Guidance for Resolution Plan Submissions of Certain Foreign-Based Covered Companies, 83557-83582 [2020-28155]
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Federal Register / Vol. 85, No. 246 / Tuesday, December 22, 2020 / Notices
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
Change in Bank Control Notices;
Acquisitions of Shares of a Bank or
Bank Holding Company
[Docket No. OP–1699]
The notificants listed below have
applied under the Change in Bank
Control Act (Act) (12 U.S.C. 1817(j)) and
§ 225.41 of the Board’s Regulation Y (12
CFR 225.41) to acquire shares of a bank
or bank holding company. The factors
that are considered in acting on the
applications are set forth in paragraph 7
of the Act (12 U.S.C. 1817(j)(7)).
The public portions of the
applications listed below, as well as
other related filings required by the
Board, if any, are available for
immediate inspection at the Federal
Reserve Bank(s) indicated below and at
the offices of the Board of Governors.
This information may also be obtained
on an expedited basis, upon request, by
contacting the appropriate Federal
Reserve Bank and from the Board’s
Freedom of Information Office at
https://www.federalreserve.gov/foia/
request.htm. Interested persons may
express their views in writing on the
standards enumerated in paragraph 7 of
the Act.
Comments regarding each of these
applications must be received at the
Reserve Bank indicated or the offices of
the Board of Governors, Ann E.
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Street and Constitution Avenue NW,
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than January 6, 2021.
A. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis
(David L. Hubbard, Senior Manager)
P.O. Box 442, St. Louis, Missouri
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electronically to
Comments.applications@stls.frb.org:
1. Charles Taff Cross and John Fuller
Cross, Jr., both of Eureka Springs,
Arkansas; to acquire additional voting
shares of Eureka Bancshares, Inc., and
thereby indirectly acquire voting shares
of CS Bank (fka Cornerstone Bank), all
of Eureka Springs, Arkansas.
RIN 3064–ZA15
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION
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Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, December 17, 2020.
Michele Taylor Fennell,
Deputy Associate Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 2020–28186 Filed 12–21–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P
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Guidance for Resolution Plan
Submissions of Certain Foreign-Based
Covered Companies
Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System (Board) and
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(FDIC).
ACTION: Final guidance.
AGENCY:
The Board and the FDIC
(together, the agencies) are adopting this
final guidance for the 2021 and
subsequent resolution plan submissions
by certain foreign banking organizations
(FBOs). The final guidance is meant to
assist these firms in developing their
resolution plans, which are required to
be submitted pursuant to Section 165(d)
of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act (DoddFrank Act). The final guidance reflects
a number of changes to the proposal in
response to comments received by the
agencies and further analysis by the
agencies. The scope of application of the
final guidance is FBOs that are Category
II firms according to their combined
U.S. operations under the Board’s
tailoring ruleand are required to have a
U.S. intermediate holding company
(IHC) under the Board’s Regulation YY
(the Specified FBOs) as published in 84
FR 59032 (November 1, 2019). In
addition to the three firms(Barclays
PLC, Credit Suisse Group AG, and
Deutsche Bank AG (the Proposed FBOs)
that would have been within the scope
of application under the methodology
utilized in the proposal, one additional
firm, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group,
Inc. (MUFG), is within the scope for
application of the final guidance at the
time of its issuance. Consequently,
MUFG will have a transition period to
consider the application of the final
guidance to its resolution plan
submission, as further described below.
The final guidance describes the
agencies’ expectations regarding a
number of key vulnerabilities in plans
for an orderly resolution under the U.S.
Bankruptcy Code (i.e., capital, liquidity,
governance mechanisms, operational,
branches, legal entity rationalization,
and derivatives and trading activities).
The final guidance modifies and
clarifies certain aspects of the proposed
guidance based on the agencies’
consideration of comments to the
proposal, additional analysis, and
SUMMARY:
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further assessment of the business and
risk profiles of the U.S. operations of
large and complex FBOs.
DATES: The final guidance is available
on December 22, 2020.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Board: Mona Elliot, Deputy Associate
Director, (202) 452–4688, Catherine
Tilford, Deputy Associate Director, (202)
452–5240, Division of Supervision and
Regulation, Laurie Schaffer, Deputy
General Counsel, (202) 452–2272, Jay
Schwarz, Special Counsel, (202) 452–
2970, Steve Bowne, Senior Counsel,
(202) 452–3900, or Sarah Podrygula,
Attorney, (202) 912–4658, Legal
Division; Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, 20th and C
Streets NW, Washington, DC 20551.
FDIC: Alexandra Steinberg Barrage,
Associate Director, Policy and Data
Analytics, abarrage@fdic.gov; Yan
Zhou, Acting Associate Director, Data
Analytics, yazhou@fdic.gov; Catherine
Needham, Advisor, cneedham@fdic.gov;
Ronald W. Crawley, Jr., Senior
Resolution Policy Specialist, rcrawley@
fdic.gov, Division of Complex
Institution Supervision and Resolution;
David N. Wall, Assistant General
Counsel, dwall@fdic.gov; Celia Van
Gorder, Senior Counsel, 202–898–6749,
cvangorder@fdic.gov; or Esther Rabin,
Counsel, erabin@fdic.gov, Legal
Division, Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, 550 17th Street NW,
Washington, DC 20429.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
a. Background
b. Proposed Guidance
II. Overview of Comments
III. Final Guidance
a. Scope of Application
b. Transition Period
c. Consolidation of Prior Guidance and
Format and Structure of Plans
d. Capital and Liquidity
e. Governance Mechanisms
f. Operational
g. Branches
h. Group Resolution Plan
i. Legal Entity Rationalization and
Separability
j. Derivatives and Trading Activities
k. Additional Comments
IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
V. Final Guidance
I. Introduction
a. Background
Section 165(d) of the Dodd-Frank
Act 1 and the jointly issued
implementing regulation (the Rule) 2
1 12
U.S.C. 5365(d).
CFR part 243 and 12 CFR part 381, as
amended.
2 12
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require certain financial companies,
including certain foreign-based firms, to
report periodically to the agencies their
plans for rapid and orderly resolution
under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code (the
Bankruptcy Code) in the event of
material financial distress or failure.
With respect to a covered company 3
that is organized or incorporated in a
jurisdiction other than the United States
(other than a bank holding company) or
that is an FBO, the Rule requires that
the firm’s U.S. resolution plan include
specified information with respect to
the subsidiaries, branches, and agencies,
and identified critical operations and
core business lines, as applicable, that
are domiciled in the United States or
conducted in whole or material part in
the United States.4 The Rule also
requires, among other things, each
covered company’s full resolution plan
to include a strategic analysis of the
plan’s components, a description of the
range of specific actions the covered
company proposes to take in resolution,
and a description of the covered
company’s organizational structure,
material entities, and interconnections
and interdependencies.5 In addition, the
Rule requires that all resolution plans
include a confidential section that
contains any confidential supervisory
and proprietary information submitted
to the agencies as part of the resolution
plan and a separate section that the
agencies make available to the public.
Public sections of resolution plans can
be found on the agencies’ websites.6
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Objectives of the Resolution Planning
Process
The goal of the Dodd-Frank Act
resolution planning process is to help
ensure that a covered company’s failure
would not have serious adverse effects
on financial stability in the United
States. Specifically, the resolution
planning process requires covered
companies to demonstrate that they
have adequately assessed the challenges
that their structures and business
activities pose to an orderly resolution
and that they have taken action to
3 The terms ‘‘covered company,’’ ‘‘material
entities,’’ ‘‘identified critical operations,’’ ‘‘core
business lines,’’ and similar terms used throughout
this guidance all have the same meaning as in the
Rule. See generally 12 CFR 243.2; 12 CFR 381.2.
4 12 CFR 243.5(a)(2)(i); 12 CFR 381.5(a)(2)(i).
5 Under the Rule, all filers must submit a full
resolution plan, either every other time a resolution
plan submission is required or as a firm’s initial
resolution plan submission. See 12 CFR 243.4(a)(5)–
(6), (b)(4)–(5), and (c)(4)–(5); 12 CFR 381.4(a)(5)–(6),
(b)(4)–(5), and (c)(4)–(5).
6 The public sections of resolution plans
submitted to the agencies are available at https://
www.federalreserve.gov/supervisionreg/resolutionplans.htm and www.fdic.gov/regulations/reform/
resplans/.
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address those issues. For FBOs, the
resolution planning process focuses on
their U.S. subsidiaries and operations.
The agencies recognize that the
preferred resolution outcome for many
FBOs is a successful home country
resolution using a single point of entry
(SPOE) resolution strategy where U.S.
material entities are provided with
sufficient capital and liquidity resources
to allow them to stay out of resolution
proceedings and maintain continuity of
operations throughout the parent’s
resolution. However, because support
from the foreign parent in stress cannot
be ensured, the Rule provides that the
U.S. resolution plan for foreign-based
covered companies should specifically
address a scenario where the U.S.
operations experience material financial
distress, and the plan should not
assume that the covered company takes
resolution actions outside the United
States that would eliminate the need for
any U.S. subsidiaries to enter resolution
proceedings.7 Nonetheless, the Rule also
provides firms with appropriate
flexibility to construct a U.S. resolution
strategy in a way that is not inconsistent
with a firm’s global resolution strategy,
as long as assumptions consistent with
the firm’s global strategy support the
firm’s U.S. resolution strategy and
adhere to the required and prohibited
assumptions articulated in the Rule.
Recent Developments
Implementation of the Rule has been
an iterative process aimed at
strengthening the resolution planning
capabilities of financial institutions
subject to the Rule. The final guidance
is based on the Guidance for 2018
§ 165(d) Annual Resolution Plan
Submissions By Foreign-based Covered
Companies that Submitted Resolution
Plans in July 2015 (2018 FBO
guidance).8 The 2018 FBO guidance was
provided to four FBOs.9 The agencies
also have previously provided feedback
on several occasions to the four FBOs
that at present are in scope for the final
guidance.10 In general, the guidance and
feedback were intended to assist the
recipients in their development of
future resolution plan submissions and
to provide additional clarity with
respect to the agencies’ expectations for
the filers’ future progress. The 2018 FBO
7 12
CFR 243.4(h)(3); 12 CFR 381.4(h)(3).
at www.federalreserve.gov/
newsevents/pressreleases/files/
bcreg20170324a21.pdf and www.fdic.gov/
resauthority/2018subguidance.pdf.
9 Barclays PLC, Credit Suisse Group AG, Deutsche
Bank AG, and UBS AG.
10 See infra Section III.c (Consolidation of Prior
Guidance).
8 Available
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guidance and the feedback letters were
made available to the public.
Several developments inform the final
guidance:
• The agencies’ consideration of
comments to the proposed guidance (as
defined below);
• The agencies’ review of certain
FBOs’ 2018 resolution plans and the
issuance of individual letters
communicating the agencies’ views on
and shortcomings contained in the 2018
resolution plans filed by the firms
subject to the 2018 FBO guidance (2018
feedback letters); 11
• Revisions to the content related to
payment, clearing, and settlement (PCS)
activities and derivatives and trading
activities in the updated guidance for
the resolution plan submissions by the
eight largest, most complex U.S.
banking organizations in February 2019
(2019 domestic guidance); 12
• The 2019 amendments to the Rule
(2019 Rule revisions), which included
the clarification that FBOs should not
assume that its foreign parent company
takes resolution actions outside of the
United States that would eliminate the
need for any U.S. subsidiaries to enter
into resolution proceedings; 13 and
• An analysis of the current risk
profiles of the large, complex FBOs
subject to resolution planning
requirements.
The preamble to the 2019 Rule
revisions indicated that the agencies
would make any future resolution
guidance available for comment,14 and
in March 2020 the agencies invited
comments on proposed guidance for the
2021 and subsequent resolution plan
submissions by certain FBOs (proposed
guidance).15
Under the 2019 Rule revisions, each
Specified FBO will be a triennial full
filer and will be required to submit a
resolution plan every three years,
alternating between a full resolution
plan and a targeted resolution plan. The
2019 Rule revisions require all triennial
full filers to submit a targeted resolution
plan on or before July 1, 2021, followed
by a full resolution plan in 2024. In
addition, the agencies indicated in the
2019 Rule revisions that they would
strive to provide final general guidance
at least a year before the next resolution
11 Available at www.federalreserve.gov/
newsevents/pressreleases/bcreg20181220c.htm.
12 Final Guidance for the 2019, 84 FR 1438
(February 4, 2019).
13 Resolution Plans Required, 84 FR 59194
(November 1, 2019). The amendments became
effective on December 31, 2019.
14 84 FR 59204.
15 Guidance for Resolution Plan Submissions of
Certain Foreign-Based Covered Companies, 85 FR
15449 (March 18, 2020).
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plan submission date of firms to which
the general guidance is directed.
On May 6, 2020, the agencies
extended the 2021 resolution plan
submission date for Category II and III
firms, including those firms who are
currently Specified FBOs, from July 1 to
September 29.16 In accordance with the
expectation set out in the preamble to
the 2019 Rule revisions, the agencies are
further extending the 2021 resolution
plan submission deadline for the firms
that are currently Specified FBOs and
were previously subject to the 2018 FBO
guidance to December 17, 2021, to
provide the firms with sufficient time to
develop their targeted resolution plans
in light of the final guidance. In
addition, as discussed in more detail
below, a Specified FBO that was not
subject to the 2018 FBO guidance for its
most recent resolution plan submission
will not be expected to have taken the
final guidance into consideration in
developing its targeted plan submission
due in 2021. Instead, such a firm should
consider the final guidance in
connection with developing its next full
resolution plan submission due in 2024.
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International Cooperation on Resolution
Planning
The 2018 feedback letters also noted
the importance of the agencies’
engagement with non-U.S. regulators.
The Specified FBOs are subject to their
home country resolvability frameworks,
in addition to section 165(d) of the
Dodd-Frank Act and the Rule.
Resolution of the U.S. operations of a
firm domiciled outside the United
States with significant global activities
(e.g., the Specified FBOs) will require
substantial coordination between home
and host country authorities, just as
resolution of the foreign operations of a
U.S. G–SIB would. The agencies
identified three areas in the 2018
feedback letters (legal entity
rationalization, PCS, and derivatives
booking practices) where enhanced
cooperation between the agencies and
each firm’s home country regulatory
authorities would maximize
resolvability under both the U.S. and
home country resolution strategies.17
The agencies will continue to
coordinate with non-U.S. authorities
regarding these and other resolution
matters (e.g., resources in resolution,
communications), including
developments in the U.S. and home
16 See https://www.federalreserve.gov/
newsevents/pressreleases/bcreg20200506a.htm and
https://www.fdic.gov/news/news/press/2020/
pr20057.html.
17 Available at www.federalreserve.gov/
newsevents/pressreleases/bcreg20181220c.htm.
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country resolution capabilities of the
Specified FBOs.
and whether the proposed guidance was
sufficiently clear.
b. Proposed Guidance
In March 2020, the agencies invited
public comment on the proposed
guidance, which was proposed to apply
beginning with the subject firms’ 2021
resolution plan submissions. The
proposed guidance began with a
description of the proposed scoping
methodology and was then organized
into eight substantive areas, consistent
with the 2018 FBO guidance. These
areas were: Capital, liquidity,
governance mechanisms, operational,
branches, group resolution plan, legal
entity rationalization and separability,
and derivatives and trading activities.
The proposed guidance described the
agencies’ proposed expectations for
each of these areas.
The proposal was largely consistent
with the 2018 FBO guidance and the
2019 domestic guidance. Accordingly,
the agencies expected that the Proposed
FBOs had already incorporated
significant aspects of the proposed
guidance into their resolution planning.
With respect to the 2019 domestic
guidance, the proposed guidance
differed in certain respects, given the
circumstances under which a foreignbased covered company’s U.S.
resolution plan is most likely to be
relevant. The proposal was tailored for
large, complex FBOs as compared to the
U.S. global systemically important
banks (G–SIBs) to account for
differences between U.S. G–SIBs’ and
FBOs’ U.S. footprints and operations.
The proposal updated the PCS and
derivatives and trading activities areas
of the 2018 FBO guidance to reflect the
agencies’ review of certain FBOs’ 2018
resolution plans and revisions
contained in the 2019 domestic
guidance. It also made minor
clarifications to certain areas of the 2018
FBO guidance in light of the 2019 Rule
revisions. In general, the proposed
revisions to the guidance were intended
to streamline the firms’ submissions and
to provide additional clarity. In
addition, the proposed guidance would
have consolidated all guidance
applicable to the Proposed FBOs into a
single document, which would provide
the industry and public with one source
of applicable guidance to which to refer.
The agencies invited comments on all
aspects of the proposed guidance. The
agencies also specifically requested
comments on a number of issues,
including whether the topics in the
proposed guidance represented the key
vulnerabilities of the covered companies
in resolution, whether the proposed
scope of applicability was appropriate,
II. Overview of Comments
The agencies received and reviewed
seven comment letters on the proposed
guidance. Commenters included various
financial services trade associations, a
financial market utility, and two FBOs.
In addition, the agencies met with
industry representatives and FBOs at
their request to discuss issues relating to
the proposed guidance.18 This section
provides an overview of the general
themes raised by commenters. The
comments received on the proposed
guidance are further discussed below in
the sections describing the final
guidance, including any changes that
the agencies have made to the proposed
guidance in response to comments.
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Further Tailoring of Proposal Due to
Reduced Size and Risk
Most commenters suggested that the
proposed guidance should be further
tailored for the Proposed FBOs. They
asserted that these firms have reduced
the size and systemic risk profiles of
their U.S. operations since resolution
guidance was originally issued, and the
guidance should be commensurately
streamlined. Therefore, commenters
questioned the appropriateness of
issuing guidance to the Proposed
FBOs—which they noted were Category
III firms, as calculated using the assets
and activities of each firm’s top tier U.S.
intermediate holding company—that
would be similar to the guidance
provided to the U.S. G–SIBs, which are
Category I covered companies.
Commenters argued that, in some cases,
the proposed guidance was even more
expansive than the guidance issued to
the U.S. G–SIBs. Certain commenters
also stated that the proposal failed to
articulate a clear distinction in the
expectations applicable to Category I
firms and to Category II/III firms. In
addition, commenters asserted that the
proposal, if finalized, would have
resulted in disparate treatment among
firms in Category II and Category III.
Home Country Considerations
Some commenters disagreed with the
proposal’s view on resolution planning
for the Proposed FBOs, which these
commenters described as narrowly
focused on the resolution of U.S.
operations independent of home
country measures or foreign parent
support. The commenters noted that
these firms have been subject to
extensive home country frameworks,
18 Summaries of those meetings and copies of the
comments can be found on each agency’s website.
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which include global SPOE strategies.
These commenters asserted that the
resolution plans for the U.S. operations
of these firms should be considered in
this context and should not have
requirements equivalent to the U.S. G–
SIBs.
Some commenters cited prior
comments by the Vice Chair for
Supervision of the Board in which he
encouraged host regulators to recognize
their interests in the success of the
foreign parent company’s SPOE strategy
and to provide further flexibility for the
parent to move resources as necessary
within the organization. The
commenters offered resource preplacement requirements for FBOs,
which exceed those required by
similarly sized U.S. firms, as an
example of how the proposed guidance
would be inconsistent with these
principles.
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Scoping Methodology
The commenters generally opposed
the proposed use of the second
methodology (method 2) of the G–SIB
surcharge framework as the scoping
methodology for the proposal. The
commenters made a number of
assertions about the proposed scoping
methodology, including:
• Method 2 does not accurately
reflect the reduced systemic risk of the
Proposed FBOs due to shortcomings in
the metric as applied to firms other than
the U.S. G–SIBs. As a result, the method
2 scores for the Proposed FBOs are
inappropriately inflated.
• Method 2 was not intended to be
applied to FBOs as a scoping
methodology, but rather was designed to
calculate the G–SIB capital surcharge.
• Using method 2 as the scoping
methodology for the guidance would be
inconsistent with the approach taken by
the agencies to use the tailoring
framework to determine resolution plan
submission requirements, especially
since the agencies previously rejected
using the G–SIB surcharge framework
for that purpose.
Some commenters suggested a
number of alternatives to method 2 as
the scoping methodology. One
suggestion was to use the tailoring
categories established for enhanced
prudential standards, specifically
having the proposal only apply to
Category II firms, as calculated using the
assets and activities of each firm’s top
tier U.S. intermediate holding company.
Two commenters suggested, as an
alternative, that the agencies use a
modified version of method 2 or method
1 G–SIBs’ surcharge scores.
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Payment, Clearing, and Settlement
Services
Several commenters asserted that the
proposed guidance for PCS services
raised issues of extraterritoriality. They
argued that the PCS guidance regarding
non-U.S. affiliates should be addressed
as part of the group resolution planning
process or supervision and any related
information request would be outside
the scope of the Title I resolution plan
requirements. They also proposed that
the agencies obtain this information
through home-host supervisor
cooperation. Commenters also argued
that the proposed PCS expectations
were even more extensive than the
guidance provided to the U.S. G–SIBs
on this topic.
One commenter supported certain
portions of the PCS services section, but
also suggested changes, including
aligning the guidance with certain
expectations of the European Banking
Union’s resolution authority, enhancing
communication strategies, and
clarifying terms used in the proposed
guidance.
Derivatives and Trading Activities
A number of comments concerning
the proposed derivatives guidance were
similar to those made for the PCS
section in asserting that the proposed
information requests presented concerns
of extraterritoriality and were outside
the scope of the Title I resolution plan
requirements. Commenters argued that
the proposal called for strategies
regarding and data on the activities of
non-U.S. affiliates and non-U.S.
transactions. They noted that these
items are generally addressed in home
country resolution plans or supervision
and suggested that the related
information could be requested from
home country regulators. Some
commenters maintained that the
proposed guidance on derivatives was
broader than the guidance issued to the
U.S. G–SIBs and should be tailored for
the Proposed FBOs. For example, the
proposal would have established
expectations for non-derivatives trading
activities, such as securities financing
transactions.
Contractually Binding Mechanisms
A few commenters provided views
concerning contractually binding
mechanisms (CBMs), which are
intended to ensure that sufficient capital
and liquidity are provided to material
entity subsidiaries in a timely manner.
These commenters generally agreed that
the agencies should continue to allow
firms flexibility to create support
arrangements that work best for their
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structures and global and U.S.
resolution plans. They asserted that,
accordingly, the guidance should
continue to focus on the need to
mitigate the risks of creditor challenges
and on how well the strategy selected by
the firm satisfies the policy objectives of
the agencies, rather than specifying a
particular mechanism.
Capital and Liquidity
The agencies received a number of
comments on the capital and liquidity
sections of the proposed guidance. With
regard to the capital section of the
proposed guidance, commenters argued
that the proposal included expectations
that are duplicative of existing capital
requirements and suggested removing
the guidance on resolution capital
adequacy and positioning (RCAP) from
the final guidance. Most of these
commenters asserted that streamlining
the multiple capital measures would
reduce burden on the firms. Further,
two commenters asserted that the
proposal would have reduced the
flexibility for firms to position their
capital most effectively in stress. With
regard to the liquidity section of the
proposed guidance, commenters
suggested there is redundancy between
the proposal and existing regulatory
requirements and also recommended
removing the guidance on resolution
liquidity adequacy and positioning
(RLAP) from the final guidance.
III. Final Guidance
After considering the comments,
conducting additional analysis, and
further assessing the business and risk
profiles of the U.S. operations of large
and complex FBOs, the agencies are
issuing final guidance that includes
certain modifications and clarifications.
In particular, the scope, capital,
liquidity, governance mechanisms, PCS,
and derivatives and trading activities
sections of the final guidance reflect
changes from the proposed guidance.
Other sections, such as group resolution
plan, and sub-sections such as
management information systems,
qualified financial contracts (QFCs), and
mapping of branch activities, were
determined to be duplicative of existing
regulatory requirements and
accordingly, have been eliminated from
the guidance. The intent of these
changes is to clarify expectations, more
closely align expectations with the
current business and risk profiles of the
Specified FBOs’ U.S. operations, and
recognize that the preferred resolution
strategy for the Specified FBOs is a
successful home country resolution. The
agencies are also eliminating
expectations that relate to information
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that, in the agencies’ experience, may be
obtained through other existing and
effective mechanisms, such as home/
host coordination and supervisory
information sharing. In addition, the
final guidance consolidates all prior
resolution planning guidance for the
firms in one document and clarifies that
any prior guidance not included in the
final guidance has been superseded.
These changes are discussed in more
detail below.
The final guidance is not meant to
limit firms’ consideration of additional
vulnerabilities or obstacles that might
arise based on a firm’s particular
structure, operations, or resolution
strategy and that should be factored into
the firm’s submission. Moreover, the
final guidance does not contain certain
expectations in the proposed guidance
and in the 2018 FBO guidance,
including certain expectations relating
to capital, liquidity, governance
mechanisms, PCS, and derivatives and
trading activities. The agencies do not
expect that the Specified FBOs’
resolution plans will continue to
address the elements that have been
removed from the guidance. However,
the agencies note that the Specified
FBOs’ resolution plans, like the plans
for all covered companies, are still
required to meet all of the informational
requirements of the Rule
notwithstanding these changes to the
guidance.19
The agencies note that commenters
described certain expectations that are
set forth in the guidance as
‘‘requirements.’’ The agencies are
clarifying that the final guidance does
not have the force and effect of law.
Rather, the final guidance outlines the
agencies’ supervisory expectations
regarding each subject area covered by
the final guidance.20
a. Scope of Application.
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The agencies received numerous
comments objecting to the scope of
application of the proposed guidance,
which proposed using the method 2 G–
SIB surcharge framework 21 to
determine the Proposed FBOs.
Specifically, commenters argued that
the proposed scope of application
appeared to be inconsistent with the
principles of tailoring established in the
19 See 12 CFR 243.5 and 243.6; 12 CFR 381.5 and
381.6.
20 See generally, Interagency Statement Clarifying
the Role of Supervisory Guidance (Sept. 11, 2018),
available at https://www.federalreserve.gov/
supervisionreg/srletters/sr1805a1.pdf. See also Role
of Supervisory Guidance, 85 FR 70512 (Nov. 5,
2020).
21 12 CFR 217.405.
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Board’s tailoring rule.22 In addition,
commenters asserted that the method 2
G–SIB framework was not designed to
be a scoping mechanism outside of
certain requirements for U.S. G–SIBs,
has never been applicable to IHCs, and
inappropriately weights the short-term
wholesale funding (STWF) factor.
Commenters also questioned the
proposal’s justification for why a
method 2 score of 250 was chosen as the
threshold for purposes of scope of
application. Furthermore, several
commenters asserted that the proposed
guidance did not adequately recognize
that the Proposed FBOs have reduced
risk at their U.S. operations, are smaller
and less systemically important than the
U.S. G–SIBs, and are subject to robust
global resolution planning
requirements, and so should not be
subject to similar expectations as the
U.S. G–SIBs.
Commenters suggested that the
agencies consider alternative scoping
methodologies, including those that
were discussed in the proposal’s
preamble. Some commenters suggested
that the agencies adopt a scope based on
the Board’s tailoring categories, with
some commenters recommending that
the guidance apply only to firms subject
to Category II standards while others
recommended that the final guidance
should be similar to expectations for
domestic firms subject to Category II
and III standards. Other commenters
suggested different potential options to
modify or replace the proposed method
2 G–SIB surcharge framework, such as
using method 1 G–SIB surcharge scores,
that the commenters asserted would
more appropriately balance the
agencies’ guidance expectations with
the actual risk profile of the Proposed
FBOs. Even if an alternative scoping
methodology were adopted, some
commenters asked the agencies to
consider tailoring the guidance to what
they viewed as the Proposed FBOs’
reduced risk and stronger capital and
liquidity positions, and recommended
that the final guidance not introduce
new expectations beyond those already
in effect.
In their consideration of the
commenters’ feedback, the agencies
have sought to align resolution plan
supervisory expectations with the
current business and risk profiles of the
Specified FBOs’ U.S. operations through
the simple, transparent, and predictable
mechanism of the Board’s tailoring
framework. The agencies also
22 Prudential Standards for Large Bank Holding
Companies, Savings and Loan Holding Companies,
and Foreign Banking Organizations, 84 FR 59032
(November 1, 2019).
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acknowledge that relevant resolution
plan information can be obtained via
other means, such as through
engagement with home country
regulators and supervisory information
sharing. The agencies appreciate the
analyses provided by the commenters
that compared the operations of U.S. G–
SIBs to the reduced U.S. footprint of
Proposed FBOs with large U.S.
operations. The agencies continue to
believe that the scope of heightened
resolution planning expectations
applicable to FBOs should align with
the Specified FBOs’ systemic risk
profile and relevant resolution
challenges, and the final guidance
should be consistent with the principles
of national treatment and equality of
competitive opportunity.
The agencies acknowledge
commenters’ meaningful input on
certain methodological traits in the
method 2 G–SIB surcharge framework,
in particular the STWF factor weight,
which could distort the liquidity risk
and systemic relevance of FBOs relative
to U.S. G–SIBs. Liquidity risk is just one
of several important factors in a
resolution scenario, and the measure of
liquidity risk should not solely
determine scoping of the guidance;
rather, scoping should be determined
holistically. Therefore, the final
guidance applies to FBOs that are
subject to Category II standards
according to their combined U.S.
operations pursuant to the Board’s
tailoring rule 23 and that are also
required to form IHCs.24
Using the tailoring categories in this
context also will promote uniform
scoping between resolution expectations
and regulatory requirements. As stated
in the preamble to the Rule, the agencies
believe that the risk-based indicators
identified in the Board’s tailoring rule
are an effective means of dividing firms
into groups for the purposes of
determining the frequency and
informational content of resolution
plans. The indicators-based approach
for application of Category II, III, and IV
standards provides a simple framework
23 Category II FBOs are defined as those with (1)
≥$700 billion average combined U.S. assets or (2)
≥$100 billion average combined U.S. assets with
≥$75b in average cross-jurisdictional activity.
24 The formula defining Category II in the Board’s
tailoring rule does not include formation of an IHC
as a requirement. The final guidance diverges from
the Board’s tailoring rule in this respect because an
IHC formed pursuant to the Board’s Regulation YY
indicates the materiality of the FBO’s U.S.
operations that would go through bankruptcy under
the Bankruptcy Code or other ordinary U.S.
resolution regime. The agencies note that Category
II is not limited to FBOs. The final guidance,
however, is directed only to FBOs that meet the
criteria noted above and not to domestic banking
organizations.
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that supports the objectives of risk
sensitivity and transparency and thus is
an appropriate mechanism for scoping
the application of the final guidance.
Size and operational complexity are
also factors in the decision to apply the
guidance to FBOs subject to Category II
standards. As indicated in the preamble
to the Board’s tailoring rule, the failure
or distress of the U.S. operations of a
FBO that is subject to Category II
standards could impose significant costs
on the U.S. financial system and
economy. In addition, increased levels
of cross-jurisdictional activity, an
indicator for Category II firms, could
increase the operational complexity of a
resolution, as it may be more difficult to
resolve or unwind a firm’s positions due
to the involvement of multiple
jurisdictions and regulatory authorities.
As such, FBOs subject to Category II
standards merit the application of more
detailed expectations than those FBOs
that are smaller or that do not share the
same indicators of operational risk. The
agencies also believe this modification
to the scope appropriately focuses on
the largest and most complex FBOs with
U.S. IHCs without losing the focus on
cross-jurisdictional activities.
While the proposal relied only to a
limited extent on the Board’s tailoring
rule for scoping the proposed
guidance—noting that the tailoring
categories were developed to determine
application of a broad range of
enhanced prudential standards and
were not explicitly focused on
determining which covered companies
should be subject to more detailed
resolution planning guidance—the
agencies have concluded that the
benefits of employing the tailoring
categories—clear, predictable scoping
based on publicly reported quantitative
data—outweigh any concerns related to
using them for this purpose.
Consistent with the Rule, the final
guidance takes into account a Specified
FBO’s entire U.S operations, including
branches and agencies (i.e., combined
U.S. operations), when determining
scope of applicability. As discussed in
the preamble to the 2019 Rule revisions,
reference to combined U.S. operations is
appropriate as the resolution planning
requirement applies to a firm’s entire
U.S. operations. Moreover, U.S.
branches, agencies, and offices
constitute a significant share of these
foreign banking organizations’ presence
in the United States and the agencies’
experience reviewing resolution plans
demonstrates that there are
interconnections and dependencies
between a foreign firm’s U.S. branches,
agencies, and offices and its U.S.
subsidiaries, core business lines, and
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critical operations. Thus, the inclusion
of U.S. branches, agencies, and offices
in determining the scope of application
of the final guidance is not only
consistent with the Rule, but it is also
appropriate in order to measure the
operational complexity and full scope of
potential risks to U.S. financial stability
that a FBO may pose.
Finally, while the method 1 G–SIB
surcharge score methodology could
potentially address the concerns raised
on STWF, the agencies believe the riskbased indicator approach in the Board’s
tailoring rule further simplifies
application of the guidance.
b. Transition Period
The proposed guidance did not
describe how the guidance would be
applied to FBOs that become covered by
its scope, but it did request comment on
the methodology and process for
determining the FBOs to which the
guidance should apply, including
whether the agencies should specify an
implementation period for any FBOs
that are designated as Specified FBOs
under the final guidance. Some
commenters requested that the agencies
provide clarity on a transition period for
firms that may newly fall under the
scope of the guidance, and, conversely,
on an exit process for firms that may no
longer be covered.
To provide certainty to FBOs, the
final guidance includes transition
periods for Specified FBOs that were
not previously within the scope of the
2018 FBO guidance and for firms that
become Specified FBOs after December
22, 2020. A firm that is currently a
Specified FBO, but was not previously
the subject of guidance for its most
recent resolution plan, will not be
expected to have taken the final
guidance into consideration in
developing its targeted plan submission
due in 2021. Rather, such a firm will be
expected to consider the final guidance
in developing its next full resolution
plan submission, so long as the firm is
a Specified FBO as of the submission
date for that plan.
The final guidance also states that
when an FBO becomes a Specified FBO,
the final guidance will apply to the
firm’s next resolution plan submission
with a submission date that is at least
12 months after the time the firm
becomes a Specified FBO.25 If a
Specified FBO ceases to be subject to
Category II standards or to the Board’s
requirement to form an intermediate
holding company, it will no longer be
25 The plan type for that next submission remains
as specified by the Rule, i.e., a full or targeted
resolution plan. See 12 CFR 243.4; 12 CFR 381.4.
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considered a Specified FBO, and the
guidance will no longer be applicable to
that firm as of the date the firm ceases
to be subject to Category II standards.
c. Consolidation of Prior Guidance and
Format and Structure of Plans
One commenter supported, and no
commenters opposed, the agencies’
proposal to consolidate prior guidance.
Accordingly, the final guidance
includes, as proposed, a section
regarding the format, assumptions, and
structure of resolution plans, which
includes the aspects of previous
guidance that remain applicable to
resolution planning. In light of the
changes in the final guidance to the
areas of capital, liquidity, governance
mechanisms, and separability, the
agencies have reviewed the Frequently
Asked Questions (FAQs) contained in
the proposed guidance. The FAQs
appended to the final guidance contain
those FAQs that continue to be
applicable to resolution planning, with
appropriate modifications to reflect the
changes to the final guidance.
Consistent with the proposal, to the
extent not incorporated in or appended
to the final guidance, prior guidance 26
is superseded.
d. Capital and Liquidity
While the proposed guidance would
have maintained substantially all of the
expectations in the capital and liquidity
sections that were included in the 2018
FBO guidance,27 the final guidance, in
contrast to the proposal, does not
include expectations for RCAP, RLAP,
and certain liquidity capabilities. These
changes were made to more closely
align guidance expectations with the
current business and risk profiles of the
Specified FBOs’ U.S. operations and in
recognition of the overlap between those
concepts and certain other regulatory
provisions, as discussed below. As
noted in the proposed guidance, the
agencies continue to evaluate the
relationship between the capital and
liquidity sections of the final guidance
and other capital and liquidity
regulatory provisions. The agencies
expect that any further changes to the
26 In addition to the 2018 FBO guidance, the
agencies have also issued and provided to certain
FBOs: The Guidance for 2013 § 165(d) Annual
Resolution Plan Submissions by Foreign-Based
Covered Companies that Submitted Initial
Resolution Plans in 2012; the February 2015 staff
communication regarding the 2016 plan
submissions; the July 2017 Resolution Plan
Frequently Asked Questions; and feedback letters
issued to Barclays PLC, Credit Suisse Group AG,
Deutsche Bank AG, and UBS AG in December 2018
and in August 2014 and feedback letters issued to
Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group in July 2019,
January 2018, and July 2015.
27 Section II and Section III of the proposal.
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remaining guidance in these areas
would be adopted following notice and
comment.
i. Capital
The final guidance does not include
expectations for RCAP but retains
proposed expectations for resolution
capital execution need (RCEN). Several
commenters requested that the agencies
remove RCAP expectations from the
guidance because of the reduced U.S.
systemic risk of the Proposed FBOs and
the potential redundancy with other
regulatory provisions, such as the
Board’s rule on total loss absorbing
capacity (TLAC). Commenters also
suggested that RCAP expectations are
redundant with TLAC requirements for
local, bail-in-able resources to
recapitalize an FBO’s U.S. operations,
and one commenter further asserted that
RCAP constrains a firm’s ability to
position capital within the U.S. IHC
entities in a manner that allows for the
most flexibility and efficiency in a stress
scenario. One commenter expressed
support for maintaining expectations for
RCEN. Some commenters also suggested
that the guidance should take into
account the positioning of financial
resources in the United States in light of
the positioning of resources in the firm’s
non-U.S. operations and that the
agencies should reconsider expectations
for resource preplacement within the
United States to encourage more
flexibility at the international level.
