Changes to Applicability Thresholds for Regulatory Capital Requirements for Certain U.S. Subsidiaries of Foreign Banking Organizations and Application of Liquidity Requirements to Foreign Banking Organizations, Certain U.S. Depository Institution Holding Companies, and Certain Depository Institution Subsidiaries, 24296-24358 [2019-09245]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency
12 CFR Parts 3 and 50
[Docket ID OCC–2019–0009]
RIN 1557–AE63
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Parts 217 and 249
[Regulations Q, WW; Docket No. R–1628B]
RIN 7100–AF21
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION
12 CFR Parts 324 and 329
RIN 3064–AE96
Changes to Applicability Thresholds
for Regulatory Capital Requirements
for Certain U.S. Subsidiaries of Foreign
Banking Organizations and Application
of Liquidity Requirements to Foreign
Banking Organizations, Certain U.S.
Depository Institution Holding
Companies, and Certain Depository
Institution Subsidiaries
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency, Treasury; the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System; and the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking
with request for public comment.
AGENCY:
The Office of the Comptroller
of the Currency, the Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System (Board),
and the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (collectively, the agencies)
are inviting comment on a proposal that
would determine the application of
regulatory capital requirements to
certain U.S. intermediate holding
companies of foreign banking
organizations and their depository
institution subsidiaries and the
application of standardized liquidity
requirements with respect to certain
U.S. operations of large foreign banking
organizations and certain of their
depository institution subsidiaries, each
according to risk-based categories. For
liquidity, the proposal would require a
foreign banking organization that meets
certain criteria to comply with liquidity
coverage ratio and net stable funding
ratio requirements with respect to any
U.S. intermediate holding company and
certain depository institution
subsidiaries thereof; in addition, the
Board is not proposing but is requesting
comment on whether it should impose
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SUMMARY:
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standardized liquidity requirements on
such foreign banking organizations with
respect to their U.S. branch and agency
networks, as well as possible
approaches for doing so. The proposal is
consistent with a separate proposal
issued by the Board that would apply
certain prudential standards to foreign
banking organizations based on the
same categories, and is similar to a
proposal issued by the agencies in 2018
that would determine the application of
regulatory capital and standardized
liquidity requirements for large U.S.
banking organizations according to riskbased categories (the domestic
interagency proposal). In addition, the
Board is modifying one aspect of the
proposed requirements under the
domestic interagency proposal with
respect to certain banking organizations;
specifically, to propose the application
of a standardized liquidity requirement
to certain U.S. depository institution
holding companies that meet specified
criteria relating to their liquidity risk
profile. The agencies are also making
technical amendments to certain
provisions of the domestic interagency
proposal.
Comments on the proposal,
including the Board’s proposal to apply
liquidity requirements to certain
domestic holding companies discussed
in section VI of the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION, must be received by June
21, 2019.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be
directed to:
OCC: You may submit comments to
the OCC by any of the methods set forth
below. Commenters are encouraged to
submit comments through the Federal
eRulemaking Portal or email, if possible.
Please use the title ‘‘Proposed changes
to applicability thresholds for regulatory
capital requirements for certain U.S.
subsidiaries of foreign banking
organizations and application of
liquidity requirements for foreign
banking organizations’’ to facilitate the
organization and distribution of the
comments. You may submit comments
by any of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal—
‘‘regulations.gov’’: Go to
www.regulations.gov. Enter ‘‘Docket ID
OCC–2019–0009’’ in the Search Box and
click ‘‘Search.’’ Click on ‘‘Comment
Now’’ to submit public comments. Click
on the ‘‘Help’’ tab on the
Regulations.gov home page to get
information on using Regulations.gov,
including instructions for submitting
public comments.
• Email: regs.comments@
occ.treas.gov.
DATES:
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• Mail: Chief Counsel’s Office,
Attention: Comment Processing, Office
of the Comptroller of the Currency, 400
7th Street SW, Suite 3E–218,
Washington, DC 20219.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: 400 7th
Street SW, Suite 3E–218, Washington,
DC 20219.
• Fax: (571) 465–4326.
Instructions: You must include
‘‘OCC’’ as the agency name and ‘‘Docket
ID OCC–2019–0009’’ in your comment.
In general, the OCC will enter all
comments received into the docket and
publish them on the Regulations.gov
website without change, including any
business or personal information that
you provide such as name and address
information, email addresses, or phone
numbers. Comments received, including
attachments and other supporting
materials, are part of the public record
and subject to public disclosure. Do not
include any information in your
comment or supporting materials that
you consider confidential or
inappropriate for public disclosure.
You may review comments and other
related materials that pertain to this
rulemaking action by any of the
following methods:
• Viewing Comments Electronically:
Go to www.regulations.gov. Enter
‘‘Docket ID OCC–2019–0009’’ in the
Search box and click ‘‘Search.’’ Click on
‘‘Open Docket Folder’’ on the right side
of the screen and then ‘‘Comments.’’
Comments and supporting materials can
be filtered by clicking on ‘‘View all
documents and comments in this
docket’’ and then using the filtering
tools on the left side of the screen. Click
on the ‘‘Help’’ tab on the
Regulations.gov home page to get
information on using Regulations.gov.
The docket may be viewed after the
close of the comment period in the same
manner as during the comment period.
• Viewing Comments Personally: You
may personally inspect comments at the
OCC, 400 7th Street SW, Washington,
DC 20219. For security reasons, the OCC
requires that visitors make an
appointment to inspect comments. You
may do so by calling (202) 649–6700 or,
for persons who are hearing impaired,
TTY, (202) 649–5597. Upon arrival,
visitors will be required to present valid
government-issued photo identification
and submit to security screening in
order to inspect comments.
Board: You may submit comments,
identified by Docket No. R–1628, by any
of the following methods:
• Agency Website: https://
www.federalreserve.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments at
https://www.federalreserve.gov/general
info/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm.
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 101 / Friday, May 24, 2019 / Proposed Rules
• Email: regs.comments@
federalreserve.gov. Include docket
number in the subject line of the
message.
• Fax: (202) 452–3819 or (202) 452–
3102.
• Mail: Ann E. Misback, Secretary,
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, 20th Street and
Constitution Avenue NW, Washington,
DC 20551. All public comments will be
made available on the Board’s website at
https://www.federalreserve.gov/
generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm as
submitted, unless modified for technical
reasons or to remove personally
identifiable information at the
commenter’s request. Accordingly,
comments will not be edited to remove
any identifying or contact information.
Public comments may also be viewed
electronically or in paper form in Room
146, 1709 New York Avenue,
Washington, DC 20006 between 9:00
a.m. and 5:00 p.m. on weekdays.
FDIC: You may submit comments,
identified by RIN 3064–AE96, by any of
the following methods:
• Agency Website: https://
www.FDIC.gov/regulations/laws/
federal/propose.html. Follow
instructions for submitting comments
on the FDIC website.
• Mail: Robert E. Feldman, Executive
Secretary, Attention: Comments/Legal
ESS, Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, 550 17th Street NW,
Washington, DC 20429.
• Hand Delivered/Courier: Comments
may be hand-delivered to the guard
station at the rear of the 550 17th Street
Building (located on F Street) on
business days between 7:00 a.m. and
5:00 p.m.
• Email: comments@FDIC.gov.
Include RIN 3064–AE96 on the subject
line of the message.
• Public Inspection: All comments
received must include the agency name
and RIN 3064–AE96 for this rulemaking.
All comments received will be posted
without change to https://www.fdic.gov/
regulations/laws/federal/, including any
personal information provided. Paper
copies of public comments may be
ordered from the FDIC Public
Information Center, 3501 North Fairfax
Drive, Room E–1002, Arlington, VA
22226, or by telephone at (877) 275–
3342 or (703) 562–2200.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
OCC: Mark Ginsberg, Senior Risk
Expert, or Venus Fan, Risk Expert,
Capital and Regulatory Policy, (202)
649–6370; James Weinberger, Technical
Expert, Treasury & Market Risk Policy,
(202) 649–6360; or Carl Kaminski,
Special Counsel, Henry Barkhausen,
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Counsel, or Daniel Perez, Attorney,
Chief Counsel’s Office, (202) 649–5490,
or for persons who are hearing
impaired, TTY, (202) 649–5597, Office
of the Comptroller of the Currency, 400
7th Street SW, Washington, DC 20219.
Board: Constance M. Horsley, Deputy
Associate Director, (202) 452–5239;
Elizabeth MacDonald, Manager, (202)
475–6216; Brian Chernoff, Lead
Financial Institution Policy Analyst,
(202) 452–2952; J. Kevin Littler, Lead
Financial Institution Policy Analyst,
(202) 475–6677; Mark Handzlik, Lead
Financial Institution Policy Analyst,
(202) 475–6636; Matthew McQueeney,
Senior Financial Institution Policy
Analyst, (202) 452–2942; Christopher
Powell, Senior Financial Institution
Policy Analyst, (202) 452–3442,
Division of Supervision and Regulation;
or Benjamin McDonough, Assistant
General Counsel, (202) 452–2036; Asad
Kudiya, Counsel, (202) 475–6358; Jason
Shafer, Counsel (202) 728–5811; Mary
Watkins, Senior Attorney, (202) 452–
3722; Joshua Strazanac, Attorney, (202)
452–2457; Alyssa O’Connor, Attorney,
(202) 452–3886, Legal Division, Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, 20th and C Streets NW,
Washington, DC 20551. For the hearing
impaired only, Telecommunication
Device for the Deaf (TDD), (202) 263–
4869.
FDIC: Benedetto Bosco, Chief, Capital
Policy Section, bbosco@fdic.gov;
Michael Maloney, Senior Policy
Analyst, mmaloney@fdic.gov;
regulatorycapital@fdic.gov; Michael E.
Spencer, Chief, Capital Markets
Strategies Section, michspencer@
fdic.gov; Eric W. Schatten, Senior Policy
Analyst, eschatten@fdic.gov; Andrew D.
Carayiannis, Senior Policy Analyst,
acarayiannis@fdic.gov; Capital Markets
Branch, Division of Risk Management
Supervision, (202) 898–6888; Michael
Phillips, Counsel, mphillips@fdic.gov;
Catherine Wood, Acting Supervisory
Counsel, cawood@fdic.gov; Suzanne
Dawley, Counsel, sudawley@fdic.gov;
Andrew B. Williams II, Counsel,
andwilliams@fdic.gov; or Gregory Feder,
Counsel, gfeder@fdic.gov; Supervision
and Legislation Branch, Legal Division,
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation,
550 17th Street NW, Washington, DC
20429. For the hearing impaired only,
Telecommunication Device for the Deaf
(TDD), (800) 925–4618.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
II. Background
A. Current Prudential Regulatory Regime
B. Tailoring in the Current Prudential
Regulatory Regime
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C. Structure and Activities of Foreign
Banking Organizations
III. Overview of the Proposal
A. Categories of Standards
B. Scoping Criteria
C. Determination of Applicable Category of
Standards
IV. Capital Requirements
A. Category II Standards
B. Category III Standards
C. Category IV Standards
V. Liquidity Requirements
A. Categories of Liquidity Requirements for
a Foreign Banking Organization
B. LCR Requirement With Respect to
Foreign Banking Organizations
C. NSFR Requirement With Respect to
Foreign Banking Organizations
D. LCR and NSFR Public Disclosure for
Foreign Banking Organizations and U.S.
Banking Organizations
E. Request for Comment on Standardized
Liquidity Requirements With Respect to
U.S. Branches and Agencies of a Foreign
Banking Organization
F. LCR and NSFR Requirements for Certain
Depository Institution Subsidiaries of a
Foreign Banking Organization
G. Transition Period; Cessation of
Applicability
VI. Re-Proposal of Standardized Liquidity
Requirements for Certain U.S. Depository
Institution Holding Companies Subject
to Category IV Standards
VII. Technical Amendments
VIII. Impact Assessment
IX. Administrative Law Matters
A. Solicitation of Comments and Use of
Plain Language
B. Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
D. Riegle Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994
E. OCC Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995 Determination
I. Introduction
The Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency (OCC), the Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System (Board),
and the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC) (collectively, the
agencies) are inviting comment on a
proposed rule (the proposal) that would
apply regulatory capital and
standardized liquidity requirements
with respect to the U.S. operations of
foreign banking organizations according
to risk-based categories.1 U.S. law
permits foreign banking organizations to
operate in the United States through a
variety of structures. For example, a
foreign banking organization might
conduct U.S. banking activities through
1 Foreign banking organization means a foreign
bank that operates a branch, agency, or commercial
lending company subsidiary in the United States;
controls a bank in the United States; or controls an
Edge corporation acquired after March 5, 1987; and
any company of which the foreign bank is a
subsidiary. See 12 CFR 211.21(o); 12 CFR 252.2(k).
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a U.S. branch or agency,2 a U.S.
depository institution, or both. In
addition, many foreign banking
organizations conduct a range of
nonbank activities through separately
incorporated U.S. subsidiaries.
For capital requirements, the Board is
proposing to modify the capital
requirements applicable to large U.S.
intermediate holding companies of
foreign banking organizations 3—
specifically, those with at least $100
billion in total consolidated assets—and
the agencies are proposing to modify the
capital requirements applicable to
depository institution subsidiaries of
these U.S. intermediate holding
companies according to the proposed
risk-based categories.
For liquidity requirements, the
proposed framework would apply
standardized liquidity requirements to
foreign banking organizations with
respect to their combined U.S.
operations 4 according to the proposed
risk-based categories. Specifically, the
Board is proposing to require a foreign
banking organization that meets certain
criteria—including having combined
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2 An agency is place of business of a foreign bank,
located in any state, at which credit balances are
maintained, checks are paid, money is lent, or, to
the extent not prohibited by state or federal law,
deposits are accepted from a person or entity that
is not a citizen or resident of the United States. A
branch is a place of business of a foreign bank,
located in any state, at which deposits are received
and that is not an agency. See 12 CFR 211.21(b) and
(e).
3 A foreign banking organization with U.S. nonbranch assets of $50 billion or more must establish
a U.S. intermediate holding company. 12 CFR
252.153.
4 The combined U.S. operations of a foreign
banking organization include any U.S. subsidiaries
(including any U.S. intermediate holding company,
which would reflect on a consolidated basis any
U.S. depository institution subsidiaries thereof),
U.S. branches, and U.S. agencies. See section II.C
of this SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section.
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U.S. assets 5 of $100 billion or more—to
comply with liquidity coverage ratio
(LCR) and net stable funding ratio
(NSFR) requirements with respect to
any U.S. intermediate holding company.
The Board is not currently proposing
but is requesting comment on whether
it should impose standardized liquidity
requirements on foreign banking
organizations with respect to their U.S.
branch and agency networks, as well as
possible approaches for doing so.6 In
addition, the agencies are proposing to
determine the application of LCR and
NSFR requirements to certain
depository institution subsidiaries of a
foreign banking organization according
to the proposed risk-based categories.
The proposal would generally align
with the framework the agencies
proposed for large U.S. banking
organizations (the domestic interagency
proposal).7 The agencies noted in the
domestic interagency proposal that they
were not at that time proposing to
amend the capital and liquidity
requirements currently applicable to a
U.S. intermediate holding company of a
foreign banking organization or to its
depository institution subsidiaries. This
proposal would tailor the agencies’
5 Combined U.S. assets means the sum of the
consolidated assets of each top-tier U.S. subsidiary
of the foreign banking organization (excluding any
company whose assets are held pursuant to section
2(h)(2) of the Bank Holding Company Act, 12 U.S.C.
1841(h)(2), if applicable) and the total assets of each
U.S. branch and U.S. agency of the foreign banking
organization, as reported by the foreign banking
organization on the Capital and Asset Report for
Foreign Banking Organizations (FR Y–7Q).
6 This SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section uses
the term ‘‘U.S. branch and agency network’’ to refer
to the U.S. branches and agencies of a foreign
banking organization in the aggregate, including
any consolidated subsidiaries thereof.
7 Proposed Changes to Applicability Thresholds
for Regulatory Capital and Liquidity Requirements,
83 FR 66024 (December 21, 2018).
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capital and liquidity requirements for
foreign banking organizations and their
U.S. subsidiaries.
The Board is also modifying one
aspect of the domestic interagency
proposal with respect to certain banking
organizations.8 Specifically, the Board is
proposing to apply standardized
liquidity requirements to a U.S.
depository institution holding company
that would be subject to Category IV
standards under the domestic
interagency proposal if the depository
institution holding company
significantly relies on short-term
wholesale funding relative to its total
consolidated assets.9 The proposed
requirement for such Category IV U.S.
depository institution holding
companies would align with a similar
requirement for foreign banking
organizations under this proposal.
Concurrently with this proposal, the
Board is separately inviting comment on
a proposed rule (the Board-only foreign
banking organization enhanced
prudential standards proposal) that
would revise the framework for
determining the applicability of
enhanced prudential standards for
foreign banking organizations with total
consolidated assets of $100 billion or
more, based on the risk profile of their
U.S. operations. The agencies encourage
commenters to review this proposal
together with the Board-only foreign
banking organization enhanced
prudential standards proposal.
8 The agencies are also making a technical
amendment to the proposed regulation text
included in the domestic interagency proposal,
discussed in section VII of this SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section.
9 Currently, no U.S. depository institution
holding company that would be subject to Category
IV standards has a risk profile that would meet the
proposed criteria.
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II. Background
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A. Current Prudential Regulatory
Regime
In 2013, the agencies adopted a
revised regulatory capital rule (the
capital rule) that, among other things,
addressed weaknesses in the regulatory
framework that became apparent in the
2007–2009 financial crisis.10 The capital
rule strengthened the capital
requirements applicable to banking
organizations,11 including U.S. banking
organization subsidiaries of foreign
banking organizations, by improving
both the quality and quantity of
regulatory capital and increasing the
risk-sensitivity of capital requirements.
In addition, to improve the banking
sector’s resiliency to liquidity stress and
the ability of large and internationally
active banking organizations to monitor
and manage liquidity risk, in 2014, the
agencies adopted the liquidity coverage
ratio rule (LCR rule).12 Banking
organizations subject to the LCR rule
must maintain an amount of highquality liquid assets (HQLA) equal to or
greater than their projected total net
cash outflows over a prospective 30calendar-day period.13 Finally, on June
1, 2016, the agencies invited comment
on a proposed rule to implement an
NSFR requirement for large and
internationally active banking
organizations (the NSFR proposed
rule).14 The NSFR proposed rule would
10 The Board and OCC issued a joint final rule on
October 11, 2013 (78 FR 62018), and the FDIC
issued a substantially identical interim final rule on
September 10, 2013 (78 FR 55340). On April 14,
2014 (79 FR 20754), the FDIC adopted the interim
final rule as a final rule with no substantive
changes.
11 Banking organizations subject to the agencies’
capital rule include national banks, state member
banks, insured state nonmember banks, federal and
state savings associations, and top-tier bank holding
companies and savings and loan holding companies
domiciled in the United States not subject to the
Board’s Small Bank Holding Company and Savings
and Loan Holding Company Policy Statement (12
CFR part 225, appendix C, and 12 CFR 238.9),
excluding certain savings and loan holding
companies that are substantially engaged in
insurance underwriting or commercial activities or
that are estate trusts, and bank holding companies
and savings and loan holding companies that are
employee stock ownership plans.
12 See Liquidity Coverage Ratio: Liquidity Risk
Measurement Standards, 79 FR 61440 (October 10,
2014) (LCR FR rule), codified at 12 CFR part 50
(OCC), 12 CFR part 249 (Board), and 12 CFR part
329 (FDIC).
13 For depository institution holding companies
with $50 billion or more, but less than $250 billion,
in total consolidated assets and less than $10 billion
in on-balance sheet foreign exposure, the Board
separately adopted a modified LCR requirement,
described further below. 12 CFR part 249, subpart
G.
14 ‘‘Net Stable Funding Ratio: Liquidity Risk
Measurement Standards and Disclosure
Requirements; Proposed Rule,’’ 81 FR 35124 (June
1, 2016). For depository institution holding
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establish a quantitative metric to
measure and help ensure the stability of
the funding profile of a banking
organization over a one-year time
horizon. During this period, the Board
also implemented further enhanced
capital and liquidity standards for the
largest bank holding companies and
foreign banking organizations, such as
capital planning requirements and
liquidity risk-management standards.15
B. Tailoring in the Current Prudential
Regulatory Regime
Many of the agencies’ current rules,
including the capital rule, the LCR rule,
and the NSFR proposed rule,
differentiate requirements among
banking organizations, including U.S.
intermediate holding companies of
foreign banking organizations, based on
one or more risk indicators, such as total
asset size and on-balance sheet foreign
exposure.
All banking organizations subject to
the capital rule must meet minimum
risk-based and leverage capital
requirements, among other
requirements.16 All banking
organizations must calculate riskweighted assets for purposes of their
risk-based capital requirements using
the generally applicable capital rule and
calculate a leverage ratio that measures
regulatory capital relative to on-balance
sheet assets.17 In addition, banking
organizations with $250 billion or more
in total consolidated assets or $10
billion or more in total on-balance sheet
foreign exposure (the advanced
approaches thresholds), together with
depository institution subsidiaries of
banking organizations meeting those
thresholds (advanced approaches
banking organizations),18 are subject to
additional requirements. A U.S.
advanced approaches banking
organization must calculate its riskweighted assets using the advanced
companies with $50 billion or more, but less than
$250 billion, in total consolidated assets and less
than $10 billion in total on-balance sheet foreign
exposure, the Board separately proposed a modified
NSFR requirement.
15 See Enhanced Prudential Standards for Bank
Holding Companies and Foreign Banking
Organizations, 79 FR 17240 (March 27, 2014) (the
enhanced prudential standards rule), codified at 12
CFR part 252.
16 See 12 CFR part 217 (Board); 12 CFR part 3
(OCC); 12 CFR part 324 (FDIC).
17 See Subpart D of the regulatory capital rule, 12
CFR part 217 (Board); 12 CFR part 3 (OCC); 12 CFR
part 324 (FDIC).
18 See 12 CFR 217.1(c), 12 CFR 217.100(b)
(Board); 12 CFR 3.1(c), 12 CFR 3.100(b) (OCC); 12
CFR 324.1(c), 12 CFR 324.100(b) (FDIC). U.S. global
systemically important bank holding companies
(GSIBs) form a sub-category of advanced
approaches banking organizations.
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approaches,19 and all advanced
approaches banking organizations must
calculate a supplementary leverage
ratio, which measures regulatory capital
relative to on-balance sheet and certain
off-balance sheet exposures, in addition
to the leverage ratio described above.20
In addition, when calculating their
regulatory capital levels, advanced
approaches banking organizations are
required to include most elements of
accumulated other comprehensive
income (AOCI) in regulatory capital,
which better reflects the loss-absorbing
capacity of a banking organization at a
specific point in time, but can also
result in regulatory capital volatility and
require more sophisticated capital
planning and asset-liability
management. Advanced approaches
banking organizations must also
increase their capital conservation
buffers by the amount of a
countercyclical capital buffer under
certain circumstances.
The LCR rule and NSFR proposed
rule also distinguish between banking
organizations based on total asset size
and total on-balance sheet foreign
exposure. Under the LCR rule, the full
LCR requirement generally applies to
depository institution holding
companies and depository institutions
that meet or exceed the advanced
approaches thresholds and to their
depository institution subsidiaries that
have total consolidated assets of $10
billion or more.21 The Board’s
regulations also apply a less stringent,
modified LCR requirement to depository
institution holding companies that do
not meet the advanced approaches
thresholds but have more than $50
billion in total consolidated assets.
Under the NSFR proposed rule, the
proposed NSFR requirement would
apply to the same banking organizations
as the current full LCR requirement.
Similarly, under the NSFR proposed
rule, the Board proposed to apply a less
stringent, modified NSFR requirement
19 See Subpart E of the regulatory capital rule, 12
CFR part 217 (Board); 12 CFR part 3 (OCC); 12 CFR
part 324 (FDIC).
20 U.S. intermediate holding companies that are
advanced approaches banking organizations are not
required to calculate risk-weighted assets using the
advanced approaches, given the costs associated
with maintaining different home country and U.S.
models for the calculation. Relatedly, in certain
cases, U.S. depository institution subsidiaries of
U.S. intermediate holding companies that are
advanced approaches banking organizations also
have been granted requests to be exempted from the
requirement to calculate risk-weighted assets using
the U.S. advanced approaches rule.
21 See 12 CFR 50.1 (OCC); 12 CFR 249.1 (Board);
and 12 CFR 329.1 (FDIC). The full requirements of
the LCR rule include the calculation of the LCR on
each business day and the inclusion of a maturity
mismatch add-on in the total net cash outflow
amount.
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to the same depository institution
holding companies that are subject to
the modified LCR requirement.
The scoping criteria of the regulations
described above rely on a definition of
advanced approaches banking
organization that the agencies
introduced in 2007 in connection with
the adoption of the advanced
approaches risk-based capital rule. The
thresholds established by this definition
were designed to include the largest and
most internationally active banking
organizations. In implementing the
liquidity rules, the agencies relied on
these same thresholds, recognizing that
banking organizations that meet the
advanced approaches thresholds have
balance sheet compositions, off-balance
sheet activities, and funding profiles
that lead to larger and more complex
liquidity risk profiles.
C. Structure and Activities of Foreign
Banking Organizations
The presence of foreign banking
organizations in the United States brings
competitive and countercyclical benefits
to U.S. markets, as these firms serve as
an important source of credit to U.S.
households and businesses and
contribute materially to the strength and
liquidity of U.S. financial markets. Postcrisis financial regulations have resulted
in substantial gains in resiliency for
individual firms and the financial
system as a whole. Foreign banking
organizations’ U.S. operations have
become less fragmented, and these firms
maintain greater capital and liquidity in
the United States.22
The U.S. operations of foreign
banking organizations vary in their
complexity and systemic risk profile.
For example, the U.S. operations of
some foreign banking organizations are
heavily reliant on U.S. dollardenominated short-term wholesale
funding. As demonstrated in the
financial crisis, reliance on short-term
wholesale funding relative to more
stable funding sources (such as capital,
long-term debt, and insured deposits)
presents significant risks to U.S.
financial stability and the safety and
soundness of an individual banking
organization. Among all foreign banking
organizations with combined U.S. assets
of $100 billion or more, weighted shortterm wholesale funding 23 is equivalent
to approximately 30 percent of their
U.S. assets in the aggregate, ranging
from 10 percent to as much as 60
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22 Sources:
Consolidated Financial Statements for
Holding Companies (FR Y–9C) and Complex
Institution Liquidity Monitoring Report (FR 2052a).
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Figure 1 provides a simplified
illustration of a how a foreign banking
organization may structure its U.S.
operations, and depicts the portion of
those operations that would comprise
its combined U.S. operations for
purposes of the proposal.
23 Weighted short-term wholesale funding
provides a measure of a firm’s reliance on certain
less stable forms of funding. See section III.B.2.d of
this Supplementary Information section.
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percent at individual firms.24 Because
the U.S. branches of these foreign
banking organizations have limited
access to more stable funding through
retail deposits, these branches in
particular rely more extensively on
short-term wholesale funding.
In addition, some foreign banking
organizations engage in complex
activities through broker-dealers in the
United States, which are highly
interconnected to U.S. and foreign
financial intermediaries. Among foreign
banking organizations with combined
U.S. assets of $100 billion or more, U.S.
broker-dealer subsidiaries comprise
approximately 25 percent of these
banking organizations’ U.S. assets in
aggregate, with a range of zero to 50
percent at individual firms.25 Overall,
total nonbank assets, including brokerdealer subsidiaries, in aggregate
comprise approximately 25 percent of
the combined U.S. assets of foreign
banking organizations with combined
U.S. assets of $100 billion or more, with
a range of zero to 70 percent at
individual firms.26
The U.S. operations of some foreign
banking organizations also exhibit
greater complexity and face risks due to
significant levels of cross-jurisdictional
activity and off-balance sheet exposure.
Among foreign banking organizations
with combined U.S. assets of $100
billion or more, cross-jurisdictional
activity (excluding cross-jurisdictional
liabilities to non-U.S. affiliates) 27 is
equivalent to approximately 30 percent
of the combined U.S. assets of these
firms in the aggregate, ranging from 13
percent to as much as 81 percent at
individual firms, whereas off-balance
sheet exposure is equivalent to
approximately 30 percent of the
combined U.S. assets of these firms in
the aggregate, ranging from 10 percent to
as much as 51 percent at individual
firms.28 As discussed below, both crossjurisdictional activity and off-balance
sheet exposure provide a measure of a
banking organization’s
24 Source:
FR 2052a, as of June 30, 2018.
Parent Company Only Financial
Statements for Large Holding Companies (FR Y–
9LP), FR Y–7Q, and the Securities Exchange
Commission’s Financial and Operational Combined
Uniform Single Report, as of September 30, 2018.
26 Id.
27 See section III.B.2.a of this SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section. In addition, while the
proposal would allow recognition of financial
collateral in calculating intercompany claims,
recognition of financial collateral is not reflected in
this analysis.
28 This analysis was based on data compiled from
the FR Y–7Q, as well as information collected from
certain foreign banking organizations supervised by
the Board as of September 30, 2018.
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interconnectedness, as well as other
risks.
The agencies are proposing to modify
the regulatory framework applicable to
foreign banking organizations in a
manner commensurate with the risks
such organizations pose to U.S.
financial stability, based on the factors
set forth in this proposal. The proposal
is designed to better address the risks
presented by the U.S. operations of
foreign banking organizations to U.S.
financial stability. The proposed
framework would be consistent with the
framework the agencies proposed for
large U.S. banking organizations, using
consistent indicators of risk.
III. Overview of the Proposal
The proposal builds on the agencies’
existing practice of tailoring capital,
liquidity, and other requirements based
on the size, complexity, and overall risk
profile of banking organizations.
Specifically, the proposal would
establish categories of capital and
liquidity standards to align
requirements with a banking
organization’s risk profile and apply
consistent standards to foreign banking
organizations with similar risk profiles
in the United States. The proposal
generally aligns with the framework set
forth in the domestic interagency
proposal, with modifications to address
the fact that foreign banking
organizations may operate in the United
States directly through U.S. branches
and agencies or through subsidiaries.
For capital, the proposal would
determine the application of
requirements for U.S. intermediate
holding companies with total
consolidated assets of $100 billion or
more and their depository institution
subsidiaries. For liquidity, the proposal
would apply LCR and NSFR
requirements to certain foreign banking
organizations with combined U.S. assets
of $100 billion or more with respect to
any U.S. intermediate holding company
and to certain large depository
institution subsidiaries thereof.29 The
Board is also not currently proposing
but is requesting comment on whether
it should impose a standardized
liquidity requirement on foreign
banking organizations with respect to
their U.S. branch and agency networks,
as well as possible approaches for doing
so.
The proposal also includes a
modification to the proposed
standardized liquidity requirements that
29 As discussed in section V of this
Supplementary Information section, the proposal
would require a foreign banking organization to
calculate and maintain an LCR and NSFR for any
U.S. intermediate holding company.
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would apply under the domestic
interagency proposal to U.S. depository
institution holding companies that meet
certain criteria. Specifically, the Board
is proposing to apply LCR and NSFR
requirements to U.S. depository
institution holding companies that meet
the requirements for Category IV
standards under the domestic
interagency proposal and have $50
billion or more in weighted short-term
wholesale funding. This modification
would reflect the liquidity risks of U.S.
depository institution holding
companies that meet these criteria and
align with the liquidity requirements
the Board is currently proposing for
foreign banking organizations that meet
the same risk-based criteria. No U.S.
depository institution holding company
that currently meets the criteria for
Category IV standards, however, meets
the proposed $50 billion weighted
short-term wholesale funding threshold.
A. Categories of Standards
The proposal would establish riskbased categories for determining the
application of regulatory capital and
standardized liquidity requirements to
the U.S. operations of foreign banking
organizations. Specifically, the proposal
would establish three categories of
standards for foreign banking
organizations with large U.S.
operations—Categories II, III, and IV.30
Capital standards would apply based on
the risk profile of a foreign banking
organization’s U.S. intermediate holding
company and liquidity standards would
apply based on the risk profile of a
foreign banking organization’s
combined U.S. operations,31 in each
case measured based on size, crossjurisdictional activity, weighted shortterm wholesale funding, off-balance
sheet exposure, and nonbank assets.32
For capital, a U.S. intermediate
holding company with $100 billion or
more in total consolidated assets and
each of its depository institution
subsidiaries would be subject to
Category II, Category III, or Category IV
capital standards. The proposal would
determine the applicable category of
30 The domestic interagency proposal also
included a fourth category of standards, Category I,
that would apply to U.S. GSIBs. As discussed
below, the proposal would not include this category
for foreign banking organizations.
31 Accordingly, the category of capital standards
that applies to a U.S. intermediate holding company
of a foreign banking organization may be different
from the category of liquidity standards that applies
to the foreign banking organization.
32 As an alternative, the Board is also requesting
comment on a score-based approach, which would
differentiate requirements for firms using an
aggregated ‘‘score’’ across multiple measures of risk.
See section III.B.3 of this SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section.
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capital standards based on the size,
cross-jurisdictional activity, weighted
short-term wholesale funding, offbalance sheet exposure, and nonbank
assets of the U.S. intermediate holding
company. The agencies are not
proposing to apply regulatory capital
standards to U.S. branches and agencies
of a foreign banking organization
because these branches and agencies do
not maintain regulatory capital separate
from their foreign parents.
For purposes of liquidity, a foreign
banking organization would determine
the applicable category of standards
based on the risk profile of its combined
U.S. operations. Therefore, a foreign
banking organization with $100 billion
or more in combined U.S. assets would
be subject to Category II, Category III, or
Category IV liquidity standards, based
on the size, cross-jurisdictional activity,
weighted short-term wholesale funding,
off-balance sheet exposure, and
nonbank assets of the foreign banking
organization’s combined U.S.
operations, including, if applicable, any
U.S. intermediate holding company and
any U.S. branches and agencies. The
proposal would apply LCR and NSFR
requirements to a foreign banking
organization with respect to a U.S.
intermediate holding company, and the
same category of liquidity standards
would apply to any depository
institution subsidiary that has $10
billion or more in assets and is a
subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate
holding company (covered depository
institution subsidiary). In addition, the
Board is not currently proposing but is
requesting comment on whether it
should impose standardized liquidity
requirements on a foreign banking
organization with respect to its U.S.
branch and agency network, as well as
possible approaches for doing so.
During stress conditions, liquidity needs
can arise suddenly and tend to manifest
in all parts of an organization. For
instance, funding vulnerabilities at the
U.S. branches and agencies of a foreign
banking organization can cause
heightened liquidity risk exposure not
only at the branches and agencies
themselves, but also at the foreign
banking organization’s U.S. subsidiary
operations, and vice versa. For these
reasons, funding vulnerabilities at the
U.S. branches and agencies of a foreign
banking organization may also have an
impact on broader U.S. financial
stability. Accordingly, the proposal
would apply liquidity standards based
on the combined U.S. operations of a
foreign banking organization.
The proposed categories of capital
standards that would apply to a U.S.
intermediate holding company with
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total consolidated assets of $100 billion
or more and its depository institution
subsidiaries, and the proposed
categories of liquidity standards that
would apply to a foreign banking
organization with combined U.S. assets
of $100 billion or more and to its
covered depository institution
subsidiaries, are described below.
Capital Standards
• Category II capital standards would
apply to a U.S. intermediate holding
company (and any depository
institution subsidiary thereof) that has
$700 billion or more in total
consolidated assets or $75 billion or
more in cross-jurisdictional activity. For
purposes of determining categories of
capital (and liquidity) standards, crossjurisdictional activity would be
measured excluding cross-jurisdictional
liabilities to non-U.S. affiliates and
cross-jurisdictional claims on non-U.S.
affiliates to the extent that these claims
are secured by eligible financial
collateral.33 In addition to the generally
applicable capital requirements, these
standards would include the
supplementary leverage ratio;
countercyclical capital buffer, if
applicable; and the requirement to
recognize most elements of AOCI in
regulatory capital.34
• Category III capital standards would
apply to a U.S. intermediate holding
company (and any depository
institution subsidiary thereof) that is not
subject to Category II standards and that
has $250 billion or more in total
consolidated assets or $75 billion or
more in any of the following indicators:
Nonbank assets, weighted short-term
wholesale funding, or off-balance-sheet
exposure.35 In addition to the generally
applicable capital requirements, these
standards would include the
supplementary leverage ratio and, if
33 See
section III.B.2 of the SUPPLEMENTARY
for discussion of the proposed crossjurisdictional activity indicator.
34 In the domestic interagency proposal, the
agencies proposed to require U.S. banking
organizations that are subject to Category II capital
standards to calculate risk-based capital ratios using
both the advanced approaches and the standardized
approach. See domestic interagency proposal, 83 FR
at 66034. Consistent with current requirements, a
U.S. intermediate holding company (and depository
institution subsidiaries thereof) would not be
required to calculate risk-based capital
requirements using the advanced approaches under
the capital rule, and would instead use the
generally applicable capital requirements for
calculating risk-weighted assets. See section IV.A of
this SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section.
35 For purposes of determining categories of
capital and liquidity standards, weighted short-term
wholesale funding would be measured including
transactions with non-U.S. affiliates. See section
III.B.2 of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION.
INFORMATION
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applicable, the countercyclical capital
buffer.
• Category IV capital standards would
apply to a U.S. intermediate holding
company (and any depository
institution subsidiary thereof) that has
at least $100 billion in total
consolidated assets and does not meet
any of the thresholds specified for
Category II or III capital standards.
Category IV capital standards include
the generally applicable capital
requirements.36
Liquidity Standards
• Category II liquidity standards
would apply to a foreign banking
organization (and any covered
depository institution subsidiary
thereof) with $700 billion or more in
combined U.S. assets, or $75 billion or
more in cross-jurisdictional activity. For
purposes of determining categories of
liquidity (and capital) standards, crossjurisdictional activity would be
measured excluding cross-jurisdictional
liabilities to non-U.S. affiliates and
cross-jurisdictional claims on non-U.S.
affiliates to the extent that these claims
are secured by eligible financial
collateral.37 These standards would
include full LCR and NSFR
requirements for a foreign banking
organization with respect to any U.S.
intermediate holding company. In
addition, the full LCR and NSFR
requirements would apply to any
covered depository institution
subsidiary of a foreign banking
organization subject to Category II
liquidity standards.
• Category III liquidity standards
would apply to a foreign banking
organization (and any covered
depository institution subsidiary
thereof) that is not subject to Category
II liquidity standards and that has $250
billion or more in combined U.S. assets
or $75 billion or more in any of the
following indicators: Nonbank assets,
weighted short-term wholesale funding,
or off-balance-sheet exposures. To the
extent the combined U.S. operations of
the foreign banking organization have
$75 billion or more in weighted shortterm wholesale funding, the foreign
banking organization would be subject
to the same standardized liquidity
requirements as would apply under
Category II liquidity standards,
specifically, full LCR and NSFR
36 U.S. intermediate holding companies with total
consolidated assets of less than $100 billion and
their depository institutions subsidiaries would also
remain subject to the generally applicable capital
requirements.
37 See section III.B.2 of the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION for discussion of the proposed crossjurisdictional activity indicator.
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requirements with respect to any U.S.
intermediate holding company. To the
extent the combined U.S. operations of
the foreign banking organization have
less than $75 billion in weighted shortterm wholesale funding, the foreign
banking organization would be subject
to reduced LCR and NSFR requirements
with respect to any U.S. intermediate
holding company.38 Full or reduced
LCR and NSFR requirements would also
apply to any covered depository
institution subsidiary of a foreign
banking organization subject to Category
III liquidity standards, at the same
calibration (i.e., full or reduced) that
would apply to the foreign banking
organization for a U.S. intermediate
holding company.
• Category IV liquidity standards
would apply to a foreign banking
organization that has combined U.S.
assets of $100 billion or more and is not
subject to Category II or III liquidity
standards. Category IV liquidity
standards would include reduced LCR
and NSFR requirements only if the
combined U.S. operations of a foreign
banking organization have $50 billion or
more in weighted short-term wholesale
funding.39 These reduced requirements
would apply to the foreign banking
organization, which would calculate
and maintain an LCR and NSFR for any
U.S. intermediate holding company. No
LCR or NSFR requirement would apply
to depository institution subsidiaries of
foreign banking organizations subject to
Category IV liquidity standards. A
foreign banking organization that is not
subject to Category II or III liquidity
standards but has combined U.S. assets
of $100 billion or more and weighted
short-term wholesale funding within its
U.S. operations of less than $50 billion
would not be subject to standardized
liquidity requirements under this
proposal (but would remain subject
under the Board-only foreign banking
organization enhanced prudential
standards proposal to enhanced
38 The agencies requested comment in the
domestic interagency proposal regarding the
appropriate calibration of the minimum LCR and
proposed NSFR requirements within a range of 70
to 85 percent of the full liquidity requirements. This
proposal would apply a calibration to foreign
banking organizations that is consistent with the
calibration that would apply to U.S. banking
organizations, and similarly requests comment
regarding the appropriate calibration.
39 As discussed in section VI of this
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section, the Board is
also proposing to apply reduced LCR and NSFR
requirements to a U.S. depository institution
holding company that would be subject to Category
IV standards under the domestic interagency
proposal and has $100 billion or more in total
consolidated assets and $50 billion or more in
weighted short-term wholesale funding.
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liquidity requirements in the Board’s
enhanced prudential standards rule).
Similar to the domestic interagency
proposal, the proposed approach with
respect to foreign banking organizations
would allow these firms to identify and
predict what requirements would apply
based on the current characteristics of a
foreign banking organization’s U.S.
operations, and what requirements
would apply if the characteristics of the
foreign banking organization’s
operations were to change. By taking
into consideration the materiality of
each proposed risk-based indicator, the
proposal would provide a basis for
assessing the financial stability and
safety and soundness risks of a foreign
banking organization’s U.S. operations.
In general, the proposed categories of
capital and liquidity standards align
with the categories of standards that
would apply under the domestic
interagency proposal to U.S. banking
organizations. The domestic interagency
proposal includes an additional
category of standards—Category I—that
would apply to U.S. global systemically
important bank holding companies (U.S.
GSIBs), identified using the
methodology under the Board’s GSIB
surcharge rule.40 Because the U.S. GSIB
surcharge rule would not identify a
foreign banking organization or U.S.
intermediate holding company as a U.S.
GSIB, Category I liquidity and capital
standards would not apply to any
foreign banking organization or U.S.
intermediate holding company under
this proposal.
Question 1: What would be the
advantages and disadvantages of
applying capital and liquidity standards
that are more stringent than those in
Category II under the proposed
framework for foreign banking
organizations, comparable to those of
Category I under the domestic
interagency proposal, to a U.S.
intermediate holding company or
combined U.S. operations of the foreign
banking organization with comparable
systemic risk profile to a U.S. GSIB?
What other or different capital or
liquidity standards would be
appropriate to apply to such a U.S.
intermediate holding company or
foreign banking organization with
respect to its U.S. operations, relative to
the standards that would already apply
under the proposal?
40 See 12 CFR part 217, subpart H; see also
Regulatory Capital Rules: Implementation of RiskBased Capital Surcharge for Global Systemically
Important Bank Holding Companies, 80 FR 49082
(August 14, 2015).
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B. Scoping Criteria
1. Size
The proposal would tailor the
application of capital and liquidity
requirements based on the asset size of
either a U.S. intermediate holding
company or the combined U.S.
operations of a foreign banking
organization, as applicable. Section 165
of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act (DoddFrank Act),41 as amended by the
Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief,
and Consumer Protection Act
(EGRRCPA),42 requires the Board to
apply enhanced prudential standards to
foreign banking organizations based on
their total consolidated asset size.43
Section 165 also directs the Board, in its
application of enhanced prudential
standards to foreign banking
organizations, to give due regard to the
principles of national treatment and
equality of competitive opportunity and
to take into account the extent to which
a foreign banking organization is
subject, on a consolidated basis, to
home-country standards that are
comparable to those applied to financial
companies in the United States.44 The
agencies believe a size threshold based
on a foreign banking organization’s U.S.
presence is appropriate for
differentiating among foreign banking
organizations in view of the statutory
purpose, which is to prevent or mitigate
risks to U.S. financial stability.45 The
agencies have also previously used size
as a simple measure of a U.S. banking
organization’s potential systemic impact
as well as safety and soundness risks.46
The asset size thresholds set forth in
this proposal are generally consistent
with those that would apply to large
U.S. banking organizations under the
domestic interagency proposal for
Categories II through IV.
In developing the asset size
thresholds for the domestic interagency
proposal, the Board reviewed current
supervisory reports and considered the
requirements of section 165 of the
Dodd-Frank Act, as amended by
EGRRCPA, together with historical
examples of large domestic banking
41 Public Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010), sec.
165, codified at 12 U.S.C. 5365.
42 Public Law 115–174, 132 Stat. 1296 (2018).
43 See generally 12 U.S.C. 5635 and EGRRCPA
sec. 401.
44 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(2).
45 12 U.S.C. 5365(a)(1).
46 For example, the supplementary leverage ratio
and countercyclical capital buffer generally apply to
U.S. intermediate holding companies with total
consolidated assets of $250 billion or more or total
consolidated on-balance sheet foreign exposure of
$10 billion or more. See 12 CFR 217.10(a),
217.11(b), and 217.100(b); 252.153(e)(2)(i).
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organizations that experienced
significant distress or failure during the
financial crisis. Analysis conducted by
the Board found that the crisis
experience of domestic banking
organizations with total consolidated
assets on the order of $100 billion, $250
billion, and $700 billion presented
materially different risks to U.S.
financial stability and the U.S. economy
more broadly, and thus would support
the differentiation of enhanced
prudential standards for banking
organizations included within those size
groupings.47 In addition, such
significant size thresholds reflected
observed differences in structural and
operational complexity, and in the range
and scale of financial services a banking
organization provides.
To maintain comparability in the
application of capital and liquidity
standards to both domestic and foreign
banking organizations, the agencies are
proposing to use similar asset
thresholds (in addition to the other riskbased indicators discussed below) to
those used in the domestic interagency
proposal to tailor the application of
capital and liquidity standards under
this proposal. Although the agencies
recognize that the U.S. operations of
foreign banking organizations are
structured differently than domestic
banking organizations, the risks to
financial stability and safety and
soundness that stem from size are
present regardless of structure.
Like total asset size for U.S. banking
organizations, the size of the U.S.
operations of a foreign banking
organization provides a measure of the
extent to which customers or
counterparties may be exposed to a risk
of loss or suffer a disruption in the
provision of services in the event that
those operations are subject to an
idiosyncratic stress or are affected by a
systemic stress event. During the
financial crisis, some large foreign
banking organizations rapidly
deleveraged their U.S. operations to
address capital deficiencies, leaving
commercial borrowers without a
primary source of funding and
contributing to large-scale asset fire
sales. For foreign banking organizations
with the largest U.S. operations, stress
among those operations could be
disruptive to U.S. markets and present
significant risks to U.S. financial
stability.
For liquidity requirements, the
proposal would measure size based on
the combined U.S. assets of a foreign
banking organization. For capital
47 See domestic interagency proposal, 83 FR at
66028–66030.
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requirements, the proposal would
measure size based on the total
consolidated assets of a U.S.
intermediate holding company.48 The
proposal would use an asset size
threshold of $700 billion or more for
Category II standards; $250 billion or
more but less than $700 billion for
Category III standards; and $100 billion
or more but less than $250 billion for
Category IV standards.
Question 2: What are the advantages
and disadvantages of using asset size
thresholds to tailor capital and liquidity
requirements? In what ways, if any, does
the inclusion of asset size thresholds in
capital and liquidity standards drive
changes in foreign banking
organizations’ business models and risk
profiles in ways that differ from the
effects of thresholds based on other riskbased indicators? As an alternative to
size thresholds, what other factors
should the agencies consider to
differentiate among the risk profiles of
foreign banking organizations and serve
as tools to tailor capital and liquidity
requirements, and why?
2. Other Risk-Based Indicators
Consistent with the domestic
interagency proposal, this proposal also
would consider the level of crossjurisdictional activity, nonbank assets,
off-balance sheet exposure, and
weighted short-term wholesale funding
of the combined U.S. operations of a
foreign banking organization and of any
U.S. intermediate holding company to
determine the applicable category of
standards for liquidity and capital,
respectively.49 Each indicator would be
measured as the average amount of the
indicator for the four most recent
calendar quarters, generally calculated
in accordance with the instructions to
the Banking Organization Systemic Risk
Report (FR Y–15) or equivalent
reporting form.50 The agencies are
48 Combined U.S. assets are reported on the
Annual Report of Foreign Banking Organizations
(FR Y–7) or FR Y–7Q. Total consolidated assets of
a U.S. intermediate holding company are reported
on the Consolidated Statements for Holding
Companies, under Form FR Y–9C. If a foreign
banking organization that is required to report the
FR Y–7 or Y–7Q has not filed an FR Y–7 or Y–7Q
for each of the four most recent consecutive
quarters, it would be required to use the most recent
quarter or consecutive quarters as reported on FR
Y–7 or FR Y–7Q. Similarly, if the U.S. intermediate
holding company has not filed an FR Y–9C for each
of the four most recent consecutive quarters, it
would be required to use the most recent quarter
or consecutive quarters as reported on FR Y–9C (or
as determined under applicable accounting
standards, if no FR Y–9C has been filed).
49 For the discussion in the domestic interagency
proposal on the other risk-based indicators, see 83
FR at 66030–66031.
50 The Board is separately proposing to amend the
FR Y–15 to collect risk-indicator data for the
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proposing to apply a uniform threshold
of $75 billion for each of these riskbased indicators. A threshold of $75
billion would represent at least 30
percent and as much as 75 percent of
the size of the U.S. operations of a
foreign banking organization or a U.S.
intermediate holding company with
combined U.S. assets or total
consolidated assets, respectively, of
between $100 billion and $250 billion.
The agencies also proposed a $75 billion
threshold for these indicators in the
domestic interagency proposal. Under
this proposal and the domestic
interagency proposal, setting the
thresholds for these risk-based
indicators at $75 billion would ensure
that domestic banking organizations and
the U.S. operations of foreign banking
organizations that account for the vast
majority—over 70 percent—of the total
amount of each risk-based indicator
would be subject to liquidity and capital
requirements. To the extent the levels
and distribution of an indicator
substantially change in the future, the
agencies may consider modifications, if
appropriate.
a. Cross-Jurisdictional Activity
Foreign banking organizations with
U.S. operations that engage in
significant cross-jurisdictional activity
present complexities that support the
application of more stringent standards.
For example, significant cross-border
activity of the U.S. operations of a
foreign banking organization may
require more sophisticated risk
management to appropriately address
the heightened interconnectivity and
complexity of those operations and the
diversity of risks across all jurisdictions
in which the foreign banking
organization provides financial services.
In addition, cross-jurisdictional activity
may present increased challenges in
resolution because there could be legal
or regulatory restrictions that prevent
the transfer of financial resources across
borders where multiple jurisdictions
and regulatory authorities are involved.
The use of a threshold based on crossjurisdictional activity to differentiate the
capital and liquidity requirements
applicable to foreign banking
organizations is also intended to
maintain consistency with the
thresholds proposed for large U.S.
banking organizations under the
domestic interagency proposal. The
agencies’ capital and liquidity
regulations currently use total oncombined U.S. operations of foreign banking
organizations, including any U.S. intermediate
holding company. The FR Y–15 Banking
Organization Systemic Risk Report is proposed to
be renamed FR Y–15 Systemic Risk Report.
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balance sheet foreign exposure, as
reported on the Country Exposure
Report (FFIEC 009), to determine the
application of certain requirements for
depository institution holding
companies and certain of their
depository institution subsidiaries, such
as the supplementary leverage ratio and
countercyclical capital buffer.51
For purposes of determining the
application of capital and liquidity
requirements under the proposal, a
foreign banking organization would
measure cross-jurisdictional activity as
the sum of the cross-jurisdictional assets
and liabilities of its combined U.S.
operations or its U.S. intermediate
holding company, as applicable,
excluding intercompany liabilities and
collateralized intercompany claims.
Measuring cross-jurisdictional activity
taking into account both assets and
liabilities—instead of just assets—would
provide a broader gauge of the scale of
cross-border operations and associated
risks, as it includes both borrowing and
lending activities outside of the United
States.52 The proposal would adjust the
measurement of cross-jurisdictional
activity to exclude intercompany
liabilities and to recognize collateral in
calculating intercompany claims in
order to reflect the structural differences
between foreign banking organizations’
operations in the United States and
domestic holding companies.
Specifically, the proposed crossjurisdictional activity indicator would
exclude liabilities of the combined U.S.
operations or U.S. intermediate holding
company that reflect transactions with
non-U.S. affiliates. Intercompany
liabilities generally represent funding
from the foreign banking organization to
its U.S. operations and, in the case of
certain long-term debt instruments, may
be required by regulation.53 The
proposed exclusion recognizes the
benefit of the foreign banking
organization providing support to its
U.S. operations. Short-term funding
from affiliates, which may pose
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51 See
12 CFR 217.10 (requiring advanced
approaches Board-regulated institutions to maintain
a supplementary leverage ratio); 217.11(b)
(requiring advanced approaches Board-regulated
institutions to maintain a countercyclical capital
buffer); 217.100(b)(1) (describing the size and onbalance sheet foreign exposure thresholds for
determining an advanced approaches Boardregulated institution).
52 The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision
(BCBS) recently amended its measurement of crossborder activity to more consistently reflect
derivatives, and the Board anticipates it will
separately propose changes to the FR Y–15 in a
manner consistent with this change. Any related
changes to the proposed cross-jurisdictional activity
indicator would be updated through those
separately proposed changes to the FR Y–15.
53 See 12 CFR 252.162 and 12 CFR 252.165.
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heightened liquidity risks to the U.S.
operations, would be captured in the
proposal’s measure of weighted shortterm wholesale funding.
Foreign banking organizations’ U.S.
operations often intermediate
transactions between U.S. clients and
foreign markets, including by
facilitating access for foreign clients to
U.S. markets, and clearing and settling
U.S. dollar-denominated transactions. In
addition, they engage in transactions to
manage enterprise-wide risks. In these
roles, they engage in substantial and
regular transactions with non-U.S.
affiliates. In recognition that the U.S.
operations have increased crossjurisdictional activity as a result of these
activities, the proposal would include in
cross-jurisdictional claims only the net
exposure (i.e., net of collateral value
subject to haircuts) of all secured
transactions with non-U.S. affiliates to
the extent that these claims are
collateralized by financial collateral.54
The proposed recognition of financial
collateral would apply to all types of
claims, including repurchase
agreements and securities lending
agreements. Specifically, claims on nonU.S. affiliates would be reduced by the
value of any financial collateral in a
manner consistent with the agencies’
capital rule,55 which permits, for
example, banking organizations to
recognize financial collateral when
measuring the exposure amount of
repurchase agreements and securities
borrowing and securities lending
transactions (together, repo-style
transactions).56 The capital rule
recognizes as financial collateral certain
types of high-quality collateral,
including cash on deposit and securities
issued by the U.S. government, as well
as certain types of equity securities and
debt. With the exception of cash on
deposit, the banking organization also is
required to have a perfected, firstpriority interest in the collateral or,
outside of the United States, the legal
equivalent thereof.57 Permitting the
54 See
the definition of ‘‘financial collateral’’ at 12
CFR 3.2 (OCC); 12 CFR 217.2 (Board); 12 CFR 324.2
(FDIC).
55 See 12 CFR 3.37 (OCC); 12 CFR 217.37 (Board);
12 CFR 324.37 (FDIC).
56 See the definition of ‘‘repo-style transaction’’ at
12 CFR 3.2 (OCC); 12 CFR 217.2 (Board); 12 CFR
324.2 (FDIC).
57 See 12 CFR 217.2. The proposal would differ
from the FFIEC 009, on which U.S. intermediate
holding companies report cross-border claims, in
two respects. The FFIEC 009 uses different rules to
recognize collateral, using the term ‘‘eligible
collateral,’’ which includes cash as well as
investment grade debt or marketable equity
securities. In addition, the FFIEC 009 requires
reporting of repurchase agreements, securities
lending agreements and other similar financing
agreements at the value of the outstanding claim,
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reduction of certain claims on non-U.S.
affiliates if the collateral meets the
definition of financial collateral would
ensure that the collateral is liquid, while
the use of supervisory haircuts would
also limit risk associated with price
volatility. In addition, relying on the
capital rule’s definition of financial
collateral would provide clarity
regarding the types of collateral eligible
to reduce the amount of crossjurisdictional claims under this
approach.
As an example of how the proposed
financial collateral recognition would
operate, if the U.S. operations of a
foreign banking organization placed
cash with the parent foreign banking
organization through a reverse
repurchase agreement, and the parent
foreign banking organization provided
securities that qualified as financial
collateral, the exposure of the U.S.
operations would be reduced by the
value of the securities in a manner
consistent with the capital rule’s
collateral haircut approach. If the value
of the claim exceeds the value of the
financial collateral after taking into
account supervisory haircuts, then the
uncollateralized portion of the claim
would be included in the foreign
banking organization’s measure of crossjurisdictional activity. Conversely, if the
value of the collateral after taking into
account supervisory haircuts exceeds
the value of the claim, the exposure to
the non-U.S. affiliate would be excluded
from the measure of cross-jurisdictional
activity.
In addition to the proposal to exclude
intercompany liabilities and certain
collateralized intercompany claims from
the measure of cross-jurisdictional
activity, the agencies are requesting
comment on alternatives to adjusting
the measure for cross-jurisdictional
activity to recognize that the U.S.
intermediate holding company or
combined U.S. operations engage in
regardless of the amount of collateral provided. See
Instructions for the Preparation of the Country
Exposure Report (FFIEC 009) at 12–13 (effective
September 2016). The proposal would use the
concept of financial collateral from the agencies’
capital rule and would recognize collateral for any
claim, including claims to which the collateral
haircut approach applies under the agencies’ capital
rule.
In addition, the FFIEC 009 measures crossjurisdictional activity on an ultimate-risk basis,
whereby claims are allocated based on the country
of residence of the ultimate obligor, which, in
certain cases, can mean the country or residence of
the collateral provided. Securities lending
agreements and repurchase agreements, however,
are allocated based on the residence of the
counterparty, without taking into consideration the
location of the collateral. The proposal would
require allocation of exposures on an ultimate-risk
basis (subject to the netting described above).
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substantial and regular transactions
with non-U.S. affiliates.
Under the first alternative, the
agencies would exclude all transactions
with non-U.S. affiliates from the
computation of the cross-jurisdictional
activity of a U.S. intermediate holding
company or the combined U.S.
operations of a foreign banking
organization. This alternative would
focus only on third-party assets and
liabilities and may be a less burdensome
way to account for the structural
differences between foreign banking
organizations’ operations in the United
States and large domestic holding
companies.
Under the second alternative, the
agencies would adjust the $75 billion
threshold for the cross-jurisdictional
activity indicator. For example, the
agencies could apply a threshold of
$100 billion for cross-jurisdictional
activity such that the U.S. intermediate
holding company or combined U.S.
operations of a foreign banking
organization would be subject to
Category II capital or liquidity standards
if it exceeded this threshold. This
alternative would recognize the flows
between a foreign banking
organization’s U.S. operations and its
foreign affiliates without making any
additional adjustments to address
intercompany liabilities or
collateralized intercompany claims.
This alternative would not require a
foreign banking organization to monitor
collateral transfers or calculate
supervisory haircuts in measuring its
cross-jurisdictional activity.
Question 3: What are the advantages
and disadvantages of recognizing the
value of collateral for certain
transactions with non-U.S. affiliates in
the computation of the crossjurisdictional activity of a U.S.
intermediate holding company or the
combined U.S. operations of a foreign
banking organization? How would this
recognition align with the objectives of
the proposed indicator as a measure of
operational complexity, scope, and risks
associated with operations and
activities in foreign jurisdictions and
with principles of national treatment
and equality of competitive
opportunity?
Question 4: What would be the
advantages and disadvantages of
excluding from the measure of crossjurisdictional activity liabilities to nonU.S. affiliates? How would this
exclusion align with the objectives of the
proposed indicator as a measure of
operational complexity, scope, and risks
associated with operations and
activities in foreign jurisdictions and
with principles of national treatment
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and equality of competitive
opportunity?
Question 5: What are the advantages
and disadvantages of recognizing
collateral for all repo-style transactions
and other collateralized positions? To
what extent should the type of
transaction determine whether
collateral is recognized?
Question 6: What are the advantages
and disadvantages of relying on the
definition of financial collateral in the
agencies’ capital rule and applying
supervisory haircuts in calculating the
amount of cross-jurisdictional claims?
What are the burdens associated with
this approach and how do these
burdens compare with the benefits? Are
there other criteria that the agencies
should consider in addition to this
approach (e.g., the amount of time that
would be needed to monetize the
collateral) and why?
Question 7: What would be the
advantages and disadvantages of other
ways to define eligible collateral, such
relying on the definition of HQLA in the
LCR rule? Under this alternative
approach, collateral would be
recognized in the calculation of the
exposure if the collateral is HQLA.
Would relying on the definition of
HQLA help ensure the collateral is
liquid and provide greater clarity on the
types of collateral that could be
recognized? What are the burdens
associated with this approach and how
do these burdens compare with the
benefits?
Question 8: As discussed above,
measuring cross-jurisdictional activity
on an ultimate risk basis takes into
consideration both the type of collateral,
and the location of the collateral or
issuer. On the FFIEC 009, if collateral is
in the form of investment grade debt or
marketable securities, risk is allocated
based on the residence of the issuer of
the security, while cash collateral is
allocated based on the residence of the
legal entity where the cash is held. What
would be the advantages and
disadvantages of allocating crossjurisdictional claims based on the
location of the entity holding the
collateral for securities and cash?
Question 9: On the FFIEC 009,
repurchase agreements, securities
lending agreements, and other similar
financial transactions cannot be reallocated or ‘‘transferred’’ to a different
jurisdiction based on the location of the
collateral or issuer. What would be the
advantages and disadvantages of
allowing repurchase agreements,
securities financing transactions, and
other similar agreements to be excluded
from the measure of cross-jurisdictional
activity if the collateral was issued by a
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U.S. entity or, for cash collateral,
located in the United States? How
would such treatment align with the
objectives of the proposed indicator as
a measure of operational complexity,
scope, and risks associated with
operations and activities in foreign
jurisdictions and with principles of
national treatment and equality of
competitive opportunity?
Question 10: What are the advantages
and disadvantages of measuring crossjurisdictional activity on an immediatecounterparty basis (i.e., on the basis of
the country of residence of the borrower)
rather than on an ultimate-risk basis?
What, if any, clarifications could be
made to the measurement of crossjurisdictional activity on an ultimaterisk basis to ensure consistency across
banking organizations and more
accurate assessment of risk?
Question 11: What is the most
appropriate way in which the proposed
cross-jurisdictional activity indicator
could account for the risk of
transactions with a delayed settlement
date, and why? What are the advantages
and disadvantages of the use of
settlement date accounting versus trade
date accounting for purposes of the
cross-jurisdictional activity indicator?
Question 12: What are the advantages
or disadvantages of the alternative
approaches to measuring non-U.S.
affiliate transactions for purposes of the
cross-jurisdictional activity indicator?
How do these alternatives compare to
the proposal?
Question 13: What other positions, if
any, should be excluded from or
included in the cross-jurisdictional
activity indicator for purposes of
determining capital and liquidity
standards, and why? How would
excluding from the cross-jurisdictional
activity measure a broader or narrower
set of intercompany assets and
liabilities align with the objectives of the
proposed indicator as a measure of
operational complexity, scope, and risks
associated with operations and
activities in foreign jurisdictions and
with principles of national treatment
and equality of competitive
opportunity?
Question 14: What would be the
advantages and disadvantages of
including in or excluding from the
proposed cross-jurisdictional activity
indicator positions of the U.S. branches
and agencies of a foreign banking
organization with the parent foreign
banking organization or other non-U.S.
affiliates? For example, what would be
the advantages or disadvantages of
including or excluding reported gross
due from and gross due to the parent
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foreign banking organization or other
non-U.S. affiliates?
Question 15: What modifications to
the proposed cross-jurisdictional
activity measure should the agencies
consider to better align it with the
proposed treatment for U.S. banking
organizations under the domestic
interagency proposal and promote
consistency in the measurement of
assets and liabilities across the
agencies’ regulatory capital and
liquidity framework and applicable
accounting standards, and why? How
would any such modification more
appropriately account for the risks of
cross-jurisdictional activity for foreign
banking organizations and mitigate
risks to U.S. financial stability?
Question 16: To what extent would
using a particular measure of crossjurisdictional activity create incentives
for foreign banking organizations to
restructure relationships between U.S.
subsidiaries, U.S. branches and
agencies, and non-U.S. affiliates?
Question 17: What alternative
indicators should the agencies consider
to the proposed cross-jurisdictional
activity indicator as a measure of crossborder activity of a foreign banking
organization? How would any
alternative indicator align with the
proposed cross-jurisdictional activity
measure for U.S. banking organizations
under the domestic interagency
proposal?
Question 18: What are the advantages
and disadvantages of the proposal or
the alternatives in combination with
other potential changes to the
measurement and reporting of crossjurisdictional activity discussed above
(e.g., ultimate-risk basis)? How would
changes to the measurement and
reporting of cross-jurisdictional activity
in combination with the proposal or
alternatives align with the objectives of
the proposed indicator as a measure of
operational complexity, scope, and risks
associated with operations and
activities in foreign jurisdictions and
with principles of national treatment
and equality of competitive
opportunity?
Question 19: Data reported on the FR
Y–15 is used to measure the systemic
risk of large banking organizations,
including to identify and calibrate
surcharges applied to U.S. GSIBs. The
Board may amend the FR Y–15 in this
context, and would seek comment on
the effect of any changes on the U.S.
GSIB surcharge framework as well as on
the advantages and disadvantages of
incorporating these changes into the
calculation of risk indicators. The Board
also may separately amend the FR Y–15
in the context of the calculation of risk
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indicators. What are the advantages and
disadvantages of the risk-based
indicator definitions tracking the inputs
to the U.S. GSIB surcharge framework?
b. Nonbank Assets
The amount of a banking
organization’s investment in nonbank
subsidiaries provides a measure of the
organization’s business and operational
complexity. Specifically, banking
organizations with significant
investments in nonbank subsidiaries are
more likely to have complex corporate
structures and funding relationships,
and substantial inter-affiliate
transactions that can add operational
challenges. A banking organization’s
complexity is positively correlated with
the impact of the organization’s failure
or distress.58 U.S. intermediate holding
companies can maintain significant
investments in nonbank subsidiaries,
and therefore may present attendant
risks.
Nonbank activities may involve a
broader range of risks than those
associated with banking activities, and
can increase interconnectedness with
other financial firms, requiring
sophisticated risk management and
governance, including capital planning,
stress testing, and liquidity risk
management. If not adequately
managed, the risks associated with
nonbank activities could present
significant safety and soundness
concerns and increase financial stability
risks. The distress or failure of a
nonbank subsidiary could be
destabilizing to the U.S. operations of a
foreign banking organization and the
foreign banking organization itself, and
cause counterparties and creditors to
lose confidence in the organization’s
U.S. or global operations. Nonbank
assets also reflect the degree to which a
foreign banking organization and its
U.S. operations may be engaged in
activities through legal entities that are
not subject to separate capital or
liquidity requirements or to the direct
regulation and supervision applicable to
a regulated banking entity.
Under the proposal, nonbank assets
would be measured as the average
amount of assets in consolidated
nonbank subsidiaries 59 and any direct
58 See Regulatory Capital Rules: Implementation
of Risk-Based Capital Surcharges for Global
Systemically Important Bank Holding Companies,
80 FR 49082 (August 14, 2015). See also ‘‘Global
systemically important banks: Updated assessment
methodology and the higher loss absorbency
requirement’’ (paragraph 25), available at https://
www.bis.org/publ/bcbs255.htm.
59 The proposed measure of nonbank assets
would exclude assets in a national bank, state
member bank, and state nonmember bank, as well
as assets in other depository institutions, including
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investments in unconsolidated nonbank
subsidiaries.60 The proposed nonbank
assets indicator would align with the
nonbank assets indicator in the
domestic interagency proposal, as well
as with the Board’s capital plan rule.61
c. Off-Balance Sheet Exposure
Off-balance sheet exposure
complements the measure of size by
taking into consideration financial and
banking activities not reflected on the
balance sheet of a foreign banking
organization’s U.S. operations. Like size,
off-balance sheet exposure provides a
measure of the extent to which
customers or counterparties may be
exposed to a risk of loss or suffer a
disruption in the provision of services.
In addition, off-balance sheet exposure
can lead to significant future draws on
liquidity, particularly in times of stress.
In the financial crisis, for example,
vulnerabilities among the U.S.
operations of foreign banking
organizations were exacerbated by
draws on commitments. These types of
exposures can be a source of safety and
soundness risk, as organizations with
significant off-balance sheet exposure
may have to fund these positions in the
market in a time of stress. The nature of
these risks for foreign banking
organizations of significant size and
complexity can also lead to financial
stability risk, as they can manifest
rapidly and with less transparency to
other market participants. In addition,
because draws on off-balance sheet
exposures such as committed credit and
liquidity facilities tend to increase in
times of stress, they can exacerbate the
effects of stress conditions.62
a federal savings association, federal savings bank,
or state savings association. The nonbank assets
measure also would exclude the assets in each Edge
or Agreement Corporation that is held through a
banking subsidiary.
60 The proposed measure of nonbank assets
would include the assets in each Edge or Agreement
Corporation not held through a banking subsidiary,
and would exclude assets in a federal savings
association, federal savings bank, or state savings
association.
61 See 12 CFR 225.8. The capital plan rule defines
‘‘average total nonbank assets’’ with respect to a
U.S. intermediate holding company subject to the
capital plan rule as the average of the total nonbank
assets of the U.S. intermediate holding company,
calculated in accordance with the instructions to
the FR Y–9LP, for the four most recent consecutive
quarters or, if the U.S. intermediate holding
company has not filed the FR Y–9LP for each of the
four most recent consecutive quarters, for the most
recent quarter or consecutive quarters, as
applicable. 12 CFR 225.8(d)(2).
62 See William F. Bassett, Simon Gilchrist,
Gretchen C. Weinbach, Egon Zakrajsˇek, ‘‘Improving
Our Ability to Monitor Bank Lending,’’ in Risk
Topography: Systemic Risk and Macro Modeling
149–161 (Markus Brunnermeier and Arvind
Krishnamurthy, eds. 2014), available at: https://
www.nber.org/chapters/c12554.
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Off-balance sheet exposure may also
amplify contagion effects. Some offbalance sheet exposures, such as
derivatives, are concentrated among the
largest financial firms.63 The distress or
failure of one party to a financial
contract, such as a derivative or
securities financing transaction, can
trigger disruptive terminations of these
contracts that destabilize the defaulting
party’s otherwise solvent affiliates.64
Such a default also can lead to
disruptions in markets for financial
contracts, including by resulting in
rapid market-wide unwinding of trading
positions.65 In this way, the effects of
one party’s failure or distress can be
amplified by its off-balance sheet
connections with other financial market
participants.
Under the proposal, off-balance sheet
exposure would be measured as the
difference between total exposure and
on-balance sheet assets. Total exposure
includes on-balance sheet assets plus
certain off-balance sheet exposures,
including derivative exposures, repostyle transactions, and other off-balance
sheet exposures (such as commitments).
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d. Weighted Short-Term Wholesale
Funding
The proposed weighted short-term
wholesale funding indicator would
measure the level of reliance on shortterm wholesale funding sources.66 This
indicator provides a measure of
liquidity risk, as reliance on short-term,
generally uninsured funding from more
63 See, e.g., Sheri M. Markose, Systemic Risk from
Global Financial Derivatives: A Network Analysis
of Contagion and its Mitigation with SuperSpreader Tax, IMF Working Papers (Nov. 30, 2012),
available at: https://www.imf.org/en/Publications/
WP/Issues/2016/12/31/Systemic-Risk-from-GlobalFinancial-Derivatives-A-Network-Analysis-ofContagion-and-Its-40130.
64 To address these risks at the largest and most
systemically risky firms, the agencies have
established restrictions relating to the qualified
financial contracts of U.S. GSIBs, the depository
institution subsidiaries of U.S. GSIBs, and the U.S.
operations of systemically important foreign
banking organizations. See 12 CFR part 252, subpart
I (Board); 12 CFR part 47 (OCC); and 12 CFR part
382 (FDIC).
65 See, e.g., The Orderly Liquidation of Lehman
Brothers Holdings Inc. under the Dodd-Frank Act,
5 FDIC Quarterly No. 2, 31 (2011), https://
www.fdic.gov/bank/analytical/quarterly/2011-vol52/article2.pdf.
66 Specifically, short-term wholesale funding is
the amount of a firm’s funding obtained from
wholesale counterparties or retail brokered deposits
and sweeps with a remaining maturity of one year
or less. Categories of short-term wholesale funding
are then weighted based on four residual maturity
buckets; the asset class of collateral, if any, backing
the funding; and characteristics of the counterparty.
Weightings reflect risk of runs and attendant fire
sales. See 12 CFR 217.406 and Regulatory Capital
Rules: Implementation of Risk-Based Capital
Surcharges for Global Systemically Important Bank
Holding Companies, 80 FR 49082 (August 14,
2015).
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sophisticated counterparties can make
those operations vulnerable to largescale funding runs. In particular, foreign
banking organizations that fund longterm assets with short-term liabilities
from financial intermediaries such as
investment funds may need to rapidly
sell less liquid assets to meet
withdrawals and maintain their
operations in a time of stress, which
they may be able to do only at ‘‘fire
sale’’ prices. Such asset fire sales can
cause rapid deterioration in a foreign
banking organization’s financial
condition and negatively affect broader
financial stability by driving down asset
prices across the market. As a result,
weighted short-term wholesale funding
reflects both safety and soundness and
financial stability risks. Short-term
wholesale funding also provides a
measure of interconnectedness among
market participants, including other
financial sector entities, which can
provide a mechanism for transmission
of distress. Weighted short-term
wholesale funding would include
exposures between the U.S. operations
of a foreign banking organization and its
non-U.S. affiliates, as reliance on shortterm wholesale funding from foreign
affiliates can contribute to the funding
vulnerability of a foreign banking
organization’s U.S. operations in times
of stress.
Question 20: What are the advantages
and disadvantages of the proposed riskbased indicators? What different
indicators should the agencies consider,
and why?
Question 21: At what level should the
threshold for each indicator be set, and
why? Commenters are encouraged to
provide data supporting their
recommendations.
Question 22: The agencies are
considering whether Category II
standards should apply based on a
banking organization’s weighted shortterm wholesale funding, nonbank
assets, and off-balance sheet exposure,
using a higher threshold than the $75
billion that would apply for Category III
standards, in addition to the thresholds
discussed above based on asset size and
cross-jurisdictional activity. For
example, a foreign banking
organization’s combined U.S.
operations and its depository institution
subsidiaries could be subject to Category
II standards if one or more of these
indicators equaled or exceeded a level
such as $100 billion or $200 billion. A
threshold of $200 billion would
represent at least 30 percent and as
much as 80 percent of the combined
U.S. assets of a foreign banking
organization with between $250 billion
and $700 billion in combined U.S.
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assets. If the agencies were to adopt
additional indicators for purposes of
identifying foreign banking
organizations with U.S. operations that
should be subject to Category II
standards, at what level should the
threshold for each indicator be set, and
why? Commenters are encouraged to
provide data supporting their
recommendations.
3. Alternative Scoping Criteria
An alternative approach for tailoring
the application of enhanced prudential
standards to a foreign banking
organization would be to use a single,
comprehensive score to assess the risk
profile and systemic footprint of a
foreign banking organization’s
combined U.S. operations or U.S.
intermediate holding company. The
Board uses such an identification
methodology (scoring methodology) to
identify a U.S. GSIB and apply riskbased capital surcharges to these firms.
As an alternative in the domestic
interagency proposal, the agencies
described a scoring methodology that
could be used to tailor prudential
standards for domestic banking
organizations.
The scoring methodology in the
Board’s regulations is used to calculate
a U.S. GSIB’s capital surcharge under
two methods.67 The first method is
based on the sum of a bank holding
company’s systemic indicator scores
reflecting its size, interconnectedness,
cross-jurisdictional activity,
substitutability, and complexity
(method 1). The second method is based
on the sum of these same measures of
risk, except that the substitutability
measures are replaced with a measure of
the bank holding company’s reliance on
short-term wholesale funding (method
2).68 Consistent with the domestic
interagency proposal and as an
alternative to the threshold approach
under this proposal, the agencies are
seeking comment on use of the scoring
methodology to tailor the application of
enhanced prudential standards to the
U.S. operations of foreign banking
organizations.
The scoring methodology was
designed to identify and assess the
systemic risk of large U.S. banking
67 Application of a U.S. GSIB’s capital surcharge
is determined based on an annual calculation.
Similarly, the alternative scoping criteria under this
proposal would be based on an annual calculation.
See 12 CFR part 217, subpart H.
68 For more discussion relating to the scoring
methodology, please see the Board’s final rule
establishing the scoring methodology. See
Regulatory Capital Rules: Implementation of RiskBased Capital Surcharges for Global Systemically
Important Bank Holding Companies, 80 FR 49082
(Aug. 14, 2015).
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organizations, and similarly can be used
to measure the risks posed by the U.S.
operations of foreign banking
organizations. The component measures
of the scoring methodology identify
banking organizations that have
heightened risk profiles, and provide a
basis for assessing risk to safety and
soundness and U.S. financial stability.
Size, interconnectedness, crossjurisdictional activity, substitutability,
complexity, and short-term wholesale
funding are indicators of risk for both
foreign and domestic banking
organizations. Similar to the thresholdsbased approach set forth in this
proposal, the indicators used in the
scoring methodology closely align with
the risk-based factors specified in
section 165 of the Dodd-Frank Act for
applying enhanced prudential
standards. Because this information
would be reported publicly, use of the
scoring methodology would promote
transparency in the application of such
standards to foreign banking
organizations.
The Board has previously used the
scoring methodology and global
methodology 69 to identify and apply
enhanced prudential standards to U.S.
subsidiaries and operations of foreign
global systemically important banking
organizations (foreign GSIBs). For
example, the Board’s restrictions on
qualified financial contracts and total
loss-absorbing capacity requirements
apply to U.S. GSIBs and the U.S.
operations of foreign GSIBs, with the
latter identified under the Board’s
scoring methodology or the global
methodology.70
Under the alternative scoring
approach, the size of a foreign banking
organization’s combined U.S. assets,
together with the method 1 or method
2 score of its U.S. operations under the
scoring methodology, would be used to
determine which category of liquidity
standards would apply. Consistent with
the proposal, most enhanced prudential
standards would be based on the
method 1 or method 2 score applicable
to a foreign banking organization’s
combined U.S. operations. The
application of capital standards,
69 Global methodology means the assessment
methodology and the higher loss absorbency
requirement for global systemically important banks
issued by the BCBS, as updated from time to time.
12 CFR 252.2.
70 See 12 CFR 252.82(b) (definition of ‘‘covered
entity’’ with regard to restrictions on qualified
financial contracts); 12 CFR 252.160 (definition of
‘‘covered IHC’’ with regard to total loss-absorbing
capacity requirements). See also, 12 CFR 252.153(b)
(identification of foreign GSIBs in the enhanced
prudential standards rule; 12 CFR 252.170(a)(2)(ii)
(definition of ‘‘major foreign banking organization’’
in single counterparty credit limits rule).
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however, would apply based on the
method 1 or method 2 score of a foreign
banking organization’s U.S.
intermediate holding company
depository institution subsidiary. U.S.
intermediate holding companies already
report information required to calculate
method 1 and method 2 scores, and in
connection with this proposal, those
reporting requirements would be
extended to include a foreign banking
organization’s combined U.S.
operations.71
To determine which category of
standards would apply under the
alternative scoring methodology, the
Board considered the distribution of
method 1 and method 2 scores of the
U.S. operations of foreign banking
organizations, U.S. intermediate holding
companies, domestic bank holding
companies, and certain savings and loan
holding companies with at least $100
billion in total consolidated assets.72 As
discussed below, the agencies are
providing ranges of scores for the
application of Category II and Category
III standards. If the agencies adopt a
final rule that uses the scoring
methodology to establish tailoring
thresholds, the agencies would set a
single score within the listed ranges for
the application of Category II and
Category III standards. Like under the
indicators-based approach, a subsidiary
depository institution of a foreign
banking organization would be subject
to the same category of standards as the
foreign banking organization.
Category II. In selecting the ranges of
method 1 or method 2 scores that could
define the application of Category II
standards, the Board considered the
potential of a banking organization’s
material distress or failure to disrupt the
U.S. financial system or economy. The
Board estimated method 1 and method
2 scores for domestic banking
organizations with more than $250
billion in total consolidated assets, and
foreign banking organizations with more
than $250 billion in combined U.S.
assets. To this sample, the Board added
estimates of method 1 and method 2
scores for a banking organization whose
distress impacted U.S. financial stability
during the crisis (Wachovia), and
estimated method 1 and method 2
scores assuming significant growth in
operations (e.g., if one or more U.S.
intermediate holding companies each
had $700 billion in assets). The Board
71 As discussed above, the Board is separately
proposing to amend the FR Y–15 to collect riskindicator data for the combined U.S. operations of
foreign banking organizations.
72 In conducting its analysis, the Board
considered method 1 and method 2 scores as of
September 30, 2018.
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also considered the outlier method 1
and method 2 scores for domestic and
foreign banking organizations with more
than $250 billion in total consolidated
assets that are not U.S. GSIBs.73
Based on this analysis and to
maintain comparability to the domestic
interagency proposal, under the
alternative scoring approach the
agencies would apply Category II
liquidity standards to any foreign
banking organization with at least $100
billion in combined U.S. assets and
whose combined U.S. operations have
(a) a method 1 score that meets or
exceeds a minimum score between 60
and 80, or (b) a method 2 score that
meets or exceeds a minimum score
between 100 to 150. These same size
thresholds and score ranges would
apply to U.S. intermediate holding
companies for the application of capital
standards.
Category III. Under the proposal, the
agencies would apply Category III
liquidity standards to a foreign banking
organization with combined U.S. assets
of $250 billion or more, or, for capital
standards, a U.S. intermediate holding
company with total consolidated assets
of $250 billion or more that does not
meet the criteria for Category II. This
reflects, among other things, the crisis
experience of domestic banking
organizations with total consolidated
assets of $250 billion or more, which
presented materially different risks to
U.S. financial stability relative to
banking organizations with less than
$250 billion in assets. Similarly, under
the domestic interagency proposal, the
agencies would at a minimum apply
Category III standards to a banking
organization with assets of $250 billion
or more, reflecting the threshold above
which the Board must apply enhanced
prudential standards under section 165.
The domestic interagency proposal
seeks comment on an alternative scoring
approach under which a banking
organization with total consolidated
assets between $100 billion and $250
billion that has a method 1 or method
2 score within a specified range would
be subject to Category III standards.
Specifically, the agencies proposed
selecting a minimum score for
application of Category III standards
between 25 and 45 under method 1, or
of between 50 and 85 under method 2.
73 Outliers can be determined by a number of
statistical methods. For these purposes, the Board
computed an outlier as the third quartile plus three
times the interquartile range of method 1 and
method 2 scores of these U.S. bank holding
companies, U.S. savings and loan holding
companies, U.S. intermediate holding companies,
and the combined U.S. operations of foreign
banking organizations.
