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Vol. 79

Thursday,

No. 59

March 27, 2014

Part II

Federal Reserve System

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12 CFR Part 252
Enhanced Prudential Standards for Bank Holding Companies and Foreign
Banking Organizations; Final Rule

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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 59 / Thursday, March 27, 2014 / Rules and Regulations

FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 252
[Regulation YY; Docket No. 1438]
RIN 7100–AD–86

Enhanced Prudential Standards for
Bank Holding Companies and Foreign
Banking Organizations
Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System (Board), Federal
Reserve System.
ACTION: Final rule; request for public
comment on Paperwork Reduction Act
burden estimates only.
AGENCY:

The Board is adopting
amendments to Regulation YY to
implement certain of the enhanced
prudential standards required to be
established under section 165 of the
Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act for bank
holding companies and foreign banking
organizations with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more. The
enhanced prudential standards include
risk-based and leverage capital
requirements, liquidity standards,
requirements for overall risk
management (including establishing a
risk committee), stress-test
requirements, and a 15-to-1 debt-toequity limit for companies that the
Financial Stability Oversight Council
(Council) has determined pose a grave
threat to financial stability. The
amendments also establish riskcommittee requirements and capital
stress-testing requirements for certain
bank holding companies and foreign
banking organizations with total
consolidated assets of $10 billion or
more. The rule does not impose
enhanced prudential standards on
nonbank financial companies
designated by the Council for
supervision by the Board.
DATES: Effective date: June 1, 2014.
Comments must be submitted on the
Paperwork Reduction Act burden
estimates only by May 27, 2014.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
on the Paperwork Reduction Act burden
estimates only, identified by Docket No.
R–1438 and RIN 7100 AD 86, by any of
the following methods:
• Agency Web Site: http://
www.federalreserve.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments at
http://www.federalreserve.gov/
generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Email: regs.comments@
federalreserve.gov. Include docket and

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SUMMARY:

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RIN numbers in the subject line of the
message.
• FAX: (202) 452–3819 or (202) 452–
3102.
• Mail: Robert deV. Frierson,
Secretary, Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, 20th Street and
Constitution Avenue NW., Washington,
DC 20551.
All public comments are available
from the Board’s Web site at http://
www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/
foia/ProposedRegs.cfm as submitted,
unless modified for technical reasons.
Accordingly, your comments will not be
edited to remove any identifying or
contact information. Public comments
may also be viewed electronically or in
paper form in Room MP–500 of the
Board’s Martin Building (20th and C
Streets NW., Washington, DC 20551)
between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. on
weekdays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:

Mark E. Van Der Weide, Senior
Associate Director, (202) 452–2263,
Elizabeth MacDonald, Senior
Supervisory Financial Analyst, (202)
475–6316, Jordan Bleicher, Supervisory
Financial Analyst, (202) 973–6123,
Division of Banking Supervision and
Regulation; or Laurie Schaffer, Associate
General Counsel, (202) 452–2277, or
Christine E. Graham, Counsel, (202)
452–3005, Legal Division.
Risk-Based and Leverage Capital
Requirements: Anna Lee Hewko, Deputy
Associate Director, (202) 530–6260, or
Elizabeth MacDonald, Senior
Supervisory Financial Analyst, (202)
475–6316, Division of Banking
Supervision and Regulation; or
Benjamin W. McDonough, Senior
Counsel, (202) 452–2036, or April C.
Snyder, Senior Counsel, (202) 452–
3099, Legal Division.
Liquidity Requirements: David
Emmel, Manager, (202) 603–9017,
Division of Banking Supervision and
Regulation; or April C. Snyder, Senior
Counsel, (202) 452–3099, or Dafina
Stewart, Senior Attorney, (202) 452–
3876, Legal Division.
Risk Management and Risk
Committee Requirements: David E.
Palmer, Senior Supervisory Financial
Analyst, (202) 452–2904, Division of
Banking Supervision and Regulation; or
Jeremy C. Kress, Attorney, (202) 872–
7589, Legal Division.
Stress-Test Requirements: Tim Clark,
Senior Associate Director, (202) 452–
5264, Lisa Ryu, Deputy Associate
Director, (202) 263–4833, or Joseph Cox,
Financial Analyst, (202) 452–3216,
Division of Banking Supervision and
Regulation; or Benjamin W.
McDonough, Senior Counsel, (202) 452–

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2036, or Christine E. Graham, Counsel,
(202) 452–3005, Legal Division.
Debt-to-Equity Limits: Elizabeth
MacDonald, Senior Supervisory
Financial Analyst, (202) 475–6316,
Division of Banking Supervision and
Regulation; or Benjamin W.
McDonough, Senior Counsel, (202) 452–
2036, or David W. Alexander, Senior
Attorney, (202) 452–2877, Legal
Division.
U.S. Intermediate Holding Company
Requirement for Foreign Banking
Organizations: Elizabeth MacDonald,
Senior Supervisory Financial Analyst,
(202) 475–6316, Division of Banking
Supervision and Regulation; or
Benjamin W. McDonough, Senior
Counsel, (202) 452–2036, April C.
Snyder, Senior Counsel, (202) 452–
3099, Christine E. Graham, Counsel,
(202) 452–3005, or David W. Alexander,
Senior Attorney, (202) 452–2877, Legal
Division.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Introduction
A. The Dodd-Frank Act Mandate
B. Background of the Proposals and
Overview of the Final Rule
II. Final Rule and Major Changes From the
Proposals
A. Description of the Final Rule
B. Major Changes From the Proposals
1. Threshold for Forming a U.S.
Intermediate Holding Company
2. Implementation Timing for Foreign
Banking Organizations
3. Nonbank Financial Companies
Supervised by the Board
4. Other Changes
C. Application to Savings and Loan
Holding Companies Engaged in
Substantial Banking Activities
III. Enhanced Prudential Standards for Bank
Holding Companies
A. Enhanced Risk-Based and Leverage
Capital Requirements, Capital Planning
and Stress Testing
1. Capital Planning and Stress Testing
2. Risk-Based Capital and Leverage
Requirements
B. Risk Management and Risk Committee
Requirements
1. Responsibilities of the Risk Committee
2. Risk Committee Requirements
3. Risk Committee for Bank Holding
Companies With Total Consolidated
Assets of More Than $10 Billion and Less
Than $50 Billion
3. Additional Enhanced Risk-Management
Standards for Bank Holding Companies
With Total Consolidated Assets of $50
Billion or More
C. Liquidity Requirements for Bank
Holding Companies
1. General
2. Framework for Managing Liquidity Risk
3. Independent Review
4. Cash-flow Projections
5. Contingency Funding Plan
6. Liquidity Risk Limits

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7. Collateral, Legal Entity, and Intraday
Liquidity Risk Monitoring
8. Liquidity Stress Testing
9. Liquidity Buffer
10. Short-Term Debt Limits
D. Debt-to-Equity Limits for Bank Holding
Companies
IV. Enhanced Prudential Standards for
Foreign Banking Organizations
A. Background
1. Considerations in Developing the
Proposal
2. The Financial Stability Mandate of the
Dodd-Frank Act
3. Summary of the Proposal
4. Targeted Adjustments to Foreign Bank
Regulation
B. U.S. Intermediate Holding Company
Requirement
1. Adopting the U.S. Intermediate Holding
Company Requirement as an Additional
Prudential Standard
2. Restructuring Costs
3. Scope of the Application of the U.S.
Intermediate Holding Company
Requirement
4. Method for Calculating the Asset
Threshold
5. Formation of the U.S. Intermediate
Holding Company
6. Virtual U.S. Intermediate Holding
Company
7. Application of the Enhanced Prudential
Standards to a Bank Holding Company
That Is a Subsidiary of a Foreign
Banking Organization
C. Capital Requirements
1. Risk-Based and Leverage Capital
Requirements Applicable to U.S.
Intermediate Holding Companies
2. Capital Planning Requirements
3. Parent Capital Requirements
D. Risk Management Requirements for
Foreign Banking Organizations
1. Risk Committee Requirements for
Foreign Banking Organizations With $10
Billion or More in Total Consolidated
Assets But Less Than $50 Billion in
Combined U.S. Assets
2. Risk-Management and Risk Committee
Requirements for Foreign Banking
Organizations With Combined U.S.
Assets of $50 Billion or More
E. Liquidity Requirements for Foreign
Banking Organizations
1. General Comments
2. Framework for Managing Liquidity Risk
3. Independent Review
4. Cash-Flow Projections
5. Contingency Funding Plan
6. Liquidity Risk Limits
7. Collateral, Legal Entity and Intraday
Liquidity Risk Monitoring
8. Liquidity Stress Testing
9. Liquidity Buffer
10. Liquidity Requirements for Foreign
Banking Organizations With Total
Consolidated Assets of $50 Billion or
More and Combined U.S. Assets of Less
Than $50 Billion
11. Short-Term Debt Limits
F. Stress-Test Requirements for Foreign
Banking Organizations
1. U.S. Intermediate Holding Companies
2. Stress-Test Requirements for Branches
and Agencies of Foreign Banks With

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Combined U.S. Assets of $50 Billion or
More
3. Information Requirements for Foreign
Banking Organizations With Combined
U.S. Assets of $50 Billion or More
4. Additional Information Required From a
Foreign Banking Organization With U.S.
Branches and Agencies That Are in an
Aggregate Net Due From Position
5. Supplemental Requirements for Foreign
Banking Organizations With Combined
U.S. Assets of $50 Billion or More That
Do Not Comply With Stress-Testing
Requirements
6. Stress-Test Requirements for Foreign
Banking Organizations With Total
Consolidated Assets of More Than $50
Billion But Combined U.S. Assets of Less
Than $50 Billion
7. Stress-Test Requirements for Other
Foreign Banking Organizations and
Foreign Savings and Loan Holding
Companies With Total Consolidated
Assets of More Than $10 Billion
G. Debt-to-Equity Limits for Foreign
Banking Organizations
V. Administrative Law Matters
A. Regulatory Flexibility Act
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
C. Plain Language