The final guidance does not include
RCAP expectations concerning the
appropriate positioning of capital and
other loss-absorbing instruments among
the U.S. IHC and its subsidiaries
because existing TLAC requirements
applicable to the U.S. IHC provide a
backstop of resources that is appropriate
to the size and complexity of the
Specified FBOs. The final guidance,
consistent with one commenter’s
recommendation, maintains the RCEN
expectations regarding a methodology
for periodically estimating the amount
of capital that may be needed to support
each U.S. IHC subsidiary after the U.S.
IHC’s bankruptcy filing. RCEN helps the
firm and the agencies determine when
the U.S. IHC is approaching a situation
where it will not have sufficient
resources to conduct a successful
resolution.
Several commenters requested that
the agencies reconsider requirements
and expectations for resource
preplacement within the United States,
such as internal TLAC requirements
applicable to the U.S. IHC, that are not
set by the guidance. As these
requirements and expectations are
outside the scope of the guidance, the
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final guidance does not address these
requests.
ii. Liquidity
The final guidance retains the
proposed expectations for resolution
liquidity execution need (RLEN) but
does not include expectations for
liquidity capabilities and RLAP. Several
commenters requested that the agencies
remove RLAP expectations from the
guidance, in consideration of factors
including the reduced U.S. systemic risk
of the Proposed FBOs and potential
redundancy with other regulatory
provisions, such as the Net Stable
Funding Ratio (NSFR) and internal
liquidity stress testing. One commenter
suggested that the agencies conduct an
assessment of the cumulative effect of
liquidity and capital expectations and
requirements, specifically between
RLEN and NSFR and between RLAP and
TLAC. Another commenter suggested
integrating the RLAP liquidity
expectations in the proposal into
regulatory liquidity requirements via the
rulemaking process. This commenter
also expressed concern about the
potential additive requirements and
expectations of RLAP relative to the
NSFR. Finally, one commenter
expressed support for maintaining
RLEN expectations.
Like the rationale for eliminating
RCAP from the final guidance, because
of the Specified FBOs’ relatively simple
U.S. legal entity structures and reduced
risk profiles, the final guidance does not
include RLAP expectations concerning
the appropriate positioning of liquidity
among the U.S. IHC and its subsidiaries.
However, a firm’s ability to reliably
estimate and meet the liquidity needs of
the U.S. IHC and its subsidiaries prior
to, and in, resolution remains important
to the execution of a Specified FBO’s
U.S. resolution strategy, as reflected in
the Rule.28 The final guidance therefore
incorporates only expectations for
RLEN. The final guidance also
eliminates references to RLAP.
The agencies do not believe there will
be significant overlap between RLEN
expectations and the NSFR rule because
the regulation implicates long-term
liquidity risks and stability of funding
sources, while the guidance focuses on
liquidity needs during a resolution
scenario, which are shorter-term in
nature. Further, liquidity needs in a
resolution scenario may be driven by
highly idiosyncratic factors. These
factors can be incorporated into a firm’s
RLEN framework, but would not
necessarily be addressed in a
28 See 12 CFR 243.5(c)(1)(iii); 12 CFR
381.5(c)(1)(iii).
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standardized measure like the NSFR.
The agencies’ decision not to include
expectations for RLAP in the final
guidance obviates the need to analyze
interaction between RLAP and TLAC.
Separately, the suggestion to incorporate
liquidity expectations into existing
regulatory requirements is outside the
scope of the current guidance-making.
e. Governance Mechanisms
i. Playbooks
The proposed guidance outlined an
expectation for Proposed FBOs to
develop governance playbooks that
detail specific actions that the board of
directors and senior management of U.S.
non-branch material entities would take
under the firm’s U.S. resolution strategy.
The expectations related to
communication and escalation protocols
were contingent on triggers, which are
firm-defined financial metrics reflecting
the U.S. IHC’s financial condition. In
addition, the proposed guidance called
for playbooks to address, among other
things, the fiduciary responsibilities of
boards of directors, potential conflicts of
interest, and employee retention
policies. One commenter suggested that
the agencies streamline playbook
expectations to focus only on
governance and escalation procedures
as well as capabilities to produce key
information and data that support
timely and informed decision-making.
The commenter argued that outlining
details about specific decisions
management would have to make would
be of limited value given that
resolution-related actions would be
driven by the circumstances and market
conditions present at the time of
financial stress. The agencies are
finalizing this aspect of the guidance as
proposed as the agencies believe that
the suggested additional information
would have important value in a
resolution scenario.
ii. Triggers
The agencies received no comments
about the expectations in the proposed
guidance regarding triggers. That said,
recognizing that the preferred resolution
outcome for the Specified FBOs is a
successful home country resolution, the
final guidance does not include
expectations regarding triggers or
escalation protocols based on the U.S.
IHC’s financial condition. The final
guidance, however, retains the broader
expectation that firms have in place
mechanisms to ensure that timely
communication and coordination occurs
between and among the boards of the
U.S. IHC, U.S. IHC subsidiaries, and the
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foreign parent to facilitate the provision
of financial support.
iii. Potential Mechanisms for Parent
Support
Having a structure in place that
facilitates the transmission of resources
to an FBO’s U.S. material entity
subsidiaries and mitigates against
potential legal challenges is an
important component for resolution
plans that contemplate the provision of
such support. Neither the proposed
guidance nor the Rule endorses a
specific strategy for the provision of
such support. Rather, under the
proposal, firms would have been
expected to (i) develop a mechanism for
planned foreign parent support of U.S.
non-branch material entities to meet
those entities’ liquidity needs and (ii)
include in their resolution plan
submissions analysis of potential
challenges to planned foreign parent
support and associated mitigants.
Further, the proposal provided that if a
plan anticipates the provision of capital
and liquidity by a U.S. material entity
(e.g., the U.S. IHC) to its U.S. affiliates
prior to the U.S. IHC’s bankruptcy filing,
the plan should also include a detailed
legal analysis of the potential state law
and bankruptcy law challenges and
mitigants to the provision of resources.
To date, some Specified FBOs have
relied on CBMs for the timely provision
of capital and liquidity from a U.S.
material entity (e.g., the U.S. IHC) to its
U.S. affiliates prior to the U.S. IHC
commencing a bankruptcy case and to
mitigate potential legal challenges to the
provision of such support. In addition,
the agencies solicited comment on the
benefits and costs and the relative
advantages and disadvantages of two
approaches currently used by FBOs to
assist the agencies in deciding whether
to endorse a specific approach in
finalizing the guidance.
Commenters urged against imposing
specific requirements or expectations
regarding CBMs and supported
maintaining flexibility for firms to
determine the particular form and
structure of CBMs based on a firm’s
structure, resolution strategy, and global
capital and liquidity planning needs.
Commenters further recommended that
the agencies evaluate CBMs based on
their effectiveness in mitigating creditor
challenges. One commenter suggested
that the agencies’ assessment of the
effectiveness of various CBMs should
take into consideration the nature of the
Proposed FBOs, specifically that: (i) All
of the Proposed FBOs in the proposed
guidance have global SPOE strategies
that do not contemplate the insolvency
of the U.S. IHC or any other U.S. entity;
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(ii) internal TLAC requirements have
been complied with and incentivize the
firms to recapitalize their U.S.
operations to avoid the costs,
operational burdens, and other
consequences associated with
bankruptcy proceedings; and (iii) the
Board has the authority to trigger the
conversion of internal TLAC in the form
of long-term debt into equity to
recapitalize an IHC without the need for
a U.S. bankruptcy proceeding. This
commenter also argued that the agencies
should provide a threshold for
determining whether a CBM sufficiently
mitigates the risk of creditor challenges
that is materially lower than for U.S.
BHCs for which a bankruptcy
proceeding is a primary resolution
strategy. This commenter also stated
that the agencies had already been
provided with substantial legal analyses
supporting the workability of existing
CBMs and urged the agencies to engage
with the Proposed FBOs prior to
providing specific requirements
regarding CBMs.
One commenter cautioned that the
proposed CBM guidance may impede
capital and liquidity placed in the U.S.
IHC from being returned to the parent
for efficient deployment globally, and
that a CBM developed only to support
a U.S. resolution may trap financial
resources in the IHC. Separately,
another commenter requested that the
agencies engage with the Proposed
FBOs and consider alternative
approaches to ensure the timely
availability of capital and liquidity
support. Suggestions included reducing
or amending internal TLAC
requirements, allowing use of internal
TLAC to satisfy the demands of
Comprehensive Capital Analysis and
Review, and eliminating the
requirement in the Rule that firms must
assume the bankruptcy of a U.S. entity.
Consistent with the comments
received, and to maintain flexibility for
firms, the agencies are finalizing the
guidance without including additional
expectations regarding the use and
structure of CBMs. This lack of specific,
additional expectations related to CBMs
should not be interpreted as an
expression of the agencies’ view on the
feasibility of current support
mechanisms. Additionally, no revisions
have been made in response to a
comment that urged the agencies to
describe, ex ante, a particular threshold
for what constitutes an effective CBM.
Furthermore, the agencies have not
made changes in response to the
comment recommending amendments
to various rules, as revisions to
regulatory requirements are outside the
scope of the present guidance. The
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agencies refer to the above discussion
about capital and liquidity in response
to concerns about the placement and
availability of capital and liquidity.29
In addition, the final guidance
removes the expectation for the
resolution plan to include an analysis of
the potential challenges to the planned
foreign parent support to U.S. nonbranch material entities, and the
planned provision of capital and
liquidity by a U.S. material entity to its
U.S. affiliates prior to the U.S. IHC’s
bankruptcy filing. This approach gives
due consideration to the arguments put
forth by commenters that the Specified
FBOs should have flexibility to
determine the particular form and
structure of the framework developed to
support its particular resolution strategy
and needs, that the preferred resolution
outcome for the Specified FBOs is a
successful home country resolution, and
that internal TLAC resources are
available for conversion to support IHC
recapitalization outside of bankruptcy.
f. Operational
i. Payment, Clearing and Settlement
Activities
Scope of PCS Activities: Most
commenters requested that the scope of
the guidance be limited to U.S. material
entities, core business lines, and critical
operations domiciled in the U.S. and
resolved under the U.S. Bankruptcy
Code, and that guidance should not
include indirect PCS relationships
through non-U.S. affiliates. Commenters
contended that the proposal would
subject the Proposed FBOs to
expectations that are essentially the
same as, and in some ways more
extensive than, the expectations for PCS
activities applicable to U.S. G–SIBs.
Commenters also claimed that the
proposal would be potentially
extraterritorial in its coverage of nonU.S. branches and affiliates and contrary
to the Rule and Title I of the DoddFrank Act. These commenters also
asserted that because non-U.S. affiliate
relationships were covered under home
country regulatory frameworks,
inclusion of information about these
relationships in U.S. resolution
planning would be duplicative and the
information should be obtained via
home-host supervisor cooperation. One
commenter suggested that indirect
access to PCS services through non-U.S.
affiliates does not raise significant U.S.
resolution concerns. Another
commenter claimed that a U.S. material
entity would not have the ability to
distinguish activity specific to its clients
29 See
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or counterparties with the indirect
financial market utility (FMU), as this
activity is typically subject to netting by
the non-U.S. affiliate, and that a U.S.
material entity of a Proposed FBO
would not have the authority to make
decisions on contingency actions
involving an FMU that is accessed via
a non-U.S. affiliate. These commenters
suggested that the guidance be tailored
to fit the Proposed FBOs’ reduced U.S.
footprint and their limited role in this
space, relative to U.S. G–SIBs.
As a preliminary matter, the agencies
note that the Rule requires full
resolution plan submissions by foreignbased covered companies to include
information on ‘‘the interconnections
and interdependencies among the U.S.
subsidiaries, branches, and agencies,
and between those entities and . . .
[a]ny foreign-based affiliate.’’ 30 In
addition, each full resolution plan is
required to ‘‘identify each trading,
payment, clearing, or settlement system
of which the covered company, directly
or indirectly, is a member and on which
the covered company conducts a
material number or value amount of
trades or transactions.’’ 31 These
provisions, together, provide the
agencies the authority to set forth the
expectation that a firm’s PCS framework
address its indirect access to PCS
services through non-U.S. affiliates. The
proposed guidance was therefore
consistent with the Rule and Title I of
the Dodd-Frank Act. The agencies
reiterate that continuity of access
arrangements provided indirectly by
non-U.S. affiliates to support a Specified
FBO’s U.S. operations and key clients
are an important part of a Specified
FBO’s U.S. resolution planning.
The agencies acknowledge, however,
that commenters’ feedback that a nonU.S. affiliate’s ability to maintain access
to key FMUs and key agent banks to
support indirect PCS relationships
through non-U.S. affiliates may be
addressed in the firm’s group resolution
plan or in other information provided to
home country regulators. As such,
expectations that Specified FBOs submit
detailed information related to non-U.S.
affiliates’ support of their U.S.
operations may be duplicative. In
recognition of this feedback and in an
effort to more closely align expectations
with the business and risk profiles of
the Specified FBOs’ U.S. operations, the
final guidance does not include
expectations that firms provide
information regarding indirect access to
key FMUs and agent banks provided by
non-U.S. branches and affiliates. As
30 12
31 12
CFR 243.5(a)(2)(i); 12 CFR 381.5(a)(2)(i).
CFR 243.5(e)(12); 12 CFR 381.5(e)(12).
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further suggested by commenters and
consistent with prior statements by the
agencies, the agencies expect to engage
with the Specified FBOs and their home
country authorities.
Providers of PCS Services: Two
commenters recommended clarifying
the term ‘‘provider of PCS services’’ to
include other key roles in which a firm
may act, and to provide further
examples where a firm may act as
provider (or recipient) of PCS services.
One commenter also recommended that
the term ‘‘agent bank’’ should be
clarified to specifically include ‘‘nostro
banks.’’ One commenter also suggested
that firms be encouraged to amend their
bilateral contracts with agent banks,
including contracts with nostro agents,
to facilitate continuity of access to PCS
services. The final guidance does not
include additional clarification or
examples as the agencies do not intend
the guidance to be prescriptive. Rather,
the final guidance is intended to
provide a firm with flexibility to define
and identify PCS services, as well as the
instances where the firm is a provider
of such PCS services to its clients.
Regarding the amendment of bilateral
contracts, the agencies believe that the
expectations regarding establishment of
service-level agreements (SLAs) in the
Shared and Outsourced Services section
of the final guidance address the
commenter’s suggestions.
One commenter also recommended
that the proposal recognize that many
FMUs and agent banks do not
implement bilateral SLAs for core
clearing and custody services. The
agencies have clarified the final
guidance by adding ‘as applicable’ to
the relevant capability in the guidance
text.
Playbooks for Continued Access to
PCS Services: One commenter stated
that FMU playbooks should be
streamlined to include only critical
information necessary to facilitate an
orderly resolution (e.g., management
information, liquidity considerations,
key governance, and responsible parties)
and that firms should not be expected
to include information regarding FMU
membership rules or expected behavior.
Another commenter stated that to the
extent such critical information had
already been provided to the agencies
through prior exam processes, firms
should be able to reference such items
instead of including them in playbooks.
Separately, another commenter
recommended that the final guidance
direct firms to maintain lists of key
resolution contacts for their key FMUs
and key agent banks and provide
equivalent contact information to key
FMUs and key agent banks. This
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commenter also suggested that the
guidance put additional emphasis on
the importance of continued firm
engagement with key external
stakeholders and that the agencies
consider adding expectations for firm
communication with key FMUs and key
agent banks during stress and
resolution. The agencies also were
encouraged by this commenter to
develop their own communication
strategies for key stakeholders and vet
them with relevant firms and FMUs.
The commenter further suggested that
firms should identify, ex ante, services
they would likely cease to provide in a
resolution and plan for actions they
would take to mitigate any resulting
adverse systemic impact. Finally, a
commenter stated that the guidance
should recognize that there is specific,
industry-wide default guidance already
in place for certain FMUs (e.g., central
counterparties) that would apply to a
Proposed FBO’s activities in a
resolution.
The agencies are finalizing these
elements of the guidance as proposed.
The expectations in the final guidance
call for playbooks that address
specifically how firms would maintain
access to PCS services but that do not
necessarily include a discussion of FMU
rules around a member firm’s default.
The final guidance aims to provide
firms flexibility in determining how
they would best maintain access to PCS
services in a stress scenario and to
clarify that playbooks are not expected
to include a scenario in which the firm
loses access to an agent bank or FMU.
The proposed guidance contained
expectations for firms to engage with
key external stakeholders and reflect
any feedback received during such
ongoing outreach, and the agencies are
retaining those expectations in the final
guidance. To the extent that certain
playbook information may be addressed
in other sections of the firm’s
submission, the firm may include a
specific cross-reference to that content
in the appropriate playbook. While the
agencies are not expecting firms to
model expected FMU behaviors, firms
are expected to consider operational and
financial resources that would be
needed to respond to adverse actions
and execute any contingency
arrangement. In addition, given the joint
nature of the resolution plan process,
the final guidance, like the Rule,
provides for incorporation of previously
submitted resolution plan information
by reference.
The comment suggesting that the
agencies develop their own
communication strategies for key
stakeholders is not applicable to the
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content in a firm’s resolution plan;
therefore, no changes have been made to
address the comment. The agencies
already proactively engage with firms
and key stakeholders through various
fora, including direct engagement, crisis
management groups, and international
working groups focused on crisis
management under the Financial
Stability Board. The agencies also
encourage firms and their agent banks to
continue engaging and communicating
with each other, key FMUs, agent banks,
and clients, and other stakeholders to
identify possible ways to support
continued access to PCS services.
While expressing general support for
the expectations in the proposed
guidance related to PCS-related
Liquidity Sources and Uses, a
commenter suggested that the sentence
related to ‘‘PCS Liquidity Sources’’ be
revised from ‘‘various currencies’’ to
‘‘all currencies relevant to banks’
participation’’ in FMUs, to be consistent
with international expectations. The
agencies are adopting this suggestion in
the final guidance. The commenter also
suggested that the final guidance clarify
that firms should assess their key FMU
and key agent bank liquidity needs in
the aggregate so that firms account for
the availability of funds across more
than one key FMU or agent bank.
Regarding intraday liquidity, this
commenter suggested that the final
guidance be amended to include
additional specific expectations for
playbooks beyond describing
capabilities to control intraday liquidity
inflows and outflows, and to identify
and prioritize time-specific payments.
The agencies are not adopting these
suggestions in the final guidance to
allow the Specified FBOs flexibility to
tailor and streamline playbook content
based on the actual profile of their PCS
activities relevant to their U.S.
operations.
Key Client Contingency
Arrangements: Two commenters
questioned the benefit of expectations
related to the identification and
mapping of PCS services to key clients
and the description of contingency
actions that the firm may take
concerning provision of intraday credit
to key clients since most clients have
other relationships. Another commenter
suggested that the final guidance
contain examples of particular actions
and arrangements that the agencies
expect the firms to consider around the
provision of intraday credit to affiliate
and third-party clients. The agencies are
not modifying the final guidance in
response to these comments. The final
guidance contains expectations that
firms maintain continuity of access to
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PCS services for key clients in the
Unites States. The final guidance is not
prescriptive, and each firm is expected
to determine the relevant contingency
actions and arrangements that are
specific to maintaining continuity of
access to its PCS activities. Firms have
the discretion to tailor the discussion to
client impacts specific to the PCS
services provided by such firms. The
agencies are not modifying provisions
related to the identification and
mapping of PCS services to key clients
as this information helps the agencies
understand the ecosystem of provision
of PCS services.
Adverse Actions: A commenter
expressed support for the expectation
for playbooks to assess the range of
adverse actions that may be taken by
key FMUs or key agent banks but
indicated that the term ‘‘adverse
actions’’ may be incorrectly interpreted
and suggested using ‘‘risk-mitigating
actions,’’ which would be more
consistent with a home country
authority’s guidance. The agencies are
not making any changes to the final
guidance because ‘‘adverse actions’’
includes not only ‘‘risk mitigating
actions,’’ but also a broader set of
actions that could be taken by key FMUs
or key agent banks.
Loss of Access: One commenter
suggested that there was a contradiction
in the proposed guidance and requested
clarification about whether there was an
expectation for a firm to contemplate a
scenario where it loses access to a key
FMU or key agent bank. The agencies
are finalizing the guidance as proposed.
The final guidance specifies that a firm
is not expected to incorporate a scenario
in which it loses FMU or agent bank
access into its U.S. resolution strategy.
However, in support of maintaining
continuity of access to PCS services,
playbooks should provide analysis of
the financial and operational impacts to
the firm’s material entities and key
clients due to adverse actions that may
be taken by an FMU or agent bank, and
the contingency actions that may be
taken by the filer.
ii. Management Information Systems
The agencies received no comments
regarding the management information
systems (MIS) section of the proposed
guidance. The expectations contained in
the proposed guidance articulate general
expectations for firms to have the
requisite MIS capabilities to produce
timely, accurate financial and risk data
on a U.S. legal entity basis. The agencies
determined that the expectations and
capabilities are addressed in the Rule 32
32 See
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and thus the final guidance does not
include a section on MIS.
iii. Managing, Identifying, and Valuing
Collateral
The agencies received no comments
regarding the managing, identifying, and
valuing collateral section of the
proposed guidance and are finalizing
the section as proposed.
iv. Shared and Outsourced Services
The agencies received no comments
regarding the shared and outsourced
services section of the proposed
guidance and are finalizing the section
as proposed.
v. Qualified Financial Contracts
The agencies received no comments
regarding the QFC section of the
proposed guidance, which sets forth
expectations for firms to articulate their
progress in implementing requirements
regarding contractual stays in qualified
financial contracts. However, the
agencies are not including this subsection in the final guidance due to the
progress made by the Specified FBOs in
complying with the QFC stay rules of
the Board, the Office of the Comptroller
of the Currency, and the FDIC.33
g. Branches
The agencies received no comments
regarding the branches section of the
proposed guidance. However, the
agencies are removing expectations from
the final guidance that are viewed as
duplicative to existing rules or repeat,
without elaboration, components of the
Rule. Specifically, mapping
expectations for U.S. branches that are
material entities are specified in the
Rule.34 In addition, expectations for a
liquidity buffer are addressed in the
Board’s Regulation YY.35 Neither
subsection of the proposed guidance
was intended to expand upon or clarify
existing rules and thus it is appropriate
to remove them from the final guidance.
The remaining parts of the Branches
section regarding expectations for
supporting assumptions on continuity
of operations and analyzing the impact
of cessation of operations remain
unchanged from the proposed guidance.
h. Group Resolution Plan
The agencies received no comments
regarding the group resolution section of
the proposed guidance, which set forth
expectations for firms to address how
33 12 CFR part 47 (Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency); 12 CFR part 252, subpart I (Board); and
12 CFR part 382 (FDIC).
34 See 12 CFR 243.5(a)(2), (g); 12 CFR 381.5(a)(2),
(g).
35 See 12 CFR 252.
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resolution planning in the U.S. is
integrated into the group resolution
plan. However, in recognition that the
preferred resolution outcome for many
Specified FBOs is a successful home
country resolution using an SPOE
resolution strategy, the agencies expect
to supplement their understanding of
the impact on U.S. operations of
executing a firm’s group resolution plan
through international collaboration with
home country regulators and therefore
such a section is unnecessary. The
agencies determined that as this item is
addressed by the Rule,36 the final
guidance does not include a section on
group resolution.
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i. Legal Entity Rationalization and
Separability
The agencies received no comments
regarding the legal entity rationalization
and separability section of the proposed
guidance. However, consistent with
agencies’ efforts to more closely align
guidance expectations with the current
business and risk profiles of the
Specified FBOs’ U.S. operations, the
final guidance does not include the
separability expectations, which would
have suggested that firms identify
discrete U.S. operations that would be
sold or transferred in a resolution
scenario. Given that the U.S. operations
of the Specified FBOs are a
subcomponent of a larger FBO, for
which the preferred resolution approach
is a home-country SPOE resolution, the
agencies have found that the
separability options within the United
States are few and that their inclusion
in resolution plans has yielded limited
new insights. Moreover, the agencies
expect that such information is
obtainable through international
collaboration with home country
regulators. As such, the agencies have
eliminated these expectations from the
final guidance.
j. Derivatives and Trading Activities
The agencies received a number of
comments on the Derivatives and
Trading Activities section of the
proposed guidance. Overall,
commenters supported the proposed
elimination of the active and passive
wind-down scenario analyses and rating
agency playbooks, and recommended
certain additional modifications and
clarifications to streamline the
resolution plan submissions and
provide further clarity.
After reviewing the comments, the
agencies have adopted final guidance
that includes several adjustments to
36 See 12 CFR 243.5(a)(2)(ii); 12 CFR
381.5(a)(2)(ii).
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address matters raised by the
commenters. Specifically, the final
guidance does not include elements
from the proposal related to derivatives
and trading activities originated in the
U.S. and booked directly to non-U.S.
affiliates. Commenters argued that the
derivatives guidance should not include
U.S. derivatives and trading activities or
prime brokerage customer account
balances booked directly to non-U.S.
affiliates because they are beyond the
scope of the Rule and the information is
better gathered through collaboration
with home country regulators.
Commenters suggested that the
derivatives guidance focus solely on
derivatives and trading activities and
prime brokerage customer account
balances that are booked to U.S.
material entities and related to core
business lines and critical operations.37
Further, commenters suggested that the
guidance should not include the
identification, assessment, or reporting
on risk transfer arrangements with nonU.S. affiliates and also argued that the
proposed guidance would result in
firms having to create reporting
processes for activities booked in nonU.S. affiliates. Commenters also
suggested that the proposed guidance
would subject the Proposed FBOs to
expectations greater than, or similar to,
those imposed on U.S. G–SIBs and that
transactions booked outside the U.S. fall
under the purview of home country
authorities, are best addressed in the
global resolution plan, and are outside
the scope of the Rule and Title I of the
Dodd-Frank Act.
As a preliminary matter, similar to the
discussion in the PCS section of this
preamble, the agencies note that the
Rule requires full resolution plan
submissions by foreign-based covered
companies to include information ‘‘with
respect to the subsidiaries, branches and
agencies, and identified critical
operations and core business lines, as
applicable, that are domiciled in the
United States or conducted in whole or
material part in the United States.’’ 38
37 The agencies note that based on the Specified
FBOs’ most recent resolution plans, each of the
Specified FBOs identifies certain U.S. derivatives
and trading activities (including U.S. prime
brokerage services) as an identified critical
operation or core business line.
38 12 CFR 243.5(a)(2)(i); 12 CFR 381.5(a)(2)(i). See
also 12 CFR 243.5(a)(2)(ii); 12 CFR 381.5(a)(2)(i)
(requiring each full resolution plan to include a
‘‘detailed explanation of how resolution planning
for the subsidiaries, branches and agencies, and
identified critical operations and core business
lines of the foreign-based covered company that are
domiciled in the United States or conducted in
whole or material part in the United States is
integrated into the foreign-based covered company’s
overall resolution or other contingency planning
process.’’).
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This provision provides the agencies the
authority to set forth the expectation
that a resolution plan include
information about the firm’s derivatives
and trading activities, including
derivatives and trading activities
originated from U.S. entities that are
booked directly into a non-U.S. affiliate,
because those activities occur in
material part in the United States.
Accordingly, the proposed guidance
was consistent with the Rule and Title
I of the Dodd-Frank Act.
However, after considering
commenters’ views, and in an effort to
more closely align expectations with the
current business and risk profiles of the
Specified FBOs, the final guidance does
not include expectations concerning
derivatives and trading activities that
originate from U.S. entities but are
booked into non-U.S. affiliates. Because
the booking of U.S. derivatives and
trading activities regularly occurs across
jurisdictions and creates
interconnections and interdependencies
among and between a firm’s U.S.
entities and its non-U.S. affiliates, the
agencies expect to coordinate with
home country authorities to collect
information about derivatives booking
activities that occur across jurisdictions
in order to understand any related risks
to the execution of the firm’s U.S.
resolution strategy. This approach is
consistent with the 2018 Title I feedback
letters to some Specified FBOs, in
which the agencies indicated their
intent to engage with the FBO and home
authorities regarding derivatives
booking practices.
The agencies also have made several
adjustments and clarifications in the
final guidance to address other matters
raised by the commenters. Commenters
argued that the proposal inappropriately
applied the derivatives guidance to nonderivatives trading activities (e.g.,
securities financing transactions). The
agencies acknowledge that the Specified
FBOs have drastically decreased their
exposures to securities financing
transactions, while the U.S. G–SIBs
have increased their exposures.
Therefore, the final guidance only
covers derivatives and linked nonderivatives.
Commenters also suggested that a
Proposed FBO should be allowed to
define linked non-derivatives trading
positions based on its overall business
and resolution strategy trading
positions. The agencies agree with this
comment, and the final guidance allows
for linked non-derivatives trading
positions to be defined based on the
Specified FBO’s overall business and
resolution strategy. Finally, some
commenters suggested that the scope for
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the prime brokerage subsection of the
proposal was either unclear or overly
broad. As suggested, the final guidance
clarifies that a U.S. prime brokerage
client should be a client who signs a
prime brokerage agreement with a U.S.
material entity. Further, the agencies are
not finalizing aspects of the proposed
guidance regarding requests for
information and reporting related to
prime brokerage activities that are
booked to non-U.S. entities, as stated
above.
Some commenters recommended the
agencies adjust certain expectations that
are not specified in the proposed
guidance. The agencies have determined
not to modify the guidance in these
instances. For example, commenters
stated that development of a plan for
resolution of positions of non-U.S.
affiliates is beyond the scope of the
Rule. The agencies note, as described
above, that the proposed guidance did
not set out expectations that the
Proposed FBOs develop a plan for the
resolution of derivatives and trading
activities booked to non-U.S. entities.
The scope of the stabilization and derisking strategy subsection applies only
to U.S. derivatives portfolios booked to
U.S. entities.
The agencies received comments
related to tailoring derivatives
expectations. For example, commenters
suggested the segmentation analysis and
analysis of de-risking strategy
provisions of the proposal were neither
warranted nor sufficiently clear for
Proposed FBOs because their
derivatives exposures are significantly
smaller than those of U.S. G–SIBs. After
considering multiple relevant factors,
the agencies have not modified the
guidance in response to these
comments. The ability to identify,
quickly and reliably, problematic
derivatives positions and portfolios is
foundational to minimizing uncertainty
and estimating resource needs for an
orderly resolution of a firm’s U.S.
entities. Further, in the event of material
financial distress or failure, the
resolvability risks related to a firm’s
U.S. derivatives and trading activities
could be a key obstacle to the firm’s
orderly resolution of any U.S. IHC
subsidiary with a derivatives portfolio.
As a result, the final guidance confirms
that a firm’s plan should provide a
detailed analysis of its strategy to
stabilize and de-risk any derivatives
portfolio of any U.S. IHC subsidiary that
continues to operate after the U.S. IHC
enters into a U.S. bankruptcy
proceeding. The agencies also note that
the portfolio segmentation subsection
applies only to U.S. derivatives
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positions that are booked to U.S.
entities.
Finally, commenters suggested
tailoring the scope of applicability of the
derivatives section using a threshold,
such as the Volcker Rule’s proprietary
trading categories. The agencies do not
believe that the compliance thresholds
and the associated calculation
methodology (total trading assets and
liabilities) established under the Volcker
Rule accurately capture the size and
complexity of a firm’s derivatives
activities for resolution purposes and
thus are an inappropriate scoping
mechanism for the guidance. Therefore,
the final guidance does not incorporate
compliance thresholds, such as those
established by the Volcker Rule.
k. Additional Comments
i. Comments About the Development of
the Proposal
The agencies received several general
comments about the development of the
proposed guidance. The agencies have
considered these commenters’ input but
have made no modifications to the final
guidance.
One commenter claimed that the
agencies’ proposed guidance did not
reflect internationally agreed upon
approaches to home and host authority
responsibility with regard to resolution
planning, with the proposal’s continued
emphasis on a separate U.S. strategy,
which the commenter argued is largely
duplicative of home country
requirements. Other commenters
criticized the proposed guidance for not
reflecting any reliance on supervisory
colleges and crisis management groups,
or on the capital markets and resolution
rules and requirements of the Securities
and Exchange Commission, Financial
Industry Regulatory Authority, or the
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission.
The agencies do not agree with these
comments. Since the enactment of
section 165(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act,
the agencies have worked bilaterally
and multilaterally with relevant
domestic and foreign authorities and in
various international fora to understand
risks to the firms’ orderly resolution
under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code, as well
as to share resolution planning
expertise. In addition, the agencies have
established resolution-related
information-sharing arrangements with
both domestic and foreign authorities in
an effort to enhance the prospects for a
successful cross-border resolution of the
Specified FBOs. Moreover, the agencies
note that both section 165(d) of the
Dodd-Frank Act and the Rule require all
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large bank holding companies,
including FBOs, to file resolution plans.
Another commenter encouraged the
agencies to consider aligning their
guidance with the resolution-related
guidance issued by the European Single
Resolution Board. The agencies
recognize that international
coordination in resolution-related
matters is important to ensuring that
home and host country regulators have
sufficient understanding of the
resolvability of internationally active
financial companies. The purpose and
general subject matter of the final
guidance are generally consistent with
those of the Single Resolution Board’s
Expectations for Banks. Both the final
guidance and the Single Resolution
Board document describe the respective
authorities’ expectations regarding a
number of key vulnerabilities in
resolution (e.g., governance
mechanisms, operational, capital,
liquidity, and legal entity
rationalization). The agencies will
continue to work with international
counterparts to build a shared
understanding around resolution-related
matters through participation in firmspecific, cross-border crisis management
groups, as both home authorities and
host authorities.
Other commenters suggested that the
proposed guidance did not adequately
recognize foreign parents as sources of
strength to the U.S. operations of
Proposed FBOs, but instead appeared to
treat the non-U.S. parent and affiliates
only as sources of risk for U.S. material
entities. The agencies understand that
the preferred resolution outcome for
many Specified FBOs is a successful
home country resolution using a SPOE
resolution strategy where U.S. material
entities are provided with sufficient
capital and liquidity resources to allow
them to stay out of resolution
proceedings and maintain continuity of
operations throughout the parent’s
resolution. The Rule balances this
recognition with the concern that
support from a foreign parent in stress
cannot be ensured. The final guidance,
in turn, lays out expectations that reflect
a number of key vulnerabilities
associated with an orderly resolution
under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code.
Certain commenters suggested that
the agencies streamline plan
submissions to make the documents
more actionable and reduce the time the
agencies may need to review and
challenge the submissions. These
commenters also encouraged the
agencies to leverage information
provided by firms through existing bank
supervision and exam processes to
collect information relevant to the
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agencies’ review of resolution planning.
The agencies note that the scope and
informational content of resolution plan
submissions are dictated by the Rule.
That said, the agencies have endeavored
in this final guidance to tailor
expectations for the Specified FBOs’
resolution plans to be commensurate to
and address risks posed by key
vulnerabilities of the Specified FBOs in
resolution. The agencies also have made
a number of modifications to the final
guidance with the express purpose of
streamlining plan expectations and,
where appropriate, leveraging existing
supervisory relationships with home
and host country authorities to
collaboratively obtain information about
the resolution planning and
resolvability of the firms.
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ii. Comments About General Concerns
With the Proposal
Some commenters asserted that the
proposed guidance exceeded the scope
of the Rule or Title I of the Dodd-Frank
Act, introduced definitions and
expectations that were inconsistent with
the Rule, and created issues of
extraterritoriality and duplication of
information that may already be covered
under home country regulations. Some
commenters also objected to
expectations pertaining to the
identification, assessment, or reporting
of indirect relationships through nonU.S. affiliates, or risk transfer
arrangements with non-U.S. affiliates.
These comments are addressed in the
individual sections of this preamble to
which they relate.
Another commenter recommended
modifying resolution guidance and
requirements to emphasize firms
maintaining resolution capabilities that
remain available during business as
usual. This comment generally aligns
with the agencies’ approach to
resolution planning expectations, and
the final guidance emphasizes that the
Specified FBOs should have effective
capabilities and well-developed plans.
That said, the agencies do not believe
that any specific revisions are necessary
to respond to this comment; rather, the
agencies will continue to deliberate how
to ensure that resolution planning can
be facilitated by and integrated into the
firm’s business-as-usual practices.
iii. Comments About Resolution
Planning Generally
The agencies received several
comments about the broader
supervisory landscape related to
resolution planning. Certain
commenters recommended that the
agencies, in addition to deepening home
and host country regulatory
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relationships, engage bilaterally with
the Proposed FBOs to clarify
outstanding concerns about the
resolvability of the firms’ U.S.
operations, as well as any concerns
about the firms’ reliance on home
country resolution strategies.
These comments do not directly relate
to the guidance and, as a result, the
agencies are not making any changes to
the final guidance. Relatedly, one
commenter asked the agencies to clearly
identify residual concerns with respect
to each Proposed FBO and then tie
resolution planning guidance to those
concerns. The agencies expect that
overall engagement and ongoing dialog
and feedback with each of the Specified
FBOs will continue to provide clarity on
any outstanding concerns with respect
to resolution capabilities. The agencies
also note that the final guidance takes
into consideration the agencies’
experience in reviewing prior resolution
plan submissions. No specific changes
have been made to the final guidance in
response to this comment.
iv. Comments Outside the Scope of
Guidance-Making
One commenter requested that the
agencies also incorporate that
commenter’s thoughts into future
changes to guidance for U.S. G–SIBs,
while another commenter argued for the
removal of the Proposed FBOs from the
Board’s Large Institution Supervision
Coordinating Committee (LISCC)
portfolio. The final guidance does not
apply to U.S. G–SIBs, who remain
subject to heightened resolution plan
supervisory expectations given their
size and risk profile, and the
composition of the LISCC portfolio of
firms is similarly outside the scope of
this final guidance. Accordingly, the
agencies have not made any changes to
the guidance to address these
comments.39
IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
Certain provisions of the guidance
contain ‘‘collection of information’’
provisions within the meaning of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44
U.S.C. 3501–3521) (PRA). In accordance
with the requirements of the PRA, the
agencies may not conduct or sponsor,
and a respondent is not required to
respond to, an information collection
unless it displays a currently valid
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) control number. The agencies
reviewed the final guidance and
39 The agencies note that, on November 6, 2020,
the Board announced that it is updating the list of
firms supervised by the LISCC Program. See https://
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/
bcreg20201106a.htm.
