule.
DTC states that the purpose of the limitation of liability is to
facilitate and protect DTC's ability to act expeditiously in response
to extraordinary events. Such limitation of liability would be
available only following triggering of the Wind-down Plan. In addition,
and as a separate matter, DTC states that the limitation of liability
provides Participants with transparency for the unlikely situation when
those extraordinary events could occur, as well as supporting the legal
framework within which DTC would take such actions. DTC states that
these provisions, collectively, are designed to enable DTC to take such
acts as the Board determines necessary to effectuate an orderly
transfer and wind-down of its business should recovery efforts prove
unsuccessful.
2. Rule 38 (Market Disruption and Force Majeure)
The proposed Rule 38 (``Force Majeure Rule'') would address DTC's
authority to take certain actions upon the occurrence, and during the
pendency, of a Market Disruption Event, as defined therein. DTC states
that the Proposed Rule is designed to clarify DTC's ability to take
actions to address extraordinary events outside of the control of DTC
and of its membership, and to mitigate the effect of such events by
facilitating the continuity of services (or, if deemed necessary, the
temporary suspension of services). To that end, under the proposed
Force Majeure Rule, DTC would be entitled, during the pendency of a
Market Disruption Event, to (1) suspend the provision of any or all
services, and (2) take, or refrain from taking, or require its
Participants and Pledgees to take, or refrain from taking, any actions
it considers appropriate to address, alleviate, or mitigate the event
and facilitate the continuation of DTC's services as may be
practicable.
The proposed Force Majeure Rule would identify the events or
circumstances that would be considered a Market Disruption Event. The
proposed Force Majeure Rule would define the governance procedures for
how DTC would determine whether, and how, to implement the provisions
of the rule. A determination that a Market Disruption Event has
occurred would generally be made by the Board, but the Proposed Rule
would provide for limited, interim delegation of authority to a
specified officer or management committee if the Board would not be
able to take timely action. In the event such delegated authority is
exercised, the proposed Force Majeure Rule would require that the Board
be convened as promptly as practicable, no later than five Business
Days after such determination has been made, to ratify, modify, or
rescind the action. The proposed Force Majeure Rule would also provide
for prompt notification to the Commission, and advance consultation
with Commission staff, when practicable, including notification when an
event is no longer continuing and the relevant actions are terminated.
The Proposed Rule would require Participants and Pledgees to notify DTC
immediately upon becoming aware of a Market Disruption Event, and,
likewise, would require DTC to notify its Participants and Pledgees if
it has triggered the Proposed Rule and of actions taken or intended to
be taken thereunder.
Finally, the Proposed Rule would address other related matters,
including a limitation of liability for any failure or delay in
performance, in whole or in part, arising out of the Market Disruption
Event. DTC states that the purpose of the limitation of liability would
be similar to the purpose of the analogous provision in the proposed
Wind-down Rule, which is to facilitate and protect DTC's ability to act
expeditiously in response to extraordinary events.
II. Discussion and Commission Findings
Section 19(b)(2)(C) of the Act \45\ directs the Commission to
approve a proposed rule change of a self-regulatory organization if it
finds that the proposed rule change is consistent with the requirements
of the Act and the rules and regulations thereunder applicable to such
organization. After careful review, the Commission finds that the
Proposed Rule Change is consistent with the requirements of the Act and
the rules and regulations thereunder applicable to DTC. In particular,
the Commission finds that the Proposed Rule Change is consistent with
Section 17A(b)(3)(F) of the Act,\46\ Rules 17Ad-22(e)(2)(i), (iii), and
(v) under the Act,\47\ Rule 17Ad-22(e)(3)(ii) under the Act,\48\ and
Rules 17Ad-22(e)(15)(i) and (ii) under the Act.\49\
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\45\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2)(C).
\46\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1(b)(3)(F).
\47\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(2)(i), (iii), and (v).
\48\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(3)(ii).
\49\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(15)(i) and (ii).