I. Introduction
A. The Dodd-Frank Act Mandate
Section 165 of the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection
Act (Dodd-Frank Act or the Act) 1
directs the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System (Board) to
establish prudential standards for bank
holding companies with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more and for nonbank financial
companies that the Financial Stability
Oversight Council (Council) has
determined will be supervised by the
Board (nonbank financial companies
supervised by the Board) in order to
prevent or mitigate risks to U.S.
financial stability that could arise from
the material financial distress or failure,
or ongoing activities of, large,
interconnected financial institutions.
The Dodd-Frank Act requires the
enhanced prudential standards
established by the Board under section
165 of the Act to be more stringent than
those standards applicable to other bank
holding companies and to nonbank
financial companies that do not present
similar risks to U.S. financial stability.2
The standards must also increase in
stringency based on several factors,
including the size and risk
characteristics of a company subject to
the rule, and the Board must take into
account the difference among bank
holding companies and nonbank
financial companies based on the same
1 Public
2 See

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factors.3 Generally, the Board has
authority under section 165 of the Act
to tailor the application of the
standards, including differentiating
among companies subject to section 165
on an individual basis or by category. In
applying section 165 to foreign banking
organizations, the Dodd-Frank Act also
directs the Board to give due regard to
the principle of national treatment and
equality of competitive opportunity, and
to take into account the extent to which
the foreign banking organization is
subject, on a consolidated basis, to
home country standards that are
comparable to those applied to financial
companies in the United States.4
The prudential standards must
include enhanced risk-based and
leverage capital requirements, liquidity
requirements, risk-management and
risk-committee requirements,
resolution-planning requirements,
single counterparty credit limits, stresstest requirements, and a debt-to-equity
limit for companies that the Council has
determined pose a grave threat to the
financial stability of the United States.
Section 165 also permits the Board to
establish other prudential standards in
addition to the mandatory standards,
including three enumerated standards—
a contingent capital requirement,
enhanced public disclosures, and shortterm debt limits—and any ‘‘other
prudential standards’’ that the Board
determines are ‘‘appropriate.’’
B. Background of the Proposals and
Overview of the Final Rule
The Board invited comment on two
separate proposals to implement the
enhanced prudential standards included
in this final rule. On January 5, 2012,
the Board invited comment on proposed
rules to implement the provisions of
sections 165 and 166 of the Dodd-Frank
Act for bank holding companies with
total consolidated assets of $50 billion
or more and for nonbank financial firms
supervised by the Board (domestic
proposal).5 On December 28, 2012, the
Board invited comment on proposed
rules to implement the provisions of
sections 165 and 166 of the Dodd-Frank
Act for foreign banking organizations
with total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more and foreign nonbank
financial companies supervised by the
Board (foreign proposal,6 and, together
3 See 12 U.S.C. 5365(a)(1)(B). Under section
165(a)(1)(B) of the Dodd-Frank Act, the enhanced
prudential standards must increase in stringency
based on the considerations listed in section
165(b)(3).
4 12 U.S.C. 5365(a)(2).
5 77 FR 594 (January 5, 2012).
6 77 FR 76628 (December 28, 2012).

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with the domestic proposal, the
proposals). Consistent with the DoddFrank Act mandate, and in furtherance
of financial stability, the proposals
contained similar enhanced risk-based
and leverage capital requirements,
enhanced liquidity requirements,
enhanced risk management and risk
committee requirements, resolution
planning requirements, single
counterparty credit limits, stress-test
requirements, and a debt-to-equity limit
for companies that the Council has
determined pose a grave threat to the
financial stability of the United States.
The foreign proposal also included a
U.S. intermediate holding company
requirement for a foreign banking
organization with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more and
combined U.S. assets, other than those
held by a U.S. branch or agency or U.S.
subsidiary held under section 2(h)(2) of
the Bank Holding Company Act 7 (U.S.
non-branch assets), of $10 billion or
more.
The Board received over 100 public
comments on the domestic proposal,
and over 60 public comments on the
foreign proposal, from U.S. and foreign
firms, public officials (including
members of Congress), public interest
groups, private individuals, and other
interested parties. While many
commenters expressed support for the
broad goals of the proposed rules, some
commenters criticized specific aspects
of the proposals. As discussed in this
preamble, the final rule makes
adjustments to the proposed rules that
respond to commenters’ concerns. Major
changes from the proposals are
discussed below in section II.B of this
preamble.

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II. Final Rule and Major Changes From
the Proposals
A. Description of the Final Rule
The final rule implements elements of
both the domestic and foreign
proposals. For a bank holding company
with total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more, it incorporates as an
enhanced prudential standard the
previously-issued capital planning and
stress testing requirements and imposes
enhanced liquidity requirements,
enhanced risk-management
requirements, and the debt-to-equity
limit for those companies that the
Council has determined pose a grave
threat to the financial stability of the
United States. It also establishes riskcommittee requirements for a publicly
traded bank holding company with total
consolidated assets of $10 billion or
7 See

12 U.S.C. 1841(h)(2).

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more. For a foreign banking organization
with total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more, the final rule
implements enhanced risk-based and
leverage capital requirements, liquidity
requirements, risk-management
requirements, stress testing
requirements, and the debt-to-equity
limit for those companies that the
Council has determined pose a grave
threat to the financial stability of the
United States. In addition, it requires
foreign banking organizations with U.S.
non-branch assets, as defined in the
final rule, of $50 billion or more to form
a U.S. intermediate holding company
and imposes enhanced risk-based and
leverage capital requirements, liquidity
requirements, risk-management
requirements, and stress-testing
requirements on the U.S. intermediate
holding company. The final rule also
establishes a risk-committee
requirement for publicly traded foreign
banking organizations with total
consolidated assets of $10 billion or
more and implements stress-testing
requirements for foreign banking
organizations and foreign savings and
loan holding companies with total
consolidated assets of more than $10
billion.
The prudential standards established
for bank holding companies and foreign
banking organizations with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more and nonbank financial companies
supervised by the Board (covered
companies) must be more stringent than
the standards and requirements
applicable to bank holding companies
and nonbank financial companies that
do not present similar risks to the
financial stability of the United States.8
The Board is developing an integrated
set of prudential standards for covered
companies through a series of
rulemakings, including the resolution
plan rule, the capital plan rule, the
stress test rules, and this final rule. As
discussed further in this preamble, the
Board will continue to develop these
standards through future rules and
orders. The integrated set of standards
will result in a more stringent regulatory
regime to mitigate risks to U.S. financial
stability, and include measures that
increase the resiliency of covered
companies and reduce the impact on
U.S. financial stability were these firms
to fail. These rules are applicable only
to covered companies, and do not apply
to smaller firms that present less risk to
U.S. financial stability.
As explained more fully throughout
the preamble, the final rules result in
enhanced supervision and regulation of
8 See

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covered companies that is more
stringent based on the systemic
footprint and risk characteristics of the
company than the provisions applicable
to firms that are not covered companies
and that take into account differences
among covered companies based on
these factors.9
For instance, bank holding companies
and U.S. intermediate holding
companies of foreign banking
organizations are subject to the capital
plan rule, which requires a company to
project its regulatory capital ratios
under stressed conditions and
demonstrate the ability to meet the
Board’s minimum regulatory capital
requirements. These minimum
regulatory capital requirements include
leverage and risk-based capital
requirements. By requiring firms to
demonstrate the ability to meet these
capital requirements under stressed
conditions, the capital plan rule subjects
a company to more stringent standards
as the leverage, off-balance sheet
exposures, and interconnectedness of a
covered company increase. For
example, with respect to leverage, the
Board’s minimum leverage capital
requirements require a U.S. company
subject to the requirements to hold
capital based on its total consolidated
assets.10 The more on-balance sheet
assets that a company holds, the more
capital the company must hold to
comply with the minimum leverage
capital requirement. Companies that
have $250 billion or more in total
consolidated assets or $10 billion or
more in total foreign exposure based on
year-end financial reports will become
subject to a supplementary leverage
ratio, which requires the companies to
hold leverage capital for both their onand off-balance sheet assets.11 For a
company subject to the supplementary
leverage ratio, the more on- and offbalance sheet assets that the company
holds, the more capital the company
must hold to comply with the minimum
leverage capital requirement.12 The
Board’s risk-based capital rules require
a company subject to the rules to deduct
an investment in an unconsolidated
financial institution above certain
9 See

12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(3).
12 CFR 217.10(a)(4); 12 CFR part 208,
Appendix B; 12 CFR part 225, Appendix D.
11 12 CFR 217.10(a)(5).
12 More generally, the Board’s capital rules
require all companies subject to the rules to hold
risk-based capital based on their off-balance sheet
exposures. The more off-balance sheet exposures
that a company holds, the more risk-based capital
the company must hold. See 12 CFR 217.33; 12 CFR
part 217, subpart E; 12 CFR part 208, Appendix A,
section III.D.; 12 CFR part 225, Appendix A, section
III.D.
10 See

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thresholds.13 The more investments in
such unconsolidated financial
institutions that a company has above
these thresholds, the more deductions
that a company must take from its
regulatory capital.
Covered bank holding companies and
foreign banking organizations are
subject to the enhanced liquidity
standards included in this final rule,
which will result in a more stringent set
of standards as the liquidity risk of a
company’s liabilities increases. For
instance, the enhanced liquidity
standards require covered bank holding
companies and foreign banking
organizations to maintain a liquidity
buffer sufficient to cover net cash
outflows based on a 30-day stress test.
In general, the more a company relies on
short-term funding, the larger the
required buffer will be.
The set of enhanced prudential
standards for bank holding companies
and foreign banking organizations
increases in stringency based on the
nature, scope, size, scale, concentration,
interconnectedness, and mix of the
activities of the company. For example,
the resolution plan rule applies a
tailored resolution plan regime for
smaller, less complex bank holding
companies and foreign banking
organizations that is materially less
stringent than what is required of larger
organizations. Similarly, the Board has
tailored the application of and its
supervisory expectations regarding
stress testing and capital planning based
on the size and complexity of covered
companies. For instance, the Board
applies the global market shock to the
trading and private equity positions of
the largest bank holding companies
subject to the market risk requirements,
and requires bank holding companies
with substantial trading and custodial
operations to include a counterparty
default scenario component in their
stress tests.14 In addition, the capital,
liquidity, risk-management, and stress
testing requirements applicable to
foreign banking organizations with
combined U.S. assets of less than $50
billion are substantially reduced as
compared to the requirements
applicable to foreign banking
organizations with a larger U.S.
presence.
The Dodd-Frank Act requires the
Board to consider the importance of the
company as a source of credit for
households, businesses, and state
13 12

