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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 70 / Wednesday, April 11, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
full amount owed plus any applicable
interest, and to make an advance
payment of the full amount of the
estimated fee before the Council begins
to process a new request or the pending
request.
(5) When the Council acts under
paragraphs (g)(1) through (4) of this
section, the administrative time limits of
twenty (20) days (excluding Saturdays,
Sundays, and legal public holidays)
from receipt of initial requests or
appeals, plus extensions of these time
limits, shall begin only after any
applicable fees have been paid (in the
case of paragraphs (g)(2), (g)(3), or
(g)(4)), a written agreement to pay fees
has been provided (in the case of
paragraph (g)(1)), or a request has been
reformulated (in the case of paragraphs
(g)(1) or (g)(2)).
(h) Form of payment. Payment may be
made by check or money order paid to
the Treasurer of the United States.
(i) Charging interest. The Council may
charge interest on any unpaid bill
starting on the 31st day following the
date of billing the requester. Interest
charges will be assessed at the rate
provided in 31 U.S.C. 3717 and will
accrue from the date of the billing until
payment is received by the Council. The
Council will follow the provisions of the
Debt Collection Act of 1982 (Pub. L. 97–
365, 96 Stat. 1749), as amended, and its
administrative procedures, including
the use of consumer reporting agencies,
collection agencies, and offset.
(j) Aggregating requests. If the Council
reasonably determines that a requester
or a group of requesters acting together
is attempting to divide a request into a
series of requests for the purpose of
avoiding fees, the Council may aggregate
those requests and charge accordingly.
The Council may presume that multiple
requests involving related matters
submitted within a thirty (30) calendar
day period have been made in order to
avoid fees. The Council shall not
aggregate multiple requests involving
unrelated matters.

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Dated: April 3, 2012.
Rebecca Ewing,
Acting Executive Secretary, Department of
the Treasury.
[FR Doc. 2012–8625 Filed 4–10–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–25–P

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FINANCIAL STABILITY OVERSIGHT
COUNCIL
12 CFR Part 1310
RIN 4030–AA00

Authority To Require Supervision and
Regulation of Certain Nonbank
Financial Companies
Financial Stability Oversight
Council.
ACTION: Final rule and interpretive
guidance.
AGENCY:

Section 113 of the DoddFrank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act (the ‘‘Dodd-Frank Act’’)
authorizes the Financial Stability
Oversight Council (the ‘‘Council’’) to
determine that a nonbank financial
company shall be supervised by the
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System (the ‘‘Board of
Governors’’) and shall be subject to
prudential standards, in accordance
with Title I of the Dodd-Frank Act, if the
Council determines that material
financial distress at the nonbank
financial company, or the nature, scope,
size, scale, concentration,
interconnectedness, or mix of the
activities of the nonbank financial
company, could pose a threat to the
financial stability of the United States.
This final rule and the interpretive
guidance attached as an appendix
thereto describe the manner in which
the Council intends to apply the
statutory standards and considerations,
and the processes and procedures that
the Council intends to follow, in making
determinations under section 113 of the
Dodd-Frank Act.
DATES: Effective date: May 11, 2012.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Lance Auer, Office of Domestic Finance,
Treasury, at (202) 622–1262, or Eric
Froman, Office of the General Counsel,
Treasury, at (202) 622–1942.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:

I. Background
Section 111 of the Dodd-Frank Act (12
U.S.C. 5321) established the Financial
Stability Oversight Council. Among the
purposes of the Council under section
112 of the Dodd-Frank Act (12 U.S.C.
5322) are ‘‘(A) to identify risks to the
financial stability of the United States
that could arise from the material
financial distress or failure, or ongoing
activities, of large, interconnected bank
holding companies or nonbank financial
companies, or that could arise outside
the financial services marketplace; (B) to
promote market discipline, by
eliminating expectations on the part of

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shareholders, creditors, and
counterparties of such companies that
the Government will shield them from
losses in the event of failure; and (C) to
respond to emerging threats to the
stability of the United States financial
system.’’
In the recent financial crisis, financial
distress at certain nonbank financial
companies contributed to a broad
seizing up of financial markets and
stress at other financial firms. Many of
these nonbank financial companies
were not subject to the type of
regulation and consolidated supervision
applied to bank holding companies, nor
were there effective mechanisms in
place to resolve the largest and most
interconnected of these nonbank
financial companies without causing
further instability. To address any
potential risks to U.S. financial stability
posed by these companies, the DoddFrank Act authorizes the Council to
determine that certain nonbank
financial companies will be subject to
supervision by the Board of Governors
and prudential standards. The Board of
Governors is responsible for establishing
the prudential standards that will be
applicable, under section 165 of the
Dodd-Frank Act, to nonbank financial
companies subject to a Council
determination.
Title I of the Dodd-Frank Act defines
a ‘‘nonbank financial company’’ as a
domestic or foreign company that is
‘‘predominantly engaged in financial
activities,’’ other than bank holding
companies and certain other types of
firms.1 The Dodd-Frank Act provides
that a company is ‘‘predominantly
engaged’’ in financial activities if either
(i) the annual gross revenues derived by
the company and all of its subsidiaries
from financial activities, as well as from
the ownership or control of insured
depository institutions, represent 85
percent or more of the consolidated
annual gross revenues of the company;
or (ii) the consolidated assets of the
company and all of its subsidiaries
related to financial activities, as well as
related to the ownership or control of
insured depository institutions,
represent 85 percent or more of the
consolidated assets of the company.2
The Dodd-Frank Act requires the Board
of Governors to establish the
requirements for determining whether a
company is ‘‘predominantly engaged in
financial activities’’ for this purpose.3
The Council issued an advance notice
of proposed rulemaking (the ‘‘ANPR’’)
on October 6, 2010 (75 FR 61653), in
1 See

12 U.S.C. 5311(a)(4).
12 U.S.C. 5311(a)(6).
3 See 12 U.S.C. 5311(b).
2 See

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which it requested public comment on
the application of the statutory factors
that the Dodd-Frank Act requires the
Council to consider in determining
whether a nonbank financial company
should be supervised by the Board of
Governors and subject to prudential
standards. The ANPR posed 15
questions, all of which addressed the
application of the statutory
considerations that the Council must
take into account in the process of
determining whether a nonbank
financial company should be subject to
supervision by the Board of Governors
and be subject to prudential standards
(the ‘‘Determination Process’’).
On January 26, 2011, the Council
issued a notice of proposed rulemaking
(the ‘‘First NPR’’) (76 FR 4555) through
which it sought public comment
regarding the specific criteria and
analytic framework that the Council
intends to apply in the Determination
Process. The comment period for the
First NPR closed on February 25, 2011.
In response to comments that the
Council received on the First NPR, on
October 18, 2011, the Council issued a
second notice of proposed rulemaking
(the ‘‘NPR’’) and proposed interpretive
guidance (the ‘‘Proposed Guidance’’)
(76 FR 64264) to provide (i) additional
details regarding the framework that the
Council intends to use in the process of
assessing whether a nonbank financial
company could pose a threat to U.S.
financial stability, and (ii) further
opportunity for public comment on the
Council’s proposed approach to the
Determination Process.
The Council received 41 comment
letters in response to the NPR and
Proposed Guidance, of which 12 were
from companies or trade associations in
the insurance industry, eight were from
companies or trade associations in the
asset management industry, seven were
from other financial or business trade
associations, four were from specialty
finance companies, and 10 were from
law firms, advocacy groups, think tanks,
and individuals.4 (Comment letters are
4 In addition, the Council received two comment
letters dated March 8, 2012, requesting a public
hearing or public roundtables on the NPR and
Proposed Guidance. These letters also reiterated
earlier substantive comments on the NPR and
Proposed Guidance by a number of the letters’
signatories. The writers acknowledged that these
prior substantive comments were submitted and
that the Council had received numerous comments
to the NPR and Proposed Guidance on a wide range
of concerns. In drafting the final rule and
interpretive guidance, the Council has carefully
considered all the comments received. Neither the
Dodd-Frank Act nor the Administrative Procedure
Act requires a public hearing on the NPR and
Proposed Guidance prior to the issuance of the final
rule and interpretive guidance. The letters
requesting a hearing did not indicate why the

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available online at http://www.
regulations.gov.) In addition to issuing
the ANPR, the First NPR, and the NPR
and Proposed Guidance for public
comment, staff of Council members and
their agencies met with financial
industry representatives to discuss the
proposals. Meeting participants
generally reiterated the views expressed
in their comment submissions.
Commenters generally found that the
NPR and Proposed Guidance provided
helpful insight and transparency into
the Council’s approach to the
Determination Process. Many
commenters applauded the inclusion of
a three-stage process for review of
nonbank financial companies and the
inclusion of sample metrics for the
Council’s analysis under its analytic
framework. Some commenters suggested
that the NPR and Proposed Guidance
continued to provide an insufficient
degree of certainty and transparency.5
As described below, the Council has
carefully considered the comments
received on the NPR and Proposed
Guidance in developing the final rule
and interpretive guidance.
II. Comments on Scope and
Implementation of Determination
Authority
A. Comments on Scope of Council
Determinations
Many commenters addressed the
types of nonbank financial companies
that should be considered for
determinations. Many commenters
representing particular segments of the
financial industry suggested that
nonbank financial companies operating
in those segments do not pose a threat
to U.S. financial stability and should not
generally be subject to a determination.
For example, commenters representing
the insurance industry argued that the
products and services of regulated,
traditional insurance companies are
highly substitutable and that these
companies operate without significant
leverage or reliance on short-term debt
and are subject to high levels of existing
regulatory scrutiny. Commenters
representing the asset management
industry contended that asset managers
are unlikely to pose a threat to U.S.
opportunity to submit written comments was
inadequate for commenters to participate fully in
the rulemaking process. Accordingly, the Council
has determined that a public hearing or roundtable
is not necessary prior to adopting the final rule and
interpretive guidance.
5 In addition, one commenter recommended that
the Council abandon this rulemaking entirely; the
Council has declined to do so, for the reasons
described below. Consistent with the Council’s
intended approach, two other commenters
recommended that the determination process be
implemented as soon as possible.

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financial stability, and some noted that
the legal distinction between investment
advisers and the funds they manage
make the prudential standards
contemplated by section 165 of the
Dodd-Frank Act an inappropriate
mechanism for addressing any threat
posed by such firms. Others commented
on behalf of financial guaranty insurers,
captive finance companies, money
market funds, and the Federal Home
Loan Banks. The Council’s
determination with respect to a nonbank
financial company will be based on an
evaluation of whether the nonbank
financial company meets the statutory
standards, taking into account the
statutory considerations set forth in
section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Act. The
Council does not intend to provide
industry-based exemptions from
potential determinations under section
113 of the Dodd-Frank Act, but the
Council intends to give these comments
due consideration in the Determination
Process.6
In contrast, some commenters argued
that the standard for determinations
should be low, so that many nonbank
financial companies may be subject to a
determination. Other commenters
suggested that particular types of
nonbank financial companies, such as
companies that serve as primary dealers
or foreign banking organizations that
reorganize their operations and
deregister as bank holding companies in
order to avoid new capital and liquidity
requirements should automatically be
considered by the Council.7 As noted
above, the Council’s determination with
respect to a nonbank financial company
will be based on an application of the
statutory standards, taking into account
6 Pursuant to section 170 of the Dodd-Frank Act,
the Board of Governors is authorized to promulgate
regulations on behalf of, and in consultation with,
the Council setting forth the criteria for exempting
certain types or classes of nonbank financial
companies from supervision by the Board of
Governors. See 12 U.S.C. 5370.
7 The Council notes that a foreign bank that is a
bank holding company or that operates a branch or
agency in the United States is subject to
consolidated supervision by the Board of Governors
and would be subject to the enhanced prudential
standards to be adopted by the Board of Governors
under section 165 of the Dodd-Frank Act, resolution
planning requirements, and early remediation
requirements to be adopted by the Board of
Governors under section 166 of the Dodd-Frank Act
if it has total consolidated worldwide assets of at
least $50 billion. See 76 FR 67323, at 67326 (Nov.
1, 2011) for a discussion of the application of
resolution-planning requirements to foreign banks.
A foreign bank that has a financial but not a
banking presence in the United States may not be
subject to consolidated supervision by the Board of
Governors and consequently, may not be subject to
these requirements, regardless of its size, unless the
Council were to make a determination with respect
to such company pursuant to section 113 of the
Dodd-Frank Act.

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the considerations set forth in section
113 of the Dodd-Frank Act, to the facts
regarding that nonbank financial
company.
As noted above under ‘‘Background,’’
Title I of the Dodd-Frank Act defines a
‘‘nonbank financial company’’ as a
domestic or foreign company that is
‘‘predominantly engaged in financial
activities,’’ with certain exceptions. The
guidance notes that the Council intends
to interpret the term ‘‘company’’ broadly
with respect to nonbank financial
companies and other companies in
connection with section 113 of the
Dodd-Frank Act, to include any
corporation, limited liability company,
partnership, business trust, association,
or similar organization. In response to
commenter concerns, the Council
clarifies that it does not generally intend
to encompass unincorporated
associations within the definition of
‘‘company.’’ One commenter suggested
that the rule include a definition of
‘‘company.’’ The Council has
determined that adding this definition
to the rule would not be consistent with
the focus of the rule on issues of
Council procedure and practice, but the
Council’s intended interpretation of this
term has been included in the
interpretive guidance. Other
commenters argued that the definition
of ‘‘nonbank financial company’’ should
include financial businesses owned by
another company that engage in
separate, unrelated financial
transactions, or that open-end
investment companies might not be
included within the statutory definition
of ‘‘nonbank financial company.’’ The
Board of Governors has authority to
issue regulations regarding the
requirements for determining if a
company is predominantly engaged in
financial activities, and thus potentially
a nonbank financial company, and has
issued a proposed rule under this
authority.
B. Comments on Coordination With
Other Regulatory Activities
A number of commenters requested
that the Council delay this rulemaking
until other, related regulatory activities
are completed. The other regulatory
activities cited were (i) the requirements
for determining if a company is
‘‘predominantly engaged in financial
activities’’ under section 102 of the
Dodd-Frank Act; (ii) the adoption of
enhanced prudential standards
applicable under section 165 of the
Dodd-Frank Act to nonbank financial
companies subject to a Council
determination; (iii) the rule regarding
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the Dodd-Frank Act; (iv) the rules
further defining ‘‘major swap
participant’’ and ‘‘major security-based
swap participant’’ under Title VII of the
Dodd-Frank Act; (v) the Council’s
regulations implementing the Freedom
of Information Act (‘‘FOIA’’); (vi) safe
harbors from Board of Governors
supervision under section 170 of the
Dodd-Frank Act; and (vii)
recommendations of the Council for
additional standards applicable to
activities or practices under section 120
of the Dodd-Frank Act.
The regulatory activities cited by
commenters are in various stages of the
rulemaking process, including the
Council’s FOIA regulations, which the
Council adopted on April 3, 2012. The
Council does not believe it is necessary
or appropriate to postpone the adoption
of this rule or the interpretive guidance
until these other regulatory actions are
completed. These rulemakings are not
essential to the Council’s consideration
of whether a nonbank financial
company could pose a threat to U.S.
financial stability, and the Council has
the statutory authority to proceed with
determinations under section 113 of the
Dodd-Frank Act prior to the adoption of
such rules.
In addition, several commenters urged
the Council to coordinate the issuance
of the rule and interpretive guidance
with G–20-mandated efforts being
undertaken by international bodies,
such as the Financial Stability Board
and the International Association of
Insurance Supervisors, or to postpone
the Determination Process until broader
U.S. and international financial reforms
have been implemented. Council
members are working closely with their
international counterparts on a number
of initiatives, including the process for
identifying globally systemically
important financial institutions and
financial market infrastructures. At the
same time, the Council’s determinations
under section 113 of the Dodd-Frank
Act are an important part of the U.S.
financial reform process, and the
Council believes it is important for this
framework to be in place as soon as
practicable.
III. Description of the Rule and the
Interpretive Guidance
In developing the rule and
interpretive guidance, the Council has
carefully considered the comments
received on the NPR and Proposed
Guidance, as well as the language and
legislative history of the Dodd-Frank
Act. After this review, the Council is
adopting the rule and interpretive
guidance substantially as proposed, but

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with a number of clarifications in
response to commenter concerns.
The rule sets forth the procedures and
practices for the Council’s
determinations regarding nonbank
financial companies, including the
statutory considerations and procedures
for information collection and hearings.
The interpretive guidance, which is
attached as an appendix to the rule,
addresses, among other things—
• Key terms and concepts related to
the Council’s determination authority,
including ‘‘material financial distress’’
and ‘‘threat to financial stability’’;
• The uniform quantitative thresholds
that the Council intends to use to
identify nonbank financial companies
for further evaluation;
• The six-category framework that the
Council intends to use to consider
whether a nonbank financial company
meets either of the statutory standards
for a determination, including examples
of quantitative metrics for assessing
each category; and
• The process that the Council
intends to follow when considering
whether to subject a nonbank financial
company to supervision by the Board of
Governors and prudential standards.
To foster transparency with respect to
the Determination Process, the rule and
interpretive guidance provide a detailed
description of (i) the profile of those
nonbank financial companies that the
Council likely will evaluate for potential
determination, so as to minimize
uncertainty among nonbank financial
companies, market participants, and
other members of the public, and (ii) the
factors that the Council intends to use
when analyzing companies at various
stages of the Determination Process,
including examples of the metrics that
the Council intends to use when
evaluating a nonbank financial company
under the six-category analytic
framework. The Council’s ultimate
assessment of whether a nonbank
financial company meets a statutory
standard for determination will be based
on an evaluation of each of the statutory
considerations, taking into account facts
and circumstances relevant to each
nonbank financial company.
The Council has numerous authorities
and tools to carry out its statutory duty
to monitor the financial stability of the
United States. In addition to the
Council’s determination authority under
section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Act, the
Council has the authority to make
recommendations to primary financial
regulatory agencies to apply new or
heightened standards and safeguards for
a financial activity or practice
conducted by bank holding companies
or nonbank financial companies under

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the jurisdiction of such agencies if the
Council determines that the conduct,
scope, nature, size, scale, concentration,
or interconnectedness of such activity or
practice could create or increase the risk
of significant liquidity, credit, or other
problems spreading among bank
holding companies and nonbank
financial companies, U.S. financial
markets, or low-income, minority, or
underserved communities.8 In addition,
the Council may designate financial
market utilities and payment, clearing
and settlement activities that the
Council determines are, or are likely to
become, systemically important.9 The
Council expects that its response to any
potential threat to financial stability will
be based on an assessment of the
circumstances.
Pursuant to section 115(a) of the
Dodd-Frank Act, the Council may also
make recommendations to the Board of
Governors concerning the establishment
and refinement of prudential standards
and reporting and disclosure
requirements applicable to nonbank
financial companies supervised by the
Board of Governors pursuant to section
113 of the Dodd-Frank Act. In making
such recommendations, the Dodd-Frank
Act also authorizes the Council to
differentiate among companies on an
individual basis or by category, taking
into consideration their capital
structure, riskiness, complexity,
financial activities (including the
financial activities of their subsidiaries),
size, and any other risk-related factors
that the Council deems appropriate. In
addition, section 165 of the Dodd-Frank
Act gives the Board of Governors the
ability to tailor the application of the
prudential standards on its own.
Several commenters supported the
recognition in the NPR of the Council’s
numerous authorities and tools to carry
out its statutory duties. Commenters
also urged the Council to perform, in
connection with each potential
determination with respect to a nonbank
financial company, a comparative costbenefit analysis of the tools available to
the Council to mitigate any identified
threat posed by the company. Some
commenters further suggested that the
Council provide this analysis to the
nonbank financial company, explaining
why a determination is the best
available tool to mitigate the threat.
Section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Act sets
forth the factors that the Council must
consider in determining whether to
subject a nonbank financial company to
Board of Governors supervision and
prudential standards. The relative cost
8 See
9 See

12 U.S.C. 5330(a).
12 U.S.C. 5463(a)(1).

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and benefit of such a determination is
not one of these statutory
considerations. Therefore, while the
Council expects to consider its available
regulatory tools in addressing any
potential threat to financial stability, the
Council does not intend to conduct costbenefit analyses in making
determinations with respect to
individual nonbank financial
companies.
The rule and interpretive guidance, as
well as the Council’s responses to the
comments received, are discussed in
greater detail below.
A. Statutory Determination Standards
and Considerations
Section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Act
authorizes the Council to subject a
nonbank financial company to
supervision by the Board of Governors
and prudential standards if the Council
determines that (i) material financial
distress at the nonbank financial
company could pose a threat to the
financial stability of the United States
(the ‘‘First Determination Standard’’), or
(ii) the nature, scope, size, scale,
concentration, interconnectedness, or
mix of the activities of the nonbank
financial company could pose a threat
to the financial stability of the United
States (the ‘‘Second Determination
Standard’’).
Pursuant to the provisions of the
Dodd-Frank Act, the Council is required
to consider the following statutory
considerations when evaluating whether
to make this determination with respect
to a nonbank financial company: 10
(A) The extent of the leverage of the
company;
(B) The extent and nature of the offbalance-sheet exposures of the
company;
(C) The extent and nature of the
transactions and relationships of the
company with other significant nonbank
financial companies and significant
bank holding companies;
(D) The importance of the company as
a source of credit for households,
businesses, and State and local
governments and as a source of liquidity
for the U.S. financial system;
(E) The importance of the company as
a source of credit for low-income,
minority, or underserved communities,
and the impact that the failure of such
company would have on the availability
of credit in such communities;
10 This

list reflects the statutory considerations
applicable to a determination with respect to a U.S.
nonbank financial company. The Council is
required to consider corresponding factors in
making a determination with respect to a foreign
nonbank financial company.

