Margin and Capital Requirements for Covered Swap Entities, 59970-59989 [2019-23541]
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59970
Proposed Rules
Federal Register
Vol. 84, No. 216
Thursday, November 7, 2019
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains notices to the public of the proposed
issuance of rules and regulations. The
purpose of these notices is to give interested
persons an opportunity to participate in the
rule making prior to the adoption of the final
rules.
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency
12 CFR Part 45
[Docket No. OCC–2019–0023]
RIN 1557–AE69
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 237
[Docket No. R–1682]
RIN 7100–AF62
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION
12 CFR Part 349
RIN 3064–AF08
FARM CREDIT ADMINISTRATION
12 CFR Part 624
RIN 3052–AD38
FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE
AGENCY
Comments should be received on
or before December 9, 2019.
DATES:
12 CFR Part 1221
Margin and Capital Requirements for
Covered Swap Entities
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency, Treasury (OCC); Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System (Board); Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC); Farm
Credit Administration (FCA); and the
Federal Housing Finance Agency
(FHFA).
ACTION: Proposed rule and request for
comment.
AGENCY:
The OCC, Board, FDIC, FCA,
and FHFA (each, an agency, and
collectively, the agencies) request
comment on a proposed rule that would
amend the agencies’ regulations that
require swap dealers and security-based
SUMMARY:
17:23 Nov 06, 2019
Interested parties are
encouraged to submit written comments
jointly to all of the agencies.
Commenters are encouraged to use the
title ‘‘Margin and Capital Requirements
for Covered Swap Entities’’ to facilitate
the organization and distribution of
comments among the agencies.
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 ‘‘Margin and Capital
Requirements for Covered Swap
Entities’’ to facilitate the organization
and distribution of the comments. You
may submit comments by any of the
following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal—
Regulations.gov Classic or
Regulations.gov Beta
ADDRESSES:
RIN 2590–AB03
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swap dealers under the agencies’
respective jurisdictions to exchange
margin with their counterparties for
swaps that are not centrally cleared
(Swap Margin Rule). The Swap Margin
Rule as adopted in 2015 takes effect
under a phased compliance schedule
spanning from 2016 through 2020, and
the dealers covered by the rule continue
to hold swaps in their portfolios that
were entered into before the effective
dates of the rule. Such swaps are
grandfathered from the Swap Margin
Rule’s requirements until they expire
according to their terms. The proposed
rule would permit swaps entered into
prior to an applicable compliance date
(legacy swaps) to retain their legacy
status in the event that they are
amended to replace an interbank offered
rate (IBOR) or other discontinued rate,
repeal the inter-affiliate initial margin
provisions, introduce an additional
compliance date for initial margin
requirements, clarify the point in time at
which trading documentation must be
in place, permit legacy swaps to retain
their legacy status in the event that they
are amended due to technical
amendments, notional reductions, or
portfolio compression exercises, and
make technical changes to relocate the
provision addressing amendments to
legacy swaps that are made to comply
with the Qualified Financial Contract
Rules, as defined in the Supplementary
Information section.
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Regulations.gov Classic: Go to https://
www.regulations.gov/. Enter ‘‘Docket ID
OCC–2019–0023’’ in the Search Box and
click ‘‘Search.’’ Click on ‘‘Comment
Now’’ to submit public comments. For
help with submitting effective
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or (703) 454–9859 Monday–Friday, 9
a.m.–5 p.m. ET or email to regulations@
erulemakinghelpdesk.com.
• Email: regs.comments@
occ.treas.gov.
• 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–2019–0023’’ in your comment.
In general, the OCC will enter all
comments received into the docket and
publish the comments 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
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 216 / Thursday, November 7, 2019 / Proposed Rules
rulemaking action by any of the
following methods:
• Viewing Comments Electronically—
Regulations.gov Classic or
Regulations.gov Beta
Regulations.gov Classic: Go to https://
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OCC–2019–0023’’ in the Search box and
click ‘‘Search.’’ Click on ‘‘Open Docket
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Comments and supporting materials can
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or (703) 454–9859 Monday–Friday, 9
a.m.–5 p.m. ET or email to regulations@
erulemakinghelpdesk.com.
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 deaf or 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–1682 and
RIN No. 7100–AF62, 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.
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• Email: regs.comments@
federalreserve.gov. Include the docket
number and RIN number in the subject
line of the message.
• Fax: (202) 452–3819.
• Mail: Address to Ann E. Misback,
Secretary, Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, 20th Street and
Constitution Avenue NW, Washington,
DC 20551.
All public comments are available
from 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 in Room 146, 1709 New York
Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20006
between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. on
weekdays.
FDIC: You may submit comments,
identified by RIN 3064–AF08, by any of
the following methods:
• Agency Website: https://
www.FDIC.gov/regulations/laws/federal.
• Mail: Robert E. Feldman, Executive
Secretary, Attention: Comments/Legal
ESS, Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, 550 17th Street NW,
Washington, DC 20429.
• Hand Delivered/Courier: 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.
Comments submitted must include
‘‘FDIC’’ and ‘‘RIN 3064–AF08—Margin
Amendments’’: Margin and Capital
Requirements for Covered Swap
Entities.’’ Comments received will be
posted without change to https://
www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal,
including any personal information
provided.
FCA: We offer a variety of methods for
you to submit your comments. For
accuracy and efficiency reasons,
commenters are encouraged to submit
comments by email or through the
FCA’s website. As facsimiles (fax) are
difficult for us to process and achieve
compliance with section 508 of the
Rehabilitation Act, we are no longer
accepting comments submitted by fax.
Regardless of the method you use,
please do not submit your comments
multiple times via different methods.
You may submit comments by any of
the following methods:
• Email: Send us an email at regcomm@fca.gov.
• FCA Website: https://www.fca.gov.
Click inside the ‘‘I want to . . .’’ field
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near the top of the page; select
‘‘comment on a pending regulation’’
from the dropdown menu; and click
‘‘Go.’’ This takes you to an electronic
public comment form.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Mail: Barry F. Mardock, Deputy
Director, Office of Regulatory Policy,
Farm Credit Administration, 1501 Farm
Credit Drive, McLean, VA 22102–5090.
You may review copies of all
comments we receive at our office in
McLean, Virginia or on our website at
https://www.fca.gov. Once you are on the
website, click inside the ‘‘I want to
. . .’’ field near the top of the page;
select ‘‘find comments on a pending
regulation’’ from the dropdown menu;
and click ‘‘Go.’’ This will take you to the
Comment Letters page where you can
select the regulation for which you
would like to read the public comments.
We will show your comments as
submitted, including any supporting
data provided, but for technical reasons
we may omit items such as logos and
special characters. Identifying
information that you provide, such as
phone numbers and addresses, will be
publicly available. However, we will
attempt to remove email addresses to
help reduce internet spam.
FHFA: You may submit your written
comments on the proposed rulemaking,
identified by regulatory information
number: (RIN) 2590–AB03, by any one
of the following methods:
• Agency Website: www.fhfa.gov/
open-for-comment-or-input.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments. If
you submit your comment to the
Federal eRulemaking Portal, please also
send it by email to FHFA at
RegComments@fhfa.gov to ensure
timely receipt by the agency. Please
include ‘‘RIN 2590–AB03’’ in the
subject line of the message.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: The hand
delivery address is: Alfred M. Pollard,
General Counsel, Attention: Comments/
RIN 2590–AB03, Federal Housing
Finance Agency, Constitution Center
(OGC Eighth Floor), 400 7th St. SW,
Washington, DC 20219. Deliver the
package to the Seventh Street entrance
Guard Desk, First Floor, on business
days between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m.
• U.S. Mail, United Parcel Service,
Federal Express, or Other Mail Service:
The mailing address for comments is:
Alfred M. Pollard, General Counsel,
Attention: Comments/RIN 2590–AB03,
Federal Housing Finance Agency,
Constitution Center (OGC Eighth Floor),
400 7th St. SW, Washington, DC 20219.
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 216 / Thursday, November 7, 2019 / Proposed Rules
Please note that all mail sent to FHFA
via U.S. Mail is routed through a
national irradiation facility, a process
that may delay delivery by
approximately two weeks.
All comments received by the
deadline will be posted for public
inspection without change, including
any personal information you provide,
such as your name, address, email
address and telephone number on the
FHFA website at https://www.fhfa.gov. In
addition, copies of all comments
received will be available for
examination by the public through the
electronic rulemaking docket for this
proposed rule also located on the FHFA
website.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
OCC: Chris McBride, Director for
Market Risk, Treasury and Market Risk
Policy, (202) 649–6402, or Allison
Hester-Haddad, Counsel, Chief
Counsel’s Office, (202) 649–5490, for
persons who are deaf or hearing
impaired, TTY (202) 649–5597, Office of
the Comptroller of the Currency, 400 7th
Street SW, Washington, DC 20219.
Board: Constance Horsley, Deputy
Associate Director, (202) 452–5239,
Lesley Chao, Lead Financial Institution
Policy Analyst, (202) 974–7063, or John
Feid, Principal Economist, (202) 452–
2385, Division of Supervision and
Regulation; Patricia Yeh, Senior
Counsel, (202) 452–3089, Jason Shafer,
Senior Counsel, (202) 728–5811, or
Justyna Bolter, Senior Attorney, (202)
452–2686, Legal Division; for users of
Telecommunication Devices for the Deaf
(TDD) only, contact 202–263–4869;
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, 20th and C Streets NW,
Washington, DC 20551.
FDIC: Irina Leonova, Senior Policy
Analyst, ileonova@fdic.gov, Capital
Markets Branch, Division of Risk
Management Supervision, (202) 898–
3843; Thomas F. Hearn, Counsel,
thohearn@fdic.gov, Legal Division,
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation,
550 17th Street NW, Washington, DC
20429.
FCA: Jeremy R. Edelstein, Associate
Director, Finance & Capital Market
Team, Timothy T. Nerdahl, Senior
Policy Analyst, Clayton D. Milburn,
Senior Financial Analyst, Office of
Regulatory Policy, (703) 883–4414, TTY
(703) 883–4056, or Richard A. Katz,
Senior Counsel, Office of General
Counsel, (703) 883–4020, TTY (703)
883–4056, Farm Credit Administration,
1501 Farm Credit Drive, McLean, VA
22102–5090.
FHFA: Christopher Vincent, Senior
Financial Analyst, Office of Financial
Analysis, Modeling & Simulations, (202)
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649–3685, Christopher.Vincent@
fhfa.gov, or James P. Jordan, Associate
General Counsel, Office of General
Counsel, (202) 649–3075,
James.Jordan@fhfa.gov, Federal Housing
Finance Agency, Constitution Center,
400 7th St. SW, Washington, DC 20219.
The telephone number for the
Telecommunications Device for the
Hearing Impaired is (800) 877–8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background on the Swap Margin
Rule
The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act (DoddFrank Act) required the OCC, Board,
FDIC, FCA, and FHFA (each, an agency,
and collectively, the agencies) to jointly
adopt rules that establish capital and
margin requirements for swap entities
that are prudentially regulated by one of
the agencies (covered swap entities).1
These capital and margin requirements
apply to swaps that are not cleared by
a registered derivatives clearing
organization or a registered clearing
agency (non-cleared swaps).2 For the
remainder of this preamble, the term
‘‘non-cleared swaps’’ refers to noncleared swaps and non-cleared securitybased swaps unless the context requires
otherwise.
The Basel Committee on Banking
Supervision (BCBS) and the Board of
the International Organization of
Securities Commissions (IOSCO)
established an international framework
for margin requirements on non-cleared
derivatives in September 2013 (BCBS/
IOSCO framework).3 Following the
establishment of the BCBS/IOSCO
1 Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act, Pub. L. 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376
(2010). See 7 U.S.C. 6s; 15 U.S.C. 78o–10. Sections
731 and 764 of the Dodd-Frank Act added a new
section 4s to the Commodity Exchange Act of 1936,
as amended, and a new section, section 15F, to the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended,
respectively, which require registration with the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) of
swap dealers and major swap participants and the
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) of
security-based swap dealers and major securitybased swap participants (each a swap entity and,
collectively, swap entities). Section 1a(39) of the
Commodity Exchange Act of 1936, as amended,
defines the term ‘‘prudential regulator’’ for
purposes of the margin requirements applicable to
swap dealers, major swap participants, securitybased swap dealers and major security-based swap
participants. See 7 U.S.C. 1a(39).
2 A ‘‘swap’’ is defined in section 721 of the DoddFrank Act to include, among other things, an
interest rate swap, commodity swap, equity swap,
and credit default swap, and a security-based swap
is defined in section 761 of the Dodd-Frank Act to
include a swap based on a single security or loan
or on a narrow-based security index. See 7 U.S.C.
1a(47); 15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(68).
3 See BCBS and IOSCO ‘‘Margin requirements for
non-centrally cleared derivatives,’’ (September
2013), available at https://www.bis.org/publ/
bcbs261.pdf.
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framework, on November 30, 2015, the
agencies published regulations that
require swap dealers and security-based
swap dealers under the agencies’
respective jurisdictions to exchange
margin with their counterparties for
swaps that are not centrally cleared
(Swap Margin Rule or Rule), which
includes many of the principles and
other aspects of the BCBS/IOSCO
framework.4 In particular, the Swap
Margin Rule adopted the
implementation schedule set forth in
the BCBS/IOSCO framework, including
the revised implementation schedule
adopted on March 18, 2015.5
The Swap Margin Rule established an
effective date of April 1, 2016, with a
phased-in compliance schedule for the
initial and variation margin
requirements.6 On or after March 1,
2017, all covered swap entities were
required to comply with the variation
margin requirements for transactions
with other swap entities and financial
end user counterparties. The Swap
Margin Rule presently requires all
covered swap entities to comply with
the initial margin requirements for noncleared swaps with all financial end
users with a material swaps exposure
and with all swap entities by September
1, 2020.
The Swap Margin Rule’s requirements
generally apply only to a non-cleared
swap entered into on or after the
applicable compliance date.7 A noncleared swap entered into prior to an
entity’s applicable compliance date is
essentially ‘‘grandfathered’’ by this
regulatory provision, in that the noncleared swap is generally not subject to
the margin requirements in the Swap
Margin Rule (legacy swap). However,
the agencies explained in the preamble
of the Swap Margin Rule that a legacy
swap that is later amended or novated
on or after the applicable compliance
4 80
FR 74840 (November 30, 2015).
BCBS and IOSCO ‘‘Margin requirements for
non-centrally cleared derivatives,’’ (March 2015),
available at https://www.bis.org/bcbs/publ/
d317.pdf.
6 The applicable compliance date for a covered
swap entity is based on the average daily aggregate
notional amount of non-cleared swaps, foreign
exchange forwards and foreign exchange swaps of
the covered swap entity and its counterparty
(accounting for their respective affiliates) for each
business day in March, April, and May of that year.
The applicable compliance dates for initial margin
requirements that are currently in place, and the
corresponding average daily aggregate notional
amount thresholds, are: September 1, 2016, $3
trillion; September 1, 2017, $2.25 trillion;
September 1, 2018, $1.5 trillion; September 1, 2019,
$0.75 trillion; and September 1, 2020, all swap
entities and counterparties. See § __.1(e) of the
Swap Margin Rule. In this proposed rule, the
agencies are also proposing to add one additional
year to this schedule for certain counterparties.
7 See § l.1(e) of the Swap Margin Rule.
5 See
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date should be subject to the
requirements of the Swap Margin Rule,
in the interests of preventing evasion of
the Rule’s margin requirements.8
The Swap Margin Rule has recently
been amended to (1) provide relief to
legacy swaps that are amended to
achieve compliance with final rules that
established restrictions on and
requirements for certain non-cleared
swaps and certain other qualified
financial contracts of U.S. global
systemically important banking
organizations and their subsidiaries and
the U.S. operations of foreign global
systemically important banking
organizations (QFC Rules) 9 and (2)
subject to certain conditions, provide
relief for entities located in the United
Kingdom to transfer their existing swap
portfolios that face counterparties
located in the European Union to an
affiliate or other related establishment
located within the European Union or
the United States while maintaining
legacy status for such portfolios.10 This
notice of proposed rulemaking would
make the following changes to the Swap
Margin Rule:
First, the proposal would provide
relief by allowing legacy swaps to be
amended to replace existing interest rate
provisions based on certain interbank
offered rates (IBORs) and other interest
rates that are reasonably expected to be
discontinued or are reasonably
determined to have lost their relevance
as a reliable benchmark due to a
significant impairment, without such
swaps losing their legacy status.
Second, the proposal would amend
the Swap Margin Rule’s requirements
for inter-affiliate swaps. The proposal
would repeal the requirement for a
covered swap entity to collect initial
margin from its affiliates, but would
retain the requirement that variation
margin be exchanged for affiliate
transactions.
Third, the proposal would add an
additional initial margin compliance
period for certain smaller
counterparties, and clarify the existing
trading documentation requirements in
§ l.10 of the Rule.
Fourth, the proposal would amend
the Swap Margin Rule to permit
amendments caused by conducting
certain routine life-cycle activities that
covered swap entities may conduct for
legacy swaps, such as reduction of
notional amounts and portfolio
8 80
FR 74850–51.
FR 50805 (October 10, 2018). The QFC Rules
are codified as follows: 12 CFR part 47 (OCC’s QFC
Rule); 12 CFR part 252, subpart I (Board’s QFC
Rule); 12 CFR part 382 (FDIC’s QFC Rule).
10 84 FR 9940 (March 19, 2019).
9 83
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compression exercises, without
triggering margin requirements.
These aspects of the proposal are each
discussed in greater detail below.
II. Interbank Offered Rates
A. Background on IBORs
The proposed rule would amend the
Swap Margin Rule to permit a covered
swap entity to amend a legacy swap in
order to replace an IBOR with an
alternative reference rate or rates,
without triggering margin requirements.
An IBOR is a benchmark interest rate
that is intended to represent banks’ cost
of unsecured wholesale borrowing.
IBORs 11 have been used as the
benchmark interest rate for a large
volume and broad range of existing
financial products and contracts,
including for an estimated $190 trillion
US Dollar LIBOR (USD LIBOR)
exposure, of which $145 trillion
represents over-the-counter derivatives
exposure (as of year-end 2016).12
However, the discovery of, and
numerous regulatory actions to seek
redress of, market manipulation and
false reporting of the many IBORs,
together with the post-crisis decline in
liquidity in interbank unsecured
funding markets, have undermined
confidence in the reliability and
robustness of IBORs.
As a result, the Financial Stability
Board (FSB) and the U.S. Financial
Stability Oversight Council (FSOC)
requested that government and industry
stakeholders undertake implementation
of new designs and methodologies for
IBORs, and the identification of viable
alternative near risk-free rates in their
respective currencies (U.S. dollar in the
case of the United States) with a focus
on the feasibility of new rate
methodologies, including identification
of suitable administrators and any
necessary infrastructure to support these
rates.13
11 IBORs include the London Interbank Offered
Rate (LIBOR), the Tokyo Interbank Offered Rate
(TIBOR), the Bank Bill Swap Rate (BBSW), the
Singapore Interbank Offered Rate (SIBOR), the
Canadian Dollar Offered Rate (CDOR), the Euro
Interbank Offered Rate (EURIBOR), and the Hong
Kong Interbank Offered Rate (HIBOR).
12 ‘‘Second Report of the Alternative Reference
Rates Committee’’ published in March 2018,
available at https://www.newyorkfed.org/
medialibrary/Microsites/arrc/files/2018/ARRCSecond-report.
13 ‘‘Reforming Major Interest Rate Benchmarks’’
published by the Financial Stability Board on July
22, 2014, available at https://www.fsb.org/wpcontent/uploads/r_140722.pdf. Several central
banks responded to this request and convened
working groups of market participants and official
sector representatives, including the United
Kingdom, Japan, Switzerland, and the Eurozone.
The work has also been coordinated at the
international level by the FSB’s Official Sector
Steering Group (OSSG).
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The Federal Reserve Board and
Federal Reserve Bank of New York
convened the Alternative Reference
Rates Committee (ARRC) 14 in 2014 to
identify an alternative reference rate for
USD LIBOR and create an
implementation plan to promote the use
of the selected alternative on a
voluntary basis. In 2017, the ARRC
selected the Secured Overnight Funding
Rate (SOFR), which is designed to be
representative of general funding
conditions in the overnight Treasury
repo market. The ARRC has noted that
use of SOFR is voluntary and that other
benchmarks can also be considered as
potential alternatives for USD LIBOR.
For example, the American Financial
Exchange is offering Ameribor as a
potential USD LIBOR replacement
rate.15 In addition, benchmarks such as
an Overnight Bank Funding Rate were
suggested by some market participants
as a potential alternative.
In July 2017, the U.K. Financial
Conduct Authority (UKFCA), which
regulates ICE Benchmark
Administration, the administrator of
LIBOR, announced that it has sought
commitments from LIBOR panel banks
to continue to contribute to LIBOR
through the end of 2021, but that the
UKFCA will not use its powers to
compel or persuade contributions
beyond that date. The UKFCA has also
warned that it may judge LIBOR to no
longer be representative of its
underlying market should it persist past
this date. Thus, it is possible that LIBOR
will cease to be published at the end of
2021. Consequently, it is likely that
derivatives contracts that reference
LIBOR will need to be amended to
replace LIBOR.
In consideration of this uncertainty,
the International Swaps and Derivatives
Association, Inc. (ISDA), which
produces standard documentation used
by parties to derivatives contracts,
indicated that it plans to amend its
documentation to ‘‘include fallbacks
that would apply upon the permanent
discontinuation of certain key
14 The voting members of the 2014 ARRC were
Bank of America, Barclays, BNP Paribas, Citigroup,
Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank, Goldman Sachs,
HSBC, JP Morgan Chase & Co., Morgan Stanley,
Nomura, RBS, Socie´te´ Ge´ne´rale, UBS, and Wells
Fargo; the non-voting members were Bank of New
York Mellon, CME, DTCC, ISDA and LCH.Clearnet;
the ex officio members were Board of Governors of
the Federal Reserve System, Federal Reserve Bank
of New York, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading
Commission, U.S. Treasury Department and Office
of Financial Research. The ARRC’s membership has
changed over time. For a list of the latest members,
see https://www.newyorkfed.org/arrc.
15 See https://ameribor.net/.
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IBORs.’’ 16 For new non-cleared swaps,
market participants will have an option
to amend their documentation via an
ISDA benchmark supplement. For noncleared swaps that are already in place,
market participants will have the option
to utilize an ISDA protocol that will
specify amended definitions, triggers,
and other adjustments.17
Due to the potential discontinuation
of LIBOR at the end of 2021, covered
swap entities face uncertainty about the
way their swap contracts based on
LIBOR and other IBORs will operate
after the permanent discontinuation
date without a reliable benchmark rate.
A benchmark rate is a critical term for
calculating payments under a swap
contract. In many instances, these firms
may decide to amend existing swap
contracts to replace an IBOR before the
IBOR becomes discontinued. Such
amendments may also trigger follow-on
amendments 18 that the counterparties
determine are necessary to maintain the
economics of the contract. Absent the
proposed revisions to the Swap Margin
Rule, one or more of these amendments
could affect the legacy status of a noncleared swap and make it subject to the
requirements of the Rule. In order to
enable covered swap entities and their
counterparties to avoid the risk of future
financial instability, the agencies
believe it is appropriate to permit
covered swap entities to amend the
reference rates in a legacy swap contract
and to adopt necessary follow-on
amendments without converting the
legacy swap into a swap subject to the
Swap Margin Rule. The conditions of
eligibility for the amendments are
described in the next section of this
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION.
B. Proposed Rule on IBORs
In recognition of the ongoing efforts to
transition away from key IBORs due to
their potential discontinuation, the
agencies are proposing to amend the
Swap Margin Rule to remove
impediments that would limit the
ability of covered swap entities to
replace certain rates in their legacy non16 ISDA Consultation on Pre-Cessation Issues for
LIBOR and Certain Other Interbank Offered Rates
(IBORs), May 16, 2019, available at https://
www.isda.org/a/md6ME/FINAL-Pre-cessationissues-Consultation.pdf.
17 ISDA Supplemental Consultation on Spread
and Term Adjustments for Fallbacks in Derivatives
Referencing USD LIBOR, CDOR and HIBOR and
Certain Aspects of Fallbacks for Derivatives
Referencing SOR, May 16, 2019, available at https://
www.isda.org/a/n6tME/Supplemental-Consultationon-USD-LIBOR-CDOR-HIBOR-and-SOR.pdf.
18 Follow-on amendments may include a variety
of spread adjustments resulting from the move from
a term rate to an overnight rate, from unsecured to
secured, or could result from a change in tenor,
among others.
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cleared swaps. Specifically, the agencies
propose to amend § l.1(h) to preserve
the legacy status of a non-cleared swap
after a covered swap entity replaces
certain reference rates. Proposed
§ l.1(h) recognizes that these
replacements could be carried out using
a variety of legal mechanisms by
permitting amendments accomplished
by the parties’: Adherence to a protocol;
contractual amendment of an agreement
or confirmation; or execution of a new
contract in replacement of and
immediately upon termination of an
existing contract (i.e., tear-up), subject
to the limitations discussed below.
The proposed rule is intended to be
flexible with respect to the method of
amendment. The proposal would permit
amendments to be executed with
respect to an individual non-cleared
swap or on a netting set level, as long
as the other proposed criteria are met.
The proposed rule describes the type
of rate that can be replaced and the
accompanying changes that would be
permitted. Proposed section § l
.1(h)(3)(i) would permit amendments
that are made solely to accommodate
the replacement of an IBOR or a
replacement of any other non-IBOR
interest rate that a covered swap entity
reasonably expects to be discontinued
or reasonably determines has lost its
relevance as a reliable benchmark due to
a significant impairment with an
alternate reference rate.19 For example,
if a benchmark administrator materially
changes the inputs in the benchmark
calculation because an input is no
longer available, a covered swap entity
may determine that the benchmark has
lost its relevance as a reliable
benchmark due to a significant
impairment.
The proposed rule lists the IBORs that
could be replaced, including LIBOR,
TIBOR, BBSW, SIBOR, CDOR,
EURIBOR, and HIBOR. Although the
current uncertainty surrounding
reference rates is tied to IBORs, the
agencies are also proposing a second,
19 Under the EU Benchmark Regulation
(Regulation (EU) 2016/1011 (June 8, 2016)), a
benchmark administrator is expected to regularly
assess whether a critical benchmark measures the
underlying market or economic reality. In certain
circumstances, a regulatory authority of a
benchmark administrator may complete its own
assessment of a benchmark’s representativeness as
well. Covered swap entities may refer to such
assessments or other public statements by
benchmark administrators or regulatory authorities
in order to inform their expectations about whether
a benchmark will be discontinued or continues to
be reliable. In addition, covered swap entities may
consult the IOSCO Principles for Financial
Benchmarks (July 2013), to assist in determining
whether a benchmark has lost its relevance as a
reliable benchmark, available at https://
www.iosco.org/library/pubdocs/pdf/
IOSCOPD415.pdf.
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more qualitative standard that would be
applicable to other categories of
reference rates, should the need arise in
the future. This forward-looking
standard is designed to encourage
covered swap entities to resolve critical
uncertainties before an interest rate
benchmark is discontinued, or loses its
market relevance, in order to minimize
disturbance to the markets.
The agencies also anticipate that a
reference rate may need to be replaced
more than one time. For example, an
IBOR may first be replaced with fallback
provisions at a time when a permanent
alternative rate is not yet available or
amendment documentation has not yet
been developed. Subsequently, fallback
provisions may be replaced with
permanent alternative rates. If the
original rate that is being replaced is an
IBOR or any other non-IBOR interest
rate benchmark that otherwise meets the
requirements of the proposed rule that
a covered swap entity reasonably
expects it to be discontinued or
reasonably determines that it has lost its
relevance as a reliable benchmark due to
a significant impairment, the noncleared swap may be amended more
than once to accommodate ongoing
developments toward a permanent
replacement rate. There is no limit to
the number of amendments that can
take place, as long as the rate that was
originally present in the non-cleared
swap met the criteria in either § l
.1(h)(3)(i)(A) or § l.1(h)(3)(i)(B). The
proposed approach of permitting
subsequent amendments takes into
account that any subsequent changes to
the reference rate will be the subject of
negotiations among counterparties that
are incentivized to agree to a reasonable
rate. The proposed rule would not
permit subsequent amendments that
change rates or other terms of the noncleared swap for any purpose other than
for those purposes explicitly set out in
§ l.1(h), without triggering application
of the margin requirements.