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The maximum score for application of
the Category III standards would be one
point lower than the minimum score
selected for application of Category II
standards. In selecting these ranges, the
Board compared the scores of domestic
banking organizations with total
consolidated assets of between $100
billion and $250 billion with those of
banking organizations with total
consolidated assets greater than $250
billion. The Board performed a similar
analysis including the scores of foreign
banking organizations and found similar
results. The agencies are therefore
considering the same thresholds for
application of Category III standards to
foreign banking organizations under the
alternative scoring approach. Use of
these thresholds would maintain
comparable treatment between domestic
banking organizations and the U.S.
operations of foreign banking
organizations under the alternative
scoring approach.
Specifically, under the alternative
scoring approach, Category III standards
would apply to a foreign banking
organization with combined U.S. assets
between $100 billion and $250 billion
with a method 1 score that meets or
exceeds a minimum score between 25
and 45, or a method 2 score that meets
or exceeds a minimum score between 50
and 85, and in either case is below the
score threshold for Category II
standards. These same size thresholds
and score ranges would apply to U.S.
intermediate holding companies for the
application of capital standards.
Category IV: Under the alternative
scoring approach, Category IV liquidity
standards would apply to a foreign
banking organization with at least $100
billion in combined U.S. assets whose
method 1 or method 2 score for its
combined U.S. operations is below the
minimum score threshold for Category
III. Likewise, Category IV capital
standards would apply to a foreign
banking organization with a U.S.
intermediate holding company that has
at least $100 billion in total assets and
does not meet any threshold specified
for Category III.
Question 23: What are the advantages
and disadvantages to the use of the
alternative scoring approach and
category thresholds described above
instead of the proposed thresholds for
foreign banking organizations?
Question 24: If the agencies were to
use the alternative scoring approach to
differentiate foreign banking
organizations’ U.S. operations for
purposes of tailoring prudential
standards, should the agencies use
method 1 scores, method 2 scores, or
both? What are the challenges of
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applying the alternative scoring
approach to the combined U.S.
operations or U.S. intermediate holding
company of a foreign banking
organization? What modifications to the
alternative scoring approach, if any,
should the agencies consider (e.g.,
should intercompany transactions be
reflected in the calculation of
indicators)?
Question 25: If the agencies adopted
the alternative scoring approach, what
would be the advantages or
disadvantages of requiring scores to be
calculated for the U.S. operations of a
foreign banking organization at a
frequency greater than annually,
including, for example, requiring scores
to be calculated on a quarterly basis?
Question 26: With respect to each
category of standards described above,
at what level should the method 1 or
method 2 score thresholds be set for the
combined U.S. operations or U.S.
intermediate holding company of a
foreign banking organization and why?
Commenters are encouraged to provide
data supporting their recommendations.
Question 27: What other approaches
should the agencies consider in setting
thresholds for tailored prudential
standards for foreign banking
organizations and why? How would any
such approach affect the comparability
of requirements across domestic
banking organizations and foreign
banking organizations with U.S.
operations?
C. Determination of Applicable Category
of Standards
Under the proposal, a U.S.
intermediate holding company with
$100 billion or more in total
consolidated assets, and a depository
institution subsidiary thereof, would be
required to determine its applicable
category of capital standards based on
the risk-based indicators applicable to
the U.S. intermediate holding company.
Similarly, the proposal would require a
foreign banking organization with
combined U.S. assets of $100 billion or
more, and covered depository
institution subsidiaries thereof, to
determine the applicable category of
liquidity standards based on the riskbased indicators of the combined U.S.
operations. In order to capture
significant changes, rather than
temporary fluctuations, in the risk
profile of the U.S. intermediate holding
company or the foreign banking
organization’s combined U.S.
operations, a category of standards
would apply based on the levels of each
risk-based indicator over the preceding
four calendar quarters.
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For capital standards, a category of
standards would apply to a U.S.
intermediate holding company and any
depository institution subsidiary thereof
based on the average levels of each
indicator over the preceding four
calendar quarters for the U.S.
intermediate holding company.74 A U.S.
intermediate holding company and any
depository institution subsidiary would
remain subject to a category of standards
until it no longer meets the indicators
for that category in each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, or until the
U.S. intermediate holding company
meets the criteria for another category of
standards based on an increase in the
average value of one or more risk-based
indicator over the preceding four
calendar quarters.
For liquidity standards, the category
of standards applicable to a foreign
banking organization and any covered
depository institution subsidiary thereof
would be based on the average levels of
each indicator over the preceding four
calendar quarters for the combined U.S.
operations.75 A foreign banking
organization and any covered
depository institution subsidiary thereof
would remain subject to a category of
standards until the foreign banking
organization’s combined U.S. operations
no longer meet the indicators for that
category in each of the four most recent
calendar quarters, or until the foreign
banking organization meets the criteria
for another category of standards based
on an increase in the average value of
one or more risk-based indicator for the
preceding four calendar quarters.76
Changes in capital or liquidity
requirements that result from a change
in category of capital or liquidity
standards, respectively, would take
effect on the first day of the second
quarter following the change in the
applicable category. For example, a U.S.
intermediate holding company that
changes from Category IV to Category III
capital standards based on an increase
74 With respect to a U.S. intermediate holding
company that has reported a risk-based indicator for
less than four quarters, the proposal would refer to
the average of the most recent quarter or quarters.
75 With respect to a foreign banking organization
that has reported a risk-based indicator for less than
four quarters, the proposal would refer to the
average of the most recent quarter or quarters.
76 In addition, as discussed in section V.G of this
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section, consistent
with the LCR rule and NSFR proposed rule and the
domestic interagency proposal, once a foreign
banking organization or any covered depository
institution subsidiary is subject to LCR or NSFR
requirements under the proposal, it would remain
subject to the rule until the applicable agency
determines that application of the rule is not
appropriate in light of its asset size, level of
complexity, risk profile, scope of operations,
affiliation with foreign or domestic covered entities,
or risk to the financial system.
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in the average value of its risk-based
indicators over the first, second, third,
and fourth quarters of a calendar year
would be subject to Category III capital
standards beginning on the first day of
the second quarter of the following year
(April, in this example).
Under the proposal, a U.S.
intermediate holding company or
depository institution subsidiary of a
foreign banking organization could be
subject to different categories of
standards for capital and liquidity.
Consider, for example, a foreign banking
organization with combined U.S. assets
of $400 billion, cross-jurisdictional
activity of $80 billion at its combined
U.S. operations, and a U.S. intermediate
holding company with consolidated
total assets of $260 billion and crossjurisdictional activity of $40 billion. In
this example, the foreign banking
organization would be subject to
Category II liquidity standards,
including with respect to its LCR and
NSFR calculation for any U.S.
intermediate holding company, because
the combined U.S. operations have more
than $75 billion in cross-jurisdictional
activity. Any covered depository
institution subsidiary of the foreign
banking organization in this example
would likewise be subject to Category II
liquidity standards. However, the U.S.
intermediate holding company and any
depository institution subsidiary thereof
would be subject to Category III capital
standards based on the U.S.
intermediate holding company’s total
consolidated assets, which are more
than $250 billion but less than $700
billion, and cross-jurisdictional activity,
which is less than $75 billion.
Question 28: What are the advantages
and disadvantages of determining the
category of standards applicable to a
foreign banking organization’s
combined U.S. operations, its U.S.
intermediate holding company, or its
depository institution subsidiary on a
quarterly basis? Discuss whether
determination on an annual basis would
be more appropriate and why.
Question 29: What are the advantages
and disadvantages of the proposed
transition period for a foreign banking
organization to comply with a change in
its applicable requirements due to
changes in its U.S. risk profile? What
would be the advantages or
disadvantages of providing additional
time to conform to new requirements?
IV. Capital Requirements
Under the proposal, capital
requirements would continue to apply
to U.S. intermediate holding companies
and depository institution subsidiaries
of foreign banking organizations.
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Applying generally applicable and
tailored capital requirements to U.S.
intermediate holding companies and
depository institution subsidiaries of
foreign banking organizations both
strengthens the capital position of U.S.
subsidiaries of foreign banking
organizations and provides parity in the
capital treatment for U.S. bank holding
companies and the U.S. subsidiaries of
foreign banking organizations. In
addition, aligning the capital
requirements between U.S. subsidiaries
of foreign banking organizations and
U.S. bank holding companies is
consistent with international capital
standards published by the BCBS.77
A. Category II Standards
In addition to the generally applicable
capital requirements, the proposal
would require a U.S. intermediate
holding company and any depository
institution subsidiary thereof subject to
Category II standards to maintain a
minimum supplementary leverage ratio
of 3 percent of tier 1 capital to onbalance-sheet assets and certain offbalance sheet exposures. These banking
organizations would also be required to
recognize most elements of AOCI in
regulatory capital. Reflecting AOCI in
regulatory capital results in a more
sensitive measure of capital, which is
important for maintaining the resilience
of these banking organizations.
Additionally, these banking
organizations would be subject to the
countercyclical capital buffer, if
applicable.
Consistent with current requirements,
the U.S. intermediate holding company
(and depository institution subsidiaries
thereof) would not be required to
calculate risk-based capital
requirements using the advanced
approaches under the capital rule, and
would instead use the generally
applicable capital requirements for
calculating risk-weighted assets. The
BCBS recently completed revisions to
its capital standards, revising the
methodologies for credit risk,
operational risk, and market risk. The
agencies are considering how to most
appropriately implement these
standards in the United States,
including potentially replacing the
advanced approaches with risk-based
capital requirements based on the Basel
standardized approaches for credit risk
and operational risk. Any such changes
to applicable risk-based capital
requirements would be subject to notice
77 See, e.g., BCBS, ‘‘International Convergence of
Capital Measurement and Capital Standards,’’ Sec.
781 (June 2006).
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and comment through a future
rulemaking.
The agencies note that there are
currently additional outstanding notices
of proposed rulemaking that make
reference to the advanced approaches
thresholds to set the scope of
application. First, in October 2017, the
agencies proposed simplifications to the
capital rule (simplifications proposal),
proposing a simplified capital treatment
for mortgage servicing assets, deferred
tax assets arising from temporary
differences that an institution could not
realize through net operating loss
carrybacks, investments in the capital of
unconsolidated financial institutions,
and minority interest.78 For purposes of
that pending notice, the requirements
that would apply to ‘‘advanced
approaches banking organizations’’
would be included as Category II capital
standards under this proposal.
In addition, the agencies have
separately proposed to adopt the
standardized approach for counterparty
credit risk for derivatives exposures
(SA–CCR) and to require advanced
approaches banking organizations to use
SA–CCR for calculating their risk-based
capital ratios and a modified version of
SA–CCR for calculating total leverage
exposure under the supplementary
leverage ratio.79 For purposes of the SA–
CCR proposal, the requirements that
would apply to ‘‘advanced approaches
banking organizations’’ would be
included as Category II capital standards
under this proposal.
Question 30: What modifications, if
any, should the agencies consider to the
proposed Category II capital standards
for foreign banking organizations, and
why?
B. Category III Standards
In addition to the generally applicable
capital requirements, the proposal
would require a U.S. intermediate
holding company subject to Category III
standards to maintain a minimum
supplementary leverage ratio of 3
percent given its size and risk profile.
For example, a U.S. intermediate
holding company subject to Category III
standards could include a U.S.
intermediate holding company with
material off-balance sheet exposures
that are not accounted for in the
traditional U.S. tier 1 leverage ratio but
are included in the supplementary
leverage ratio. The supplementary
78 See Simplifications to the Capital Rule
Pursuant to the Economic Growth and Regulatory
Paperwork Reduction; Proposed Rule, 82 FR 49984,
49985 (October 27, 2017).
79 See Standardized Approach for Calculating the
Exposure Amount of Derivative Contracts; Proposed
Rule, 83 FR 64660 (December 17, 2018).
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leverage ratio is important for these
banking organizations to constrain the
build-up of off-balance sheet exposures,
which can contribute to instability and
undermine safety and soundness of
individual banking organizations.
Category III standards also would
include the countercyclical capital
buffer, given these banking
organizations’ significant role in
financial intermediation in the United
States individually and as a group. The
operations of U.S. intermediate holding
companies that would be subject to
Category III standards have a substantial
enough footprint that the capital
conservation buffer expanded to include
the countercyclical capital buffer would
support the prudential goals of the
capital buffer requirements. Any
depository institution subsidiary of a
U.S. intermediate holding company that
is subject to Category III capital
standards would likewise be subject to
Category III capital standards.
As noted above, there are currently
additional outstanding notices of
proposed rulemaking that make
reference to the advanced approaches
thresholds to set the scope of
application. With respect to the
simplifications proposal described in
section IV.A of this SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section, the requirements
that would apply to ‘‘non-advanced
approaches banking organizations’’
would be included as Category III or IV
capital standards under this proposal.80
For purposes of determining its
counterparty credit risk for derivatives
under the proposed SA–CCR (described
above in section IV.A of this
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section), if
adopted, a U.S. intermediate holding
company and its depository institution
subsidiaries that are not advanced
approaches banking organizations
(under this proposal, that are not subject
to Category II standards) could elect to
use SA–CCR for calculating derivatives
exposure in connection with their riskbased capital ratios and supplementary
leverage ratios or to continue to use the
current exposure method.
Question 31: Under the capital rule,
the agencies apply certain provisions,
such as the supplementary leverage
ratio and countercyclical capital buffer,
based on the same thresholds as
advanced approaches capital
requirements. The proposal would
establish different applicability
thresholds for the supplementary
leverage ratio and countercyclical
80 See Simplifications to the Capital Rule
Pursuant to the Economic Growth and Regulatory
Paperwork Reduction; Proposed Rule, 82 FR 49984
(October 27, 2017).
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capital buffer by including these
requirements as Category III standards.
This approach would increase the risksensitivity of the framework and allow
for the retention of key elements of the
capital rule for U.S. intermediate
holding companies and their depository
institution subsidiaries subject to
Category III standards. However, it
would also increase the complexity of
the capital rule. To what extent, if any,
would this additional complexity
increase compliance costs for large
banking organizations (for example, by
requiring banking organizations to
monitor and manage the proposed riskbased indicator thresholds)? To what
extent, if any, would the proposed
approach add complexity for market
participants when comparing the
capital adequacy of U.S. intermediate
holding companies and their depository
institution subsidiaries in different
categories? The agencies request
comment on the advantages and
disadvantages of establishing separate
Category III capital standards for U.S.
intermediate holding companies and
their depository institution subsidiaries
that are different from either Category II
or Category IV standards, including any
wider implications for financial
stability.
Question 32: What are the advantages
and disadvantages of applying the
supplementary leverage ratio
requirement to U.S. intermediate
holding companies and their depository
institution subsidiaries as a Category III
standard? How do these advantages and
disadvantages compare to any costs
associated with any additional
complexity to the regulatory capital
framework that would result from
applying this to U.S. intermediate
holding companies and their depository
institution subsidiaries subject to
Category III standards? To what extent
would application of the supplementary
leverage ratio requirement to these
banking organizations strengthen their
safety and soundness and improve U.S.
financial stability?
Question 33: What are the advantages
and disadvantages of not requiring U.S.
intermediate holding companies and
their depository institution subsidiaries
subject to Category III standards to
recognize most elements of AOCI in
regulatory capital? To what extent does
not requiring U.S. intermediate holding
companies and their depository
institution subsidiaries subject to
Category III standards to recognize most
elements of AOCI in regulatory capital
impact safety and soundness of
individual U.S. intermediate holding
companies or their depository
institution subsidiaries, or raise broader
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financial stability concerns? For
example, to what extent would this
approach reduce the accuracy of the
reported regulatory capital of these U.S.
intermediate holding companies and
their depository institution subsidiaries?
To what extent does the recognition of
most elements of AOCI in regulatory
capital improve market discipline and
provide for a clearer picture of the
financial health of U.S. intermediate
holding companies and their depository
institution subsidiaries? To what extent
would such recognition make
comparing the financial condition of
U.S. intermediate holding companies
and their depository institution
subsidiaries subject to Category III
standards to that of U.S. intermediate
holding companies and their depository
institution subsidiaries subject to
Category II standards more difficult?
Question 34: With respect to U.S.
intermediate holding companies and
their depository institution subsidiaries
that currently recognize most elements
of AOCI in regulatory capital, to what
extent do intra-quarter variations in
regulatory capital due to the inclusion
of AOCI since the capital rule took effect
differ from variations in reported
quarter-end data over the same period?
What have been the causes of variations
in each?
Question 35: As discussed above,
under the proposal, the agencies would
not require U.S. intermediate holding
companies and their depository
institution subsidiaries subject to
Category III standards to recognize most
elements of AOCI in regulatory capital.
Alternatively, the agencies could require
only the U.S. intermediate holding
companies to recognize most elements
of AOCI in regulatory capital while
exempting their depository institution
subsidiary from this requirement. What
are the advantages and disadvantages of
this alternative approach? What would
be the costs and operational challenges
associated with this additional
complexity, where the U.S. intermediate
holding company and depository
institution subsidiary implement
different standards related to AOCI? In
what ways would this alternative
approach to AOCI reduce costs for
banking organizations subject to
Category III standards relative to their
current AOCI requirement under the
agencies’ capital rule (i.e., both the toptier U.S. intermediate holding company
and depository institution subsidiary
are currently required to recognize most
elements of AOCI in regulatory capital)?
In what ways would this alternative
approach affect the transparency
around, and market participants’
understanding of, the financial
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condition of the depository institution
subsidiary and the parent holding
company?
Question 36: For purposes of
comparability, in a final rulemaking
should the agencies require all banking
organizations subject to Category III
standards to use SA–CCR for either riskbased or supplementary leverage ratio
calculations and, if so, why?
Question 37: What would be the
advantages and disadvantages of no
longer applying the countercyclical
capital buffer to U.S. intermediate
holding companies and their depository
institution subsidiaries that would be
subject to Category III standards? In
particular, how would narrowing the
scope of application of the
countercyclical buffer affect the
financial stability and countercyclical
objectives of the buffer? What other
regulatory tools, if any, could be used to
meet these objectives?
Question 38: The proposal would
apply Category III standards to U.S.
intermediate holding companies and
their depository institution subsidiaries
that exceed certain risk-based
indicators, including having more than
$75 billion in off-balance sheet
exposures. In light of the inclusion of
off-balance sheet exposures as a
threshold for Category III standards,
what are the advantages and
disadvantages of including the
supplementary leverage ratio as a
Category III standard?
C. Category IV Standards
The proposal would require a U.S.
intermediate holding company and any
depository institution subsidiary thereof
subject to Category IV standards to
apply the generally applicable capital
requirements. Category IV standards
would not include the countercyclical
capital buffer or the supplementary
leverage ratio. In this manner, these
standards would maintain the risksensitivity of the current capital regime
and resiliency of these banking
organizations’ capital positions, and
would recognize that these banking
organizations’ U.S. intermediate holding
companies, while large, have lower
indicators of risk relative to their larger
peers, as set forth in the proposal. As a
result, such U.S. intermediate holding
companies (and their depository
institution subsidiaries) would be
subject to the same capital requirements
as U.S. intermediate holding companies
with under $100 billion in total
consolidated assets.
Question 39: What modifications, if
any, should the agencies consider to the
proposed Category IV capital standards,
and why?
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V. Liquidity Requirements
The proposed framework would apply
standardized liquidity requirements
with respect to the U.S. operations of
foreign banking organizations according
to the proposed risk-based categories.
Based on the risk profile of a foreign
banking organization’s combined U.S.
operations, the proposal would require
a foreign banking organization to
calculate and maintain a minimum LCR
and NSFR for any U.S. intermediate
holding company. LCR and NSFR
requirements would also apply to
covered depository institution
subsidiaries of foreign banking
organizations subject to Category II or III
liquidity standards, consistent with the
requirements that would apply to the
depository institution subsidiaries of
large U.S. banking organizations under
the domestic interagency proposal. In
addition, as discussed in section V.E of
this SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section, the Board is requesting
comment on whether it should impose
standardized liquidity requirements on
the U.S. branch and agency network of
a foreign banking organization, as well
as possible approaches for doing so,
including an approach based on the LCR
rule and an approach that would apply
a requirement based on the aggregate
U.S. branch and agency assets of a
foreign banking organization.
The proposed standardized liquidity
requirements are designed to serve as a
complement to existing internal
liquidity stress testing requirements,
which require a foreign banking
organization to assess the liquidity
needs of its U.S. operations, including
any U.S. intermediate holding company,
under stress and to hold a liquidity
buffer against projected stressed
outflows reflecting the firm’s
idiosyncratic risks. Together with
standardized liquidity requirements that
the Board is considering proposing at a
future date with respect to the U.S.
branches and agencies of a foreign
banking organization, the proposed LCR
and NSFR requirements would
strengthen the resilience of a foreign
banking organization’s U.S. operations
to liquidity risks and reduce risks to
U.S. financial stability. The
requirements would help to ensure that
similarly situated foreign banking
organizations maintain a comparable,
minimum amount of liquid assets
within their U.S. operations. As for large
U.S. banking organizations, minimum
liquidity requirements are particularly
important for the U.S. operations of
foreign banking organizations with
significant reliance on short-term
wholesale funding, as disruptions to
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wholesale funding markets can limit
such a firm’s ability to satisfy liquidity
demands and threaten the resiliency of
the firm’s U.S. operations, which can
transmit distress to other market
participants.
As discussed above, foreign banking
organizations operate under a wide
variety of business models and
structures that reflect the legal,
regulatory, and business climates in the
home and host jurisdictions in which
they operate. In the United States,
foreign banking organizations operate
through subsidiaries, including U.S.
intermediate holding companies and
depository institutions, and branches
and agencies, and are permitted to
engage in the United States in
substantially the same banking and
nonbanking activities as domestic banks
and U.S. bank holding companies.
The U.S. operations of foreign
banking organizations, particularly
those with a large U.S. branch and
agency network or large nonbank
operations, generally rely on less stable,
short-term wholesale funding to a
greater extent than U.S. bank holding
companies because of their structure
and business model. Furthermore,
certain foreign banking organizations
conduct substantial capital markets
activities in the United States through
nonbank subsidiaries or branch
operations, such as short-term securities
financing and derivatives activities.
These activities can give rise to greater
interconnectedness with financial sector
counterparties and increase the
potential impact of a funding stress on
the foreign banking organization’s U.S.
operations.
In response to liquidity risks observed
during the crisis, the Board established
liquidity risk management, internal
liquidity stress testing, and liquidity
buffer requirements for the combined
U.S. operations of foreign banking
organizations under its enhanced
prudential standards rule.81 These
provisions require a foreign banking
organization to assess its idiosyncratic
risk profile, experience, and scope of
operations. However, similar to other
81 Under the enhanced prudential standards rule,
certain foreign banking organizations are required
to conduct monthly internal liquidity stress tests
and determine minimum liquidity buffers to be
held in the United States. A foreign banking
organization must calculate and maintain a
minimum liquidity buffer for its U.S. intermediate
holding company sufficient to cover a modeled net
stressed cash flow need over a 30-day stress
horizon. A foreign banking organization must also
model the 30-day net stressed cash flow need for
its U.S. branches and agencies on an aggregate basis
and is required to hold a minimum liquidity buffer
for these branches and agencies sufficient to cover
the first 14 days of the 30-day planning horizon. See
12 CFR 252.157.
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internal model-based requirements that
require a banking organization to make
certain assumptions, firms’ own models
may overestimate cash flow sources or
underestimate cash flow needs arising
from a particular business line.
Standardized liquidity requirements
would serve as a complement to the
foreign banking organization’s own
assessment of its idiosyncratic risks, in
particular through their use of uniform
inflow and outflow rates and other
standardized assumptions that reflect
broader industry and supervisory
experience.
Currently, a foreign banking
organization operating in the United
States is not subject to the LCR rule, nor
would it be subject to the NSFR
proposed rule, with respect to its U.S.
operations, except to the extent that a
subsidiary depository institution
holding company or a subsidiary
depository institution of the foreign
banking organization meets the relevant
applicability criteria on a stand-alone
basis.82 The Board indicated in previous
rulemakings its intent to apply
standardized liquidity requirements
with respect to the U.S. operations of a
foreign banking organization in order to
align all elements of its forward-looking
liquidity regulatory regime for similarly
situated domestic and foreign banking
organizations. For example, when
finalizing the enhanced prudential
standards rule for foreign banking
organizations in March 2014 and the
LCR rule for U.S. banking organizations
in September 2014, the Board stated that
it anticipated implementing an LCRbased standard for the U.S. operations of
foreign banking organizations through a
future rulemaking.83 Similarly, when
proposing the NSFR rule in May 2016,
the Board stated that it anticipated
implementing an NSFR requirement
through a future, separate rulemaking
for the U.S. operations of foreign
banking organizations.84
82 Although a foreign banking organization may
be subject to liquidity requirements on a
consolidated basis in its home jurisdiction, a
requirement to comply with LCR and NSFR
requirements with respect to a U.S. intermediate
holding company would require these firms to align
the location of liquid assets with the location in the
United States of the liquidity risks of their U.S.
intermediate holding companies, in order to ensure
better protection against risks to safety and
soundness and U.S. financial stability.
83 79 FR 17240, 17291 (March 27, 2014), 79 FR
61440, 61447 (October 10, 2014). The Board did not
initially align the timing of a liquidity coverage
ratio requirement for foreign banking organizations
with those of domestic firms because the Board
proposed the domestic LCR before it finalized the
structural requirements for foreign banking
organizations to form intermediate holding
companies.
84 See ‘‘Net Stable Funding Ratio: Liquidity Risk
Measurement Standards and Disclosure
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The proposal would require a foreign
banking organization to maintain a
minimum LCR and NSFR for its U.S.
intermediate holding company,
regardless of whether the U.S.
intermediate holding company is also a
depository institution holding company,
in order to ensure that parallel
requirements would apply with respect
to all U.S. intermediate holding
companies. The proposal would solicit
public input on potential standardized
liquidity requirements for foreign
banking organizations with respect to
their U.S. branch and agency networks
for proposal at a later date.
The proposal would tailor the
proposed U.S. intermediate holding
company requirements based on the risk
profile of a foreign banking
organization’s combined U.S.
operations, using the risk-based
indicators, thresholds, and categories set
forth above. In addition, consistent with
the standardized liquidity requirements
that would apply to U.S. banking
organizations under the domestic
interagency proposal, the proposal
would apply LCR and NSFR
requirements to covered depository
institution subsidiaries of foreign
banking organizations that would be
subject to Category II or III liquidity
standards.
The LCR and NSFR requirements
proposed for U.S. intermediate holding
companies are generally consistent with
international standards. For example,
the proposed LCR calculation (including
percentages used in the determination
of inflow and outflow amounts, and
requirements regarding the
encumbrance and transferability of
HQLA) would generally be consistent
with the Basel III liquidity coverage
ratio standard published by the BCBS.85
Because the proposal would largely
align with international standards, the
proposed LCR requirement is not
expected to require a foreign banking
organization to acquire additional
HQLA above the amount the firm
currently holds to meet its global LCR
requirements under the requirements of
its home jurisdiction; however, the
proposal would require that assets be
held in the U.S. intermediate holding
company to the extent that they are
needed to meet the proposed
requirement. Similarly, the proposed
NSFR requirement is generally
consistent with the Basel III net stable
Requirements; Proposed Rule,’’ 81 FR 35128 (June
1, 2016).
85 BCBS, ‘‘Basel III: The Liquidity Coverage Ratio
and liquidity risk monitoring tools’’ (January 2013)
(Basel III LCR standard), available at https://
www.bis.org/publ/bcbs238.htm.
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funding ratio standard published by the
BCBS.86
A. Categories of Liquidity Requirements
for a Foreign Banking Organization
The proposal would tailor
standardized liquidity requirements for
foreign banking organizations according
to the risk-based indicators and
thresholds described above, measured
based on the combined U.S. operations
of the foreign banking organization.87
Specifically, the proposal would apply
one of three categories of liquidity
standards to a foreign banking
organization: Category II, III, or IV. As
discussed above in this Supplementary
Information section, differentiation of
requirements based on the risk profile of
a foreign banking organization’s
combined U.S. operations recognizes
that certain risks are more appropriately
accounted for and regulated across the
combined U.S. operations of a foreign
banking organization to prevent or
mitigate risks to U.S. financial stability.
For foreign banking organizations
subject to Category III or IV liquidity
standards, the proposal would further
tailor standardized liquidity
requirements based on the weighted
short-term wholesale funding of a firm’s
combined U.S. operations, which
provides a measure of exposure to less
stable funding that increases a firm’s
liquidity risks.
Covered depository institution
subsidiaries of the U.S. intermediate
holding company of a foreign banking
organization subject to Category II or III
liquidity standards would be subject to
LCR and NSFR requirements based on
the category of the foreign banking
organization. The risk-based indicators
for these categories reflect the systemic
risk profile and resiliency of the U.S.
operations of a foreign banking
organization, of which a large
depository institution subsidiary may be
a significant part. The presence of each
of these indicators heightens the need
for sophisticated measures to monitor
and manage liquidity risk, including at
covered depository institution
subsidiaries. Application of the LCR and
NSFR requirements to covered
depository institution subsidiaries of
foreign banking organizations subject to
Category II or III liquidity standards
would also be consistent with the
86 BCBS, ‘‘Basel III: the net stable funding ratio’’
(October 2014), available at https://www.bis.org/
bcbs/publ/d295.pdf.
87 This approach would be consistent with the
Board’s proposed approach to tailor liquidity
requirements for foreign banking organizations
under the Board’s enhanced prudential standards
rule in the Board-only foreign banking organization
enhanced prudential standards proposal.
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standardized liquidity requirements
proposed for U.S. banking organizations
under the domestic interagency
proposal. As discussed further below,
depository institution subsidiaries of
foreign banking organizations subject to
Category IV liquidity standards would
not be subject to LCR or NSFR
requirements under the proposal, also
consistent with the proposed
requirements for U.S. banking
organizations.
1. Category II Liquidity Standards
Under the proposal, a foreign banking
organization with $700 billion or more
in combined U.S. assets or $75 billion
or more in cross-jurisdictional activity
at its combined U.S. operations would
be subject to Category II liquidity
standards. Foreign banking
organizations subject to Category II
liquidity standards have significant U.S.
operations or cross-jurisdictional
activity that may complicate liquidity
risk management, and the failure or
distress of the U.S. operations of such a
firm could impose significant costs on
the U.S. financial system and economy.
Size and cross-jurisdictional activity can
present particularly heightened
challenges in the case of a liquidity
stress, which can present both financial
stability and safety and soundness risks.
For example, a foreign banking
organization with very large U.S.
operations that engages in asset fire
sales to meet short-term liquidity needs
is likely to transmit distress in the
United States on a broader scale because
of the greater volume of assets it could
sell in a short period of time. In
addition, foreign banking organizations
with U.S. operations that engage in
heightened levels of cross-jurisdictional
activity present operational
complexities and interconnectivity
concerns, and may be exposed to a
greater diversity of risks as a result of
the multiple jurisdictions in which they
provide financial services. The risks and
operational complexities associated
with cross-jurisdictional activity can
present significant challenges to
recovery and resolution.
The proposal would require a foreign
banking organization subject to Category
II liquidity standards to comply with the
full LCR requirement described in
section V.B of this Supplementary
Information section, including
calculation on each business day, and
the full NSFR requirement described in
section V.C of this SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section, each as applied to
any U.S. intermediate holding company.
Covered depository institution
subsidiaries of a foreign banking
organization subject to Category II
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liquidity standards would also be
subject to the full LCR and NSFR
requirements, as discussed above. The
proposed liquidity standards would
help to ensure resiliency of the foreign
banking organization’s U.S. operations
to liquidity risks, and improve the
ability of the foreign banking
organization’s management and
supervisors to assess the foreign banking
organization’s ability to meet the
projected liquidity needs of its U.S.
operations, particularly during periods
of liquidity stress, and take appropriate
actions to address liquidity needs.
2. Category III Liquidity Standards
Category III liquidity standards would
apply to a foreign banking organization
that does not meet the criteria for
Category II and the combined U.S.
operations of which have either (i)
assets of at least $250 billion, or (ii)
assets of at least $100 billion and $75
billion or more in weighted short-term
wholesale funding, nonbank assets, or
off-balance sheet exposure.
The proposal would determine the
LCR and NSFR requirements applicable
to foreign banking organizations subject
to Category III liquidity standards based
on the weighted short-term wholesale
funding of a foreign banking
organization’s U.S. operations. A foreign
banking organization subject to Category
III standards that has $75 billion or
more in weighted short-term wholesale
funding at its combined U.S. operations
would be subject to the same
standardized liquidity requirements as
would apply under Category II
standards—specifically, the full LCR
and NSFR requirements with respect to
any U.S. intermediate holding company.
An elevated level of weighted shortterm wholesale funding indicates that
the organization’s U.S. operations have
greater reliance on less stable forms of
funding and a higher degree of
interconnectedness with other financial
firms. As a consequence, these
operations may generally be more
vulnerable to liquidity stress and more
likely to transmit stress internally
within the foreign banking organization
and to other firms. Accordingly, the
proposal would apply the most stringent
standardized liquidity requirements to
these foreign banking organizations,
consistent with the proposed
requirements for U.S. banking
organizations with similar risk profiles
under the domestic interagency
proposal.
Reduced LCR and NSFR requirements
would apply to a foreign banking
organization subject to Category III
standards that has less than $75 billion
in weighted short-term wholesale
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funding at its combined U.S. operations.
The agencies are inviting comment on a
range of potential calibrations for these
firms (and their covered depository
institution subsidiaries), equivalent to
between 70 and 85 percent of the full
requirements.88 Even where a foreign
banking organization has less than $75
billion in weighted short-term
wholesale funding at its combined U.S.
operations, standardized liquidity
requirements are appropriate for a
foreign banking organization with
combined U.S. assets of $250 billion or
more in order to increase the resiliency
of the firm’s U.S. operations and reduce
its probability of failure. A larger U.S.
footprint increases the risk that that the
failure or distress of a foreign banking
organization would pose heightened
risks to U.S. financial stability;
accordingly, the proposal would apply
standardized liquidity requirements (at
a reduced level) to strengthen the
resiliency of such a banking
organization’s U.S. operations.
Standardized liquidity requirements are
also appropriate for foreign banking
organizations with combined U.S. assets
of $100 billion or more and nonbank
assets or off-balance sheet exposure of
$75 billion or more, as these measures
can also be indicators of liquidity risk.
Significant nonbank assets of a banking
organization generally tend to reflect
greater engagement in complex
activities, such as trading and prime
brokerage activities, that present
heightened liquidity risk. Similarly,
banking organizations with large offbalance sheet exposures could
experience large outflows, the risks of
which counterparties may not have fully
anticipated due to their off-balance
sheet nature, putting additional pressure
on the firm’s liquidity position and
creating a risk of transmission of
instability to other market participants.
As discussed above, the agencies
would also apply LCR and NSFR
requirements to covered depository
institution subsidiaries of foreign
banking organizations subject to
Category III liquidity standards, at the
same level (i.e., full or reduced) as
would apply to the foreign banking
organization.
Question 40: Between a range of 70
and 85 percent of the full requirements,
what calibration should the agencies
adopt for the reduced LCR and NSFR
88 The calibration within this range for foreign
banking organizations (and their covered depository
institution subsidiaries) would be consistent with
the calibration applied under the domestic
interagency proposal to U.S. banking organizations
subject to Category III standards that have less than
$75 billion in weighted short-term wholesale
funding.
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organizations subject to Category III
standards that have less than $75
billion in weighted short-term wholesale
funding, and their covered depository
institution subsidiaries, and why?
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3. Category IV Liquidity Standards
In the domestic interagency proposal,
the agencies proposed that U.S. banking
organizations with total consolidated
assets of $100 billion or more that do
not meet any of the thresholds for a
different category would be subject to
Category IV standards, which did not
include an LCR or NSFR requirement.
As discussed in the domestic
interagency proposal, firms in the
current population of U.S. banking
organizations that meet the criteria for
this category have more traditional
balance sheet structures, are largely
funded by stable deposits, and have less
reliance on less stable wholesale
funding, indicating less liquidity risk.
Accordingly, and taking into account
that the Board separately proposed to
maintain internal liquidity stress testing
requirements and other liquidity
standards at the consolidated holding
company level for these banking
organizations,89 the agencies proposed
not to apply standardized liquidity
requirements to these banking
organizations.90 The Board also
separately proposed to apply tailored
internal liquidity stress testing
requirements at the consolidated
holding company level to these firms.
In developing this proposal, however,
the Board observed that some domestic
or foreign banking organizations that
meet the criteria for Category IV
standards could potentially have a
heightened liquidity risk profile. For
example, these firms may not be funded
by stable deposits and may have
material reliance on less-stable shortterm wholesale funding. Thus, under
this proposal, the Board would apply
standardized liquidity requirements to a
foreign banking organization subject to
Category IV standards if the reliance of
the firm’s U.S. operations on short-term
wholesale funding is significant relative
to the firm’s combined U.S. assets.91
89 See Prudential Standards for Large Bank
Holding Companies and Savings and Loan Holding
Companies; Proposed Rule, 83 FR 61408 (November
29, 2018).
90 See domestic interagency proposal, 83 FR at
66037–66038.
91 As discussed in section VI of this
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section, the Board is
also proposing to modify the domestic interagency
proposal to apply standardized liquidity
requirements in a consistent manner to domestic
bank holding companies and certain savings and
loan holding companies subject to Category IV
standards that have significant reliance on shortterm wholesale funding.
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Specifically, the Board is proposing to
apply reduced LCR and NSFR
requirements to a foreign banking
organization that meets the criteria for
Category IV liquidity standards and has
$50 billion or more in weighted shortterm wholesale funding at its combined
U.S. operations. Like the Category II and
III liquidity standards, the proposed
LCR and NSFR requirements would
apply with respect to the foreign
banking organization’s U.S.
intermediate holding company. As
noted below, the proposed LCR and
NSFR requirements would not apply to
covered depository institution
subsidiaries of a foreign banking
organization subject to Category IV
liquidity standards. The Board requests
comment on a range of potential
calibrations for the LCR and NSFR
requirements that would apply to these
firms, equivalent to between 70 and 85
percent of the full requirements.
Given the heightened liquidity risk
profile of the U.S. operations of these
foreign banking organizations, as
indicated by their level of relative
reliance on less stable, short-term
wholesale funding, the application of
standardized liquidity requirements
would help to ensure that these firms
are appropriately monitoring and
managing their liquidity risk in the
United States. For a foreign banking
organization subject to Category IV
standards, $50 billion or more in
weighted short-term wholesale funding
is significant relative to the firm’s
combined U.S. assets, given that firms
in this category by definition have less
than $250 billion in combined U.S.
assets. For example, $50 billion in
weighted short-term wholesale funding
would be equivalent to more than 20
percent of the U.S. assets of a foreign
banking organization with less than
$250 billion in combined U.S. assets or
50 percent of the U.S. assets of a foreign
banking organization with $100 billion
in combined U.S. assets. A $50 billion
weighted short-term wholesale funding
threshold would in this way serve to
identify banking organizations in this
category that do not have traditional
balance sheet structures funded by
stable retail deposits or that have more
reliance on less stable short-term
wholesale funding. In light of this
liquidity risk, the application of LCR
and NSFR requirements would help to
ensure that these firms are holding a
minimum level of liquid assets that
would be available to use in the event
of a liquidity stress event and that these
firms maintain more stable, resilient
funding profiles.
To reduce compliance costs for these
firms and reflect the smaller systemic
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footprint of these firms’ U.S. operations
relative to banking organizations that
would be subject to Category II or III
liquidity standards, the Board is
proposing to require calculation of the
LCR on the last business day of the
applicable month, rather than each
business day. For these same reasons,
the agencies are not proposing to apply
an LCR or NSFR requirement to the
covered depository institution
subsidiaries of such firms.
Question 41: Between a range of 70
and 85 percent of the full requirements,
what calibration should the Board adopt
for the reduced LCR and NSFR
requirements for foreign banking
organizations subject to Category IV
standards that have $50 billion or more
in weighted short-term wholesale
funding, and why?
B. LCR Requirement With Respect to
Foreign Banking Organizations
Under the proposal, the Board would
require a foreign banking organization
that meets the applicability criteria
described above to calculate and
maintain a minimum LCR for any U.S.
intermediate holding company. In
addition, the agencies are proposing to
require covered depository institution
subsidiaries of foreign banking
organizations subject to Category II or III
liquidity standards to calculate and
maintain a minimum LCR. Proposed
new subpart O of part 249 would
establish the LCR (and NSFR)
requirements that apply to foreign
banking organizations, and proposed
amendments to subpart A of the current
LCR rule would apply to the covered
depository institution subsidiaries of
foreign banking organizations subject to
Category II or III liquidity standards.
The proposed requirements would
apply in a manner consistent with the
LCR requirements for U.S. banking
organizations under the LCR rule, NSFR
proposed rule, and domestic
interagency proposal. As discussed
above, these requirements would help to
ensure the resiliency of U.S.
intermediate holding companies and
covered depository institution
subsidiaries of foreign banking
organizations to liquidity stress and
funding disruptions.
The proposed LCR requirement would
be nearly identical to the LCR
requirement that currently applies to
U.S. banking organizations. Specifically,
the proposal would instruct a foreign
banking organization to calculate an
LCR for a U.S. intermediate holding
company using the same definitions that
apply to U.S. banking organizations 92
92 12
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and subparts B through E of the
proposal as if the U.S. intermediate
holding company (and not the foreign
banking organization itself) were a toptier Board-regulated institution.93 (For
example, a foreign banking organization
would treat the U.S. intermediate
holding company as a ‘‘Board-regulated
institution’’ wherever that term appears
in the definitions in § 249.3.) This
approach would promote consistent
treatment with domestic banking
organizations subject to the LCR rule.
The LCR requirement for a foreign
banking organization with respect to its
U.S. intermediate holding company
would differ from the LCR requirement
for domestic banking organizations in
certain, limited respects, discussed
below.
Question 42: What conforming
changes, if any, should be made to the
definitions found in § 249.3 to effectuate
the purpose of the proposed
requirement that a foreign banking
organization calculate an LCR for a U.S.
intermediate holding company using
§ 249.3 and subparts B through E of part
249?
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1. Minimum Liquidity Coverage Ratio,
Calculation Date and Time, and
Shortfall
The proposal would require a foreign
banking organization to maintain at its
consolidated U.S. intermediate holding
company an amount of HQLA meeting
the criteria set forth in the proposal
(HQLA amount; the numerator of the
ratio) that is no less than 100 percent of
the U.S. intermediate holding
company’s total net cash outflow
amount over a 30-calendar day time
horizon as calculated in accordance
with the proposal (the denominator of
the ratio). Consistent with the domestic
interagency proposal, in the case of a
foreign banking organization that would
be subject to a reduced LCR requirement
under Category III or IV liquidity
standards, the denominator of the ratio
would be reduced by an applicable
outflow adjustment percentage.94
93 Under the current LCR rule, a U.S. intermediate
holding company that is a bank holding company
may be subject to LCR requirements. The proposal
would eliminate any such independent LCR
requirements for a bank holding company
subsidiary of a foreign banking organization and
replace them with the requirement that the foreign
banking organization calculate and maintain a
minimum LCR for its U.S. intermediate holding
company.
94 As discussed in section V.A of this
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section, the agencies
are requesting comment on a range of potential
calibrations for the outflow adjustment percentage
for these firms, between 70 and 85 percent. For
firms subject to the full LCR requirement, an
outflow adjustment percentage of 100 percent
would apply.
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Expressed as a ratio, the proposal would
require a foreign banking organization to
calculate and maintain an LCR for a U.S.
intermediate holding company equal to
or greater than 1.0 on each calculation
date.
Under the proposal, a foreign banking
organization that is subject to Category
II or III liquidity standards would be
required to calculate the LCR for a U.S.
intermediate holding company each
business day. A daily calculation
requirement for these firms would
reflect the heightened liquidity risk
profiles of their U.S. operations, which
require more sophisticated monitoring
and management. The Board is
proposing to require a foreign banking
organization that is subject to Category
IV liquidity standards and that has $50
billion or more in short-term wholesale
funding to calculate an LCR for any U.S.
intermediate holding company on the
last business day of the applicable
month. A monthly calculation for these
firms would reflect the lesser systemic
footprint and risk profile of these firms’
U.S. operations relative to banking
organizations that meet the criteria for
Category II or III standards, as discussed
above.
To ensure consistency of the LCR
calculation by firms, the proposal would
require a foreign banking organization to
calculate its LCR for a U.S. intermediate
holding company as of the same time
(the elected calculation time) on each
calculation date, selected by the foreign
banking organization prior to the
effective date of the rule with respect to
the firm and communicated in writing
to the Board. Subsequent to this initial
election, a foreign banking organization
may change the time at which it
calculates its applicable LCR with the
prior written approval of the Board.95
A banking organization subject to the
LCR rule is required to report a shortfall
in its ratio on any business day to the
appropriate regulatory agency, and
promptly consult with the agency on
providing a plan for achieving
compliance.96 Under the proposal, a
foreign banking organization would be
required to conduct the LCR
calculations for a U.S. intermediate
holding company at the calculation
date. Accordingly, proposed § 249.206
provides that a foreign banking
organization must notify the Board of,
and address, any shortfall in the same
95 In the case of a foreign banking organization
that calculates multiple LCRs (for example, if the
foreign banking organization has more than one
U.S. intermediate holding company), the proposal
would require the foreign banking organization to
elect the same calculation time for each of its LCRs.
96 See 12 CFR 50.40 (OCC), 12 CFR 249.40
(Board), and 12 CFR 329.40 (FDIC).
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24317
time frame and manner as a U.S.
banking organizations subject to the
LCR rule.97
Question 43: The proposal would
require a foreign banking organization
to calculate an LCR for any U.S.
intermediate holding company. The
Board is considering applying LCR
requirements directly to a U.S.
intermediate holding company, rather
than requiring applying an LCR
requirement to a foreign banking
organization with respect to its U.S.
intermediate holding company. What
are the advantages and disadvantages of
applying the LCR requirements in the
proposed manner rather than requiring,
for example, a U.S. intermediate
holding company to be responsible for
calculating its own LCR?
2. Numerator of the LCR: HQLA,
Eligible HQLA, and the HQLA Amount
Under the LCR rule, an asset must
meet the requirements of section 20 to
be HQLA and section 22 to be eligible
for inclusion in a banking organization’s
HQLA amount (the numerator of the
LCR).98 The criteria in section 20
identify assets with liquidity
characteristics that indicate they are
likely able to be convertible into cash
with little or no loss of value in a time
of stress,99 and the criteria in section 22
serve to ensure that the LCR numerator
includes only HQLA that would be
readily available for use by a banking
organization subject to the rule to meet
liquidity needs during a liquidity stress.
Among other things, section 22 of the
LCR rule requires a banking
organization subject to the LCR rule to
demonstrate the operational capability
to monetize HQLA and to implement
policies that require the HQLA to be
under control of the management
function of the banking organization.
Section 249.205 of the proposal would
maintain these requirements but would
require the foreign banking
organization, rather than the U.S.
intermediate holding company, to
satisfy these requirements.100
97 See
proposed § 249.206.
CFR 50.20 (OCC), 12 CFR 249.20 (Board),
and 12 CFR 329.20 (FDIC).
99 See LCR FR rule, 79 FR at 61450–61471.
100 As part of the NSFR proposed rule, the
agencies proposed to add the new term
‘‘encumbered’’ to the LCR rule, which would
replace the criteria for an unencumbered asset set
forth in section 22(b) of the LCR rule. See 81 FR
35124. Because the agencies have not yet finalized
the NSFR proposed rule, the proposal includes two
versions of regulatory text for § 249.205, one that is
identical to the requirements in section 22(b) (12
CFR 249.22(b)) and another that uses the term
‘‘encumbered.’’ These two versions are being
proposed so that the requirements in § 249.205
match whatever requirements exist for
98 12
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Accordingly, the management function
of the foreign banking organization that
is charged with managing liquidity risks
must evidence control over the HQLA
for the purposes of covering the net cash
outflows of the U.S. intermediate
holding company.101 The risks of a
foreign banking organization’s U.S.
operations are a component of the
broader risks of its global activities, and
HQLA held in the United States may be
managed as part of the foreign banking
organization’s global liquidity risk
management operations. To ensure that
HQLA that are held in the United States
to cover potential outflows of the U.S.
intermediate holding company are able
to be monetized without restriction in a
time of stress, the Board expects the
assets must be continually available for
use by the management function within
the foreign banking organization’s U.S.
operations that is charged with
managing U.S. liquidity risks. For
example, eligible HQLA, including
HQLA that have been borrowed
(including under a secured lending
transaction such as a reverse repurchase
agreement) from the foreign banking
organization’s head office must not be
controlled, transferable, or able to be
monetized by an overseas entity or
business function in a manner that
would restrict the ability of the
responsible management function to
monetize the HQLA in a time of stress
for use by a U.S. intermediate holding
company of the foreign banking
organization.
In addition to the generally applicable
criteria for eligible HQLA under the
current LCR rule, the proposal would
require that eligible HQLA for a foreign
banking organization’s U.S.
intermediate holding company be held
in accounts in the United States.102 This
requirement would be consistent with
the location requirement of a foreign
banking organization’s highly liquid
asset buffers required under the Board’s
enhanced prudential standards rule.103
Consistent with the current location
requirements for these liquidity buffers,
and to ensure that liquid assets are
available to cover the relevant net cash
unencumbered assets in § 249.22(b) when the
proposal is finalized.
101 Each foreign banking organization that would
be subject to the proposed rule is subject to risk
management and liquidity risk management
requirements for its U.S. operations under the
Board’s enhanced prudential standards rule. See 12
CFR 252.155 and .156. Generally, the Board expects
that the management function that is responsible for
managing liquidity risks under the proposal would
be the same management function that is
responsible for managing liquidity risk under the
enhanced prudential standards rule.
102 See proposed § 249.222(c).
103 See 12 CFR 252.157(c)(4).
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outflows in a period of stress, eligible
HQLA for a foreign banking
organization’s U.S. intermediate holding
company must be held at the U.S.
intermediate holding company or a
consolidated subsidiary thereof.
Under the proposal, a foreign banking
organization would directly utilize
section 20 of the current LCR rule,
which enumerates the criteria that
assets must meet to qualify as HQLA.104
Structural and regulatory issues may
limit the extent to which HQLA can be
treated as eligible HQLA for a foreign
banking organization’s calculation with
respect to a U.S. intermediate holding
company. For example, Reserve Bank
balances held by a foreign banking
organization at its U.S. branches would
not be able to be included as eligible
HQLA in the foreign banking
organization’s LCR calculation for a U.S.
intermediate holding company.
Consistent with the current LCR rule,
eligible HQLA would not need to be
reflected on the balance sheet of a U.S.
entity under the proposal; for example,
securities sourced through a secured
lending transaction by a U.S. entity and
not reflected on its balance sheet may be
eligible HQLA if the assets meet all the
relevant criteria in the proposal.
In addition, consistent with the
current LCR rule 105 and the domestic
interagency proposal, the proposal
would limit the amount of HQLA held
at a consolidated subsidiary of a U.S.
intermediate holding company that can
be included as eligible HQLA for
purposes of a foreign banking
organization’s LCR calculation for a U.S.
intermediate holding company.106 The
LCR rule requires a single HQLA
amount calculation at each calculation
date for a consolidated banking
organization subject to the rule. To
ensure the recognition only of eligible
HQLA that are usable to meet
consolidated total net cash outflows of
the top-tier banking organization subject
to the LCR rule, the LCR rule limits the
ability of a top-tier banking organization
subject to the rule to include in its
HQLA amount eligible HQLA held at a
consolidated subsidiary in excess of the
net cash outflows of the subsidiary,
except to the extent an additional
amount of the assets (including the
proceeds of monetization of the assets)
would be available for transfer to the
top-tier banking organization without
104 See 12 CFR 249.20. The proposal would also
apply the LCR rule’s definition of HQLA under 12
CFR 249.3 without change.
105 See 12 CFR 50.22(b)(3) and (4) (OCC), 12 CFR
249.22(b)(3) and (4) (Board), and 12 CFR
329.22(b)(3) and (4) (FDIC).
106 See proposed § 249.205(d).
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statutory, regulatory, contractual, or
supervisory restrictions.107
For the same reasons, the proposal
would apply consistent limitations for a
foreign banking organization’s LCR
calculation with respect to its U.S.
intermediate holding company.
Consistent with the requirements for
U.S. banking organizations, a foreign
banking organization would be required
to apply only the statutory, regulatory,
contractual, or supervisory restrictions
that are in effect as of the calculation
date.108
Consistent with the domestic
interagency proposal, a foreign banking
organization subject to the proposed
reduced LCR requirement under
Category III or IV standards would not
be permitted to include in the HQLA
amount of its U.S. intermediate holding
company eligible HQLA of a
consolidated subsidiary of the U.S.
intermediate holding company except
up to the amount of the net cash
outflows of the subsidiary (as adjusted
for the factor reducing the stringency of
the requirement), plus any additional
amount of assets, including proceeds
from the monetization of assets, that
would be available for transfer to the
top-tier U.S. intermediate holding
company during times of stress without
statutory, regulatory, contractual, or
supervisory restrictions. A similar
restriction would apply under the
proposed NSFR requirement.109
Question 44: What modifications, if
any, should the Board consider with
respect to the definition of HQLA as it
applies to a foreign banking
organization’s calculation of an LCR for
a U.S. intermediate holding company,
and why?
Question 45: What would be the
advantages or disadvantages of the
proposed criteria for HQLA and eligible
HQLA applicable to a foreign banking
organization’s LCR calculation with
respect to a U.S .intermediate holding
company? What additional criteria, if
any, should the Board consider for
eligible HQLA held by a foreign banking
organization to meet stressed cash
outflows in the United States?
Question 46: In what ways, if any,
would the proposed eligible HQLA
location criteria affect a foreign banking
organization’s U.S. operations? If a
foreign banking organization’s U.S.
intermediate holding company does not
have a depository institution subsidiary,
how should the proposal treat Reserve
Bank balances held outside of the
107 See
12 CFR 249.22(b).
LCR FR rule, 79 FR at 61470.
109 See section V.C of this SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section.
108 See
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consolidated U.S. intermediate holding
company (for example, at the Federal
Reserve account of a U.S. branch of the
foreign banking organization) for the
purposes of the foreign banking
organization’s LCR calculation for a
U.S. intermediate holding company?
Question 47: The Board requests
comment regarding this proposed
approach with respect to assets held at
a consolidated subsidiary of a U.S.
intermediate holding company, as well
as potential alternative approaches to
recognizing in a foreign banking
organization’s LCR calculation
restrictions on the transferability of
liquidity from a consolidated subsidiary
to the U.S. intermediate holding
company. What alternative approaches
should the Board consider and why?
For example, should the Board
consider the approach the Board
currently permits for depository
institution holding companies subject to
a modified LCR requirement? Under this
approach, a holding company may
include in its HQLA amount eligible
HQLA held at a subsidiary up to 100
percent of the net cash outflows of the
subsidiary, plus amounts that may be
transferred without restriction to the
top-tier covered company. What would
be the advantages and disadvantages of
the proposed approach and potential
alternatives? What incentives would
each have with respect to the
positioning of HQLA within a banking
organization? What effects would the
proposed approach or alternative
approaches have on the safety and
soundness of a U.S. intermediate
holding company and its subsidiary
depository institutions?
3. Denominator of the LCR—Total Net
Cash Outflow Amounts for Foreign
Banking Organizations
Consistent with the domestic
interagency proposal, the LCR
denominator for a foreign banking
organization’s calculation with respect
to a U.S. intermediate holding company
would be the total net cash outflow
amount, after the application of an
outflow adjustment percentage based on
the foreign banking organization’s
category of liquidity standards.
Under this approach, the total net
cash outflow amount prior to the
application of any outflow adjustment
percentage would be:
(i) The sum of the outflow amounts
applicable to the calculation, as
determined under the proposal, less
(ii) The lesser of the sum of inflow
amounts applicable to the calculation,
as determined under the proposal, or 75
percent of the outflow amounts in (i),
plus
(iii) The applicable maturity
mismatch add-on.
After calculating the net amount of
these components for a U.S.
intermediate holding company, the
foreign banking organization would
multiply that amount by the appropriate
outflow adjustment percentage
described in proposed § 249.203 to
determine the denominator of the U.S.
intermediate holding company’s LCR.
The applicable outflow adjustment
percentage would reflect the category of
liquidity standards that applies to the
foreign banking organization: 110
Outflow adjustment
percentage
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Foreign banking organization subject to Category II liquidity standards ................................................................................
Foreign banking organization subject to Category III liquidity standards, with $75 billion or more in weighted short-term
wholesale funding at its combined U.S. operations.
Foreign banking organization subject to Category III liquidity standards, with less than $75 billion in weighted short-term
wholesale funding at its combined U.S. operations.
Foreign banking organization subject to Category IV liquidity standards, with $50 billion or more in weighted short-term
wholesale funding at its combined U.S. operations.
To calculate the total net cash outflow
amount for a U.S. intermediate holding
company, a foreign banking
organization would directly utilize
§ 249.30, using the same methodology
that would apply under the domestic
interagency proposal. For determining
outflow amounts and inflow amounts,
the proposal would not change any of
the percentages applied to transactions,
instruments, balances, or obligations
used under §§ 249.32 and 249.33.
Similarly, for purposes of determining
the effective maturity date, if any, of
instruments, transactions, and
obligations included in the LCR
calculation for the U.S. intermediate
holding company, the foreign banking
organization would apply the same
provisions as apply to Board-regulated
U.S. banking organizations under
§ 249.31.
For the purpose of the proposed
requirement, a foreign banking
organization would apply §§ 249.32(m)
and 249.33(i) of the LCR rule to identify
excluded amounts for intragroup
transactions, as if the U.S. intermediate
holding company were the top-tier
Board-regulated institution.111
Accordingly, the proposal would treat
transactions between the consolidated
U.S. intermediate holding company and
any affiliates (including any U.S.
branches and agencies of the foreign
banking organization and subsidiaries of
the foreign banking organization outside
the U.S. intermediate holding company)
in the same manner as it does
transactions with unaffiliated third
parties.
Consistent with the requirements for
U.S. banking organizations,112 the
proposal would limit the sum of the
inflow amounts included in the LCR
denominator to 75 percent of the gross
outflow amounts calculated by the
foreign banking organization with
110 For a foreign banking organization subject to
Category II or III standards, the same outflow
adjustment percentage would apply to any LCR
requirement applicable to a covered depository
institution subsidiary of the foreign banking
organization.
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100 percent.
100 percent.
[70 to 85] percent.
[70 to 85] percent.
respect to a U.S. intermediate holding
company. This requirement would
ensure that foreign banking
organizations subject to the proposed
LCR requirement maintain an HQLA
amount to meet total net cash outflows
at the U.S. intermediate holding
company and are not overly reliant on
inflows that may not materialize in a
time of stress.
In addition to this requirement, the
Board considered whether it was
appropriate to propose an additional
limit that would restrict the recognition
of standardized inflow amounts
resulting from assets, transactions, or
instruments related to affiliates of the
foreign banking organization’s U.S.
intermediate holding company (interaffiliate inflows). Such an additional
restriction would have been consistent
with the requirement set forth in the
Board’s enhanced prudential standards
rule for the determination of minimum
111 12
CFR 249.32(m) and 249.33(i).
12 CFR 50.30 (OCC), 12 CFR 249.30
(Board), and 12 CFR 329.30 (FDIC).
112 See
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liquid asset buffers by a foreign banking
organization.113 This limit addresses the
risk that an affiliate may not be willing
or able to return funds in a time of
stress, given that a liquidity stress may
simultaneously have an impact on both
the foreign banking organization’s U.S.
operations and the affiliate providing
the inflow. This requirement remains an
important part of the internal liquidity
stress test and liquidity buffer
requirements set forth in the Board’s
enhanced prudential standards rule for
foreign banking organizations. However,
the proposal does not include this
additional limitation on recognition of
inter-affiliate inflows and instead relies
on the LCR’s total inflow amount cap to
address this risk. While the LCR’s total
inflow amount cap does not fully
capture the risk that non-U.S. affiliates
may be unable or unwilling to return
funds to U.S. entities in a stress, it
aligns with the Basel III LCR standard
and allows more direct comparability
between LCRs calculated by foreign
banking organizations under the
proposal and the LCRs currently
calculated by large U.S. bank holding
companies.
Question 48: What would be the
advantages and disadvantages of
preventing or otherwise limiting a
foreign banking organization from
assuming reliance on inter-affiliate
inflows to offset third-party net cash
outflows for purposes of the proposed
LCR requirements? What, if any, specific
approaches should the Board consider
applying to prevent such reliance, and
why?
C. NSFR Requirement With Respect to
Foreign Banking Organizations
Proposed § 249.204 would require a
foreign banking organization that is
subject to Category II or III standards, or
that is subject to Category IV standards
and has weighted short-term wholesale
funding of $50 billion or more, to
calculate and maintain a minimum
NSFR for its U.S. intermediate holding
company.114 Although the Board is
requesting comment regarding the
application of standardized liquidity
requirements with respect to the U.S.
branches and agencies of a foreign
banking organization, including an LCRbased approach, the Board is not
proposing at this time to require a
foreign banking organization to
113 See 12 CFR 252.157(c)(2)(iv)(C) and
(c)(3)(iv)(C).
114 As discussed in section V.F of this
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section, infra, the
proposal would also require covered depository
institution subsidiaries of foreign banking
organizations subject to Category II or III standards
to calculate and maintain an NSFR.
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calculate and maintain a minimum
NSFR for its U.S. branches and agencies.
The Board continues to consider
whether a stable funding requirement
for the U.S. branch and agency network
would be appropriate.
The proposed NSFR requirement
would generally be consistent with the
NSFR requirement that would apply to
U.S. banking organizations under the
NSFR proposed rule and the domestic
interagency proposal. Proposed
§ 249.204 would require a foreign
banking organization to calculate an
NSFR for its U.S. intermediate holding
company using proposed subparts K
through L of part 249 as if the U.S.
intermediate holding company (and not
the foreign banking organization itself)
were a top-tier Board-regulated
institution. In determining the required
stable funding amount for a U.S.
intermediate holding company, the
foreign banking organization would
apply the required stable funding
adjustment percentage under proposed
§ 249.204 based on its category of
liquidity standards. Consistent with
these subparts, the foreign banking
organization’s NSFR calculation would
take into account the transferability of
available stable funding from a
consolidated subsidiary to the top-tier
U.S. intermediate holding company.115
For a foreign banking organization that
is subject to a reduced NSFR
requirement, the foreign banking
organization may include available
stable funding of the consolidated
subsidiary in the U.S. intermediate
holding company’s ASF amount up to
the reduced required stable funding
amount of the subsidiary, plus amounts
of assets that the subsidiary may transfer
without restriction to the U.S.
intermediate holding company.
The proposal’s requirement that a
foreign banking organization calculate
and maintain an NSFR for its U.S.
intermediate holding company would
help to strengthen the funding profiles
of these entities and reduce the impact
of potential disruptions in their regular
sources of funding. Without an
appropriately stable funding profile for
its U.S. intermediate holding company,
a foreign banking organization faces the
risk that a liquidity stress in the United
States affecting its U.S. intermediate
holding company may adversely affect
the U.S. operations of the foreign
banking organization and U.S. financial
stability.
Under the NSFR proposed rule, a U.S.
bank holding company that is a
subsidiary of a foreign banking
organization could be subject to the
existing proposed NSFR requirements if
it meets certain criteria on a stand-alone
basis. In all cases, such a bank holding
company would also be registered as a
U.S. intermediate holding company
because it was established or designated
as such to meet the requirements of the
Board’s enhanced prudential standards
rule.116 This proposal would replace
any requirements that were included in
the NSFR proposed rule for a U.S.
intermediate holding company with a
requirement that a foreign banking
organization calculate and maintain an
NSFR for its U.S. intermediate holding
company. Similar to the proposed
change in the application of LCR
requirements, the Board is proposing
the change in the application of the
proposed NSFR requirements for U.S.
intermediate holding companies in
order to tailor these requirements based
on a foreign banking organization’s
combined U.S. operations, for the
reasons discussed above.
Question 49: What are the advantages
and disadvantages of applying an NSFR
requirement to a foreign banking
organization with respect to its U.S.
intermediate holding company? In what
way, if any, should the Board amend the
scope of the proposed requirements?
Question 50: How should the Board
address the risks associated with the
stable funding profile of a foreign
banking organization’s U.S. branch and
agency network?
Question 51: What would be the
advantages and disadvantages of the
proposed approach, and potential
alternatives, to the transferability of
liquidity within a consolidated U.S
intermediate holding company? What
incentives would each have with respect
to stable funding within a foreign
banking organization’s U.S. operations?
What effects would the proposed
approach, or alternative approaches,
have on the safety and soundness of a
foreign banking organization’s U.S.
operations?
D. LCR and NSFR Public Disclosure for
Foreign Banking Organizations and U.S.
Banking Organizations
The proposal would require a foreign
banking organization subject to Category
II or III liquidity standards, or subject to
Category IV liquidity standards with $50
billion or more in weighted short-term
wholesale funding, to publicly disclose
its LCR and NSFR with respect to its
U.S intermediate holding company, and
certain components of each ratio’s
calculation.117 A foreign banking
organization would disclose the ratios
116 See
115 See
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and their components on a quarterly
basis in a direct and prominent manner
consistent with the requirements for
large U.S. depository institution holding
companies under the Board’s LCR rule
and Board’s NSFR proposed rule.118
The proposal would also amend the
regulation text and the format of the
disclosure tables used in subpart J of the
LCR rule and subpart N of the NSFR
proposed rule to require a banking
organization to publicly disclose
information related to its net cash
outflow amount and required stable
funding amount, respectively, before
and after the application of any
applicable percentage adjustment. These
amendments would apply to both
foreign banking organizations and U.S.
banking organizations.
The Board has long supported
meaningful public disclosure by
banking organizations with the
objectives of improving market
discipline and encouraging sound risk
management practices. Market
discipline can mitigate risk to financial
stability by creating incentives for a
banking organization to internalize the
costs of its liquidity profile and
encouraging safe and sound banking
practices. Companies with less-resilient
profiles would be incentivized to
improve their liquidity positions, and
companies with more resilient liquidity
profiles would be encouraged to
maintain their sound risk management
practices.
Question 52: How should the
proposed public disclosure
requirements with respect to a U.S.
intermediate holding company be
adjusted to better assist the functioning
of the standardized liquidity
requirements and support market
discipline? In what way, if any, should
the scope of public disclose be
amended?
Question 53: What are the advantages
and disadvantages of requiring
disclosure of the LCR and NSFR for a
U.S. intermediate holding company and
certain of their components, consistent
with the disclosure requirements
applicable to a bank holding company?
Question 54: What are the advantages
or disadvantages of applying the
proposed public disclosure
requirements to foreign banking
118 The format and content requirements for
public disclosure for the LCR are described in 12
CFR part 249, subpart J. See also ‘‘Liquidity
Coverage Ratio: Public Disclosure Requirements;
Extension of Compliance Period for Certain
Companies to Meet the Liquidity Coverage Ratio
Requirements,’’ 81 FR 94922 (Dec. 27, 2016). The
proposed format and content requirements for the
disclosure of an NSFR are described in the NSFR
proposed rule.
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organizations subject to Category IV
standards?
E. Request for Comment on
Standardized Liquidity Requirements
With Respect to U.S. Branches and
Agencies of a Foreign Banking
Organization
The Board is currently proposing to
require certain foreign banking
organizations to comply with LCR and
NSFR requirements with respect to any
U.S. intermediate holding company, and
the agencies are proposing to apply
corresponding LCR and NSFR
requirements to the covered depository
institution subsidiaries of foreign
banking organizations subject to
Category II or III standards. As an
additional component of the proposed
liquidity framework, the Board is
requesting comment on whether it
should impose standardized liquidity
requirements to foreign banking
organizations with respect to their U.S.
branch and agency networks, as well as
possible approaches for doing so. The
Board would propose any such
requirements in a future notice of
proposed rulemaking.
While the standardized liquidity
requirements under the proposal would
address liquidity risks at the significant
U.S. subsidiaries of a foreign banking
organization, liquidity vulnerabilities
could still arise at the U.S. branches and
agencies of a foreign banking
organization, which could generate
significant risks in the United States. As
discussed above, risks to U.S. financial
stability and liquidity risks to a foreign
banking organization’s U.S. operations
can arise from any part of a foreign
banking organization’s U.S. operations.
During stress conditions, liquidity needs
can arise suddenly and tend to manifest
in all parts of an organization. For
instance, funding vulnerabilities at the
U.S. branches and agencies of a foreign
banking organization can cause
heightened liquidity risk exposure not
only at the branches and agencies
themselves, but also at the foreign
banking organization’s U.S. subsidiaries,
and vice versa. In addition, a foreign
banking organization’s U.S. branches
and agencies can have significant scale
and risk profile in the United States,
and an inability to meet liquidity needs
could lead to disruptions in U.S.
financial stability in a similar manner to
the distress or failure of other large
banking organizations or segments of a
foreign banking organization.
In general, the operations of foreign
banking organizations conducted
through U.S. branches and agencies
have distinct characteristics, funding
structures, and liquidity risks. U.S.
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branches of foreign banking
organizations tend to rely on less stable,
short-term wholesale funding to a
greater extent than U.S. bank holding
companies because of their structure
and business model. For example, U.S.
branches of a foreign banking
organization are generally not permitted
to accept retail deposits from U.S.
citizens and residents.119 As discussed
above, the reliance of a large banking
organization, or of the significant U.S.
operations of a foreign banking
organization, on short-term wholesale
funding relative to more stable funding
sources presents greater liquidity risks
to safety and soundness and U.S.
financial stability, particularly during
periods of stress. In addition, foreign
banking organizations often use U.S.
branches to fund the larger global
operations of the firm. For example,
under the ‘‘funding branch’’ model, a
foreign banking organization, via its
U.S. branches, borrows in the U.S.
wholesale funding markets to finance
long-term, U.S. dollar-denominated
project and trade finance around the
world. This model presented challenges
during the financial crisis, when
disruptions in wholesale funding
markets in the United States limited the
ability of U.S. branches of foreign
banking organizations to secure
wholesale funding to satisfy the
demands of their local and global
operations.120 This interaction resulted
in foreign banking organizations
borrowing extensively from the Federal
Reserve System in order to continue
operations.
In combination with the proposed
LCR requirement with respect to a U.S.
intermediate holding company, the goal
of a standardized liquidity requirement
with respect to a foreign banking
organization’s U.S. branch and agency
network is to strengthen the overall
resilience of the firm’s U.S. operations
to liquidity risks and help to prevent
transmission of risks between the
various segments of the foreign banking
organization. Without appropriate
liquid asset coverage for all components
of the U.S. operations of a foreign
banking organization, a foreign banking
organization faces the risk that a
liquidity stress in a single part of the
firm may adversely affect the U.S.
operations and U.S. financial stability.
Even where a foreign banking
organization with significant U.S.
operations is subject to consolidated
119 See
12 U.S.C. 3104.
e.g., Linda Goldberg and David Skeie,
‘‘Why Did U.S. Branches of Foreign Banks Borrow
at the Discount Window during the Crisis,’’ Federal
Reserve Bank of New York Liberty Street Economics
(April 13, 2011).
120 See,
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liquidity requirements in its home
jurisdiction, the application of a
standardized liquidity requirement with
respect to its U.S. branch and agency
network, in addition to its significant
U.S. subsidiary operations, would
require these firms to align the location
of liquid assets with the location of their
liquidity risks in the United States, in
order to ensure better protection against
risks to the U.S. operations and to U.S.
financial stability.
Such requirements are designed to
ensure a more level playing field for
liquidity regulations across the U.S.
operations of foreign banking
organizations and U.S. banking
organizations with similar levels of
liquidity risk. As noted above, while
large U.S. banking organizations are
subject to both firm-specific liquidity
requirements, such as internal liquidity
stress testing and buffer requirements,
and standardized liquidity
requirements, such as the LCR rule, a
foreign banking organization is not
currently subject to standardized
liquidity requirements with respect to
its U.S. branch and agency network,
despite generally significant reliance on
less stable forms of funding. Application
of a standardized liquidity requirement
is intended to provide a more consistent
framework to address such risks.
The Board is seeking comment on two
potential approaches, as well as other
alternatives, for standardized liquidity
requirements to address the liquidity
risks of the U.S. branches and agencies
of a foreign banking organization with
significant U.S. operations. As
discussed further below, the first
possible approach would be based on
the LCR rule, applied to a foreign
banking organization with respect to its
U.S. branches and agencies in the
aggregate. The second described
approach would apply a requirement to
a foreign banking organization tied to
the asset size of the foreign banking
organization’s U.S. branch and agency
network. The first approach would be
more sensitive to liquidity risk, while
the second would be simpler. The Board
also requests comment on other,
alternative approaches. In evaluating
potential approaches to standardized
liquidity requirements, the Board is
mindful that U.S. branches and agencies
are parts of larger global banks and play
an important role in ensuring firms can
meet their global U.S. dollar needs.
Accordingly, the Board is seeking
comment on how standardized liquidity
requirements should be adjusted to
reflect these factors.
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1. Option 1: LCR-Based Approach for
the U.S. Branch and Agency Network of
a Foreign Banking Organization
As one potential approach for
addressing the near-term liquidity risks
of a foreign banking organization’s U.S.
branches and agencies, the Board
requests comment on a liquid asset
requirement that would be generally
similar to the LCR rule. Under this
option, the Board could require a
foreign banking organization to
calculate and maintain an LCR with
respect to its U.S. branches and agencies
on an aggregate basis. Requiring
calculation on an aggregate basis would
be consistent with the approach taken
with the internal liquidity stress testing
and buffer requirements that apply
under the Board’s enhanced prudential
standards rule with respect to the U.S.
branches and agencies of a foreign
banking organization.121 The liquidity
requirements with respect to the U.S.
branch and agency network would be
based on the size and risk profile of the
foreign banking organization’s
combined U.S. operations, consistent
with the approach proposed with
respect to U.S. intermediate holding
companies.
Application of an LCR requirement
would help to ensure a consistent
minimum capability to estimate
liquidity needs in stress and ensure a
minimum level of liquid assets to cover
such needs, which are core elements of
sound liquidity risk management.122 A
standardized approach based on the risk
of stressed outflows would complement
a foreign banking organization’s
idiosyncratic risk modeling under the
Board’s enhanced prudential standards
rule.123
To the extent a standardized approach
were to align with the current LCR rule,
such an approach could promote
consistency and compliance efficiencies
with LCR requirements applied with
respect to a U.S. intermediate holding
company of a foreign banking
organization and covered depository
institution subsidiaries. Such an
approach would also facilitate
supervisory comparisons between the
liquidity risk profiles of the U.S. branch
and agency networks of foreign banking
organizations, the U.S. subsidiary
operations of foreign banking
organizations, and U.S. banking
121 12
CFR 252.157(a)(1)(i)(B) and (c)(3).
OCC, Board, FDIC, Office of Thrift
Supervision, and National Credit Union
Administration, ‘‘Interagency Policy Statement on
Funding and Liquidity Risk Management,’’ 75 FR
13656 (March 22, 2010) and BCBS, ‘‘Principles of
sound liquidity risk management and supervision,’’
(September 2008).
123 See 12 CFR 252.157.
122 See
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organizations. Because of the LCR rule’s
consistency with the Basel III LCR, an
LCR-based approach would also address
liquidity risk exposures of a foreign
banking organization’s U.S. operations
in a manner generally consistent with
home jurisdiction requirements for the
global consolidated foreign banking
organization, which could reduce
operational costs and facilitate more
integrated liquidity risk management.
Furthermore, to the extent that the
Board were to align the scope of
application of any U.S. branches and
agencies requirement for foreign
banking organizations with the scope of
application under the proposal,
alignment with existing regulatory
reporting by foreign banking
organizations under the Board’s FR
2052a Complex Institution Liquidity
Monitoring Report could limit the
incremental operational costs of
calculating an LCR-based requirement,
given that FR 2052a reporting closely
aligns with the component elements of
an LCR calculation.
Question 55: If the Board were to
propose an LCR-based requirement for
foreign banking organizations with
respect to their U.S. branch and agency
network, in what ways should the
requirement be consistent with the LCR
rule, interagency domestic proposal, or
the proposed LCR requirement for the
U.S. intermediate holding company of a
foreign banking organization? What
changes should be made to address the
risks and structure of a foreign banking
organization’s U.S. branches and
agencies?
Question 56: Which definitions in the
LCR rule, if any, should the Board
adjust, and in what ways, for an LCR
calculation with respect to a foreign
banking organization’s U.S. branch and
agency network?
Question 57: Any standardized
liquidity requirement for U.S. branches
and agencies would need to define the
types and quality of assets that would be
appropriate to cover the risk of potential
outflows. Under an LCR-based
approach, what differences, if any,
should the Board apply to the definition
of HQLA for U.S. branches and agencies
relative to the definition under the LCR
rule?
Question 58: The LCR rule includes
criteria for determining eligible HQLA of
a banking organization, including
operational requirements and generally
applicable criteria. What differences
should the Board consider, if any, to
ensure that eligible HQLA are available
to meet the stressed cash outflows of a
foreign banking organization’s U.S.
branch and agency network? In what
ways, if any, should the operational
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requirements or generally applicable
criteria differ in order to align with the
liquidity risk management operations of
foreign banking organizations?
Question 59: The generally applicable
criteria in the LCR rule include certain
requirements to ensure that the assets
included as HQLA are free from
encumbrance and may be freely
monetized to meet outflows. How
should an LCR approach take into
account the operating structures of U.S.
branches and agencies of foreign
banking organizations in the United
States for purposes of determining
eligible HQLA? For example, a federal
or state branch operating in the United
States may hold amounts of HQLA to
meet other regulatory requirements,
such as the capital equivalency deposits
(CED) requirement applicable to a
federal branch.124 In light of the criteria
for determining eligible HQLA under the
LCR rule, what, if any, changes to
relevant rules or policies should the
agencies consider regarding the
treatment of assets held for the purpose
of satisfying other regulatory
requirements, such as assets held to
meet CED requirements or other asset
maintenance requirements, and why?
Question 60: How should an LCRbased approach take into account the
transferability of assets between U.S.
branches and agencies for purposes of
determining the eligible HQLA of a
foreign banking organization’s U.S.
branch and agency network? For
example, a U.S. branch or agency may
be subject to a regulatory restriction in
place in a given state that could limit
the transferability of assets from that
branch or agency to another branch or
agency that is part of the U.S. branch
and agency network.
Question 61: In what ways, if any,
should the calculation of the HQLA
amount by a foreign banking
organization for its U.S. branch and
agency network differ from the
calculation that a foreign banking
organization would conduct under the
proposal with respect to a U.S.
intermediate holding company? For
example, how should an LCR approach
incorporate the haircuts and
composition caps on level 2 liquid
assets that are included in the current
LCR rule? What adjustments, if any,
would need to be made to the
definitions in the LCR rule to facilitate
these calculations?
Question 62: The current LCR
framework uses outflow amounts and
inflow amounts for a 30-day time
horizon. What would be the advantages
and disadvantages of using the same
124 See
12 CFR 28.15.
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time horizon for the outflow amounts
and inflow amounts of a foreign banking
organization’s U.S. branch and agency
network?
Question 63: If the minimum
standardized liquidity requirement for
the U.S. branch and agency network of
a foreign banking organization were to
be calibrated based on a time horizon
other than the LCR’s 30-day time
horizon, the approach would need to
address the timing of net cash outflows.
Under the LCR rule, one set of outflow
amounts and inflow amounts are
directly associated with a time horizon
and therefore included in the net
cumulative maturity outflow amount in
the maturity mismatch add-on
calculation. The remaining set of
contractual and contingent outflow
amounts and inflow amounts are not
included in the net cumulative maturity
outflow amount and are not directly
associated with specific time horizon
within the LCR’s 30-day window. How
should the outflow amounts and inflow
amounts be calibrated for a given time
horizon, and why?
Question 64: How could specific
outflow amounts and inflow amounts
for a foreign banking organization’s U.S.
branches and agencies appropriately
reflect the relevant risks? What, if any,
modifications would be required to the
outflow amounts and inflow amounts
described in §§ l. 32 and l.33
respectively of the LCR rule for a U.S.
branch and agency LCR calculation? For
example, the LCR rule excludes
transactions between two subsidiaries of
a consolidated holding company subject
to the rule. For calculations involving a
foreign banking organization’s U.S.
branch and agency network, what
transactions should be excluded and
why?
Question 65: Use of a standardized
liquidity requirement for U.S. branches
and agencies that is similar to a foreign
banking organization’s proposed LCR
requirement for a U.S. intermediate
holding company could provide greater
consistency across the approaches.
However, there may be outflow amounts
and inflow amounts described in the
proposal that need to be adapted for
U.S. branches and agencies, or that may
not be relevant and could be omitted.
For example, the LCR rule includes a
provision, the ‘‘broker-dealer segregated
account inflow amount,’’ that allows a
banking organization subject to the rule
to determine the extent to which it may,
over the course of the LCR 30-calendar
day time horizon, take into account any
reduction in regulatory asset
maintenance requirements that would
occur in a manner consistent with the
LCR’s outflow and inflow
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calculations.125 If the Board were to
apply an LCR requirement to a foreign
banking organization with respect to its
U.S. branches and agencies, to what
extent, if any, should such an approach
be included for forms of client
protection requirements or other
potential reductions in regulatory
requirements, such as CED requirements
of a branch or other asset maintenance
requirements?
Question 66: As described in the
proposal for a foreign banking
organization’s U.S. intermediate holding
company calculation, the LCR inflow
cap of 75 percent of total outflow
amounts would not reflect any specific
reliance of a foreign banking
organization’s U.S. operations on
anticipated affiliate inflows. What
alternative limits, if any, should be
applied to the inflow amounts of a
foreign banking organization’s U.S.
branch and agency network, and why?
Given the structure of U.S. branch and
agency funding, how should inflows
from U.S. and foreign affiliated legal
entities and offices be treated, and why?
For example, what would be the
advantages and disadvantages under an
LCR-based approach of preventing or
otherwise limiting the ability of a foreign
banking organization to assume reliance
on inter-affiliate inflows to offset
outflows?
Question 67: When considered in
combination with a foreign banking
organization’s LCR calculation for any
U.S. intermediate holding company
described in the proposal, how should a
standardized approach for U.S.
branches and agencies achieve
comprehensive coverage of the shortterm liquidity risks of a foreign banking
organization’s U.S. operations? In what
ways, if any, should an approach to
addressing the liquidity risks of a
foreign banking organization’s U.S.
branches and agencies capture the risk
of stressed cash outflows within the
United States that could result from
transactions, instruments and
obligations booked at affiliated legal
entities and offices outside of the foreign
banking organization’s U.S. operations?
Question 68: If the Board were to
implement standardized liquidity
requirements for foreign banking
organizations with respect to their U.S.
branch and agency networks, what
would be the advantages and
disadvantages of public disclosures
associated with such requirements?
What form should such public
disclosures take and why?
125 See 12 CFR 50.33(g) (OCC), 12 CFR 249.33(g)
(Board), and 12 CFR 329.33(g) (FDIC).
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2. Option 2: Simplified Liquidity
Requirement Based on U.S. Branch and
Agency Total Assets
An alternative approach for a
minimum standardized liquidity
requirement could be to require a
foreign banking organization to
maintain within its U.S. branch and
agency network an amount of liquid
assets of prescribed quality exceeding a
prescribed percentage (for example 20
percent) of the total aggregate U.S.
branch and agency network assets. Such
a requirement could function as a floor
to existing non-standardized liquidity
requirements.
The minimum amount of liquid assets
required under such an approach could
depend on the interaction with other
regulatory standards. For example, the
minimum requirement could be reduced
(for example, to 15 percent) to reflect
assets of a foreign banking
organization’s U.S. branches and
agencies that have appropriate liquidity
characteristics and are held to meet
other regulatory requirements, such as
CED requirements applicable to a
federal branch or other asset
maintenance requirements, even if those
assets might not necessarily be available
to meet outflows outside of particular
circumstances specified under those
requirements.