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determined that it would revise the
reporting provisions that have been
previously approved by OMB under the
Board’s OMB control number 7100–
0346 (Reporting Requirements
Associated with Regulation QQ; FR QQ)
and the FDIC’s control number 3064–
0210 (Reporting Requirements
Associated with Resolution Planning).
The Board has reviewed the final
guidance under the authority delegated
to the Board by OMB. The agencies’
information collections will be extended
for three years, with revision.
Current Actions
The proposed guidance stated that the
proposed changes to the 2018 FBO
guidance would not revise the reporting
provisions that have been previously
cleared by the OMB under the Board’s
control number 7100–0346 and the
FDIC’s control number 3064–0210. The
agencies did not receive any comments
on the PRA determination in the
proposed guidance.
However, as indicated above, the final
guidance includes certain modifications
and clarifications to the proposed
guidance. In particular, the scope,
capital, liquidity, governance
mechanisms, PCS, and derivatives and
trading activities sections of the final
guidance reflect changes from the
proposal. Other sections or sub-sections,
such as group resolution plan,
management information systems,
QFCs, separability, and mapping of
branch activities, were determined not
to be necessary as they are duplicative
of existing regulatory requirements or
not reflective of the Specified FBOs’
current business models and
accordingly have been eliminated from
the guidance. The intent of these
changes is to clarify expectations, more
closely align expectations with the
current business and risk profiles of the
Specified FBOs’ U.S. operations, and
recognize that the preferred resolution
strategy for the Specified FBOs is a
successful home country resolution. The
final guidance also eliminates
expectations for information that, in the
agencies’ experience, may be obtained
through other existing and effective
mechanisms.
As a result of these changes, the final
guidance reduces the existing estimated
burden for a triennial full complex filer
from 13,135 hours to 9,916 hours per
year. This reduction is driven mainly by
significant reductions in the burdens
related to capital, liquidity, separability,
and governance mechanisms. These
burden savings are borne by the
Proposed FBOs.
One FBO is no longer classified as a
triennial full complex filer and thus
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saves the total burden associated with
filing a triennial full complex resolution
plan. However, another FBO is newly
classified as a triennial full complex
filer and must bear the burden. The
agencies estimate the annual burden for
this new triennial full complex filer as
9,767 hours per year. This estimate
differs from the burden for the Proposed
FBOs for primarily two reasons: (1) The
agencies estimate that the new triennial
full complex filer will incur some startup costs in preparing its first full
resolution plan that is subject to the
final guidance; and (2) the agencies
estimate that the burden for the new
triennial full complex filer’s 2021
targeted resolution plan will be less
than the burdens for the three Proposed
FBOs because the new triennial
complex filer will not be expected to
consider the final guidance for its 2021
targeted resolution plan (unlike the
three other covered companies).
Historically, the Board and the FDIC
have split the respondents for purposes
of PRA clearances. As such, the agencies
will split the change in burden as well.
The FDIC has agreed to take the burden
of the new triennial full complex filer
and one Proposed FBO whereas the
Board will take the burden for the
remaining two Proposed FBOs.
Specially, as a result of this split and
these revisions, there will be a net
decrease in the overall estimated burden
of 6,438 hours for the Board and 6,587
hours for the FDIC. Therefore, the total
Board estimated burden for its entire
information collection (7100–0346) is
209,168 hours and the total FDIC
estimated burden for its entire
information collection (3064–0210) is
203,332 hours.
Proposed Information Collection
Title of Information Collection:
Reporting Requirements Associated
with Resolution Planning.
Agency Form Number: FR QQ.
Frequency of Response: Biennially,
Triennially.
Respondents: Bank holding
companies (including any foreign bank
or company that is, or is treated as, a
bank holding company under section
8(a) of the International Banking Act of
1978, and meets the relevant total
consolidated assets threshold) with total
consolidated assets of $250 billion or
more, bank holding companies with
$100 billion or more in total
consolidated assets with certain
characteristics, and nonbank financial
firms designated by the Financial
Stability Oversight Council for
supervision by the Board.
The following table presents only the
change in the estimated burden hours,
as amended by this final guidance,
broken out by agency. The table does
not include a discussion of the
remaining estimated burden hours,
which remain unchanged.
TABLE 1—BURDEN HOUR ESTIMATES UNDER CURRENT REGULATIONS AND UNDER THE FINAL GUIDANCE
Number of
respondents
FR QQ
Annual
frequency
Estimated average
hours per response *
Estimated
annual burden
hours
Board Burdens
2019 Rule Revisions:
Triennial Full Complex Foreign ......................................
2
1
13,135 ......................................
26,270
Board Total ..............................................................
Final Guidance:
Triennial Full Complex Foreign ......................................
........................
........................
..................................................
26,270
2
1
9,916 ........................................
19,832
Board Total ..............................................................
........................
........................
..................................................
19,832
FDIC Burdens
2019 Rule Revisions:
Triennial Full Complex Foreign ......................................
2
1
13,135 ......................................
26,270
FDIC Total ...............................................................
Final Guidance:
Triennial Full Complex Foreign ......................................
Triennial Full Complex Foreign (new) ............................
........................
........................
..................................................
26,270
1
1
1
1
9,916 ........................................
** 9,767 ....................................
9,916
9,767
FDIC Total ...............................................................
........................
........................
..................................................
19,683
* Hours are calculated as the hours to prepare and submit one full resolution plan and one targeted resolution plan, annualized over 6 years.
** Includes one-time start-up burdens for new triennial full complex foreign filers and excludes guidance-based burdens for the new triennial full
complex filer’s 2021 targeted resolution plan, as the filer is not expected to consider the guidance for that plan.
V. Final Guidance
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Guidance for Resolution Plan
Submissions of Certain Foreign-Based
Covered Companies
I. Introduction
II. Capital
III. Liquidity
IV. Governance Mechanisms
a. Playbooks
V. Operational
a. Payment, Clearing and Settlement
Activities
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b. Managing, Identifying, and Valuing
Collateral
c. Shared and Outsourced Services
VI. Branches
VII. Legal Entity Rationalization
VIII. Derivatives and Trading Activities
IX. Format and Structure of Plans
X. Public Section
Appendix: Frequently Asked Questions
I. Introduction
Section 165(d) of the Dodd-Frank
Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act (12 U.S.C. 5365(d))
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requires certain financial companies to
report periodically to the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System (the Federal Reserve or Board)
and the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (the FDIC) (together the
Agencies) their plans for rapid and
orderly resolution in the event of
material financial distress or failure. On
November 1, 2011, the Agencies
promulgated a joint rule implementing
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the provisions of Section 165(d).1
Subsequently, in November 2019, the
Agencies finalized amendments to the
joint rule addressing amendments to the
Dodd-Frank Act made by the Economic
Growth, Regulatory Relief, and
Consumer Protection Act and improving
certain aspects of the joint rule based on
the Agencies’ experience implementing
the joint rule since its adoption.2
Financial companies meeting criteria set
out in the Rule must file a resolution
plan (Plan) according to the schedule
specified in the Rule.
This document is intended to provide
guidance to certain foreign banking
organizations (FBOs) that are required to
submit Plans regarding development of
their respective U.S. resolution
strategies (Specified FBOs or firms).
Specifically, the guidance applies to any
FBO that is subject to Category II
standards according to its combined
U.S. operations in accordance with the
Board’s tailoring rule 3 and that is
required to form an intermediate
holding company.4
When an FBO first becomes a
Specified FBO,5 this document will
apply to the firm’s next resolution plan
submission that is due at least 12
months after the date the firm becomes
a Specified FBO. If a Specified FBO
ceases to be subject to Category II
standards or to the Board’s requirement
to form an intermediate holding
company, it will no longer be a
Specified FBO, and this document will
no longer apply to that firm.
The document is intended to assist
these firms in further developing their
U.S. resolution strategies. The document
does not have the force and effect of
law. Rather, it describes the Agencies’
expectations and priorities regarding
these firms’ Plans and the Agencies’
general views regarding specific areas
where additional detail should be
provided and where certain capabilities
or optionality should be developed and
maintained to demonstrate that each
firm has considered fully, and is able to
mitigate, obstacles to the successful
1 76 FR 67323 (November 1, 2011), codified at 12
CFR parts 243 and 381.
2 Resolution Plans Required, 84 FR 59194
(November 1, 2019). The amendments became
effective December 31, 2019. ‘‘Rule’’ means the joint
rule as amended in 2019. Capitalized terms not
defined herein have the meanings set forth in the
Rule.
3 Prudential Standards for Large Bank Holding
Companies, Savings and Loan Holding Companies,
and Foreign Banking Organizations, 84 FR 59032
(Nov. 1, 2019).
4 See 12 CFR part 252.
5 See 12 CFR 252.5(c).
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implementation of their U.S. resolution
strategy.6
The Agencies are providing guidance
to the Specified FBOs to assist their
further development of a resolution plan
for their U.S. operations for their 2021
and subsequent resolution plan
submissions. This guidance for
Specified FBOs builds upon the
guidance issued in December 2018 for
certain U.S.-based covered companies,
taking into account the circumstances
under which a U.S. resolution plan is
most likely to be relevant for an FBO.
The U.S. resolution plan for a Specified
FBO would address a scenario where
the U.S. operations experience material
financial distress and the foreign parent
is unable or unwilling to provide
sufficient financial support for the
continuation of U.S. operations, and at
least the top tier U.S. Intermediate
Holding Company (U.S. IHC) files for
bankruptcy under Title 11, United
States Code. Under such a scenario, the
Plan should provide for the orderly
resolution of the Specified FBO’s U.S.
material entities 7 and operations.
In general, this document is organized
around a number of key vulnerabilities
in resolution (e.g., capital; liquidity;
governance mechanisms; operational;
legal entity rationalization; and
derivatives and trading activities) that
apply across resolution plans.
Additional vulnerabilities or obstacles
may arise based on a firm’s particular
structure, operations, or resolution
strategy. Each firm is expected to
satisfactorily address these
vulnerabilities in its Plan—e.g., by
developing sensitivity analysis for
certain underlying assumptions,
6 This guidance consolidates the Guidance for
2018 § 165(d) Annual Resolution Plan Submissions
by Foreign-Based Covered Companies that
Submitted Resolution Plans in July 2015; the July
2017 Resolution Plan Frequently Asked Questions;
feedback letters issued to Barclays PLC, Credit
Suisse Group AG, Deutsche Bank AG, and UBS AG
in December 2018 and in August 2014 and feedback
letters issued to Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group in
July 2019, January 2018, and July 2015; the
communications the Agencies made to certain
foreign-based Covered Companies in February 2015;
and the Guidance for 2013 § 165(d) Annual
Resolution Plan Submissions by Foreign-Based
Covered Companies that Submitted Initial
Resolution Plans in 2012 (taken together, prior
guidance). To the extent not incorporated in or
appended to this guidance, prior guidance is
superseded.
7 The terms ‘‘material entities,’’ ‘‘identified
critical operations,’’ and ‘‘core business lines’’ have
the same meaning as in the Rule. The term ‘‘U.S.
material entity’’ means any subsidiary, branch, or
agency that is a material entity and is domiciled in
the United States. The term ‘‘U.S. non-branch
material entity’’ means a material entity organized
or incorporated in the U.S. including, in all cases,
the U.S. IHC. The term ‘‘U.S. IHC subsidiaries’’
means all U.S. non-branch material entities other
than the U.S. IHC.
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enhancing capabilities, providing
detailed analysis, or increasing
optionality development, as indicated
below.
Under the Rule, the Agencies will
review the Plan to determine if it
satisfactorily addresses key potential
vulnerabilities, including those
specified below. If the Agencies jointly
decide that these matters are not
satisfactorily addressed in the Plan, the
Agencies may determine jointly that the
Plan is not credible or would not
facilitate an orderly resolution under the
U.S. Bankruptcy Code.
II. Capital
The firm should have the capital
capabilities necessary to execute its U.S.
resolution strategy, including the model
and estimation process described below.
To the extent required by the firm’s
U.S. resolution strategy, U.S. nonbranch material entities need to be
recapitalized to a level that allows for an
orderly resolution. The firm should
have a methodology for periodically
estimating the amount of capital that
may be needed to support each U.S. IHC
subsidiary after the U.S. IHC bankruptcy
filing (Resolution Capital Execution
Need or RCEN). The firm’s positioning
of IHC total loss absorbing capacity
(TLAC) 8 should be able to support the
RCEN estimates.
The firm’s RCEN methodology should
use conservative forecasts for losses and
risk-weighted assets and incorporate
estimates of potential additional capital
needs through the resolution period,9
consistent with the firm’s resolution
strategy for its U.S. operations. The
methodology is not required to produce
aggregate losses that are greater than the
amount of IHC TLAC that would be
required for the firm under the Board’s
final rule.10 The RCEN methodology
should be calibrated such that
recapitalized U.S. IHC subsidiaries have
sufficient capital to maintain market
confidence as required under the U.S
resolution strategy. Capital levels
should meet or exceed all applicable
regulatory capital requirements for
‘‘well-capitalized’’ status and meet
estimated additional capital needs
throughout resolution. U.S. IHC
subsidiaries that are not subject to
capital requirements may be considered
8 Total Loss-Absorbing Capacity, Long-Term Debt,
and Clean Holding Company Requirements for
Systemically Important U.S. Bank Holding
Companies and Intermediate Holding Companies of
Systemically Important Foreign Banking
Organizations, 82 FR 8266 (January 24, 2017).
9 The resolution period begins immediately after
the U.S. IHC bankruptcy filing and extends through
the completion of the U.S. resolution strategy.
10 82 FR 8266 (January 24, 2017).
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sufficiently recapitalized when they
have achieved capital levels typically
required to obtain an investment-grade
credit rating or, if the entity is not rated,
an equivalent level of financial
soundness. Finally, the methodology
should be independently reviewed,
consistent with the firm’s corporate
governance processes and controls for
the use of models and methodologies.
III. Liquidity
The firm should have the liquidity
capabilities necessary to execute its U.S.
resolution strategy. In particular, the
firm should have a methodology for
estimating the liquidity needed after the
U.S. IHC’s bankruptcy filing to stabilize
any surviving U.S. IHC subsidiaries and
to allow those entities to operate postfiling, in accordance with the U.S.
strategy (Resolution Liquidity Execution
Need or RLEN).
The firm’s RLEN methodology should:
(A) Estimate the minimum operating
liquidity (MOL) needed at each U.S. IHC
subsidiary to ensure those entities could
continue to operate, to the extent relied
upon in the U.S. resolution strategy,
after implementation of the U.S.
resolution strategy and/or to support a
wind-down strategy;
(B) Provide daily cash flow forecasts
by U.S. IHC subsidiary to support
estimation of peak funding needs to
stabilize each entity under resolution;
(C) Provide a comprehensive breakout
of all inter-affiliate transactions and
arrangements that could impact the
MOL or peak funding needs estimates
for the U.S. IHC subsidiaries; and
(D) Estimate the minimum amount of
liquidity required at each U.S. IHC
subsidiary to meet the MOL and peak
needs noted above, which would inform
the provision of financial resources from
the foreign parent to the U.S. IHC, or if
the foreign parent is unable or unwilling
to provide such financial support, any
preparatory resolution-related actions.
The MOL estimates should capture
U.S. IHC subsidiaries’ intraday liquidity
requirements, operating expenses,
working capital needs, and inter-affiliate
funding frictions to ensure that U.S. IHC
subsidiaries could operate without
disruption during the resolution.
The peak funding needs estimates
should be projected for each U.S. IHC
subsidiary and cover the length of time
the firm expects it would take to
stabilize that U.S. IHC subsidiary. Interaffiliate funding frictions should be
taken into account in the estimation
process.
The firm’s forecasts of MOL and peak
funding needs should ensure that U.S.
IHC subsidiaries could operate through
resolution consistent with regulatory
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requirements, market expectations, and
the firm’s post-failure strategy. These
forecasts should inform the RLEN
estimate, i.e., the minimum amount of
high-quality liquid assets (HQLA)
required to facilitate the execution of
the firm’s strategy for the U.S. IHC
subsidiaries.
For non-surviving U.S. IHC
subsidiaries, the firm should provide
analysis and an explanation of how the
material entity’s resolution could be
accomplished within a reasonable
period of time and in a manner that
substantially mitigates the risk of
serious adverse effects on U.S. financial
stability. For example, if a U.S. IHC
subsidiary that is a broker-dealer is
assumed to fail and enter resolution
under the Securities Investor Protection
Act, the firm should provide an analysis
of the potential impacts on funding and
asset markets and on prime brokerage
clients, bearing in mind the objective of
an orderly resolution.
need to act under the firm’s U.S.
resolution strategy.
In order to meet liquidity needs at the
U.S. non-branch material entities, the
firm may either fully pre-position
liquidity in the U.S. non-branch
material entities or develop a
mechanism for planned foreign parent
support, of any amount not prepositioned, for the successful execution
of the U.S. strategy. Mechanisms to
support readily available liquidity may
include a term liquidity facility between
the U.S. IHC and the foreign parent that
can be drawn as needed and as
informed by the firm’s RLEN estimates
and liquidity positioning. The plan
should include analysis of how the U.S.
IHC/foreign parent facility is funded or
buffered for by the foreign parent. The
sufficiency of the liquidity should be
informed by the firm’s RLEN estimate
for the U.S. non-branch material
entities.
IV. Governance Mechanisms
Payment, Clearing, and Settlement
Activities
Framework. Maintaining continuity of
payment, clearing, and settlement (PCS)
services is critical for the orderly
resolution of firms that are either users
or providers,12 or both, of PCS services.
A firm should demonstrate capabilities
for continued access to PCS services
essential to an orderly resolution under
its U.S. resolution strategy through a
framework to support such access by:
• Identifying clients,13 financial
market utilities (FMUs), and agent banks
as key from the firm’s perspective for
the firm’s U.S. material entities,
identified critical operations, and core
business lines, using both quantitative
(volume and value) 14 and qualitative
criteria;
A firm should identify the governance
mechanisms that would ensure that
communication and coordination occurs
between the boards of the U.S. IHC or
a U.S. IHC subsidiary and the foreign
parent to facilitate the provision of
financial support, or if not forthcoming,
any preparatory resolution-related
actions to facilitate an orderly
resolution.
Playbooks: Governance playbooks
should detail the board and senior
management actions of U.S. non-branch
material entities that would be needed
under the firm’s U.S. resolution strategy.
The governance playbooks should also
include a discussion of (A) the firm’s
proposed U.S. communications strategy,
both internal and external; 11 (B) the
fiduciary responsibilities of the
applicable board(s) of directors or other
similar governing bodies and how
planned actions would be consistent
with such responsibilities applicable at
the time actions are expected to be
taken; (C) potential conflicts of interest,
including interlocking boards of
directors; (D) any employee retention
policy; and (E) any other limitations on
the authority of the U.S. IHC and the
U.S. IHC subsidiary boards and senior
management to implement the U.S.
resolution strategy. All responsible
parties and timeframes for action should
be identified. Governance playbooks
should be updated periodically for each
entity whose governing body would
11 External communications include those with
U.S. and foreign authorities and other external
stakeholders.
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V. Operational
12 A firm is a user of PCS services if it accesses
PCS services through an agent bank or it uses the
services of an FMU through its membership in that
FMU or through an agent bank. A firm is a provider
of PCS services if it provides PCS services to clients
as an agent bank or it provides clients with access
to an FMU or agent bank through the firm’s
membership in or relationship with that service
provider. A firm is also a provider if it provides
clients with PCS services through the firm’s own
operations in the United States (e.g., payment
services or custody services).
13 For purposes of this section V, a client is an
individual or entity, including affiliates of the firm,
to whom the firm provides PCS services and, if
credit or liquidity is offered, any related credit or
liquidity offered in connection with those services.
14 In identifying entities as key, examples of
quantitative criteria may include: For a client,
transaction volume/value, market value of
exposures, assets under custody, usage of PCS
services, and if credit or liquidity is offered, any
extension of related intraday credit or liquidity; for
an FMU, the aggregate volumes and values of all
transactions processed through such FMU; and for
an agent bank, assets under custody, the value of
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• Mapping U.S. material entities,
identified critical operations, core
business lines, and key clients of the
firm’s U.S. operations to both key FMUs
and key agent banks; and
• Developing a playbook for each key
FMU and key agent bank essential to an
orderly resolution under its U.S.
resolution strategy that reflects the
firm’s role(s) as a user and/or provider
of PCS services.
The framework should address direct
relationships (e.g., a firm’s direct
membership in an FMU, a firm’s
provision of clients with PCS services
through its own operations in the
United States, or a firm’s contractual
relationship with an agent bank) and
indirect relationships (e.g., a firm’s
provision of clients with access to the
relevant FMU or agent bank through the
firm’s membership in or relationship
with that FMU or agent bank, or a firm’s
U.S. affiliate and branch provision of
U.S. material entities and key clients of
the firm’s U.S. operations with access to
an FMU or agent bank). The framework
also should address the potential impact
of any disruption to, curtailment of, or
termination of such direct and indirect
relationships on the firm’s U.S. material
entities, identified critical operations,
and core business lines, as well as any
corresponding impact on key clients of
the firm’s U.S. operations.
Playbooks for Continued Access to
PCS Services. The firm is expected to
provide a playbook for each key FMU
and key agent bank that addresses
considerations that would assist the
firm and key clients of the firm’s U.S.
operations in maintaining continued
access to PCS services in the period
leading up to and including the firm’s
resolution under its U.S. resolution
strategy. Each playbook should provide
analysis of the financial and operational
impact of adverse actions that may be
taken by a key FMU or a key agent bank
and contingency actions that may be
taken by the firm. Each playbook also
should discuss any possible alternative
arrangements that would allow
continued access to PCS services for the
firm’s U.S. material entities, identified
critical operations and core business
lines, and key clients of the firm’s U.S.
operations, while the firm is in
resolution under its U.S. resolution
strategy. The firm is not expected to
incorporate a scenario in which it loses
key FMU or key agent bank access into
its U.S. resolution strategy or its RLEN
and RCEN estimates. The firm should
continue to engage with key FMUs, key
agent banks, and key clients of the
cash and securities settled, and extensions of
intraday credit.
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firm’s U.S. operations, and playbooks
should reflect any feedback received
during such ongoing outreach.
Content Related to Users of PCS
Services. Individual key FMU and key
agent bank playbooks should include:
• Descriptions of the firm’s
relationship as a user, including through
indirect access, with the key FMU or
key agent bank and the identification
and mapping of PCS services to the
firm’s U.S. material entities, identified
critical operations, and core business
lines that use those PCS services;
• Discussion of the potential range of
adverse actions that may be taken by
that key FMU or key agent bank when
the firm is in resolution under its U.S.
resolution strategy,15 the operational
and financial impact of such actions on
the firm’s U.S. material entities,
identified critical operations, and core
business lines, and contingency
arrangements that may be initiated by
the firm in response to potential adverse
actions by the key FMU or key agent
bank; and
• Discussion of PCS-related liquidity
sources and uses in business-as-usual
(BAU), in stress, and in the resolution
period, presented by currency type
(with U.S. dollar equivalent) and by
U.S. material entity.
Æ PCS Liquidity Sources: These may
include the amounts of intraday
extensions of credit, liquidity buffer,
inflows from FMU participants, and
prefunded amounts of key clients of the
firm’s U.S. operations in BAU, in stress,
and in the resolution period. The
playbook also should describe intraday
credit arrangements (e.g., facilities of the
key FMU, key agent bank, or a central
bank) and any similar custodial
arrangements that allow ready access to
a firm’s funds for PCS-related key FMU
and key agent bank obligations
(including margin requirements) in all
currencies relevant to the firm’s
participation, including placements of
firm liquidity at central banks, key
FMUs, and key agent banks.
Æ PCS Liquidity Uses: These may
include margin and prefunding by the
firm and key clients of the firm’s U.S.
operations, and intraday extensions of
credit, including incremental amounts
required during resolution.
Æ Intraday Liquidity Inflows and
Outflows: The playbook should describe
the firm’s ability to control intraday
liquidity inflows and outflows and to
identify and prioritize time-specific
payments. The playbook also should
15 Examples of potential adverse actions may
include increased collateral and margin
requirements and enhanced reporting and
monitoring.
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83573
describe any account features that might
restrict the firm’s ready access to its
liquidity sources.
Content Related to Providers of PCS
Services.16 Individual key FMU and key
agent bank playbooks should include:
• Identification and mapping of PCS
services to the firm’s U.S. material
entities, identified critical operations,
and core business lines that provide
those PCS services, and a description of
the scale and the way in which each
provides PCS services;
• Identification and mapping of PCS
services to key clients of the firm’s U.S.
operations to whom the firm’s U.S.
material entities, identified critical
operations, and core business lines
provide such PCS services and any
related credit or liquidity offered in
connection with such services;
• Discussion of the potential range of
firm contingency arrangements available
to minimize disruption to the provision
of PCS services to key clients of the
firm’s U.S. operations, including the
viability of transferring activity and any
related assets of key clients of the firm’s
U.S. operations, as well as any
alternative arrangements that would
allow the key clients of the firm’s U.S.
operations continued access to PCS
services if the firm could no longer
provide such access (e.g., due to the
firm’s loss of key FMU or key agent
bank access), and the financial and
operational impacts of such
arrangements from the firm’s
perspective;
• Descriptions of the range of
contingency actions that the firm may
take concerning its provision of intraday
credit to key clients of the firm’s U.S.
operations, including analysis
quantifying the potential liquidity the
firm could generate by taking such
actions in stress and in the resolution
period, such as (i) requiring key clients
of the firm’s U.S. operations to designate
or appropriately pre-position liquidity,
including through prefunding of
settlement activity, for PCS-related key
FMU and key agent bank obligations at
specific material entities of the firm
(e.g., direct members of key FMUs) or
any similar custodial arrangements that
allow ready access to funds for such
obligations in all relevant currencies of
key clients of the firm’s U.S. operations;
(ii) delaying or restricting PCS activity
16 Where a firm is a provider of PCS services
through the firm’s own operations in the United
States, the firm is expected to produce a playbook
for the U.S. material entities that provide those
services, addressing each of the items described
under ‘‘Content Related to Providers of PCS
Services,’’ which include contingency arrangements
to permit the firm’s key clients of the firm’s U.S.
operations to maintain continued access to PCS
services.
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of key clients of the firm’s U.S.
operations; and (iii) restricting,
imposing conditions upon (e.g.,
requiring collateral), or eliminating the
provision of intraday credit or liquidity
to key clients of the firm’s U.S.
operations; and
• Descriptions of how the firm will
communicate to key clients of the firm’s
U.S. operations the potential impacts of
implementation of any identified
contingency arrangements or
alternatives, including a description of
the firm’s methodology for determining
whether any additional communication
should be provided to some or all key
clients of the firm’s U.S. operations (e.g.,
due to BAU usage of that access and/or
related intraday credit or liquidity of the
key client of the firm’s U.S. operations),
and the expected timing and form of
such communication.
Capabilities. Firms are expected to
have and describe capabilities to
understand, for each U.S. material
entity, its obligations and exposures
associated with PCS activities,
including contractual obligations and
commitments. For example, firms
should be able to:
• Track the following items by U.S.
material entity and, with respect to
customers, counterparties, and agents
and service providers, by location/
jurisdiction:
Æ PCS activities, with each activity
mapped to the relevant material entities
and core business lines; 17
Æ Customers and counterparties for
PCS activities, including values and
volumes of various transaction types, as
well as used and unused capacity for all
lines of credit; 18
Æ Exposures to and volumes
transacted with FMUs, nostro agents,
and custodians; and 19
Æ Services provided and service level
agreements, as applicable, for other
current agents and service providers
(internal and external).20
• Assess the potential effects of
adverse actions by FMUs, nostro agents,
custodians, and other agents and service
providers, including suspension or
termination of membership or services,
on the firm’s U.S. operations and
customers and counterparties of those
U.S. operations; 21
• Develop contingency arrangements
in the event of such adverse actions; 22
and
• Quantify the liquidity needs and
operational capacity required to meet all
17 12
CFR 243.5(e)(12); 12 CFR 381.5(e)(12).
18 Id.
CFR 252.156(g).
CFR 243.5(f)(l)(i); 12 CFR 381.5(f)(1)(i).
21 12 CFR 252.156(e).
22 Id.
PCS obligations, including any change
in demand for and sources of liquidity
needed to meet such obligations.
Managing, Identifying, and Valuing
Collateral: The firm is expected to have
and describe its capabilities to manage,
identify, and value the collateral that
the U.S. non-branch material entities
receive from and post to external parties
and affiliates. Specifically, the firm
should:
• Be able to query and provide
aggregate statistics for all qualified
financial contracts concerning crossdefault clauses, downgrade triggers, and
other key collateral-related contract
terms—not just those terms that may be
impacted in an adverse economic
environment—across contract types,
business lines, legal entities, and
jurisdictions;
• Be able to track both firm collateral
sources (i.e., counterparties that have
pledged collateral) and uses (i.e.,
counterparties to whom collateral has
been pledged) at the CUSIP level on at
least a t+1 basis;
• Have robust risk measurements for
cross-entity and cross-contract netting,
including consideration of where
collateral is held and pledged;
• Be able to identify CUSIP and asset
class level information on collateral
pledged to specific central
counterparties by legal entity on at least
a t+1 basis;
• Be able to track and report on interbranch collateral pledged and received
on at least a t+1 basis and have clear
policies explaining the rationale for
such inter-branch pledges, including
any regulatory considerations; and
• Have a comprehensive collateral
management policy that outlines how
the firm as a whole approaches
collateral and serves as a single source
for governance.23
In addition, as of the conclusion of
any business day, the firm should be
able to:
• Identify the legal entity and
geographic jurisdiction where
counterparty collateral is held;
• Document all netting and rehypothecation arrangements with
affiliates and external parties, by legal
entity; and
• Track and manage collateral
requirements associated with
counterparty credit risk exposures
between affiliates, including foreign
branches.
At least on a quarterly basis, the firm
should be able to:
• Review the material terms and
provisions of International Swaps and
19 12
20 12
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23 The policy may reference subsidiary or related
policies already in place, as implementation may
differ based on business line or other factors.
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Derivatives Association Master
Agreements and the Credit Support
Annexes, such as termination events, for
triggers that may be breached as a result
of changes in market conditions;
• Identify legal and operational
differences and potential challenges in
managing collateral within specific
jurisdictions, agreement types,
counterparty types, collateral forms, or
other distinguishing characteristics; and
• Forecast changes in collateral
requirements and cash and non-cash
collateral flows under a variety of stress
scenarios.
Shared and Outsourced Services: The
firm should maintain a fully actionable
implementation plan to ensure the
continuity of shared services that
support identified critical operations 24
and robust arrangements to support the
continuity of shared and outsourced
services, including, without limitation,
appropriate plans to retain key
personnel relevant to the execution of
the firm’s strategy. If a material entity
provides shared services that support
identified critical operations,25 and the
continuity of these shared services relies
on the assumed cooperation,
forbearance, or other non-intervention
of regulator(s) in any jurisdiction, the
Plan should discuss the extent to which
the resolution or insolvency of any other
group entities operating in that same
jurisdiction may adversely affect the
assumed cooperation, forbearance, or
other regulatory non-intervention. If a
material entity providing shared
services that support identified critical
operations is located outside of the
United States, the Plan should discuss
how the firm will ensure the operational
continuity of such shared services
through resolution.
The firm should (A) maintain an
identification of all shared services that
support identified critical operations;
(B) maintain a mapping of how/where
these services support U.S. core
business lines and identified critical
operations; (C) incorporate such
mapping into legal entity rationalization
criteria and implementation efforts; and
(D) mitigate identified continuity risks
through establishment of service-level
agreements (SLAs) for all critical shared
services.
SLAs should fully describe the
services provided, reflect pricing
considerations on an arm’s-length basis
where appropriate, and incorporate
24 ‘‘Shared services that support identified critical
operations’’ or ‘‘critical shared services’’ are those
that support identified critical operations
conducted in whole or in material part in the
United States.
25 This should be interpreted to include data
access and intellectual property rights.
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appropriate terms and conditions to (A)
prevent automatic termination upon
certain resolution-related events and (B)
achieve continued provision of such
services during resolution.26 The firm
should also store SLAs in a central
repository or repositories located in or
immediately accessible from the U.S. at
all times, including in resolution (and
subject to enforceable access
arrangements) in a searchable format. In
addition, the firm should ensure the
financial resilience of internal shared
service providers by maintaining
working capital for six months (or
through the period of stabilization as
required in the firm’s U.S. resolution
strategy) in such entities sufficient to
cover contract costs, consistent with the
U.S. resolution strategy. The firm
should demonstrate that such working
capital is held in a manner that ensures
its availability for its intended purpose.
The firm should identify all service
providers and critical outsourced
services that support identified critical
operations and identify any that could
not be promptly substituted. The firm
should (A) evaluate the agreements
governing these services to determine
whether there are any that could be
terminated upon commencement of any
resolution despite continued
performance; and (B) update contracts
to incorporate appropriate terms and
conditions to prevent automatic
termination upon commencement of
any resolution proceeding and facilitate
continued provision of such services.
Relying on entities projected to survive
during resolution to avoid contract
termination is insufficient to ensure
continuity. In the Plan, the firm should
document the amendment of any such
agreements governing these services.
The Plan must also discuss
arrangements to ensure the operational
continuity of shared services that
support identified critical operations in
resolution in the event of the disruption
of those shared services.
A firm is expected to have robust
arrangements in place for the continued
provision of shared or outsourced
services needed to maintain identified
critical operations. For example, firms
should:
• Evaluate internal and external
dependencies and develop documented
strategies and contingency arrangements
for the continuity or replacement of the
shared and outsourced services that are
necessary to maintain identified critical
26 The firm should consider whether these SLAs
should be governed by the laws of a U.S. state and
expressly subject to the jurisdiction of a court in the
U.S.
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operations.27 Examples may include
personnel, facilities, systems, data
warehouses, and intellectual property;
and
• Maintain current cost estimates for
implementing such strategies and
contingency arrangements.
VI. Branches
Continuity of Operations: If the Plan
assumes that federal or state regulators,
as applicable, do not take possession of
any U.S. branch that is a material entity,
the Plan must support that assumption.
For any U.S. branch that is significant
to the activities of an identified critical
operation, the Plan should describe and
demonstrate how the branch would
continue to facilitate FMU access for
identified critical operations and meet
funding needs. Such a U.S. branch
would also be required to describe how
it would meet supervisory requirements
imposed by state regulators or the
appropriate Federal banking agency, as
appropriate, including maintaining a net
due to position and complying with
heightened asset maintenance
requirements.28 In addition, the plan
should describe how such a U.S.
branch’s third-party creditors would be
protected such that the state regulator or
appropriate Federal banking agency
would allow the branch to continue
operations.
Impact of the Cessation of Operations:
The firm must provide an analysis of the
impact of the cessation of operations of
any U.S. branch that is significant to the
activities of an identified critical
operation on the firm’s FMU access and
identified critical operations, even if
such scenario is not contemplated as
part of the U.S. resolution strategy. The
analysis should include a description of
how identified critical operations could
be transferred to a U.S. IHC subsidiary
or sold in resolution, the obstacles
presented by the cessation of shared
services that support identified critical
operations provided by any U.S. branch
that is a material entity, and mitigants
that could address such obstacles in a
timely manner.
VII. Legal Entity Rationalization
Legal Entity Rationalization Criteria
(LER Criteria): A firm should develop
and implement legal entity
rationalization criteria that support the
firm’s U.S. resolution strategy and
minimize risk to U.S. financial stability
in the event of resolution. LER Criteria
should consider the best alignment of
CFR 243.5(g); 12 CFR 381.5(g).
should take into consideration historical
practice, by applicable regulators, regarding asset
maintenance requirements imposed during stress.
83575
legal entities and business lines to
improve the resolvability of U.S.
operations under different market
conditions. LER Criteria should govern
the corporate structure and
arrangements between the U.S.
subsidiaries and U.S. branches in a way
that facilitates resolvability of the firm’s
U.S. operations as the firm’s U.S.
activities, technology, business models,
or geographic footprint change over
time.
Specifically, application of the criteria
should:
(A) Ensure that the allocation of
activities across the firm’s U.S. branches
and U.S. non-branch material entities
support the firm’s U.S. resolution
strategy and minimize risk to U.S.
financial stability in the event of
resolution;
(B) Facilitate the recapitalization and
liquidity support of U.S. IHC
subsidiaries, as required by the firm’s
U.S. resolution strategy. Such criteria
should include clean lines of ownership
and clean funding pathways between
the foreign parent, the U.S. IHC, and
U.S. IHC subsidiaries;
(C) Facilitate the sale, transfer, or
wind-down of certain discrete
operations within a timeframe that
would meaningfully increase the
likelihood of an orderly resolution in
the United States, including provisions
for the continuity of associated services
and mitigation of financial, operational,
and legal challenges to separation and
disposition;
(D) Adequately protect U.S.
subsidiary insured depository
institutions from risks arising from the
activities of any nonbank U.S.
subsidiaries (other than those that are
subsidiaries of an insured depository
institution); and
(E) Minimize complexity that could
impede an orderly resolution in the
United States and minimize redundant
and dormant entities.
These criteria should be built into the
firm’s ongoing process for creating,
maintaining, and optimizing the firm’s
U.S. structure and operations on a
continuous basis.
VIII. Derivatives and Trading Activities
A Specified FBO’s plan should
address the following areas.