CFR 217.22(c)(4)–(5).
e.g., Comprehensive Capital Analysis and
Review 2014: Summary Instructions and Guidance
(November 1, 2013), available at: http://
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/bcreg/
bcreg20131101a2.pdf.
14 See,

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governments, source of liquidity for the
U.S. financial system, and source of
credit for low-income, minority, or
underserved communities. As a whole,
the standards increase the resiliency of
bank holding companies and foreign
banking organizations, which enables
them to continue serving as financial
intermediaries for the U.S. financial
system and sources of credit to
households, businesses, state
governments, and low-income,
minority, or underserved communities
during times of stress.
The enhanced prudential standards
for bank holding companies and foreign
banking organizations take into account
the extent to which the company is
subject to existing regulatory scrutiny.
As explained more below, for bank
holding companies, the final rule
applies enhanced prudential standards
at the consolidated bank holding
company, and does not directly apply
any standards to functionally regulated
subsidiaries. In recognition of the homecountry supervisory regime applicable
to foreign banking organizations, the
final rule relies on the home country
capital and stress testing regimes
applicable to the foreign banking
organization. However, to the extent
that a foreign banking organization’s
home country capital or stress test
standards do not meet the standards set
forth in the final rule, the Board will
impose requirements, conditions or
restrictions relating to the activities or
business operations of the combined
U.S. operations of the foreign banking
organization.
The Board has designed the final rule
to reduce the potential that small
changes in the characteristics of the
company would result in sharp,
discontinuous changes in the standards.
The enhanced prudential standards
regime generally mitigates the potential
for sharp, discontinuous changes by
generally measuring the threshold for
applicability of the enhanced prudential
standards over a four-quarter period and
providing for transition periods prior to
application of the standards.
The final rule also takes account of
differences among covered companies
based on whether a company owns an
insured depository institution and
adapts the required standards as
appropriate in light of any predominant
line of business of such a company.
Bank holding companies, by definition,
control an insured depository
institution, and engage in banking as a
predominant line of business. Foreign
banking organizations have a banking
presence in the United States through
either control of an insured depository
institution or through U.S. branches or

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agencies. Foreign banking organizations
that have branches and agencies are
treated as if they were bank holding
companies for purposes of the Bank
Holding Company Act and the DoddFrank Act. By statute, both uninsured
and insured U.S. branches and agencies
of foreign banks may receive Federal
Reserve advances on the same terms and
conditions that apply to domestic
insured state member banks. The risks
to financial stability presented by
foreign banking organizations with U.S.
branches and agencies generally are not
dependent on whether the foreign
banking organization has a U.S. insured
depository institution. In many cases,
insured depository institution
subsidiaries of foreign banks form a
small percentage of their U.S. assets.
The stress-test requirements included
in the domestic proposal for bank
holding companies or nonbank financial
companies supervised by the Board
were finalized separately in 2012.15
Furthermore, the Board continues to
develop the single counterparty credit
limits and early remediation
requirements for bank holding
companies and foreign banking
organizations. With respect to single
counterparty credit limits, the Basel
Committee on Banking Supervision
(Basel Committee) 16 is developing a
similar large exposure regime that
would apply to all global banks. The
Board is participating in the Basel
Committee’s initiative and intends to
take into account this effort in
implementing the single counterparty
credit limits under the Dodd-Frank Act.
The Board also intends to take into
account information gained through its
quantitative impact study on the effects
of the limit and comments received on
the domestic and foreign proposals.
With respect to early remediation
requirements, the Board continues to
review the comments.
Finally, the Board has determined not
to impose enhanced prudential
standards on nonbank financial
companies supervised by the Board
through this final rule. The Board
intends separately to issue orders or
15 On October 9, 2012, the Board issued a final
rule implementing the supervisory and companyrun stress-testing requirements for U.S. bank
holding companies with total consolidated assets of
$50 billion or more and for U.S. nonbank financial
companies supervised by the Board. 77 FR 62378
(October 12, 2012).
16 The Basel Committee is a committee of banking
supervisory authorities, which was established by
the central bank governors of the G–10 countries in
1975. More information regarding the Basel
Committee and its membership is available at:
http://www.bis.org/bcbs/about.htm. Documents
issued by the Basel Committee are available through
the Bank for International Settlements Web site
available at: http://www.bis.org.

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rules imposing such standards on each
nonbank financial company designated
by the Council for Board supervision, as
further described below.
The Board has consulted with all
Council members and member agencies,
including those that primarily supervise
a functionally regulated subsidiary or
depository institution subsidiary of a
bank holding company or foreign
banking organization subject to the
proposals by providing periodic updates
to agencies represented on the Council
and their staff on the development of
the final enhanced prudential
standards.17 The final rule reflects
comments provided to the Board as a
part of this consultation process. The
Council has not made any formal
recommendations under section 115 of
the Dodd-Frank Act to date.
B. Major Changes From the Proposals
1. Threshold for Forming a U.S.
Intermediate Holding Company
The foreign proposal would have
required a foreign banking organization
with U.S. non-branch assets of $10
billion or more to establish a U.S.
intermediate holding company. Many
commenters argued that the proposed
threshold was too low, asserting that the
U.S. operations of entities with $10
billion of U.S. non-branch assets do not
present risks to U.S. financial stability.
These commenters suggested that a
minimum of $50 billion in U.S. nonbranch assets is a more appropriate
threshold for the U.S. intermediate
holding company requirement.18 After
considering these comments and the
other statutory considerations in section
165 of the Dodd-Frank Act, the Board is
raising the final rule’s threshold for the
U.S. intermediate holding company
requirement from $10 billion to $50
billion of U.S. non-branch assets.

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2. Implementation Timing for Foreign
Banking Organizations
The proposed rule would have
required a foreign banking organization
with U.S. non-branch assets of $50
billion or more as of July 1, 2014, to
establish a U.S. intermediate holding
company by July 1, 2015, unless that
time were extended by the Board in
writing.19 A foreign banking
organization with U.S. non-branch
assets equal to or exceeding the asset
threshold after July 1, 2014 would have
17 See

12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(4).
comments are discussed more fully
below in section IV.B.3 of this preamble.
19 Under the proposal, total consolidated assets of
a foreign banking organization were determined
based on the information provided through the
Board’s regulatory reporting forms, as discussed
further below.
18 These

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been required to establish a U.S.
intermediate holding company within
12 months after it met or exceeded the
asset threshold, unless that time were
accelerated or extended by the Board in
writing. A number of commenters
requested a longer transition period for
the proposed requirements, citing the
need to reorganize their U.S. operations
and address attendant restructuring
costs and tax costs, as well as the costs
of compliance with other regulatory
initiatives.20
In response to comments, the final
rule would extend the initial
compliance date for foreign banking
organizations by one year to July 1,
2016.21 The extended transition period
would provide foreign banking
organizations that exceed the asset
threshold on the effective date of the
rule with a reasonable transition period
during which to prepare for the
structural reorganization required by the
final rule and for compliance with the
enhanced prudential standards.
In order to ensure that foreign banking
organizations are taking the necessary
steps toward meeting the requirements
of the final rule, the final rule requires
a foreign banking organization that has
U.S. non-branch assets of $50 billion or
more as of June 30, 2014, to submit an
implementation plan by January 1, 2015
outlining its proposed process to come
into compliance with the rule’s
requirements.22
20 These comments are discussed more fully
below in section IV.B.2 of this preamble.
21 The initial measurement date would be
deferred from July 1, 2014 to July 1, 2015.
Generally, the calculation will be based on the
average of U.S. non-branch assets reported by the
foreign banking organization on the FR Y–7Q for
the four most recent quarters. If U.S. non-branch
assets have not been reported on the FR Y–7Q for
the full four most recent quarters, the calculation
will be based on the average of the U.S. non-branch
assets as reported on the FR Y–7Q for the most
recent quarter or quarters. On July 1, 2016, the U.S.
intermediate holding company would be required
to hold the foreign banking organization’s
ownership interest in any U.S. bank holding
company subsidiary, any depository institution
subsidiary, and U.S. subsidiaries representing 90
percent of the foreign banking organization’s assets
not held under the bank holding company. The
final rule would also provide a foreign banking
organization until July 1, 2017, to transfer its
ownership interest in any residual U.S. subsidiaries
to the U.S. intermediate holding company.
22 As described in section IV.B.5 of this preamble,
the implementation plan is intended to facilitate
compliance with the U.S. intermediate holding
company requirement. The implementation plan
must include: A list of the foreign banking
organization’s U.S. subsidiaries; a projected
timeline for the transfer by the foreign banking
organization of its ownership interest in those
subsidiaries to the U.S. intermediate holding
company; a timeline of all planned capital actions
or strategies for capital accumulation that will
facilitate the U.S. intermediate holding company’s
compliance with the risk-based and leverage capital
requirements; quarterly pro forma financial

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In addition, to address commenters’
concerns about the cost of compliance
with leverage capital requirements
proposed for the U.S. intermediate
holding company, the final rule
generally delays application of leverage
capital requirements to the U.S.
intermediate holding company until
January 1, 2018.
Finally, a foreign banking
organization that has U.S. non-branch
assets that equal or exceed $50 billion
after July 1, 2015 has two years to come
into compliance with the final rule,
instead of 12 months under the
proposal. These modifications to the
transition period will enable a foreign
banking organization to plan the
transactions necessary to bring its U.S.
subsidiaries under the U.S. intermediate
holding company and mitigate costs.
3. Nonbank Financial Companies
Supervised by the Board
The proposals would have provided
that the standards applicable to bank
holding companies and foreign banking
organizations would serve as the
baseline for enhanced prudential
standards applicable to U.S. and foreign
nonbank financial companies,
respectively. Many commenters
representing nonbank financial
companies asserted that the proposed
enhanced prudential standards were
inappropriate for nonbank financial
companies because of their business
models and activities, as well as the
existing regulatory regime applicable to
certain nonbank financial companies.
These commenters also expressed
concern that the proposals as applied to
nonbank financial companies
supervised by the Board were too broad,
and the proposals did not provide
sufficient information for nonbank
financial companies supervised by the
Board to understand application of the
proposed standards.
The Board recognizes that the
companies designated by the Council
may have a range of businesses,
structures, and activities, that the types
of risks to financial stability posed by
nonbank financial companies will likely
vary, and that the enhanced prudential
standards applicable to bank holding
companies and foreign banking
organizations may not be appropriate, in
whole or in part, for all nonbank
financial companies. Accordingly, the
Board is not applying enhanced
prudential standards to nonbank
financial companies supervised by the
statements for the U.S. intermediate holding
company; and a plan for compliance with the
liquidity and risk-management requirements in the
final rule.