The Board requests comment on all
aspects of this approach, including
overall calibration and potential criteria
for determining which assets could be
permitted to satisfy a simplified
liquidity requirement. One approach
could align with the criteria used under
other liquidity requirements, such as the
criteria for highly liquid assets used for
purposes of the liquidity buffer
requirements under the Board’s
enhanced prudential standards rule or
HQLA under the LCR rule.
Alternatively, a foreign banking
organization could satisfy a simplified
liquidity requirement with assets that
meet the criteria for HQLA set forth in
the LCR rule, or a simplified version of
these criteria. For example, the criteria
could include the HQLA criteria under
section 20 of the LCR rule without
regard to the additional requirements for
eligible HQLA under section 22 or the
standardized haircuts and liquid asset
composition limits under section 21.
Question 69: Relative to an LCR-based
approach, when applied to foreign
banking organizations with similarly
sized U.S. operations, a requirement
tied only to the asset size of a foreign
banking organization’s U.S. branches
and agencies would tend to result in
lower requirements for foreign banking
organizations with greater measures of
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liquidity risk and higher requirements
for foreign banking organizations with
lower measures of liquidity risk. What
would be the advantages or
disadvantages of such a result? What
incentives could be created?
Question 70: How should a
requirement based on asset size take
into account off-balance sheet
exposures, such as in connection with
commitments and derivatives, which
can represent a material source of
liquidity risk to the U.S. operations of a
foreign banking organization?
Question 71: What would be the
advantages and disadvantages of basing
a more simple branch and agency
liquidity requirement on measures other
than or in addition to aggregate U.S.
branch and agency assets? What
measures should be included and in
what ways under such an approach?
Question 72: What would be the
advantages and disadvantages of
permitting assets held to meet another
regulatory requirement to reduce the
required level of liquid assets under a
standardized liquidity requirement?
How would such an approach align with
how a foreign banking organization
considers, for purposes of its internal
liquidity risk management practices,
assets required to be held under a
particular regulation to be available to
meet liquidity needs under various
economic and financial market
conditions?
Question 73: What criteria should be
applied for liquid assets to satisfy a
simplified, standardized liquidity
requirement based on aggregate U.S.
branch and agency assets? How should
such an approach incorporate a foreign
banking organization’s ability to
monetize these assets? What, if any,
standardized haircuts to the fair market
value should be applied and what
aggregate composition limits, if any,
should be applied, and why?
Question 74: To what extent would
different approaches for a standardized
liquidity requirement create incentives
for a foreign banking organization to
restructure the business models of U.S.
branches and agencies?
Question 75: What other approaches
should the Board consider for
standardized liquidity requirements to
address the liquidity risks of the U.S.
branches and agencies of a foreign
banking organization with significant
U.S. operations? Please provide the
rationale for any alternative approach
and a detailed description of how the
approach could mechanically operate in
conjunction with existing statutory and
regulatory requirements. What would be
the advantages and disadvantages to an
alternative approach for standardized
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liquidity requirements? Commenters are
encouraged to provide data to support
their responses.
F. LCR and NSFR Requirements for
Certain Depository Institution
Subsidiaries of a Foreign Banking
Organization
The agencies are proposing to apply
LCR and NSFR requirements to certain
large depository institution subsidiaries
of foreign banking organizations subject
to Category II or III liquidity standards.
Specifically, LCR and NSFR
requirements would apply to any
covered depository subsidiary (that is, a
depository institution that has total
consolidated assets of $10 billion or
more and is a consolidated subsidiary of
a U.S. intermediate holding company of
a foreign banking organization) of a
foreign banking organization that is
subject to Category II or III liquidity
standards.126 The level of the LCR
requirement applicable to the covered
depository institution subsidiary would
be the same as the level that would
apply to the foreign banking
organization. For example, a depository
institution with $10 billion in total
consolidated assets that is a subsidiary
of a U.S. intermediate holding company
of a foreign banking organization subject
to the reduced LCR requirement under
Category III liquidity standards would
itself be subject to the reduced LCR
requirement.
The risk-based indicators for
Categories II and III reflect the systemic
risk profile and safety and soundness
risk profile of the U.S. operations of a
foreign banking organization, of which a
large depository institution subsidiary is
a significant part. Each of these
indicators heightens the need for
sophisticated measures to monitor and
manage liquidity risk, including at a
covered depository institution
subsidiary. Such depository institution
subsidiaries are part of the U.S.
operations of a foreign banking
organization with a more significant
liquidity risk profile and whose failure
or distress could impose significant
costs on the U.S. financial system and
economy. The liquidity challenges of
such firms therefore make it appropriate
to ensure that a large depository
institution subsidiary maintains
sufficient liquidity to cover outflows
generated from its activities rather than
relying on other entities of the U.S.
126 The proposal would measure the total
consolidated assets of a subsidiary depository
institution based on the average level over the
previous four calendar quarters. See section III.C of
this Supplementary Information section, regarding
determination of the applicable category of
standards.
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operations of the foreign banking
organization.
The agencies are not proposing to
apply LCR or NSFR requirements to
covered depository institution
subsidiaries of foreign banking
organizations subject to Category IV
standards, based on the lesser risk
profile of their U.S. operations relative
to those of firms that would be subject
to Category II or III standards.
G. Transition Period; Cessation of
Applicability
The proposal would provide initial
transition periods for foreign banking
organizations and covered depository
institution subsidiaries to comply with
the proposed LCR requirements.127 The
compliance date for a foreign banking
organization with respect to its U.S.
intermediate holding company would
depend on whether the U.S.
intermediate holding company is
subject to the LCR rule at the effective
date of a final rule. Except as noted
below, a covered depository institution
subsidiary would be required to comply
with any applicable proposed LCR
requirement beginning on the same
date. More specifically:
• If a U.S. intermediate holding
company of a foreign banking
organization is subject to the full LCR
requirement as a covered company (for
example, as a bank holding company)
under the current LCR at the effective
date of a final rule, the foreign banking
organization would be required to
comply with the applicable proposed
LCR requirement (full or reduced) with
respect to its U.S. intermediate holding
company beginning on the effective date
of the final rule. A covered depository
institution subsidiary would be required
to comply with any applicable proposed
LCR requirement beginning on the same
date.
• If a U.S. intermediate holding
company of a foreign banking
organization is subject to the modified
LCR requirement (for example, as a bank
holding company) under the current
LCR rule at the effective date of a final
rule, the foreign banking organization
would be required to comply with the
proposed LCR requirement with respect
to its U.S. intermediate holding
company beginning on the effective
date. However, for one year following
the effective date of the final rule, the
LCR calculation with respect to the U.S.
intermediate holding company would
be on a monthly basis, would not
include a maturity-mismatch add-on,
127 The agencies will address the relevant
effective and compliance dates of the NSFR in the
final NSFR rule.
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and would use a 70 percent outflow
adjustment factor. In addition, no LCR
requirement would apply to a covered
depository institution subsidiary of such
a foreign banking organization until one
year following the effective date of the
final rule.128 The foreign banking
organization and any covered
depository institution subsidiary would
be required to comply with the maturity
mismatch add-on, any applicable
outflow adjustment factor, and any
applicable daily calculation requirement
beginning the first day of the calendar
quarter that is one year following the
effective date of the final rule.
• If a U.S. intermediate holding
company of a foreign banking
organization is not a covered company
under the LCR rule at the effective date
of a final rule, the foreign banking
organization would be required to
comply with the proposed LCR
requirement with respect to the U.S.
intermediate holding company
beginning on the first day of the
calendar quarter that is one year
following the effective date. A covered
depository institution subsidiary would
be required to comply with any
applicable proposed LCR requirement
beginning on the same date.
Following the date that is one year
after adoption of a final rule (or, in the
case of the proposed NSFR requirement,
following the effective date of that
requirement), a foreign banking
organization would be required to
comply with the requirements based on
its applicable category of standards,
according to the same timing as would
apply to a U.S. banking organization
under the domestic interagency
proposal.129 Specifically, under the
proposal, a foreign banking organization
that becomes subject to the proposed
LCR or NSFR requirements after the
initial effective date would be required
to comply with these requirements on
the first day of the second quarter after
the foreign banking organization became
subject to these requirements, consistent
with the amount of time currently
provided under the LCR rule and NSFR
proposed rule after the currently
applicable year-end measurement
date.130
In addition, the current LCR rule
provides newly covered banking
organizations with a transition period
for the daily calculation requirement,
recognizing that a daily calculation
requirement could involve significant
operational and technology demands.
Specifically, under the current rule, a
newly covered banking organization
must calculate its LCR monthly from
April 1 to December 1 of its first year
of compliance. Beginning on January 1
of the following year, the banking
organization must calculate its LCR
daily.131 The proposal would maintain
this transition period of three calendar
quarters following initial applicability
of a daily LCR calculation requirement
to a foreign banking organization.132
Under the proposal, like the current
LCR rule and NSFR proposed rule, once
a foreign banking organization is subject
to the proposed LCR or NSFR
requirements, it would remain subject to
the rule until the Board determines that
application of the rule would not be
appropriate in light of the foreign
banking organization’s asset size, level
of complexity, risk profile, or scope of
operations. This approach would be
consistent with the cessation provisions
that apply to U.S. banking organizations
under the current LCR rule and NSFR
proposed rule, and that would continue
to apply under the domestic interagency
proposal.
Question 76: What would be the
advantages and disadvantages of
maintaining the cessation provisions of
the LCR rule and NSFR proposed rule?
What would be the advantages and
disadvantages of aligning the cessation
provisions in the LCR rule and NSFR
proposed rule with the transition
provisions between categories of
standards? For example, the current
version of the LCR rule provides that,
once a banking organization becomes
subject to the LCR rule, it remains
subject to the LCR rule until its regulator
determines in writing that application of
the LCR rule is no longer appropriate.
What are the advantages and
disadvantages of requiring a written
determination before a banking
organization can move to a lower
category? What would be the advantages
128 This transition provision would apply to a
depository institution that is not subject to the LCR
rule and is a subsidiary of a covered company
subject to the modified LCR requirement at the
effective date of the final rule.
129 See section III.C of this Supplementary
Information section regarding determination of
applicable category of standards.
130 Under the LCR rule and NSFR proposed rule,
a banking organization that meets the thresholds for
applicability measured as of the year-end must
comply with the requirement(s) beginning on April
1 of the following year, or as specified by the
appropriate agency. See 12 CFR 50.1(b)(2) (OCC); 12
CFR 249.1(b)(2) (Board); 12 CFR 329(1)(b)(2) (FDIC);
and NSFR proposed rule. See also LCR FR rule, 79
FR at 61447.
131 See id.
132 For clarification, the proposed 3-quarter
transition period would apply only to a foreign
banking organization that becomes subject to a daily
LCR calculation requirement after the effective date
of a final rule; the 3-quarter transition period would
not be additive to any initial transition period that
would apply to a foreign banking organization in
connection with the effective date.
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and disadvantages of automatically
moving the category of a banking
organization based on its size and
indicators over the preceding four
quarters?
VI. Re-Proposal of Standardized
Liquidity Requirements for Certain U.S.
Depository Institution Holding
Companies Subject to Category IV
Standards
The domestic interagency proposal
would not have included LCR and
NSFR requirements for U.S. banking
organizations subject to Category IV
standards, based on an assessment that
these banking organizations generally
have more traditional balance sheet
structures, are largely funded by stable
retail deposits, and have less reliance on
less stable short-term wholesale
funding.133 However, as discussed
above in section V.A.3 of this
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section, the
Board observed that some banking
organizations that meet the criteria for
Category IV standards could potentially
have a heightened liquidity risk profile.
Thus, this proposal includes additional
tailoring of liquidity requirements for
both foreign banking organizations and
domestic holding companies subject to
Category IV standards in order to ensure
that standardized liquidity requirements
apply to all banking organizations with
heightened liquidity risks.134 As a
result, this proposal would modify the
applicable standardized liquidity
requirements for domestic holding
companies described in the domestic
interagency proposal. Accordingly, the
Board is accepting comments and
information during this reopened
comment period for the domestic
interagency proposal with respect to
this modification.
As discussed in section V.A.3 of this
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section, the
Board is proposing to apply
standardized liquidity requirements to
certain foreign banking organizations
subject to Category IV standards if the
reliance of the foreign banking
organization’s U.S. operations on shortterm wholesale funding is significant
relative to the firm’s combined U.S.
assets. The proposal would also apply
consistent requirements to U.S.
depository institution holding
companies that meet the same
indicators of risk. Specifically, a U.S.
133 See domestic interagency proposal, 83 FR
66024, 66037 (December 21, 2018).
134 The Board is proposing consistent
requirements for both U.S. and foreign banking
organizations that meet these criteria. Section V.A.3
of this SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section
discusses the proposed Category IV liquidity
standards for foreign banking organizations.
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depository institution holding company
subject to Category IV standards would
be subject to reduced LCR and NSFR
requirements if the firm has $50 billion
or more in weighted short-term
wholesale funding. As with the
proposed reduced LCR and NSFR
requirements that would apply to
certain banking organizations subject to
Category III standards, the Board
requests comment on a range of
potential calibrations for the reduced
requirement, between 70 and 85
percent. The proposal would require
such a U.S. depository institution
holding company standards to publicly
disclose its LCR and NSFR and certain
components of each ratio’s
calculation.135
For a U.S. banking organization
subject to Category IV standards, $50
billion or more in weighted short-term
wholesale funding would be significant
relative to the banking organization’s
total assets. Such banking organizations
do not have a traditional balance sheet
structure, rely less on funding from
stable deposits, and have material
reliance on less stable wholesale
funding. Accordingly, a banking
organization that meets these criteria
would have a higher level of liquidity
risk than other banking organizations
subject to Category IV standards.
However, to reflect the lesser risk
profile of these banking organizations
relative to U.S. banking organizations
that meet the criteria for Category I, II,
or III standards under the domestic
interagency proposal and foreign
banking organizations that meet the
criteria for Category II or III standards
under this proposal, the Board is
proposing to require calculation of the
LCR on a monthly basis, rather than
each business day. In addition, the
agencies are not proposing to apply an
LCR or NSFR requirement to the
depository institution subsidiaries of
such firms.
Question 77: What are the advantages
and disadvantages of applying a
reduced LCR and NSFR requirement to
U.S. depository institution holding
companies subject to Category IV
standards that have $50 billion or more
in weighted short-term wholesale
funding?
Question 78: Between a range of 70
and 85 percent of the full requirements,
135 As noted above, the format and content
requirements for public disclosure for the LCR are
described in 12 CFR part 249, subpart J. See also
‘‘Liquidity Coverage Ratio: Public Disclosure
Requirements; Extension of Compliance Period for
Certain Companies to Meet the Liquidity Coverage
Ratio Requirements,’’ 81 FR 94922 (Dec. 27, 2016).
The proposed format and content requirements for
the disclosure of an NSFR are described in the
NSFR proposed rule.
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what calibration should the Board adopt
for the reduced LCR and NSFR
requirements for U.S. depository
institution holding companies subject to
Category IV standards that have $50
billion or more in weighted short-term
wholesale funding, and why?
VII. Technical Amendments
In the domestic interagency proposal,
the agencies stated that changes in
liquidity requirements that result from a
change in category would take effect on
the first day of the second quarter
following the change in the banking
organization’s category.136 However, the
domestic interagency proposal did not
include proposed regulation text to give
effect to this intended treatment. The
agencies are making a technical
amendment in the regulation text
included with this proposal to provide
this treatment for U.S. banking
organizations. The agencies are also
making a technical amendment in both
the capital and liquidity regulation text
to clarify that a subsidiary depository
institution of a depository institution
would be categorized based on the risk
profile of its parent depository
institution.
VIII. Impact Assessment
The Board assessed the potential
impact of the proposal, taking into
account current levels of capital and
holdings of HQLA at affected foreign
banking organizations, potential benefits
in the form of reduced liquidity risk at
large foreign banking organizations, and
potential costs related to decreased
activity in global dollar funding
markets.
The Board expects the proposal to
have no material impact on the capital
levels of foreign banking organizations
that would be subject to Category II
standards. For foreign banking
organizations that would be subject to
Category III standards and that currently
reflect AOCI in regulatory capital, the
Board estimates that the proposal would
slightly lower capital requirements
under current conditions (depending on
the data on cross-jurisdictional activity,
by between $2 billion to $3 billion, or
between 0.5 to 0.6 percent of total riskweighted assets at these banking
organizations), as such firms would not
be required to reflect AOCI in regulatory
capital.137 This impact could vary under
different economic and market
conditions. For example, from 2001 to
2018, the aggregate AOCI for banking
organizations that would be subject to
136 83
FR at 66033.
Board’s analysis uses aggregate AOCI data
from the FR Y–9C as of September 30, 2018.
137 The
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Category III standards under the
proposal that included AOCI in capital
ranged from an estimated decrease of
approximately 90 basis points of total
risk-weighted assets to an estimated
increase of approximately 70 basis
points of total risk-weighted assets.138
For purposes of assessing the
potential impact of the proposed
changes to the liquidity standards, the
Board’s assessment focused on the
impact of the proposed change in the
applicability and the stringency of the
LCR rule, taking into account firms’
internal liquidity stress test
requirements.139 As the proposal would
reduce requirements for some firms and
increase requirements for others, the
Board quantified the net impact of the
proposal on the required HQLA of
affected foreign banking organizations
with respect to their U.S. intermediate
holding companies.140
Board staff estimated that, under the
proposal, liquidity requirements would
be expected to increase by between $1
billion to $10 billion for foreign banking
organizations in aggregate, depending
on the data on cross-jurisdictional
activity and on whether the reduced
LCR requirement were set at 70 or 85
percent.141 The increase in requirements
would represent between a 0.5 to 4
percent increase in total liquidity
requirements for the U.S. intermediate
holding companies of foreign banking
organizations. Foreign banking
organizations affected by the proposal
increased their holdings of liquid assets
after the financial crisis, and most or all
already hold sufficient HQLA to meet
the proposed requirements at their U.S.
subsidiaries. Board staff estimated that
the proposal would require foreign
banking organizations in the aggregate
to increase U.S. HQLA by between zero
to $1 billion, or by up to 0.5 percent of
total HQLA holdings at affected firms
for the second quarter ending June 30,
138 The Board’s analysis uses data from the FR Y–
9C between 2001 and 2018.
139 Because the NSFR and modified NSFR
requirements have not yet been finalized, banking
organizations are not currently subject to those
minimum requirements. As a result, the Board did
not assess any changes in impact as a result of
amending its scope of application.
140 Under the proposal, two U.S. intermediate
holding companies that are currently not subject to
the LCR rule would be subject to the LCR for the
first time, and two U.S. intermediate holding
companies currently subject to the LCR rule would
no longer be required to comply with an LCR
requirement.
141 The Board’s analysis estimates the impact of
modifying the LCR requirement for holding
companies that would be subject to Category III or
Category IV standards using data submitted on the
FR 2052a by these holding companies for the
second quarter 2018 reporting period.
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2018, in order to satisfy the proposed
LCR requirement.
The Board does not expect liquidity
requirements to increase for any
banking organization based on the
modification of the domestic
interagency proposal to apply
standardized liquidity requirements to
U.S. depository institution holding
companies subject to Category IV
standards that have $50 billion or more
in weighted short-term wholesale
funding, as no U.S. depository
institution holding companies currently
meet these criteria.
In addition to assessing the potential
impact of the proposal on LCR
minimum requirements, the Board
assessed the broader costs and benefits
associated with the liquidity regulation
of foreign banking organizations. One
potential benefit is that the proposal
would strengthen the safety and
soundness of foreign banking
organizations with respect to their U.S.
operations. The Board estimated the
relationship between holdings of liquid
assets and, as a measure of liquidity
stress, the usage of Federal Reserve
liquidity facilities during the financial
crisis, and found that, controlling for
other factors, foreign banking
organizations with more liquid assets
were less likely to access these
facilities.142 Moreover, among foreign
banking organizations that accessed
these facilities, those with more liquid
assets used these facilities less
intensively.
A potential cost of liquidity regulation
for foreign banking organizations is the
reduced efficiency of global dollar
markets.143 Foreign banking
organizations help integrate global
dollar markets by supplying dollars in
these markets or engaging in derivatives
transactions, and short-term funding
helps facilitate these activities.
Liquidity regulation may reduce
incentives for some foreign banking
organizations to engage in such
activities, with potentially adverse
effects on the functioning of global
dollar markets.
As the immediate effect of the
proposed change for foreign banking
organizations is estimated to be between
a zero to 0.5 percent increase in HQLA,
the anticipated effects on these firms’
safety and soundness and the
142 The Federal Reserve liquidity facilities
examined comprised of the discount window and
the Term Auction Facility.
143 Foreign banking organizations account for
more than 80 percent of dollar-denominated crossborder lending globally and fund nearly a quarter
of their global dollar balance sheet from their U.S.
operations.
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24327
functioning of global dollar markets are
likely to be mild.
Question 79: The Board invites
comment on all aspects of the foregoing
impact assessment associated with the
proposal. What, if any, additional costs
and benefits should be considered?
Commenters are encouraged to submit
data on potential impacts on foreign
banking organizations, as well as
potential costs or benefits of the
proposal that the agencies may not have
considered.
IX. Administrative Law Matters
A. Solicitation of Comments and Use of
Plain Language
Section 722 of the Gramm-LeachBliley Act 144 requires the Federal
banking agencies to use plain language
in all proposed and final rules
published after January 1, 2000. The
agencies have sought to present the
proposed rule in a simple and
straightforward manner, and invite
comment on the use of plain language.
For example:
• Have the agencies organized the
material to suit your needs? If not, how
could they present the proposed rule
more clearly?
• Are the requirements in the
proposed rule clearly stated? If not, how
could the proposed rule be more clearly
stated?
• Do the regulations contain technical
language or jargon that is not clear? If
so, which language requires
clarification?
• Would a different format (grouping
and order of sections, use of headings,
paragraphing) make the regulation
easier to understand? If so, what
changes would achieve that?
• Would more, but shorter, sections
be better? If so, which sections should
be changed?
• What other changes can the
agencies incorporate to make the
regulation easier to understand?
B. Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis
Certain provisions of the proposal
contain ‘‘collection of information’’
requirements within the meaning of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3501–3521) (PRA). In accordance
with the requirements of the PRA, the
agencies may not conduct or sponsor,
and a respondent is not required to
respond to, an information collection
unless it displays a currently valid
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) control number. The OMB
control numbers for the agencies’
respective LCR rules are OCC (1557–
144 Public Law 106–102, sec. 722, 113 Stat. 1338,
1471 (1999).
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0323), Board (7100–0367), and FDIC
(3064–0197). The OMB control numbers
for the agencies’ respective regulatory
capital rules are OCC (1557–0318),
Board (7100–0313), and FDIC (3064–
0153). These information collections
will be extended for three years, with
revision. The information collection
requirements contained in this proposal
have been submitted by the OCC and
FDIC to OMB for review and approval
under section 3507(d) of the PRA (44
U.S.C. 3507(d)) and section 1320.11 of
the OMB’s implementing regulations (5
CFR part 1320). The Board reviewed the
proposal under the authority delegated
to the Board by OMB.
Comments are invited on:
a. Whether the collections of
information are necessary for the proper
performance of the agencies’ functions,
including whether the information has
practical utility;
b. The accuracy or the estimate of the
burden of the information collections,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
c. Ways to enhance the quality,
utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected;
d. Ways to minimize the burden of the
information collections on respondents,
including through the use of automated
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology; and
e. Estimates of capital or startup costs
and costs of operation, maintenance,
and purchase of services to provide
information.
All comments will become a matter of
public record. Comments on aspects of
this notice that may affect reporting,
recordkeeping, or disclosure
requirements and burden estimates
should be sent to the addresses listed in
the ADDRESSES section of this document.
A copy of the comments may also be
submitted to the OMB desk officer for
the agencies by mail to U.S. Office of
Management and Budget, 725 17th
Street NW, #10235, Washington, DC
20503; facsimile to (202) 395–6974; or
email to oira_submission@omb.eop.gov,
Attention, Federal Banking Board Desk
Officer.
LCR Rule
Current Actions: The proposal would
revise §§ l.1, l.3, l.30, l.50, and l
.105 of each of the agencies’ respective
LCR rules and §§ 249.10, 249.90, 249.91,
and 249.131 of the Board’s LCR rule to
require depository institution
subsidiaries of certain U.S. intermediate
holding companies of foreign banking
organizations to calculate an LCR and
NSFR. The proposal would also add
subpart O of the Board’s regulations,
which would require certain foreign
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banking organizations to calculate an
LCR and NSFR with respect to their U.S.
intermediate holding companies.
Currently, a foreign banking
organization operating in the United
States is not subject to the LCR rule, nor
would it be subject to the NSFR
proposed rule, with respect to its U.S.
operations, except to the extent that a
subsidiary depository institution
holding company or a subsidiary
depository institution of the foreign
banking organization meets the relevant
applicability criteria on a stand-alone
basis. However, for most foreign
banking organizations that would be
subject to subpart O, their U.S.
intermediate holding companies
currently meet the relevant applicability
criteria on a stand-alone basis under the
current LCR rule. Subpart O contains
additional reporting, recordkeeping and
disclosure requirements for foreign
banking organizations in §§ 249.204,
249.205, 249.206, 249.207, and 249.208.
Section 249.204 would require a
foreign banking organization to
maintain for each U.S. intermediate
holding company a net stable funding
ratio that is equal to or greater than 1.0
on an ongoing basis in accordance with
§ 249.3 and subparts K and L of this part
as if each U.S. intermediate holding
company (and not the foreign banking
organization subject to this subpart)
were a top-tier Board-regulated
institution. In complying with
§ 249.204, a foreign banking
organization will utilize proposed § l
.108(b) of each of the agencies’
respective LCR rules, which provides
that if an institution includes an ASF
amount in excess of the RSF amount of
the consolidated subsidiary, it must
implement and maintain written
procedures to identify and monitor
applicable statutory, regulatory,
contractual, supervisory, or other
restrictions on transferring assets from
the consolidated subsidiaries.
Section 249.205 would be consistent
with § l.22 of each the agencies’
respective LCR rules. Section 249.205
requires that, with respect to each asset
eligible for inclusion in the foreign
banking organization’ HQLA amount,
the foreign banking organization must
implement policies that require eligible
HQLA to be under the control of the
management function of the foreign
banking organization that is charged
with managing liquidity risk. In
addition, consistent with § l.22,
§ 249.205 would require that a foreign
banking organization have a
documented methodology that results in
a consistent treatment for determining
that the eligible HQLA meet the
requirements in § 249.205.
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Section 249.206 would be consistent
with § l.40 of each of the agencies’
respective LCR rules. These provisions
describe the reporting and
recordkeeping requirements related to a
shortfall in a foreign banking
organization’s liquidity coverage ratio.
Section 249.207 would be consistent
with proposed § l.110 of the proposed
NSFR rule. These provisions describe
the reporting and recordkeeping
requirements related to a shortfall in a
foreign banking organization’s net stable
funding ratio.
Section 249.208 would require a
foreign banking organization to disclose
publicly all information for a U.S.
intermediate holding company as if the
U.S. intermediate holding company
were subject to the disclosure
requirements found in the LCR rule
(§§ 249.90 and 249.91) and proposed
NSFR rule (§§ 249.130 and 249.131).
For more detail on §§ l.22 and l.40,
please see ‘‘Liquidity Coverage Ratio:
Liquidity Risk Measurement Standards,
Final Rule,’’ 79 FR 61440 (October 10,
2014). For more detail on §§ l.90 and
l.91, please see ‘‘Liquidity Coverage
Ratio: Public Disclosure Requirements;
Extension of Compliance Period for
Certain Companies to Meet the
Liquidity Coverage Ratio
Requirements,’’ 81 FR 94922 (Dec. 27,
2016). For more detail on §§ l.108, l
.110, l.130, and l.131, please see ‘‘Net
Stable Funding Ratio: Liquidity Risk
Measurement Standards and Disclosure
Requirements; Proposed Rule,’’ 81 FR
35124 (June 1, 2016). The disclosure
requirements are only for Board
supervised entities. The Board would
also delete the disclosure requirements
in § 249.64.
Information Collections Proposed to
be Revised:
OCC
OMB control number: 1557–0323.
Title of Information Collection:
Reporting and Recordkeeping
Requirements Associated with Liquidity
Coverage Ratio: Liquidity Risk
Measurement, Standards, and
Monitoring.
Frequency: Event generated, monthly,
quarterly, annually.
Affected Public: National banks and
federal savings associations.
Estimated average hours per response:
Sections 50.40(a), 50.110(a) (19
respondents)
Reporting (ongoing monthly)—.50
Sections 50.40(b), 50.110(b) (19
respondents)
Reporting (ongoing)—.50
Sections 50.40(b)(3)(iv), 50.110(b)(3) (19
respondents)
Reporting (quarterly)—.50
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Sections 329.22(a)(2) and (5), 329.108(b)
(2 respondents)
Recordkeeping (ongoing)—40
Sections 329.40(b), 329.110(b) (2
respondents)
Recordkeeping (ongoing)—200
Estimated annual burden hours: 497.
Sections 50.22(a)(2) and (5), 50.108(b)
(19 respondents)
Recordkeeping (ongoing)—40
Sections 50.40(b), 50.110(b) (19
respondents)
Recordkeeping (ongoing)—200
Estimated annual burden hours:
4,722.
Disclosure Burden—Advanced
Approaches Banking Organizations
Board
OMB control number: 7100–0367.
Title of Information Collection:
Reporting, Recordkeeping, and
Disclosure Requirements Associated
with the Regulation WW.
Frequency: Event generated, monthly,
quarterly, annually.
Affected Public: Insured state member
banks, bank holding companies, and
savings and loan holding companies,
and foreign banking organizations.
Estimated average hours per response:
Sections 249.40(a), 249.110(a),
249.206(a), 249.207(a) (3
respondents)
Reporting (ongoing monthly)—.50
Sections 249.40(b), 249.110(b),
249.206(b), 249.207(a) (3
respondents)
Reporting (ongoing)—.50
Sections 249.40(b)(3)(iv), 249.110(b)(3),
249.206(b)(iv),249. 207(b)(3) (3
respondents)
Reporting (quarterly)—.50
Sections 249.22(a)(2) and (5),
249.108(b), 249.204, 249.205(a)(2)
and (5) (23 respondents)
Recordkeeping (ongoing)—40
Sections 249.40(b), 249.110(b),
249.206(b), 249.207(b) (3
respondents)
Recordkeeping (ongoing)—200
Sections 249.90, 249.91, 249.130,
249.131, 249.208 (19 respondents)
Disclosure (quarterly)—24
Estimated annual burden hours:
3,370.
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FDIC
OMB control number: 3064–0197.
Title of Information Collection:
Liquidity Coverage Ratio: Liquidity Risk
Measurement, Standards, and
Monitoring (LCR).
Frequency: Event generated, monthly,
quarterly, annually.
Affected Public: State nonmember
banks and state savings associations.
Estimated average hours per response:
Sections 329.40(a), 329.110(a) (2
respondents)
Reporting (ongoing monthly)—.50
Sections 329.40(b), 329.110(b) (2
respondents)
Reporting (ongoing)—.50
Sections 329.40(b)(3)(iv), 329.110(b)(3)
(2 respondents)
Reporting (quarterly)—.50
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Current Actions
The proposal would require a U.S.
intermediate holding company subject
to Category III standards to maintain a
minimum supplementary leverage ratio
of 3 percent given its size and risk
profile. As a result, these intermediate
holding companies would no longer be
identified as ‘‘advanced approaches
banking organizations’’ for purposes of
the advanced approach disclosure
respondent count.
Information Collections Proposed to
be Revised:
OCC
Title of Information Collection: RiskBased Capital Standards: Advanced
Capital Adequacy Framework.
Frequency: Quarterly, annual.
Affected Public: Businesses or other
for-profit.
Respondents: National banks, state
member banks, state nonmember banks,
and state and federal savings
associations.
OMB control number: 1557–0318.
Estimated number of respondents:
1,365 (of which 18 are advanced
approaches institutions).
Estimated average hours per response:
Minimum Capital Ratios
Recordkeeping (Ongoing)—16
Standardized Approach
Recordkeeping (Initial setup)—122
Recordkeeping (Ongoing)—20
Disclosure (Initial setup)—226.25
Disclosure (Ongoing quarterly)—
131.25
Advanced Approach
Recordkeeping (Initial setup)—460
Recordkeeping (Ongoing)—540.77
Recordkeeping (Ongoing quarterly)—
20
Disclosure (Initial setup)—328
Disclosure (Ongoing)—5.78
Disclosure (Ongoing quarterly)—41
Estimated annual burden hours: 1,136
hours initial setup, 64,945 hours for
ongoing.
Board
Title of Information Collection:
Recordkeeping and Disclosure
Requirements Associated with
Regulation Q.
Frequency: Quarterly, annual.
Affected Public: Businesses or other
for-profit.
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24329
Respondents: State member banks
(SMBs), bank holding companies
(BHCs), U.S. intermediate holding
companies (IHCs), savings and loan
holding companies (SLHCs), and global
systemically important bank holding
companies (GSIBs).
Current actions: This proposal would
amend the definition of advanced
approaches Board-regulated institution
to include, as relevant here, a depository
institution holding company that is
identified as a Category II banking
organization pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5
or 12 CFR 238.10, and a U.S.
intermediate holding company that is
identified as a Category II banking
organization pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5.
Category III Board-regulated institutions
would not be considered advanced
approaches Board-regulated institutions.
As a result, the Board estimates that 1
institution will no longer be an
advanced approaches Board-regulated
institution under the proposal.
Legal authorization and
confidentiality: This information
collection is authorized by section 38(o)
of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12
U.S.C. 1831o(c)), section 908 of the
International Lending Supervision Act
of 1983 (12 U.S.C. 3907(a)(1)), section
9(6) of the Federal Reserve Act (12
U.S.C. 324), and section 5(c) of the Bank
Holding Company Act (12 U.S.C.
1844(c)). The obligation to respond to
this information collection is
mandatory. If a respondent considers
the information to be trade secrets and/
or privileged such information could be
withheld from the public under the
authority of the Freedom of Information
Act (5 U.S.C. 552(b)(4)). Additionally, to
the extent that such information may be
contained in an examination report such
information could also be withheld from
the public (5 U.S.C. 552 (b)(8)).
Agency form number: FR Q.
OMB control number: 7100–0313.
Estimated number of respondents:
1,431 (of which 16 are advanced
approaches institutions).
Estimated average hours per response:
Minimum Capital Ratios
Recordkeeping (Ongoing)—16
Standardized Approach
Recordkeeping (Initial setup)—122
Recordkeeping (Ongoing)—20
Disclosure (Initial setup)—226.25
Disclosure (Ongoing quarterly)—
131.25
Advanced Approach
Recordkeeping (Initial setup)—460
Recordkeeping (Ongoing)—540.77
Recordkeeping (Ongoing quarterly)—
20
Disclosure (Initial setup)—280
Disclosure (Ongoing)—5.78
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Disclosure (Ongoing quarterly)—35
Disclosure (Table 13 quarterly)—5
Risk-based Capital Surcharge for GSIBs
Recordkeeping (Ongoing)—0.5
Current estimated annual burden
hours: 1,088 hours initial setup, 78,183
hours for ongoing.
Proposed revisions estimated annual
burden: (787) hours.
Total estimated annual burden: 1,088
hours initial setup, 77,396 hours for
ongoing.
FDIC
Title of Information Collection:
Regulatory Capital Rule.
Frequency: Quarterly, annual.
Affected Public: Businesses or other
for-profit.
Respondents: State nonmember
banks, state savings associations, and
certain subsidiaries of those entities.
OMB control number: 3064–0153.
Estimated number of respondents:
3,489 (of which 1 is an advanced
approaches institution).
Estimated average hours per response:
Minimum Capital Ratios
Recordkeeping (Ongoing)—16.
Standardized Approach
Recordkeeping (Initial setup)—122
Recordkeeping (Ongoing)—20
Disclosure (Initial setup)—226.25
Disclosure (Ongoing quarterly)—
131.25
Advanced Approach
Recordkeeping (Initial setup)—460
Recordkeeping (Ongoing)—540.77
Recordkeeping (Ongoing quarterly)—
20
Disclosure (Initial setup)—328
Disclosure (Ongoing)—5.78
Disclosure (Ongoing quarterly)—41
Estimated annual burden hours: 1,136
hours initial setup, 126,920 hours for
ongoing.
Reporting Burden—FFIEC and Board
Forms
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Current Actions
The proposal would also require
changes to the Consolidated Reports of
Condition and Income (Call Reports)
(FFIEC 031, FFIEC 041, and FFIEC 051;
OMB Nos. 1557–0081 (OCC), 7100–0036
(Board), and 3064–0052 (FDIC)) and
Risk-Based Capital Reporting for
Institutions Subject to the Advanced
Capital Adequacy Framework (FFIEC
101; OMB Nos. 1557–0239 (OCC), 7100–
0319 (Board), and 3064–0159 (FDIC)),
which will be addressed in a separate
Federal Register notice.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
OCC: The Regulatory Flexibility Act,
5 U.S.C. 601 et seq., (RFA), requires an
agency, in connection with a proposed
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Jkt 247001
rule, to prepare an Initial Regulatory
Flexibility Analysis describing the
impact of the rule on small entities
(defined by the SBA for purposes of the
RFA to include commercial banks and
savings institutions with total
consolidated assets of $550 million or
less and trust companies with total
consolidated assets of $38.5 million of
less) or to certify that the proposed rule
would not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
As part of our analysis, we consider
whether the proposal would have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities,
pursuant to the RFA. The OCC currently
supervises approximately 886 small
entities.145 Because the proposal only
applies to IHCs with total consolidated
assets of $100 billion or more, it would
not impact any OCC-supervised small
entities. Therefore, the proposal would
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities.
Board: In accordance with the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), 5
U.S.C. 601 et seq., the Board is
publishing an initial regulatory
flexibility analysis of the proposal. The
RFA requires each federal agency to
prepare an initial regulatory flexibility
analysis in connection with the
promulgation of a proposed rule, or
certify that the proposed rule will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small
entities.146 Under regulations issued by
the SBA, a small entity includes a bank,
bank holding company, or savings and
loan holding company with assets of
$550 million or less (small banking
organization).147 Based on the Board’s
analysis, and for the reasons stated
below, the Board believes that this
proposed rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial of
number of small banking organizations.
As discussed in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section, the Board is
proposing to adopt amendments to
Regulations Q 148 and WW 149 that
would affect the regulatory
requirements that apply to foreign
145 The OCC calculated the number of small
entities using the SBA’s size thresholds for
commercial banks and savings institutions, and
trust companies, which are $550 million and $38.5
million, respectively. Consistent with the General
Principles of Affiliation, 13 CFR 121.103(a), the
OCC counted the assets of affiliated financial
institutions when determining whether to classify
a national bank or Federal savings association as a
small entity.
146 See 5 U.S.C. 603, 604, and 605.
147 See 13 CFR 121.201.
148 12 CFR part 217.
149 12 CFR part 249.
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banking organizations with $50 billion
or more in total consolidated assets and
U.S. depository institution holding
companies with $100 billion or more in
total consolidated assets. Companies
that are affected by the proposal
therefore substantially exceed the $550
million asset threshold at which a
banking entity is considered a ‘‘small
entity’’ under SBA regulations.
Because the proposal is not likely to
apply to any company with assets of
$550 million or less if adopted in final
form, the proposal is not expected to
affect any small entity for purposes of
the RFA. The Board does not believe
that the proposal duplicates, overlaps,
or conflicts with any other Federal
rules. In light of the foregoing, the Board
does not believe that the proposal, if
adopted in final form, would have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
supervised. Nonetheless, the Board
seeks comment on whether the proposal
would impose undue burdens on, or
have unintended consequences for,
small banking organizations, and
whether there are ways such potential
burdens or consequences could be
minimized in a manner consistent the
purpose of the proposal.
FDIC: The Regulatory Flexibility Act
(RFA) generally requires an agency, in
connection with a proposed rule, to
prepare and make available for public
comment an initial regulatory flexibility
analysis that describes the impact of a
proposed rule on small entities.150
However, an initial regulatory flexibility
analysis is not required if the agency
certifies that the rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
The Small Business Administration
(SBA) has defined ‘‘small entities’’ to
include banking organizations with total
assets of less than or equal to $550
million.151 For the reasons described
below and under section 605(b) of the
RFA, the FDIC certifies that the proposal
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
The FDIC supervises 3,489
institutions, of which 2,674 are
150 5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.
SBA defines a small banking organization
as having $550 million or less in assets, where an
organization’s ‘‘assets are determined by averaging
the assets reported on its four quarterly financial
statements for the preceding year.’’ See 13 CFR
121.201 (as amended, effective December 2, 2014).
In its determination, the ‘‘SBA counts the receipts,
employees, or other measure of size of the concern
whose size is at issue and all of its domestic and
foreign affiliates.’’ See 13 CFR 121.103. Following
these regulations, the FDIC uses a covered entity’s
affiliated and acquired assets, averaged over the
preceding four quarters, to determine whether the
covered entity is ‘‘small’’ for the purposes of RFA.
151 The
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considered small entities for the
purposes of RFA.152
The proposed rule would change
capital and liquidity requirements for
certain foreign banking organizations
with total combined or consolidated
U.S. assets greater than $100 billion or
with greater than $75 billion in one or
more risk-based indicators. None of the
institutions with total combined or
consolidated U.S. assets greater than
$100 billion or with greater than $75
billion in one or more risk-based
indicators are FDIC-supervised small
entities by SBA standards. Since this
proposal does not affect any institutions
that are defined as small entities for the
purposes of the RFA, the FDIC certifies
that the proposal will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
The FDIC invites comments on all
aspects of the supporting information
provided in this RFA section. In
particular, would this rule have any
significant effects on small entities that
the FDIC has not identified?
rulemaking process. In addition, the
agencies also invite any other comments
that further will inform the agencies’
consideration of RCDRIA.
D. Riegle Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994
Pursuant to section 302(a) of the
Riegle Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act (RCDRIA),
in determining the effective date and
administrative compliance requirements
for new regulations that impose
additional reporting, disclosure, or other
requirements on insured depository
institutions, each federal banking
agency must consider, consistent with
principles of safety and soundness and
the public interest, any administrative
burdens that such regulations would
place on insured depository institutions,
including small depository institutions,
and customers of depository
institutions, as well as the benefits of
such regulations.153 In addition, section
302(b) of RCDRIA requires new
regulations and amendments to
regulations that impose additional
reporting, disclosures, or other new
requirements on insured depository
institutions generally to take effect on
the first day of a calendar quarter that
begins on or after the date on which the
regulations are published in final
form.154
The agencies note that comment on
these matters has been solicited in other
sections of this Supplementary
Information section, and that the
requirements of RCDRIA will be
considered as part of the overall
List of Subjects
§ 3.2
12 CFR Part 3
*
152 Call
Report Data for the quarter ending
December 31, 2018.
153 12 U.S.C. 4802(a).
154 12 U.S.C. 4802(b).
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E. OCC Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
of 1995 Determination
The OCC analyzed the proposed rule
under the factors set forth in the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
(UMRA) (2 U.S.C. 1532). Under this
analysis, the OCC considered whether
the proposed rule includes a Federal
mandate that may result in the
expenditure by State, local, and Tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100 million or more
in any one year (adjusted for inflation).
The OCC has determined that this
proposed rule would not result in
expenditures by State, local, and Tribal
governments, or the private sector, of
$100 million or more in any one year.
Accordingly, the OCC has not prepared
a written statement to accompany this
proposal.
Administrative practice and
procedure, Federal Reserve System,
National banks, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
12 CFR Part 50
Administrative practice and
procedure, Banks, banking, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements,
Savings associations.
12 CFR Part 217
Administrative practice and
procedure, Banks, banking, Holding
companies, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Securities.
12 CFR Part 249
Administrative practice and
procedure, Banks, banking, Holding
companies, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
12 CFR Part 324
Administrative practice and
procedure, Banks, banking, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements,
Savings associations.
12 CFR Part 329
Administrative practice and
procedure, Banks, banking, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
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24331
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency
12 CFR Chapter I
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons stated in the
chapter I
of title 12 of the Code of Federal
Regulations is proposed to be amended
as follows:
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION,
PART 3—CAPITAL ADEQUACY
STANDARDS
1. The authority citation for part 3
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 93a, 161, 1462,
1462a, 1463, 1464, 1818, 1828(n), 1828 note,
1831n note, 1835, 3907, 3909, and
5412(b)(2)(B).
2. In § 3.2, add the definitions of
Category II national bank or Federal
savings association, Category III
national bank or Federal savings
association, FR Y–9LP, and FR Y–15 in
alphabetical order to read as follows:
■
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
Category II national bank or Federal
savings association means:
(1) A national bank or Federal savings
association that is a subsidiary of a
Category II banking organization, as
defined pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5 or 12
CFR 238.10, as applicable; or
(2) A national bank or Federal savings
association that:
(i)(A) Has total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
national bank’s or Federal savings
association’s total consolidated assets
for the four most recent calendar
quarters as reported on the Consolidated
Report of Condition and Income (Call
Report), equal to $700 billion or more.
If the national bank or Federal savings
association has not filed the Call Report
for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters, total consolidated assets means
the average of its total consolidated
assets, as reported on the Call Report,
for the most recent quarter or quarters,
as applicable; or
(B) Has:
(1) Total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
national bank’s or Federal savings
association’s total consolidated assets
for the four most recent calendar
quarters as reported on the Call Report,
of $100 billion or more but less than
$700 billion. If the national bank or
Federal savings association has not filed
the Call Report for each of the four most
recent quarters, total consolidated assets
means the average of its total
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 101 / Friday, May 24, 2019 / Proposed Rules
consolidated assets, as reported on the
Call Report, for the most recent quarter
or quarters, as applicable; and
(2) Cross-jurisdictional activity,
calculated based on the average of its
cross jurisdictional activity for the four
most recent calendar quarters, of $75
billion or more. Cross-jurisdictional
activity is the sum of crossjurisdictional claims and crossjurisdictional liabilities, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the
FR Y–15 or equivalent reporting form.
(ii) After meeting the criteria in
paragraph (2)(i) of this definition, a
national bank or Federal savings
association continues to be a Category II
national bank or Federal savings
association until the national bank or
Federal savings association has:
(A)(1) Less than $700 billion in total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
Call Report, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters; and
(2) Less than $75 billion in crossjurisdictional activity for each of the
four most recent calendar quarters.
Cross-jurisdictional activity is the sum
of cross-jurisdictional claims and crossjurisdictional liabilities, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the
FR Y–15 or equivalent reporting form;
or
(B) Less than $100 billion in total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
Call Report, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters.
Category III national bank or Federal
savings association means:
(1) A national bank or Federal savings
association that is a subsidiary of a
Category III banking organization as
defined pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5 or 12
CFR 238.10, as applicable;
(2) A national bank or Federal savings
association that meets the criteria in
paragraph (3)(ii)(A) or (B) of this
definition; or
(3) A depository institution that:
(i) Is a national bank or Federal
savings association; and
(ii)(A) Has total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
depository institution’s total
consolidated assets for the four most
recent calendar quarters as reported on
the Call Report, equal to $250 billion or
more. If the depository institution has
not filed the Call Report for each of the
four most recent calendar quarters, total
consolidated assets means the average of
its total consolidated assets, as reported
on the Call Report, for the most recent
quarter or quarters, as applicable; or
(B) Has:
(1) Total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
depository institution’s total
consolidated assets for the four most
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18:46 May 23, 2019
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recent calendar quarters as reported on
the Call Report, of $100 billion or more
but less than $250 billion. If the
depository institution has not filed the
Call Report for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, total
consolidated assets means the average of
its total consolidated assets, as reported
on the Call Report, for the most recent
quarter or quarters, as applicable; and
(2) At least one of the following in
paragraphs (3)(ii)(B)(2)(i) through (iii) of
this definition, each calculated as the
average of the four most recent
consecutive quarters, or if the
depository institution has not filed each
applicable reporting form for each of the
four most recent calendar quarters, for
the most recent quarter or quarters, as
applicable:
(i) Total nonbank assets, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the
FR Y–9LP or equivalent reporting form,
equal to $75 billion or more;
(ii) Off-balance sheet exposure equal
to $75 billion or more. Off-balance sheet
exposure is a depository institution’s
total exposure, calculated in accordance
with the instructions to the FR Y–15 or
equivalent reporting form, minus the
total consolidated assets of the
depository institution, as reported on
the Call Report; or
(iii) Weighted short-term wholesale
funding, calculated in accordance with
the instructions to the FR Y–15 or
equivalent reporting form, equal to $75
billion or more.
(iii) After meeting the criteria in
paragraph (3)(ii) of this definition, a
national bank or Federal savings
association continues to be a Category
III national bank or Federal savings
association until the national bank or
Federal savings association has:
(A)(1) Less than $250 billion in total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
Call Report, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters;
(2) Less than $75 billion in total
nonbank assets, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the
FR Y–9LP or equivalent reporting form,
for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters;
(3) Less than $75 billion in weighted
short-term wholesale funding,
calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the FR Y–15 or
equivalent reporting form, for each of
the four most recent calendar quarters;
and
(4) Less than $75 billion in off-balance
sheet exposure for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters. Off-balance
sheet exposure is a national bank’s or
Federal savings association’s total
exposure, calculated in accordance with
the instructions to the FR Y–15 or
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Sfmt 4702
equivalent reporting form, minus the
total consolidated assets of the national
bank or Federal savings association, as
reported on the Call Report; or
(B) Less than $100 billion in total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
Call Report, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters; or
(C) Is a Category II national bank or
Federal savings association.
*
*
*
*
*
FR Y–15 means the Systemic Risk
Report.
FR Y–9LP means the Parent Company
Only Financial Statements for Large
Holding Companies.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. In § 3.10, revise paragraphs (a)(6),
(c) introductory text, and (c)(4)(i)
introductory text to read as follows:
§ 3.10
Minimum capital requirements.
(a) * * *
(6) For advanced approaches national
banks and Federal savings associations,
and for Category III national banks and
Federal savings associations, a
supplementary leverage ratio of 3
percent.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Advanced approaches capital ratio
calculations. An advanced approaches
national bank or Federal savings
association that has completed the
parallel run process and received
notification from the OCC pursuant to
§ 3.121(d) must determine its regulatory
capital ratios as described in paragraphs
(c)(1) through (3) of this section. An
advanced approaches national bank or
Federal savings association must
determine its supplementary leverage
ratio in accordance with paragraph
(c)(4) of this section, beginning with the
calendar quarter immediately following
the quarter in which the national bank
or Federal savings association
institution meets any of the criteria in
§ 3.100(b)(1). A Category III national
bank or Federal savings association
must determine its supplementary
leverage ratio in accordance with
paragraph (c)(4) of this section,
beginning with the calendar quarter
immediately following the quarter in
which the national bank or Federal
savings association is identified as a
Category III national bank or Federal
savings association.
*
*
*
*
*
(4) Supplementary leverage ratio. (i)
An advanced approaches national
bank’s or Federal savings association’s
or a Category III national bank’s or
Federal savings association’s
supplementary leverage ratio is the ratio
of its tier 1 capital to total leverage
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exposure, the latter which is calculated
as the sum of:
*
*
*
*
*
■ 4. In § 3.11, revise paragraphs (b)(1)
introductory text and (b)(1)(ii) to read as
follows:
*
*
*
*
(b) Countercyclical capital buffer
amount—(1) General. An advanced
approaches national bank or Federal
savings association, and a Category III
national bank or Federal savings
association, must calculate a
countercyclical capital buffer amount in
accordance with paragraphs (b)(1)(i)
through (iv) of this section for purposes
of determining its maximum payout
ratio under Table 1 to this section.
*
*
*
*
*
(ii) Amount. An advanced approaches
national bank or Federal savings
association, and a Category III national
bank or Federal savings association, has
a countercyclical capital buffer amount
determined by calculating the weighted
average of the countercyclical capital
buffer amounts established for the
national jurisdictions where the
national bank’s or Federal savings
association’s private sector credit
exposures are located, as specified in
paragraphs (b)(2) and (3) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 5. In § 3.100, revise paragraph (b)(1) to
read as follows:
§ 3.100 Purpose, applicability, and
principle of conservatism.
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*
*
*
*
(b) Applicability. (1) This subpart
applies to a national bank or Federal
savings association that:
(i) Is a subsidiary of a global
systemically important BHC, as
identified pursuant to 12 CFR 217.402;
(ii) Is a Category II national bank or
Federal savings association;
(iii) Is a subsidiary of a depository
institution that uses the advanced
approaches pursuant to this subpart
(OCC), 12 CFR part 217 (Board), or 12
CFR part 324 (FDIC), to calculate its
risk-based capital requirements; or
(iv) Is a subsidiary of a bank holding
company or savings and loan holding
company that uses the advanced
approaches pursuant to subpart E of 12
CFR part 217 to calculate its risk-based
capital requirements; or
(v) Elects to use this subpart to
calculate its risk-based capital
requirements.
*
*
*
*
*
18:46 May 23, 2019
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Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1 et seq., 93a, 481,
1818, and 1462 et seq.
■
*
VerDate Sep<11>2014
6. The authority citation for part 50
continues to read as follows:
■
7. In § 50.1, revise paragraph (b) to
read as follows:
§ 3.11 Capital conservation buffer and
countercyclical capital buffer amount.
*
PART 50—LIQUIDITY RISK
MEASUREMENT STANDARDS
§ 50.1
Purpose and applicability.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Applicability of minimum liquidity
standards. (1) A national bank or
Federal savings association is subject to
the minimum liquidity standard and
other requirements of this part if:
(i) It is a GSIB depository institution,
a Category II national bank or Federal
savings association, or a Category III
national bank or Federal savings
association;
(ii) It is a national bank or Federal
savings association that has total
consolidated assets equal to $10 billion
or more, calculated based on the average
of the national bank’s or Federal savings
association’s total consolidated assets
for the four most recent calendar
quarters as reported on the Call Report,
and it is a consolidated subsidiary of a
U.S. intermediate holding company of
either a Category II foreign banking
organization or a Category III foreign
banking organization. If the depository
institution has not filed the Call Report
for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters, total consolidated assets means
the average of its total consolidated
assets, as reported on the Call Report,
for the most recent quarter or quarters,
as applicable; and
(iii) It is a national bank or Federal
savings association for which the OCC
has determined that application of this
part is appropriate in light of the
national bank’s or Federal savings
association’s asset size, level of
complexity, risk profile, scope of
operations, affiliation with foreign or
domestic covered entities, or risk to the
financial system.
(2)(i) A national bank or Federal
savings association that initially
becomes subject to the minimum
liquidity standard, minimum stable
funding standard, and other
requirements of this part under
paragraph (b)(1)(i) or (ii) of this section
must comply with the requirements of
this part beginning on the first day of
the second calendar quarter after which
the national bank or Federal savings
association becomes subject to the
minimum liquidity standard and other
requirements of this part, except:
(A) For the first three calendar
quarters after a national bank or Federal
savings association begins complying
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24333
with the minimum liquidity standard
and other requirements of this part, a
national bank or Federal savings
association must calculate and maintain
a liquidity coverage ratio monthly, on
each calculation date that is the last
business day of the applicable calendar
month; and
(B) Beginning one year after the
national bank or Federal savings
association becomes subject to the
minimum liquidity standard and other
requirements of this part under
paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this section, and
thereafter, the national bank or Federal
savings association must calculate and
maintain a liquidity coverage ratio on
each calculation date.
(ii) A national bank or Federal savings
association that becomes subject to the
minimum liquidity standard and other
requirements of this part under
paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this section must
comply with the requirements of this
part subject to a transition period
specified by the OCC.
■ 8. In § 50.3:
■ a. Add the definition of Average
weighted short-term wholesale funding
in alphabetical order;
■ b. Revise the definition for
Calculation date;
■ c. Add the definitions of Call Report,
Category II national bank or Federal
savings association, Category II foreign
banking organization, Category III
foreign banking organization, and
Category III national bank or Federal
savings association in alphabetical
order;
■ d. Revise the definition for Covered
depository institution holding company;
■ e. Add the definitions of Foreign
banking organization, FR Y–9LP, FR Y–
15, Global systemically important BHC,
and GSIB depository institution in
alphabetical order;
■ f. Revise the definition for Regulated
financial company; and
■ g. Add the definitions of State and
U.S. intermediate holding company in
alphabetical order.
The additions and revisions read as
follows:
§ 50.3
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Average weighted short-term
wholesale funding means the average of
the banking organization’s weighted
short-term wholesale funding for each of
the four most recent calendar quarters as
reported quarterly on the FR Y–15 or, if
the banking organization has not filed
the FR Y–15 for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, for the most
recent quarter or quarters, as applicable.
*
*
*
*
*
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Calculation date means, for purposes
of subparts A through J of this part, any
date on which a national bank or
Federal savings association calculates
its liquidity coverage ratio under
§ 50.21, and for purposes of subparts K
through N of this part, any date on
which a national bank or Federal
savings association calculates its net
stable funding ratio (NSFR) under
§ 50.100.
Call Report means the Consolidated
Reports of Condition and Income.
Category II foreign banking
organization means a foreign banking
organization that is identified as a
Category II banking organization
pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5.
Category III foreign banking
organization means a foreign banking
organization that is identified as a
Category III banking organization
pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5.
Category II national bank or Federal
savings association means:
(1)(i) A national bank or Federal
savings association that:
(A) Is a consolidated subsidiary of:
(1) A company that is defined as a
Category II banking organization
pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5 or 12 CFR
238.10, as applicable; or
(2) A depository institution that meets
the criteria in paragraph (2)(ii)(A) or (B)
of this definition; and
(B) Has total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
national bank’s or Federal savings
association’s total consolidated assets
for the four most recent calendar
quarters as reported on the Call Report,
equal to $10 billion or more.
(ii) If the national bank or Federal
savings association has not filed the Call
Report for each of the four most recent
calendar quarters, total consolidated
assets means the average of its total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
Call Report, for the most recent quarter
or quarters, as applicable. After meeting
the criteria under this paragraph (1), a
national bank or Federal savings
association continues to be a Category II
national bank or Federal savings
association until the national bank or
Federal savings association has less than
$10 billion in total consolidated assets,
as reported on the Call Report, for each
of the four most recent calendar
quarters, or the national bank or Federal
savings association is no longer a
consolidated subsidiary an entity
described in paragraph (1)(i)(A)(1) or (2)
of this definition; or
(2) A depository institution that:
(i) Is a national bank or Federal
savings association; and
(ii)(A) Has total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
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18:46 May 23, 2019
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depository institution’s total
consolidated assets for the four most
recent calendar quarters as reported on
the Consolidated Report of Condition
and Income (Call Report), equal to $700
billion or more. If the depository
institution has not filed the Call Report
for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters, total consolidated assets means
the average of its total consolidated
assets, as reported on the Call Report,
for the most recent quarter or quarters,
as applicable; or
(B) Has:
(1) Total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
depository institution’s total
consolidated assets for the four most
recent calendar quarters as reported on
the Call Report, of $100 billion or more
but less than $700 billion. If the
depository institution has not filed the
Call Report for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, total
consolidated assets means the average of
its total consolidated assets, as reported
on the Call Report, for the most recent
quarter or quarters, as applicable; and
(2) Cross-jurisdictional activity,
calculated based on the average of its
cross-jurisdictional activity for the four
most recent consecutive quarters, of $75
billion or more. Cross-jurisdictional
activity is the sum of crossjurisdictional claims and crossjurisdictional liabilities, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the
FR Y–15 or equivalent reporting form.
(iii) After meeting the criteria in
paragraphs (2)(i) and (ii) of this
definition, a national bank or Federal
savings association continues to be a
Category II national bank or Federal
savings association until the national
bank or Federal savings association:
(A)(1) Has less than $700 billion in
total consolidated assets, as reported on
the Call Report, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters; and
(2) Has less than $75 billion in crossjurisdictional activity for each of the
four most recent calendar quarters.
Cross-jurisdictional activity is the sum
of cross-jurisdictional claims and crossjurisdictional liabilities, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the
FR Y–15 or equivalent reporting form;
(B) Has less than $100 billion in total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
Call Report, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters; or
(C) Is a GSIB depository institution.
Category III national bank or Federal
savings association means:
(1)(i) A national bank or Federal
savings association that:
(A) Is a consolidated subsidiary of:
(1) A company that is defined as a
Category III banking organization
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pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5 or 12 CFR
238.10, as applicable; or
(2) A depository institution that meets
the criteria in paragraph (2)(ii)(A) or (B)
of this definition; and
(B) has total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
national bank’s or Federal savings
association’s total consolidated assets
for the four most recent calendar
quarters as reported on the Call Report,
equal to $10 billion or more.
(ii) If the national bank or Federal
savings association has not filed the Call
Report for each of the four most recent
calendar quarters, total consolidated
assets means the average of its total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
Call Report, for the most recent quarter
or quarters, as applicable. After meeting
the criteria under this paragraph (1), a
national bank or Federal savings
association continues to be a Category
III national bank or Federal savings
association until the national bank or
Federal savings association has less than
$10 billion in total consolidated assets,
as reported on the Call Report, for each
of the four most recent calendar
quarters, or the national bank or Federal
savings association is no longer a
consolidated subsidiary of an entity
described in paragraph (1)(i)(A)(1) or (2)
of this definition; or
(2) A depository institution that:
(i) Is a national bank or Federal
savings association; and
(ii)(A) Has total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
depository institution’s total
consolidated assets for the four most
recent calendar quarters as reported on
the Consolidated Report of Condition
and Income (Call Report), equal to $250
billion or more. If the depository
institution has not filed the Call Report
for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters, total consolidated assets means
the average of its total consolidated
assets, as reported on the Call Report,
for the most recent quarter or quarters,
as applicable; or
(B) Has:
(1) Total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
depository institution’s total
consolidated assets for the four most
recent calendar quarters as reported on
the Call Report, of at least $100 billion
but less than $250 billion. If the
depository institution has not filed the
Call Report for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, total
consolidated assets means the average of
its total consolidated assets, as reported
on the Call Report, for the most recent
quarter or quarters, as applicable; and
(2) One or more of the following in
paragraphs (2)(ii)(B)(2)(i) through (iii) of
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this definition, each measured as the
average of the four most recent quarters,
or if the depository institution has not
filed each applicable reporting form for
each of the four most recent calendar
quarters, for the most recent quarter or
quarters, as applicable:
(i) Total nonbank assets, calculated in
accordance with instructions to the FR
Y–9LP or equivalent reporting form,
equal to $75 billion or more;
(ii) Off-balance sheet exposure,
calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the FR Y–15 or
equivalent reporting form, minus the
total consolidated assets of the
depository institution, as reported on
the Call Report, equal to $75 billion or
more; or
(iii) Weighted short-term wholesale
funding, calculated in accordance with
the instructions to the FR Y–15 or
equivalent reporting form, equal to $75
billion or more.
(iii) After meeting the criteria in
paragraphs (2)(i) and (ii) of this
definition, a national bank or Federal
savings association continues to be a
Category III national bank or Federal
savings association until the national
bank or Federal savings association:
(A)(1) Has less than $250 billion in
total consolidated assets, as reported on
the Call Report, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters;
(2) Has less than $75 billion in total
nonbank assets, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the
FR Y–9LP or equivalent reporting form,
for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters;
(3) Has less than $75 billion in
weighted short-term wholesale funding,
calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the FR Y–15 or
equivalent reporting form, for each of
the four most recent calendar quarters;
and
(4) Has less than $75 billion in offbalance sheet exposure for each of the
four most recent calendar quarters. Offbalance sheet exposure is a national
bank’s or Federal savings association’s
total exposure, calculated in accordance
with the instructions to the FR Y–15 or
equivalent reporting form, minus the
total consolidated assets of the national
bank or Federal savings association, as
reported on the Call Report; or
(B) Has less than $100 billion in total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
Call Report, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters; or
(C) Is a Category II national bank or
Federal savings bank; or
(D) Is a GSIB depository institution.
*
*
*
*
*
Covered depository institution
holding company means a top-tier bank
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holding company or savings and loan
holding company domiciled in the
United States other than:
(1) A top-tier savings and loan
holding company that is:
(i) A grandfathered unitary savings
and loan holding company as defined in
section 10(c)(9)(A) of the Home Owners’
Loan Act (12 U.S.C. 1461 et seq.); and
(ii) As of June 30 of the previous
calendar year, derived 50 percent or
more of its total consolidated assets or
50 percent of its total revenues on an
enterprise-wide basis (as calculated
under GAAP) from activities that are not
financial in nature under section 4(k) of
the Bank Holding Company Act (12
U.S.C. 1842(k));
(2) A top-tier depository institution
holding company that is an insurance
underwriting company;
(3)(i) A top-tier depository institution
holding company that, as of June 30 of
the previous calendar year, held 25
percent or more of its total consolidated
assets in subsidiaries that are insurance
underwriting companies (other than
assets associated with insurance for
credit risk); and
(ii) For purposes of paragraph (3)(i) of
this definition, the company must
calculate its total consolidated assets in
accordance with GAAP, or if the
company does not calculate its total
consolidated assets under GAAP for any
regulatory purpose (including
compliance with applicable securities
laws), the company may estimate its
total consolidated assets, subject to
review and adjustment by the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System; or
(4) A U.S. intermediate holding
company.
*
*
*
*
*
Foreign banking organization has the
same meaning as in 12 CFR 211.21(o)
(§ 211.21(o) of the Board’s Regulation
K), provided that if the top-tier foreign
banking organization is incorporated in
or organized under the laws of any
State, the foreign banking organization
shall not be treated as a foreign banking
organization for purposes of this part.
*
*
*
*
*
FR Y–15 means the Systemic Risk
Report.
FR Y–9LP means the Parent Company
Only Financial Statements for Large
Holding Companies.
*
*
*
*
*
Global systemically important BHC
means a bank holding company
identified as a global systemically
important BHC pursuant to 12 CFR
217.402.
GSIB depository institution means a
depository institution that is a
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24335
consolidated subsidiary of a global
systemically important BHC and has
total consolidated assets equal to $10
billion or more, calculated based on the
average of the depository institution’s
total consolidated assets for the four
most recent calendar quarters as
reported on the Call Report. If the
depository institution has not filed the
Call Report for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, total
consolidated assets means the average of
its total consolidated assets, as reported
on the Call Report, for the most recent
calendar quarter or quarters, as
applicable. After meeting the criteria
under this definition, a depository
institution continues to be a GSIB
depository institution until the
depository institution has less than $10
billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of
the four most recent calendar quarters,
or the depository institution is no longer
a consolidated subsidiary of a global
systemically important BHC.
*
*
*
*
*
Regulated financial company means:
(1) A depository institution holding
company or designated company;
(2) A company included in the
organization chart of a depository
institution holding company on the
Form FR Y–6, as listed in the hierarchy
report of the depository institution
holding company produced by the
National Information Center (NIC)
website,2 provided that the top-tier
depository institution holding company
is subject to a minimum liquidity
standard under 12 CFR part 249;
(3) A depository institution; foreign
bank; credit union; industrial loan
company, industrial bank, or other
similar institution described in section
2 of the Bank Holding Company Act of
1956, as amended (12 U.S.C. 1841 et
seq.); national bank, state member bank,
or state non-member bank that is not a
depository institution;
(4) An insurance company;
(5) A securities holding company as
defined in section 618 of the DoddFrank Act (12 U.S.C. 1850a); broker or
dealer registered with the SEC under
section 15 of the Securities Exchange
Act (15 U.S.C. 78o); futures commission
merchant as defined in section 1a of the
Commodity Exchange Act of 1936 (7
U.S.C. 1 et seq.); swap dealer as defined
in section 1a of the Commodity
Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1a); or securitybased swap dealer as defined in section
3 of the Securities Exchange Act (15
U.S.C. 78c);
2 https://www.ffiec.gov/nicpubweb/nicweb/
NicHome.aspx.
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(6) A designated financial market
utility, as defined in section 803 of the
Dodd-Frank Act (12 U.S.C. 5462);
(7) A U.S. intermediate holding
company; and
(8) Any company not domiciled in the
United States (or a political subdivision
thereof) that is supervised and regulated
in a manner similar to entities described
in paragraphs (1) through (7) of this
definition (e.g., a foreign banking
organization, foreign insurance
company, foreign securities broker or
dealer or foreign financial market
utility).
(9) A regulated financial company
does not include:
(i) U.S. government-sponsored
enterprises;
(ii) Small business investment
companies, as defined in section 102 of
the Small Business Investment Act of
1958 (15 U.S.C. 661 et seq.);
(iii) Entities designated as Community
Development Financial Institutions
(CDFIs) under 12 U.S.C. 4701 et seq. and
12 CFR part 1805; or
(iv) Central banks, the Bank for
International Settlements, the
International Monetary Fund, or
multilateral development banks.
*
*
*
*
*
State means any state,
commonwealth, territory, or possession
of the United States, the District of
Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico, the Commonwealth of the
Northern Mariana Islands, American
Samoa, Guam, or the United States
Virgin Islands.
*
*
*
*
*
U.S. intermediate holding company
means a company formed by a foreign
banking organization pursuant to 12
CFR 252.153.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 9. In § 50.30, revise paragraph (a) and
add paragraphs (c) and (d) to read as
follows:
§ 50.30
Total net cash outflow amount.
(a) Calculation of total net cash
outflow amount. As of the calculation
date, a national bank’s or Federal
savings association’s total net cash
outflow amount equals the national
bank’s or Federal savings association’s
outflow adjustment percentage as
determined under paragraph (c) of this
section multiplied by:
(1) The sum of the outflow amounts
calculated under § 50.32(a) through (l);
minus
(2) The lesser of:
(i) The sum of the inflow amounts
calculated under § 50.33(b) through (g);
and
(ii) 75 percent of the amount
calculated under paragraph (a)(1) of this
section; plus
(3) The maturity mismatch add-on as
calculated under paragraph (b) of this
section.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Outflow adjustment percentage. A
national bank’s or Federal savings
association’s outflow adjustment
percentage is determined pursuant to
Table 1 to this section.
TABLE 1 TO § 50.30—OUTFLOW ADJUSTMENT PERCENTAGES
[Outflow adjustment percentage]
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A GSIB depository institution ...................................................................................................................................................
Category II national bank or Federal savings association ......................................................................................................
Category III national bank or Federal savings association that:
(1) Is a consolidated subsidiary of a Category III banking organization with $75 billion or more in average weighted
short-term wholesale funding; or
(2) Has $75 billion or more in average weighted short-term wholesale funding and is not consolidated under a holding company
Category III national bank or Federal savings association that:
(1) Is a consolidated subsidiary of a Category III banking organization with less than $75 billion in average weighted
short-term wholesale funding; or
(2) Has less than $75 billion in average weighted short-term wholesale funding and is not consolidated under a
holding company
A national bank or Federal savings association that is described in § 50.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated subsidiary of a
U.S. intermediate holding company of a Category II foreign banking organization.
A national bank or Federal savings association that is described in § 50.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated subsidiary of a
U.S. intermediate holding company of a Category III foreign banking organization with $75 billion or more in average
weighted short-term wholesale funding.
A national bank or Federal savings association that is described in § 50.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated subsidiary of a
U.S. intermediate holding company of a Category III foreign banking organization with less than $75 billion in average
weighted short-term wholesale funding.
(d) Transition. A national bank or
Federal savings association whose
outflow adjustment percentage increases
from a lower to a higher outflow
adjustment percentage may continue to
use its previous lower outflow
adjustment percentage until the first day
of the second calendar quarter after the
outflow adjustment percentage
increases.
■ 10. In § 50.50, revise paragraph (a) to
read as follows
§ 50.50
Transitions.
(a) Depository institution subsidiary of
a U.S. intermediate holding company. A
national bank or Federal savings
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association that becomes subject to this
part under § 50.1(b)(1)(ii) does not need
to comply with the minimum liquidity
standard and other requirements of this
part until [one year after effective date
of final rule], at which time the national
bank or Federal savings association
must begin to calculate and maintain a
liquidity coverage ratio daily in
accordance with subparts A through N
of this part, if the national bank or
Federal savings association is a
consolidated subsidiary of a U.S.
intermediate holding company that,
immediately prior to [effective date of
final rule]:
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100 percent.
100 percent.
100 percent.
[70 to 85] percent.
100 percent.
100 percent.
[70 to 85] percent.
(1) Was domiciled in the United
States;
(2) Had total consolidated assets equal
to $50 billion or more (based on the
average of the U.S. intermediate holding
company’s four most recent
Consolidated Financial Statements for
Holding Companies reporting forms (FR
Y–9Cs));
(3) Had total consolidated assets less
than $250 billion as of the 2018 yearend FR Y–9C or Call Report, as
applicable; and
(4) Had total consolidated on-balance
sheet foreign exposure of less than $10
billion as of year-end 2018 (where total
on-balance sheet foreign exposure
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equals total cross-border claims less
claims with a head office or guarantor
located in another country plus
redistributed guaranteed amounts to the
country of the head office or guarantor
plus local country claims on local
residents plus revaluation gains on
foreign exchange and derivative
transaction products, calculated in
accordance with the Federal Financial
Institutions Examination Council
(FFIEC) 009 Country Exposure Report).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 11. Section 50.105, as proposed to be
added at 81 FR 35124 (June 1, 2016), is
revised to read as follows:
§ 50.105 Calculation of required stable
funding amount.
(a) As of the calculation date, a
national bank or Federal savings
association’s required stable funding
(RSF) amount equals the national bank
or Federal savings association’s required
stable funding adjustment percentage as
determined under paragraph (b) of this
section multiplied by the sum of:
(1) The carrying values of a national
bank or Federal savings association’s
assets (other than amounts included in
the calculation of the derivatives RSF
amount pursuant to § 50.107(b)) and the
undrawn amounts of a national bank or
Federal savings association’s credit and
liquidity facilities, in each case
multiplied by the RSF factors applicable
in § 50.106; and
(2) The national bank or Federal
savings association’s derivatives RSF
amount calculated pursuant to
§ 50.107(b).
(b) A national bank or Federal savings
association’s required stable funding
adjustment percentage is determined
pursuant to Table 1 to this section.
TABLE 1 TO § 50.105—REQUIRED STABLE FUNDING ADJUSTMENT PERCENTAGES
[Required stable funding adjustment percentage]
A GSIB depository institution ...................................................................................................................................................
Category II national bank or Federal savings association ......................................................................................................
Category III national bank or Federal savings association that:
(1) Is a consolidated subsidiary of a Category III banking organization with $75 billion or more in average weighted
short-term wholesale funding; or
(2) Has $75 billion or more in average weighted short-term wholesale funding and is not consolidated under a holding company
Category III national bank or Federal savings association that:
(1) Is a consolidated subsidiary of a Category III banking organization with less than $75 billion in average weighted
short-term wholesale funding; or
(2) Has less than $75 billion in average weighted short-term wholesale funding and is not consolidated under a
holding company
A national bank or Federal savings association that is described in § 50.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated subsidiary of a
U.S. intermediate holding company of a Category II foreign banking organization.
A national bank or Federal savings association that is described in § 50.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated subsidiary of a
U.S. intermediate holding company of a Category III foreign banking organization with $75 billion or more in average
weighted short-term wholesale funding.
A national bank or Federal savings association that is described in § 50.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated subsidiary of a
U.S. intermediate holding company of a Category III foreign banking organization with less than $75 billion in average
weighted short-term wholesale funding.
(c) A national bank or Federal savings
association whose required stable
funding adjustment percentage
increases from a lower to a higher
required stable funding adjustment
percentage may continue to use its
previous lower required stable funding
adjustment percentage until the first day
of the second calendar quarter after the
required stable funding adjustment
percentage increases.
BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12. The authority citation for part 217
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 248(a), 321–338a,
481–486, 1462a, 1467a, 1818, 1828, 1831n,
1831o, 1831p–1, 1831w, 1835, 1844(b), 1851,
3904, 3906–3909, 4808, 5365, 5368, 5371.
13. Section 217.2, as proposed to be
amended at 83 FR 66024 (December 21,
2018), is further amended by revising
the definitions of Advanced approaches
Board-regulated institution, Category II
Board-regulated institution, Category III
Board-regulated institution, FR Y–15,
and FR Y–9LP and adding the definition
of U.S. intermediate holding company
in alphabetical order to read as follows:
■
12 CFR Chapter II
Authority and Issuance
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PART 217—CAPITAL ADEQUACY OF
BANK HOLDING COMPANIES,
SAVINGS AND LOAN HOLDING
COMPANIES, AND STATE MEMBER
BANKS (REGULATION Q)
For the reasons set forth in the
Supplementary Information, chapter II
of title 12 of the Code of Federal
Regulations is proposed to be amended
as follows:
§ 217.2
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Advanced-approaches Boardregulated institution means a Board-
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100 percent.
100 percent.
100 percent.
[70 to 85] percent.
100 percent.
100 percent.
[70 to 85] percent.
regulated institution that is described in
§ 217.100(b)(1).
*
*
*
*
*
Category II Board-regulated
institution means:
(1) A depository institution holding
company that is identified as a Category
II banking organization pursuant to 12
CFR 252.5 or 12 CFR 238.10, as
applicable;
(2) A U.S. intermediate holding
company that is identified as a Category
II banking organization pursuant to 12
CFR 252.5;
(3) A state member bank that is a
subsidiary of a company identified in
paragraph (1) of this definition; or
(4) A state member bank that:
(i)(A) Has total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
state member bank’s total consolidated
assets for the four most recent calendar
quarters as reported on the Call Report,
equal to $700 billion or more. If the state
member bank has not filed the Call
Report for each of the four most recent
calendar quarters, total consolidated
assets is calculated based on the average
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of its total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for the most
recent quarter or quarters, as applicable;
or
(B) Has:
(1) Total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
state member bank’s total consolidated
assets for the four most recent calendar
quarters as reported on the Call Report,
of $100 billion or more but less than
$700 billion. If the state member bank
has not filed the Call Report for each of
the four most recent quarters, total
consolidated assets means the average of
its total consolidated assets, as reported
on the Call Report, for the most recent
quarter or quarters, as applicable; and
(2) Cross-jurisdictional activity,
calculated based on the average of its
cross-jurisdictional activity for the four
most recent calendar quarters, of $75
billion or more. Cross-jurisdictional
activity is the sum of crossjurisdictional claims and crossjurisdictional liabilities, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the
FR Y–15 or equivalent reporting form.
(ii) After meeting the criteria in
paragraph (4)(i) of this section, a state
member bank continues to be a Category
II Board-regulated institution until the
state member bank:
(A) Has:
(1) Less than $700 billion in total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
Call Report, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters; and
(2) Less than $75 billion in crossjurisdictional activity for each of the
four most recent calendar quarters.
Cross-jurisdictional activity is the sum
of cross-jurisdictional claims and crossjurisdictional liabilities, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the
FR Y–15 or equivalent reporting form;
or
(B) Has less than $100 billion in total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
Call Report, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters.
Category III Board-regulated
institution means:
(1) A depository institution holding
company that is identified as a Category
III banking organization pursuant to 12
CFR 252.5 or 12 CFR 238.10, as
applicable;
(2) A U.S. intermediate holding
company that is identified as a Category
III banking organization pursuant to 12
CFR 252.5;
(3) A state member bank that is a
subsidiary of a company identified in
paragraph (1) of this definition;
(4) A depository institution that:
(i)(A) Has total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
state member bank’s total consolidated
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assets for the four most recent calendar
quarters as reported on the Call Report,
equal to $250 billion or more. If the state
member bank has not filed the Call
Report for each of the four most recent
calendar quarters, total consolidated
assets is calculated based on the average
of its total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for the most
recent quarter or quarters, as applicable;
or
(B) Has:
(1) Total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
state member bank’s total consolidated
assets for the four most recent calendar
quarters as reported on the Call Report,
of $100 billion or more but less than
$250 billion. If the state member bank
has not filed the Call Report for each of
the four most recent calendar quarters,
total consolidated assets is calculated
based on the average of its total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
Call Report, for the most recent quarter
or quarters, as applicable; and
(2) At least one of the following in
paragraphs (4)(i)(B)(2)(i) through (iii) of
this definition, each calculated as the
average of the four most recent calendar
quarters:
(i) Total nonbank assets, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the
FR Y–9LP or equivalent reporting form,
equal to $75 billion or more;
(ii) Off-balance sheet exposure equal
to $75 billion or more. Off-balance sheet
exposure is a state member bank’s total
exposure, calculated in accordance with
the instructions to the FR Y–15 or
equivalent reporting form, minus the
total consolidated assets of the state
member bank, as reported on the Call
Report; or
(iii) Weighted short-term wholesale
funding, calculated in accordance with
the instructions to the FR Y–15 or
equivalent reporting form, equal to $75
billion or more; or
(ii) [Reserved]
(5)(i) A subsidiary of a depository
institution identified in paragraph (4)(i)
of this definition.
(ii) After meeting the criteria in
paragraph (4)(i) of this definition, a state
member bank continues to be a Category
III Board-regulated institution until the
state member bank:
(A) Has:
(1) Less than $250 billion in total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
Call Report, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters;
(2) Less than $75 billion in total
nonbank assets, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the
FR Y–9LP or equivalent reporting form,
for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters;
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(3) Less than $75 billion in weighted
short-term wholesale funding,
calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the FR Y–15 or
equivalent reporting form, for each of
the four most recent calendar quarters;
and
(4) Less than $75 billion in off-balance
sheet exposure for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters. Off-balance
sheet exposure is a state member bank’s
total exposure, calculated in accordance
with the instructions to the FR Y–15 or
equivalent reporting form, minus the
total consolidated assets of the state
member bank, as reported on the Call
Report; or
(B) Has less than $100 billion in total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
Call Report, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters; or
(C) Is a Category II Board-regulated
institution.
*
*
*
*
*
FR Y–15 means the Systemic Risk
Report.
FR Y–9LP means the Parent Company
Only Financial Statements for Large
Holding Companies.
*
*
*
*
*
U.S. intermediate holding company
means the company that is required to
be established or designated pursuant to
12 CFR 252.153.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 14. In § 217.10, revise paragraphs
(a)(5), (c) introductory text, and (c)(4)(i)
introductory text to read as follows:
§ 217.10
Minimum capital requirements.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(5) For advanced approaches Boardregulated institutions or, for Category III
Board-regulated institutions, a
supplementary leverage ratio of 3
percent.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Advanced approaches and
Category III capital ratio calculations.
An advanced approaches Boardregulated institution that has completed
the parallel run process and received
notification from the Board pursuant to
§ 217.121(d) must determine its
regulatory capital ratios as described in
paragraphs (c)(1) through (3) of this
section. An advanced approaches
Board-regulated institution must
determine its supplementary leverage
ratio in accordance with paragraph
(c)(4) of this section, beginning with the
calendar quarter immediately following
the quarter in which the Boardregulated institution meets any of the
criteria in § 217.100(b)(1). A Category III
Board-regulated institution must
determine its supplementary leverage
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ratio in accordance with paragraph
(c)(4) of this section, beginning with the
calendar quarter immediately following
the quarter in which the Boardregulated institution is identified as a
Category III Board-regulated institution.
*
*
*
*
*
(4) Supplementary leverage ratio. (i)
An advanced approaches Boardregulated institution’s or a Category III
Board-regulated institution’s
supplementary leverage ratio is the ratio
of its tier 1 capital to total leverage
exposure, the latter which is calculated
as the sum of:
*
*
*
*
*
■ 15. In § 217.11, revise paragraphs
(b)(1) introductory text and (b)(1)(ii) to
read as follows:
§ 217.11 Capital conservation buffer,
countercyclical capital buffer amount, and
GSIB surcharge.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Countercyclical capital buffer
amount—(1) General. An advanced
approaches Board-regulated institution
or a Category III Board-regulated
institution must calculate a
countercyclical capital buffer amount in
accordance with this paragraph (b) for
purposes of determining its maximum
payout ratio under Table 1 to this
section.