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A. Consistency With Section 17A(b)(3)(F) of the Act
Section 17A(b)(3)(F) of the Act requires, in part, that a
registered clearing agency have rules designed to promote the prompt
and accurate clearance and settlement of securities transactions and to
assure the safeguarding of securities and funds which are in the
custody or control of the clearing agency or for which it is
responsible.\50\
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\50\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1(b)(3)(F).
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First, the Commission believes that the R&W Plan, generally, is
designed to help DTC promote the prompt and accurate clearance and
settlement of securities transactions and assure the safeguarding of
securities and funds which are in the custody or control of DTC or for
which it is responsible by providing DTC with a roadmap for actions it
may employ to monitor and manage its risks, and, as needed, to
stabilize its financial condition in the event those risks materialize.
Specifically, as described above, the Recovery Plan would establish a
number of triggers for the potential application of a number of
recovery tools described in the Recovery Plan. The Commission believes
that establishing such triggers alongside a list of available recovery
tools would help DTC to more promptly determine when and how it may
need to manage a significant stress event, and, as needed, stabilize
its financial condition.
Similarly, the Force Majeure Rule is designed to provide a roadmap
to address extraordinary events that may occur outside of DTC's
control. Specifically, as described above, the Force Majeure Rule would
define a Market Disruption Event and provide governance around
determining when such an event has occurred. The Force Majeure Rule
also would describe DTC's authority to take actions during the pendency
of a Market Disruption Event that it deems appropriate to address such
an event and facilitate the continuation of DTC's services, if
practicable. By defining a Market Disruption Event and providing such
governance and authority, the Commission believes that the Force
Majeure Rule would help DTC improve its ability to identify and manage
a force majeure event, and, as needed, to stabilize its financial
condition so that DTC can continue to operate.
The Commission believes that the Recovery Plan and the Force
Majeure Rule would allow for a more considered and comprehensive
evaluation by DTC of a stressed market situation and the ways in which
DTC could apply available recovery tools in a manner intended to
minimize the potential negative effects of the stress situation for
DTC, its membership, and the broader financial system. Therefore, the
[[Page 44975]]
Commission believes that the Recovery Plan and the Force Majeure Rule
are designed to help DTC promote the prompt and accurate clearance and
settlement of securities transactions and assure the safeguarding of
securities and funds which are in the custody or control of DTC or for
which it is responsible by establishing a means for DTC to best
determine the most appropriate way to address such stress situations in
an effective manner.
Second, the Commission believes that the R&W Plan, generally, is
designed to help DTC to promote the prompt and accurate clearance and
settlement of securities transactions and to assure the safeguarding of
securities and funds which are in the custody or control of DTC or for
which it is responsible by providing a roadmap to wind-down that is
designed to ensure the availability of DTC's critical services to the
marketplace, while reducing disruption to the operations of
Participants and financial markets that might be caused by DTC's
failure. Specifically, as described above, the Wind-down Plan, as
facilitated by the Wind-down Rule, would provide for the wind-down of
DTC's business and transfer of membership and critical services if the
recovery tools do not successfully return DTC to financial viability.
Accordingly, critical services, such as services that lack alternative
providers or products as well as services that are interconnected with
other participants and processes within the U.S. financial system would
be able to continue in an orderly manner while DTC is seeking to wind-
down its services. By designing the Wind-down Plan and the Wind-down
Rule to enable the continuity of DTC's critical services and membership
in an orderly manner while DTC is seeking to wind-down its services,
the Commission believes these proposed changes would help DTC to
promote the prompt and accurate clearance and settlement of securities
transactions and to assure the safeguarding of securities and funds
which are in the custody or control of DTC or for which it is
responsible in the event the Wind-down Plan is implemented.
By better enabling DTC to promote the prompt and accurate clearance
and settlement of securities transactions and to assure the
safeguarding of securities and funds which are in the custody or
control of DTC or for which it is responsible, as described above, the
Commission finds that the Proposed Rule Change is consistent with
Section 17A(b)(3)(F) of the Act.\51\
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\51\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1(b)(3)(F).