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Board through this rulemaking. Instead,
following designation of a nonbank
financial company for supervision by
the Board, the Board intends thoroughly
to assess the business model, capital
structure, and risk profile of the
designated company to determine how
the proposed enhanced prudential
standards should apply, and if
appropriate, would tailor application of
the standards by order or regulation to
that nonbank financial company or to a
category of nonbank financial
companies. In applying the standards to
a nonbank financial company, the Board
will take into account differences among
nonbank financial companies
supervised by the Board and bank
holding companies with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more. For those nonbank financial
companies that are similar in activities
and risk profile to bank holding
companies, the Board expects to apply
enhanced prudential standards that are

similar to those that apply to bank
holding companies. For those that differ
from bank holding companies in their
activities, balance sheet structure, risk
profile, and functional regulation, the
Board expects to apply more tailored
standards. The Board will ensure that
nonbank financial companies receive
notice and opportunity to comment
prior to determination of their enhanced
prudential standards.
4. Other Changes
In the final rule, the Board also
restructured the rule text of the
domestic and foreign proposals to
organize the text by type of company—
domestic or foreign—and by the size of
the company. The purpose of the
reorganization is to improve the
usability of the text by grouping
requirements applicable to a company
based on these criteria in one subpart.
To facilitate this reorganization, the
Board has previously moved the

17245

adopted stress testing requirements to
the appropriate subparts.23 Following
the reorganization, the company-run
stress test requirements for domestic
bank holding companies with total
consolidated assets of more than $10
billion but less than $50 billion and for
domestic savings and loan holding
companies and state member banks with
total consolidated assets of more than
$10 billion are contained in subpart B,
the supervisory stress tests for bank
holding companies with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more are contained in subpart E, and the
company-run stress tests for bank
holding companies of this size are
contained in subpart F.
Table 1, below, sets forth the
requirements in the final rule that apply
to bank holding companies and Table 2
sets forth the requirements in the final
rule that apply to foreign banking
organizations, each depending on size.

TABLE 1—REQUIREMENTS FOR U.S. BANK HOLDING COMPANIES
Size

Requirements

Subpart

Total consolidated assets of more than $10 billion but less
than $50 billion.
Total consolidated assets equal to or greater than $10 billion
but less than $50 billion (if publicly-traded).
Total consolidated assets of $50 billion or more ......................

Company-run stress tests ........................................................

Subpart B.

Risk committee .........................................................................

Subpart C.

Risk-based and leverage capital ..............................................
Risk management
Risk committee
Liquidity risk-management, stress-testing, and buffers ...........
Supervisory stress tests ...........................................................
Company-run stress tests ........................................................
Debt-to-equity limits (upon grave threat determination) ..........

Subpart D.

Subpart E.
Subpart F.
Subpart U.

TABLE 2—REQUIREMENTS FOR FOREIGN BANKING ORGANIZATIONS
Size

Requirements

Total consolidated assets of more than $10 billion but less
than $50 billion.
Total consolidated assets equal to or greater than $10 billion
but less than $50 billion (if publicly-traded).
Total consolidated assets of $50 billion or more, but combined
U.S. assets of less than $50 billion.

Company-run stress tests ........................................................

Subpart L.

Risk committee .........................................................................

Subpart M.

Risk-based and leverage capital ..............................................
Risk management
Risk committee
Liquidity
Capital stress testing
Debt to equity limits (upon grave threat determination) ..........
Risk-based and leverage capital ..............................................
Risk management
Risk committee
Liquidity risk management, liquidity stress testing, and buffer
Capital stress testing
U.S. intermediate holding company requirement (if the foreign banking organization has U.S. non-branch assets of
$50 billion or more).
Debt-to-equity limits (upon grave threat determination) ..........

Subpart N.

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Total consolidated assets of $50 billion or more, and combined U.S. assets of $50 billion or more.

If an institution increases in asset
size, it will become subject to the
23 See

subpart applicable to institutions of that
size. On the date it becomes subject to

Subpart

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Subpart O.
Subpart U.

the substantive requirements of a new
subpart, it will cease to be subject to

79 FR 13498.

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Subpart U.
Subpart O.

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requirements of the subpart for smaller
institutions.

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C. Application to Savings and Loan
Holding Companies Engaged in
Substantial Banking Activities
With the exception of company-run
stress-tests, the domestic proposal did
not propose to apply the enhanced
prudential standards to savings and loan
holding companies.24 The domestic
proposal indicated that the Board
intends to issue a separate proposal for
notice and comment initially to apply
the enhanced prudential standards and
early remediation requirements to all
savings and loan holding companies
with substantial banking activities—for
example, any savings and loan holding
company that: (i) Has total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more; and (ii)(A)
controls savings association subsidiaries
that comprise 25 percent or more of
such savings and loan holding
company’s total consolidated assets; or
(B) controls one or more savings
associations with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more. The
preamble to the domestic proposal
indicated that the Board also may
determine to apply the enhanced
prudential standards to any savings and
loan holding company, if appropriate to
ensure the safety and soundness of such
company, on a case-by-case basis.
Commenters argued that the Home
Owners’ Loan Act does not provide the
Board with authority to apply enhanced
prudential standards and early
remediation requirements to savings
and loan holding companies, and doing
so would contradict Congress’s intent to
apply only the section 165 requirements
regarding company-run stress-test
requirements to savings and loan
holding companies. However, the
Board, as the appropriate federal
banking agency of savings and loan
holding companies, has authority under
the Home Owners’ Loan Act to apply
prudential standards to savings and loan
holding companies to help to ensure
their safety and soundness.25 The Board
recently established risk-based and
leverage capital requirements for certain
savings and loan holding companies
and has set forth supervisory
expectations regarding, among other
things, liquidity risk management and
24 In October 2012, the Board adopted a final rule
implementing company-run stress testing
requirements for savings and loan holding
companies with total consolidated assets greater
than $10 billion. See 77 FR 62396 (October 12,
2012).
25 See 12 U.S.C. 1467a(g) (authorizing the Board
to issue such regulations and orders as the Board
deems necessary or appropriate to administer and
carry out the purposes of section 10 of the Home
Owners’ Loan Act).

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enterprise-wide risk management.26 As
discussed in the domestic proposal, the
Board may apply additional prudential
requirements to certain savings and loan
holding companies that are similar to
the enhanced prudential standards if it
determines that such standards are
consistent with the safety and
soundness of such companies.
III. Enhanced Prudential Standards for
Bank Holding Companies
A. Enhanced Risk-Based and Leverage
Capital Requirements, Capital Planning
and Stress Testing
1. Capital Planning and Stress Testing
The final rule, consistent with the
proposal, incorporates two existing
standards: The previously-issued
capital-planning and stress-testing
requirements for bank holding
companies with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more.27 The
Board has long held the view that a
bank holding company generally should
hold capital that is commensurate with
its risk profile and activities, so that the
firm can meet its obligations to creditors
and other counterparties, as well as
continue to serve as a financial
intermediary through periods of
financial and economic stress.28 A bank
holding company should have internal
processes for assessing its capital
adequacy that reflect a full
understanding of its risks and ensure
that it holds capital corresponding to
those risks to maintain overall capital
adequacy.29
In 2011, the Board adopted the capital
plan rule (capital plan rule), which
imposed enhanced risk-based and
leverage capital requirements on a bank
holding company with $50 billion or
more in total consolidated assets. The
rule requires such a bank holding
company to submit an annual capital
plan to the Federal Reserve in which it
26 See, e.g., 78 FR 62018 (October 11, 2013);
Supervision and Regulation Letter 11–11 (July 21,
2011), available at: http://www.federalreserve.gov/
bankinforeg/srletters/sr1111.htm.
27 12 CFR 225.8. See 76 FR 74631 (December 1,
2011). The capital plan rule currently applies to all
U.S. bank holding companies with $50 billion or
more in total consolidated assets, except for those
bank holding companies that have relied on
Supervision & Regulation Letter 01–01 (January 5,
2001), available at: http://www.federalreserve.gov/
boarddocs/srletters/2001/sr0101.htm.
28 See Supervision and Regulation Letter 12–17
(December 12, 2012), available at: http://
www.federalreserve.gov/bankinforeg/srletters/
sr1217.htm; 12 CFR Part 217; 12 CFR 225.8;
Supervision and Regulation Letter 99–18 (July 1,
1999), available at: http://www.federalreserve.gov/
boarddocs/srletters/1999/SR9918.HTM.
29 See e.g., Supervision and Regulation Letter 09–
4 (March 27, 2009); available at: http://
www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/srletters/2009/
SR0904.htm; 12 CFR 225.8.