To benefit from the treatment of this
new legacy swap provision, a covered
swap entity must make the amendments
to the non-cleared swap solely to
accommodate the replacement of a rate
described in the proposed rule. The
proposed rule is flexible as to the
incoming replacement rate by leaving it
up to the counterparties to select a
mutually agreeable replacement rate.
The agencies expect that any
replacement rate, including any
subsequent replacement rate, would be
agreed upon by the parties after
assessing its complexity, safety and
soundness, and taking into
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consideration associated risk
management practices.20
The agencies also acknowledge that
replacing a reference rate could require
other contractual changes to maintain
the economics of the non-cleared swap
and to preserve the relative values to the
parties after incorporating changes in
the reference rate. The proposed rule
would permit changes that incorporate
spreads and other adjustments that
accompany and implement the
replacement rate amendment. The rule
would also permit other, more
administrative and technical changes
necessary to operationalize the
determination of payments or other
exchanges of economic value using the
replacement rate, including changes to
determination dates, calculation agents,
and payment dates. These types of
administrative changes may be
necessary to adjust computations and
operational provisions to reflect the
differences between an IBOR and the
replacement rate or rates.
The agencies envision that a number
of contractual changes could be
necessary to maintain the economics of
the non-cleared swap, and for this
reason, have drafted the proposed rule
so it permits these changes. For
example, legacy swaps that contain USD
LIBOR may be referencing 1-day LIBOR,
1-week LIBOR, 1-month LIBOR, 2month LIBOR, 3-month LIBOR, 6-month
LIBOR or 12-month LIBOR. In these
cases, a replacement rate that could be
overnight and could be based, for
example, on a fully secured funding rate
(e.g., SOFR) may need to incorporate a
market risk (term structure) spread to
substitute for the market risk component
of LIBOR that is of a longer maturity
than overnight. Similarly, because
LIBOR is unsecured and therefore
includes an element of bank credit risk,
it is likely that a replacement rate that
could be overnight and could be based,
for example, on a fully secured funding
rate (e.g., SOFR) would need a credit
spread to adjust the new reference rate
to a comparable legacy LIBOR rate. This
may also be the case for non-USD IBORs
that could be replaced by overnight
funding rates.
The proposed rule would also permit
administrative and technical changes
necessary for operational purposes. For
example, for an overnight rate, interest
on financial instruments that pay
periodically (e.g., quarterly) may be set
in arrears by compounding or averaging
the daily observations over the relevant
20 The replacement rate is also expected to be
consistent with international standards, such as the
IOSCO Principles for Financial Benchmarks. See
https://www.iosco.org/library/pubdocs/pdf/
IOSCOPD415.pdf.
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period. To offer flexibility in the
transition to a new reference rate, the
proposed rule would permit the
replacement of an IBOR or other
discontinued reference rate in the
floating leg of a fixed-floating rate swap,
and would also permit the interest rate
in the fixed leg to be modified in order
to maintain the economics of the noncleared swap.
However, the agencies do not believe
that the relief being provided for rate
replacement purposes should be
expansively applied to encompass all
changes to a legacy swap. Accordingly,
the proposed rule text clarifies that the
proposed safe harbor for legacy swaps
would be unavailable if the
amendments extend the maturity or
increase the total effective notional
amount of the non-cleared swap. For
example, a one time, lump-sum
compensatory payment in lieu of a
spread adjustment would not increase
the total effective notional amount and
would be permitted. On the other hand,
extending the maturity date to allow for
additional payments to be made under
the non-cleared swap would be a change
outside the scope of the proposed rule.
The agencies envision that covered
swap entities may carry out certain
amendments, including those executed
by method of termination and
replacement, for the purpose of
implementing changes that might
qualify for more than one exemption
provided under § l.1(h). When a legacy
swap is replaced with a new contract
that reflects more than one exemption,
each of the provisions in the
replacement contract that differs from
the terminated contract must be
permitted under the respective
subsection of § l.1(h). For example, a
covered swap entity and its
counterparty may decide to replace an
IBOR with a different reference rate and,
at the same time, make changes to
comply with the QFC Rules. The IBORrelated changes must comply with § l
.1(h)(3) and the QFC Rules changes
must comply with § l.1(h)(1) for the
replacement contract to meet the ‘‘solely
to comply’’ standard and, in the case of
§ l.1(h)(3), the ‘‘solely to
accommodate’’ standard.
III. Non-Cleared Swaps Between CSEs
and an Affiliate
The proposal would amend the
treatment of affiliate transactions in the
Swap Margin Rule by creating an
exemption from the initial margin
requirements for non-cleared swaps
between affiliates.21 The proposal
21 Under the BCBS/IOSCO framework, no
common standard was set for inter-affiliate
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59975
would, however, retain the requirement
that affiliates exchange variation
margin.
Currently, § l.11 of the Swap Margin
Rule establishes special rules for
transactions between a covered swap
entity and an ‘‘affiliate,’’ generally
defined in the Swap Margin Rule as an
entity that is consolidated with the
dealer on an accounting basis, or
consolidated on a common basis by
another entity.22 The rules applicable to
transactions with affiliates differ from
the rules applicable to transactions with
non-affiliates. For example, a covered
swap entity is not required to post
initial margin to an affiliate or use an
independent custodian for most forms
of initial margin collected from an
affiliate. In addition, the covered swap
entity does not need to apply a $50
million initial margin threshold amount
to the covered swap entity’s affiliates on
an aggregate basis, and the covered
swap entity is not required to use the
ten-day holding period for calculating
initial margin using an initial margin
model under § l.8(d)(1).23 Consistent
with the requirements for non-cleared
swaps between non-affiliated
counterparties, current § l.11 requires
the exchange of variation margin for
affiliate transactions. As discussed in
the preamble to the final Swap Margin
Rule, the initial and variation margin
requirements applicable to affiliate
transactions were intended to advance
the mandate under the Dodd-Frank Act
to ‘‘offset the greater risk to swap
entities from the use of swaps that are
not cleared and help ensure the safety
and soundness of the covered swap
entity and are appropriate for the risk
associated with the non-cleared swap
entity.’’ 24 The agencies noted that the
requirement to collect initial margin
from, but not post initial margin to,
affiliates ‘‘should help to protect the
safety and soundness of covered swap
entities in the event of an affiliated
counterparty default.’’ 25 Furthermore,
by requiring that inter-affiliate swaps be
margined, the requirement was intended
transactions, in recognition of the existing and
varied approaches to the topic across jurisdictions.
22 Section l.2 provides that two companies are
‘‘affiliates’’ if either company consolidates the other
on financial statements prepared in accordance
with U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting
Principles, the International Financial Reporting
Standards, or other similar standards, or if both
companies are consolidated with a third company.
23 For a description of the application of this set
of exemptions, see the preamble to the final rule,
80 FR at 74887.
24 80 FR at 74889.
25 Id.
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to prevent unmargined swaps from
posing a risk to systemic stability.26
Since the Swap Margin Rule was
implemented, supervisory experience
has shown that inter-affiliate swaps are
used by covered swap entities for
internal risk management purposes
whereby a banking organization
transfers risk to a centralized risk
management function, which is
considered to be a prudent risk
management practice. As more covered
swap entities have come into scope, the
amount of inter-affiliate initial margin
collected by covered swap entities has
increased. This has led the affected
banking organizations to borrow
increasing amounts of cash in the debt
markets to fund eligible collateral,
placing additional demands on their
asset-liability management structure and
increasing their liability exposure to
depositors and other creditors in the
market. The removal of the inter-affiliate
initial margin requirement would
provide these banking organizations
with additional flexibility for internal
allocation of collateral. The agencies
believe that such risk management
practices often improve the safety and
soundness of a covered swap entity, and
therefore, to encourage such prudent
risk management, propose to exempt
inter-affiliate swaps from the Rule’s
initial margin requirements. The
proposal does not remove the
requirement that covered swap entities
must collect and post initial margin
with other non-affiliate covered swap
entities.
The agencies also note that because
other jurisdictions (as well as the U.S.
market regulators) do not consistently
apply swap margin rules to interaffiliate swaps, the Rule’s imposition of
initial margin requirements for interaffiliate swaps may have provided
limited systemic risk benefits and put
U.S. banking firms at a competitive
disadvantage. For example, many
covered swap entities subject to the
Swap Margin Rule are banking
organizations that are typically
internationally active with operations in
many jurisdictions that may exempt or
not impose initial margin requirements
on inter-affiliate transactions.27 In
addition, the imposition of initial
margin requirements may depend on the
26 80
FR at 74889.
the BCBS/IOSCO framework, no
common standard was set for inter-affiliate swap
transactions, in recognition of these existing and
varied approaches to the topic of inter-affiliate
transactions generally. 79 FR at 57353; Article 6 of
the BCBS and IOSCO ‘‘Margin Requirements for
Non-Centrally Cleared Derivatives’’ (September
2013), available at https://www.bis.org/publ/
bcbs261.pdf.
27 Under
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banking organization’s home country,
presence in the United States, corporate
organization, or business strategy. For
example, internationally active banking
organizations that have a cross-border
organizational structure that relies on
separate legal entities must currently
use inter-affiliate swaps to centralize
risk management of the overall banking
organization’s outward-facing
derivatives exposures, whereas other
internationally active banks that operate
cross-border through branching
structures do not have a comparable risk
management need for such inter-affiliate
swaps. The agencies do not believe this
difference in corporate organization
justifies different initial margin
requirements under the Swap Margin
Rule.
The agencies are not proposing to
alter the Rule’s uniform requirements
for covered swap entities to exchange
variation margin with their affiliates.
The agencies note it has become routine
in recent years for covered swap entities
to exchange variation margin on noncleared swaps with their affiliates. As a
best practice for risk management, the
exchange of variation margin serves to
reflect ongoing economic transfers of
current exposure for assets and
liabilities between the various parts of
the banking organization over the life of
each non-cleared swap. This in turn
contributes to the safety and soundness
of the covered swap entity, and the
larger banking organization as a whole.
The exchange of variation margin will
remain a requirement under the general
rules of § l.4 and will continue to be
applicable to inter-affiliate swaps.
The proposal would also supplement
the definition of ‘‘affiliate’’ for purposes
of § l.11 to include not only the
definition of ‘‘affiliate’’ found in § l.2
of the Swap Margin Rule, focusing on
consolidation under applicable
accounting rules, but also the
established ‘‘catch-all’’ legal standard
for affiliation in banking focusing on the
direct or indirect exercise of controlling
influence over the management or
policies of the controlled company.
Absent this change, the Swap Margin
Rule would, by its general provisions,
require covered swap entities to post
initial margin to, and collect initial
margin from, unconsolidated entities
that are treated as affiliates of the
covered swap entity for other legal or
regulatory purposes.
Finally, the agencies note that certain
affiliate transactions are subject to the
requirements of sections 23A and 23B of
the Federal Reserve Act as implemented
by the Federal Reserve’s Regulation W,
as these requirements continue to apply
to affiliate transactions with an insured
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depository institution.28 Currently,
almost all U.S. covered swap entities are
insured depository institutions that
would be subject to Sections 23A, 23B,
and Regulation W. These provisions are
specifically tailored to address risks
arising from transactions, including
non-cleared swaps, between affiliates.
As such, the agencies believe that they
are the more effective tools to address
risks arising from transactions between
affiliates. The Board continues to
consider how inter-affiliate non-cleared
swaps can be addressed under
Regulation W.
IV. Additional Compliance Date for
Initial Margin Requirements
The agencies are proposing to give
covered swap entities an additional year
to implement initial margin
requirements for certain smaller
counterparties. The implementation of
both initial and variation margin
requirements started on September 1,
2016. With respect to initial margin
requirements, the requirements in the
Swap Margin Rule are implemented in
five phases from September 1, 2016,
through September 1, 2020, depending
on the size of the covered swap entity’s
portfolio of non-cleared swaps and the
counterparty’s portfolio of non-cleared
swaps. Variation margin requirements
for all covered swap entities and
counterparties were completely phased
in by March 1, 2017. This schedule was
consistent with BCBS/IOSCO
framework when the Swap Margin Rule
was adopted in 2015.
The phase-in schedule for initial
margin is based on the average daily
aggregate notional amount (AANA) of
non-cleared swaps held in each party’s
market-wide portfolio, measured
separately from the standpoint of the
covered swap entity and the standpoint
of the counterparty.29 With the recent
28 12 U.S.C. 371c and 371c–1; 12 CFR part 223.
In adopting the Swap Margin Rule, the agencies
noted that transactions between banks and their
affiliates have long been subject to their own special
set of regulatory restrictions, particularly in the case
of U.S. banks pursuant to sections 23A and 23B of
the Federal Reserve Act. See 80 FR at 74889 (noting
the obligation of banks that are covered swap
entities to comply with additional regulatory
restrictions on inter-affiliate swap transactions,
such as those required by sections 23A and 23B).
29 As noted above, the AANA is determined based
on the non-cleared swaps, foreign exchange
forwards and foreign exchange swaps of each of the
covered swap entity and its counterparty
(accounting for their respective affiliates) for each
business day in March, April and May of that year.
The corresponding average daily notional
thresholds for each compliance date currently are:
September 1, 2016, $3 trillion; September 1, 2017,
$2.25 trillion; September 1, 2018, $1.5 trillion;
September 1, 2019, $0.75 trillion; and September 1,
2020, all covered swap entities and their
counterparties. See § l.1(e) of the Swap Margin
Rule.
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occurrence of the fourth phase of initial
margin compliance obligations on
September 1, 2019—for covered swap
entities and counterparties with an
AANA of $750 billion to $1.5 trillion—
the group currently scheduled for the
fifth phase of compliance in the
upcoming year includes all remaining
entities within the scope of the initial
margin requirements, spanning AANAs
from $8 billion up to $750 billion.30
The industry’s implementation work
to execute new trading documentation
to meet variation margin compliance
obligations by 2017 largely excluded
any rule-compliant documentation for
initial margin, due to the greater
operational complexity associated with
‘‘T+1’’ portfolio reconciliation of
internally-modeled initial margin
amounts and third-party segregation of
initial margin collateral. The industry
has raised significant concerns about the
operational and other difficulties
associated with beginning to exchange
initial margin with the large number of
relatively small counterparties
encompassed in the Swap Margin Rule’s
fifth phase. In recognition of these
difficulties, the BCBS/IOSCO framework
was recently revised to permit an
additional phase for smaller
counterparties, and the agencies believe
it is appropriate to amend the Swap
Margin Rule in a similar manner. 31
Accordingly, the agencies are proposing
to amend the compliance schedule to
add a sixth phase of compliance for
certain smaller entities that are
currently subject to the ‘‘phase five’’
compliance deadline. The proposed
amendments would require compliance
by September 1, 2020, for counterparties
with an AANA ranging from $50 billion
up to $750 billion, while the
compliance date for all other
counterparties (with an AANA ranging
from a ‘‘material swaps exposure’’ of $8
billion up to $50 billion) would be
extended to September 1, 2021.
V. Documentation Requirements
Complying with initial margin
requirements creates regulatory
obligations for covered swap entities
and implications for their
counterparties.32 Covered swap entities
30 The
Swap Margin Rule does not require initial
margin to be exchanged with any counterparty
whose AANA is less than $8 billion as of the
previous June, July, and August. See § l.3 and the
definition of ‘‘material swaps exposure’’ in § l.1.
31 See BCBS and IOSCO ‘‘Margin requirements for
non-centrally cleared derivatives,’’ (July 2019),
available at https://www.bis.org/bcbs/publ/
d475.pdf.
32 See § l.1(f) (providing that once a covered
swap entity must comply with the margin
requirements for non-cleared swaps and noncleared security-based swaps with respect to a
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must calculate initial margin to be
collected and posted to determine if and
when collection or posting of initial
margin is required. Under § l.3, a
covered swap entity must collect or post
initial margin when it calculates an
initial margin amount that, after
subtracting the initial margin threshold
amount (not including any portion of
the initial margin threshold amount
already applied by the covered swap
entity or its affiliates to other noncleared swaps or non-cleared securitybased swaps with the counterparty or its
affiliates), exceeds zero. It is only at the
time at which the covered swap entity
is required to collect or post initial
margin pursuant to § l.3 that it is
required to have completed the initial
margin trading documentation required
by § l.10. For the avoidance of doubt,
the agencies are proposing to amend
§ l.10 to expressly state that a covered
swap entity is not required to execute
initial margin trading documentation
with a counterparty prior to the time
that it is required to collect or post
initial margin pursuant to § l.3.33
As discussed in the Swap Margin
Rule, a covered swap entity must
execute trading documentation with
each counterparty that falls within the
scope of the Rule’s definition of a swap
entity or a financial end user regarding
credit support arrangements unless the
swap entity or financial end user is
explicitly exempt from the Rule
pursuant to § l.1(d).34 The
documentation must provide the
covered swap entity the contractual
rights and obligations to collect and post
initial and variation margin in such
amounts, in such form, and under such
circumstances as are required by the
Rule. The documentation must also
specify the methods, procedures, rules,
and inputs for determining the value of
each non-cleared swap for purposes of
calculating variation margin and the
procedures by which any disputes
concerning the valuation of non-cleared
swaps or the valuation of assets
particular counterparty, the covered swap entity
remains subject to the requirements of the Swap
Margin Rule with respect to that counterparty).
33 Section l.10 has parallel requirements for
covered swap entities to execute trading
documentation providing the covered swap entity
with the contractual right to collect and post
variation margin in such amounts, in such form,
and under such circumstances as are required by
the Swap Margin Rule. There is no threshold
margin amount for variation margin pursuant to § l
.4, and § l.10 requires covered swap entities to
execute variation margin trading documentation no
later than the time the covered swap entity
commences trading non-cleared swaps with any
swap entity or financial end user covered by the
Swap Margin Rule.
34 80 FR 74886–74887 (describing the trading
documentation requirements of § l.10).
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collected or posted as initial margin or
variation margin may be resolved.
Finally, the documentation must also
describe the methods, procedures, rules,
and inputs used to calculate initial
margin for non-cleared swaps entered
into between the covered swap entity
and the counterparty.35
The custody agreement requirements
in § l.7 of the Swap Margin Rule
require such agreements to be in place
only after initial margin is required to be
collected or posted pursuant to § l.3, or
when initial margin is posted by a
covered swap entity beyond an amount
required by the Rule. The agencies
expect that covered swap entities will
closely monitor their exposures and take
appropriate steps to ensure that trading
documentation is in place at such time
as initial margin is required to be
exchanged pursuant to § l.3. The
agencies note that this view is
consistent with statements of the BCBS
and IOSCO with respect to
internationally agreed standards for
margin requirements for non-centrally
cleared derivatives.36
VI. Portfolio Compression Exercises
and Other Amendments
The Swap Margin Rule applies to
non-cleared swaps entered into on or
after the applicable compliance date. As
discussed above, the agencies have also
expressed concerns about amendments
to a swap that was entered into before
the applicable compliance date if the
amendments would have the effect of
allowing covered swap entities and their
counterparties to evade or otherwise
artificially delay implementation of
margin requirements. In particular, the
agencies have been concerned whether
market participants would amend
legacy swaps, rather than entering into
new ones and exchanging margin
pursuant to the Rule once the legacy
swaps expire according to their original
terms. The industry has raised concerns
whether certain amendments,
particularly non-material amendments
to non-economic terms, as well as
amendments that are made to reduce
operational or counterparty risk, such as
notional reductions and portfolio
35 Id.
36 BCBS/IOSCO statement on the final
implementation phases of the Margin requirements
for non-centrally cleared derivatives, March 5, 2019,
available at https://www.iosco.org/library/pubdocs/
pdf/IOSCOPD624.pdf, stating that ‘‘the framework
does not specify documentation, custodial or
operational requirements if the bilateral initial
margin amount does not exceed the framework’s
Ö50 million initial margin threshold. It is expected,
however, that covered entities will act diligently
when their exposures approach the threshold to
ensure that the relevant arrangements needed are in
place if the threshold is exceeded.’’
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compressions, could be executed while
still allowing those amended legacy
swaps to remain exempt from the Swap
Margin Rule.
The agencies are proposing
amendments to clarify the agencies’
implementation of the legacy swaps
provisions of the Swap Margin Rule
since its adoption in 2015. These
amendments are intended to permit
amendments to legacy swaps arising
from certain routine industry practices
over the life-cycle of a non-cleared swap
that are carried out for logistical reasons
or risk-management purposes. The
proposed amendments are those that do
not raise concerns that the covered swap
entity is seeking to evade or otherwise
delay the application of margin
requirements for non-cleared swaps.
One of these proposed amendments
recognizes the legacy status of a noncleared swap that has been amended to
reflect technical changes, such as
addresses, the identities of parties for
delivery of formal notices, and other
administrative or operational provisions
of the non-cleared swap that do not alter
the non-cleared swap’s underlying asset
or indicator, such as a security,
currency, interest rate, commodity, or
price index, the remaining maturity, or
the total effective notional amount. The
types of technical changes described are
necessary to reflect changes in a
counterparty’s circumstances, but are
not associated with a desire by either
party to increase or decrease its
exposure to market risk factors. While
the technical changes listed above
would be permitted, a change in the
non-cleared swap’s underlying index
would not be a technical change.
The second proposed amendment
recognizes the legacy status of a noncleared swap that has been amended
solely to reduce the notional amount of
the non-cleared swap, without altering
other terms of the original non-cleared
swap. For these purposes, a reduction in
notional amount may be achieved
through a partial termination of the
original non-cleared swap, with the
remaining non-terminated non-cleared
swap being able to retain its legacy
status. A reduction in notional amount
could also be achieved by novating a
portion of the original non-cleared
swap’s notional amount to a third party.
The original non-cleared swap, with a
lower notional amount, would retain
legacy status, but the novated portion
would not retain legacy status.
The third proposed amendment
recognizes the legacy status of noncleared swaps that have been modified
as part of certain portfolio compression
exercises used as a risk management
tool. In compression, offsetting trades
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between two or more parties are
amended or torn up and replaced,
which reduces the size of gross
derivatives exposures and generally
reduces the number or frequency of
payments between parties, thus
maintaining or reducing the overall risk
profile of the portfolio. In general, these
compression exercises make use of third
party service providers to assist in the
choice of trades to be modified and the
risk composition of the resulting
portfolios.
In a simple bilateral form of
compression between two
counterparties, the dealer agrees with
another dealer to compress trades so
that offsetting positions are cancelled
and only the net amount remains,
without any change to the overall
market exposures. The resulting net
position is documented by amending
one of the original swaps. This
‘‘amended swap’’ method is the
predominant method used in
compressions of non-cleared interest
rate swaps. Compression can also be
done on a multilateral basis among more
than two counterparties, and is often
even more efficient, as trades across
multiple dealers involved in a
compression exercise can be offset,
reducing the risk in each relationship
across the various counterparties
involved in the compression. The
resulting net position is documented by
creating a replacement swap reflecting
the net position. This ‘‘replacement
swap’’ method is predominantly used in
compression exercises for non-cleared
credit default swaps, but it can also be
used for interest rate swap compression.
Compression often results in the
cancellation of offsetting positions, but
it could also result in new trades being
booked into an existing non-cleared
portfolio to reflect the netted-down risk
of the original portfolio.
One reason that the agencies are
permitting amendments resulting from
compression exercises is to reduce the
operational burden associated with
IBOR replacements. While protocols to
amend non-cleared swaps that reference
an IBOR or another discontinued rate
are in development, there is a
possibility that counterparties may
choose to replace portfolios of IBORbased non-cleared swaps with
replacement swaps generated through
compression exercises.
In recognition of the value of riskreducing compression exercises, the
agencies are proposing to amend the
Swap Margin Rule to expressly
recognize the benefits of amending or
replacing non-cleared swaps solely to
accomplish risk-reducing or risk-neutral
portfolio compression between or
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among covered swap entities and their
counterparties, without converting the
legacy swap into a swap subject to the
Swap Margin Rule.
Under the proposed rule, amended
swaps that reflect the outcome of a
compression exercise are treated slightly
differently than replacement swaps that
are issued as a result of the compression
exercise. If a non-cleared swap is
amended solely as a result of a
compression exercise, the amendments
cannot extend the remaining maturity of
the amended non-cleared swap or
increase the total effective notional
amount of the non-cleared swap.
Example 1: The limitations on remaining
maturity and total effective notional amount
in a compression exercise resulting in a
replacement swap are different. For example,
if swap 1 entered into by a covered swap
entity and counterparty A has a total effective
notional amount of $10 (long position) and
a remaining maturity of 5 years, and swap 2
entered into by the same covered swap entity
and the same counterparty A has a total
effective notional amount of $5 (short
position) and a remaining maturity of 4 years,
the compression exercise might result in a
cancellation of swap 2 and an amendment to
swap 1 such that the total effective notional
amount would become $5 (long position) and
the remaining maturity would remain at 5
years. This amendment would be permitted
under the proposed rule since the maturity
of the amended swap is not longer than the
maturity of swap 1 (5 years) and the total
effective notional amount of the amended
swap is not greater than the total effective
notional amount of swap 1 ($10 long
position). However, an amendment to swap
1 that extends the remaining maturity of the
amended swap beyond the original 5 years or
increases the total effective notional amount
higher than the original $10 would not be
able to take advantage of the proposed safe
harbor.
A replacement swap cannot extend the
longest remaining maturity of all of the
swaps in the compression exercise and
cannot have a total effective notional amount
that exceeds the total effective notional
amount of that longest remaining maturity
swap.
Example 2: Using the terms of swap 1 in
the example above, assume that swap 2 has
a total effective notional amount of $5 (short
position) and a remaining maturity of 3 years.
The two swaps could be in a compression
exercise in which both swaps are terminated
and replaced with a new swap. The
replacement swap must have a remaining
maturity that does not extend the longest
remaining maturity of swaps 1 and 2 (swap
1 has the longer remaining maturity of 5
years). The replacement swap must also have
a total effective notional amount that does
not exceed the total effective notional
amount of the swap with the longest
remaining maturity (swap 1 has the longer
remaining maturity of 5 years, so the
replacement swap cannot exceed swap 1’s
total effective notional amount of $10 long
position).
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Example 3: Assume that the following
swaps are part of a compression exercise:
Swap contract No.
1
2
3
4
5
Total effective notional amount
..................................................................................................
..................................................................................................
..................................................................................................
..................................................................................................
..................................................................................................
If a compression exercise terminates all the
swaps listed above and replaces them with a
new replacement swap, the total effective
notional amount of the replacement swap
cannot exceed the sum of the total effective
notional amounts for all swaps with the same
or longer remaining maturity than the
replacement swap. Therefore, if one assumes
the compression exercise results in a
remaining maturity of 3 years for the
replacement swap, the replacement swap
with a remaining maturity of 3 years could
have a maximum total effective notional
amount of the sum of the total effective
notional amounts of the 5 year swap, the 4
year swap, and the 3 year swap, or 10 + 4
+ 7 = $21.37 Alternatively, if one assumes the
compression exercise results in a remaining
maturity of 2 years for the replacement swap,
the replacement swap with a remaining
maturity of 2 years could have a maximum
total effective notional amount of the sum of
the total effective notional amounts of the 5
year swap, the 4 year swap, the 3 year swap,
and the 2 year swap or 10 + 4 + 7 + 3 = $24.
The agencies are also concerned about
clarifying the legacy status of swaptions
that are entered into before the
applicable compliance date but
exercised after that compliance date. As
a general matter, a swaption is created
when a covered swap entity and its
counterparty enter into a derivative
transaction granting one party an option
to, at a later time, call for the transaction
to be converted into a non-cleared swap
between the two parties, the terms of
which are set out in the derivative
contract itself. The agencies believe it is
not necessary to propose rule text to
address the legacy status of swaptions
that become non-cleared swaps once
exercised. Although the exchange of
payments under the non-cleared swap
does not commence until after the
applicable compliance date, the terms of
that non-cleared swap were established
and entered into during the original
creation of the swaption contract, which
was entered into before the applicable
compliance date and therefore the
resulting non-cleared swap retains
37 Note, however, that a replacement swap with
a total effective notional amount of $21 would only
be acceptable if the result is also risk-neutral or
risk-reducing based on the long or short positions
of each swap’s total effective notional amount. The
overall effect of the compression exercise must be
either risk-neutral or risk-reducing.