Booking Practices
A firm should have booking practices
commensurate with the size, scope, and
complexity of its U.S. derivatives and
trading activities.29 The following
27 12
28 Firms
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29 ‘‘U.S. derivatives and trading activities’’, means
all derivatives and linked non-derivatives trading
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booking practices-related capabilities
should be addressed in a firm’s
resolution plan:
Derivatives and trading booking
framework. A firm should have a
comprehensive booking model
framework that articulates the
principles, rationales, and approach to
implementing its booking practices for
all of its U.S. derivatives and trading
activities. The framework and its
underlying components should be
documented and adequately supported
by internal controls (e.g., procedures,
systems, processes). Taken together, the
booking framework and its components
should provide transparency with
respect to (i) what is being booked (e.g.,
product, counterparty), (ii) where it is
being originated and booked (e.g., legal
entity), (iii) by whom it is booked (e.g.,
business or trading desk), (iv) why it is
booked that way (e.g., drivers or
rationales for that arrangement), and (v)
what controls the firm has in place to
monitor and manage those practices
(e.g., governance or information
systems).30
The firm’s resolution plan should
include detailed descriptions of the
framework and each of its material
components. In particular, a firm’s
resolution plan should include
descriptions of documented booking
models covering its U.S. derivatives and
trading activities.31 These descriptions
should provide clarity with respect to
the underlying booking flows (e.g., the
mapping of trade flows based on
multiple trade characteristics as
decision points that determine on which
entity a trade is directly booked and the
applicability of any risk transfer
arrangements). Furthermore, a firm’s
resolution plan should describe its endto-end booking and reporting processes,
including a description of the current
scope of automation (e.g., automated
trade flows, detective monitoring) of the
systems controls applied to the firm’s
documented booking models. The plan
should also discuss why the firm
believes its current (or planned) scope
of automation is sufficient for managing
activities conducted on behalf of the firm, its
clients, or its counterparties that are booked into the
firm’s U.S. IHC subsidiaries and material entity
branches (U.S. entities). The firm may define linked
non-derivatives trading activities based on its
overall business and resolution strategy.
30 The description of controls should include any
components of any market, credit, or liquidity risk
management framework that is material to the
management of the firm’s U.S. derivatives and
trading activities.
31 The booking models should represent the vast
majority (e.g., 95 percent) of a firm’s U.S.
derivatives and trading activities, measured by, for
example, trade notional and gross market value (for
derivatives) and client positions and balances (for
prime brokerage client accounts).
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its U.S. derivatives and trading activities
during the execution of its U.S.
resolution strategy.32
Derivatives and trading entity analysis
and reporting. A firm should have the
ability to identify, assess, and report on
each U.S. entity that originates or
otherwise conducts (in whole or in
material part) any significant aspect of
the firm’s U.S. derivatives and trading
activities (a derivatives or trading
entity). First, the firm’s resolution plan
should describe its method (which may
include both qualitative and
quantitative criteria) for evaluating the
significance of each derivatives or
trading entity both with respect to the
firm’s current U.S. derivatives and
trading activities and its U.S. resolution
strategy.33 Second, a firm’s resolution
plan should demonstrate (including
through use of illustrative samples) the
firm’s ability to readily generate current
derivatives or trading entity profiles that
(i) cover all derivatives or trading
entities, (ii) are reportable in a
consistent manner, and (iii) include
information regarding current legal
ownership structure, business activities
and volume, and risk profile of the
entity (including relevant risk transfer
arrangements).
U.S. Activities Monitoring
A firm should be able to assess how
the management of U.S. derivatives and
trading activities could be affected in
the period leading up to and during the
execution of its U.S. resolution strategy,
including disruptions that could affect
materially the funding or operations of
the U.S. entities that conduct the U.S.
derivatives and trading activities or
their clients and counterparties.
Therefore, a firm should have
capabilities to provide timely
transparency into the management of its
U.S. derivatives and trading activities,
32 Effective preventative (up-front) and detective
(post-booking) controls embedded in a firm’s
booking processes can help avoid and/or timely
remediate trades that do not align with a
documented booking model or related risk limit.
Firms typically use a combination of manual and
automated control functions. Although automation
may not be best suited for all control functions, as
compared to manual methods, it can improve
consistency and traceability with respect to booking
practices. However, non-automated methods also
can be effective when supported by other internal
controls (e.g., robust detective monitoring,
escalation protocols).
33 The firm should leverage any existing methods
and criteria it uses for other entity assessments (e.g.,
legal entity rationalization or the prepositioning of
internal loss-absorbing resources). The firm’s
method for determining the significance of
derivatives or trading entities may diverge from the
parameters for material entity designation under the
Rule (i.e., entities significant to the activities of an
identified critical operation or core business line);
however, any differences should be adequately
supported and explained.
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in the period leading up to and during
the execution of its U.S. resolution
strategy by maintaining a monitoring
framework for U.S. derivatives and
trading activities, which consists of at
least the following two components:
1. A method for identifying U.S.
derivatives and trading activities, and
measuring, monitoring, and reporting on
those activities on a business line and
legal entity basis; and
2. A method for identifying, assessing,
and reporting the potential impact on (i)
clients and counterparties of U.S.
entities that conduct the U.S.
derivatives and trading activities and (ii)
any related risk transfer arrangements 34
among and between U.S. entities and
their non-U.S. affiliates.
Prime Brokerage Customer Account
Transfers
A firm should have the operational
capacity to facilitate the orderly transfer
of U.S. prime brokerage accounts,35 to
peer prime brokers in periods of
material financial distress and during
the execution of its U.S. resolution
strategy. The firm’s plan should include
an assessment of how it would transfer
such accounts. This assessment should
be informed by clients’ relationships
with other prime brokers, the use of
automated and manual transaction
processes, clients’ overall long and short
positions as facilitated by the firm, and
the liquidity of clients’ portfolios. The
assessment should also analyze the risks
and loss mitigants of customer-tocustomer internalization (e.g., the
inability to fund customer longs with
customer shorts) and operational
challenges (including insufficient
staffing) that the firm may experience in
effecting the scale and speed of prime
brokerage account transfers envisioned
under the firm’s U.S. resolution strategy.
In addition, a firm should describe
and demonstrate its ability to segment
and analyze the quality and
composition of U.S. prime brokerage
account balances based on a set of welldefined and consistently applied
segmentation criteria (e.g., size, singleprime, platform, use of leverage, nonrehypothecatable securities, liquidity of
underlying assets). The capabilities
should cover U.S. prime brokerage
account balances and the resulting
segments should represent a range in
34 For example, risk transfer arrangements might
include transfer pricing, profit sharing, loss
limiting, or intragroup hedging arrangements.
35 ‘‘U.S. prime brokerage account’’ or ‘‘U.S. prime
brokerage account balances’’ should include the
account positions and balances of a client of the
firm’s U.S. prime brokerage business who signs a
prime brokerage agreement with a U.S. material
entity.
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potential transfer speed (e.g., from
fastest to longest to transfer, from most
liquid to least liquid). The selected
segmentation criteria should reflect
characteristics 36 that the firm believes
could affect the speed at which the U.S.
prime brokerage account would be
transferred to an alternate prime broker.
Portfolio Segmentation
A firm should have the capabilities to
produce analysis that reflects
derivatives portfolio 37 segmentation
and differentiation of assumptions,
taking into account trade-level
characteristics. More specifically, a firm
should have systems capabilities that
would allow it to produce a spectrum of
derivatives portfolio segmentation
analysis using multiple segmentation
dimensions for each U.S. entity with a
derivatives portfolio—namely, (1)
trading desk or product, (2) cleared vs.
clearable vs. non-clearable trades, (3)
counterparty type, (4) currency, (5)
maturity, (6) level of collateralization,
and (7) netting set.38 A firm should also
have the capabilities to segment and
analyze the full contractual maturity
(run-off) profile of the derivatives
portfolios in its U.S. entities. The firm’s
resolution plan should describe and
demonstrate the firm’s ability to
segment and analyze the derivatives
portfolios booked into its U.S. entities
using the relevant segmentation
dimensions and to report the results of
such segmentation and analysis.
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Derivatives Stabilization and De-Risking
Strategy
To the extent the U.S. resolution
strategy assumes the continuation of a
U.S. IHC subsidiary with a derivatives
portfolio after the entry of the U.S. IHC
into a U.S. bankruptcy proceeding
(surviving derivatives subsidiary), the
firm’s plan should provide a detailed
analysis of the strategy to stabilize and
de-risk any derivatives portfolio of the
surviving derivatives subsidiary (U.S.
derivatives strategy) that has been
incorporated into its U.S. resolution
strategy.39 In developing its U.S.
36 For example, relevant characteristics might
include product, size, clearability, currency,
maturity, level of collateralization, and other risk
characteristics.
37 A firm’s derivatives portfolios include its
derivatives positions and linked non-derivatives
trading positions.
38 The enumerated segmentation dimensions are
not intended as an exhaustive list of relevant
dimensions. With respect to any product or asset
class, a firm may have reasons for not capturing
data on (or not using) one or more of the
enumerated segmentation dimensions. In that case,
however, the firm should explain those reasons.
39 Subject to the relevant constraints, a firm’s U.S.
derivatives strategy may take the form of a goingconcern strategy, an accelerated de-risking strategy
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derivatives strategy, a firm should apply
the following assumption constraints:
• OTC derivatives market access: At
or before the start of the resolution
period, each surviving derivatives
subsidiary should be assumed to lack an
investment grade credit rating (e.g.,
unrated or downgraded below
investment grade). Each surviving
derivatives subsidiary also should be
assumed to have failed to establish or
reestablish investment grade status for
the duration of the resolution period,
unless the plan provides well-supported
analysis to the contrary. As the
subsidiary is not investment grade, it
further should be assumed that each
surviving derivatives subsidiary has no
access to bilateral OTC derivatives
markets and must use exchange-traded
or centrally cleared instruments for any
new hedging needs that arise during the
resolution period. Nevertheless, a firm
may assume the ability to engage in
certain risk-reducing derivatives trades
with bilateral OTC derivatives
counterparties during the resolution
period to facilitate novations with third
parties and to close out inter-affiliate
trades.40
• Early exits (break clauses): A firm
should assume that counterparties (both
external and affiliates) will exercise any
contractual termination or other right,
including any rights stayed by contract
(including amendments) or in
compliance with the rules establishing
restrictions on qualified financial
contracts of the Board, the FDIC, or the
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency 41 or any other regulatory
requirements, (i) that is available to the
counterparty at or following the start of
(e.g., active wind-down) or an alternative, third
strategy so long as the firm’s resolution plan
adequately supports the execution of the chosen
strategy. For example, a firm may choose a goingconcern scenario (e.g., surviving derivatives
subsidiary reestablishes investment grade status
and does not enter any wind-down) as its
derivatives strategy. Likewise, a firm may choose to
adopt a combination of going-concern and
accelerated de-risking scenarios as its U.S.
derivatives strategy. For example, the U.S.
derivatives strategy could be a stabilization scenario
for the U.S. bank entity and an accelerated derisking scenario for U.S. broker-dealer entities.
40 A firm may engage in bilateral OTC derivatives
trades with, for example, (i) external counterparties,
to effect the novation of the firm’s side of a
derivatives contract to a new, acquiring
counterparty; and (ii) inter-affiliate counterparties,
where the trades with inter-affiliate counterparties
do not materially increase either the credit exposure
of any participating counterparty or the market risk
of any such counterparty on a standalone basis,
after taking into account any hedging with
exchange-traded and centrally-cleared instruments.
The firm should provide analysis to support the risk
of the trade on the basis of information that would
be known to the firm at the time of the transaction.
41 See 12 CFR part 47 (OCC); part 252, subpart I
(Board); part 382 (FDIC).
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the resolution period; and (ii) if
exercising such right would
economically benefit the counterparty
(counterparty-initiated termination).
• Time horizon: The duration of the
resolution period should be between 12
and 24 months. The resolution period
begins immediately after the U.S. IHC
bankruptcy filing and extends through
the completion of the U.S. resolution
strategy.42
A firm’s analysis of its U.S.
derivatives strategy should take into
account (i) the starting profile of any
derivatives portfolio of each surviving
derivatives subsidiary (e.g., nature,
concentration, maturity, clearability,
liquidity of positions); (ii) the profile
and function of any surviving
derivatives subsidiary during the
resolution period; (iii) the means,
challenges, and capacity of the
surviving derivatives subsidiary to
manage and de-risk its derivatives
portfolios (e.g., method for timely
segmenting, packaging, and selling the
derivatives positions; challenges with
novating less liquid positions; rehedging strategy); (iv) the financial and
operational resources required to effect
the derivatives strategy; and (v) any
potential residual portfolio (further
discussed below). In addition, the firm’s
resolution plan should address the
following areas in the analysis of its
derivatives strategy:
Forecasts of resource needs. The
forecasts of capital and liquidity
resource needs of U.S. IHC subsidiaries
required to support adequately the
firm’s U.S. derivatives strategy should
be incorporated into the firm’s RCEN
and RLEN estimates for its overall U.S.
resolution strategy. These include, for
example, the costs and liquidity flows
resulting from (i) the close-out of OTC
derivatives, (ii) the hedging of
derivatives portfolios, (iii) the
quantified losses that could be incurred
due to basis and other risks that would
result from hedging with only exchangetraded and centrally cleared instruments
in a severely adverse stress
environment, and (iv) operational
costs.43
Sensitivity analysis. A firm should
have a method to apply sensitivity
42 The firm may consider a resolution period of
less than 12 months as long as the length of the
resolution period is adequately supported by the
firm’s analysis of the size, composition, complexity,
and maturity profile of the derivatives portfolios in
its U.S. IHC subsidiaries.
43 A firm may choose not to isolate and separately
model the operational costs solely related to
executing its derivatives strategy. However, the firm
should provide transparency around operational
cost estimation at a more granular level than
material entity (e.g., business line level within a
material entity, subject to wind-down).
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analyses to the key drivers of the
derivatives-related costs and liquidity
flows under its U.S. resolution strategy.
A firm’s resolution plan should describe
its method for (i) evaluating the
materiality of assumptions and (ii)
identifying those assumptions (or
combinations of assumptions) that
constitute the key drivers for its
forecasts of derivatives-related
operational and financial resource needs
under the U.S. resolution strategy. In
addition, using its U.S. resolution
strategy as a baseline, the firm’s
resolution plan should describe and
demonstrate its approach to testing the
sensitivities of the identified key drivers
and the potential impact on its forecasts
of resource needs.44
Potential residual derivatives
portfolio. A firm’s resolution plan
should include a method for estimating
the composition of any potential
residual derivatives portfolio
transactions booked in a U.S. IHC
subsidiary remaining at the end of the
resolution period under its U.S.
resolution strategy. The firm’s plan also
should provide detailed descriptions of
the trade characteristics used to identify
such potential residual portfolio and of
the resulting trades (or categories of
trades).45 A firm should assess the risk
profile of such potential residual
portfolio (including its anticipated size,
composition, complexity, and
counterparties), and the potential
counterparty and market impacts of
non-performance by the firm on the
stability of U.S. financial markets (e.g.,
on funding markets, on underlying asset
markets, on clients and counterparties).
Non-surviving entity analysis. To the
extent the U.S. resolution strategy
assumes a U.S. IHC subsidiary with a
derivatives portfolio enters its own
resolution proceeding after the entry of
the U.S. IHC into a U.S. bankruptcy
proceeding (a non-surviving derivatives
subsidiary), the firm should provide a
detailed analysis of how the nonsurviving derivatives subsidiary’s
resolution can be accomplished within
a reasonable period of time and in a
manner that substantially mitigates the
44 For example, key drivers of derivatives-related
costs and liquidity flows might include the timing
of derivatives unwind, cost of capital-related
assumptions (e.g., target return on equity, discount
rate, weighted average life, capital constraints, tax
rate), operational cost reduction rate, and
operational capacity for novations. Other examples
of key drivers likely also include central
counterparty margin flow assumptions and riskweighted asset forecast assumptions.
45 If, under the firm’s U.S. resolution strategy, any
derivatives portfolios are transferred during the
resolution period by way of a line of business sale
(or similar transaction), then those portfolios
nonetheless should be included within the firm’s
potential residual portfolio analysis.
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risk of serious adverse effects on U.S.
financial stability and on the orderly
execution of the firm’s U.S. resolution
strategy. In particular, the firm should
provide an analysis of the potential
impacts on funding markets, on
underlying asset markets, on clients and
counterparties (including affiliates), and
on the firm’s U.S. resolution strategy.
IX. Format and Structure of Plans
Format of Plan
Executive Summary. The Plan should
contain an executive summary
consistent with the Rule, which must
include, among other things, a concise
description of the key elements of the
firm’s U.S. strategy for an orderly
resolution. In addition, the executive
summary should include a discussion of
the firm’s assessment of any
impediments to the firm’s U.S.
resolution strategy and its execution, as
well as the steps it has taken to address
any identified impediments.
Narrative. The Plan should include a
strategic analysis consistent with the
Rule. This analysis should take the form
of a concise narrative that enhances the
readability and understanding of the
firm’s discussion of its U.S. strategy for
orderly resolution in bankruptcy or
other applicable insolvency regimes
(Narrative). The Narrative also should
include a high-level discussion of how
the firm is addressing key
vulnerabilities jointly identified by the
Agencies. This is not an exhaustive list
and does not preclude identification of
further vulnerabilities or impediments.
Appendices. The Plan should contain
a sufficient level of detail and analysis
to substantiate and support the strategy
described in the Narrative. Such detail
and analysis should be included in
appendices that are distinct from and
clearly referenced in the related parts of
the Narrative (Appendices).
Public Section. The Plan must be
divided into a public section and a
confidential section consistent with the
requirements of the Rule.
Other Informational Requirements.
The Plan must comply with all other
informational requirements of the Rule.
The firm may incorporate by reference
previously submitted information as
provided in the Rule.
Guidance Regarding Assumptions
1. The Plan should be based on the
current state of the applicable legal and
policy frameworks. Pending legislation
or regulatory actions may be discussed
as additional considerations.
2. The firm must submit a plan that
does not rely on the provision of
extraordinary support by the United
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States or any other government to the
firm or its subsidiaries to prevent the
failure of the firm.
3. The firm should not assume that it
will be able to sell identified critical
operations or core business lines, or that
unsecured funding will be available
immediately prior to filing for
bankruptcy.
4. The Plan should assume the DoddFrank Act Stress Test (DFAST) severely
adverse scenario for the first quarter of
the calendar year in which the Plan is
submitted is the domestic and
international economic environment at
the time of the firm’s failure and
throughout the resolution process.
5. The resolution strategy may be
based on an idiosyncratic event or
action. The firm should justify use of
that assumption, consistent with the
conditions of the economic scenario.
6. Within the context of the applicable
idiosyncratic scenario, markets are
functioning and competitors are in a
position to take on business. If a firm’s
Plan assumes the sale of assets, the firm
should take into account all issues
surrounding its ability to sell in market
conditions present in the applicable
economic condition at the time of sale
(i.e., the firm should take into
consideration the size and scale of its
operations as well as issues of
separation and transfer.)
7. The firm should not assume any
waivers of section 23A or 23B of the
Federal Reserve Act in connection with
the actions proposed to be taken prior
to or in resolution.
8. The firm may assume that its
depository institutions will have access
to the Discount Window only for a few
days after the point of failure to
facilitate orderly resolution. However,
the firm should not assume its
subsidiary depository institutions will
have access to the Discount Window
while critically undercapitalized, in
FDIC receivership, or operating as a
bridge bank, nor should it assume any
lending from a Federal Reserve credit
facility to a non-bank affiliate.
Financial Statements and Projections
The Plan should include the actual
balance sheet for each material entity
and the consolidating balance sheet
adjustments between material entities as
well as pro forma balance sheets for
each material entity at the point of
failure and at key junctures in the
execution of the resolution strategy. It
should also include projected
statements of sources and uses of funds
for the interim periods. The pro forma
financial statements and accompanying
notes in the Plan must clearly evidence
the failure trigger event; the Plan’s
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assumptions; and any transactions that
are critical to the execution of the Plan’s
preferred strategy, such as
recapitalizations, the creation of new
legal entities, transfers of assets, and
asset sales and unwinds.
Material Entities
Material entities should encompass
those entities, including subsidiaries,
branches and agencies (collectively,
Offices), which are significant to the
activities of an identified critical
operation or core business line. If the
abrupt disruption or cessation of a core
business line might have systemic
consequences to U.S. financial stability,
the entities essential to the continuation
of such core business line should be
considered for material entity
designation. Material entities should
include the following types of entities:
a. Any Office, wherever located, that
is significant to the activities of an
identified critical operation.
b. Any Office, wherever located,
whose provision or support of global
treasury operations, funding, or
liquidity activities (inclusive of
intercompany transactions) is
significant to the activities of an
identified critical operation.
c. Any Office, wherever located, that
would provide material operational
support in resolution (key personnel,
information technology, data centers,
real estate or other shared services) to
the activities of an identified critical
operation.
d. Any Office, wherever located, that
is engaged in derivatives booking
activity that is significant to the
activities of an identified critical
operation, including those that conduct
either the internal hedge side or the
client-facing side of a transaction.
e. Any Office, wherever located,
engaged in asset custody or asset
management that are significant to the
activities of an identified critical
operation.
f. Any Office, wherever located,
holding licenses or memberships in
clearinghouses, exchanges, or other
FMUs that are significant to the
activities of an identified critical
operation.
For each material entity (including a
branch), the Plan should enumerate, on
a jurisdiction-by-jurisdiction basis, the
specific mandatory and discretionary
actions or forbearances that regulatory
and resolution authorities would take
during resolution, including any
regulatory filings and notifications that
would be required as part of the U.S.
resolution strategy, and explain how the
Plan addresses the actions and
forbearances. The Plan should describe
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the consequences for the firm’s U.S.
resolution strategy if specific actions in
each jurisdiction were not taken,
delayed, or forgone, as relevant.
X. Public Section
The purpose of the public section is
to inform the public’s understanding of
the firm’s resolution strategy and how it
works.
The public section should discuss the
steps that the firm is taking to improve
resolvability under the U.S. Bankruptcy
Code. The public section should
provide background information on
each material entity and should be
enhanced by including the firm’s
rationale for designating material
entities. The public section should also
discuss, at a high level, the firm’s intragroup financial and operational
interconnectedness (including the types
of guarantees or support obligations in
place that could impact the execution of
the firm’s strategy). There should also be
a high-level discussion of the liquidity
resources and loss-absorbing capacity of
the U.S. IHC.
The discussion of strategy in the
public section should broadly explain
how the firm has addressed any
deficiencies, shortcomings, and other
key vulnerabilities that the Agencies
have identified in prior Plan
submissions. For each material entity, it
should be clear how the strategy
provides for continuity, transfer, or
orderly wind-down of the entity and its
operations. There should also be a
description of the resulting organization
upon completion of the resolution
process.
The public section may note that the
resolution plan is not binding on a
bankruptcy court or other resolution
authority and that the proposed failure
scenario and associated assumptions are
hypothetical and do not necessarily
reflect an event or events to which the
firm is or may become subject.
Appendix: Frequently Asked Questions
In March 2017, the Agencies issued
guidance for use in developing the 2018
resolution plan submissions by certain
foreign banking organizations.
In response to frequently asked
questions regarding that guidance from
the recipients of that guidance, Board
and FDIC staff jointly developed
answers and provided those answers to
the guidance recipients in 2017 so that
they could take this information into
account in developing their next
resolution plan submissions.46
46 The FAQs represent the views of staff of the
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and
do not bind the Board or the FDIC.
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The questions in this Appendix:
• Comprise common questions asked
by different covered companies. Not
every question is applicable to every
firm; not every aspect of the guidance
applies to each firm’s preferred strategy/
structure; and
• Reflect updated references to
correspond to this final guidance for the
Specified FBOs (Final Guidance).
As indicated below, those questions
and answers that are deemed to be no
longer meaningful or relevant have not
been consolidated in this Appendix and
are superseded.
Capital
CAP 1. Not consolidated
CAP 2. Definition of ‘‘Well-Capitalized’’
Status
Q. How should firms apply the term
‘‘well-capitalized’’?
A. U.S. non-branch material entities
must comply with the capital
requirements and expectations of their
primary regulator. U.S. non-branch
material entities should be recapitalized
to meet jurisdictional requirements and
to maintain market confidence as
required under the U.S. resolution
strategy.
CAP 3. RCEN Relationship to DFAST
Severely Adverse Scenario
Q. How should the firm’s RCEN and
RLEN estimates relate to the DFAST
Severely Adverse scenario? Can those
estimates be recalibrated in actual stress
conditions?
A. For resolution plan submission
purposes, the estimation of RLEN and
RCEN should assume macroeconomic
conditions consistent with the DFAST
Severely Adverse scenario. However,
the RLEN and RCEN methodologies
should have the flexibility to
incorporate macroeconomic conditions
that may deviate from the DFAST
Severely Adverse scenario in order to
facilitate execution of the U.S.
resolution strategy.
CAP 4. Not Consolidated
Liquidity
LIQ 1. Inter-Company ‘‘Frictions’’
Q. Can the Agencies clarify what
kinds of frictions might occur between
affiliates beyond regulatory ringfencing?
A. Frictions are any impediments to
the free flow of funds, collateral and
other transactions between material
entities. Examples include regulatory,
legal, financial (i.e., tax consequences),
market, or operational constraints or
requirements.
LIQ 2. Distinction between Liquidity
Forecasting Periods
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Q1. How long is the stabilization
period?
A1. The stabilization period begins
immediately after the U.S. IHC
bankruptcy filing and extends until each
material entity reestablishes market
confidence. The stabilization period
may not be less than 30 days. The
reestablishment of market confidence
may be reflected by the maintaining,
reestablishing, or establishing of
investment grade ratings or the
equivalent financial condition for each
entity. The stabilization period may
vary by material entity, given
differences in regulatory, counterparty,
and other stakeholder interests in each
entity.
Q2. Not Consolidated.
Q3. What is the resolution period?
A3. The resolution period begins
immediately after the U.S. IHC’s
bankruptcy filing and extends through
the completion of the U.S. strategy.
After the stabilization period (see ‘‘LIQ
2. Distinction between Liquidity
Forecasting Periods,’’ Question 1,
regarding ‘‘stabilization period’’),
financial statements and projections
may be provided at quarterly intervals
through the remainder of the resolution
period.
LIQ 3. Inter-Affiliate Transaction
Assumptions
Q. Does inter-affiliate funding refer to
all kinds of intercompany transactions,
including both unsecured and secured?
A. Yes.
LIQ 4. RLEN and Minimum Operating
Liquidity (MOL)
Q1. How should firms distinguish
between the minimum operating
liquidity (MOL) and peak funding needs
during the RLEN period?
A1. The peak funding needs represent
the peak cumulative net out-flows
during the stabilization period. The
components of peak funding needs,
including the monetization of assets and
other management actions, should be
transparent in the RLEN projections.
The peak funding needs should be
supported by projections of daily
sources and uses of cash for each U.S.
IHC subsidiary, incorporating interaffiliate and third-party exposures. In
mathematical terms, RLEN = MOL +
peak funding needs during the
stabilization period. RLEN should also
incorporate liquidity execution needs of
the U.S. resolution strategy for
derivatives (see Derivatives and Trading
Activities section).
Q2. Should the MOL per entity make
explicit the allocation for intraday
liquidity requirements, inter-affiliate
and other funding frictions, operating
expenses, and working capital needs?
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A2. Yes, the components of the MOL
estimates for each surviving U.S. IHC
subsidiary should be transparent and
supported.
Q3. Can MOLs decrease as surviving
U.S. IHC subsidiaries wind down?
A3. MOL estimates can decline as
long as they are sufficiently supported
by the firm’s methodology and
assumptions.
LIQ 5. Not Consolidated
LIQ 6. Inter-Affiliate Transactions with
Optionality
Q. How should firms treat an interaffiliate transaction with an embedded
option that may affect the contractual
maturity date?
A. For the purpose of calculating a
firm’s net liquidity position at a material
entity, the RLEN model should assume
that these transactions mature at the
earliest possible exercise date; this
adjusted maturity should be applied
symmetrically to both material entities
involved in the transaction.
LIQ 7. Stabilization and Regulatory
Liquidity Requirements
Q. As it relates to the RLEN model
and actions necessary to re-establish
market confidence, what assumptions
should firms make regarding
compliance with regulatory liquidity
requirements?
A. Firms should consider the
applicable regulatory expectations for
each U.S. IHC subsidiary to achieve the
stabilization needed to execute the U.S.
resolution strategy. Firms’ assumptions
in the RLEN model regarding the actions
necessary to reestablish market
confidence during the stabilization
period may vary by U.S. IHC subsidiary,
for example, based on differences in
regulatory, counterparty, other
stakeholder interests, and based on the
U.S. resolution strategy for each U.S.
IHC subsidiary. See also ‘‘LIQ 2.
Distinction between Liquidity
Forecasting Periods.’’
LIQ 8. HQLA and Assets Not Eligible as
HQLA in the RLEN Model
Q. The Final Guidance states the
RLEN estimate should be based on the
minimum amount of HQLA required to
facilitate the execution of the firm’s U.S.
resolution strategy. How should firms
incorporate any expected liquidity value
of assets that are not eligible as HQLA
(non-HQLA) into the RLEN model?
A. For a firm’s RLEN model, firms
may incorporate conservative estimates
of potential liquidity that may be
generated through the monetization of
non-HQLA. The estimated liquidity
value of non-HQLA should be
supported by thorough analysis of the
potential market constraints and asset
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value haircuts that may be required.
Assumptions for the monetization of
non-HQLA should be consistent with
the U.S. resolution strategy for each U.S.
IHC subsidiary.
LIQ 9. Components of Minimum
Operating Liquidity
Q. Do the agencies have particular
definitions of the ‘‘intraday liquidity
requirements,’’ ‘‘operating expenses,’’
and ‘‘working capital needs’’
components of minimum operating
liquidity (MOL) estimates?
A. No. A firm may use its internal
definitions of the components of MOL
estimates. The components of MOL
estimates should be well-supported by a
firm’s internal methodologies and
calibrated to the specifics of each U.S.
IHC subsidiary.
LIQ 10. RLEN Model and Net Revenue
Recognition
Q. Can firms assume in the RLEN
model that cash-based net revenue
generated by U.S. IHC subsidiaries after
the U.S. IHC’s bankruptcy filing is
available to offset estimated liquidity
needs?
A. Yes. Firms may incorporate cash
revenue generated by U.S. IHC
subsidiaries in the RLEN model. Cash
revenue projections should be
conservatively estimated and consistent
with the operating environment and the
U.S. strategy for each U.S. IHC
subsidiary.
LIQ 11. RLEN Model and Inter-Affiliate
Frictions
Q. Can a firm modify its assumptions
regarding one or more inter-affiliate
frictions during the stabilization or poststabilization period in the RLEN model?
A. Once a U.S. IHC subsidiary has
achieved market confidence necessary
for stabilization consistent with the U.S.
resolution strategy, a firm may modify
one or more inter-affiliate frictions,
provided the firm provides sufficient
analysis to support this assumption.
LIQ 12. RLEN Relationship to DFAST
Severely Adverse scenario
(See ‘‘CAP 3. RCEN Relationship to
DFAST Severely Adverse Scenario’’ in
the Capital section.)
LIQ 13. Liquidity Positioning and
Foreign Parent Support
Q1. May firms consider available
liquidity at the foreign parent for
meeting RLEN estimates for U.S. nonbranch material entities?
A1. To meet the liquidity needs
informed by the RLEN methodology,
firms may either fully pre-position
liquidity in the U.S. non-branch
material entities or develop a
mechanism for planned foreign parent
support of any amount not pre-
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positioned for the successful execution
of the U.S. strategy. Mechanisms to
support readily available liquidity may
include a term liquidity facility between
the U.S. IHC and the foreign parent that
can be drawn as needed. If a firm’s plan
relies on foreign parent support, the
plan should include analysis of how the
U.S. IHC/foreign parent facility is
funded or buffered for by the foreign
parent.
LIQ 14. Not consolidated
LIQ 15. Not consolidated
LIQ 16. Not consolidated
Operational: Shared Services
OPS SS 1. Not Consolidated
OPS SS 2. Working Capital
Q1. Must working capital be
maintained for third party and internal
shared service costs?
A1. Where a firm maintains shared
service companies to provide services to
affiliates, working capital should be
maintained in those entities sufficient to
permit those entities to continue to
provide services for six months or
through the period of stabilization as
required in the firm’s U.S. resolution
strategy.
Costs related to third-party vendors
and inter-affiliate services should be
captured through the working capital
element of the MOL estimate (RLEN).
Q2. When does the six month working
capital requirement period begin?
A2. The measurement of the six
month working capital expectation
begins upon the bankruptcy filing of the
U.S. IHC. The expectation for
maintaining the working capital is
effective upon the July 2018 submission.
OPS SS 3. Not Consolidated
OPS SS 4. Not Consolidated
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Operations: Payments, Clearing and
Settlement
To the extent relevant, the PCS FAQs
have been consolidated into the updated
section of the Final Guidance.
Legal Entity Rationalization
LER 1. Not consolidated
LER 2. Legal Entity Rationalization
Criteria
Q. Is it acceptable to take into account
business-related criteria, in addition to
the resolution requirements, so that the
LER Criteria can be used for both
resolution planning and business
operations purposes?
A. Yes, LER criteria may incorporate
both business and resolution
considerations. In determining the best
alignment of legal entities and business
lines to improve the firm’s resolvability
under different market conditions,
business considerations should not be
prioritized over resolution needs.
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LER 3. Creation of Additional Legal
Entities
Q. Is the addition of legal entities
acceptable, so long as it is consistent
with the LER criteria?
A. Yes.
LER 4. Clean Funding Pathways
Q1. Can you provide additional
context around what is meant by clean
lines of ownership and clean funding
pathways in the legal entity
rationalization criteria? Additionally,
what types of funding are covered by the
requirements?
A1. The funding pathways between
the foreign parent, U.S. IHC, and U.S.
IHC subsidiaries should minimize
uncertainty in the provision of funds
and facilitate recapitalization. Also, the
complexity of ownership should not
impede the flow of funding to a U.S.
non-branch material entity under the
firm’s U.S. resolution strategy. Potential
sources of additional complexity could
include, for example, multiple
intermediate holding companies, tenor
mismatches, or complicated ownership
structures (including those involving
multiple jurisdictions or fractional
ownerships). Ownership should be as
clean and simple as practicable,
supporting the U.S. strategy and
actionable sales, transfers, or winddowns under varying market conditions.
The clean funding pathways expectation
applies to all funding provided to a U.S.
non-branch material entity regardless of
type and should not be viewed solely to
apply to internal TLAC.
Q2. The Final Guidance regarding
legal entity rationalization criteria
discusses ‘‘clean lines of ownership’’
and ‘‘clean funding pathways.’’ Does
this statement mean that firms’ legal
entity rationalization criteria should
require funding pathways and
recapitalization to always follow lines of
ownership?
A2. No. However, the firm should
identify and address or mitigate any
legal, regulatory, financial, operational,
and other factors that could complicate
the recapitalization and/or liquidity
support of U.S. non-branch material
entities.
LER 5. Not consolidated
LER 6. Not consolidated
LER 7. Application of Legal Entity
Rationalization Criteria
Q1. Which legal entities should be
covered under the LER framework?
A1. The scope of a firm’s LER criteria
should apply to the entire U.S.
operations.
Q2. To the extent a firm has a large
number of similar U.S. non-material
entities (such as single-purpose entities
PO 00000
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83581
formed for Community Reinvestment
Act purposes), may a firm apply its legal
entity rationalization criteria to these
entities as a group, rather than at the
individual entity level?
A2. Yes.
LER 8. Application of LER Criteria.
Q. Under the Final Guidance, is there
an expectation that the LER criteria be
applied to the legal structure outside of
the U.S. operations (e.g., outside of the
U.S. IHC or U.S. branch)?
A. The LER criteria serve to govern
the corporate structure and
arrangements between U.S. subsidiaries
and U.S. branches in a manner that
facilitates the resolvability of U.S.
operations. The Final Guidance is not
intended to govern the corporate
structure in jurisdictions outside the
U.S. The application of the LER criteria
should, among other things, ensure that
the allocation of activities across the
firm’s U.S. branches and U.S. nonbranch material entities support the
firm’s US resolution strategy and
minimize risk to US financial stability
in the event of resolution.
Moreover, LER works with other
components to improve resolvability.
For example, with regard to shared
services the firm should identify all
shared services that support identified
critical operations, maintain a mapping
of how/where these services support
core business lines and identified
critical operations, and include this
mapping into the legal rationalization
criteria and implementation efforts.
Derivatives and Trading Activities
To the extent relevant, the derivatives
and trading FAQs have been
consolidated into the updated section of
the Final Guidance.
Legal
LEG 1. Not consolidated.
LEG 2. Contractually Binding
Mechanisms
The Final Guidance does not
specifically reference consideration of a
contractually binding mechanism.
However, the following questions and
answers may be useful to a firm that
chooses to consider a contractually
binding mechanism as a mitigant to the
potential challenges to the planned
Support.
Q1. Do the Agencies have any
preference as to whether capital is
down-streamed to key subsidiaries
(including an IDI subsidiary) in the form
of capital contributions vs. forgiveness
of debt?
A1. No. The Agencies do not have a
preference as to the form of capital
contribution or liquidity support.
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83582
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Q2. Should a contractually binding
mechanism relate to the provision of
capital or liquidity? What classes of
assets would be deemed to provide
capital vs. liquidity?
A2. Contractually binding mechanism
is a generic term and includes the
down-streaming of capital and/or
liquidity as contemplated by the U.S.
resolution strategy. Furthermore, it is up
to the firm, as informed by any relevant
guidance of the Agencies, to identify
what assets would satisfy a U.S.
affiliate’s need for capital and/or
liquidity.