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demonstrates its ability to maintain
capital above the Board’s minimum riskbased capital ratios under both baseline
and stressed conditions over a
minimum nine-quarter, forward-looking
planning horizon. Such plan must also
include a discussion of the bank holding
company’s sources and uses of capital
reflecting the risk profile of the firm
over the planning horizon. Since the
adoption of the capital plan rule, the
Board’s Comprehensive Capital
Analysis and Review associated with
capital plans submitted by those bank
holding companies has become an
important and regular part of the
Federal Reserve’s capital adequacy
assessment of the largest bank holding
companies.
In 2012, the Board, in coordination
with the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC) and the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency (OCC),
adopted stress testing rules under
section 165(i)(1) of the Dodd-Frank Act
for large bank holding companies and
nonbank financial companies
supervised by the Board. These rules
establish a framework for the Board to
conduct annual supervisory stress tests
to evaluate whether these companies
have the capital necessary to absorb
losses as a result of adverse economic
conditions and require these companies
to conduct semi-annual company-run
stress tests.30
In addition, the Board adopted
company-run stress test requirements
under section 165(i)(2) of the DoddFrank Act for bank holding companies
with more than $10 billion but less than
$50 billion in total consolidated assets
and savings and loan holding
companies and state member banks with
more than $10 billion in total
consolidated assets.31 The FDIC and
OCC adopted similar rules for the
insured depository institutions that they
supervise.32
In September 2013, the Board issued
an interim final rule that clarified how
bank holding companies should
incorporate recent revisions to the
Board’s regulatory capital rules into
their capital plan and the stress tests.33
2. Risk-Based Capital and Leverage
Requirements
In July 2013, the Board issued a final
rule implementing regulatory capital
reforms reflecting agreements reached
by the Basel Committee in ‘‘Basel III: A
30 77 FR 62378 (Oct. 12, 2012) (codified at 12 CFR
part 252, subparts F and G). These rules have been
re-codified to 12 CFR part 252, subparts E and F.
31 See 77 FR 62396 (October 12, 2012).
32 77 FR 61238 (October 9, 2012); 77 FR 62417
(October 15, 2012).
33 See 78 FR 59779 (September 30, 2013).

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Global Regulatory Framework for More
Resilient Banks and Banking Systems’’
(Basel III) 34 and certain changes
required by the Dodd-Frank Act (revised
capital framework).35 The revised
capital framework introduced a new
minimum common equity tier 1 capital
ratio of 4.5 percent, raised the minimum
tier 1 ratio from 4 percent to 6 percent,
required all banking organizations to
meet a 4 percent minimum leverage
ratio, implemented stricter eligibility
criteria for regulatory capital
instruments, and introduced a
standardized methodology for
calculating risk-weighted assets. In
addition, it required bank holding
companies with total consolidated
assets of $250 billion or more or total
consolidated on-balance sheet foreign
exposures of at least $10 billion
(advanced approaches banking
organizations) to meet a supplementary
leverage ratio of 3 percent based on the
international leverage standard agreed
to by the Basel Committee.
To further enhance capital standards
for the largest companies that pose the
most systemic risk, in July 2013, the
Board sought public comment on a
proposal that, in part, would require a
U.S. top-tier bank holding company
with more than $700 billion in total
consolidated assets or $10 trillion in
assets under custody to maintain a
buffer of at least 2 percent above the
minimum supplementary leverage
capital requirement of 3 percent in order
to avoid restrictions on capital
distributions and discretionary bonus
payments to executive officers.36 The
Board is currently reviewing comments
on that proposal. The Board also expects
34 Basel III was published in December 2010 and
revised in June 2011. See Basel Committee, Basel
III: A global framework for more resilient banks and
banking systems (December 2010), available at:
http://www.bis.org/publ/bcbs189.pdf.
35 See 78 FR 62018 (October 11, 2013). The
revised capital framework also reorganized the
Board’s capital adequacy guidelines into a
harmonized, codified set of rules, located at 12 CFR
Part 217. The requirements of 12 CFR Part 217 came
into effect on January 1, 2014, for bank holding
companies subject to the advanced approaches riskbased capital rule, and as of January 1, 2015 for all
other bank holding companies. The predecessor
capital adequacy guidelines for bank holding
companies are found at 12 CFR part 225, Appendix
A (general risk-based capital rule), 12 CFR part 225,
Appendix D (leverage rule), 12 CFR part 225,
Appendix E (market risk rule), and 12 CFR part 225,
Appendix G (advanced approaches risk-based
capital rule).
36 78 FR 51101 (August 20, 2013). The proposal
applies to ‘‘a U.S. top-tier bank holding company
that has more than $700 billion in total assets as
reported on the company’s most recent
Consolidated Financial Statement for Bank Holding
Companies (FR Y–9C) or more than $10 trillion in
assets under custody as reported on the company’s
most recent Banking Organization Systemic Risk
Report (FR Y–15).’’ Id.

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to seek comment on additional
enhancements to the risk-based capital
rules for large bank holding companies
in the future, including through a
proposal for a quantitative risk-based
capital surcharge in the United States
based on the Basel Committee’s
approach and implementation
timeframe.
B. Risk Management and Risk
Committee Requirements
Section 165(b)(1)(A) of the DoddFrank Act requires the Board to
establish enhanced risk-management
requirements for bank holding
companies with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more.37 In
addition, section 165(h) of the DoddFrank Act directs the Board to issue
regulations requiring publicly traded
bank holding companies with total
consolidated assets of $10 billion or
more to establish risk committees.38
Section 165(h) requires the risk
committee to be responsible for the
oversight of the enterprise-wide riskmanagement practices of the company,
to have a certain number of independent
directors as members as the Board
determines is appropriate, and to
include at least one risk-management
expert having experience in identifying,
assessing, and managing risk exposures
of large, complex firms.
To address the risk-management
weaknesses observed during the
financial crisis, the proposed rule would
have established risk-management
standards for bank holding companies
with total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more that would have
required oversight of enterprise-wide
risk management by a stand-alone risk
committee; reinforced the independence
of a firm’s risk-management function;
and required employment of a chief risk
officer with appropriate expertise and
stature. In addition, the proposal would
have required each publicly traded bank
holding company with total
consolidated assets equal to or greater
than $10 billion but less than $50
billion to establish an enterprise-wide
risk committee of its board of directors.
The proposal would not have applied to
bank holding companies that have
assets of less than $10 billion.
The Board is adopting many aspects
of the proposed rule, with revisions to
certain elements of the proposed rule in
response to commenters, as described
further below in this section. The Board
emphasizes that the risk committee and
overall risk-management requirements
outlined in the final rule supplement
37 12
38 12

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U.S.C. 5365(h).

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the Board’s existing risk-management
guidance and supervisory
expectations.39 All banking
organizations supervised by the Board
should continue to follow such
guidance to ensure appropriate
oversight of and limitations on risk.
1. Responsibilities of the Risk
Committee
Under the proposal, a company’s risk
committee would generally have been
required to document, review, and
approve the enterprise-wide riskmanagement practices of the company.
The risk committee would have
overseen the operation, on an
enterprise-wide basis, of an appropriate
risk-management framework that is
commensurate with the company’s
capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, size, and other
appropriate risk-related factors. The
proposal specified that the riskmanagement framework must include:
Risk limitations appropriate to each
business line of the company;
appropriate policies and procedures
relating to risk management governance,
risk-management practices, and risk
control infrastructure; processes and
systems for identifying and reporting
risks, including emerging risks;
monitoring of compliance with the
company’s risk limit structure and
policies and procedures relating to risk
management governance, practices, and
risk controls; effective and timely
implementation of corrective actions;
specification of management and
employees’ authority and independence
to carry out risk management
responsibilities; and integration of risk
management and control objectives in
management goals and the company’s
compensation structure. The enterprisewide focus would have required the
company’s risk committee to take into
account both its U.S. and foreign
operations as part of its riskmanagement oversight.
Many commenters asserted that the
proposed rule would inappropriately
assign managerial and operational
responsibilities to the risk committee.
These commenters generally
recommended that the Board clarify that
a risk committee is not responsible for
the day-to-day operations of the
company. In particular, some
39 See Supervision and Regulation Letter SR 08–
8 (October 16, 2008), available at: http://
www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/srletters/2008/
SR0808.htm; Supervision and Regulation Letter SR
08–9 (October 16, 2008), available at: http://
www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/srletters/2008/
SR0809.htm; Supervision and Regulation Letter SR
12–17 (December 17, 2012), available at: http://
www.federalreserve.gov/bankinforeg/srletters/
sr1217.htm.