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10 (long) .....................................................................................
4 (short) ......................................................................................
7 (long) .......................................................................................
3 (short) ......................................................................................
17 (short) ....................................................................................
legacy status. The exercise of the option
under the derivative is not an
amendment of the contract, but rather a
second phase that operationalizes the
original contract.
VII. Technical Changes
The proposed rule would delete § l
.1(e)(7), which includes an amendment
relating to the QFC Rules. The text of
§ l.1(e)(7), with slight modifications,
would be moved to § l.1(h)(1), so that
it would reside in the section of the
Swap Margin Rule dedicated to legacy
swap amendments. The methods of
amendment listed in § l.1(h) would
apply not only to IBOR replacements,
but also to any other contractual
modifications permitted under § l.1(h),
including amendments relating to the
QFC Rules.
VIII. Request for Comments
A. IBORs
The agencies request comment on all
aspects of the proposed rule as well as
on the following specific questions.
(1) The proposed rule permits
amendments to non-cleared swaps by
method of adherence to a protocol,
contractual amendment of an agreement
or confirmation, or execution of a new
contract in replacement of and
immediately upon termination of an
existing contract (i.e., tear-up). Should
the agencies provide additional
clarification in the rule as to types of
permissible amendments to better
reflect established or emerging industry
practices? What specifically should be
added or clarified, and why?
(2) Does the proposed rule provide
sufficient flexibility regarding contractby-contract, netting set, and
compression amendments to the
reference rate? What, if any, additional
flexibility is needed, and why?
(3) The agencies have listed a number
of IBORs as examples of rates that
would be permitted to be replaced. To
what extent should this list be revised
to remove or to include any additional
rates, such as the Swap Offer Rate of
Singapore?
(4) The relief provided by the
proposed rule would apply to the
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Remaining
maturity
5
4
3
2
1
replacement of an IBOR. The agencies
are also proposing to allow replacement
of other non-IBOR reference rates if the
covered swap entity reasonably expects
that the rate will be discontinued or
reasonably determines has lost its
relevance as a reliable benchmark due to
a significant impairment. Is there a need
to provide relief for replacement of rates
under other circumstances? What
potential criteria could the agencies
impose on non-IBOR interest rate
benchmarks in order for such a
benchmark to be considered to have lost
its relevance as a reliable benchmark
due to a significant impairment? If so,
please provide a description of the
circumstances creating this need and a
description of the rates that may need to
be replaced, either now or in the future.
(5) The proposed rule anticipates that
a reference rate may need to be
amended more than once. What types of
criteria should the regulation establish
for subsequent amendments to reference
rates? Please explain how those criteria
maintain the robustness of the new
reference rate and avoid the problems
that plagued LIBOR, such as market
manipulation, etc. Should the agencies
impose a cap on the number of times a
reference rate may be amended and, if
so, how should that cap be structured?
(6) The proposed rule does not specify
any criteria for a replacement rate, but
rather leaves this open to the parties.
What types of rates might parties settle
on? Should the agencies limit the scope
of the replacement rate to specific
criteria, such as that the rate must be
based on observable, risk-free
characteristics? If so, what other criteria
might be appropriate, or what specific
rates might be appropriate?
(7) The proposed rule intends to be
accommodating to accompanying
amendments that may be necessary to
maintain the relative economics of the
non-cleared swap following the
replacement of a reference rate. Do the
accompanying amendments provide
sufficient flexibility to permit the
additional modifications that parties
plan to make? If not, please explain
what changes the agencies should
contemplate and why, and explain how
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they should be permitted under the rule.
Alternatively, would the accompanying
amendments change the non-cleared
swap such that it does not resemble the
original legacy contract? If this is a
concern, how should the rule address it?
For example, should the agencies
prohibit an amendment to the currency
from being eligible for the safe harbor?
(8) The proposed rule does not specify
an end date by which these IBORrelated amendments must be completed.
Should the agencies include an end
date? Should it be one year, two years,
five years, ten years? Are there legacy
contracts that would still be in place in
ten years such that a ten-year timeframe
would be realistic?
(9) As noted above, the agencies
propose to permit the replacement of an
IBOR in the floating-rate leg of the swap
with a new reference rate, and would
also permit the fixed-rate leg in a fixedfloating interest rate swap to be
modified to maintain the economics of
the non-cleared swap. Is this approach
appropriate in order for the fixedfloating swap to retain its legacy status,
and if not, how should it be modified?
B. Non-Cleared Swaps Between CSEs
and an Affiliate
(1) What, if any, additional conditions
or limitations should the agencies
impose before allowing a covered swap
entity to take advantage of the
exemption from initial margin
requirements for inter-affiliate swaps?
For example, the CFTC imposes certain
limitations and conditions on its initial
margin exemption for inter-affiliate
swaps. Discuss why any additional
conditions may be appropriate to ensure
the safety and soundness of the covered
swap entity.
(2) Should the definitions of
‘‘affiliate’’ and ‘‘control’’ in § _.11 be
revised to match with the definitions of
the Board’s Regulation W, Regulation Y,
Regulation Q, or any other regulations?
Why or why not?
C. Additional Compliance Date for
Initial Margin Requirements
(1) Does the proposed one-year
extension of the final implementation
timeline to September 1, 2021
substantially address all
implementation challenges? Please
explain.
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E. Portfolio Compression Exercises and
Other Amendments
(1) What are the methods used by
covered swap entities to determine
whether portfolio compression exercises
would meet the requirements set out in
the proposal, including not extending
the remaining maturity or increasing the
total effective notional amounts?
(2) Should the Rule limit compression
exercises to mitigating only certain
types of risk and if so, which types of
risk?
(3) For a replacement swap that
results from a compression exercise,
should the agencies consider a different
method of restricting either the total
effective notional amount or the
remaining maturity? Would commenters
be supportive of an approach that limits
the remaining maturity to an ‘‘effective
maturity’’ calculation based on the total
effective notional amounts in the
exercise? For example, swap 1 has a
notional amount of 10 and 3 years
remaining maturity and swap 2 has a
notional amount of 8 and 5 years
remaining maturity. Under the
‘‘effective maturity’’ calculation, the
replacement swap could not exceed an
effective maturity of 3 years and 10
months, calculated as (3*10 + 5*8)/
(10+8). The replacement swap with a 3
year and 10 month maturity would also
not be able to exceed a total effective
notional amount of 18 (10+8).
(4) How should the Rule be more
specific about technical amendments
that are permitted? How can the Rule
better explain that amending a swap’s
underlying asset or indicator, such as a
security, currency, interest rate,
commodity, or price index, is not a
technical amendment?
IX. Administrative Law Matters
A. Solicitation of Comments on Use of
Plain Language
D. Documentation Requirements
(1) What issues are there, if any,
related to how parties document
transactions in compliance with the
Swap Margin Rule that should be
considered by the agencies?
(2) Are there any reasons why covered
swap entities would not be able to
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reasonably anticipate the point in time
at which they will cross the $50 million
initial margin threshold amount such
that they can prepare the required
documentation in time? Please explain.
Section 722 of the Gramm-LeachBliley Act 38 requires the OCC, Board,
and FDIC to use plain language in all
proposed and final rules published after
January 1, 2000. The OCC, Board, and
FDIC have sought to present the
proposed rule in a simple and
straightforward manner and invite
comments on whether the proposal is
clearly stated and effectively organized,
38 Public Law 106–102, 113 Stat. 1338, 1471
(codified at 12 U.S.C. 4809).
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and how to make this proposal easier to
understand. For example:
• Have we organized the material to
suit your needs? If not, how could this
material be better organized?
• Are the requirements in the
proposed rule clearly stated? If not, how
could the proposed rule be more clearly
stated?
• Does the proposed rule contain
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 proposed rule
easier to understand? If so, what
changes to the format would make the
proposed rule easier to understand?
• What else could we do to make the
proposed rule easier to understand?
B. Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis
Certain provisions of the proposed
rulemaking contain ‘‘collection of
information’’ requirements within the
meaning of the Paperwork Reduction
Act (PRA) of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501–
3521). 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 agencies reviewed the proposed
rulemaking and determined that it
revises certain recordkeeping
requirements that have been previously
cleared under various OMB control
numbers. In order to be consistent
across the agencies, the agencies are also
applying a conforming methodology for
calculating the burden estimates. The
agencies are proposing to extend for
three years, with revision, these
information collections. The OCC and
FDIC have submitted to OMB for review
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 1320). The Board has reviewed the
information collection under its
delegated authority. The OMB control
numbers are 1557–0251 (OCC), 3064–
0204 (FDIC), and 7100–0364 (Board).
The FCA has determined the notice of
proposed rulemaking has no PRA
implications because Farm Credit
System institutions are Federally
chartered instrumentalities of the
United States and instrumentalities of
the United States are specifically
excepted from the definition of
‘‘collection of information’’ contained in
44 U.S.C. 3502(3). The FHFA has
determined that the notice of proposed
rulemaking does not contain any
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collection of information for which the
agency must obtain clearance under the
PRA.
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 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 Agency Desk Officer.
Current Actions
The proposed rulemaking removes the
recordkeeping requirement in section
l.11(b) that a covered swap entity shall
calculate the amount of initial margin
that would be required to be posted to
an affiliate that is a financial end user
with material swaps exposure pursuant
to section _.3(b) and provide
documentation of such amount to each
affiliate on a daily basis.
Proposed Revision, With Extension, of
the Following Information Collections
Title of Information Collection:
Reporting and Recordkeeping
Requirements Associated with Swaps
Margin and Swaps Push-Out.
Frequency: Annual and event
generated.
Affected Public: Businesses or other
for-profit.
Estimated average hours per response:
Reporting
Section _.1(d)—1 hour (on average of
1,000 times per year).
Sections _.8(c) and _.8(d)—240 hours.
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Section _.8(f)(3)—50 hours.
Section _.9(e)—10 hours (on average
of 3 times per year).
Sections 237.22(a)(1) and 237.22(e)
(Board only)—7 hours.
Recordkeeping
Sections _.2 (definition of ‘‘eligible
master netting agreement,’’ item 4),
237.8(g), and 237.10—5 hours.
Section _.5(c)(2)(i)—4 hours.
Section _.7(c)—100 hours.
Sections _.8(e) and 237.8(f)—40
hours.
Section _.8(h)—20 hours.
Disclosure
Section _.1(h)—1 hour.
OCC
Respondents: Any national bank or a
subsidiary thereof, Federal savings
association or a subsidiary thereof, or
Federal branch or agency of a foreign
bank that is registered as a swap dealer,
major swap participant, security-based
swap dealer, or major security-based
swap participant.
Estimated number of respondents: 10.
Proposed revisions only estimated
annual burden: –2,500 hours.
Total estimated annual burden:
14,900 hours.
Board
Respondents: Any state member bank
(as defined in 12 CFR 208.2(g)), bank
holding company (as defined in 12
U.S.C. 1841), savings and loan holding
company (as defined in 12 U.S.C.
1467a), foreign banking organization (as
defined in 12 CFR 211.21(o)), foreign
bank that does not operate an insured
branch, state branch or state agency of
a foreign bank (as defined in 12 U.S.C.
3101(b)(11) and (12)), or Edge or
agreement corporation (as defined in 12
CFR 211.1(c)(2) and (3)) that is
registered as a swap dealer, major swap
participant, security-based swap dealer,
or major security-based swap
participant.
Estimated number of respondents: 41.
Proposed revisions only estimated
annual burden: –10,209 hours.
Total estimated annual burden:
61,104 hours.
FDIC
FDIC: Any FDIC-insured statechartered bank that is not a member of
the Federal Reserve System or FDICinsured state-chartered savings
association that is registered as a swap
dealer, major swap participant, securitybased swap dealer, or major securitybased swap participant.
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59981
Estimated number of respondents:
1.39
Proposed revisions only estimated
annual burden: –249 hours.
Total estimated annual burden: 1,490
hours.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
OCC: In general, the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA) (5 U.S.C. 601 et
seq.) requires that in connection with a
rulemaking, an agency prepare and
make available for public comment a
regulatory flexibility analysis that
describes the impact of the rule on small
entities. Under section 605(b) of the
RFA, this analysis is not required if an
agency certifies that the rule will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities
and publishes its certification and a
brief explanatory statement in the
Federal Register along with its rule.
As part of our analysis, we consider
whether, pursuant to the RFA, the
proposed rule would have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. The OCC
currently supervises approximately 782
small entities.40 Among these 782 small
entities, 44 could be affected by the
proposed rule if one or more of these
small entities are a party to a financial
contract with a covered swap entity.
Because we believe banks will incur de
minimis costs, if any, to comply with
the proposed rule, we conclude that the
proposed rule, if implemented, would
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
entities.41
Board: The Regulatory Flexibility Act,
5 U.S.C. 601 et seq. (RFA), generally
requires that an agency prepare and
make available for public comment an
initial regulatory flexibility analysis in
connection with a notice of proposed
39 The FDIC estimates zero entities, but is
estimating one here as a placeholder.
40 We base our estimate of the number of small
entities on the Small Business Administration’s
(SBA’s) size thresholds for commercial banks and
savings institutions, and trust companies, which are
$600 million and $41.5 million, respectively.
Consistent with the General Principles of
Affiliation, 13 CFR 121.103(a), we count the assets
of affiliated financial institutions when determining
if we should classify an OCC-supervised institution
as a small entity. We use December 31, 2018, to
determine size because a ‘‘financial institution’s
assets are determined by averaging the assets
reported on its four quarterly financial statements
for the preceding year.’’ See footnote 8 of the SBA’s
Table of Size Standards.
41 As one way of determining whether any of the
small entities is a covered swap entity, the OCC
reviewed the CFTC’s listing of registered swap
dealers at https://www.cftc.gov/LawRegulation/
DoddFrankAct/registerswapdealer. The SEC has not
yet imposed a registration requirement on entities
that meet the definition of security-based swap
dealer or major security-based swap participant.
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rulemaking or certify that the proposed
rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities.42 The Board
welcomes comment on all aspects of the
initial regulatory flexibility analysis. A
final regulatory flexibility analysis will
be conducted after consideration of
comments received during the public
comment period.
As described above, the proposed rule
would (i) permit legacy swaps to retain
their legacy status in the event that they
are amended to replace an IBOR or other
discontinued rate, (ii) repeal the interaffiliate initial margin provisions,
introduce an additional compliance date
for initial margin requirements, (iii)
introduce an additional compliance date
for initial margin requirements, (iv)
clarify the point in time at which
trading documentation must be in place,
(v) permit legacy swaps to retain their
legacy status in the event that they are
amended due to technical amendments,
notional reductions, or portfolio
compression exercises, and (vi) make
technical changes to relocate the
provision addressing amendments to
legacy swaps that are made to comply
with the QFC Rules.
This proposed rule applies to
financial institutions that are covered
swap entities that are subject to the
requirements of the Swap Margin Rule.
Under SBA regulations, the finance and
insurance sector includes commercial
banking, savings institutions, credit
unions, other depository credit
intermediation and credit card issuing
entities (financial institutions). With
respect to financial institutions that are
covered swap entities under the Swap
Margin Rule, a financial institution
generally is considered small if it has
assets of $600 million or less.43 Covered
swap entities would be considered
financial institutions for purposes of the
RFA in accordance with SBA
regulations. The Board does not expect
that any covered swap entity is likely to
be a small financial institution, because
a small financial institution is unlikely
to engage in the level of swap activity
that would require it to register as a
swap dealer or a major swap participant
with the CFTC or a security-based swap
dealer or security-based major swap
participant with the U.S. Securities and
42 See
5 U.S.C. 603(a).
13 CFR 121.201 (effective December 2,
2014, as amended by 84 FR 34261, effective August
19, 2019); see also 13 CFR 121.103(a)(6) (noting
factors that the SBA considers in determining
whether an entity qualifies as a small business,
including receipts, employees, and other measures
of its domestic and foreign affiliates).
43 See
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Exchange Commission (SEC).44 None of
the current Board-regulated covered
swap entities are small entities.
The Board does not believe the
proposed rule will result in any new
reporting, recordkeeping or other
compliance requirements. In light of the
foregoing, the Board does not believe
that this proposed rule would have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities and
therefore there are no significant
alternatives to the proposed rule that
would reduce the impact on small
entities.
FDIC: The RFA generally requires
that, in connection with a proposed
rulemaking, an agency prepare and
make available for public comment an
initial regulatory flexibility analysis
describing the impact of the proposed
rule on small entities. However, a
regulatory flexibility analysis is not
required if the agency certifies that the
proposed rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. The SBA has
defined ‘‘small entities’’ to include
banking organizations with total assets
of less than or equal to $600 million that
are independently owned and operated
or owned by a holding company with
less than or equal to $600 million in
total assets.45 Generally, the FDIC
considers a significant effect to be a
quantified effect in excess of 5 percent
of total annual salaries and benefits per
institution, or 2.5 percent of total noninterest expenses. The FDIC believes
that effects in excess of these thresholds
typically represent significant effects for
FDIC-supervised institutions. For the
reasons described below, the FDIC
certifies pursuant to section 605(b) of
the RFA that the proposed rule will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
According to data from recent
Consolidated Reports of Income and
Condition (Call Report),46 the FDIC
supervised 3,465 institutions. Of those,
2,705 are considered ‘‘small,’’ according
to the terms of the RFA. As discussed
previously, the proposed rule directly
applies to covered swap entities (which
includes persons registered with the
CFTC as swap dealers or major swap
participants pursuant to the Commodity
Exchange Act of 1936 and persons
registered with the SEC as securitybased swap dealers and major securitybased swap participants under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934) that
are subject to the requirements of the
Swap Margin Rule. The FDIC has
identified 105 swap dealers and major
swap participants that, as of May 22,
2019, have registered as swap entities.47
None of these institutions are
supervised by the FDIC.
As an amendment to the Swap Margin
Rule, the proposed rule also affects
counterparties to swaps entered into by
covered swap entities. However, the
Terrorism Risk Insurance Program
Reauthorization Act of 2015 excludes
non-cleared swaps entered into for
hedging purposes by a financial
institution with total assets of $10
billion or less from the requirements of
the Swap Margin Rule. Given this
exclusion, a non-cleared swap between
a covered swap entity and a small FDICsupervised entity that is used to hedge
a commercial risk of the small entity
will not be subject to the Swap Margin
Rule. The FDIC believes that it is
unlikely that any small entity it
supervises will engage in non-cleared
swaps for purposes other than hedging.
Given that no FDIC-supervised small
entities are covered swap entities and
that it is unlikely that FDIC-supervised
small entities enter into non-cleared
swaps for purposes other than hedging,
this proposed rule is not expected to
have a significant economic impact on
46 FDIC
44 The
CFTC has published a list of provisionally
registered swap dealers as of October 17, 2017 that
does not include any small financial institutions.
See https://www.cftc.gov/LawRegulation/
DoddFrankAct/registerswapdealer. The SEC has not
yet imposed a registration requirement on entities
that meet the definition of security-based swap
dealer or major security-based swap participant.
45 The SBA defines a small banking organization
as having $600 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 by 84 FR 34261, effective
August 19, 2019). 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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Call Report, March 31, 2019.
the SEC had adopted a regulation that
would require registration of security-based swap
dealers and major security-based swap participants,
as of June 28, 2019, there was no date established
as the compliance date and no SEC-published list
of any such entities that so registered (see 84 FR
4906 at 4925). Accordingly, no security-based swap
dealers and no major security-based swap
participants have been identified as swap entities
by the FDIC. In identifying the 105 institutions
referred to in the text, the FDIC used the list of swap
dealers set forth, on June 28, 2019 (providing data
as of May 22, 2019) at https://www.cftc.gov/
LawRegulation/DoddFrankAct/
registerswapdealer.html. Major swap participants,
among others, are required to apply for registration
through a filing with the National Futures
Association. Accordingly, the FDIC reviewed the
National Futures Association https://
www.nfa.futures.org/members/sd/ to
determine whether there were registered major
swap participants. As of June 21, 2019, there were
no major swap participants listed on this link.
47 While
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 216 / Thursday, November 7, 2019 / Proposed Rules
a substantial number of small entities
supervised by the FDIC. For these
reasons, the FDIC certifies that the
proposed rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities, within the
meaning of those terms as used in the
RFA. Accordingly, a regulatory
flexibility analysis is not required.
The FDIC invites comments on all
aspects of the supporting information
provided in this section, and in
particular, whether the proposed rule
would have any significant effects on
small entities that the FDIC has not
identified.
FCA: Pursuant to section 605(b) of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601
et seq.), FCA hereby certifies that the
proposed rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Each of the
banks in the Farm Credit System,
considered together with its affiliated
associations, has assets and annual
income in excess of the amounts that
would qualify them as small entities;
nor does the Federal Agricultural
Mortgage Corporation meet the
definition of ‘‘small entity.’’ Therefore,
Farm Credit System institutions are not
‘‘small entities’’ as defined in the
Regulatory Flexibility Act.
FHFA: The Regulatory Flexibility Act
(5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) requires that a
regulation that has a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities, small
businesses, or small organizations must
include an initial regulatory flexibility
analysis describing the regulation’s
impact on small entities. FHFA need not
undertake such an analysis if the agency
has certified the regulation will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. 5
U.S.C. 605(b). FHFA has considered the
impact of the proposed rule under the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, and certifies
that the proposed rule does not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities
because the proposed rule is applicable
only to FHFA’s regulated entities, which
are not small entities for purposes of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of
1995
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995
(Unfunded Mandates Act) (2 U.S.C.
1532) requires that the OCC prepare a
budgetary impact statement before
promulgating a rule that includes any
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
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17:23 Nov 06, 2019
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(adjusted annually for inflation,
currently $154 million) in any one year.
If a budgetary impact statement is
required, section 205 of the Unfunded
Mandates Act also requires the OCC to
identify and consider a reasonable
number of regulatory alternatives before
promulgating a rule.
The OCC analyzed the amendments
proposed in this notice of proposed
rulemaking, and has determined that
they would not result in expenditures
by State, local, and Tribal governments,
in the aggregate, or by the private sector,
of $154 million in any one year.
Accordingly, the OCC has not prepared
a written statement under sections 202
and 205.
E. Riegle Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994
Pursuant to section 302(a) of the
Riegle Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994
(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 depository
institutions, including small depository
institutions, and customers of
depository institutions, as well as the
benefits of such regulations.48 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.49 Each Federal banking
agency has determined that the
proposed rule would not impose
additional reporting, disclosure, or other
requirements; therefore the
requirements of the RCDRIA do not
apply. However, the agencies note that
comments on these matters have 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 will further inform the agencies’
consideration of RCDRIA.
U.S.C. 4802(a).
49 12 U.S.C. 4802.
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List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 45
Administrative practice and
procedure, Capital, Margin
requirements, National Banks, Federal
Savings Associations, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Risk.
12 CFR Part 237
Administrative practice and
procedure, Banks, banking, Foreign
banking, Holding companies, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements,
Swaps.
12 CFR Part 349
Administrative practice and
procedure, Banks, banking, Holding
companies, Capital, Margin
Requirements, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Savings
associations, Risk, Swaps.
12 CFR Part 624
Accounting, Agriculture, Banks,
Banking, Capital, Cooperatives, Credit,
Margin requirements, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Risk, Rural
areas, Swaps.
12 CFR Part 1221
Government-sponsored enterprises,
Mortgages, Securities.
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency
12 CFR Chapter I
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the
common preamble and under the
authority of 12 U.S.C. 93a and
5412(b)(2)(B), the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency proposes to
amend part 45 of Title 12, Code of
Federal Regulations, as follows:
PART 45—MARGIN AND CAPITAL
REQUIREMENTS FOR COVERED
SWAP ENTITIES
1. The authority citation for part 45
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 6s(e), 12 U.S.C. 1 et
seq., 12 U.S.C. 93a, 161, 481, 1818, 3907,
3909, 5412(b)(2)(B), and 15 U.S.C. 78o–10(e).
2. Section 45.1 is amended by:
a. Revising paragraphs (e)(6), (e)(7),
(h) introductory text, and (h)(1); and
■ b. Adding paragraphs (h)(3) through
(h)(5).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
■
■
§ 45.1 Authority, purpose, scope,
exemptions and compliance dates.
48 12
*
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59983
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*
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*
*
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 216 / Thursday, November 7, 2019 / Proposed Rules
(e) Compliance dates. * * *
*
*
*
*
(6) September 1, 2020 with respect to
requirements in § 45.3 for initial margin
for any non-cleared swaps and noncleared security-based swaps, where
both:
(i) The covered swap entity combined
with all its affiliates; and
(ii) Its counterparty combined with all
its affiliates, have an average daily
aggregate notional amount of noncleared swaps, foreign exchange
forwards and foreign exchange swaps
for March, April and May 2020 that
exceeds $50 billion, where such
amounts are calculated only for
business days; and
(iii) In calculating the amounts in
paragraphs (e)(6)(i) and (ii) of this
section, an entity shall count the
average daily aggregate notional amount
of a non-cleared swap, a non-cleared
security-based swap, a foreign exchange
forward or a foreign exchange swap
between the entity and an affiliate only
one time, and shall not count a swap or
security-based swap that is exempt
pursuant to paragraph (d) of this
section.
(7) September 1, 2021 with respect to
requirements in § 45.3 for initial margin
for any other covered swap entity with
respect to non-cleared swaps and noncleared security-based swaps entered
into with any other counterparty.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) Legacy swaps. Covered swaps
entities are required to comply with the
requirements of this part for non-cleared
swaps and non-cleared security-based
swaps entered into on or after the
relevant compliance dates for variation
margin and for initial margin
established in paragraph (e) of this
section. Any non-cleared swap or noncleared security-based swap entered
into before such relevant date shall
remain outside the scope of this part if
amendments are made to the noncleared swap or non-cleared securitybased swap by method of adherence to
a protocol, contractual amendment of an
agreement or confirmation, or execution
of a new contract in replacement of and
immediately upon termination of an
existing contract, as follows:
(1) Amendments to the non-cleared
swap or non-cleared security-based
swap solely to comply with the
requirements of part 47, subpart I of part
252 or part 382 of title 12, as applicable;
*
*
*
*
*
(3)(i) Amendments to the non-cleared
swap or non-cleared security-based
swap that are made solely to
accommodate the replacement of:
*
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17:23 Nov 06, 2019
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(A) An interbank offered rate (IBOR)
including, but not limited to, the
London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR),
the Tokyo Interbank Offered Rate
(TIBOR), the Bank Bill Swap Rate
(BBSW), the Singapore Interbank
Offered Rate (SIBOR), the Canadian
Dollar Offered Rate (CDOR), Euro
Interbank Offered Rate (EURIBOR), and
the Hong Kong Interbank Offered Rate
(HIBOR);
(B) Any other interest rate that a
covered swap entity reasonably expects
to be discontinued or reasonably
determines has lost its relevance as a
reliable benchmark due to a significant
impairment; or
(C) Any other interest rate that
succeeds a rate referenced in paragraph
(h)(3)(i)(A) or (h)(3)(i)(B) of this section.
An amendment made under this
paragraph (h)(3)(i)(C) could be one of
multiple amendments made under this
paragraph (h)(3)(i)(C). For example, an
amendment could replace an IBOR with
a temporary interest rate and later
replace the temporary interest rate with
a permanent interest rate.
(ii) Amendments to accommodate
replacement of a rate described in
paragraph (h)(3)(i) may also incorporate
spreads or other adjustments to the
replacement rate and make other
necessary technical changes to
operationalize the determination of
payments or other exchanges of
economic value using the replacement
rate, including changes to determination
dates, calculation agents, and payment
dates, so long as the changes do not
extend the maturity or increase the total
effective notional amount of the noncleared swap or non-cleared securitybased swap.
(4) The non-cleared swap or noncleared security-based swap was
amended or replaced solely to reduce
risk or remain risk-neutral through
portfolio compression between or
among covered swap entities and their
counterparties as long as:
(i) A non-cleared swap or non-cleared
security-based swap that is amended to
reflect the outcome of the compression
exercise does not:
(A) Extend the remaining maturity; or
(B) Increase the total effective
notional amount of that swap; or
(ii) A non-cleared swap or noncleared security-based swap that is
entered into as a replacement to reflect
the outcome of the compression exercise
does not:
(A) Exceed the sum of the total
effective notional amounts of all of the
swaps that were submitted to the
compression exercise that had the same
or longer remaining maturity as the
replacement swap; or
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Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
(B) Exceed the longest remaining
maturity of all the swaps submitted to
the compression exercise.