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(F) The extent to which assets are
managed rather than owned by the
company, and the extent to which
ownership of assets under management
is diffuse;
(G) The nature, scope, size, scale,
concentration, interconnectedness, and
mix of the activities of the company;
(H) The degree to which the company
is already regulated by one or more
primary financial regulatory agencies;
(I) The amount and nature of the
financial assets of the company;
(J) The amount and types of the
liabilities of the company, including the
degree of reliance on short-term
funding; and
(K) Any other risk-related factors that
the Council deems appropriate.
The Council intends to take into
account all of the statutory
considerations, separately and in
conjunction with each other, when
determining whether either of the
statutory standards for determination
has been met. The Council included
each of the statutory considerations in
the NPR and has retained this text in the
rule. The interpretive guidance provides
detail regarding the manner in which
the Council intends to assess nonbank
financial companies under the First and
Second Determination Standards.11 The
interpretive guidance sets forth
definitions of the terms ‘‘material
financial distress,’’ which is relevant to
the First Determination Standard, and
‘‘threat to the financial stability of the
United States,’’ which is relevant to
both determination standards.
Commenters requested further
clarification of the Council’s
interpretation of certain relevant
definitions underlying the First and
Second Determination Standards, such
as the addition of quantitative metrics to
measure material financial distress and
a threat to U.S. financial stability. In
addition, two commenters
recommended that ‘‘threat to the
financial stability of the United States’’
be defined narrowly, as a high threshold
for the Council’s determinations. The
Council believes that these definitions
accurately reflect the statutory
requirements and the nature of the
threat that the Council’s authority under
section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Act seeks
to mitigate. The interpretive guidance
therefore includes these definitions as
proposed.
11 While one commenter suggested that the
Council should disregard the Second Determination
Standard, the Council intends to evaluate nonbank
financial companies under either the First or the
Second Determination Standard, in accordance
with section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Act, as the
Council deems appropriate.

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The interpretive guidance also
describes three channels the Council
believes are most likely to facilitate the
transmission of the negative effects of a
nonbank financial company’s material
financial distress or activities to other
firms and markets, thereby posing a
threat to U.S. financial stability: (i)
Exposure of creditors, counterparties,
investors, or other market participants
to a nonbank financial company; (ii)
disruptions caused by the liquidation of
a nonbank financial company’s assets;
and (iii) the inability or unwillingness
of a nonbank financial company to
provide a critical function or service
relied upon by market participants and
for which there are no ready substitutes.
A number of commenters requested
further clarification of the three
transmission channels. These
commenters suggested that the Council
provide identifying metrics and explicit
links between the channels and the
statutory considerations. To address
these requests, the interpretive guidance
provides some additional clarification
describing how the Council expects its
assessments under the First and Second
Determination Standards to relate to the
transmission channels and the statutory
considerations. However, due to the
unique threat that each nonbank
financial company may pose to U.S.
financial stability and the qualitative
nature of the inquiry under the statutory
considerations, it is not possible to
provide broadly applicable metrics
defining these channels or to identify
universally applicable links between the
channels and the statutory
considerations.
Two commenters also objected to the
inclusion in the third transmission
channel of a nonbank financial
company’s ability or willingness to
provide a critical function or service,
arguing that regulators should not
interfere with companies’ business
decisions in this regard. Substitutability
is an important consideration for
evaluating the importance of a financial
company. If a nonbank financial
company is the sole provider, or one of
a small number of providers, of a critical
market function or service, the Council
believes that it is appropriate to
consider the impact a decision by the
company to cease providing that
function or service could have on other
market participants or market
functioning and, thereby, on U.S.
financial stability.
B. Analytic Framework for
Determinations
As described in the Proposed
Guidance, the Council has incorporated
the statutory considerations for

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evaluating whether a nonbank financial
company meets either the First or
Second Determination Standard into an
analytic framework consisting of the
following six categories: (i) Size, (ii)
interconnectedness, (iii) substitutability,
(iv) leverage, (v) liquidity risk and
maturity mismatch, and (vi) existing
regulatory scrutiny. Three of these six
categories seek to assess the potential
impact of a nonbank financial
company’s financial distress on the
broader economy: size,
interconnectedness, and substitutability.
The remaining three categories seek to
assess the vulnerability of a nonbank
financial company to financial distress:
leverage, liquidity risk and maturity
mismatch, and existing regulatory
scrutiny. The interpretive guidance
contains the table from the Proposed
Guidance that illustrates the
relationship between the 10 statutory
considerations and the six framework
categories.
Most commenters addressed these six
categories either in the context of a
particular financial sector (as described
above under ‘‘Comments on Scope and
Implementation of Determination
Authority’’) or with respect to the
proposed uniform quantitative
thresholds that the Council intends to
use to identify nonbank financial
companies for further evaluation (as
described below under ‘‘The Stage 1
Thresholds’’). Of the commenters that
specifically addressed the analytic
framework, several recommended that
substitutability either be narrowed to
focus on nonbank financial companies
that provide a critical function or
service, or be broadened to encompass
circumstances such as oligopolies and
potential future business changes. The
Council is adopting the description of
substitutability as proposed, because the
Council believes it accurately delineates
the primary factors that may cause a
lack of substitutability to pose a threat
to U.S. financial stability.
Several commenters also urged the
Council to give significant weight in its
evaluations to existing regulatory
scrutiny. In particular, one commenter
argued that a nonbank financial
company operating internationally
should only have one lead supervisor, to
ensure consistent supervision. Several
other commenters advised that the
effectiveness of existing regulation, or a
consideration of existing regulations in
light of the potential threat posed by a
particular nonbank financial company,
should be evaluated. As existing
regulatory scrutiny is one of the
statutory considerations, the Council
intends to evaluate this factor, together
with each of the other statutory

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considerations, in connection with any
determination. In response to these
comments, the interpretive guidance has
been revised to clarify that the Council
will consider both the existence and the
effectiveness of consolidated
supervision of a nonbank financial
company.
A number of commenters provided
detailed recommendations regarding the
analysis of companies within particular
industries under the six-category
analytic framework in Stages 2 and 3.
For example, commenters highlighted
the differences between insurance
companies and other types of nonbank
financial companies. These comments
addressed issues such as the importance
of focusing on the unregulated,
nontraditional activities undertaken by
insurance companies, rather than on
regulated activities. One commenter
suggested that the analysis of
interconnectedness of insurance
companies should focus on
interconnectedness within a financial
services conglomerate and between a
U.S. insurance company and foreign
entities. Others recommended technical
changes to the types of information
described in the interpretive guidance
that the Council may consider in
evaluating insurance companies. With
respect to all the comments on industryspecific analyses, the evaluation of any
nonbank financial company under the
six-category framework will be
company-specific, and the description
in the interpretive guidance is intended
to indicate the types of information that
the Council will consider. The Council
has not revised the interpretive
guidance to address these comments but
intends to consider such factors, where
appropriate.
In response to a commenter, the
interpretive guidance clarifies that the
risk of interest rate fluctuations and
reinvestment risk may be considered in
evaluating maturity mismatch of life
insurance companies.
C. Three-Stage Process for Evaluating
Nonbank Financial Companies
1. Overview of the Three-Stage Process
The interpretive guidance provides a
detailed description of the three-stage
process that the Council intends to use
to identify nonbank financial companies
for determinations in non-emergency
situations. Each stage of the
Determination Process involves an
analysis based on an increasing amount
of information to determine whether a
nonbank financial company meets the
First or Second Determination Standard.
The first stage of the process (‘‘Stage
1’’) is designed to narrow the universe

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of nonbank financial companies to a
smaller set of nonbank financial
companies. In Stage 1, the Council
intends to evaluate nonbank financial
companies by applying uniform
quantitative thresholds that are broadly
applicable across the financial sector to
a large group of nonbank financial
companies. These Stage 1 thresholds
represent the framework categories that
are more readily quantified: Size,
interconnectedness, leverage, and
liquidity risk and maturity mismatch.12
A nonbank financial company would be
subject to additional review if it meets
both the size threshold and any one of
the other quantitative thresholds. The
Council believes that the Stage 1
thresholds will help a nonbank financial
company predict whether such
company will be subject to additional
review by the Council. Stage 1 does not
reflect a determination by the Council
that the nonbank financial companies
identified during Stage 1 meet one of
the Determination Standards. Rather,
Stage 1 is intended to identify nonbank
financial companies that should be
subject to further evaluation in
subsequent stages of review.
In the second stage of the process
(‘‘Stage 2’’), the Council will conduct a
comprehensive analysis, using the sixcategory analytic framework, of the
potential for the nonbank financial
companies identified in Stage 1 to pose
a threat to U.S. financial stability. In
general, this analysis will be based on
a broad range of quantitative and
qualitative information available to the
Council through existing public and
regulatory sources, including industryand company-specific metrics beyond
those analyzed in Stage 1, and any
information voluntarily submitted by
the company.
Based on the analysis conducted
during Stage 2, the Council intends to
identify the nonbank financial
companies that the Council believes
merit further review in the third stage
(‘‘Stage 3’’). The Council will send a
notice of consideration to each nonbank
financial company that will be reviewed
in Stage 3, and will give those nonbank
financial companies an opportunity to
submit materials within a time period
specified by the Council (which will be
not less than 30 days). Stage 3 will build
on the Stage 2 analysis using
quantitative and qualitative information
collected directly from the nonbank
financial company, generally by the
12 The Council believes that quantitative
thresholds measuring substitutability and existing
regulatory scrutiny would not be appropriate and
intends to rely on company-specific qualitative and
quantitative analyses of these factors in Stages 2
and 3.

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Office of Financial Research (the
‘‘OFR’’), in addition to the information
considered during Stages 1 and 2. The
Council will determine whether to
subject a nonbank financial company to
Board of Governors supervision and
prudential standards based on the
results of the analyses conducted during
this three-stage review process.
As discussed in the interpretive
guidance, the Council does not believe
that a determination decision can be
reduced to a formula. Each
determination will be made based on a
company-specific evaluation and an
application of the standards and
considerations set forth in section 113 of
the Dodd-Frank Act, and taking into
account qualitative and quantitative
information that the Council deems
relevant to a particular nonbank
financial company.
2. Stage 1
As described in the interpretive
guidance, in Stage 1, the Council
intends to apply quantitative thresholds
to a broad group of nonbank financial
companies to identify a set of nonbank
financial companies that merit further
evaluation.
Many commenters commended the
inclusion of Stage 1 in the Proposed
Guidance. A smaller number of
commenters objected to the Stage 1
process generally, stating either that the
thresholds will capture too many or too
few nonbank financial companies, or
that the thresholds are not focused on
activities that could cause a threat to
financial stability. In addition, several
commenters proposed that nonbank
financial companies should be subject
to further review only if they exceed at
least two Stage 1 thresholds, rather than
only one, in addition to the total
consolidated assets threshold (described
below). One commenter suggested that
Stages 1 and 2 could be combined in
instances when it is clear that a
nonbank financial company may meet
either the First or Second Determination
Standard. Based on its analysis, the
Council believes the Stage 1 approach as
proposed, with certain clarifications, is
appropriate. Stage 1 is not intended to
identify nonbank financial companies
for a final determination. Instead, Stage
1 is a tool that the Council, nonbank
financial companies, market
participants, and other members of the
public may use to assess whether a
nonbank financial company will be
subject to further evaluation by the
Council. Any nonbank financial
company that is selected for further
evaluation during Stage 1 will be
assessed more comprehensively during
Stage 2 and, if appropriate, Stage 3. In

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addition to its other benefits, the
careful, company-specific analysis in
Stages 2 and 3 avoids any possible ‘‘cliff
effects’’ for nonbank financial
companies that narrowly exceed the
Stage 1 thresholds.
The Council considered several
approaches for Stage 1 other than the
thresholds-based approach described in
the interpretive guidance. Alternatives
that were considered included a
weighting of various metrics according
to relative importance, and a multi-step,
quantitative analysis under which
progression through the analysis would
have required meeting certain
thresholds in each step. These
approaches attempted to tailor the Stage
1 analysis more specifically to the
various types of nonbank financial
companies and to customize the factors
to address narrower concepts of a threat
to U.S. financial stability. In contrast to
these alternative approaches, the
Council determined that the thresholdsbased approach set forth in the
interpretive guidance offers greater
transparency, consistency, and ease of
application for the Council, nonbank
financial companies, market
participants, and other members of the
public, and requires less reliance on
subjective assumptions. A tailored
analysis will be performed, potentially
using the approaches described above,
with respect to individual nonbank
financial companies, as appropriate, in
Stages 2 and 3. This approach will
enable the Council to engage in a
flexible, company-specific analysis that
will reflect the unique risks posed by
each nonbank financial company.
In all instances, the Council reserves
the right, at its discretion, to subject any
nonbank financial company to further
review if the Council believes that
further analysis of the company is
warranted to determine if the company
could pose a threat to U.S. financial
stability, irrespective of whether such
company meets the thresholds in Stage
1. Several commenters commended the
Council’s reservation of authority, while
others suggested that the Council’s
reservation of authority will generate
uncertainty or was otherwise
inappropriate. As noted above, the Stage
1 thresholds are intended only to
identify nonbank financial companies
for further evaluation. However, the
Council recognizes that all relevant data
are likely not available to assess all
nonbank financial companies using the
Stage 1 quantitative thresholds and that
the thresholds are an imperfect
mechanism to identify all nonbank
financial companies of which further
review is warranted. While the
thresholds were designed to be uniform,

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transparent, and readily calculable by
the Council, nonbank financial
companies, market participants, and
other members of the public, the
Council also recognizes that the
thresholds may not adequately measure
unique risks posed by particular
nonbank financial companies.
Therefore, the Council retains its
discretion to consider nonbank financial
companies not identified by the Stage 1
thresholds for any reason, including a
lack of available data in Stage 1.
Commenters also suggested that the
Council should provide an explanation
of the basis for the Council’s evaluation
of any nonbank financial company that
is reviewed in Stage 2 but did not
exceed the Stage 1 thresholds. Any
nonbank financial company that the
Council determines should be reviewed
during Stage 3 will receive notice of this
review. If the Council determines by
vote to subject a nonbank financial
company to a proposed determination,
the Council will provide the nonbank
financial company with notice and an
explanation of the basis of the proposed
determination, as described below.
Several commenters addressed the
collection of data from nonbank
financial companies in Stage 1. While
some commenters sought clarification of
how the Council would collect data for
Stage 1, particularly in cases where the
data underlying the Stage 1 thresholds
is not available, others urged the
Council expressly to reserve the right to
collect data from nonbank financial
companies in Stage 1, to avoid any
failure to identify a nonbank financial
company that should be evaluated
further. A fundamental purpose of Stage
1 is to narrow the universe of nonbank
financial companies, based on
information available to the Council
through existing public and regulatory
sources, to a smaller set of companies
that will be subject to company-specific
evaluation in Stage 2. The Council
recognizes that all relevant data are
likely not available to assess all
nonbank financial companies using the
Stage 1 thresholds. Therefore, the
Council may subject a nonbank
financial company to further review in
Stage 2 if the Council believes that
further analysis is warranted, for any
reason, to determine if the company
could pose a threat to U.S. financial
stability.
3. The Stage 1 Thresholds
In Stage 1, the Council intends to
apply six quantitative thresholds to a
broad group of nonbank financial
companies. The thresholds are—
• $50 billion in total consolidated
assets;

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• $30 billion in gross notional credit
default swaps outstanding for which a
nonbank financial company is the
reference entity;
• $3.5 billion of derivative liabilities;
• $20 billion in total debt
outstanding;
• 15 to 1 leverage ratio of total
consolidated assets (excluding separate
accounts) to total equity; and
• 10 percent short-term debt ratio of
total debt outstanding with a maturity of
less than 12 months to total
consolidated assets (excluding separate
accounts).
A nonbank financial company will be
evaluated in Stage 2 if it meets both the
total consolidated assets threshold and
any one of the other thresholds.
Many commenters provided detailed
recommendations regarding the six
Stage 1 thresholds. These comments
generally fall into three categories: (i)
The level of a threshold should be
changed; (ii) the method of calculating
a threshold should be refined; and (iii)
a threshold generally is inappropriate. A
smaller number of commenters
suggested new Stage 1 thresholds.
Commenters suggested that the
Council tailor the thresholds by
industry to provide a more accurate
indication of the threat to U.S. financial
stability that could be posed by a
nonbank financial company in a
particular industry. The Council
recognizes that the quantitative
thresholds it has identified for
application during Stage 1 may not
provide a comprehensive means to
identify nonbank financial companies
for further review across all financial
industries and companies. However, the
Stage 1 thresholds provide a reasonable
set of measures for identifying nonbank
financial companies that, in general,
warrant further review. In addition,
because many nonbank financial
companies engage in financial activities
across multiple segments of the
financial markets, the application of
specialized industry-specific thresholds
to nonbank financial companies is not
generally useful. Industry- and
company-specific considerations are
better evaluated during Stages 2 and 3,
when more detailed information can be
collected and more tailored analysis can
be performed.
Several commenters requested
additional information on how the Stage
1 thresholds were selected and
suggested alternative measures that
could be used. The Council selected the
Stage 1 thresholds based on their
applicability to nonbank financial
companies that operate in diverse
financial industries and because the