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commenters asserted that the proposed
requirement that the risk committee
‘‘document, review, and approve the
enterprise-wide risk-management
practices of the company’’ would not be
consistent with the proper scope of a
committee of the board of directors
because it would require the board to
assume responsibilities typically
performed by management. These
commenters recommended that the role
of the risk committee be limited to
reviewing and approving overall riskmanagement policies.
In light of commenters’ concerns, the
Board has revised the requirements in
the final rule to clarify the role of the
risk committee. A company’s risk
committee, acting in its oversight role,
should fully understand the company’s
enterprise-wide risk-management
policies and framework and have a
general understanding of the risk
management practices of the company.
Accordingly, the final rule requires the
risk committee to approve and
periodically review the enterprise-wide
risk-management policies of the
company, rather than its riskmanagement practices. The Board
believes that the requirement that the
risk committee ‘‘approve and
periodically review’’ the company’s
enterprise-wide risk-management
policies is more closely aligned with the
board of directors’ oversight role over
risk management. Furthermore, the
Board has not included in the final rule
the requirement that the risk
management framework overseen by the
risk committee include specific risk
limitations for each business line of the
company.
The other elements of the enterprisewide risk management framework under
the proposal, however, represent the key
components of an institution’s riskmanagement function, and are generally
consistent with the board of directors’
overall responsibilities for risk
management. Accordingly, other than as
described above, the final rule adopts
the elements of the enterprise-wide riskmanagement framework generally as
proposed. As finalized, a company’s risk
management framework must be
commensurate with the company’s
structure, risk profile, complexity,
activities, and size, and must include
policies and procedures establishing
risk-management governance, riskmanagement practices, and risk control
infrastructure for the company’s global
operations and processes and systems
for implementing and monitoring

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compliance with such policies and
procedures.40
One commenter asserted that effective
risk oversight requires the attention of a
company’s full board of directors, rather
than its risk committee. The commenter
recommended that a company’s full
board of directors approve and oversee
its risk-management policies. The Board
agrees that directors should be aware of
the risk-management policies of the
company, and the Board expects that
the risk committee will report
significant risk-management matters to
the full board of directors. The Board
observes, however, that boards of
directors routinely delegate oversight
responsibilities for particular aspects of
a company’s operations to committees
in order to more efficiently allocate
responsibility among the directors. In
addition, this delegation is consistent
with the requirements of the DoddFrank Act. Accordingly, the final rule
maintains the proposed requirement
that the risk committee oversee
enterprise-wide risk management.
One commenter recommended that
the Board require companies to engage
in a regular process of ‘‘constructive
dialogue’’ among the board of directors,
business lines, and risk management
personnel. The Board believes that
robust dialogue among these key
stakeholders is important for effective
risk management, and believes that the
proposed and final rule already requires
such communication in specific
instances, for instance, by requiring a
bank holding company’s riskmanagement framework to include
processes and systems for identifying
and reporting risks and risk
management deficiencies. Accordingly,
the Board is not adding a separate
requirement for ‘‘constructive
dialogue.’’
In addition, various liquidity riskmanagement responsibilities are
assigned to the board of directors or risk
committee, as discussed in section
III.C.2. These liquidity risk-management
responsibilities are components of the
risk-management framework described
in this section.
40 The processes and systems must include those
for identifying and reporting risks and riskmanagement deficiencies, including with respect to
emerging risks and ensuring effective and timely
implementation of corrective actions to address risk
management deficiencies for the company’s global
operations; processes and systems for specifying
managerial and employee responsibility for risk
management, for ensuring the independence of the
risk management function; and processes and
systems to integrate management and associated
controls with management goals and the company’s
compensation structure for the company’s global
operations.

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2. Risk Committee Requirements
a. Independent Director
Consistent with section 165(h)(3)(B)
of the Dodd-Frank Act, the proposed
rule would have required the risk
committee of a publicly traded 41 bank
holding company with total
consolidated assets of $10 billion or
more to have one independent director
that was the chair of the risk committee.
The proposal would have defined an
independent director as a director who:
(i) Is not an officer or employee of the
company and had not been an officer or
employee of the company during the
previous three years; (ii) is not a
member of the immediate family, as
defined in section 225.41(b)(3) of the
Board’s Regulation Y (12 CFR
225.41(b)(3)), of a person who is, or has
been within the last three years, an
executive officer of the company, as
defined in section 215.2(e)(1) of the
Board’s Regulation O (12 CFR
215.2(e)(1)); and (iii) is an independent
director under Item 407 of the Securities
and Exchange Commission’s (SEC)
Regulation S–K, 17 CFR 229.407(a), or
would qualify as an independent
director under the listing standards of a
national securities exchange (as
demonstrated to the satisfaction of the
Board) in the event that the company
does not have an outstanding class of
securities traded on a national securities
exchange. For companies that are not
publicly traded in the United States, the
Board indicated that it would make
determinations about director
independence on a case-by-case basis,
and would consider compensation paid
to the director or director’s family by the
company and material business
relationships between the director and
the company, among other things. The
Board specifically sought comment on
whether, and under what
circumstances, the Board should require
more than one independent director on
the risk committee.
Some commenters supported the
independent director requirement,
although they generally opposed an
increase in the number of independent
directors required because, in their
view, participation by management and
other non-independent directors could
enhance the deliberations of the risk
committee. Two commenters, however,
urged the Board to increase the number
of independent directors required on the
41 The proposal provided that a company is
publicly traded if it is traded on any exchange
registered with the Securities and Exchange
Commission under Section 6 of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78f) or on any nonU.S.-based securities exchange that meets certain
criteria.

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risk committee to ensure that members
of the risk committee have a diversity of
experiences. The Board is finalizing the
requirement to have one independent
director that chairs the risk committee
as proposed. The Board believes that a
bank holding company should
determine the appropriate proportion of
independent directors on the risk
committee based on its size, scope, and
complexity, provided that it meets the
minimum requirement of one
independent director. The Board
believes that active involvement of
independent directors can be vital to
robust oversight of risk management and
encourages companies to consider
including additional independent
directors as members of their risk
committees. The Board further notes
that involvement of directors affiliated
with the company on the risk committee
may complement the involvement of
independent directors.
b. Risk-Management Experience
Under the proposal, at least one
member of a bank holding company’s
risk committee would have been
required to have risk-management
expertise that was commensurate with
the company’s capital structure, risk
profile, complexity, activities, size, and
other appropriate risk-related factors.
The proposal defined risk-management
expertise as an understanding of risk
management principles and practices
with respect to bank holding companies
or depository institutions; the ability to
assess the general application of such
principles and practices; and experience
developing and applying riskmanagement practices and procedures,
measuring and identifying risks, and
monitoring and testing risk controls
with respect to banking organizations
or, if applicable, nonbank financial
companies. This requirement was
intended to ensure that the company’s
risk committee has at least one member
with the background and experience
necessary to evaluate the company’s
risk-management policies and practices.
Several commenters criticized the
proposed definition of risk-management
expertise as being too stringent and
suggested that the proposal would result
in a shortage of qualified candidates to
serve on risk committees. For instance,
some commenters argued that the rule
should recognize that risk-management
experience could be acquired in fields
other than banking. Other commenters
argued that the definition of riskmanagement expertise was too limiting
and asserted that it was not realistic to
require a director to fulfill all of the
proposed requirements. Other
commenters suggested that the Board

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adopt a definition of risk-management
expertise that is similar to the SEC’s
definition of audit committee financial
expert, which generally focuses on ‘‘an
individual’s understanding of relevant
principles, the ability to assess the
application of such principles, and
experience that is commensurate with
the breadth and complexity of issues to
be raised, among other factors.’’ 42 Some
commenters raised concerns that some
of the Board’s statements in the
preamble to the proposed rule suggested
that more than one member of the risk
committee would be required to have
risk-management expertise.
In light of these comments, the final
rule revises the proposed ‘‘risk
management expert’’ requirement for
the risk committee in two ways. First,
for a publicly traded bank holding
company with total consolidated assets
equal to or greater than $10 billion but
less than $50 billion, an individual’s
risk-management experience in a
nonbanking or nonfinancial field may
fulfill the requirements of the final rule.
For instance, relevant experience could
include risk-management experience
acquired through executive-level service
at a large nonfinancial company with a
high risk profile and above-average
complexity. For a bank holding
company with total consolidated assets
of $50 billion or more, the final rule
requires that an individual have
experience in identifying, assessing, and
managing risk exposures of large,
complex financial firms. For this
purpose, a financial firm could include
a bank, a securities broker-dealer, or an
insurance company, provided that the
experience is relevant to the particular
risks facing the company. For all bank
holding companies, the Board expects
that the individual’s experience in risk
management would be commensurate
with the bank holding company’s
structure, risk profile, complexity,
activities, and size, and the bank
holding company should be able to
demonstrate that an individual’s
experience is relevant to the particular
risks facing the company.
Second, in response to commenters
asserting that the proposed definition of
‘‘risk management expertise’’ was too
limiting, the final rule would require
that a risk committee have a member
with experience in ‘‘identifying,
assessing, and managing risk exposures’’
of large, complex firms.43 While the
proposed definition of risk-management
42 17

CFR 228.407(d)(5)(ii).
noted above, in the case of a bank holding
company with total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more, the experience must be with respect
to financial firms.
43 As

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expertise generally set forth the types of
experience that the Board would expect
a risk-management expert to have, in
some circumstances, a person may have
an appropriate level of risk-management
expertise without direct experience in
each area cited in the proposed rule.
The final rule requires that only one
member of the committee have
experience in identifying, assessing, and
managing risk exposures of large,
complex firms. However, the Board
would expect all risk committee
members generally to have an
understanding of risk management
principles and practices relevant to the
company. The appropriate level of riskmanagement expertise for a company’s
risk committee can vary depending on
the risks posed by the company to the
stability of the U.S. financial system.
Accordingly, the risk committee of a
company that poses more systemic risk
should have more risk committee
members with commensurately greater
understandings of risk management
principles and practices.
Two commenters urged the Board to
include a requirement that members of
the risk committee receive continuing
education and training specifically
related to risk management. Although
the Board supports ongoing risk
management education and training for
risk committee members, the Board is
not including this requirement in the
final rule because it does not believe
that the benefits of such education and
training would justify the burden of
imposing such a requirement for all
bank holding companies of this size.
c. Corporate Governance
The Board also proposed to establish
certain corporate governance
requirements for risk committees.
Specifically, under the proposal, a
company’s risk committee would have
been required to have a formal, written
charter that is approved by the
company’s board of directors. The Board
is finalizing this requirement as
proposed. In addition, the proposal
would have required that a risk
committee meet regularly and as
needed. To provide more specificity,
and because quarterly meetings of board
committees are standard in the financial
industry, the final rule requires that a
risk committee meet at least quarterly
and otherwise as needed.
The proposal also would have
required that a risk committee fully
document and maintain records of its
proceedings, including risk management
decisions. One commenter opposed the
requirement that a risk committee
document its ‘‘risk management
decisions.’’ The commenter asserted