*
*
*
*
*
(ii) Amount. An advanced approaches
Board-regulated institution or a
Category III Board-regulated institution
has a countercyclical capital buffer
amount determined by calculating the
weighted average of the countercyclical
capital buffer amounts established for
the national jurisdictions where the
Board-regulated institution’s private
sector credit exposures are located, as
specified in paragraphs (b)(2) and (3) of
this section.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 16. In § 217.100, revise paragraph
(b)(1) to read as follows:
§ 217.100 Purpose, applicability, and
principle of conservatism.
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*
*
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*
(b) Applicability. (1) This subpart
applies to:
(i) A top-tier bank holding company
or savings and loan holding company
domiciled in the United States that:
(A) Is not a consolidated subsidiary of
another bank holding company or
savings and loan holding company that
uses this subpart to calculate its riskbased capital requirements; and
(B) That:
(1) Is identified as a global
systemically important BHC pursuant to
§ 217.402;
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(2) Is identified as a Category II
banking organization pursuant to 12
CFR 252.5 or 12 CFR 238.10; or
(3) Has a subsidiary depository
institution that is required, or has
elected, to use 12 CFR part 3, subpart E
(OCC), this subpart (Board), or 12 CFR
part 324, subpart E (FDIC), to calculate
its risk-based capital requirements;
(ii) A state member bank that:
(A) Is a subsidiary of a global
systemically important BHC;
(B) Is a Category II Board-regulated
institution;
(C) Is a subsidiary of a depository
institution that uses 12 CFR part 3,
subpart E (OCC), this subpart E (Board),
or 12 CFR part 324, subpart E (FDIC), to
calculate its risk-based capital
requirements; or
(D) Is a subsidiary of a bank holding
company or savings and loan holding
company that uses this subpart to
calculate its risk-based capital
requirements; or
(iii) Any Board-regulated institution
that elects to use this subpart to
calculate its risk-based capital
requirements.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 249—LIQUIDITY RISK
MEASUREMENT STANDARDS
(REGULATION WW)
17. Revise the authority citation for
part 249 to read as follows:
■
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 248(a), 321–338a,
481–486, 1467a(g)(1), 1818, 1828, 1831p–1,
1831o–1, 1844(b), 5365, 5366, 5368; 12
U.S.C. 3101 et seq.
■
18. Revise § 249.1 to read as follows:
§ 249.1
Purpose and applicability.
(a) Purpose. This part establishes a
minimum liquidity standard and a
minimum stable funding standard for
certain Board-regulated institutions on a
consolidated basis, as set forth in this
part.
(b) Applicability. (1) A Boardregulated institution is subject to the
minimum liquidity standard, minimum
stable funding standard, and other
requirements of this part if:
(i) It is a:
(A) Global systemically important
BHC;
(B) GSIB depository institution;
(C) Category II Board-regulated
institution;
(D) Category III Board-regulated
institution; or
(E) Category IV Board-regulated
institution with $50 billion or more in
average weighted short-term wholesale
funding;
(ii) It is a depository institution, other
than a Federal branch or insured branch
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24339
(as defined in 12 U.S.C. 1813(s)(2) and
(3)), that has total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
depository institution’s total
consolidated assets for the four most
recent calendar quarters as reported on
the Call Report, equal to $10 billion or
more and is a consolidated subsidiary of
a U.S. intermediate holding company of
either a Category II foreign banking
organization or a Category III foreign
banking organization. If the depository
institution has not filed the Call Report
for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters, total consolidated assets is
calculated based on the average of its
total consolidated assets, as reported on
the Call Report, for the most recent
quarter or quarters, as applicable;
(iii) It is a covered nonbank company;
or
(iv) The Board has determined that
application of this part is appropriate in
light of the Board-regulated institution’s
asset size, level of complexity, risk
profile, scope of operations, affiliation
with foreign or domestic covered
entities, or risk to the financial system.
(2)(i) A Board-regulated institution
that initially becomes subject to the
minimum liquidity standard, minimum
stable funding standard, and other
requirements of this part under
paragraph (b)(1)(i), (ii), or (iii) of this
section must comply with the
requirements of this part beginning on
the first day of the second calendar
quarter after which the Board-regulated
institution becomes subject to this part,
except that a Board-regulated institution
that is not a Category IV Board-regulated
institution must:
(A) For the first three calendar
quarters after the Board-regulated
institution begins complying with the
minimum liquidity standard and other
requirements of this part, calculate and
maintain a liquidity coverage ratio
monthly, on each calculation date that
is the last business day of the applicable
calendar month; and
(B) Beginning one year after the
Board-regulated institution becomes
subject to the minimum liquidity
standard and other requirements of this
part and continuing thereafter, calculate
and maintain a liquidity coverage ratio
on each calculation date.
(ii) A Board-regulated institution that
becomes subject to the minimum
liquidity standard, minimum funding
standard, and other requirements of this
part under paragraph (b)(1)(iv) of this
section, must comply with the
requirements of this part subject to a
transition period specified by the Board.
(3) This part does not apply to:
(i) A bridge financial company as
defined in 12 U.S.C. 5381(a)(3), or a
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subsidiary of a bridge financial
company; or
(ii) A new depository institution or a
bridge depository institution, as defined
in 12 U.S.C. 1813(i).
(4) A Board-regulated institution
subject to a minimum liquidity
standard, minimum stable funding
standard, and other requirements of this
part shall remain subject until the Board
determines in writing that application of
this part to the Board-regulated
institution is not appropriate in light of
the Board-regulated institution’s asset
size, level of complexity, risk profile,
scope of operations, affiliation with
foreign or domestic covered entities, or
risk to the financial system.
(5) In making a determination under
paragraph (b)(1)(iv) or (b)(4) of this
section, the Board will apply, as
appropriate, notice and response
procedures in the same manner and to
the same extent as the notice and
response procedures set forth in 12 CFR
263.202.
(c) Covered nonbank companies. The
Board will establish a minimum
liquidity standard, minimum stable
funding standard, and other
requirements for a designated company
under this part by rule or order. In
establishing such standard, the Board
will consider the factors set forth in
sections 165(a)(2) and (b)(3) of the
Dodd-Frank Act and may tailor the
application of the requirements of this
part to the designated company based
on the nature, scope, size, scale,
concentration, interconnectedness, mix
of the activities of the designated
company, or any other risk-related
factor that the Board determines is
appropriate.
■ 19. Amend § 249.3 by:
■ a. Adding the definition for ‘‘Average
weighted short-term wholesale funding’’
in alphabetical order;
■ b. Revising the definitions for
‘‘Calculation date’’;
■ c. Adding the definitions for ‘‘Call
Report’’, ‘‘Category II Board-regulated
institution’’, ‘‘Category III Boardregulated institution’’, ‘‘Category IV
Board-regulated institution’’, ‘‘Category
II foreign banking organization’’,
‘‘Category III foreign banking
organization’’, and ‘‘Category IV foreign
banking organization’’ in alphabetical
order;
■ d. Revising the definition for
‘‘Covered depository institution holding
company’’;
■ e. Adding the definitions for ‘‘Foreign
banking organization’’, ‘‘FR Y–9LP’’,
‘‘FR Y–15’’, ‘‘Global systemically
important BHC’’, and ‘‘GSIB depository
institution’’ in alphabetical order;
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f. Revising the definition for
‘‘Regulated financial company’’; and
■ g. Adding the definitions for ‘‘State’’
and ‘‘U.S. intermediate holding
company’’ in alphabetical order.
The additions and revisions read as
follows:
■
§ 249.3
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Average weighted short-term
wholesale funding means the average of
the weighted short-term wholesale
funding for each of the four most recent
calendar quarters as reported quarterly
on the FR Y–15 or, if the Boardregulated institution or foreign banking
organization has not filed the FR Y–15
for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters, for the most recent quarter or
quarters, as applicable.
*
*
*
*
*
Calculation date means, for purposes
of subparts A through J of this part, any
date on which a Board-regulated
institution calculates its liquidity
coverage ratio under § 249.21, and for
purposes of subparts K through N of this
part, any date on which a Boardregulated institution calculates its net
stable funding ratio (NSFR) under
§ 249.100.
Call Report means the Consolidated
Reports of Condition and Income.
Category II Board-regulated
institution means:
(1) A covered depository institution
holding company that is identified as a
Category II banking organization
pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5 or 12 CFR
238.10;
(2)(i) A state member bank that:
(A) Is a consolidated subsidiary of:
(1) A company described in paragraph
(1) of this definition; or
(2) A depository institution that meets
the criteria in paragraph (3)(ii)(A) or (B)
of this definition; and
(B) That has total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
state member bank’s total consolidated
assets for the four most recent calendar
quarters as reported on the Call Report,
equal to $10 billion or more.
(ii) If the state member bank has not
filed the Call Report for each of the four
most recent calendar quarters, total
consolidated assets is calculated based
on the average of its total consolidated
assets, as reported on the Call Report,
for the most recent quarter or quarters,
as applicable. After meeting the criteria
under this paragraph (2), a state member
bank continues to be a Category II
Board-regulated institution until the
state member bank has less than $10
billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of
the four most recent calendar quarters,
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or the state member bank is no longer
a consolidated subsidiary of a company
described in paragraph (2)(i)(A)(1) or (2)
of this definition; or
(3) A depository institution that:
(i) Is a state member bank; and
(ii)(A) Has total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
depository institution’s total
consolidated assets for the four most
recent calendar quarters as reported on
the Call Report, equal to $700 billion or
more. If the depository institution has
not filed the Call Report for each of the
four most recent calendar quarters, total
consolidated assets is calculated based
on the average of its total consolidated
assets, as reported on the Call Report,
for the most recent quarter or quarters,
as applicable; or
(B) Has:
(1) Total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
depository institution’s total
consolidated assets for the four most
recent calendar quarters as reported on
the Call Report, of $100 billion or more
but less than $700 billion. If the
depository institution has not filed the
Call Report for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, total
consolidated assets means the average of
its total consolidated assets, as reported
on the Call Report, for the most recent
quarter or quarters, as applicable; and
(2) Cross-jurisdictional activity,
calculated based on the average of its
cross-jurisdictional activity for the four
most recent calendar quarters, of $75
billion or more. Cross-jurisdictional
activity is the sum of crossjurisdictional claims and crossjurisdictional liabilities, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the
FR Y–15 or equivalent reporting form.
(iii) After meeting the criteria in
paragraphs (3)(i) and (ii) of this
definition, a state member bank
continues to be a Category II Boardregulated institution until the state
member bank:
(A)(1) Has less than $700 billion in
total consolidated assets, as reported on
the Call Report, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters; and
(2) Has less than $75 billion in crossjurisdictional activity for each of the
four most recent calendar quarters.
Cross-jurisdictional activity is the sum
of cross-jurisdictional claims and crossjurisdictional liabilities, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the
FR Y–15 or equivalent reporting form;
(B) Has less than $100 billion in total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
Call Report, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters; or
(C) Is a GSIB depository institution.
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Category III Board-regulated
institution means:
(1) A covered depository institution
holding company that is identified as a
Category III banking organization
pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5 or 12 CFR
238.10, as applicable;
(2)(i) A state member bank that is:
(A) A consolidated subsidiary of:
(1) A company described in paragraph
(1) of this definition; or
(2) A depository institution that meets
the criteria in paragraph (3)(ii)(A) or (B)
of this definition; and
(B) Has total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
state member bank’s total consolidated
assets for the four most recent calendar
quarters as reported on the Call Report,
equal to $10 billion or more.
(ii) If the state member bank has not
filed the Call Report for each of the four
most recent calendar quarters, total
consolidated assets means the average of
its total consolidated assets, as reported
on the Call Report, for the most recent
quarter or quarters, as applicable. After
meeting the criteria under this
paragraph (2), a state member bank
continues to be a Category III Boardregulated institution until the state
member bank has less than $10 billion
in total consolidated assets, as reported
on the Call Report, for each of the four
most recent calendar quarters, or the
state member bank is no longer a
consolidated subsidiary of a company
an entity described in paragraph
(2)(i)(A)(1) or (2) of this definition; or
(3) A depository institution that:
(i) Is a state member bank; and
(ii)(A) Has total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
depository institution’s total
consolidated assets in the four most
recent quarters as reported quarterly on
the most recent Call Report, equal to
$250 billion or more. If the depository
institution has not filed the Call Report
for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters, total consolidated assets means
the average of its total consolidated
assets, as reported on the Call Report,
for the most recent quarter or quarters,
as applicable; or
(B) Has:
(1) Total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
depository institution’s total
consolidated assets in the four most
recent calendar quarters as reported
quarterly on the most recent Call Report,
of $100 billion or more but less than
$250 billion. If the depository
institution has not filed the Call Report
for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters, total consolidated assets means
the average of its total consolidated
assets, as reported on the Call Report,
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for the most recent quarter or quarters,
as applicable; and
(2) One or more of the following in
paragraphs (3)(ii)(B)(2)(i) through (iii) of
this definition, each measured as the
average of the four most recent calendar
quarters, or if the depository institution
has not filed the FR Y–9LP or equivalent
reporting form, Call Report, or FR Y–15
or equivalent reporting form, as
applicable, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, for the most
recent quarter or quarters, as applicable:
(i) Total nonbank assets, calculated in
accordance with instructions to the FR
Y–9LP or equivalent reporting form,
equal to $75 billion or more;
(ii) Off-balance sheet exposure,
calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the FR Y–15 or
equivalent reporting form, minus the
total consolidated assets of the
depository institution, as reported on
the Call Report, equal to $75 billion or
more; or
(iii) Weighted short-term wholesale
funding, calculated in accordance with
the instructions to the FR Y–15 or
equivalent reporting form, equal to $75
billion or more.
(iii) After meeting the criteria in
paragraphs (3)(i) and (ii) of this
definition, a state member bank
continues to be a Category III Boardregulated institution until the state
member bank:
(A)(1) Has less than $250 billion in
total consolidated assets, as reported on
the Call Report, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters;
(2) Has less than $75 billion in total
nonbank assets, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the
FR Y–9LP or equivalent reporting form,
for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters;
(3) Has less than $75 billion in
weighted short-term wholesale funding,
calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the FR Y–15 or
equivalent reporting form, for each of
the four most recent calendar quarters;
and
(4) Has less than $75 billion in offbalance sheet exposure for each of the
four most recent calendar quarters. Offbalance sheet exposure is a state
member bank’s total exposure,
calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the FR Y–15 or
equivalent reporting form, minus the
total consolidated assets of the state
member bank, as reported on the Call
Report; or
(B) Has less than $100 billion in total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
Call Report, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters;
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(C) Is a Category II Board-regulated
institution; or
(D) Is a GSIB depository institution.
Category IV Board-regulated
institution means a covered depository
institution holding company that is
identified as a Category IV banking
organization pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5
or 12 CFR 238.10, as applicable.
Category II foreign banking
organization means a foreign banking
organization that is identified as a
Category II banking organization
pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5.
Category III foreign banking
organization means a foreign banking
organization that is identified as a
Category III banking organization
pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5.
Category IV foreign banking
organization means a foreign banking
organization that is identified as a
Category IV banking organization
pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5.
*
*
*
*
*
Covered depository institution
holding company means a top-tier bank
holding company or savings and loan
holding company domiciled in the
United States other than:
(1) A top-tier savings and loan
holding company that is:
(i) A grandfathered unitary savings
and loan holding company as defined in
section 10(c)(9)(A) of the Home Owners’
Loan Act (12 U.S.C. 1461 et seq.); and
(ii) As of June 30 of the previous
calendar year, derived 50 percent or
more of its total consolidated assets or
50 percent of its total revenues on an
enterprise-wide basis (as calculated
under GAAP) from activities that are not
financial in nature under section 4(k) of
the Bank Holding Company Act (12
U.S.C. 1843(k));
(2) A top-tier depository institution
holding company that is an insurance
underwriting company;
(3)(i) A top-tier depository institution
holding company that, as of June 30 of
the previous calendar year, held 25
percent or more of its total consolidated
assets in subsidiaries that are insurance
underwriting companies (other than
assets associated with insurance for
credit risk); and
(ii) For purposes of paragraph (3)(i) of
this definition, the company must
calculate its total consolidated assets in
accordance with GAAP, or if the
company does not calculate its total
consolidated assets under GAAP for any
regulatory purpose (including
compliance with applicable securities
laws), the company may estimate its
total consolidated assets, subject to
review and adjustment by the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System; or
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(4) A U.S. intermediate holding
company.
*
*
*
*
*
Foreign banking organization has the
same meaning as in 12 CFR 211.21(o)
(§ 211.21(o) of the Board’s Regulation
K), provided that if the top-tier foreign
banking organization is incorporated in
or organized under the laws of any
State, the foreign banking organization
shall not be treated as a foreign banking
organization for purposes of this part.
*
*
*
*
*
FR Y–15 means the Systemic Risk
Report.
FR Y–9LP means the Parent Company
Only Financial Statements for Large
Holding Companies.
*
*
*
*
*
Global systemically important BHC
means a bank holding company
identified as a global systemically
important BHC pursuant to 12 CFR
217.402.
GSIB depository institution means a
depository institution that is a
consolidated subsidiary of a global
systemically important BHC and has
total consolidated assets equal to $10
billion or more, calculated based on the
average of the depository institution’s
total consolidated assets for the four
most recent calendar quarters as
reported on the Call Report. If the
depository institution has not filed the
Call Report for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, total
consolidated assets means the average of
its total consolidated assets, as reported
on the Call Report, for the most recent
calendar quarter or quarters, as
applicable. After meeting the criteria
under this definition, a depository
institution continues to be a GSIB
depository institution until the
depository institution has less than $10
billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of
the four most recent calendar quarters,
or the depository institution is no longer
a consolidated subsidiary of a global
systemically important BHC.
*
*
*
*
*
Regulated financial company means:
(1) A depository institution holding
company or designated company;
(2) A company included in the
organization chart of a depository
institution holding company on the
Form FR Y–6, as listed in the hierarchy
report of the depository institution
holding company produced by the
National Information Center (NIC)
website,2 provided that the top-tier
2 https://www.ffiec.gov/nicpubweb/nicweb/
NicHome.aspx.
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depository institution holding company
is subject to a minimum liquidity
standard under this part;
(3) A depository institution; foreign
bank; credit union; industrial loan
company, industrial bank, or other
similar institution described in section
2 of the Bank Holding Company Act of
1956, as amended (12 U.S.C. 1841 et
seq.); national bank, state member bank,
or state non-member bank that is not a
depository institution;
(4) An insurance company;
(5) A securities holding company as
defined in section 618 of the DoddFrank Act (12 U.S.C. 1850a); broker or
dealer registered with the SEC under
section 15 of the Securities Exchange
Act (15 U.S.C. 78o); futures commission
merchant as defined in section 1a of the
Commodity Exchange Act of 1936 (7
U.S.C. 1 et seq.); swap dealer as defined
in section 1a of the Commodity
Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1a); or securitybased swap dealer as defined in section
3 of the Securities Exchange Act (15
U.S.C. 78c);
(6) A designated financial market
utility, as defined in section 803 of the
Dodd-Frank Act (12 U.S.C. 5462);
(7) A U.S. intermediate holding
company; and
(8) Any company not domiciled in the
United States (or a political subdivision
thereof) that is supervised and regulated
in a manner similar to entities described
in paragraphs (1) through (7) of this
definition (e.g., a foreign banking
organization, foreign insurance
company, foreign securities broker or
dealer or foreign financial market
utility).
(9) A regulated financial company
does not include:
(i) U.S. government-sponsored
enterprises;
(ii) Small business investment
companies, as defined in section 102 of
the Small Business Investment Act of
1958 (15 U.S.C. 661 et seq.);
(iii) Entities designated as Community
Development Financial Institutions
(CDFIs) under 12 U.S.C. 4701 et seq. and
12 CFR part 1805; or
(iv) Central banks, the Bank for
International Settlements, the
International Monetary Fund, or
multilateral development banks.
*
*
*
*
*
State means any state,
commonwealth, territory, or possession
of the United States, the District of
Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico, the Commonwealth of the
Northern Mariana Islands, American
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Samoa, Guam, or the United States
Virgin Islands.
*
*
*
*
*
U.S. intermediate holding company
means a company formed by a foreign
banking organization pursuant to 12
CFR 252.153.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 20. In § 249.10, revise paragraph (a) to
read as follows:
§ 249.10
Liquidity coverage ratio.
(a) Minimum liquidity coverage ratio
requirement. Subject to the transition
provisions in subpart F of this part, a
Board-regulated institution must
calculate and maintain a liquidity
coverage ratio that is equal to or greater
than 1.0 on each business day (or, in the
case of a Category IV Board-regulated
institution, on the last business day of
the applicable month) in accordance
with this part. A Board-regulated
institution must calculate its liquidity
coverage ratio as of the same time on
each calculation date (the elected
calculation time). The Board-regulated
institution must select this time by
written notice to the Board prior to
[effective date of the final rule]. The
Board-regulated institution may not
thereafter change its elected calculation
time without prior written approval
from the Board.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 21. In § 249.30, revise paragraph (a)
and add paragraphs (c) and (d) to read
as follows:
§ 249.30
Total net cash outflow amount.
(a) Calculation of total net cash
outflow amount. As of the calculation
date, a Board-regulated institution’s
total net cash outflow amount equals the
Board-regulated institution’s outflow
adjustment percentage as determined
under paragraph (c) of this section
multiplied by:
(1) The sum of the outflow amounts
calculated under § 249.32(a) through (l);
minus
(2) The lesser of:
(i) The sum of the inflow amounts
calculated under § 249.33(b) through (g);
and
(ii) 75 percent of the amount
calculated under paragraph (a)(1) of this
section; plus
(3) The maturity mismatch add-on as
calculated under paragraph (b) of this
section.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Outflow adjustment percentage. A
Board-regulated institution’s outflow
adjustment percentage is determined
pursuant to Table 1 to this section.
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TABLE 1 TO § 249.30—OUTFLOW ADJUSTMENT PERCENTAGES
[Outflow adjustment percentage]
Global systemically important BHC or GSIB depository institution .........................................................................................
Category II Board-regulated institution ....................................................................................................................................
Category III Board-regulated institution with $75 billion or more in average weighted short-term wholesale funding and
any Category III Board-regulated institution that is a consolidated subsidiary of such a Category III Board-regulated institution.
Category III Board-regulated institution with less than $75 billion in average weighted short-term wholesale funding and
any Category III Board-regulated institution that is a consolidated subsidiary of such a Category III Board-regulated institution.
Category IV Board-regulated institution with $50 billion or more in average weighted short-term wholesale funding ..........
A state member bank described in § 249.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate holding
company of a Category II foreign banking organization.
A state member bank described in § 249.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate holding
company of a Category III foreign banking organization with $75 billion or more in average weighted short-term wholesale funding.
A state member bank described in § 249.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate holding
company of a Category III foreign banking organization with less than $75 billion in average weighted short-term
wholesale funding.
(d) Transition. A Board-regulated
institution whose outflow adjustment
percentage increases from a lower to a
higher outflow adjustment percentage
may continue to use its previous lower
outflow adjustment percentage until the
first day of the second calendar quarter
after the outflow adjustment percentage
increases.
■ 22. Revise § 249.50 to read as follows:
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§ 249.50
Transitions.
(a) Depository institution subsidiary of
a U.S. intermediate holding company. A
Board-regulated institution does not
need to comply with the minimum
liquidity standard and other
requirements of this part until [one year
after the effective date of the final rule],
at which time the Board-regulated
institution must begin to calculate and
maintain a liquidity coverage ratio daily
in accordance with this part, if the
Board-regulated institution:
(1) Becomes subject to this part under
§ 249.1(b)(1)(ii); and
(2) Is a consolidated subsidiary of a
U.S. intermediate holding company
that, immediately prior to [effective date
of final rule]:
(i) Was domiciled in the United
States;
(ii) Had total consolidated assets
equal to $50 billion or more (based on
the average of the U.S. intermediate
holding company’s four most recent
Consolidated Financial Statements for
Holding Companies reporting forms (FR
Y–9Cs));
(iii) Had total consolidated assets less
than $250 billion as of the 2018 yearend FR Y–9C or Call Report, as
applicable; and
(iv) Had total consolidated on-balance
sheet foreign exposure less than $10
billion as of year-end 2018 (where total
on-balance sheet foreign exposure
equals total cross-border claims less
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claims with a head office or guarantor
located in another country plus
redistributed guaranteed amounts to the
country of the head office or guarantor
plus local country claims on local
residents plus revaluation gains on
foreign exchange and derivative
transaction products, calculated in
accordance with the Federal Financial
Institutions Examination Council
(FFIEC) 009 Country Exposure Report).
(b) Foreign banking organizations. A
foreign banking organization that
becomes subject to subpart O of this part
on [effective date of final rule] does not
need to comply with the minimum
liquidity standard of § 249.203 or with
the public disclosure requirements of
§ 249.208 until [one year after the
effective date of the final rule], at which
time the foreign banking organization
must comply with the minimum
liquidity standard of § 249.203 daily (or,
in the case of a Category IV foreign
banking organization, on the last
business day of the applicable calendar
month) in accordance with this part,
and with the public disclosure
requirements of § 249.208, except:
(1) Beginning on [effective date of
final rule] and thereafter, a foreign
banking organization must comply with
the minimum liquidity standard of
§ 249.203 and with the public disclosure
requirements of § 249.208 beginning on
[effective date of final rule] if the U.S.
intermediate holding company:
(i) Had total consolidated assets equal
to $250 billion or more, as of the 2018
year-end FR Y–9C or Call Report, as
applicable; or
(ii) Had total consolidated on-balance
sheet foreign exposure equal to $10
billion or more as of year-end 2018
(where total on-balance sheet foreign
exposure equals total cross-border
claims less claims with a head office or
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100 percent.
100 percent.
100 percent.
[70 to 85] percent.
[70 to 85] percent.
100 percent.
100 percent.
[70 to 85] percent.
guarantor located in another country
plus redistributed guaranteed amounts
to the country of the head office or
guarantor plus local country claims on
local residents plus revaluation gains on
foreign exchange and derivative
transaction products, calculated in
accordance with the Federal Financial
Institutions Examination Council
(FFIEC) 009 Country Exposure Report).
(2) From [effective date of final rule]
to [one year after the effective date of
the final rule], a foreign banking
organization whose U.S. intermediate
holding company, immediately prior to
[effective date of final rule], was
domiciled in the United States, had total
consolidated assets equal to $50 billion
or more (based on the average of the
U.S. intermediate holding company’s
four most recent FR Y–9Cs), and did not
meet the criteria set forth in paragraph
(b)(1)(i) or (ii) of this section, must
comply with the minimum liquidity
standard of § 249.203 and with the
public disclosure requirements of
§ 249.208, except:
(i) The foreign banking organization
may calculate the requirement of
§ 249.203 on the last business day of the
applicable calendar month; and
(ii) As of the calculation date, the
foreign banking organization may
calculate the total net cash outflow
amount for the U.S. intermediate
holding company to be 70 percent of:
(A) The sum of the outflow amounts
for the U.S. intermediate holding
company (calculated under § 249.32(a)
through (l) as if the U.S. intermediate
holding company and not the foreign
banking organization were the top-tier
Board-regulated institution); less:
(B) The lesser of:
(1) The sum of the inflow amounts
(calculated under § 249.33(b) through (g)
as if the U.S. intermediate holding
company and not the foreign banking
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organization were the top-tier Boardregulated institution); and
(2) 75 percent of the amount in
paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(A) of this section as
calculated for that calendar day.
■ 23. In § 249.90, revise paragraphs (a)
and (b) to read as follows:
§ 249.90 Timing, method and retention of
disclosures.
(a) Applicability. A covered
depository institution holding company
or covered nonbank company that is
subject to § 249.1 must disclose publicly
all the information required under this
subpart.
(b) Timing of disclosure. (1) A covered
depository institution holding company
or covered nonbank company subject to
this subpart must provide timely public
disclosures each calendar quarter of all
the information required under this
subpart.
(2) A covered depository institution
holding company or covered nonbank
company that is subject to this subpart
must provide the disclosures required
by this subpart beginning with the first
calendar quarter that includes the date
that is 18 months after the covered
depository institution holding company
first became subject to this subpart.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 24. In § 249.91:
■ a. Revise Table 1 to § 249.91(a);
■ b. In paragraph (b)(1)(i)(B):
i. Remove ‘‘(c)(1), (c)(5), (c)(9), (c)(14),
(c)(19), (c)(23), and (c)(28)’’ and add in
its place ‘‘(c)(1), (5), (9), (14), (19), (23),
and (28)’’ and
■ ii. Remove the semicolon at the end of
the paragraph and add a period in its
place.
■ c. Remove paragraph (b)(1)(ii) and
redesignate paragraph (b)(1)(iii) as
paragraph (b)(1)(ii);
■ d. Revise paragraphs (c)(32) and (33):
and
■ e. Add paragraphs (c)(34) and (35).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
■
§ 249.91
Disclosure requirements.
(a) * * *
TABLE 1 TO § 249.91(a)—DISCLOSURE TEMPLATE
Average
unweighted
amount
XX/XX/XXXX to YY/YY/YYYY
(In millions of U.S. dollars)
Average
weighted
amount
High-Quality Liquid Assets
1. Total eligible high-quality liquid assets (HQLA), of which:
2. Eligible level 1 liquid assets.
3. Eligible level 2A liquid assets.
4. Eligible level 2B liquid assets.
Cash Outflow Amounts
5. Deposit outflow from retail customers and counterparties, of which:
6.
Stable retail deposit outflow.
7.
Other retail funding.
8.
Brokered deposit outflow.
9. Unsecured wholesale funding outflow, of which:
10.
Operational deposit outflow.
11.
Non-operational funding outflow.
12.
Unsecured debt outflow.
13. Secured wholesale funding and asset exchange outflow.
14. Additional outflow requirements, of which:
15.
Outflow related to derivative exposures and other collateral requirements.
16.
Outflow related to credit and liquidity facilities including unconsolidated structured transactions
and mortgage commitments.
17.
Other contractual funding obligation outflow.
18.
Other contingent funding obligations outflow.
19.
Total Cash Outflow.
Cash Inflow Amounts
20. Secured lending and asset exchange cash inflow.
21. Retail cash inflow.
22. Unsecured wholesale cash inflow.
23. Other cash inflows, of which:
24.
Net derivative cash inflow.
25.
Securities cash inflow.
26.
Broker-dealer segregated account inflow.
27.
Other cash inflow.
28.
Total Cash Inflow.
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Average
Amount 1
29.
30.
31.
32.
33.
34.
35.
HQLA Amount .................................................................................................................................
Total Net Cash Outflow Amount Excluding the Maturity Mismatch Add-On .................................
Maturity Mismatch Add-On .............................................................................................................
Total Unadusted Net Cash Outflow Amount ..................................................................................
Outflow Adjustment Percentage .....................................................................................................
Total Adjusted Net Cash Outflow Amount .....................................................................................
Liquidity Coverage Ratio (%) ..........................................................................................................
1 The amounts reported in this column may not equal the calculation of those amounts using component amounts reported in rows 1–28 due to
technical factors such as the application of the level 2 liquid asset caps and the total inflow cap.
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*
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(32) The average amount of the total
net cash outflow amount as calculated
under § 249.30 prior to the application
of the applicable outflow adjustment
percentage described in Table 1 to
§ 249.30 (row 32);
(33) The applicable outflow
adjustment percentage described in
Table 1 to § 249.30 (row 33);
(34) The average amount of the total
net cash outflow as calculated under
§ 249.30 (row 34); and
(35) The average of the liquidity
coverage ratios as calculated under
§ 249.10(b) (row 35).
*
*
*
*
*
25. Section 249.105, as proposed to be
added at 81 FR 35124 (June 1, 2016), is
revised to read as follows:
■
§ 249.105 Calculation of required stable
funding amount.
(a) Required stable funding amount. A
Board-regulated institution’s required
stable funding (RSF) amount equals the
Board-regulated institution’s required
stable funding adjustment percentage as
determined under paragraph (b) of this
section multiplied by the sum of:
(1) The carrying values of a Boardregulated institution’s assets (other than
amounts included in the calculation of
the derivatives RSF amount pursuant to
§ 249.107(b)) and the undrawn amounts
of a Board-regulated institution’s credit
and liquidity facilities, in each case
multiplied by the RSF factors applicable
in § 249.106; and
(2) The Board-regulated institution’s
derivatives RSF amount calculated
pursuant to § 249.107(b).
(b) Required stable funding
adjustment percentage. A Boardregulated institution’s required stable
funding adjustment percentage is
determined pursuant to Table 1 to this
section.
TABLE 1 TO § 249.105—REQUIRED STABLE FUNDING ADJUSTMENT PERCENTAGES
[Required stable funding adjustment percentage]
Global systemically important BHC or GSIB depository institution .........................................................................................
Category II Board-regulated institution ....................................................................................................................................
Category III Board-regulated institution with $75 billion or more in average weighted short-term wholesale funding and
any Category III Board-regulated institution that is a consolidated subsidiary of such a Category III Board-regulated institution.
Category III Board-regulated institution with less than $75 billion in average weighted short-term wholesale funding and
any Category III Board-regulated institution that is a consolidated subsidiary of such a Category III Board-regulated institution.
Category IV Board-regulated institution with $50 billion or more in average weighted short-term wholesale funding ..........
A state member bank described in § 249.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate holding
company of a Category II foreign banking organization.
A state member bank described in § 249.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate holding
company of a Category III foreign banking organization with $75 billion or more in average weighted short-term wholesale funding.
A state member bank described in § 249.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate holding
company of a Category III foreign banking organization with less than $75 billion in average weighted short-term
wholesale funding.
khammond on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with PROPOSALS3
(c) Transition. A Board-regulated
institution whose required stable
funding adjustment percentage
increases from a lower to a higher
required stable funding adjustment
percentage may continue to use its
previous lower required stable funding
adjustment percentage until the first day
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of the second calendar quarter after the
required stable funding adjustment
percentage increases.
■ 26. Section 249.131, as proposed to be
added at 81 FR 35124 (June 1, 2016), is
further amended by revising Table 1 to
§ 249.131(a) and paragraph (c)(2)(xxii),
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100 percent.
100 percent.
100 percent.
[70 to 85] percent.
[70 to 85] percent.
100 percent.
100 percent.
[70 to 85] percent.
adding paragraphs (c)(2)(xxiii) and
(xxiv), and revising paragraph (c)(3) to
read as follows:
§ 249.131
Disclosure requirements.
(a) * * *
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P; 4810–33–P; 6714–01–P;
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Table 1 to§ 249.131(a)-Disclosure Template
Quarter ended XX/XX/XXXX
In millions of U.S. dollars
.
.
AS:FITEM ...
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
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20
.
•.·.·
. --:cc.
.
...···
.·..
;..,--
I
.
I
---:~-c:
•·.·
.
.··
.
I Perpetual
Weighted
Amount
.
Capital and securities:
NSFR regulatory capital
elements
Other capital elements
and securities
Retail funding:
Stable deposits
Less stable deposits
Retail brokered deposits
Other retail funding
Wholesale funding:
Operational deposits
Other wholesale
funding
Other liabilities:
NSFR derivatives
liability amount
Total derivatives
liability amount
All other liabilities not
included in the above
categories
TOTALASF
RSFITEM ·.
16
17
18
19
'
·.·.
~
...
.
.
..
.·
.. ··.. •.
.··
.
.·\.
18:46 May 23, 2019
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....
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..
.·
.·
·····
Total high-quality liquid
assets (HQLA)
Level 1 liquid assets
Level 2A liquid assets
Level 2B liquid assets
Zero percent RSF assets
that are not level 1 liquid
assets
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:
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1
: ..
Open
Maturity
Unweighted Amount
<6
6 months
months
to < 1 year > 1 vear
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 101 / Friday, May 24, 2019 / Proposed Rules
Quarter ended XX/XX/XXXX
In millions of U.S. dollars
Open
Maturity
28
Loans to financial
sector entities secured
by level 1 liquid assets
Loans to financial
sector entities secured
by assets other than
level 1 liquid assets and
unsecured loans to
financial sector entities
Loans to wholesale
customers or
counterparties that are
not financial sector
entities and loans to
retail customers or
counterparties
Ofwhich: With a
risk weight no
greater than 20
percent under
[AGENCY
CAPITAL
REGULATION]
Retail mortgages
Ofwhich: With a
risk weight of no
greater than 50
percent under
[AGENCY
CAPITAL
REGULATION]
29
Securities that do not
qualify as HQLA
23
24
25
26
27
Unwei!!hted Amount
<6
6 months
months
to< 1 vear > 1 vear
Pervetual
24347
Weighted
Amount
·.
Other assets:
31
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Commodities
Assets provided as
initial margin for
derivative transactions
and contributions to
CCPs' mutualized losssharing arrangements
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30
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 101 / Friday, May 24, 2019 / Proposed Rules
BILLING CODE 6210–01–C; 4810–33–C; 6714–01–C
§ 249.201
*
(a) Purpose. This subpart establishes a
minimum liquidity standard and
minimum stable funding standard for
certain foreign banking organizations, as
set forth in this part.
(b) Applicability. (1) A foreign
banking organization is subject to the
minimum liquidity standard, minimum
stable funding standard, and other
requirements of this subpart if:
(i) It is a:
(A) Category II foreign banking
organization;
(B) Category III foreign banking
organization; or
(C) Category IV foreign banking
organization with $50 billion or more in
average weighted short-term wholesale
funding;
(ii) The Board determines that
application of this subpart is
appropriate in light of the foreign
banking organization’s asset size, level
of complexity, risk profile, scope of
operations, affiliation with foreign or
domestic covered entities, or risk to the
financial system.
(2) Subject to the transition periods
set forth in subpart F of this part:
(i) A foreign banking organization that
becomes subject to the minimum
liquidity standard, minimum stable
funding standard, and other
requirements of this subpart under
*
*
*
*
(c) * * *
(2) * * *
(xxii) The RSF amount described in
§ 249.105 prior to the application of the
RSF adjustment percentage provided for
in Table 1 to § 249.105 (row 37);
(xxiii) The applicable RSF adjustment
factor as described in Table 1 to
§ 249.105 (row 38); and
(xxiv) The RSF amount described in
§ 249.105 (row 39); and
(3) The net stable funding ratio under
§ 249.100(b) (row 40).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 27. Add subpart O to read as follows:
khammond on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with PROPOSALS3
Subpart O—Minimum Liquidity
Standard and Minimum Stable Funding
Standard for Certain Foreign Banking
Organizations
Sec.
249.201 Purpose and applicability.
249.202 Reservation of authority.
249.203 Liquidity coverage ratio for certain
foreign banking organizations.
249.204 Net stable funding ratio.
249.205 Requirements for eligible highquality liquid assets.
249.206 Liquidity coverage shortfall:
Supervisory framework.
249.207 NSFR shortfall: Supervisory
framework.
249.208 Disclosure requirements.
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Purpose and applicability.
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paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this section must
comply with such requirements
beginning on the first day of the second
calendar quarter after which the foreign
banking organization becomes subject to
such requirements, except that a foreign
banking organization that is not a
category IV foreign banking organization
must:
(A) For the first three calendar
quarters after the foreign banking
organization begins complying with the
minimum liquidity standard and other
requirements of this subpart, calculate
and maintain the liquidity coverage
ratio required by § 249.203 monthly, on
each calculation date that is the last
business day of the applicable calendar
month; and
(B) Beginning one year after the
foreign banking organization becomes
subject to the minimum liquidity
standard and other requirements of this
subpart and continuing thereafter,
calculate and maintain the liquidity
coverage ratios required by § 249.203 on
each calculation date.
(ii) A foreign banking organization
that becomes subject to the minimum
liquidity standard and other
requirements of this subpart under
paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section, must
comply with the requirements of this
subpart subject to a transition period
specified by the Board.
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(3) This subpart does not apply to:
(i) A bridge financial company as
defined in 12 U.S.C. 5381(a)(3), or a
subsidiary of a bridge financial
company; or
(ii) A new depository institution or a
bridge depository institution, as defined
in 12 U.S.C. 1813(i).
(4) A foreign banking organization
subject to a minimum liquidity standard
under this subpart shall remain subject
until the Board determines in writing
that application of this subpart to the
foreign banking organization is not
appropriate in light of the foreign
banking organization’s asset size, level
of complexity, risk profile, scope of
operations, affiliation with foreign or
domestic covered entities, or risk to the
financial system.
(5) In making a determination under
paragraph (b)(1)(ii) or (b)(4) of this
section, the Board will apply, as
appropriate, notice and response
procedures in the same manner and to
the same extent as the notice and
response procedures set forth in 12 CFR
263.202.
§ 249.202
Reservation of authority.
(a) The Board may require a foreign
banking organization to hold an amount
of high-quality liquid assets (HQLA)
greater than otherwise required under
this subpart, or to take any other
measure to improve the liquidity risk
profile of a U.S. intermediate holding
company, if the Board determines that
the liquidity requirements of the foreign
banking organization as calculated
under this subpart are not
commensurate with the liquidity risks
presented by the foreign banking
organization or its U.S. intermediate
holding company. In making
determinations under this section, the
Board will apply notice and response
procedures as set forth in 12 CFR
263.202.
(b) The Board may require a foreign
banking organization to maintain an
amount of available stable funding
(ASF) greater than otherwise required
under this subpart, or to take any other
measure to improve the stable funding
of its U.S. intermediate holding
company, if the Board determines that
the foreign banking organization’s stable
funding requirements as calculated
under this subpart are not
commensurate with the funding risks of
the foreign banking organization or its
U.S. intermediate holding company. In
making determinations under this
section, the Board will apply notice and
response procedures as set forth in 12
CFR 263.202.
(c) Nothing in this subpart limits the
authority of the Board under any other
provision of law or regulation to take
supervisory or enforcement action,
including action to address unsafe or
unsound practices or conditions,
deficient liquidity levels, or violations
of law.
§ 249.203 Liquidity coverage ratio for
certain foreign banking organizations.
(a) Minimum liquidity coverage ratio
requirements for foreign banking
organizations. Subject to the transition
periods in subpart F of this part, a
foreign banking organization must
calculate and maintain a liquidity
coverage ratio equal to or greater than
1.0 on each business day (or, in the case
of a Category IV foreign banking
organization, on the last business day of
24349
the applicable calendar month) for each
U.S. intermediate holding company of
the foreign banking organization in
accordance with § 249.3 and subparts B
through E of this part as if the U.S.
intermediate holding company (and not
the foreign banking organization subject
to this subpart) were a top-tier Boardregulated institution, except that:
(1) A high-quality liquid asset used to
meet the liquidity coverage ratio
required by this paragraph (a) must
satisfy the requirements in § 249.205
and not § 249.22 to be eligible HQLA;
and
(2) The outflow adjustment
percentage used to meet the liquidity
coverage ratio required by this
paragraph (a) must be determined in
accordance with paragraph (c) of this
section and not § 249.30(c).
(b) Elected calculation time. A foreign
banking organization subject to this
subpart must calculate any liquidity
coverage ratio required by paragraph (a)
of this section as of the same time on
each business day, or, in the case of a
Category IV foreign banking
organization, as of the same time on
each calculation day (the elected
calculation time). The foreign banking
organization must select this time by
written notice to the Board prior to
[effective date of the final rule]. The
foreign banking organization may not
thereafter change its elected calculation
time without prior written approval
from the Board.
(c) Outflow adjustment percentage. A
foreign banking organization’s outflow
adjustment percentage is determined
pursuant to Table 1 to this section.
TABLE 1 TO § 249.203—OUTFLOW ADJUSTMENT PERCENTAGES
Outflow adjustment
percentage
Category
Category
Category
Category
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§ 249.204
II foreign banking organization ................................................................................................................................
III foreign banking organization with $75 billion or more in average weighted short-term wholesale funding .......
III foreign banking organization with less than $75 billion in average weighted short-term wholesale funding .....
IV foreign banking organization with $50 billion or more in average weighted short-term wholesale funding ......
Net stable funding ratio.
(a) Minimum net stable funding ratio
requirement. A foreign banking
organization must maintain for each
U.S. intermediate holding company a
net stable funding ratio that is equal to
or greater than 1.0 on an ongoing basis
in accordance with § 249.3 and subparts
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K and L of this part as if each U.S.
intermediate holding company (and not
the foreign banking organization subject
to this subpart) were a top-tier Boardregulated institution, except that the
foreign banking organization must
determine its required stable funding
adjustment percentage in accordance
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100 percent.
100 percent.
[70 to 85] percent.
[70 to 85] percent.
with paragraph (b) of this section, and
not § 249.105(b).
(b) Required stable funding
adjustment percentage. A foreign
banking organization’s required stable
funding adjustment percentage is
determined pursuant to Table 1 to this
section.
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TABLE 1 TO § 249.204—REQUIRED STABLE FUNDING ADJUSTMENT PERCENTAGES
Required stable
funding adjustment
percentage
Category
Category
Category
Category
II foreign banking organization ................................................................................................................................
III foreign banking organization with $75 billion or more in average weighted short-term wholesale funding .......
III foreign banking organization with less than $75 billion in average weighted short-term wholesale funding .....
IV foreign banking organization with $50 billion or more in average weighted short-term wholesale funding ......
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§ 249.205 Requirements for eligible highquality liquid assets.
(a) Operational requirements for
eligible HQLA. With respect to each
asset that is eligible for inclusion in the
HQLA amount calculated for the
liquidity coverage ratio requirement in
§ 249.203, all of the operational
requirements in this paragraph (a) must
be met:
(1) The foreign banking organization
must demonstrate the operational
capability to monetize the HQLA by:
(i) Implementing and maintaining
appropriate procedures and systems to
monetize any HQLA at any time in
accordance with relevant standard
settlement periods and procedures; and
(ii) Periodically monetizing a sample
of HQLA that reasonably reflects the
composition of the eligible HQLA used
to meet the liquidity coverage ratio
requirement in § 249.203, including
with respect to asset type, maturity, and
counterparty characteristics;
(2) The foreign banking organization
must implement policies that require
eligible HQLA to be under the control
of the management function in the
foreign banking organization that is
charged with managing liquidity risk,
and this management function must
evidence its control over the HQLA by
either:
(i) Segregating the HQLA from other
assets, with the sole intent to use the
HQLA as a source of liquidity; or
(ii) Demonstrating the ability to
monetize the assets and making the
proceeds available to the liquidity
management function without
conflicting with a business or risk
management strategy of the foreign
banking organization;
(3) The fair value of the eligible HQLA
must be reduced by the outflow amount
that would result from the termination
of any specific transaction hedging
eligible HQLA;
(4) The foreign banking organization
must implement and maintain policies
and procedures that determine the
composition of the eligible HQLA on
each calculation date, by:
(i) Identifying its eligible HQLA by
legal entity, geographical location,
currency, account, or other relevant
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18:46 May 23, 2019
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identifying factors as of the calculation
date;
(ii) Determining that eligible HQLA
meet the criteria set forth in this section;
and
(iii) Ensuring the appropriate
diversification of the eligible HQLA by
asset type, counterparty, issuer,
currency, borrowing capacity, or other
factors associated with the liquidity risk
of the assets; and
(5) The foreign banking organization
must have a documented methodology
that results in a consistent treatment for
determining that the eligible HQLA
meets the requirements set forth in this
section.
(b) Generally applicable criteria for
eligible HQLA. The eligible HQLA used
to meet the liquidity coverage ratio
requirement in § 249.203 must meet all
of the criteria in this paragraph (b):
Alternative 1—Paragraph (b)(1)
(1) The assets are unencumbered in
accordance with the criteria in this
paragraph (b)(1):
(i) The assets are free of legal,
regulatory, contractual, or other
restrictions on the ability of the foreign
banking organization to monetize the
assets; and
(ii) The assets are not pledged,
explicitly or implicitly, to secure or to
provide credit enhancement to any
transaction, but the assets may be
considered unencumbered if the assets
are pledged to a central bank or a U.S.
government-sponsored enterprise
where:
(A) Potential credit secured by the
assets is not currently extended to the
foreign banking organization or its
consolidated subsidiaries; and
(B) The pledged assets are not
required to support access to the
payment services of a central bank;
Alternative 2—Paragraph (b)(1)
(1) The assets are not unencumbered.
(2) The asset is not:
(i) A client pool security held in a
segregated account; or
(ii) An asset received from a secured
funding transaction involving client
pool securities that were held in a
segregated account;
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100 percent.
100 percent.
[70 to 85] percent.
[70 to 85] percent.
(3) For eligible HQLA held in a legal
entity that is a U.S. consolidated
subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate
holding company:
(i) If the U.S. consolidated subsidiary
is subject to a minimum liquidity
standard under this part, 12 CFR part
50, or 12 CFR part 329, the foreign
banking organization may include the
eligible HQLA of the U.S. consolidated
subsidiary in its HQLA amount up to:
(A) The amount of net cash outflows
of the U.S. consolidated subsidiary
calculated by the U.S. consolidated
subsidiary for its own minimum
liquidity standard under this part, 12
CFR part 50, or 12 CFR part 329; plus
(B) Any additional amount of assets,
including proceeds from the
monetization of assets, that would be
available for transfer to the U.S.
intermediate holding company during
times of stress without statutory,
regulatory, contractual, or supervisory
restrictions, including sections 23A and
23B of the Federal Reserve Act (12
U.S.C. 371c and 12 U.S.C. 371c–1) and
12 CFR part 223 (Regulation W);
(ii) If the U.S. consolidated subsidiary
is not subject to a minimum liquidity
standard under this part, 12 CFR part
50, or 12 CFR part 329, the Boardregulated institution may include the
eligible HQLA of the U.S. consolidated
subsidiary in its HQLA amount up to:
(A) The amount of the net cash
outflows of the U.S. consolidated
subsidiary as of the 30th calendar day
after the calculation date, as calculated
by the foreign banking organization for
its minimum liquidity standard under
this part; plus
(B) Any additional amount of assets,
including proceeds from the
monetization of assets, that would be
available for transfer to the U.S.
intermediate holding company during
times of stress without statutory,
regulatory, contractual, or supervisory
restrictions, including sections 23A and
23B of the Federal Reserve Act (12
U.S.C. 371c and 12 U.S.C. 371c–1) and
12 CFR part 223 (Regulation W); and
(4) For HQLA held by a consolidated
subsidiary of the U.S. intermediate
holding company that is organized
under the laws of a foreign jurisdiction,
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the foreign banking organization may
include the eligible HQLA of the
consolidated subsidiary organized
under the laws of a foreign jurisdiction
in its HQLA amount up to:
(i) The amount of net cash outflows of
the consolidated subsidiary as of the
30th calendar day after the calculation
date, as calculated by the foreign
banking organization for its minimum
liquidity standard under this part; plus
(ii) Any additional amount of assets
that are available for transfer to the U.S.
intermediate holding company during
times of stress without statutory,
regulatory, contractual, or supervisory
restrictions;
(5) Eligible HQLA must not include
any assets or HQLA resulting from
transactions involving an asset that the
U.S. intermediate holding company
received with rehypothecation rights, if
the counterparty that provided the asset
or the beneficial owner of the asset has
a contractual right to withdraw the
assets without an obligation to pay more
than de minimis remuneration at any
time during the 30 calendar days
following the calculation date; and
(6) The foreign banking organization
has not designated the assets to cover
operational costs of its U.S. intermediate
holding company.
(c) Location of eligible HQLA for the
foreign banking organization. A foreign
banking organization must maintain the
eligible HQLA used to meet the
minimum requirements under § 249.203
in accounts in the United States.
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§ 249.206 Liquidity coverage shortfall:
Supervisory framework.
(a) Notification requirements. A
foreign banking organization must
notify the Board on any business day
when its liquidity coverage ratio is
calculated to be less than the minimum
requirement in § 249.203.
(b) Liquidity plan. (1) For the period
during which a foreign banking
organization must calculate a liquidity
coverage ratio on the last business day
of each applicable calendar month
under subpart F or O of this part, if the
foreign banking organization’s liquidity
coverage ratio is below the minimum
requirements in § 249.203 for any
calculation date that is the last business
day of the applicable calendar month, or
if the Board has determined that the
foreign banking organization is
otherwise materially noncompliant with
the requirements of this part, the foreign
banking organization must promptly
consult with the Board to determine
whether the foreign banking
organization must provide to the Board
a plan for achieving compliance with
the minimum liquidity requirement in
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§ 249.203 and all other requirements of
this subpart.
(2) For the period during which a
foreign banking organization must
calculate a liquidity coverage ratio each
business day under subpart F or O of
this part, if a foreign banking
organization’s liquidity coverage ratio is
below the minimum requirement in
§ 249.203 for three consecutive business
days, or if the Board has determined
that the foreign banking organization is
otherwise materially noncompliant with
the requirements of this subpart, the
foreign banking organization must
promptly provide to the Board a plan for
achieving compliance with the
minimum liquidity requirement in
§ 249.203 and all other requirements of
this subpart.
(3) The plan must include, as
applicable:
(i) An assessment of the liquidity
position of the U.S. intermediate
holding company;
(ii) The actions the foreign banking
organization has taken and will take to
achieve full compliance with this
subpart, including:
(A) A plan for adjusting the risk
profile, risk management, and funding
sources of the U.S. intermediate holding
company in order to achieve full
compliance with this subpart; and
(B) A plan for remediating any
operational or management issues that
contributed to noncompliance with this
subpart;
(iii) An estimated time frame for
achieving full compliance with this
subpart; and
(iv) A commitment to report to the
Board no less than weekly on progress
to achieve compliance in accordance
with the plan until full compliance with
this subpart is achieved.
(c) Supervisory and enforcement
actions. The Board may, at its
discretion, take additional supervisory
or enforcement actions to address
noncompliance with the minimum
liquidity standard and other
requirements of this subpart.
§ 249.207 NSFR shortfall: Supervisory
framework.
(a) Notification requirements. A
foreign banking organization must
notify the Board no later than 10
business days, or such other period as
the Board may otherwise require by
written notice, following the date that
any event has occurred that would
cause or has caused the foreign banking
organization’s net stable funding ratio to
be less than 1.0 as required under
§ 249.204.
(b) Liquidity plan. (1) A foreign
banking organization must within 10
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24351
business days, or such other period as
the Board may otherwise require by
written notice, provide to the Board a
plan for achieving a net stable funding
ratio equal to or greater than 1.0 as
required under § 249.204 if:
(i) The foreign banking organization
has or should have provided notice,
pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section,
that the foreign banking organization’s
net stable funding ratio is, or will
become, less than 1.0 as required under
§ 249.204;
(ii) The foreign banking organization’s
reports or disclosures to the Board
indicate that the foreign banking
organization’s net stable funding ratio is
less than 1.0 as required under
§ 249.204; or
(iii) The Board notifies the foreign
banking organization in writing that a
plan is required and provides a reason
for requiring such a plan.
(2) The plan must include, as
applicable:
(i) An assessment of the U.S.
intermediate holding company’s
liquidity profile;
(ii) The actions the foreign banking
organization has taken and will take to
achieve a net stable funding ratio equal
to or greater than 1.0 as required under
§ 249.204, including:
(A) A plan for adjusting the liquidity
profile of the U.S. intermediate holding
company;
(B) A plan for remediating any
operational or management issues that
contributed to noncompliance with
§ 249.204; and
(iii) An estimated time frame for
achieving full compliance with
§ 249.204.
(3) The foreign banking organization
must report to the Board at least
monthly, or such other frequency as
required by the Board, on progress to
achieve full compliance with § 249.204.
(c) Supervisory and enforcement
actions. The Board may, at its
discretion, take additional supervisory
or enforcement actions to address
noncompliance with the minimum net
stable funding ratio and other
requirements of § 249.204 (see also
§ 249.202(c)).
§ 249.208
Disclosure requirements.
(a) Disclosure of minimum liquidity
standard. A foreign banking
organization that is subject to this
subpart must disclose publicly all the
information for a U.S. intermediate
holding company that the U.S.
intermediate holding company would
be required to disclose, and in the same
manner that would be required of the
U.S. intermediate holding company, if
the U.S. intermediate holding company
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were a covered depository institution
holding company subject to subpart J of
this part.
(b) Disclosure of minimum stable
funding standard. A foreign banking
organization that is subject to this
subpart must disclose publicly all the
information for a U.S. intermediate
holding company that the U.S.
intermediate holding company would
be required to disclose, and in the same
manner that would be required of the
U.S. intermediate holding company, if it
were a covered depository institution
holding company subject to subpart N of
this part.
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION
12 CFR Chapter III
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the
Supplementary Information, chapter III
of title 12 of the Code of Federal
Regulations is proposed to be amended
as follows:
PART 324—CAPITAL ADEQUACY OF
FDIC-SUPERVISED INSTITUTIONS
28. The authority citation for part 324
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1815(a), 1815(b),
1816, 1818(a), 1818(b), 1818(c), 1818(t),
1819(Tenth), 1828(c), 1828(d), 1828(i),
1828(n), 1828(o), 1831o, 1835, 3907, 3909,
4808; 5371; 5412; Pub. L. 102–233, 105 Stat.
1761, 1789, 1790 (12 U.S.C. 1831n note); Pub.
L. 102–242, 105 Stat. 2236, 2355, as amended
by Pub. L. 103–325, 108 Stat. 2160, 2233 (12
U.S.C. 1828 note); Pub. L. 102–242, 105 Stat.
2236, 2386, as amended by Pub. L. 102–550,
106 Stat. 3672, 4089 (12 U.S.C. 1828 note);
Pub. L. 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376, 1887 (15
U.S.C. 78o–7 note).
29. In § 324.2, add the definitions of
Category II FDIC-supervised institution,
Category III FDIC-supervised institution,
FR Y–9LP, and FR Y–15 in alphabetical
order to read as follows:
■
§ 324.2
Definitions.
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*
*
*
*
*
Category II FDIC-supervised
institution means:
(1) An FDIC-supervised institution
that is a subsidiary of a Category II
banking organization, as defined
pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5 or 12 CFR
238.10, as applicable; or
(2) An FDIC-supervised institution
that:
(i)(A) Has total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
FDIC-supervised institution’s total
consolidated assets for the four most
recent calendar quarters as reported on
the Call Report, equal to $700 billion or
more. If the FDIC-supervised institution
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has not filed the Call Report for each of
the four most recent calendar quarters,
total consolidated assets means the
average of its total consolidated assets,
as reported on the Call Report, for the
most recent quarter or quarters, as
applicable; or
(B) Has:
(1) Total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
FDIC-supervised institution’s total
consolidated assets for the four most
recent calendar quarters as reported on
the Call Report, of $100 billion or more
but less than $700 billion. If the FDICsupervised institution has not filed the
Call Report for each of the four most
recent quarters, total consolidated assets
means the average of its total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
Call Report, for the most recent quarter
or quarters, as applicable; and
(2) Cross-jurisdictional activity,
calculated based on the average of its
cross-jurisdictional activity for the four
most recent calendar quarters, of $75
billion or more. Cross-jurisdictional
activity is the sum of crossjurisdictional claims and crossjurisdictional liabilities, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the
FR Y–15 or equivalent reporting form.
(ii) After meeting the criteria in
paragraph (2)(i) of this definition, an
FDIC-supervised institution continues
to be a Category II FDIC-supervised
institution until the FDIC-supervised
institution:
(A) Has:
(1) Less than $700 billion in total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
Call Report, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters; and
(2) Less than $75 billion in crossjurisdictional activity for each of the
four most recent calendar quarters.
Cross-jurisdictional activity is the sum
of cross-jurisdictional claims and crossjurisdictional liabilities, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the
FR Y–15 or equivalent reporting form;
or
(B) Has less than $100 billion in total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
Call Report, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters.
Category III FDIC-supervised
institution means:
(1) An FDIC-supervised institution
that is a subsidiary of a Category III
banking organization, as defined
pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5 or 12 CFR
238.10, as applicable;
(2) An FDIC-supervised institution
that is a subsidiary of a depository
institution that meets the criteria in
paragraph (3)(ii)(A) or (B) of this
definition; or
(3) An depository institution that:
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(i) Is an FDIC-supervised institution;
and
(ii)(A) Has total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
depository institution’s total
consolidated assets for the four most
recent calendar quarters as reported on
the Call Report, equal to $250 billion or
more. If the depository institution has
not filed the Call Report for each of the
four most recent calendar quarters, total
consolidated assets means the average of
its total consolidated assets, as reported
on the Call Report, for the most recent
quarter or quarters, as applicable; or
(B) Has:
(1) Total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
depository institution’s total
consolidated assets for the four most
recent calendar quarters as reported on
the Call Report, of $100 billion or more
but less than $250 billion. If the
depository institution has not filed the
Call Report for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, total
consolidated assets means the average of
its total consolidated assets, as reported
on the Call Report, for the most recent
quarter or quarters, as applicable; and
(2) At least one of the following in
paragraphs (3)(ii)(B)(2)(i) through (iii) of
this definition, each calculated as the
average of the four most recent calendar
quarters, or if the depository institution
has not filed each applicable reporting
form for each of the four most recent
calendar quarters, for the most recent
quarter or quarters, as applicable:
(i) Total nonbank assets, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the
FR Y–9LP or equivalent reporting form,
equal to $75 billion or more;
(ii) Off-balance sheet exposure equal
to $75 billion or more. Off-balance sheet
exposure is a depository institution’s
total exposure, calculated in accordance
with the instructions to the FR Y–15 or
equivalent reporting form, minus the
total consolidated assets of the
depository institution, as reported on
the Call Report; or
(iii) Weighted short-term wholesale
funding, calculated in accordance with
the instructions to the FR Y–15 or
equivalent reporting form, equal to $75
billion or more.
(iii) After meeting the criteria in
paragraph (3)(ii) of this definition, an
FDIC-supervised institution continues
to be a Category III FDIC-supervised
institution until the FDIC-supervised
institution:
(A) Has:
(1) Less than $250 billion in total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
Call Report, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters;
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(2) Less than $75 billion in total
nonbank assets, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the
FR Y–9LP or equivalent reporting form,
for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters;
(3) Less than $75 billion in weighted
short-term wholesale funding,
calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the FR Y–15 or
equivalent reporting form, for each of
the four most recent calendar quarters;
and
(4) Less than $75 billion in off-balance
sheet exposure for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters. Off-balance
sheet exposure is an FDIC-supervised
institution’s total exposure, calculated
in accordance with the instructions to
the FR Y–15 or equivalent reporting
form, minus the total consolidated
assets of the FDIC-supervised
institution, as reported on the Call
Report; or
(B) Has less than $100 billion in total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
Call Report, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters; or
(C) Is a Category II FDIC-supervised
institution.
*
*
*
*
*
FR Y–15 means the Systemic Risk
Report.
FR Y–9LP means the Parent Company
Only Financial Statements for Large
Holding Companies.
*
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*
*
*
■ 30. In § 324.10, revise paragraphs
(a)(5), (c) introductory text, and (c)(4)(i)
introductory text to read as follows:
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§ 324.10
Minimum capital requirements.
(a) * * *
(5) For advanced approaches FDICsupervised institutions or, for Category
III FDIC-supervised institutions, a
supplementary leverage ratio of 3
percent.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Advanced approaches capital ratio
calculations. An advanced approaches
FDIC-supervised institution that has
completed the parallel run process and
received notification from the FDIC
pursuant to § 324.121(d) must determine
its regulatory capital ratios as described
in paragraphs (c)(1) through (3) of this
section. An advanced approaches FDICsupervised institution must determine
its supplementary leverage ratio in
accordance with paragraph (c)(4) of this
section, beginning with the calendar
quarter immediately following the
quarter in which the FDIC-supervised
institution meets any of the criteria in
§ 324.100(b)(1). A Category III FDICsupervised institution must determine
its supplementary leverage ratio in
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accordance with paragraph (c)(4) of this
section, beginning with the calendar
quarter immediately following the
quarter in which the FDIC-supervised
institution is identified as a Category III
FDIC-supervised institution.
*
*
*
*
*
(4) Supplementary leverage ratio. (i)
An advanced approaches FDICsupervised institution’s or a Category III
FDIC-supervised institution’s
supplementary leverage ratio is the ratio
of its tier 1 capital to total leverage
exposure, the latter of which is
calculated as the sum of:
*
*
*
*
*
■ 31. In § 324.11, revise paragraphs
(b)(1) introductory text and (b)(1)(ii) as
follows:
§ 324.11 Capital conservation buffer and
countercyclical capital buffer amount.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Countercyclical capital buffer
amount—(1) General. An advanced
approaches FDIC-supervised institution
or a Category III FDIC-supervised
institution must calculate a
countercyclical capital buffer amount in
accordance with paragraphs (b)(1)(i)
through (iv) of this section for purposes
of determining its maximum payout
ratio under Table 1 to this section.
*
*
*
*
*
(ii) Amount. An advanced approaches
FDIC-supervised institution or a
Category III FDIC-supervised institution
has a countercyclical capital buffer
amount determined by calculating the
weighted average of the countercyclical
capital buffer amounts established for
the national jurisdictions where the
FDIC-supervised institution’s private
sector credit exposures are located, as
specified in paragraphs (b)(2) and (3) of
this section.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 32. In § 324.100, revise paragraph
(b)(1) to read as follows:
§ 324.100 Purpose, applicability, and
principle of conservatism.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Applicability. (1) This subpart
applies to an FDIC-supervised
institution that:
(i) Is a subsidiary of a global
systemically important BHC pursuant to
12 CFR 217.402;
(ii) Is a Category II FDIC-supervised
institution;
(iii) Is a subsidiary of a depository
institution that uses 12 CFR part 3,
subpart E (OCC), 12 CFR part 217,
subpart E (Board), or this subpart (FDIC)
to calculate its risk-based capital
requirements;
(iv) Is a subsidiary of a bank holding
company or savings and loan holding
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24353
company that uses 12 CFR part 217,
subpart E, to calculate its risk-based
capital requirements; or
(v) Elects to use this subpart to
calculate its risk-based capital
requirements.
*
*
*
*
*
PART 329—LIQUIDITY RISK
MEASUREMENT STANDARDS
33. The authority citation for part 329
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 12 U.S.C 1815, 1816, 1818,
1819, 1828, 1831p–1, 5412.
■
34. Revise § 329.1 to read as follows:
§ 329.1
Purpose and applicability.
(a) Purpose. This part establishes a
minimum liquidity standard and a
minimum stable funding standard for
certain FDIC-supervised institutions on
a consolidated basis, as set forth in this
part.
(b) Applicability. (1) An FDICsupervised institution is subject to the
minimum liquidity standard, minimum
stable funding standard, and other
requirements of this part if:
(i) It is a GSIB FDIC-supervised
institution, a Category II FDICsupervised institution, or a Category III
FDIC-supervised institution;
(ii) It is an FDIC-supervised
institution that has total consolidated
assets, calculated based on the average
of the FDIC-supervised institution’s
total consolidated assets for the four
most recent calendar quarters as
reported on the Call Report, equal to $10
billion or more and is a consolidated
subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate
holding company of either a Category II
foreign banking organization or a
Category III foreign banking
organization. If the FDIC-supervised
institution has not filed the Call Report
for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters, total consolidated assets means
the average of its total consolidated
assets, as reported on the Call Report,
for the most recent quarter or quarters,
as applicable; or
(iii) It is an FDIC-supervised
institution that the FDIC has determined
that application of this part is
appropriate in light of the FDICsupervised institution’s asset size, level
of complexity, risk profile, scope of
operations, affiliation with foreign or
domestic covered entities, or risk to the
financial system.
(2)(i) An FDIC-supervised institution
that initially becomes subject to the
minimum liquidity standard, minimum
stable funding standard, and other
requirements of this part under
paragraph (b)(1)(i) or (ii) of this section
must comply with the requirements of
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this part beginning on the first day of
the second calendar quarter after which
the FDIC-supervised institution
becomes subject to this part, except an
FDIC-supervised institution must:
(A) For the first three calendar
quarters after the FDIC-supervised
institution begins complying with the
minimum liquidity standard and other
requirements of this part, calculate and
maintain a liquidity coverage ratio
monthly, on each calculation date that
is the last business day of the applicable
calendar month; and
(B) Beginning one year after the FDICsupervised institution becomes subject
to the minimum liquidity standard and
other requirements of this part and
continuing thereafter, calculate and
maintain a liquidity coverage ratio on
each calculation date.
(ii) An FDIC-supervised institution
that becomes subject to the minimum
liquidity standard and other
requirements of this part under
paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this section, must
comply with the requirements of this
part subject to a transition period
specified by the FDIC.
■ 35. Amend § 329.3 by
■ a. Adding the definition for ‘‘Average
weighted short-term wholesale funding’’
in alphabetical order;
■ b. Revising the definition for
‘‘Calculation date’’;
■ c. Adding definitions for ‘‘Call
report’’, ‘‘Category II FDIC-supervised
institution’’, ‘‘Category III FDICsupervised institution’’, ‘‘Category II
foreign banking organization’’, and
‘‘Category III foreign banking
organization’’ in alphabetical order;
■ d. Revising the definition for
‘‘Covered depository institution holding
company’’;
■ e. Adding definitions for ‘‘Foreign
banking organization’’, ‘‘FR Y–9LP’’,
‘‘FR Y–15’’, ‘‘Global systemically
important BHC’’, and ‘‘GSIB depository
institution’’ in alphabetical order;
■ f. Revising the definition for
‘‘Regulated financial company’’; and
■ g. Adding definitions for ‘‘State’’ and
‘‘U.S. intermediate holding company’’
in alphabetical order.
The additions and revisions read as
follows:
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§ 329.3
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Average weighted short-term
wholesale funding means the average of
the banking organization’s weighted
short-term wholesale funding for each of
the four most recent calendar quarters as
reported quarterly on the FR Y–15 or, if
the banking organization has not filed
the FR Y–15 for each of the four most
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recent calendar quarters, for the most
recent quarter or quarters, as applicable.
*
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*
*
Calculation date means, for purposes
of subparts A through J of this part, any
date on which an FDIC-supervised
institution calculates its liquidity
coverage ratio under § 329.21, and for
purposes of subparts K through N of this
part, any date on which an FDICsupervised institution calculates its net
stable funding ratio (NSFR) under
§ 329.100.
Call Report means the Consolidated
Reports of Condition and Income.
Category II FDIC-supervised
institution means:
(1)(i) An FDIC-supervised institution
that:
(A) Is a consolidated subsidiary of:
(1) A company that is identified as a
Category II banking organization
pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5 or 12 CFR
238.10, as applicable; or
(2) A depository institution that meets
the criteria in paragraph (2)(ii)(A) or (B)
of this definition; and
(B) Has total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
FDIC-supervised institution’s total
consolidated assets for the four most
recent calendar quarters as reported on
the Call Report, equal to $10 billion or
more.
(ii) If the FDIC-supervised institution
has not filed the Call Report for each of
the four most recent calendar quarters,
total consolidated assets means the
average of its total consolidated assets,
as reported on the Call Report, for the
most recent quarter or quarters, as
applicable. After meeting the criteria
under this paragraph (1), an FDICsupervised institution continues to be a
Category II FDIC-supervised institution
until the FDIC-supervised institution
has less than $10 billion in total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
Call Report, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, or the FDICsupervised institution is no longer a
consolidated subsidiary of an entity
described in paragraph (1)(i)(A)(1) or (2)
of this definition; or
(2) A depository institution that:
(i) Is an FDIC-supervised institution;
and
(ii)(A) Has total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
depository institution’s total
consolidated assets for the four most
recent calendar quarters as reported on
the Consolidated Report of Condition
and Income (Call Report), equal to $700
billion or more. If the depository
institution has not filed the Call Report
for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters, total consolidated assets means
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the average of its total consolidated
assets, as reported on the Call Report,
for the most recent quarter or quarters,
as applicable; or
(B) Has:
(1) Total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
depository institution’s total
consolidated assets for the four most
recent calendar quarters as reported on
the Call Report, of $100 billion or more
but less than $700 billion. If the
depository institution has not filed the
Call Report for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, total
consolidated assets means the average of
its total consolidated assets, as reported
on the Call Report, for the most recent
quarter or quarters, as applicable; and
(2) Cross-jurisdictional activity,
calculated based on the average of its
cross-jurisdictional activity for the four
most recent calendar quarters, of $75
billion or more. Cross-jurisdictional
activity is the sum of crossjurisdictional claims and crossjurisdictional liabilities, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the
FR Y–15 or equivalent reporting form.
(iii) After meeting the criteria in
paragraphs (2)(i) and (ii) of this
definition, an FDIC-supervised
institution continues to be a Category II
FDIC-supervised institution until the
FDIC-supervised institution:
(A)(1) Has less than $700 billion in
total consolidated assets, as reported on
the Call Report, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters; and
(2) Has less than $75 billion in crossjurisdictional activity for each of the
four most recent calendar quarters.
Cross-jurisdictional activity is the sum
of cross-jurisdictional claims and crossjurisdictional liabilities, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the
FR Y–15 or equivalent reporting form;
(B) Has less than $100 billion in total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
Call Report, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters; or
(C) Is a GSIB FDIC-supervised
institution.
Category III FDIC-supervised
institution means:
(1)(i) An FDIC-supervised institution
that:
(A) Is a consolidated subsidiary of:
(1) A company that is identified as a
Category III banking organization
pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5 or 12 CFR
238.10, as applicable; or
(2) A depository institution that meets
the criteria in paragraph (2)(ii)(A) or (B)
of this definition; and
(B) Has total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
FDIC-supervised institution’s total
consolidated assets for the four most
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recent calendar quarters as reported on
the Call Report, equal to $10 billion or
more.
(ii) If the FDIC-supervised institution
has not filed the Call Report for each of
the four most recent calendar quarters,
total consolidated assets means the
average of its total consolidated assets,
as reported on the Call Report, for the
most recent quarter or quarters, as
applicable. After meeting the criteria
under this paragraph (1), an FDICsupervised institution continues to be a
Category III FDIC-supervised institution
until the FDIC-supervised institution
has less than $10 billion in total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
Call Report, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, or the FDICsupervised institution is no longer a
consolidated subsidiary of an entity
described in paragraph (1)(i)(A)(1) or (2)
of this definition; or
(2) A depository institution that:
(i) Is an FDIC-supervised institution;
and
(ii)(A) Has total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
depository institution’s total
consolidated assets in the four most
recent quarters as reported quarterly on
the most recent Call Report, equal to
$250 billion or more. If the depository
institution has not filed the Call Report
for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters, total consolidated assets means
the average of its total consolidated
assets, as reported on the Call Report,
for the most recent quarter or quarters,
as applicable; or
(B) Has:
(1) Total consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
depository institution’s total
consolidated assets in the four most
recent calendar quarters as reported
quarterly on the most recent Call Report,
of at least $100 billion but less than
$250 billion. If the depository
institution has not filed the Call Report
for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters, total consolidated assets means
the average of its total consolidated
assets, as reported on the Call Report,
for the most recent quarter or quarters,
as applicable; and
(2) One or more of the following in
paragraphs (2)(ii)(B)(2)(i) through (iii) of
this definition, each measured as the
average of the four most recent quarters,
or if the depository institution has not
filed each applicable reporting form for
each of the four most recent calendar
quarters, for the most recent quarter or
quarters, as applicable:
(i) Total nonbank assets, calculated in
accordance with instructions to the FR
Y–9LP or equivalent reporting form,
equal to $75 billion or more;
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(ii) Off-balance sheet exposure,
calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the FR Y–15 or
equivalent reporting form, minus the
total consolidated assets of the
depository institution, as reported on
the Call Report, equal to $75 billion or
more; or
(iii) Weighted short-term wholesale
funding, calculated in accordance with
the instructions to the FR Y–15 or
equivalent reporting form, equal to $75
billion or more.
(iii) After meeting the criteria in
paragraphs (2)(i) and (ii) of this
definition, an FDIC-supervised
institution continues to be a Category III
FDIC-supervised institution until the
FDIC-supervised institution:
(A)(1) Has less than $250 billion in
total consolidated assets, as reported on
the Call Report, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters;
(2) Has less than $75 billion in total
nonbank assets, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the
FR Y–9LP or equivalent reporting form,
for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters;
(3) Has less than $75 billion in
weighted short-term wholesale funding,
calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the FR Y–15 or
equivalent reporting form, for each of
the four most recent calendar quarters;
and
(4) Has less than $75 billion in offbalance sheet exposure for each of the
four most recent calendar quarters. Offbalance sheet exposure is an FDICsupervised institution’s total exposure,
calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the FR Y–15 or
equivalent reporting form, minus the
total consolidated assets of the FDICsupervised institution, as reported on
the Call Report; or
(B) Has less than $100 billion in total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
Call Report, for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters;
(C) Is a Category II FDIC-supervised
institution; or
(D) Is a GSIB FDIC-supervised
institution.
Category II foreign banking
organization means a foreign banking
organization that is identified as a
Category II banking organization
pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5 or 238.10.
Category III foreign banking
organization means a foreign banking
organization that is identified as a
Category III banking organization
pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5 or 238.10.
*
*
*
*
*
Covered depository institution
holding company means a top-tier bank
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24355
holding company or savings and loan
holding company domiciled in the
United States other than:
(1) A top-tier savings and loan
holding company that is:
(i) A grandfathered unitary savings
and loan holding company as defined in
section 10(c)(9)(A) of the Home Owners’
Loan Act (12 U.S.C. 1461 et seq.); and
(ii) As of June 30 of the previous
calendar year, derived 50 percent or
more of its total consolidated assets or
50 percent of its total revenues on an
enterprise-wide basis (as calculated
under GAAP) from activities that are not
financial in nature under section 4(k) of
the Bank Holding Company Act (12
U.S.C. 1842(k));
(2) A top-tier depository institution
holding company that is an insurance
underwriting company;
(3)(i) A top-tier depository institution
holding company that, as of June 30 of
the previous calendar year, held 25
percent or more of its total consolidated
assets in subsidiaries that are insurance
underwriting companies (other than
assets associated with insurance for
credit risk); and
(ii) For purposes of paragraph (3)(i) of
this definition, the company must
calculate its total consolidated assets in
accordance with GAAP, or if the
company does not calculate its total
consolidated assets under GAAP for any
regulatory purpose (including
compliance with applicable securities
laws), the company may estimate its
total consolidated assets, subject to
review and adjustment by the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System; or
(4) A U.S. intermediate holding
company.
*
*
*
*
*
Foreign banking organization has the
same meaning as in 12 CFR 211.21(o)
(§ 211.21(o) of the Board’s Regulation
K), provided that if the top-tier foreign
banking organization is incorporated in
or organized under the laws of any
State, the foreign banking organization
shall not be treated as a foreign banking
organization for purposes of this part.
*
*
*
*
*
FR Y–15 means the Systemic Risk
Report.
FR Y–9LP means the Parent Company
Only Financial Statements for Large
Holding Companies.
*
*
*
*
*
Global systemically important BHC
means a bank holding company
identified as a global systemically
important BHC pursuant to 12 CFR
217.402.
GSIB depository institution means a
depository institution that is a
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consolidated subsidiary of a global
systemically important BHC and has
total consolidated assets equal to $10
billion or more, calculated based on the
average of the depository institution’s
total consolidated assets for the four
most recent calendar quarters as
reported on the Call Report. If the
depository institution has not filed the
Call Report for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, total
consolidated assets means the average of
its total consolidated assets, as reported
on the Call Report, for the most recent
calendar quarter or quarters, as
applicable. After meeting the criteria
under this definition, a depository
institution continues to be a GSIB
depository institution until the
depository institution has less than $10
billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of
the four most recent calendar quarters,
or the depository institution is no longer
a consolidated subsidiary of a global
systemically important BHC.
*
*
*
*
*
Regulated financial company means:
(1) A depository institution holding
company or designated company;
(2) A company included in the
organization chart of a depository
institution holding company on the
Form FR Y–6, as listed in the hierarchy
report of the depository institution
holding company produced by the
National Information Center (NIC)
website,2 provided that the top-tier
depository institution holding company
is subject to a minimum liquidity
standard under 12 CFR part 249;
(3) A depository institution; foreign
bank; credit union; industrial loan
company, industrial bank, or other
similar institution described in section
2 of the Bank Holding Company Act of
1956, as amended (12 U.S.C. 1841 et
seq.); national bank, state member bank,
or state non-member bank that is not a
depository institution;
(4) An insurance company;
(5) A securities holding company as
defined in section 618 of the DoddFrank Act (12 U.S.C. 1850a); broker or
dealer registered with the SEC under
section 15 of the Securities Exchange
Act (15 U.S.C. 78o); futures commission
merchant as defined in section 1a of the
Commodity Exchange Act of 1936 (7
U.S.C. 1 et seq.); swap dealer as defined
in section 1a of the Commodity
Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1a); or securitybased swap dealer as defined in section
3 of the Securities Exchange Act (15
U.S.C. 78c);
(6) A designated financial market
utility, as defined in section 803 of the
Dodd-Frank Act (12 U.S.C. 5462);
(7) A U.S. intermediate holding
company; and
(8) Any company not domiciled in the
United States (or a political subdivision
thereof) that is supervised and regulated
in a manner similar to entities described
in paragraphs (1) through (7) of this
definition (e.g., a foreign banking
organization, foreign insurance
company, foreign securities broker or
dealer or foreign financial market
utility).
(9) A regulated financial company
does not include:
(i) U.S. government-sponsored
enterprises;
(ii) Small business investment
companies, as defined in section 102 of
the Small Business Investment Act of
1958 (15 U.S.C. 661 et seq.);
(iii) Entities designated as Community
Development Financial Institutions
(CDFIs) under 12 U.S.C. 4701 et seq. and
12 CFR part 1805; or
(iv) Central banks, the Bank for
International Settlements, the
International Monetary Fund, or
multilateral development banks.
*
*
*
*
*
State means any state,
commonwealth, territory, or possession
of the United States, the District of
Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico, the Commonwealth of the
Northern Mariana Islands, American
Samoa, Guam, or the United States
Virgin Islands.
*
*
*
*
*
U.S. intermediate holding company
means a company formed by a foreign
banking organization pursuant to 12
CFR 252.153.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 36. In § 329.30, revise paragraph (a)
and add paragraphs (c) and (d) to read
as follows:
§ 329.30
Total net cash outflow amount.
(a) Calculation of total net cash
outflow amount. As of the calculation
date, an FDIC-supervised institution’s
total net cash outflow amount equals the
FDIC-supervised institution’s outflow
adjustment percentage as determined
under paragraph (c) of this section
multiplied by:
(1) The sum of the outflow amounts
calculated under § 329.32(a) through (l);
minus
(2) The lesser of:
(i) The sum of the inflow amounts
calculated under § 329.33(b) through (g);
and
(ii) 75 percent of the amount
calculated under paragraph (a)(1) of this
section; plus
(3) The maturity mismatch add-on as
calculated under paragraph (b) of this
section.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Outflow adjustment percentage.
An FDIC-supervised institution’s
outflow adjustment percentage is
determined pursuant to Table 1 to this
section.
TABLE 1 TO § 329.30—OUTFLOW ADJUSTMENT PERCENTAGES
khammond on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with PROPOSALS3
[Outflow adjustment percentage]
GSIB FDIC-supervised institution ............................................................................................................................................
Category II FDIC-supervised institution ...................................................................................................................................
Category III FDIC-supervised institution that: .........................................................................................................................
(1) Is a consolidated subsidiary of a Category III banking organization with $75 billion or more in average weighted
short-term wholesale funding; or.
(2) Has $75 billion or more in average weighted short-term wholesale funding and is not a consolidated subsidiary
under a holding company.
Category III FDIC-supervised institution that: .........................................................................................................................
(1) Is a consolidated subsidiary of a Category III banking organization with less than $75 billion in average weighted
short-term wholesale funding; or.