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data underlying these thresholds for a
broad range of nonbank financial
companies are generally available from
existing public and regulatory sources.
The Council reviewed distributions of
various samples of nonbank financial
companies and bank holding companies
to inform its judgment regarding the
appropriate thresholds and their
quantitative levels. As discussed in the
interpretive guidance, the Council also
considered historical testing of the
thresholds to assess whether they would
have captured nonbank financial
companies that encountered material
financial distress during the financial
crisis of 2007–2008. In this review, the
Council focused separately on the
period immediately before the crisis and
also a number of years preceding it.
While some commenters argued that
historical analyses are not a sufficient
justification for determining appropriate
levels of thresholds, this approach,
when combined with other analytical
methods, can be a helpful tool for
evaluating potential thresholds. After
considering the comments on the Stage
1 thresholds, including those
recommending the elimination of
particular thresholds, the Council has
determined to finalize the thresholds
largely as proposed. The Stage 1
thresholds and their levels reflect the
collective judgment of the Council
members regarding the appropriate
thresholds and their levels, in light of
the statutory standards and
considerations and an extensive review
of applicable data and various analyses.
The Stage 1 thresholds do not reflect a
determination that the identified
nonbank financial companies meet one
of the Determination Standards, or that
nonbank financial companies that do
not meet the thresholds will not be
designated. Rather, they are designed to
identify nonbank financial companies
for further evaluation based on the
statutory standards and considerations.
While the Council will apply the
Stage 1 thresholds to all types of
nonbank financial companies,
including, to the extent that the relevant
data are available, to financial
guarantors, asset management
companies, private equity firms, and
hedge funds, these and other types of
companies may pose risks that are not
well-measured by the quantitative
thresholds approach.
With respect to hedge funds and
private equity firms in particular, the
Council intends to apply the Stage 1
thresholds, but recognizes that less data
are generally available about these
companies than about certain other
types of nonbank financial companies.
Beginning in June 2012, advisers to

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hedge funds and private equity firms
and commodity pool operators and
commodity trading advisors will be
required to file Form PF with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘SEC’’) or the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission (‘‘CFTC’’), as
applicable, on which form such
companies will make certain financial
disclosures. Using these and other data,
the Council will consider whether to
establish an additional set of metrics or
thresholds tailored to evaluate hedge
funds and private equity firms and their
advisers.
In addition, the Council, its member
agencies, and the OFR are analyzing the
extent to which there are potential
threats to U.S. financial stability arising
from asset management companies. This
analysis is considering what threats
exist, if any, and whether such threats
can be mitigated by subjecting such
companies to Board of Governors
supervision and prudential standards,
or whether they are better addressed
through other regulatory measures. The
Council may develop additional
guidance regarding potential metrics
and thresholds relevant to
determinations regarding asset
managers, as appropriate. Commenters
voiced both support for and opposition
to the implementation of new metrics
and thresholds applicable to asset
managers. While the Council intends to
address such issues at a later date,
consistent with the intention described
above not to provide exemptions under
section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Act for
any type of nonbank financial company,
the Council intends to evaluate asset
managers under the current interpretive
guidance.
Generally, as reporting requirements
evolve and new information about
certain industries and nonbank financial
companies become available, the
Council expects to review the
quantitative thresholds as appropriate
based on this new information. For
example, the Council may consider
credit exposure data proposed to be
collected under section 165 of the DoddFrank Act by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation and the Board of
Governors. Similarly, pursuant to
reporting and disclosure requirements
being implemented under section 728 of
the Dodd-Frank Act,13 the Council may
consider swaps information reported to
swap data repositories.
The Council recognizes that the Stage
1 threshold to measure a nonbank
financial company’s derivative
liabilities captures only the current
exposure, rather than the current and
13 See

17 CFR 49.17.

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potential future exposure created by the
nonbank financial company’s
outstanding derivatives. The SEC and
CFTC have proposed rules to further
define the terms ‘‘major swap
participant’’ (‘‘MSP’’) and ‘‘major
security-based swap participant’’
(‘‘MSBSP’’) that contain a methodology
to measure the potential future exposure
created by an entity’s outstanding
derivatives, with respect to certain
institutions.
Once the final rules regarding
reporting of data on swaps and securitybased swaps come into effect, and data
have been collected pursuant to those
rules, the Council may revisit this Stage
1 threshold based on factors such as a
nonbank financial company’s current
and potential future exposure from its
outstanding derivatives for purposes of
determining whether some or all MSPs,
MSBSPs, or other nonbank financial
companies that are subject to the rules
will be subject to further examination in
Stage 2.
In addition, in response to comments,
the Council has made several clarifying
changes to the interpretive guidance
with respect to the Stage 1 thresholds.
The Proposed Guidance included a
‘‘loans and bonds outstanding’’
threshold of $20 billion. A number of
commenters requested a clarification of
the types of obligations and instruments
that would be included in the
calculation of this threshold. In
response to these comments, the
Council has renamed this threshold
‘‘total debt outstanding.’’ The
interpretive guidance now also specifies
that this threshold will be defined
broadly and regardless of maturity to
include loans, bonds, repurchase
agreements, commercial paper,
securities lending arrangements, surplus
notes (for insurance companies), and
other forms of indebtedness. The
interpretive guidance has also been
revised to clarify that this definition of
‘‘total debt outstanding’’ will be used in
calculating the short-term debt ratio
threshold.
In response to questions from two
commenters regarding the Council’s
data source for the threshold relating to
credit default swaps outstanding, the
Council currently intends to calculate
this threshold using data available
through the Trade Information
Warehouse, which is operated by a
subsidiary of the Depository Trust &
Clearing Corporation. If other sources
for this data become available, the
Council may use those sources instead
of, or in addition to, this source.
Further, to respond to comments, the
interpretive guidance clarifies that in
calculating the derivative liabilities

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threshold for nonbank financial
companies that disclose the effects of
master netting agreements and cash
collateral held with the same
counterparty on a net basis, the Council
intends to calculate derivative liabilities
after taking into account the effects of
these arrangements. For nonbank
financial companies that do not disclose
the effects of these arrangements,
derivative liabilities will equal the fair
value of derivative contracts in a
negative position. For Stages 2 and 3,
the impact of netting will be considered
as appropriate.
Several commenters suggested that
embedded derivatives be excluded from
the definition of derivative liabilities,
particularly for insurance companies or
insurance products. Under statutory
accounting principles (‘‘SAP’’),
derivative features within insurance
products are not accounted for
separately from the host contract. Under
generally accepted accounting
principles in the United States
(‘‘GAAP’’), derivative features that are
combined with traditional insurance
products may be accounted for
separately and included in a company’s
derivative liabilities, depending on
whether the contract as a whole is
carried at fair value and other criteria.
The Council is cognizant of these
differences between reporting under
GAAP and SAP. Embedded derivatives
will be included in the calculation of
the Stage 1 derivative liabilities
threshold, in accordance with GAAP,
when such information is available. The
Council will, as appropriate, assess
embedded derivatives in Stages 2 and 3
with respect to particular nonbank
financial companies. The relative
importance of embedded derivatives
tied to insurance products will depend
on their type and how they may
contribute to the risk posed by a
nonbank financial company, regardless
of how they are reported.
A number of commenters questioned
how the Council will calculate the Stage
1 thresholds for asset managers and
investment advisers. The Council has
included in the interpretive guidance a
clarification that while the Council
expects that its determinations will
apply to individual legal entities, the
Council has authority to assess nonbank
financial companies in a manner that
addresses the statutory considerations
and such other factors as the Council
deems appropriate. For example, in
applying the Stage 1 thresholds to funds
(whether or not they are registered
investment companies), the interpretive
guidance states that the Council may
consider the aggregate risks posed by
separate funds that are managed by the

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same adviser, particularly if the funds’
investments are identical or highly
similar. When applying the Stage 1
thresholds to an asset manager, the
Council’s analysis will appropriately
reflect the distinct nature of assets
under management compared to the
asset manager’s own assets. As
discussed above, the Council may in the
future issue additional guidance
regarding additional metrics and
thresholds, potentially including factors
related to assets under management,
regarding asset managers.
With respect to the application of the
Stage 1 thresholds to foreign nonbank
financial companies, several
commenters requested that the
thresholds be calculated based solely on
the companies’ U.S. operations. To
respond to this request, the interpretive
guidance specifies that for purposes of
evaluating any U.S. nonbank financial
company, the Council intends to apply
each of the Stage 1 thresholds based on
the global assets, liabilities and
operations of the company and its
subsidiaries. In contrast, for foreign
nonbank financial companies, the
Council intends to calculate the Stage 1
thresholds based solely on the U.S.
assets, liabilities and operations of the
foreign nonbank financial company and
its subsidiaries.
Several commenters also suggested
that a nonbank financial company’s
subsidiaries should not be included in
the Council’s evaluation of the
company, including for purposes of
calculating the Stage 1 thresholds.
Similarly, these commenters requested
that the Stage 1 thresholds, as applied
to foreign nonbank financial companies,
should exclude the operations of any
U.S. subsidiary that meets the definition
of ‘‘U.S. nonbank financial company.’’
The Dodd-Frank Act requires the
Council to consider subsidiaries of
nonbank financial companies in its
analysis, and thus, the references to
subsidiaries in the rule and interpretive
guidance include subsidiaries. This
conclusion is based in part on the
statutory definition of ‘‘nonbank
financial company,’’ which is based on
a calculation of the revenues or assets of
the relevant company ‘‘and all of its
subsidiaries.’’ 14 Further, in light of the
purposes of section 113 of the DoddFrank Act and the broad statutory
considerations set forth in that
provision, and the types of prudential
standards to which nonbank financial
companies subject to Council
determinations are subject, a meaningful
analysis must include not only a
nonbank financial company’s own
14 See

12 U.S.C. 5311(a)(6).

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operations, but also those of its
subsidiaries. To determine whether a
subsidiary of a nonbank financial
company should be included for
purposes of calculating the Stage 1
thresholds, the interpretive guidance, as
described below, specifies that the
Council intends generally to apply the
Stage 1 thresholds using applicable
accounting standards or such other data
as are available to the Council.
Numerous commenters suggested that
the levels of the Stage 1 thresholds
should be adjusted periodically over
time, based on indexes such as inflation
or economic growth. The Council
believes that automatic adjustments to
the threshold levels based on one or
more particular indexes such as
inflation could result in threshold levels
that do not indicate the potential for a
nonbank financial company to pose a
threat to financial stability. Therefore,
the interpretive guidance states that the
Council intends to review the levels of
the Stage 1 thresholds that are specified
in dollars at least every five years and
to adjust those thresholds as the Council
may deem advisable.
A number of commenters requested a
clarification of the calculation date for
the Stage 1 thresholds, with several
proposing that the calculations be based
on multi-period averages to reduce
volatility and mitigate the effects of any
unusual or one-time items. The Council
recognizes that certain events that may
cause a nonbank financial company
briefly to exceed one or more Stage 1
thresholds may not indicate an
increased threat to U.S. financial
stability. However, because such an
analysis is by its nature fact-specific, the
Council believes that the appropriate
framework for consideration of such
factors is in Stage 2. Therefore, the
interpretive guidance provides that the
Council intends to reapply the Stage 1
thresholds using the most recently
available data on a quarterly basis, or
less frequently for nonbank financial
companies with respect to which
quarterly data are unavailable.
Several commenters also requested a
clarification of the financial reporting
standards that the Council will apply in
Stage 1. In response to this request, the
Council has revised the interpretive
guidance to provide that the Council
intends generally to apply the Stage 1
thresholds using GAAP when such
information is available, or otherwise to
rely on SAP, international financial
reporting standards, or such other data
as are available to the Council. While
commenters suggested that the Council
should rely on SAP when analyzing
insurance companies, the Council has
determined generally to rely on GAAP

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when such data are available in order to
promote consistency and uniformity in
the application of the Stage 1
thresholds. The Council expects to
review financial statements prepared in
accordance with SAP in Stages 2 and 3,
if applicable.
4. Analysis and Procedures in Stages 2
and 3
After a subset of nonbank financial
companies has been identified in Stage
1, the Council intends in Stage 2 to
conduct a robust analysis of the
potential threat that each of those
nonbank financial companies could
pose to U.S. financial stability primarily
based on information available to the
Council through existing public and
regulatory sources, including
information possessed by the company’s
primary financial regulatory agency or
home country supervisor, as
appropriate. The evaluation of the risk
profile and characteristics of each
nonbank financial company in Stage 2
will be based on a wide range of
quantitative and qualitative industryand company-specific factors. This
analysis will use the six-category
analytic framework described above
under ‘‘Analytic Framework for
Determinations.’’ To the extent data are
available, the Council also intends in
Stage 2 to consider the impact that
resolving the nonbank financial
company could have on U.S. financial
stability.
Following Stage 2, nonbank financial
companies that are selected for
additional review in Stage 3 will receive
notice that they are being considered for
a proposed determination. Several
commenters suggested that this notice
should include an explanation of the
basis of the Council’s consideration, so
that the nonbank financial company
may present the Council with pertinent
information. The Council believes that it
would be premature to explain the basis
of the nonbank financial company’s
identification for further consideration
because the decision to review a
nonbank financial company in Stage 3
does not represent a formal
determination. The Council will provide
the company with a written explanation
of the basis of any proposed
determination that it makes regarding
the nonbank financial company after the
Stage 3 review.
As discussed in greater detail in the
interpretive guidance, during the Stage
3 review, the Council intends to analyze
the nonbank financial company’s
potential to pose a threat to financial
stability based on information obtained
directly from the nonbank financial
company and the information

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previously obtained by the Council
during prior stages of review. In Stage
3, the Council likely will consider
qualitative factors, including
considerations that could mitigate or
aggravate the potential of the nonbank
financial company to pose a threat to
U.S. financial stability, such as the
nonbank financial company’s
resolvability, the opacity of its
operations, its complexity, and the
extent and nature of its existing
regulatory scrutiny.
Several commenters requested an
additional description of how the
Council will perform its analysis in
Stages 2 and 3, including a timetable for
evaluations in Stages 2 and 3 and the
relative weighting of particular metrics
in the analysis. Commenters also
suggested a variety of additional types
of analysis the Council could perform in
Stages 2 and 3, including trend analysis,
risk-weighting of criteria, and analysis
of economic cyclicality. Due to the
diverse types of nonbank financial
companies that may be evaluated in
Stages 2 and 3 and the unique threats
that these nonbank financial companies
may pose to U.S. financial stability, the
analysis and timing of review will
depend on the particular circumstances
of each nonbank financial company
under consideration and the unique
nature of the threat it may pose to U.S.
financial stability.
While the interpretive guidance
describes many metrics and factors that
the Council may consider in evaluating
nonbank financial companies, one
commenter suggested that the Council
should publicly disclose the use of any
factors that are not specified in the
interpretive guidance. The Council will
include in any written notice of a
proposed or final determination the
basis of the proposed or final
determination, whether or not the
relevant metrics and factors are
specified in the interpretive guidance.
In accordance with section
112(a)(2)(N)(iv) of the Dodd-Frank Act,
the basis for the Council’s final
determinations will be specified in the
Council’s annual report to Congress.
Commenters also cited a nonbank
financial company’s internal risk
management program as a factor that the
Council either should or should not
consider in its evaluations. The
interpretive guidance notes, as
proposed, that the Council may analyze
a nonbank financial company’s riskmanagement procedures as one of many
factors in Stage 3.
Several commenters also requested a
clarification of the Council’s assessment
of resolvability. The interpretive
guidance has been revised to clarify that

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the evaluation of a nonbank financial
company’s resolvability may mitigate or
aggravate the potential of a nonbank
financial company to pose a threat to
U.S. financial stability.
In response to a commenter’s request
for a clarification of one of the sample
metrics specified in the Proposed
Guidance, the interpretive guidance
clarifies that the Council may consider
total consolidated assets or liabilities as
determined under GAAP or the nonbank
financial company’s applicable financial
reporting standards, depending on the
availability of data and the stage of the
Determination Process.
Several commenters also requested
that nonbank financial companies that
are evaluated in Stage 2 receive notices
at the beginning of Stage 2, or be
permitted to participate in Stage 2 by
submitting information to the Council.
Pursuant to the rule, the Council will
provide every nonbank financial
company that will be reviewed in Stage
3 a notice of consideration and an
opportunity to submit written materials
to contest the Council’s consideration of
the nonbank financial company for a
proposed determination. Stage 2 is
intended to comprise the Council’s
initial company-specific analysis, based
primarily on existing public and
regulatory sources, and the Council
believes that Stage 3 provides a
sufficient opportunity for nonbank
financial companies to participate in the
Determination Process. In addition,
commenters requested that a nonbank
financial company be notified if it is
evaluated in Stage 2 and will not be
considered in Stage 3. Due to the
preliminary nature of the Council’s
evaluation of a nonbank financial
company in Stage 2, the Council does
not currently intend to provide for such
notices in Stage 2. The Council may, at
its discretion, adjust its process for
providing notifications to nonbank
financial companies as it gains
experience with the Determination
Process.
Based on the analysis performed in
Stages 2 and 3, the Council may
consider whether to vote to subject a
nonbank financial company to a
proposed determination. Prior to
making a proposed determination, the
Council may (i) consult with the
nonbank financial company’s primary
financial regulatory agency or home
country supervisor, as appropriate, and
(ii) consider the views of such entities.15
15 However, the concurrence of the primary
financial regulatory agency is not required prior to
the Council’s proposed or final determination with
respect to a nonbank financial company. The
Council’s consultation with a nonbank financial
company’s primary financial regulatory agency does

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Commenters urged the Council to
consult closely with the primary state
regulator for any U.S. nonbank financial
company or the primary home country
supervisor for any foreign nonbank
financial company under consideration
for a determination. Such consultation
and coordination will be an important
part of the Determination Process, and
the Council believes this process is
sufficiently incorporated into
paragraphs (b), (c), and (d) of § 1310.20
of the rule.
As noted in the interpretive guidance,
the Council expects to notify a nonbank
financial company that has been
evaluated in Stage 3 if the company,
either before or after a proposed
determination, ceases to be considered
for determination.
5. Process and Procedures Following a
Proposed Determination
Following a proposed determination,
the Council will issue a written notice
of the proposed determination to the
nonbank financial company that will
provide an explanation of the basis of
the proposed determination. The
nonbank financial company may request
a hearing to contest the proposed
determination in accordance with
section 113(e) of the Dodd-Frank Act
and § 1310.21(c) of the rule.
In response to the public comments
requesting more transparency regarding
the Determination Process, the rule and
interpretive guidance reflect certain
clarifying changes.
Several commenters made suggestions
as to whether the Council should
publish the names of nonbank financial
companies under consideration for a
determination. Due to the preliminary
nature of the Council’s evaluation of a
nonbank financial company prior to a
final determination, and the potential
for market participants to misinterpret
such an announcement, the Council
does not intend to publicly announce or
otherwise disclose the name of any
nonbank financial company that is
under evaluation for a determination
prior to a final determination with
respect to such company. A statement
that this is the Council’s intention has
been included in the interpretive
guidance. In addition, in response to
comments, the interpretive guidance
specifies that, when practicable and
consistent with the purposes of the
Determination Process, the Council
intends to provide a nonbank financial
company with a notice of a final
determination at least one business day
before publicly announcing the final
not create any rights on the part of the nonbank
financial company under consideration.