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B. Consistency With Rules 17Ad-22(e)(2)(i), (iii), and (v) Under the
Act
Rule 17Ad-22(e)(2)(i) under the Act requires a covered clearing
agency \52\ to establish, implement, maintain, and enforce written
policies and procedures reasonably designed to provide for governance
arrangements that are clear and transparent.\53\ Rule 17Ad-
22(e)(2)(iii) under the Act requires a covered clearing agency to
establish, implement, maintain, and enforce written policies and
procedures reasonably designed to provide for governance arrangements
that support the public interest requirements in Section 17A of the Act
\54\ applicable to clearing agencies, and the objectives of owners and
participants.\55\ Rule 17Ad-22(e)(2)(v) under the Act requires a
covered clearing agency to establish, implement, maintain, and enforce
written policies and procedures reasonably designed to provide for
governance arrangements that specify clear and direct lines of
responsibility.\56\
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\52\ A ``covered clearing agency'' means, among other things, a
clearing agency registered with the Commission under Section 17A of
the Exchange Act (15 U.S.C. 78q-1 et seq.) that is designated
systemically important by the Financial Stability Oversight Counsel
(``FSOC'') pursuant to the Clearing Supervision Act (12 U.S.C. 5461
et seq.). See 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(a)(5)-(6). On July 18, 2012, FSOC
designated DTC as systemically important. U.S. Department of the
Treasury, ``FSOC Makes First Designations in Effort to Protect
Against Future Financial Crises,'' available at https://www.treasury.gov/press-center/press-releases/Pages/tg1645.aspx.
Therefore, DTC is a covered clearing agency.
\53\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(2)(i).
\54\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1.
\55\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(2)(iii).
\56\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(2)(v).
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As described above, the R&W Plan is designed to identify clear
lines of responsibility concerning the R&W Plan including (1) the
ongoing development of the R&W Plan; (2) ongoing maintenance of the R&W
Plan; (3) reviews and approval of the R&W Plan; and (4) the functioning
and implementation of the R&W Plan. As described above, the R&R Team,
which reports to the Management Committee, is responsible for
maintaining the R&W Plan and for the development and ongoing
maintenance of the overall recovery and wind-down planning process.
Meanwhile, the Board, or such committees as may be delegated authority
by the Board from time to time pursuant to its charter, would review
and approve the R&W Plan biennially, and also would review and approve
any changes that are proposed to the R&W Plan outside of the biennial
review. Moreover, the R&W Plan would state the stages of escalation
required to manage recovery under the Recovery Plan or to invoke DTC's
wind-down under the Wind-down Plan, which would range from relevant
business line managers up to the Board. The R&W Plan would identify the
parties responsible for certain activities under both the Recovery Plan
and the Wind-down Plan, and would describe their respective roles. The
R&W Plan also would specify the process DTC would take to receive input
from various parties at DTC, including management committees and the
Board.
In considering the above, the Commission believes that the R&W Plan
would help contribute to establishing, implementing, maintaining, and
enforcing written policies and procedures reasonably designed to
provide for governance arrangements that are clear and transparent
because it would specify lines of control. The Commission also believes
that the R&W Plan would help contribute to establishing, implementing,
maintaining, and enforcing written policies and procedures reasonably
designed to provide for governance arrangements that support the public
interest requirements in Section 17A of the Act \57\ applicable to
clearing agencies, and the objectives of owners and participants
because the R&W Plan specifies the process DTC would take to receive
input from various DTC stakeholders. In addition, the Commission
believes that the R&W Plan would help contribute to establishing,
implementing, maintaining, and enforcing written policies and
procedures reasonably designed to provide for governance arrangements
that specify clear and direct lines of responsibility because it
specifies who is responsible for the ongoing development, maintenance,
reviews, approval, functioning, and implementation of the R&W Plan.
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\57\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1.
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Therefore, the Commission finds that the R&W Plan is consistent
with Rules 17Ad-22(e)(2)(i), (iii), and (v) under the Act.\58\
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\58\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(2)(i), (iii), and (v).