(5) The non-cleared swap or noncleared security-based swap was
amended solely for one of the following
reasons:
(i) To reflect technical changes, such
as addresses, identities of parties for
delivery of formal notices, and other
administrative or operational provisions
as long as they do not alter the noncleared swap’s or non-cleared securitybased swap’s underlying asset or
indicator, the remaining maturity, or the
total effective notional amount; or
(ii) To reduce the notional amount, so
long as:
(A) All payment obligations attached
to the total effective notional amount
being eliminated as a result of the
amendment are fully terminated; or
(B) All payment obligations attached
to the total effective notional amount
being eliminated as a result of the
amendment are fully novated to a third
party, who complies with applicable
margin rules for the novated portion
upon the transfer.
■ 3. Amend § 45.10 by revising
paragraph (a) to read as follows:
§ 45.10
Documentation of margin matters.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) Provides the covered swap entity
and its counterparty with the
contractual right to collect and post
initial margin and variation margin in
such amounts, in such form, and under
such circumstances as are required by
this subpart, and at such time as initial
margin or variation margin is required
to be collected or posted under § 45.3 or
§ 45.4, as applicable; and
*
*
*
*
*
■ 4. Section 45.11 is revised to read as
follows:
§ 45.11 Initial margin exemption for
affiliates.
(a) The requirement for a covered
swap entity to collect or post initial
margin under § 45.3 does not apply with
respect to any non-cleared swap or noncleared security-based swap with a
counterparty that is an affiliate.
(b) For purposes of this section, an
affiliate means:
(1) An affiliate as defined in § 45.2;
and
(2) Any company that controls, is
controlled by, or is under common
control with the covered swap entity
through the direct or indirect exercise of
controlling influence over the
management or policies of the
controlled company.
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 216 / Thursday, November 7, 2019 / Proposed Rules
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System
12 CFR Chapter II
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the
common preamble, the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System proposes to amend 12 CFR part
237 to read as follows:
PART 237—SWAPS MARGIN AND
SWAPS PUSH–OUT
5. The authority citation for part 237
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 6s(e), 15 U.S.C. 78o–
10(e), 15 U.S.C. 8305, 12 U.S.C. 221 et seq.,
12 U.S.C. 343–350, 12 U.S.C. 1818, 12 U.S.C.
1841 et seq., 12 U.S.C. 3101 et seq., and 12
U.S.C. 1461 et seq.
Subpart A— Margin and Capital
Requirements for Covered Swap
Entities (Regulation KK)
6. Section 237.1 is amended by:
a. Revising paragraphs (e)(6), (e)(7),
(h) introductory text, and (h)(1); and
■ b. Adding paragraphs (h)(3) through
(h)(5).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
■
■
§ 237.1 Authority, purpose, scope,
exemptions and compliance dates.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
(6) September 1, 2020 with respect to
requirements in § 237.3 for initial
margin for any non-cleared swaps and
non-cleared security-based swaps,
where both:
(i) The covered swap entity combined
with all its affiliates; and
(ii) Its counterparty combined with all
its affiliates, have an average daily
aggregate notional amount of noncleared swaps, foreign exchange
forwards and foreign exchange swaps
for March, April and May 2020 that
exceeds $50 billion, where such
amounts are calculated only for
business days; and
(iii) In calculating the amounts in
paragraphs (e)(6)(i) and (ii) of this
section, an entity shall count the
average daily aggregate notional amount
of a non-cleared swap, a non-cleared
security-based swap, a foreign exchange
forward or a foreign exchange swap
between the entity and an affiliate only
one time, and shall not count a swap or
security-based swap that is exempt
pursuant to paragraph (d) of this
section.
(7) September 1, 2021 with respect to
requirements in § 237.3 for initial
margin for any other covered swap
entity with respect to non-cleared swaps
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17:23 Nov 06, 2019
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and non-cleared security-based swaps
entered into with any other
counterparty.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) Legacy swaps. Covered swaps
entities are required to comply with the
requirements of this subpart for noncleared swaps and non-cleared securitybased swaps entered into on or after the
relevant compliance dates for variation
margin and for initial margin
established in paragraph (e) of this
section. Any non-cleared swap or noncleared security-based swap entered
into before such relevant date shall
remain outside the scope of this subpart
if amendments are made to the noncleared swap or non-cleared securitybased swap by method of adherence to
a protocol, contractual amendment of an
agreement or confirmation, or execution
of a new contract in replacement of and
immediately upon termination of an
existing contract, as follows:
(1) Amendments to the non-cleared
swap or non-cleared security-based
swap solely to comply with the
requirements of part 47, subpart I of part
252 or part 382 of title 12, as applicable;
*
*
*
*
*
(3)(i) Amendments to the non-cleared
swap or non-cleared security-based
swap that are made solely to
accommodate the replacement of:
(A) An interbank offered rate (IBOR)
including, but not limited to, the
London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR),
the Tokyo Interbank Offered Rate
(TIBOR), the Bank Bill Swap Rate
(BBSW), the Singapore Interbank
Offered Rate (SIBOR), the Canadian
Dollar Offered Rate (CDOR), Euro
Interbank Offered Rate (EURIBOR), and
the Hong Kong Interbank Offered Rate
(HIBOR);
(B) Any other interest rate that a
covered swap entity reasonably expects
to be discontinued or reasonably
determines has lost its relevance as a
reliable benchmark due to a significant
impairment; or
(C) Any other interest rate that
succeeds a rate referenced in paragraph
(h)(3)(i)(A) or (h)(3)(i)(B) of this section.
An amendment made under this
paragraph (h)(3)(i)(C) could be one of
multiple amendments made under this
paragraph (h)(3)(i)(C). For example, an
amendment could replace an IBOR with
a temporary interest rate and later
replace the temporary interest rate with
a permanent interest rate.
(ii) Amendments to accommodate
replacement of a rate described in
paragraph (h)(3)(i) may also incorporate
spreads or other adjustments to the
replacement rate and make other
necessary technical changes to
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59985
operationalize the determination of
payments or other exchanges of
economic value using the replacement
rate, including changes to determination
dates, calculation agents, and payment
dates, so long as the changes do not
extend the maturity or increase the total
effective notional amount of the noncleared swap or non-cleared securitybased swap.
(4) The non-cleared swap or noncleared security-based swap was
amended or replaced solely to reduce
risk or remain risk-neutral through
portfolio compression between or
among covered swap entities and their
counterparties as long as:
(i) A non-cleared swap or non-cleared
security-based swap that is amended to
reflect the outcome of the compression
exercise does not:
(A) Extend the remaining maturity; or
(B) Increase the total effective
notional amount of that swap; or
(ii) A non-cleared swap or noncleared security-based swap that is
entered into as a replacement to reflect
the outcome of the compression exercise
does not:
(A) Exceed the sum of the total
effective notional amounts of all of the
swaps that were submitted to the
compression exercise that had the same
or longer remaining maturity as the
replacement swap; or
(B) Exceed the longest remaining
maturity of all the swaps submitted to
the compression exercise.
(5) The non-cleared swap or noncleared security-based swap was
amended solely for one of the following
reasons:
(i) To reflect technical changes, such
as addresses, identities of parties for
delivery of formal notices, and other
administrative or operational provisions
as long as they do not alter the noncleared swap’s or non-cleared securitybased swap’s underlying asset or
indicator, the remaining maturity, or the
total effective notional amount; or
(ii) To reduce the notional amount, so
long as:
(A) All payment obligations attached
to the total effective notional amount
being eliminated as a result of the
amendment are fully terminated; or
(B) All payment obligations attached
to the total effective notional amount
being eliminated as a result of the
amendment are fully novated to a third
party, who complies with applicable
margin rules for the novated portion
upon the transfer.
■ 7. Amend § 237.10 by revising
paragraph (a) to read as follows:
§ 237.10 Documentation of margin
matters.
*
E:\FR\FM\07NOP1.SGM
*
*
07NOP1
*
*
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 216 / Thursday, November 7, 2019 / Proposed Rules
(a) Provides the covered swap entity
and its counterparty with the
contractual right to collect and post
initial margin and variation margin in
such amounts, in such form, and under
such circumstances as are required by
this subpart, and at such time as initial
margin or variation margin is required
to be collected or posted under § 237.3
or § 237.4, as applicable; and
*
*
*
*
*
■ 8. Section 237.11 is revised to read as
follows:
§ 237.11 Initial margin exemption for
affiliates.
(a) The requirement for a covered
swap entity to collect or post initial
margin under § 237.3 does not apply
with respect to any non-cleared swap or
non-cleared security-based swap with a
counterparty that is an affiliate.
(b) For purposes of this section, an
affiliate means:
(1) An affiliate as defined in § 237.2;
and
(2) Any company that controls, is
controlled by, or is under common
control with the covered swap entity
through the direct or indirect exercise of
controlling influence over the
management or policies of the
controlled company.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
12 CFR Chapter III
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the
Supplementary Information section, the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
proposes to amend 12 CFR Chapter III
as follows:
PART 349—DERIVATIVES
9. The authority citation for subpart A
of part 349 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 6s(e), 15 U.S.C. 78o–
10(e), and 12 U.S.C. 1818 and 12 U.S.C.
1819(a)(Tenth), 12 U.S.C. 1813(q), 1818,
1819, and 3108.
10. Section 349.1 is amended by:
a. Revising paragraphs (e)(6), (e)(7),
(h) introductory text, and (h)(1); and
■ b. Adding paragraphs (h)(3) through
(h)(5).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
■
■
§ 349.1 Authority, purpose, scope,
exemptions and compliance dates.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
*
*
*
*
*
(6) September 1, 2020 with respect to
requirements in § 349.3 for initial
margin for any non-cleared swaps and
non-cleared security-based swaps,
where both:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:23 Nov 06, 2019
Jkt 250001
(i) The covered swap entity combined
with all its affiliates; and
(ii) Its counterparty combined with all
its affiliates, have an average daily
aggregate notional amount of noncleared swaps, foreign exchange
forwards and foreign exchange swaps
for March, April and May 2020 that
exceeds $50 billion, where such
amounts are calculated only for
business days; and
(iii) In calculating the amounts in
paragraphs (e)(6)(i) and (ii) of this
section, an entity shall count the
average daily aggregate notional amount
of a non-cleared swap, a non-cleared
security-based swap, a foreign exchange
forward or a foreign exchange swap
between the entity and an affiliate only
one time, and shall not count a swap or
security-based swap that is exempt
pursuant to paragraph (d) of this
section.
(7) September 1, 2021 with respect to
requirements in § 349.3 for initial
margin for any other covered swap
entity with respect to non-cleared swaps
and non-cleared security-based swaps
entered into with any other
counterparty.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) Legacy swaps. Covered swaps
entities are required to comply with the
requirements of this part for non-cleared
swaps and non-cleared security-based
swaps entered into on or after the
relevant compliance dates for variation
margin and for initial margin
established in paragraph (e) of this
section. Any non-cleared swap or noncleared security-based swap entered
into before such relevant date shall
remain outside the scope of this part if
amendments are made to the noncleared swap or non-cleared securitybased swap by method of adherence to
a protocol, contractual amendment of an
agreement or confirmation, or execution
of a new contract in replacement of and
immediately upon termination of an
existing contract, as follows:
(1) Amendments to the non-cleared
swap or non-cleared security-based
swap solely to comply with the
requirements of part 47, subpart I of part
252 or part 382 of title 12, as applicable;
*
*
*
*
*
(3)(i) Amendments to the non-cleared
swap or non-cleared security-based
swap that are made solely to
accommodate the replacement of:
(A) An interbank offered rate (IBOR)
including, but not limited to, the
London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR),
the Tokyo Interbank Offered Rate
(TIBOR), the Bank Bill Swap Rate
(BBSW), the Singapore Interbank
Offered Rate (SIBOR), the Canadian
PO 00000
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Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
Dollar Offered Rate (CDOR), Euro
Interbank Offered Rate (EURIBOR), and
the Hong Kong Interbank Offered Rate
(HIBOR);
(B) Any other interest rate that a
covered swap entity reasonably expects
to be discontinued or reasonably
determines has lost its relevance as a
reliable benchmark due to a significant
impairment; or
(C) Any other interest rate that
succeeds a rate referenced in paragraph
(h)(3)(i)(A) or (h)(3)(i)(B) of this section.
An amendment made under this
paragraph (h)(3)(i)(C) could be one of
multiple amendments made under this
paragraph (h)(3)(i)(C). For example, an
amendment could replace an IBOR with
a temporary interest rate and later
replace the temporary interest rate with
a permanent interest rate.
(ii) Amendments to accommodate
replacement of a rate described in
paragraph (h)(3)(i) may also incorporate
spreads or other adjustments to the
replacement rate and make other
necessary technical changes to
operationalize the determination of
payments or other exchanges of
economic value using the replacement
rate, including changes to determination
dates, calculation agents, and payment
dates, so long as the changes do not
extend the maturity or increase the total
effective notional amount of the noncleared swap or non-cleared securitybased swap.
(4) The non-cleared swap or noncleared security-based swap was
amended or replaced solely to reduce
risk or remain risk-neutral through
portfolio compression between or
among covered swap entities and their
counterparties as long as:
(i) A non-cleared swap or non-cleared
security-based swap that is amended to
reflect the outcome of the compression
exercise does not:
(A) Extend the remaining maturity; or
(B) Increase the total effective
notional amount of that swap; or
(ii) A non-cleared swap or noncleared security-based swap that is
entered into as a replacement to reflect
the outcome of the compression exercise
does not:
(A) Exceed the sum of the total
effective notional amounts of all of the
swaps that were submitted to the
compression exercise that had the same
or longer remaining maturity as the
replacement swap; or
(B) Exceed the longest remaining
maturity of all the swaps submitted to
the compression exercise.
(5) The non-cleared swap or noncleared security-based swap was
amended solely for one of the following
reasons:
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 216 / Thursday, November 7, 2019 / Proposed Rules
(i) To reflect technical changes, such
as addresses, identities of parties for
delivery of formal notices, and other
administrative or operational provisions
as long as they do not alter the noncleared swap’s or non-cleared securitybased swap’s underlying asset or
indicator, the remaining maturity, or the
total effective notional amount; or
(ii) To reduce the notional amount, so
long as:
(A) All payment obligations attached
to the total effective notional amount
being eliminated as a result of the
amendment are fully terminated; or
(B) All payment obligations attached
to the total effective notional amount
being eliminated as a result of the
amendment are fully novated to a third
party, who complies with applicable
margin rules for the novated portion
upon the transfer.
■ 11. Amend § 349.10 by revising
paragraph (a) to read as follows:
§ 349.10 Documentation of margin
matters.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) Provides the covered swap entity
and its counterparty with the
contractual right to collect and post
initial margin and variation margin in
such amounts, in such form, and under
such circumstances as are required by
this subpart, and at such time as initial
margin or variation margin is required
to be collected or posted under § 349.3
or § 349.4, as applicable; and
*
*
*
*
*
■ 12. Section 349.11 is revised to read
as follows:
§ 349.11 Initial margin exemption for
affiliates.
(a) The requirement for a covered
swap entity to collect or post initial
margin under § 349.3 does not apply
with respect to any non-cleared swap or
non-cleared security-based swap with a
counterparty that is an affiliate.
(b) For purposes of this section, an
affiliate means:
(1) An affiliate as defined in § 349.2;
and
(2) Any company that controls, is
controlled by, or is under common
control with the covered swap entity
through the direct or indirect exercise of
controlling influence over the
management or policies of the
controlled company.
Farm Credit Administration
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Farm Credit
Administration proposes to amend
chapter VI of title 12, Code of Federal
Regulations, as follows:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:23 Nov 06, 2019
Jkt 250001
PART 624—MARGIN AND CAPITAL
REQUIREMENTS FOR COVERED
SWAP ENTITIES
13. The authority citation for part 624
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C 6s(e), 15 U.S.C. 78o–
10(e), 12 U.S.C. 2154, 12 U.S.C. 2243, 12
U.S.C. 2252, 12 U.S.C. 2279bb–1.
14. Section 624.1 is amended by
a. Revising paragraphs (e)(6), (e)(7),
(h) introductory text, and (h)(1); and
■ b. Adding paragraphs (h)(3) through
(h)(5).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
■
■
§ 624.1 Authority, purpose, scope,
exemptions and compliance dates.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
*
*
*
*
*
(6) September 1, 2020 with respect to
requirements in § 624.3 for initial
margin for any non-cleared swaps and
non-cleared security-based swaps,
where both:
(i) The covered swap entity combined
with all its affiliates; and
(ii) Its counterparty combined with all
its affiliates, have an average daily
aggregate notional amount of noncleared swaps, foreign exchange
forwards and foreign exchange swaps
for March, April and May 2020 that
exceeds $50 billion, where such
amounts are calculated only for
business days; and
(iii) In calculating the amounts in
paragraphs (e)(6)(i) and (ii) of this
section, an entity shall count the
average daily aggregate notional amount
of a non-cleared swap, a non-cleared
security-based swap, a foreign exchange
forward or a foreign exchange swap
between the entity and an affiliate only
one time, and shall not count a swap or
security-based swap that is exempt
pursuant to paragraph (d) of this
section.
(7) September 1, 2021 with respect to
requirements in § 624.3 for initial
margin for any other covered swap
entity with respect to non-cleared swaps
and non-cleared security-based swaps
entered into with any other
counterparty.
*
*
*
*
*
(h) Legacy swaps. Covered swaps
entities are required to comply with the
requirements of this part for non-cleared
swaps and non-cleared security-based
swaps entered into on or after the
relevant compliance dates for variation
margin and for initial margin
established in paragraph (e) of this
section. Any non-cleared swap or noncleared security-based swap entered
into before such relevant date shall
PO 00000
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59987
remain outside the scope of this part if
amendments are made to the noncleared swap or non-cleared securitybased swap by method of adherence to
a protocol, contractual amendment of an
agreement or confirmation, or execution
of a new contract in replacement of and
immediately upon termination of an
existing contract, as follows:
(1) Amendments to the non-cleared
swap or non-cleared security-based
swap solely to comply with the
requirements of part 47, subpart I of part
252 or part 382 of title 12, as applicable;
*
*
*
*
*
(3)(i) Amendments to the non-cleared
swap or non-cleared security-based
swap that are made solely to
accommodate the replacement of:
(A) An interbank offered rate (IBOR)
including, but not limited to, the
London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR),
the Tokyo Interbank Offered Rate
(TIBOR), the Bank Bill Swap Rate
(BBSW), the Singapore Interbank
Offered Rate (SIBOR), the Canadian
Dollar Offered Rate (CDOR), Euro
Interbank Offered Rate (EURIBOR), and
the Hong Kong Interbank Offered Rate
(HIBOR);
(B) Any other interest rate that a
covered swap entity reasonably expects
to be discontinued or reasonably
determines has lost its relevance as a
reliable benchmark due to a significant
impairment; or
(C) Any other interest rate that
succeeds a rate referenced in paragraph
(h)(3)(i)(A) or (h)(3)(i)(B) of this section.
An amendment made under this
paragraph (h)(3)(i)(C) could be one of
multiple amendments made under this
paragraph (h)(3)(i)(C). For example, an
amendment could replace an IBOR with
a temporary interest rate and later
replace the temporary interest rate with
a permanent interest rate.
(ii) Amendments to accommodate
replacement of a rate described in
paragraph (h)(3)(i) may also incorporate
spreads or other adjustments to the
replacement rate and make other
necessary technical changes to
operationalize the determination of
payments or other exchanges of
economic value using the replacement
rate, including changes to determination
dates, calculation agents, and payment
dates, so long as the changes do not
extend the maturity or increase the total
effective notional amount of the noncleared swap or non-cleared securitybased swap.
(4) The non-cleared swap or noncleared security-based swap was
amended or replaced solely to reduce
risk or remain risk-neutral through
portfolio compression between or
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 216 / Thursday, November 7, 2019 / Proposed Rules
among covered swap entities and their
counterparties as long as:
(i) A non-cleared swap or non-cleared
security-based swap that is amended to
reflect the outcome of the compression
exercise does not:
(A) Extend the remaining maturity; or
(B) Increase the total effective
notional amount of that swap; or
(ii) A non-cleared swap or noncleared security-based swap that is
entered into as a replacement to reflect
the outcome of the compression exercise
does not:
(A) Exceed the sum of the total
effective notional amounts of all of the
swaps that were submitted to the
compression exercise that had the same
or longer remaining maturity as the
replacement swap; or
(B) Exceed the longest remaining
maturity of all the swaps submitted to
the compression exercise.
(5) The non-cleared swap or noncleared security-based swap was
amended solely for one of the following
reasons:
(i) To reflect technical changes, such
as addresses, identities of parties for
delivery of formal notices, and other
administrative or operational provisions
as long as they do not alter the noncleared swap’s or non-cleared securitybased swap’s underlying asset or
indicator, the remaining maturity, or the
total effective notional amount; or
(ii) To reduce the notional amount, so
long as:
(A) All payment obligations attached
to the total effective notional amount
being eliminated as a result of the
amendment are fully terminated; or (B)
All payment obligations attached to the
total effective notional amount being
eliminated as a result of the amendment
are fully novated to a third party, who
complies with applicable margin rules
for the novated portion upon the
transfer.
■ 15. Amend § 624.10 by revising
paragraph (a) to read as follows:
§ 624.10 Documentation of margin
matters.
*
*
*
*
*
(a) Provides the covered swap entity
and its counterparty with the
contractual right to collect and post
initial margin and variation margin in
such amounts, in such form, and under
such circumstances as are required by
this subpart, and at such time as initial
margin or variation margin is required
to be collected or posted under § 624.3
or § 624.4, as applicable; and
*
*
*
*
*
■ 16. Section 624.11 is revised to read
as follows:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:23 Nov 06, 2019
Jkt 250001
§ 624.11 Initial margin exemption for
affiliates.
(a) The requirement for a covered
swap entity to collect or post initial
margin under § 624.3 does not apply
with respect to any non-cleared swap or
non-cleared security-based swap with a
counterparty that is an affiliate.
(b) For purposes of this section, an
affiliate means:
(1) An affiliate as defined in § 624.2,
and
(2) Any company that controls, is
controlled by, or is under common
control with the covered swap entity
through the direct or indirect exercise of
controlling influence over the
management or policies of the
controlled company.
Federal Housing Finance Agency
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Federal Housing Finance
Agency proposes to amend chapter XII
of title 12, Code of Federal Regulations,
as follows:
PART 1221—MARGIN AND CAPITAL
REQUIREMENTS FOR COVERED
SWAP ENTITIES
17. The authority citation for part
1221 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 6s(e), 15 U.S.C. 78o–
10(e), 12 U.S.C. 4513, and 12 U.S.C. 4526(a).
18. Section 1221.1 is amended by:
a. Revising paragraphs (e)(6), (e)(7),
(h) introductory text, and (h)(1); and
■ b. Adding paragraphs (h)(3) through
(h)(5).
The revisions and additions read as
follows:
■
■
§ 1221.1 Authority, purpose, scope,
exemptions and compliance dates.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) * * *
*
*
*
*
*
(6) September 1, 2020 with respect to
requirements in § 1221.3 for initial
margin for any non-cleared swaps and
non-cleared security-based swaps,
where both:
(i) The covered swap entity combined
with all its affiliates; and
(ii) Its counterparty combined with all
its affiliates, have an average daily
aggregate notional amount of noncleared swaps, foreign exchange
forwards and foreign exchange swaps
for March, April and May 2020 that
exceeds $50 billion, where such
amounts are calculated only for
business days; and
(iii) In calculating the amounts in
paragraphs (e)(6)(i) and (ii) of this
section, an entity shall count the
average daily aggregate notional amount
PO 00000
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Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
of a non-cleared swap, a non-cleared
security-based swap, a foreign exchange
forward or a foreign exchange swap
between the entity and an affiliate only
one time, and shall not count a swap or
security-based swap that is exempt
pursuant to paragraph (d) of this
section.
(7) September 1, 2021 with respect to
requirements in § 1221.3 for initial
margin for any other covered swap
entity with respect to non-cleared swaps
and non-cleared security-based swaps
entered into with any other
counterparty.
(h) Legacy swaps. Covered swaps
entities are required to comply with the
requirements of this part for non-cleared
swaps and non-cleared security-based
swaps entered into on or after the
relevant compliance dates for variation
margin and for initial margin
established in paragraph (e) of this
section. Any non-cleared swap or noncleared security-based swap entered
into before such relevant date shall
remain outside the scope of this part if
amendments are made to the noncleared swap or non-cleared securitybased swap by method of adherence to
a protocol, contractual amendment of an
agreement or confirmation, or execution
of a new contract in replacement of and
immediately upon termination of an
existing contract, as follows:
(1) Amendments to the non-cleared
swap or non-cleared security-based
swap solely to comply with the
requirements of part 47, subpart I of part
252 or part 382 of title 12, as applicable;
*
*
*
*
*
(3)(i) Amendments to the non-cleared
swap or non-cleared security-based
swap that are made solely to
accommodate the replacement of:
(A) An interbank offered rate (IBOR)
including, but not limited to, the
London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR),
the Tokyo Interbank Offered Rate
(TIBOR), the Bank Bill Swap Rate
(BBSW), the Singapore Interbank
Offered Rate (SIBOR), the Canadian
Dollar Offered Rate (CDOR), the Euro
Interbank Offered Rate (EURIBOR), and
the Hong Kong Interbank Offered Rate
(HIBOR);
(B) Any other interest rate that a
covered swap entity reasonably expects
to be discontinued or reasonably
determines has lost its relevance as a
reliable benchmark due to a significant
impairment; or
(C) Any other interest rate that
succeeds a rate referenced in paragraph
(h)(3)(i)(A) or (h)(3)(i)(B) of this section.
An amendment made under this
paragraph (h)(3)(i)(C) could be one of
multiple amendments made under this
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Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 216 / Thursday, November 7, 2019 / Proposed Rules
paragraph (h)(3)(i)(C). For example, an
amendment could replace an IBOR with
a temporary interest rate and later
replace the temporary interest rate with
a permanent interest rate.
(ii) Amendments to accommodate
replacement of a rate described in
paragraph (h)(3)(i) may also incorporate
spreads or other adjustments to the
replacement rate and make other
necessary technical changes to
operationalize the determination of
payments or other exchanges of
economic value using the replacement
rate, including changes to determination
dates, calculation agents, and payment
dates, so long as the changes do not
extend the maturity or increase the total
effective notional amount of the noncleared swap or non-cleared securitybased swap.
(4) The non-cleared swap or noncleared security-based swap was
amended or replaced solely to reduce
risk or remain risk-neutral through
portfolio compression between or
among covered swap entities and their
counterparties as long as:
(i) A non-cleared swap or non-cleared
security-based swap that is amended to
reflect the outcome of the compression
exercise does not:
(A) Extend the remaining maturity; or
(B) Increase the total effective
notional amount of that swap; or
(ii) A non-cleared swap or noncleared security-based swap that is
entered into as a replacement to reflect
the outcome of the compression exercise
does not:
(A) Exceed the sum of the total
effective notional amounts of all of the
swaps that were submitted to the
compression exercise that had the same
or longer remaining maturity as the
replacement swap; or
(B) Exceed the longest remaining
maturity of all the swaps submitted to
the compression exercise.
(5) The non-cleared swap or noncleared security-based swap was
amended solely for one of the following
reasons:
(i) To reflect technical changes, such
as addresses, identities of parties for
delivery of formal notices, and other
administrative or operational provisions
as long as they do not alter the noncleared swap’s or non-cleared securitybased swap’s underlying asset or
indicator, the remaining maturity, or the
total effective notional amount; or
(ii) To reduce the notional amount, so
long as:
(A) All payment obligations attached
to the total effective notional amount
being eliminated as a result of the
amendment are fully terminated; or
VerDate Sep<11>2014
18:10 Nov 06, 2019
Jkt 250001
(B) All payment obligations attached
to the total effective notional amount
being eliminated as a result of the
amendment are fully novated to a third
party, who complies with applicable
margin rules for the novated portion
upon the transfer.
■ 19. Amend § 1221.10 by revising
paragraph (a) to read as follows:
§ 1221.10
matters.