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determination. This minimum time
period is intended to allow nonbank
financial companies to prepare any
public communications and disclosures,
but is relatively brief in order to avoid
any potential market impact after the
nonbank financial company is informed
of the determination and before the
determination is publicly announced.
One commenter recommended that
the Council specify, in every notice of
proposed and final determination, the
regulatory approach the Council
recommends to the Board of Governors
with respect to the nonbank financial
company. Under the Dodd-Frank Act,
while the Council is authorized to make
determinations regarding nonbank
financial companies, the establishment
of prudential standards applicable to
such companies is within the purview
of the Board of Governors, subject to any
recommendations by the Council under
section 115 of the Dodd-Frank Act.
Therefore, in accordance with its
statutory authority, the Council does not
generally intend to make companyspecific regulatory recommendations to
the Board of Governors in connection
with determinations.
One commenter requested that the
Council clarify the registration
procedures for companies that are
subject to a final determination. Under
section 114 of the Dodd-Frank Act, the
Board of Governors is authorized to
prescribe the forms for registration,
including such information as the Board
of Governors, in consultation with the
Council, may deem necessary or
appropriate. It is therefore appropriate
for the registration procedures to be
established by the Board of Governors,
rather than by the Council.
D. Status of the Interpretive Guidance
and Other Legal Issues
Several commenters questioned the
Council’s authority to issue the
proposed rule and interpretive
guidance, while other commenters
requested that the Council clarify the
legal status of the interpretive guidance.
Section 111(e)(2) of the Dodd-Frank Act
explicitly authorizes the Council to
issue rules necessary for the conduct of
the business of the Council, and
specifies that such rules will constitute
rules of agency organization, procedure,
or practice. In accordance with this
authority, the rule sets forth the
procedures and practices that the
Council will follow in the
Determination Process and the manner
in which nonbank financial companies
may present themselves and their views
to the Council.
Moreover, as the agency charged by
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under section 113 of the Dodd-Frank
Act, the Council has the inherent
authority to promulgate interpretive
rules and interpretive guidance that
explain and interpret the statutory
factors that the Council will consider in
the Determination Process.16 The
interpretive guidance simply describes
the Council’s interpretation of the
statutory factors and provides
transparency to the public as to how the
Council intends to exercise its statutory
grant of discretionary authority. The
interpretive guidance does not impose
duties on, or alter the rights or interests
of, any company, nor does it relieve the
Council of making specific
determinations in accordance with the
Dodd-Frank Act. Rather, the Council
must review and determine whether to
subject any particular nonbank financial
company to Board of Governors
supervision on a company-specific basis
after review of all of the relevant factors.
Moreover, by providing for transparency
in the Determination Process, the rule
and interpretive guidance promote an
accountability that benefits the public
and the nonbank financial companies
subject to evaluation. Thus,
notwithstanding arguments to the
contrary by a small number of
commenters, the Council has the
necessary authority to issue the rule and
interpretive guidance.
Some commenters requested either
that the interpretive guidance be
incorporated into the rule text, or that
the Council commit to providing the
public with notice and an opportunity
to comment on any proposed changes to
the interpretive guidance. These
commenters sought to ensure that the
Council’s actions would be made
consistently and fairly and that the
public would have notice of any
changes to the interpretive guidance. If
the Council revises the interpretive
guidance in the future, the Council may
provide the public with notice and an
opportunity to comment on those
changes, as the Council determines
appropriate.
One commenter argued that Title I of
the Dodd-Frank Act violates the U.S.
Constitution based on (i) the limited
judicial review of Council
16 Courts have recognized that ‘‘an agency
charged with a duty to enforce or administer a
statute has inherent authority to issue interpretive
rules informing the public of the procedures and
standards it intends to apply in exercising its
discretion.’’ See, for example, Production Tool v.
Employment & Training Administration, 688 F.2d
1161, 1166 (7th Cir. 1982). The Supreme Court has
acknowledged that ‘‘whether or not they enjoy any
express delegation of authority on a particular
question, agencies charged with applying a statute
necessarily make all sorts of interpretive choices.’’
See U.S. v. Mead, 533 U.S. 218, 227 (2001).

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determinations under section 113(h) of
the Dodd-Frank Act and (ii) the scope of
the delegation of Congressional
authority embodied by the regulation of
nonbank financial companies under
Title I of the statute. The Council
disagrees with this assessment and does
not believe that this rulemaking is the
appropriate context to address these
issues.
One commenter asserted that the
Council had not satisfied the
requirements of the Congressional
Review Act (5 U.S.C. 801) in connection
with this rulemaking. That statute
provides that before a rule can take
effect, the federal agency promulgating
it must submit certain information to
Congress and to the Comptroller
General. No action was required to be
taken by the Council in connection with
the issuance of the NPR and Proposed
Guidance, and the Council will comply
fully with the statutory requirements in
connection with the issuance of the rule
and interpretive guidance.
IV. Section-by-Section Analysis
A. Subpart A—General
1. § 1310.1

Authority and Purpose

This section sets forth the authority
for and purpose of the rule.
2. § 1310.2

Definitions

This section defines the terms
relevant to the rule. One commenter
requested a clarification of the
definition of ‘‘member agencies.’’ That
term is defined, unchanged from the
NPR, as an agency represented by a
voting member of the Council under
section 111(b)(1) of the Dodd-Frank Act.
B. Subpart B—Determinations
1. § 1310.10 Council Determinations
Regarding Nonbank Financial
Companies
This section sets forth the Council’s
authority to make proposed and final
determinations with respect to nonbank
financial companies, pursuant to
sections 113(a) and (b) of the DoddFrank Act. It sets forth the two
standards for determinations, the
requirements for a Council vote with
respect to proposed and final
determinations, and the Council’s
ability pursuant to section 112(d)(4) of
the Dodd-Frank Act to request that the
Board of Governors conduct an
examination to determine whether a
U.S. nonbank financial company should
be supervised by the Board of Governors
for purposes of Title I of the Dodd-Frank
Act.
Two commenters suggested that the
Council clarify the circumstances under

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which the Council will enlist the Board
of Governors as an examiner under
§ 1310.10(c)(1) of the rule. In order to
maintain consistency with section
112(d)(4) of the Dodd-Frank Act, the
Council is adopting this section of the
rule as proposed.

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2. § 1310.11 Considerations in Making
Proposed and Final Determinations
This section sets forth the
considerations that the Council must
consider in making a proposed or final
determination with respect to a U.S.
nonbank financial company or foreign
nonbank financial company. These
considerations reflect the statutory
factors set forth in sections 113(a)(2) and
(b)(2) of the Dodd-Frank Act.
3. § 1310.12 Anti-Evasion Provision
This section sets forth the Council’s
authority to require that the financial
activities of a company that is not a
nonbank financial company be
supervised by the Board of Governors
and be subject to prudential standards if
the Council determines that material
financial distress related to, or the
nature, scope, size, scale, concentration,
interconnectedness, or mix of, the
financial activities conducted directly or
indirectly by a company would pose a
threat to the financial stability of the
United States, and the company is
organized or operates in such a manner
as to evade the application of Title I of
the Dodd-Frank Act. This section
defines ‘‘financial activities’’ as that
term is defined in section 113(c)(5) of
the Dodd-Frank Act.
Paragraph (d) is intended to clarify
the application of subpart C. This
section provides that, in accordance
with section 113(c)(4) of the Dodd-Frank
Act, the provisions of subpart C
governing information collection
(including the confidentiality
provisions), consultation, notice and
opportunity for an evidentiary hearing,
emergency waivers or modifications,
and reevaluation and rescission of
determinations will apply in the context
of the Council’s anti-evasion authority.
The information-collection authority of
the Council with respect to companies
in this context derives from the
authority of the Council to receive
information from the OFR, member
agencies, and the Federal Insurance
Office, and from the authority of the
OFR, on behalf of the Council, to require
the submission of periodic and other
reports from any financial company,
under sections 112(a)(2)(A), 112(d)(1),
(2), and (3), and 154(b) of the DoddFrank Act.
Companies that are engaged in
financial activities, but that are

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organized or operated in such a manner
as to evade the application of Title I of
the Dodd-Frank Act, may be subject to
a determination by the Council under
the anti-evasion authority in section
113(c) of the Dodd-Frank Act. In
exercising its anti-evasion authority
with respect to a U.S. nonbank financial
company or foreign nonbank financial
company, the Council must consider the
relevant statutory factors applicable to a
U.S. or foreign nonbank financial
company, respectively. The Council
may make such a determination either
on its own initiative or at the request of
the Board of Governors. Commenters
requested that the rule further define the
scope of the Council’s anti-evasion
authority. In addition, one commenter
recommended that the rules should
permit the supervision of internal
financial activities of a nonbank
financial company that has been the
subject of a Council determination
under its anti-evasion authority.
Because § 1310.12 of the rule reflects the
statutory authorities under section
113(c), and the Council believes such
consistency is appropriate, the Council
has not revised this section as suggested
by commenters.
C. Subpart C—Information Collection;
Proposed and Final Determinations;
Evidentiary Hearings
1. § 1310.20 Council Information
Collection; Consultation; Coordination;
Confidentiality
This section sets forth the Council’s
authority to collect information with
respect to nonbank financial companies
and its responsibilities in consulting
and coordinating with regulators and
maintaining the confidentiality of
submitted information. Paragraph (a)
sets forth the Council’s ability to collect
information from the OFR, member
agencies, the Federal Insurance Office,
and other Federal and State financial
regulatory agencies. Pursuant to its
statutory authority, the Council may
also receive and request the submission
of data or information from its voting
and non-voting members. Paragraph (b)
sets forth the Council’s ability to collect
information from nonbank financial
companies. These two paragraphs
implement the provisions of section 112
of the Dodd-Frank Act relating to the
Council’s authority to obtain
information and collect financial data.
Paragraph (c), which has been revised
for consistency with section 113(g) of
the Dodd-Frank Act, provides that the
Council will consult with a nonbank
financial company’s primary financial
regulatory agency in a timely manner.
Paragraph (d) provides that the Council

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will consult with appropriate foreign
regulatory authorities, to the extent
appropriate, in accordance with section
113(i) of the Dodd-Frank Act. Paragraph
(e) implements the confidentiality
requirements provided in section
112(d)(5) of the Dodd-Frank Act.
Several commenters requested that
information submitted by nonbank
financial companies be treated as
exempt from disclosure under the FOIA.
Commenters also requested that further
confidentiality provisions be added to
the rule, such as incorporating the
Council’s separate FOIA rule into the
rule, committing to limiting the
collection of sensitive information, and
protections for information that has
been collected. The Council is sensitive
to these concerns. Under § 1310.20(e)(3)
of the rule, the FOIA and the applicable
exemptions thereunder apply to any
data or information submitted under the
rule. In addition, the Council’s FOIA
rule will apply to data and information
received by the Council. The Council
expects that nonbank financial
companies’ submissions will likely
contain or consist of ‘‘trade secrets and
commercial or financial information
obtained from a person and privileged
or confidential’’ and information that is
‘‘contained in or related to examination,
operating, or condition reports prepared
by, on behalf of, or for the use of an
agency responsible for the regulation or
supervision of financial institutions.’’
These types of information are subject to
withholding under exemptions 4 and 8
of the FOIA (5 U.S.C. 552(b)(4) and (8)).
To the extent that nonbank financial
companies’ submissions contain or
consist of data or information not
subject to an applicable FOIA
exemption, that data or information
would be releasable under the FOIA.
In response to commenters’ concerns
regarding confidentiality, the Council
has modified § 1310.20 of the rule to
clarify that the protections under that
section apply to data, information, and
reports (i) collected from federal and
state financial regulatory agencies other
than the OFR, member agencies, and the
Federal Insurance Office and (ii)
voluntarily submitted by any nonbank
financial company that is being
considered for a determination. This
change also addresses another
commenter’s assertion that the Council
lacks statutory authority to collect
information from federal or state
financial regulatory agencies other than
the OFR, member agencies and the
Federal Insurance Office,17 because the
17 One of the statutory Council’s duties, under
section 112(a)(2)(A), is to ‘‘collect information from
member agencies, other Federal and State financial

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Council expects that the OFR will
participate as necessary in the
information-collection and review
process pursuant to its authority under
sections 112(d) and 154(b) of the DoddFrank Act. Further, it should be noted
that all members of the Council,
including both its voting and non-voting
members, will treat records of the
Council in accordance with the
Council’s FOIA rule. When the Council
and its members provide non-public
information to each other in connection
with Council functions and activities,
the recipients generally intend to treat
such information as confidential and
not publicly to disclose such
information without the consent of the
providing party. However, such
information may be used by the
recipients for enforcement, examination,
resolution planning, or other purposes,
subject to any appropriate limitations on
the disclosure of such information to
third parties, taking into account factors
including the need to preserve the
integrity of the supervision and
examination process. The Council
believes that the additional
confidentiality restrictions suggested by
commenters generally would not
materially increase the confidentially of
information collected by the Council,
due to requirements under the FOIA, or
would harmfully constrain the Council’s
ability to perform its evaluations of
nonbank financial companies.
Commenters also recommended that
the Council rely to the extent possible
on existing regulatory sources and on
information in the form it is reported to
regulators, to minimize the burden of
information requests. The Council
generally agrees with these comments,
and in accordance with the Council’s
statutory obligation under section
112(d)(3)(B) of the Dodd-Frank Act
intends, whenever possible, to rely on
information available from the OFR or
any member agency or primary financial
regulatory agency that regulates a
nonbank financial company before
requiring the submission of reports from
such nonbank financial company. The
Council expects that the collection of
information under this section of the
rule will be performed in a manner that
attempts to minimize burdens for
affected nonbank financial companies.
2. § 1310.21 Proposed and Final
Determinations; Notice and Opportunity
for an Evidentiary Hearing
This section sets forth the procedural
rights of a nonbank financial company
being considered for a proposed or final
regulatory agencies [and] the Federal Insurance
Office.’’

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determination, the time period within
which the Council will act after it
notifies the nonbank financial company
that it is being considered for a
proposed determination, and the
nonbank financial company’s rights to a
hearing after a proposed determination.
Paragraph (a) provides that the Council
will deliver written notice to a nonbank
financial company that it is being
considered for a proposed
determination and will provide the
nonbank financial company an
opportunity to submit written materials
to contest the proposed determination.
Paragraph (a) clarifies that the nonbank
financial company may submit any
written materials to contest the
proposed determination, including
materials concerning whether the
nonbank financial company meets the
standards for a determination. In
response to comments, paragraph (a)
provides that the Council will provide
a nonbank financial company at least 30
days to respond to the notice of
consideration. Commenters had
requested a longer minimum period for
responses, but based on the types and
volume of information the Council
expects to request, the subsequent
opportunity for a nonbank to provide
additional information following any
proposed determination, and the
Council’s authority in individual cases
to grant a longer period for a response,
the Council believes a 30-day minimum
is appropriate.
Paragraph (b) provides that the
Council will provide a nonbank
financial company with written notice
of a proposed determination, including
an explanation of the basis of the
proposed determination. Paragraphs (c),
(d), and (e) set forth the procedures for
an evidentiary hearing following a
proposed determination, pursuant to
section 113(e) of the Dodd-Frank Act,
and provide the time period within
which the Council will make a final
determination. These paragraphs also
provide that the Council will make
public any final determination that it
makes. While not specified in the rule,
the Council expects to notify the
relevant nonbank financial company if
the Council has not made a final
determination with respect to the
company within the time period set
forth in paragraph (d) or (e), as
applicable. In response to comments,
the Council has clarified paragraph (c)
to provide that the hearing would be
nonpublic. However, the Council has
not revised the rule as requested by
several commenters to provide a
nonbank financial company with a right
to an oral hearing. Instead, the rule

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maintains consistency with section
113(e)(2) of the Dodd-Frank Act, which
grants the Council sole discretion as to
the format of any hearing. Paragraph
(c)(1) has also been revised to clarify
that, consistent with the definition of
‘‘hearing date,’’ a hearing may be before
the Council or its representatives.
Paragraph (f) sets forth the time
period within which the Council may
make a proposed determination with
respect to a nonbank financial company
that has received a notice of
consideration of determination. Under
paragraph (a)(3), the Council will notify
a nonbank financial company that is
being considered for a proposed
determination of the date on which the
Council deems its evidentiary record
regarding that nonbank financial
company to be complete. If the Council
does not make a proposed
determination with respect to that
nonbank financial company within 180
days after that date, the Council will not
make a proposed determination unless
the Council issues a subsequent written
notice of consideration of determination
under paragraph (a) and thereafter
complies with the other procedures set
forth in that section. This paragraph is
intended to provide clarity to a nonbank
financial company that is subject to a
notice of consideration of determination
regarding the timing of any potential
subsequent Council action. The Council
expects to notify the relevant nonbank
financial company upon expiration of
this 180-day period.
3. § 1310.22 Emergency Exception to
§ 1310.21
This section sets forth the process by
which the Council may waive or modify
any of the notice or other procedural
requirements of the rule if the Council
determines that the waiver or
modification is necessary or appropriate
to prevent or mitigate threats posed by
the nonbank financial company to the
financial stability of the United States,
pursuant to section 113(f) of the DoddFrank Act. This section provides that a
nonbank financial company will receive
notice of the waiver or modification and
an opportunity for a hearing to contest
the waiver or modification, and sets
forth the process by which the Council
will make and publicly announce its
final determination. This section
incorporates the statutory requirement
that the Council consult with the
appropriate home country supervisor, if
any, of a foreign nonbank financial
company considered for a determination
under this section. This section also
requires the Council to consult with the
primary financial regulatory agency, if
any, of a nonbank financial company in

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making a determination under this
section. These consultations will be
conducted in such time and manner as
the Council may deem appropriate.
Several commenters requested that the
Council clarify or limit the scope of this
section of the rule. To maintain
consistency with the Council’s statutory
authority under section 113(f) of the
Dodd-Frank Act, and to avoid imposing
unwarranted restrictions on the
Council’s ability to respond to
emergency situations, the Council is
adopting this section as proposed. In
response to comments, the Council has
clarified paragraph (c) to provide that
the hearing under this section would be
nonpublic, and the Council has revised
paragraph (d) to clarify that while the
Council will publicly announce final
determinations under § 1310.10(a), the
Council will not publicly announce
determinations regarding waivers or
modifications under § 1310.22(c).
Paragraph (c)(1) has also been revised to
clarify that, consistent with the
definition of ‘‘hearing date,’’ a hearing
may be before the Council or its
representatives.
4. § 1310.23 Council Reevaluation and
Rescission of Determinations
This section sets forth the Council’s
statutory responsibility, pursuant to
section 113(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act, to
reevaluate currently effective
determinations and rescind any
determination if the Council determines
that the nonbank financial company no
longer meets the standards for
determination.
In response to comments requesting
clarification of the process for
reevaluations, paragraph (b) provides
new procedural protections for nonbank
financial companies. Pursuant to
paragraph (b), the Council will notify
each nonbank financial company
subject to a currently effective
determination prior to the Council’s
annual reevaluation. The nonbank
financial company will be provided an
opportunity to submit written materials
to the Council to contest the
determination. Because increased
information about any nonbank
financial company subject to a previous
determination will be available to the
Council through the Board of Governors,
and the Council will have previously
performed a comprehensive analysis of
any such company, a replication in full
of the Council’s evaluation in Stages 2
and 3 will not be necessary. Instead, the
Council expects that its reevaluations
will focus on any material changes with
respect to the nonbank financial
company or the markets in which it
operates since the Council’s previous