(2) Has less than $75 billion in average weighted short-term wholesale funding and is not a consolidated subsidiary
under a holding company.
An FDIC-supervised institution described in § 329.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate
holding company of a Category II foreign banking organization.
2 https://www.ffiec.gov/nicpubweb/nicweb/
NicHome.aspx.
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100 percent.
100 percent.
100 percent.
[70 to 85] percent.
100 percent.
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TABLE 1 TO § 329.30—OUTFLOW ADJUSTMENT PERCENTAGES—Continued
[Outflow adjustment percentage]
An FDIC-supervised institution described in § 329.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate
holding company of a Category III foreign banking organization with $75 billion or more in average weighted shortterm wholesale funding.
An FDIC-supervised institution described in § 329.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate
holding company of a Category III foreign banking organization with less than $75 billion in average weighted shortterm wholesale funding.
(d) Transition. An FDIC-supervised
institution whose outflow adjustment
percentage increases from a lower to a
higher outflow adjustment percentage
may continue to use its previous lower
outflow adjustment percentage until the
first day of the second calendar quarter
after the outflow adjustment percentage
increases.
■ 37. In § 329.50, revise paragraph (a) to
read as follows:
§ 329.50
Transitions.
(a) Depository institution subsidiary of
a U.S. intermediate holding company.
An FDIC-supervised institution that
becomes subject to this part under
§ 329.1(b)(1)(ii) does not need to comply
with the minimum liquidity standard
and other requirements of this part until
[one year after the effective date of the
final rule], at which time the FDICsupervised institution must begin to
calculate and maintain a liquidity
coverage ratio daily in accordance with
subparts A through N of this part, if the
FDIC-supervised institution is a
consolidated subsidiary of a U.S.
intermediate holding company that,
immediately prior to [effective date of
final rule]:
(1) Was domiciled in the United
States;
(2) Had total consolidated assets equal
to $50 billion or more (based on the
average of the U.S. intermediate holding
company’s four most recent
Consolidated Financial Statements for
Holding Companies reporting forms (FR
Y–9Cs));
(3) Had total consolidated assets less
than $250 billion as of the 2018 yearend FR Y–9C or Call Report, as
applicable; and
(4) Had total consolidated on-balance
sheet foreign exposure of less than $10
billion as of year-end 2018 (where total
on-balance sheet foreign exposure
equals total cross-border claims less
claims with a head office or guarantor
located in another country plus
redistributed guaranteed amounts to the
country of the head office or guarantor
plus local country claims on local
residents plus revaluation gains on
foreign exchange and derivative
transaction products, calculated in
accordance with the Federal Financial
Institutions Examination Council
(FFIEC) 009 Country Exposure Report).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 38. Section 329.105, as proposed to be
added at 81 FR 35124 (June 1, 2016), is
revised to read as follows:
100 percent.
[70 to 85] percent.
§ 329.105 Calculation of required stable
funding amount.
(a) Required stable funding amount.
An FDIC-supervised institution’s
required stable funding (RSF) amount
equals the FDIC-supervised institution’s
required stable funding adjustment
percentage as determined under
paragraph (b) of this section multiplied
by the sum of:
(1) The carrying values of an FDICsupervised institution’s assets (other
than amounts included in the
calculation of the derivatives RSF
amount pursuant to § 329.107(b)) and
the undrawn amounts of an FDICsupervised institution’s credit and
liquidity facilities, in each case
multiplied by the RSF factors applicable
in § 329.106; and
(2) The FDIC-supervised institution’s
derivatives RSF amount calculated
pursuant to § 329.107(b).
(b) Required stable funding
adjustment percentage. An FDICsupervised institution’s required stable
funding adjustment percentage is
determined pursuant to Table 1 to this
section.
TABLE 1 TO § 329.105—REQUIRED STABLE FUNDING ADJUSTMENT PERCENTAGES
khammond on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with PROPOSALS3
[Required stable funding adjustment percentage]
GSIB FDIC-supervised institution ............................................................................................................................................
Category II FDIC-supervised institution ...................................................................................................................................
Category III FDIC-supervised institution that: .........................................................................................................................
(3) Is a consolidated subsidiary of a Category III banking organization with $75 billion or more in average weighted
short-term wholesale funding; or.
(4) Has $75 billion or more in average weighted short-term wholesale funding and is not a consolidated subsidiary
under a holding company.
Category III FDIC-supervised institution that: .........................................................................................................................
(3) Is a consolidated subsidiary of a Category III banking organization with less than $75 billion in average weighted
short-term wholesale funding; or.
(4) Has less than $75 billion in average weighted short-term wholesale funding and is not a consolidated subsidiary
under a holding company.
An FDIC-supervised institution described in § 329.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate
holding company of a Category II foreign banking organization.
An FDIC-supervised institution described in § 329.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate
holding company of a Category III foreign banking organization with $75 billion or more in average weighted shortterm wholesale funding.
An FDIC-supervised institution described in § 329.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate
holding company of a Category III foreign banking organization with less than $75 billion in average weighted shortterm wholesale funding.
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100 percent.
100 percent.
100 percent.
[70 to 85] percent.
100 percent.
100 percent.
[70 to 85] percent.
24358
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khammond on DSKBBV9HB2PROD with PROPOSALS3
(c) Transition. An FDIC-supervised
institution whose required stable
funding adjustment percentage
increases from a lower to a higher
required stable funding adjustment
percentage may continue to use its
previous lower required stable funding
adjustment percentage until the first day
of the second calendar quarter after the
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18:46 May 23, 2019
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required stable funding adjustment
percentage increases.
Dated: April 9, 2019.
Joseph M. Otting,
Comptroller of the Currency.
By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Dated at Washington, DC, on April 16,
2019.
Valerie J. Best,
Assistant Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2019–09245 Filed 5–21–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P; 4810–33–P; 6714–01–P
Ann E. Misback,
Secretary of the Board.
By order of the Board of Directors.
PO 00000
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 101 (Friday, May 24, 2019)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 24296-24358]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-09245]
[[Page 24295]]
Vol. 84
Friday,
No. 101
May 24, 2019
Part III
Department of the Treasury
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
Federal Reserve System
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
12 CFR Parts 3, 50, 217, et al.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Changes to Applicability Thresholds for Regulatory Capital Requirements
for Certain U.S. Subsidiaries of Foreign Banking Organizations and
Application of Liquidity Requirements to Foreign Banking Organizations,
Certain U.S. Depository Institution Holding Companies, and Certain
Depository Institution Subsidiaries; Proposed Rule
Federal Register / Vol. 84 , No. 101 / Friday, May 24, 2019 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 24296]]
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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
12 CFR Parts 3 and 50
[Docket ID OCC-2019-0009]
RIN 1557-AE63
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Parts 217 and 249
[Regulations Q, WW; Docket No. R-1628B]
RIN 7100-AF21
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
12 CFR Parts 324 and 329
RIN 3064-AE96
Changes to Applicability Thresholds for Regulatory Capital
Requirements for Certain U.S. Subsidiaries of Foreign Banking
Organizations and Application of Liquidity Requirements to Foreign
Banking Organizations, Certain U.S. Depository Institution Holding
Companies, and Certain Depository Institution Subsidiaries
AGENCY: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Treasury; the Board
of Governors of the Federal Reserve System; and the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking with request for public comment.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board), and the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (collectively, the agencies) are inviting
comment on a proposal that would determine the application of
regulatory capital requirements to certain U.S. intermediate holding
companies of foreign banking organizations and their depository
institution subsidiaries and the application of standardized liquidity
requirements with respect to certain U.S. operations of large foreign
banking organizations and certain of their depository institution
subsidiaries, each according to risk-based categories. For liquidity,
the proposal would require a foreign banking organization that meets
certain criteria to comply with liquidity coverage ratio and net stable
funding ratio requirements with respect to any U.S. intermediate
holding company and certain depository institution subsidiaries
thereof; in addition, the Board is not proposing but is requesting
comment on whether it should impose standardized liquidity requirements
on such foreign banking organizations with respect to their U.S. branch
and agency networks, as well as possible approaches for doing so. The
proposal is consistent with a separate proposal issued by the Board
that would apply certain prudential standards to foreign banking
organizations based on the same categories, and is similar to a
proposal issued by the agencies in 2018 that would determine the
application of regulatory capital and standardized liquidity
requirements for large U.S. banking organizations according to risk-
based categories (the domestic interagency proposal). In addition, the
Board is modifying one aspect of the proposed requirements under the
domestic interagency proposal with respect to certain banking
organizations; specifically, to propose the application of a
standardized liquidity requirement to certain U.S. depository
institution holding companies that meet specified criteria relating to
their liquidity risk profile. The agencies are also making technical
amendments to certain provisions of the domestic interagency proposal.
DATES: Comments on the proposal, including the Board's proposal to
apply liquidity requirements to certain domestic holding companies
discussed in section VI of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION, must be
received by June 21, 2019.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be directed to:
OCC: You may submit comments to the OCC by any of the methods set
forth below. Commenters are encouraged to submit comments through the
Federal eRulemaking Portal or email, if possible. Please use the title
``Proposed changes to applicability thresholds for regulatory capital
requirements for certain U.S. subsidiaries of foreign banking
organizations and application of liquidity requirements for foreign
banking organizations'' to facilitate the organization and distribution
of the comments. You may submit comments by any of the following
methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal--``regulations.gov'': Go to
www.regulations.gov. Enter ``Docket ID OCC-2019-0009'' in the Search
Box and click ``Search.'' Click on ``Comment Now'' to submit public
comments. Click on the ``Help'' tab on the Regulations.gov home page to
get information on using Regulations.gov, including instructions for
submitting public comments.
Email: [email protected].
Mail: Chief Counsel's Office, Attention: Comment
Processing, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, 400 7th Street
SW, Suite 3E-218, Washington, DC 20219.
Hand Delivery/Courier: 400 7th Street SW, Suite 3E-218,
Washington, DC 20219.
Fax: (571) 465-4326.
Instructions: You must include ``OCC'' as the agency name and
``Docket ID OCC-2019-0009'' in your comment. In general, the OCC will
enter all comments received into the docket and publish them on the
Regulations.gov website without change, including any business or
personal information that you provide such as name and address
information, email addresses, or phone numbers. Comments received,
including attachments and other supporting materials, are part of the
public record and subject to public disclosure. Do not include any
information in your comment or supporting materials that you consider
confidential or inappropriate for public disclosure.
You may review comments and other related materials that pertain to
this rulemaking action by any of the following methods:
Viewing Comments Electronically: Go to
www.regulations.gov. Enter ``Docket ID OCC-2019-0009'' in the Search
box and click ``Search.'' Click on ``Open Docket Folder'' on the right
side of the screen and then ``Comments.'' Comments and supporting
materials can be filtered by clicking on ``View all documents and
comments in this docket'' and then using the filtering tools on the
left side of the screen. Click on the ``Help'' tab on the
Regulations.gov home page to get information on using Regulations.gov.
The docket may be viewed after the close of the comment period in the
same manner as during the comment period.
Viewing Comments Personally: You may personally inspect
comments at the OCC, 400 7th Street SW, Washington, DC 20219. For
security reasons, the OCC requires that visitors make an appointment to
inspect comments. You may do so by calling (202) 649-6700 or, for
persons who are hearing impaired, TTY, (202) 649-5597. Upon arrival,
visitors will be required to present valid government-issued photo
identification and submit to security screening in order to inspect
comments.
Board: You may submit comments, identified by Docket No. R-1628, by
any of the following methods:
Agency Website: https://www.federalreserve.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments at https://www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm.
[[Page 24297]]
Email: [email protected]. Include docket
number in the subject line of the message.
Fax: (202) 452-3819 or (202) 452-3102.
Mail: Ann E. Misback, Secretary, Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, 20th Street and Constitution Avenue NW,
Washington, DC 20551. All public comments will be made available on the
Board's website at https://www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm as submitted, unless modified for technical reasons or
to remove personally identifiable information at the commenter's
request. Accordingly, comments will not be edited to remove any
identifying or contact information. Public comments may also be viewed
electronically or in paper form in Room 146, 1709 New York Avenue,
Washington, DC 20006 between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. on weekdays.
FDIC: You may submit comments, identified by RIN 3064-AE96, by any
of the following methods:
Agency Website: https://www.FDIC.gov/regulations/laws/federal/propose.html. Follow instructions for submitting comments on
the FDIC website.
Mail: Robert E. Feldman, Executive Secretary, Attention:
Comments/Legal ESS, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th
Street NW, Washington, DC 20429.
Hand Delivered/Courier: Comments may be hand-delivered to
the guard station at the rear of the 550 17th Street Building (located
on F Street) on business days between 7:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m.
Email: [email protected]. Include RIN 3064-AE96 on the
subject line of the message.
Public Inspection: All comments received must include the
agency name and RIN 3064-AE96 for this rulemaking. All comments
received will be posted without change to https://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal/, including any personal information provided.
Paper copies of public comments may be ordered from the FDIC Public
Information Center, 3501 North Fairfax Drive, Room E-1002, Arlington,
VA 22226, or by telephone at (877) 275-3342 or (703) 562-2200.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
OCC: Mark Ginsberg, Senior Risk Expert, or Venus Fan, Risk Expert,
Capital and Regulatory Policy, (202) 649-6370; James Weinberger,
Technical Expert, Treasury & Market Risk Policy, (202) 649-6360; or
Carl Kaminski, Special Counsel, Henry Barkhausen, Counsel, or Daniel
Perez, Attorney, Chief Counsel's Office, (202) 649-5490, or for persons
who are hearing impaired, TTY, (202) 649-5597, Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency, 400 7th Street SW, Washington, DC 20219.
Board: Constance M. Horsley, Deputy Associate Director, (202) 452-
5239; Elizabeth MacDonald, Manager, (202) 475-6216; Brian Chernoff,
Lead Financial Institution Policy Analyst, (202) 452-2952; J. Kevin
Littler, Lead Financial Institution Policy Analyst, (202) 475-6677;
Mark Handzlik, Lead Financial Institution Policy Analyst, (202) 475-
6636; Matthew McQueeney, Senior Financial Institution Policy Analyst,
(202) 452-2942; Christopher Powell, Senior Financial Institution Policy
Analyst, (202) 452-3442, Division of Supervision and Regulation; or
Benjamin McDonough, Assistant General Counsel, (202) 452-2036; Asad
Kudiya, Counsel, (202) 475-6358; Jason Shafer, Counsel (202) 728-5811;
Mary Watkins, Senior Attorney, (202) 452-3722; Joshua Strazanac,
Attorney, (202) 452-2457; Alyssa O'Connor, Attorney, (202) 452-3886,
Legal Division, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 20th
and C Streets NW, Washington, DC 20551. For the hearing impaired only,
Telecommunication Device for the Deaf (TDD), (202) 263-4869.
FDIC: Benedetto Bosco, Chief, Capital Policy Section,
[email protected]; Michael Maloney, Senior Policy Analyst,
[email protected]; [email protected]; Michael E. Spencer,
Chief, Capital Markets Strategies Section, [email protected]; Eric
W. Schatten, Senior Policy Analyst, [email protected]; Andrew D.
Carayiannis, Senior Policy Analyst, [email protected]; Capital
Markets Branch, Division of Risk Management Supervision, (202) 898-
6888; Michael Phillips, Counsel, [email protected]; Catherine Wood,
Acting Supervisory Counsel, [email protected]; Suzanne Dawley, Counsel,
[email protected]; Andrew B. Williams II, Counsel,
[email protected]; or Gregory Feder, Counsel, [email protected];
Supervision and Legislation Branch, Legal Division, Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street NW, Washington, DC 20429. For
the hearing impaired only, Telecommunication Device for the Deaf (TDD),
(800) 925-4618.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
II. Background
A. Current Prudential Regulatory Regime
B. Tailoring in the Current Prudential Regulatory Regime
C. Structure and Activities of Foreign Banking Organizations
III. Overview of the Proposal
A. Categories of Standards
B. Scoping Criteria
C. Determination of Applicable Category of Standards
IV. Capital Requirements
A. Category II Standards
B. Category III Standards
C. Category IV Standards
V. Liquidity Requirements
A. Categories of Liquidity Requirements for a Foreign Banking
Organization
B. LCR Requirement With Respect to Foreign Banking Organizations
C. NSFR Requirement With Respect to Foreign Banking
Organizations
D. LCR and NSFR Public Disclosure for Foreign Banking
Organizations and U.S. Banking Organizations
E. Request for Comment on Standardized Liquidity Requirements
With Respect to U.S. Branches and Agencies of a Foreign Banking
Organization
F. LCR and NSFR Requirements for Certain Depository Institution
Subsidiaries of a Foreign Banking Organization
G. Transition Period; Cessation of Applicability
VI. Re-Proposal of Standardized Liquidity Requirements for Certain
U.S. Depository Institution Holding Companies Subject to Category IV
Standards
VII. Technical Amendments
VIII. Impact Assessment
IX. Administrative Law Matters
A. Solicitation of Comments and Use of Plain Language
B. Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
D. Riegle Community Development and Regulatory Improvement Act
of 1994
E. OCC Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 Determination
I. Introduction
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board), and the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) (collectively, the agencies) are
inviting comment on a proposed rule (the proposal) that would apply
regulatory capital and standardized liquidity requirements with respect
to the U.S. operations of foreign banking organizations according to
risk-based categories.\1\ U.S. law permits foreign banking
organizations to operate in the United States through a variety of
structures. For example, a foreign banking organization might conduct
U.S. banking activities through
[[Page 24298]]
a U.S. branch or agency,\2\ a U.S. depository institution, or both. In
addition, many foreign banking organizations conduct a range of nonbank
activities through separately incorporated U.S. subsidiaries.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Foreign banking organization means a foreign bank that
operates a branch, agency, or commercial lending company subsidiary
in the United States; controls a bank in the United States; or
controls an Edge corporation acquired after March 5, 1987; and any
company of which the foreign bank is a subsidiary. See 12 CFR
211.21(o); 12 CFR 252.2(k).
\2\ An agency is place of business of a foreign bank, located in
any state, at which credit balances are maintained, checks are paid,
money is lent, or, to the extent not prohibited by state or federal
law, deposits are accepted from a person or entity that is not a
citizen or resident of the United States. A branch is a place of
business of a foreign bank, located in any state, at which deposits
are received and that is not an agency. See 12 CFR 211.21(b) and
(e).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For capital requirements, the Board is proposing to modify the
capital requirements applicable to large U.S. intermediate holding
companies of foreign banking organizations \3\--specifically, those
with at least $100 billion in total consolidated assets--and the
agencies are proposing to modify the capital requirements applicable to
depository institution subsidiaries of these U.S. intermediate holding
companies according to the proposed risk-based categories.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ A foreign banking organization with U.S. non-branch assets
of $50 billion or more must establish a U.S. intermediate holding
company. 12 CFR 252.153.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For liquidity requirements, the proposed framework would apply
standardized liquidity requirements to foreign banking organizations
with respect to their combined U.S. operations \4\ according to the
proposed risk-based categories. Specifically, the Board is proposing to
require a foreign banking organization that meets certain criteria--
including having combined U.S. assets \5\ of $100 billion or more--to
comply with liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) and net stable funding ratio
(NSFR) requirements with respect to any U.S. intermediate holding
company. The Board is not currently proposing but is requesting comment
on whether it should impose standardized liquidity requirements on
foreign banking organizations with respect to their U.S. branch and
agency networks, as well as possible approaches for doing so.\6\ In
addition, the agencies are proposing to determine the application of
LCR and NSFR requirements to certain depository institution
subsidiaries of a foreign banking organization according to the
proposed risk-based categories.
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\4\ The combined U.S. operations of a foreign banking
organization include any U.S. subsidiaries (including any U.S.
intermediate holding company, which would reflect on a consolidated
basis any U.S. depository institution subsidiaries thereof), U.S.
branches, and U.S. agencies. See section II.C of this SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section.
\5\ Combined U.S. assets means the sum of the consolidated
assets of each top-tier U.S. subsidiary of the foreign banking
organization (excluding any company whose assets are held pursuant
to section 2(h)(2) of the Bank Holding Company Act, 12 U.S.C.
1841(h)(2), if applicable) and the total assets of each U.S. branch
and U.S. agency of the foreign banking organization, as reported by
the foreign banking organization on the Capital and Asset Report for
Foreign Banking Organizations (FR Y-7Q).
\6\ This Supplementary Information section uses the term ``U.S.
branch and agency network'' to refer to the U.S. branches and
agencies of a foreign banking organization in the aggregate,
including any consolidated subsidiaries thereof.
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The proposal would generally align with the framework the agencies
proposed for large U.S. banking organizations (the domestic interagency
proposal).\7\ The agencies noted in the domestic interagency proposal
that they were not at that time proposing to amend the capital and
liquidity requirements currently applicable to a U.S. intermediate
holding company of a foreign banking organization or to its depository
institution subsidiaries. This proposal would tailor the agencies'
capital and liquidity requirements for foreign banking organizations
and their U.S. subsidiaries.
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\7\ Proposed Changes to Applicability Thresholds for Regulatory
Capital and Liquidity Requirements, 83 FR 66024 (December 21, 2018).
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The Board is also modifying one aspect of the domestic interagency
proposal with respect to certain banking organizations.\8\
Specifically, the Board is proposing to apply standardized liquidity
requirements to a U.S. depository institution holding company that
would be subject to Category IV standards under the domestic
interagency proposal if the depository institution holding company
significantly relies on short-term wholesale funding relative to its
total consolidated assets.\9\ The proposed requirement for such
Category IV U.S. depository institution holding companies would align
with a similar requirement for foreign banking organizations under this
proposal.
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\8\ The agencies are also making a technical amendment to the
proposed regulation text included in the domestic interagency
proposal, discussed in section VII of this SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section.
\9\ Currently, no U.S. depository institution holding company
that would be subject to Category IV standards has a risk profile
that would meet the proposed criteria.
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Concurrently with this proposal, the Board is separately inviting
comment on a proposed rule (the Board-only foreign banking organization
enhanced prudential standards proposal) that would revise the framework
for determining the applicability of enhanced prudential standards for
foreign banking organizations with total consolidated assets of $100
billion or more, based on the risk profile of their U.S. operations.
The agencies encourage commenters to review this proposal together with
the Board-only foreign banking organization enhanced prudential
standards proposal.
[[Page 24299]]
II. Background
A. Current Prudential Regulatory Regime
In 2013, the agencies adopted a revised regulatory capital rule
(the capital rule) that, among other things, addressed weaknesses in
the regulatory framework that became apparent in the 2007-2009
financial crisis.\10\ The capital rule strengthened the capital
requirements applicable to banking organizations,\11\ including U.S.
banking organization subsidiaries of foreign banking organizations, by
improving both the quality and quantity of regulatory capital and
increasing the risk-sensitivity of capital requirements. In addition,
to improve the banking sector's resiliency to liquidity stress and the
ability of large and internationally active banking organizations to
monitor and manage liquidity risk, in 2014, the agencies adopted the
liquidity coverage ratio rule (LCR rule).\12\ Banking organizations
subject to the LCR rule must maintain an amount of high-quality liquid
assets (HQLA) equal to or greater than their projected total net cash
outflows over a prospective 30-calendar-day period.\13\ Finally, on
June 1, 2016, the agencies invited comment on a proposed rule to
implement an NSFR requirement for large and internationally active
banking organizations (the NSFR proposed rule).\14\ The NSFR proposed
rule would establish a quantitative metric to measure and help ensure
the stability of the funding profile of a banking organization over a
one-year time horizon. During this period, the Board also implemented
further enhanced capital and liquidity standards for the largest bank
holding companies and foreign banking organizations, such as capital
planning requirements and liquidity risk-management standards.\15\
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\10\ The Board and OCC issued a joint final rule on October 11,
2013 (78 FR 62018), and the FDIC issued a substantially identical
interim final rule on September 10, 2013 (78 FR 55340). On April 14,
2014 (79 FR 20754), the FDIC adopted the interim final rule as a
final rule with no substantive changes.
\11\ Banking organizations subject to the agencies' capital rule
include national banks, state member banks, insured state nonmember
banks, federal and state savings associations, and top-tier bank
holding companies and savings and loan holding companies domiciled
in the United States not subject to the Board's Small Bank Holding
Company and Savings and Loan Holding Company Policy Statement (12
CFR part 225, appendix C, and 12 CFR 238.9), excluding certain
savings and loan holding companies that are substantially engaged in
insurance underwriting or commercial activities or that are estate
trusts, and bank holding companies and savings and loan holding
companies that are employee stock ownership plans.
\12\ See Liquidity Coverage Ratio: Liquidity Risk Measurement
Standards, 79 FR 61440 (October 10, 2014) (LCR FR rule), codified at
12 CFR part 50 (OCC), 12 CFR part 249 (Board), and 12 CFR part 329
(FDIC).
\13\ For depository institution holding companies with $50
billion or more, but less than $250 billion, in total consolidated
assets and less than $10 billion in on-balance sheet foreign
exposure, the Board separately adopted a modified LCR requirement,
described further below. 12 CFR part 249, subpart G.
\14\ ``Net Stable Funding Ratio: Liquidity Risk Measurement
Standards and Disclosure Requirements; Proposed Rule,'' 81 FR 35124
(June 1, 2016). For depository institution holding companies with
$50 billion or more, but less than $250 billion, in total
consolidated assets and less than $10 billion in total on-balance
sheet foreign exposure, the Board separately proposed a modified
NSFR requirement.
\15\ See Enhanced Prudential Standards for Bank Holding
Companies and Foreign Banking Organizations, 79 FR 17240 (March 27,
2014) (the enhanced prudential standards rule), codified at 12 CFR
part 252.
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B. Tailoring in the Current Prudential Regulatory Regime
Many of the agencies' current rules, including the capital rule,
the LCR rule, and the NSFR proposed rule, differentiate requirements
among banking organizations, including U.S. intermediate holding
companies of foreign banking organizations, based on one or more risk
indicators, such as total asset size and on-balance sheet foreign
exposure.
All banking organizations subject to the capital rule must meet
minimum risk-based and leverage capital requirements, among other
requirements.\16\ All banking organizations must calculate risk-
weighted assets for purposes of their risk-based capital requirements
using the generally applicable capital rule and calculate a leverage
ratio that measures regulatory capital relative to on-balance sheet
assets.\17\ In addition, banking organizations with $250 billion or
more in total consolidated assets or $10 billion or more in total on-
balance sheet foreign exposure (the advanced approaches thresholds),
together with depository institution subsidiaries of banking
organizations meeting those thresholds (advanced approaches banking
organizations),\18\ are subject to additional requirements. A U.S.
advanced approaches banking organization must calculate its risk-
weighted assets using the advanced approaches,\19\ and all advanced
approaches banking organizations must calculate a supplementary
leverage ratio, which measures regulatory capital relative to on-
balance sheet and certain off-balance sheet exposures, in addition to
the leverage ratio described above.\20\ In addition, when calculating
their regulatory capital levels, advanced approaches banking
organizations are required to include most elements of accumulated
other comprehensive income (AOCI) in regulatory capital, which better
reflects the loss-absorbing capacity of a banking organization at a
specific point in time, but can also result in regulatory capital
volatility and require more sophisticated capital planning and asset-
liability management. Advanced approaches banking organizations must
also increase their capital conservation buffers by the amount of a
countercyclical capital buffer under certain circumstances.
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\16\ See 12 CFR part 217 (Board); 12 CFR part 3 (OCC); 12 CFR
part 324 (FDIC).
\17\ See Subpart D of the regulatory capital rule, 12 CFR part
217 (Board); 12 CFR part 3 (OCC); 12 CFR part 324 (FDIC).
\18\ See 12 CFR 217.1(c), 12 CFR 217.100(b) (Board); 12 CFR
3.1(c), 12 CFR 3.100(b) (OCC); 12 CFR 324.1(c), 12 CFR 324.100(b)
(FDIC). U.S. global systemically important bank holding companies
(GSIBs) form a sub-category of advanced approaches banking
organizations.
\19\ See Subpart E of the regulatory capital rule, 12 CFR part
217 (Board); 12 CFR part 3 (OCC); 12 CFR part 324 (FDIC).
\20\ U.S. intermediate holding companies that are advanced
approaches banking organizations are not required to calculate risk-
weighted assets using the advanced approaches, given the costs
associated with maintaining different home country and U.S. models
for the calculation. Relatedly, in certain cases, U.S. depository
institution subsidiaries of U.S. intermediate holding companies that
are advanced approaches banking organizations also have been granted
requests to be exempted from the requirement to calculate risk-
weighted assets using the U.S. advanced approaches rule.
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The LCR rule and NSFR proposed rule also distinguish between
banking organizations based on total asset size and total on-balance
sheet foreign exposure. Under the LCR rule, the full LCR requirement
generally applies to depository institution holding companies and
depository institutions that meet or exceed the advanced approaches
thresholds and to their depository institution subsidiaries that have
total consolidated assets of $10 billion or more.\21\ The Board's
regulations also apply a less stringent, modified LCR requirement to
depository institution holding companies that do not meet the advanced
approaches thresholds but have more than $50 billion in total
consolidated assets. Under the NSFR proposed rule, the proposed NSFR
requirement would apply to the same banking organizations as the
current full LCR requirement. Similarly, under the NSFR proposed rule,
the Board proposed to apply a less stringent, modified NSFR requirement
[[Page 24300]]
to the same depository institution holding companies that are subject
to the modified LCR requirement.
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\21\ See 12 CFR 50.1 (OCC); 12 CFR 249.1 (Board); and 12 CFR
329.1 (FDIC). The full requirements of the LCR rule include the
calculation of the LCR on each business day and the inclusion of a
maturity mismatch add-on in the total net cash outflow amount.
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The scoping criteria of the regulations described above rely on a
definition of advanced approaches banking organization that the
agencies introduced in 2007 in connection with the adoption of the
advanced approaches risk-based capital rule. The thresholds established
by this definition were designed to include the largest and most
internationally active banking organizations. In implementing the
liquidity rules, the agencies relied on these same thresholds,
recognizing that banking organizations that meet the advanced
approaches thresholds have balance sheet compositions, off-balance
sheet activities, and funding profiles that lead to larger and more
complex liquidity risk profiles.
C. Structure and Activities of Foreign Banking Organizations
Figure 1 provides a simplified illustration of a how a foreign
banking organization may structure its U.S. operations, and depicts the
portion of those operations that would comprise its combined U.S.
operations for purposes of the proposal.
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP24MY19.003
The presence of foreign banking organizations in the United States
brings competitive and countercyclical benefits to U.S. markets, as
these firms serve as an important source of credit to U.S. households
and businesses and contribute materially to the strength and liquidity
of U.S. financial markets. Post-crisis financial regulations have
resulted in substantial gains in resiliency for individual firms and
the financial system as a whole. Foreign banking organizations' U.S.
operations have become less fragmented, and these firms maintain
greater capital and liquidity in the United States.\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ Sources: Consolidated Financial Statements for Holding
Companies (FR Y-9C) and Complex Institution Liquidity Monitoring
Report (FR 2052a).
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The U.S. operations of foreign banking organizations vary in their
complexity and systemic risk profile. For example, the U.S. operations
of some foreign banking organizations are heavily reliant on U.S.
dollar-denominated short-term wholesale funding. As demonstrated in the
financial crisis, reliance on short-term wholesale funding relative to
more stable funding sources (such as capital, long-term debt, and
insured deposits) presents significant risks to U.S. financial
stability and the safety and soundness of an individual banking
organization. Among all foreign banking organizations with combined
U.S. assets of $100 billion or more, weighted short-term wholesale
funding \23\ is equivalent to approximately 30 percent of their U.S.
assets in the aggregate, ranging from 10 percent to as much as 60
[[Page 24301]]
percent at individual firms.\24\ Because the U.S. branches of these
foreign banking organizations have limited access to more stable
funding through retail deposits, these branches in particular rely more
extensively on short-term wholesale funding.
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\23\ Weighted short-term wholesale funding provides a measure of
a firm's reliance on certain less stable forms of funding. See
section III.B.2.d of this Supplementary Information section.
\24\ Source: FR 2052a, as of June 30, 2018.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, some foreign banking organizations engage in complex
activities through broker-dealers in the United States, which are
highly interconnected to U.S. and foreign financial intermediaries.
Among foreign banking organizations with combined U.S. assets of $100
billion or more, U.S. broker-dealer subsidiaries comprise approximately
25 percent of these banking organizations' U.S. assets in aggregate,
with a range of zero to 50 percent at individual firms.\25\ Overall,
total nonbank assets, including broker-dealer subsidiaries, in
aggregate comprise approximately 25 percent of the combined U.S. assets
of foreign banking organizations with combined U.S. assets of $100
billion or more, with a range of zero to 70 percent at individual
firms.\26\
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\25\ Sources: Parent Company Only Financial Statements for Large
Holding Companies (FR Y-9LP), FR Y-7Q, and the Securities Exchange
Commission's Financial and Operational Combined Uniform Single
Report, as of September 30, 2018.
\26\ Id.
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The U.S. operations of some foreign banking organizations also
exhibit greater complexity and face risks due to significant levels of
cross-jurisdictional activity and off-balance sheet exposure. Among
foreign banking organizations with combined U.S. assets of $100 billion
or more, cross-jurisdictional activity (excluding cross-jurisdictional
liabilities to non-U.S. affiliates) \27\ is equivalent to approximately
30 percent of the combined U.S. assets of these firms in the aggregate,
ranging from 13 percent to as much as 81 percent at individual firms,
whereas off-balance sheet exposure is equivalent to approximately 30
percent of the combined U.S. assets of these firms in the aggregate,
ranging from 10 percent to as much as 51 percent at individual
firms.\28\ As discussed below, both cross-jurisdictional activity and
off-balance sheet exposure provide a measure of a banking
organization's interconnectedness, as well as other risks.
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\27\ See section III.B.2.a of this SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section. In addition, while the proposal would allow recognition of
financial collateral in calculating intercompany claims, recognition
of financial collateral is not reflected in this analysis.
\28\ This analysis was based on data compiled from the FR Y-7Q,
as well as information collected from certain foreign banking
organizations supervised by the Board as of September 30, 2018.
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The agencies are proposing to modify the regulatory framework
applicable to foreign banking organizations in a manner commensurate
with the risks such organizations pose to U.S. financial stability,
based on the factors set forth in this proposal. The proposal is
designed to better address the risks presented by the U.S. operations
of foreign banking organizations to U.S. financial stability. The
proposed framework would be consistent with the framework the agencies
proposed for large U.S. banking organizations, using consistent
indicators of risk.
III. Overview of the Proposal
The proposal builds on the agencies' existing practice of tailoring
capital, liquidity, and other requirements based on the size,
complexity, and overall risk profile of banking organizations.
Specifically, the proposal would establish categories of capital and
liquidity standards to align requirements with a banking organization's
risk profile and apply consistent standards to foreign banking
organizations with similar risk profiles in the United States. The
proposal generally aligns with the framework set forth in the domestic
interagency proposal, with modifications to address the fact that
foreign banking organizations may operate in the United States directly
through U.S. branches and agencies or through subsidiaries.
For capital, the proposal would determine the application of
requirements for U.S. intermediate holding companies with total
consolidated assets of $100 billion or more and their depository
institution subsidiaries. For liquidity, the proposal would apply LCR
and NSFR requirements to certain foreign banking organizations with
combined U.S. assets of $100 billion or more with respect to any U.S.
intermediate holding company and to certain large depository
institution subsidiaries thereof.\29\ The Board is also not currently
proposing but is requesting comment on whether it should impose a
standardized liquidity requirement on foreign banking organizations
with respect to their U.S. branch and agency networks, as well as
possible approaches for doing so.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ As discussed in section V of this Supplementary Information
section, the proposal would require a foreign banking organization
to calculate and maintain an LCR and NSFR for any U.S. intermediate
holding company.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposal also includes a modification to the proposed
standardized liquidity requirements that would apply under the domestic
interagency proposal to U.S. depository institution holding companies
that meet certain criteria. Specifically, the Board is proposing to
apply LCR and NSFR requirements to U.S. depository institution holding
companies that meet the requirements for Category IV standards under
the domestic interagency proposal and have $50 billion or more in
weighted short-term wholesale funding. This modification would reflect
the liquidity risks of U.S. depository institution holding companies
that meet these criteria and align with the liquidity requirements the
Board is currently proposing for foreign banking organizations that
meet the same risk-based criteria. No U.S. depository institution
holding company that currently meets the criteria for Category IV
standards, however, meets the proposed $50 billion weighted short-term
wholesale funding threshold.
A. Categories of Standards
The proposal would establish risk-based categories for determining
the application of regulatory capital and standardized liquidity
requirements to the U.S. operations of foreign banking organizations.
Specifically, the proposal would establish three categories of
standards for foreign banking organizations with large U.S.
operations--Categories II, III, and IV.\30\ Capital standards would
apply based on the risk profile of a foreign banking organization's
U.S. intermediate holding company and liquidity standards would apply
based on the risk profile of a foreign banking organization's combined
U.S. operations,\31\ in each case measured based on size, cross-
jurisdictional activity, weighted short-term wholesale funding, off-
balance sheet exposure, and nonbank assets.\32\
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\30\ The domestic interagency proposal also included a fourth
category of standards, Category I, that would apply to U.S. GSIBs.
As discussed below, the proposal would not include this category for
foreign banking organizations.
\31\ Accordingly, the category of capital standards that applies
to a U.S. intermediate holding company of a foreign banking
organization may be different from the category of liquidity
standards that applies to the foreign banking organization.
\32\ As an alternative, the Board is also requesting comment on
a score-based approach, which would differentiate requirements for
firms using an aggregated ``score'' across multiple measures of
risk. See section III.B.3 of this Supplementary Information section.
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For capital, a U.S. intermediate holding company with $100 billion
or more in total consolidated assets and each of its depository
institution subsidiaries would be subject to Category II, Category III,
or Category IV capital standards. The proposal would determine the
applicable category of
[[Page 24302]]
capital standards based on the size, cross-jurisdictional activity,
weighted short-term wholesale funding, off-balance sheet exposure, and
nonbank assets of the U.S. intermediate holding company. The agencies
are not proposing to apply regulatory capital standards to U.S.
branches and agencies of a foreign banking organization because these
branches and agencies do not maintain regulatory capital separate from
their foreign parents.
For purposes of liquidity, a foreign banking organization would
determine the applicable category of standards based on the risk
profile of its combined U.S. operations. Therefore, a foreign banking
organization with $100 billion or more in combined U.S. assets would be
subject to Category II, Category III, or Category IV liquidity
standards, based on the size, cross-jurisdictional activity, weighted
short-term wholesale funding, off-balance sheet exposure, and nonbank
assets of the foreign banking organization's combined U.S. operations,
including, if applicable, any U.S. intermediate holding company and any
U.S. branches and agencies. The proposal would apply LCR and NSFR
requirements to a foreign banking organization with respect to a U.S.
intermediate holding company, and the same category of liquidity
standards would apply to any depository institution subsidiary that has
$10 billion or more in assets and is a subsidiary of a U.S.
intermediate holding company (covered depository institution
subsidiary). In addition, the Board is not currently proposing but is
requesting comment on whether it should impose standardized liquidity
requirements on a foreign banking organization with respect to its U.S.
branch and agency network, as well as possible approaches for doing so.
During stress conditions, liquidity needs can arise suddenly and tend
to manifest in all parts of an organization. For instance, funding
vulnerabilities at the U.S. branches and agencies of a foreign banking
organization can cause heightened liquidity risk exposure not only at
the branches and agencies themselves, but also at the foreign banking
organization's U.S. subsidiary operations, and vice versa. For these
reasons, funding vulnerabilities at the U.S. branches and agencies of a
foreign banking organization may also have an impact on broader U.S.
financial stability. Accordingly, the proposal would apply liquidity
standards based on the combined U.S. operations of a foreign banking
organization.
The proposed categories of capital standards that would apply to a
U.S. intermediate holding company with total consolidated assets of
$100 billion or more and its depository institution subsidiaries, and
the proposed categories of liquidity standards that would apply to a
foreign banking organization with combined U.S. assets of $100 billion
or more and to its covered depository institution subsidiaries, are
described below.
Capital Standards
Category II capital standards would apply to a U.S.
intermediate holding company (and any depository institution subsidiary
thereof) that has $700 billion or more in total consolidated assets or
$75 billion or more in cross-jurisdictional activity. For purposes of
determining categories of capital (and liquidity) standards, cross-
jurisdictional activity would be measured excluding cross-
jurisdictional liabilities to non-U.S. affiliates and cross-
jurisdictional claims on non-U.S. affiliates to the extent that these
claims are secured by eligible financial collateral.\33\ In addition to
the generally applicable capital requirements, these standards would
include the supplementary leverage ratio; countercyclical capital
buffer, if applicable; and the requirement to recognize most elements
of AOCI in regulatory capital.\34\
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\33\ See section III.B.2 of the Supplementary Information for
discussion of the proposed cross-jurisdictional activity indicator.
\34\ In the domestic interagency proposal, the agencies proposed
to require U.S. banking organizations that are subject to Category
II capital standards to calculate risk-based capital ratios using
both the advanced approaches and the standardized approach. See
domestic interagency proposal, 83 FR at 66034. Consistent with
current requirements, a U.S. intermediate holding company (and
depository institution subsidiaries thereof) would not be required
to calculate risk-based capital requirements using the advanced
approaches under the capital rule, and would instead use the
generally applicable capital requirements for calculating risk-
weighted assets. See section IV.A of this Supplementary Information
section.
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Category III capital standards would apply to a U.S.
intermediate holding company (and any depository institution subsidiary
thereof) that is not subject to Category II standards and that has $250
billion or more in total consolidated assets or $75 billion or more in
any of the following indicators: Nonbank assets, weighted short-term
wholesale funding, or off-balance-sheet exposure.\35\ In addition to
the generally applicable capital requirements, these standards would
include the supplementary leverage ratio and, if applicable, the
countercyclical capital buffer.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\35\ For purposes of determining categories of capital and
liquidity standards, weighted short-term wholesale funding would be
measured including transactions with non-U.S. affiliates. See
section III.B.2 of the Supplementary Information.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Category IV capital standards would apply to a U.S.
intermediate holding company (and any depository institution subsidiary
thereof) that has at least $100 billion in total consolidated assets
and does not meet any of the thresholds specified for Category II or
III capital standards. Category IV capital standards include the
generally applicable capital requirements.\36\
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\36\ U.S. intermediate holding companies with total consolidated
assets of less than $100 billion and their depository institutions
subsidiaries would also remain subject to the generally applicable
capital requirements.
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Liquidity Standards
Category II liquidity standards would apply to a foreign
banking organization (and any covered depository institution subsidiary
thereof) with $700 billion or more in combined U.S. assets, or $75
billion or more in cross-jurisdictional activity. For purposes of
determining categories of liquidity (and capital) standards, cross-
jurisdictional activity would be measured excluding cross-
jurisdictional liabilities to non-U.S. affiliates and cross-
jurisdictional claims on non-U.S. affiliates to the extent that these
claims are secured by eligible financial collateral.\37\ These
standards would include full LCR and NSFR requirements for a foreign
banking organization with respect to any U.S. intermediate holding
company. In addition, the full LCR and NSFR requirements would apply to
any covered depository institution subsidiary of a foreign banking
organization subject to Category II liquidity standards.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ See section III.B.2 of the Supplementary Information for
discussion of the proposed cross-jurisdictional activity indicator.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Category III liquidity standards would apply to a foreign
banking organization (and any covered depository institution subsidiary
thereof) that is not subject to Category II liquidity standards and
that has $250 billion or more in combined U.S. assets or $75 billion or
more in any of the following indicators: Nonbank assets, weighted
short-term wholesale funding, or off-balance-sheet exposures. To the
extent the combined U.S. operations of the foreign banking organization
have $75 billion or more in weighted short-term wholesale funding, the
foreign banking organization would be subject to the same standardized
liquidity requirements as would apply under Category II liquidity
standards, specifically, full LCR and NSFR
[[Page 24303]]
requirements with respect to any U.S. intermediate holding company. To
the extent the combined U.S. operations of the foreign banking
organization have less than $75 billion in weighted short-term
wholesale funding, the foreign banking organization would be subject to
reduced LCR and NSFR requirements with respect to any U.S. intermediate
holding company.\38\ Full or reduced LCR and NSFR requirements would
also apply to any covered depository institution subsidiary of a
foreign banking organization subject to Category III liquidity
standards, at the same calibration (i.e., full or reduced) that would
apply to the foreign banking organization for a U.S. intermediate
holding company.
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\38\ The agencies requested comment in the domestic interagency
proposal regarding the appropriate calibration of the minimum LCR
and proposed NSFR requirements within a range of 70 to 85 percent of
the full liquidity requirements. This proposal would apply a
calibration to foreign banking organizations that is consistent with
the calibration that would apply to U.S. banking organizations, and
similarly requests comment regarding the appropriate calibration.
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Category IV liquidity standards would apply to a foreign
banking organization that has combined U.S. assets of $100 billion or
more and is not subject to Category II or III liquidity standards.
Category IV liquidity standards would include reduced LCR and NSFR
requirements only if the combined U.S. operations of a foreign banking
organization have $50 billion or more in weighted short-term wholesale
funding.\39\ These reduced requirements would apply to the foreign
banking organization, which would calculate and maintain an LCR and
NSFR for any U.S. intermediate holding company. No LCR or NSFR
requirement would apply to depository institution subsidiaries of
foreign banking organizations subject to Category IV liquidity
standards. A foreign banking organization that is not subject to
Category II or III liquidity standards but has combined U.S. assets of
$100 billion or more and weighted short-term wholesale funding within
its U.S. operations of less than $50 billion would not be subject to
standardized liquidity requirements under this proposal (but would
remain subject under the Board-only foreign banking organization
enhanced prudential standards proposal to enhanced liquidity
requirements in the Board's enhanced prudential standards rule).
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\39\ As discussed in section VI of this Supplementary
Information section, the Board is also proposing to apply reduced
LCR and NSFR requirements to a U.S. depository institution holding
company that would be subject to Category IV standards under the
domestic interagency proposal and has $100 billion or more in total
consolidated assets and $50 billion or more in weighted short-term
wholesale funding.
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Similar to the domestic interagency proposal, the proposed approach
with respect to foreign banking organizations would allow these firms
to identify and predict what requirements would apply based on the
current characteristics of a foreign banking organization's U.S.
operations, and what requirements would apply if the characteristics of
the foreign banking organization's operations were to change. By taking
into consideration the materiality of each proposed risk-based
indicator, the proposal would provide a basis for assessing the
financial stability and safety and soundness risks of a foreign banking
organization's U.S. operations.
In general, the proposed categories of capital and liquidity
standards align with the categories of standards that would apply under
the domestic interagency proposal to U.S. banking organizations. The
domestic interagency proposal includes an additional category of
standards--Category I--that would apply to U.S. global systemically
important bank holding companies (U.S. GSIBs), identified using the
methodology under the Board's GSIB surcharge rule.\40\ Because the U.S.
GSIB surcharge rule would not identify a foreign banking organization
or U.S. intermediate holding company as a U.S. GSIB, Category I
liquidity and capital standards would not apply to any foreign banking
organization or U.S. intermediate holding company under this proposal.
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\40\ See 12 CFR part 217, subpart H; see also Regulatory Capital
Rules: Implementation of Risk-Based Capital Surcharge for Global
Systemically Important Bank Holding Companies, 80 FR 49082 (August
14, 2015).
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Question 1: What would be the advantages and disadvantages of
applying capital and liquidity standards that are more stringent than
those in Category II under the proposed framework for foreign banking
organizations, comparable to those of Category I under the domestic
interagency proposal, to a U.S. intermediate holding company or
combined U.S. operations of the foreign banking organization with
comparable systemic risk profile to a U.S. GSIB? What other or
different capital or liquidity standards would be appropriate to apply
to such a U.S. intermediate holding company or foreign banking
organization with respect to its U.S. operations, relative to the
standards that would already apply under the proposal?
B. Scoping Criteria
1. Size
The proposal would tailor the application of capital and liquidity
requirements based on the asset size of either a U.S. intermediate
holding company or the combined U.S. operations of a foreign banking
organization, as applicable. Section 165 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act),\41\ as amended by
the Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer Protection Act
(EGRRCPA),\42\ requires the Board to apply enhanced prudential
standards to foreign banking organizations based on their total
consolidated asset size.\43\ Section 165 also directs the Board, in its
application of enhanced prudential standards to foreign banking
organizations, to give due regard to the principles of national
treatment and equality of competitive opportunity and to take into
account the extent to which a foreign banking organization is subject,
on a consolidated basis, to home-country standards that are comparable
to those applied to financial companies in the United States.\44\ The
agencies believe a size threshold based on a foreign banking
organization's U.S. presence is appropriate for differentiating among
foreign banking organizations in view of the statutory purpose, which
is to prevent or mitigate risks to U.S. financial stability.\45\ The
agencies have also previously used size as a simple measure of a U.S.
banking organization's potential systemic impact as well as safety and
soundness risks.\46\ The asset size thresholds set forth in this
proposal are generally consistent with those that would apply to large
U.S. banking organizations under the domestic interagency proposal for
Categories II through IV.
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\41\ Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010), sec. 165,
codified at 12 U.S.C. 5365.
\42\ Public Law 115-174, 132 Stat. 1296 (2018).
\43\ See generally 12 U.S.C. 5635 and EGRRCPA sec. 401.
\44\ 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(2).
\45\ 12 U.S.C. 5365(a)(1).
\46\ For example, the supplementary leverage ratio and
countercyclical capital buffer generally apply to U.S. intermediate
holding companies with total consolidated assets of $250 billion or
more or total consolidated on-balance sheet foreign exposure of $10
billion or more. See 12 CFR 217.10(a), 217.11(b), and 217.100(b);
252.153(e)(2)(i).
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In developing the asset size thresholds for the domestic
interagency proposal, the Board reviewed current supervisory reports
and considered the requirements of section 165 of the Dodd-Frank Act,
as amended by EGRRCPA, together with historical examples of large
domestic banking
[[Page 24304]]
organizations that experienced significant distress or failure during
the financial crisis. Analysis conducted by the Board found that the
crisis experience of domestic banking organizations with total
consolidated assets on the order of $100 billion, $250 billion, and
$700 billion presented materially different risks to U.S. financial
stability and the U.S. economy more broadly, and thus would support the
differentiation of enhanced prudential standards for banking
organizations included within those size groupings.\47\ In addition,
such significant size thresholds reflected observed differences in
structural and operational complexity, and in the range and scale of
financial services a banking organization provides.
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\47\ See domestic interagency proposal, 83 FR at 66028-66030.
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To maintain comparability in the application of capital and
liquidity standards to both domestic and foreign banking organizations,
the agencies are proposing to use similar asset thresholds (in addition
to the other risk-based indicators discussed below) to those used in
the domestic interagency proposal to tailor the application of capital
and liquidity standards under this proposal. Although the agencies
recognize that the U.S. operations of foreign banking organizations are
structured differently than domestic banking organizations, the risks
to financial stability and safety and soundness that stem from size are
present regardless of structure.
Like total asset size for U.S. banking organizations, the size of
the U.S. operations of a foreign banking organization provides a
measure of the extent to which customers or counterparties may be
exposed to a risk of loss or suffer a disruption in the provision of
services in the event that those operations are subject to an
idiosyncratic stress or are affected by a systemic stress event. During
the financial crisis, some large foreign banking organizations rapidly
deleveraged their U.S. operations to address capital deficiencies,
leaving commercial borrowers without a primary source of funding and
contributing to large-scale asset fire sales. For foreign banking
organizations with the largest U.S. operations, stress among those
operations could be disruptive to U.S. markets and present significant
risks to U.S. financial stability.
For liquidity requirements, the proposal would measure size based
on the combined U.S. assets of a foreign banking organization. For
capital requirements, the proposal would measure size based on the
total consolidated assets of a U.S. intermediate holding company.\48\
The proposal would use an asset size threshold of $700 billion or more
for Category II standards; $250 billion or more but less than $700
billion for Category III standards; and $100 billion or more but less
than $250 billion for Category IV standards.
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\48\ Combined U.S. assets are reported on the Annual Report of
Foreign Banking Organizations (FR Y-7) or FR Y-7Q. Total
consolidated assets of a U.S. intermediate holding company are
reported on the Consolidated Statements for Holding Companies, under
Form FR Y-9C. If a foreign banking organization that is required to
report the FR Y-7 or Y-7Q has not filed an FR Y-7 or Y-7Q for each
of the four most recent consecutive quarters, it would be required
to use the most recent quarter or consecutive quarters as reported
on FR Y-7 or FR Y-7Q. Similarly, if the U.S. intermediate holding
company has not filed an FR Y-9C for each of the four most recent
consecutive quarters, it would be required to use the most recent
quarter or consecutive quarters as reported on FR Y-9C (or as
determined under applicable accounting standards, if no FR Y-9C has
been filed).
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Question 2: What are the advantages and disadvantages of using
asset size thresholds to tailor capital and liquidity requirements? In
what ways, if any, does the inclusion of asset size thresholds in
capital and liquidity standards drive changes in foreign banking
organizations' business models and risk profiles in ways that differ
from the effects of thresholds based on other risk-based indicators? As
an alternative to size thresholds, what other factors should the
agencies consider to differentiate among the risk profiles of foreign
banking organizations and serve as tools to tailor capital and
liquidity requirements, and why?
2. Other Risk-Based Indicators
Consistent with the domestic interagency proposal, this proposal
also would consider the level of cross-jurisdictional activity, nonbank
assets, off-balance sheet exposure, and weighted short-term wholesale
funding of the combined U.S. operations of a foreign banking
organization and of any U.S. intermediate holding company to determine
the applicable category of standards for liquidity and capital,
respectively.\49\ Each indicator would be measured as the average
amount of the indicator for the four most recent calendar quarters,
generally calculated in accordance with the instructions to the Banking
Organization Systemic Risk Report (FR Y-15) or equivalent reporting
form.\50\ The agencies are proposing to apply a uniform threshold of
$75 billion for each of these risk-based indicators. A threshold of $75
billion would represent at least 30 percent and as much as 75 percent
of the size of the U.S. operations of a foreign banking organization or
a U.S. intermediate holding company with combined U.S. assets or total
consolidated assets, respectively, of between $100 billion and $250
billion. The agencies also proposed a $75 billion threshold for these
indicators in the domestic interagency proposal. Under this proposal
and the domestic interagency proposal, setting the thresholds for these
risk-based indicators at $75 billion would ensure that domestic banking
organizations and the U.S. operations of foreign banking organizations
that account for the vast majority--over 70 percent--of the total
amount of each risk-based indicator would be subject to liquidity and
capital requirements. To the extent the levels and distribution of an
indicator substantially change in the future, the agencies may consider
modifications, if appropriate.
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\49\ For the discussion in the domestic interagency proposal on
the other risk-based indicators, see 83 FR at 66030-66031.
\50\ The Board is separately proposing to amend the FR Y-15 to
collect risk-indicator data for the combined U.S. operations of
foreign banking organizations, including any U.S. intermediate
holding company. The FR Y-15 Banking Organization Systemic Risk
Report is proposed to be renamed FR Y-15 Systemic Risk Report.
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a. Cross-Jurisdictional Activity
Foreign banking organizations with U.S. operations that engage in
significant cross-jurisdictional activity present complexities that
support the application of more stringent standards. For example,
significant cross-border activity of the U.S. operations of a foreign
banking organization may require more sophisticated risk management to
appropriately address the heightened interconnectivity and complexity
of those operations and the diversity of risks across all jurisdictions
in which the foreign banking organization provides financial services.
In addition, cross-jurisdictional activity may present increased
challenges in resolution because there could be legal or regulatory
restrictions that prevent the transfer of financial resources across
borders where multiple jurisdictions and regulatory authorities are
involved. The use of a threshold based on cross-jurisdictional activity
to differentiate the capital and liquidity requirements applicable to
foreign banking organizations is also intended to maintain consistency
with the thresholds proposed for large U.S. banking organizations under
the domestic interagency proposal. The agencies' capital and liquidity
regulations currently use total on-
[[Page 24305]]
balance sheet foreign exposure, as reported on the Country Exposure
Report (FFIEC 009), to determine the application of certain
requirements for depository institution holding companies and certain
of their depository institution subsidiaries, such as the supplementary
leverage ratio and countercyclical capital buffer.\51\
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\51\ See 12 CFR 217.10 (requiring advanced approaches Board-
regulated institutions to maintain a supplementary leverage ratio);
217.11(b) (requiring advanced approaches Board-regulated
institutions to maintain a countercyclical capital buffer);
217.100(b)(1) (describing the size and on-balance sheet foreign
exposure thresholds for determining an advanced approaches Board-
regulated institution).
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For purposes of determining the application of capital and
liquidity requirements under the proposal, a foreign banking
organization would measure cross-jurisdictional activity as the sum of
the cross-jurisdictional assets and liabilities of its combined U.S.
operations or its U.S. intermediate holding company, as applicable,
excluding intercompany liabilities and collateralized intercompany
claims. Measuring cross-jurisdictional activity taking into account
both assets and liabilities--instead of just assets--would provide a
broader gauge of the scale of cross-border operations and associated
risks, as it includes both borrowing and lending activities outside of
the United States.\52\ The proposal would adjust the measurement of
cross-jurisdictional activity to exclude intercompany liabilities and
to recognize collateral in calculating intercompany claims in order to
reflect the structural differences between foreign banking
organizations' operations in the United States and domestic holding
companies.
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\52\ The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS) recently
amended its measurement of cross-border activity to more
consistently reflect derivatives, and the Board anticipates it will
separately propose changes to the FR Y-15 in a manner consistent
with this change. Any related changes to the proposed cross-
jurisdictional activity indicator would be updated through those
separately proposed changes to the FR Y-15.
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Specifically, the proposed cross-jurisdictional activity indicator
would exclude liabilities of the combined U.S. operations or U.S.
intermediate holding company that reflect transactions with non-U.S.
affiliates. Intercompany liabilities generally represent funding from
the foreign banking organization to its U.S. operations and, in the
case of certain long-term debt instruments, may be required by
regulation.\53\ The proposed exclusion recognizes the benefit of the
foreign banking organization providing support to its U.S. operations.
Short-term funding from affiliates, which may pose heightened liquidity
risks to the U.S. operations, would be captured in the proposal's
measure of weighted short-term wholesale funding.
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\53\ See 12 CFR 252.162 and 12 CFR 252.165.
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Foreign banking organizations' U.S. operations often intermediate
transactions between U.S. clients and foreign markets, including by
facilitating access for foreign clients to U.S. markets, and clearing
and settling U.S. dollar-denominated transactions. In addition, they
engage in transactions to manage enterprise-wide risks. In these roles,
they engage in substantial and regular transactions with non-U.S.
affiliates. In recognition that the U.S. operations have increased
cross-jurisdictional activity as a result of these activities, the
proposal would include in cross-jurisdictional claims only the net
exposure (i.e., net of collateral value subject to haircuts) of all
secured transactions with non-U.S. affiliates to the extent that these
claims are collateralized by financial collateral.\54\
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\54\ See the definition of ``financial collateral'' at 12 CFR
3.2 (OCC); 12 CFR 217.2 (Board); 12 CFR 324.2 (FDIC).
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The proposed recognition of financial collateral would apply to all
types of claims, including repurchase agreements and securities lending
agreements. Specifically, claims on non-U.S. affiliates would be
reduced by the value of any financial collateral in a manner consistent
with the agencies' capital rule,\55\ which permits, for example,
banking organizations to recognize financial collateral when measuring
the exposure amount of repurchase agreements and securities borrowing
and securities lending transactions (together, repo-style
transactions).\56\ The capital rule recognizes as financial collateral
certain types of high-quality collateral, including cash on deposit and
securities issued by the U.S. government, as well as certain types of
equity securities and debt. With the exception of cash on deposit, the
banking organization also is required to have a perfected, first-
priority interest in the collateral or, outside of the United States,
the legal equivalent thereof.\57\ Permitting the reduction of certain
claims on non-U.S. affiliates if the collateral meets the definition of
financial collateral would ensure that the collateral is liquid, while
the use of supervisory haircuts would also limit risk associated with
price volatility. In addition, relying on the capital rule's definition
of financial collateral would provide clarity regarding the types of
collateral eligible to reduce the amount of cross-jurisdictional claims
under this approach.
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\55\ See 12 CFR 3.37 (OCC); 12 CFR 217.37 (Board); 12 CFR 324.37
(FDIC).
\56\ See the definition of ``repo-style transaction'' at 12 CFR
3.2 (OCC); 12 CFR 217.2 (Board); 12 CFR 324.2 (FDIC).
\57\ See 12 CFR 217.2. The proposal would differ from the FFIEC
009, on which U.S. intermediate holding companies report cross-
border claims, in two respects. The FFIEC 009 uses different rules
to recognize collateral, using the term ``eligible collateral,''
which includes cash as well as investment grade debt or marketable
equity securities. In addition, the FFIEC 009 requires reporting of
repurchase agreements, securities lending agreements and other
similar financing agreements at the value of the outstanding claim,
regardless of the amount of collateral provided. See Instructions
for the Preparation of the Country Exposure Report (FFIEC 009) at
12-13 (effective September 2016). The proposal would use the concept
of financial collateral from the agencies' capital rule and would
recognize collateral for any claim, including claims to which the
collateral haircut approach applies under the agencies' capital
rule.
In addition, the FFIEC 009 measures cross-jurisdictional
activity on an ultimate-risk basis, whereby claims are allocated
based on the country of residence of the ultimate obligor, which, in
certain cases, can mean the country or residence of the collateral
provided. Securities lending agreements and repurchase agreements,
however, are allocated based on the residence of the counterparty,
without taking into consideration the location of the collateral.
The proposal would require allocation of exposures on an ultimate-
risk basis (subject to the netting described above).
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As an example of how the proposed financial collateral recognition
would operate, if the U.S. operations of a foreign banking organization
placed cash with the parent foreign banking organization through a
reverse repurchase agreement, and the parent foreign banking
organization provided securities that qualified as financial
collateral, the exposure of the U.S. operations would be reduced by the
value of the securities in a manner consistent with the capital rule's
collateral haircut approach. If the value of the claim exceeds the
value of the financial collateral after taking into account supervisory
haircuts, then the uncollateralized portion of the claim would be
included in the foreign banking organization's measure of cross-
jurisdictional activity. Conversely, if the value of the collateral
after taking into account supervisory haircuts exceeds the value of the
claim, the exposure to the non-U.S. affiliate would be excluded from
the measure of cross-jurisdictional activity.
In addition to the proposal to exclude intercompany liabilities and
certain collateralized intercompany claims from the measure of cross-
jurisdictional activity, the agencies are requesting comment on
alternatives to adjusting the measure for cross-jurisdictional activity
to recognize that the U.S. intermediate holding company or combined
U.S. operations engage in
[[Page 24306]]
substantial and regular transactions with non-U.S. affiliates.
Under the first alternative, the agencies would exclude all
transactions with non-U.S. affiliates from the computation of the
cross-jurisdictional activity of a U.S. intermediate holding company or
the combined U.S. operations of a foreign banking organization. This
alternative would focus only on third-party assets and liabilities and
may be a less burdensome way to account for the structural differences
between foreign banking organizations' operations in the United States
and large domestic holding companies.
Under the second alternative, the agencies would adjust the $75
billion threshold for the cross-jurisdictional activity indicator. For
example, the agencies could apply a threshold of $100 billion for
cross-jurisdictional activity such that the U.S. intermediate holding
company or combined U.S. operations of a foreign banking organization
would be subject to Category II capital or liquidity standards if it
exceeded this threshold. This alternative would recognize the flows
between a foreign banking organization's U.S. operations and its
foreign affiliates without making any additional adjustments to address
intercompany liabilities or collateralized intercompany claims. This
alternative would not require a foreign banking organization to monitor
collateral transfers or calculate supervisory haircuts in measuring its
cross-jurisdictional activity.
Question 3: What are the advantages and disadvantages of
recognizing the value of collateral for certain transactions with non-
U.S. affiliates in the computation of the cross-jurisdictional activity
of a U.S. intermediate holding company or the combined U.S. operations
of a foreign banking organization? How would this recognition align
with the objectives of the proposed indicator as a measure of
operational complexity, scope, and risks associated with operations and
activities in foreign jurisdictions and with principles of national
treatment and equality of competitive opportunity?
Question 4: What would be the advantages and disadvantages of
excluding from the measure of cross-jurisdictional activity liabilities
to non-U.S. affiliates? How would this exclusion align with the
objectives of the proposed indicator as a measure of operational
complexity, scope, and risks associated with operations and activities
in foreign jurisdictions and with principles of national treatment and
equality of competitive opportunity?
Question 5: What are the advantages and disadvantages of
recognizing collateral for all repo-style transactions and other
collateralized positions? To what extent should the type of transaction
determine whether collateral is recognized?
Question 6: What are the advantages and disadvantages of relying on
the definition of financial collateral in the agencies' capital rule
and applying supervisory haircuts in calculating the amount of cross-
jurisdictional claims? What are the burdens associated with this
approach and how do these burdens compare with the benefits? Are there
other criteria that the agencies should consider in addition to this
approach (e.g., the amount of time that would be needed to monetize the
collateral) and why?
Question 7: What would be the advantages and disadvantages of other
ways to define eligible collateral, such relying on the definition of
HQLA in the LCR rule? Under this alternative approach, collateral would
be recognized in the calculation of the exposure if the collateral is
HQLA. Would relying on the definition of HQLA help ensure the
collateral is liquid and provide greater clarity on the types of
collateral that could be recognized? What are the burdens associated
with this approach and how do these burdens compare with the benefits?
Question 8: As discussed above, measuring cross-jurisdictional
activity on an ultimate risk basis takes into consideration both the
type of collateral, and the location of the collateral or issuer. On
the FFIEC 009, if collateral is in the form of investment grade debt or
marketable securities, risk is allocated based on the residence of the
issuer of the security, while cash collateral is allocated based on the
residence of the legal entity where the cash is held. What would be the
advantages and disadvantages of allocating cross-jurisdictional claims
based on the location of the entity holding the collateral for
securities and cash?
Question 9: On the FFIEC 009, repurchase agreements, securities
lending agreements, and other similar financial transactions cannot be
re-allocated or ``transferred'' to a different jurisdiction based on
the location of the collateral or issuer. What would be the advantages
and disadvantages of allowing repurchase agreements, securities
financing transactions, and other similar agreements to be excluded
from the measure of cross-jurisdictional activity if the collateral was
issued by a U.S. entity or, for cash collateral, located in the United
States? How would such treatment align with the objectives of the
proposed indicator as a measure of operational complexity, scope, and
risks associated with operations and activities in foreign
jurisdictions and with principles of national treatment and equality of
competitive opportunity?
Question 10: What are the advantages and disadvantages of measuring
cross-jurisdictional activity on an immediate-counterparty basis (i.e.,
on the basis of the country of residence of the borrower) rather than
on an ultimate-risk basis? What, if any, clarifications could be made
to the measurement of cross-jurisdictional activity on an ultimate-risk
basis to ensure consistency across banking organizations and more
accurate assessment of risk?
Question 11: What is the most appropriate way in which the proposed
cross-jurisdictional activity indicator could account for the risk of
transactions with a delayed settlement date, and why? What are the
advantages and disadvantages of the use of settlement date accounting
versus trade date accounting for purposes of the cross-jurisdictional
activity indicator?
Question 12: What are the advantages or disadvantages of the
alternative approaches to measuring non-U.S. affiliate transactions for
purposes of the cross-jurisdictional activity indicator? How do these
alternatives compare to the proposal?
Question 13: What other positions, if any, should be excluded from
or included in the cross-jurisdictional activity indicator for purposes
of determining capital and liquidity standards, and why? How would
excluding from the cross-jurisdictional activity measure a broader or
narrower set of intercompany assets and liabilities align with the
objectives of the proposed indicator as a measure of operational
complexity, scope, and risks associated with operations and activities
in foreign jurisdictions and with principles of national treatment and
equality of competitive opportunity?
Question 14: What would be the advantages and disadvantages of
including in or excluding from the proposed cross-jurisdictional
activity indicator positions of the U.S. branches and agencies of a
foreign banking organization with the parent foreign banking
organization or other non-U.S. affiliates? For example, what would be
the advantages or disadvantages of including or excluding reported
gross due from and gross due to the parent
[[Page 24307]]
foreign banking organization or other non-U.S. affiliates?
Question 15: What modifications to the proposed cross-
jurisdictional activity measure should the agencies consider to better
align it with the proposed treatment for U.S. banking organizations
under the domestic interagency proposal and promote consistency in the
measurement of assets and liabilities across the agencies' regulatory
capital and liquidity framework and applicable accounting standards,
and why? How would any such modification more appropriately account for
the risks of cross-jurisdictional activity for foreign banking
organizations and mitigate risks to U.S. financial stability?
Question 16: To what extent would using a particular measure of
cross-jurisdictional activity create incentives for foreign banking
organizations to restructure relationships between U.S. subsidiaries,
U.S. branches and agencies, and non-U.S. affiliates?
Question 17: What alternative indicators should the agencies
consider to the proposed cross-jurisdictional activity indicator as a
measure of cross-border activity of a foreign banking organization? How
would any alternative indicator align with the proposed cross-
jurisdictional activity measure for U.S. banking organizations under
the domestic interagency proposal?
Question 18: What are the advantages and disadvantages of the
proposal or the alternatives in combination with other potential
changes to the measurement and reporting of cross-jurisdictional
activity discussed above (e.g., ultimate-risk basis)? How would changes
to the measurement and reporting of cross-jurisdictional activity in
combination with the proposal or alternatives align with the objectives
of the proposed indicator as a measure of operational complexity,
scope, and risks associated with operations and activities in foreign
jurisdictions and with principles of national treatment and equality of
competitive opportunity?
Question 19: Data reported on the FR Y-15 is used to measure the
systemic risk of large banking organizations, including to identify and
calibrate surcharges applied to U.S. GSIBs. The Board may amend the FR
Y-15 in this context, and would seek comment on the effect of any
changes on the U.S. GSIB surcharge framework as well as on the
advantages and disadvantages of incorporating these changes into the
calculation of risk indicators. The Board also may separately amend the
FR Y-15 in the context of the calculation of risk indicators. What are
the advantages and disadvantages of the risk-based indicator
definitions tracking the inputs to the U.S. GSIB surcharge framework?
b. Nonbank Assets
The amount of a banking organization's investment in nonbank
subsidiaries provides a measure of the organization's business and
operational complexity. Specifically, banking organizations with
significant investments in nonbank subsidiaries are more likely to have
complex corporate structures and funding relationships, and substantial
inter-affiliate transactions that can add operational challenges. A
banking organization's complexity is positively correlated with the
impact of the organization's failure or distress.\58\ U.S. intermediate
holding companies can maintain significant investments in nonbank
subsidiaries, and therefore may present attendant risks.
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\58\ See Regulatory Capital Rules: Implementation of Risk-Based
Capital Surcharges for Global Systemically Important Bank Holding
Companies, 80 FR 49082 (August 14, 2015). See also ``Global
systemically important banks: Updated assessment methodology and the
higher loss absorbency requirement'' (paragraph 25), available at
https://www.bis.org/publ/bcbs255.htm.
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Nonbank activities may involve a broader range of risks than those
associated with banking activities, and can increase interconnectedness
with other financial firms, requiring sophisticated risk management and
governance, including capital planning, stress testing, and liquidity
risk management. If not adequately managed, the risks associated with
nonbank activities could present significant safety and soundness
concerns and increase financial stability risks. The distress or
failure of a nonbank subsidiary could be destabilizing to the U.S.
operations of a foreign banking organization and the foreign banking
organization itself, and cause counterparties and creditors to lose
confidence in the organization's U.S. or global operations. Nonbank
assets also reflect the degree to which a foreign banking organization
and its U.S. operations may be engaged in activities through legal
entities that are not subject to separate capital or liquidity
requirements or to the direct regulation and supervision applicable to
a regulated banking entity.
Under the proposal, nonbank assets would be measured as the average
amount of assets in consolidated nonbank subsidiaries \59\ and any
direct investments in unconsolidated nonbank subsidiaries.\60\ The
proposed nonbank assets indicator would align with the nonbank assets
indicator in the domestic interagency proposal, as well as with the
Board's capital plan rule.\61\
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\59\ The proposed measure of nonbank assets would exclude assets
in a national bank, state member bank, and state nonmember bank, as
well as assets in other depository institutions, including a federal
savings association, federal savings bank, or state savings
association. The nonbank assets measure also would exclude the
assets in each Edge or Agreement Corporation that is held through a
banking subsidiary.
\60\ The proposed measure of nonbank assets would include the
assets in each Edge or Agreement Corporation not held through a
banking subsidiary, and would exclude assets in a federal savings
association, federal savings bank, or state savings association.
\61\ See 12 CFR 225.8. The capital plan rule defines ``average
total nonbank assets'' with respect to a U.S. intermediate holding
company subject to the capital plan rule as the average of the total
nonbank assets of the U.S. intermediate holding company, calculated
in accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-9LP, for the four
most recent consecutive quarters or, if the U.S. intermediate
holding company has not filed the FR Y-9LP for each of the four most
recent consecutive quarters, for the most recent quarter or
consecutive quarters, as applicable. 12 CFR 225.8(d)(2).
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c. Off-Balance Sheet Exposure
Off-balance sheet exposure complements the measure of size by
taking into consideration financial and banking activities not
reflected on the balance sheet of a foreign banking organization's U.S.
operations. Like size, off-balance sheet exposure provides a measure of
the extent to which customers or counterparties may be exposed to a
risk of loss or suffer a disruption in the provision of services. In
addition, off-balance sheet exposure can lead to significant future
draws on liquidity, particularly in times of stress. In the financial
crisis, for example, vulnerabilities among the U.S. operations of
foreign banking organizations were exacerbated by draws on commitments.
These types of exposures can be a source of safety and soundness risk,
as organizations with significant off-balance sheet exposure may have
to fund these positions in the market in a time of stress. The nature
of these risks for foreign banking organizations of significant size
and complexity can also lead to financial stability risk, as they can
manifest rapidly and with less transparency to other market
participants. In addition, because draws on off-balance sheet exposures
such as committed credit and liquidity facilities tend to increase in
times of stress, they can exacerbate the effects of stress
conditions.\62\
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\62\ See William F. Bassett, Simon Gilchrist, Gretchen C.
Weinbach, Egon Zakraj[scaron]ek, ``Improving Our Ability to Monitor
Bank Lending,'' in Risk Topography: Systemic Risk and Macro Modeling
149-161 (Markus Brunnermeier and Arvind Krishnamurthy, eds. 2014),
available at: https://www.nber.org/chapters/c12554.
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[[Page 24308]]
Off-balance sheet exposure may also amplify contagion effects. Some
off-balance sheet exposures, such as derivatives, are concentrated
among the largest financial firms.\63\ The distress or failure of one
party to a financial contract, such as a derivative or securities
financing transaction, can trigger disruptive terminations of these
contracts that destabilize the defaulting party's otherwise solvent
affiliates.\64\ Such a default also can lead to disruptions in markets
for financial contracts, including by resulting in rapid market-wide
unwinding of trading positions.\65\ In this way, the effects of one
party's failure or distress can be amplified by its off-balance sheet
connections with other financial market participants.
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\63\ See, e.g., Sheri M. Markose, Systemic Risk from Global
Financial Derivatives: A Network Analysis of Contagion and its
Mitigation with Super-Spreader Tax, IMF Working Papers (Nov. 30,
2012), available at: https://www.imf.org/en/Publications/WP/Issues/2016/12/31/Systemic-Risk-from-Global-Financial-Derivatives-A-Network-Analysis-of-Contagion-and-Its-40130.
\64\ To address these risks at the largest and most systemically
risky firms, the agencies have established restrictions relating to
the qualified financial contracts of U.S. GSIBs, the depository
institution subsidiaries of U.S. GSIBs, and the U.S. operations of
systemically important foreign banking organizations. See 12 CFR
part 252, subpart I (Board); 12 CFR part 47 (OCC); and 12 CFR part
382 (FDIC).
\65\ See, e.g., The Orderly Liquidation of Lehman Brothers
Holdings Inc. under the Dodd-Frank Act, 5 FDIC Quarterly No. 2, 31
(2011), https://www.fdic.gov/bank/analytical/quarterly/2011-vol5-2/article2.pdf.
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Under the proposal, off-balance sheet exposure would be measured as
the difference between total exposure and on-balance sheet assets.
Total exposure includes on-balance sheet assets plus certain off-
balance sheet exposures, including derivative exposures, repo-style
transactions, and other off-balance sheet exposures (such as
commitments).
d. Weighted Short-Term Wholesale Funding
The proposed weighted short-term wholesale funding indicator would
measure the level of reliance on short-term wholesale funding
sources.\66\ This indicator provides a measure of liquidity risk, as
reliance on short-term, generally uninsured funding from more
sophisticated counterparties can make those operations vulnerable to
large-scale funding runs. In particular, foreign banking organizations
that fund long-term assets with short-term liabilities from financial
intermediaries such as investment funds may need to rapidly sell less
liquid assets to meet withdrawals and maintain their operations in a
time of stress, which they may be able to do only at ``fire sale''
prices. Such asset fire sales can cause rapid deterioration in a
foreign banking organization's financial condition and negatively
affect broader financial stability by driving down asset prices across
the market. As a result, weighted short-term wholesale funding reflects
both safety and soundness and financial stability risks. Short-term
wholesale funding also provides a measure of interconnectedness among
market participants, including other financial sector entities, which
can provide a mechanism for transmission of distress. Weighted short-
term wholesale funding would include exposures between the U.S.
operations of a foreign banking organization and its non-U.S.
affiliates, as reliance on short-term wholesale funding from foreign
affiliates can contribute to the funding vulnerability of a foreign
banking organization's U.S. operations in times of stress.
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\66\ Specifically, short-term wholesale funding is the amount of
a firm's funding obtained from wholesale counterparties or retail
brokered deposits and sweeps with a remaining maturity of one year
or less. Categories of short-term wholesale funding are then
weighted based on four residual maturity buckets; the asset class of
collateral, if any, backing the funding; and characteristics of the
counterparty. Weightings reflect risk of runs and attendant fire
sales. See 12 CFR 217.406 and Regulatory Capital Rules:
Implementation of Risk-Based Capital Surcharges for Global
Systemically Important Bank Holding Companies, 80 FR 49082 (August
14, 2015).
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Question 20: What are the advantages and disadvantages of the
proposed risk-based indicators? What different indicators should the
agencies consider, and why?
Question 21: At what level should the threshold for each indicator
be set, and why? Commenters are encouraged to provide data supporting
their recommendations.
Question 22: The agencies are considering whether Category II
standards should apply based on a banking organization's weighted
short-term wholesale funding, nonbank assets, and off-balance sheet
exposure, using a higher threshold than the $75 billion that would
apply for Category III standards, in addition to the thresholds
discussed above based on asset size and cross-jurisdictional activity.
For example, a foreign banking organization's combined U.S. operations
and its depository institution subsidiaries could be subject to
Category II standards if one or more of these indicators equaled or
exceeded a level such as $100 billion or $200 billion. A threshold of
$200 billion would represent at least 30 percent and as much as 80
percent of the combined U.S. assets of a foreign banking organization
with between $250 billion and $700 billion in combined U.S. assets. If
the agencies were to adopt additional indicators for purposes of
identifying foreign banking organizations with U.S. operations that
should be subject to Category II standards, at what level should the
threshold for each indicator be set, and why? Commenters are encouraged
to provide data supporting their recommendations.
3. Alternative Scoping Criteria
An alternative approach for tailoring the application of enhanced
prudential standards to a foreign banking organization would be to use
a single, comprehensive score to assess the risk profile and systemic
footprint of a foreign banking organization's combined U.S. operations
or U.S. intermediate holding company. The Board uses such an
identification methodology (scoring methodology) to identify a U.S.
GSIB and apply risk-based capital surcharges to these firms. As an
alternative in the domestic interagency proposal, the agencies
described a scoring methodology that could be used to tailor prudential
standards for domestic banking organizations.
The scoring methodology in the Board's regulations is used to
calculate a U.S. GSIB's capital surcharge under two methods.\67\ The
first method is based on the sum of a bank holding company's systemic
indicator scores reflecting its size, interconnectedness, cross-
jurisdictional activity, substitutability, and complexity (method 1).
The second method is based on the sum of these same measures of risk,
except that the substitutability measures are replaced with a measure
of the bank holding company's reliance on short-term wholesale funding
(method 2).\68\ Consistent with the domestic interagency proposal and
as an alternative to the threshold approach under this proposal, the
agencies are seeking comment on use of the scoring methodology to
tailor the application of enhanced prudential standards to the U.S.
operations of foreign banking organizations.
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\67\ Application of a U.S. GSIB's capital surcharge is
determined based on an annual calculation. Similarly, the
alternative scoping criteria under this proposal would be based on
an annual calculation. See 12 CFR part 217, subpart H.
\68\ For more discussion relating to the scoring methodology,
please see the Board's final rule establishing the scoring
methodology. See Regulatory Capital Rules: Implementation of Risk-
Based Capital Surcharges for Global Systemically Important Bank
Holding Companies, 80 FR 49082 (Aug. 14, 2015).
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The scoring methodology was designed to identify and assess the
systemic risk of large U.S. banking
[[Page 24309]]
organizations, and similarly can be used to measure the risks posed by
the U.S. operations of foreign banking organizations. The component
measures of the scoring methodology identify banking organizations that
have heightened risk profiles, and provide a basis for assessing risk
to safety and soundness and U.S. financial stability. Size,
interconnectedness, cross-jurisdictional activity, substitutability,
complexity, and short-term wholesale funding are indicators of risk for
both foreign and domestic banking organizations. Similar to the
thresholds-based approach set forth in this proposal, the indicators
used in the scoring methodology closely align with the risk-based
factors specified in section 165 of the Dodd-Frank Act for applying
enhanced prudential standards. Because this information would be
reported publicly, use of the scoring methodology would promote
transparency in the application of such standards to foreign banking
organizations.
The Board has previously used the scoring methodology and global
methodology \69\ to identify and apply enhanced prudential standards to
U.S. subsidiaries and operations of foreign global systemically
important banking organizations (foreign GSIBs). For example, the
Board's restrictions on qualified financial contracts and total loss-
absorbing capacity requirements apply to U.S. GSIBs and the U.S.
operations of foreign GSIBs, with the latter identified under the
Board's scoring methodology or the global methodology.\70\
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\69\ Global methodology means the assessment methodology and the
higher loss absorbency requirement for global systemically important
banks issued by the BCBS, as updated from time to time. 12 CFR
252.2.
\70\ See 12 CFR 252.82(b) (definition of ``covered entity'' with
regard to restrictions on qualified financial contracts); 12 CFR
252.160 (definition of ``covered IHC'' with regard to total loss-
absorbing capacity requirements). See also, 12 CFR 252.153(b)
(identification of foreign GSIBs in the enhanced prudential
standards rule; 12 CFR 252.170(a)(2)(ii) (definition of ``major
foreign banking organization'' in single counterparty credit limits
rule).
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Under the alternative scoring approach, the size of a foreign
banking organization's combined U.S. assets, together with the method 1
or method 2 score of its U.S. operations under the scoring methodology,
would be used to determine which category of liquidity standards would
apply. Consistent with the proposal, most enhanced prudential standards
would be based on the method 1 or method 2 score applicable to a
foreign banking organization's combined U.S. operations. The
application of capital standards, however, would apply based on the
method 1 or method 2 score of a foreign banking organization's U.S.
intermediate holding company depository institution subsidiary. U.S.
intermediate holding companies already report information required to
calculate method 1 and method 2 scores, and in connection with this
proposal, those reporting requirements would be extended to include a
foreign banking organization's combined U.S. operations.\71\
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\71\ As discussed above, the Board is separately proposing to
amend the FR Y-15 to collect risk-indicator data for the combined
U.S. operations of foreign banking organizations.