Q3. Is there a minimum acceptable
duration for a contractually binding
mechanism? Would an ‘‘evergreen’’
arrangement, renewable on a periodic
basis (and with notice to the Agencies),
be acceptable?
A3. To the extent a firm utilizes a
contractually binding mechanism, such
mechanism, including its duration,
should be appropriate for the firm’s U.S.
resolution strategy, including
adequately addressing relevant
financial, operational, and legal
requirements and challenges.
Q4. Not consolidated.
Q5. Not consolidated.
Q6. The firm may need to amend its
contractually binding mechanism from
time to time resulting potentially from
changes in relevant law, new or different
regulatory expectations, etc. Is a firm
able to do this as long as there is no
undue risk to the enforceability (e.g., no
signs of financial stress sufficient to
unduly threaten the agreement’s
enforceability as a result of fraudulent
transfer)?
A6. Yes, however the Agencies should
be informed of the proposed duration of
the agreement, as well as any terms and
conditions on renewal and/or
amendment. Any amendments should
be identified and discussed as part of
the firm’s next U.S. resolution plan
submission.
Q7. Not consolidated.
Q8. Should firms include a formal
regulatory trigger by which the Agencies
can directly trigger a contractually
binding mechanism?
A8. No
[FR Doc. 2020–28155 Filed 12–21–20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01– 6714–01–P
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
Change in Bank Control Notices;
Acquisitions of Shares of a Bank or
Bank Holding Company
None of the general FAQs were
consolidated.
The notificants listed below have
applied under the Change in Bank
Control Act (Act) (12 U.S.C. 1817(j)) and
§ 225.41 of the Board’s Regulation Y (12
CFR 225.41) to acquire shares of a bank
or bank holding company. The factors
that are considered in acting on the
applications are set forth in paragraph 7
of the Act (12 U.S.C. 1817(j)(7)).
The public portions of the
applications listed below, as well as
other related filings required by the
Board, if any, are available for
immediate inspection at the Federal
Reserve Bank(s) indicated below and at
the offices of the Board of Governors.
This information may also be obtained
on an expedited basis, upon request, by
contacting the appropriate Federal
Reserve Bank and from the Board’s
Freedom of Information Office at
https://www.federalreserve.gov/foia/
request.htm. Interested persons may
express their views in writing on the
standards enumerated in paragraph 7 of
the Act.
Comments regarding each of these
applications must be received at the
Reserve Bank indicated or the offices of
the Board of Governors, Ann E.
Misback, Secretary of the Board, 20th
Street and Constitution Avenue NW,
Washington, DC 20551–0001, not later
than January 6, 2021.
A. Federal Reserve Bank of
Minneapolis (Chris P. Wangen,
Assistant Vice President) 90 Hennepin
Avenue, Minneapolis, Minnesota
55480–0291:
1. Steven and Laurel Klefstad,
Forman, North Dakota; to join the
McLaen family shareholder group, a
group acting in concert, to retain voting
shares of Napoleon Bancorporation,
Inc., Napoleon, North Dakota, and
thereby indirectly retain voting shares of
Stock Growers Bank, Forman, North
Dakota.
By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System.
Ann Misback,
Secretary of the Board.
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, December 17, 2020.
Michele Taylor Fennell,
Deputy Associate Secretary of the Board.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
By order of the Board of Directors.
[FR Doc. 2020–28199 Filed 12–21–20; 8:45 am]
General
jbell on DSKJLSW7X2PROD with NOTICES
Dated at Washington, DC, on or about
December 7, 2020.
James P. Sheesley,
Assistant Executive Secretary.
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17:30 Dec 21, 2020
Jkt 253001
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P
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GENERAL SERVICES
ADMINISTRATION
[Notice-PBS–2020–11; Docket No. 2020–
0002; Sequence No. 41]
Notice of Intent To Prepare an
Environmental Impact Statement for
the Proposed Master Plan for the U.S.
Food and Drug Administration Muirkirk
Road Campus (Prince George’s
County, Laurel, MD)
National Capital Region,
General Services Administration (GSA).
ACTION: Notice of Intent to prepare an
Environmental Impact Statement (EIS).
AGENCY:
Pursuant to the requirements
of the National Environmental Policy
Act of 1969 (NEPA), the Council on
Environmental Quality Regulations,
GSA Order, ADM 1095.1F,
Environmental Considerations in
Decision Making, dated October 19,
1999, and the GSA Public Buildings
Service NEPA Desk Guide, GSA plans to
prepare an EIS for a proposed Master
Plan for the U.S. Food and Drug
Administration’s (FDA) Muirkirk Road
Campus (MRC), in Laurel, Maryland,
located in Prince George’s County. The
Master Plan will provide FDA with a
structured framework for developing the
MRC over the next 20 years.
DATES: Applicable: December 22, 2020.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Marshall Popkin, Office of Planning and
Design Quality, Public Buildings
Service, GSA, National Capital Region,
at 202–919–0026.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The GSA
intends to prepare an EIS to analyze the
potential impacts resulting from the
proposed Master Plan to support the
FDA MRC, in Laurel, Maryland, located
in Prince George’s County. GSA will
analyze four alternatives for the
proposed MRC Master Plan: (1) No
Action Alternative; (2) Development at
the Mod 1/Mod 2 site; (3) Hybrid of
Alternatives 2 and 4; and (4)
Development at the Beltsville Research
Facility site. The proposed action is
anticipated to impact soils and
topography; traffic and transit; water
resources; vegetation; wildlife; air
quality; greenhouse gases and climate;
utilities; and waste management. No
permits are required to adopt the Master
Plan. Implementation of the Master Plan
in the future could require the following
permits and authorizations:
• Dredge or fill permit under Section
404 of the Clean Water Act
• Coastal Zone Management
Consistency Determination
• State and local permits, including
water and wastewater permits,
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\22DEN1.SGM
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 85, Number 246 (Tuesday, December 22, 2020)]
[Notices]
[Pages 83557-83582]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2020-28155]
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
[Docket No. OP-1699]
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
RIN 3064-ZA15
Guidance for Resolution Plan Submissions of Certain Foreign-Based
Covered Companies
AGENCY: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board) and
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC).
ACTION: Final guidance.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Board and the FDIC (together, the agencies) are adopting
this final guidance for the 2021 and subsequent resolution plan
submissions by certain foreign banking organizations (FBOs). The final
guidance is meant to assist these firms in developing their resolution
plans, which are required to be submitted pursuant to Section 165(d) of
the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-
Frank Act). The final guidance reflects a number of changes to the
proposal in response to comments received by the agencies and further
analysis by the agencies. The scope of application of the final
guidance is FBOs that are Category II firms according to their combined
U.S. operations under the Board's tailoring ruleand are required to
have a U.S. intermediate holding company (IHC) under the Board's
Regulation YY (the Specified FBOs) as published in 84 FR 59032
(November 1, 2019). In addition to the three firms(Barclays PLC, Credit
Suisse Group AG, and Deutsche Bank AG (the Proposed FBOs) that would
have been within the scope of application under the methodology
utilized in the proposal, one additional firm, Mitsubishi UFJ Financial
Group, Inc. (MUFG), is within the scope for application of the final
guidance at the time of its issuance. Consequently, MUFG will have a
transition period to consider the application of the final guidance to
its resolution plan submission, as further described below. The final
guidance describes the agencies' expectations regarding a number of key
vulnerabilities in plans for an orderly resolution under the U.S.
Bankruptcy Code (i.e., capital, liquidity, governance mechanisms,
operational, branches, legal entity rationalization, and derivatives
and trading activities). The final guidance modifies and clarifies
certain aspects of the proposed guidance based on the agencies'
consideration of comments to the proposal, additional analysis, and
further assessment of the business and risk profiles of the U.S.
operations of large and complex FBOs.
DATES: The final guidance is available on December 22, 2020.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Board: Mona Elliot, Deputy Associate Director, (202) 452-4688,
Catherine Tilford, Deputy Associate Director, (202) 452-5240, Division
of Supervision and Regulation, Laurie Schaffer, Deputy General Counsel,
(202) 452-2272, Jay Schwarz, Special Counsel, (202) 452-2970, Steve
Bowne, Senior Counsel, (202) 452-3900, or Sarah Podrygula, Attorney,
(202) 912-4658, Legal Division; Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, 20th and C Streets NW, Washington, DC 20551.
FDIC: Alexandra Steinberg Barrage, Associate Director, Policy and
Data Analytics, [email protected]; Yan Zhou, Acting Associate Director,
Data Analytics, [email protected]; Catherine Needham, Advisor,
[email protected]; Ronald W. Crawley, Jr., Senior Resolution Policy
Specialist, [email protected], Division of Complex Institution
Supervision and Resolution; David N. Wall, Assistant General Counsel,
[email protected]; Celia Van Gorder, Senior Counsel, 202-898-6749,
[email protected]; or Esther Rabin, Counsel, [email protected], Legal
Division, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street NW,
Washington, DC 20429.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
a. Background
b. Proposed Guidance
II. Overview of Comments
III. Final Guidance
a. Scope of Application
b. Transition Period
c. Consolidation of Prior Guidance and Format and Structure of
Plans
d. Capital and Liquidity
e. Governance Mechanisms
f. Operational
g. Branches
h. Group Resolution Plan
i. Legal Entity Rationalization and Separability
j. Derivatives and Trading Activities
k. Additional Comments
IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
V. Final Guidance
I. Introduction
a. Background
Section 165(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act \1\ and the jointly issued
implementing regulation (the Rule) \2\
[[Page 83558]]
require certain financial companies, including certain foreign-based
firms, to report periodically to the agencies their plans for rapid and
orderly resolution under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code (the Bankruptcy Code)
in the event of material financial distress or failure. With respect to
a covered company \3\ that is organized or incorporated in a
jurisdiction other than the United States (other than a bank holding
company) or that is an FBO, the Rule requires that the firm's U.S.
resolution plan include specified information with respect to the
subsidiaries, branches, and agencies, and identified critical
operations and core business lines, as applicable, that are domiciled
in the United States or conducted in whole or material part in the
United States.\4\ The Rule also requires, among other things, each
covered company's full resolution plan to include a strategic analysis
of the plan's components, a description of the range of specific
actions the covered company proposes to take in resolution, and a
description of the covered company's organizational structure, material
entities, and interconnections and interdependencies.\5\ In addition,
the Rule requires that all resolution plans include a confidential
section that contains any confidential supervisory and proprietary
information submitted to the agencies as part of the resolution plan
and a separate section that the agencies make available to the public.
Public sections of resolution plans can be found on the agencies'
websites.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 12 U.S.C. 5365(d).
\2\ 12 CFR part 243 and 12 CFR part 381, as amended.
\3\ The terms ``covered company,'' ``material entities,''
``identified critical operations,'' ``core business lines,'' and
similar terms used throughout this guidance all have the same
meaning as in the Rule. See generally 12 CFR 243.2; 12 CFR 381.2.
\4\ 12 CFR 243.5(a)(2)(i); 12 CFR 381.5(a)(2)(i).
\5\ Under the Rule, all filers must submit a full resolution
plan, either every other time a resolution plan submission is
required or as a firm's initial resolution plan submission. See 12
CFR 243.4(a)(5)-(6), (b)(4)-(5), and (c)(4)-(5); 12 CFR 381.4(a)(5)-
(6), (b)(4)-(5), and (c)(4)-(5).
\6\ The public sections of resolution plans submitted to the
agencies are available at https://www.federalreserve.gov/supervisionreg/resolution-plans.htm and www.fdic.gov/regulations/reform/resplans/.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Objectives of the Resolution Planning Process
The goal of the Dodd-Frank Act resolution planning process is to
help ensure that a covered company's failure would not have serious
adverse effects on financial stability in the United States.
Specifically, the resolution planning process requires covered
companies to demonstrate that they have adequately assessed the
challenges that their structures and business activities pose to an
orderly resolution and that they have taken action to address those
issues. For FBOs, the resolution planning process focuses on their U.S.
subsidiaries and operations.
The agencies recognize that the preferred resolution outcome for
many FBOs is a successful home country resolution using a single point
of entry (SPOE) resolution strategy where U.S. material entities are
provided with sufficient capital and liquidity resources to allow them
to stay out of resolution proceedings and maintain continuity of
operations throughout the parent's resolution. However, because support
from the foreign parent in stress cannot be ensured, the Rule provides
that the U.S. resolution plan for foreign-based covered companies
should specifically address a scenario where the U.S. operations
experience material financial distress, and the plan should not assume
that the covered company takes resolution actions outside the United
States that would eliminate the need for any U.S. subsidiaries to enter
resolution proceedings.\7\ Nonetheless, the Rule also provides firms
with appropriate flexibility to construct a U.S. resolution strategy in
a way that is not inconsistent with a firm's global resolution
strategy, as long as assumptions consistent with the firm's global
strategy support the firm's U.S. resolution strategy and adhere to the
required and prohibited assumptions articulated in the Rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ 12 CFR 243.4(h)(3); 12 CFR 381.4(h)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Recent Developments
Implementation of the Rule has been an iterative process aimed at
strengthening the resolution planning capabilities of financial
institutions subject to the Rule. The final guidance is based on the
Guidance for 2018 Sec. 165(d) Annual Resolution Plan Submissions By
Foreign-based Covered Companies that Submitted Resolution Plans in July
2015 (2018 FBO guidance).\8\ The 2018 FBO guidance was provided to four
FBOs.\9\ The agencies also have previously provided feedback on several
occasions to the four FBOs that at present are in scope for the final
guidance.\10\ In general, the guidance and feedback were intended to
assist the recipients in their development of future resolution plan
submissions and to provide additional clarity with respect to the
agencies' expectations for the filers' future progress. The 2018 FBO
guidance and the feedback letters were made available to the public.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Available at www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/files/bcreg20170324a21.pdf and www.fdic.gov/resauthority/2018subguidance.pdf.
\9\ Barclays PLC, Credit Suisse Group AG, Deutsche Bank AG, and
UBS AG.
\10\ See infra Section III.c (Consolidation of Prior Guidance).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Several developments inform the final guidance:
The agencies' consideration of comments to the proposed
guidance (as defined below);
The agencies' review of certain FBOs' 2018 resolution
plans and the issuance of individual letters communicating the
agencies' views on and shortcomings contained in the 2018 resolution
plans filed by the firms subject to the 2018 FBO guidance (2018
feedback letters); \11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ Available at www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/bcreg20181220c.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Revisions to the content related to payment, clearing, and
settlement (PCS) activities and derivatives and trading activities in
the updated guidance for the resolution plan submissions by the eight
largest, most complex U.S. banking organizations in February 2019 (2019
domestic guidance); \12\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ Final Guidance for the 2019, 84 FR 1438 (February 4, 2019).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The 2019 amendments to the Rule (2019 Rule revisions),
which included the clarification that FBOs should not assume that its
foreign parent company takes resolution actions outside of the United
States that would eliminate the need for any U.S. subsidiaries to enter
into resolution proceedings; \13\ and
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ Resolution Plans Required, 84 FR 59194 (November 1, 2019).
The amendments became effective on December 31, 2019.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
An analysis of the current risk profiles of the large,
complex FBOs subject to resolution planning requirements.
The preamble to the 2019 Rule revisions indicated that the agencies
would make any future resolution guidance available for comment,\14\
and in March 2020 the agencies invited comments on proposed guidance
for the 2021 and subsequent resolution plan submissions by certain FBOs
(proposed guidance).\15\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ 84 FR 59204.
\15\ Guidance for Resolution Plan Submissions of Certain
Foreign-Based Covered Companies, 85 FR 15449 (March 18, 2020).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under the 2019 Rule revisions, each Specified FBO will be a
triennial full filer and will be required to submit a resolution plan
every three years, alternating between a full resolution plan and a
targeted resolution plan. The 2019 Rule revisions require all triennial
full filers to submit a targeted resolution plan on or before July 1,
2021, followed by a full resolution plan in 2024. In addition, the
agencies indicated in the 2019 Rule revisions that they would strive to
provide final general guidance at least a year before the next
resolution
[[Page 83559]]
plan submission date of firms to which the general guidance is
directed.
On May 6, 2020, the agencies extended the 2021 resolution plan
submission date for Category II and III firms, including those firms
who are currently Specified FBOs, from July 1 to September 29.\16\ In
accordance with the expectation set out in the preamble to the 2019
Rule revisions, the agencies are further extending the 2021 resolution
plan submission deadline for the firms that are currently Specified
FBOs and were previously subject to the 2018 FBO guidance to December
17, 2021, to provide the firms with sufficient time to develop their
targeted resolution plans in light of the final guidance. In addition,
as discussed in more detail below, a Specified FBO that was not subject
to the 2018 FBO guidance for its most recent resolution plan submission
will not be expected to have taken the final guidance into
consideration in developing its targeted plan submission due in 2021.
Instead, such a firm should consider the final guidance in connection
with developing its next full resolution plan submission due in 2024.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ See https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/bcreg20200506a.htm and https://www.fdic.gov/news/news/press/2020/pr20057.html.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
International Cooperation on Resolution Planning
The 2018 feedback letters also noted the importance of the
agencies' engagement with non-U.S. regulators. The Specified FBOs are
subject to their home country resolvability frameworks, in addition to
section 165(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act and the Rule. Resolution of the
U.S. operations of a firm domiciled outside the United States with
significant global activities (e.g., the Specified FBOs) will require
substantial coordination between home and host country authorities,
just as resolution of the foreign operations of a U.S. G-SIB would. The
agencies identified three areas in the 2018 feedback letters (legal
entity rationalization, PCS, and derivatives booking practices) where
enhanced cooperation between the agencies and each firm's home country
regulatory authorities would maximize resolvability under both the U.S.
and home country resolution strategies.\17\ The agencies will continue
to coordinate with non-U.S. authorities regarding these and other
resolution matters (e.g., resources in resolution, communications),
including developments in the U.S. and home country resolution
capabilities of the Specified FBOs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ Available at www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/bcreg20181220c.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
b. Proposed Guidance
In March 2020, the agencies invited public comment on the proposed
guidance, which was proposed to apply beginning with the subject firms'
2021 resolution plan submissions. The proposed guidance began with a
description of the proposed scoping methodology and was then organized
into eight substantive areas, consistent with the 2018 FBO guidance.
These areas were: Capital, liquidity, governance mechanisms,
operational, branches, group resolution plan, legal entity
rationalization and separability, and derivatives and trading
activities. The proposed guidance described the agencies' proposed
expectations for each of these areas.
The proposal was largely consistent with the 2018 FBO guidance and
the 2019 domestic guidance. Accordingly, the agencies expected that the
Proposed FBOs had already incorporated significant aspects of the
proposed guidance into their resolution planning. With respect to the
2019 domestic guidance, the proposed guidance differed in certain
respects, given the circumstances under which a foreign-based covered
company's U.S. resolution plan is most likely to be relevant. The
proposal was tailored for large, complex FBOs as compared to the U.S.
global systemically important banks (G-SIBs) to account for differences
between U.S. G-SIBs' and FBOs' U.S. footprints and operations. The
proposal updated the PCS and derivatives and trading activities areas
of the 2018 FBO guidance to reflect the agencies' review of certain
FBOs' 2018 resolution plans and revisions contained in the 2019
domestic guidance. It also made minor clarifications to certain areas
of the 2018 FBO guidance in light of the 2019 Rule revisions. In
general, the proposed revisions to the guidance were intended to
streamline the firms' submissions and to provide additional clarity. In
addition, the proposed guidance would have consolidated all guidance
applicable to the Proposed FBOs into a single document, which would
provide the industry and public with one source of applicable guidance
to which to refer.
The agencies invited comments on all aspects of the proposed
guidance. The agencies also specifically requested comments on a number
of issues, including whether the topics in the proposed guidance
represented the key vulnerabilities of the covered companies in
resolution, whether the proposed scope of applicability was
appropriate, and whether the proposed guidance was sufficiently clear.
II. Overview of Comments
The agencies received and reviewed seven comment letters on the
proposed guidance. Commenters included various financial services trade
associations, a financial market utility, and two FBOs. In addition,
the agencies met with industry representatives and FBOs at their
request to discuss issues relating to the proposed guidance.\18\ This
section provides an overview of the general themes raised by
commenters. The comments received on the proposed guidance are further
discussed below in the sections describing the final guidance,
including any changes that the agencies have made to the proposed
guidance in response to comments.
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\18\ Summaries of those meetings and copies of the comments can
be found on each agency's website.
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Further Tailoring of Proposal Due to Reduced Size and Risk
Most commenters suggested that the proposed guidance should be
further tailored for the Proposed FBOs. They asserted that these firms
have reduced the size and systemic risk profiles of their U.S.
operations since resolution guidance was originally issued, and the
guidance should be commensurately streamlined. Therefore, commenters
questioned the appropriateness of issuing guidance to the Proposed
FBOs--which they noted were Category III firms, as calculated using the
assets and activities of each firm's top tier U.S. intermediate holding
company--that would be similar to the guidance provided to the U.S. G-
SIBs, which are Category I covered companies. Commenters argued that,
in some cases, the proposed guidance was even more expansive than the
guidance issued to the U.S. G-SIBs. Certain commenters also stated that
the proposal failed to articulate a clear distinction in the
expectations applicable to Category I firms and to Category II/III
firms. In addition, commenters asserted that the proposal, if
finalized, would have resulted in disparate treatment among firms in
Category II and Category III.
Home Country Considerations
Some commenters disagreed with the proposal's view on resolution
planning for the Proposed FBOs, which these commenters described as
narrowly focused on the resolution of U.S. operations independent of
home country measures or foreign parent support. The commenters noted
that these firms have been subject to extensive home country
frameworks,
[[Page 83560]]
which include global SPOE strategies. These commenters asserted that
the resolution plans for the U.S. operations of these firms should be
considered in this context and should not have requirements equivalent
to the U.S. G-SIBs.
Some commenters cited prior comments by the Vice Chair for
Supervision of the Board in which he encouraged host regulators to
recognize their interests in the success of the foreign parent
company's SPOE strategy and to provide further flexibility for the
parent to move resources as necessary within the organization. The
commenters offered resource pre-placement requirements for FBOs, which
exceed those required by similarly sized U.S. firms, as an example of
how the proposed guidance would be inconsistent with these principles.
Scoping Methodology
The commenters generally opposed the proposed use of the second
methodology (method 2) of the G-SIB surcharge framework as the scoping
methodology for the proposal. The commenters made a number of
assertions about the proposed scoping methodology, including:
Method 2 does not accurately reflect the reduced systemic
risk of the Proposed FBOs due to shortcomings in the metric as applied
to firms other than the U.S. G-SIBs. As a result, the method 2 scores
for the Proposed FBOs are inappropriately inflated.
Method 2 was not intended to be applied to FBOs as a
scoping methodology, but rather was designed to calculate the G-SIB
capital surcharge.
Using method 2 as the scoping methodology for the guidance
would be inconsistent with the approach taken by the agencies to use
the tailoring framework to determine resolution plan submission
requirements, especially since the agencies previously rejected using
the G-SIB surcharge framework for that purpose.
Some commenters suggested a number of alternatives to method 2 as
the scoping methodology. One suggestion was to use the tailoring
categories established for enhanced prudential standards, specifically
having the proposal only apply to Category II firms, as calculated
using the assets and activities of each firm's top tier U.S.
intermediate holding company. Two commenters suggested, as an
alternative, that the agencies use a modified version of method 2 or
method 1 G-SIBs' surcharge scores.
Payment, Clearing, and Settlement Services
Several commenters asserted that the proposed guidance for PCS
services raised issues of extraterritoriality. They argued that the PCS
guidance regarding non-U.S. affiliates should be addressed as part of
the group resolution planning process or supervision and any related
information request would be outside the scope of the Title I
resolution plan requirements. They also proposed that the agencies
obtain this information through home-host supervisor cooperation.
Commenters also argued that the proposed PCS expectations were even
more extensive than the guidance provided to the U.S. G-SIBs on this
topic.
One commenter supported certain portions of the PCS services
section, but also suggested changes, including aligning the guidance
with certain expectations of the European Banking Union's resolution
authority, enhancing communication strategies, and clarifying terms
used in the proposed guidance.
Derivatives and Trading Activities
A number of comments concerning the proposed derivatives guidance
were similar to those made for the PCS section in asserting that the
proposed information requests presented concerns of extraterritoriality
and were outside the scope of the Title I resolution plan requirements.
Commenters argued that the proposal called for strategies regarding and
data on the activities of non-U.S. affiliates and non-U.S.
transactions. They noted that these items are generally addressed in
home country resolution plans or supervision and suggested that the
related information could be requested from home country regulators.
Some commenters maintained that the proposed guidance on derivatives
was broader than the guidance issued to the U.S. G-SIBs and should be
tailored for the Proposed FBOs. For example, the proposal would have
established expectations for non-derivatives trading activities, such
as securities financing transactions.
Contractually Binding Mechanisms
A few commenters provided views concerning contractually binding
mechanisms (CBMs), which are intended to ensure that sufficient capital
and liquidity are provided to material entity subsidiaries in a timely
manner. These commenters generally agreed that the agencies should
continue to allow firms flexibility to create support arrangements that
work best for their structures and global and U.S. resolution plans.
They asserted that, accordingly, the guidance should continue to focus
on the need to mitigate the risks of creditor challenges and on how
well the strategy selected by the firm satisfies the policy objectives
of the agencies, rather than specifying a particular mechanism.
Capital and Liquidity
The agencies received a number of comments on the capital and
liquidity sections of the proposed guidance. With regard to the capital
section of the proposed guidance, commenters argued that the proposal
included expectations that are duplicative of existing capital
requirements and suggested removing the guidance on resolution capital
adequacy and positioning (RCAP) from the final guidance. Most of these
commenters asserted that streamlining the multiple capital measures
would reduce burden on the firms. Further, two commenters asserted that
the proposal would have reduced the flexibility for firms to position
their capital most effectively in stress. With regard to the liquidity
section of the proposed guidance, commenters suggested there is
redundancy between the proposal and existing regulatory requirements
and also recommended removing the guidance on resolution liquidity
adequacy and positioning (RLAP) from the final guidance.
III. Final Guidance
After considering the comments, conducting additional analysis, and
further assessing the business and risk profiles of the U.S. operations
of large and complex FBOs, the agencies are issuing final guidance that
includes certain modifications and clarifications. In particular, the
scope, capital, liquidity, governance mechanisms, PCS, and derivatives
and trading activities sections of the final guidance reflect changes
from the proposed guidance. Other sections, such as group resolution
plan, and sub-sections such as management information systems,
qualified financial contracts (QFCs), and mapping of branch activities,
were determined to be duplicative of existing regulatory requirements
and accordingly, have been eliminated from the guidance. The intent of
these changes is to clarify expectations, more closely align
expectations with the current business and risk profiles of the
Specified FBOs' U.S. operations, and recognize that the preferred
resolution strategy for the Specified FBOs is a successful home country
resolution. The agencies are also eliminating expectations that relate
to information
[[Page 83561]]
that, in the agencies' experience, may be obtained through other
existing and effective mechanisms, such as home/host coordination and
supervisory information sharing. In addition, the final guidance
consolidates all prior resolution planning guidance for the firms in
one document and clarifies that any prior guidance not included in the
final guidance has been superseded. These changes are discussed in more
detail below.
The final guidance is not meant to limit firms' consideration of
additional vulnerabilities or obstacles that might arise based on a
firm's particular structure, operations, or resolution strategy and
that should be factored into the firm's submission. Moreover, the final
guidance does not contain certain expectations in the proposed guidance
and in the 2018 FBO guidance, including certain expectations relating
to capital, liquidity, governance mechanisms, PCS, and derivatives and
trading activities. The agencies do not expect that the Specified FBOs'
resolution plans will continue to address the elements that have been
removed from the guidance. However, the agencies note that the
Specified FBOs' resolution plans, like the plans for all covered
companies, are still required to meet all of the informational
requirements of the Rule notwithstanding these changes to the
guidance.\19\
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\19\ See 12 CFR 243.5 and 243.6; 12 CFR 381.5 and 381.6.
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The agencies note that commenters described certain expectations
that are set forth in the guidance as ``requirements.'' The agencies
are clarifying that the final guidance does not have the force and
effect of law. Rather, the final guidance outlines the agencies'
supervisory expectations regarding each subject area covered by the
final guidance.\20\
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\20\ See generally, Interagency Statement Clarifying the Role of
Supervisory Guidance (Sept. 11, 2018), available at https://www.federalreserve.gov/supervisionreg/srletters/sr1805a1.pdf. See
also Role of Supervisory Guidance, 85 FR 70512 (Nov. 5, 2020).
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a. Scope of Application.
The agencies received numerous comments objecting to the scope of
application of the proposed guidance, which proposed using the method 2
G-SIB surcharge framework \21\ to determine the Proposed FBOs.
Specifically, commenters argued that the proposed scope of application
appeared to be inconsistent with the principles of tailoring
established in the Board's tailoring rule.\22\ In addition, commenters
asserted that the method 2 G-SIB framework was not designed to be a
scoping mechanism outside of certain requirements for U.S. G-SIBs, has
never been applicable to IHCs, and inappropriately weights the short-
term wholesale funding (STWF) factor. Commenters also questioned the
proposal's justification for why a method 2 score of 250 was chosen as
the threshold for purposes of scope of application. Furthermore,
several commenters asserted that the proposed guidance did not
adequately recognize that the Proposed FBOs have reduced risk at their
U.S. operations, are smaller and less systemically important than the
U.S. G-SIBs, and are subject to robust global resolution planning
requirements, and so should not be subject to similar expectations as
the U.S. G-SIBs.
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\21\ 12 CFR 217.405.
\22\ Prudential Standards for Large Bank Holding Companies,
Savings and Loan Holding Companies, and Foreign Banking
Organizations, 84 FR 59032 (November 1, 2019).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commenters suggested that the agencies consider alternative scoping
methodologies, including those that were discussed in the proposal's
preamble. Some commenters suggested that the agencies adopt a scope
based on the Board's tailoring categories, with some commenters
recommending that the guidance apply only to firms subject to Category
II standards while others recommended that the final guidance should be
similar to expectations for domestic firms subject to Category II and
III standards. Other commenters suggested different potential options
to modify or replace the proposed method 2 G-SIB surcharge framework,
such as using method 1 G-SIB surcharge scores, that the commenters
asserted would more appropriately balance the agencies' guidance
expectations with the actual risk profile of the Proposed FBOs. Even if
an alternative scoping methodology were adopted, some commenters asked
the agencies to consider tailoring the guidance to what they viewed as
the Proposed FBOs' reduced risk and stronger capital and liquidity
positions, and recommended that the final guidance not introduce new
expectations beyond those already in effect.
In their consideration of the commenters' feedback, the agencies
have sought to align resolution plan supervisory expectations with the
current business and risk profiles of the Specified FBOs' U.S.
operations through the simple, transparent, and predictable mechanism
of the Board's tailoring framework. The agencies also acknowledge that
relevant resolution plan information can be obtained via other means,
such as through engagement with home country regulators and supervisory
information sharing. The agencies appreciate the analyses provided by
the commenters that compared the operations of U.S. G-SIBs to the
reduced U.S. footprint of Proposed FBOs with large U.S. operations. The
agencies continue to believe that the scope of heightened resolution
planning expectations applicable to FBOs should align with the
Specified FBOs' systemic risk profile and relevant resolution
challenges, and the final guidance should be consistent with the
principles of national treatment and equality of competitive
opportunity.
The agencies acknowledge commenters' meaningful input on certain
methodological traits in the method 2 G-SIB surcharge framework, in
particular the STWF factor weight, which could distort the liquidity
risk and systemic relevance of FBOs relative to U.S. G-SIBs. Liquidity
risk is just one of several important factors in a resolution scenario,
and the measure of liquidity risk should not solely determine scoping
of the guidance; rather, scoping should be determined holistically.
Therefore, the final guidance applies to FBOs that are subject to
Category II standards according to their combined U.S. operations
pursuant to the Board's tailoring rule \23\ and that are also required
to form IHCs.\24\
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\23\ Category II FBOs are defined as those with (1) >=$700
billion average combined U.S. assets or (2) >=$100 billion average
combined U.S. assets with >=$75b in average cross-jurisdictional
activity.
\24\ The formula defining Category II in the Board's tailoring
rule does not include formation of an IHC as a requirement. The
final guidance diverges from the Board's tailoring rule in this
respect because an IHC formed pursuant to the Board's Regulation YY
indicates the materiality of the FBO's U.S. operations that would go
through bankruptcy under the Bankruptcy Code or other ordinary U.S.
resolution regime. The agencies note that Category II is not limited
to FBOs. The final guidance, however, is directed only to FBOs that
meet the criteria noted above and not to domestic banking
organizations.
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Using the tailoring categories in this context also will promote
uniform scoping between resolution expectations and regulatory
requirements. As stated in the preamble to the Rule, the agencies
believe that the risk-based indicators identified in the Board's
tailoring rule are an effective means of dividing firms into groups for
the purposes of determining the frequency and informational content of
resolution plans. The indicators-based approach for application of
Category II, III, and IV standards provides a simple framework
[[Page 83562]]
that supports the objectives of risk sensitivity and transparency and
thus is an appropriate mechanism for scoping the application of the
final guidance.
Size and operational complexity are also factors in the decision to
apply the guidance to FBOs subject to Category II standards. As
indicated in the preamble to the Board's tailoring rule, the failure or
distress of the U.S. operations of a FBO that is subject to Category II
standards could impose significant costs on the U.S. financial system
and economy. In addition, increased levels of cross-jurisdictional
activity, an indicator for Category II firms, could increase the
operational complexity of a resolution, as it may be more difficult to
resolve or unwind a firm's positions due to the involvement of multiple
jurisdictions and regulatory authorities. As such, FBOs subject to
Category II standards merit the application of more detailed
expectations than those FBOs that are smaller or that do not share the
same indicators of operational risk. The agencies also believe this
modification to the scope appropriately focuses on the largest and most
complex FBOs with U.S. IHCs without losing the focus on cross-
jurisdictional activities.
While the proposal relied only to a limited extent on the Board's
tailoring rule for scoping the proposed guidance--noting that the
tailoring categories were developed to determine application of a broad
range of enhanced prudential standards and were not explicitly focused
on determining which covered companies should be subject to more
detailed resolution planning guidance--the agencies have concluded that
the benefits of employing the tailoring categories--clear, predictable
scoping based on publicly reported quantitative data--outweigh any
concerns related to using them for this purpose.
Consistent with the Rule, the final guidance takes into account a
Specified FBO's entire U.S operations, including branches and agencies
(i.e., combined U.S. operations), when determining scope of
applicability. As discussed in the preamble to the 2019 Rule revisions,
reference to combined U.S. operations is appropriate as the resolution
planning requirement applies to a firm's entire U.S. operations.
Moreover, U.S. branches, agencies, and offices constitute a significant
share of these foreign banking organizations' presence in the United
States and the agencies' experience reviewing resolution plans
demonstrates that there are interconnections and dependencies between a
foreign firm's U.S. branches, agencies, and offices and its U.S.
subsidiaries, core business lines, and critical operations. Thus, the
inclusion of U.S. branches, agencies, and offices in determining the
scope of application of the final guidance is not only consistent with
the Rule, but it is also appropriate in order to measure the
operational complexity and full scope of potential risks to U.S.
financial stability that a FBO may pose.
Finally, while the method 1 G-SIB surcharge score methodology could
potentially address the concerns raised on STWF, the agencies believe
the risk-based indicator approach in the Board's tailoring rule further
simplifies application of the guidance.
b. Transition Period
The proposed guidance did not describe how the guidance would be
applied to FBOs that become covered by its scope, but it did request
comment on the methodology and process for determining the FBOs to
which the guidance should apply, including whether the agencies should
specify an implementation period for any FBOs that are designated as
Specified FBOs under the final guidance. Some commenters requested that
the agencies provide clarity on a transition period for firms that may
newly fall under the scope of the guidance, and, conversely, on an exit
process for firms that may no longer be covered.
To provide certainty to FBOs, the final guidance includes
transition periods for Specified FBOs that were not previously within
the scope of the 2018 FBO guidance and for firms that become Specified
FBOs after December 22, 2020. A firm that is currently a Specified FBO,
but was not previously the subject of guidance for its most recent
resolution plan, will not be expected to have taken the final guidance
into consideration in developing its targeted plan submission due in
2021. Rather, such a firm will be expected to consider the final
guidance in developing its next full resolution plan submission, so
long as the firm is a Specified FBO as of the submission date for that
plan.
The final guidance also states that when an FBO becomes a Specified
FBO, the final guidance will apply to the firm's next resolution plan
submission with a submission date that is at least 12 months after the
time the firm becomes a Specified FBO.\25\ If a Specified FBO ceases to
be subject to Category II standards or to the Board's requirement to
form an intermediate holding company, it will no longer be considered a
Specified FBO, and the guidance will no longer be applicable to that
firm as of the date the firm ceases to be subject to Category II
standards.
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\25\ The plan type for that next submission remains as specified
by the Rule, i.e., a full or targeted resolution plan. See 12 CFR
243.4; 12 CFR 381.4.
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c. Consolidation of Prior Guidance and Format and Structure of Plans
One commenter supported, and no commenters opposed, the agencies'
proposal to consolidate prior guidance. Accordingly, the final guidance
includes, as proposed, a section regarding the format, assumptions, and
structure of resolution plans, which includes the aspects of previous
guidance that remain applicable to resolution planning. In light of the
changes in the final guidance to the areas of capital, liquidity,
governance mechanisms, and separability, the agencies have reviewed the
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) contained in the proposed guidance.
The FAQs appended to the final guidance contain those FAQs that
continue to be applicable to resolution planning, with appropriate
modifications to reflect the changes to the final guidance. Consistent
with the proposal, to the extent not incorporated in or appended to the
final guidance, prior guidance \26\ is superseded.