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review. Commenters also suggested that
nonbank financial companies be
permitted to request additional
reevaluations. Due to the relatively
frequent mandatory reevaluations, such
additional reevaluations should rarely
be necessary. In the event of an
extraordinary change that materially
decreases the threat a nonbank financial
company poses to U.S. financial
stability relatively soon after a previous
reevaluation, the Council may, at its
sole discretion, consider a request from
such company for a reevaluation prior
to the next annual reevaluation. New
paragraph (d) provides that upon a
rescission of a determination with
respect to a nonbank financial company,
the Council will notify the company and
publicly announce the rescission.
V. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Council certifies that this final
rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. The economic
impact of this rule is not expected to be
significant. The final rule would apply
only to nonbank financial companies
that could pose a threat to the financial
stability of the United States. Size is an
important factor, although not the
exclusive factor, in assessing whether a
nonbank financial company could pose
a threat to financial stability. The
Council expects that few, if any, small
companies (as defined for purposes of
the Small Business Act) could pose a
threat to financial stability. Therefore,
the Council does not expect the rule to
directly affect a substantial number of
small entities. Accordingly, a regulatory
flexibility analysis under the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601–612) is not
required.
VI. Paperwork Reduction Act
The collection of information
contained in this final rule has been
reviewed and approved by the Office of
Management and Budget in accordance
with the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 (44 U.S.C. 3507(d)) under control
1505–0244. An agency may not conduct
or sponsor, and a person is not required
to respond to, a collection of
information unless it displays a valid
control number assigned by the Office of
Management and Budget.
The collection of information in this
final rule is found in § 1310.20,
§ 1310.21, § 1310.22, and § 1310.23.
The hours and costs associated with
preparing data, information, and reports
for submission to the Council constitute
reporting and cost burdens imposed by
the collection of information. The
estimated total annual reporting burden
associated with the collection of

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information in this final rule is 1,000
hours. We estimate the cost associated
with this information collection to be
$450,000. In making this estimate, the
Council estimates that due to the nature
of the information likely to be
requested, approximately 75 percent of
the burden in hours will be carried by
nonbank financial companies internally
at an average cost of $400 per hour, and
the remainder will be carried by outside
professionals retained by nonbank
financial companies at an average cost
of $600 per hour. In addition, in
determining these estimates, the
Council considered its obligation under
§ 1310.20(b) of the rule to, whenever
possible, rely on information available
from the OFR or any member agency or
primary financial regulatory agency that
regulates a nonbank financial company
before requiring the submission of
reports from such nonbank financial
company. The Council expects that its
collection of information under the rule
will be performed in a manner that
attempts to minimize burdens for
affected nonbank financial companies.
The aggregate burden will be subject to
the number of nonbank financial
companies that are evaluated in Stage 3,
the extent of information regarding such
companies that is available to the
Council through existing public and
regulatory sources, and the amount and
types of information that nonbank
financial companies provide to the
Council during the Determination
Process.
Several commenters asserted that the
Paperwork Reduction Act disclosure in
the NPR did not comply with the
statute, citing a requirement to provide
the public with notice and an
opportunity to comment on the
proposed collection of information,
including an estimate of the burden that
will result from the collection of
information. The NPR cited the sections
of the proposed rule that related to the
collection of information, described the
types of information expected to be
collected and the frequency of
collections, provided an estimate of the
total annual reporting burden, and
enabled the public to assess the likely
respondents. The NPR therefore
complied with the requirements of the
Paperwork Reduction Act.
VII. Executive Orders 12866 and 13563
Presidential Executive Order 12866,
‘‘Regulatory Planning and Review,’’ 18
and Executive Order 13563, ‘‘Improving
18 Available at http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/
WCPD-1993-10-04/pdf/WCPD-1993-10-04Pg1925.pdf.

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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 70 / Wednesday, April 11, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
Regulation and Regulatory Review,’’ 19
direct certain agencies to assess costs
and benefits of available regulatory
alternatives and, if regulation is
necessary, to select regulatory
approaches that maximize net benefits
(including potential economic,
environmental, public health and safety
effects, distributive impacts, and
equity). Executive Order 13563
emphasizes the importance of
quantifying both costs and benefits, of
reducing costs, of harmonizing rules,
and of promoting flexibility. This rule
has been designated a ‘‘significant
regulatory action’’ although not
economically significant under section
3(f) of Executive Order 12866.
Accordingly, the rule has been reviewed
by the Office of Management and
Budget.
Several commenters suggested that
the Council should, or is required to,
conduct a cost-benefit analysis, such as
a review of the impact of the rule on the
economy and on different sectors of the
financial services industry. These
commenters argued that a cost-benefit
analysis would enhance transparency
and ensure that costs are minimized,
and may be required under Executive
Orders 12866 and 13563. In addition,
commenters questioned the
determination that this rule is not
economically significant under section
3(f) of Executive Order 12866. That
section defines ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ to include a regulatory action
(which may include a proposed rule of
agency procedure or practice) that is
likely to result in a rule that may raise
certain novel legal or policy issues.
Based on this determination, which is
made by the Office of Management and
Budget, the Council is not required to
conduct a cost-benefit analysis in
connection with this rulemaking. The
rule and the interpretive guidance are
limited to descriptions of the processes
and procedures that the Council intends
to follow in making determinations
under section 113 of the Dodd-Frank
Act, the manner in which nonbank
financial companies may present
themselves and their views to the
Council, the Council’s interpretation of
the statutory factors, and how the
Council intends to exercise its statutory
grant of discretionary authority. The
rights and obligations of nonbank
financial companies that the Council is
considering for a determination, or for a
reevaluation and potential rescission of
a determination, arise directly from
section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Act. The
rights and obligations of nonbank
19 Available at http://www.gpo.gov/fdsys/pkg/FR2011-01-21/pdf/2011-1385.pdf.

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financial companies that the Council
has been determined shall be supervised
by the Board of Governors arise from
other sections of the Dodd-Frank Act
and the rules promulgated thereunder,
such as the enhanced prudential
standards to be established by the Board
of Governors and the resolution plans
required under section 165 of the DoddFrank Act. Based on data currently
available to the Council through existing
public and regulatory sources, the
Council has estimated that fewer than
50 nonbank financial companies meet
the Stage 1 thresholds.

21651

List of Subjects in 21 CFR Part 1310
Nonbank financial companies.

(b) Purpose. The principal purposes of
this part are to set forth the standards
and procedures governing Council
determinations under section 113 of the
Dodd-Frank Act (12 U.S.C. 5323),
including whether material financial
distress at a nonbank financial
company, or the nature, scope, size,
scale, concentration,
interconnectedness, or mix of the
activities of the nonbank financial
company, could pose a threat to the
financial stability of the United States,
and whether a nonbank financial
company shall be supervised by the
Board of Governors and shall be subject
to prudential standards in accordance
with Title I of the Dodd-Frank Act.

Financial Stability Oversight Council

§ 1310.2

Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Financial Stability
Oversight Council adds a new part 1310
to Title 12 of the Code of Federal
Regulations, to read as follows:

The terms used in this part have the
following meanings—
Board of Governors. The term ‘‘Board
of Governors’’ means the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System.
Commission. The term ‘‘Commission’’
means the Securities and Exchange
Commission, except in the context of
the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission.
Council. The term ‘‘Council’’ means
the Financial Stability Oversight
Council.
Federal Insurance Office. The term
‘‘Federal Insurance Office’’ means the
office established within the
Department of the Treasury by section
502(a) of the Dodd-Frank Act (31 U.S.C.
301 (note)).
Foreign nonbank financial company.
The term ‘‘foreign nonbank financial
company’’ means a company (other than
a company that is, or is treated in the
United States as, a bank holding
company) that is—
(1) Incorporated or organized in a
country other than the United States;
and
(2) ‘‘Predominantly engaged in
financial activities,’’ as that term is
defined in section 102(a)(6) of the DoddFrank Act (12 U.S.C. 5311(a)(6)) and
pursuant to any requirements for
determining if a company is
predominantly engaged in financial
activities as established by regulation of
the Board of Governors pursuant to
section 102(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act
(12 U.S.C. 5311(b)), including through a
branch in the United States.
Hearing date. The term ‘‘hearing
date’’ means the latest of—
(1) The date on which the Council has
received all of the written materials
timely submitted by a nonbank financial
company for a hearing that is conducted
without oral testimony pursuant to
§ 1310.21 or § 1310.22, as applicable;

PART 1310—AUTHORITY TO REQUIRE
SUPERVISION AND REGULATION OF
CERTAIN NONBANK FINANCIAL
COMPANIES
Sec.
Subpart A—General
1310.1 Authority and purpose.
1310.2 Definitions.
Subpart B—Determinations
1310.10 Council determinations regarding
nonbank financial companies.
1310.11 Considerations in making proposed
and final determinations.
1310.12 Anti-evasion provision.
Subpart C—Information Collection;
Proposed and Final Determinations;
Evidentiary Hearings
1310.20 Council information collection;
consultation; coordination;
confidentiality.
1310.21 Proposed and final determinations;
notice and opportunity for an
evidentiary hearing.
1310.22 Emergency exception to § 1310.21.
1310.23 Council reevaluation and
rescission of determinations.
Appendix A to Part 1310—Financial Stability
Oversight Council Guidance for Nonbank
Financial Company Determinations
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 5321; 12 U.S.C. 5322;
12 U.S.C. 5323.

Subpart A—General
§ 1310.1

Authority and purpose.

(a) Authority. This part is issued by
the Council under sections 111, 112 and
113 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act
(‘‘Dodd-Frank Act’’) (12 U.S.C. 5321,
5322, and 5323).

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(2) The final date on which the
Council or its representatives convene
to hear oral testimony presented by a
nonbank financial company pursuant to
§ 1310.21 or § 1310.22, as applicable;
and
(3) The date on which the Council has
received all of the written materials
timely submitted by a nonbank financial
company to supplement any oral
testimony and materials presented by
the nonbank financial company
pursuant to § 1310.21 or § 1310.22, as
applicable.
Member agency. The term ‘‘member
agency’’ means an agency represented
by a voting member of the Council
under section 111(b)(1) of the DoddFrank Act (12 U.S.C. 5321).
Nonbank financial company. The
term ‘‘nonbank financial company’’
means a U.S. nonbank financial
company or a foreign nonbank financial
company.
Office of Financial Research. The
term ‘‘Office of Financial Research’’
means the office established within the
Department of the Treasury by section
152 of the Dodd-Frank Act (12 U.S.C.
5342).
Primary financial regulatory agency.
The term ‘‘primary financial regulatory
agency’’ means—
(1) The appropriate Federal banking
agency, with respect to institutions
described in section 3(q) of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C.
1813(q)), except to the extent that an
institution is or the activities of an
institution are otherwise described in
paragraph (2), (3), (4), or (5) of this
definition;
(2) The Commission, with respect to—
(i) Any broker or dealer that is
registered with the Commission under
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934,
with respect to the activities of the
broker or dealer that require the broker
or dealer to be registered under that Act;
(ii) Any investment company that is
registered with the Commission under
the Investment Company Act of 1940,
with respect to the activities of the
investment company that require the
investment company to be registered
under that Act;
(iii) Any investment adviser that is
registered with the Commission under
the Investment Advisers Act of 1940,
with respect to the investment advisory
activities of such company and
activities that are incidental to such
advisory activities;
(iv) Any clearing agency registered
with the Commission under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, with
respect to the activities of the clearing
agency that require the agency to be
registered under such Act;

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(v) Any nationally recognized
statistical rating organization registered
with the Commission under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934;
(vi) Any transfer agent registered with
the Commission under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934;
(vii) Any exchange registered as a
national securities exchange with the
Commission under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934;
(viii) Any national securities
association registered with the
Commission under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934;
(ix) Any securities information
processor registered with the
Commission under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934;
(x) The Municipal Securities
Rulemaking Board established under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934;
(xi) The Public Company Accounting
Oversight Board established under the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 (15 U.S.C.
7201 et seq.);
(xii) The Securities Investor
Protection Corporation established
under the Securities Investor Protection
Act of 1970 (15 U.S.C. 78aaa et seq.);
and
(xiii) Any security-based swap
execution facility, security-based swap
data repository, security-based swap
dealer or major security-based swap
participant registered with the
Commission under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, with respect to
the security-based swap activities of the
person that require such person to be
registered under such Act;
(3) The Commodity Futures Trading
Commission, with respect to—
(i) Any futures commission merchant
registered with the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission under the
Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1 et
seq.), with respect to the activities of the
futures commission merchant that
require the futures commission
merchant to be registered under that
Act;
(ii) Any commodity pool operator
registered with the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission under the
Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1 et
seq.), with respect to the activities of the
commodity pool operator that require
the commodity pool operator to be
registered under that Act, or a
commodity pool, as defined in that Act;
(iii) Any commodity trading advisor
or introducing broker registered with
the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission under the Commodity
Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1 et seq.), with
respect to the activities of the
commodity trading advisor or
introducing broker that require the

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commodity trading advisor or
introducing broker to be registered
under that Act;
(iv) Any derivatives clearing
organization registered with the
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission under the Commodity
Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1 et seq.), with
respect to the activities of the
derivatives clearing organization that
require the derivatives clearing
organization to be registered under that
Act;
(v) Any board of trade designated as
a contract market by the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission under the
Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1 et
seq.);
(vi) Any futures association registered
with the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission under the Commodity
Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1 et seq.);
(vii) Any retail foreign exchange
dealer registered with the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission under the
Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1 et
seq.), with respect to the activities of the
retail foreign exchange dealer that
require the retail foreign exchange
dealer to be registered under that Act;
(viii) Any swap execution facility,
swap data repository, swap dealer, or
major swap participant registered with
the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission under the Commodity
Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1 et seq.) with
respect to the swap activities of the
person that require such person to be
registered under that Act; and
(ix) Any registered entity as defined
in section 1a of the Commodity
Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1a), with respect
to the activities of the registered entity
that require the registered entity to be
registered under that Act;
(4) The State insurance authority of
the State in which an insurance
company is domiciled, with respect to
the insurance activities and activities
that are incidental to such insurance
activities of an insurance company that
is subject to supervision by the State
insurance authority under State
insurance law; and
(5) The Federal Housing Finance
Agency, with respect to Federal Home
Loan Banks or the Federal Home Loan
Bank System, and with respect to the
Federal National Mortgage Association
or the Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corporation.
Prudential standards. The term
‘‘prudential standards’’ means enhanced
supervision and regulatory standards
established by the Board of Governors
under section 165 of the Dodd-Frank
Act (12 U.S.C. 5365).
Significant companies. The terms
‘‘significant nonbank financial

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company’’ and ‘‘significant bank
holding company’’ have the meanings
ascribed to such terms by regulation of
the Board of Governors issued under
section 102(a)(7) of the Dodd-Frank Act
(12 U.S.C. 5311(a)(7)).
U.S. nonbank financial company. The
term ‘‘U.S. nonbank financial company’’
means a company (other than a bank
holding company; a Farm Credit System
institution chartered and subject to the
provisions of the Farm Credit Act of
1971 (12 U.S.C. 2001 et seq.); a national
securities exchange (or parent thereof),
clearing agency (or parent thereof,
unless the parent is a bank holding
company), security-based swap
execution facility, or security-based
swap data repository registered with the
Commission; a board of trade designated
as a contract market by the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission (or parent
thereof); or a derivatives clearing
organization (or parent thereof, unless
the parent is a bank holding company),
swap execution facility, or swap data
repository registered with the
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission), that is—
(1) Incorporated or organized under
the laws of the United States or any
State; and
(2) ‘‘Predominantly engaged in
financial activities,’’ as that term is
defined in section 102(a)(6) of the DoddFrank Act (12 U.S.C. 5311(a)(6)), and
pursuant to any requirements for
determining if a company is
predominantly engaged in financial
activities as established by regulation of
the Board of Governors pursuant to
section 102(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act
(12 U.S.C. 5311(b)).
Subpart B—Determinations

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§ 1310.10 Council determinations
regarding nonbank financial companies.

(a) Determinations. The Council may
determine that a nonbank financial
company shall be supervised by the
Board of Governors and shall be subject
to prudential standards, in accordance
with Title I of the Dodd-Frank Act, if the
Council determines that material
financial distress at the nonbank
financial company, or the nature, scope,
size, scale, concentration,
interconnectedness, or mix of the
activities of the nonbank financial
company, could pose a threat to the
financial stability of the United States.
(b) Vote required. Any proposed or
final determination under paragraph (a)
of this section shall—
(1) Be made by the Council and shall
not be delegated by the Council; and
(2) Require the vote of not fewer than
two-thirds of the voting members of the

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Council then serving, including the
affirmative vote of the Chairperson of
the Council.
(c) Back-up examination by the Board
of Governors. (1) If the Council is unable
to determine whether the financial
activities of a U.S. nonbank financial
company, including a U.S. nonbank
financial company that is owned by a
foreign nonbank financial company,
pose a threat to the financial stability of
the United States, based on information
or reports obtained by the Council
under § 1310.20, including discussions
with management, and publicly
available information, the Council may
request the Board of Governors, and the
Board of Governors is authorized, to
conduct an examination of the U.S.
nonbank financial company and its
subsidiaries for the sole purpose of
determining whether the nonbank
financial company should be supervised
by the Board of Governors for purposes
of Title I of the Dodd-Frank Act (12
U.S.C. 5311–5374).
(2) The Council shall review the
results of the examination of a nonbank
financial company, including its
subsidiaries, conducted by the Board of
Governors under this paragraph (c) in
connection with any proposed or final
determination under paragraph (a) of
this section with respect to the nonbank
financial company.
§ 1310.11 Considerations in making
proposed and final determinations.

(a) Considerations for U.S. nonbank
financial companies. In making a
proposed or final determination under
§ 1310.10(a) with respect to a U.S.
nonbank financial company, the
Council shall consider—
(1) The extent of the leverage of the
U.S. nonbank financial company and its
subsidiaries;
(2) The extent and nature of the offbalance-sheet exposures of the U.S.
nonbank financial company and its
subsidiaries;
(3) The extent and nature of the
transactions and relationships of the
U.S. nonbank financial company and its
subsidiaries with other significant
nonbank financial companies and
significant bank holding companies;
(4) The importance of the U.S.
nonbank financial company and its
subsidiaries as a source of credit for
households, businesses, and State and
local governments and as a source of
liquidity for the United States financial
system;
(5) The importance of the U.S.
nonbank financial company and its
subsidiaries as a source of credit for
low-income, minority, or underserved
communities, and the impact that the

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failure of such U.S. nonbank financial
company would have on the availability
of credit in such communities;
(6) The extent to which assets are
managed rather than owned by the U.S.
nonbank financial company and its
subsidiaries, and the extent to which
ownership of assets under management
is diffuse;
(7) The nature, scope, size, scale,
concentration, interconnectedness, and
mix of the activities of the U.S. nonbank
financial company and its subsidiaries;
(8) The degree to which the U.S.
nonbank financial company and its
subsidiaries are already regulated by 1
or more primary financial regulatory
agencies;
(9) The amount and nature of the
financial assets of the U.S. nonbank
financial company and its subsidiaries;
(10) The amount and types of the
liabilities of the U.S. nonbank financial
company and its subsidiaries, including
the degree of reliance on short-term
funding; and
(11) Any other risk-related factor that
the Council deems appropriate, either
by regulation or on a case-by-case basis.
(b) Considerations for foreign
nonbank financial companies. In
making a proposed or final
determination under § 1310.10(a) with
respect to a foreign nonbank financial
company, the Council shall consider—
(1) The extent of the leverage of the
foreign nonbank financial company and
its subsidiaries;
(2) The extent and nature of the
United States related off-balance-sheet
exposures of the foreign nonbank
financial company and its subsidiaries;
(3) The extent and nature of the
transactions and relationships of the
foreign nonbank financial company and
its subsidiaries with other significant
nonbank financial companies and
significant bank holding companies;
(4) The importance of the foreign
nonbank financial company and its
subsidiaries as a source of credit for
United States households, businesses,
and State and local governments and as
a source of liquidity for the United
States financial system;
(5) The importance of the foreign
nonbank financial company and its
subsidiaries as a source of credit for
low-income, minority, or underserved
communities in the United States, and
the impact that the failure of such
foreign nonbank financial company
would have on the availability of credit
in such communities;
(6) The extent to which assets are
managed rather than owned by the
foreign nonbank financial company and
its subsidiaries and the extent to which

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ownership of assets under management
is diffuse;
(7) The nature, scope, size, scale,
concentration, interconnectedness, and
mix of the activities of the foreign
nonbank financial company and its
subsidiaries;
(8) The extent to which the foreign
nonbank financial company and its
subsidiaries are subject to prudential
standards on a consolidated basis in the
foreign nonbank financial company’s
home country that are administered and
enforced by a comparable foreign
supervisory authority;
(9) The amount and nature of the
United States financial assets of the
foreign nonbank financial company and
its subsidiaries;
(10) The amount and nature of the
liabilities of the foreign nonbank
financial company and its subsidiaries
used to fund activities and operations in
the United States, including the degree
of reliance on short-term funding; and
(11) Any other risk-related factor that
the Council deems appropriate, either
by regulation or on a case-by-case basis.