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To determine which category of standards would apply under the
alternative scoring methodology, the Board considered the distribution
of method 1 and method 2 scores of the U.S. operations of foreign
banking organizations, U.S. intermediate holding companies, domestic
bank holding companies, and certain savings and loan holding companies
with at least $100 billion in total consolidated assets.\72\ As
discussed below, the agencies are providing ranges of scores for the
application of Category II and Category III standards. If the agencies
adopt a final rule that uses the scoring methodology to establish
tailoring thresholds, the agencies would set a single score within the
listed ranges for the application of Category II and Category III
standards. Like under the indicators-based approach, a subsidiary
depository institution of a foreign banking organization would be
subject to the same category of standards as the foreign banking
organization.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\72\ In conducting its analysis, the Board considered method 1
and method 2 scores as of September 30, 2018.
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Category II. In selecting the ranges of method 1 or method 2 scores
that could define the application of Category II standards, the Board
considered the potential of a banking organization's material distress
or failure to disrupt the U.S. financial system or economy. The Board
estimated method 1 and method 2 scores for domestic banking
organizations with more than $250 billion in total consolidated assets,
and foreign banking organizations with more than $250 billion in
combined U.S. assets. To this sample, the Board added estimates of
method 1 and method 2 scores for a banking organization whose distress
impacted U.S. financial stability during the crisis (Wachovia), and
estimated method 1 and method 2 scores assuming significant growth in
operations (e.g., if one or more U.S. intermediate holding companies
each had $700 billion in assets). The Board also considered the outlier
method 1 and method 2 scores for domestic and foreign banking
organizations with more than $250 billion in total consolidated assets
that are not U.S. GSIBs.\73\
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\73\ Outliers can be determined by a number of statistical
methods. For these purposes, the Board computed an outlier as the
third quartile plus three times the interquartile range of method 1
and method 2 scores of these U.S. bank holding companies, U.S.
savings and loan holding companies, U.S. intermediate holding
companies, and the combined U.S. operations of foreign banking
organizations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Based on this analysis and to maintain comparability to the
domestic interagency proposal, under the alternative scoring approach
the agencies would apply Category II liquidity standards to any foreign
banking organization with at least $100 billion in combined U.S. assets
and whose combined U.S. operations have (a) a method 1 score that meets
or exceeds a minimum score between 60 and 80, or (b) a method 2 score
that meets or exceeds a minimum score between 100 to 150. These same
size thresholds and score ranges would apply to U.S. intermediate
holding companies for the application of capital standards.
Category III. Under the proposal, the agencies would apply Category
III liquidity standards to a foreign banking organization with combined
U.S. assets of $250 billion or more, or, for capital standards, a U.S.
intermediate holding company with total consolidated assets of $250
billion or more that does not meet the criteria for Category II. This
reflects, among other things, the crisis experience of domestic banking
organizations with total consolidated assets of $250 billion or more,
which presented materially different risks to U.S. financial stability
relative to banking organizations with less than $250 billion in
assets. Similarly, under the domestic interagency proposal, the
agencies would at a minimum apply Category III standards to a banking
organization with assets of $250 billion or more, reflecting the
threshold above which the Board must apply enhanced prudential
standards under section 165.
The domestic interagency proposal seeks comment on an alternative
scoring approach under which a banking organization with total
consolidated assets between $100 billion and $250 billion that has a
method 1 or method 2 score within a specified range would be subject to
Category III standards. Specifically, the agencies proposed selecting a
minimum score for application of Category III standards between 25 and
45 under method 1, or of between 50 and 85 under method 2.
[[Page 24310]]
The maximum score for application of the Category III standards would
be one point lower than the minimum score selected for application of
Category II standards. In selecting these ranges, the Board compared
the scores of domestic banking organizations with total consolidated
assets of between $100 billion and $250 billion with those of banking
organizations with total consolidated assets greater than $250 billion.
The Board performed a similar analysis including the scores of foreign
banking organizations and found similar results. The agencies are
therefore considering the same thresholds for application of Category
III standards to foreign banking organizations under the alternative
scoring approach. Use of these thresholds would maintain comparable
treatment between domestic banking organizations and the U.S.
operations of foreign banking organizations under the alternative
scoring approach.
Specifically, under the alternative scoring approach, Category III
standards would apply to a foreign banking organization with combined
U.S. assets between $100 billion and $250 billion with a method 1 score
that meets or exceeds a minimum score between 25 and 45, or a method 2
score that meets or exceeds a minimum score between 50 and 85, and in
either case is below the score threshold for Category II standards.
These same size thresholds and score ranges would apply to U.S.
intermediate holding companies for the application of capital
standards.
Category IV: Under the alternative scoring approach, Category IV
liquidity standards would apply to a foreign banking organization with
at least $100 billion in combined U.S. assets whose method 1 or method
2 score for its combined U.S. operations is below the minimum score
threshold for Category III. Likewise, Category IV capital standards
would apply to a foreign banking organization with a U.S. intermediate
holding company that has at least $100 billion in total assets and does
not meet any threshold specified for Category III.
Question 23: What are the advantages and disadvantages to the use
of the alternative scoring approach and category thresholds described
above instead of the proposed thresholds for foreign banking
organizations?
Question 24: If the agencies were to use the alternative scoring
approach to differentiate foreign banking organizations' U.S.
operations for purposes of tailoring prudential standards, should the
agencies use method 1 scores, method 2 scores, or both? What are the
challenges of applying the alternative scoring approach to the combined
U.S. operations or U.S. intermediate holding company of a foreign
banking organization? What modifications to the alternative scoring
approach, if any, should the agencies consider (e.g., should
intercompany transactions be reflected in the calculation of
indicators)?
Question 25: If the agencies adopted the alternative scoring
approach, what would be the advantages or disadvantages of requiring
scores to be calculated for the U.S. operations of a foreign banking
organization at a frequency greater than annually, including, for
example, requiring scores to be calculated on a quarterly basis?
Question 26: With respect to each category of standards described
above, at what level should the method 1 or method 2 score thresholds
be set for the combined U.S. operations or U.S. intermediate holding
company of a foreign banking organization and why? Commenters are
encouraged to provide data supporting their recommendations.
Question 27: What other approaches should the agencies consider in
setting thresholds for tailored prudential standards for foreign
banking organizations and why? How would any such approach affect the
comparability of requirements across domestic banking organizations and
foreign banking organizations with U.S. operations?
C. Determination of Applicable Category of Standards
Under the proposal, a U.S. intermediate holding company with $100
billion or more in total consolidated assets, and a depository
institution subsidiary thereof, would be required to determine its
applicable category of capital standards based on the risk-based
indicators applicable to the U.S. intermediate holding company.
Similarly, the proposal would require a foreign banking organization
with combined U.S. assets of $100 billion or more, and covered
depository institution subsidiaries thereof, to determine the
applicable category of liquidity standards based on the risk-based
indicators of the combined U.S. operations. In order to capture
significant changes, rather than temporary fluctuations, in the risk
profile of the U.S. intermediate holding company or the foreign banking
organization's combined U.S. operations, a category of standards would
apply based on the levels of each risk-based indicator over the
preceding four calendar quarters.
For capital standards, a category of standards would apply to a
U.S. intermediate holding company and any depository institution
subsidiary thereof based on the average levels of each indicator over
the preceding four calendar quarters for the U.S. intermediate holding
company.\74\ A U.S. intermediate holding company and any depository
institution subsidiary would remain subject to a category of standards
until it no longer meets the indicators for that category in each of
the four most recent calendar quarters, or until the U.S. intermediate
holding company meets the criteria for another category of standards
based on an increase in the average value of one or more risk-based
indicator over the preceding four calendar quarters.
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\74\ With respect to a U.S. intermediate holding company that
has reported a risk-based indicator for less than four quarters, the
proposal would refer to the average of the most recent quarter or
quarters.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For liquidity standards, the category of standards applicable to a
foreign banking organization and any covered depository institution
subsidiary thereof would be based on the average levels of each
indicator over the preceding four calendar quarters for the combined
U.S. operations.\75\ A foreign banking organization and any covered
depository institution subsidiary thereof would remain subject to a
category of standards until the foreign banking organization's combined
U.S. operations no longer meet the indicators for that category in each
of the four most recent calendar quarters, or until the foreign banking
organization meets the criteria for another category of standards based
on an increase in the average value of one or more risk-based indicator
for the preceding four calendar quarters.\76\
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\75\ With respect to a foreign banking organization that has
reported a risk-based indicator for less than four quarters, the
proposal would refer to the average of the most recent quarter or
quarters.
\76\ In addition, as discussed in section V.G of this
Supplementary Information section, consistent with the LCR rule and
NSFR proposed rule and the domestic interagency proposal, once a
foreign banking organization or any covered depository institution
subsidiary is subject to LCR or NSFR requirements under the
proposal, it would remain subject to the rule until the applicable
agency determines that application of the rule is not appropriate in
light of its asset size, level of complexity, risk profile, scope of
operations, affiliation with foreign or domestic covered entities,
or risk to the financial system.
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Changes in capital or liquidity requirements that result from a
change in category of capital or liquidity standards, respectively,
would take effect on the first day of the second quarter following the
change in the applicable category. For example, a U.S. intermediate
holding company that changes from Category IV to Category III capital
standards based on an increase
[[Page 24311]]
in the average value of its risk-based indicators over the first,
second, third, and fourth quarters of a calendar year would be subject
to Category III capital standards beginning on the first day of the
second quarter of the following year (April, in this example).
Under the proposal, a U.S. intermediate holding company or
depository institution subsidiary of a foreign banking organization
could be subject to different categories of standards for capital and
liquidity. Consider, for example, a foreign banking organization with
combined U.S. assets of $400 billion, cross-jurisdictional activity of
$80 billion at its combined U.S. operations, and a U.S. intermediate
holding company with consolidated total assets of $260 billion and
cross-jurisdictional activity of $40 billion. In this example, the
foreign banking organization would be subject to Category II liquidity
standards, including with respect to its LCR and NSFR calculation for
any U.S. intermediate holding company, because the combined U.S.
operations have more than $75 billion in cross-jurisdictional activity.
Any covered depository institution subsidiary of the foreign banking
organization in this example would likewise be subject to Category II
liquidity standards. However, the U.S. intermediate holding company and
any depository institution subsidiary thereof would be subject to
Category III capital standards based on the U.S. intermediate holding
company's total consolidated assets, which are more than $250 billion
but less than $700 billion, and cross-jurisdictional activity, which is
less than $75 billion.
Question 28: What are the advantages and disadvantages of
determining the category of standards applicable to a foreign banking
organization's combined U.S. operations, its U.S. intermediate holding
company, or its depository institution subsidiary on a quarterly basis?
Discuss whether determination on an annual basis would be more
appropriate and why.
Question 29: What are the advantages and disadvantages of the
proposed transition period for a foreign banking organization to comply
with a change in its applicable requirements due to changes in its U.S.
risk profile? What would be the advantages or disadvantages of
providing additional time to conform to new requirements?
IV. Capital Requirements
Under the proposal, capital requirements would continue to apply to
U.S. intermediate holding companies and depository institution
subsidiaries of foreign banking organizations. Applying generally
applicable and tailored capital requirements to U.S. intermediate
holding companies and depository institution subsidiaries of foreign
banking organizations both strengthens the capital position of U.S.
subsidiaries of foreign banking organizations and provides parity in
the capital treatment for U.S. bank holding companies and the U.S.
subsidiaries of foreign banking organizations. In addition, aligning
the capital requirements between U.S. subsidiaries of foreign banking
organizations and U.S. bank holding companies is consistent with
international capital standards published by the BCBS.\77\
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\77\ See, e.g., BCBS, ``International Convergence of Capital
Measurement and Capital Standards,'' Sec. 781 (June 2006).
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A. Category II Standards
In addition to the generally applicable capital requirements, the
proposal would require a U.S. intermediate holding company and any
depository institution subsidiary thereof subject to Category II
standards to maintain a minimum supplementary leverage ratio of 3
percent of tier 1 capital to on-balance-sheet assets and certain off-
balance sheet exposures. These banking organizations would also be
required to recognize most elements of AOCI in regulatory capital.
Reflecting AOCI in regulatory capital results in a more sensitive
measure of capital, which is important for maintaining the resilience
of these banking organizations. Additionally, these banking
organizations would be subject to the countercyclical capital buffer,
if applicable.
Consistent with current requirements, the U.S. intermediate holding
company (and depository institution subsidiaries thereof) would not be
required to calculate risk-based capital requirements using the
advanced approaches under the capital rule, and would instead use the
generally applicable capital requirements for calculating risk-weighted
assets. The BCBS recently completed revisions to its capital standards,
revising the methodologies for credit risk, operational risk, and
market risk. The agencies are considering how to most appropriately
implement these standards in the United States, including potentially
replacing the advanced approaches with risk-based capital requirements
based on the Basel standardized approaches for credit risk and
operational risk. Any such changes to applicable risk-based capital
requirements would be subject to notice and comment through a future
rulemaking.
The agencies note that there are currently additional outstanding
notices of proposed rulemaking that make reference to the advanced
approaches thresholds to set the scope of application. First, in
October 2017, the agencies proposed simplifications to the capital rule
(simplifications proposal), proposing a simplified capital treatment
for mortgage servicing assets, deferred tax assets arising from
temporary differences that an institution could not realize through net
operating loss carrybacks, investments in the capital of unconsolidated
financial institutions, and minority interest.\78\ For purposes of that
pending notice, the requirements that would apply to ``advanced
approaches banking organizations'' would be included as Category II
capital standards under this proposal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\78\ See Simplifications to the Capital Rule Pursuant to the
Economic Growth and Regulatory Paperwork Reduction; Proposed Rule,
82 FR 49984, 49985 (October 27, 2017).
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In addition, the agencies have separately proposed to adopt the
standardized approach for counterparty credit risk for derivatives
exposures (SA-CCR) and to require advanced approaches banking
organizations to use SA-CCR for calculating their risk-based capital
ratios and a modified version of SA-CCR for calculating total leverage
exposure under the supplementary leverage ratio.\79\ For purposes of
the SA-CCR proposal, the requirements that would apply to ``advanced
approaches banking organizations'' would be included as Category II
capital standards under this proposal.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\79\ See Standardized Approach for Calculating the Exposure
Amount of Derivative Contracts; Proposed Rule, 83 FR 64660 (December
17, 2018).
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Question 30: What modifications, if any, should the agencies
consider to the proposed Category II capital standards for foreign
banking organizations, and why?
B. Category III Standards
In addition to the generally applicable capital requirements, the
proposal would require a U.S. intermediate holding company subject to
Category III standards to maintain a minimum supplementary leverage
ratio of 3 percent given its size and risk profile. For example, a U.S.
intermediate holding company subject to Category III standards could
include a U.S. intermediate holding company with material off-balance
sheet exposures that are not accounted for in the traditional U.S. tier
1 leverage ratio but are included in the supplementary leverage ratio.
The supplementary
[[Page 24312]]
leverage ratio is important for these banking organizations to
constrain the build-up of off-balance sheet exposures, which can
contribute to instability and undermine safety and soundness of
individual banking organizations. Category III standards also would
include the countercyclical capital buffer, given these banking
organizations' significant role in financial intermediation in the
United States individually and as a group. The operations of U.S.
intermediate holding companies that would be subject to Category III
standards have a substantial enough footprint that the capital
conservation buffer expanded to include the countercyclical capital
buffer would support the prudential goals of the capital buffer
requirements. Any depository institution subsidiary of a U.S.
intermediate holding company that is subject to Category III capital
standards would likewise be subject to Category III capital standards.
As noted above, there are currently additional outstanding notices
of proposed rulemaking that make reference to the advanced approaches
thresholds to set the scope of application. With respect to the
simplifications proposal described in section IV.A of this
Supplementary Information section, the requirements that would apply to
``non-advanced approaches banking organizations'' would be included as
Category III or IV capital standards under this proposal.\80\ For
purposes of determining its counterparty credit risk for derivatives
under the proposed SA-CCR (described above in section IV.A of this
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section), if adopted, a U.S. intermediate
holding company and its depository institution subsidiaries that are
not advanced approaches banking organizations (under this proposal,
that are not subject to Category II standards) could elect to use SA-
CCR for calculating derivatives exposure in connection with their risk-
based capital ratios and supplementary leverage ratios or to continue
to use the current exposure method.
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\80\ See Simplifications to the Capital Rule Pursuant to the
Economic Growth and Regulatory Paperwork Reduction; Proposed Rule,
82 FR 49984 (October 27, 2017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Question 31: Under the capital rule, the agencies apply certain
provisions, such as the supplementary leverage ratio and
countercyclical capital buffer, based on the same thresholds as
advanced approaches capital requirements. The proposal would establish
different applicability thresholds for the supplementary leverage ratio
and countercyclical capital buffer by including these requirements as
Category III standards. This approach would increase the risk-
sensitivity of the framework and allow for the retention of key
elements of the capital rule for U.S. intermediate holding companies
and their depository institution subsidiaries subject to Category III
standards. However, it would also increase the complexity of the
capital rule. To what extent, if any, would this additional complexity
increase compliance costs for large banking organizations (for example,
by requiring banking organizations to monitor and manage the proposed
risk-based indicator thresholds)? To what extent, if any, would the
proposed approach add complexity for market participants when comparing
the capital adequacy of U.S. intermediate holding companies and their
depository institution subsidiaries in different categories? The
agencies request comment on the advantages and disadvantages of
establishing separate Category III capital standards for U.S.
intermediate holding companies and their depository institution
subsidiaries that are different from either Category II or Category IV
standards, including any wider implications for financial stability.
Question 32: What are the advantages and disadvantages of applying
the supplementary leverage ratio requirement to U.S. intermediate
holding companies and their depository institution subsidiaries as a
Category III standard? How do these advantages and disadvantages
compare to any costs associated with any additional complexity to the
regulatory capital framework that would result from applying this to
U.S. intermediate holding companies and their depository institution
subsidiaries subject to Category III standards? To what extent would
application of the supplementary leverage ratio requirement to these
banking organizations strengthen their safety and soundness and improve
U.S. financial stability?
Question 33: What are the advantages and disadvantages of not
requiring U.S. intermediate holding companies and their depository
institution subsidiaries subject to Category III standards to recognize
most elements of AOCI in regulatory capital? To what extent does not
requiring U.S. intermediate holding companies and their depository
institution subsidiaries subject to Category III standards to recognize
most elements of AOCI in regulatory capital impact safety and soundness
of individual U.S. intermediate holding companies or their depository
institution subsidiaries, or raise broader financial stability
concerns? For example, to what extent would this approach reduce the
accuracy of the reported regulatory capital of these U.S. intermediate
holding companies and their depository institution subsidiaries? To
what extent does the recognition of most elements of AOCI in regulatory
capital improve market discipline and provide for a clearer picture of
the financial health of U.S. intermediate holding companies and their
depository institution subsidiaries? To what extent would such
recognition make comparing the financial condition of U.S. intermediate
holding companies and their depository institution subsidiaries subject
to Category III standards to that of U.S. intermediate holding
companies and their depository institution subsidiaries subject to
Category II standards more difficult?
Question 34: With respect to U.S. intermediate holding companies
and their depository institution subsidiaries that currently recognize
most elements of AOCI in regulatory capital, to what extent do intra-
quarter variations in regulatory capital due to the inclusion of AOCI
since the capital rule took effect differ from variations in reported
quarter-end data over the same period? What have been the causes of
variations in each?
Question 35: As discussed above, under the proposal, the agencies
would not require U.S. intermediate holding companies and their
depository institution subsidiaries subject to Category III standards
to recognize most elements of AOCI in regulatory capital.
Alternatively, the agencies could require only the U.S. intermediate
holding companies to recognize most elements of AOCI in regulatory
capital while exempting their depository institution subsidiary from
this requirement. What are the advantages and disadvantages of this
alternative approach? What would be the costs and operational
challenges associated with this additional complexity, where the U.S.
intermediate holding company and depository institution subsidiary
implement different standards related to AOCI? In what ways would this
alternative approach to AOCI reduce costs for banking organizations
subject to Category III standards relative to their current AOCI
requirement under the agencies' capital rule (i.e., both the top-tier
U.S. intermediate holding company and depository institution subsidiary
are currently required to recognize most elements of AOCI in regulatory
capital)? In what ways would this alternative approach affect the
transparency around, and market participants' understanding of, the
financial
[[Page 24313]]
condition of the depository institution subsidiary and the parent
holding company?
Question 36: For purposes of comparability, in a final rulemaking
should the agencies require all banking organizations subject to
Category III standards to use SA-CCR for either risk-based or
supplementary leverage ratio calculations and, if so, why?
Question 37: What would be the advantages and disadvantages of no
longer applying the countercyclical capital buffer to U.S. intermediate
holding companies and their depository institution subsidiaries that
would be subject to Category III standards? In particular, how would
narrowing the scope of application of the countercyclical buffer affect
the financial stability and countercyclical objectives of the buffer?
What other regulatory tools, if any, could be used to meet these
objectives?
Question 38: The proposal would apply Category III standards to
U.S. intermediate holding companies and their depository institution
subsidiaries that exceed certain risk-based indicators, including
having more than $75 billion in off-balance sheet exposures. In light
of the inclusion of off-balance sheet exposures as a threshold for
Category III standards, what are the advantages and disadvantages of
including the supplementary leverage ratio as a Category III standard?
C. Category IV Standards
The proposal would require a U.S. intermediate holding company and
any depository institution subsidiary thereof subject to Category IV
standards to apply the generally applicable capital requirements.
Category IV standards would not include the countercyclical capital
buffer or the supplementary leverage ratio. In this manner, these
standards would maintain the risk-sensitivity of the current capital
regime and resiliency of these banking organizations' capital
positions, and would recognize that these banking organizations' U.S.
intermediate holding companies, while large, have lower indicators of
risk relative to their larger peers, as set forth in the proposal. As a
result, such U.S. intermediate holding companies (and their depository
institution subsidiaries) would be subject to the same capital
requirements as U.S. intermediate holding companies with under $100
billion in total consolidated assets.
Question 39: What modifications, if any, should the agencies
consider to the proposed Category IV capital standards, and why?
V. Liquidity Requirements
The proposed framework would apply standardized liquidity
requirements with respect to the U.S. operations of foreign banking
organizations according to the proposed risk-based categories. Based on
the risk profile of a foreign banking organization's combined U.S.
operations, the proposal would require a foreign banking organization
to calculate and maintain a minimum LCR and NSFR for any U.S.
intermediate holding company. LCR and NSFR requirements would also
apply to covered depository institution subsidiaries of foreign banking
organizations subject to Category II or III liquidity standards,
consistent with the requirements that would apply to the depository
institution subsidiaries of large U.S. banking organizations under the
domestic interagency proposal. In addition, as discussed in section V.E
of this SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section, the Board is requesting
comment on whether it should impose standardized liquidity requirements
on the U.S. branch and agency network of a foreign banking
organization, as well as possible approaches for doing so, including an
approach based on the LCR rule and an approach that would apply a
requirement based on the aggregate U.S. branch and agency assets of a
foreign banking organization.
The proposed standardized liquidity requirements are designed to
serve as a complement to existing internal liquidity stress testing
requirements, which require a foreign banking organization to assess
the liquidity needs of its U.S. operations, including any U.S.
intermediate holding company, under stress and to hold a liquidity
buffer against projected stressed outflows reflecting the firm's
idiosyncratic risks. Together with standardized liquidity requirements
that the Board is considering proposing at a future date with respect
to the U.S. branches and agencies of a foreign banking organization,
the proposed LCR and NSFR requirements would strengthen the resilience
of a foreign banking organization's U.S. operations to liquidity risks
and reduce risks to U.S. financial stability. The requirements would
help to ensure that similarly situated foreign banking organizations
maintain a comparable, minimum amount of liquid assets within their
U.S. operations. As for large U.S. banking organizations, minimum
liquidity requirements are particularly important for the U.S.
operations of foreign banking organizations with significant reliance
on short-term wholesale funding, as disruptions to wholesale funding
markets can limit such a firm's ability to satisfy liquidity demands
and threaten the resiliency of the firm's U.S. operations, which can
transmit distress to other market participants.
As discussed above, foreign banking organizations operate under a
wide variety of business models and structures that reflect the legal,
regulatory, and business climates in the home and host jurisdictions in
which they operate. In the United States, foreign banking organizations
operate through subsidiaries, including U.S. intermediate holding
companies and depository institutions, and branches and agencies, and
are permitted to engage in the United States in substantially the same
banking and nonbanking activities as domestic banks and U.S. bank
holding companies.
The U.S. operations of foreign banking organizations, particularly
those with a large U.S. branch and agency network or large nonbank
operations, generally rely on less stable, short-term wholesale funding
to a greater extent than U.S. bank holding companies because of their
structure and business model. Furthermore, certain foreign banking
organizations conduct substantial capital markets activities in the
United States through nonbank subsidiaries or branch operations, such
as short-term securities financing and derivatives activities. These
activities can give rise to greater interconnectedness with financial
sector counterparties and increase the potential impact of a funding
stress on the foreign banking organization's U.S. operations.
In response to liquidity risks observed during the crisis, the
Board established liquidity risk management, internal liquidity stress
testing, and liquidity buffer requirements for the combined U.S.
operations of foreign banking organizations under its enhanced
prudential standards rule.\81\ These provisions require a foreign
banking organization to assess its idiosyncratic risk profile,
experience, and scope of operations. However, similar to other
[[Page 24314]]
internal model-based requirements that require a banking organization
to make certain assumptions, firms' own models may overestimate cash
flow sources or underestimate cash flow needs arising from a particular
business line. Standardized liquidity requirements would serve as a
complement to the foreign banking organization's own assessment of its
idiosyncratic risks, in particular through their use of uniform inflow
and outflow rates and other standardized assumptions that reflect
broader industry and supervisory experience.
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\81\ Under the enhanced prudential standards rule, certain
foreign banking organizations are required to conduct monthly
internal liquidity stress tests and determine minimum liquidity
buffers to be held in the United States. A foreign banking
organization must calculate and maintain a minimum liquidity buffer
for its U.S. intermediate holding company sufficient to cover a
modeled net stressed cash flow need over a 30-day stress horizon. A
foreign banking organization must also model the 30-day net stressed
cash flow need for its U.S. branches and agencies on an aggregate
basis and is required to hold a minimum liquidity buffer for these
branches and agencies sufficient to cover the first 14 days of the
30-day planning horizon. See 12 CFR 252.157.
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Currently, a foreign banking organization operating in the United
States is not subject to the LCR rule, nor would it be subject to the
NSFR proposed rule, with respect to its U.S. operations, except to the
extent that a subsidiary depository institution holding company or a
subsidiary depository institution of the foreign banking organization
meets the relevant applicability criteria on a stand-alone basis.\82\
The Board indicated in previous rulemakings its intent to apply
standardized liquidity requirements with respect to the U.S. operations
of a foreign banking organization in order to align all elements of its
forward-looking liquidity regulatory regime for similarly situated
domestic and foreign banking organizations. For example, when
finalizing the enhanced prudential standards rule for foreign banking
organizations in March 2014 and the LCR rule for U.S. banking
organizations in September 2014, the Board stated that it anticipated
implementing an LCR-based standard for the U.S. operations of foreign
banking organizations through a future rulemaking.\83\ Similarly, when
proposing the NSFR rule in May 2016, the Board stated that it
anticipated implementing an NSFR requirement through a future, separate
rulemaking for the U.S. operations of foreign banking
organizations.\84\
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\82\ Although a foreign banking organization may be subject to
liquidity requirements on a consolidated basis in its home
jurisdiction, a requirement to comply with LCR and NSFR requirements
with respect to a U.S. intermediate holding company would require
these firms to align the location of liquid assets with the location
in the United States of the liquidity risks of their U.S.
intermediate holding companies, in order to ensure better protection
against risks to safety and soundness and U.S. financial stability.
\83\ 79 FR 17240, 17291 (March 27, 2014), 79 FR 61440, 61447
(October 10, 2014). The Board did not initially align the timing of
a liquidity coverage ratio requirement for foreign banking
organizations with those of domestic firms because the Board
proposed the domestic LCR before it finalized the structural
requirements for foreign banking organizations to form intermediate
holding companies.
\84\ See ``Net Stable Funding Ratio: Liquidity Risk Measurement
Standards and Disclosure Requirements; Proposed Rule,'' 81 FR 35128
(June 1, 2016).
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The proposal would require a foreign banking organization to
maintain a minimum LCR and NSFR for its U.S. intermediate holding
company, regardless of whether the U.S. intermediate holding company is
also a depository institution holding company, in order to ensure that
parallel requirements would apply with respect to all U.S. intermediate
holding companies. The proposal would solicit public input on potential
standardized liquidity requirements for foreign banking organizations
with respect to their U.S. branch and agency networks for proposal at a
later date.
The proposal would tailor the proposed U.S. intermediate holding
company requirements based on the risk profile of a foreign banking
organization's combined U.S. operations, using the risk-based
indicators, thresholds, and categories set forth above. In addition,
consistent with the standardized liquidity requirements that would
apply to U.S. banking organizations under the domestic interagency
proposal, the proposal would apply LCR and NSFR requirements to covered
depository institution subsidiaries of foreign banking organizations
that would be subject to Category II or III liquidity standards.
The LCR and NSFR requirements proposed for U.S. intermediate
holding companies are generally consistent with international
standards. For example, the proposed LCR calculation (including
percentages used in the determination of inflow and outflow amounts,
and requirements regarding the encumbrance and transferability of HQLA)
would generally be consistent with the Basel III liquidity coverage
ratio standard published by the BCBS.\85\ Because the proposal would
largely align with international standards, the proposed LCR
requirement is not expected to require a foreign banking organization
to acquire additional HQLA above the amount the firm currently holds to
meet its global LCR requirements under the requirements of its home
jurisdiction; however, the proposal would require that assets be held
in the U.S. intermediate holding company to the extent that they are
needed to meet the proposed requirement. Similarly, the proposed NSFR
requirement is generally consistent with the Basel III net stable
funding ratio standard published by the BCBS.\86\
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\85\ BCBS, ``Basel III: The Liquidity Coverage Ratio and
liquidity risk monitoring tools'' (January 2013) (Basel III LCR
standard), available at https://www.bis.org/publ/bcbs238.htm.
\86\ BCBS, ``Basel III: the net stable funding ratio'' (October
2014), available at https://www.bis.org/bcbs/publ/d295.pdf.
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A. Categories of Liquidity Requirements for a Foreign Banking
Organization
The proposal would tailor standardized liquidity requirements for
foreign banking organizations according to the risk-based indicators
and thresholds described above, measured based on the combined U.S.
operations of the foreign banking organization.\87\ Specifically, the
proposal would apply one of three categories of liquidity standards to
a foreign banking organization: Category II, III, or IV. As discussed
above in this Supplementary Information section, differentiation of
requirements based on the risk profile of a foreign banking
organization's combined U.S. operations recognizes that certain risks
are more appropriately accounted for and regulated across the combined
U.S. operations of a foreign banking organization to prevent or
mitigate risks to U.S. financial stability. For foreign banking
organizations subject to Category III or IV liquidity standards, the
proposal would further tailor standardized liquidity requirements based
on the weighted short-term wholesale funding of a firm's combined U.S.
operations, which provides a measure of exposure to less stable funding
that increases a firm's liquidity risks.
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\87\ This approach would be consistent with the Board's proposed
approach to tailor liquidity requirements for foreign banking
organizations under the Board's enhanced prudential standards rule
in the Board-only foreign banking organization enhanced prudential
standards proposal.
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Covered depository institution subsidiaries of the U.S.
intermediate holding company of a foreign banking organization subject
to Category II or III liquidity standards would be subject to LCR and
NSFR requirements based on the category of the foreign banking
organization. The risk-based indicators for these categories reflect
the systemic risk profile and resiliency of the U.S. operations of a
foreign banking organization, of which a large depository institution
subsidiary may be a significant part. The presence of each of these
indicators heightens the need for sophisticated measures to monitor and
manage liquidity risk, including at covered depository institution
subsidiaries. Application of the LCR and NSFR requirements to covered
depository institution subsidiaries of foreign banking organizations
subject to Category II or III liquidity standards would also be
consistent with the
[[Page 24315]]
standardized liquidity requirements proposed for U.S. banking
organizations under the domestic interagency proposal. As discussed
further below, depository institution subsidiaries of foreign banking
organizations subject to Category IV liquidity standards would not be
subject to LCR or NSFR requirements under the proposal, also consistent
with the proposed requirements for U.S. banking organizations.
1. Category II Liquidity Standards
Under the proposal, a foreign banking organization with $700
billion or more in combined U.S. assets or $75 billion or more in
cross-jurisdictional activity at its combined U.S. operations would be
subject to Category II liquidity standards. Foreign banking
organizations subject to Category II liquidity standards have
significant U.S. operations or cross-jurisdictional activity that may
complicate liquidity risk management, and the failure or distress of
the U.S. operations of such a firm could impose significant costs on
the U.S. financial system and economy. Size and cross-jurisdictional
activity can present particularly heightened challenges in the case of
a liquidity stress, which can present both financial stability and
safety and soundness risks. For example, a foreign banking organization
with very large U.S. operations that engages in asset fire sales to
meet short-term liquidity needs is likely to transmit distress in the
United States on a broader scale because of the greater volume of
assets it could sell in a short period of time. In addition, foreign
banking organizations with U.S. operations that engage in heightened
levels of cross-jurisdictional activity present operational
complexities and interconnectivity concerns, and may be exposed to a
greater diversity of risks as a result of the multiple jurisdictions in
which they provide financial services. The risks and operational
complexities associated with cross-jurisdictional activity can present
significant challenges to recovery and resolution.
The proposal would require a foreign banking organization subject
to Category II liquidity standards to comply with the full LCR
requirement described in section V.B of this Supplementary Information
section, including calculation on each business day, and the full NSFR
requirement described in section V.C of this SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section, each as applied to any U.S. intermediate holding company.
Covered depository institution subsidiaries of a foreign banking
organization subject to Category II liquidity standards would also be
subject to the full LCR and NSFR requirements, as discussed above. The
proposed liquidity standards would help to ensure resiliency of the
foreign banking organization's U.S. operations to liquidity risks, and
improve the ability of the foreign banking organization's management
and supervisors to assess the foreign banking organization's ability to
meet the projected liquidity needs of its U.S. operations, particularly
during periods of liquidity stress, and take appropriate actions to
address liquidity needs.
2. Category III Liquidity Standards
Category III liquidity standards would apply to a foreign banking
organization that does not meet the criteria for Category II and the
combined U.S. operations of which have either (i) assets of at least
$250 billion, or (ii) assets of at least $100 billion and $75 billion
or more in weighted short-term wholesale funding, nonbank assets, or
off-balance sheet exposure.
The proposal would determine the LCR and NSFR requirements
applicable to foreign banking organizations subject to Category III
liquidity standards based on the weighted short-term wholesale funding
of a foreign banking organization's U.S. operations. A foreign banking
organization subject to Category III standards that has $75 billion or
more in weighted short-term wholesale funding at its combined U.S.
operations would be subject to the same standardized liquidity
requirements as would apply under Category II standards--specifically,
the full LCR and NSFR requirements with respect to any U.S.
intermediate holding company. An elevated level of weighted short-term
wholesale funding indicates that the organization's U.S. operations
have greater reliance on less stable forms of funding and a higher
degree of interconnectedness with other financial firms. As a
consequence, these operations may generally be more vulnerable to
liquidity stress and more likely to transmit stress internally within
the foreign banking organization and to other firms. Accordingly, the
proposal would apply the most stringent standardized liquidity
requirements to these foreign banking organizations, consistent with
the proposed requirements for U.S. banking organizations with similar
risk profiles under the domestic interagency proposal.
Reduced LCR and NSFR requirements would apply to a foreign banking
organization subject to Category III standards that has less than $75
billion in weighted short-term wholesale funding at its combined U.S.
operations. The agencies are inviting comment on a range of potential
calibrations for these firms (and their covered depository institution
subsidiaries), equivalent to between 70 and 85 percent of the full
requirements.\88\ Even where a foreign banking organization has less
than $75 billion in weighted short-term wholesale funding at its
combined U.S. operations, standardized liquidity requirements are
appropriate for a foreign banking organization with combined U.S.
assets of $250 billion or more in order to increase the resiliency of
the firm's U.S. operations and reduce its probability of failure. A
larger U.S. footprint increases the risk that that the failure or
distress of a foreign banking organization would pose heightened risks
to U.S. financial stability; accordingly, the proposal would apply
standardized liquidity requirements (at a reduced level) to strengthen
the resiliency of such a banking organization's U.S. operations.
Standardized liquidity requirements are also appropriate for foreign
banking organizations with combined U.S. assets of $100 billion or more
and nonbank assets or off-balance sheet exposure of $75 billion or
more, as these measures can also be indicators of liquidity risk.
Significant nonbank assets of a banking organization generally tend to
reflect greater engagement in complex activities, such as trading and
prime brokerage activities, that present heightened liquidity risk.
Similarly, banking organizations with large off-balance sheet exposures
could experience large outflows, the risks of which counterparties may
not have fully anticipated due to their off-balance sheet nature,
putting additional pressure on the firm's liquidity position and
creating a risk of transmission of instability to other market
participants.
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\88\ The calibration within this range for foreign banking
organizations (and their covered depository institution
subsidiaries) would be consistent with the calibration applied under
the domestic interagency proposal to U.S. banking organizations
subject to Category III standards that have less than $75 billion in
weighted short-term wholesale funding.
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As discussed above, the agencies would also apply LCR and NSFR
requirements to covered depository institution subsidiaries of foreign
banking organizations subject to Category III liquidity standards, at
the same level (i.e., full or reduced) as would apply to the foreign
banking organization.
Question 40: Between a range of 70 and 85 percent of the full
requirements, what calibration should the agencies adopt for the
reduced LCR and NSFR
[[Page 24316]]
requirements for foreign banking organizations subject to Category III
standards that have less than $75 billion in weighted short-term
wholesale funding, and their covered depository institution
subsidiaries, and why?
3. Category IV Liquidity Standards
In the domestic interagency proposal, the agencies proposed that
U.S. banking organizations with total consolidated assets of $100
billion or more that do not meet any of the thresholds for a different
category would be subject to Category IV standards, which did not
include an LCR or NSFR requirement. As discussed in the domestic
interagency proposal, firms in the current population of U.S. banking
organizations that meet the criteria for this category have more
traditional balance sheet structures, are largely funded by stable
deposits, and have less reliance on less stable wholesale funding,
indicating less liquidity risk. Accordingly, and taking into account
that the Board separately proposed to maintain internal liquidity
stress testing requirements and other liquidity standards at the
consolidated holding company level for these banking organizations,\89\
the agencies proposed not to apply standardized liquidity requirements
to these banking organizations.\90\ The Board also separately proposed
to apply tailored internal liquidity stress testing requirements at the
consolidated holding company level to these firms.
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\89\ See Prudential Standards for Large Bank Holding Companies
and Savings and Loan Holding Companies; Proposed Rule, 83 FR 61408
(November 29, 2018).
\90\ See domestic interagency proposal, 83 FR at 66037-66038.
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In developing this proposal, however, the Board observed that some
domestic or foreign banking organizations that meet the criteria for
Category IV standards could potentially have a heightened liquidity
risk profile. For example, these firms may not be funded by stable
deposits and may have material reliance on less-stable short-term
wholesale funding. Thus, under this proposal, the Board would apply
standardized liquidity requirements to a foreign banking organization
subject to Category IV standards if the reliance of the firm's U.S.
operations on short-term wholesale funding is significant relative to
the firm's combined U.S. assets.\91\
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\91\ As discussed in section VI of this SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section, the Board is also proposing to modify the
domestic interagency proposal to apply standardized liquidity
requirements in a consistent manner to domestic bank holding
companies and certain savings and loan holding companies subject to
Category IV standards that have significant reliance on short-term
wholesale funding.
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Specifically, the Board is proposing to apply reduced LCR and NSFR
requirements to a foreign banking organization that meets the criteria
for Category IV liquidity standards and has $50 billion or more in
weighted short-term wholesale funding at its combined U.S. operations.
Like the Category II and III liquidity standards, the proposed LCR and
NSFR requirements would apply with respect to the foreign banking
organization's U.S. intermediate holding company. As noted below, the
proposed LCR and NSFR requirements would not apply to covered
depository institution subsidiaries of a foreign banking organization
subject to Category IV liquidity standards. The Board requests comment
on a range of potential calibrations for the LCR and NSFR requirements
that would apply to these firms, equivalent to between 70 and 85
percent of the full requirements.
Given the heightened liquidity risk profile of the U.S. operations
of these foreign banking organizations, as indicated by their level of
relative reliance on less stable, short-term wholesale funding, the
application of standardized liquidity requirements would help to ensure
that these firms are appropriately monitoring and managing their
liquidity risk in the United States. For a foreign banking organization
subject to Category IV standards, $50 billion or more in weighted
short-term wholesale funding is significant relative to the firm's
combined U.S. assets, given that firms in this category by definition
have less than $250 billion in combined U.S. assets. For example, $50
billion in weighted short-term wholesale funding would be equivalent to
more than 20 percent of the U.S. assets of a foreign banking
organization with less than $250 billion in combined U.S. assets or 50
percent of the U.S. assets of a foreign banking organization with $100
billion in combined U.S. assets. A $50 billion weighted short-term
wholesale funding threshold would in this way serve to identify banking
organizations in this category that do not have traditional balance
sheet structures funded by stable retail deposits or that have more
reliance on less stable short-term wholesale funding. In light of this
liquidity risk, the application of LCR and NSFR requirements would help
to ensure that these firms are holding a minimum level of liquid assets
that would be available to use in the event of a liquidity stress event
and that these firms maintain more stable, resilient funding profiles.
To reduce compliance costs for these firms and reflect the smaller
systemic footprint of these firms' U.S. operations relative to banking
organizations that would be subject to Category II or III liquidity
standards, the Board is proposing to require calculation of the LCR on
the last business day of the applicable month, rather than each
business day. For these same reasons, the agencies are not proposing to
apply an LCR or NSFR requirement to the covered depository institution
subsidiaries of such firms.
Question 41: Between a range of 70 and 85 percent of the full
requirements, what calibration should the Board adopt for the reduced
LCR and NSFR requirements for foreign banking organizations subject to
Category IV standards that have $50 billion or more in weighted short-
term wholesale funding, and why?
B. LCR Requirement With Respect to Foreign Banking Organizations
Under the proposal, the Board would require a foreign banking
organization that meets the applicability criteria described above to
calculate and maintain a minimum LCR for any U.S. intermediate holding
company. In addition, the agencies are proposing to require covered
depository institution subsidiaries of foreign banking organizations
subject to Category II or III liquidity standards to calculate and
maintain a minimum LCR. Proposed new subpart O of part 249 would
establish the LCR (and NSFR) requirements that apply to foreign banking
organizations, and proposed amendments to subpart A of the current LCR
rule would apply to the covered depository institution subsidiaries of
foreign banking organizations subject to Category II or III liquidity
standards. The proposed requirements would apply in a manner consistent
with the LCR requirements for U.S. banking organizations under the LCR
rule, NSFR proposed rule, and domestic interagency proposal. As
discussed above, these requirements would help to ensure the resiliency
of U.S. intermediate holding companies and covered depository
institution subsidiaries of foreign banking organizations to liquidity
stress and funding disruptions.
The proposed LCR requirement would be nearly identical to the LCR
requirement that currently applies to U.S. banking organizations.
Specifically, the proposal would instruct a foreign banking
organization to calculate an LCR for a U.S. intermediate holding
company using the same definitions that apply to U.S. banking
organizations \92\
[[Page 24317]]
and subparts B through E of the proposal as if the U.S. intermediate
holding company (and not the foreign banking organization itself) were
a top-tier Board-regulated institution.\93\ (For example, a foreign
banking organization would treat the U.S. intermediate holding company
as a ``Board-regulated institution'' wherever that term appears in the
definitions in Sec. 249.3.) This approach would promote consistent
treatment with domestic banking organizations subject to the LCR rule.
The LCR requirement for a foreign banking organization with respect to
its U.S. intermediate holding company would differ from the LCR
requirement for domestic banking organizations in certain, limited
respects, discussed below.
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\92\ 12 CFR 249.3.
\93\ Under the current LCR rule, a U.S. intermediate holding
company that is a bank holding company may be subject to LCR
requirements. The proposal would eliminate any such independent LCR
requirements for a bank holding company subsidiary of a foreign
banking organization and replace them with the requirement that the
foreign banking organization calculate and maintain a minimum LCR
for its U.S. intermediate holding company.
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Question 42: What conforming changes, if any, should be made to the
definitions found in Sec. 249.3 to effectuate the purpose of the
proposed requirement that a foreign banking organization calculate an
LCR for a U.S. intermediate holding company using Sec. 249.3 and
subparts B through E of part 249?
1. Minimum Liquidity Coverage Ratio, Calculation Date and Time, and
Shortfall
The proposal would require a foreign banking organization to
maintain at its consolidated U.S. intermediate holding company an
amount of HQLA meeting the criteria set forth in the proposal (HQLA
amount; the numerator of the ratio) that is no less than 100 percent of
the U.S. intermediate holding company's total net cash outflow amount
over a 30-calendar day time horizon as calculated in accordance with
the proposal (the denominator of the ratio). Consistent with the
domestic interagency proposal, in the case of a foreign banking
organization that would be subject to a reduced LCR requirement under
Category III or IV liquidity standards, the denominator of the ratio
would be reduced by an applicable outflow adjustment percentage.\94\
Expressed as a ratio, the proposal would require a foreign banking
organization to calculate and maintain an LCR for a U.S. intermediate
holding company equal to or greater than 1.0 on each calculation date.
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\94\ As discussed in section V.A of this SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION section, the agencies are requesting comment on a range
of potential calibrations for the outflow adjustment percentage for
these firms, between 70 and 85 percent. For firms subject to the
full LCR requirement, an outflow adjustment percentage of 100
percent would apply.
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Under the proposal, a foreign banking organization that is subject
to Category II or III liquidity standards would be required to
calculate the LCR for a U.S. intermediate holding company each business
day. A daily calculation requirement for these firms would reflect the
heightened liquidity risk profiles of their U.S. operations, which
require more sophisticated monitoring and management. The Board is
proposing to require a foreign banking organization that is subject to
Category IV liquidity standards and that has $50 billion or more in
short-term wholesale funding to calculate an LCR for any U.S.
intermediate holding company on the last business day of the applicable
month. A monthly calculation for these firms would reflect the lesser
systemic footprint and risk profile of these firms' U.S. operations
relative to banking organizations that meet the criteria for Category
II or III standards, as discussed above.
To ensure consistency of the LCR calculation by firms, the proposal
would require a foreign banking organization to calculate its LCR for a
U.S. intermediate holding company as of the same time (the elected
calculation time) on each calculation date, selected by the foreign
banking organization prior to the effective date of the rule with
respect to the firm and communicated in writing to the Board.
Subsequent to this initial election, a foreign banking organization may
change the time at which it calculates its applicable LCR with the
prior written approval of the Board.\95\
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\95\ In the case of a foreign banking organization that
calculates multiple LCRs (for example, if the foreign banking
organization has more than one U.S. intermediate holding company),
the proposal would require the foreign banking organization to elect
the same calculation time for each of its LCRs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A banking organization subject to the LCR rule is required to
report a shortfall in its ratio on any business day to the appropriate
regulatory agency, and promptly consult with the agency on providing a
plan for achieving compliance.\96\ Under the proposal, a foreign
banking organization would be required to conduct the LCR calculations
for a U.S. intermediate holding company at the calculation date.
Accordingly, proposed Sec. 249.206 provides that a foreign banking
organization must notify the Board of, and address, any shortfall in
the same time frame and manner as a U.S. banking organizations subject
to the LCR rule.\97\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\96\ See 12 CFR 50.40 (OCC), 12 CFR 249.40 (Board), and 12 CFR
329.40 (FDIC).
\97\ See proposed Sec. 249.206.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Question 43: The proposal would require a foreign banking
organization to calculate an LCR for any U.S. intermediate holding
company. The Board is considering applying LCR requirements directly to
a U.S. intermediate holding company, rather than requiring applying an
LCR requirement to a foreign banking organization with respect to its
U.S. intermediate holding company. What are the advantages and
disadvantages of applying the LCR requirements in the proposed manner
rather than requiring, for example, a U.S. intermediate holding company
to be responsible for calculating its own LCR?
2. Numerator of the LCR: HQLA, Eligible HQLA, and the HQLA Amount
Under the LCR rule, an asset must meet the requirements of section
20 to be HQLA and section 22 to be eligible for inclusion in a banking
organization's HQLA amount (the numerator of the LCR).\98\ The criteria
in section 20 identify assets with liquidity characteristics that
indicate they are likely able to be convertible into cash with little
or no loss of value in a time of stress,\99\ and the criteria in
section 22 serve to ensure that the LCR numerator includes only HQLA
that would be readily available for use by a banking organization
subject to the rule to meet liquidity needs during a liquidity stress.
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\98\ 12 CFR 50.20 (OCC), 12 CFR 249.20 (Board), and 12 CFR
329.20 (FDIC).
\99\ See LCR FR rule, 79 FR at 61450-61471.
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Among other things, section 22 of the LCR rule requires a banking
organization subject to the LCR rule to demonstrate the operational
capability to monetize HQLA and to implement policies that require the
HQLA to be under control of the management function of the banking
organization. Section 249.205 of the proposal would maintain these
requirements but would require the foreign banking organization, rather
than the U.S. intermediate holding company, to satisfy these
requirements.\100\
[[Page 24318]]
Accordingly, the management function of the foreign banking
organization that is charged with managing liquidity risks must
evidence control over the HQLA for the purposes of covering the net
cash outflows of the U.S. intermediate holding company.\101\ The risks
of a foreign banking organization's U.S. operations are a component of
the broader risks of its global activities, and HQLA held in the United
States may be managed as part of the foreign banking organization's
global liquidity risk management operations. To ensure that HQLA that
are held in the United States to cover potential outflows of the U.S.
intermediate holding company are able to be monetized without
restriction in a time of stress, the Board expects the assets must be
continually available for use by the management function within the
foreign banking organization's U.S. operations that is charged with
managing U.S. liquidity risks. For example, eligible HQLA, including
HQLA that have been borrowed (including under a secured lending
transaction such as a reverse repurchase agreement) from the foreign
banking organization's head office must not be controlled,
transferable, or able to be monetized by an overseas entity or business
function in a manner that would restrict the ability of the responsible
management function to monetize the HQLA in a time of stress for use by
a U.S. intermediate holding company of the foreign banking
organization.
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\100\ As part of the NSFR proposed rule, the agencies proposed
to add the new term ``encumbered'' to the LCR rule, which would
replace the criteria for an unencumbered asset set forth in section
22(b) of the LCR rule. See 81 FR 35124. Because the agencies have
not yet finalized the NSFR proposed rule, the proposal includes two
versions of regulatory text for Sec. 249.205, one that is identical
to the requirements in section 22(b) (12 CFR 249.22(b)) and another
that uses the term ``encumbered.'' These two versions are being
proposed so that the requirements in Sec. 249.205 match whatever
requirements exist for unencumbered assets in Sec. 249.22(b) when
the proposal is finalized.
\101\ Each foreign banking organization that would be subject to
the proposed rule is subject to risk management and liquidity risk
management requirements for its U.S. operations under the Board's
enhanced prudential standards rule. See 12 CFR 252.155 and .156.
Generally, the Board expects that the management function that is
responsible for managing liquidity risks under the proposal would be
the same management function that is responsible for managing
liquidity risk under the enhanced prudential standards rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition to the generally applicable criteria for eligible HQLA
under the current LCR rule, the proposal would require that eligible
HQLA for a foreign banking organization's U.S. intermediate holding
company be held in accounts in the United States.\102\ This requirement
would be consistent with the location requirement of a foreign banking
organization's highly liquid asset buffers required under the Board's
enhanced prudential standards rule.\103\ Consistent with the current
location requirements for these liquidity buffers, and to ensure that
liquid assets are available to cover the relevant net cash outflows in
a period of stress, eligible HQLA for a foreign banking organization's
U.S. intermediate holding company must be held at the U.S. intermediate
holding company or a consolidated subsidiary thereof.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\102\ See proposed Sec. 249.222(c).
\103\ See 12 CFR 252.157(c)(4).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under the proposal, a foreign banking organization would directly
utilize section 20 of the current LCR rule, which enumerates the
criteria that assets must meet to qualify as HQLA.\104\ Structural and
regulatory issues may limit the extent to which HQLA can be treated as
eligible HQLA for a foreign banking organization's calculation with
respect to a U.S. intermediate holding company. For example, Reserve
Bank balances held by a foreign banking organization at its U.S.
branches would not be able to be included as eligible HQLA in the
foreign banking organization's LCR calculation for a U.S. intermediate
holding company.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\104\ See 12 CFR 249.20. The proposal would also apply the LCR
rule's definition of HQLA under 12 CFR 249.3 without change.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Consistent with the current LCR rule, eligible HQLA would not need
to be reflected on the balance sheet of a U.S. entity under the
proposal; for example, securities sourced through a secured lending
transaction by a U.S. entity and not reflected on its balance sheet may
be eligible HQLA if the assets meet all the relevant criteria in the
proposal.
In addition, consistent with the current LCR rule \105\ and the
domestic interagency proposal, the proposal would limit the amount of
HQLA held at a consolidated subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate holding
company that can be included as eligible HQLA for purposes of a foreign
banking organization's LCR calculation for a U.S. intermediate holding
company.\106\ The LCR rule requires a single HQLA amount calculation at
each calculation date for a consolidated banking organization subject
to the rule. To ensure the recognition only of eligible HQLA that are
usable to meet consolidated total net cash outflows of the top-tier
banking organization subject to the LCR rule, the LCR rule limits the
ability of a top-tier banking organization subject to the rule to
include in its HQLA amount eligible HQLA held at a consolidated
subsidiary in excess of the net cash outflows of the subsidiary, except
to the extent an additional amount of the assets (including the
proceeds of monetization of the assets) would be available for transfer
to the top-tier banking organization without statutory, regulatory,
contractual, or supervisory restrictions.\107\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\105\ See 12 CFR 50.22(b)(3) and (4) (OCC), 12 CFR 249.22(b)(3)
and (4) (Board), and 12 CFR 329.22(b)(3) and (4) (FDIC).
\106\ See proposed Sec. 249.205(d).
\107\ See 12 CFR 249.22(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
For the same reasons, the proposal would apply consistent
limitations for a foreign banking organization's LCR calculation with
respect to its U.S. intermediate holding company. Consistent with the
requirements for U.S. banking organizations, a foreign banking
organization would be required to apply only the statutory, regulatory,
contractual, or supervisory restrictions that are in effect as of the
calculation date.\108\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\108\ See LCR FR rule, 79 FR at 61470.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Consistent with the domestic interagency proposal, a foreign
banking organization subject to the proposed reduced LCR requirement
under Category III or IV standards would not be permitted to include in
the HQLA amount of its U.S. intermediate holding company eligible HQLA
of a consolidated subsidiary of the U.S. intermediate holding company
except up to the amount of the net cash outflows of the subsidiary (as
adjusted for the factor reducing the stringency of the requirement),
plus any additional amount of assets, including proceeds from the
monetization of assets, that would be available for transfer to the
top-tier U.S. intermediate holding company during times of stress
without statutory, regulatory, contractual, or supervisory
restrictions. A similar restriction would apply under the proposed NSFR
requirement.\109\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\109\ See section V.C of this Supplementary Information section.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Question 44: What modifications, if any, should the Board consider
with respect to the definition of HQLA as it applies to a foreign
banking organization's calculation of an LCR for a U.S. intermediate
holding company, and why?
Question 45: What would be the advantages or disadvantages of the
proposed criteria for HQLA and eligible HQLA applicable to a foreign
banking organization's LCR calculation with respect to a U.S
.intermediate holding company? What additional criteria, if any, should
the Board consider for eligible HQLA held by a foreign banking
organization to meet stressed cash outflows in the United States?
Question 46: In what ways, if any, would the proposed eligible HQLA
location criteria affect a foreign banking organization's U.S.
operations? If a foreign banking organization's U.S. intermediate
holding company does not have a depository institution subsidiary, how
should the proposal treat Reserve Bank balances held outside of the
[[Page 24319]]
consolidated U.S. intermediate holding company (for example, at the
Federal Reserve account of a U.S. branch of the foreign banking
organization) for the purposes of the foreign banking organization's
LCR calculation for a U.S. intermediate holding company?
Question 47: The Board requests comment regarding this proposed
approach with respect to assets held at a consolidated subsidiary of a
U.S. intermediate holding company, as well as potential alternative
approaches to recognizing in a foreign banking organization's LCR
calculation restrictions on the transferability of liquidity from a
consolidated subsidiary to the U.S. intermediate holding company. What
alternative approaches should the Board consider and why?
For example, should the Board consider the approach the Board
currently permits for depository institution holding companies subject
to a modified LCR requirement? Under this approach, a holding company
may include in its HQLA amount eligible HQLA held at a subsidiary up to
100 percent of the net cash outflows of the subsidiary, plus amounts
that may be transferred without restriction to the top-tier covered
company. What would be the advantages and disadvantages of the proposed
approach and potential alternatives? What incentives would each have
with respect to the positioning of HQLA within a banking organization?
What effects would the proposed approach or alternative approaches have
on the safety and soundness of a U.S. intermediate holding company and
its subsidiary depository institutions?
3. Denominator of the LCR--Total Net Cash Outflow Amounts for Foreign
Banking Organizations
Consistent with the domestic interagency proposal, the LCR
denominator for a foreign banking organization's calculation with
respect to a U.S. intermediate holding company would be the total net
cash outflow amount, after the application of an outflow adjustment
percentage based on the foreign banking organization's category of
liquidity standards.
Under this approach, the total net cash outflow amount prior to the
application of any outflow adjustment percentage would be:
(i) The sum of the outflow amounts applicable to the calculation,
as determined under the proposal, less
(ii) The lesser of the sum of inflow amounts applicable to the
calculation, as determined under the proposal, or 75 percent of the
outflow amounts in (i), plus
(iii) The applicable maturity mismatch add-on.
After calculating the net amount of these components for a U.S.
intermediate holding company, the foreign banking organization would
multiply that amount by the appropriate outflow adjustment percentage
described in proposed Sec. 249.203 to determine the denominator of the
U.S. intermediate holding company's LCR. The applicable outflow
adjustment percentage would reflect the category of liquidity standards
that applies to the foreign banking organization: \110\
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\110\ For a foreign banking organization subject to Category II
or III standards, the same outflow adjustment percentage would apply
to any LCR requirement applicable to a covered depository
institution subsidiary of the foreign banking organization.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Outflow adjustment
percentage
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Foreign banking organization subject to 100 percent.
Category II liquidity standards.
Foreign banking organization subject to 100 percent.
Category III liquidity standards, with
$75 billion or more in weighted short-
term wholesale funding at its combined
U.S. operations.
Foreign banking organization subject to [70 to 85] percent.
Category III liquidity standards, with
less than $75 billion in weighted short-
term wholesale funding at its combined
U.S. operations.
Foreign banking organization subject to [70 to 85] percent.
Category IV liquidity standards, with $50
billion or more in weighted short-term
wholesale funding at its combined U.S.
operations.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
To calculate the total net cash outflow amount for a U.S.
intermediate holding company, a foreign banking organization would
directly utilize Sec. 249.30, using the same methodology that would
apply under the domestic interagency proposal. For determining outflow
amounts and inflow amounts, the proposal would not change any of the
percentages applied to transactions, instruments, balances, or
obligations used under Sec. Sec. 249.32 and 249.33. Similarly, for
purposes of determining the effective maturity date, if any, of
instruments, transactions, and obligations included in the LCR
calculation for the U.S. intermediate holding company, the foreign
banking organization would apply the same provisions as apply to Board-
regulated U.S. banking organizations under Sec. 249.31.
For the purpose of the proposed requirement, a foreign banking
organization would apply Sec. Sec. 249.32(m) and 249.33(i) of the LCR
rule to identify excluded amounts for intragroup transactions, as if
the U.S. intermediate holding company were the top-tier Board-regulated
institution.\111\ Accordingly, the proposal would treat transactions
between the consolidated U.S. intermediate holding company and any
affiliates (including any U.S. branches and agencies of the foreign
banking organization and subsidiaries of the foreign banking
organization outside the U.S. intermediate holding company) in the same
manner as it does transactions with unaffiliated third parties.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\111\ 12 CFR 249.32(m) and 249.33(i).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Consistent with the requirements for U.S. banking
organizations,\112\ the proposal would limit the sum of the inflow
amounts included in the LCR denominator to 75 percent of the gross
outflow amounts calculated by the foreign banking organization with
respect to a U.S. intermediate holding company. This requirement would
ensure that foreign banking organizations subject to the proposed LCR
requirement maintain an HQLA amount to meet total net cash outflows at
the U.S. intermediate holding company and are not overly reliant on
inflows that may not materialize in a time of stress.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\112\ See 12 CFR 50.30 (OCC), 12 CFR 249.30 (Board), and 12 CFR
329.30 (FDIC).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition to this requirement, the Board considered whether it
was appropriate to propose an additional limit that would restrict the
recognition of standardized inflow amounts resulting from assets,
transactions, or instruments related to affiliates of the foreign
banking organization's U.S. intermediate holding company (inter-
affiliate inflows). Such an additional restriction would have been
consistent with the requirement set forth in the Board's enhanced
prudential standards rule for the determination of minimum
[[Page 24320]]
liquid asset buffers by a foreign banking organization.\113\ This limit
addresses the risk that an affiliate may not be willing or able to
return funds in a time of stress, given that a liquidity stress may
simultaneously have an impact on both the foreign banking
organization's U.S. operations and the affiliate providing the inflow.
This requirement remains an important part of the internal liquidity
stress test and liquidity buffer requirements set forth in the Board's
enhanced prudential standards rule for foreign banking organizations.
However, the proposal does not include this additional limitation on
recognition of inter-affiliate inflows and instead relies on the LCR's
total inflow amount cap to address this risk. While the LCR's total
inflow amount cap does not fully capture the risk that non-U.S.
affiliates may be unable or unwilling to return funds to U.S. entities
in a stress, it aligns with the Basel III LCR standard and allows more
direct comparability between LCRs calculated by foreign banking
organizations under the proposal and the LCRs currently calculated by
large U.S. bank holding companies.
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\113\ See 12 CFR 252.157(c)(2)(iv)(C) and (c)(3)(iv)(C).
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Question 48: What would be the advantages and disadvantages of
preventing or otherwise limiting a foreign banking organization from
assuming reliance on inter-affiliate inflows to offset third-party net
cash outflows for purposes of the proposed LCR requirements? What, if
any, specific approaches should the Board consider applying to prevent
such reliance, and why?
C. NSFR Requirement With Respect to Foreign Banking Organizations
Proposed Sec. 249.204 would require a foreign banking organization
that is subject to Category II or III standards, or that is subject to
Category IV standards and has weighted short-term wholesale funding of
$50 billion or more, to calculate and maintain a minimum NSFR for its
U.S. intermediate holding company.\114\ Although the Board is
requesting comment regarding the application of standardized liquidity
requirements with respect to the U.S. branches and agencies of a
foreign banking organization, including an LCR-based approach, the
Board is not proposing at this time to require a foreign banking
organization to calculate and maintain a minimum NSFR for its U.S.
branches and agencies. The Board continues to consider whether a stable
funding requirement for the U.S. branch and agency network would be
appropriate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\114\ As discussed in section V.F of this Supplementary
Information section, infra, the proposal would also require covered
depository institution subsidiaries of foreign banking organizations
subject to Category II or III standards to calculate and maintain an
NSFR.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed NSFR requirement would generally be consistent with
the NSFR requirement that would apply to U.S. banking organizations
under the NSFR proposed rule and the domestic interagency proposal.
Proposed Sec. 249.204 would require a foreign banking organization to
calculate an NSFR for its U.S. intermediate holding company using
proposed subparts K through L of part 249 as if the U.S. intermediate
holding company (and not the foreign banking organization itself) were
a top-tier Board-regulated institution. In determining the required
stable funding amount for a U.S. intermediate holding company, the
foreign banking organization would apply the required stable funding
adjustment percentage under proposed Sec. 249.204 based on its
category of liquidity standards. Consistent with these subparts, the
foreign banking organization's NSFR calculation would take into account
the transferability of available stable funding from a consolidated
subsidiary to the top-tier U.S. intermediate holding company.\115\ For
a foreign banking organization that is subject to a reduced NSFR
requirement, the foreign banking organization may include available
stable funding of the consolidated subsidiary in the U.S. intermediate
holding company's ASF amount up to the reduced required stable funding
amount of the subsidiary, plus amounts of assets that the subsidiary
may transfer without restriction to the U.S. intermediate holding
company.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\115\ See proposed Sec. 249.204
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposal's requirement that a foreign banking organization
calculate and maintain an NSFR for its U.S. intermediate holding
company would help to strengthen the funding profiles of these entities
and reduce the impact of potential disruptions in their regular sources
of funding. Without an appropriately stable funding profile for its
U.S. intermediate holding company, a foreign banking organization faces
the risk that a liquidity stress in the United States affecting its
U.S. intermediate holding company may adversely affect the U.S.
operations of the foreign banking organization and U.S. financial
stability.
Under the NSFR proposed rule, a U.S. bank holding company that is a
subsidiary of a foreign banking organization could be subject to the
existing proposed NSFR requirements if it meets certain criteria on a
stand-alone basis. In all cases, such a bank holding company would also
be registered as a U.S. intermediate holding company because it was
established or designated as such to meet the requirements of the
Board's enhanced prudential standards rule.\116\ This proposal would
replace any requirements that were included in the NSFR proposed rule
for a U.S. intermediate holding company with a requirement that a
foreign banking organization calculate and maintain an NSFR for its
U.S. intermediate holding company. Similar to the proposed change in
the application of LCR requirements, the Board is proposing the change
in the application of the proposed NSFR requirements for U.S.
intermediate holding companies in order to tailor these requirements
based on a foreign banking organization's combined U.S. operations, for
the reasons discussed above.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\116\ See 12 CFR 252.153.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Question 49: What are the advantages and disadvantages of applying
an NSFR requirement to a foreign banking organization with respect to
its U.S. intermediate holding company? In what way, if any, should the
Board amend the scope of the proposed requirements?
Question 50: How should the Board address the risks associated with
the stable funding profile of a foreign banking organization's U.S.
branch and agency network?
Question 51: What would be the advantages and disadvantages of the
proposed approach, and potential alternatives, to the transferability
of liquidity within a consolidated U.S intermediate holding company?
What incentives would each have with respect to stable funding within a
foreign banking organization's U.S. operations? What effects would the
proposed approach, or alternative approaches, have on the safety and
soundness of a foreign banking organization's U.S. operations?
D. LCR and NSFR Public Disclosure for Foreign Banking Organizations and
U.S. Banking Organizations
The proposal would require a foreign banking organization subject
to Category II or III liquidity standards, or subject to Category IV
liquidity standards with $50 billion or more in weighted short-term
wholesale funding, to publicly disclose its LCR and NSFR with respect
to its U.S intermediate holding company, and certain components of each
ratio's calculation.\117\ A foreign banking organization would disclose
the ratios
[[Page 24321]]
and their components on a quarterly basis in a direct and prominent
manner consistent with the requirements for large U.S. depository
institution holding companies under the Board's LCR rule and Board's
NSFR proposed rule.\118\
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\117\ See proposed Sec. 249.290.
\118\ The format and content requirements for public disclosure
for the LCR are described in 12 CFR part 249, subpart J. See also
``Liquidity Coverage Ratio: Public Disclosure Requirements;
Extension of Compliance Period for Certain Companies to Meet the
Liquidity Coverage Ratio Requirements,'' 81 FR 94922 (Dec. 27,
2016). The proposed format and content requirements for the
disclosure of an NSFR are described in the NSFR proposed rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposal would also amend the regulation text and the format of
the disclosure tables used in subpart J of the LCR rule and subpart N
of the NSFR proposed rule to require a banking organization to publicly
disclose information related to its net cash outflow amount and
required stable funding amount, respectively, before and after the
application of any applicable percentage adjustment. These amendments
would apply to both foreign banking organizations and U.S. banking
organizations.
The Board has long supported meaningful public disclosure by
banking organizations with the objectives of improving market
discipline and encouraging sound risk management practices. Market
discipline can mitigate risk to financial stability by creating
incentives for a banking organization to internalize the costs of its
liquidity profile and encouraging safe and sound banking practices.
Companies with less-resilient profiles would be incentivized to improve
their liquidity positions, and companies with more resilient liquidity
profiles would be encouraged to maintain their sound risk management
practices.
Question 52: How should the proposed public disclosure requirements
with respect to a U.S. intermediate holding company be adjusted to
better assist the functioning of the standardized liquidity
requirements and support market discipline? In what way, if any, should
the scope of public disclose be amended?
Question 53: What are the advantages and disadvantages of requiring
disclosure of the LCR and NSFR for a U.S. intermediate holding company
and certain of their components, consistent with the disclosure
requirements applicable to a bank holding company?
Question 54: What are the advantages or disadvantages of applying
the proposed public disclosure requirements to foreign banking
organizations subject to Category IV standards?
E. Request for Comment on Standardized Liquidity Requirements With
Respect to U.S. Branches and Agencies of a Foreign Banking Organization
The Board is currently proposing to require certain foreign banking
organizations to comply with LCR and NSFR requirements with respect to
any U.S. intermediate holding company, and the agencies are proposing
to apply corresponding LCR and NSFR requirements to the covered
depository institution subsidiaries of foreign banking organizations
subject to Category II or III standards. As an additional component of
the proposed liquidity framework, the Board is requesting comment on
whether it should impose standardized liquidity requirements to foreign
banking organizations with respect to their U.S. branch and agency
networks, as well as possible approaches for doing so. The Board would
propose any such requirements in a future notice of proposed
rulemaking.
While the standardized liquidity requirements under the proposal
would address liquidity risks at the significant U.S. subsidiaries of a
foreign banking organization, liquidity vulnerabilities could still
arise at the U.S. branches and agencies of a foreign banking
organization, which could generate significant risks in the United
States. As discussed above, risks to U.S. financial stability and
liquidity risks to a foreign banking organization's U.S. operations can
arise from any part of a foreign banking organization's U.S.
operations. During stress conditions, liquidity needs can arise
suddenly and tend to manifest in all parts of an organization. For
instance, funding vulnerabilities at the U.S. branches and agencies of
a foreign banking organization can cause heightened liquidity risk
exposure not only at the branches and agencies themselves, but also at
the foreign banking organization's U.S. subsidiaries, and vice versa.
In addition, a foreign banking organization's U.S. branches and
agencies can have significant scale and risk profile in the United
States, and an inability to meet liquidity needs could lead to
disruptions in U.S. financial stability in a similar manner to the
distress or failure of other large banking organizations or segments of
a foreign banking organization.
In general, the operations of foreign banking organizations
conducted through U.S. branches and agencies have distinct
characteristics, funding structures, and liquidity risks. U.S. branches
of foreign banking organizations tend to rely on less stable, short-
term wholesale funding to a greater extent than U.S. bank holding
companies because of their structure and business model. For example,
U.S. branches of a foreign banking organization are generally not
permitted to accept retail deposits from U.S. citizens and
residents.\119\ As discussed above, the reliance of a large banking
organization, or of the significant U.S. operations of a foreign
banking organization, on short-term wholesale funding relative to more
stable funding sources presents greater liquidity risks to safety and
soundness and U.S. financial stability, particularly during periods of
stress. In addition, foreign banking organizations often use U.S.
branches to fund the larger global operations of the firm. For example,
under the ``funding branch'' model, a foreign banking organization, via
its U.S. branches, borrows in the U.S. wholesale funding markets to
finance long-term, U.S. dollar-denominated project and trade finance
around the world. This model presented challenges during the financial
crisis, when disruptions in wholesale funding markets in the United
States limited the ability of U.S. branches of foreign banking
organizations to secure wholesale funding to satisfy the demands of
their local and global operations.\120\ This interaction resulted in
foreign banking organizations borrowing extensively from the Federal
Reserve System in order to continue operations.
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\119\ See 12 U.S.C. 3104.
\120\ See, e.g., Linda Goldberg and David Skeie, ``Why Did U.S.
Branches of Foreign Banks Borrow at the Discount Window during the
Crisis,'' Federal Reserve Bank of New York Liberty Street Economics
(April 13, 2011).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In combination with the proposed LCR requirement with respect to a
U.S. intermediate holding company, the goal of a standardized liquidity
requirement with respect to a foreign banking organization's U.S.
branch and agency network is to strengthen the overall resilience of
the firm's U.S. operations to liquidity risks and help to prevent
transmission of risks between the various segments of the foreign
banking organization. Without appropriate liquid asset coverage for all
components of the U.S. operations of a foreign banking organization, a
foreign banking organization faces the risk that a liquidity stress in
a single part of the firm may adversely affect the U.S. operations and
U.S. financial stability. Even where a foreign banking organization
with significant U.S. operations is subject to consolidated
[[Page 24322]]
liquidity requirements in its home jurisdiction, the application of a
standardized liquidity requirement with respect to its U.S. branch and
agency network, in addition to its significant U.S. subsidiary
operations, would require these firms to align the location of liquid
assets with the location of their liquidity risks in the United States,
in order to ensure better protection against risks to the U.S.
operations and to U.S. financial stability.
Such requirements are designed to ensure a more level playing field
for liquidity regulations across the U.S. operations of foreign banking
organizations and U.S. banking organizations with similar levels of
liquidity risk. As noted above, while large U.S. banking organizations
are subject to both firm-specific liquidity requirements, such as
internal liquidity stress testing and buffer requirements, and
standardized liquidity requirements, such as the LCR rule, a foreign
banking organization is not currently subject to standardized liquidity
requirements with respect to its U.S. branch and agency network,
despite generally significant reliance on less stable forms of funding.
Application of a standardized liquidity requirement is intended to
provide a more consistent framework to address such risks.
The Board is seeking comment on two potential approaches, as well
as other alternatives, for standardized liquidity requirements to
address the liquidity risks of the U.S. branches and agencies of a
foreign banking organization with significant U.S. operations. As
discussed further below, the first possible approach would be based on
the LCR rule, applied to a foreign banking organization with respect to
its U.S. branches and agencies in the aggregate. The second described
approach would apply a requirement to a foreign banking organization
tied to the asset size of the foreign banking organization's U.S.
branch and agency network. The first approach would be more sensitive
to liquidity risk, while the second would be simpler. The Board also
requests comment on other, alternative approaches. In evaluating
potential approaches to standardized liquidity requirements, the Board
is mindful that U.S. branches and agencies are parts of larger global
banks and play an important role in ensuring firms can meet their
global U.S. dollar needs. Accordingly, the Board is seeking comment on
how standardized liquidity requirements should be adjusted to reflect
these factors.
1. Option 1: LCR-Based Approach for the U.S. Branch and Agency Network
of a Foreign Banking Organization
As one potential approach for addressing the near-term liquidity
risks of a foreign banking organization's U.S. branches and agencies,
the Board requests comment on a liquid asset requirement that would be
generally similar to the LCR rule. Under this option, the Board could
require a foreign banking organization to calculate and maintain an LCR
with respect to its U.S. branches and agencies on an aggregate basis.
Requiring calculation on an aggregate basis would be consistent with
the approach taken with the internal liquidity stress testing and
buffer requirements that apply under the Board's enhanced prudential
standards rule with respect to the U.S. branches and agencies of a
foreign banking organization.\121\ The liquidity requirements with
respect to the U.S. branch and agency network would be based on the
size and risk profile of the foreign banking organization's combined
U.S. operations, consistent with the approach proposed with respect to
U.S. intermediate holding companies.
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\121\ 12 CFR 252.157(a)(1)(i)(B) and (c)(3).
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Application of an LCR requirement would help to ensure a consistent
minimum capability to estimate liquidity needs in stress and ensure a
minimum level of liquid assets to cover such needs, which are core
elements of sound liquidity risk management.\122\ A standardized
approach based on the risk of stressed outflows would complement a
foreign banking organization's idiosyncratic risk modeling under the
Board's enhanced prudential standards rule.\123\
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\122\ See OCC, Board, FDIC, Office of Thrift Supervision, and
National Credit Union Administration, ``Interagency Policy Statement
on Funding and Liquidity Risk Management,'' 75 FR 13656 (March 22,
2010) and BCBS, ``Principles of sound liquidity risk management and
supervision,'' (September 2008).
\123\ See 12 CFR 252.157.
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To the extent a standardized approach were to align with the
current LCR rule, such an approach could promote consistency and
compliance efficiencies with LCR requirements applied with respect to a
U.S. intermediate holding company of a foreign banking organization and
covered depository institution subsidiaries. Such an approach would
also facilitate supervisory comparisons between the liquidity risk
profiles of the U.S. branch and agency networks of foreign banking
organizations, the U.S. subsidiary operations of foreign banking
organizations, and U.S. banking organizations. Because of the LCR
rule's consistency with the Basel III LCR, an LCR-based approach would
also address liquidity risk exposures of a foreign banking
organization's U.S. operations in a manner generally consistent with
home jurisdiction requirements for the global consolidated foreign
banking organization, which could reduce operational costs and
facilitate more integrated liquidity risk management. Furthermore, to
the extent that the Board were to align the scope of application of any
U.S. branches and agencies requirement for foreign banking
organizations with the scope of application under the proposal,
alignment with existing regulatory reporting by foreign banking
organizations under the Board's FR 2052a Complex Institution Liquidity
Monitoring Report could limit the incremental operational costs of
calculating an LCR-based requirement, given that FR 2052a reporting
closely aligns with the component elements of an LCR calculation.
Question 55: If the Board were to propose an LCR-based requirement
for foreign banking organizations with respect to their U.S. branch and
agency network, in what ways should the requirement be consistent with
the LCR rule, interagency domestic proposal, or the proposed LCR
requirement for the U.S. intermediate holding company of a foreign
banking organization? What changes should be made to address the risks
and structure of a foreign banking organization's U.S. branches and
agencies?
Question 56: Which definitions in the LCR rule, if any, should the
Board adjust, and in what ways, for an LCR calculation with respect to
a foreign banking organization's U.S. branch and agency network?
Question 57: Any standardized liquidity requirement for U.S.
branches and agencies would need to define the types and quality of
assets that would be appropriate to cover the risk of potential
outflows. Under an LCR-based approach, what differences, if any, should
the Board apply to the definition of HQLA for U.S. branches and
agencies relative to the definition under the LCR rule?
Question 58: The LCR rule includes criteria for determining
eligible HQLA of a banking organization, including operational
requirements and generally applicable criteria. What differences should
the Board consider, if any, to ensure that eligible HQLA are available
to meet the stressed cash outflows of a foreign banking organization's
U.S. branch and agency network? In what ways, if any, should the
operational
[[Page 24323]]
requirements or generally applicable criteria differ in order to align
with the liquidity risk management operations of foreign banking
organizations?
Question 59: The generally applicable criteria in the LCR rule
include certain requirements to ensure that the assets included as HQLA
are free from encumbrance and may be freely monetized to meet outflows.
How should an LCR approach take into account the operating structures
of U.S. branches and agencies of foreign banking organizations in the
United States for purposes of determining eligible HQLA? For example, a
federal or state branch operating in the United States may hold amounts
of HQLA to meet other regulatory requirements, such as the capital
equivalency deposits (CED) requirement applicable to a federal
branch.\124\ In light of the criteria for determining eligible HQLA
under the LCR rule, what, if any, changes to relevant rules or policies
should the agencies consider regarding the treatment of assets held for
the purpose of satisfying other regulatory requirements, such as assets
held to meet CED requirements or other asset maintenance requirements,
and why?
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\124\ See 12 CFR 28.15.
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Question 60: How should an LCR-based approach take into account the
transferability of assets between U.S. branches and agencies for
purposes of determining the eligible HQLA of a foreign banking
organization's U.S. branch and agency network? For example, a U.S.
branch or agency may be subject to a regulatory restriction in place in
a given state that could limit the transferability of assets from that
branch or agency to another branch or agency that is part of the U.S.
branch and agency network.
Question 61: In what ways, if any, should the calculation of the
HQLA amount by a foreign banking organization for its U.S. branch and
agency network differ from the calculation that a foreign banking
organization would conduct under the proposal with respect to a U.S.
intermediate holding company? For example, how should an LCR approach
incorporate the haircuts and composition caps on level 2 liquid assets
that are included in the current LCR rule? What adjustments, if any,
would need to be made to the definitions in the LCR rule to facilitate
these calculations?
Question 62: The current LCR framework uses outflow amounts and
inflow amounts for a 30-day time horizon. What would be the advantages
and disadvantages of using the same time horizon for the outflow
amounts and inflow amounts of a foreign banking organization's U.S.
branch and agency network?
Question 63: If the minimum standardized liquidity requirement for
the U.S. branch and agency network of a foreign banking organization
were to be calibrated based on a time horizon other than the LCR's 30-
day time horizon, the approach would need to address the timing of net
cash outflows. Under the LCR rule, one set of outflow amounts and
inflow amounts are directly associated with a time horizon and
therefore included in the net cumulative maturity outflow amount in the
maturity mismatch add-on calculation. The remaining set of contractual
and contingent outflow amounts and inflow amounts are not included in
the net cumulative maturity outflow amount and are not directly
associated with specific time horizon within the LCR's 30-day window.
How should the outflow amounts and inflow amounts be calibrated for a
given time horizon, and why?
Question 64: How could specific outflow amounts and inflow amounts
for a foreign banking organization's U.S. branches and agencies
appropriately reflect the relevant risks? What, if any, modifications
would be required to the outflow amounts and inflow amounts described
in Sec. Sec. _. 32 and _.33 respectively of the LCR rule for a U.S.
branch and agency LCR calculation? For example, the LCR rule excludes
transactions between two subsidiaries of a consolidated holding company
subject to the rule. For calculations involving a foreign banking
organization's U.S. branch and agency network, what transactions should
be excluded and why?
Question 65: Use of a standardized liquidity requirement for U.S.
branches and agencies that is similar to a foreign banking
organization's proposed LCR requirement for a U.S. intermediate holding
company could provide greater consistency across the approaches.
However, there may be outflow amounts and inflow amounts described in
the proposal that need to be adapted for U.S. branches and agencies, or
that may not be relevant and could be omitted. For example, the LCR
rule includes a provision, the ``broker-dealer segregated account
inflow amount,'' that allows a banking organization subject to the rule
to determine the extent to which it may, over the course of the LCR 30-
calendar day time horizon, take into account any reduction in
regulatory asset maintenance requirements that would occur in a manner
consistent with the LCR's outflow and inflow calculations.\125\ If the
Board were to apply an LCR requirement to a foreign banking
organization with respect to its U.S. branches and agencies, to what
extent, if any, should such an approach be included for forms of client
protection requirements or other potential reductions in regulatory
requirements, such as CED requirements of a branch or other asset
maintenance requirements?
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\125\ See 12 CFR 50.33(g) (OCC), 12 CFR 249.33(g) (Board), and
12 CFR 329.33(g) (FDIC).
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Question 66: As described in the proposal for a foreign banking
organization's U.S. intermediate holding company calculation, the LCR
inflow cap of 75 percent of total outflow amounts would not reflect any
specific reliance of a foreign banking organization's U.S. operations
on anticipated affiliate inflows. What alternative limits, if any,
should be applied to the inflow amounts of a foreign banking
organization's U.S. branch and agency network, and why? Given the
structure of U.S. branch and agency funding, how should inflows from
U.S. and foreign affiliated legal entities and offices be treated, and
why? For example, what would be the advantages and disadvantages under
an LCR-based approach of preventing or otherwise limiting the ability
of a foreign banking organization to assume reliance on inter-affiliate
inflows to offset outflows?