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that management, rather than a board of
directors, makes decisions on risk
management practices and procedures.
As discussed further below, the Board
has clarified in the final rule that the
risk committee is responsible for the
oversight of risk-management policies,
rather than for its risk-management
practices. The Board believes that it is
important for a risk committee to
document its decisions relating to riskmanagement policies and, accordingly,
the Board is finalizing this aspect of the
requirement as proposed.
3. Risk Committee for Bank Holding
Companies With Total Consolidated
Assets of More Than $10 Billion and
Less Than $50 Billion
A few commenters expressed concern
about the effect of the proposed rule on
smaller bank holding companies,
including publicly traded bank holding
companies with total consolidated
assets of less than $50 billion. One
commenter recommended that for bank
holding companies with less than $50
billion in total consolidated assets, the
Board allow for flexibility with respect
to board member qualifications, riskcommittee structure, and the reporting
structure for risk management
executives. Another commenter asserted
that the risk committee requirement for
bank holding companies with total
consolidated assets of less than $50
billion is an unreasonable and
unnecessary burden on community
banks. A commenter also expressed
concern that the more stringent riskmanagement standards in the proposal
might be applied to bank holding
companies with less than $10 billion in
total consolidated assets.
Section 165(h) requires publicly
traded bank holding companies with
total consolidated assets of $10 billion
or more to establish risk committees.
The final rule implements this statutory
requirement. The Board observes that
larger and more complex companies
should have more robust riskmanagement practices and frameworks
than smaller, less complex companies.
As a company grows or increases in
complexity, the company’s risk
committee should ensure that its riskmanagement practices and framework
adapt to changes in the company’s
operations and the inherent level of risk
posed by the company to the U.S.
financial system. The Board believes
that the risk committee structure and
responsibilities in the final rule are
therefore appropriate for publicly traded
bank holding companies with at least
$10 billion but less than $50 billion in
total consolidated assets, as they
address corporate governance issues

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common among bank holding
companies of various sizes. However, as
explained above, the Board does not
expect board members of bank holding
companies with total consolidated
assets of less than $50 billion to have
risk-management expertise comparable
to that of board members of larger bank
holding companies. Furthermore, the
Board notes that the final rule does not
apply the risk-committee requirements
to bank holding companies with less
than $10 billion in assets or to those that
are not publicly traded and have assets
of less than $50 billion.
Another commenter expressed
concern that the standards in the
proposal for the qualifications,
responsibilities, and role of a chief risk
officer described below could be
applied to a smaller company through
supervisory examinations. The final
rule, consistent with the proposal,
would impose a chief risk officer
requirement only on bank holding
companies with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more.
4. Additional Enhanced RiskManagement Standards for Bank
Holding Companies With Total
Consolidated Assets of $50 Billion or
More
In accordance with section
165(b)(1)(A)(iii) of the Dodd-Frank Act,
the proposed rule would have
established certain overall riskmanagement standards for bank holding
companies with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more. These
enhanced prudential standards are in
addition to the risk committee
requirements discussed above.
a. Additional Risk Committee
Requirements
Under the proposed rule, risk
committees of bank holding companies
with total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more would have been
required to meet certain requirements in
addition to those provided in the
proposal for bank holding companies
with total consolidated assets equal to
or greater than $10 billion but less than
$50 billion because of the risk posed to
financial stability by these firms. For
instance, the proposal would have
required that such a banking
organization’s risk committee not be
housed within another committee or be
part of a joint committee, report directly
to the bank holding company’s board of
directors, and receive and review
regular reports from the bank holding
company’s chief risk officer.
Several commenters objected to the
proposed stand-alone risk committee
requirement. These commenters

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generally asserted that a banking
organization should be given flexibility
to determine how to structure its risk
committee based on the company’s
business strategy and risk profile. Some
commenters requested that the final rule
permit the use of joint risk committees
by a banking organization and its
subsidiaries. A few commenters asserted
that it is common practice for a risk
committee at a holding company also to
serve as the risk committee for its
subsidiaries and that this practice can
improve the understanding, monitoring,
and evaluation of risks throughout the
organization. One commenter
recommended that the final rule allow
a banking organization to combine its
risk and finance committees in order to
ensure strong oversight of capital,
liquidity, and stress testing. Similarly, a
few commenters asserted that the final
rule should permit a board of directors
to allocate risk-management oversight
responsibilities to various committees,
and not solely to the risk committee.
Appropriate oversight by the board of
directors of the risks undertaken by
complex banking organizations requires
significant knowledge, experience, and
time. Therefore, it is important for a
bank holding company with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more to have a separate committee of its
board of directors devoted to riskmanagement oversight. The Board notes
that this is also consistent with industry
practice, as large, complex banking
organizations commonly have a risk
committee of the board of directors that
is distinct from other committees of the
board. The risk committee may have
members that are on other board
committees, and other board
committees, such as audit or finance,
may have some involvement in
establishing a banking organization’s
risk management framework. However,
a stand-alone risk committee, rather
than a joint risk/audit or risk/finance
committee, enables appropriate boardlevel attention to risk management. The
final rule therefore retains the
requirement for a separate risk
committee, and clarifies that the risk
committee may not be part of a joint
committee. This requirement would
prevent the risk committee from having
other substantive responsibilities at the
bank holding company. The rule does
not prevent a parent company’s risk
committee from serving as the risk
committee for one or more of its
subsidiaries as long as the requirements
of the rule are otherwise satisfied.
As noted above, the proposal would
have required a bank holding company’s
risk committee to report directly to the
company’s board of directors. In

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addition, the proposed rule would have
directed a banking organization’s risk
committee to receive and review regular
reports from the chief risk officer. These
requirements were intended to ensure
the proper flow of information regarding
risk management within a banking
organization. One commenter
recommended that the Board specify the
procedures to be followed when risk
levels rise at an institution. The Board
believes that a bank holding company
should be able to establish procedures
appropriate to its operations, provided
that the chief risk officer reports
material risk issues to the board of
directors or the risk committee. The
final rule clarifies that ‘‘regular reports’’
must be provided not less than
quarterly.
b. Chief Risk Officer

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i. Appointment and Qualifications
Under the proposal, each bank
holding company with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more would have been required to
appoint a chief risk officer to implement
appropriate enterprise-wide riskmanagement practices for the company.
The chief risk officer would have been
required to have risk-management
expertise commensurate with the bank
holding company’s capital structure,
risk profile, complexity, activities, size,
and other appropriate risk-related
factors.
A few commenters opposed the
proposed requirement that a bank
holding company with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more appoint a designated chief risk
officer. The commenters asserted that
the appointment of a specific risk
management position should be left to
the discretion of a company.
Considering the complexity and size of
the operations of a bank holding
company of this size, the Board believes
that it is important for the bank holding
company to have a designated executive
in charge of implementing and
maintaining the risk management
framework and practices approved by
the risk committee. Accordingly, the
final rule requires each bank holding
company with total consolidated assets
of $50 billion or more to appoint a chief
risk officer.
Several commenters opposed the riskmanagement expertise requirements in
the proposal. Some commenters
asserted that management and the board
of directors should be able to determine
what combination of skill, experience,
and education is appropriate for the
chief risk officer given the company’s
culture, business strategy, and risk

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profile. Other commenters opined that
the risk-management field is still
developing educational and expertise
standards and urged the Board not to
adopt specific educational or
professional requirements for the chief
risk officer. One commenter asked for
clarification as to whether the standards
for chief risk officer qualification would
be applied prospectively or retroactively
to existing chief risk officers.
The Board believes that although a
company generally should have
flexibility to determine the particular
qualifications it desires in a chief risk
officer, because of the risks posed by
bank holding companies with total
assets of $50 billion or more, a chief risk
officer should satisfy certain minimum
standards. Accordingly, and similar to
the risk-committee requirements, the
final rule would revise the ‘‘risk
management expertise’’ requirement to
focus on an individual’s experience in
identifying, assessing, and managing
exposures of large, complex financial
firms rather than on his or her
subjective ability to understand risk
management principles and practices
and assess the general application of
such principles and practices. The
Board believes that focusing on an
individual’s risk-management
experience and demonstrated ability to
apply that expertise to risk management
provides a more reliable and objective
method for bank holding companies and
supervisors to assess an individual’s
fitness to serve as a chief risk officer.
The minimum standards for a
company’s chief risk officer of the final
rule are similar to the risk-management
experience requirement for the risk
committee of a bank holding company
with total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more, as discussed above. In
every case, the Board expects that a
bank holding company should be able to
demonstrate that its chief risk officer’s
experience is relevant to the particular
risks facing the company and
commensurate with the bank holding
company’s structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, and size. All of
the requirements for a chief risk officer,
including the risk-management
experience requirement, will become
effective on January 1, 2015, for bank
holding companies. At that time, bank
holding companies with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more will be required to employ a chief
risk officer who meets the requirements
of the final rule, regardless of how the
banking organization managed risk prior
to the effective date of the final rule.