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§ 1310.12

Anti-evasion provision.

(a) Determinations. In order to avoid
evasion of Title I of the Dodd-Frank Act
(12 U.S.C. 5311–5374) or this part, the
Council, on its own initiative or at the
request of the Board of Governors, may
require that the financial activities of a
company shall be supervised by the
Board of Governors and subject to
prudential standards if the Council
determines that—
(1) Material financial distress related
to, or the nature, scope, size, scale,
concentration, interconnectedness, or
mix of, the financial activities
conducted directly or indirectly by a
company incorporated or organized
under the laws of the United States or
any State or the financial activities in
the United States of a company
incorporated or organized in a country
other than the United States would pose
a threat to the financial stability of the
United States, based on consideration of
the factors in—
(i) § 1310.11(a) if the company is
incorporated or organized under the
laws of the United States or any State;
or
(ii) § 1310.11(b) if the company is
incorporated or organized in a country
other than the United States; and
(2) The company is organized or
operates in such a manner as to evade
the application of Title I of the DoddFrank Act (12 U.S.C. 5311–5374) or this
part.
(b) Vote required. Any proposed or
final determination under paragraph (a)
of this section shall—

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(1) Be made by the Council and shall
not be delegated by the Council; and
(2) Require the vote of not fewer than
two-thirds of the voting members of the
Council then serving, including the
affirmative vote of the Chairperson of
the Council.
(c) Definition of covered financial
activities. For purposes of this section,
the term ‘‘financial activities’’—
(1) Means activities that are financial
in nature (as defined in section 4(k) of
the Bank Holding Company Act of
1956);
(2) Includes the ownership or control
of one or more insured depository
institutions; and
(3) Does not include internal financial
activities conducted for the company or
any affiliate thereof, including internal
treasury, investment, and employee
benefit functions.
(d) Application of other provisions.
Sections 1310.20(a), 1310.20(b),
1310.20(c), 1310.20(e), 1310.21,
1310.22, and 1310.23, and the
definitions referred to therein, shall
apply to proposed and final
determinations of the Council with
respect to the financial activities of a
company pursuant to this section in the
same manner as such sections apply to
proposed and final determinations of
the Council with respect to nonbank
financial companies.
Subpart C—Information Collection;
Proposed and Final Determinations;
Evidentiary Hearings
§ 1310.20 Council information collection;
consultation; coordination; confidentiality.

(a) Information collection from the
Office of Financial Research, member
agencies, the Federal Insurance Office,
and other Federal and State financial
regulatory agencies. The Council may
receive, and may request the submission
of, such data or information from the
Office of Financial Research, member
agencies, the Federal Insurance Office,
and (acting through the Office of
Financial Research, to the extent the
Council determines necessary) other
Federal and State financial regulatory
agencies as the Council deems necessary
to carry out the provisions of Title I of
the Dodd-Frank Act (12 U.S.C. 5311–
5374) or this part.
(b) Information collection from
nonbank financial companies. (1) The
Council may, to the extent the Council
determines appropriate, direct the
Office of Financial Research to require
the submission of periodic and other
reports from any nonbank financial
company, including a nonbank financial
company that is being considered for a
proposed or final determination under

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§ 1310.10(a), for the purpose of
assessing the extent to which a nonbank
financial company poses a threat to the
financial stability of the United States.
(2) Before requiring the submission of
reports under this paragraph (b) from
any nonbank financial company that is
regulated by a member agency or any
primary financial regulatory agency, the
Council, acting through the Office of
Financial Research, shall coordinate
with such agency or agencies and shall,
whenever possible, rely on information
available from the Office of Financial
Research or such agency or agencies.
(3) Before requiring the submission of
reports under this paragraph (b) from a
company that is a foreign nonbank
financial company, the Council shall,
acting through the Office of Financial
Research, to the extent appropriate,
consult with the appropriate foreign
regulator of such foreign nonbank
financial company and, whenever
possible, rely on information already
being collected by such foreign
regulator, with English translation.
(4) The Council may, to the extent the
Council determines appropriate, accept
the submission of any data, information,
and reports voluntarily submitted by
any nonbank financial company that is
being considered for a proposed or final
determination under § 1310.10(a), for
the purpose of assessing the extent to
which a nonbank financial company
poses a threat to the financial stability
of the United States.
(c) Consultation. The Council shall
consult with the primary financial
regulatory agency, if any, for each
nonbank financial company or
subsidiary of a nonbank financial
company that is being considered for
supervision by the Board of Governors
under § 1310.10(a) in a timely manner
before the Council makes any final
determination under § 1310.10(a) with
respect to such nonbank financial
company.
(d) International coordination. In
exercising its duties under this part with
respect to foreign nonbank financial
companies and cross-border activities
and markets, the Council, acting
through its Chairperson or other
authorized designee, shall consult with
appropriate foreign regulatory
authorities, to the extent appropriate.
(e) Confidentiality—(1) In general.
The Council shall maintain the
confidentiality of any data, information,
and reports submitted under this part.
(2) Retention of privilege. The
submission of any non-publicly
available data or information under this
part shall not constitute a waiver of, or
otherwise affect, any privilege arising
under Federal or State law (including

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the rules of any Federal or State court)
to which the data or information is
otherwise subject.
(3) Freedom of Information Act.
Section 552 of Title 5, United States
Code, including the exceptions
thereunder, and any regulations
thereunder adopted by the Council,
shall apply to any data, information,
and reports submitted under this part.

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§ 1310.21 Proposed and final
determinations; notice and opportunity for
an evidentiary hearing.

(a) Written notice of consideration of
determination; submission of materials.
Before providing a nonbank financial
company written notice of a proposed
determination pursuant to paragraph (b)
of this section, the Council shall provide
the nonbank financial company—
(1) Written notice that the Council is
considering whether to make a proposed
determination with respect to the
nonbank financial company under
§ 1310.10(a);
(2) An opportunity to submit written
materials, within such time as the
Council determines to be appropriate
(which shall be not less than 30 days
after the date of receipt by the nonbank
financial company of the notice
described in paragraph (a)(1)), to the
Council to contest the Council’s
consideration of the nonbank financial
company for a proposed determination,
including materials concerning whether,
in the nonbank financial company’s
view, material financial distress at the
nonbank financial company, or the
nature, scope, size, scale, concentration,
interconnectedness, or mix of the
activities of the nonbank financial
company, could pose a threat to the
financial stability of the United States;
and
(3) Notice when the Council deems its
evidentiary record regarding such
nonbank financial company to be
complete.
(b) Notice of proposed determination.
If the Council determines under
§ 1310.10(a) that a nonbank financial
company should be supervised by the
Board of Governors and be subject to
prudential standards, the Council shall
provide to the nonbank financial
company written notice of the proposed
determination, including an explanation
of the basis of the proposed
determination and the date by which an
evidentiary hearing may be requested by
the nonbank financial company under
paragraph (c) of this section.
(c) Evidentiary hearing. (1) Not later
than 30 days after the date of receipt by
a nonbank financial company of the
notice of proposed determination under
paragraph (b) of this section, the

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nonbank financial company may
request, in writing, an opportunity for a
nonpublic, written or oral evidentiary
hearing before the Council or its
representatives to contest the proposed
determination under § 1310.10(a).
(2) Upon receipt by the Council of a
timely request under paragraph (c)(1),
the Council shall fix a time (not later
than 30 days after the date of receipt by
the Council of the request) and place at
which such nonbank financial company
may appear, personally or through
counsel, for a nonpublic evidentiary
hearing at which the nonbank financial
company may submit written materials
(or, at the sole discretion of the Council,
oral testimony and oral argument) to
contest the proposed determination
under § 1310.10(a), including materials
concerning whether, in the nonbank
financial company’s view, material
financial distress at the nonbank
financial company, or the nature, scope,
size, scale, concentration,
interconnectedness, or mix of the
activities of the nonbank financial
company, could pose a threat to the
financial stability of the United States.
(d) Final determination after
evidentiary hearing. If the nonbank
financial company makes a timely
request for an evidentiary hearing under
paragraph (c) of this section, the Council
shall, not later than 60 days after the
hearing date—
(1) Determine whether to make a final
determination under § 1310.10(a);
(2) Notify the nonbank financial
company, in writing, of any final
determination of the Council under
§ 1310.10(a), which notice shall contain
a statement of the basis for the decision
of the Council; and
(3) If the Council makes a final
determination under § 1310.10(a),
publicly announce the final
determination of the Council.
(e) No evidentiary hearing requested.
If a nonbank financial company does
not make a timely request for an
evidentiary hearing under paragraph (c)
of this section or notifies the Council in
writing that it is not requesting an
evidentiary hearing under paragraph (c)
of this section, the Council shall, not
later than 10 days after the date by
which the nonbank financial company
could have requested a hearing under
paragraph (c) of this section or 10 days
after the date on which the Council
receives notice from the nonbank
financial company that it is not
requesting an evidentiary hearing, as
applicable—
(1) Determine whether to make a final
determination under § 1310.10(a);
(2) Notify the nonbank financial
company, in writing, of any final

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determination of the Council under
§ 1310.10(a), which notice shall contain
a statement of the basis for the decision
of the Council; and
(3) If the Council makes a final
determination under § 1310.10(a),
publicly announce the final
determination of the Council.
(f) Time period for consideration. (1)
If the Council does not make a proposed
determination under § 1310.10(a) with
respect to a nonbank financial company
within 180 days after the date on which
the nonbank financial company receives
the notice of completion of the
Council’s evidentiary record described
in paragraph (a)(3) of this section, the
nonbank financial company shall not be
eligible for a proposed determination
under § 1310.10(a) unless the Council
issues a subsequent written notice of
consideration of determination under
paragraph (a) of this section to such
nonbank financial company.
(2) This paragraph (f) shall not limit
the Council’s ability to issue a
subsequent written notice of
consideration of determination under
§ 1310.21(a) to any nonbank financial
company that, within 180 days after the
date on which such nonbank financial
company received a notice described in
paragraph (a)(3) of this section, does not
become subject to a proposed
determination under § 1310.10(a).
§ 1310.22 Emergency exception to
§ 1310.21.

(a) Exception to § 1310.21.
Notwithstanding anything to the
contrary in § 1310.21, the Council may
waive or modify any or all of the notice
and other procedural requirements of
§ 1310.21 with respect to a nonbank
financial company if—
(1) The Council determines that such
waiver or modification is necessary or
appropriate to prevent or mitigate
threats posed by the nonbank financial
company to the financial stability of the
United States; and
(2) The Council provides written
notice of the waiver or modification
under this section to the nonbank
financial company as soon as
practicable, but not later than 24 hours
after the waiver or modification is
granted. Any such notice shall set forth
the manner and form for transmitting a
request for an evidentiary hearing under
paragraph (c) of this section.
(b) Consultation. (1) In making a
determination under paragraph (a) of
this section with respect to a nonbank
financial company, the Council shall
consult with the primary financial
regulatory agency, if any, for such
nonbank financial company, in such

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time and manner as the Council may
deem appropriate.
(2) In making a determination under
paragraph (a) of this section with
respect to a foreign nonbank financial
company, the Council shall consult with
the appropriate home country
supervisor, if any, of such foreign
nonbank financial company, in such
time and manner as the Council may
deem appropriate.
(c) Opportunity for evidentiary
hearing. (1) If the Council, pursuant to
paragraph (a) of this section, waives or
modifies any of the notice or other
procedural requirements of § 1310.21
with respect to a nonbank financial
company, the nonbank financial
company may request, in writing, an
opportunity for a nonpublic, written or
oral evidentiary hearing before the
Council or its representatives to contest
such waiver or modification, not later
than 10 days after the date of receipt by
the nonbank financial company of the
notice described in paragraph (a)(2) of
this section.
(2) Upon receipt of a timely request
for an evidentiary hearing under
paragraph (c)(1), the Council shall fix a
time (not later than 15 days after the
date of receipt by the Council of the
request) and place at which the nonbank
financial company may appear,
personally or through counsel, for a
nonpublic evidentiary hearing at which
the nonbank financial company may
submit written materials (or, at the sole
discretion of the Council, oral testimony
and oral argument) regarding the waiver
or modification under this section.
(d) Notice of final determination. If
the nonbank financial company makes a
timely request for an evidentiary
hearing under paragraph (c) of this
section, the Council shall, not later than
30 days after the hearing date—
(1) Make a final determination
regarding the waiver or modification
under this § 1310.22;
(2) Notify the nonbank financial
company, in writing, of the final
determination of the Council regarding
the waiver or modification under this
§ 1310.22, which notice shall contain a
statement of the basis for the final
decision of the Council; and
(3) If the Council makes a final
determination under § 1310.10(a),
publicly announce the final
determination of the Council.
(e) Vote required. Any determination
of the Council under paragraph (a)(1) of
this section to waive or modify any of
the notice or other procedural
requirements of § 1310.21 shall—
(1) Be made by the Council and shall
not be delegated by the Council; and

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(2) Require the vote of not fewer than
two-thirds of the voting members of the
Council then serving, including the
affirmative vote of the Chairperson of
the Council.
§ 1310.23 Council reevaluation and
rescission of determinations.

(a) Reevaluation and rescission. The
Council shall, not less frequently than
annually—
(1) Reevaluate each currently effective
determination made under § 1310.10(a);
and
(2) Rescind any such determination, if
the Council determines that the
nonbank financial company no longer
meets the standard under § 1310.10(a),
taking into account the considerations
in § 1310.11(a) or § 1310.11(b), as
applicable.
(b) Notice of reevaluation; submission
of materials. The Council shall provide
written notice to each nonbank financial
company subject to a currently effective
determination prior to the Council’s
reevaluation of such determination
under paragraph (a) of this section and
shall provide such nonbank financial
company an opportunity to submit
written materials, within such time as
the Council determines to be
appropriate (which shall be not less
than 30 days after the date of receipt by
the nonbank financial company of such
notice), to the Council to contest the
determination, including materials
concerning whether, in the nonbank
financial company’s view, material
financial distress at the nonbank
financial company, or the nature, scope,
size, scale, concentration,
interconnectedness, or mix of the
activities of the nonbank financial
company, could pose a threat to the
financial stability of the United States.
(c) Vote required. Any determination
of the Council under paragraph (a)(2) of
this section to rescind a determination
made with respect to a nonbank
financial company shall—
(1) Be made by the Council and shall
not be delegated by the Council; and
(2) Require the vote of not fewer than
two-thirds of the voting members of the
Council then serving, including the
affirmative vote of the Chairperson of
the Council.
(d) Notice of rescission. If the Council
rescinds a determination with respect to
any nonbank financial company under
paragraph (a) of this section, the Council
shall notify the nonbank financial
company, in writing, of such rescission
and publicly announce such rescission.

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Appendix A to Part 1310—Financial
Stability Oversight Council Guidance
for Nonbank Financial Company
Determinations
I. Introduction
Section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act (the
‘‘Dodd-Frank Act’’) 1 authorizes the Financial
Stability Oversight Council (the ‘‘Council’’)
to determine that a nonbank financial
company will be supervised by the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System (the
‘‘Board of Governors’’) and be subject to
prudential standards in accordance with
Title I of the Dodd-Frank Act if either of two
standards is met. Under the first standard,
the Council may subject a nonbank financial
company to supervision by the Board of
Governors and prudential standards if the
Council determines that ‘‘material financial
distress’’ at the nonbank financial company
could pose a threat to the financial stability
of the United States. Under the second
standard, the Council may determine that a
nonbank financial company will be
supervised by the Board of Governors and
subject to prudential standards if the nature,
scope, size, scale, concentration,
interconnectedness, or mix of the activities of
the nonbank financial company could pose a
threat to U.S. financial stability. Section 113
of the Dodd-Frank Act also lists 10
considerations that the Council must take
into account in making a determination.2
Section II of this document describes the
manner in which the Council intends to
apply the statutory standards and
considerations in making determinations
under section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Act.
First, section II defines ‘‘threat to the
financial stability of the United States’’ and
describes channels through which a nonbank
financial company could pose such a threat.
Second, it discusses each of the two statutory
standards for determination. Third, it
describes the six-category framework that the
Council intends to use to evaluate nonbank
financial companies under each of the 10
statutory considerations. Section II also
includes lists of sample metrics that may be
used to evaluate individual nonbank
financial companies under each of the six
categories.
Section III of this document outlines the
process that the Council intends to follow in
non-emergency situations when determining
whether to subject a nonbank financial
company to Board of Governors supervision
and prudential standards. Section III also
provides a detailed description of the
analysis that the Council intends to conduct
during each stage of its review. In the first
stage of the process, the Council will apply
six uniform quantitative thresholds to
nonbank financial companies to identify
those nonbank financial companies that will
be subject to further evaluation by the
Council. Because the Council is relying in the
first stage on quantitative thresholds using
1 See

12 U.S.C. 5323.
addition to these considerations, the Council
may consider any other risk-related factors that the
Council deems appropriate. 12 U.S.C. 5323(a)(2)(K)
and (b)(2)(K).
2 In

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information available through existing public
and regulatory sources, nonbank financial
companies should be able to assess whether
they will be subject to further evaluation by
the Council. During the second stage of the
evaluation process, the Council will analyze
the identified nonbank financial companies
using a broad range of information available
to the Council primarily through existing
public and regulatory sources. The third
stage of the process will involve a
comprehensive analysis of those nonbank
financial companies using information
collected directly from the nonbank financial
company, as well as the information used in
the first two stages.