Question 67: When considered in combination with a foreign banking
organization's LCR calculation for any U.S. intermediate holding
company described in the proposal, how should a standardized approach
for U.S. branches and agencies achieve comprehensive coverage of the
short-term liquidity risks of a foreign banking organization's U.S.
operations? In what ways, if any, should an approach to addressing the
liquidity risks of a foreign banking organization's U.S. branches and
agencies capture the risk of stressed cash outflows within the United
States that could result from transactions, instruments and obligations
booked at affiliated legal entities and offices outside of the foreign
banking organization's U.S. operations?
Question 68: If the Board were to implement standardized liquidity
requirements for foreign banking organizations with respect to their
U.S. branch and agency networks, what would be the advantages and
disadvantages of public disclosures associated with such requirements?
What form should such public disclosures take and why?
[[Page 24324]]
2. Option 2: Simplified Liquidity Requirement Based on U.S. Branch and
Agency Total Assets
An alternative approach for a minimum standardized liquidity
requirement could be to require a foreign banking organization to
maintain within its U.S. branch and agency network an amount of liquid
assets of prescribed quality exceeding a prescribed percentage (for
example 20 percent) of the total aggregate U.S. branch and agency
network assets. Such a requirement could function as a floor to
existing non-standardized liquidity requirements.
The minimum amount of liquid assets required under such an approach
could depend on the interaction with other regulatory standards. For
example, the minimum requirement could be reduced (for example, to 15
percent) to reflect assets of a foreign banking organization's U.S.
branches and agencies that have appropriate liquidity characteristics
and are held to meet other regulatory requirements, such as CED
requirements applicable to a federal branch or other asset maintenance
requirements, even if those assets might not necessarily be available
to meet outflows outside of particular circumstances specified under
those requirements.
The Board requests comment on all aspects of this approach,
including overall calibration and potential criteria for determining
which assets could be permitted to satisfy a simplified liquidity
requirement. One approach could align with the criteria used under
other liquidity requirements, such as the criteria for highly liquid
assets used for purposes of the liquidity buffer requirements under the
Board's enhanced prudential standards rule or HQLA under the LCR rule.
Alternatively, a foreign banking organization could satisfy a
simplified liquidity requirement with assets that meet the criteria for
HQLA set forth in the LCR rule, or a simplified version of these
criteria. For example, the criteria could include the HQLA criteria
under section 20 of the LCR rule without regard to the additional
requirements for eligible HQLA under section 22 or the standardized
haircuts and liquid asset composition limits under section 21.
Question 69: Relative to an LCR-based approach, when applied to
foreign banking organizations with similarly sized U.S. operations, a
requirement tied only to the asset size of a foreign banking
organization's U.S. branches and agencies would tend to result in lower
requirements for foreign banking organizations with greater measures of
liquidity risk and higher requirements for foreign banking
organizations with lower measures of liquidity risk. What would be the
advantages or disadvantages of such a result? What incentives could be
created?
Question 70: How should a requirement based on asset size take into
account off-balance sheet exposures, such as in connection with
commitments and derivatives, which can represent a material source of
liquidity risk to the U.S. operations of a foreign banking
organization?
Question 71: What would be the advantages and disadvantages of
basing a more simple branch and agency liquidity requirement on
measures other than or in addition to aggregate U.S. branch and agency
assets? What measures should be included and in what ways under such an
approach?
Question 72: What would be the advantages and disadvantages of
permitting assets held to meet another regulatory requirement to reduce
the required level of liquid assets under a standardized liquidity
requirement? How would such an approach align with how a foreign
banking organization considers, for purposes of its internal liquidity
risk management practices, assets required to be held under a
particular regulation to be available to meet liquidity needs under
various economic and financial market conditions?
Question 73: What criteria should be applied for liquid assets to
satisfy a simplified, standardized liquidity requirement based on
aggregate U.S. branch and agency assets? How should such an approach
incorporate a foreign banking organization's ability to monetize these
assets? What, if any, standardized haircuts to the fair market value
should be applied and what aggregate composition limits, if any, should
be applied, and why?
Question 74: To what extent would different approaches for a
standardized liquidity requirement create incentives for a foreign
banking organization to restructure the business models of U.S.
branches and agencies?
Question 75: What other approaches should the Board consider for
standardized liquidity requirements to address the liquidity risks of
the U.S. branches and agencies of a foreign banking organization with
significant U.S. operations? Please provide the rationale for any
alternative approach and a detailed description of how the approach
could mechanically operate in conjunction with existing statutory and
regulatory requirements. What would be the advantages and disadvantages
to an alternative approach for standardized liquidity requirements?
Commenters are encouraged to provide data to support their responses.
F. LCR and NSFR Requirements for Certain Depository Institution
Subsidiaries of a Foreign Banking Organization
The agencies are proposing to apply LCR and NSFR requirements to
certain large depository institution subsidiaries of foreign banking
organizations subject to Category II or III liquidity standards.
Specifically, LCR and NSFR requirements would apply to any covered
depository subsidiary (that is, a depository institution that has total
consolidated assets of $10 billion or more and is a consolidated
subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate holding company of a foreign banking
organization) of a foreign banking organization that is subject to
Category II or III liquidity standards.\126\ The level of the LCR
requirement applicable to the covered depository institution subsidiary
would be the same as the level that would apply to the foreign banking
organization. For example, a depository institution with $10 billion in
total consolidated assets that is a subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate
holding company of a foreign banking organization subject to the
reduced LCR requirement under Category III liquidity standards would
itself be subject to the reduced LCR requirement.
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\126\ The proposal would measure the total consolidated assets
of a subsidiary depository institution based on the average level
over the previous four calendar quarters. See section III.C of this
Supplementary Information section, regarding determination of the
applicable category of standards.
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The risk-based indicators for Categories II and III reflect the
systemic risk profile and safety and soundness risk profile of the U.S.
operations of a foreign banking organization, of which a large
depository institution subsidiary is a significant part. Each of these
indicators heightens the need for sophisticated measures to monitor and
manage liquidity risk, including at a covered depository institution
subsidiary. Such depository institution subsidiaries are part of the
U.S. operations of a foreign banking organization with a more
significant liquidity risk profile and whose failure or distress could
impose significant costs on the U.S. financial system and economy. The
liquidity challenges of such firms therefore make it appropriate to
ensure that a large depository institution subsidiary maintains
sufficient liquidity to cover outflows generated from its activities
rather than relying on other entities of the U.S.
[[Page 24325]]
operations of the foreign banking organization.
The agencies are not proposing to apply LCR or NSFR requirements to
covered depository institution subsidiaries of foreign banking
organizations subject to Category IV standards, based on the lesser
risk profile of their U.S. operations relative to those of firms that
would be subject to Category II or III standards.
G. Transition Period; Cessation of Applicability
The proposal would provide initial transition periods for foreign
banking organizations and covered depository institution subsidiaries
to comply with the proposed LCR requirements.\127\ The compliance date
for a foreign banking organization with respect to its U.S.
intermediate holding company would depend on whether the U.S.
intermediate holding company is subject to the LCR rule at the
effective date of a final rule. Except as noted below, a covered
depository institution subsidiary would be required to comply with any
applicable proposed LCR requirement beginning on the same date. More
specifically:
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\127\ The agencies will address the relevant effective and
compliance dates of the NSFR in the final NSFR rule.
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If a U.S. intermediate holding company of a foreign
banking organization is subject to the full LCR requirement as a
covered company (for example, as a bank holding company) under the
current LCR at the effective date of a final rule, the foreign banking
organization would be required to comply with the applicable proposed
LCR requirement (full or reduced) with respect to its U.S. intermediate
holding company beginning on the effective date of the final rule. A
covered depository institution subsidiary would be required to comply
with any applicable proposed LCR requirement beginning on the same
date.
If a U.S. intermediate holding company of a foreign
banking organization is subject to the modified LCR requirement (for
example, as a bank holding company) under the current LCR rule at the
effective date of a final rule, the foreign banking organization would
be required to comply with the proposed LCR requirement with respect to
its U.S. intermediate holding company beginning on the effective date.
However, for one year following the effective date of the final rule,
the LCR calculation with respect to the U.S. intermediate holding
company would be on a monthly basis, would not include a maturity-
mismatch add-on, and would use a 70 percent outflow adjustment factor.
In addition, no LCR requirement would apply to a covered depository
institution subsidiary of such a foreign banking organization until one
year following the effective date of the final rule.\128\ The foreign
banking organization and any covered depository institution subsidiary
would be required to comply with the maturity mismatch add-on, any
applicable outflow adjustment factor, and any applicable daily
calculation requirement beginning the first day of the calendar quarter
that is one year following the effective date of the final rule.
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\128\ This transition provision would apply to a depository
institution that is not subject to the LCR rule and is a subsidiary
of a covered company subject to the modified LCR requirement at the
effective date of the final rule.
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If a U.S. intermediate holding company of a foreign
banking organization is not a covered company under the LCR rule at the
effective date of a final rule, the foreign banking organization would
be required to comply with the proposed LCR requirement with respect to
the U.S. intermediate holding company beginning on the first day of the
calendar quarter that is one year following the effective date. A
covered depository institution subsidiary would be required to comply
with any applicable proposed LCR requirement beginning on the same
date.
Following the date that is one year after adoption of a final rule
(or, in the case of the proposed NSFR requirement, following the
effective date of that requirement), a foreign banking organization
would be required to comply with the requirements based on its
applicable category of standards, according to the same timing as would
apply to a U.S. banking organization under the domestic interagency
proposal.\129\ Specifically, under the proposal, a foreign banking
organization that becomes subject to the proposed LCR or NSFR
requirements after the initial effective date would be required to
comply with these requirements on the first day of the second quarter
after the foreign banking organization became subject to these
requirements, consistent with the amount of time currently provided
under the LCR rule and NSFR proposed rule after the currently
applicable year-end measurement date.\130\
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\129\ See section III.C of this Supplementary Information
section regarding determination of applicable category of standards.
\130\ Under the LCR rule and NSFR proposed rule, a banking
organization that meets the thresholds for applicability measured as
of the year-end must comply with the requirement(s) beginning on
April 1 of the following year, or as specified by the appropriate
agency. See 12 CFR 50.1(b)(2) (OCC); 12 CFR 249.1(b)(2) (Board); 12
CFR 329(1)(b)(2) (FDIC); and NSFR proposed rule. See also LCR FR
rule, 79 FR at 61447.
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In addition, the current LCR rule provides newly covered banking
organizations with a transition period for the daily calculation
requirement, recognizing that a daily calculation requirement could
involve significant operational and technology demands. Specifically,
under the current rule, a newly covered banking organization must
calculate its LCR monthly from April 1 to December 1 of its first year
of compliance. Beginning on January 1 of the following year, the
banking organization must calculate its LCR daily.\131\ The proposal
would maintain this transition period of three calendar quarters
following initial applicability of a daily LCR calculation requirement
to a foreign banking organization.\132\
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\131\ See id.
\132\ For clarification, the proposed 3-quarter transition
period would apply only to a foreign banking organization that
becomes subject to a daily LCR calculation requirement after the
effective date of a final rule; the 3-quarter transition period
would not be additive to any initial transition period that would
apply to a foreign banking organization in connection with the
effective date.
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Under the proposal, like the current LCR rule and NSFR proposed
rule, once a foreign banking organization is subject to the proposed
LCR or NSFR requirements, it would remain subject to the rule until the
Board determines that application of the rule would not be appropriate
in light of the foreign banking organization's asset size, level of
complexity, risk profile, or scope of operations. This approach would
be consistent with the cessation provisions that apply to U.S. banking
organizations under the current LCR rule and NSFR proposed rule, and
that would continue to apply under the domestic interagency proposal.
Question 76: What would be the advantages and disadvantages of
maintaining the cessation provisions of the LCR rule and NSFR proposed
rule? What would be the advantages and disadvantages of aligning the
cessation provisions in the LCR rule and NSFR proposed rule with the
transition provisions between categories of standards? For example, the
current version of the LCR rule provides that, once a banking
organization becomes subject to the LCR rule, it remains subject to the
LCR rule until its regulator determines in writing that application of
the LCR rule is no longer appropriate. What are the advantages and
disadvantages of requiring a written determination before a banking
organization can move to a lower category? What would be the advantages
[[Page 24326]]
and disadvantages of automatically moving the category of a banking
organization based on its size and indicators over the preceding four
quarters?
VI. Re-Proposal of Standardized Liquidity Requirements for Certain U.S.
Depository Institution Holding Companies Subject to Category IV
Standards
The domestic interagency proposal would not have included LCR and
NSFR requirements for U.S. banking organizations subject to Category IV
standards, based on an assessment that these banking organizations
generally have more traditional balance sheet structures, are largely
funded by stable retail deposits, and have less reliance on less stable
short-term wholesale funding.\133\ However, as discussed above in
section V.A.3 of this SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section, the Board
observed that some banking organizations that meet the criteria for
Category IV standards could potentially have a heightened liquidity
risk profile. Thus, this proposal includes additional tailoring of
liquidity requirements for both foreign banking organizations and
domestic holding companies subject to Category IV standards in order to
ensure that standardized liquidity requirements apply to all banking
organizations with heightened liquidity risks.\134\ As a result, this
proposal would modify the applicable standardized liquidity
requirements for domestic holding companies described in the domestic
interagency proposal. Accordingly, the Board is accepting comments and
information during this reopened comment period for the domestic
interagency proposal with respect to this modification.
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\133\ See domestic interagency proposal, 83 FR 66024, 66037
(December 21, 2018).
\134\ The Board is proposing consistent requirements for both
U.S. and foreign banking organizations that meet these criteria.
Section V.A.3 of this SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section discusses
the proposed Category IV liquidity standards for foreign banking
organizations.
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As discussed in section V.A.3 of this SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
section, the Board is proposing to apply standardized liquidity
requirements to certain foreign banking organizations subject to
Category IV standards if the reliance of the foreign banking
organization's U.S. operations on short-term wholesale funding is
significant relative to the firm's combined U.S. assets. The proposal
would also apply consistent requirements to U.S. depository institution
holding companies that meet the same indicators of risk. Specifically,
a U.S. depository institution holding company subject to Category IV
standards would be subject to reduced LCR and NSFR requirements if the
firm has $50 billion or more in weighted short-term wholesale funding.
As with the proposed reduced LCR and NSFR requirements that would apply
to certain banking organizations subject to Category III standards, the
Board requests comment on a range of potential calibrations for the
reduced requirement, between 70 and 85 percent. The proposal would
require such a U.S. depository institution holding company standards to
publicly disclose its LCR and NSFR and certain components of each
ratio's calculation.\135\
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\135\ As noted above, the format and content requirements for
public disclosure for the LCR are described in 12 CFR part 249,
subpart J. See also ``Liquidity Coverage Ratio: Public Disclosure
Requirements; Extension of Compliance Period for Certain Companies
to Meet the Liquidity Coverage Ratio Requirements,'' 81 FR 94922
(Dec. 27, 2016). The proposed format and content requirements for
the disclosure of an NSFR are described in the NSFR proposed rule.
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For a U.S. banking organization subject to Category IV standards,
$50 billion or more in weighted short-term wholesale funding would be
significant relative to the banking organization's total assets. Such
banking organizations do not have a traditional balance sheet
structure, rely less on funding from stable deposits, and have material
reliance on less stable wholesale funding. Accordingly, a banking
organization that meets these criteria would have a higher level of
liquidity risk than other banking organizations subject to Category IV
standards.
However, to reflect the lesser risk profile of these banking
organizations relative to U.S. banking organizations that meet the
criteria for Category I, II, or III standards under the domestic
interagency proposal and foreign banking organizations that meet the
criteria for Category II or III standards under this proposal, the
Board is proposing to require calculation of the LCR on a monthly
basis, rather than each business day. In addition, the agencies are not
proposing to apply an LCR or NSFR requirement to the depository
institution subsidiaries of such firms.
Question 77: What are the advantages and disadvantages of applying
a reduced LCR and NSFR requirement to U.S. depository institution
holding companies subject to Category IV standards that have $50
billion or more in weighted short-term wholesale funding?
Question 78: Between a range of 70 and 85 percent of the full
requirements, what calibration should the Board adopt for the reduced
LCR and NSFR requirements for U.S. depository institution holding
companies subject to Category IV standards that have $50 billion or
more in weighted short-term wholesale funding, and why?
VII. Technical Amendments
In the domestic interagency proposal, the agencies stated that
changes in liquidity requirements that result from a change in category
would take effect on the first day of the second quarter following the
change in the banking organization's category.\136\ However, the
domestic interagency proposal did not include proposed regulation text
to give effect to this intended treatment. The agencies are making a
technical amendment in the regulation text included with this proposal
to provide this treatment for U.S. banking organizations. The agencies
are also making a technical amendment in both the capital and liquidity
regulation text to clarify that a subsidiary depository institution of
a depository institution would be categorized based on the risk profile
of its parent depository institution.
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\136\ 83 FR at 66033.
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VIII. Impact Assessment
The Board assessed the potential impact of the proposal, taking
into account current levels of capital and holdings of HQLA at affected
foreign banking organizations, potential benefits in the form of
reduced liquidity risk at large foreign banking organizations, and
potential costs related to decreased activity in global dollar funding
markets.
The Board expects the proposal to have no material impact on the
capital levels of foreign banking organizations that would be subject
to Category II standards. For foreign banking organizations that would
be subject to Category III standards and that currently reflect AOCI in
regulatory capital, the Board estimates that the proposal would
slightly lower capital requirements under current conditions (depending
on the data on cross-jurisdictional activity, by between $2 billion to
$3 billion, or between 0.5 to 0.6 percent of total risk-weighted assets
at these banking organizations), as such firms would not be required to
reflect AOCI in regulatory capital.\137\ This impact could vary under
different economic and market conditions. For example, from 2001 to
2018, the aggregate AOCI for banking organizations that would be
subject to
[[Page 24327]]
Category III standards under the proposal that included AOCI in capital
ranged from an estimated decrease of approximately 90 basis points of
total risk-weighted assets to an estimated increase of approximately 70
basis points of total risk-weighted assets.\138\
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\137\ The Board's analysis uses aggregate AOCI data from the FR
Y-9C as of September 30, 2018.
\138\ The Board's analysis uses data from the FR Y-9C between
2001 and 2018.
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For purposes of assessing the potential impact of the proposed
changes to the liquidity standards, the Board's assessment focused on
the impact of the proposed change in the applicability and the
stringency of the LCR rule, taking into account firms' internal
liquidity stress test requirements.\139\ As the proposal would reduce
requirements for some firms and increase requirements for others, the
Board quantified the net impact of the proposal on the required HQLA of
affected foreign banking organizations with respect to their U.S.
intermediate holding companies.\140\
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\139\ Because the NSFR and modified NSFR requirements have not
yet been finalized, banking organizations are not currently subject
to those minimum requirements. As a result, the Board did not assess
any changes in impact as a result of amending its scope of
application.
\140\ Under the proposal, two U.S. intermediate holding
companies that are currently not subject to the LCR rule would be
subject to the LCR for the first time, and two U.S. intermediate
holding companies currently subject to the LCR rule would no longer
be required to comply with an LCR requirement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Board staff estimated that, under the proposal, liquidity
requirements would be expected to increase by between $1 billion to $10
billion for foreign banking organizations in aggregate, depending on
the data on cross-jurisdictional activity and on whether the reduced
LCR requirement were set at 70 or 85 percent.\141\ The increase in
requirements would represent between a 0.5 to 4 percent increase in
total liquidity requirements for the U.S. intermediate holding
companies of foreign banking organizations. Foreign banking
organizations affected by the proposal increased their holdings of
liquid assets after the financial crisis, and most or all already hold
sufficient HQLA to meet the proposed requirements at their U.S.
subsidiaries. Board staff estimated that the proposal would require
foreign banking organizations in the aggregate to increase U.S. HQLA by
between zero to $1 billion, or by up to 0.5 percent of total HQLA
holdings at affected firms for the second quarter ending June 30, 2018,
in order to satisfy the proposed LCR requirement.
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\141\ The Board's analysis estimates the impact of modifying the
LCR requirement for holding companies that would be subject to
Category III or Category IV standards using data submitted on the FR
2052a by these holding companies for the second quarter 2018
reporting period.
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The Board does not expect liquidity requirements to increase for
any banking organization based on the modification of the domestic
interagency proposal to apply standardized liquidity requirements to
U.S. depository institution holding companies subject to Category IV
standards that have $50 billion or more in weighted short-term
wholesale funding, as no U.S. depository institution holding companies
currently meet these criteria.
In addition to assessing the potential impact of the proposal on
LCR minimum requirements, the Board assessed the broader costs and
benefits associated with the liquidity regulation of foreign banking
organizations. One potential benefit is that the proposal would
strengthen the safety and soundness of foreign banking organizations
with respect to their U.S. operations. The Board estimated the
relationship between holdings of liquid assets and, as a measure of
liquidity stress, the usage of Federal Reserve liquidity facilities
during the financial crisis, and found that, controlling for other
factors, foreign banking organizations with more liquid assets were
less likely to access these facilities.\142\ Moreover, among foreign
banking organizations that accessed these facilities, those with more
liquid assets used these facilities less intensively.
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\142\ The Federal Reserve liquidity facilities examined
comprised of the discount window and the Term Auction Facility.
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A potential cost of liquidity regulation for foreign banking
organizations is the reduced efficiency of global dollar markets.\143\
Foreign banking organizations help integrate global dollar markets by
supplying dollars in these markets or engaging in derivatives
transactions, and short-term funding helps facilitate these activities.
Liquidity regulation may reduce incentives for some foreign banking
organizations to engage in such activities, with potentially adverse
effects on the functioning of global dollar markets.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\143\ Foreign banking organizations account for more than 80
percent of dollar-denominated cross-border lending globally and fund
nearly a quarter of their global dollar balance sheet from their
U.S. operations.
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As the immediate effect of the proposed change for foreign banking
organizations is estimated to be between a zero to 0.5 percent increase
in HQLA, the anticipated effects on these firms' safety and soundness
and the functioning of global dollar markets are likely to be mild.
Question 79: The Board invites comment on all aspects of the
foregoing impact assessment associated with the proposal. What, if any,
additional costs and benefits should be considered? Commenters are
encouraged to submit data on potential impacts on foreign banking
organizations, as well as potential costs or benefits of the proposal
that the agencies may not have considered.
IX. Administrative Law Matters
A. Solicitation of Comments and Use of Plain Language
Section 722 of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act \144\ requires the
Federal banking agencies to use plain language in all proposed and
final rules published after January 1, 2000. The agencies have sought
to present the proposed rule in a simple and straightforward manner,
and invite comment on the use of plain language. For example:
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\144\ Public Law 106-102, sec. 722, 113 Stat. 1338, 1471 (1999).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Have the agencies organized the material to suit your
needs? If not, how could they present the proposed rule more clearly?
Are the requirements in the proposed rule clearly stated?
If not, how could the proposed rule be more clearly stated?
Do the regulations contain technical language or jargon
that is not clear? If so, which language requires clarification?
Would a different format (grouping and order of sections,
use of headings, paragraphing) make the regulation easier to
understand? If so, what changes would achieve that?
Would more, but shorter, sections be better? If so, which
sections should be changed?
What other changes can the agencies incorporate to make
the regulation easier to understand?
B. Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis
Certain provisions of the proposal contain ``collection of
information'' requirements within the meaning of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-3521) (PRA). In accordance with
the requirements of the PRA, the agencies may not conduct or sponsor,
and a respondent is not required to respond to, an information
collection unless it displays a currently valid Office of Management
and Budget (OMB) control number. The OMB control numbers for the
agencies' respective LCR rules are OCC (1557-
[[Page 24328]]
0323), Board (7100-0367), and FDIC (3064-0197). The OMB control numbers
for the agencies' respective regulatory capital rules are OCC (1557-
0318), Board (7100-0313), and FDIC (3064-0153). These information
collections will be extended for three years, with revision. The
information collection requirements contained in this proposal have
been submitted by the OCC and FDIC to OMB for review and approval under
section 3507(d) of the PRA (44 U.S.C. 3507(d)) and section 1320.11 of
the OMB's implementing regulations (5 CFR part 1320). The Board
reviewed the proposal under the authority delegated to the Board by
OMB.
Comments are invited on:
a. Whether the collections of information are necessary for the
proper performance of the agencies' functions, including whether the
information has practical utility;
b. The accuracy or the estimate of the burden of the information
collections, including the validity of the methodology and assumptions
used;
c. Ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected;
d. Ways to minimize the burden of the information collections on
respondents, including through the use of automated collection
techniques or other forms of information technology; and
e. Estimates of capital or startup costs and costs of operation,
maintenance, and purchase of services to provide information.
All comments will become a matter of public record. Comments on
aspects of this notice that may affect reporting, recordkeeping, or
disclosure requirements and burden estimates should be sent to the
addresses listed in the ADDRESSES section of this document. A copy of
the comments may also be submitted to the OMB desk officer for the
agencies by mail to U.S. Office of Management and Budget, 725 17th
Street NW, #10235, Washington, DC 20503; facsimile to (202) 395-6974;
or email to [email protected], Attention, Federal Banking
Board Desk Officer.
LCR Rule
Current Actions: The proposal would revise Sec. Sec. _.1, _.3,
_.30, _.50, and _.105 of each of the agencies' respective LCR rules and
Sec. Sec. 249.10, 249.90, 249.91, and 249.131 of the Board's LCR rule
to require depository institution subsidiaries of certain U.S.
intermediate holding companies of foreign banking organizations to
calculate an LCR and NSFR. The proposal would also add subpart O of the
Board's regulations, which would require certain foreign banking
organizations to calculate an LCR and NSFR with respect to their U.S.
intermediate holding companies. Currently, a foreign banking
organization operating in the United States is not subject to the LCR
rule, nor would it be subject to the NSFR proposed rule, with respect
to its U.S. operations, except to the extent that a subsidiary
depository institution holding company or a subsidiary depository
institution of the foreign banking organization meets the relevant
applicability criteria on a stand-alone basis. However, for most
foreign banking organizations that would be subject to subpart O, their
U.S. intermediate holding companies currently meet the relevant
applicability criteria on a stand-alone basis under the current LCR
rule. Subpart O contains additional reporting, recordkeeping and
disclosure requirements for foreign banking organizations in Sec. Sec.
249.204, 249.205, 249.206, 249.207, and 249.208.
Section 249.204 would require a foreign banking organization to
maintain for each U.S. intermediate holding company a net stable
funding ratio that is equal to or greater than 1.0 on an ongoing basis
in accordance with Sec. 249.3 and subparts K and L of this part as if
each U.S. intermediate holding company (and not the foreign banking
organization subject to this subpart) were a top-tier Board-regulated
institution. In complying with Sec. 249.204, a foreign banking
organization will utilize proposed Sec. _.108(b) of each of the
agencies' respective LCR rules, which provides that if an institution
includes an ASF amount in excess of the RSF amount of the consolidated
subsidiary, it must implement and maintain written procedures to
identify and monitor applicable statutory, regulatory, contractual,
supervisory, or other restrictions on transferring assets from the
consolidated subsidiaries.
Section 249.205 would be consistent with Sec. _.22 of each the
agencies' respective LCR rules. Section 249.205 requires that, with
respect to each asset eligible for inclusion in the foreign banking
organization' HQLA amount, the foreign banking organization must
implement policies that require eligible HQLA to be under the control
of the management function of the foreign banking organization that is
charged with managing liquidity risk. In addition, consistent with
Sec. _.22, Sec. 249.205 would require that a foreign banking
organization have a documented methodology that results in a consistent
treatment for determining that the eligible HQLA meet the requirements
in Sec. 249.205.
Section 249.206 would be consistent with Sec. _.40 of each of the
agencies' respective LCR rules. These provisions describe the reporting
and recordkeeping requirements related to a shortfall in a foreign
banking organization's liquidity coverage ratio.
Section 249.207 would be consistent with proposed Sec. _.110 of
the proposed NSFR rule. These provisions describe the reporting and
recordkeeping requirements related to a shortfall in a foreign banking
organization's net stable funding ratio.
Section 249.208 would require a foreign banking organization to
disclose publicly all information for a U.S. intermediate holding
company as if the U.S. intermediate holding company were subject to the
disclosure requirements found in the LCR rule (Sec. Sec. 249.90 and
249.91) and proposed NSFR rule (Sec. Sec. 249.130 and 249.131).
For more detail on Sec. Sec. _.22 and _.40, please see ``Liquidity
Coverage Ratio: Liquidity Risk Measurement Standards, Final Rule,'' 79
FR 61440 (October 10, 2014). For more detail on Sec. Sec. _.90 and
_.91, please see ``Liquidity Coverage Ratio: Public Disclosure
Requirements; Extension of Compliance Period for Certain Companies to
Meet the Liquidity Coverage Ratio Requirements,'' 81 FR 94922 (Dec. 27,
2016). For more detail on Sec. Sec. _.108, _.110, _.130, and _.131,
please see ``Net Stable Funding Ratio: Liquidity Risk Measurement
Standards and Disclosure Requirements; Proposed Rule,'' 81 FR 35124
(June 1, 2016). The disclosure requirements are only for Board
supervised entities. The Board would also delete the disclosure
requirements in Sec. 249.64.
Information Collections Proposed to be Revised:
OCC
OMB control number: 1557-0323.
Title of Information Collection: Reporting and Recordkeeping
Requirements Associated with Liquidity Coverage Ratio: Liquidity Risk
Measurement, Standards, and Monitoring.
Frequency: Event generated, monthly, quarterly, annually.
Affected Public: National banks and federal savings associations.
Estimated average hours per response:
Sections 50.40(a), 50.110(a) (19 respondents)
Reporting (ongoing monthly)--.50
Sections 50.40(b), 50.110(b) (19 respondents)
Reporting (ongoing)--.50
Sections 50.40(b)(3)(iv), 50.110(b)(3) (19 respondents)
Reporting (quarterly)--.50
[[Page 24329]]
Sections 50.22(a)(2) and (5), 50.108(b) (19 respondents)
Recordkeeping (ongoing)--40
Sections 50.40(b), 50.110(b) (19 respondents)
Recordkeeping (ongoing)--200
Estimated annual burden hours: 4,722.
Board
OMB control number: 7100-0367.
Title of Information Collection: Reporting, Recordkeeping, and
Disclosure Requirements Associated with the Regulation WW.
Frequency: Event generated, monthly, quarterly, annually.
Affected Public: Insured state member banks, bank holding
companies, and savings and loan holding companies, and foreign banking
organizations.
Estimated average hours per response:
Sections 249.40(a), 249.110(a), 249.206(a), 249.207(a) (3 respondents)
Reporting (ongoing monthly)--.50
Sections 249.40(b), 249.110(b), 249.206(b), 249.207(a) (3 respondents)
Reporting (ongoing)--.50
Sections 249.40(b)(3)(iv), 249.110(b)(3), 249.206(b)(iv),249. 207(b)(3)
(3 respondents)
Reporting (quarterly)--.50
Sections 249.22(a)(2) and (5), 249.108(b), 249.204, 249.205(a)(2) and
(5) (23 respondents)
Recordkeeping (ongoing)--40
Sections 249.40(b), 249.110(b), 249.206(b), 249.207(b) (3 respondents)
Recordkeeping (ongoing)--200
Sections 249.90, 249.91, 249.130, 249.131, 249.208 (19 respondents)
Disclosure (quarterly)--24
Estimated annual burden hours: 3,370.
FDIC
OMB control number: 3064-0197.
Title of Information Collection: Liquidity Coverage Ratio:
Liquidity Risk Measurement, Standards, and Monitoring (LCR).
Frequency: Event generated, monthly, quarterly, annually.
Affected Public: State nonmember banks and state savings
associations.
Estimated average hours per response:
Sections 329.40(a), 329.110(a) (2 respondents)
Reporting (ongoing monthly)--.50
Sections 329.40(b), 329.110(b) (2 respondents)
Reporting (ongoing)--.50
Sections 329.40(b)(3)(iv), 329.110(b)(3) (2 respondents)
Reporting (quarterly)--.50
Sections 329.22(a)(2) and (5), 329.108(b) (2 respondents)
Recordkeeping (ongoing)--40
Sections 329.40(b), 329.110(b) (2 respondents)
Recordkeeping (ongoing)--200
Estimated annual burden hours: 497.
Disclosure Burden--Advanced Approaches Banking Organizations
Current Actions
The proposal would require a U.S. intermediate holding company
subject to Category III standards to maintain a minimum supplementary
leverage ratio of 3 percent given its size and risk profile. As a
result, these intermediate holding companies would no longer be
identified as ``advanced approaches banking organizations'' for
purposes of the advanced approach disclosure respondent count.
Information Collections Proposed to be Revised:
OCC
Title of Information Collection: Risk-Based Capital Standards:
Advanced Capital Adequacy Framework.
Frequency: Quarterly, annual.
Affected Public: Businesses or other for-profit.
Respondents: National banks, state member banks, state nonmember
banks, and state and federal savings associations.
OMB control number: 1557-0318.
Estimated number of respondents: 1,365 (of which 18 are advanced
approaches institutions).
Estimated average hours per response:
Minimum Capital Ratios
Recordkeeping (Ongoing)--16
Standardized Approach
Recordkeeping (Initial setup)--122
Recordkeeping (Ongoing)--20
Disclosure (Initial setup)--226.25
Disclosure (Ongoing quarterly)--131.25
Advanced Approach
Recordkeeping (Initial setup)--460
Recordkeeping (Ongoing)--540.77
Recordkeeping (Ongoing quarterly)--20
Disclosure (Initial setup)--328
Disclosure (Ongoing)--5.78
Disclosure (Ongoing quarterly)--41
Estimated annual burden hours: 1,136 hours initial setup, 64,945
hours for ongoing.
Board
Title of Information Collection: Recordkeeping and Disclosure
Requirements Associated with Regulation Q.
Frequency: Quarterly, annual.
Affected Public: Businesses or other for-profit.
Respondents: State member banks (SMBs), bank holding companies
(BHCs), U.S. intermediate holding companies (IHCs), savings and loan
holding companies (SLHCs), and global systemically important bank
holding companies (GSIBs).
Current actions: This proposal would amend the definition of
advanced approaches Board-regulated institution to include, as relevant
here, a depository institution holding company that is identified as a
Category II banking organization pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5 or 12 CFR
238.10, and a U.S. intermediate holding company that is identified as a
Category II banking organization pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5. Category III
Board-regulated institutions would not be considered advanced
approaches Board-regulated institutions. As a result, the Board
estimates that 1 institution will no longer be an advanced approaches
Board-regulated institution under the proposal.
Legal authorization and confidentiality: This information
collection is authorized by section 38(o) of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1831o(c)), section 908 of the International
Lending Supervision Act of 1983 (12 U.S.C. 3907(a)(1)), section 9(6) of
the Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 324), and section 5(c) of the Bank
Holding Company Act (12 U.S.C. 1844(c)). The obligation to respond to
this information collection is mandatory. If a respondent considers the
information to be trade secrets and/or privileged such information
could be withheld from the public under the authority of the Freedom of
Information Act (5 U.S.C. 552(b)(4)). Additionally, to the extent that
such information may be contained in an examination report such
information could also be withheld from the public (5 U.S.C. 552
(b)(8)).
Agency form number: FR Q.
OMB control number: 7100-0313.
Estimated number of respondents: 1,431 (of which 16 are advanced
approaches institutions).
Estimated average hours per response:
Minimum Capital Ratios
Recordkeeping (Ongoing)--16
Standardized Approach
Recordkeeping (Initial setup)--122
Recordkeeping (Ongoing)--20
Disclosure (Initial setup)--226.25
Disclosure (Ongoing quarterly)--131.25
Advanced Approach
Recordkeeping (Initial setup)--460
Recordkeeping (Ongoing)--540.77
Recordkeeping (Ongoing quarterly)--20
Disclosure (Initial setup)--280
Disclosure (Ongoing)--5.78
[[Page 24330]]
Disclosure (Ongoing quarterly)--35
Disclosure (Table 13 quarterly)--5
Risk-based Capital Surcharge for GSIBs
Recordkeeping (Ongoing)--0.5
Current estimated annual burden hours: 1,088 hours initial setup,
78,183 hours for ongoing.
Proposed revisions estimated annual burden: (787) hours.
Total estimated annual burden: 1,088 hours initial setup, 77,396
hours for ongoing.
FDIC
Title of Information Collection: Regulatory Capital Rule.
Frequency: Quarterly, annual.
Affected Public: Businesses or other for-profit.
Respondents: State nonmember banks, state savings associations, and
certain subsidiaries of those entities.
OMB control number: 3064-0153.
Estimated number of respondents: 3,489 (of which 1 is an advanced
approaches institution).
Estimated average hours per response:
Minimum Capital Ratios
Recordkeeping (Ongoing)--16.
Standardized Approach
Recordkeeping (Initial setup)--122
Recordkeeping (Ongoing)--20
Disclosure (Initial setup)--226.25
Disclosure (Ongoing quarterly)--131.25
Advanced Approach
Recordkeeping (Initial setup)--460
Recordkeeping (Ongoing)--540.77
Recordkeeping (Ongoing quarterly)--20
Disclosure (Initial setup)--328
Disclosure (Ongoing)--5.78
Disclosure (Ongoing quarterly)--41
Estimated annual burden hours: 1,136 hours initial setup, 126,920
hours for ongoing.
Reporting Burden--FFIEC and Board Forms
Current Actions
The proposal would also require changes to the Consolidated Reports
of Condition and Income (Call Reports) (FFIEC 031, FFIEC 041, and FFIEC
051; OMB Nos. 1557-0081 (OCC), 7100-0036 (Board), and 3064-0052 (FDIC))
and Risk-Based Capital Reporting for Institutions Subject to the
Advanced Capital Adequacy Framework (FFIEC 101; OMB Nos. 1557-0239
(OCC), 7100-0319 (Board), and 3064-0159 (FDIC)), which will be
addressed in a separate Federal Register notice.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
OCC: The Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq., (RFA),
requires an agency, in connection with a proposed rule, to prepare an
Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis describing the impact of the
rule on small entities (defined by the SBA for purposes of the RFA to
include commercial banks and savings institutions with total
consolidated assets of $550 million or less and trust companies with
total consolidated assets of $38.5 million of less) or to certify that
the proposed rule would not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
As part of our analysis, we consider whether the proposal would
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities, pursuant to the RFA. The OCC currently supervises
approximately 886 small entities.\145\ Because the proposal only
applies to IHCs with total consolidated assets of $100 billion or more,
it would not impact any OCC-supervised small entities. Therefore, the
proposal would not have a significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities.
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\145\ The OCC calculated the number of small entities using the
SBA's size thresholds for commercial banks and savings institutions,
and trust companies, which are $550 million and $38.5 million,
respectively. Consistent with the General Principles of Affiliation,
13 CFR 121.103(a), the OCC counted the assets of affiliated
financial institutions when determining whether to classify a
national bank or Federal savings association as a small entity.
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Board: In accordance with the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), 5
U.S.C. 601 et seq., the Board is publishing an initial regulatory
flexibility analysis of the proposal. The RFA requires each federal
agency to prepare an initial regulatory flexibility analysis in
connection with the promulgation of a proposed rule, or certify that
the proposed rule will not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.\146\ Under regulations issued by
the SBA, a small entity includes a bank, bank holding company, or
savings and loan holding company with assets of $550 million or less
(small banking organization).\147\ Based on the Board's analysis, and
for the reasons stated below, the Board believes that this proposed
rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial of
number of small banking organizations.
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\146\ See 5 U.S.C. 603, 604, and 605.
\147\ [thinsp]See 13 CFR 121.201.
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As discussed in the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION section, the Board is
proposing to adopt amendments to Regulations Q \148\ and WW \149\ that
would affect the regulatory requirements that apply to foreign banking
organizations with $50 billion or more in total consolidated assets and
U.S. depository institution holding companies with $100 billion or more
in total consolidated assets. Companies that are affected by the
proposal therefore substantially exceed the $550 million asset
threshold at which a banking entity is considered a ``small entity''
under SBA regulations.
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\148\ 12 CFR part 217.
\149\ 12 CFR part 249.
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Because the proposal is not likely to apply to any company with
assets of $550 million or less if adopted in final form, the proposal
is not expected to affect any small entity for purposes of the RFA. The
Board does not believe that the proposal duplicates, overlaps, or
conflicts with any other Federal rules. In light of the foregoing, the
Board does not believe that the proposal, if adopted in final form,
would have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities supervised. Nonetheless, the Board seeks comment on
whether the proposal would impose undue burdens on, or have unintended
consequences for, small banking organizations, and whether there are
ways such potential burdens or consequences could be minimized in a
manner consistent the purpose of the proposal.
FDIC: The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) generally requires an
agency, in connection with a proposed rule, to prepare and make
available for public comment an initial regulatory flexibility analysis
that describes the impact of a proposed rule on small entities.\150\
However, an initial regulatory flexibility analysis is not required if
the agency certifies that the rule will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities. The Small Business
Administration (SBA) has defined ``small entities'' to include banking
organizations with total assets of less than or equal to $550
million.\151\ For the reasons described below and under section 605(b)
of the RFA, the FDIC certifies that the proposal will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
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\150\ 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.
\151\ The SBA defines a small banking organization as having
$550 million or less in assets, where an organization's ``assets are
determined by averaging the assets reported on its four quarterly
financial statements for the preceding year.'' See 13 CFR 121.201
(as amended, effective December 2, 2014). In its determination, the
``SBA counts the receipts, employees, or other measure of size of
the concern whose size is at issue and all of its domestic and
foreign affiliates.'' See 13 CFR 121.103. Following these
regulations, the FDIC uses a covered entity's affiliated and
acquired assets, averaged over the preceding four quarters, to
determine whether the covered entity is ``small'' for the purposes
of RFA.
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The FDIC supervises 3,489 institutions, of which 2,674 are
[[Page 24331]]
considered small entities for the purposes of RFA.\152\
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\152\ Call Report Data for the quarter ending December 31, 2018.
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The proposed rule would change capital and liquidity requirements
for certain foreign banking organizations with total combined or
consolidated U.S. assets greater than $100 billion or with greater than
$75 billion in one or more risk-based indicators. None of the
institutions with total combined or consolidated U.S. assets greater
than $100 billion or with greater than $75 billion in one or more risk-
based indicators are FDIC-supervised small entities by SBA standards.
Since this proposal does not affect any institutions that are defined
as small entities for the purposes of the RFA, the FDIC certifies that
the proposal will not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
The FDIC invites comments on all aspects of the supporting
information provided in this RFA section. In particular, would this
rule have any significant effects on small entities that the FDIC has
not identified?
D. Riegle Community Development and Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994
Pursuant to section 302(a) of the Riegle Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act (RCDRIA), in determining the effective date
and administrative compliance requirements for new regulations that
impose additional reporting, disclosure, or other requirements on
insured depository institutions, each federal banking agency must
consider, consistent with principles of safety and soundness and the
public interest, any administrative burdens that such regulations would
place on insured depository institutions, including small depository
institutions, and customers of depository institutions, as well as the
benefits of such regulations.\153\ In addition, section 302(b) of
RCDRIA requires new regulations and amendments to regulations that
impose additional reporting, disclosures, or other new requirements on
insured depository institutions generally to take effect on the first
day of a calendar quarter that begins on or after the date on which the
regulations are published in final form.\154\
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\153\ 12 U.S.C. 4802(a).
\154\ 12 U.S.C. 4802(b).
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The agencies note that comment on these matters has been solicited
in other sections of this Supplementary Information section, and that
the requirements of RCDRIA will be considered as part of the overall
rulemaking process. In addition, the agencies also invite any other
comments that further will inform the agencies' consideration of
RCDRIA.
E. OCC Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 Determination
The OCC analyzed the proposed rule under the factors set forth in
the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA) (2 U.S.C. 1532). Under
this analysis, the OCC considered whether the proposed rule includes a
Federal mandate that may result in the expenditure by State, local, and
Tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the private sector, of $100
million or more in any one year (adjusted for inflation). The OCC has
determined that this proposed rule would not result in expenditures by
State, local, and Tribal governments, or the private sector, of $100
million or more in any one year. Accordingly, the OCC has not prepared
a written statement to accompany this proposal.
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 3
Administrative practice and procedure, Federal Reserve System,
National banks, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
12 CFR Part 50
Administrative practice and procedure, Banks, banking, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements, Savings associations.
12 CFR Part 217
Administrative practice and procedure, Banks, banking, Holding
companies, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Securities.
12 CFR Part 249
Administrative practice and procedure, Banks, banking, Holding
companies, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
12 CFR Part 324
Administrative practice and procedure, Banks, banking, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements, Savings associations.
12 CFR Part 329
Administrative practice and procedure, Banks, banking, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
12 CFR Chapter I
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons stated in the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION, chapter I
of title 12 of the Code of Federal Regulations is proposed to be
amended as follows:
PART 3--CAPITAL ADEQUACY STANDARDS
0
1. The authority citation for part 3 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 93a, 161, 1462, 1462a, 1463, 1464, 1818,
1828(n), 1828 note, 1831n note, 1835, 3907, 3909, and 5412(b)(2)(B).
0
2. In Sec. 3.2, add the definitions of Category II national bank or
Federal savings association, Category III national bank or Federal
savings association, FR Y-9LP, and FR Y-15 in alphabetical order to
read as follows:
Sec. 3.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
Category II national bank or Federal savings association means:
(1) A national bank or Federal savings association that is a
subsidiary of a Category II banking organization, as defined pursuant
to 12 CFR 252.5 or 12 CFR 238.10, as applicable; or
(2) A national bank or Federal savings association that:
(i)(A) Has total consolidated assets, calculated based on the
average of the national bank's or Federal savings association's total
consolidated assets for the four most recent calendar quarters as
reported on the Consolidated Report of Condition and Income (Call
Report), equal to $700 billion or more. If the national bank or Federal
savings association has not filed the Call Report for each of the four
most recent calendar quarters, total consolidated assets means the
average of its total consolidated assets, as reported on the Call
Report, for the most recent quarter or quarters, as applicable; or
(B) Has:
(1) Total consolidated assets, calculated based on the average of
the national bank's or Federal savings association's total consolidated
assets for the four most recent calendar quarters as reported on the
Call Report, of $100 billion or more but less than $700 billion. If the
national bank or Federal savings association has not filed the Call
Report for each of the four most recent quarters, total consolidated
assets means the average of its total
[[Page 24332]]
consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report, for the most
recent quarter or quarters, as applicable; and
(2) Cross-jurisdictional activity, calculated based on the average
of its cross jurisdictional activity for the four most recent calendar
quarters, of $75 billion or more. Cross-jurisdictional activity is the
sum of cross-jurisdictional claims and cross-jurisdictional
liabilities, calculated in accordance with the instructions to the FR
Y-15 or equivalent reporting form.
(ii) After meeting the criteria in paragraph (2)(i) of this
definition, a national bank or Federal savings association continues to
be a Category II national bank or Federal savings association until the
national bank or Federal savings association has:
(A)(1) Less than $700 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters; and
(2) Less than $75 billion in cross-jurisdictional activity for each
of the four most recent calendar quarters. Cross-jurisdictional
activity is the sum of cross-jurisdictional claims and cross-
jurisdictional liabilities, calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the FR Y-15 or equivalent reporting form; or
(B) Less than $100 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters.
Category III national bank or Federal savings association means:
(1) A national bank or Federal savings association that is a
subsidiary of a Category III banking organization as defined pursuant
to 12 CFR 252.5 or 12 CFR 238.10, as applicable;
(2) A national bank or Federal savings association that meets the
criteria in paragraph (3)(ii)(A) or (B) of this definition; or
(3) A depository institution that:
(i) Is a national bank or Federal savings association; and
(ii)(A) Has total consolidated assets, calculated based on the
average of the depository institution's total consolidated assets for
the four most recent calendar quarters as reported on the Call Report,
equal to $250 billion or more. If the depository institution has not
filed the Call Report for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters, total consolidated assets means the average of its total
consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report, for the most
recent quarter or quarters, as applicable; or
(B) Has:
(1) Total consolidated assets, calculated based on the average of
the depository institution's total consolidated assets for the four
most recent calendar quarters as reported on the Call Report, of $100
billion or more but less than $250 billion. If the depository
institution has not filed the Call Report for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, total consolidated assets means the average
of its total consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report, for
the most recent quarter or quarters, as applicable; and
(2) At least one of the following in paragraphs (3)(ii)(B)(2)(i)
through (iii) of this definition, each calculated as the average of the
four most recent consecutive quarters, or if the depository institution
has not filed each applicable reporting form for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, for the most recent quarter or quarters, as
applicable:
(i) Total nonbank assets, calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the FR Y-9LP or equivalent reporting form, equal to $75
billion or more;
(ii) Off-balance sheet exposure equal to $75 billion or more. Off-
balance sheet exposure is a depository institution's total exposure,
calculated in accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-15 or
equivalent reporting form, minus the total consolidated assets of the
depository institution, as reported on the Call Report; or
(iii) Weighted short-term wholesale funding, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-15 or equivalent reporting
form, equal to $75 billion or more.
(iii) After meeting the criteria in paragraph (3)(ii) of this
definition, a national bank or Federal savings association continues to
be a Category III national bank or Federal savings association until
the national bank or Federal savings association has:
(A)(1) Less than $250 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters;
(2) Less than $75 billion in total nonbank assets, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-9LP or equivalent
reporting form, for each of the four most recent calendar quarters;
(3) Less than $75 billion in weighted short-term wholesale funding,
calculated in accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-15 or
equivalent reporting form, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters; and
(4) Less than $75 billion in off-balance sheet exposure for each of
the four most recent calendar quarters. Off-balance sheet exposure is a
national bank's or Federal savings association's total exposure,
calculated in accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-15 or
equivalent reporting form, minus the total consolidated assets of the
national bank or Federal savings association, as reported on the Call
Report; or
(B) Less than $100 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters; or
(C) Is a Category II national bank or Federal savings association.
* * * * *
FR Y-15 means the Systemic Risk Report.
FR Y-9LP means the Parent Company Only Financial Statements for
Large Holding Companies.
* * * * *
0
3. In Sec. 3.10, revise paragraphs (a)(6), (c) introductory text, and
(c)(4)(i) introductory text to read as follows:
Sec. 3.10 Minimum capital requirements.
(a) * * *
(6) For advanced approaches national banks and Federal savings
associations, and for Category III national banks and Federal savings
associations, a supplementary leverage ratio of 3 percent.
* * * * *
(c) Advanced approaches capital ratio calculations. An advanced
approaches national bank or Federal savings association that has
completed the parallel run process and received notification from the
OCC pursuant to Sec. 3.121(d) must determine its regulatory capital
ratios as described in paragraphs (c)(1) through (3) of this section.
An advanced approaches national bank or Federal savings association
must determine its supplementary leverage ratio in accordance with
paragraph (c)(4) of this section, beginning with the calendar quarter
immediately following the quarter in which the national bank or Federal
savings association institution meets any of the criteria in Sec.
3.100(b)(1). A Category III national bank or Federal savings
association must determine its supplementary leverage ratio in
accordance with paragraph (c)(4) of this section, beginning with the
calendar quarter immediately following the quarter in which the
national bank or Federal savings association is identified as a
Category III national bank or Federal savings association.
* * * * *
(4) Supplementary leverage ratio. (i) An advanced approaches
national bank's or Federal savings association's or a Category III
national bank's or Federal savings association's supplementary leverage
ratio is the ratio of its tier 1 capital to total leverage
[[Page 24333]]
exposure, the latter which is calculated as the sum of:
* * * * *
0
4. In Sec. 3.11, revise paragraphs (b)(1) introductory text and
(b)(1)(ii) to read as follows:
Sec. 3.11 Capital conservation buffer and countercyclical capital
buffer amount.
* * * * *
(b) Countercyclical capital buffer amount--(1) General. An advanced
approaches national bank or Federal savings association, and a Category
III national bank or Federal savings association, must calculate a
countercyclical capital buffer amount in accordance with paragraphs
(b)(1)(i) through (iv) of this section for purposes of determining its
maximum payout ratio under Table 1 to this section.
* * * * *
(ii) Amount. An advanced approaches national bank or Federal
savings association, and a Category III national bank or Federal
savings association, has a countercyclical capital buffer amount
determined by calculating the weighted average of the countercyclical
capital buffer amounts established for the national jurisdictions where
the national bank's or Federal savings association's private sector
credit exposures are located, as specified in paragraphs (b)(2) and (3)
of this section.
* * * * *
0
5. In Sec. 3.100, revise paragraph (b)(1) to read as follows:
Sec. 3.100 Purpose, applicability, and principle of conservatism.
* * * * *
(b) Applicability. (1) This subpart applies to a national bank or
Federal savings association that:
(i) Is a subsidiary of a global systemically important BHC, as
identified pursuant to 12 CFR 217.402;
(ii) Is a Category II national bank or Federal savings association;
(iii) Is a subsidiary of a depository institution that uses the
advanced approaches pursuant to this subpart (OCC), 12 CFR part 217
(Board), or 12 CFR part 324 (FDIC), to calculate its risk-based capital
requirements; or
(iv) Is a subsidiary of a bank holding company or savings and loan
holding company that uses the advanced approaches pursuant to subpart E
of 12 CFR part 217 to calculate its risk-based capital requirements; or
(v) Elects to use this subpart to calculate its risk-based capital
requirements.
* * * * *
PART 50--LIQUIDITY RISK MEASUREMENT STANDARDS
0
6. The authority citation for part 50 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1 et seq., 93a, 481, 1818, and 1462 et
seq.
0
7. In Sec. 50.1, revise paragraph (b) to read as follows:
Sec. [thinsp]50.1 Purpose and applicability.
* * * * *
(b) Applicability of minimum liquidity standards. (1) A national
bank or Federal savings association is subject to the minimum liquidity
standard and other requirements of this part if:
(i) It is a GSIB depository institution, a Category II national
bank or Federal savings association, or a Category III national bank or
Federal savings association;
(ii) It is a national bank or Federal savings association that has
total consolidated assets equal to $10 billion or more, calculated
based on the average of the national bank's or Federal savings
association's total consolidated assets for the four most recent
calendar quarters as reported on the Call Report, and it is a
consolidated subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate holding company of
either a Category II foreign banking organization or a Category III
foreign banking organization. If the depository institution has not
filed the Call Report for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters, total consolidated assets means the average of its total
consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report, for the most
recent quarter or quarters, as applicable; and
(iii) It is a national bank or Federal savings association for
which the OCC has determined that application of this part is
appropriate in light of the national bank's or Federal savings
association's asset size, level of complexity, risk profile, scope of
operations, affiliation with foreign or domestic covered entities, or
risk to the financial system.
(2)(i) A national bank or Federal savings association that
initially becomes subject to the minimum liquidity standard, minimum
stable funding standard, and other requirements of this part under
paragraph (b)(1)(i) or (ii) of this section must comply with the
requirements of this part beginning on the first day of the second
calendar quarter after which the national bank or Federal savings
association becomes subject to the minimum liquidity standard and other
requirements of this part, except:
(A) For the first three calendar quarters after a national bank or
Federal savings association begins complying with the minimum liquidity
standard and other requirements of this part, a national bank or
Federal savings association must calculate and maintain a liquidity
coverage ratio monthly, on each calculation date that is the last
business day of the applicable calendar month; and
(B) Beginning one year after the national bank or Federal savings
association becomes subject to the minimum liquidity standard and other
requirements of this part under paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this section,
and thereafter, the national bank or Federal savings association must
calculate and maintain a liquidity coverage ratio on each calculation
date.
(ii) A national bank or Federal savings association that becomes
subject to the minimum liquidity standard and other requirements of
this part under paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this section must comply with
the requirements of this part subject to a transition period specified
by the OCC.
0
8. In Sec. 50.3:
0
a. Add the definition of Average weighted short-term wholesale funding
in alphabetical order;
0
b. Revise the definition for Calculation date;
0
c. Add the definitions of Call Report, Category II national bank or
Federal savings association, Category II foreign banking organization,
Category III foreign banking organization, and Category III national
bank or Federal savings association in alphabetical order;
0
d. Revise the definition for Covered depository institution holding
company;
0
e. Add the definitions of Foreign banking organization, FR Y-9LP, FR Y-
15, Global systemically important BHC, and GSIB depository institution
in alphabetical order;
0
f. Revise the definition for Regulated financial company; and
0
g. Add the definitions of State and U.S. intermediate holding company
in alphabetical order.
The additions and revisions read as follows:
Sec. 50.3 Definitions.
* * * * *
Average weighted short-term wholesale funding means the average of
the banking organization's weighted short-term wholesale funding for
each of the four most recent calendar quarters as reported quarterly on
the FR Y-15 or, if the banking organization has not filed the FR Y-15
for each of the four most recent calendar quarters, for the most recent
quarter or quarters, as applicable.
* * * * *
[[Page 24334]]
Calculation date means, for purposes of subparts A through J of
this part, any date on which a national bank or Federal savings
association calculates its liquidity coverage ratio under Sec.
[thinsp]50.21, and for purposes of subparts K through N of this part,
any date on which a national bank or Federal savings association
calculates its net stable funding ratio (NSFR) under Sec. 50.100.
Call Report means the Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income.
Category II foreign banking organization means a foreign banking
organization that is identified as a Category II banking organization
pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5.
Category III foreign banking organization means a foreign banking
organization that is identified as a Category III banking organization
pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5.
Category II national bank or Federal savings association means:
(1)(i) A national bank or Federal savings association that:
(A) Is a consolidated subsidiary of:
(1) A company that is defined as a Category II banking organization
pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5 or 12 CFR 238.10, as applicable; or
(2) A depository institution that meets the criteria in paragraph
(2)(ii)(A) or (B) of this definition; and
(B) Has total consolidated assets, calculated based on the average
of the national bank's or Federal savings association's total
consolidated assets for the four most recent calendar quarters as
reported on the Call Report, equal to $10 billion or more.
(ii) If the national bank or Federal savings association has not
filed the Call Report for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters, total consolidated assets means the average of its total
consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report, for the most
recent quarter or quarters, as applicable. After meeting the criteria
under this paragraph (1), a national bank or Federal savings
association continues to be a Category II national bank or Federal
savings association until the national bank or Federal savings
association has less than $10 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters, or the national bank or Federal savings association is no
longer a consolidated subsidiary an entity described in paragraph
(1)(i)(A)(1) or (2) of this definition; or
(2) A depository institution that:
(i) Is a national bank or Federal savings association; and
(ii)(A) Has total consolidated assets, calculated based on the
average of the depository institution's total consolidated assets for
the four most recent calendar quarters as reported on the Consolidated
Report of Condition and Income (Call Report), equal to $700 billion or
more. If the depository institution has not filed the Call Report for
each of the four most recent calendar quarters, total consolidated
assets means the average of its total consolidated assets, as reported
on the Call Report, for the most recent quarter or quarters, as
applicable; or
(B) Has:
(1) Total consolidated assets, calculated based on the average of
the depository institution's total consolidated assets for the four
most recent calendar quarters as reported on the Call Report, of $100
billion or more but less than $700 billion. If the depository
institution has not filed the Call Report for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, total consolidated assets means the average
of its total consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report, for
the most recent quarter or quarters, as applicable; and
(2) Cross-jurisdictional activity, calculated based on the average
of its cross-jurisdictional activity for the four most recent
consecutive quarters, of $75 billion or more. Cross-jurisdictional
activity is the sum of cross-jurisdictional claims and cross-
jurisdictional liabilities, calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the FR Y-15 or equivalent reporting form.
(iii) After meeting the criteria in paragraphs (2)(i) and (ii) of
this definition, a national bank or Federal savings association
continues to be a Category II national bank or Federal savings
association until the national bank or Federal savings association:
(A)(1) Has less than $700 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters; and
(2) Has less than $75 billion in cross-jurisdictional activity for
each of the four most recent calendar quarters. Cross-jurisdictional
activity is the sum of cross-jurisdictional claims and cross-
jurisdictional liabilities, calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the FR Y-15 or equivalent reporting form;
(B) Has less than $100 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters; or
(C) Is a GSIB depository institution.
Category III national bank or Federal savings association means:
(1)(i) A national bank or Federal savings association that:
(A) Is a consolidated subsidiary of:
(1) A company that is defined as a Category III banking
organization pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5 or 12 CFR 238.10, as applicable;
or
(2) A depository institution that meets the criteria in paragraph
(2)(ii)(A) or (B) of this definition; and
(B) has total consolidated assets, calculated based on the average
of the national bank's or Federal savings association's total
consolidated assets for the four most recent calendar quarters as
reported on the Call Report, equal to $10 billion or more.
(ii) If the national bank or Federal savings association has not
filed the Call Report for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters, total consolidated assets means the average of its total
consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report, for the most
recent quarter or quarters, as applicable. After meeting the criteria
under this paragraph (1), a national bank or Federal savings
association continues to be a Category III national bank or Federal
savings association until the national bank or Federal savings
association has less than $10 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters, or the national bank or Federal savings association is no
longer a consolidated subsidiary of an entity described in paragraph
(1)(i)(A)(1) or (2) of this definition; or
(2) A depository institution that:
(i) Is a national bank or Federal savings association; and
(ii)(A) Has total consolidated assets, calculated based on the
average of the depository institution's total consolidated assets for
the four most recent calendar quarters as reported on the Consolidated
Report of Condition and Income (Call Report), equal to $250 billion or
more. If the depository institution has not filed the Call Report for
each of the four most recent calendar quarters, total consolidated
assets means the average of its total consolidated assets, as reported
on the Call Report, for the most recent quarter or quarters, as
applicable; or
(B) Has:
(1) Total consolidated assets, calculated based on the average of
the depository institution's total consolidated assets for the four
most recent calendar quarters as reported on the Call Report, of at
least $100 billion but less than $250 billion. If the depository
institution has not filed the Call Report for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, total consolidated assets means the average
of its total consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report, for
the most recent quarter or quarters, as applicable; and
(2) One or more of the following in paragraphs (2)(ii)(B)(2)(i)
through (iii) of
[[Page 24335]]
this definition, each measured as the average of the four most recent
quarters, or if the depository institution has not filed each
applicable reporting form for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters, for the most recent quarter or quarters, as applicable:
(i) Total nonbank assets, calculated in accordance with
instructions to the FR Y-9LP or equivalent reporting form, equal to $75
billion or more;
(ii) Off-balance sheet exposure, calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the FR Y-15 or equivalent reporting form, minus the
total consolidated assets of the depository institution, as reported on
the Call Report, equal to $75 billion or more; or
(iii) Weighted short-term wholesale funding, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-15 or equivalent reporting
form, equal to $75 billion or more.
(iii) After meeting the criteria in paragraphs (2)(i) and (ii) of
this definition, a national bank or Federal savings association
continues to be a Category III national bank or Federal savings
association until the national bank or Federal savings association:
(A)(1) Has less than $250 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters;
(2) Has less than $75 billion in total nonbank assets, calculated
in accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-9LP or equivalent
reporting form, for each of the four most recent calendar quarters;
(3) Has less than $75 billion in weighted short-term wholesale
funding, calculated in accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-15
or equivalent reporting form, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters; and
(4) Has less than $75 billion in off-balance sheet exposure for
each of the four most recent calendar quarters. Off-balance sheet
exposure is a national bank's or Federal savings association's total
exposure, calculated in accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-15
or equivalent reporting form, minus the total consolidated assets of
the national bank or Federal savings association, as reported on the
Call Report; or
(B) Has less than $100 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters; or
(C) Is a Category II national bank or Federal savings bank; or
(D) Is a GSIB depository institution.
* * * * *
Covered depository institution holding company means a top-tier
bank holding company or savings and loan holding company domiciled in
the United States other than:
(1) A top-tier savings and loan holding company that is:
(i) A grandfathered unitary savings and loan holding company as
defined in section 10(c)(9)(A) of the Home Owners' Loan Act (12 U.S.C.
1461 et seq.); and
(ii) As of June 30 of the previous calendar year, derived 50
percent or more of its total consolidated assets or 50 percent of its
total revenues on an enterprise-wide basis (as calculated under GAAP)
from activities that are not financial in nature under section 4(k) of
the Bank Holding Company Act (12 U.S.C. 1842(k));
(2) A top-tier depository institution holding company that is an
insurance underwriting company;
(3)(i) A top-tier depository institution holding company that, as
of June 30 of the previous calendar year, held 25 percent or more of
its total consolidated assets in subsidiaries that are insurance
underwriting companies (other than assets associated with insurance for
credit risk); and
(ii) For purposes of paragraph (3)(i) of this definition, the
company must calculate its total consolidated assets in accordance with
GAAP, or if the company does not calculate its total consolidated
assets under GAAP for any regulatory purpose (including compliance with
applicable securities laws), the company may estimate its total
consolidated assets, subject to review and adjustment by the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System; or
(4) A U.S. intermediate holding company.
* * * * *
Foreign banking organization has the same meaning as in 12 CFR
211.21(o) (Sec. 211.21(o) of the Board's Regulation K), provided that
if the top-tier foreign banking organization is incorporated in or
organized under the laws of any State, the foreign banking organization
shall not be treated as a foreign banking organization for purposes of
this part.
* * * * *
FR Y-15 means the Systemic Risk Report.
FR Y-9LP means the Parent Company Only Financial Statements for
Large Holding Companies.
* * * * *
Global systemically important BHC means a bank holding company
identified as a global systemically important BHC pursuant to 12 CFR
217.402.
GSIB depository institution means a depository institution that is
a consolidated subsidiary of a global systemically important BHC and
has total consolidated assets equal to $10 billion or more, calculated
based on the average of the depository institution's total consolidated
assets for the four most recent calendar quarters as reported on the
Call Report. If the depository institution has not filed the Call
Report for each of the four most recent calendar quarters, total
consolidated assets means the average of its total consolidated assets,
as reported on the Call Report, for the most recent calendar quarter or
quarters, as applicable. After meeting the criteria under this
definition, a depository institution continues to be a GSIB depository
institution until the depository institution has less than $10 billion
in total consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report, for each
of the four most recent calendar quarters, or the depository
institution is no longer a consolidated subsidiary of a global
systemically important BHC.
* * * * *
Regulated financial company means:
(1) A depository institution holding company or designated company;
(2) A company included in the organization chart of a depository
institution holding company on the Form FR Y-6, as listed in the
hierarchy report of the depository institution holding company produced
by the National Information Center (NIC) website,\2\ provided that the
top-tier depository institution holding company is subject to a minimum
liquidity standard under 12 CFR part 249;
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\2\ https://www.ffiec.gov/nicpubweb/nicweb/NicHome.aspx.
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(3) A depository institution; foreign bank; credit union;
industrial loan company, industrial bank, or other similar institution
described in section 2 of the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956, as
amended (12 U.S.C. 1841 et seq.); national bank, state member bank, or
state non-member bank that is not a depository institution;
(4) An insurance company;
(5) A securities holding company as defined in section 618 of the
Dodd-Frank Act (12 U.S.C. 1850a); broker or dealer registered with the
SEC under section 15 of the Securities Exchange Act (15 U.S.C. 78o);
futures commission merchant as defined in section 1a of the Commodity
Exchange Act of 1936 (7 U.S.C. 1 et seq.); swap dealer as defined in
section 1a of the Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1a); or security-
based swap dealer as defined in section 3 of the Securities Exchange
Act (15 U.S.C. 78c);
[[Page 24336]]
(6) A designated financial market utility, as defined in section
803 of the Dodd-Frank Act (12 U.S.C. 5462);
(7) A U.S. intermediate holding company; and
(8) Any company not domiciled in the United States (or a political
subdivision thereof) that is supervised and regulated in a manner
similar to entities described in paragraphs (1) through (7) of this
definition (e.g., a foreign banking organization, foreign insurance
company, foreign securities broker or dealer or foreign financial
market utility).
(9) A regulated financial company does not include:
(i) U.S. government-sponsored enterprises;
(ii) Small business investment companies, as defined in section 102
of the Small Business Investment Act of 1958 (15 U.S.C. 661 et seq.);
(iii) Entities designated as Community Development Financial
Institutions (CDFIs) under 12 U.S.C. 4701 et seq. and 12 CFR part 1805;
or
(iv) Central banks, the Bank for International Settlements, the
International Monetary Fund, or multilateral development banks.
* * * * *
State means any state, commonwealth, territory, or possession of
the United States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, American Samoa,
Guam, or the United States Virgin Islands.
* * * * *
U.S. intermediate holding company means a company formed by a
foreign banking organization pursuant to 12 CFR 252.153.
* * * * *
0
9. In Sec. 50.30, revise paragraph (a) and add paragraphs (c) and (d)
to read as follows:
Sec. 50.30 Total net cash outflow amount.
(a) Calculation of total net cash outflow amount. As of the
calculation date, a national bank's or Federal savings association's
total net cash outflow amount equals the national bank's or Federal
savings association's outflow adjustment percentage as determined under
paragraph (c) of this section multiplied by:
(1) The sum of the outflow amounts calculated under Sec. 50.32(a)
through (l); minus
(2) The lesser of:
(i) The sum of the inflow amounts calculated under Sec. 50.33(b)
through (g); and
(ii) 75 percent of the amount calculated under paragraph (a)(1) of
this section; plus
(3) The maturity mismatch add-on as calculated under paragraph (b)
of this section.
* * * * *
(c) Outflow adjustment percentage. A national bank's or Federal
savings association's outflow adjustment percentage is determined
pursuant to Table 1 to this section.
Table 1 to Sec. 50.30--Outflow Adjustment Percentages
[Outflow adjustment percentage]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
A GSIB depository institution............. 100 percent.
Category II national bank or Federal 100 percent.
savings association.
Category III national bank or Federal 100 percent.
savings association that:
(1) Is a consolidated subsidiary of a
Category III banking organization with
$75 billion or more in average weighted
short-term wholesale funding; or
(2) Has $75 billion or more in average
weighted short-term wholesale funding and
is not consolidated under a holding
company
Category III national bank or Federal [70 to 85] percent.
savings association that:
(1) Is a consolidated subsidiary of a
Category III banking organization with
less than $75 billion in average weighted
short-term wholesale funding; or
(2) Has less than $75 billion in average
weighted short-term wholesale funding and
is not consolidated under a holding
company
A national bank or Federal savings 100 percent.
association that is described in Sec.
50.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated
subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate holding
company of a Category II foreign banking
organization.
A national bank or Federal savings 100 percent.
association that is described in Sec.
50.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated
subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate holding
company of a Category III foreign banking
organization with $75 billion or more in
average weighted short-term wholesale
funding.
A national bank or Federal savings [70 to 85] percent.
association that is described in Sec.
50.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated
subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate holding
company of a Category III foreign banking
organization with less than $75 billion
in average weighted short-term wholesale
funding.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(d) Transition. A national bank or Federal savings association
whose outflow adjustment percentage increases from a lower to a higher
outflow adjustment percentage may continue to use its previous lower
outflow adjustment percentage until the first day of the second
calendar quarter after the outflow adjustment percentage increases.
0
10. In Sec. 50.50, revise paragraph (a) to read as follows
Sec. 50.50 Transitions.
(a) Depository institution subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate
holding company. A national bank or Federal savings association that
becomes subject to this part under Sec. 50.1(b)(1)(ii) does not need
to comply with the minimum liquidity standard and other requirements of
this part until [one year after effective date of final rule], at which
time the national bank or Federal savings association must begin to
calculate and maintain a liquidity coverage ratio daily in accordance
with subparts A through N of this part, if the national bank or Federal
savings association is a consolidated subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate
holding company that, immediately prior to [effective date of final
rule]:
(1) Was domiciled in the United States;
(2) Had total consolidated assets equal to $50 billion or more
(based on the average of the U.S. intermediate holding company's four
most recent Consolidated Financial Statements for Holding Companies
reporting forms (FR Y-9Cs));
(3) Had total consolidated assets less than $250 billion as of the
2018 year-end FR Y-9C or Call Report, as applicable; and
(4) Had total consolidated on-balance sheet foreign exposure of
less than $10 billion as of year-end 2018 (where total on-balance sheet
foreign exposure
[[Page 24337]]
equals total cross-border claims less claims with a head office or
guarantor located in another country plus redistributed guaranteed
amounts to the country of the head office or guarantor plus local
country claims on local residents plus revaluation gains on foreign
exchange and derivative transaction products, calculated in accordance
with the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council (FFIEC) 009
Country Exposure Report).
* * * * *
0
11. Section 50.105, as proposed to be added at 81 FR 35124 (June 1,
2016), is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 50.105 Calculation of required stable funding amount.
(a) As of the calculation date, a national bank or Federal savings
association's required stable funding (RSF) amount equals the national
bank or Federal savings association's required stable funding
adjustment percentage as determined under paragraph (b) of this section
multiplied by the sum of:
(1) The carrying values of a national bank or Federal savings
association's assets (other than amounts included in the calculation of
the derivatives RSF amount pursuant to Sec. 50.107(b)) and the undrawn
amounts of a national bank or Federal savings association's credit and
liquidity facilities, in each case multiplied by the RSF factors
applicable in Sec. 50.106; and
(2) The national bank or Federal savings association's derivatives
RSF amount calculated pursuant to Sec. 50.107(b).
(b) A national bank or Federal savings association's required
stable funding adjustment percentage is determined pursuant to Table 1
to this section.
Table 1 to Sec. 50.105--Required Stable Funding Adjustment Percentages
[Required stable funding adjustment percentage]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
A GSIB depository institution............. 100 percent.
Category II national bank or Federal 100 percent.
savings association.
Category III national bank or Federal 100 percent.
savings association that:
(1) Is a consolidated subsidiary of a
Category III banking organization with
$75 billion or more in average weighted
short-term wholesale funding; or
(2) Has $75 billion or more in average
weighted short-term wholesale funding and
is not consolidated under a holding
company
Category III national bank or Federal [70 to 85] percent.
savings association that:
(1) Is a consolidated subsidiary of a
Category III banking organization with
less than $75 billion in average weighted
short-term wholesale funding; or
(2) Has less than $75 billion in average
weighted short-term wholesale funding and
is not consolidated under a holding
company
A national bank or Federal savings 100 percent.
association that is described in Sec.
50.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated
subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate holding
company of a Category II foreign banking
organization.
A national bank or Federal savings 100 percent.
association that is described in Sec.
50.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated
subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate holding
company of a Category III foreign banking
organization with $75 billion or more in
average weighted short-term wholesale
funding.
A national bank or Federal savings [70 to 85] percent.
association that is described in Sec.
50.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated
subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate holding
company of a Category III foreign banking
organization with less than $75 billion
in average weighted short-term wholesale
funding.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(c) A national bank or Federal savings association whose required
stable funding adjustment percentage increases from a lower to a higher
required stable funding adjustment percentage may continue to use its
previous lower required stable funding adjustment percentage until the
first day of the second calendar quarter after the required stable
funding adjustment percentage increases.
BOARD OF GOVERNORS OF THE FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Chapter II
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the Supplementary Information, chapter
II of title 12 of the Code of Federal Regulations is proposed to be
amended as follows:
PART 217--CAPITAL ADEQUACY OF BANK HOLDING COMPANIES, SAVINGS AND
LOAN HOLDING COMPANIES, AND STATE MEMBER BANKS (REGULATION Q)
0
12. The authority citation for part 217 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 248(a), 321-338a, 481-486, 1462a, 1467a,
1818, 1828, 1831n, 1831o, 1831p-1, 1831w, 1835, 1844(b), 1851, 3904,
3906-3909, 4808, 5365, 5368, 5371.
0
13. Section 217.2, as proposed to be amended at 83 FR 66024 (December
21, 2018), is further amended by revising the definitions of Advanced
approaches Board-regulated institution, Category II Board-regulated
institution, Category III Board-regulated institution, FR Y-15, and FR
Y-9LP and adding the definition of U.S. intermediate holding company in
alphabetical order to read as follows:
Sec. 217.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
Advanced-approaches Board-regulated institution means a Board-
regulated institution that is described in Sec. 217.100(b)(1).
* * * * *
Category II Board-regulated institution means:
(1) A depository institution holding company that is identified as
a Category II banking organization pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5 or 12 CFR
238.10, as applicable;
(2) A U.S. intermediate holding company that is identified as a
Category II banking organization pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5;
(3) A state member bank that is a subsidiary of a company
identified in paragraph (1) of this definition; or
(4) A state member bank that:
(i)(A) Has total consolidated assets, calculated based on the
average of the state member bank's total consolidated assets for the
four most recent calendar quarters as reported on the Call Report,
equal to $700 billion or more. If the state member bank has not filed
the Call Report for each of the four most recent calendar quarters,
total consolidated assets is calculated based on the average
[[Page 24338]]
of its total consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report, for
the most recent quarter or quarters, as applicable; or
(B) Has:
(1) Total consolidated assets, calculated based on the average of
the state member bank's total consolidated assets for the four most
recent calendar quarters as reported on the Call Report, of $100
billion or more but less than $700 billion. If the state member bank
has not filed the Call Report for each of the four most recent
quarters, total consolidated assets means the average of its total
consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report, for the most
recent quarter or quarters, as applicable; and
(2) Cross-jurisdictional activity, calculated based on the average
of its cross-jurisdictional activity for the four most recent calendar
quarters, of $75 billion or more. Cross-jurisdictional activity is the
sum of cross-jurisdictional claims and cross-jurisdictional
liabilities, calculated in accordance with the instructions to the FR
Y-15 or equivalent reporting form.
(ii) After meeting the criteria in paragraph (4)(i) of this
section, a state member bank continues to be a Category II Board-
regulated institution until the state member bank:
(A) Has:
(1) Less than $700 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters; and
(2) Less than $75 billion in cross-jurisdictional activity for each
of the four most recent calendar quarters. Cross-jurisdictional
activity is the sum of cross-jurisdictional claims and cross-
jurisdictional liabilities, calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the FR Y-15 or equivalent reporting form; or
(B) Has less than $100 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters.
Category III Board-regulated institution means:
(1) A depository institution holding company that is identified as
a Category III banking organization pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5 or 12 CFR
238.10, as applicable;
(2) A U.S. intermediate holding company that is identified as a
Category III banking organization pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5;
(3) A state member bank that is a subsidiary of a company
identified in paragraph (1) of this definition;
(4) A depository institution that:
(i)(A) Has total consolidated assets, calculated based on the
average of the state member bank's total consolidated assets for the
four most recent calendar quarters as reported on the Call Report,
equal to $250 billion or more. If the state member bank has not filed
the Call Report for each of the four most recent calendar quarters,
total consolidated assets is calculated based on the average of its
total consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report, for the most
recent quarter or quarters, as applicable; or
(B) Has:
(1) Total consolidated assets, calculated based on the average of
the state member bank's total consolidated assets for the four most
recent calendar quarters as reported on the Call Report, of $100
billion or more but less than $250 billion. If the state member bank
has not filed the Call Report for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters, total consolidated assets is calculated based on the average
of its total consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report, for
the most recent quarter or quarters, as applicable; and
(2) At least one of the following in paragraphs (4)(i)(B)(2)(i)
through (iii) of this definition, each calculated as the average of the
four most recent calendar quarters:
(i) Total nonbank assets, calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the FR Y-9LP or equivalent reporting form, equal to $75
billion or more;
(ii) Off-balance sheet exposure equal to $75 billion or more. Off-
balance sheet exposure is a state member bank's total exposure,
calculated in accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-15 or
equivalent reporting form, minus the total consolidated assets of the
state member bank, as reported on the Call Report; or
(iii) Weighted short-term wholesale funding, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-15 or equivalent reporting
form, equal to $75 billion or more; or
(ii) [Reserved]
(5)(i) A subsidiary of a depository institution identified in
paragraph (4)(i) of this definition.
(ii) After meeting the criteria in paragraph (4)(i) of this
definition, a state member bank continues to be a Category III Board-
regulated institution until the state member bank:
(A) Has:
(1) Less than $250 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters;
(2) Less than $75 billion in total nonbank assets, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-9LP or equivalent
reporting form, for each of the four most recent calendar quarters;
(3) Less than $75 billion in weighted short-term wholesale funding,
calculated in accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-15 or
equivalent reporting form, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters; and
(4) Less than $75 billion in off-balance sheet exposure for each of
the four most recent calendar quarters. Off-balance sheet exposure is a
state member bank's total exposure, calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the FR Y-15 or equivalent reporting form, minus the
total consolidated assets of the state member bank, as reported on the
Call Report; or
(B) Has less than $100 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters; or
(C) Is a Category II Board-regulated institution.
* * * * *
FR Y-15 means the Systemic Risk Report.
FR Y-9LP means the Parent Company Only Financial Statements for
Large Holding Companies.
* * * * *
U.S. intermediate holding company means the company that is
required to be established or designated pursuant to 12 CFR 252.153.
* * * * *
0
14. In Sec. 217.10, revise paragraphs (a)(5), (c) introductory text,
and (c)(4)(i) introductory text to read as follows:
Sec. 217.10 Minimum capital requirements.
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(5) For advanced approaches Board-regulated institutions or, for
Category III Board-regulated institutions, a supplementary leverage
ratio of 3 percent.
* * * * *
(c) Advanced approaches and Category III capital ratio
calculations. An advanced approaches Board-regulated institution that
has completed the parallel run process and received notification from
the Board pursuant to Sec. 217.121(d) must determine its regulatory
capital ratios as described in paragraphs (c)(1) through (3) of this
section. An advanced approaches Board-regulated institution must
determine its supplementary leverage ratio in accordance with paragraph
(c)(4) of this section, beginning with the calendar quarter immediately
following the quarter in which the Board-regulated institution meets
any of the criteria in Sec. 217.100(b)(1). A Category III Board-
regulated institution must determine its supplementary leverage
[[Page 24339]]
ratio in accordance with paragraph (c)(4) of this section, beginning
with the calendar quarter immediately following the quarter in which
the Board-regulated institution is identified as a Category III Board-
regulated institution.
* * * * *
(4) Supplementary leverage ratio. (i) An advanced approaches Board-
regulated institution's or a Category III Board-regulated institution's
supplementary leverage ratio is the ratio of its tier 1 capital to
total leverage exposure, the latter which is calculated as the sum of:
* * * * *
0
15. In Sec. 217.11, revise paragraphs (b)(1) introductory text and
(b)(1)(ii) to read as follows:
Sec. 217.11 Capital conservation buffer, countercyclical capital
buffer amount, and GSIB surcharge.
* * * * *
(b) Countercyclical capital buffer amount--(1) General. An advanced
approaches Board-regulated institution or a Category III Board-
regulated institution must calculate a countercyclical capital buffer
amount in accordance with this paragraph (b) for purposes of
determining its maximum payout ratio under Table 1 to this section.
* * * * *
(ii) Amount. An advanced approaches Board-regulated institution or
a Category III Board-regulated institution has a countercyclical
capital buffer amount determined by calculating the weighted average of
the countercyclical capital buffer amounts established for the national
jurisdictions where the Board-regulated institution's private sector
credit exposures are located, as specified in paragraphs (b)(2) and (3)
of this section.
* * * * *
0
16. In Sec. 217.100, revise paragraph (b)(1) to read as follows:
Sec. 217.100 Purpose, applicability, and principle of conservatism.