*
*
*
*
(a) Provides the covered swap entity
and its counterparty with the
contractual right to collect and post
initial margin and variation margin in
such amounts, in such form, and under
such circumstances as are required by
this part, and at such time as initial
margin or variation margin is required
to be collected or posted under § 1221.3
or § 1221.4, as applicable; and
*
*
*
*
*
■ 20. Section 1221.11 is revised to read
as follows:
Initial margin exemption for
(a) The requirement for a covered
swap entity to collect or post initial
margin under § 1221.3 does not apply
with respect to any non-cleared swap or
non-cleared security-based swap with a
counterparty that is an affiliate.
(b) For purposes of this section, an
affiliate means:
(1) An affiliate as defined in § 1221.2;
and
(2) Any company that controls, is
controlled by, or is under common
control with the covered swap entity
through the direct or indirect exercise of
controlling influence over the
management or policies of the
controlled company.
Dated: September 17th, 2019.
Joseph M. Otting,
Comptroller of the Currency.
By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, October 21, 2019.
Ann E. Misback,
Secretary of the Board. Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation. By order of the Board
of Directors.
Dated at Washington, DC, on September
17, 2019.
Robert E. Feldman,
Executive Secretary.
By order of the Board of the Farm Credit
Administration.
PO 00000
Dated at McLean, VA, this 17th day of
September, 2019.
Dale L. Aultman,
Secretary.
Dated: August 27, 2019.
Mark A. Calabria,
Director, Federal Housing Finance Agency.
[FR Doc. 2019–23541 Filed 11–6–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–33–P; 6210–01–P; 6714–01–P;
8070–01–P; 6705–01–P
Documentation of margin
*
§ 1221.11
affiliates.
59989
Frm 00020
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
NATIONAL CREDIT UNION
ADMINISTRATION
12 CFR Part 701
RIN 3133–AF06
Chartering and Field of Membership
National Credit Union
Administration (NCUA).
ACTION: Proposed rule and supplemental
statement.
AGENCY:
The NCUA Board (Board) is
proposing to amend its chartering and
field of membership (FOM) rules with
respect to applicants for a community
charter approval, expansion, or
conversion. Specifically, the Board is
proposing to re-adopt a provision to
allow an applicant to designate a
Combined Statistical Area (CSA), or an
individual, contiguous portion thereof,
as a well-defined local community
(WDLC), provided that the chosen area
has a population of 2.5 million or less.
Separately, in accordance with an
August 2019 opinion and order issued
by the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals
(court) with respect to communities
based on a Core-Based Statistical Area
(CBSA) or a portion thereof, the Board
is providing further explanation and
support for its elimination of the
requirement to serve the CBSA’s core
area as provided for in a 2016
rulemaking. In addition, the Board is
proposing to clarify existing
requirements and add an explicit
provision to its rules to address
concerns about potential discrimination
in the FOM selection for CSAs and
CBSAs.
SUMMARY:
Comments must be received by
December 9, 2019.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
by any of the following methods (Please
send comments by one method only):
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• NCUA Website: https://
www.ncua.gov/RegulationsOpinions
Laws/proposed_regs/proposed_
regs.html. Follow the instructions for
submitting comments.
DATES:
E:\FR\FM\07NOP1.SGM
07NOP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 216 (Thursday, November 7, 2019)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 59970-59989]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-23541]
========================================================================
Proposed Rules
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains notices to the public of
the proposed issuance of rules and regulations. The purpose of these
notices is to give interested persons an opportunity to participate in
the rule making prior to the adoption of the final rules.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 216 / Thursday, November 7, 2019 /
Proposed Rules
[[Page 59970]]
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
12 CFR Part 45
[Docket No. OCC-2019-0023]
RIN 1557-AE69
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 237
[Docket No. R-1682]
RIN 7100-AF62
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
12 CFR Part 349
RIN 3064-AF08
FARM CREDIT ADMINISTRATION
12 CFR Part 624
RIN 3052-AD38
FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE AGENCY
12 CFR Part 1221
RIN 2590-AB03
Margin and Capital Requirements for Covered Swap Entities
AGENCY: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Treasury (OCC);
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board); Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC); Farm Credit Administration (FCA);
and the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA).
ACTION: Proposed rule and request for comment.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The OCC, Board, FDIC, FCA, and FHFA (each, an agency, and
collectively, the agencies) request comment on a proposed rule that
would amend the agencies' regulations that require swap dealers and
security-based swap dealers under the agencies' respective
jurisdictions to exchange margin with their counterparties for swaps
that are not centrally cleared (Swap Margin Rule). The Swap Margin Rule
as adopted in 2015 takes effect under a phased compliance schedule
spanning from 2016 through 2020, and the dealers covered by the rule
continue to hold swaps in their portfolios that were entered into
before the effective dates of the rule. Such swaps are grandfathered
from the Swap Margin Rule's requirements until they expire according to
their terms. The proposed rule would permit swaps entered into prior to
an applicable compliance date (legacy swaps) to retain their legacy
status in the event that they are amended to replace an interbank
offered rate (IBOR) or other discontinued rate, repeal the inter-
affiliate initial margin provisions, introduce an additional compliance
date for initial margin requirements, clarify the point in time at
which trading documentation must be in place, permit legacy swaps to
retain their legacy status in the event that they are amended due to
technical amendments, notional reductions, or portfolio compression
exercises, and make technical changes to relocate the provision
addressing amendments to legacy swaps that are made to comply with the
Qualified Financial Contract Rules, as defined in the Supplementary
Information section.
DATES: Comments should be received on or before December 9, 2019.
ADDRESSES: Interested parties are encouraged to submit written comments
jointly to all of the agencies. Commenters are encouraged to use the
title ``Margin and Capital Requirements for Covered Swap Entities'' to
facilitate the organization and distribution of comments among the
agencies.
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
``Margin and Capital Requirements for Covered Swap Entities'' to
facilitate the organization and distribution of the comments. You may
submit comments by any of the following methods:
Federal eRulemaking Portal--Regulations.gov Classic or
Regulations.gov Beta
Regulations.gov Classic: Go to https://www.regulations.gov/. Enter
``Docket ID OCC-2019-0023'' in the Search Box and click ``Search.''
Click on ``Comment Now'' to submit public comments. For help with
submitting effective comments please click on ``View Commenter's
Checklist.'' Click on the ``Help'' tab on the Regulations.gov home page
to get information on using Regulations.gov, including instructions for
submitting public comments.
Regulations.gov Beta: Go to https://beta.regulations.gov/ or click
``Visit New Regulations.gov Site'' from the Regulations.gov classic
homepage. Enter ``Docket ID OCC-2019-0023'' in the Search Box and click
``Search.'' Public comments can be submitted via the ``Comment'' box
below the displayed document information or click on the document title
and click the ``Comment'' box on the top-left side of the screen. For
help with submitting effective comments please click on ``Commenter's
Checklist.'' For assistance with the Regulations.gov Beta site please
call (877) 378-5457 (toll free) or (703) 454-9859 Monday-Friday, 9
a.m.-5 p.m. ET or email to [email protected].
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-2019-0023'' in your comment. In general, the OCC will
enter all comments received into the docket and publish the comments 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
[[Page 59971]]
rulemaking action by any of the following methods:
Viewing Comments Electronically--Regulations.gov Classic
or Regulations.gov Beta
Regulations.gov Classic: Go to https://www.regulations.gov/. Enter
``Docket ID OCC-2019-0023'' in the Search box and click ``Search.''
Click on ``Open Docket Folder'' on the right side of the screen.
Comments and supporting materials can be viewed and 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.
Regulations.gov Beta: Go to https://beta.regulations.gov/ or click
``Visit New Regulations.gov Site'' from the Regulations.gov classic
homepage. Enter ``Docket ID OCC-2019-0023'' in the Search Box and click
``Search.'' Click on the ``Comments'' tab. Comments can be viewed and
filtered by clicking on the ``Sort By'' drop-down on the right side of
the screen or the ``Refine Results'' options on the left side of the
screen. Supporting Materials can be viewed by clicking on the
``Documents'' tab and filtered by clicking on the ``Sort By'' drop-down
on the right side of the screen or the ``Refine Results'' options on
the left side of the screen. For assistance with the Regulations.gov
Beta site please call (877)-378-5457 (toll free) or (703) 454-9859
Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m. ET or email to
[email protected].
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 deaf or 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-1682 and
RIN No. 7100-AF62, 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.
Email: [email protected]. Include the
docket number and RIN number in the subject line of the message.
Fax: (202) 452-3819.
Mail: Address to Ann E. Misback, Secretary, Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 20th Street and Constitution
Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20551.
All public comments are available from 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 in Room 146, 1709 New York Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20006
between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. on weekdays.
FDIC: You may submit comments, identified by RIN 3064-AF08, by any
of the following methods:
Agency Website: https://www.FDIC.gov/regulations/laws/federal.
Mail: Robert E. Feldman, Executive Secretary, Attention:
Comments/Legal ESS, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th
Street NW, Washington, DC 20429.
Hand Delivered/Courier: 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]. Comments submitted must include
``FDIC'' and ``RIN 3064-AF08--Margin Amendments'': Margin and Capital
Requirements for Covered Swap Entities.'' Comments received will be
posted without change to https://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal,
including any personal information provided.
FCA: We offer a variety of methods for you to submit your comments.
For accuracy and efficiency reasons, commenters are encouraged to
submit comments by email or through the FCA's website. As facsimiles
(fax) are difficult for us to process and achieve compliance with
section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act, we are no longer accepting
comments submitted by fax. Regardless of the method you use, please do
not submit your comments multiple times via different methods. You may
submit comments by any of the following methods:
Email: Send us an email at [email protected].
FCA Website: https://www.fca.gov. Click inside the ``I want
to . . .'' field near the top of the page; select ``comment on a
pending regulation'' from the dropdown menu; and click ``Go.'' This
takes you to an electronic public comment form.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
Mail: Barry F. Mardock, Deputy Director, Office of
Regulatory Policy, Farm Credit Administration, 1501 Farm Credit Drive,
McLean, VA 22102-5090.
You may review copies of all comments we receive at our office in
McLean, Virginia or on our website at https://www.fca.gov. Once you are
on the website, click inside the ``I want to . . .'' field near the top
of the page; select ``find comments on a pending regulation'' from the
dropdown menu; and click ``Go.'' This will take you to the Comment
Letters page where you can select the regulation for which you would
like to read the public comments. We will show your comments as
submitted, including any supporting data provided, but for technical
reasons we may omit items such as logos and special characters.
Identifying information that you provide, such as phone numbers and
addresses, will be publicly available. However, we will attempt to
remove email addresses to help reduce internet spam.
FHFA: You may submit your written comments on the proposed
rulemaking, identified by regulatory information number: (RIN) 2590-
AB03, by any one of the following methods:
Agency Website: www.fhfa.gov/open-for-comment-or-input.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments. If you submit your
comment to the Federal eRulemaking Portal, please also send it by email
to FHFA at [email protected] to ensure timely receipt by the agency.
Please include ``RIN 2590-AB03'' in the subject line of the message.
Hand Delivery/Courier: The hand delivery address is:
Alfred M. Pollard, General Counsel, Attention: Comments/RIN 2590-AB03,
Federal Housing Finance Agency, Constitution Center (OGC Eighth Floor),
400 7th St. SW, Washington, DC 20219. Deliver the package to the
Seventh Street entrance Guard Desk, First Floor, on business days
between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m.
U.S. Mail, United Parcel Service, Federal Express, or
Other Mail Service: The mailing address for comments is: Alfred M.
Pollard, General Counsel, Attention: Comments/RIN 2590-AB03, Federal
Housing Finance Agency, Constitution Center (OGC Eighth Floor), 400 7th
St. SW, Washington, DC 20219.
[[Page 59972]]
Please note that all mail sent to FHFA via U.S. Mail is routed through
a national irradiation facility, a process that may delay delivery by
approximately two weeks.
All comments received by the deadline will be posted for public
inspection without change, including any personal information you
provide, such as your name, address, email address and telephone number
on the FHFA website at https://www.fhfa.gov. In addition, copies of all
comments received will be available for examination by the public
through the electronic rulemaking docket for this proposed rule also
located on the FHFA website.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
OCC: Chris McBride, Director for Market Risk, Treasury and Market
Risk Policy, (202) 649-6402, or Allison Hester-Haddad, Counsel, Chief
Counsel's Office, (202) 649-5490, for persons who are deaf or hearing
impaired, TTY (202) 649-5597, Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency, 400 7th Street SW, Washington, DC 20219.
Board: Constance Horsley, Deputy Associate Director, (202) 452-
5239, Lesley Chao, Lead Financial Institution Policy Analyst, (202)
974-7063, or John Feid, Principal Economist, (202) 452-2385, Division
of Supervision and Regulation; Patricia Yeh, Senior Counsel, (202) 452-
3089, Jason Shafer, Senior Counsel, (202) 728-5811, or Justyna Bolter,
Senior Attorney, (202) 452-2686, Legal Division; for users of
Telecommunication Devices for the Deaf (TDD) only, contact 202-263-
4869; Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 20th and C
Streets NW, Washington, DC 20551.
FDIC: Irina Leonova, Senior Policy Analyst, [email protected],
Capital Markets Branch, Division of Risk Management Supervision, (202)
898-3843; Thomas F. Hearn, Counsel, [email protected], Legal Division,
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street NW, Washington,
DC 20429.
FCA: Jeremy R. Edelstein, Associate Director, Finance & Capital
Market Team, Timothy T. Nerdahl, Senior Policy Analyst, Clayton D.
Milburn, Senior Financial Analyst, Office of Regulatory Policy, (703)
883-4414, TTY (703) 883-4056, or Richard A. Katz, Senior Counsel,
Office of General Counsel, (703) 883-4020, TTY (703) 883-4056, Farm
Credit Administration, 1501 Farm Credit Drive, McLean, VA 22102-5090.
FHFA: Christopher Vincent, Senior Financial Analyst, Office of
Financial Analysis, Modeling & Simulations, (202) 649-3685,
[email protected], or James P. Jordan, Associate General
Counsel, Office of General Counsel, (202) 649-3075,
[email protected], Federal Housing Finance Agency, Constitution
Center, 400 7th St. SW, Washington, DC 20219. The telephone number for
the Telecommunications Device for the Hearing Impaired is (800) 877-
8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background on the Swap Margin Rule
The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act
(Dodd-Frank Act) required the OCC, Board, FDIC, FCA, and FHFA (each, an
agency, and collectively, the agencies) to jointly adopt rules that
establish capital and margin requirements for swap entities that are
prudentially regulated by one of the agencies (covered swap
entities).\1\ These capital and margin requirements apply to swaps that
are not cleared by a registered derivatives clearing organization or a
registered clearing agency (non-cleared swaps).\2\ For the remainder of
this preamble, the term ``non-cleared swaps'' refers to non-cleared
swaps and non-cleared security-based swaps unless the context requires
otherwise.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act,
Pub. L. 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010). See 7 U.S.C. 6s; 15 U.S.C.
78o-10. Sections 731 and 764 of the Dodd-Frank Act added a new
section 4s to the Commodity Exchange Act of 1936, as amended, and a
new section, section 15F, to the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as
amended, respectively, which require registration with the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) of swap dealers and major swap
participants and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
of security-based swap dealers and major security-based swap
participants (each a swap entity and, collectively, swap entities).
Section 1a(39) of the Commodity Exchange Act of 1936, as amended,
defines the term ``prudential regulator'' for purposes of the margin
requirements applicable to swap dealers, major swap participants,
security-based swap dealers and major security-based swap
participants. See 7 U.S.C. 1a(39).
\2\ A ``swap'' is defined in section 721 of the Dodd-Frank Act
to include, among other things, an interest rate swap, commodity
swap, equity swap, and credit default swap, and a security-based
swap is defined in section 761 of the Dodd-Frank Act to include a
swap based on a single security or loan or on a narrow-based
security index. See 7 U.S.C. 1a(47); 15 U.S.C. 78c(a)(68).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS) and the Board of
the International Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO)
established an international framework for margin requirements on non-
cleared derivatives in September 2013 (BCBS/IOSCO framework).\3\
Following the establishment of the BCBS/IOSCO framework, on November
30, 2015, the agencies published regulations that require swap dealers
and security-based swap dealers under the agencies' respective
jurisdictions to exchange margin with their counterparties for swaps
that are not centrally cleared (Swap Margin Rule or Rule), which
includes many of the principles and other aspects of the BCBS/IOSCO
framework.\4\ In particular, the Swap Margin Rule adopted the
implementation schedule set forth in the BCBS/IOSCO framework,
including the revised implementation schedule adopted on March 18,
2015.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ See BCBS and IOSCO ``Margin requirements for non-centrally
cleared derivatives,'' (September 2013), available at https://www.bis.org/publ/bcbs261.pdf.
\4\ 80 FR 74840 (November 30, 2015).
\5\ See BCBS and IOSCO ``Margin requirements for non-centrally
cleared derivatives,'' (March 2015), available at https://www.bis.org/bcbs/publ/d317.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Swap Margin Rule established an effective date of April 1,
2016, with a phased-in compliance schedule for the initial and
variation margin requirements.\6\ On or after March 1, 2017, all
covered swap entities were required to comply with the variation margin
requirements for transactions with other swap entities and financial
end user counterparties. The Swap Margin Rule presently requires all
covered swap entities to comply with the initial margin requirements
for non-cleared swaps with all financial end users with a material
swaps exposure and with all swap entities by September 1, 2020.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ The applicable compliance date for a covered swap entity is
based on the average daily aggregate notional amount of non-cleared
swaps, foreign exchange forwards and foreign exchange swaps of the
covered swap entity and its counterparty (accounting for their
respective affiliates) for each business day in March, April, and
May of that year. The applicable compliance dates for initial margin
requirements that are currently in place, and the corresponding
average daily aggregate notional amount thresholds, are: September
1, 2016, $3 trillion; September 1, 2017, $2.25 trillion; September
1, 2018, $1.5 trillion; September 1, 2019, $0.75 trillion; and
September 1, 2020, all swap entities and counterparties. See Sec.
__.1(e) of the Swap Margin Rule. In this proposed rule, the agencies
are also proposing to add one additional year to this schedule for
certain counterparties.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Swap Margin Rule's requirements generally apply only to a non-
cleared swap entered into on or after the applicable compliance
date.\7\ A non-cleared swap entered into prior to an entity's
applicable compliance date is essentially ``grandfathered'' by this
regulatory provision, in that the non-cleared swap is generally not
subject to the margin requirements in the Swap Margin Rule (legacy
swap). However, the agencies explained in the preamble of the Swap
Margin Rule that a legacy swap that is later amended or novated on or
after the applicable compliance
[[Page 59973]]
date should be subject to the requirements of the Swap Margin Rule, in
the interests of preventing evasion of the Rule's margin
requirements.\8\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ See Sec. _.1(e) of the Swap Margin Rule.
\8\ 80 FR 74850-51.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Swap Margin Rule has recently been amended to (1) provide
relief to legacy swaps that are amended to achieve compliance with
final rules that established restrictions on and requirements for
certain non-cleared swaps and certain other qualified financial
contracts of U.S. global systemically important banking organizations
and their subsidiaries and the U.S. operations of foreign global
systemically important banking organizations (QFC Rules) \9\ and (2)
subject to certain conditions, provide relief for entities located in
the United Kingdom to transfer their existing swap portfolios that face
counterparties located in the European Union to an affiliate or other
related establishment located within the European Union or the United
States while maintaining legacy status for such portfolios.\10\ This
notice of proposed rulemaking would make the following changes to the
Swap Margin Rule:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ 83 FR 50805 (October 10, 2018). The QFC Rules are codified
as follows: 12 CFR part 47 (OCC's QFC Rule); 12 CFR part 252,
subpart I (Board's QFC Rule); 12 CFR part 382 (FDIC's QFC Rule).
\10\ 84 FR 9940 (March 19, 2019).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
First, the proposal would provide relief by allowing legacy swaps
to be amended to replace existing interest rate provisions based on
certain interbank offered rates (IBORs) and other interest rates that
are reasonably expected to be discontinued or are reasonably determined
to have lost their relevance as a reliable benchmark due to a
significant impairment, without such swaps losing their legacy status.
Second, the proposal would amend the Swap Margin Rule's
requirements for inter-affiliate swaps. The proposal would repeal the
requirement for a covered swap entity to collect initial margin from
its affiliates, but would retain the requirement that variation margin
be exchanged for affiliate transactions.
Third, the proposal would add an additional initial margin
compliance period for certain smaller counterparties, and clarify the
existing trading documentation requirements in Sec. _.10 of the Rule.
Fourth, the proposal would amend the Swap Margin Rule to permit
amendments caused by conducting certain routine life-cycle activities
that covered swap entities may conduct for legacy swaps, such as
reduction of notional amounts and portfolio compression exercises,
without triggering margin requirements.
These aspects of the proposal are each discussed in greater detail
below.
II. Interbank Offered Rates
A. Background on IBORs
The proposed rule would amend the Swap Margin Rule to permit a
covered swap entity to amend a legacy swap in order to replace an IBOR
with an alternative reference rate or rates, without triggering margin
requirements.
An IBOR is a benchmark interest rate that is intended to represent
banks' cost of unsecured wholesale borrowing. IBORs \11\ have been used
as the benchmark interest rate for a large volume and broad range of
existing financial products and contracts, including for an estimated
$190 trillion US Dollar LIBOR (USD LIBOR) exposure, of which $145
trillion represents over-the-counter derivatives exposure (as of year-
end 2016).\12\ However, the discovery of, and numerous regulatory
actions to seek redress of, market manipulation and false reporting of
the many IBORs, together with the post-crisis decline in liquidity in
interbank unsecured funding markets, have undermined confidence in the
reliability and robustness of IBORs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ IBORs include the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR),
the Tokyo Interbank Offered Rate (TIBOR), the Bank Bill Swap Rate
(BBSW), the Singapore Interbank Offered Rate (SIBOR), the Canadian
Dollar Offered Rate (CDOR), the Euro Interbank Offered Rate
(EURIBOR), and the Hong Kong Interbank Offered Rate (HIBOR).
\12\ ``Second Report of the Alternative Reference Rates
Committee'' published in March 2018, available at https://www.newyorkfed.org/medialibrary/Microsites/arrc/files/2018/ARRC-Second-report.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As a result, the Financial Stability Board (FSB) and the U.S.
Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC) requested that government
and industry stakeholders undertake implementation of new designs and
methodologies for IBORs, and the identification of viable alternative
near risk-free rates in their respective currencies (U.S. dollar in the
case of the United States) with a focus on the feasibility of new rate
methodologies, including identification of suitable administrators and
any necessary infrastructure to support these rates.\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ ``Reforming Major Interest Rate Benchmarks'' published by
the Financial Stability Board on July 22, 2014, available at https://www.fsb.org/wp-content/uploads/r_140722.pdf. Several central banks
responded to this request and convened working groups of market
participants and official sector representatives, including the
United Kingdom, Japan, Switzerland, and the Eurozone. The work has
also been coordinated at the international level by the FSB's
Official Sector Steering Group (OSSG).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Federal Reserve Board and Federal Reserve Bank of New York
convened the Alternative Reference Rates Committee (ARRC) \14\ in 2014
to identify an alternative reference rate for USD LIBOR and create an
implementation plan to promote the use of the selected alternative on a
voluntary basis. In 2017, the ARRC selected the Secured Overnight
Funding Rate (SOFR), which is designed to be representative of general
funding conditions in the overnight Treasury repo market. The ARRC has
noted that use of SOFR is voluntary and that other benchmarks can also
be considered as potential alternatives for USD LIBOR. For example, the
American Financial Exchange is offering Ameribor as a potential USD
LIBOR replacement rate.\15\ In addition, benchmarks such as an
Overnight Bank Funding Rate were suggested by some market participants
as a potential alternative.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ The voting members of the 2014 ARRC were Bank of America,
Barclays, BNP Paribas, Citigroup, Credit Suisse, Deutsche Bank,
Goldman Sachs, HSBC, JP Morgan Chase & Co., Morgan Stanley, Nomura,
RBS, Soci[eacute]t[eacute] G[eacute]n[eacute]rale, UBS, and Wells
Fargo; the non-voting members were Bank of New York Mellon, CME,
DTCC, ISDA and LCH.Clearnet; the ex officio members were Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Federal Reserve Bank of New
York, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, U.S. Treasury
Department and Office of Financial Research. The ARRC's membership
has changed over time. For a list of the latest members, see https://www.newyorkfed.org/arrc.
\15\ See https://ameribor.net/.
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In July 2017, the U.K. Financial Conduct Authority (UKFCA), which
regulates ICE Benchmark Administration, the administrator of LIBOR,
announced that it has sought commitments from LIBOR panel banks to
continue to contribute to LIBOR through the end of 2021, but that the
UKFCA will not use its powers to compel or persuade contributions
beyond that date. The UKFCA has also warned that it may judge LIBOR to
no longer be representative of its underlying market should it persist
past this date. Thus, it is possible that LIBOR will cease to be
published at the end of 2021. Consequently, it is likely that
derivatives contracts that reference LIBOR will need to be amended to
replace LIBOR.
In consideration of this uncertainty, the International Swaps and
Derivatives Association, Inc. (ISDA), which produces standard
documentation used by parties to derivatives contracts, indicated that
it plans to amend its documentation to ``include fallbacks that would
apply upon the permanent discontinuation of certain key
[[Page 59974]]
IBORs.'' \16\ For new non-cleared swaps, market participants will have
an option to amend their documentation via an ISDA benchmark
supplement. For non-cleared swaps that are already in place, market
participants will have the option to utilize an ISDA protocol that will
specify amended definitions, triggers, and other adjustments.\17\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ ISDA Consultation on Pre-Cessation Issues for LIBOR and
Certain Other Interbank Offered Rates (IBORs), May 16, 2019,
available at https://www.isda.org/a/md6ME/FINAL-Pre-cessation-issues-Consultation.pdf.
\17\ ISDA Supplemental Consultation on Spread and Term
Adjustments for Fallbacks in Derivatives Referencing USD LIBOR, CDOR
and HIBOR and Certain Aspects of Fallbacks for Derivatives
Referencing SOR, May 16, 2019, available at https://www.isda.org/a/n6tME/Supplemental-Consultation-on-USD-LIBOR-CDOR-HIBOR-and-SOR.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Due to the potential discontinuation of LIBOR at the end of 2021,
covered swap entities face uncertainty about the way their swap
contracts based on LIBOR and other IBORs will operate after the
permanent discontinuation date without a reliable benchmark rate. A
benchmark rate is a critical term for calculating payments under a swap
contract. In many instances, these firms may decide to amend existing
swap contracts to replace an IBOR before the IBOR becomes discontinued.
Such amendments may also trigger follow-on amendments \18\ that the
counterparties determine are necessary to maintain the economics of the
contract. Absent the proposed revisions to the Swap Margin Rule, one or
more of these amendments could affect the legacy status of a non-
cleared swap and make it subject to the requirements of the Rule. In
order to enable covered swap entities and their counterparties to avoid
the risk of future financial instability, the agencies believe it is
appropriate to permit covered swap entities to amend the reference
rates in a legacy swap contract and to adopt necessary follow-on
amendments without converting the legacy swap into a swap subject to
the Swap Margin Rule. The conditions of eligibility for the amendments
are described in the next section of this SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ Follow-on amendments may include a variety of spread
adjustments resulting from the move from a term rate to an overnight
rate, from unsecured to secured, or could result from a change in
tenor, among others.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Proposed Rule on IBORs
In recognition of the ongoing efforts to transition away from key
IBORs due to their potential discontinuation, the agencies are
proposing to amend the Swap Margin Rule to remove impediments that
would limit the ability of covered swap entities to replace certain
rates in their legacy non-cleared swaps. Specifically, the agencies
propose to amend Sec. _.1(h) to preserve the legacy status of a non-
cleared swap after a covered swap entity replaces certain reference
rates. Proposed Sec. _.1(h) recognizes that these replacements could
be carried out using a variety of legal mechanisms by permitting
amendments accomplished by the parties': Adherence to a protocol;
contractual amendment of an agreement or confirmation; or execution of
a new contract in replacement of and immediately upon termination of an
existing contract (i.e., tear-up), subject to the limitations discussed
below.
The proposed rule is intended to be flexible with respect to the
method of amendment. The proposal would permit amendments to be
executed with respect to an individual non-cleared swap or on a netting
set level, as long as the other proposed criteria are met.