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II. Council Determination Authority and
Framework
As noted above, the Council may
determine that a nonbank financial company
will be supervised by the Board of Governors
and be subject to prudential standards if the
Council determines that (i) material financial
distress at the nonbank financial company
could pose a threat to the financial stability
of the United States (the ‘‘First Determination
Standard’’) or (ii) the nature, scope, size,
scale, concentration, interconnectedness, or
mix of the activities of the nonbank financial
company could pose a threat to the financial
stability of the United States (the ‘‘Second
Determination Standard,’’ and, together with
the First Determination Standard, the
‘‘Determination Standards’’).
The Council intends to interpret the term
‘‘company’’ broadly with respect to nonbank
financial companies and other companies in
connection with section 113 of the DoddFrank Act, to include any corporation,
limited liability company, partnership,
business trust, association, or similar
organization.
This section provides definitions of the
terms ‘‘threat to the financial stability of the
United States’’ and ‘‘material financial
distress’’ and describes how the Council
expects to apply the Determination
Standards.
a. Threat to the Financial Stability of the
United States
The Determination Standards require the
Council to determine whether a nonbank
financial company could pose a threat to the
financial stability of the United States. The
Council will consider a ‘‘threat to the
financial stability of the United States’’ to
exist if there would be an impairment of
financial intermediation or of financial
market functioning that would be sufficiently
severe to inflict significant damage on the
broader economy.
In evaluating a nonbank financial company
under one of the Determination Standards,
the Council intends to assess how a nonbank
financial company’s material financial
distress or activities could be transmitted to,
or otherwise affect, other firms or markets,
thereby causing a broader impairment of
financial intermediation or of financial
market functioning. An impairment of
financial intermediation and financial market
functioning can occur through several
channels. The Council has identified the
following channels as most likely to facilitate

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the transmission of the negative effects of a
nonbank financial company’s material
financial distress or activities to other
financial firms and markets:
• Exposure. A nonbank financial
company’s creditors, counterparties,
investors, or other market participants have
exposure to the nonbank financial company
that is significant enough to materially
impair those creditors, counterparties,
investors, or other market participants and
thereby pose a threat to U.S. financial
stability. In its initial analysis of nonbank
financial companies with respect to this
channel, the Council expects to consider
metrics including total consolidated assets,
credit default swaps outstanding, derivative
liabilities, total debt outstanding, and
leverage ratio.
• Asset liquidation. A nonbank financial
company holds assets that, if liquidated
quickly, would cause a fall in asset prices
and thereby significantly disrupt trading or
funding in key markets or cause significant
losses or funding problems for other firms
with similar holdings. This channel would
likely be most relevant for a nonbank
financial company whose funding and liquid
asset profile makes it likely that it would be
forced to liquidate assets quickly when it
comes under financial pressure. For example,
this could be the case if a large nonbank
financial company relies heavily on shortterm funding. In its initial analysis of
nonbank financial companies with respect to
this channel, the Council expects to consider
metrics including total consolidated assets
and short-term debt ratio.
• Critical function or service. A nonbank
financial company is no longer able or
willing to provide a critical function or
service that is relied upon by market
participants and for which there are no ready
substitutes. The analysis of this channel will
incorporate a review of the competitive
landscape for markets in which a nonbank
financial company participates and for the
services it provides (including the provision
of liquidity to the U.S. financial system, the
provision of credit to low-income, minority,
or underserved communities, or the
provision of credit to households, businesses
and state and local governments), the
nonbank financial company’s market share,
and the ability of other firms to replace those
services. Due to the unique ways in which a
nonbank financial company may provide a
critical function or service to the market, the
Council expects to apply company-specific
analyses with respect to this channel, rather
than applying a broadly applicable
quantitative metric.
The Council believes that the threat a
nonbank financial company may pose to U.S.
financial stability through the impairment of
financial intermediation and financial market
functioning is likely to be exacerbated if the
nonbank financial company is sufficiently
complex, opaque, or difficult to resolve in
bankruptcy such that its resolution in
bankruptcy would disrupt key markets or
have a material adverse impact on other
financial firms or markets.
The Council intends to continue to
evaluate additional transmission channels
and may, at its discretion, consider other

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channels through which a nonbank financial
company may transmit the negative effects of
its material financial distress or activities and
thereby pose a threat to U.S. financial
stability.
b. First Determination Standard: Material
Financial Distress
Under the First Determination Standard,
the Council may subject a nonbank financial
company to supervision by the Board of
Governors and prudential standards if the
Council determines that ‘‘material financial
distress’’ at the nonbank financial company
could pose a threat to U.S. financial stability.
The Council believes that material financial
distress exists when a nonbank financial
company is in imminent danger of
insolvency or defaulting on its financial
obligations.
For purposes of considering whether a
nonbank financial company could pose a
threat to U.S. financial stability under this
Determination Standard, the Council intends
to assess the impact of the nonbank financial
company’s material financial distress in the
context of a period of overall stress in the
financial services industry and in a weak
macroeconomic environment. The Council
believes this is appropriate because in such
a context, a nonbank financial company’s
distress may have a greater effect on U.S.
financial stability.
c. Second Determination Standard: Nature,
Scope, Size, Scale, Concentration,
Interconnectedness, or Mix of Activities
Under the Second Determination Standard,
the Council may subject a nonbank financial
company to supervision by the Board of
Governors and prudential standards if the
Council determines that the nature, scope,
size, scale, concentration,
interconnectedness, or mix of the activities of
the nonbank financial company could pose a
threat to U.S. financial stability. The Council
believes that this Determination Standard
will be met if the Council determines that the
nature of a nonbank financial company’s
business practices, conduct, or operations
could pose a threat to U.S. financial stability,
regardless of whether the nonbank financial
company is experiencing financial distress.
The Council expects that there likely will be
significant overlap between the outcome of
an assessment of a nonbank financial
company under the First and Second
Determination Standards, because, in many
cases, a nonbank financial company that
could pose a threat to U.S. financial stability
because of the nature, scope, size, scale,
concentration, interconnectedness, or mix of
its activities could also pose a threat to U.S.
financial stability if it were to experience
material financial distress.
d. Analytic Framework for Statutory
Considerations
As required by section 113 of the DoddFrank Act, the Council’s determination will
be based on its judgment that a firm meets
one of the Determination Standards
described above. In evaluating whether a firm
meets one of the Determination Standards,
the Council will consider each of the
statutory considerations. The discussion
below outlines the analytic framework that

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the Council intends to use to organize its
evaluation of a nonbank financial company
under the statutory considerations and
provides additional detail on the key data
and analyses that the Council intends to use
to assess the considerations.
1. Grouping of Statutory Considerations Into
Six-Category Framework
The Dodd-Frank Act requires the Council
to consider 10 considerations (described
below) when evaluating the potential of a
nonbank financial company to pose a threat
to U.S. financial stability. The statute also
authorizes the Council to consider ‘‘any other
risk-related factors that the Council deems
appropriate.’’ These statutory considerations
will help the Council to evaluate whether
one of the Determination Standards, as
described in sections II.b and II.c above, has
been met. The Council has developed an
analytic framework that groups all relevant
factors, including the 10 statutory
considerations and any additional riskrelated factors, into six categories: size,
interconnectedness, substitutability, leverage,

liquidity risk and maturity mismatch, and
existing regulatory scrutiny. The Council
expects to use these six categories to guide
its evaluation of whether a particular
nonbank financial company meets either
Determination Standard. However, the
Council’s ultimate determination decision
regarding a nonbank financial company will
not be based on a formulaic application of
the six categories. Rather, the Council
intends to analyze a nonbank financial
company using quantitative and qualitative
data relevant to each of the six categories, as
the Council determines is appropriate with
respect to the particular nonbank financial
company.
Each of the six categories reflects a
different dimension of a nonbank financial
company’s potential to pose a threat to U.S.
financial stability. Three of the six
categories—size, substitutability, and
interconnectedness—seek to assess the
potential impact of the nonbank financial
company’s financial distress on the broader
economy. Material financial distress at
nonbank financial companies that are large,

provide critical financial services for which
there are few substitutes, or are highly
interconnected with other financial firms or
markets are more likely to have a financial
or operational impact on other companies,
markets, and consumers that could pose a
threat to the financial stability of the United
States. The remaining three categories—
leverage, liquidity risk and maturity
mismatch, and existing regulatory scrutiny of
the nonbank financial company—seek to
assess the vulnerability of a nonbank
financial company to financial distress.
Nonbank financial companies that are highly
leveraged, have a high degree of liquidity risk
or maturity mismatch, and are under little or
no regulatory scrutiny are more likely to be
more vulnerable to financial distress.
Each of the statutory considerations in
sections 113(a)(2) and (b)(2) of the DoddFrank Act would be considered as part of one
or more of the six categories. This is reflected
in the following table, using the
considerations relevant to a U.S. nonbank
financial company for illustrative purposes.3

Statutory considerations:

Category or categories in which this consideration would be addressed:

(A) The extent of the leverage of the company ................................................................................
(B) The extent and nature of the off-balance-sheet exposures of the company ..............................
(C) The extent and nature of the transactions and relationships of the company with other significant nonbank financial companies and significant bank holding companies.
(D) The importance of the company as a source of credit for households, businesses, and State
and local governments and as a source of liquidity for the United States financial system.
(E) The importance of the company as a source of credit for low-income, minority, or underserved communities, and the impact that the failure of such company would have on the availability of credit in such communities.
(F) The extent to which assets are managed rather than owned by the company, and the extent
to which ownership of assets under management is diffuse.
(G) The nature, scope, size, scale, concentration, interconnectedness, and mix of the activities of
the company.
(H) The degree to which the company is already regulated by 1 or more primary financial regulatory agencies.
(I) The amount and nature of the financial assets of the company ..................................................
(J) The amount and types of the liabilities of the company, including the degree of reliance on
short-term funding.
(K) Any other risk-related factors that the Council deems appropriate .............................................

Leverage.
Size; interconnectedness.
Interconnectedness.

2. Six-Category Framework
The discussion below describes each of the
six categories and how these categories relate
to a firm’s likelihood to pose a threat to
financial stability. The sample metrics set
forth below under each category are
representative, not exhaustive, and may not
apply to all nonbank financial companies
under evaluation. The Council may apply the
sample metrics in the context of stressed
market conditions.
Interconnectedness
Interconnectedness captures direct or
indirect linkages between financial
companies that may be conduits for the
transmission of the effects resulting from a
nonbank financial company’s material
financial distress or activities. Examples of

the key conduits through which the effects
may travel are a nonbank financial
company’s direct or indirect exposures to
counterparties (including creditors, trading
and derivatives counterparties, investors,
borrowers, and other participants in the
financial markets). Interconnectedness
depends not only on the number of
counterparties that a nonbank financial
company has, but also on the importance of
that nonbank financial company to its
counterparties and the extent to which the
counterparties are interconnected with other
financial firms, the financial system and the
broader economy. The Council’s assessment
of interconnectedness is intended to
determine whether a nonbank financial
company’s exposure to its counterparties
would pose a threat to U.S. financial stability

3 The corresponding statutory considerations for
a foreign nonbank financial company would be

considered under the relevant categories indicated
in the table.

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Size; substitutability.
Substitutability.
Size; interconnectedness; substitutability.
Size; interconnectedness; substitutability.
Existing regulatory scrutiny.
Size; interconnectedness.
Liquidity risk and maturity mismatch; size;
interconnectedness.
Appropriate category or categories based on
the nature of the additional risk-related factor.

if that company encountered material
financial distress.
For example, metrics that may be used to
assess interconnectedness include:
• Counterparties’ exposures to a nonbank
financial company, including derivatives,
reinsurance, loans, securities borrowing and
lending, and lines of credit that facilitate
settlement and clearing activities.
• Number, size, and financial strength of a
nonbank financial company’s counterparties,
including the proportion of its
counterparties’ exposure to the nonbank
financial company relative to the
counterparties’ capital.
• Identity of a nonbank financial
company’s principal contractual
counterparties, which reflects the
concentration of the nonbank financial

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company’s assets financed by particular firms
and the importance of the nonbank financial
company’s counterparties to the market.
• Aggregate amounts of a nonbank
financial company’s gross or net derivatives
exposures and the number of its derivatives
counterparties.
• The amount of gross notional credit
default swaps outstanding for which a
nonbank financial company or its parent is
the reference entity.
• Total debt outstanding, which captures a
nonbank financial company’s sources of
funding.
• Reinsurance obligations, which measure
the reinsurance risk assumed from nonaffiliates net of retrocession.
Substitutability
Substitutability captures the extent to
which other firms could provide similar
financial services in a timely manner at a
similar price and quantity if a nonbank
financial company withdraws from a
particular market. Substitutability also
captures situations in which a nonbank
financial company is the primary or
dominant provider of services in a market
that the Council determines to be essential to
U.S. financial stability. An example of the
manner in which the Council may determine
a nonbank financial company’s
substitutability is to consider its market
share. The Council’s evaluation of a nonbank
financial company’s market share regarding a
particular product or service will include
assessments of the ability of the nonbank
financial company’s competitors to expand to
meet market needs; the costs that market
participants would incur if forced to switch
providers; the timeframe within which a
disruption in the provision of the product or
service would materially affect market
participants or market functioning; and the
economic implications of such a disruption.
Concern about a potential lack of
substitutability could be greater if a nonbank
financial company and its competitors are
likely to experience stress at the same time
because they are exposed to the same risks.
The Council may also analyze a nonbank
financial company’s core operations and
critical functions and the importance of those
operations and functions to the U.S. financial
system and assess how those operations and
functions would be performed by the
nonbank financial company or other market
participants in the event of the nonbank
financial company’s material financial
distress. The Council also intends to consider
substitutability with respect to any nonbank
financial company with global operations to
identify the substitutability of critical market
functions that the company provides in the
United States in the event of material
financial distress of a foreign parent
company.
For example, metrics that may be used to
assess substitutability include:
• The market share, using the appropriate
quantitative measure (such as loans
originated, loans outstanding, and notional
transaction volume) of a nonbank financial
company and its competitors in the market
under consideration.
• The stability of market share across the
firms in the market over time.

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• The market share of the company and its
competitors for products or services that
serve a substantially similar economic
function as the primary market under
consideration.
Size
Size captures the amount of financial
services or financial intermediation that a
nonbank financial company provides. Size
also may affect the extent to which the effects
of a nonbank financial company’s financial
distress are transmitted to other firms and to
the financial system. For example, financial
distress at an extremely large nonbank
financial company that is highly
interconnected likely would transmit risk on
a larger scale than would financial distress at
a smaller nonbank financial company that is
similarly interconnected. Size is
conventionally measured by the assets,
liabilities and capital of the firm. However,
such measures of size may not provide
complete or accurate assessments of the scale
of a nonbank financial company’s risk
potential. Thus, the Council also intends to
take into account off-balance sheet assets and
liabilities and assets under management in a
manner that recognizes the unique and
distinct nature of these classes. Other
measures of size, such as numbers of
customers and counterparties, may also be
relevant.
For example, metrics that may be used to
assess size include:
• Total consolidated assets or liabilities, as
determined under generally accepted
accounting principles in the United States
(‘‘GAAP’’) or the nonbank financial
company’s applicable financial reporting
standards, depending on the availability of
data and the stage of the determination
process.
• Total risk-weighted assets, as appropriate
for different industry sectors.
• Off-balance sheet exposures where a
nonbank financial company has a risk of loss,
including, for example, lines of credit. For
foreign nonbank financial companies, this
would be evaluated based on the extent and
nature of U.S.-related off-balance sheet
exposures.
• The extent to which assets are managed
rather than owned by a nonbank financial
company and the extent to which ownership
of assets under management is diffuse.
• Direct written premiums, as reported by
insurance companies. This is the aggregate of
direct written premiums reported by
insurance entities under all lines of business
and serves as a proxy for the amount of
insurance underwritten by the insurance
entities.
• Risk in force, which is the aggregate risk
exposure from risk underwritten in insurance
related to certain financial risks, such as
mortgage insurance.
• Total loan originations, by loan type, in
number and dollar amount.
Leverage
Leverage captures a company’s exposure or
risk in relation to its equity capital. Leverage
amplifies a company’s risk of financial
distress in two ways. First, by increasing a
company’s exposure relative to capital,
leverage raises the likelihood that a company

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will suffer losses exceeding its capital.
Second, by increasing the size of a company’s
liabilities, leverage raises a company’s
dependence on its creditors’ willingness and
ability to fund its balance sheet. Leverage can
also amplify the impact of a company’s
distress on other companies, both directly, by
increasing the amount of exposure that other
firms have to the company, and indirectly, by
increasing the size of any asset liquidation
that the company is forced to undertake as
it comes under financial pressure. Leverage
can be measured by the ratio of assets to
capital, but it can also be defined in terms
of risk, as a measure of economic risk relative
to capital. The latter measurement can better
capture the effect of derivatives and other
products with embedded leverage on the risk
undertaken by a nonbank financial company.
For example, metrics that may be used to
assess leverage include:
• Total assets and total debt measured
relative to total equity, which is intended to
measure financial leverage.
• Gross notional exposure of derivatives
and off-balance sheet obligations relative to
total equity or to net assets under
management, which is intended to show how
much off-balance sheet leverage a nonbank
financial company may have.
• The ratio of risk to statutory capital,
which is relevant to certain insurance
companies and is intended to show how
much risk exposure a nonbank financial
company has in relation to its ability to
absorb loss.
• Changes in leverage ratios, which may
indicate that a nonbank financial company is
rapidly increasing its risk profile.
Liquidity Risk and Maturity Mismatch
Liquidity risk generally refers to the risk
that a company may not have sufficient
funding to satisfy its short-term needs, either
through its cash flows, maturing assets, or
assets salable at prices equivalent to book
value, or through its ability to access funding
markets. For example, if a company holds
assets that are illiquid or that are subject to
significant decreases in market value during
times of market stress, the company may be
unable to liquidate its assets effectively in
response to a loss of funding. In order to
assess liquidity, the Council may examine a
nonbank financial company’s assets to
determine if it possesses cash instruments or
readily marketable securities, such as
Treasury securities, which could reasonably
be expected to have a liquid market in times
of distress. The Council may also review a
nonbank financial company’s debt profile to
determine if it has adequate long-term
funding, or can otherwise mitigate liquidity
risk. Liquidity problems also can arise from
a company’s inability to roll maturing debt or
to satisfy margin calls, and from demands for
additional collateral, depositor withdrawals,
draws on committed lines, and other
potential draws on liquidity.
A maturity mismatch generally refers to the
difference between the maturities of a
company’s assets and liabilities. A maturity
mismatch affects a company’s ability to
survive a period of stress that may limit its
access to funding and to withstand shocks in
the yield curve. For example, if a company
relies on short-term funding to finance

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longer-term positions, it will be subject to
significant refunding risk that may force it to
sell assets at low market prices or potentially
suffer through significant margin pressure.
However, maturity mismatches are not
confined to the use of short-term liabilities
and can exist at any point in the maturity
schedule of a nonbank financial company’s
assets and liabilities. For example, in the case
of a life insurance company, liabilities may
have maturities of 30 years or more, whereas
the market availability of equivalently longterm assets may be limited, exposing the
company to interest rate fluctuations and
reinvestment risk.
For example, metrics that may be used to
assess liquidity and maturity mismatch
include:
• Fraction of assets that are classified as
level 2 and level 3 under applicable
accounting standards, as a measure of how
much of a nonbank financial company’s
balance sheet is composed of hard-to-value
and potentially illiquid securities.
• Liquid asset ratios, which are intended
to indicate a nonbank financial company’s
ability to repay its short-term debt.
• The ratio of unencumbered and highly
liquid assets to the net cash outflows that a
nonbank financial company could encounter
in a short-term stress scenario.
• Callable debt as a fraction of total debt,
which provides one measure of a nonbank
financial company’s ability to manage its
funding position in response to changes in
interest rates.
• Asset-backed funding versus other
funding, to determine a nonbank financial
company’s susceptibility to distress in
particular credit markets.
• Asset-liability duration and gap analysis,
which is intended to indicate how well a
nonbank financial company is matching the
re-pricing and maturity of the nonbank
financial company’s assets and liabilities.
• Short-term debt as a percentage of total
debt and as a percentage of total assets,
which indicates a nonbank financial
company’s reliance on short-term debt
markets.
Existing Regulatory Scrutiny
The Council will consider the extent to
which nonbank financial companies are
already subject to regulation, including the
consistency of that regulation across nonbank
financial companies within a sector, across
different sectors, and providing similar
services, and the statutory authority of those
regulators.
For example, metrics that may be used to
assess existing regulatory scrutiny include:
• The extent of state or federal regulatory
scrutiny, including processes or systems for
peer review; inter-regulatory coordination
and cooperation; and whether existing
regulators have the ability to impose detailed
and timely reporting obligations, capital and
liquidity requirements, and enforcement
actions, and to resolve the company.
• Existence and effectiveness of
consolidated supervision, and a
determination of whether and how nonregulated entities and groups within a
nonbank financial company are supervised
on a group-wide basis.