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C. Consistency With Rule 17Ad-22(e)(3)(ii) Under the Act
Rule 17Ad-22(e)(3)(ii) under the Act requires a covered clearing
agency to establish, implement, maintain, and enforce written policies
and procedures reasonably designed to maintain a sound risk management
framework for comprehensively managing legal, credit, liquidity,
operational, general business, investment, custody, and other risks
that arise in or are borne by the covered clearing agency, which
includes plans
[[Page 44976]]
for the recovery and orderly wind-down of the covered clearing agency
necessitated by credit losses, liquidity shortfalls, losses from
general business risk, or any other losses.\59\
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\59\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(3)(ii).
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As described above, the R&W Plan's Recovery Plan provides a plan
for DTC's recovery necessitated by credit losses, liquidity shortfalls,
losses from general business risk, or any other losses by defining the
risk management activities, stress conditions and indicators, and tools
that DTC may use to address stress scenarios that could eventually
prevent DTC from being able to provide its critical services as a going
concern. More specifically, through the framework of the Crisis
Continuum, which identifies tools that can be employed to mitigate
losses and mitigate or minimize liquidity needs as the market
environment becomes increasingly stressed, the Recovery Plan would
identify measures that DTC may take to manage risks of credit losses
and liquidity shortfalls, and other losses that could arise from a
Participant Default. The Recovery Plan also would address DTC's
management of general business risks and other non-default risks that
could lead to losses by identifying potential non-default losses and
the resources available to DTC to address such losses, including
recovery triggers and tools to mitigate such losses. Therefore, the
Commission believes that the R&W Plan's Recovery Plan helps DTC
establish, implement, maintain, and enforce written policies and
procedures reasonably designed to maintain a sound risk management
framework for comprehensively managing legal, credit, liquidity,
operational, general business, investment, custody, and other risks
that arise in or are borne by DTC, which includes a recovery plan
necessitated by credit losses, liquidity shortfalls, losses from
general business risk, or any other losses.
As described above, the R&W Plan's Wind-down Plan provides a plan
for orderly wind-down of DTC, which would be triggered by a
determination by the Board that recovery efforts have not been, or are
unlikely to be, successful in returning DTC to viability as a going
concern. Once triggered, the Wind-down Plan sets forth mechanisms for
the transfer of DTC's membership and business, and it is designed to
maintain continued access to DTC's critical services and to minimize
market impact of the transfer while DTC is seeking to ultimately wind-
down its services. Specifically, the Wind-down Plan would provide for
the transfer of DTC's business, assets, securities inventory, and
membership to another legal entity with such transfer being effected in
connection with proceedings under Chapter 11 of the U.S. Bankruptcy
Code.\60\ After effectuating this transfer, DTC would liquidate any
remaining assets in an orderly manner in bankruptcy proceedings.
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\60\ 11 U.S.C. 101 et seq.
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Although the Commission is not opining on the Wind-down Plan's
consistency with the U.S. Bankruptcy Code, in reviewing the proposed
changes, the Commission believes that DTC's intent to use bankruptcy
proceedings to achieve an orderly liquidation of assets after any
transfer of DTC's business appears reasonable, in light of the
provisions of the Bankruptcy Code that address the liquidation and
distribution of a debtor's property among creditors and interest
holders.\61\ Under many circumstances, Section 363 of the Bankruptcy
Code provides for the sale of property ``free and clear of any interest
in such property of an entity other than the estate[.]'' \62\ The
Commission believes that DTC's analysis regarding the applicability of
these provisions, while not free from doubt, presents a reasonable
approach to liquidation in light of the circumstances and the available
alternatives.\63\ Therefore, the Commission believes that the R&W
Plan's Wind-down Plan helps DTC establish, implement, maintain, and
enforce written policies and procedures reasonably designed to maintain
a sound risk management framework for comprehensively managing legal,
credit, liquidity, operational, general business, investment, custody,
and other risks that arise in or are borne by DTC, which includes a
wind-down plan necessitated by credit losses, liquidity shortfalls,
losses from general business risk, or any other losses.
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\61\ See, e.g., 11 U.S.C. 363, 726, and 1129(a)(7).
\62\ See 11 U.S.C. 363(f).