The proposed rule describes the type of rate that can be replaced
and the accompanying changes that would be permitted. Proposed section
Sec. _.1(h)(3)(i) would permit amendments that are made solely to
accommodate the replacement of an IBOR or a replacement of any other
non-IBOR interest rate that a covered swap entity reasonably expects to
be discontinued or reasonably determines has lost its relevance as a
reliable benchmark due to a significant impairment with an alternate
reference rate.\19\ For example, if a benchmark administrator
materially changes the inputs in the benchmark calculation because an
input is no longer available, a covered swap entity may determine that
the benchmark has lost its relevance as a reliable benchmark due to a
significant impairment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ Under the EU Benchmark Regulation (Regulation (EU) 2016/
1011 (June 8, 2016)), a benchmark administrator is expected to
regularly assess whether a critical benchmark measures the
underlying market or economic reality. In certain circumstances, a
regulatory authority of a benchmark administrator may complete its
own assessment of a benchmark's representativeness as well. Covered
swap entities may refer to such assessments or other public
statements by benchmark administrators or regulatory authorities in
order to inform their expectations about whether a benchmark will be
discontinued or continues to be reliable. In addition, covered swap
entities may consult the IOSCO Principles for Financial Benchmarks
(July 2013), to assist in determining whether a benchmark has lost
its relevance as a reliable benchmark, available at https://www.iosco.org/library/pubdocs/pdf/IOSCOPD415.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The proposed rule lists the IBORs that could be replaced, including
LIBOR, TIBOR, BBSW, SIBOR, CDOR, EURIBOR, and HIBOR. Although the
current uncertainty surrounding reference rates is tied to IBORs, the
agencies are also proposing a second, more qualitative standard that
would be applicable to other categories of reference rates, should the
need arise in the future. This forward-looking standard is designed to
encourage covered swap entities to resolve critical uncertainties
before an interest rate benchmark is discontinued, or loses its market
relevance, in order to minimize disturbance to the markets.
The agencies also anticipate that a reference rate may need to be
replaced more than one time. For example, an IBOR may first be replaced
with fallback provisions at a time when a permanent alternative rate is
not yet available or amendment documentation has not yet been
developed. Subsequently, fallback provisions may be replaced with
permanent alternative rates. If the original rate that is being
replaced is an IBOR or any other non-IBOR interest rate benchmark that
otherwise meets the requirements of the proposed rule that a covered
swap entity reasonably expects it to be discontinued or reasonably
determines that it has lost its relevance as a reliable benchmark due
to a significant impairment, the non-cleared swap may be amended more
than once to accommodate ongoing developments toward a permanent
replacement rate. There is no limit to the number of amendments that
can take place, as long as the rate that was originally present in the
non-cleared swap met the criteria in either Sec. _.1(h)(3)(i)(A) or
Sec. _.1(h)(3)(i)(B). The proposed approach of permitting subsequent
amendments takes into account that any subsequent changes to the
reference rate will be the subject of negotiations among counterparties
that are incentivized to agree to a reasonable rate. The proposed rule
would not permit subsequent amendments that change rates or other terms
of the non-cleared swap for any purpose other than for those purposes
explicitly set out in Sec. _.1(h), without triggering application of
the margin requirements.
To benefit from the treatment of this new legacy swap provision, a
covered swap entity must make the amendments to the non-cleared swap
solely to accommodate the replacement of a rate described in the
proposed rule. The proposed rule is flexible as to the incoming
replacement rate by leaving it up to the counterparties to select a
mutually agreeable replacement rate. The agencies expect that any
replacement rate, including any subsequent replacement rate, would be
agreed upon by the parties after assessing its complexity, safety and
soundness, and taking into
[[Page 59975]]
consideration associated risk management practices.\20\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ The replacement rate is also expected to be consistent with
international standards, such as the IOSCO Principles for Financial
Benchmarks. See https://www.iosco.org/library/pubdocs/pdf/IOSCOPD415.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The agencies also acknowledge that replacing a reference rate could
require other contractual changes to maintain the economics of the non-
cleared swap and to preserve the relative values to the parties after
incorporating changes in the reference rate. The proposed rule would
permit changes that incorporate spreads and other adjustments that
accompany and implement the replacement rate amendment. The rule would
also permit other, more administrative and technical changes necessary
to operationalize the determination of payments or other exchanges of
economic value using the replacement rate, including changes to
determination dates, calculation agents, and payment dates. These types
of administrative changes may be necessary to adjust computations and
operational provisions to reflect the differences between an IBOR and
the replacement rate or rates.
The agencies envision that a number of contractual changes could be
necessary to maintain the economics of the non-cleared swap, and for
this reason, have drafted the proposed rule so it permits these
changes. For example, legacy swaps that contain USD LIBOR may be
referencing 1-day LIBOR, 1-week LIBOR, 1-month LIBOR, 2-month LIBOR, 3-
month LIBOR, 6-month LIBOR or 12-month LIBOR. In these cases, a
replacement rate that could be overnight and could be based, for
example, on a fully secured funding rate (e.g., SOFR) may need to
incorporate a market risk (term structure) spread to substitute for the
market risk component of LIBOR that is of a longer maturity than
overnight. Similarly, because LIBOR is unsecured and therefore includes
an element of bank credit risk, it is likely that a replacement rate
that could be overnight and could be based, for example, on a fully
secured funding rate (e.g., SOFR) would need a credit spread to adjust
the new reference rate to a comparable legacy LIBOR rate. This may also
be the case for non-USD IBORs that could be replaced by overnight
funding rates.
The proposed rule would also permit administrative and technical
changes necessary for operational purposes. For example, for an
overnight rate, interest on financial instruments that pay periodically
(e.g., quarterly) may be set in arrears by compounding or averaging the
daily observations over the relevant period. To offer flexibility in
the transition to a new reference rate, the proposed rule would permit
the replacement of an IBOR or other discontinued reference rate in the
floating leg of a fixed-floating rate swap, and would also permit the
interest rate in the fixed leg to be modified in order to maintain the
economics of the non-cleared swap.
However, the agencies do not believe that the relief being provided
for rate replacement purposes should be expansively applied to
encompass all changes to a legacy swap. Accordingly, the proposed rule
text clarifies that the proposed safe harbor for legacy swaps would be
unavailable if the amendments extend the maturity or increase the total
effective notional amount of the non-cleared swap. For example, a one
time, lump-sum compensatory payment in lieu of a spread adjustment
would not increase the total effective notional amount and would be
permitted. On the other hand, extending the maturity date to allow for
additional payments to be made under the non-cleared swap would be a
change outside the scope of the proposed rule.
The agencies envision that covered swap entities may carry out
certain amendments, including those executed by method of termination
and replacement, for the purpose of implementing changes that might
qualify for more than one exemption provided under Sec. _.1(h). When a
legacy swap is replaced with a new contract that reflects more than one
exemption, each of the provisions in the replacement contract that
differs from the terminated contract must be permitted under the
respective subsection of Sec. _.1(h). For example, a covered swap
entity and its counterparty may decide to replace an IBOR with a
different reference rate and, at the same time, make changes to comply
with the QFC Rules. The IBOR-related changes must comply with Sec.
_.1(h)(3) and the QFC Rules changes must comply with Sec. _.1(h)(1)
for the replacement contract to meet the ``solely to comply'' standard
and, in the case of Sec. _.1(h)(3), the ``solely to accommodate''
standard.
III. Non-Cleared Swaps Between CSEs and an Affiliate
The proposal would amend the treatment of affiliate transactions in
the Swap Margin Rule by creating an exemption from the initial margin
requirements for non-cleared swaps between affiliates.\21\ The proposal
would, however, retain the requirement that affiliates exchange
variation margin.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ Under the BCBS/IOSCO framework, no common standard was set
for inter-affiliate transactions, in recognition of the existing and
varied approaches to the topic across jurisdictions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Currently, Sec. _.11 of the Swap Margin Rule establishes special
rules for transactions between a covered swap entity and an
``affiliate,'' generally defined in the Swap Margin Rule as an entity
that is consolidated with the dealer on an accounting basis, or
consolidated on a common basis by another entity.\22\ The rules
applicable to transactions with affiliates differ from the rules
applicable to transactions with non-affiliates. For example, a covered
swap entity is not required to post initial margin to an affiliate or
use an independent custodian for most forms of initial margin collected
from an affiliate. In addition, the covered swap entity does not need
to apply a $50 million initial margin threshold amount to the covered
swap entity's affiliates on an aggregate basis, and the covered swap
entity is not required to use the ten-day holding period for
calculating initial margin using an initial margin model under Sec.
_.8(d)(1).\23\ Consistent with the requirements for non-cleared swaps
between non-affiliated counterparties, current Sec. _.11 requires the
exchange of variation margin for affiliate transactions. As discussed
in the preamble to the final Swap Margin Rule, the initial and
variation margin requirements applicable to affiliate transactions were
intended to advance the mandate under the Dodd-Frank Act to ``offset
the greater risk to swap entities from the use of swaps that are not
cleared and help ensure the safety and soundness of the covered swap
entity and are appropriate for the risk associated with the non-cleared
swap entity.'' \24\ The agencies noted that the requirement to collect
initial margin from, but not post initial margin to, affiliates
``should help to protect the safety and soundness of covered swap
entities in the event of an affiliated counterparty default.'' \25\
Furthermore, by requiring that inter-affiliate swaps be margined, the
requirement was intended
[[Page 59976]]
to prevent unmargined swaps from posing a risk to systemic
stability.\26\
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\22\ Section _.2 provides that two companies are ``affiliates''
if either company consolidates the other on financial statements
prepared in accordance with U.S. Generally Accepted Accounting
Principles, the International Financial Reporting Standards, or
other similar standards, or if both companies are consolidated with
a third company.
\23\ For a description of the application of this set of
exemptions, see the preamble to the final rule, 80 FR at 74887.
\24\ 80 FR at 74889.
\25\ Id.
\26\ 80 FR at 74889.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Since the Swap Margin Rule was implemented, supervisory experience
has shown that inter-affiliate swaps are used by covered swap entities
for internal risk management purposes whereby a banking organization
transfers risk to a centralized risk management function, which is
considered to be a prudent risk management practice. As more covered
swap entities have come into scope, the amount of inter-affiliate
initial margin collected by covered swap entities has increased. This
has led the affected banking organizations to borrow increasing amounts
of cash in the debt markets to fund eligible collateral, placing
additional demands on their asset-liability management structure and
increasing their liability exposure to depositors and other creditors
in the market. The removal of the inter-affiliate initial margin
requirement would provide these banking organizations with additional
flexibility for internal allocation of collateral. The agencies believe
that such risk management practices often improve the safety and
soundness of a covered swap entity, and therefore, to encourage such
prudent risk management, propose to exempt inter-affiliate swaps from
the Rule's initial margin requirements. The proposal does not remove
the requirement that covered swap entities must collect and post
initial margin with other non-affiliate covered swap entities.
The agencies also note that because other jurisdictions (as well as
the U.S. market regulators) do not consistently apply swap margin rules
to inter-affiliate swaps, the Rule's imposition of initial margin
requirements for inter-affiliate swaps may have provided limited
systemic risk benefits and put U.S. banking firms at a competitive
disadvantage. For example, many covered swap entities subject to the
Swap Margin Rule are banking organizations that are typically
internationally active with operations in many jurisdictions that may
exempt or not impose initial margin requirements on inter-affiliate
transactions.\27\ In addition, the imposition of initial margin
requirements may depend on the banking organization's home country,
presence in the United States, corporate organization, or business
strategy. For example, internationally active banking organizations
that have a cross-border organizational structure that relies on
separate legal entities must currently use inter-affiliate swaps to
centralize risk management of the overall banking organization's
outward-facing derivatives exposures, whereas other internationally
active banks that operate cross-border through branching structures do
not have a comparable risk management need for such inter-affiliate
swaps. The agencies do not believe this difference in corporate
organization justifies different initial margin requirements under the
Swap Margin Rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ Under the BCBS/IOSCO framework, no common standard was set
for inter-affiliate swap transactions, in recognition of these
existing and varied approaches to the topic of inter-affiliate
transactions generally. 79 FR at 57353; Article 6 of the BCBS and
IOSCO ``Margin Requirements for Non-Centrally Cleared Derivatives''
(September 2013), available at https://www.bis.org/publ/bcbs261.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The agencies are not proposing to alter the Rule's uniform
requirements for covered swap entities to exchange variation margin
with their affiliates. The agencies note it has become routine in
recent years for covered swap entities to exchange variation margin on
non-cleared swaps with their affiliates. As a best practice for risk
management, the exchange of variation margin serves to reflect ongoing
economic transfers of current exposure for assets and liabilities
between the various parts of the banking organization over the life of
each non-cleared swap. This in turn contributes to the safety and
soundness of the covered swap entity, and the larger banking
organization as a whole. The exchange of variation margin will remain a
requirement under the general rules of Sec. _.4 and will continue to
be applicable to inter-affiliate swaps.
The proposal would also supplement the definition of ``affiliate''
for purposes of Sec. _.11 to include not only the definition of
``affiliate'' found in Sec. _.2 of the Swap Margin Rule, focusing on
consolidation under applicable accounting rules, but also the
established ``catch-all'' legal standard for affiliation in banking
focusing on the direct or indirect exercise of controlling influence
over the management or policies of the controlled company. Absent this
change, the Swap Margin Rule would, by its general provisions, require
covered swap entities to post initial margin to, and collect initial
margin from, unconsolidated entities that are treated as affiliates of
the covered swap entity for other legal or regulatory purposes.
Finally, the agencies note that certain affiliate transactions are
subject to the requirements of sections 23A and 23B of the Federal
Reserve Act as implemented by the Federal Reserve's Regulation W, as
these requirements continue to apply to affiliate transactions with an
insured depository institution.\28\ Currently, almost all U.S. covered
swap entities are insured depository institutions that would be subject
to Sections 23A, 23B, and Regulation W. These provisions are
specifically tailored to address risks arising from transactions,
including non-cleared swaps, between affiliates. As such, the agencies
believe that they are the more effective tools to address risks arising
from transactions between affiliates. The Board continues to consider
how inter-affiliate non-cleared swaps can be addressed under Regulation
W.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ 12 U.S.C. 371c and 371c-1; 12 CFR part 223. In adopting the
Swap Margin Rule, the agencies noted that transactions between banks
and their affiliates have long been subject to their own special set
of regulatory restrictions, particularly in the case of U.S. banks
pursuant to sections 23A and 23B of the Federal Reserve Act. See 80
FR at 74889 (noting the obligation of banks that are covered swap
entities to comply with additional regulatory restrictions on inter-
affiliate swap transactions, such as those required by sections 23A
and 23B).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
IV. Additional Compliance Date for Initial Margin Requirements
The agencies are proposing to give covered swap entities an
additional year to implement initial margin requirements for certain
smaller counterparties. The implementation of both initial and
variation margin requirements started on September 1, 2016. With
respect to initial margin requirements, the requirements in the Swap
Margin Rule are implemented in five phases from September 1, 2016,
through September 1, 2020, depending on the size of the covered swap
entity's portfolio of non-cleared swaps and the counterparty's
portfolio of non-cleared swaps. Variation margin requirements for all
covered swap entities and counterparties were completely phased in by
March 1, 2017. This schedule was consistent with BCBS/IOSCO framework
when the Swap Margin Rule was adopted in 2015.
The phase-in schedule for initial margin is based on the average
daily aggregate notional amount (AANA) of non-cleared swaps held in
each party's market-wide portfolio, measured separately from the
standpoint of the covered swap entity and the standpoint of the
counterparty.\29\ With the recent
[[Page 59977]]
occurrence of the fourth phase of initial margin compliance obligations
on September 1, 2019--for covered swap entities and counterparties with
an AANA of $750 billion to $1.5 trillion--the group currently scheduled
for the fifth phase of compliance in the upcoming year includes all
remaining entities within the scope of the initial margin requirements,
spanning AANAs from $8 billion up to $750 billion.\30\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ As noted above, the AANA is determined based on the non-
cleared swaps, foreign exchange forwards and foreign exchange swaps
of each of the covered swap entity and its counterparty (accounting
for their respective affiliates) for each business day in March,
April and May of that year. The corresponding average daily notional
thresholds for each compliance date currently are: September 1,
2016, $3 trillion; September 1, 2017, $2.25 trillion; September 1,
2018, $1.5 trillion; September 1, 2019, $0.75 trillion; and
September 1, 2020, all covered swap entities and their
counterparties. See Sec. _.1(e) of the Swap Margin Rule.
\30\ The Swap Margin Rule does not require initial margin to be
exchanged with any counterparty whose AANA is less than $8 billion
as of the previous June, July, and August. See Sec. _.3 and the
definition of ``material swaps exposure'' in Sec. _.1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The industry's implementation work to execute new trading
documentation to meet variation margin compliance obligations by 2017
largely excluded any rule-compliant documentation for initial margin,
due to the greater operational complexity associated with ``T+1''
portfolio reconciliation of internally-modeled initial margin amounts
and third-party segregation of initial margin collateral. The industry
has raised significant concerns about the operational and other
difficulties associated with beginning to exchange initial margin with
the large number of relatively small counterparties encompassed in the
Swap Margin Rule's fifth phase. In recognition of these difficulties,
the BCBS/IOSCO framework was recently revised to permit an additional
phase for smaller counterparties, and the agencies believe it is
appropriate to amend the Swap Margin Rule in a similar manner. \31\
Accordingly, the agencies are proposing to amend the compliance
schedule to add a sixth phase of compliance for certain smaller
entities that are currently subject to the ``phase five'' compliance
deadline. The proposed amendments would require compliance by September
1, 2020, for counterparties with an AANA ranging from $50 billion up to
$750 billion, while the compliance date for all other counterparties
(with an AANA ranging from a ``material swaps exposure'' of $8 billion
up to $50 billion) would be extended to September 1, 2021.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\31\ See BCBS and IOSCO ``Margin requirements for non-centrally
cleared derivatives,'' (July 2019), available at https://www.bis.org/bcbs/publ/d475.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
V. Documentation Requirements
Complying with initial margin requirements creates regulatory
obligations for covered swap entities and implications for their
counterparties.\32\ Covered swap entities must calculate initial margin
to be collected and posted to determine if and when collection or
posting of initial margin is required. Under Sec. _.3, a covered swap
entity must collect or post initial margin when it calculates an
initial margin amount that, after subtracting the initial margin
threshold amount (not including any portion of the initial margin
threshold amount already applied by the covered swap entity or its
affiliates to other non-cleared swaps or non-cleared security-based
swaps with the counterparty or its affiliates), exceeds zero. It is
only at the time at which the covered swap entity is required to
collect or post initial margin pursuant to Sec. _.3 that it is
required to have completed the initial margin trading documentation
required by Sec. _.10. For the avoidance of doubt, the agencies are
proposing to amend Sec. _.10 to expressly state that a covered swap
entity is not required to execute initial margin trading documentation
with a counterparty prior to the time that it is required to collect or
post initial margin pursuant to Sec. _.3.\33\
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\32\ See Sec. _.1(f) (providing that once a covered swap entity
must comply with the margin requirements for non-cleared swaps and
non-cleared security-based swaps with respect to a particular
counterparty, the covered swap entity remains subject to the
requirements of the Swap Margin Rule with respect to that
counterparty).
\33\ Section _.10 has parallel requirements for covered swap
entities to execute trading documentation providing the covered swap
entity with the contractual right to collect and post variation
margin in such amounts, in such form, and under such circumstances
as are required by the Swap Margin Rule. There is no threshold
margin amount for variation margin pursuant to Sec. _.4, and Sec.
_.10 requires covered swap entities to execute variation margin
trading documentation no later than the time the covered swap entity
commences trading non-cleared swaps with any swap entity or
financial end user covered by the Swap Margin Rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As discussed in the Swap Margin Rule, a covered swap entity must
execute trading documentation with each counterparty that falls within
the scope of the Rule's definition of a swap entity or a financial end
user regarding credit support arrangements unless the swap entity or
financial end user is explicitly exempt from the Rule pursuant to Sec.
_.1(d).\34\ The documentation must provide the covered swap entity the
contractual rights and obligations to collect and post initial and
variation margin in such amounts, in such form, and under such
circumstances as are required by the Rule. The documentation must also
specify the methods, procedures, rules, and inputs for determining the
value of each non-cleared swap for purposes of calculating variation
margin and the procedures by which any disputes concerning the
valuation of non-cleared swaps or the valuation of assets collected or
posted as initial margin or variation margin may be resolved. Finally,
the documentation must also describe the methods, procedures, rules,
and inputs used to calculate initial margin for non-cleared swaps
entered into between the covered swap entity and the counterparty.\35\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\34\ 80 FR 74886-74887 (describing the trading documentation
requirements of Sec. _.10).
\35\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The custody agreement requirements in Sec. _.7 of the Swap Margin
Rule require such agreements to be in place only after initial margin
is required to be collected or posted pursuant to Sec. _.3, or when
initial margin is posted by a covered swap entity beyond an amount
required by the Rule. The agencies expect that covered swap entities
will closely monitor their exposures and take appropriate steps to
ensure that trading documentation is in place at such time as initial
margin is required to be exchanged pursuant to Sec. _.3. The agencies
note that this view is consistent with statements of the BCBS and IOSCO
with respect to internationally agreed standards for margin
requirements for non-centrally cleared derivatives.\36\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\36\ BCBS/IOSCO statement on the final implementation phases of
the Margin requirements for non-centrally cleared derivatives, March
5, 2019, available at https://www.iosco.org/library/pubdocs/pdf/IOSCOPD624.pdf, stating that ``the framework does not specify
documentation, custodial or operational requirements if the
bilateral initial margin amount does not exceed the framework's
[euro]50 million initial margin threshold. It is expected, however,
that covered entities will act diligently when their exposures
approach the threshold to ensure that the relevant arrangements
needed are in place if the threshold is exceeded.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
VI. Portfolio Compression Exercises and Other Amendments
The Swap Margin Rule applies to non-cleared swaps entered into on
or after the applicable compliance date. As discussed above, the
agencies have also expressed concerns about amendments to a swap that
was entered into before the applicable compliance date if the
amendments would have the effect of allowing covered swap entities and
their counterparties to evade or otherwise artificially delay
implementation of margin requirements. In particular, the agencies have
been concerned whether market participants would amend legacy swaps,
rather than entering into new ones and exchanging margin pursuant to
the Rule once the legacy swaps expire according to their original
terms. The industry has raised concerns whether certain amendments,
particularly non-material amendments to non-economic terms, as well as
amendments that are made to reduce operational or counterparty risk,
such as notional reductions and portfolio
[[Page 59978]]
compressions, could be executed while still allowing those amended
legacy swaps to remain exempt from the Swap Margin Rule.
The agencies are proposing amendments to clarify the agencies'
implementation of the legacy swaps provisions of the Swap Margin Rule
since its adoption in 2015. These amendments are intended to permit
amendments to legacy swaps arising from certain routine industry
practices over the life-cycle of a non-cleared swap that are carried
out for logistical reasons or risk-management purposes. The proposed
amendments are those that do not raise concerns that the covered swap
entity is seeking to evade or otherwise delay the application of margin
requirements for non-cleared swaps.
One of these proposed amendments recognizes the legacy status of a
non-cleared swap that has been amended to reflect technical changes,
such as addresses, the identities of parties for delivery of formal
notices, and other administrative or operational provisions of the non-
cleared swap that do not alter the non-cleared swap's underlying asset
or indicator, such as a security, currency, interest rate, commodity,
or price index, the remaining maturity, or the total effective notional
amount. The types of technical changes described are necessary to
reflect changes in a counterparty's circumstances, but are not
associated with a desire by either party to increase or decrease its
exposure to market risk factors. While the technical changes listed
above would be permitted, a change in the non-cleared swap's underlying
index would not be a technical change.
The second proposed amendment recognizes the legacy status of a
non-cleared swap that has been amended solely to reduce the notional
amount of the non-cleared swap, without altering other terms of the
original non-cleared swap. For these purposes, a reduction in notional
amount may be achieved through a partial termination of the original
non-cleared swap, with the remaining non-terminated non-cleared swap
being able to retain its legacy status. A reduction in notional amount
could also be achieved by novating a portion of the original non-
cleared swap's notional amount to a third party. The original non-
cleared swap, with a lower notional amount, would retain legacy status,
but the novated portion would not retain legacy status.
The third proposed amendment recognizes the legacy status of non-
cleared swaps that have been modified as part of certain portfolio
compression exercises used as a risk management tool. In compression,
offsetting trades between two or more parties are amended or torn up
and replaced, which reduces the size of gross derivatives exposures and
generally reduces the number or frequency of payments between parties,
thus maintaining or reducing the overall risk profile of the portfolio.
In general, these compression exercises make use of third party service
providers to assist in the choice of trades to be modified and the risk
composition of the resulting portfolios.
In a simple bilateral form of compression between two
counterparties, the dealer agrees with another dealer to compress
trades so that offsetting positions are cancelled and only the net
amount remains, without any change to the overall market exposures. The
resulting net position is documented by amending one of the original
swaps. This ``amended swap'' method is the predominant method used in
compressions of non-cleared interest rate swaps. Compression can also
be done on a multilateral basis among more than two counterparties, and
is often even more efficient, as trades across multiple dealers
involved in a compression exercise can be offset, reducing the risk in
each relationship across the various counterparties involved in the
compression. The resulting net position is documented by creating a
replacement swap reflecting the net position. This ``replacement swap''
method is predominantly used in compression exercises for non-cleared
credit default swaps, but it can also be used for interest rate swap
compression. Compression often results in the cancellation of
offsetting positions, but it could also result in new trades being
booked into an existing non-cleared portfolio to reflect the netted-
down risk of the original portfolio.
One reason that the agencies are permitting amendments resulting
from compression exercises is to reduce the operational burden
associated with IBOR replacements. While protocols to amend non-cleared
swaps that reference an IBOR or another discontinued rate are in
development, there is a possibility that counterparties may choose to
replace portfolios of IBOR-based non-cleared swaps with replacement
swaps generated through compression exercises.
In recognition of the value of risk-reducing compression exercises,
the agencies are proposing to amend the Swap Margin Rule to expressly
recognize the benefits of amending or replacing non-cleared swaps
solely to accomplish risk-reducing or risk-neutral portfolio
compression between or among covered swap entities and their
counterparties, without converting the legacy swap into a swap subject
to the Swap Margin Rule.
Under the proposed rule, amended swaps that reflect the outcome of
a compression exercise are treated slightly differently than
replacement swaps that are issued as a result of the compression
exercise. If a non-cleared swap is amended solely as a result of a
compression exercise, the amendments cannot extend the remaining
maturity of the amended non-cleared swap or increase the total
effective notional amount of the non-cleared swap.
Example 1: The limitations on remaining maturity and total
effective notional amount in a compression exercise resulting in a
replacement swap are different. For example, if swap 1 entered into
by a covered swap entity and counterparty A has a total effective
notional amount of $10 (long position) and a remaining maturity of 5
years, and swap 2 entered into by the same covered swap entity and
the same counterparty A has a total effective notional amount of $5
(short position) and a remaining maturity of 4 years, the
compression exercise might result in a cancellation of swap 2 and an
amendment to swap 1 such that the total effective notional amount
would become $5 (long position) and the remaining maturity would
remain at 5 years. This amendment would be permitted under the
proposed rule since the maturity of the amended swap is not longer
than the maturity of swap 1 (5 years) and the total effective
notional amount of the amended swap is not greater than the total
effective notional amount of swap 1 ($10 long position). However, an
amendment to swap 1 that extends the remaining maturity of the
amended swap beyond the original 5 years or increases the total
effective notional amount higher than the original $10 would not be
able to take advantage of the proposed safe harbor.
A replacement swap cannot extend the longest remaining maturity
of all of the swaps in the compression exercise and cannot have a
total effective notional amount that exceeds the total effective
notional amount of that longest remaining maturity swap.
Example 2: Using the terms of swap 1 in the example above,
assume that swap 2 has a total effective notional amount of $5
(short position) and a remaining maturity of 3 years. The two swaps
could be in a compression exercise in which both swaps are
terminated and replaced with a new swap. The replacement swap must
have a remaining maturity that does not extend the longest remaining
maturity of swaps 1 and 2 (swap 1 has the longer remaining maturity
of 5 years). The replacement swap must also have a total effective
notional amount that does not exceed the total effective notional
amount of the swap with the longest remaining maturity (swap 1 has
the longer remaining maturity of 5 years, so the replacement swap
cannot exceed swap 1's total effective notional amount of $10 long
position).