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• For entities based outside the United
States, the extent to which a nonbank
financial company is subject to prudential
standards on a consolidated basis in its home
country that are administered and enforced
by a comparable foreign supervisory
authority.
III. The Determination Process
The Council expects generally to follow a
three-stage process of increasingly in-depth
evaluation and analysis leading up to a
proposed determination (a ‘‘Proposed
Determination’’) that a nonbank financial
company could pose a threat to the financial
stability of the United States. Quantitative
metrics, together with qualitative analysis,
will inform the judgment of the Council
when it is evaluating a nonbank financial
company for a Proposed Determination. The
purpose of this process is to help determine
whether a nonbank financial company could
pose a threat to the financial stability of the
United States.
In the first stage of the process (‘‘Stage 1’’),
a set of uniform quantitative metrics will be
applied to a broad group of nonbank
financial companies in order to identify
nonbank financial companies for further
evaluation and to provide clarity for nonbank
financial companies that likely will not be
subject to further evaluation. In Stage 1, the
Council will rely solely on information
available through existing public and
regulatory sources. The purpose of Stage 1 is
to enable the Council to identify a group of
nonbank financial companies that are most
likely to satisfy one of the Determination
Standards.
In the second stage (‘‘Stage 2’’), the
nonbank financial companies identified in
Stage 1 will be analyzed and prioritized,
based on a wide range of quantitative and
qualitative information available to the
Council primarily through public and
regulatory sources. The Council will also
begin the consultation process with the
primary financial regulatory agencies or
home country supervisors, as appropriate. As
part of that consultation process, the Council
intends to consult with the primary financial
regulatory agency, if any, of each significant
subsidiary of the nonbank financial
company, to the extent the Council deems
appropriate. The Council also intends to
fulfill its statutory obligation to rely
whenever possible on information available
through the Office of Financial Research (the
‘‘OFR’’), member agencies, or the nonbank
financial company’s primary financial
regulatory agencies before requiring the
submission of reports from any nonbank
financial company.4
Following Stage 2, nonbank financial
companies that are selected for additional
review will receive notice that they are being
considered for a Proposed Determination and
will be subject to in-depth evaluation during
the third stage of review (‘‘Stage 3’’). Stage 3
will involve the evaluation of information
collected directly from the nonbank financial
company, in addition to the information
considered during Stages 1 and 2. At the end
of Stage 3, the Council may consider whether
4 See

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to make a Proposed Determination with
respect to the nonbank financial company. If
a Proposed Determination is made by the
Council, the nonbank financial company may
request a hearing in accordance with section
113(e) of the Dodd-Frank Act and
§ 1310.21(c) of the Council’s rule.5
The Council expects to follow this threestage process and to consider the categories,
metrics, thresholds, and channels described
in this guidance to assess a nonbank financial
company’s potential to pose a threat to U.S.
financial stability. In addition to the
information described herein that the
Council generally expects to consider, the
Council also will consider quantitative and
qualitative information that it deems relevant
to a particular nonbank financial company,
as each determination will be made on a
company-specific basis. The Council may
consider any nonbank financial company for
a Proposed Determination at any point in the
three-stage evaluation process described in
this guidance if the Council believes such
company could pose a threat to U.S. financial
stability.
a. Stage 1: Initial Identification of Nonbank
Financial Companies for Evaluation
In Stage 1, the Council will seek to identify
a set of nonbank financial companies that
merit company-specific evaluation. In this
stage, the Council intends to apply
quantitative thresholds to a broad group of
nonbank financial companies. A nonbank
financial company that is selected for further
evaluation during Stage 1 will be assessed
during Stage 2. During the Stage 1 process,
the Council will evaluate nonbank financial
companies using only data available to the
Council, such as publicly available
information and information member
agencies possess in their supervisory
capacities.
In the Stage 1 quantitative analysis, the
Council intends to apply thresholds that
relate to the framework categories of size,
interconnectedness, leverage, and liquidity
risk and maturity mismatch. These
thresholds were selected based on (1) their
applicability to nonbank financial companies
that operate in different types of financial
markets and industries, (2) the meaningful
initial assessment that such thresholds
provide regarding the potential for a nonbank
financial company to pose a threat to
financial stability in diverse financial
markets, and (3) the current availability of
data. These thresholds are intended to
measure both the susceptibility of a nonbank
financial company to financial distress and
the potential for that nonbank financial
company’s financial distress to spread
throughout the financial system. A nonbank
financial company will be evaluated further
in Stage 2 if it meets both the total
consolidated assets threshold and any one of
the other thresholds.6 The thresholds are:
5 See

12 CFR 1310.21(c).
the Council expects that its
determinations under section 113 of the DoddFrank Act will be with respect to individual legal
entities, the Council has authority to assess
nonbank financial companies, and their
relationships with other nonbank financial
companies and market participants, in a manner
6 While

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• Total Consolidated Assets. The Council
intends to apply a size threshold of $50
billion in total consolidated assets. This
threshold is consistent with the Dodd-Frank
Act threshold of $50 billion in assets for
subjecting bank holding companies to
enhanced prudential standards.
• Credit Default Swaps Outstanding. The
Council intends to apply a threshold of $30
billion in gross notional credit default swaps
(‘‘CDS’’) outstanding for which a nonbank
financial company is the reference entity.
Gross notional value equals the sum of CDS
contracts bought (or equivalently sold). If the
amount of CDS sold on a particular nonbank
financial company is greater than $30 billion,
this indicates that a large number of
institutions may be exposed to that nonbank
financial company and that if the nonbank
financial company fails, a significant number
of financial market participants may be
affected. This threshold was selected based
on an analysis of the distribution of
outstanding CDS data for nonbank financial
companies included in a list of the top 1,000
CDS reference entities.
• Derivative Liabilities. The Council
intends to apply a threshold of $3.5 billion
of derivative liabilities. Derivative liabilities
equal the fair value of derivative contracts in
a negative position. For nonbank financial
companies that disclose the effects of master
netting agreements and cash collateral held
with the same counterparty on a net basis,
the Council intends to calculate derivative
liabilities after taking into account the effects
of these arrangements. This threshold serves
as a proxy for interconnectedness, as a
nonbank financial company that has a greater
level of derivative liabilities would have
higher counterparty exposure throughout the
financial system.
• Total Debt Outstanding. The Council
intends to apply a threshold of $20 billion in
total debt outstanding. The Council will
define total debt outstanding broadly and
regardless of maturity to include loans
(whether secured or unsecured), bonds,
repurchase agreements, commercial paper,
securities lending arrangements, surplus
notes (for insurance companies), and other
forms of indebtedness. This threshold serves
as a proxy for interconnectedness, as
nonbank financial companies with a large
amount of outstanding debt are generally
more interconnected with the broader
financial system, in part because financial
institutions hold a large proportion of
outstanding debt. An analysis of the
distribution of debt outstanding for a sample
of nonbank financial companies was
performed to determine the $20 billion
threshold. Historical testing of this threshold
demonstrated that it would have captured
that addresses the statutory considerations and such
other factors as the Council deems appropriate. For
example, for purposes of applying the six
thresholds to investment funds (including private
equity firms and hedge funds), the Council may
consider the aggregate risks posed by separate funds
that are managed by the same adviser, particularly
if the funds’ investments are identical or highly
similar. In performing this analysis, the Council
may use data reported on Form PF with the
Securities and Exchange Commission or the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission.

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many of the nonbank financial companies
that encountered material financial distress
during the financial crisis in 2007–2008,
including Bear Stearns, Countrywide, and
Lehman Brothers.
• Leverage Ratio. The Council intends to
apply a threshold leverage ratio of total
consolidated assets (excluding separate
accounts) to total equity of 15 to 1. The
Council intends to exclude separate accounts
from this calculation because separate
accounts are not available to claims by
general creditors of a nonbank financial
company. Measuring leverage in this manner
benefits from simplicity, availability and
comparability across industries. An analysis
of the distribution of the historical leverage
ratios of large financial institutions was used
to identify the 15 to 1 threshold. Historical
testing of this threshold demonstrated that it
would have captured the major nonbank
financial companies that encountered
material financial distress and posed a threat
to U.S. financial stability during the financial
crisis, including Bear Stearns, Countrywide,
IndyMac Bancorp, and Lehman Brothers.
• Short-Term Debt Ratio. The Council
intends to apply a threshold ratio of total
debt outstanding (as defined above) with a
maturity of less than 12 months to total
consolidated assets (excluding separate
accounts) of 10 percent. An analysis of the
historical distribution of the short-term debt
ratios of large financial institutions was used
to determine the 10 percent threshold.
Historical testing of this threshold
demonstrated that it would have captured a
number of the nonbank financial companies
that faced short-term funding issues during
the financial crisis, including Bear Stearns
and Lehman Brothers.
The Council intends generally to apply the
Stage 1 thresholds using GAAP when such
information is available. If GAAP information
with respect to a nonbank financial company
is not available, the Council may rely on data
reported under statutory accounting
principles, international financial reporting
standards, or such other data as are available
to the Council.
For purposes of evaluating any U.S.
nonbank financial company, the Council
intends to apply each of the Stage 1
thresholds based on the global assets,
liabilities and operations of the company and
its subsidiaries. In contrast, for purposes of
evaluating any foreign nonbank financial
company, the Council intends to calculate
the Stage 1 thresholds based solely on the
U.S. assets, liabilities and operations of the
foreign nonbank financial company and its
subsidiaries.
The Council intends to reapply the Stage
1 thresholds to nonbank financial companies
using the most recently available data on a
quarterly basis, or less frequently for
nonbank financial companies with respect to
which quarterly data are unavailable.
The Council intends to review the
appropriateness of both the Stage 1
thresholds and the levels of the thresholds
that are specified in dollars as needed, but at
least every five years, and to adjust the
thresholds and levels as the Council may
deem advisable.
The Stage 1 thresholds are intended to
identify nonbank financial companies for

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further evaluation by the Council and to help
a nonbank financial company predict
whether such company will be subject to
additional review. Because the uniform
quantitative thresholds may not capture all
types of nonbank financial companies and all
of the potential ways in which a nonbank
financial company could pose a threat to
financial stability, the Council may initially
evaluate any nonbank financial company
based on other firm-specific qualitative or
quantitative factors, irrespective of whether
such company meets the thresholds in Stage
1.
A nonbank financial company that is
identified for further evaluation in Stage 1
would be further assessed during Stage 2 (the
‘‘Stage 2 Pool’’).
b. Stage 2: Review and Prioritization of Stage
2 Pool
After the Stage 2 Pool has been identified,
the Council intends to conduct a robust
analysis of the potential threat that each of
those nonbank financial companies could
pose to U.S. financial stability. In general,
this analysis will be based on information
already available to the Council through
existing public and regulatory sources,
including information possessed by the
company’s primary financial regulatory
agency or home country supervisor, as
appropriate, and information voluntarily
submitted by the company. In contrast to the
application of uniform quantitative
thresholds to a broad group of nonbank
financial companies in Stage 1, the Council
intends to evaluate the risk profile and
characteristics of each individual nonbank
financial company in the Stage 2 Pool based
on a wide range of quantitative and
qualitative industry-specific and companyspecific factors. This analysis will use the
six-category analytic framework described in
section II.d above. In addition, the Stage 2
evaluation will include a review, based on
available data, of qualitative factors,
including whether the resolution of a
nonbank financial company, as described
below, could pose a threat to U.S. financial
stability, and the extent to which the
nonbank financial company is subject to
regulation.
Based on this analysis, the Council intends
to contact those nonbank financial
companies that the Council believes merit
further evaluation in Stage 3 (the ‘‘Stage 3
Pool’’).
c. Stage 3: Review of Stage 3 Pool
In Stage 3, the Council, working with the
OFR, will conduct a review of each nonbank
financial company in the Stage 3 Pool using
information collected directly from the
nonbank financial company, as well as the
information used in the first two stages. The
review will focus on whether the nonbank
financial company could pose a threat to U.S.
financial stability because of the company’s
material financial distress or the nature,
scope, size, scale, concentration,
interconnectedness, or mix of the activities of
the company. The transmission channels
discussed above, and other appropriate
factors, will be used to evaluate a nonbank
financial company’s potential to pose a threat

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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 70 / Wednesday, April 11, 2012 / Rules and Regulations

wreier-aviles on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with RULES

to U.S. financial stability. The analytic
framework consisting of the six categories set
forth above, and the metrics used to measure
each of the six categories, will assist the
Council in assessing the extent to which the
transmission of material financial distress is
likely to occur.
Each nonbank financial company in the
Stage 3 Pool will receive a notice (a ‘‘Notice
of Consideration’’) that the nonbank financial
company is under consideration for a
Proposed Determination. The Notice of
Consideration likely will include a request
that the nonbank financial company provide
information that the Council deems relevant
to the Council’s evaluation, and the nonbank
financial company will be provided an
opportunity to submit written materials to
the Council.7 This information will generally
be collected by the OFR.8 Before requiring
the submission of reports from any nonbank
financial company that is regulated by a
member agency or any primary financial
regulatory agency, the Council, acting
through the OFR, will coordinate with such
agencies and will, whenever possible, rely on
information available from the OFR or such
agencies. Council members and their
agencies and staffs will maintain the
confidentiality of such information in
accordance with applicable law.
Information requests likely will involve
both qualitative and quantitative data.
Information relevant to the Council’s analysis
may include confidential business
information such as internal assessments,
internal risk management procedures,
funding details, counterparty exposure or
position data, strategic plans, resolvability,
potential acquisitions or dispositions, and
other anticipated changes to the nonbank
financial company’s business or structure
that could affect the threat to U.S. financial
stability posed by the nonbank financial
company.
In evaluating qualitative factors during
Stage 3, the Council expects to have access,
to a greater degree than during earlier stages
of review, to information relating to factors
that are not easily quantifiable or that may
not directly cause a company to pose a threat
to financial stability, but could mitigate or
aggravate the potential of a nonbank financial
company to pose a threat to the United
States. Such factors may include the opacity
of the nonbank financial company’s
operations, its complexity, and the extent to
which it is subject to existing regulatory
scrutiny and the nature of such scrutiny.
The Stage 3 analysis will also include an
evaluation of a nonbank financial company’s
resolvability, which may mitigate or
aggravate the potential of a nonbank financial
company to pose a threat to U.S. financial
stability. An evaluation of a nonbank
financial company’s resolvability entails an
assessment of the complexity of the nonbank
7 See

section 1310.21(a) of the rule.
section 112(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act, if
the Council is unable to determine whether a U.S.
nonbank financial company poses a threat to U.S.
financial stability based on such information, the
Council may request that the Board of Governors
conduct an examination of the nonbank financial
company to determine whether it should be
supervised by the Board of Governors.
8 Under

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financial company’s legal, funding, and
operational structure, and any obstacles to
the rapid and orderly resolution of the
nonbank financial company in a manner that
would mitigate the risk that the nonbank
financial company’s failure would have a
material adverse effect on financial stability.
In addition to the factors described above, a
nonbank financial company’s resolvability is
also a function of legal entity and crossborder operations issues. These factors
include the ability to separate functions and
spin off services or business lines; the
likelihood of preserving franchise value in a
recovery or resolution scenario, and of
maintaining continuity of critical services
within the existing or in a new legal entity
or structure; the degree of the nonbank
financial company’s intra-group dependency
for liquidity and funding, payment operation,
and risk management needs; and the size and
nature of the nonbank financial company’s
intra-group transactions.
The Council anticipates that the
information necessary to conduct an in-depth
analysis of a particular nonbank financial
company may vary significantly based on the
nonbank financial company’s business and
activities and the information already
available to the Council from existing public
sources and domestic or foreign regulatory
authorities. The Council will also consult
with the primary financial regulatory agency,
if any, for each nonbank financial company
or subsidiary of a nonbank financial
company under consideration in a timely
manner before the Council makes any final
determination with respect to such nonbank
financial company, and with appropriate
foreign regulatory authorities, to the extent
appropriate.
Before making a Proposed Determination,
the Council intends to notify each nonbank
financial company in the Stage 3 Pool when
the Council believes that the evidentiary
record regarding such nonbank financial
company is complete.
Based on the analysis performed in Stages
2 and 3, a nonbank financial company will
be considered for a Proposed Determination.
Before a vote of the Council with respect to
a particular nonbank financial company, the
Council members will review information
relevant to the consideration of the nonbank
financial company for a Proposed
Determination. After this review, the Council
may, by a vote of two-thirds of its members
(including an affirmative vote of the Council
Chairperson), make a Proposed
Determination with respect to the nonbank
financial company. Following a Proposed
Determination, the Council intends to issue
a written notice of the Proposed
Determination to the nonbank financial
company, which will include an explanation
of the basis of the Proposed Determination.
The Council expects to notify any nonbank
financial company in the Stage 3 Pool if the
nonbank financial company, either before or
after a Proposed Determination of such
nonbank financial company, ceases to be
considered for determination. Any nonbank
financial company that ceases to be
considered at any time in the Council’s
determination process may be considered for
a Proposed Determination in the future at the
Council’s discretion.

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A nonbank financial company that is
subject to a Proposed Determination may
request a nonpublic hearing to contest the
Proposed Determination in accordance with
section 113(e) of the Dodd-Frank Act. If the
nonbank financial company requests a
hearing in accordance with the procedures
set forth in § 1310.21(c) of the Council’s
rule,9 the Council will set a time and place
for such hearing. The Council will (after a
hearing, if a hearing is requested), determine
by a vote of two-thirds of the voting members
of the Council (including the affirmative vote
of the Chairperson) whether to subject such
company to supervision by the Board of
Governors and prudential standards. The
Council will provide the nonbank financial
company with written notice of the Council’s
final determination, including an explanation
of the basis for the Council’s decision. When
practicable and consistent with the purposes
of the determination process, the Council
intends to provide a nonbank financial
company with a notice of a final
determination at least one business day
before publicly announcing the
determination pursuant to § 1310.21(d)(3),
§ 1310.21(e)(3) or § 1310.22(d)(3) of the
Council’s rule.10 The Council does not intend
to publicly announce the name of any
nonbank financial company that is under
evaluation for a determination prior to a final
determination with respect to such company.
In accordance with section 113(h) of the
Dodd-Frank Act, a nonbank financial
company that is subject to a final
determination may bring an action in U.S.
district court for an order requiring that the
determination be rescinded.
Dated: April 3, 2012.
Rebecca Ewing,
Acting Executive Secretary, Department of
the Treasury.
[FR Doc. 2012–8627 Filed 4–10–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–25–P–P

DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 71
[Docket No. FAA–2012–0099; Airspace
Docket No. 12–ASO–11]

Amendment of Class D Airspace;
Cocoa Beach, FL
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Final rule, technical
amendment.
AGENCY:

This action amends Class D
airspace at Cape Canaveral Skid Strip,
Cocoa Beach, FL, by correcting the
geographic coordinates of the airport to
aid in the navigation of our National
Airspace System and by removing the

SUMMARY:

9 See

12 CFR 1310.21(c).
12 CFR 1310.21(d)(3), 1310.21(e)(3) and
1310.22(d)(3).
10 See

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