\63\ The Wind-down Plan would identify certain factors the Board
may consider in evaluating alternatives, which would include, for
example, whether DTC could safely stabilize the business and protect
its value without seeking bankruptcy protection, and DTC's ability
to continue to meet its regulatory requirements.
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Therefore, the Commission finds that the R&W Plan is consistent
with Rule 17Ad-22(e)(3)(ii) under the Act.\64\
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\64\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(3)(ii).
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D. Consistency With Rules 17Ad-22(e)(15)(i)-(ii) Under the Act
Rule 17Ad-22(e)(15)(i) under the Act requires a covered clearing
agency to establish, implement, maintain, and enforce written policies
and procedures reasonably designed to identify, monitor, and manage its
general business risk and hold sufficient liquid net assets funded by
equity to cover potential general business losses so that the covered
clearing agency can continue operations and services as a going concern
if those losses materialize, including by determining the amount of
liquid net assets funded by equity based upon its general business risk
profile and the length of time required to achieve a recovery or
orderly wind-down, as appropriate, of its critical operations and
services if such action is taken.\65\ Rule 17Ad-22(e)(15)(ii) under the
Act requires a covered clearing agency to establish, implement,
maintain, and enforce written policies and procedures reasonably
designed to identify, monitor, and manage its general business risk and
hold sufficient liquid net assets funded by equity to cover potential
general business losses so that the covered clearing agency can
continue operations and services as a going concern if those losses
materialize, including by holding liquid net assets funded by equity
equal to the greater of either (x) six months of the covered clearing
agency's current operating expenses, or (y) the amount determined by
the board of directors to be sufficient to ensure a recovery or orderly
wind-down of critical operations and services of the covered clearing
agency, as contemplated by the plans established under Rule 17Ad-
22(e)(3)(ii) under the Act,\66\ discussed above.\67\
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\65\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(15)(i).
\66\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(3)(ii).
\67\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(15)(ii).
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As discussed above, DTC's Capital Policy is designed to address how
DTC holds LNA in compliance with these requirements,\68\ while the
Wind-down Plan would include an analysis to estimate the amount of time
and cost to achieve a recovery or orderly wind-down of DTC's critical
operations and services, and would provide that the Board review and
approve this analysis and estimation annually. The Wind-down Plan also
would provide that the estimate would be the Recovery/Wind-down Capital
Requirement under the Capital Policy. Under that policy, the General
Business Risk Capital Requirement, which is the amount of LNA that DTC
plans to hold to cover potential general business losses so that it can
continue operations and services as a going concern if those losses
materialize, is calculated as the greatest of three estimated amounts,
one of
[[Page 44977]]
which is this Recovery/Wind-down Capital Requirement. Therefore, the
Commission finds that the R&W Plan is consistent with Rules 17Ad-
22(e)(15)(i) and (ii) under the Act.\69\
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\68\ Supra note 12.
\69\ 17 CFR 240.17Ad-22(e)(15)(i) and (ii).
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III. Conclusion
On the basis of the foregoing, the Commission finds that the
proposal is consistent with the requirements of the Act and in
particular with the requirements of Section 17A of the Act \70\ and the
rules and regulations thereunder.
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\70\ 15 U.S.C. 78q-1.
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It is therefore ordered, pursuant to Section 19(b)(2) of the
Act,\71\ that proposed rule change SR-DTC-2017-021, as modified by
Amendment No. 1, be, and it hereby is, approved \72\ as of the date of
this order or the date of a notice by the Commission authorizing DTC to
implement advance notice SR-DTC-2017-803, as modified by Amendment No.
1, whichever is later.
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\71\ 15 U.S.C. 78s(b)(2).
\72\ In approving the Proposed Rule Change, the Commission has
considered the Proposed Rule Change's impact on efficiency,
competition, and capital formation. See 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
\73\ 17 CFR 200.30-3(a)(12).
For the Commission, by the Division of Trading and Markets,
pursuant to delegated authority.\73\
Eduardo A. Aleman,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018-19054 Filed 8-31-18; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8011-01-P