* * * * *
(b) Applicability. (1) This subpart applies to:
(i) A top-tier bank holding company or savings and loan holding
company domiciled in the United States that:
(A) Is not a consolidated subsidiary of another bank holding
company or savings and loan holding company that uses this subpart to
calculate its risk-based capital requirements; and
(B) That:
(1) Is identified as a global systemically important BHC pursuant
to Sec. 217.402;
(2) Is identified as a Category II banking organization pursuant to
12 CFR 252.5 or 12 CFR 238.10; or
(3) Has a subsidiary depository institution that is required, or
has elected, to use 12 CFR part 3, subpart E (OCC), this subpart
(Board), or 12 CFR part 324, subpart E (FDIC), to calculate its risk-
based capital requirements;
(ii) A state member bank that:
(A) Is a subsidiary of a global systemically important BHC;
(B) Is a Category II Board-regulated institution;
(C) Is a subsidiary of a depository institution that uses 12 CFR
part 3, subpart E (OCC), this subpart E (Board), or 12 CFR part 324,
subpart E (FDIC), to calculate its risk-based capital requirements; or
(D) Is a subsidiary of a bank holding company or savings and loan
holding company that uses this subpart to calculate its risk-based
capital requirements; or
(iii) Any Board-regulated institution that elects to use this
subpart to calculate its risk-based capital requirements.
* * * * *
PART 249--LIQUIDITY RISK MEASUREMENT STANDARDS (REGULATION WW)
0
17. Revise the authority citation for part 249 to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 248(a), 321-338a, 481-486, 1467a(g)(1),
1818, 1828, 1831p-1, 1831o-1, 1844(b), 5365, 5366, 5368; 12 U.S.C.
3101 et seq.
0
18. Revise Sec. 249.1 to read as follows:
Sec. 249.1 Purpose and applicability.
(a) Purpose. This part establishes a minimum liquidity standard and
a minimum stable funding standard for certain Board-regulated
institutions on a consolidated basis, as set forth in this part.
(b) Applicability. (1) A Board-regulated institution is subject to
the minimum liquidity standard, minimum stable funding standard, and
other requirements of this part if:
(i) It is a:
(A) Global systemically important BHC;
(B) GSIB depository institution;
(C) Category II Board-regulated institution;
(D) Category III Board-regulated institution; or
(E) Category IV Board-regulated institution with $50 billion or
more in average weighted short-term wholesale funding;
(ii) It is a depository institution, other than a Federal branch or
insured branch (as defined in 12 U.S.C. 1813(s)(2) and (3)), that has
total consolidated assets, calculated based on the average of the
depository institution's total consolidated assets for the four most
recent calendar quarters as reported on the Call Report, equal to $10
billion or more and is a consolidated subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate
holding company of either a Category II foreign banking organization or
a Category III foreign banking organization. If the depository
institution has not filed the Call Report for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, total consolidated assets is calculated based
on the average of its total consolidated assets, as reported on the
Call Report, for the most recent quarter or quarters, as applicable;
(iii) It is a covered nonbank company; or
(iv) The Board has determined that application of this part is
appropriate in light of the Board-regulated institution's asset size,
level of complexity, risk profile, scope of operations, affiliation
with foreign or domestic covered entities, or risk to the financial
system.
(2)(i) A Board-regulated institution that initially becomes subject
to the minimum liquidity standard, minimum stable funding standard, and
other requirements of this part under paragraph (b)(1)(i), (ii), or
(iii) of this section must comply with the requirements of this part
beginning on the first day of the second calendar quarter after which
the Board-regulated institution becomes subject to this part, except
that a Board-regulated institution that is not a Category IV Board-
regulated institution must:
(A) For the first three calendar quarters after the Board-regulated
institution begins complying with the minimum liquidity standard and
other requirements of this part, calculate and maintain a liquidity
coverage ratio monthly, on each calculation date that is the last
business day of the applicable calendar month; and
(B) Beginning one year after the Board-regulated institution
becomes subject to the minimum liquidity standard and other
requirements of this part and continuing thereafter, calculate and
maintain a liquidity coverage ratio on each calculation date.
(ii) A Board-regulated institution that becomes subject to the
minimum liquidity standard, minimum funding standard, and other
requirements of this part under paragraph (b)(1)(iv) of this section,
must comply with the requirements of this part subject to a transition
period specified by the Board.
(3) This part does not apply to:
(i) A bridge financial company as defined in 12 U.S.C. 5381(a)(3),
or a
[[Page 24340]]
subsidiary of a bridge financial company; or
(ii) A new depository institution or a bridge depository
institution, as defined in 12 U.S.C. 1813(i).
(4) A Board-regulated institution subject to a minimum liquidity
standard, minimum stable funding standard, and other requirements of
this part shall remain subject until the Board determines in writing
that application of this part to the Board-regulated institution is not
appropriate in light of the Board-regulated institution's asset size,
level of complexity, risk profile, scope of operations, affiliation
with foreign or domestic covered entities, or risk to the financial
system.
(5) In making a determination under paragraph (b)(1)(iv) or (b)(4)
of this section, the Board will apply, as appropriate, notice and
response procedures in the same manner and to the same extent as the
notice and response procedures set forth in 12 CFR 263.202.
(c) Covered nonbank companies. The Board will establish a minimum
liquidity standard, minimum stable funding standard, and other
requirements for a designated company under this part by rule or order.
In establishing such standard, the Board will consider the factors set
forth in sections 165(a)(2) and (b)(3) of the Dodd-Frank Act and may
tailor the application of the requirements of this part to the
designated company based on the nature, scope, size, scale,
concentration, interconnectedness, mix of the activities of the
designated company, or any other risk-related factor that the Board
determines is appropriate.
0
19. Amend Sec. 249.3 by:
0
a. Adding the definition for ``Average weighted short-term wholesale
funding'' in alphabetical order;
0
b. Revising the definitions for ``Calculation date'';
0
c. Adding the definitions for ``Call Report'', ``Category II Board-
regulated institution'', ``Category III Board-regulated institution'',
``Category IV Board-regulated institution'', ``Category II foreign
banking organization'', ``Category III foreign banking organization'',
and ``Category IV foreign banking organization'' in alphabetical order;
0
d. Revising the definition for ``Covered depository institution holding
company'';
0
e. Adding the definitions for ``Foreign banking organization'', ``FR Y-
9LP'', ``FR Y-15'', ``Global systemically important BHC'', and ``GSIB
depository institution'' in alphabetical order;
0
f. Revising the definition for ``Regulated financial company''; and
0
g. Adding the definitions for ``State'' and ``U.S. intermediate holding
company'' in alphabetical order.
The additions and revisions read as follows:
Sec. 249.3 Definitions.
* * * * *
Average weighted short-term wholesale funding means the average of
the weighted short-term wholesale funding for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters as reported quarterly on the FR Y-15 or, if
the Board-regulated institution or foreign banking organization has not
filed the FR Y-15 for each of the four most recent calendar quarters,
for the most recent quarter or quarters, as applicable.
* * * * *
Calculation date means, for purposes of subparts A through J of
this part, any date on which a Board-regulated institution calculates
its liquidity coverage ratio under Sec. 249.21, and for purposes of
subparts K through N of this part, any date on which a Board-regulated
institution calculates its net stable funding ratio (NSFR) under Sec.
249.100.
Call Report means the Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income.
Category II Board-regulated institution means:
(1) A covered depository institution holding company that is
identified as a Category II banking organization pursuant to 12 CFR
252.5 or 12 CFR 238.10;
(2)(i) A state member bank that:
(A) Is a consolidated subsidiary of:
(1) A company described in paragraph (1) of this definition; or
(2) A depository institution that meets the criteria in paragraph
(3)(ii)(A) or (B) of this definition; and
(B) That has total consolidated assets, calculated based on the
average of the state member bank's total consolidated assets for the
four most recent calendar quarters as reported on the Call Report,
equal to $10 billion or more.
(ii) If the state member bank has not filed the Call Report for
each of the four most recent calendar quarters, total consolidated
assets is calculated based on the average of its total consolidated
assets, as reported on the Call Report, for the most recent quarter or
quarters, as applicable. After meeting the criteria under this
paragraph (2), a state member bank continues to be a Category II Board-
regulated institution until the state member bank has less than $10
billion in total consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report,
for each of the four most recent calendar quarters, or the state member
bank is no longer a consolidated subsidiary of a company described in
paragraph (2)(i)(A)(1) or (2) of this definition; or
(3) A depository institution that:
(i) Is a state member bank; and
(ii)(A) Has total consolidated assets, calculated based on the
average of the depository institution's total consolidated assets for
the four most recent calendar quarters as reported on the Call Report,
equal to $700 billion or more. If the depository institution has not
filed the Call Report for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters, total consolidated assets is calculated based on the average
of its total consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report, for
the most recent quarter or quarters, as applicable; or
(B) Has:
(1) Total consolidated assets, calculated based on the average of
the depository institution's total consolidated assets for the four
most recent calendar quarters as reported on the Call Report, of $100
billion or more but less than $700 billion. If the depository
institution has not filed the Call Report for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, total consolidated assets means the average
of its total consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report, for
the most recent quarter or quarters, as applicable; and
(2) Cross-jurisdictional activity, calculated based on the average
of its cross-jurisdictional activity for the four most recent calendar
quarters, of $75 billion or more. Cross-jurisdictional activity is the
sum of cross-jurisdictional claims and cross-jurisdictional
liabilities, calculated in accordance with the instructions to the FR
Y-15 or equivalent reporting form.
(iii) After meeting the criteria in paragraphs (3)(i) and (ii) of
this definition, a state member bank continues to be a Category II
Board-regulated institution until the state member bank:
(A)(1) Has less than $700 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters; and
(2) Has less than $75 billion in cross-jurisdictional activity for
each of the four most recent calendar quarters. Cross-jurisdictional
activity is the sum of cross-jurisdictional claims and cross-
jurisdictional liabilities, calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the FR Y-15 or equivalent reporting form;
(B) Has less than $100 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters; or
(C) Is a GSIB depository institution.
[[Page 24341]]
Category III Board-regulated institution means:
(1) A covered depository institution holding company that is
identified as a Category III banking organization pursuant to 12 CFR
252.5 or 12 CFR 238.10, as applicable;
(2)(i) A state member bank that is:
(A) A consolidated subsidiary of:
(1) A company described in paragraph (1) of this definition; or
(2) A depository institution that meets the criteria in paragraph
(3)(ii)(A) or (B) of this definition; and
(B) Has total consolidated assets, calculated based on the average
of the state member bank's total consolidated assets for the four most
recent calendar quarters as reported on the Call Report, equal to $10
billion or more.
(ii) If the state member bank has not filed the Call Report for
each of the four most recent calendar quarters, total consolidated
assets means the average of its total consolidated assets, as reported
on the Call Report, for the most recent quarter or quarters, as
applicable. After meeting the criteria under this paragraph (2), a
state member bank continues to be a Category III Board-regulated
institution until the state member bank has less than $10 billion in
total consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report, for each of
the four most recent calendar quarters, or the state member bank is no
longer a consolidated subsidiary of a company an entity described in
paragraph (2)(i)(A)(1) or (2) of this definition; or
(3) A depository institution that:
(i) Is a state member bank; and
(ii)(A) Has total consolidated assets, calculated based on the
average of the depository institution's total consolidated assets in
the four most recent quarters as reported quarterly on the most recent
Call Report, equal to $250 billion or more. If the depository
institution has not filed the Call Report for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, total consolidated assets means the average
of its total consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report, for
the most recent quarter or quarters, as applicable; or
(B) Has:
(1) Total consolidated assets, calculated based on the average of
the depository institution's total consolidated assets in the four most
recent calendar quarters as reported quarterly on the most recent Call
Report, of $100 billion or more but less than $250 billion. If the
depository institution has not filed the Call Report for each of the
four most recent calendar quarters, total consolidated assets means the
average of its total consolidated assets, as reported on the Call
Report, for the most recent quarter or quarters, as applicable; and
(2) One or more of the following in paragraphs (3)(ii)(B)(2)(i)
through (iii) of this definition, each measured as the average of the
four most recent calendar quarters, or if the depository institution
has not filed the FR Y-9LP or equivalent reporting form, Call Report,
or FR Y-15 or equivalent reporting form, as applicable, for each of the
four most recent calendar quarters, for the most recent quarter or
quarters, as applicable:
(i) Total nonbank assets, calculated in accordance with
instructions to the FR Y-9LP or equivalent reporting form, equal to $75
billion or more;
(ii) Off-balance sheet exposure, calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the FR Y-15 or equivalent reporting form, minus the
total consolidated assets of the depository institution, as reported on
the Call Report, equal to $75 billion or more; or
(iii) Weighted short-term wholesale funding, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-15 or equivalent reporting
form, equal to $75 billion or more.
(iii) After meeting the criteria in paragraphs (3)(i) and (ii) of
this definition, a state member bank continues to be a Category III
Board-regulated institution until the state member bank:
(A)(1) Has less than $250 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters;
(2) Has less than $75 billion in total nonbank assets, calculated
in accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-9LP or equivalent
reporting form, for each of the four most recent calendar quarters;
(3) Has less than $75 billion in weighted short-term wholesale
funding, calculated in accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-15
or equivalent reporting form, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters; and
(4) Has less than $75 billion in off-balance sheet exposure for
each of the four most recent calendar quarters. Off-balance sheet
exposure is a state member bank's total exposure, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-15 or equivalent reporting
form, minus the total consolidated assets of the state member bank, as
reported on the Call Report; or
(B) Has less than $100 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters;
(C) Is a Category II Board-regulated institution; or
(D) Is a GSIB depository institution.
Category IV Board-regulated institution means a covered depository
institution holding company that is identified as a Category IV banking
organization pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5 or 12 CFR 238.10, as applicable.
Category II foreign banking organization means a foreign banking
organization that is identified as a Category II banking organization
pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5.
Category III foreign banking organization means a foreign banking
organization that is identified as a Category III banking organization
pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5.
Category IV foreign banking organization means a foreign banking
organization that is identified as a Category IV banking organization
pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5.
* * * * *
Covered depository institution holding company means a top-tier
bank holding company or savings and loan holding company domiciled in
the United States other than:
(1) A top-tier savings and loan holding company that is:
(i) A grandfathered unitary savings and loan holding company as
defined in section 10(c)(9)(A) of the Home Owners' Loan Act (12 U.S.C.
1461 et seq.); and
(ii) As of June 30 of the previous calendar year, derived 50
percent or more of its total consolidated assets or 50 percent of its
total revenues on an enterprise-wide basis (as calculated under GAAP)
from activities that are not financial in nature under section 4(k) of
the Bank Holding Company Act (12 U.S.C. 1843(k));
(2) A top-tier depository institution holding company that is an
insurance underwriting company;
(3)(i) A top-tier depository institution holding company that, as
of June 30 of the previous calendar year, held 25 percent or more of
its total consolidated assets in subsidiaries that are insurance
underwriting companies (other than assets associated with insurance for
credit risk); and
(ii) For purposes of paragraph (3)(i) of this definition, the
company must calculate its total consolidated assets in accordance with
GAAP, or if the company does not calculate its total consolidated
assets under GAAP for any regulatory purpose (including compliance with
applicable securities laws), the company may estimate its total
consolidated assets, subject to review and adjustment by the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System; or
[[Page 24342]]
(4) A U.S. intermediate holding company.
* * * * *
Foreign banking organization has the same meaning as in 12 CFR
211.21(o) (Sec. 211.21(o) of the Board's Regulation K), provided that
if the top-tier foreign banking organization is incorporated in or
organized under the laws of any State, the foreign banking organization
shall not be treated as a foreign banking organization for purposes of
this part.
* * * * *
FR Y-15 means the Systemic Risk Report.
FR Y-9LP means the Parent Company Only Financial Statements for
Large Holding Companies.
* * * * *
Global systemically important BHC means a bank holding company
identified as a global systemically important BHC pursuant to 12 CFR
217.402.
GSIB depository institution means a depository institution that is
a consolidated subsidiary of a global systemically important BHC and
has total consolidated assets equal to $10 billion or more, calculated
based on the average of the depository institution's total consolidated
assets for the four most recent calendar quarters as reported on the
Call Report. If the depository institution has not filed the Call
Report for each of the four most recent calendar quarters, total
consolidated assets means the average of its total consolidated assets,
as reported on the Call Report, for the most recent calendar quarter or
quarters, as applicable. After meeting the criteria under this
definition, a depository institution continues to be a GSIB depository
institution until the depository institution has less than $10 billion
in total consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report, for each
of the four most recent calendar quarters, or the depository
institution is no longer a consolidated subsidiary of a global
systemically important BHC.
* * * * *
Regulated financial company means:
(1) A depository institution holding company or designated company;
(2) A company included in the organization chart of a depository
institution holding company on the Form FR Y-6, as listed in the
hierarchy report of the depository institution holding company produced
by the National Information Center (NIC) website,\2\ provided that the
top-tier depository institution holding company is subject to a minimum
liquidity standard under this part;
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ https://www.ffiec.gov/nicpubweb/nicweb/NicHome.aspx.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(3) A depository institution; foreign bank; credit union;
industrial loan company, industrial bank, or other similar institution
described in section 2 of the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956, as
amended (12 U.S.C. 1841 et seq.); national bank, state member bank, or
state non-member bank that is not a depository institution;
(4) An insurance company;
(5) A securities holding company as defined in section 618 of the
Dodd-Frank Act (12 U.S.C. 1850a); broker or dealer registered with the
SEC under section 15 of the Securities Exchange Act (15 U.S.C. 78o);
futures commission merchant as defined in section 1a of the Commodity
Exchange Act of 1936 (7 U.S.C. 1 et seq.); swap dealer as defined in
section 1a of the Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1a); or security-
based swap dealer as defined in section 3 of the Securities Exchange
Act (15 U.S.C. 78c);
(6) A designated financial market utility, as defined in section
803 of the Dodd-Frank Act (12 U.S.C. 5462);
(7) A U.S. intermediate holding company; and
(8) Any company not domiciled in the United States (or a political
subdivision thereof) that is supervised and regulated in a manner
similar to entities described in paragraphs (1) through (7) of this
definition (e.g., a foreign banking organization, foreign insurance
company, foreign securities broker or dealer or foreign financial
market utility).
(9) A regulated financial company does not include:
(i) U.S. government-sponsored enterprises;
(ii) Small business investment companies, as defined in section 102
of the Small Business Investment Act of 1958 (15 U.S.C. 661 et seq.);
(iii) Entities designated as Community Development Financial
Institutions (CDFIs) under 12 U.S.C. 4701 et seq. and 12 CFR part 1805;
or
(iv) Central banks, the Bank for International Settlements, the
International Monetary Fund, or multilateral development banks.
* * * * *
State means any state, commonwealth, territory, or possession of
the United States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, American Samoa,
Guam, or the United States Virgin Islands.
* * * * *
U.S. intermediate holding company means a company formed by a
foreign banking organization pursuant to 12 CFR 252.153.
* * * * *
0
20. In Sec. 249.10, revise paragraph (a) to read as follows:
Sec. 249.10 Liquidity coverage ratio.
(a) Minimum liquidity coverage ratio requirement. Subject to the
transition provisions in subpart F of this part, a Board-regulated
institution must calculate and maintain a liquidity coverage ratio that
is equal to or greater than 1.0 on each business day (or, in the case
of a Category IV Board-regulated institution, on the last business day
of the applicable month) in accordance with this part. A Board-
regulated institution must calculate its liquidity coverage ratio as of
the same time on each calculation date (the elected calculation time).
The Board-regulated institution must select this time by written notice
to the Board prior to [effective date of the final rule]. The Board-
regulated institution may not thereafter change its elected calculation
time without prior written approval from the Board.
* * * * *
0
21. In Sec. 249.30, revise paragraph (a) and add paragraphs (c) and
(d) to read as follows:
Sec. 249.30 Total net cash outflow amount.
(a) Calculation of total net cash outflow amount. As of the
calculation date, a Board-regulated institution's total net cash
outflow amount equals the Board-regulated institution's outflow
adjustment percentage as determined under paragraph (c) of this section
multiplied by:
(1) The sum of the outflow amounts calculated under Sec. 249.32(a)
through (l); minus
(2) The lesser of:
(i) The sum of the inflow amounts calculated under Sec. 249.33(b)
through (g); and
(ii) 75 percent of the amount calculated under paragraph (a)(1) of
this section; plus
(3) The maturity mismatch add-on as calculated under paragraph (b)
of this section.
* * * * *
(c) Outflow adjustment percentage. A Board-regulated institution's
outflow adjustment percentage is determined pursuant to Table 1 to this
section.
[[Page 24343]]
Table 1 to Sec. 249.30--Outflow Adjustment Percentages
[Outflow adjustment percentage]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Global systemically important BHC or GSIB 100 percent.
depository institution.
Category II Board-regulated institution... 100 percent.
Category III Board-regulated institution 100 percent.
with $75 billion or more in average
weighted short-term wholesale funding and
any Category III Board-regulated
institution that is a consolidated
subsidiary of such a Category III Board-
regulated institution.
Category III Board-regulated institution [70 to 85] percent.
with less than $75 billion in average
weighted short-term wholesale funding and
any Category III Board-regulated
institution that is a consolidated
subsidiary of such a Category III Board-
regulated institution.
Category IV Board-regulated institution [70 to 85] percent.
with $50 billion or more in average
weighted short-term wholesale funding.
A state member bank described in Sec. 100 percent.
249.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated
subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate holding
company of a Category II foreign banking
organization.
A state member bank described in Sec. 100 percent.
249.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated
subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate holding
company of a Category III foreign banking
organization with $75 billion or more in
average weighted short-term wholesale
funding.
A state member bank described in Sec. [70 to 85] percent.
249.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated
subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate holding
company of a Category III foreign banking
organization with less than $75 billion
in average weighted short-term wholesale
funding.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(d) Transition. A Board-regulated institution whose outflow
adjustment percentage increases from a lower to a higher outflow
adjustment percentage may continue to use its previous lower outflow
adjustment percentage until the first day of the second calendar
quarter after the outflow adjustment percentage increases.
0
22. Revise Sec. 249.50 to read as follows:
Sec. 249.50 Transitions.
(a) Depository institution subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate
holding company. A Board-regulated institution does not need to comply
with the minimum liquidity standard and other requirements of this part
until [one year after the effective date of the final rule], at which
time the Board-regulated institution must begin to calculate and
maintain a liquidity coverage ratio daily in accordance with this part,
if the Board-regulated institution:
(1) Becomes subject to this part under Sec. 249.1(b)(1)(ii); and
(2) Is a consolidated subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate holding
company that, immediately prior to [effective date of final rule]:
(i) Was domiciled in the United States;
(ii) Had total consolidated assets equal to $50 billion or more
(based on the average of the U.S. intermediate holding company's four
most recent Consolidated Financial Statements for Holding Companies
reporting forms (FR Y-9Cs));
(iii) Had total consolidated assets less than $250 billion as of
the 2018 year-end FR Y-9C or Call Report, as applicable; and
(iv) Had total consolidated on-balance sheet foreign exposure less
than $10 billion as of year-end 2018 (where total on-balance sheet
foreign exposure equals total cross-border claims less claims with a
head office or guarantor located in another country plus redistributed
guaranteed amounts to the country of the head office or guarantor plus
local country claims on local residents plus revaluation gains on
foreign exchange and derivative transaction products, calculated in
accordance with the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council
(FFIEC) 009 Country Exposure Report).
(b) Foreign banking organizations. A foreign banking organization
that becomes subject to subpart O of this part on [effective date of
final rule] does not need to comply with the minimum liquidity standard
of Sec. 249.203 or with the public disclosure requirements of Sec.
249.208 until [one year after the effective date of the final rule], at
which time the foreign banking organization must comply with the
minimum liquidity standard of Sec. 249.203 daily (or, in the case of a
Category IV foreign banking organization, on the last business day of
the applicable calendar month) in accordance with this part, and with
the public disclosure requirements of Sec. 249.208, except:
(1) Beginning on [effective date of final rule] and thereafter, a
foreign banking organization must comply with the minimum liquidity
standard of Sec. 249.203 and with the public disclosure requirements
of Sec. 249.208 beginning on [effective date of final rule] if the
U.S. intermediate holding company:
(i) Had total consolidated assets equal to $250 billion or more, as
of the 2018 year-end FR Y-9C or Call Report, as applicable; or
(ii) Had total consolidated on-balance sheet foreign exposure equal
to $10 billion or more as of year-end 2018 (where total on-balance
sheet foreign exposure equals total cross-border claims less claims
with a head office or guarantor located in another country plus
redistributed guaranteed amounts to the country of the head office or
guarantor plus local country claims on local residents plus revaluation
gains on foreign exchange and derivative transaction products,
calculated in accordance with the Federal Financial Institutions
Examination Council (FFIEC) 009 Country Exposure Report).
(2) From [effective date of final rule] to [one year after the
effective date of the final rule], a foreign banking organization whose
U.S. intermediate holding company, immediately prior to [effective date
of final rule], was domiciled in the United States, had total
consolidated assets equal to $50 billion or more (based on the average
of the U.S. intermediate holding company's four most recent FR Y-9Cs),
and did not meet the criteria set forth in paragraph (b)(1)(i) or (ii)
of this section, must comply with the minimum liquidity standard of
Sec. 249.203 and with the public disclosure requirements of Sec.
249.208, except:
(i) The foreign banking organization may calculate the requirement
of Sec. 249.203 on the last business day of the applicable calendar
month; and
(ii) As of the calculation date, the foreign banking organization
may calculate the total net cash outflow amount for the U.S.
intermediate holding company to be 70 percent of:
(A) The sum of the outflow amounts for the U.S. intermediate
holding company (calculated under Sec. 249.32(a) through (l) as if the
U.S. intermediate holding company and not the foreign banking
organization were the top-tier Board-regulated institution); less:
(B) The lesser of:
(1) The sum of the inflow amounts (calculated under Sec. 249.33(b)
through (g) as if the U.S. intermediate holding company and not the
foreign banking
[[Page 24344]]
organization were the top-tier Board-regulated institution); and
(2) 75 percent of the amount in paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(A) of this
section as calculated for that calendar day.
0
23. In Sec. 249.90, revise paragraphs (a) and (b) to read as follows:
Sec. 249.90 Timing, method and retention of disclosures.
(a) Applicability. A covered depository institution holding company
or covered nonbank company that is subject to Sec. 249.1 must disclose
publicly all the information required under this subpart.
(b) Timing of disclosure. (1) A covered depository institution
holding company or covered nonbank company subject to this subpart must
provide timely public disclosures each calendar quarter of all the
information required under this subpart.
(2) A covered depository institution holding company or covered
nonbank company that is subject to this subpart must provide the
disclosures required by this subpart beginning with the first calendar
quarter that includes the date that is 18 months after the covered
depository institution holding company first became subject to this
subpart.
* * * * *
0
24. In Sec. 249.91:
0
a. Revise Table 1 to Sec. 249.91(a);
0
b. In paragraph (b)(1)(i)(B):
0
i. Remove ``(c)(1), (c)(5), (c)(9), (c)(14), (c)(19), (c)(23), and
(c)(28)'' and add in its place ``(c)(1), (5), (9), (14), (19), (23),
and (28)'' and
0
ii. Remove the semicolon at the end of the paragraph and add a period
in its place.
0
c. Remove paragraph (b)(1)(ii) and redesignate paragraph (b)(1)(iii) as
paragraph (b)(1)(ii);
0
d. Revise paragraphs (c)(32) and (33): and
0
e. Add paragraphs (c)(34) and (35).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 249.91 Disclosure requirements.
(a) * * *
Table 1 to Sec. 249.91(a)--Disclosure Template
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average Average
XX/XX/XXXX to YY/YY/YYYY (In millions unweighted weighted
of U.S. dollars) amount amount
------------------------------------------------------------------------
High-Quality Liquid Assets
1. Total eligible high-quality
liquid assets (HQLA), of which:....
2. Eligible level 1 liquid assets..
3. Eligible level 2A liquid assets.
4. Eligible level 2B liquid assets.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cash Outflow Amounts
5. Deposit outflow from retail
customers and counterparties, of
which:.............................
6. Stable retail deposit outflow...
7. Other retail funding............
8. Brokered deposit outflow........
9. Unsecured wholesale funding
outflow, of which:.................
10. Operational deposit outflow....
11. Non-operational funding outflow
12. Unsecured debt outflow.........
13. Secured wholesale funding and
asset exchange outflow.............
14. Additional outflow
requirements, of which:............
15. Outflow related to derivative
exposures and other collateral
requirements.......................
16. Outflow related to credit and
liquidity facilities including
unconsolidated structured
transactions and mortgage
commitments........................
17. Other contractual funding
obligation outflow.................
18. Other contingent funding
obligations outflow................
19. Total Cash Outflow.............
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Cash Inflow Amounts
20. Secured lending and asset
exchange cash inflow...............
21. Retail cash inflow.............
22. Unsecured wholesale cash inflow
23. Other cash inflows, of which:..
24. Net derivative cash inflow.....
25. Securities cash inflow.........
26. Broker-dealer segregated
account inflow.....................
27. Other cash inflow..............
28. Total Cash Inflow..............
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Average
Amount \1\
------------------------------------------------------------------------
29. HQLA Amount....................
30. Total Net Cash Outflow Amount
Excluding the Maturity Mismatch Add-
On.................................
31. Maturity Mismatch Add-On.......
32. Total Unadusted Net Cash
Outflow Amount.....................
33. Outflow Adjustment Percentage..
34. Total Adjusted Net Cash Outflow
Amount.............................
35. Liquidity Coverage Ratio (%)...
------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The amounts reported in this column may not equal the calculation
of those amounts using component amounts reported in rows 1-28 due to
technical factors such as the application of the level 2 liquid asset
caps and the total inflow cap.
[[Page 24345]]
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(32) The average amount of the total net cash outflow amount as
calculated under Sec. 249.30 prior to the application of the
applicable outflow adjustment percentage described in Table 1 to Sec.
249.30 (row 32);
(33) The applicable outflow adjustment percentage described in
Table 1 to Sec. 249.30 (row 33);
(34) The average amount of the total net cash outflow as calculated
under Sec. 249.30 (row 34); and
(35) The average of the liquidity coverage ratios as calculated
under Sec. 249.10(b) (row 35).
* * * * *
0
25. Section 249.105, as proposed to be added at 81 FR 35124 (June 1,
2016), is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 249.105 Calculation of required stable funding amount.
(a) Required stable funding amount. A Board-regulated institution's
required stable funding (RSF) amount equals the Board-regulated
institution's required stable funding adjustment percentage as
determined under paragraph (b) of this section multiplied by the sum
of:
(1) The carrying values of a Board-regulated institution's assets
(other than amounts included in the calculation of the derivatives RSF
amount pursuant to Sec. 249.107(b)) and the undrawn amounts of a
Board-regulated institution's credit and liquidity facilities, in each
case multiplied by the RSF factors applicable in Sec. 249.106; and
(2) The Board-regulated institution's derivatives RSF amount
calculated pursuant to Sec. 249.107(b).
(b) Required stable funding adjustment percentage. A Board-
regulated institution's required stable funding adjustment percentage
is determined pursuant to Table 1 to this section.
Table 1 to Sec. 249.105--Required Stable Funding Adjustment
Percentages
[Required stable funding adjustment percentage]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Global systemically important BHC or GSIB 100 percent.
depository institution.
Category II Board-regulated institution... 100 percent.
Category III Board-regulated institution 100 percent.
with $75 billion or more in average
weighted short-term wholesale funding and
any Category III Board-regulated
institution that is a consolidated
subsidiary of such a Category III Board-
regulated institution.
Category III Board-regulated institution [70 to 85] percent.
with less than $75 billion in average
weighted short-term wholesale funding and
any Category III Board-regulated
institution that is a consolidated
subsidiary of such a Category III Board-
regulated institution.
Category IV Board-regulated institution [70 to 85] percent.
with $50 billion or more in average
weighted short-term wholesale funding.
A state member bank described in Sec. 100 percent.
249.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated
subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate holding
company of a Category II foreign banking
organization.
A state member bank described in Sec. 100 percent.
249.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated
subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate holding
company of a Category III foreign banking
organization with $75 billion or more in
average weighted short-term wholesale
funding.
A state member bank described in Sec. [70 to 85] percent.
249.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the consolidated
subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate holding
company of a Category III foreign banking
organization with less than $75 billion
in average weighted short-term wholesale
funding.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(c) Transition. A Board-regulated institution whose required stable
funding adjustment percentage increases from a lower to a higher
required stable funding adjustment percentage may continue to use its
previous lower required stable funding adjustment percentage until the
first day of the second calendar quarter after the required stable
funding adjustment percentage increases.
0
26. Section 249.131, as proposed to be added at 81 FR 35124 (June 1,
2016), is further amended by revising Table 1 to Sec. 249.131(a) and
paragraph (c)(2)(xxii), adding paragraphs (c)(2)(xxiii) and (xxiv), and
revising paragraph (c)(3) to read as follows:
Sec. 249.131 Disclosure requirements.
(a) * * *
BILLING CODE 6210-01-P; 4810-33-P; 6714-01-P;
[[Page 24346]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP24MY19.006
[[Page 24347]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP24MY19.007
[[Page 24348]]
[GRAPHIC] [TIFF OMITTED] TP24MY19.008
BILLING CODE 6210-01-C; 4810-33-C; 6714-01-C
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(2) * * *
(xxii) The RSF amount described in Sec. 249.105 prior to the
application of the RSF adjustment percentage provided for in Table 1 to
Sec. 249.105 (row 37);
(xxiii) The applicable RSF adjustment factor as described in Table
1 to Sec. 249.105 (row 38); and
(xxiv) The RSF amount described in Sec. 249.105 (row 39); and
(3) The net stable funding ratio under Sec. 249.100(b) (row 40).
* * * * *
0
27. Add subpart O to read as follows:
Subpart O--Minimum Liquidity Standard and Minimum Stable Funding
Standard for Certain Foreign Banking Organizations
Sec.
249.201 Purpose and applicability.
249.202 Reservation of authority.
249.203 Liquidity coverage ratio for certain foreign banking
organizations.
249.204 Net stable funding ratio.
249.205 Requirements for eligible high-quality liquid assets.
249.206 Liquidity coverage shortfall: Supervisory framework.
249.207 NSFR shortfall: Supervisory framework.
249.208 Disclosure requirements.
Sec. 249.201 Purpose and applicability.
(a) Purpose. This subpart establishes a minimum liquidity standard
and minimum stable funding standard for certain foreign banking
organizations, as set forth in this part.
(b) Applicability. (1) A foreign banking organization is subject to
the minimum liquidity standard, minimum stable funding standard, and
other requirements of this subpart if:
(i) It is a:
(A) Category II foreign banking organization;
(B) Category III foreign banking organization; or
(C) Category IV foreign banking organization with $50 billion or
more in average weighted short-term wholesale funding;
(ii) The Board determines that application of this subpart is
appropriate in light of the foreign banking organization's asset size,
level of complexity, risk profile, scope of operations, affiliation
with foreign or domestic covered entities, or risk to the financial
system.
(2) Subject to the transition periods set forth in subpart F of
this part:
(i) A foreign banking organization that becomes subject to the
minimum liquidity standard, minimum stable funding standard, and other
requirements of this subpart under paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this section
must comply with such requirements beginning on the first day of the
second calendar quarter after which the foreign banking organization
becomes subject to such requirements, except that a foreign banking
organization that is not a category IV foreign banking organization
must:
(A) For the first three calendar quarters after the foreign banking
organization begins complying with the minimum liquidity standard and
other requirements of this subpart, calculate and maintain the
liquidity coverage ratio required by Sec. 249.203 monthly, on each
calculation date that is the last business day of the applicable
calendar month; and
(B) Beginning one year after the foreign banking organization
becomes subject to the minimum liquidity standard and other
requirements of this subpart and continuing thereafter, calculate and
maintain the liquidity coverage ratios required by Sec. 249.203 on
each calculation date.
(ii) A foreign banking organization that becomes subject to the
minimum liquidity standard and other requirements of this subpart under
paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this section, must comply with the requirements
of this subpart subject to a transition period specified by the Board.
[[Page 24349]]
(3) This subpart does not apply to:
(i) A bridge financial company as defined in 12 U.S.C. 5381(a)(3),
or a subsidiary of a bridge financial company; or
(ii) A new depository institution or a bridge depository
institution, as defined in 12 U.S.C. 1813(i).
(4) A foreign banking organization subject to a minimum liquidity
standard under this subpart shall remain subject until the Board
determines in writing that application of this subpart to the foreign
banking organization is not appropriate in light of the foreign banking
organization's asset size, level of complexity, risk profile, scope of
operations, affiliation with foreign or domestic covered entities, or
risk to the financial system.
(5) In making a determination under paragraph (b)(1)(ii) or (b)(4)
of this section, the Board will apply, as appropriate, notice and
response procedures in the same manner and to the same extent as the
notice and response procedures set forth in 12 CFR 263.202.
Sec. 249.202 Reservation of authority.
(a) The Board may require a foreign banking organization to hold an
amount of high-quality liquid assets (HQLA) greater than otherwise
required under this subpart, or to take any other measure to improve
the liquidity risk profile of a U.S. intermediate holding company, if
the Board determines that the liquidity requirements of the foreign
banking organization as calculated under this subpart are not
commensurate with the liquidity risks presented by the foreign banking
organization or its U.S. intermediate holding company. In making
determinations under this section, the Board will apply notice and
response procedures as set forth in 12 CFR 263.202.
(b) The Board may require a foreign banking organization to
maintain an amount of available stable funding (ASF) greater than
otherwise required under this subpart, or to take any other measure to
improve the stable funding of its U.S. intermediate holding company, if
the Board determines that the foreign banking organization's stable
funding requirements as calculated under this subpart are not
commensurate with the funding risks of the foreign banking organization
or its U.S. intermediate holding company. In making determinations
under this section, the Board will apply notice and response procedures
as set forth in 12 CFR 263.202.
(c) Nothing in this subpart limits the authority of the Board under
any other provision of law or regulation to take supervisory or
enforcement action, including action to address unsafe or unsound
practices or conditions, deficient liquidity levels, or violations of
law.
Sec. 249.203 Liquidity coverage ratio for certain foreign banking
organizations.
(a) Minimum liquidity coverage ratio requirements for foreign
banking organizations. Subject to the transition periods in subpart F
of this part, a foreign banking organization must calculate and
maintain a liquidity coverage ratio equal to or greater than 1.0 on
each business day (or, in the case of a Category IV foreign banking
organization, on the last business day of the applicable calendar
month) for each U.S. intermediate holding company of the foreign
banking organization in accordance with Sec. 249.3 and subparts B
through E of this part as if the U.S. intermediate holding company (and
not the foreign banking organization subject to this subpart) were a
top-tier Board-regulated institution, except that:
(1) A high-quality liquid asset used to meet the liquidity coverage
ratio required by this paragraph (a) must satisfy the requirements in
Sec. 249.205 and not Sec. 249.22 to be eligible HQLA; and
(2) The outflow adjustment percentage used to meet the liquidity
coverage ratio required by this paragraph (a) must be determined in
accordance with paragraph (c) of this section and not Sec. 249.30(c).
(b) Elected calculation time. A foreign banking organization
subject to this subpart must calculate any liquidity coverage ratio
required by paragraph (a) of this section as of the same time on each
business day, or, in the case of a Category IV foreign banking
organization, as of the same time on each calculation day (the elected
calculation time). The foreign banking organization must select this
time by written notice to the Board prior to [effective date of the
final rule]. The foreign banking organization may not thereafter change
its elected calculation time without prior written approval from the
Board.
(c) Outflow adjustment percentage. A foreign banking organization's
outflow adjustment percentage is determined pursuant to Table 1 to this
section.
Table 1 to Sec. 249.203--Outflow Adjustment Percentages
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Outflow adjustment
percentage
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Category II foreign banking organization.. 100 percent.
Category III foreign banking organization 100 percent.
with $75 billion or more in average
weighted short-term wholesale funding.
Category III foreign banking organization [70 to 85] percent.
with less than $75 billion in average
weighted short-term wholesale funding.
Category IV foreign banking organization [70 to 85] percent.
with $50 billion or more in average
weighted short-term wholesale funding.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sec. 249.204 Net stable funding ratio.
(a) Minimum net stable funding ratio requirement. A foreign banking
organization must maintain for each U.S. intermediate holding company a
net stable funding ratio that is equal to or greater than 1.0 on an
ongoing basis in accordance with Sec. 249.3 and subparts K and L of
this part as if each U.S. intermediate holding company (and not the
foreign banking organization subject to this subpart) were a top-tier
Board-regulated institution, except that the foreign banking
organization must determine its required stable funding adjustment
percentage in accordance with paragraph (b) of this section, and not
Sec. 249.105(b).
(b) Required stable funding adjustment percentage. A foreign
banking organization's required stable funding adjustment percentage is
determined pursuant to Table 1 to this section.
[[Page 24350]]
Table 1 to Sec. 249.204--Required Stable Funding Adjustment
Percentages
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Required stable funding
adjustment percentage
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Category II foreign banking organization.. 100 percent.
Category III foreign banking organization 100 percent.
with $75 billion or more in average
weighted short-term wholesale funding.
Category III foreign banking organization [70 to 85] percent.
with less than $75 billion in average
weighted short-term wholesale funding.
Category IV foreign banking organization [70 to 85] percent.
with $50 billion or more in average
weighted short-term wholesale funding.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sec. 249.205 Requirements for eligible high-quality liquid assets.
(a) Operational requirements for eligible HQLA. With respect to
each asset that is eligible for inclusion in the HQLA amount calculated
for the liquidity coverage ratio requirement in Sec. 249.203, all of
the operational requirements in this paragraph (a) must be met:
(1) The foreign banking organization must demonstrate the
operational capability to monetize the HQLA by:
(i) Implementing and maintaining appropriate procedures and systems
to monetize any HQLA at any time in accordance with relevant standard
settlement periods and procedures; and
(ii) Periodically monetizing a sample of HQLA that reasonably
reflects the composition of the eligible HQLA used to meet the
liquidity coverage ratio requirement in Sec. 249.203, including with
respect to asset type, maturity, and counterparty characteristics;
(2) The foreign banking organization must implement policies that
require eligible HQLA to be under the control of the management
function in the foreign banking organization that is charged with
managing liquidity risk, and this management function must evidence its
control over the HQLA by either:
(i) Segregating the HQLA from other assets, with the sole intent to
use the HQLA as a source of liquidity; or
(ii) Demonstrating the ability to monetize the assets and making
the proceeds available to the liquidity management function without
conflicting with a business or risk management strategy of the foreign
banking organization;
(3) The fair value of the eligible HQLA must be reduced by the
outflow amount that would result from the termination of any specific
transaction hedging eligible HQLA;
(4) The foreign banking organization must implement and maintain
policies and procedures that determine the composition of the eligible
HQLA on each calculation date, by:
(i) Identifying its eligible HQLA by legal entity, geographical
location, currency, account, or other relevant identifying factors as
of the calculation date;
(ii) Determining that eligible HQLA meet the criteria set forth in
this section; and
(iii) Ensuring the appropriate diversification of the eligible HQLA
by asset type, counterparty, issuer, currency, borrowing capacity, or
other factors associated with the liquidity risk of the assets; and
(5) The foreign banking organization must have a documented
methodology that results in a consistent treatment for determining that
the eligible HQLA meets the requirements set forth in this section.
(b) Generally applicable criteria for eligible HQLA. The eligible
HQLA used to meet the liquidity coverage ratio requirement in Sec.
249.203 must meet all of the criteria in this paragraph (b):
Alternative 1--Paragraph (b)(1)
(1) The assets are unencumbered in accordance with the criteria in
this paragraph (b)(1):
(i) The assets are free of legal, regulatory, contractual, or other
restrictions on the ability of the foreign banking organization to
monetize the assets; and
(ii) The assets are not pledged, explicitly or implicitly, to
secure or to provide credit enhancement to any transaction, but the
assets may be considered unencumbered if the assets are pledged to a
central bank or a U.S. government-sponsored enterprise where:
(A) Potential credit secured by the assets is not currently
extended to the foreign banking organization or its consolidated
subsidiaries; and
(B) The pledged assets are not required to support access to the
payment services of a central bank;
Alternative 2--Paragraph (b)(1)
(1) The assets are not unencumbered.
(2) The asset is not:
(i) A client pool security held in a segregated account; or
(ii) An asset received from a secured funding transaction involving
client pool securities that were held in a segregated account;
(3) For eligible HQLA held in a legal entity that is a U.S.
consolidated subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate holding company:
(i) If the U.S. consolidated subsidiary is subject to a minimum
liquidity standard under this part, 12 CFR part 50, or 12 CFR part 329,
the foreign banking organization may include the eligible HQLA of the
U.S. consolidated subsidiary in its HQLA amount up to:
(A) The amount of net cash outflows of the U.S. consolidated
subsidiary calculated by the U.S. consolidated subsidiary for its own
minimum liquidity standard under this part, 12 CFR part 50, or 12 CFR
part 329; plus
(B) Any additional amount of assets, including proceeds from the
monetization of assets, that would be available for transfer to the
U.S. intermediate holding company during times of stress without
statutory, regulatory, contractual, or supervisory restrictions,
including sections 23A and 23B of the Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C.
371c and 12 U.S.C. 371c-1) and 12 CFR part 223 (Regulation W);
(ii) If the U.S. consolidated subsidiary is not subject to a
minimum liquidity standard under this part, 12 CFR part 50, or 12 CFR
part 329, the Board-regulated institution may include the eligible HQLA
of the U.S. consolidated subsidiary in its HQLA amount up to:
(A) The amount of the net cash outflows of the U.S. consolidated
subsidiary as of the 30th calendar day after the calculation date, as
calculated by the foreign banking organization for its minimum
liquidity standard under this part; plus
(B) Any additional amount of assets, including proceeds from the
monetization of assets, that would be available for transfer to the
U.S. intermediate holding company during times of stress without
statutory, regulatory, contractual, or supervisory restrictions,
including sections 23A and 23B of the Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C.
371c and 12 U.S.C. 371c-1) and 12 CFR part 223 (Regulation W); and
(4) For HQLA held by a consolidated subsidiary of the U.S.
intermediate holding company that is organized under the laws of a
foreign jurisdiction,
[[Page 24351]]
the foreign banking organization may include the eligible HQLA of the
consolidated subsidiary organized under the laws of a foreign
jurisdiction in its HQLA amount up to:
(i) The amount of net cash outflows of the consolidated subsidiary
as of the 30th calendar day after the calculation date, as calculated
by the foreign banking organization for its minimum liquidity standard
under this part; plus
(ii) Any additional amount of assets that are available for
transfer to the U.S. intermediate holding company during times of
stress without statutory, regulatory, contractual, or supervisory
restrictions;
(5) Eligible HQLA must not include any assets or HQLA resulting
from transactions involving an asset that the U.S. intermediate holding
company received with rehypothecation rights, if the counterparty that
provided the asset or the beneficial owner of the asset has a
contractual right to withdraw the assets without an obligation to pay
more than de minimis remuneration at any time during the 30 calendar
days following the calculation date; and
(6) The foreign banking organization has not designated the assets
to cover operational costs of its U.S. intermediate holding company.
(c) Location of eligible HQLA for the foreign banking organization.
A foreign banking organization must maintain the eligible HQLA used to
meet the minimum requirements under Sec. 249.203 in accounts in the
United States.
Sec. 249.206 Liquidity coverage shortfall: Supervisory framework.
(a) Notification requirements. A foreign banking organization must
notify the Board on any business day when its liquidity coverage ratio
is calculated to be less than the minimum requirement in Sec. 249.203.
(b) Liquidity plan. (1) For the period during which a foreign
banking organization must calculate a liquidity coverage ratio on the
last business day of each applicable calendar month under subpart F or
O of this part, if the foreign banking organization's liquidity
coverage ratio is below the minimum requirements in Sec. 249.203 for
any calculation date that is the last business day of the applicable
calendar month, or if the Board has determined that the foreign banking
organization is otherwise materially noncompliant with the requirements
of this part, the foreign banking organization must promptly consult
with the Board to determine whether the foreign banking organization
must provide to the Board a plan for achieving compliance with the
minimum liquidity requirement in Sec. 249.203 and all other
requirements of this subpart.
(2) For the period during which a foreign banking organization must
calculate a liquidity coverage ratio each business day under subpart F
or O of this part, if a foreign banking organization's liquidity
coverage ratio is below the minimum requirement in Sec. 249.203 for
three consecutive business days, or if the Board has determined that
the foreign banking organization is otherwise materially noncompliant
with the requirements of this subpart, the foreign banking organization
must promptly provide to the Board a plan for achieving compliance with
the minimum liquidity requirement in Sec. 249.203 and all other
requirements of this subpart.
(3) The plan must include, as applicable:
(i) An assessment of the liquidity position of the U.S.
intermediate holding company;
(ii) The actions the foreign banking organization has taken and
will take to achieve full compliance with this subpart, including:
(A) A plan for adjusting the risk profile, risk management, and
funding sources of the U.S. intermediate holding company in order to
achieve full compliance with this subpart; and
(B) A plan for remediating any operational or management issues
that contributed to noncompliance with this subpart;
(iii) An estimated time frame for achieving full compliance with
this subpart; and
(iv) A commitment to report to the Board no less than weekly on
progress to achieve compliance in accordance with the plan until full
compliance with this subpart is achieved.
(c) Supervisory and enforcement actions. The Board may, at its
discretion, take additional supervisory or enforcement actions to
address noncompliance with the minimum liquidity standard and other
requirements of this subpart.
Sec. 249.207 NSFR shortfall: Supervisory framework.
(a) Notification requirements. A foreign banking organization must
notify the Board no later than 10 business days, or such other period
as the Board may otherwise require by written notice, following the
date that any event has occurred that would cause or has caused the
foreign banking organization's net stable funding ratio to be less than
1.0 as required under Sec. 249.204.
(b) Liquidity plan. (1) A foreign banking organization must within
10 business days, or such other period as the Board may otherwise
require by written notice, provide to the Board a plan for achieving a
net stable funding ratio equal to or greater than 1.0 as required under
Sec. 249.204 if:
(i) The foreign banking organization has or should have provided
notice, pursuant to paragraph (a) of this section, that the foreign
banking organization's net stable funding ratio is, or will become,
less than 1.0 as required under Sec. 249.204;
(ii) The foreign banking organization's reports or disclosures to
the Board indicate that the foreign banking organization's net stable
funding ratio is less than 1.0 as required under Sec. 249.204; or
(iii) The Board notifies the foreign banking organization in
writing that a plan is required and provides a reason for requiring
such a plan.
(2) The plan must include, as applicable:
(i) An assessment of the U.S. intermediate holding company's
liquidity profile;
(ii) The actions the foreign banking organization has taken and
will take to achieve a net stable funding ratio equal to or greater
than 1.0 as required under Sec. 249.204, including:
(A) A plan for adjusting the liquidity profile of the U.S.
intermediate holding company;
(B) A plan for remediating any operational or management issues
that contributed to noncompliance with Sec. 249.204; and
(iii) An estimated time frame for achieving full compliance with
Sec. 249.204.
(3) The foreign banking organization must report to the Board at
least monthly, or such other frequency as required by the Board, on
progress to achieve full compliance with Sec. 249.204.
(c) Supervisory and enforcement actions. The Board may, at its
discretion, take additional supervisory or enforcement actions to
address noncompliance with the minimum net stable funding ratio and
other requirements of Sec. 249.204 (see also Sec. 249.202(c)).
Sec. 249.208 Disclosure requirements.
(a) Disclosure of minimum liquidity standard. A foreign banking
organization that is subject to this subpart must disclose publicly all
the information for a U.S. intermediate holding company that the U.S.
intermediate holding company would be required to disclose, and in the
same manner that would be required of the U.S. intermediate holding
company, if the U.S. intermediate holding company
[[Page 24352]]
were a covered depository institution holding company subject to
subpart J of this part.
(b) Disclosure of minimum stable funding standard. A foreign
banking organization that is subject to this subpart must disclose
publicly all the information for a U.S. intermediate holding company
that the U.S. intermediate holding company would be required to
disclose, and in the same manner that would be required of the U.S.
intermediate holding company, if it were a covered depository
institution holding company subject to subpart N of this part.
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
12 CFR Chapter III
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the Supplementary Information, chapter
III of title 12 of the Code of Federal Regulations is proposed to be
amended as follows:
PART 324--CAPITAL ADEQUACY OF FDIC-SUPERVISED INSTITUTIONS
0
28. The authority citation for part 324 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1815(a), 1815(b), 1816, 1818(a), 1818(b),
1818(c), 1818(t), 1819(Tenth), 1828(c), 1828(d), 1828(i), 1828(n),
1828(o), 1831o, 1835, 3907, 3909, 4808; 5371; 5412; Pub. L. 102-233,
105 Stat. 1761, 1789, 1790 (12 U.S.C. 1831n note); Pub. L. 102-242,
105 Stat. 2236, 2355, as amended by Pub. L. 103-325, 108 Stat. 2160,
2233 (12 U.S.C. 1828 note); Pub. L. 102-242, 105 Stat. 2236, 2386,
as amended by Pub. L. 102-550, 106 Stat. 3672, 4089 (12 U.S.C. 1828
note); Pub. L. 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376, 1887 (15 U.S.C. 78o-7 note).
0
29. In Sec. 324.2, add the definitions of Category II FDIC-supervised
institution, Category III FDIC-supervised institution, FR Y-9LP, and FR
Y-15 in alphabetical order to read as follows:
Sec. 324.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
Category II FDIC-supervised institution means:
(1) An FDIC-supervised institution that is a subsidiary of a
Category II banking organization, as defined pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5
or 12 CFR 238.10, as applicable; or
(2) An FDIC-supervised institution that:
(i)(A) Has total consolidated assets, calculated based on the
average of the FDIC-supervised institution's total consolidated assets
for the four most recent calendar quarters as reported on the Call
Report, equal to $700 billion or more. If the FDIC-supervised
institution has not filed the Call Report for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, total consolidated assets means the average
of its total consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report, for
the most recent quarter or quarters, as applicable; or
(B) Has:
(1) Total consolidated assets, calculated based on the average of
the FDIC-supervised institution's total consolidated assets for the
four most recent calendar quarters as reported on the Call Report, of
$100 billion or more but less than $700 billion. If the FDIC-supervised
institution has not filed the Call Report for each of the four most
recent quarters, total consolidated assets means the average of its
total consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report, for the most
recent quarter or quarters, as applicable; and
(2) Cross-jurisdictional activity, calculated based on the average
of its cross-jurisdictional activity for the four most recent calendar
quarters, of $75 billion or more. Cross-jurisdictional activity is the
sum of cross-jurisdictional claims and cross-jurisdictional
liabilities, calculated in accordance with the instructions to the FR
Y-15 or equivalent reporting form.
(ii) After meeting the criteria in paragraph (2)(i) of this
definition, an FDIC-supervised institution continues to be a Category
II FDIC-supervised institution until the FDIC-supervised institution:
(A) Has:
(1) Less than $700 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters; and
(2) Less than $75 billion in cross-jurisdictional activity for each
of the four most recent calendar quarters. Cross-jurisdictional
activity is the sum of cross-jurisdictional claims and cross-
jurisdictional liabilities, calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the FR Y-15 or equivalent reporting form; or
(B) Has less than $100 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters.
Category III FDIC-supervised institution means:
(1) An FDIC-supervised institution that is a subsidiary of a
Category III banking organization, as defined pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5
or 12 CFR 238.10, as applicable;
(2) An FDIC-supervised institution that is a subsidiary of a
depository institution that meets the criteria in paragraph (3)(ii)(A)
or (B) of this definition; or
(3) An depository institution that:
(i) Is an FDIC-supervised institution; and
(ii)(A) Has total consolidated assets, calculated based on the
average of the depository institution's total consolidated assets for
the four most recent calendar quarters as reported on the Call Report,
equal to $250 billion or more. If the depository institution has not
filed the Call Report for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters, total consolidated assets means the average of its total
consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report, for the most
recent quarter or quarters, as applicable; or
(B) Has:
(1) Total consolidated assets, calculated based on the average of
the depository institution's total consolidated assets for the four
most recent calendar quarters as reported on the Call Report, of $100
billion or more but less than $250 billion. If the depository
institution has not filed the Call Report for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, total consolidated assets means the average
of its total consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report, for
the most recent quarter or quarters, as applicable; and
(2) At least one of the following in paragraphs (3)(ii)(B)(2)(i)
through (iii) of this definition, each calculated as the average of the
four most recent calendar quarters, or if the depository institution
has not filed each applicable reporting form for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, for the most recent quarter or quarters, as
applicable:
(i) Total nonbank assets, calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the FR Y-9LP or equivalent reporting form, equal to $75
billion or more;
(ii) Off-balance sheet exposure equal to $75 billion or more. Off-
balance sheet exposure is a depository institution's total exposure,
calculated in accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-15 or
equivalent reporting form, minus the total consolidated assets of the
depository institution, as reported on the Call Report; or
(iii) Weighted short-term wholesale funding, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-15 or equivalent reporting
form, equal to $75 billion or more.
(iii) After meeting the criteria in paragraph (3)(ii) of this
definition, an FDIC-supervised institution continues to be a Category
III FDIC-supervised institution until the FDIC-supervised institution:
(A) Has:
(1) Less than $250 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters;
[[Page 24353]]
(2) Less than $75 billion in total nonbank assets, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-9LP or equivalent
reporting form, for each of the four most recent calendar quarters;
(3) Less than $75 billion in weighted short-term wholesale funding,
calculated in accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-15 or
equivalent reporting form, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters; and
(4) Less than $75 billion in off-balance sheet exposure for each of
the four most recent calendar quarters. Off-balance sheet exposure is
an FDIC-supervised institution's total exposure, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-15 or equivalent reporting
form, minus the total consolidated assets of the FDIC-supervised
institution, as reported on the Call Report; or
(B) Has less than $100 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters; or
(C) Is a Category II FDIC-supervised institution.
* * * * *
FR Y-15 means the Systemic Risk Report.
FR Y-9LP means the Parent Company Only Financial Statements for
Large Holding Companies.
* * * * *
0
30. In Sec. 324.10, revise paragraphs (a)(5), (c) introductory text,
and (c)(4)(i) introductory text to read as follows:
Sec. 324.10 Minimum capital requirements.
(a) * * *
(5) For advanced approaches FDIC-supervised institutions or, for
Category III FDIC-supervised institutions, a supplementary leverage
ratio of 3 percent.
* * * * *
(c) Advanced approaches capital ratio calculations. An advanced
approaches FDIC-supervised institution that has completed the parallel
run process and received notification from the FDIC pursuant to Sec.
324.121(d) must determine its regulatory capital ratios as described in
paragraphs (c)(1) through (3) of this section. An advanced approaches
FDIC-supervised institution must determine its supplementary leverage
ratio in accordance with paragraph (c)(4) of this section, beginning
with the calendar quarter immediately following the quarter in which
the FDIC-supervised institution meets any of the criteria in Sec.
324.100(b)(1). A Category III FDIC-supervised institution must
determine its supplementary leverage ratio in accordance with paragraph
(c)(4) of this section, beginning with the calendar quarter immediately
following the quarter in which the FDIC-supervised institution is
identified as a Category III FDIC-supervised institution.
* * * * *
(4) Supplementary leverage ratio. (i) An advanced approaches FDIC-
supervised institution's or a Category III FDIC-supervised
institution's supplementary leverage ratio is the ratio of its tier 1
capital to total leverage exposure, the latter of which is calculated
as the sum of:
* * * * *
0
31. In Sec. 324.11, revise paragraphs (b)(1) introductory text and
(b)(1)(ii) as follows:
Sec. 324.11 Capital conservation buffer and countercyclical capital
buffer amount.
* * * * *
(b) Countercyclical capital buffer amount--(1) General. An advanced
approaches FDIC-supervised institution or a Category III FDIC-
supervised institution must calculate a countercyclical capital buffer
amount in accordance with paragraphs (b)(1)(i) through (iv) of this
section for purposes of determining its maximum payout ratio under
Table 1 to this section.
* * * * *
(ii) Amount. An advanced approaches FDIC-supervised institution or
a Category III FDIC-supervised institution has a countercyclical
capital buffer amount determined by calculating the weighted average of
the countercyclical capital buffer amounts established for the national
jurisdictions where the FDIC-supervised institution's private sector
credit exposures are located, as specified in paragraphs (b)(2) and (3)
of this section.
* * * * *
0
32. In Sec. 324.100, revise paragraph (b)(1) to read as follows:
Sec. 324.100 Purpose, applicability, and principle of conservatism.
* * * * *
(b) Applicability. (1) This subpart applies to an FDIC-supervised
institution that:
(i) Is a subsidiary of a global systemically important BHC pursuant
to 12 CFR 217.402;
(ii) Is a Category II FDIC-supervised institution;
(iii) Is a subsidiary of a depository institution that uses 12 CFR
part 3, subpart E (OCC), 12 CFR part 217, subpart E (Board), or this
subpart (FDIC) to calculate its risk-based capital requirements;
(iv) Is a subsidiary of a bank holding company or savings and loan
holding company that uses 12 CFR part 217, subpart E, to calculate its
risk-based capital requirements; or
(v) Elects to use this subpart to calculate its risk-based capital
requirements.
* * * * *
PART 329--LIQUIDITY RISK MEASUREMENT STANDARDS
0
33. The authority citation for part 329 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C 1815, 1816, 1818, 1819, 1828, 1831p-1, 5412.
0
34. Revise Sec. 329.1 to read as follows:
Sec. 329.1 Purpose and applicability.
(a) Purpose. This part establishes a minimum liquidity standard and
a minimum stable funding standard for certain FDIC-supervised
institutions on a consolidated basis, as set forth in this part.
(b) Applicability. (1) An FDIC-supervised institution is subject to
the minimum liquidity standard, minimum stable funding standard, and
other requirements of this part if:
(i) It is a GSIB FDIC-supervised institution, a Category II FDIC-
supervised institution, or a Category III FDIC-supervised institution;
(ii) It is an FDIC-supervised institution that has total
consolidated assets, calculated based on the average of the FDIC-
supervised institution's total consolidated assets for the four most
recent calendar quarters as reported on the Call Report, equal to $10
billion or more and is a consolidated subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate
holding company of either a Category II foreign banking organization or
a Category III foreign banking organization. If the FDIC-supervised
institution has not filed the Call Report for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, total consolidated assets means the average
of its total consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report, for
the most recent quarter or quarters, as applicable; or
(iii) It is an FDIC-supervised institution that the FDIC has
determined that application of this part is appropriate in light of the
FDIC-supervised institution's asset size, level of complexity, risk
profile, scope of operations, affiliation with foreign or domestic
covered entities, or risk to the financial system.
(2)(i) An FDIC-supervised institution that initially becomes
subject to the minimum liquidity standard, minimum stable funding
standard, and other requirements of this part under paragraph (b)(1)(i)
or (ii) of this section must comply with the requirements of
[[Page 24354]]
this part beginning on the first day of the second calendar quarter
after which the FDIC-supervised institution becomes subject to this
part, except an FDIC-supervised institution must:
(A) For the first three calendar quarters after the FDIC-supervised
institution begins complying with the minimum liquidity standard and
other requirements of this part, calculate and maintain a liquidity
coverage ratio monthly, on each calculation date that is the last
business day of the applicable calendar month; and
(B) Beginning one year after the FDIC-supervised institution
becomes subject to the minimum liquidity standard and other
requirements of this part and continuing thereafter, calculate and
maintain a liquidity coverage ratio on each calculation date.
(ii) An FDIC-supervised institution that becomes subject to the
minimum liquidity standard and other requirements of this part under
paragraph (b)(1)(iii) of this section, must comply with the
requirements of this part subject to a transition period specified by
the FDIC.
0
35. Amend Sec. 329.3 by
0
a. Adding the definition for ``Average weighted short-term wholesale
funding'' in alphabetical order;
0
b. Revising the definition for ``Calculation date'';
0
c. Adding definitions for ``Call report'', ``Category II FDIC-
supervised institution'', ``Category III FDIC-supervised institution'',
``Category II foreign banking organization'', and ``Category III
foreign banking organization'' in alphabetical order;
0
d. Revising the definition for ``Covered depository institution holding
company'';
0
e. Adding definitions for ``Foreign banking organization'', ``FR Y-
9LP'', ``FR Y-15'', ``Global systemically important BHC'', and ``GSIB
depository institution'' in alphabetical order;
0
f. Revising the definition for ``Regulated financial company''; and
0
g. Adding definitions for ``State'' and ``U.S. intermediate holding
company'' in alphabetical order.
The additions and revisions read as follows:
Sec. 329.3 Definitions.
* * * * *
Average weighted short-term wholesale funding means the average of
the banking organization's weighted short-term wholesale funding for
each of the four most recent calendar quarters as reported quarterly on
the FR Y-15 or, if the banking organization has not filed the FR Y-15
for each of the four most recent calendar quarters, for the most recent
quarter or quarters, as applicable.
* * * * *
Calculation date means, for purposes of subparts A through J of
this part, any date on which an FDIC-supervised institution calculates
its liquidity coverage ratio under Sec. 329.21, and for purposes of
subparts K through N of this part, any date on which an FDIC-supervised
institution calculates its net stable funding ratio (NSFR) under Sec.
329.100.
Call Report means the Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income.
Category II FDIC-supervised institution means:
(1)(i) An FDIC-supervised institution that:
(A) Is a consolidated subsidiary of:
(1) A company that is identified as a Category II banking
organization pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5 or 12 CFR 238.10, as applicable;
or
(2) A depository institution that meets the criteria in paragraph
(2)(ii)(A) or (B) of this definition; and
(B) Has total consolidated assets, calculated based on the average
of the FDIC-supervised institution's total consolidated assets for the
four most recent calendar quarters as reported on the Call Report,
equal to $10 billion or more.
(ii) If the FDIC-supervised institution has not filed the Call
Report for each of the four most recent calendar quarters, total
consolidated assets means the average of its total consolidated assets,
as reported on the Call Report, for the most recent quarter or
quarters, as applicable. After meeting the criteria under this
paragraph (1), an FDIC-supervised institution continues to be a
Category II FDIC-supervised institution until the FDIC-supervised
institution has less than $10 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters, or the FDIC-supervised institution is no longer a
consolidated subsidiary of an entity described in paragraph
(1)(i)(A)(1) or (2) of this definition; or
(2) A depository institution that:
(i) Is an FDIC-supervised institution; and
(ii)(A) Has total consolidated assets, calculated based on the
average of the depository institution's total consolidated assets for
the four most recent calendar quarters as reported on the Consolidated
Report of Condition and Income (Call Report), equal to $700 billion or
more. If the depository institution has not filed the Call Report for
each of the four most recent calendar quarters, total consolidated
assets means the average of its total consolidated assets, as reported
on the Call Report, for the most recent quarter or quarters, as
applicable; or
(B) Has:
(1) Total consolidated assets, calculated based on the average of
the depository institution's total consolidated assets for the four
most recent calendar quarters as reported on the Call Report, of $100
billion or more but less than $700 billion. If the depository
institution has not filed the Call Report for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, total consolidated assets means the average
of its total consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report, for
the most recent quarter or quarters, as applicable; and
(2) Cross-jurisdictional activity, calculated based on the average
of its cross-jurisdictional activity for the four most recent calendar
quarters, of $75 billion or more. Cross-jurisdictional activity is the
sum of cross-jurisdictional claims and cross-jurisdictional
liabilities, calculated in accordance with the instructions to the FR
Y-15 or equivalent reporting form.
(iii) After meeting the criteria in paragraphs (2)(i) and (ii) of
this definition, an FDIC-supervised institution continues to be a
Category II FDIC-supervised institution until the FDIC-supervised
institution:
(A)(1) Has less than $700 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters; and
(2) Has less than $75 billion in cross-jurisdictional activity for
each of the four most recent calendar quarters. Cross-jurisdictional
activity is the sum of cross-jurisdictional claims and cross-
jurisdictional liabilities, calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the FR Y-15 or equivalent reporting form;
(B) Has less than $100 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters; or
(C) Is a GSIB FDIC-supervised institution.
Category III FDIC-supervised institution means:
(1)(i) An FDIC-supervised institution that:
(A) Is a consolidated subsidiary of:
(1) A company that is identified as a Category III banking
organization pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5 or 12 CFR 238.10, as applicable;
or
(2) A depository institution that meets the criteria in paragraph
(2)(ii)(A) or (B) of this definition; and
(B) Has total consolidated assets, calculated based on the average
of the FDIC-supervised institution's total consolidated assets for the
four most
[[Page 24355]]
recent calendar quarters as reported on the Call Report, equal to $10
billion or more.
(ii) If the FDIC-supervised institution has not filed the Call
Report for each of the four most recent calendar quarters, total
consolidated assets means the average of its total consolidated assets,
as reported on the Call Report, for the most recent quarter or
quarters, as applicable. After meeting the criteria under this
paragraph (1), an FDIC-supervised institution continues to be a
Category III FDIC-supervised institution until the FDIC-supervised
institution has less than $10 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters, or the FDIC-supervised institution is no longer a
consolidated subsidiary of an entity described in paragraph
(1)(i)(A)(1) or (2) of this definition; or
(2) A depository institution that:
(i) Is an FDIC-supervised institution; and
(ii)(A) Has total consolidated assets, calculated based on the
average of the depository institution's total consolidated assets in
the four most recent quarters as reported quarterly on the most recent
Call Report, equal to $250 billion or more. If the depository
institution has not filed the Call Report for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, total consolidated assets means the average
of its total consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report, for
the most recent quarter or quarters, as applicable; or
(B) Has:
(1) Total consolidated assets, calculated based on the average of
the depository institution's total consolidated assets in the four most
recent calendar quarters as reported quarterly on the most recent Call
Report, of at least $100 billion but less than $250 billion. If the
depository institution has not filed the Call Report for each of the
four most recent calendar quarters, total consolidated assets means the
average of its total consolidated assets, as reported on the Call
Report, for the most recent quarter or quarters, as applicable; and
(2) One or more of the following in paragraphs (2)(ii)(B)(2)(i)
through (iii) of this definition, each measured as the average of the
four most recent quarters, or if the depository institution has not
filed each applicable reporting form for each of the four most recent
calendar quarters, for the most recent quarter or quarters, as
applicable:
(i) Total nonbank assets, calculated in accordance with
instructions to the FR Y-9LP or equivalent reporting form, equal to $75
billion or more;
(ii) Off-balance sheet exposure, calculated in accordance with the
instructions to the FR Y-15 or equivalent reporting form, minus the
total consolidated assets of the depository institution, as reported on
the Call Report, equal to $75 billion or more; or
(iii) Weighted short-term wholesale funding, calculated in
accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-15 or equivalent reporting
form, equal to $75 billion or more.
(iii) After meeting the criteria in paragraphs (2)(i) and (ii) of
this definition, an FDIC-supervised institution continues to be a
Category III FDIC-supervised institution until the FDIC-supervised
institution:
(A)(1) Has less than $250 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters;
(2) Has less than $75 billion in total nonbank assets, calculated
in accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-9LP or equivalent
reporting form, for each of the four most recent calendar quarters;
(3) Has less than $75 billion in weighted short-term wholesale
funding, calculated in accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-15
or equivalent reporting form, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters; and
(4) Has less than $75 billion in off-balance sheet exposure for
each of the four most recent calendar quarters. Off-balance sheet
exposure is an FDIC-supervised institution's total exposure, calculated
in accordance with the instructions to the FR Y-15 or equivalent
reporting form, minus the total consolidated assets of the FDIC-
supervised institution, as reported on the Call Report; or
(B) Has less than $100 billion in total consolidated assets, as
reported on the Call Report, for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters;
(C) Is a Category II FDIC-supervised institution; or
(D) Is a GSIB FDIC-supervised institution.
Category II foreign banking organization means a foreign banking
organization that is identified as a Category II banking organization
pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5 or 238.10.
Category III foreign banking organization means a foreign banking
organization that is identified as a Category III banking organization
pursuant to 12 CFR 252.5 or 238.10.
* * * * *
Covered depository institution holding company means a top-tier
bank holding company or savings and loan holding company domiciled in
the United States other than:
(1) A top-tier savings and loan holding company that is:
(i) A grandfathered unitary savings and loan holding company as
defined in section 10(c)(9)(A) of the Home Owners' Loan Act (12 U.S.C.
1461 et seq.); and
(ii) As of June 30 of the previous calendar year, derived 50
percent or more of its total consolidated assets or 50 percent of its
total revenues on an enterprise-wide basis (as calculated under GAAP)
from activities that are not financial in nature under section 4(k) of
the Bank Holding Company Act (12 U.S.C. 1842(k));
(2) A top-tier depository institution holding company that is an
insurance underwriting company;
(3)(i) A top-tier depository institution holding company that, as
of June 30 of the previous calendar year, held 25 percent or more of
its total consolidated assets in subsidiaries that are insurance
underwriting companies (other than assets associated with insurance for
credit risk); and
(ii) For purposes of paragraph (3)(i) of this definition, the
company must calculate its total consolidated assets in accordance with
GAAP, or if the company does not calculate its total consolidated
assets under GAAP for any regulatory purpose (including compliance with
applicable securities laws), the company may estimate its total
consolidated assets, subject to review and adjustment by the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System; or
(4) A U.S. intermediate holding company.
* * * * *
Foreign banking organization has the same meaning as in 12 CFR
211.21(o) (Sec. 211.21(o) of the Board's Regulation K), provided that
if the top-tier foreign banking organization is incorporated in or
organized under the laws of any State, the foreign banking organization
shall not be treated as a foreign banking organization for purposes of
this part.
* * * * *
FR Y-15 means the Systemic Risk Report.
FR Y-9LP means the Parent Company Only Financial Statements for
Large Holding Companies.
* * * * *
Global systemically important BHC means a bank holding company
identified as a global systemically important BHC pursuant to 12 CFR
217.402.
GSIB depository institution means a depository institution that is
a
[[Page 24356]]
consolidated subsidiary of a global systemically important BHC and has
total consolidated assets equal to $10 billion or more, calculated
based on the average of the depository institution's total consolidated
assets for the four most recent calendar quarters as reported on the
Call Report. If the depository institution has not filed the Call
Report for each of the four most recent calendar quarters, total
consolidated assets means the average of its total consolidated assets,
as reported on the Call Report, for the most recent calendar quarter or
quarters, as applicable. After meeting the criteria under this
definition, a depository institution continues to be a GSIB depository
institution until the depository institution has less than $10 billion
in total consolidated assets, as reported on the Call Report, for each
of the four most recent calendar quarters, or the depository
institution is no longer a consolidated subsidiary of a global
systemically important BHC.
* * * * *
Regulated financial company means:
(1) A depository institution holding company or designated company;
(2) A company included in the organization chart of a depository
institution holding company on the Form FR Y-6, as listed in the
hierarchy report of the depository institution holding company produced
by the National Information Center (NIC) website,\2\ provided that the
top-tier depository institution holding company is subject to a minimum
liquidity standard under 12 CFR part 249;
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ https://www.ffiec.gov/nicpubweb/nicweb/NicHome.aspx.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(3) A depository institution; foreign bank; credit union;
industrial loan company, industrial bank, or other similar institution
described in section 2 of the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956, as
amended (12 U.S.C. 1841 et seq.); national bank, state member bank, or
state non-member bank that is not a depository institution;
(4) An insurance company;
(5) A securities holding company as defined in section 618 of the
Dodd-Frank Act (12 U.S.C. 1850a); broker or dealer registered with the
SEC under section 15 of the Securities Exchange Act (15 U.S.C. 78o);
futures commission merchant as defined in section 1a of the Commodity
Exchange Act of 1936 (7 U.S.C. 1 et seq.); swap dealer as defined in
section 1a of the Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1a); or security-
based swap dealer as defined in section 3 of the Securities Exchange
Act (15 U.S.C. 78c);
(6) A designated financial market utility, as defined in section
803 of the Dodd-Frank Act (12 U.S.C. 5462);
(7) A U.S. intermediate holding company; and
(8) Any company not domiciled in the United States (or a political
subdivision thereof) that is supervised and regulated in a manner
similar to entities described in paragraphs (1) through (7) of this
definition (e.g., a foreign banking organization, foreign insurance
company, foreign securities broker or dealer or foreign financial
market utility).
(9) A regulated financial company does not include:
(i) U.S. government-sponsored enterprises;
(ii) Small business investment companies, as defined in section 102
of the Small Business Investment Act of 1958 (15 U.S.C. 661 et seq.);
(iii) Entities designated as Community Development Financial
Institutions (CDFIs) under 12 U.S.C. 4701 et seq. and 12 CFR part 1805;
or
(iv) Central banks, the Bank for International Settlements, the
International Monetary Fund, or multilateral development banks.
* * * * *
State means any state, commonwealth, territory, or possession of
the United States, the District of Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico, the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, American Samoa,
Guam, or the United States Virgin Islands.
* * * * *
U.S. intermediate holding company means a company formed by a
foreign banking organization pursuant to 12 CFR 252.153.
* * * * *
0
36. In Sec. 329.30, revise paragraph (a) and add paragraphs (c) and
(d) to read as follows:
Sec. [thinsp]329.30 Total net cash outflow amount.
(a) Calculation of total net cash outflow amount. As of the
calculation date, an FDIC-supervised institution's total net cash
outflow amount equals the FDIC-supervised institution's outflow
adjustment percentage as determined under paragraph (c) of this section
multiplied by:
(1) The sum of the outflow amounts calculated under Sec. 329.32(a)
through (l); minus
(2) The lesser of:
(i) The sum of the inflow amounts calculated under Sec. 329.33(b)
through (g); and
(ii) 75 percent of the amount calculated under paragraph (a)(1) of
this section; plus
(3) The maturity mismatch add-on as calculated under paragraph (b)
of this section.
* * * * *
(c) Outflow adjustment percentage. An FDIC-supervised institution's
outflow adjustment percentage is determined pursuant to Table 1 to this
section.
Table 1 to Sec. 329.30--Outflow Adjustment Percentages
[Outflow adjustment percentage]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
GSIB FDIC-supervised institution.......... 100 percent.
Category II FDIC-supervised institution... 100 percent.
Category III FDIC-supervised institution 100 percent.
that:.
(1) Is a consolidated subsidiary of a
Category III banking organization
with $75 billion or more in average
weighted short-term wholesale
funding; or.
(2) Has $75 billion or more in average
weighted short-term wholesale funding
and is not a consolidated subsidiary
under a holding company.
Category III FDIC-supervised institution [70 to 85] percent.
that:.
(1) Is a consolidated subsidiary of a
Category III banking organization
with less than $75 billion in average
weighted short-term wholesale
funding; or.
(2) Has less than $75 billion in
average weighted short-term wholesale
funding and is not a consolidated
subsidiary under a holding company.
An FDIC-supervised institution described 100 percent.
in Sec. 329.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the
consolidated subsidiary of a U.S.
intermediate holding company of a
Category II foreign banking organization.
[[Page 24357]]
An FDIC-supervised institution described 100 percent.
in Sec. 329.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the
consolidated subsidiary of a U.S.
intermediate holding company of a
Category III foreign banking organization
with $75 billion or more in average
weighted short-term wholesale funding.
An FDIC-supervised institution described [70 to 85] percent.
in Sec. 329.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the
consolidated subsidiary of a U.S.
intermediate holding company of a
Category III foreign banking organization
with less than $75 billion in average
weighted short-term wholesale funding.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
(d) Transition. An FDIC-supervised institution whose outflow
adjustment percentage increases from a lower to a higher outflow
adjustment percentage may continue to use its previous lower outflow
adjustment percentage until the first day of the second calendar
quarter after the outflow adjustment percentage increases.
0
37. In Sec. 329.50, revise paragraph (a) to read as follows:
Sec. 329.50 Transitions.
(a) Depository institution subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate
holding company. An FDIC-supervised institution that becomes subject to
this part under Sec. 329.1(b)(1)(ii) does not need to comply with the
minimum liquidity standard and other requirements of this part until
[one year after the effective date of the final rule], at which time
the FDIC-supervised institution must begin to calculate and maintain a
liquidity coverage ratio daily in accordance with subparts A through N
of this part, if the FDIC-supervised institution is a consolidated
subsidiary of a U.S. intermediate holding company that, immediately
prior to [effective date of final rule]:
(1) Was domiciled in the United States;
(2) Had total consolidated assets equal to $50 billion or more
(based on the average of the U.S. intermediate holding company's four
most recent Consolidated Financial Statements for Holding Companies
reporting forms (FR Y-9Cs));
(3) Had total consolidated assets less than $250 billion as of the
2018 year-end FR Y-9C or Call Report, as applicable; and
(4) Had total consolidated on-balance sheet foreign exposure of
less than $10 billion as of year-end 2018 (where total on-balance sheet
foreign exposure equals total cross-border claims less claims with a
head office or guarantor located in another country plus redistributed
guaranteed amounts to the country of the head office or guarantor plus
local country claims on local residents plus revaluation gains on
foreign exchange and derivative transaction products, calculated in
accordance with the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council
(FFIEC) 009 Country Exposure Report).
* * * * *
0
38. Section 329.105, as proposed to be added at 81 FR 35124 (June 1,
2016), is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 329.105 Calculation of required stable funding amount.
(a) Required stable funding amount. An FDIC-supervised
institution's required stable funding (RSF) amount equals the FDIC-
supervised institution's required stable funding adjustment percentage
as determined under paragraph (b) of this section multiplied by the sum
of:
(1) The carrying values of an FDIC-supervised institution's assets
(other than amounts included in the calculation of the derivatives RSF
amount pursuant to Sec. 329.107(b)) and the undrawn amounts of an
FDIC-supervised institution's credit and liquidity facilities, in each
case multiplied by the RSF factors applicable in Sec. 329.106; and
(2) The FDIC-supervised institution's derivatives RSF amount
calculated pursuant to Sec. 329.107(b).
(b) Required stable funding adjustment percentage. An FDIC-
supervised institution's required stable funding adjustment percentage
is determined pursuant to Table 1 to this section.
Table 1 to Sec. 329.105--Required Stable Funding Adjustment
Percentages
[Required stable funding adjustment percentage]
------------------------------------------------------------------------
------------------------------------------------------------------------
GSIB FDIC-supervised institution.......... 100 percent.
Category II FDIC-supervised institution... 100 percent.
Category III FDIC-supervised institution 100 percent.
that:.
(3) Is a consolidated subsidiary of a
Category III banking organization
with $75 billion or more in average
weighted short-term wholesale
funding; or.
(4) Has $75 billion or more in average
weighted short-term wholesale funding
and is not a consolidated subsidiary
under a holding company.
Category III FDIC-supervised institution [70 to 85] percent.
that:.
(3) Is a consolidated subsidiary of a
Category III banking organization
with less than $75 billion in average
weighted short-term wholesale
funding; or.
(4) Has less than $75 billion in
average weighted short-term wholesale
funding and is not a consolidated
subsidiary under a holding company.
An FDIC-supervised institution described 100 percent.
in Sec. 329.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the
consolidated subsidiary of a U.S.
intermediate holding company of a
Category II foreign banking organization.
An FDIC-supervised institution described 100 percent.
in Sec. 329.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the
consolidated subsidiary of a U.S.
intermediate holding company of a
Category III foreign banking organization
with $75 billion or more in average
weighted short-term wholesale funding.
An FDIC-supervised institution described [70 to 85] percent.
in Sec. 329.1(b)(1)(ii) that is the
consolidated subsidiary of a U.S.
intermediate holding company of a
Category III foreign banking organization
with less than $75 billion in average
weighted short-term wholesale funding.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
[[Page 24358]]
(c) Transition. An FDIC-supervised institution whose required
stable funding adjustment percentage increases from a lower to a higher
required stable funding adjustment percentage may continue to use its
previous lower required stable funding adjustment percentage until the
first day of the second calendar quarter after the required stable
funding adjustment percentage increases.
Dated: April 9, 2019.
Joseph M. Otting,
Comptroller of the Currency.
By order of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System.
Ann E. Misback,
Secretary of the Board.
By order of the Board of Directors.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Dated at Washington, DC, on April 16, 2019.
Valerie J. Best,
Assistant Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2019-09245 Filed 5-21-19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210-01-P; 4810-33-P; 6714-01-P