[[Page 59979]]
Example 3: Assume that the following swaps are part of a
compression exercise:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total effective Remaining
Swap contract No. notional amount maturity
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1................................. 10 (long)........... 5
2................................. 4 (short)........... 4
3................................. 7 (long)............ 3
4................................. 3 (short)........... 2
5................................. 17 (short).......... 1
------------------------------------------------------------------------
If a compression exercise terminates all the swaps listed above
and replaces them with a new replacement swap, the total effective
notional amount of the replacement swap cannot exceed the sum of the
total effective notional amounts for all swaps with the same or
longer remaining maturity than the replacement swap. Therefore, if
one assumes the compression exercise results in a remaining maturity
of 3 years for the replacement swap, the replacement swap with a
remaining maturity of 3 years could have a maximum total effective
notional amount of the sum of the total effective notional amounts
of the 5 year swap, the 4 year swap, and the 3 year swap, or 10 + 4
+ 7 = $21.\37\ Alternatively, if one assumes the compression
exercise results in a remaining maturity of 2 years for the
replacement swap, the replacement swap with a remaining maturity of
2 years could have a maximum total effective notional amount of the
sum of the total effective notional amounts of the 5 year swap, the
4 year swap, the 3 year swap, and the 2 year swap or 10 + 4 + 7 + 3
= $24.
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\37\ Note, however, that a replacement swap with a total
effective notional amount of $21 would only be acceptable if the
result is also risk-neutral or risk-reducing based on the long or
short positions of each swap's total effective notional amount. The
overall effect of the compression exercise must be either risk-
neutral or risk-reducing.
The agencies are also concerned about clarifying the legacy status
of swaptions that are entered into before the applicable compliance
date but exercised after that compliance date. As a general matter, a
swaption is created when a covered swap entity and its counterparty
enter into a derivative transaction granting one party an option to, at
a later time, call for the transaction to be converted into a non-
cleared swap between the two parties, the terms of which are set out in
the derivative contract itself. The agencies believe it is not
necessary to propose rule text to address the legacy status of
swaptions that become non-cleared swaps once exercised. Although the
exchange of payments under the non-cleared swap does not commence until
after the applicable compliance date, the terms of that non-cleared
swap were established and entered into during the original creation of
the swaption contract, which was entered into before the applicable
compliance date and therefore the resulting non-cleared swap retains
legacy status. The exercise of the option under the derivative is not
an amendment of the contract, but rather a second phase that
operationalizes the original contract.
VII. Technical Changes
The proposed rule would delete Sec. _.1(e)(7), which includes an
amendment relating to the QFC Rules. The text of Sec. _.1(e)(7), with
slight modifications, would be moved to Sec. _.1(h)(1), so that it
would reside in the section of the Swap Margin Rule dedicated to legacy
swap amendments. The methods of amendment listed in Sec. _.1(h) would
apply not only to IBOR replacements, but also to any other contractual
modifications permitted under Sec. _.1(h), including amendments
relating to the QFC Rules.
VIII. Request for Comments
A. IBORs
The agencies request comment on all aspects of the proposed rule as
well as on the following specific questions.
(1) The proposed rule permits amendments to non-cleared swaps by
method of adherence to a protocol, contractual amendment of an
agreement or confirmation, or execution of a new contract in
replacement of and immediately upon termination of an existing contract
(i.e., tear-up). Should the agencies provide additional clarification
in the rule as to types of permissible amendments to better reflect
established or emerging industry practices? What specifically should be
added or clarified, and why?
(2) Does the proposed rule provide sufficient flexibility regarding
contract-by-contract, netting set, and compression amendments to the
reference rate? What, if any, additional flexibility is needed, and
why?
(3) The agencies have listed a number of IBORs as examples of rates
that would be permitted to be replaced. To what extent should this list
be revised to remove or to include any additional rates, such as the
Swap Offer Rate of Singapore?
(4) The relief provided by the proposed rule would apply to the
replacement of an IBOR. The agencies are also proposing to allow
replacement of other non-IBOR reference rates if the covered swap
entity reasonably expects that the rate will be discontinued or
reasonably determines has lost its relevance as a reliable benchmark
due to a significant impairment. Is there a need to provide relief for
replacement of rates under other circumstances? What potential criteria
could the agencies impose on non-IBOR interest rate benchmarks in order
for such a benchmark to be considered to have lost its relevance as a
reliable benchmark due to a significant impairment? If so, please
provide a description of the circumstances creating this need and a
description of the rates that may need to be replaced, either now or in
the future.
(5) The proposed rule anticipates that a reference rate may need to
be amended more than once. What types of criteria should the regulation
establish for subsequent amendments to reference rates? Please explain
how those criteria maintain the robustness of the new reference rate
and avoid the problems that plagued LIBOR, such as market manipulation,
etc. Should the agencies impose a cap on the number of times a
reference rate may be amended and, if so, how should that cap be
structured?
(6) The proposed rule does not specify any criteria for a
replacement rate, but rather leaves this open to the parties. What
types of rates might parties settle on? Should the agencies limit the
scope of the replacement rate to specific criteria, such as that the
rate must be based on observable, risk-free characteristics? If so,
what other criteria might be appropriate, or what specific rates might
be appropriate?
(7) The proposed rule intends to be accommodating to accompanying
amendments that may be necessary to maintain the relative economics of
the non-cleared swap following the replacement of a reference rate. Do
the accompanying amendments provide sufficient flexibility to permit
the additional modifications that parties plan to make? If not, please
explain what changes the agencies should contemplate and why, and
explain how
[[Page 59980]]
they should be permitted under the rule. Alternatively, would the
accompanying amendments change the non-cleared swap such that it does
not resemble the original legacy contract? If this is a concern, how
should the rule address it? For example, should the agencies prohibit
an amendment to the currency from being eligible for the safe harbor?
(8) The proposed rule does not specify an end date by which these
IBOR-related amendments must be completed. Should the agencies include
an end date? Should it be one year, two years, five years, ten years?
Are there legacy contracts that would still be in place in ten years
such that a ten-year timeframe would be realistic?
(9) As noted above, the agencies propose to permit the replacement
of an IBOR in the floating-rate leg of the swap with a new reference
rate, and would also permit the fixed-rate leg in a fixed-floating
interest rate swap to be modified to maintain the economics of the non-
cleared swap. Is this approach appropriate in order for the fixed-
floating swap to retain its legacy status, and if not, how should it be
modified?
B. Non-Cleared Swaps Between CSEs and an Affiliate
(1) What, if any, additional conditions or limitations should the
agencies impose before allowing a covered swap entity to take advantage
of the exemption from initial margin requirements for inter-affiliate
swaps? For example, the CFTC imposes certain limitations and conditions
on its initial margin exemption for inter-affiliate swaps. Discuss why
any additional conditions may be appropriate to ensure the safety and
soundness of the covered swap entity.
(2) Should the definitions of ``affiliate'' and ``control'' in
Sec. _.11 be revised to match with the definitions of the Board's
Regulation W, Regulation Y, Regulation Q, or any other regulations? Why
or why not?
C. Additional Compliance Date for Initial Margin Requirements
(1) Does the proposed one-year extension of the final
implementation timeline to September 1, 2021 substantially address all
implementation challenges? Please explain.
D. Documentation Requirements
(1) What issues are there, if any, related to how parties document
transactions in compliance with the Swap Margin Rule that should be
considered by the agencies?
(2) Are there any reasons why covered swap entities would not be
able to reasonably anticipate the point in time at which they will
cross the $50 million initial margin threshold amount such that they
can prepare the required documentation in time? Please explain.
E. Portfolio Compression Exercises and Other Amendments
(1) What are the methods used by covered swap entities to determine
whether portfolio compression exercises would meet the requirements set
out in the proposal, including not extending the remaining maturity or
increasing the total effective notional amounts?
(2) Should the Rule limit compression exercises to mitigating only
certain types of risk and if so, which types of risk?
(3) For a replacement swap that results from a compression
exercise, should the agencies consider a different method of
restricting either the total effective notional amount or the remaining
maturity? Would commenters be supportive of an approach that limits the
remaining maturity to an ``effective maturity'' calculation based on
the total effective notional amounts in the exercise? For example, swap
1 has a notional amount of 10 and 3 years remaining maturity and swap 2
has a notional amount of 8 and 5 years remaining maturity. Under the
``effective maturity'' calculation, the replacement swap could not
exceed an effective maturity of 3 years and 10 months, calculated as
(3*10 + 5*8)/(10+8). The replacement swap with a 3 year and 10 month
maturity would also not be able to exceed a total effective notional
amount of 18 (10+8).
(4) How should the Rule be more specific about technical amendments
that are permitted? How can the Rule better explain that amending a
swap's underlying asset or indicator, such as a security, currency,
interest rate, commodity, or price index, is not a technical amendment?
IX. Administrative Law Matters
A. Solicitation of Comments on Use of Plain Language
Section 722 of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act \38\ requires the OCC,
Board, and FDIC to use plain language in all proposed and final rules
published after January 1, 2000. The OCC, Board, and FDIC have sought
to present the proposed rule in a simple and straightforward manner and
invite comments on whether the proposal is clearly stated and
effectively organized, and how to make this proposal easier to
understand. For example:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\38\ Public Law 106-102, 113 Stat. 1338, 1471 (codified at 12
U.S.C. 4809).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Have we organized the material to suit your needs? If not,
how could this material be better organized?
Are the requirements in the proposed rule clearly stated?
If not, how could the proposed rule be more clearly stated?
Does the proposed rule contain 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 proposed rule easier to
understand? If so, what changes to the format would make the proposed
rule easier to understand?
What else could we do to make the proposed rule easier to
understand?
B. Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis
Certain provisions of the proposed rulemaking contain ``collection
of information'' requirements within the meaning of the Paperwork
Reduction Act (PRA) of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-3521). 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 agencies reviewed the proposed rulemaking and determined that
it revises certain recordkeeping requirements that have been previously
cleared under various OMB control numbers. In order to be consistent
across the agencies, the agencies are also applying a conforming
methodology for calculating the burden estimates. The agencies are
proposing to extend for three years, with revision, these information
collections. The OCC and FDIC have submitted to OMB for review 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 1320). The Board has reviewed
the information collection under its delegated authority. The OMB
control numbers are 1557-0251 (OCC), 3064-0204 (FDIC), and 7100-0364
(Board). The FCA has determined the notice of proposed rulemaking has
no PRA implications because Farm Credit System institutions are
Federally chartered instrumentalities of the United States and
instrumentalities of the United States are specifically excepted from
the definition of ``collection of information'' contained in 44 U.S.C.
3502(3). The FHFA has determined that the notice of proposed rulemaking
does not contain any
[[Page 59981]]
collection of information for which the agency must obtain clearance
under the PRA.
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 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 Agency Desk
Officer.
Current Actions
The proposed rulemaking removes the recordkeeping requirement in
section _.11(b) that a covered swap entity shall calculate the amount
of initial margin that would be required to be posted to an affiliate
that is a financial end user with material swaps exposure pursuant to
section _.3(b) and provide documentation of such amount to each
affiliate on a daily basis.
Proposed Revision, With Extension, of the Following Information
Collections
Title of Information Collection: Reporting and Recordkeeping
Requirements Associated with Swaps Margin and Swaps Push-Out.
Frequency: Annual and event generated.
Affected Public: Businesses or other for-profit.
Estimated average hours per response:
Reporting
Section _.1(d)--1 hour (on average of 1,000 times per year).
Sections _.8(c) and _.8(d)--240 hours.
Section _.8(f)(3)--50 hours.
Section _.9(e)--10 hours (on average of 3 times per year).
Sections 237.22(a)(1) and 237.22(e) (Board only)--7 hours.
Recordkeeping
Sections _.2 (definition of ``eligible master netting agreement,''
item 4), 237.8(g), and 237.10--5 hours.
Section _.5(c)(2)(i)--4 hours.
Section _.7(c)--100 hours.
Sections _.8(e) and 237.8(f)--40 hours.
Section _.8(h)--20 hours.
Disclosure
Section _.1(h)--1 hour.
OCC
Respondents: Any national bank or a subsidiary thereof, Federal
savings association or a subsidiary thereof, or Federal branch or
agency of a foreign bank that is registered as a swap dealer, major
swap participant, security-based swap dealer, or major security-based
swap participant.
Estimated number of respondents: 10.
Proposed revisions only estimated annual burden: -2,500 hours.
Total estimated annual burden: 14,900 hours.
Board
Respondents: Any state member bank (as defined in 12 CFR 208.2(g)),
bank holding company (as defined in 12 U.S.C. 1841), savings and loan
holding company (as defined in 12 U.S.C. 1467a), foreign banking
organization (as defined in 12 CFR 211.21(o)), foreign bank that does
not operate an insured branch, state branch or state agency of a
foreign bank (as defined in 12 U.S.C. 3101(b)(11) and (12)), or Edge or
agreement corporation (as defined in 12 CFR 211.1(c)(2) and (3)) that
is registered as a swap dealer, major swap participant, security-based
swap dealer, or major security-based swap participant.
Estimated number of respondents: 41.
Proposed revisions only estimated annual burden: -10,209 hours.
Total estimated annual burden: 61,104 hours.
FDIC
FDIC: Any FDIC-insured state-chartered bank that is not a member of
the Federal Reserve System or FDIC-insured state-chartered savings
association that is registered as a swap dealer, major swap
participant, security-based swap dealer, or major security-based swap
participant.
Estimated number of respondents: 1.\39\
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\39\ The FDIC estimates zero entities, but is estimating one
here as a placeholder.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Proposed revisions only estimated annual burden: -249 hours.
Total estimated annual burden: 1,490 hours.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
OCC: In general, the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) (5 U.S.C. 601
et seq.) requires that in connection with a rulemaking, an agency
prepare and make available for public comment a regulatory flexibility
analysis that describes the impact of the rule on small entities. Under
section 605(b) of the RFA, this analysis is not required if an agency
certifies that the rule will not have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities and publishes its certification
and a brief explanatory statement in the Federal Register along with
its rule.
As part of our analysis, we consider whether, pursuant to the RFA,
the proposed rule would have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. The OCC currently supervises
approximately 782 small entities.\40\ Among these 782 small entities,
44 could be affected by the proposed rule if one or more of these small
entities are a party to a financial contract with a covered swap
entity. Because we believe banks will incur de minimis costs, if any,
to comply with the proposed rule, we conclude that the proposed rule,
if implemented, would not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.\41\
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\40\ We base our estimate of the number of small entities on the
Small Business Administration's (SBA's) size thresholds for
commercial banks and savings institutions, and trust companies,
which are $600 million and $41.5 million, respectively. Consistent
with the General Principles of Affiliation, 13 CFR 121.103(a), we
count the assets of affiliated financial institutions when
determining if we should classify an OCC-supervised institution as a
small entity. We use December 31, 2018, to determine size because a
``financial institution's assets are determined by averaging the
assets reported on its four quarterly financial statements for the
preceding year.'' See footnote 8 of the SBA's Table of Size
Standards.
\41\ As one way of determining whether any of the small entities
is a covered swap entity, the OCC reviewed the CFTC's listing of
registered swap dealers at https://www.cftc.gov/LawRegulation/DoddFrankAct/registerswapdealer. The SEC has not yet imposed a
registration requirement on entities that meet the definition of
security-based swap dealer or major security-based swap participant.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Board: The Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq. (RFA),
generally requires that an agency prepare and make available for public
comment an initial regulatory flexibility analysis in connection with a
notice of proposed
[[Page 59982]]
rulemaking or certify that the proposed rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities.\42\ The Board welcomes comment on all aspects of the initial
regulatory flexibility analysis. A final regulatory flexibility
analysis will be conducted after consideration of comments received
during the public comment period.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\42\ See 5 U.S.C. 603(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As described above, the proposed rule would (i) permit legacy swaps
to retain their legacy status in the event that they are amended to
replace an IBOR or other discontinued rate, (ii) repeal the inter-
affiliate initial margin provisions, introduce an additional compliance
date for initial margin requirements, (iii) introduce an additional
compliance date for initial margin requirements, (iv) clarify the point
in time at which trading documentation must be in place, (v) permit
legacy swaps to retain their legacy status in the event that they are
amended due to technical amendments, notional reductions, or portfolio
compression exercises, and (vi) make technical changes to relocate the
provision addressing amendments to legacy swaps that are made to comply
with the QFC Rules.
This proposed rule applies to financial institutions that are
covered swap entities that are subject to the requirements of the Swap
Margin Rule. Under SBA regulations, the finance and insurance sector
includes commercial banking, savings institutions, credit unions, other
depository credit intermediation and credit card issuing entities
(financial institutions). With respect to financial institutions that
are covered swap entities under the Swap Margin Rule, a financial
institution generally is considered small if it has assets of $600
million or less.\43\ Covered swap entities would be considered
financial institutions for purposes of the RFA in accordance with SBA
regulations. The Board does not expect that any covered swap entity is
likely to be a small financial institution, because a small financial
institution is unlikely to engage in the level of swap activity that
would require it to register as a swap dealer or a major swap
participant with the CFTC or a security-based swap dealer or security-
based major swap participant with the U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC).\44\ None of the current Board-regulated covered swap
entities are small entities.
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\43\ See 13 CFR 121.201 (effective December 2, 2014, as amended
by 84 FR 34261, effective August 19, 2019); see also 13 CFR
121.103(a)(6) (noting factors that the SBA considers in determining
whether an entity qualifies as a small business, including receipts,
employees, and other measures of its domestic and foreign
affiliates).
\44\ The CFTC has published a list of provisionally registered
swap dealers as of October 17, 2017 that does not include any small
financial institutions. See https://www.cftc.gov/LawRegulation/DoddFrankAct/registerswapdealer. The SEC has not yet imposed a
registration requirement on entities that meet the definition of
security-based swap dealer or major security-based swap participant.
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The Board does not believe the proposed rule will result in any new
reporting, recordkeeping or other compliance requirements. In light of
the foregoing, the Board does not believe that this proposed rule would
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities and therefore there are no significant alternatives to the
proposed rule that would reduce the impact on small entities.
FDIC: The RFA generally requires that, in connection with a
proposed rulemaking, an agency prepare and make available for public
comment an initial regulatory flexibility analysis describing the
impact of the proposed rule on small entities. However, a regulatory
flexibility analysis is not required if the agency certifies that the
proposed rule will not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. The SBA has defined ``small
entities'' to include banking organizations with total assets of less
than or equal to $600 million that are independently owned and operated
or owned by a holding company with less than or equal to $600 million
in total assets.\45\ Generally, the FDIC considers a significant effect
to be a quantified effect in excess of 5 percent of total annual
salaries and benefits per institution, or 2.5 percent of total non-
interest expenses. The FDIC believes that effects in excess of these
thresholds typically represent significant effects for FDIC-supervised
institutions. For the reasons described below, the FDIC certifies
pursuant to section 605(b) of the RFA that the proposed rule will not
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
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\45\ The SBA defines a small banking organization as having $600
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 by 84 FR 34261, effective August 19, 2019). 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.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
According to data from recent Consolidated Reports of Income and
Condition (Call Report),\46\ the FDIC supervised 3,465 institutions. Of
those, 2,705 are considered ``small,'' according to the terms of the
RFA. As discussed previously, the proposed rule directly applies to
covered swap entities (which includes persons registered with the CFTC
as swap dealers or major swap participants pursuant to the Commodity
Exchange Act of 1936 and persons registered with the SEC as security-
based swap dealers and major security-based swap participants under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934) that are subject to the requirements
of the Swap Margin Rule. The FDIC has identified 105 swap dealers and
major swap participants that, as of May 22, 2019, have registered as
swap entities.\47\ None of these institutions are supervised by the
FDIC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\46\ FDIC Call Report, March 31, 2019.
\47\ While the SEC had adopted a regulation that would require
registration of security-based swap dealers and major security-based
swap participants, as of June 28, 2019, there was no date
established as the compliance date and no SEC-published list of any
such entities that so registered (see 84 FR 4906 at 4925).
Accordingly, no security-based swap dealers and no major security-
based swap participants have been identified as swap entities by the
FDIC. In identifying the 105 institutions referred to in the text,
the FDIC used the list of swap dealers set forth, on June 28, 2019
(providing data as of May 22, 2019) at https://www.cftc.gov/LawRegulation/DoddFrankAct/registerswapdealer.html. Major swap
participants, among others, are required to apply for registration
through a filing with the National Futures Association. Accordingly,
the FDIC reviewed the National Futures Association https://www.nfa.futures.org/members/sd/ to determine whether there
were registered major swap participants. As of June 21, 2019, there
were no major swap participants listed on this link.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As an amendment to the Swap Margin Rule, the proposed rule also
affects counterparties to swaps entered into by covered swap entities.
However, the Terrorism Risk Insurance Program Reauthorization Act of
2015 excludes non-cleared swaps entered into for hedging purposes by a
financial institution with total assets of $10 billion or less from the
requirements of the Swap Margin Rule. Given this exclusion, a non-
cleared swap between a covered swap entity and a small FDIC-supervised
entity that is used to hedge a commercial risk of the small entity will
not be subject to the Swap Margin Rule. The FDIC believes that it is
unlikely that any small entity it supervises will engage in non-cleared
swaps for purposes other than hedging.
Given that no FDIC-supervised small entities are covered swap
entities and that it is unlikely that FDIC-supervised small entities
enter into non-cleared swaps for purposes other than hedging, this
proposed rule is not expected to have a significant economic impact on
[[Page 59983]]
a substantial number of small entities supervised by the FDIC. For
these reasons, the FDIC certifies that the proposed rule will not have
a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities, within the meaning of those terms as used in the RFA.
Accordingly, a regulatory flexibility analysis is not required.
The FDIC invites comments on all aspects of the supporting
information provided in this section, and in particular, whether the
proposed rule would have any significant effects on small entities that
the FDIC has not identified.
FCA: Pursuant to section 605(b) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act
(5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.), FCA hereby certifies that the proposed rule
will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities. Each of the banks in the Farm Credit System, considered
together with its affiliated associations, has assets and annual income
in excess of the amounts that would qualify them as small entities; nor
does the Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation meet the definition
of ``small entity.'' Therefore, Farm Credit System institutions are not
``small entities'' as defined in the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
FHFA: The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.)
requires that a regulation that has a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities, small businesses, or small
organizations must include an initial regulatory flexibility analysis
describing the regulation's impact on small entities. FHFA need not
undertake such an analysis if the agency has certified the regulation
will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of
small entities. 5 U.S.C. 605(b). FHFA has considered the impact of the
proposed rule under the Regulatory Flexibility Act, and certifies that
the proposed rule does not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities because the proposed rule is
applicable only to FHFA's regulated entities, which are not small
entities for purposes of the Regulatory Flexibility Act.
D. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (Unfunded
Mandates Act) (2 U.S.C. 1532) requires that the OCC prepare a budgetary
impact statement before promulgating a rule that includes any 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 (adjusted annually for inflation, currently $154
million) in any one year. If a budgetary impact statement is required,
section 205 of the Unfunded Mandates Act also requires the OCC to
identify and consider a reasonable number of regulatory alternatives
before promulgating a rule.
The OCC analyzed the amendments proposed in this notice of proposed
rulemaking, and has determined that they would not result in
expenditures by State, local, and Tribal governments, in the aggregate,
or by the private sector, of $154 million in any one year. Accordingly,
the OCC has not prepared a written statement under sections 202 and
205.
E. Riegle Community Development and Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994
Pursuant to section 302(a) of the Riegle Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994 (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 depository institutions, including small
depository institutions, and customers of depository institutions, as
well as the benefits of such regulations.\48\ 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.\49\ Each
Federal banking agency has determined that the proposed rule would not
impose additional reporting, disclosure, or other requirements;
therefore the requirements of the RCDRIA do not apply. However, the
agencies note that comments on these matters have 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 will further inform the agencies' consideration of
RCDRIA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\48\ 12 U.S.C. 4802(a).
\49\ 12 U.S.C. 4802.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 45
Administrative practice and procedure, Capital, Margin
requirements, National Banks, Federal Savings Associations, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements, Risk.
12 CFR Part 237
Administrative practice and procedure, Banks, banking, Foreign
banking, Holding companies, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements,
Swaps.
12 CFR Part 349
Administrative practice and procedure, Banks, banking, Holding
companies, Capital, Margin Requirements, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Savings associations, Risk, Swaps.
12 CFR Part 624
Accounting, Agriculture, Banks, Banking, Capital, Cooperatives,
Credit, Margin requirements, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements,
Risk, Rural areas, Swaps.
12 CFR Part 1221
Government-sponsored enterprises, Mortgages, Securities.
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
12 CFR Chapter I
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the common preamble and under the
authority of 12 U.S.C. 93a and 5412(b)(2)(B), the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency proposes to amend part 45 of Title 12, Code
of Federal Regulations, as follows:
PART 45--MARGIN AND CAPITAL REQUIREMENTS FOR COVERED SWAP ENTITIES
0
1. The authority citation for part 45 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 6s(e), 12 U.S.C. 1 et seq., 12 U.S.C. 93a,
161, 481, 1818, 3907, 3909, 5412(b)(2)(B), and 15 U.S.C. 78o-10(e).
0
2. Section 45.1 is amended by:
0
a. Revising paragraphs (e)(6), (e)(7), (h) introductory text, and
(h)(1); and
0
b. Adding paragraphs (h)(3) through (h)(5).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 45.1 Authority, purpose, scope, exemptions and compliance dates.
* * * * *
[[Page 59984]]
(e) Compliance dates. * * *
* * * * *
(6) September 1, 2020 with respect to requirements in Sec. 45.3
for initial margin for any non-cleared swaps and non-cleared security-
based swaps, where both:
(i) The covered swap entity combined with all its affiliates; and
(ii) Its counterparty combined with all its affiliates, have an
average daily aggregate notional amount of non-cleared swaps, foreign
exchange forwards and foreign exchange swaps for March, April and May
2020 that exceeds $50 billion, where such amounts are calculated only
for business days; and
(iii) In calculating the amounts in paragraphs (e)(6)(i) and (ii)
of this section, an entity shall count the average daily aggregate
notional amount of a non-cleared swap, a non-cleared security-based
swap, a foreign exchange forward or a foreign exchange swap between the
entity and an affiliate only one time, and shall not count a swap or
security-based swap that is exempt pursuant to paragraph (d) of this
section.
(7) September 1, 2021 with respect to requirements in Sec. 45.3
for initial margin for any other covered swap entity with respect to
non-cleared swaps and non-cleared security-based swaps entered into
with any other counterparty.
* * * * *
(h) Legacy swaps. Covered swaps entities are required to comply
with the requirements of this part for non-cleared swaps and non-
cleared security-based swaps entered into on or after the relevant
compliance dates for variation margin and for initial margin
established in paragraph (e) of this section. Any non-cleared swap or
non-cleared security-based swap entered into before such relevant date
shall remain outside the scope of this part if amendments are made to
the non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap by method of
adherence to a protocol, contractual amendment of an agreement or
confirmation, or execution of a new contract in replacement of and
immediately upon termination of an existing contract, as follows:
(1) Amendments to the non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-
based swap solely to comply with the requirements of part 47, subpart I
of part 252 or part 382 of title 12, as applicable;
* * * * *
(3)(i) Amendments to the non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-
based swap that are made solely to accommodate the replacement of:
(A) An interbank offered rate (IBOR) including, but not limited to,
the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR), the Tokyo Interbank Offered
Rate (TIBOR), the Bank Bill Swap Rate (BBSW), the Singapore Interbank
Offered Rate (SIBOR), the Canadian Dollar Offered Rate (CDOR), Euro
Interbank Offered Rate (EURIBOR), and the Hong Kong Interbank Offered
Rate (HIBOR);
(B) Any other interest rate that a covered swap entity reasonably
expects to be discontinued or reasonably determines has lost its
relevance as a reliable benchmark due to a significant impairment; or
(C) Any other interest rate that succeeds a rate referenced in
paragraph (h)(3)(i)(A) or (h)(3)(i)(B) of this section. An amendment
made under this paragraph (h)(3)(i)(C) could be one of multiple
amendments made under this paragraph (h)(3)(i)(C). For example, an
amendment could replace an IBOR with a temporary interest rate and
later replace the temporary interest rate with a permanent interest
rate.