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\26\ In addition to the 2018 FBO guidance, the agencies have
also issued and provided to certain FBOs: The Guidance for 2013
Sec. 165(d) Annual Resolution Plan Submissions by Foreign-Based
Covered Companies that Submitted Initial Resolution Plans in 2012;
the February 2015 staff communication regarding the 2016 plan
submissions; the July 2017 Resolution Plan Frequently Asked
Questions; and feedback letters issued to Barclays PLC, Credit
Suisse Group AG, Deutsche Bank AG, and UBS AG in December 2018 and
in August 2014 and feedback letters issued to Mitsubishi UFJ
Financial Group in July 2019, January 2018, and July 2015.
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d. Capital and Liquidity
While the proposed guidance would have maintained substantially all
of the expectations in the capital and liquidity sections that were
included in the 2018 FBO guidance,\27\ the final guidance, in contrast
to the proposal, does not include expectations for RCAP, RLAP, and
certain liquidity capabilities. These changes were made to more closely
align guidance expectations with the current business and risk profiles
of the Specified FBOs' U.S. operations and in recognition of the
overlap between those concepts and certain other regulatory provisions,
as discussed below. As noted in the proposed guidance, the agencies
continue to evaluate the relationship between the capital and liquidity
sections of the final guidance and other capital and liquidity
regulatory provisions. The agencies expect that any further changes to
the
[[Page 83563]]
remaining guidance in these areas would be adopted following notice and
comment.
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\27\ Section II and Section III of the proposal.
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i. Capital
The final guidance does not include expectations for RCAP but
retains proposed expectations for resolution capital execution need
(RCEN). Several commenters requested that the agencies remove RCAP
expectations from the guidance because of the reduced U.S. systemic
risk of the Proposed FBOs and the potential redundancy with other
regulatory provisions, such as the Board's rule on total loss absorbing
capacity (TLAC). Commenters also suggested that RCAP expectations are
redundant with TLAC requirements for local, bail-in-able resources to
recapitalize an FBO's U.S. operations, and one commenter further
asserted that RCAP constrains a firm's ability to position capital
within the U.S. IHC entities in a manner that allows for the most
flexibility and efficiency in a stress scenario. One commenter
expressed support for maintaining expectations for RCEN. Some
commenters also suggested that the guidance should take into account
the positioning of financial resources in the United States in light of
the positioning of resources in the firm's non-U.S. operations and that
the agencies should reconsider expectations for resource preplacement
within the United States to encourage more flexibility at the
international level.
The final guidance does not include RCAP expectations concerning
the appropriate positioning of capital and other loss-absorbing
instruments among the U.S. IHC and its subsidiaries because existing
TLAC requirements applicable to the U.S. IHC provide a backstop of
resources that is appropriate to the size and complexity of the
Specified FBOs. The final guidance, consistent with one commenter's
recommendation, maintains the RCEN expectations regarding a methodology
for periodically estimating the amount of capital that may be needed to
support each U.S. IHC subsidiary after the U.S. IHC's bankruptcy
filing. RCEN helps the firm and the agencies determine when the U.S.
IHC is approaching a situation where it will not have sufficient
resources to conduct a successful resolution.
Several commenters requested that the agencies reconsider
requirements and expectations for resource preplacement within the
United States, such as internal TLAC requirements applicable to the
U.S. IHC, that are not set by the guidance. As these requirements and
expectations are outside the scope of the guidance, the final guidance
does not address these requests.
ii. Liquidity
The final guidance retains the proposed expectations for resolution
liquidity execution need (RLEN) but does not include expectations for
liquidity capabilities and RLAP. Several commenters requested that the
agencies remove RLAP expectations from the guidance, in consideration
of factors including the reduced U.S. systemic risk of the Proposed
FBOs and potential redundancy with other regulatory provisions, such as
the Net Stable Funding Ratio (NSFR) and internal liquidity stress
testing. One commenter suggested that the agencies conduct an
assessment of the cumulative effect of liquidity and capital
expectations and requirements, specifically between RLEN and NSFR and
between RLAP and TLAC. Another commenter suggested integrating the RLAP
liquidity expectations in the proposal into regulatory liquidity
requirements via the rulemaking process. This commenter also expressed
concern about the potential additive requirements and expectations of
RLAP relative to the NSFR. Finally, one commenter expressed support for
maintaining RLEN expectations.
Like the rationale for eliminating RCAP from the final guidance,
because of the Specified FBOs' relatively simple U.S. legal entity
structures and reduced risk profiles, the final guidance does not
include RLAP expectations concerning the appropriate positioning of
liquidity among the U.S. IHC and its subsidiaries. However, a firm's
ability to reliably estimate and meet the liquidity needs of the U.S.
IHC and its subsidiaries prior to, and in, resolution remains important
to the execution of a Specified FBO's U.S. resolution strategy, as
reflected in the Rule.\28\ The final guidance therefore incorporates
only expectations for RLEN. The final guidance also eliminates
references to RLAP.
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\28\ See 12 CFR 243.5(c)(1)(iii); 12 CFR 381.5(c)(1)(iii).
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The agencies do not believe there will be significant overlap
between RLEN expectations and the NSFR rule because the regulation
implicates long-term liquidity risks and stability of funding sources,
while the guidance focuses on liquidity needs during a resolution
scenario, which are shorter-term in nature. Further, liquidity needs in
a resolution scenario may be driven by highly idiosyncratic factors.
These factors can be incorporated into a firm's RLEN framework, but
would not necessarily be addressed in a standardized measure like the
NSFR. The agencies' decision not to include expectations for RLAP in
the final guidance obviates the need to analyze interaction between
RLAP and TLAC. Separately, the suggestion to incorporate liquidity
expectations into existing regulatory requirements is outside the scope
of the current guidance-making.
e. Governance Mechanisms
i. Playbooks
The proposed guidance outlined an expectation for Proposed FBOs to
develop governance playbooks that detail specific actions that the
board of directors and senior management of U.S. non-branch material
entities would take under the firm's U.S. resolution strategy. The
expectations related to communication and escalation protocols were
contingent on triggers, which are firm-defined financial metrics
reflecting the U.S. IHC's financial condition. In addition, the
proposed guidance called for playbooks to address, among other things,
the fiduciary responsibilities of boards of directors, potential
conflicts of interest, and employee retention policies. One commenter
suggested that the agencies streamline playbook expectations to focus
only on governance and escalation procedures as well as capabilities to
produce key information and data that support timely and informed
decision-making. The commenter argued that outlining details about
specific decisions management would have to make would be of limited
value given that resolution-related actions would be driven by the
circumstances and market conditions present at the time of financial
stress. The agencies are finalizing this aspect of the guidance as
proposed as the agencies believe that the suggested additional
information would have important value in a resolution scenario.
ii. Triggers
The agencies received no comments about the expectations in the
proposed guidance regarding triggers. That said, recognizing that the
preferred resolution outcome for the Specified FBOs is a successful
home country resolution, the final guidance does not include
expectations regarding triggers or escalation protocols based on the
U.S. IHC's financial condition. The final guidance, however, retains
the broader expectation that firms have in place mechanisms to ensure
that timely communication and coordination occurs between and among the
boards of the U.S. IHC, U.S. IHC subsidiaries, and the
[[Page 83564]]
foreign parent to facilitate the provision of financial support.
iii. Potential Mechanisms for Parent Support
Having a structure in place that facilitates the transmission of
resources to an FBO's U.S. material entity subsidiaries and mitigates
against potential legal challenges is an important component for
resolution plans that contemplate the provision of such support.
Neither the proposed guidance nor the Rule endorses a specific strategy
for the provision of such support. Rather, under the proposal, firms
would have been expected to (i) develop a mechanism for planned foreign
parent support of U.S. non-branch material entities to meet those
entities' liquidity needs and (ii) include in their resolution plan
submissions analysis of potential challenges to planned foreign parent
support and associated mitigants. Further, the proposal provided that
if a plan anticipates the provision of capital and liquidity by a U.S.
material entity (e.g., the U.S. IHC) to its U.S. affiliates prior to
the U.S. IHC's bankruptcy filing, the plan should also include a
detailed legal analysis of the potential state law and bankruptcy law
challenges and mitigants to the provision of resources. To date, some
Specified FBOs have relied on CBMs for the timely provision of capital
and liquidity from a U.S. material entity (e.g., the U.S. IHC) to its
U.S. affiliates prior to the U.S. IHC commencing a bankruptcy case and
to mitigate potential legal challenges to the provision of such
support. In addition, the agencies solicited comment on the benefits
and costs and the relative advantages and disadvantages of two
approaches currently used by FBOs to assist the agencies in deciding
whether to endorse a specific approach in finalizing the guidance.
Commenters urged against imposing specific requirements or
expectations regarding CBMs and supported maintaining flexibility for
firms to determine the particular form and structure of CBMs based on a
firm's structure, resolution strategy, and global capital and liquidity
planning needs. Commenters further recommended that the agencies
evaluate CBMs based on their effectiveness in mitigating creditor
challenges. One commenter suggested that the agencies' assessment of
the effectiveness of various CBMs should take into consideration the
nature of the Proposed FBOs, specifically that: (i) All of the Proposed
FBOs in the proposed guidance have global SPOE strategies that do not
contemplate the insolvency of the U.S. IHC or any other U.S. entity;
(ii) internal TLAC requirements have been complied with and incentivize
the firms to recapitalize their U.S. operations to avoid the costs,
operational burdens, and other consequences associated with bankruptcy
proceedings; and (iii) the Board has the authority to trigger the
conversion of internal TLAC in the form of long-term debt into equity
to recapitalize an IHC without the need for a U.S. bankruptcy
proceeding. This commenter also argued that the agencies should provide
a threshold for determining whether a CBM sufficiently mitigates the
risk of creditor challenges that is materially lower than for U.S. BHCs
for which a bankruptcy proceeding is a primary resolution strategy.
This commenter also stated that the agencies had already been provided
with substantial legal analyses supporting the workability of existing
CBMs and urged the agencies to engage with the Proposed FBOs prior to
providing specific requirements regarding CBMs.
One commenter cautioned that the proposed CBM guidance may impede
capital and liquidity placed in the U.S. IHC from being returned to the
parent for efficient deployment globally, and that a CBM developed only
to support a U.S. resolution may trap financial resources in the IHC.
Separately, another commenter requested that the agencies engage with
the Proposed FBOs and consider alternative approaches to ensure the
timely availability of capital and liquidity support. Suggestions
included reducing or amending internal TLAC requirements, allowing use
of internal TLAC to satisfy the demands of Comprehensive Capital
Analysis and Review, and eliminating the requirement in the Rule that
firms must assume the bankruptcy of a U.S. entity.
Consistent with the comments received, and to maintain flexibility
for firms, the agencies are finalizing the guidance without including
additional expectations regarding the use and structure of CBMs. This
lack of specific, additional expectations related to CBMs should not be
interpreted as an expression of the agencies' view on the feasibility
of current support mechanisms. Additionally, no revisions have been
made in response to a comment that urged the agencies to describe, ex
ante, a particular threshold for what constitutes an effective CBM.
Furthermore, the agencies have not made changes in response to the
comment recommending amendments to various rules, as revisions to
regulatory requirements are outside the scope of the present guidance.
The agencies refer to the above discussion about capital and liquidity
in response to concerns about the placement and availability of capital
and liquidity.\29\
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\29\ See supra Section III.d (Capital and Liquidity).
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In addition, the final guidance removes the expectation for the
resolution plan to include an analysis of the potential challenges to
the planned foreign parent support to U.S. non-branch material
entities, and the planned provision of capital and liquidity by a U.S.
material entity to its U.S. affiliates prior to the U.S. IHC's
bankruptcy filing. This approach gives due consideration to the
arguments put forth by commenters that the Specified FBOs should have
flexibility to determine the particular form and structure of the
framework developed to support its particular resolution strategy and
needs, that the preferred resolution outcome for the Specified FBOs is
a successful home country resolution, and that internal TLAC resources
are available for conversion to support IHC recapitalization outside of
bankruptcy.
f. Operational
i. Payment, Clearing and Settlement Activities
Scope of PCS Activities: Most commenters requested that the scope
of the guidance be limited to U.S. material entities, core business
lines, and critical operations domiciled in the U.S. and resolved under
the U.S. Bankruptcy Code, and that guidance should not include indirect
PCS relationships through non-U.S. affiliates. Commenters contended
that the proposal would subject the Proposed FBOs to expectations that
are essentially the same as, and in some ways more extensive than, the
expectations for PCS activities applicable to U.S. G-SIBs. Commenters
also claimed that the proposal would be potentially extraterritorial in
its coverage of non-U.S. branches and affiliates and contrary to the
Rule and Title I of the Dodd-Frank Act. These commenters also asserted
that because non-U.S. affiliate relationships were covered under home
country regulatory frameworks, inclusion of information about these
relationships in U.S. resolution planning would be duplicative and the
information should be obtained via home-host supervisor cooperation.
One commenter suggested that indirect access to PCS services through
non-U.S. affiliates does not raise significant U.S. resolution
concerns. Another commenter claimed that a U.S. material entity would
not have the ability to distinguish activity specific to its clients
[[Page 83565]]
or counterparties with the indirect financial market utility (FMU), as
this activity is typically subject to netting by the non-U.S.
affiliate, and that a U.S. material entity of a Proposed FBO would not
have the authority to make decisions on contingency actions involving
an FMU that is accessed via a non-U.S. affiliate. These commenters
suggested that the guidance be tailored to fit the Proposed FBOs'
reduced U.S. footprint and their limited role in this space, relative
to U.S. G-SIBs.
As a preliminary matter, the agencies note that the Rule requires
full resolution plan submissions by foreign-based covered companies to
include information on ``the interconnections and interdependencies
among the U.S. subsidiaries, branches, and agencies, and between those
entities and . . . [a]ny foreign-based affiliate.'' \30\ In addition,
each full resolution plan is required to ``identify each trading,
payment, clearing, or settlement system of which the covered company,
directly or indirectly, is a member and on which the covered company
conducts a material number or value amount of trades or transactions.''
\31\ These provisions, together, provide the agencies the authority to
set forth the expectation that a firm's PCS framework address its
indirect access to PCS services through non-U.S. affiliates. The
proposed guidance was therefore consistent with the Rule and Title I of
the Dodd-Frank Act. The agencies reiterate that continuity of access
arrangements provided indirectly by non-U.S. affiliates to support a
Specified FBO's U.S. operations and key clients are an important part
of a Specified FBO's U.S. resolution planning.
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\30\ 12 CFR 243.5(a)(2)(i); 12 CFR 381.5(a)(2)(i).
\31\ 12 CFR 243.5(e)(12); 12 CFR 381.5(e)(12).
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The agencies acknowledge, however, that commenters' feedback that a
non-U.S. affiliate's ability to maintain access to key FMUs and key
agent banks to support indirect PCS relationships through non-U.S.
affiliates may be addressed in the firm's group resolution plan or in
other information provided to home country regulators. As such,
expectations that Specified FBOs submit detailed information related to
non-U.S. affiliates' support of their U.S. operations may be
duplicative. In recognition of this feedback and in an effort to more
closely align expectations with the business and risk profiles of the
Specified FBOs' U.S. operations, the final guidance does not include
expectations that firms provide information regarding indirect access
to key FMUs and agent banks provided by non-U.S. branches and
affiliates. As further suggested by commenters and consistent with
prior statements by the agencies, the agencies expect to engage with
the Specified FBOs and their home country authorities.
Providers of PCS Services: Two commenters recommended clarifying
the term ``provider of PCS services'' to include other key roles in
which a firm may act, and to provide further examples where a firm may
act as provider (or recipient) of PCS services. One commenter also
recommended that the term ``agent bank'' should be clarified to
specifically include ``nostro banks.'' One commenter also suggested
that firms be encouraged to amend their bilateral contracts with agent
banks, including contracts with nostro agents, to facilitate continuity
of access to PCS services. The final guidance does not include
additional clarification or examples as the agencies do not intend the
guidance to be prescriptive. Rather, the final guidance is intended to
provide a firm with flexibility to define and identify PCS services, as
well as the instances where the firm is a provider of such PCS services
to its clients. Regarding the amendment of bilateral contracts, the
agencies believe that the expectations regarding establishment of
service-level agreements (SLAs) in the Shared and Outsourced Services
section of the final guidance address the commenter's suggestions.
One commenter also recommended that the proposal recognize that
many FMUs and agent banks do not implement bilateral SLAs for core
clearing and custody services. The agencies have clarified the final
guidance by adding `as applicable' to the relevant capability in the
guidance text.
Playbooks for Continued Access to PCS Services: One commenter
stated that FMU playbooks should be streamlined to include only
critical information necessary to facilitate an orderly resolution
(e.g., management information, liquidity considerations, key
governance, and responsible parties) and that firms should not be
expected to include information regarding FMU membership rules or
expected behavior. Another commenter stated that to the extent such
critical information had already been provided to the agencies through
prior exam processes, firms should be able to reference such items
instead of including them in playbooks. Separately, another commenter
recommended that the final guidance direct firms to maintain lists of
key resolution contacts for their key FMUs and key agent banks and
provide equivalent contact information to key FMUs and key agent banks.
This commenter also suggested that the guidance put additional emphasis
on the importance of continued firm engagement with key external
stakeholders and that the agencies consider adding expectations for
firm communication with key FMUs and key agent banks during stress and
resolution. The agencies also were encouraged by this commenter to
develop their own communication strategies for key stakeholders and vet
them with relevant firms and FMUs. The commenter further suggested that
firms should identify, ex ante, services they would likely cease to
provide in a resolution and plan for actions they would take to
mitigate any resulting adverse systemic impact. Finally, a commenter
stated that the guidance should recognize that there is specific,
industry-wide default guidance already in place for certain FMUs (e.g.,
central counterparties) that would apply to a Proposed FBO's activities
in a resolution.
The agencies are finalizing these elements of the guidance as
proposed. The expectations in the final guidance call for playbooks
that address specifically how firms would maintain access to PCS
services but that do not necessarily include a discussion of FMU rules
around a member firm's default. The final guidance aims to provide
firms flexibility in determining how they would best maintain access to
PCS services in a stress scenario and to clarify that playbooks are not
expected to include a scenario in which the firm loses access to an
agent bank or FMU. The proposed guidance contained expectations for
firms to engage with key external stakeholders and reflect any feedback
received during such ongoing outreach, and the agencies are retaining
those expectations in the final guidance. To the extent that certain
playbook information may be addressed in other sections of the firm's
submission, the firm may include a specific cross-reference to that
content in the appropriate playbook. While the agencies are not
expecting firms to model expected FMU behaviors, firms are expected to
consider operational and financial resources that would be needed to
respond to adverse actions and execute any contingency arrangement. In
addition, given the joint nature of the resolution plan process, the
final guidance, like the Rule, provides for incorporation of previously
submitted resolution plan information by reference.
The comment suggesting that the agencies develop their own
communication strategies for key stakeholders is not applicable to the
[[Page 83566]]
content in a firm's resolution plan; therefore, no changes have been
made to address the comment. The agencies already proactively engage
with firms and key stakeholders through various fora, including direct
engagement, crisis management groups, and international working groups
focused on crisis management under the Financial Stability Board. The
agencies also encourage firms and their agent banks to continue
engaging and communicating with each other, key FMUs, agent banks, and
clients, and other stakeholders to identify possible ways to support
continued access to PCS services.
While expressing general support for the expectations in the
proposed guidance related to PCS-related Liquidity Sources and Uses, a
commenter suggested that the sentence related to ``PCS Liquidity
Sources'' be revised from ``various currencies'' to ``all currencies
relevant to banks' participation'' in FMUs, to be consistent with
international expectations. The agencies are adopting this suggestion
in the final guidance. The commenter also suggested that the final
guidance clarify that firms should assess their key FMU and key agent
bank liquidity needs in the aggregate so that firms account for the
availability of funds across more than one key FMU or agent bank.
Regarding intraday liquidity, this commenter suggested that the final
guidance be amended to include additional specific expectations for
playbooks beyond describing capabilities to control intraday liquidity
inflows and outflows, and to identify and prioritize time-specific
payments. The agencies are not adopting these suggestions in the final
guidance to allow the Specified FBOs flexibility to tailor and
streamline playbook content based on the actual profile of their PCS
activities relevant to their U.S. operations.
Key Client Contingency Arrangements: Two commenters questioned the
benefit of expectations related to the identification and mapping of
PCS services to key clients and the description of contingency actions
that the firm may take concerning provision of intraday credit to key
clients since most clients have other relationships. Another commenter
suggested that the final guidance contain examples of particular
actions and arrangements that the agencies expect the firms to consider
around the provision of intraday credit to affiliate and third-party
clients. The agencies are not modifying the final guidance in response
to these comments. The final guidance contains expectations that firms
maintain continuity of access to PCS services for key clients in the
Unites States. The final guidance is not prescriptive, and each firm is
expected to determine the relevant contingency actions and arrangements
that are specific to maintaining continuity of access to its PCS
activities. Firms have the discretion to tailor the discussion to
client impacts specific to the PCS services provided by such firms. The
agencies are not modifying provisions related to the identification and
mapping of PCS services to key clients as this information helps the
agencies understand the ecosystem of provision of PCS services.
Adverse Actions: A commenter expressed support for the expectation
for playbooks to assess the range of adverse actions that may be taken
by key FMUs or key agent banks but indicated that the term ``adverse
actions'' may be incorrectly interpreted and suggested using ``risk-
mitigating actions,'' which would be more consistent with a home
country authority's guidance. The agencies are not making any changes
to the final guidance because ``adverse actions'' includes not only
``risk mitigating actions,'' but also a broader set of actions that
could be taken by key FMUs or key agent banks.
Loss of Access: One commenter suggested that there was a
contradiction in the proposed guidance and requested clarification
about whether there was an expectation for a firm to contemplate a
scenario where it loses access to a key FMU or key agent bank. The
agencies are finalizing the guidance as proposed. The final guidance
specifies that a firm is not expected to incorporate a scenario in
which it loses FMU or agent bank access into its U.S. resolution
strategy. However, in support of maintaining continuity of access to
PCS services, playbooks should provide analysis of the financial and
operational impacts to the firm's material entities and key clients due
to adverse actions that may be taken by an FMU or agent bank, and the
contingency actions that may be taken by the filer.
ii. Management Information Systems
The agencies received no comments regarding the management
information systems (MIS) section of the proposed guidance. The
expectations contained in the proposed guidance articulate general
expectations for firms to have the requisite MIS capabilities to
produce timely, accurate financial and risk data on a U.S. legal entity
basis. The agencies determined that the expectations and capabilities
are addressed in the Rule \32\ and thus the final guidance does not
include a section on MIS.
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\32\ See 12 CFR 243.5(f); 12 CFR 381.5(f).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
iii. Managing, Identifying, and Valuing Collateral
The agencies received no comments regarding the managing,
identifying, and valuing collateral section of the proposed guidance
and are finalizing the section as proposed.
iv. Shared and Outsourced Services
The agencies received no comments regarding the shared and
outsourced services section of the proposed guidance and are finalizing
the section as proposed.
v. Qualified Financial Contracts
The agencies received no comments regarding the QFC section of the
proposed guidance, which sets forth expectations for firms to
articulate their progress in implementing requirements regarding
contractual stays in qualified financial contracts. However, the
agencies are not including this sub-section in the final guidance due
to the progress made by the Specified FBOs in complying with the QFC
stay rules of the Board, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency,
and the FDIC.\33\
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\33\ 12 CFR part 47 (Office of the Comptroller of the Currency);
12 CFR part 252, subpart I (Board); and 12 CFR part 382 (FDIC).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
g. Branches
The agencies received no comments regarding the branches section of
the proposed guidance. However, the agencies are removing expectations
from the final guidance that are viewed as duplicative to existing
rules or repeat, without elaboration, components of the Rule.
Specifically, mapping expectations for U.S. branches that are material
entities are specified in the Rule.\34\ In addition, expectations for a
liquidity buffer are addressed in the Board's Regulation YY.\35\
Neither subsection of the proposed guidance was intended to expand upon
or clarify existing rules and thus it is appropriate to remove them
from the final guidance. The remaining parts of the Branches section
regarding expectations for supporting assumptions on continuity of
operations and analyzing the impact of cessation of operations remain
unchanged from the proposed guidance.
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\34\ See 12 CFR 243.5(a)(2), (g); 12 CFR 381.5(a)(2), (g).
\35\ See 12 CFR 252.
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h. Group Resolution Plan
The agencies received no comments regarding the group resolution
section of the proposed guidance, which set forth expectations for
firms to address how
[[Page 83567]]
resolution planning in the U.S. is integrated into the group resolution
plan. However, in recognition that the preferred resolution outcome for
many Specified FBOs is a successful home country resolution using an
SPOE resolution strategy, the agencies expect to supplement their
understanding of the impact on U.S. operations of executing a firm's
group resolution plan through international collaboration with home
country regulators and therefore such a section is unnecessary. The
agencies determined that as this item is addressed by the Rule,\36\ the
final guidance does not include a section on group resolution.
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\36\ See 12 CFR 243.5(a)(2)(ii); 12 CFR 381.5(a)(2)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
i. Legal Entity Rationalization and Separability
The agencies received no comments regarding the legal entity
rationalization and separability section of the proposed guidance.
However, consistent with agencies' efforts to more closely align
guidance expectations with the current business and risk profiles of
the Specified FBOs' U.S. operations, the final guidance does not
include the separability expectations, which would have suggested that
firms identify discrete U.S. operations that would be sold or
transferred in a resolution scenario. Given that the U.S. operations of
the Specified FBOs are a subcomponent of a larger FBO, for which the
preferred resolution approach is a home-country SPOE resolution, the
agencies have found that the separability options within the United
States are few and that their inclusion in resolution plans has yielded
limited new insights. Moreover, the agencies expect that such
information is obtainable through international collaboration with home
country regulators. As such, the agencies have eliminated these
expectations from the final guidance.
j. Derivatives and Trading Activities
The agencies received a number of comments on the Derivatives and
Trading Activities section of the proposed guidance. Overall,
commenters supported the proposed elimination of the active and passive
wind-down scenario analyses and rating agency playbooks, and
recommended certain additional modifications and clarifications to
streamline the resolution plan submissions and provide further clarity.
After reviewing the comments, the agencies have adopted final
guidance that includes several adjustments to address matters raised by
the commenters. Specifically, the final guidance does not include
elements from the proposal related to derivatives and trading
activities originated in the U.S. and booked directly to non-U.S.
affiliates. Commenters argued that the derivatives guidance should not
include U.S. derivatives and trading activities or prime brokerage
customer account balances booked directly to non-U.S. affiliates
because they are beyond the scope of the Rule and the information is
better gathered through collaboration with home country regulators.
Commenters suggested that the derivatives guidance focus solely on
derivatives and trading activities and prime brokerage customer account
balances that are booked to U.S. material entities and related to core
business lines and critical operations.\37\ Further, commenters
suggested that the guidance should not include the identification,
assessment, or reporting on risk transfer arrangements with non-U.S.
affiliates and also argued that the proposed guidance would result in
firms having to create reporting processes for activities booked in
non-U.S. affiliates. Commenters also suggested that the proposed
guidance would subject the Proposed FBOs to expectations greater than,
or similar to, those imposed on U.S. G-SIBs and that transactions
booked outside the U.S. fall under the purview of home country
authorities, are best addressed in the global resolution plan, and are
outside the scope of the Rule and Title I of the Dodd-Frank Act.
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\37\ The agencies note that based on the Specified FBOs' most
recent resolution plans, each of the Specified FBOs identifies
certain U.S. derivatives and trading activities (including U.S.
prime brokerage services) as an identified critical operation or
core business line.
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As a preliminary matter, similar to the discussion in the PCS
section of this preamble, the agencies note that the Rule requires full
resolution plan submissions by foreign-based covered companies to
include information ``with respect to the subsidiaries, branches and
agencies, and identified critical operations and core business lines,
as applicable, that are domiciled in the United States or conducted in
whole or material part in the United States.'' \38\ This provision
provides the agencies the authority to set forth the expectation that a
resolution plan include information about the firm's derivatives and
trading activities, including derivatives and trading activities
originated from U.S. entities that are booked directly into a non-U.S.
affiliate, because those activities occur in material part in the
United States. Accordingly, the proposed guidance was consistent with
the Rule and Title I of the Dodd-Frank Act.
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\38\ 12 CFR 243.5(a)(2)(i); 12 CFR 381.5(a)(2)(i). See also 12
CFR 243.5(a)(2)(ii); 12 CFR 381.5(a)(2)(i) (requiring each full
resolution plan to include a ``detailed explanation of how
resolution planning for the subsidiaries, branches and agencies, and
identified critical operations and core business lines of the
foreign-based covered company that are domiciled in the United
States or conducted in whole or material part in the United States
is integrated into the foreign-based covered company's overall
resolution or other contingency planning process.'').
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However, after considering commenters' views, and in an effort to
more closely align expectations with the current business and risk
profiles of the Specified FBOs, the final guidance does not include
expectations concerning derivatives and trading activities that
originate from U.S. entities but are booked into non-U.S. affiliates.
Because the booking of U.S. derivatives and trading activities
regularly occurs across jurisdictions and creates interconnections and
interdependencies among and between a firm's U.S. entities and its non-
U.S. affiliates, the agencies expect to coordinate with home country
authorities to collect information about derivatives booking activities
that occur across jurisdictions in order to understand any related
risks to the execution of the firm's U.S. resolution strategy. This
approach is consistent with the 2018 Title I feedback letters to some
Specified FBOs, in which the agencies indicated their intent to engage
with the FBO and home authorities regarding derivatives booking
practices.
The agencies also have made several adjustments and clarifications
in the final guidance to address other matters raised by the
commenters. Commenters argued that the proposal inappropriately applied
the derivatives guidance to non-derivatives trading activities (e.g.,
securities financing transactions). The agencies acknowledge that the
Specified FBOs have drastically decreased their exposures to securities
financing transactions, while the U.S. G-SIBs have increased their
exposures. Therefore, the final guidance only covers derivatives and
linked non-derivatives.
Commenters also suggested that a Proposed FBO should be allowed to
define linked non-derivatives trading positions based on its overall
business and resolution strategy trading positions. The agencies agree
with this comment, and the final guidance allows for linked non-
derivatives trading positions to be defined based on the Specified
FBO's overall business and resolution strategy. Finally, some
commenters suggested that the scope for
[[Page 83568]]
the prime brokerage subsection of the proposal was either unclear or
overly broad. As suggested, the final guidance clarifies that a U.S.
prime brokerage client should be a client who signs a prime brokerage
agreement with a U.S. material entity. Further, the agencies are not
finalizing aspects of the proposed guidance regarding requests for
information and reporting related to prime brokerage activities that
are booked to non-U.S. entities, as stated above.
Some commenters recommended the agencies adjust certain
expectations that are not specified in the proposed guidance. The
agencies have determined not to modify the guidance in these instances.
For example, commenters stated that development of a plan for
resolution of positions of non-U.S. affiliates is beyond the scope of
the Rule. The agencies note, as described above, that the proposed
guidance did not set out expectations that the Proposed FBOs develop a
plan for the resolution of derivatives and trading activities booked to
non-U.S. entities. The scope of the stabilization and de-risking
strategy subsection applies only to U.S. derivatives portfolios booked
to U.S. entities.
The agencies received comments related to tailoring derivatives
expectations. For example, commenters suggested the segmentation
analysis and analysis of de-risking strategy provisions of the proposal
were neither warranted nor sufficiently clear for Proposed FBOs because
their derivatives exposures are significantly smaller than those of
U.S. G-SIBs. After considering multiple relevant factors, the agencies
have not modified the guidance in response to these comments. The
ability to identify, quickly and reliably, problematic derivatives
positions and portfolios is foundational to minimizing uncertainty and
estimating resource needs for an orderly resolution of a firm's U.S.
entities. Further, in the event of material financial distress or
failure, the resolvability risks related to a firm's U.S. derivatives
and trading activities could be a key obstacle to the firm's orderly
resolution of any U.S. IHC subsidiary with a derivatives portfolio. As
a result, the final guidance confirms that a firm's plan should provide
a detailed analysis of its strategy to stabilize and de-risk any
derivatives portfolio of any U.S. IHC subsidiary that continues to
operate after the U.S. IHC enters into a U.S. bankruptcy proceeding.
The agencies also note that the portfolio segmentation subsection
applies only to U.S. derivatives positions that are booked to U.S.
entities.
Finally, commenters suggested tailoring the scope of applicability
of the derivatives section using a threshold, such as the Volcker
Rule's proprietary trading categories. The agencies do not believe that
the compliance thresholds and the associated calculation methodology
(total trading assets and liabilities) established under the Volcker
Rule accurately capture the size and complexity of a firm's derivatives
activities for resolution purposes and thus are an inappropriate
scoping mechanism for the guidance. Therefore, the final guidance does
not incorporate compliance thresholds, such as those established by the
Volcker Rule.
k. Additional Comments
i. Comments About the Development of the Proposal
The agencies received several general comments about the
development of the proposed guidance. The agencies have considered
these commenters' input but have made no modifications to the final
guidance.
One commenter claimed that the agencies' proposed guidance did not
reflect internationally agreed upon approaches to home and host
authority responsibility with regard to resolution planning, with the
proposal's continued emphasis on a separate U.S. strategy, which the
commenter argued is largely duplicative of home country requirements.
Other commenters criticized the proposed guidance for not reflecting
any reliance on supervisory colleges and crisis management groups, or
on the capital markets and resolution rules and requirements of the
Securities and Exchange Commission, Financial Industry Regulatory
Authority, or the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
The agencies do not agree with these comments. Since the enactment
of section 165(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act, the agencies have worked
bilaterally and multilaterally with relevant domestic and foreign
authorities and in various international fora to understand risks to
the firms' orderly resolution under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code, as well
as to share resolution planning expertise. In addition, the agencies
have established resolution-related information-sharing arrangements
with both domestic and foreign authorities in an effort to enhance the
prospects for a successful cross-border resolution of the Specified
FBOs. Moreover, the agencies note that both section 165(d) of the Dodd-
Frank Act and the Rule require all large bank holding companies,
including FBOs, to file resolution plans.
Another commenter encouraged the agencies to consider aligning
their guidance with the resolution-related guidance issued by the
European Single Resolution Board. The agencies recognize that
international coordination in resolution-related matters is important
to ensuring that home and host country regulators have sufficient
understanding of the resolvability of internationally active financial
companies. The purpose and general subject matter of the final guidance
are generally consistent with those of the Single Resolution Board's
Expectations for Banks. Both the final guidance and the Single
Resolution Board document describe the respective authorities'
expectations regarding a number of key vulnerabilities in resolution
(e.g., governance mechanisms, operational, capital, liquidity, and
legal entity rationalization). The agencies will continue to work with
international counterparts to build a shared understanding around
resolution-related matters through participation in firm-specific,
cross-border crisis management groups, as both home authorities and
host authorities.
Other commenters suggested that the proposed guidance did not
adequately recognize foreign parents as sources of strength to the U.S.
operations of Proposed FBOs, but instead appeared to treat the non-U.S.
parent and affiliates only as sources of risk for U.S. material
entities. The agencies understand that the preferred resolution outcome
for many Specified FBOs is a successful home country resolution using a
SPOE resolution strategy where U.S. material entities are provided with
sufficient capital and liquidity resources to allow them to stay out of
resolution proceedings and maintain continuity of operations throughout
the parent's resolution. The Rule balances this recognition with the
concern that support from a foreign parent in stress cannot be ensured.
The final guidance, in turn, lays out expectations that reflect a
number of key vulnerabilities associated with an orderly resolution
under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code.
Certain commenters suggested that the agencies streamline plan
submissions to make the documents more actionable and reduce the time
the agencies may need to review and challenge the submissions. These
commenters also encouraged the agencies to leverage information
provided by firms through existing bank supervision and exam processes
to collect information relevant to the
[[Page 83569]]
agencies' review of resolution planning. The agencies note that the
scope and informational content of resolution plan submissions are
dictated by the Rule. That said, the agencies have endeavored in this
final guidance to tailor expectations for the Specified FBOs'
resolution plans to be commensurate to and address risks posed by key
vulnerabilities of the Specified FBOs in resolution. The agencies also
have made a number of modifications to the final guidance with the
express purpose of streamlining plan expectations and, where
appropriate, leveraging existing supervisory relationships with home
and host country authorities to collaboratively obtain information
about the resolution planning and resolvability of the firms.
ii. Comments About General Concerns With the Proposal
Some commenters asserted that the proposed guidance exceeded the
scope of the Rule or Title I of the Dodd-Frank Act, introduced
definitions and expectations that were inconsistent with the Rule, and
created issues of extraterritoriality and duplication of information
that may already be covered under home country regulations. Some
commenters also objected to expectations pertaining to the
identification, assessment, or reporting of indirect relationships
through non-U.S. affiliates, or risk transfer arrangements with non-
U.S. affiliates. These comments are addressed in the individual
sections of this preamble to which they relate.
Another commenter recommended modifying resolution guidance and
requirements to emphasize firms maintaining resolution capabilities
that remain available during business as usual. This comment generally
aligns with the agencies' approach to resolution planning expectations,
and the final guidance emphasizes that the Specified FBOs should have
effective capabilities and well-developed plans. That said, the
agencies do not believe that any specific revisions are necessary to
respond to this comment; rather, the agencies will continue to
deliberate how to ensure that resolution planning can be facilitated by
and integrated into the firm's business-as-usual practices.
iii. Comments About Resolution Planning Generally
The agencies received several comments about the broader
supervisory landscape related to resolution planning. Certain
commenters recommended that the agencies, in addition to deepening home
and host country regulatory relationships, engage bilaterally with the
Proposed FBOs to clarify outstanding concerns about the resolvability
of the firms' U.S. operations, as well as any concerns about the firms'
reliance on home country resolution strategies.
These comments do not directly relate to the guidance and, as a
result, the agencies are not making any changes to the final guidance.
Relatedly, one commenter asked the agencies to clearly identify
residual concerns with respect to each Proposed FBO and then tie
resolution planning guidance to those concerns. The agencies expect
that overall engagement and ongoing dialog and feedback with each of
the Specified FBOs will continue to provide clarity on any outstanding
concerns with respect to resolution capabilities. The agencies also
note that the final guidance takes into consideration the agencies'
experience in reviewing prior resolution plan submissions. No specific
changes have been made to the final guidance in response to this
comment.
iv. Comments Outside the Scope of Guidance-Making
One commenter requested that the agencies also incorporate that
commenter's thoughts into future changes to guidance for U.S. G-SIBs,
while another commenter argued for the removal of the Proposed FBOs
from the Board's Large Institution Supervision Coordinating Committee
(LISCC) portfolio. The final guidance does not apply to U.S. G-SIBs,
who remain subject to heightened resolution plan supervisory
expectations given their size and risk profile, and the composition of
the LISCC portfolio of firms is similarly outside the scope of this
final guidance. Accordingly, the agencies have not made any changes to
the guidance to address these comments.\39\
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\39\ The agencies note that, on November 6, 2020, the Board
announced that it is updating the list of firms supervised by the
LISCC Program. See https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/bcreg20201106a.htm.
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IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
Certain provisions of the guidance contain ``collection of
information'' provisions within the meaning of the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-3521) (PRA). In accordance with the
requirements of the PRA, the agencies may not conduct or sponsor, and a
respondent is not required to respond to, an information collection
unless it displays a currently valid Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) control number. The agencies reviewed the final guidance and
determined that it would revise the reporting provisions that have been
previously approved by OMB under the Board's OMB control number 7100-
0346 (Reporting Requirements Associated with Regulation QQ; FR QQ) and
the FDIC's control number 3064-0210 (Reporting Requirements Associated
with Resolution Planning). The Board has reviewed the final guidance
under the authority delegated to the Board by OMB. The agencies'
information collections will be extended for three years, with
revision.
Current Actions
The proposed guidance stated that the proposed changes to the 2018
FBO guidance would not revise the reporting provisions that have been
previously cleared by the OMB under the Board's control number 7100-
0346 and the FDIC's control number 3064-0210. The agencies did not
receive any comments on the PRA determination in the proposed guidance.
However, as indicated above, the final guidance includes certain
modifications and clarifications to the proposed guidance. In
particular, the scope, capital, liquidity, governance mechanisms, PCS,
and derivatives and trading activities sections of the final guidance
reflect changes from the proposal. Other sections or sub-sections, such
as group resolution plan, management information systems, QFCs,
separability, and mapping of branch activities, were determined not to
be necessary as they are duplicative of existing regulatory
requirements or not reflective of the Specified FBOs' current business
models and accordingly have been eliminated from the guidance. The
intent of these changes is to clarify expectations, more closely align
expectations with the current business and risk profiles of the
Specified FBOs' U.S. operations, and recognize that the preferred
resolution strategy for the Specified FBOs is a successful home country
resolution. The final guidance also eliminates expectations for
information that, in the agencies' experience, may be obtained through
other existing and effective mechanisms.
As a result of these changes, the final guidance reduces the
existing estimated burden for a triennial full complex filer from
13,135 hours to 9,916 hours per year. This reduction is driven mainly
by significant reductions in the burdens related to capital, liquidity,
separability, and governance mechanisms. These burden savings are borne
by the Proposed FBOs.
One FBO is no longer classified as a triennial full complex filer
and thus
[[Page 83570]]
saves the total burden associated with filing a triennial full complex
resolution plan. However, another FBO is newly classified as a
triennial full complex filer and must bear the burden. The agencies
estimate the annual burden for this new triennial full complex filer as
9,767 hours per year. This estimate differs from the burden for the
Proposed FBOs for primarily two reasons: (1) The agencies estimate that
the new triennial full complex filer will incur some start-up costs in
preparing its first full resolution plan that is subject to the final
guidance; and (2) the agencies estimate that the burden for the new
triennial full complex filer's 2021 targeted resolution plan will be
less than the burdens for the three Proposed FBOs because the new
triennial complex filer will not be expected to consider the final
guidance for its 2021 targeted resolution plan (unlike the three other
covered companies).
Historically, the Board and the FDIC have split the respondents for
purposes of PRA clearances. As such, the agencies will split the change
in burden as well. The FDIC has agreed to take the burden of the new
triennial full complex filer and one Proposed FBO whereas the Board
will take the burden for the remaining two Proposed FBOs. Specially, as
a result of this split and these revisions, there will be a net
decrease in the overall estimated burden of 6,438 hours for the Board
and 6,587 hours for the FDIC. Therefore, the total Board estimated
burden for its entire information collection (7100-0346) is 209,168
hours and the total FDIC estimated burden for its entire information
collection (3064-0210) is 203,332 hours.
Proposed Information Collection
Title of Information Collection: Reporting Requirements Associated
with Resolution Planning.
Agency Form Number: FR QQ.
Frequency of Response: Biennially, Triennially.
Respondents: Bank holding companies (including any foreign bank or
company that is, or is treated as, a bank holding company under section
8(a) of the International Banking Act of 1978, and meets the relevant
total consolidated assets threshold) with total consolidated assets of
$250 billion or more, bank holding companies with $100 billion or more
in total consolidated assets with certain characteristics, and nonbank
financial firms designated by the Financial Stability Oversight Council
for supervision by the Board.
The following table presents only the change in the estimated
burden hours, as amended by this final guidance, broken out by agency.
The table does not include a discussion of the remaining estimated
burden hours, which remain unchanged.
Table 1--Burden Hour Estimates Under Current Regulations and Under the Final Guidance
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Estimated
FR QQ Number of Annual Estimated average hours annual burden
respondents frequency per response * hours
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Board Burdens
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2019 Rule Revisions:
Triennial Full Complex Foreign.... 2 1 13,135.................. 26,270
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Board Total................... .............. .............. ........................ 26,270
Final Guidance:
Triennial Full Complex Foreign.... 2 1 9,916................... 19,832
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Board Total................... .............. .............. ........................ 19,832
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
FDIC Burdens
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
2019 Rule Revisions:
Triennial Full Complex Foreign.... 2 1 13,135.................. 26,270
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
FDIC Total.................... .............. .............. ........................ 26,270
Final Guidance:
Triennial Full Complex Foreign.... 1 1 9,916................... 9,916
Triennial Full Complex Foreign 1 1 ** 9,767................ 9,767
(new).
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FDIC Total.................... .............. .............. ........................ 19,683
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
* Hours are calculated as the hours to prepare and submit one full resolution plan and one targeted resolution
plan, annualized over 6 years.
** Includes one-time start-up burdens for new triennial full complex foreign filers and excludes guidance-based
burdens for the new triennial full complex filer's 2021 targeted resolution plan, as the filer is not expected
to consider the guidance for that plan.
V. Final Guidance
Guidance for Resolution Plan Submissions of Certain Foreign-Based
Covered Companies
I. Introduction
II. Capital
III. Liquidity
IV. Governance Mechanisms
a. Playbooks
V. Operational
a. Payment, Clearing and Settlement Activities
b. Managing, Identifying, and Valuing Collateral
c. Shared and Outsourced Services
VI. Branches
VII. Legal Entity Rationalization
VIII. Derivatives and Trading Activities
IX. Format and Structure of Plans
X. Public Section
Appendix: Frequently Asked Questions
I. Introduction
Section 165(d) of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act (12 U.S.C. 5365(d)) requires certain financial companies
to report periodically to the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System (the Federal Reserve or Board) and the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (the FDIC) (together the Agencies) their plans for rapid
and orderly resolution in the event of material financial distress or
failure. On November 1, 2011, the Agencies promulgated a joint rule
implementing
[[Page 83571]]
the provisions of Section 165(d).\1\ Subsequently, in November 2019,
the Agencies finalized amendments to the joint rule addressing
amendments to the Dodd-Frank Act made by the Economic Growth,
Regulatory Relief, and Consumer Protection Act and improving certain
aspects of the joint rule based on the Agencies' experience
implementing the joint rule since its adoption.\2\ Financial companies
meeting criteria set out in the Rule must file a resolution plan (Plan)
according to the schedule specified in the Rule.
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\1\ 76 FR 67323 (November 1, 2011), codified at 12 CFR parts 243
and 381.
\2\ Resolution Plans Required, 84 FR 59194 (November 1, 2019).
The amendments became effective December 31, 2019. ``Rule'' means
the joint rule as amended in 2019. Capitalized terms not defined
herein have the meanings set forth in the Rule.
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This document is intended to provide guidance to certain foreign
banking organizations (FBOs) that are required to submit Plans
regarding development of their respective U.S. resolution strategies
(Specified FBOs or firms). Specifically, the guidance applies to any
FBO that is subject to Category II standards according to its combined
U.S. operations in accordance with the Board's tailoring rule \3\ and
that is required to form an intermediate holding company.\4\
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\3\ Prudential Standards for Large Bank Holding Companies,
Savings and Loan Holding Companies, and Foreign Banking
Organizations, 84 FR 59032 (Nov. 1, 2019).
\4\ See 12 CFR part 252.
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When an FBO first becomes a Specified FBO,\5\ this document will
apply to the firm's next resolution plan submission that is due at
least 12 months after the date the firm becomes a Specified FBO. If a
Specified FBO ceases to be subject to Category II standards or to the
Board's requirement to form an intermediate holding company, it will no
longer be a Specified FBO, and this document will no longer apply to
that firm.
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\5\ See 12 CFR 252.5(c).
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The document is intended to assist these firms in further
developing their U.S. resolution strategies. The document does not have
the force and effect of law. Rather, it describes the Agencies'
expectations and priorities regarding these firms' Plans and the
Agencies' general views regarding specific areas where additional
detail should be provided and where certain capabilities or optionality
should be developed and maintained to demonstrate that each firm has
considered fully, and is able to mitigate, obstacles to the successful
implementation of their U.S. resolution strategy.\6\
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\6\ This guidance consolidates the Guidance for 2018 Sec.
165(d) Annual Resolution Plan Submissions by Foreign-Based Covered
Companies that Submitted Resolution Plans in July 2015; the July
2017 Resolution Plan Frequently Asked Questions; feedback letters
issued to Barclays PLC, Credit Suisse Group AG, Deutsche Bank AG,
and UBS AG in December 2018 and in August 2014 and feedback letters
issued to Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group in July 2019, January 2018,
and July 2015; the communications the Agencies made to certain
foreign-based Covered Companies in February 2015; and the Guidance
for 2013 Sec. 165(d) Annual Resolution Plan Submissions by Foreign-
Based Covered Companies that Submitted Initial Resolution Plans in
2012 (taken together, prior guidance). To the extent not
incorporated in or appended to this guidance, prior guidance is
superseded.
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The Agencies are providing guidance to the Specified FBOs to assist
their further development of a resolution plan for their U.S.
operations for their 2021 and subsequent resolution plan submissions.
This guidance for Specified FBOs builds upon the guidance issued in
December 2018 for certain U.S.-based covered companies, taking into
account the circumstances under which a U.S. resolution plan is most
likely to be relevant for an FBO. The U.S. resolution plan for a
Specified FBO would address a scenario where the U.S. operations
experience material financial distress and the foreign parent is unable
or unwilling to provide sufficient financial support for the
continuation of U.S. operations, and at least the top tier U.S.
Intermediate Holding Company (U.S. IHC) files for bankruptcy under
Title 11, United States Code. Under such a scenario, the Plan should
provide for the orderly resolution of the Specified FBO's U.S. material
entities \7\ and operations.
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\7\ The terms ``material entities,'' ``identified critical
operations,'' and ``core business lines'' have the same meaning as
in the Rule. The term ``U.S. material entity'' means any subsidiary,
branch, or agency that is a material entity and is domiciled in the
United States. The term ``U.S. non-branch material entity'' means a
material entity organized or incorporated in the U.S. including, in
all cases, the U.S. IHC. The term ``U.S. IHC subsidiaries'' means
all U.S. non-branch material entities other than the U.S. IHC.
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In general, this document is organized around a number of key
vulnerabilities in resolution (e.g., capital; liquidity; governance
mechanisms; operational; legal entity rationalization; and derivatives
and trading activities) that apply across resolution plans. Additional
vulnerabilities or obstacles may arise based on a firm's particular
structure, operations, or resolution strategy. Each firm is expected to
satisfactorily address these vulnerabilities in its Plan--e.g., by
developing sensitivity analysis for certain underlying assumptions,
enhancing capabilities, providing detailed analysis, or increasing
optionality development, as indicated below.
Under the Rule, the Agencies will review the Plan to determine if
it satisfactorily addresses key potential vulnerabilities, including
those specified below. If the Agencies jointly decide that these
matters are not satisfactorily addressed in the Plan, the Agencies may
determine jointly that the Plan is not credible or would not facilitate
an orderly resolution under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code.
II. Capital
The firm should have the capital capabilities necessary to execute
its U.S. resolution strategy, including the model and estimation
process described below.
To the extent required by the firm's U.S. resolution strategy, U.S.
non-branch material entities need to be recapitalized to a level that
allows for an orderly resolution. The firm should have a methodology
for periodically estimating the amount of capital that may be needed to
support each U.S. IHC subsidiary after the U.S. IHC bankruptcy filing
(Resolution Capital Execution Need or RCEN). The firm's positioning of
IHC total loss absorbing capacity (TLAC) \8\ should be able to support
the RCEN estimates.
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\8\ Total Loss-Absorbing Capacity, Long-Term Debt, and Clean
Holding Company Requirements for Systemically Important U.S. Bank
Holding Companies and Intermediate Holding Companies of Systemically
Important Foreign Banking Organizations, 82 FR 8266 (January 24,
2017).
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The firm's RCEN methodology should use conservative forecasts for
losses and risk-weighted assets and incorporate estimates of potential
additional capital needs through the resolution period,\9\ consistent
with the firm's resolution strategy for its U.S. operations. The
methodology is not required to produce aggregate losses that are
greater than the amount of IHC TLAC that would be required for the firm
under the Board's final rule.\10\ The RCEN methodology should be
calibrated such that recapitalized U.S. IHC subsidiaries have
sufficient capital to maintain market confidence as required under the
U.S resolution strategy. Capital levels should meet or exceed all
applicable regulatory capital requirements for ``well-capitalized''
status and meet estimated additional capital needs throughout
resolution. U.S. IHC subsidiaries that are not subject to capital
requirements may be considered
[[Page 83572]]
sufficiently recapitalized when they have achieved capital levels
typically required to obtain an investment-grade credit rating or, if
the entity is not rated, an equivalent level of financial soundness.
Finally, the methodology should be independently reviewed, consistent
with the firm's corporate governance processes and controls for the use
of models and methodologies.
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\9\ The resolution period begins immediately after the U.S. IHC
bankruptcy filing and extends through the completion of the U.S.
resolution strategy.
\10\ 82 FR 8266 (January 24, 2017).
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III. Liquidity
The firm should have the liquidity capabilities necessary to
execute its U.S. resolution strategy. In particular, the firm should
have a methodology for estimating the liquidity needed after the U.S.
IHC's bankruptcy filing to stabilize any surviving U.S. IHC
subsidiaries and to allow those entities to operate post-filing, in
accordance with the U.S. strategy (Resolution Liquidity Execution Need
or RLEN).
The firm's RLEN methodology should:
(A) Estimate the minimum operating liquidity (MOL) needed at each
U.S. IHC subsidiary to ensure those entities could continue to operate,
to the extent relied upon in the U.S. resolution strategy, after
implementation of the U.S. resolution strategy and/or to support a
wind-down strategy;
(B) Provide daily cash flow forecasts by U.S. IHC subsidiary to
support estimation of peak funding needs to stabilize each entity under
resolution;
(C) Provide a comprehensive breakout of all inter-affiliate
transactions and arrangements that could impact the MOL or peak funding
needs estimates for the U.S. IHC subsidiaries; and
(D) Estimate the minimum amount of liquidity required at each U.S.
IHC subsidiary to meet the MOL and peak needs noted above, which would
inform the provision of financial resources from the foreign parent to
the U.S. IHC, or if the foreign parent is unable or unwilling to
provide such financial support, any preparatory resolution-related
actions.
The MOL estimates should capture U.S. IHC subsidiaries' intraday
liquidity requirements, operating expenses, working capital needs, and
inter-affiliate funding frictions to ensure that U.S. IHC subsidiaries
could operate without disruption during the resolution.
The peak funding needs estimates should be projected for each U.S.
IHC subsidiary and cover the length of time the firm expects it would
take to stabilize that U.S. IHC subsidiary. Inter-affiliate funding
frictions should be taken into account in the estimation process.
The firm's forecasts of MOL and peak funding needs should ensure
that U.S. IHC subsidiaries could operate through resolution consistent
with regulatory requirements, market expectations, and the firm's post-
failure strategy. These forecasts should inform the RLEN estimate,
i.e., the minimum amount of high-quality liquid assets (HQLA) required
to facilitate the execution of the firm's strategy for the U.S. IHC
subsidiaries.
For non-surviving U.S. IHC subsidiaries, the firm should provide
analysis and an explanation of how the material entity's resolution
could be accomplished within a reasonable period of time and in a
manner that substantially mitigates the risk of serious adverse effects
on U.S. financial stability. For example, if a U.S. IHC subsidiary that
is a broker-dealer is assumed to fail and enter resolution under the
Securities Investor Protection Act, the firm should provide an analysis
of the potential impacts on funding and asset markets and on prime
brokerage clients, bearing in mind the objective of an orderly
resolution.
IV. Governance Mechanisms
A firm should identify the governance mechanisms that would ensure
that communication and coordination occurs between the boards of the
U.S. IHC or a U.S. IHC subsidiary and the foreign parent to facilitate
the provision of financial support, or if not forthcoming, any
preparatory resolution-related actions to facilitate an orderly
resolution.
Playbooks: Governance playbooks should detail the board and senior
management actions of U.S. non-branch material entities that would be
needed under the firm's U.S. resolution strategy. The governance
playbooks should also include a discussion of (A) the firm's proposed
U.S. communications strategy, both internal and external; \11\ (B) the
fiduciary responsibilities of the applicable board(s) of directors or
other similar governing bodies and how planned actions would be
consistent with such responsibilities applicable at the time actions
are expected to be taken; (C) potential conflicts of interest,
including interlocking boards of directors; (D) any employee retention
policy; and (E) any other limitations on the authority of the U.S. IHC
and the U.S. IHC subsidiary boards and senior management to implement
the U.S. resolution strategy. All responsible parties and timeframes
for action should be identified. Governance playbooks should be updated
periodically for each entity whose governing body would need to act
under the firm's U.S. resolution strategy.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ External communications include those with U.S. and foreign
authorities and other external stakeholders.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In order to meet liquidity needs at the U.S. non-branch material
entities, the firm may either fully pre-position liquidity in the U.S.
non-branch material entities or develop a mechanism for planned foreign
parent support, of any amount not pre-positioned, for the successful
execution of the U.S. strategy. Mechanisms to support readily available
liquidity may include a term liquidity facility between the U.S. IHC
and the foreign parent that can be drawn as needed and as informed by
the firm's RLEN estimates and liquidity positioning. The plan should
include analysis of how the U.S. IHC/foreign parent facility is funded
or buffered for by the foreign parent. The sufficiency of the liquidity
should be informed by the firm's RLEN estimate for the U.S. non-branch
material entities.
V. Operational
Payment, Clearing, and Settlement Activities
Framework. Maintaining continuity of payment, clearing, and
settlement (PCS) services is critical for the orderly resolution of
firms that are either users or providers,\12\ or both, of PCS services.
A firm should demonstrate capabilities for continued access to PCS
services essential to an orderly resolution under its U.S. resolution
strategy through a framework to support such access by:
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\12\ A firm is a user of PCS services if it accesses PCS
services through an agent bank or it uses the services of an FMU
through its membership in that FMU or through an agent bank. A firm
is a provider of PCS services if it provides PCS services to clients
as an agent bank or it provides clients with access to an FMU or
agent bank through the firm's membership in or relationship with
that service provider. A firm is also a provider if it provides
clients with PCS services through the firm's own operations in the
United States (e.g., payment services or custody services).
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Identifying clients,\13\ financial market utilities
(FMUs), and agent banks as key from the firm's perspective for the
firm's U.S. material entities, identified critical operations, and core
business lines, using both quantitative (volume and value) \14\ and
qualitative criteria;
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\13\ For purposes of this section V, a client is an individual
or entity, including affiliates of the firm, to whom the firm
provides PCS services and, if credit or liquidity is offered, any
related credit or liquidity offered in connection with those
services.
\14\ In identifying entities as key, examples of quantitative
criteria may include: For a client, transaction volume/value, market
value of exposures, assets under custody, usage of PCS services, and
if credit or liquidity is offered, any extension of related intraday
credit or liquidity; for an FMU, the aggregate volumes and values of
all transactions processed through such FMU; and for an agent bank,
assets under custody, the value of cash and securities settled, and
extensions of intraday credit.
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[[Page 83573]]
Mapping U.S. material entities, identified critical
operations, core business lines, and key clients of the firm's U.S.
operations to both key FMUs and key agent banks; and
Developing a playbook for each key FMU and key agent bank
essential to an orderly resolution under its U.S. resolution strategy
that reflects the firm's role(s) as a user and/or provider of PCS
services.
The framework should address direct relationships (e.g., a firm's
direct membership in an FMU, a firm's provision of clients with PCS
services through its own operations in the United States, or a firm's
contractual relationship with an agent bank) and indirect relationships
(e.g., a firm's provision of clients with access to the relevant FMU or
agent bank through the firm's membership in or relationship with that
FMU or agent bank, or a firm's U.S. affiliate and branch provision of
U.S. material entities and key clients of the firm's U.S. operations
with access to an FMU or agent bank). The framework also should address
the potential impact of any disruption to, curtailment of, or
termination of such direct and indirect relationships on the firm's
U.S. material entities, identified critical operations, and core
business lines, as well as any corresponding impact on key clients of
the firm's U.S. operations.
Playbooks for Continued Access to PCS Services. The firm is
expected to provide a playbook for each key FMU and key agent bank that
addresses considerations that would assist the firm and key clients of
the firm's U.S. operations in maintaining continued access to PCS
services in the period leading up to and including the firm's
resolution under its U.S. resolution strategy. Each playbook should
provide analysis of the financial and operational impact of adverse
actions that may be taken by a key FMU or a key agent bank and
contingency actions that may be taken by the firm. Each playbook also
should discuss any possible alternative arrangements that would allow
continued access to PCS services for the firm's U.S. material entities,
identified critical operations and core business lines, and key clients
of the firm's U.S. operations, while the firm is in resolution under
its U.S. resolution strategy. The firm is not expected to incorporate a
scenario in which it loses key FMU or key agent bank access into its
U.S. resolution strategy or its RLEN and RCEN estimates. The firm
should continue to engage with key FMUs, key agent banks, and key
clients of the firm's U.S. operations, and playbooks should reflect any
feedback received during such ongoing outreach.
Content Related to Users of PCS Services. Individual key FMU and
key agent bank playbooks should include:
Descriptions of the firm's relationship as a user,
including through indirect access, with the key FMU or key agent bank
and the identification and mapping of PCS services to the firm's U.S.
material entities, identified critical operations, and core business
lines that use those PCS services;
Discussion of the potential range of adverse actions that
may be taken by that key FMU or key agent bank when the firm is in
resolution under its U.S. resolution strategy,\15\ the operational and
financial impact of such actions on the firm's U.S. material entities,
identified critical operations, and core business lines, and
contingency arrangements that may be initiated by the firm in response
to potential adverse actions by the key FMU or key agent bank; and
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\15\ Examples of potential adverse actions may include increased
collateral and margin requirements and enhanced reporting and
monitoring.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Discussion of PCS-related liquidity sources and uses in
business-as-usual (BAU), in stress, and in the resolution period,
presented by currency type (with U.S. dollar equivalent) and by U.S.
material entity.
[cir] PCS Liquidity Sources: These may include the amounts of
intraday extensions of credit, liquidity buffer, inflows from FMU
participants, and prefunded amounts of key clients of the firm's U.S.
operations in BAU, in stress, and in the resolution period. The
playbook also should describe intraday credit arrangements (e.g.,
facilities of the key FMU, key agent bank, or a central bank) and any
similar custodial arrangements that allow ready access to a firm's
funds for PCS-related key FMU and key agent bank obligations (including
margin requirements) in all currencies relevant to the firm's
participation, including placements of firm liquidity at central banks,
key FMUs, and key agent banks.
[cir] PCS Liquidity Uses: These may include margin and prefunding
by the firm and key clients of the firm's U.S. operations, and intraday
extensions of credit, including incremental amounts required during
resolution.
[cir] Intraday Liquidity Inflows and Outflows: The playbook should
describe the firm's ability to control intraday liquidity inflows and
outflows and to identify and prioritize time-specific payments. The
playbook also should describe any account features that might restrict
the firm's ready access to its liquidity sources.
Content Related to Providers of PCS Services.\16\ Individual key
FMU and key agent bank playbooks should include:
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\16\ Where a firm is a provider of PCS services through the
firm's own operations in the United States, the firm is expected to
produce a playbook for the U.S. material entities that provide those
services, addressing each of the items described under ``Content
Related to Providers of PCS Services,'' which include contingency
arrangements to permit the firm's key clients of the firm's U.S.
operations to maintain continued access to PCS services.
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Identification and mapping of PCS services to the firm's
U.S. material entities, identified critical operations, and core
business lines that provide those PCS services, and a description of
the scale and the way in which each provides PCS services;
Identification and mapping of PCS services to key clients
of the firm's U.S. operations to whom the firm's U.S. material
entities, identified critical operations, and core business lines
provide such PCS services and any related credit or liquidity offered
in connection with such services;
Discussion of the potential range of firm contingency
arrangements available to minimize disruption to the provision of PCS
services to key clients of the firm's U.S. operations, including the
viability of transferring activity and any related assets of key
clients of the firm's U.S. operations, as well as any alternative
arrangements that would allow the key clients of the firm's U.S.
operations continued access to PCS services if the firm could no longer
provide such access (e.g., due to the firm's loss of key FMU or key
agent bank access), and the financial and operational impacts of such
arrangements from the firm's perspective;
Descriptions of the range of contingency actions that the
firm may take concerning its provision of intraday credit to key
clients of the firm's U.S. operations, including analysis quantifying
the potential liquidity the firm could generate by taking such actions
in stress and in the resolution period, such as (i) requiring key
clients of the firm's U.S. operations to designate or appropriately
pre-position liquidity, including through prefunding of settlement
activity, for PCS-related key FMU and key agent bank obligations at
specific material entities of the firm (e.g., direct members of key
FMUs) or any similar custodial arrangements that allow ready access to
funds for such obligations in all relevant currencies of key clients of
the firm's U.S. operations; (ii) delaying or restricting PCS activity
[[Page 83574]]
of key clients of the firm's U.S. operations; and (iii) restricting,
imposing conditions upon (e.g., requiring collateral), or eliminating
the provision of intraday credit or liquidity to key clients of the
firm's U.S. operations; and
Descriptions of how the firm will communicate to key
clients of the firm's U.S. operations the potential impacts of
implementation of any identified contingency arrangements or
alternatives, including a description of the firm's methodology for
determining whether any additional communication should be provided to
some or all key clients of the firm's U.S. operations (e.g., due to BAU
usage of that access and/or related intraday credit or liquidity of the
key client of the firm's U.S. operations), and the expected timing and
form of such communication.
Capabilities. Firms are expected to have and describe capabilities
to understand, for each U.S. material entity, its obligations and
exposures associated with PCS activities, including contractual
obligations and commitments. For example, firms should be able to:
Track the following items by U.S. material entity and,
with respect to customers, counterparties, and agents and service
providers, by location/jurisdiction:
[cir] PCS activities, with each activity mapped to the relevant
material entities and core business lines; \17\
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\17\ 12 CFR 243.5(e)(12); 12 CFR 381.5(e)(12).
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[cir] Customers and counterparties for PCS activities, including
values and volumes of various transaction types, as well as used and
unused capacity for all lines of credit; \18\
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\18\ Id.
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[cir] Exposures to and volumes transacted with FMUs, nostro agents,
and custodians; and \19\
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\19\ 12 CFR 252.156(g).
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[cir] Services provided and service level agreements, as
applicable, for other current agents and service providers (internal
and external).\20\
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\20\ 12 CFR 243.5(f)(l)(i); 12 CFR 381.5(f)(1)(i).
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Assess the potential effects of adverse actions by FMUs,
nostro agents, custodians, and other agents and service providers,
including suspension or termination of membership or services, on the
firm's U.S. operations and customers and counterparties of those U.S.
operations; \21\
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\21\ 12 CFR 252.156(e).
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Develop contingency arrangements in the event of such
adverse actions; \22\ and
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\22\ Id.
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Quantify the liquidity needs and operational capacity
required to meet all PCS obligations, including any change in demand
for and sources of liquidity needed to meet such obligations.
Managing, Identifying, and Valuing Collateral: The firm is expected
to have and describe its capabilities to manage, identify, and value
the collateral that the U.S. non-branch material entities receive from
and post to external parties and affiliates. Specifically, the firm
should:
Be able to query and provide aggregate statistics for all
qualified financial contracts concerning cross-default clauses,
downgrade triggers, and other key collateral-related contract terms--
not just those terms that may be impacted in an adverse economic
environment--across contract types, business lines, legal entities, and
jurisdictions;
Be able to track both firm collateral sources (i.e.,
counterparties that have pledged collateral) and uses (i.e.,
counterparties to whom collateral has been pledged) at the CUSIP level
on at least a t+1 basis;
Have robust risk measurements for cross-entity and cross-
contract netting, including consideration of where collateral is held
and pledged;
Be able to identify CUSIP and asset class level
information on collateral pledged to specific central counterparties by
legal entity on at least a t+1 basis;
Be able to track and report on inter-branch collateral
pledged and received on at least a t+1 basis and have clear policies
explaining the rationale for such inter-branch pledges, including any
regulatory considerations; and
Have a comprehensive collateral management policy that
outlines how the firm as a whole approaches collateral and serves as a
single source for governance.\23\
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\23\ The policy may reference subsidiary or related policies
already in place, as implementation may differ based on business
line or other factors.
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In addition, as of the conclusion of any business day, the firm
should be able to:
Identify the legal entity and geographic jurisdiction
where counterparty collateral is held;
Document all netting and re-hypothecation arrangements
with affiliates and external parties, by legal entity; and
Track and manage collateral requirements associated with
counterparty credit risk exposures between affiliates, including
foreign branches.
At least on a quarterly basis, the firm should be able to:
Review the material terms and provisions of International
Swaps and Derivatives Association Master Agreements and the Credit
Support Annexes, such as termination events, for triggers that may be
breached as a result of changes in market conditions;
Identify legal and operational differences and potential
challenges in managing collateral within specific jurisdictions,
agreement types, counterparty types, collateral forms, or other
distinguishing characteristics; and
Forecast changes in collateral requirements and cash and
non-cash collateral flows under a variety of stress scenarios.
Shared and Outsourced Services: The firm should maintain a fully
actionable implementation plan to ensure the continuity of shared
services that support identified critical operations \24\ and robust
arrangements to support the continuity of shared and outsourced
services, including, without limitation, appropriate plans to retain
key personnel relevant to the execution of the firm's strategy. If a
material entity provides shared services that support identified
critical operations,\25\ and the continuity of these shared services
relies on the assumed cooperation, forbearance, or other non-
intervention of regulator(s) in any jurisdiction, the Plan should
discuss the extent to which the resolution or insolvency of any other
group entities operating in that same jurisdiction may adversely affect
the assumed cooperation, forbearance, or other regulatory non-
intervention. If a material entity providing shared services that
support identified critical operations is located outside of the United
States, the Plan should discuss how the firm will ensure the
operational continuity of such shared services through resolution.
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\24\ ``Shared services that support identified critical
operations'' or ``critical shared services'' are those that support
identified critical operations conducted in whole or in material
part in the United States.
\25\ This should be interpreted to include data access and
intellectual property rights.
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The firm should (A) maintain an identification of all shared
services that support identified critical operations; (B) maintain a
mapping of how/where these services support U.S. core business lines
and identified critical operations; (C) incorporate such mapping into
legal entity rationalization criteria and implementation efforts; and
(D) mitigate identified continuity risks through establishment of
service-level agreements (SLAs) for all critical shared services.
SLAs should fully describe the services provided, reflect pricing
considerations on an arm's-length basis where appropriate, and
incorporate
[[Page 83575]]
appropriate terms and conditions to (A) prevent automatic termination
upon certain resolution-related events and (B) achieve continued
provision of such services during resolution.\26\ The firm should also
store SLAs in a central repository or repositories located in or
immediately accessible from the U.S. at all times, including in
resolution (and subject to enforceable access arrangements) in a
searchable format. In addition, the firm should ensure the financial
resilience of internal shared service providers by maintaining working
capital for six months (or through the period of stabilization as
required in the firm's U.S. resolution strategy) in such entities
sufficient to cover contract costs, consistent with the U.S. resolution
strategy. The firm should demonstrate that such working capital is held
in a manner that ensures its availability for its intended purpose.
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\26\ The firm should consider whether these SLAs should be
governed by the laws of a U.S. state and expressly subject to the
jurisdiction of a court in the U.S.
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The firm should identify all service providers and critical
outsourced services that support identified critical operations and
identify any that could not be promptly substituted. The firm should
(A) evaluate the agreements governing these services to determine
whether there are any that could be terminated upon commencement of any
resolution despite continued performance; and (B) update contracts to
incorporate appropriate terms and conditions to prevent automatic
termination upon commencement of any resolution proceeding and
facilitate continued provision of such services. Relying on entities
projected to survive during resolution to avoid contract termination is
insufficient to ensure continuity. In the Plan, the firm should
document the amendment of any such agreements governing these services.
The Plan must also discuss arrangements to ensure the operational
continuity of shared services that support identified critical
operations in resolution in the event of the disruption of those shared
services.
A firm is expected to have robust arrangements in place for the
continued provision of shared or outsourced services needed to maintain
identified critical operations. For example, firms should:
Evaluate internal and external dependencies and develop
documented strategies and contingency arrangements for the continuity
or replacement of the shared and outsourced services that are necessary
to maintain identified critical operations.\27\ Examples may include
personnel, facilities, systems, data warehouses, and intellectual
property; and
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\27\ 12 CFR 243.5(g); 12 CFR 381.5(g).
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Maintain current cost estimates for implementing such
strategies and contingency arrangements.
VI. Branches
Continuity of Operations: If the Plan assumes that federal or state
regulators, as applicable, do not take possession of any U.S. branch
that is a material entity, the Plan must support that assumption.
For any U.S. branch that is significant to the activities of an
identified critical operation, the Plan should describe and demonstrate
how the branch would continue to facilitate FMU access for identified
critical operations and meet funding needs. Such a U.S. branch would
also be required to describe how it would meet supervisory requirements
imposed by state regulators or the appropriate Federal banking agency,
as appropriate, including maintaining a net due to position and
complying with heightened asset maintenance requirements.\28\ In
addition, the plan should describe how such a U.S. branch's third-party
creditors would be protected such that the state regulator or
appropriate Federal banking agency would allow the branch to continue
operations.
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\28\ Firms should take into consideration historical practice,
by applicable regulators, regarding asset maintenance requirements
imposed during stress.
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Impact of the Cessation of Operations: The firm must provide an
analysis of the impact of the cessation of operations of any U.S.
branch that is significant to the activities of an identified critical
operation on the firm's FMU access and identified critical operations,
even if such scenario is not contemplated as part of the U.S.
resolution strategy. The analysis should include a description of how
identified critical operations could be transferred to a U.S. IHC
subsidiary or sold in resolution, the obstacles presented by the
cessation of shared services that support identified critical
operations provided by any U.S. branch that is a material entity, and
mitigants that could address such obstacles in a timely manner.
VII. Legal Entity Rationalization
Legal Entity Rationalization Criteria (LER Criteria): A firm should
develop and implement legal entity rationalization criteria that
support the firm's U.S. resolution strategy and minimize risk to U.S.
financial stability in the event of resolution. LER Criteria should
consider the best alignment of legal entities and business lines to
improve the resolvability of U.S. operations under different market
conditions. LER Criteria should govern the corporate structure and
arrangements between the U.S. subsidiaries and U.S. branches in a way
that facilitates resolvability of the firm's U.S. operations as the
firm's U.S. activities, technology, business models, or geographic
footprint change over time.
Specifically, application of the criteria should:
(A) Ensure that the allocation of activities across the firm's U.S.
branches and U.S. non-branch material entities support the firm's U.S.
resolution strategy and minimize risk to U.S. financial stability in
the event of resolution;
(B) Facilitate the recapitalization and liquidity support of U.S.
IHC subsidiaries, as required by the firm's U.S. resolution strategy.
Such criteria should include clean lines of ownership and clean funding
pathways between the foreign parent, the U.S. IHC, and U.S. IHC
subsidiaries;
(C) Facilitate the sale, transfer, or wind-down of certain discrete
operations within a timeframe that would meaningfully increase the
likelihood of an orderly resolution in the United States, including
provisions for the continuity of associated services and mitigation of
financial, operational, and legal challenges to separation and
disposition;
(D) Adequately protect U.S. subsidiary insured depository
institutions from risks arising from the activities of any nonbank U.S.
subsidiaries (other than those that are subsidiaries of an insured
depository institution); and
(E) Minimize complexity that could impede an orderly resolution in
the United States and minimize redundant and dormant entities.
These criteria should be built into the firm's ongoing process for
creating, maintaining, and optimizing the firm's U.S. structure and
operations on a continuous basis.
VIII. Derivatives and Trading Activities
A Specified FBO's plan should address the following areas.