(ii) Amendments to accommodate replacement of a rate described in
paragraph (h)(3)(i) may also incorporate spreads or other adjustments
to the replacement rate and make other necessary technical changes to
operationalize the determination of payments or other exchanges of
economic value using the replacement rate, including changes to
determination dates, calculation agents, and payment dates, so long as
the changes do not extend the maturity or increase the total effective
notional amount of the non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based
swap.
(4) The non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap was
amended or replaced solely to reduce risk or remain risk-neutral
through portfolio compression between or among covered swap entities
and their counterparties as long as:
(i) A non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap that is
amended to reflect the outcome of the compression exercise does not:
(A) Extend the remaining maturity; or
(B) Increase the total effective notional amount of that swap; or
(ii) A non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap that is
entered into as a replacement to reflect the outcome of the compression
exercise does not:
(A) Exceed the sum of the total effective notional amounts of all
of the swaps that were submitted to the compression exercise that had
the same or longer remaining maturity as the replacement swap; or
(B) Exceed the longest remaining maturity of all the swaps
submitted to the compression exercise.
(5) The non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap was
amended solely for one of the following reasons:
(i) To reflect technical changes, such as addresses, identities of
parties for delivery of formal notices, and other administrative or
operational provisions as long as they do not alter the non-cleared
swap's or non-cleared security-based swap's underlying asset or
indicator, the remaining maturity, or the total effective notional
amount; or
(ii) To reduce the notional amount, so long as:
(A) All payment obligations attached to the total effective
notional amount being eliminated as a result of the amendment are fully
terminated; or
(B) All payment obligations attached to the total effective
notional amount being eliminated as a result of the amendment are fully
novated to a third party, who complies with applicable margin rules for
the novated portion upon the transfer.
0
3. Amend Sec. 45.10 by revising paragraph (a) to read as follows:
Sec. 45.10 Documentation of margin matters.
* * * * *
(a) Provides the covered swap entity and its counterparty with the
contractual right to collect and post initial margin and variation
margin in such amounts, in such form, and under such circumstances as
are required by this subpart, and at such time as initial margin or
variation margin is required to be collected or posted under Sec. 45.3
or Sec. 45.4, as applicable; and
* * * * *
0
4. Section 45.11 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 45.11 Initial margin exemption for affiliates.
(a) The requirement for a covered swap entity to collect or post
initial margin under Sec. 45.3 does not apply with respect to any non-
cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap with a counterparty
that is an affiliate.
(b) For purposes of this section, an affiliate means:
(1) An affiliate as defined in Sec. 45.2; and
(2) Any company that controls, is controlled by, or is under common
control with the covered swap entity through the direct or indirect
exercise of controlling influence over the management or policies of
the controlled company.
[[Page 59985]]
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
12 CFR Chapter II
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the common preamble, the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System proposes to amend 12 CFR part
237 to read as follows:
PART 237--SWAPS MARGIN AND SWAPS PUSH-OUT
0
5. The authority citation for part 237 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 6s(e), 15 U.S.C. 78o-10(e), 15 U.S.C. 8305,
12 U.S.C. 221 et seq., 12 U.S.C. 343-350, 12 U.S.C. 1818, 12 U.S.C.
1841 et seq., 12 U.S.C. 3101 et seq., and 12 U.S.C. 1461 et seq.
Subpart A-- Margin and Capital Requirements for Covered Swap
Entities (Regulation KK)
0
6. Section 237.1 is amended by:
0
a. Revising paragraphs (e)(6), (e)(7), (h) introductory text, and
(h)(1); and
0
b. Adding paragraphs (h)(3) through (h)(5).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 237.1 Authority, purpose, scope, exemptions and compliance
dates.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
(6) September 1, 2020 with respect to requirements in Sec. 237.3
for initial margin for any non-cleared swaps and non-cleared security-
based swaps, where both:
(i) The covered swap entity combined with all its affiliates; and
(ii) Its counterparty combined with all its affiliates, have an
average daily aggregate notional amount of non-cleared swaps, foreign
exchange forwards and foreign exchange swaps for March, April and May
2020 that exceeds $50 billion, where such amounts are calculated only
for business days; and
(iii) In calculating the amounts in paragraphs (e)(6)(i) and (ii)
of this section, an entity shall count the average daily aggregate
notional amount of a non-cleared swap, a non-cleared security-based
swap, a foreign exchange forward or a foreign exchange swap between the
entity and an affiliate only one time, and shall not count a swap or
security-based swap that is exempt pursuant to paragraph (d) of this
section.
(7) September 1, 2021 with respect to requirements in Sec. 237.3
for initial margin for any other covered swap entity with respect to
non-cleared swaps and non-cleared security-based swaps entered into
with any other counterparty.
* * * * *
(h) Legacy swaps. Covered swaps entities are required to comply
with the requirements of this subpart for non-cleared swaps and non-
cleared security-based swaps entered into on or after the relevant
compliance dates for variation margin and for initial margin
established in paragraph (e) of this section. Any non-cleared swap or
non-cleared security-based swap entered into before such relevant date
shall remain outside the scope of this subpart if amendments are made
to the non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap by method of
adherence to a protocol, contractual amendment of an agreement or
confirmation, or execution of a new contract in replacement of and
immediately upon termination of an existing contract, as follows:
(1) Amendments to the non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-
based swap solely to comply with the requirements of part 47, subpart I
of part 252 or part 382 of title 12, as applicable;
* * * * *
(3)(i) Amendments to the non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-
based swap that are made solely to accommodate the replacement of:
(A) An interbank offered rate (IBOR) including, but not limited to,
the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR), the Tokyo Interbank Offered
Rate (TIBOR), the Bank Bill Swap Rate (BBSW), the Singapore Interbank
Offered Rate (SIBOR), the Canadian Dollar Offered Rate (CDOR), Euro
Interbank Offered Rate (EURIBOR), and the Hong Kong Interbank Offered
Rate (HIBOR);
(B) Any other interest rate that a covered swap entity reasonably
expects to be discontinued or reasonably determines has lost its
relevance as a reliable benchmark due to a significant impairment; or
(C) Any other interest rate that succeeds a rate referenced in
paragraph (h)(3)(i)(A) or (h)(3)(i)(B) of this section. An amendment
made under this paragraph (h)(3)(i)(C) could be one of multiple
amendments made under this paragraph (h)(3)(i)(C). For example, an
amendment could replace an IBOR with a temporary interest rate and
later replace the temporary interest rate with a permanent interest
rate.
(ii) Amendments to accommodate replacement of a rate described in
paragraph (h)(3)(i) may also incorporate spreads or other adjustments
to the replacement rate and make other necessary technical changes to
operationalize the determination of payments or other exchanges of
economic value using the replacement rate, including changes to
determination dates, calculation agents, and payment dates, so long as
the changes do not extend the maturity or increase the total effective
notional amount of the non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based
swap.
(4) The non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap was
amended or replaced solely to reduce risk or remain risk-neutral
through portfolio compression between or among covered swap entities
and their counterparties as long as:
(i) A non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap that is
amended to reflect the outcome of the compression exercise does not:
(A) Extend the remaining maturity; or
(B) Increase the total effective notional amount of that swap; or
(ii) A non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap that is
entered into as a replacement to reflect the outcome of the compression
exercise does not:
(A) Exceed the sum of the total effective notional amounts of all
of the swaps that were submitted to the compression exercise that had
the same or longer remaining maturity as the replacement swap; or
(B) Exceed the longest remaining maturity of all the swaps
submitted to the compression exercise.
(5) The non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap was
amended solely for one of the following reasons:
(i) To reflect technical changes, such as addresses, identities of
parties for delivery of formal notices, and other administrative or
operational provisions as long as they do not alter the non-cleared
swap's or non-cleared security-based swap's underlying asset or
indicator, the remaining maturity, or the total effective notional
amount; or
(ii) To reduce the notional amount, so long as:
(A) All payment obligations attached to the total effective
notional amount being eliminated as a result of the amendment are fully
terminated; or
(B) All payment obligations attached to the total effective
notional amount being eliminated as a result of the amendment are fully
novated to a third party, who complies with applicable margin rules for
the novated portion upon the transfer.
0
7. Amend Sec. 237.10 by revising paragraph (a) to read as follows:
Sec. 237.10 Documentation of margin matters.
* * * * *
[[Page 59986]]
(a) Provides the covered swap entity and its counterparty with the
contractual right to collect and post initial margin and variation
margin in such amounts, in such form, and under such circumstances as
are required by this subpart, and at such time as initial margin or
variation margin is required to be collected or posted under Sec.
237.3 or Sec. 237.4, as applicable; and
* * * * *
0
8. Section 237.11 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 237.11 Initial margin exemption for affiliates.
(a) The requirement for a covered swap entity to collect or post
initial margin under Sec. 237.3 does not apply with respect to any
non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap with a counterparty
that is an affiliate.
(b) For purposes of this section, an affiliate means:
(1) An affiliate as defined in Sec. 237.2; and
(2) Any company that controls, is controlled by, or is under common
control with the covered swap entity through the direct or indirect
exercise of controlling influence over the management or policies of
the controlled company.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
12 CFR Chapter III
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the Supplementary Information section,
the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation proposes to amend 12 CFR
Chapter III as follows:
PART 349--DERIVATIVES
0
9. The authority citation for subpart A of part 349 continues to read
as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 6s(e), 15 U.S.C. 78o-10(e), and 12 U.S.C.
1818 and 12 U.S.C. 1819(a)(Tenth), 12 U.S.C. 1813(q), 1818, 1819,
and 3108.
0
10. Section 349.1 is amended by:
0
a. Revising paragraphs (e)(6), (e)(7), (h) introductory text, and
(h)(1); and
0
b. Adding paragraphs (h)(3) through (h)(5).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 349.1 Authority, purpose, scope, exemptions and compliance
dates.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
* * * * *
(6) September 1, 2020 with respect to requirements in Sec. 349.3
for initial margin for any non-cleared swaps and non-cleared security-
based swaps, where both:
(i) The covered swap entity combined with all its affiliates; and
(ii) Its counterparty combined with all its affiliates, have an
average daily aggregate notional amount of non-cleared swaps, foreign
exchange forwards and foreign exchange swaps for March, April and May
2020 that exceeds $50 billion, where such amounts are calculated only
for business days; and
(iii) In calculating the amounts in paragraphs (e)(6)(i) and (ii)
of this section, an entity shall count the average daily aggregate
notional amount of a non-cleared swap, a non-cleared security-based
swap, a foreign exchange forward or a foreign exchange swap between the
entity and an affiliate only one time, and shall not count a swap or
security-based swap that is exempt pursuant to paragraph (d) of this
section.
(7) September 1, 2021 with respect to requirements in Sec. 349.3
for initial margin for any other covered swap entity with respect to
non-cleared swaps and non-cleared security-based swaps entered into
with any other counterparty.
* * * * *
(h) Legacy swaps. Covered swaps entities are required to comply
with the requirements of this part for non-cleared swaps and non-
cleared security-based swaps entered into on or after the relevant
compliance dates for variation margin and for initial margin
established in paragraph (e) of this section. Any non-cleared swap or
non-cleared security-based swap entered into before such relevant date
shall remain outside the scope of this part if amendments are made to
the non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap by method of
adherence to a protocol, contractual amendment of an agreement or
confirmation, or execution of a new contract in replacement of and
immediately upon termination of an existing contract, as follows:
(1) Amendments to the non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-
based swap solely to comply with the requirements of part 47, subpart I
of part 252 or part 382 of title 12, as applicable;
* * * * *
(3)(i) Amendments to the non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-
based swap that are made solely to accommodate the replacement of:
(A) An interbank offered rate (IBOR) including, but not limited to,
the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR), the Tokyo Interbank Offered
Rate (TIBOR), the Bank Bill Swap Rate (BBSW), the Singapore Interbank
Offered Rate (SIBOR), the Canadian Dollar Offered Rate (CDOR), Euro
Interbank Offered Rate (EURIBOR), and the Hong Kong Interbank Offered
Rate (HIBOR);
(B) Any other interest rate that a covered swap entity reasonably
expects to be discontinued or reasonably determines has lost its
relevance as a reliable benchmark due to a significant impairment; or
(C) Any other interest rate that succeeds a rate referenced in
paragraph (h)(3)(i)(A) or (h)(3)(i)(B) of this section. An amendment
made under this paragraph (h)(3)(i)(C) could be one of multiple
amendments made under this paragraph (h)(3)(i)(C). For example, an
amendment could replace an IBOR with a temporary interest rate and
later replace the temporary interest rate with a permanent interest
rate.
(ii) Amendments to accommodate replacement of a rate described in
paragraph (h)(3)(i) may also incorporate spreads or other adjustments
to the replacement rate and make other necessary technical changes to
operationalize the determination of payments or other exchanges of
economic value using the replacement rate, including changes to
determination dates, calculation agents, and payment dates, so long as
the changes do not extend the maturity or increase the total effective
notional amount of the non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based
swap.
(4) The non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap was
amended or replaced solely to reduce risk or remain risk-neutral
through portfolio compression between or among covered swap entities
and their counterparties as long as:
(i) A non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap that is
amended to reflect the outcome of the compression exercise does not:
(A) Extend the remaining maturity; or
(B) Increase the total effective notional amount of that swap; or
(ii) A non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap that is
entered into as a replacement to reflect the outcome of the compression
exercise does not:
(A) Exceed the sum of the total effective notional amounts of all
of the swaps that were submitted to the compression exercise that had
the same or longer remaining maturity as the replacement swap; or
(B) Exceed the longest remaining maturity of all the swaps
submitted to the compression exercise.
(5) The non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap was
amended solely for one of the following reasons:
[[Page 59987]]
(i) To reflect technical changes, such as addresses, identities of
parties for delivery of formal notices, and other administrative or
operational provisions as long as they do not alter the non-cleared
swap's or non-cleared security-based swap's underlying asset or
indicator, the remaining maturity, or the total effective notional
amount; or
(ii) To reduce the notional amount, so long as:
(A) All payment obligations attached to the total effective
notional amount being eliminated as a result of the amendment are fully
terminated; or
(B) All payment obligations attached to the total effective
notional amount being eliminated as a result of the amendment are fully
novated to a third party, who complies with applicable margin rules for
the novated portion upon the transfer.
0
11. Amend Sec. 349.10 by revising paragraph (a) to read as follows:
Sec. 349.10 Documentation of margin matters.
* * * * *
(a) Provides the covered swap entity and its counterparty with the
contractual right to collect and post initial margin and variation
margin in such amounts, in such form, and under such circumstances as
are required by this subpart, and at such time as initial margin or
variation margin is required to be collected or posted under Sec.
349.3 or Sec. 349.4, as applicable; and
* * * * *
0
12. Section 349.11 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 349.11 Initial margin exemption for affiliates.
(a) The requirement for a covered swap entity to collect or post
initial margin under Sec. 349.3 does not apply with respect to any
non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap with a counterparty
that is an affiliate.
(b) For purposes of this section, an affiliate means:
(1) An affiliate as defined in Sec. 349.2; and
(2) Any company that controls, is controlled by, or is under common
control with the covered swap entity through the direct or indirect
exercise of controlling influence over the management or policies of
the controlled company.
Farm Credit Administration
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Farm Credit
Administration proposes to amend chapter VI of title 12, Code of
Federal Regulations, as follows:
PART 624--MARGIN AND CAPITAL REQUIREMENTS FOR COVERED SWAP ENTITIES
0
13. The authority citation for part 624 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C 6s(e), 15 U.S.C. 78o-10(e), 12 U.S.C. 2154,
12 U.S.C. 2243, 12 U.S.C. 2252, 12 U.S.C. 2279bb-1.
0
14. Section 624.1 is amended by
0
a. Revising paragraphs (e)(6), (e)(7), (h) introductory text, and
(h)(1); and
0
b. Adding paragraphs (h)(3) through (h)(5).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 624.1 Authority, purpose, scope, exemptions and compliance
dates.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
* * * * *
(6) September 1, 2020 with respect to requirements in Sec. 624.3
for initial margin for any non-cleared swaps and non-cleared security-
based swaps, where both:
(i) The covered swap entity combined with all its affiliates; and
(ii) Its counterparty combined with all its affiliates, have an
average daily aggregate notional amount of non-cleared swaps, foreign
exchange forwards and foreign exchange swaps for March, April and May
2020 that exceeds $50 billion, where such amounts are calculated only
for business days; and
(iii) In calculating the amounts in paragraphs (e)(6)(i) and (ii)
of this section, an entity shall count the average daily aggregate
notional amount of a non-cleared swap, a non-cleared security-based
swap, a foreign exchange forward or a foreign exchange swap between the
entity and an affiliate only one time, and shall not count a swap or
security-based swap that is exempt pursuant to paragraph (d) of this
section.
(7) September 1, 2021 with respect to requirements in Sec. 624.3
for initial margin for any other covered swap entity with respect to
non-cleared swaps and non-cleared security-based swaps entered into
with any other counterparty.
* * * * *
(h) Legacy swaps. Covered swaps entities are required to comply
with the requirements of this part for non-cleared swaps and non-
cleared security-based swaps entered into on or after the relevant
compliance dates for variation margin and for initial margin
established in paragraph (e) of this section. Any non-cleared swap or
non-cleared security-based swap entered into before such relevant date
shall remain outside the scope of this part if amendments are made to
the non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap by method of
adherence to a protocol, contractual amendment of an agreement or
confirmation, or execution of a new contract in replacement of and
immediately upon termination of an existing contract, as follows:
(1) Amendments to the non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-
based swap solely to comply with the requirements of part 47, subpart I
of part 252 or part 382 of title 12, as applicable;
* * * * *
(3)(i) Amendments to the non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-
based swap that are made solely to accommodate the replacement of:
(A) An interbank offered rate (IBOR) including, but not limited to,
the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR), the Tokyo Interbank Offered
Rate (TIBOR), the Bank Bill Swap Rate (BBSW), the Singapore Interbank
Offered Rate (SIBOR), the Canadian Dollar Offered Rate (CDOR), Euro
Interbank Offered Rate (EURIBOR), and the Hong Kong Interbank Offered
Rate (HIBOR);
(B) Any other interest rate that a covered swap entity reasonably
expects to be discontinued or reasonably determines has lost its
relevance as a reliable benchmark due to a significant impairment; or
(C) Any other interest rate that succeeds a rate referenced in
paragraph (h)(3)(i)(A) or (h)(3)(i)(B) of this section. An amendment
made under this paragraph (h)(3)(i)(C) could be one of multiple
amendments made under this paragraph (h)(3)(i)(C). For example, an
amendment could replace an IBOR with a temporary interest rate and
later replace the temporary interest rate with a permanent interest
rate.
(ii) Amendments to accommodate replacement of a rate described in
paragraph (h)(3)(i) may also incorporate spreads or other adjustments
to the replacement rate and make other necessary technical changes to
operationalize the determination of payments or other exchanges of
economic value using the replacement rate, including changes to
determination dates, calculation agents, and payment dates, so long as
the changes do not extend the maturity or increase the total effective
notional amount of the non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based
swap.
(4) The non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap was
amended or replaced solely to reduce risk or remain risk-neutral
through portfolio compression between or
[[Page 59988]]
among covered swap entities and their counterparties as long as:
(i) A non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap that is
amended to reflect the outcome of the compression exercise does not:
(A) Extend the remaining maturity; or
(B) Increase the total effective notional amount of that swap; or
(ii) A non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap that is
entered into as a replacement to reflect the outcome of the compression
exercise does not:
(A) Exceed the sum of the total effective notional amounts of all
of the swaps that were submitted to the compression exercise that had
the same or longer remaining maturity as the replacement swap; or
(B) Exceed the longest remaining maturity of all the swaps
submitted to the compression exercise.
(5) The non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap was
amended solely for one of the following reasons:
(i) To reflect technical changes, such as addresses, identities of
parties for delivery of formal notices, and other administrative or
operational provisions as long as they do not alter the non-cleared
swap's or non-cleared security-based swap's underlying asset or
indicator, the remaining maturity, or the total effective notional
amount; or
(ii) To reduce the notional amount, so long as:
(A) All payment obligations attached to the total effective
notional amount being eliminated as a result of the amendment are fully
terminated; or (B) All payment obligations attached to the total
effective notional amount being eliminated as a result of the amendment
are fully novated to a third party, who complies with applicable margin
rules for the novated portion upon the transfer.
0
15. Amend Sec. 624.10 by revising paragraph (a) to read as follows:
Sec. 624.10 Documentation of margin matters.
* * * * *
(a) Provides the covered swap entity and its counterparty with the
contractual right to collect and post initial margin and variation
margin in such amounts, in such form, and under such circumstances as
are required by this subpart, and at such time as initial margin or
variation margin is required to be collected or posted under Sec.
624.3 or Sec. 624.4, as applicable; and
* * * * *
0
16. Section 624.11 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 624.11 Initial margin exemption for affiliates.
(a) The requirement for a covered swap entity to collect or post
initial margin under Sec. 624.3 does not apply with respect to any
non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap with a counterparty
that is an affiliate.
(b) For purposes of this section, an affiliate means:
(1) An affiliate as defined in Sec. 624.2, and
(2) Any company that controls, is controlled by, or is under common
control with the covered swap entity through the direct or indirect
exercise of controlling influence over the management or policies of
the controlled company.
Federal Housing Finance Agency
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Federal Housing
Finance Agency proposes to amend chapter XII of title 12, Code of
Federal Regulations, as follows:
PART 1221--MARGIN AND CAPITAL REQUIREMENTS FOR COVERED SWAP
ENTITIES
0
17. The authority citation for part 1221 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 6s(e), 15 U.S.C. 78o-10(e), 12 U.S.C. 4513,
and 12 U.S.C. 4526(a).
0
18. Section 1221.1 is amended by:
0
a. Revising paragraphs (e)(6), (e)(7), (h) introductory text, and
(h)(1); and
0
b. Adding paragraphs (h)(3) through (h)(5).
The revisions and additions read as follows:
Sec. 1221.1 Authority, purpose, scope, exemptions and compliance
dates.
* * * * *
(e) * * *
* * * * *
(6) September 1, 2020 with respect to requirements in Sec. 1221.3
for initial margin for any non-cleared swaps and non-cleared security-
based swaps, where both:
(i) The covered swap entity combined with all its affiliates; and
(ii) Its counterparty combined with all its affiliates, have an
average daily aggregate notional amount of non-cleared swaps, foreign
exchange forwards and foreign exchange swaps for March, April and May
2020 that exceeds $50 billion, where such amounts are calculated only
for business days; and
(iii) In calculating the amounts in paragraphs (e)(6)(i) and (ii)
of this section, an entity shall count the average daily aggregate
notional amount of a non-cleared swap, a non-cleared security-based
swap, a foreign exchange forward or a foreign exchange swap between the
entity and an affiliate only one time, and shall not count a swap or
security-based swap that is exempt pursuant to paragraph (d) of this
section.
(7) September 1, 2021 with respect to requirements in Sec. 1221.3
for initial margin for any other covered swap entity with respect to
non-cleared swaps and non-cleared security-based swaps entered into
with any other counterparty.
(h) Legacy swaps. Covered swaps entities are required to comply
with the requirements of this part for non-cleared swaps and non-
cleared security-based swaps entered into on or after the relevant
compliance dates for variation margin and for initial margin
established in paragraph (e) of this section. Any non-cleared swap or
non-cleared security-based swap entered into before such relevant date
shall remain outside the scope of this part if amendments are made to
the non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap by method of
adherence to a protocol, contractual amendment of an agreement or
confirmation, or execution of a new contract in replacement of and
immediately upon termination of an existing contract, as follows:
(1) Amendments to the non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-
based swap solely to comply with the requirements of part 47, subpart I
of part 252 or part 382 of title 12, as applicable;
* * * * *
(3)(i) Amendments to the non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-
based swap that are made solely to accommodate the replacement of:
(A) An interbank offered rate (IBOR) including, but not limited to,
the London Interbank Offered Rate (LIBOR), the Tokyo Interbank Offered
Rate (TIBOR), the Bank Bill Swap Rate (BBSW), the Singapore Interbank
Offered Rate (SIBOR), the Canadian Dollar Offered Rate (CDOR), the Euro
Interbank Offered Rate (EURIBOR), and the Hong Kong Interbank Offered
Rate (HIBOR);
(B) Any other interest rate that a covered swap entity reasonably
expects to be discontinued or reasonably determines has lost its
relevance as a reliable benchmark due to a significant impairment; or
(C) Any other interest rate that succeeds a rate referenced in
paragraph (h)(3)(i)(A) or (h)(3)(i)(B) of this section. An amendment
made under this paragraph (h)(3)(i)(C) could be one of multiple
amendments made under this
[[Page 59989]]
paragraph (h)(3)(i)(C). For example, an amendment could replace an IBOR
with a temporary interest rate and later replace the temporary interest
rate with a permanent interest rate.
(ii) Amendments to accommodate replacement of a rate described in
paragraph (h)(3)(i) may also incorporate spreads or other adjustments
to the replacement rate and make other necessary technical changes to
operationalize the determination of payments or other exchanges of
economic value using the replacement rate, including changes to
determination dates, calculation agents, and payment dates, so long as
the changes do not extend the maturity or increase the total effective
notional amount of the non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based
swap.
(4) The non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap was
amended or replaced solely to reduce risk or remain risk-neutral
through portfolio compression between or among covered swap entities
and their counterparties as long as:
(i) A non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap that is
amended to reflect the outcome of the compression exercise does not:
(A) Extend the remaining maturity; or
(B) Increase the total effective notional amount of that swap; or
(ii) A non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap that is
entered into as a replacement to reflect the outcome of the compression
exercise does not:
(A) Exceed the sum of the total effective notional amounts of all
of the swaps that were submitted to the compression exercise that had
the same or longer remaining maturity as the replacement swap; or
(B) Exceed the longest remaining maturity of all the swaps
submitted to the compression exercise.
(5) The non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap was
amended solely for one of the following reasons:
(i) To reflect technical changes, such as addresses, identities of
parties for delivery of formal notices, and other administrative or
operational provisions as long as they do not alter the non-cleared
swap's or non-cleared security-based swap's underlying asset or
indicator, the remaining maturity, or the total effective notional
amount; or
(ii) To reduce the notional amount, so long as:
(A) All payment obligations attached to the total effective
notional amount being eliminated as a result of the amendment are fully
terminated; or
(B) All payment obligations attached to the total effective
notional amount being eliminated as a result of the amendment are fully
novated to a third party, who complies with applicable margin rules for
the novated portion upon the transfer.
0
19. Amend Sec. 1221.10 by revising paragraph (a) to read as follows:
Sec. 1221.10 Documentation of margin matters.
* * * * *
(a) Provides the covered swap entity and its counterparty with the
contractual right to collect and post initial margin and variation
margin in such amounts, in such form, and under such circumstances as
are required by this part, and at such time as initial margin or
variation margin is required to be collected or posted under Sec.
1221.3 or Sec. 1221.4, as applicable; and
* * * * *
0
20. Section 1221.11 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 1221.11 Initial margin exemption for affiliates.
(a) The requirement for a covered swap entity to collect or post
initial margin under Sec. 1221.3 does not apply with respect to any
non-cleared swap or non-cleared security-based swap with a counterparty
that is an affiliate.
(b) For purposes of this section, an affiliate means:
(1) An affiliate as defined in Sec. 1221.2; and
(2) Any company that controls, is controlled by, or is under common
control with the covered swap entity through the direct or indirect
exercise of controlling influence over the management or policies of
the controlled company.
Dated: September 17th, 2019.
Joseph M. Otting,
Comptroller of the Currency.
By order of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, October 21, 2019.
Ann E. Misback,
Secretary of the Board. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. By order
of the Board of Directors.
Dated at Washington, DC, on September 17, 2019.
Robert E. Feldman,
Executive Secretary.
By order of the Board of the Farm Credit Administration.
Dated at McLean, VA, this 17th day of September, 2019.
Dale L. Aultman,
Secretary.
Dated: August 27, 2019.
Mark A. Calabria,
Director, Federal Housing Finance Agency.
[FR Doc. 2019-23541 Filed 11-6-19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810-33-P; 6210-01-P; 6714-01-P; 8070-01-P; 6705-01-P