Booking Practices
A firm should have booking practices commensurate with the size,
scope, and complexity of its U.S. derivatives and trading
activities.\29\ The following
[[Page 83576]]
booking practices-related capabilities should be addressed in a firm's
resolution plan:
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\29\ ``U.S. derivatives and trading activities'', means all
derivatives and linked non-derivatives trading activities conducted
on behalf of the firm, its clients, or its counterparties that are
booked into the firm's U.S. IHC subsidiaries and material entity
branches (U.S. entities). The firm may define linked non-derivatives
trading activities based on its overall business and resolution
strategy.
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Derivatives and trading booking framework. A firm should have a
comprehensive booking model framework that articulates the principles,
rationales, and approach to implementing its booking practices for all
of its U.S. derivatives and trading activities. The framework and its
underlying components should be documented and adequately supported by
internal controls (e.g., procedures, systems, processes). Taken
together, the booking framework and its components should provide
transparency with respect to (i) what is being booked (e.g., product,
counterparty), (ii) where it is being originated and booked (e.g.,
legal entity), (iii) by whom it is booked (e.g., business or trading
desk), (iv) why it is booked that way (e.g., drivers or rationales for
that arrangement), and (v) what controls the firm has in place to
monitor and manage those practices (e.g., governance or information
systems).\30\
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\30\ The description of controls should include any components
of any market, credit, or liquidity risk management framework that
is material to the management of the firm's U.S. derivatives and
trading activities.
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The firm's resolution plan should include detailed descriptions of
the framework and each of its material components. In particular, a
firm's resolution plan should include descriptions of documented
booking models covering its U.S. derivatives and trading
activities.\31\ These descriptions should provide clarity with respect
to the underlying booking flows (e.g., the mapping of trade flows based
on multiple trade characteristics as decision points that determine on
which entity a trade is directly booked and the applicability of any
risk transfer arrangements). Furthermore, a firm's resolution plan
should describe its end-to-end booking and reporting processes,
including a description of the current scope of automation (e.g.,
automated trade flows, detective monitoring) of the systems controls
applied to the firm's documented booking models. The plan should also
discuss why the firm believes its current (or planned) scope of
automation is sufficient for managing its U.S. derivatives and trading
activities during the execution of its U.S. resolution strategy.\32\
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\31\ The booking models should represent the vast majority
(e.g., 95 percent) of a firm's U.S. derivatives and trading
activities, measured by, for example, trade notional and gross
market value (for derivatives) and client positions and balances
(for prime brokerage client accounts).
\32\ Effective preventative (up-front) and detective (post-
booking) controls embedded in a firm's booking processes can help
avoid and/or timely remediate trades that do not align with a
documented booking model or related risk limit. Firms typically use
a combination of manual and automated control functions. Although
automation may not be best suited for all control functions, as
compared to manual methods, it can improve consistency and
traceability with respect to booking practices. However, non-
automated methods also can be effective when supported by other
internal controls (e.g., robust detective monitoring, escalation
protocols).
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Derivatives and trading entity analysis and reporting. A firm
should have the ability to identify, assess, and report on each U.S.
entity that originates or otherwise conducts (in whole or in material
part) any significant aspect of the firm's U.S. derivatives and trading
activities (a derivatives or trading entity). First, the firm's
resolution plan should describe its method (which may include both
qualitative and quantitative criteria) for evaluating the significance
of each derivatives or trading entity both with respect to the firm's
current U.S. derivatives and trading activities and its U.S. resolution
strategy.\33\ Second, a firm's resolution plan should demonstrate
(including through use of illustrative samples) the firm's ability to
readily generate current derivatives or trading entity profiles that
(i) cover all derivatives or trading entities, (ii) are reportable in a
consistent manner, and (iii) include information regarding current
legal ownership structure, business activities and volume, and risk
profile of the entity (including relevant risk transfer arrangements).
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\33\ The firm should leverage any existing methods and criteria
it uses for other entity assessments (e.g., legal entity
rationalization or the prepositioning of internal loss-absorbing
resources). The firm's method for determining the significance of
derivatives or trading entities may diverge from the parameters for
material entity designation under the Rule (i.e., entities
significant to the activities of an identified critical operation or
core business line); however, any differences should be adequately
supported and explained.
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U.S. Activities Monitoring
A firm should be able to assess how the management of U.S.
derivatives and trading activities could be affected in the period
leading up to and during the execution of its U.S. resolution strategy,
including disruptions that could affect materially the funding or
operations of the U.S. entities that conduct the U.S. derivatives and
trading activities or their clients and counterparties. Therefore, a
firm should have capabilities to provide timely transparency into the
management of its U.S. derivatives and trading activities, in the
period leading up to and during the execution of its U.S. resolution
strategy by maintaining a monitoring framework for U.S. derivatives and
trading activities, which consists of at least the following two
components:
1. A method for identifying U.S. derivatives and trading
activities, and measuring, monitoring, and reporting on those
activities on a business line and legal entity basis; and
2. A method for identifying, assessing, and reporting the potential
impact on (i) clients and counterparties of U.S. entities that conduct
the U.S. derivatives and trading activities and (ii) any related risk
transfer arrangements \34\ among and between U.S. entities and their
non-U.S. affiliates.
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\34\ For example, risk transfer arrangements might include
transfer pricing, profit sharing, loss limiting, or intragroup
hedging arrangements.
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Prime Brokerage Customer Account Transfers
A firm should have the operational capacity to facilitate the
orderly transfer of U.S. prime brokerage accounts,\35\ to peer prime
brokers in periods of material financial distress and during the
execution of its U.S. resolution strategy. The firm's plan should
include an assessment of how it would transfer such accounts. This
assessment should be informed by clients' relationships with other
prime brokers, the use of automated and manual transaction processes,
clients' overall long and short positions as facilitated by the firm,
and the liquidity of clients' portfolios. The assessment should also
analyze the risks and loss mitigants of customer-to-customer
internalization (e.g., the inability to fund customer longs with
customer shorts) and operational challenges (including insufficient
staffing) that the firm may experience in effecting the scale and speed
of prime brokerage account transfers envisioned under the firm's U.S.
resolution strategy.
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\35\ ``U.S. prime brokerage account'' or ``U.S. prime brokerage
account balances'' should include the account positions and balances
of a client of the firm's U.S. prime brokerage business who signs a
prime brokerage agreement with a U.S. material entity.
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In addition, a firm should describe and demonstrate its ability to
segment and analyze the quality and composition of U.S. prime brokerage
account balances based on a set of well-defined and consistently
applied segmentation criteria (e.g., size, single-prime, platform, use
of leverage, non-rehypothecatable securities, liquidity of underlying
assets). The capabilities should cover U.S. prime brokerage account
balances and the resulting segments should represent a range in
[[Page 83577]]
potential transfer speed (e.g., from fastest to longest to transfer,
from most liquid to least liquid). The selected segmentation criteria
should reflect characteristics \36\ that the firm believes could affect
the speed at which the U.S. prime brokerage account would be
transferred to an alternate prime broker.
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\36\ For example, relevant characteristics might include
product, size, clearability, currency, maturity, level of
collateralization, and other risk characteristics.
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Portfolio Segmentation
A firm should have the capabilities to produce analysis that
reflects derivatives portfolio \37\ segmentation and differentiation of
assumptions, taking into account trade-level characteristics. More
specifically, a firm should have systems capabilities that would allow
it to produce a spectrum of derivatives portfolio segmentation analysis
using multiple segmentation dimensions for each U.S. entity with a
derivatives portfolio--namely, (1) trading desk or product, (2) cleared
vs. clearable vs. non-clearable trades, (3) counterparty type, (4)
currency, (5) maturity, (6) level of collateralization, and (7) netting
set.\38\ A firm should also have the capabilities to segment and
analyze the full contractual maturity (run-off) profile of the
derivatives portfolios in its U.S. entities. The firm's resolution plan
should describe and demonstrate the firm's ability to segment and
analyze the derivatives portfolios booked into its U.S. entities using
the relevant segmentation dimensions and to report the results of such
segmentation and analysis.
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\37\ A firm's derivatives portfolios include its derivatives
positions and linked non-derivatives trading positions.
\38\ The enumerated segmentation dimensions are not intended as
an exhaustive list of relevant dimensions. With respect to any
product or asset class, a firm may have reasons for not capturing
data on (or not using) one or more of the enumerated segmentation
dimensions. In that case, however, the firm should explain those
reasons.
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Derivatives Stabilization and De-Risking Strategy
To the extent the U.S. resolution strategy assumes the continuation
of a U.S. IHC subsidiary with a derivatives portfolio after the entry
of the U.S. IHC into a U.S. bankruptcy proceeding (surviving
derivatives subsidiary), the firm's plan should provide a detailed
analysis of the strategy to stabilize and de-risk any derivatives
portfolio of the surviving derivatives subsidiary (U.S. derivatives
strategy) that has been incorporated into its U.S. resolution
strategy.\39\ In developing its U.S. derivatives strategy, a firm
should apply the following assumption constraints:
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\39\ Subject to the relevant constraints, a firm's U.S.
derivatives strategy may take the form of a going-concern strategy,
an accelerated de-risking strategy (e.g., active wind-down) or an
alternative, third strategy so long as the firm's resolution plan
adequately supports the execution of the chosen strategy. For
example, a firm may choose a going-concern scenario (e.g., surviving
derivatives subsidiary reestablishes investment grade status and
does not enter any wind-down) as its derivatives strategy. Likewise,
a firm may choose to adopt a combination of going-concern and
accelerated de-risking scenarios as its U.S. derivatives strategy.
For example, the U.S. derivatives strategy could be a stabilization
scenario for the U.S. bank entity and an accelerated de-risking
scenario for U.S. broker-dealer entities.
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OTC derivatives market access: At or before the start of
the resolution period, each surviving derivatives subsidiary should be
assumed to lack an investment grade credit rating (e.g., unrated or
downgraded below investment grade). Each surviving derivatives
subsidiary also should be assumed to have failed to establish or
reestablish investment grade status for the duration of the resolution
period, unless the plan provides well-supported analysis to the
contrary. As the subsidiary is not investment grade, it further should
be assumed that each surviving derivatives subsidiary has no access to
bilateral OTC derivatives markets and must use exchange-traded or
centrally cleared instruments for any new hedging needs that arise
during the resolution period. Nevertheless, a firm may assume the
ability to engage in certain risk-reducing derivatives trades with
bilateral OTC derivatives counterparties during the resolution period
to facilitate novations with third parties and to close out inter-
affiliate trades.\40\
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\40\ A firm may engage in bilateral OTC derivatives trades with,
for example, (i) external counterparties, to effect the novation of
the firm's side of a derivatives contract to a new, acquiring
counterparty; and (ii) inter-affiliate counterparties, where the
trades with inter-affiliate counterparties do not materially
increase either the credit exposure of any participating
counterparty or the market risk of any such counterparty on a
standalone basis, after taking into account any hedging with
exchange-traded and centrally-cleared instruments. The firm should
provide analysis to support the risk of the trade on the basis of
information that would be known to the firm at the time of the
transaction.
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Early exits (break clauses): A firm should assume that
counterparties (both external and affiliates) will exercise any
contractual termination or other right, including any rights stayed by
contract (including amendments) or in compliance with the rules
establishing restrictions on qualified financial contracts of the
Board, the FDIC, or the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency \41\
or any other regulatory requirements, (i) that is available to the
counterparty at or following the start of the resolution period; and
(ii) if exercising such right would economically benefit the
counterparty (counterparty-initiated termination).
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\41\ See 12 CFR part 47 (OCC); part 252, subpart I (Board); part
382 (FDIC).
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Time horizon: The duration of the resolution period should
be between 12 and 24 months. The resolution period begins immediately
after the U.S. IHC bankruptcy filing and extends through the completion
of the U.S. resolution strategy.\42\
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\42\ The firm may consider a resolution period of less than 12
months as long as the length of the resolution period is adequately
supported by the firm's analysis of the size, composition,
complexity, and maturity profile of the derivatives portfolios in
its U.S. IHC subsidiaries.
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A firm's analysis of its U.S. derivatives strategy should take into
account (i) the starting profile of any derivatives portfolio of each
surviving derivatives subsidiary (e.g., nature, concentration,
maturity, clearability, liquidity of positions); (ii) the profile and
function of any surviving derivatives subsidiary during the resolution
period; (iii) the means, challenges, and capacity of the surviving
derivatives subsidiary to manage and de-risk its derivatives portfolios
(e.g., method for timely segmenting, packaging, and selling the
derivatives positions; challenges with novating less liquid positions;
re-hedging strategy); (iv) the financial and operational resources
required to effect the derivatives strategy; and (v) any potential
residual portfolio (further discussed below). In addition, the firm's
resolution plan should address the following areas in the analysis of
its derivatives strategy:
Forecasts of resource needs. The forecasts of capital and liquidity
resource needs of U.S. IHC subsidiaries required to support adequately
the firm's U.S. derivatives strategy should be incorporated into the
firm's RCEN and RLEN estimates for its overall U.S. resolution
strategy. These include, for example, the costs and liquidity flows
resulting from (i) the close-out of OTC derivatives, (ii) the hedging
of derivatives portfolios, (iii) the quantified losses that could be
incurred due to basis and other risks that would result from hedging
with only exchange-traded and centrally cleared instruments in a
severely adverse stress environment, and (iv) operational costs.\43\
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\43\ A firm may choose not to isolate and separately model the
operational costs solely related to executing its derivatives
strategy. However, the firm should provide transparency around
operational cost estimation at a more granular level than material
entity (e.g., business line level within a material entity, subject
to wind-down).
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Sensitivity analysis. A firm should have a method to apply
sensitivity
[[Page 83578]]
analyses to the key drivers of the derivatives-related costs and
liquidity flows under its U.S. resolution strategy. A firm's resolution
plan should describe its method for (i) evaluating the materiality of
assumptions and (ii) identifying those assumptions (or combinations of
assumptions) that constitute the key drivers for its forecasts of
derivatives-related operational and financial resource needs under the
U.S. resolution strategy. In addition, using its U.S. resolution
strategy as a baseline, the firm's resolution plan should describe and
demonstrate its approach to testing the sensitivities of the identified
key drivers and the potential impact on its forecasts of resource
needs.\44\
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\44\ For example, key drivers of derivatives-related costs and
liquidity flows might include the timing of derivatives unwind, cost
of capital-related assumptions (e.g., target return on equity,
discount rate, weighted average life, capital constraints, tax
rate), operational cost reduction rate, and operational capacity for
novations. Other examples of key drivers likely also include central
counterparty margin flow assumptions and risk-weighted asset
forecast assumptions.
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Potential residual derivatives portfolio. A firm's resolution plan
should include a method for estimating the composition of any potential
residual derivatives portfolio transactions booked in a U.S. IHC
subsidiary remaining at the end of the resolution period under its U.S.
resolution strategy. The firm's plan also should provide detailed
descriptions of the trade characteristics used to identify such
potential residual portfolio and of the resulting trades (or categories
of trades).\45\ A firm should assess the risk profile of such potential
residual portfolio (including its anticipated size, composition,
complexity, and counterparties), and the potential counterparty and
market impacts of non-performance by the firm on the stability of U.S.
financial markets (e.g., on funding markets, on underlying asset
markets, on clients and counterparties).
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\45\ If, under the firm's U.S. resolution strategy, any
derivatives portfolios are transferred during the resolution period
by way of a line of business sale (or similar transaction), then
those portfolios nonetheless should be included within the firm's
potential residual portfolio analysis.
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Non-surviving entity analysis. To the extent the U.S. resolution
strategy assumes a U.S. IHC subsidiary with a derivatives portfolio
enters its own resolution proceeding after the entry of the U.S. IHC
into a U.S. bankruptcy proceeding (a non-surviving derivatives
subsidiary), the firm should provide a detailed analysis of how the
non-surviving derivatives subsidiary's resolution can be accomplished
within a reasonable period of time and in a manner that substantially
mitigates the risk of serious adverse effects on U.S. financial
stability and on the orderly execution of the firm's U.S. resolution
strategy. In particular, the firm should provide an analysis of the
potential impacts on funding markets, on underlying asset markets, on
clients and counterparties (including affiliates), and on the firm's
U.S. resolution strategy.
IX. Format and Structure of Plans
Format of Plan
Executive Summary. The Plan should contain an executive summary
consistent with the Rule, which must include, among other things, a
concise description of the key elements of the firm's U.S. strategy for
an orderly resolution. In addition, the executive summary should
include a discussion of the firm's assessment of any impediments to the
firm's U.S. resolution strategy and its execution, as well as the steps
it has taken to address any identified impediments.
Narrative. The Plan should include a strategic analysis consistent
with the Rule. This analysis should take the form of a concise
narrative that enhances the readability and understanding of the firm's
discussion of its U.S. strategy for orderly resolution in bankruptcy or
other applicable insolvency regimes (Narrative). The Narrative also
should include a high-level discussion of how the firm is addressing
key vulnerabilities jointly identified by the Agencies. This is not an
exhaustive list and does not preclude identification of further
vulnerabilities or impediments.
Appendices. The Plan should contain a sufficient level of detail
and analysis to substantiate and support the strategy described in the
Narrative. Such detail and analysis should be included in appendices
that are distinct from and clearly referenced in the related parts of
the Narrative (Appendices).
Public Section. The Plan must be divided into a public section and
a confidential section consistent with the requirements of the Rule.
Other Informational Requirements. The Plan must comply with all
other informational requirements of the Rule. The firm may incorporate
by reference previously submitted information as provided in the Rule.
Guidance Regarding Assumptions
1. The Plan should be based on the current state of the applicable
legal and policy frameworks. Pending legislation or regulatory actions
may be discussed as additional considerations.
2. The firm must submit a plan that does not rely on the provision
of extraordinary support by the United States or any other government
to the firm or its subsidiaries to prevent the failure of the firm.
3. The firm should not assume that it will be able to sell
identified critical operations or core business lines, or that
unsecured funding will be available immediately prior to filing for
bankruptcy.
4. The Plan should assume the Dodd-Frank Act Stress Test (DFAST)
severely adverse scenario for the first quarter of the calendar year in
which the Plan is submitted is the domestic and international economic
environment at the time of the firm's failure and throughout the
resolution process.
5. The resolution strategy may be based on an idiosyncratic event
or action. The firm should justify use of that assumption, consistent
with the conditions of the economic scenario.
6. Within the context of the applicable idiosyncratic scenario,
markets are functioning and competitors are in a position to take on
business. If a firm's Plan assumes the sale of assets, the firm should
take into account all issues surrounding its ability to sell in market
conditions present in the applicable economic condition at the time of
sale (i.e., the firm should take into consideration the size and scale
of its operations as well as issues of separation and transfer.)
7. The firm should not assume any waivers of section 23A or 23B of
the Federal Reserve Act in connection with the actions proposed to be
taken prior to or in resolution.
8. The firm may assume that its depository institutions will have
access to the Discount Window only for a few days after the point of
failure to facilitate orderly resolution. However, the firm should not
assume its subsidiary depository institutions will have access to the
Discount Window while critically undercapitalized, in FDIC
receivership, or operating as a bridge bank, nor should it assume any
lending from a Federal Reserve credit facility to a non-bank affiliate.
Financial Statements and Projections
The Plan should include the actual balance sheet for each material
entity and the consolidating balance sheet adjustments between material
entities as well as pro forma balance sheets for each material entity
at the point of failure and at key junctures in the execution of the
resolution strategy. It should also include projected statements of
sources and uses of funds for the interim periods. The pro forma
financial statements and accompanying notes in the Plan must clearly
evidence the failure trigger event; the Plan's
[[Page 83579]]
assumptions; and any transactions that are critical to the execution of
the Plan's preferred strategy, such as recapitalizations, the creation
of new legal entities, transfers of assets, and asset sales and
unwinds.
Material Entities
Material entities should encompass those entities, including
subsidiaries, branches and agencies (collectively, Offices), which are
significant to the activities of an identified critical operation or
core business line. If the abrupt disruption or cessation of a core
business line might have systemic consequences to U.S. financial
stability, the entities essential to the continuation of such core
business line should be considered for material entity designation.
Material entities should include the following types of entities:
a. Any Office, wherever located, that is significant to the
activities of an identified critical operation.
b. Any Office, wherever located, whose provision or support of
global treasury operations, funding, or liquidity activities (inclusive
of intercompany transactions) is significant to the activities of an
identified critical operation.
c. Any Office, wherever located, that would provide material
operational support in resolution (key personnel, information
technology, data centers, real estate or other shared services) to the
activities of an identified critical operation.
d. Any Office, wherever located, that is engaged in derivatives
booking activity that is significant to the activities of an identified
critical operation, including those that conduct either the internal
hedge side or the client-facing side of a transaction.
e. Any Office, wherever located, engaged in asset custody or asset
management that are significant to the activities of an identified
critical operation.
f. Any Office, wherever located, holding licenses or memberships in
clearinghouses, exchanges, or other FMUs that are significant to the
activities of an identified critical operation.
For each material entity (including a branch), the Plan should
enumerate, on a jurisdiction-by-jurisdiction basis, the specific
mandatory and discretionary actions or forbearances that regulatory and
resolution authorities would take during resolution, including any
regulatory filings and notifications that would be required as part of
the U.S. resolution strategy, and explain how the Plan addresses the
actions and forbearances. The Plan should describe the consequences for
the firm's U.S. resolution strategy if specific actions in each
jurisdiction were not taken, delayed, or forgone, as relevant.
X. Public Section
The purpose of the public section is to inform the public's
understanding of the firm's resolution strategy and how it works.
The public section should discuss the steps that the firm is taking
to improve resolvability under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. The public
section should provide background information on each material entity
and should be enhanced by including the firm's rationale for
designating material entities. The public section should also discuss,
at a high level, the firm's intra-group financial and operational
interconnectedness (including the types of guarantees or support
obligations in place that could impact the execution of the firm's
strategy). There should also be a high-level discussion of the
liquidity resources and loss-absorbing capacity of the U.S. IHC.
The discussion of strategy in the public section should broadly
explain how the firm has addressed any deficiencies, shortcomings, and
other key vulnerabilities that the Agencies have identified in prior
Plan submissions. For each material entity, it should be clear how the
strategy provides for continuity, transfer, or orderly wind-down of the
entity and its operations. There should also be a description of the
resulting organization upon completion of the resolution process.
The public section may note that the resolution plan is not binding
on a bankruptcy court or other resolution authority and that the
proposed failure scenario and associated assumptions are hypothetical
and do not necessarily reflect an event or events to which the firm is
or may become subject.
Appendix: Frequently Asked Questions
In March 2017, the Agencies issued guidance for use in developing
the 2018 resolution plan submissions by certain foreign banking
organizations.
In response to frequently asked questions regarding that guidance
from the recipients of that guidance, Board and FDIC staff jointly
developed answers and provided those answers to the guidance recipients
in 2017 so that they could take this information into account in
developing their next resolution plan submissions.\46\
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\46\ The FAQs represent the views of staff of the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation and do not bind the Board or the FDIC.
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The questions in this Appendix:
Comprise common questions asked by different covered
companies. Not every question is applicable to every firm; not every
aspect of the guidance applies to each firm's preferred strategy/
structure; and
Reflect updated references to correspond to this final
guidance for the Specified FBOs (Final Guidance).
As indicated below, those questions and answers that are deemed to
be no longer meaningful or relevant have not been consolidated in this
Appendix and are superseded.
Capital
CAP 1. Not consolidated
CAP 2. Definition of ``Well-Capitalized'' Status
Q. How should firms apply the term ``well-capitalized''?
A. U.S. non-branch material entities must comply with the capital
requirements and expectations of their primary regulator. U.S. non-
branch material entities should be recapitalized to meet jurisdictional
requirements and to maintain market confidence as required under the
U.S. resolution strategy.
CAP 3. RCEN Relationship to DFAST Severely Adverse Scenario
Q. How should the firm's RCEN and RLEN estimates relate to the
DFAST Severely Adverse scenario? Can those estimates be recalibrated in
actual stress conditions?
A. For resolution plan submission purposes, the estimation of RLEN
and RCEN should assume macroeconomic conditions consistent with the
DFAST Severely Adverse scenario. However, the RLEN and RCEN
methodologies should have the flexibility to incorporate macroeconomic
conditions that may deviate from the DFAST Severely Adverse scenario in
order to facilitate execution of the U.S. resolution strategy.
CAP 4. Not Consolidated
Liquidity
LIQ 1. Inter-Company ``Frictions''
Q. Can the Agencies clarify what kinds of frictions might occur
between affiliates beyond regulatory ring-fencing?
A. Frictions are any impediments to the free flow of funds,
collateral and other transactions between material entities. Examples
include regulatory, legal, financial (i.e., tax consequences), market,
or operational constraints or requirements.
LIQ 2. Distinction between Liquidity Forecasting Periods
[[Page 83580]]
Q1. How long is the stabilization period?
A1. The stabilization period begins immediately after the U.S. IHC
bankruptcy filing and extends until each material entity reestablishes
market confidence. The stabilization period may not be less than 30
days. The reestablishment of market confidence may be reflected by the
maintaining, reestablishing, or establishing of investment grade
ratings or the equivalent financial condition for each entity. The
stabilization period may vary by material entity, given differences in
regulatory, counterparty, and other stakeholder interests in each
entity.
Q2. Not Consolidated.
Q3. What is the resolution period?
A3. The resolution period begins immediately after the U.S. IHC's
bankruptcy filing and extends through the completion of the U.S.
strategy. After the stabilization period (see ``LIQ 2. Distinction
between Liquidity Forecasting Periods,'' Question 1, regarding
``stabilization period''), financial statements and projections may be
provided at quarterly intervals through the remainder of the resolution
period.
LIQ 3. Inter-Affiliate Transaction Assumptions
Q. Does inter-affiliate funding refer to all kinds of intercompany
transactions, including both unsecured and secured?
A. Yes.
LIQ 4. RLEN and Minimum Operating Liquidity (MOL)
Q1. How should firms distinguish between the minimum operating
liquidity (MOL) and peak funding needs during the RLEN period?
A1. The peak funding needs represent the peak cumulative net out-
flows during the stabilization period. The components of peak funding
needs, including the monetization of assets and other management
actions, should be transparent in the RLEN projections. The peak
funding needs should be supported by projections of daily sources and
uses of cash for each U.S. IHC subsidiary, incorporating inter-
affiliate and third-party exposures. In mathematical terms, RLEN = MOL
+ peak funding needs during the stabilization period. RLEN should also
incorporate liquidity execution needs of the U.S. resolution strategy
for derivatives (see Derivatives and Trading Activities section).
Q2. Should the MOL per entity make explicit the allocation for
intraday liquidity requirements, inter-affiliate and other funding
frictions, operating expenses, and working capital needs?
A2. Yes, the components of the MOL estimates for each surviving
U.S. IHC subsidiary should be transparent and supported.
Q3. Can MOLs decrease as surviving U.S. IHC subsidiaries wind down?
A3. MOL estimates can decline as long as they are sufficiently
supported by the firm's methodology and assumptions.
LIQ 5. Not Consolidated
LIQ 6. Inter-Affiliate Transactions with Optionality
Q. How should firms treat an inter-affiliate transaction with an
embedded option that may affect the contractual maturity date?
A. For the purpose of calculating a firm's net liquidity position
at a material entity, the RLEN model should assume that these
transactions mature at the earliest possible exercise date; this
adjusted maturity should be applied symmetrically to both material
entities involved in the transaction.
LIQ 7. Stabilization and Regulatory Liquidity Requirements
Q. As it relates to the RLEN model and actions necessary to re-
establish market confidence, what assumptions should firms make
regarding compliance with regulatory liquidity requirements?
A. Firms should consider the applicable regulatory expectations for
each U.S. IHC subsidiary to achieve the stabilization needed to execute
the U.S. resolution strategy. Firms' assumptions in the RLEN model
regarding the actions necessary to reestablish market confidence during
the stabilization period may vary by U.S. IHC subsidiary, for example,
based on differences in regulatory, counterparty, other stakeholder
interests, and based on the U.S. resolution strategy for each U.S. IHC
subsidiary. See also ``LIQ 2. Distinction between Liquidity Forecasting
Periods.''
LIQ 8. HQLA and Assets Not Eligible as HQLA in the RLEN Model
Q. The Final Guidance states the RLEN estimate should be based on
the minimum amount of HQLA required to facilitate the execution of the
firm's U.S. resolution strategy. How should firms incorporate any
expected liquidity value of assets that are not eligible as HQLA (non-
HQLA) into the RLEN model?
A. For a firm's RLEN model, firms may incorporate conservative
estimates of potential liquidity that may be generated through the
monetization of non-HQLA. The estimated liquidity value of non-HQLA
should be supported by thorough analysis of the potential market
constraints and asset value haircuts that may be required. Assumptions
for the monetization of non-HQLA should be consistent with the U.S.
resolution strategy for each U.S. IHC subsidiary.
LIQ 9. Components of Minimum Operating Liquidity
Q. Do the agencies have particular definitions of the ``intraday
liquidity requirements,'' ``operating expenses,'' and ``working capital
needs'' components of minimum operating liquidity (MOL) estimates?
A. No. A firm may use its internal definitions of the components of
MOL estimates. The components of MOL estimates should be well-supported
by a firm's internal methodologies and calibrated to the specifics of
each U.S. IHC subsidiary.
LIQ 10. RLEN Model and Net Revenue Recognition
Q. Can firms assume in the RLEN model that cash-based net revenue
generated by U.S. IHC subsidiaries after the U.S. IHC's bankruptcy
filing is available to offset estimated liquidity needs?
A. Yes. Firms may incorporate cash revenue generated by U.S. IHC
subsidiaries in the RLEN model. Cash revenue projections should be
conservatively estimated and consistent with the operating environment
and the U.S. strategy for each U.S. IHC subsidiary.
LIQ 11. RLEN Model and Inter-Affiliate Frictions
Q. Can a firm modify its assumptions regarding one or more inter-
affiliate frictions during the stabilization or post-stabilization
period in the RLEN model?
A. Once a U.S. IHC subsidiary has achieved market confidence
necessary for stabilization consistent with the U.S. resolution
strategy, a firm may modify one or more inter-affiliate frictions,
provided the firm provides sufficient analysis to support this
assumption.
LIQ 12. RLEN Relationship to DFAST Severely Adverse scenario
(See ``CAP 3. RCEN Relationship to DFAST Severely Adverse
Scenario'' in the Capital section.)
LIQ 13. Liquidity Positioning and Foreign Parent Support
Q1. May firms consider available liquidity at the foreign parent
for meeting RLEN estimates for U.S. non-branch material entities?
A1. To meet the liquidity needs informed by the RLEN methodology,
firms may either fully pre-position liquidity in the U.S. non-branch
material entities or develop a mechanism for planned foreign parent
support of any amount not pre-
[[Page 83581]]
positioned for the successful execution of the U.S. strategy.
Mechanisms to support readily available liquidity may include a term
liquidity facility between the U.S. IHC and the foreign parent that can
be drawn as needed. If a firm's plan relies on foreign parent support,
the plan should include analysis of how the U.S. IHC/foreign parent
facility is funded or buffered for by the foreign parent.
LIQ 14. Not consolidated
LIQ 15. Not consolidated
LIQ 16. Not consolidated
Operational: Shared Services
OPS SS 1. Not Consolidated
OPS SS 2. Working Capital
Q1. Must working capital be maintained for third party and internal
shared service costs?
A1. Where a firm maintains shared service companies to provide
services to affiliates, working capital should be maintained in those
entities sufficient to permit those entities to continue to provide
services for six months or through the period of stabilization as
required in the firm's U.S. resolution strategy.
Costs related to third-party vendors and inter-affiliate services
should be captured through the working capital element of the MOL
estimate (RLEN).
Q2. When does the six month working capital requirement period
begin?
A2. The measurement of the six month working capital expectation
begins upon the bankruptcy filing of the U.S. IHC. The expectation for
maintaining the working capital is effective upon the July 2018
submission.
OPS SS 3. Not Consolidated
OPS SS 4. Not Consolidated
Operations: Payments, Clearing and Settlement
To the extent relevant, the PCS FAQs have been consolidated into
the updated section of the Final Guidance.
Legal Entity Rationalization
LER 1. Not consolidated
LER 2. Legal Entity Rationalization Criteria
Q. Is it acceptable to take into account business-related criteria,
in addition to the resolution requirements, so that the LER Criteria
can be used for both resolution planning and business operations
purposes?
A. Yes, LER criteria may incorporate both business and resolution
considerations. In determining the best alignment of legal entities and
business lines to improve the firm's resolvability under different
market conditions, business considerations should not be prioritized
over resolution needs.
LER 3. Creation of Additional Legal Entities
Q. Is the addition of legal entities acceptable, so long as it is
consistent with the LER criteria?
A. Yes.
LER 4. Clean Funding Pathways
Q1. Can you provide additional context around what is meant by
clean lines of ownership and clean funding pathways in the legal entity
rationalization criteria? Additionally, what types of funding are
covered by the requirements?
A1. The funding pathways between the foreign parent, U.S. IHC, and
U.S. IHC subsidiaries should minimize uncertainty in the provision of
funds and facilitate recapitalization. Also, the complexity of
ownership should not impede the flow of funding to a U.S. non-branch
material entity under the firm's U.S. resolution strategy. Potential
sources of additional complexity could include, for example, multiple
intermediate holding companies, tenor mismatches, or complicated
ownership structures (including those involving multiple jurisdictions
or fractional ownerships). Ownership should be as clean and simple as
practicable, supporting the U.S. strategy and actionable sales,
transfers, or wind-downs under varying market conditions. The clean
funding pathways expectation applies to all funding provided to a U.S.
non-branch material entity regardless of type and should not be viewed
solely to apply to internal TLAC.
Q2. The Final Guidance regarding legal entity rationalization
criteria discusses ``clean lines of ownership'' and ``clean funding
pathways.'' Does this statement mean that firms' legal entity
rationalization criteria should require funding pathways and
recapitalization to always follow lines of ownership?
A2. No. However, the firm should identify and address or mitigate
any legal, regulatory, financial, operational, and other factors that
could complicate the recapitalization and/or liquidity support of U.S.
non-branch material entities.
LER 5. Not consolidated
LER 6. Not consolidated
LER 7. Application of Legal Entity Rationalization Criteria
Q1. Which legal entities should be covered under the LER framework?
A1. The scope of a firm's LER criteria should apply to the entire
U.S. operations.
Q2. To the extent a firm has a large number of similar U.S. non-
material entities (such as single-purpose entities formed for Community
Reinvestment Act purposes), may a firm apply its legal entity
rationalization criteria to these entities as a group, rather than at
the individual entity level?
A2. Yes.
LER 8. Application of LER Criteria.
Q. Under the Final Guidance, is there an expectation that the LER
criteria be applied to the legal structure outside of the U.S.
operations (e.g., outside of the U.S. IHC or U.S. branch)?
A. The LER criteria serve to govern the corporate structure and
arrangements between U.S. subsidiaries and U.S. branches in a manner
that facilitates the resolvability of U.S. operations. The Final
Guidance is not intended to govern the corporate structure in
jurisdictions outside the U.S. The application of the LER criteria
should, among other things, ensure that the allocation of activities
across the firm's U.S. branches and U.S. non-branch material entities
support the firm's US resolution strategy and minimize risk to US
financial stability in the event of resolution.
Moreover, LER works with other components to improve resolvability.
For example, with regard to shared services the firm should identify
all shared services that support identified critical operations,
maintain a mapping of how/where these services support core business
lines and identified critical operations, and include this mapping into
the legal rationalization criteria and implementation efforts.
Derivatives and Trading Activities
To the extent relevant, the derivatives and trading FAQs have been
consolidated into the updated section of the Final Guidance.
Legal
LEG 1. Not consolidated.
LEG 2. Contractually Binding Mechanisms
The Final Guidance does not specifically reference consideration of
a contractually binding mechanism. However, the following questions and
answers may be useful to a firm that chooses to consider a
contractually binding mechanism as a mitigant to the potential
challenges to the planned Support.
Q1. Do the Agencies have any preference as to whether capital is
down-streamed to key subsidiaries (including an IDI subsidiary) in the
form of capital contributions vs. forgiveness of debt?
A1. No. The Agencies do not have a preference as to the form of
capital contribution or liquidity support.
[[Page 83582]]
Q2. Should a contractually binding mechanism relate to the
provision of capital or liquidity? What classes of assets would be
deemed to provide capital vs. liquidity?
A2. Contractually binding mechanism is a generic term and includes
the down-streaming of capital and/or liquidity as contemplated by the
U.S. resolution strategy. Furthermore, it is up to the firm, as
informed by any relevant guidance of the Agencies, to identify what
assets would satisfy a U.S. affiliate's need for capital and/or
liquidity.
Q3. Is there a minimum acceptable duration for a contractually
binding mechanism? Would an ``evergreen'' arrangement, renewable on a
periodic basis (and with notice to the Agencies), be acceptable?
A3. To the extent a firm utilizes a contractually binding
mechanism, such mechanism, including its duration, should be
appropriate for the firm's U.S. resolution strategy, including
adequately addressing relevant financial, operational, and legal
requirements and challenges.
Q4. Not consolidated.
Q5. Not consolidated.
Q6. The firm may need to amend its contractually binding mechanism
from time to time resulting potentially from changes in relevant law,
new or different regulatory expectations, etc. Is a firm able to do
this as long as there is no undue risk to the enforceability (e.g., no
signs of financial stress sufficient to unduly threaten the agreement's
enforceability as a result of fraudulent transfer)?
A6. Yes, however the Agencies should be informed of the proposed
duration of the agreement, as well as any terms and conditions on
renewal and/or amendment. Any amendments should be identified and
discussed as part of the firm's next U.S. resolution plan submission.
Q7. Not consolidated.
Q8. Should firms include a formal regulatory trigger by which the
Agencies can directly trigger a contractually binding mechanism?
A8. No
General
None of the general FAQs were consolidated.
By order of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System.
Ann Misback,
Secretary of the Board.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
By order of the Board of Directors.
Dated at Washington, DC, on or about December 7, 2020.
James P. Sheesley,
Assistant Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2020-28155 Filed 12-21-20; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210-01- 6714-01-P