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ii. Responsibilities
Under the proposal, the chief risk
officer would have had direct oversight
over: Establishment of risk limits and
monitoring compliance with such
limits; implementation and ongoing
compliance with appropriate policies
and procedures relating to risk
management governance, practices, and
risk controls; developing and
implementing appropriate processes
and systems for identifying and
reporting risks, including emerging
risks; managing risk exposures and risk
controls; monitoring and testing risk
controls; reporting risk management
issues and emerging risks; and ensuring
that risk management issues are
effectively resolved in a timely manner.
Several commenters criticized the
responsibilities of the chief risk officer
under the proposed rule. Some
commenters opposed the requirement
that the chief risk officer ‘‘directly’’
oversee risk-management functions
because the chief risk officer works
with, and through, individual business
units that have a primary role in
managing risks in their businesses.
Another commenter asserted that the
list of responsibilities included matters
not appropriately assigned to risk
managers, such as the development of
processes and systems for identifying
and reporting risks, which the
commenter asserted are often performed
by information technology groups.
Another commenter argued that the
responsibilities of the chief risk officer
should be more general and
comprehensive.
The Board agrees that the chief risk
officer may execute his or her
responsibilities by working with, or
through, others in the organization. The
final rule does not include the proposed
requirement that the chief risk officer
have ‘‘direct’’ oversight over the
enumerated responsibilities or perform
the functions that carry out those
responsibilities. Notwithstanding
involvement of other departments
within the organization in the execution
of the processes enumerated above, the
Board believes that each responsibility
described in the proposed rule is
primarily a risk-management function
and, therefore, is appropriately assigned
to the chief risk officer as the officer of
the company responsible for ensuring
those risk management responsibilities
are carried out. The Board is finalizing
these requirements generally as
proposed.
The final enhanced liquidity risk
managements standards set forth certain
responsibilities of senior management,
as discussed in section III.C.2 of this

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preamble. A company may assign the
responsibilities assigned to senior
management to its chief risk officer, as
this officer would be considered a
member of the senior management of a
company.
iii. Reporting Lines
The proposal would have required a
chief risk officer to report directly to the
risk committee and the bank holding
company’s chief executive officer.
Several commenters opposed the
proposed requirement that a chief risk
officer report directly both to the risk
committee and the chief executive
officer of the company. Some
commenters asserted that the chief risk
officer should report only to the chief
executive officer and not to the risk
committee because reporting to the
board could interfere with the chief risk
officer’s ability to influence senior
management. Other commenters
asserted that the chief risk officer
should report only to the risk committee
because this would allow direct access
to an independent director without
managerial influence. Finally, several
commenters urged the Board not to
specify a reporting structure in the final
rule to preserve flexibility for each bank
holding company with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more to structure its reporting
requirements as it deems appropriate.
The Board believes that dual reporting
by the chief risk officer to both the risk
committee and the chief executive
officer will help the board of directors
to oversee the risk-management function
and may help disseminate information
relevant to risk management throughout
the organization. Furthermore, guidance
issued by the Basel Committee and the
Financial Stability Board (FSB) supports
dual reporting by the chief risk officer
to the risk committee and the chief
executive officer.44 Thus, the Board is
finalizing the chief risk officer reporting
requirements as proposed.

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iv. Compensation
The proposal also would have
required the compensation of a bank
holding company’s chief risk officer to
be structured to provide for an objective
44 See Basel Committee, ‘‘Principles for
enhancing corporate governance,’’ (October 2010),
available at: http://www.bis.org/publ/bcbs176.pdf
(‘‘While the chief risk officer may report to the chief
executive officer or other senior management, the
chief risk officer should also report and have direct
access to the board and its risk committee without
impediment.’’). See also FSB, ‘‘Thematic Review on
Risk Governance,’’ (February 2013), available at:
http://www.financialstabilityboard.org/
publications/r_130212.pdf (The chief risk officer
should have ‘‘a direct reporting line to the chief
executive officer’’ and ‘‘a direct reporting line to the
board and/or risk committee.’’).

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assessment of the risks taken by the
company. One commenter opposed the
compensation requirement, asserting
that the proposed pay structure would
not allow for discretion in crafting a
compensation model and that
compensation committees are best
suited to approve decisions regarding
executive pay programs.
The Board observes that the proposed
requirement would not prevent a
company from using discretion in
adopting a compensation structure for
its chief risk officer, whether through its
compensation committee or otherwise,
as long as the structure of the chief risk
officer’s compensation provides for an
objective assessment of risks.
Accordingly, the Board is adopting the
substance of this requirement as
proposed. In addition, the Board notes
that this requirement supplements
existing Board guidance on incentive
compensation, which provides, among
other things, that compensation for
employees in risk management and
control functions should avoid conflicts
of interest and that incentive
compensation received by these
employees should not be based
substantially on the financial
performance of the business units that
they review.45
C. Liquidity Requirements for Bank
Holding Companies
1. General
Section 165(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act
directs the Board to adopt enhanced
liquidity requirements for bank holding
companies with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more.46 The
domestic proposal would have required
that a bank holding company establish
a framework for the management of
liquidity risk, conduct monthly
liquidity stress tests, and maintain a
buffer of highly liquid assets to cover
cash-flow needs under stressed
conditions.
The requirements in the proposed and
final rule build on the Board’s overall
supervisory framework for liquidity
adequacy and liquidity risk
management. This framework includes
supervisory guidance set forth in the
Board’s Supervision and Regulation
(SR) letter 10–6, Interagency Policy
Statement on Funding and Liquidity
Risk Management issued in March 2010
(Interagency Liquidity Risk Policy
Statement), which was based
substantially on the Basel Committee’s
‘‘Principles for Sound Liquidity Risk
Management and Supervision’’ (Basel
45 Guidance on Sound Incentive Compensation
Policies, 75 FR 36395 (June 25, 2010).
46 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(1)(A)(ii).

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Committee principles for liquidity risk
management).47 The final rule is
designed to provide a regulatory
framework for ensuring that bank
holding companies with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more establish and maintain robust
liquidity risk management practices,
perform internal stress tests for
determining the adequacy of their
liquidity resources, and maintain a
buffer of highly liquid assets in the
United States to cover cash flow needs
under stress. In addition, the Board
intends to use the supervisory process
to supplement the final rule through
horizontal reviews of the internal stresstesting methods, liquidity risk
management, and liquidity adequacy of
the largest, most complex bank holding
companies.
Many commenters were generally
supportive of the proposed liquidity
rules and expressed the view that the
liquidity requirements were an
appropriate step for improving liquidity
risk monitoring and management. One
commenter noted that the tools in the
proposed rule (particularly the cashflow projections, liquidity stress testing,
liquidity buffer, and contingency
funding planning) are consistent with
liquidity management practices as they
have evolved since the financial crisis.
Other commenters, however, expressed
concern that the proposed rules were
too limiting and requested that the risk
management and stress testing
requirements include additional
flexibility for smaller bank holding
companies. These commenters argued
that formulaic quantitative and specific
risk management requirements should
apply only to bank holding companies
with the greatest systemic footprints,
and, further, that criteria such as an
institution’s business model would be a
better gauge of systemic importance
than asset size.
The Board observes that, in general,
the proposed requirements build on
existing guidance that sets forth
supervisory expectations for liquidity
risk management at institutions of all
sizes. Additionally, the proposed
requirements were designed to provide
bank holding companies with
47 Principles for Sound Liquidity Risk
Management and Supervision (September 2008),
available at: http://www.bis.org/publ/bcbs144.htm.
See also Supervision and Regulation Letter SR 10–
6, Interagency Policy Statement on Funding and
Liquidity Risk Management (March 17, 2010),
available at: http://www.federalreserve.gov/
boarddocs/srletters/2010/sr1006.pdf; 75 FR 13656
(March 22, 2010). Bank holding companies that are
not subject to the final rule are also expected to
have adequate liquidity resources and engage in
sound liquidity risk management consistent with
the Interagency Liquidity Risk Policy Statement.

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significant flexibility as to the structure
of the liquidity risk management
process, so that a bank holding company
can manage its liquidity risk consistent
with its overall risk profile and business
model. However, the prescriptive
elements of the proposed requirements
represent the minimum standards that
the Board believes should be
incorporated into the liquidity riskmanagement practices of all bank
holding companies with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more.
The Board therefore is adopting the
proposed requirements with some
modifications, as described below. In
many cases, the final rule directs a
company to implement the standards
taking into account its capital structure,
risk profile, complexity, activities, and
size, reflecting the Board’s view that the
standards are sufficiently flexible to be
used by bank holding companies with
varying sizes, business models, and
activities.
Several commenters opined that they
preferred the proposal’s internalmodels-based approach to stress testing
to the standardized approach required
by the international liquidity standards
published by the Basel Committee in
December 2010 and revised in January
2013, including the liquidity coverage
ratio (Basel III LCR).48 While the Board
believes that a regulatory framework for
overall liquidity risk management—
including internal stress testing—is
important as part of enhanced liquidity
standards, the Board also believes that
a standardized, minimum liquidity risk
requirement is an important component
of a comprehensive liquidity risk
framework for large, complex
institutions. Accordingly, the Board
participated in the international
agreement on liquidity standards and
sought comment on a proposed liquidity
coverage ratio based on the Basel III LCR
(proposed U.S. LCR) in October 2013.49
Consistent with the Basel III LCR, the
proposed U.S. LCR would require
internationally active banking
organizations and nonbank financial
companies supervised by the Board to
hold an amount of high-quality liquid
assets sufficient to meet expected net
cash outflows under a supervisory stress
48 Basel III: International framework for liquidity
risk measurement, standards and monitoring
(December 2010), available at: http://www.bis.org/
publ/bcbs188.pdf; Basel III: The Liquidity Coverage
Ratio and liquidity risk monitoring tools (January
2013), available at: http://www.bis.org/publ/
bcbs238.htm.
49 See Liquidity Coverage Ratio: Liquidity Risk
Measurement, Standards, and Monitoring, 78 FR
71818 (November 29, 2013).

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scenario over a 30-day time horizon.50
The proposed U.S. LCR would also
apply a less stringent, modified
liquidity coverage ratio to bank holding
companies with total consolidated
assets between $50 billion and $250
billion that do not meet the thresholds
for an internationally active banking
organization.51
The proposed U.S. LCR and the
enhanced liquidity requirements
included in this rule were designed to
complement one another. Whereas the
final rule’s internal liquidity stress-test
requirements provide a view of an
individual firm under multiple
scenarios, and include assumptions
tailored to the specific products and risk
profile of the company, the standardized
measure of liquidity adequacy that
would be provided by the proposed U.S.
LCR would facilitate a transparent
assessment of firms’ liquidity positions
under a standard stress scenario and
facilitate comparison across firms. Both
requirements would enhance the
liquidity position of bank holding
companies while requiring robust
liquidity risk management practices.
2. Framework for Managing Liquidity
Risk
a. Board of Directors
The domestic proposal would have
required the board of directors of a bank
holding company with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more to oversee the company’s liquidity
risk management processes, and to
review and approve the liquidity risk
management strategies, policies, and
procedures established by senior
management. As part of these
responsibilities, the board of directors
would have been required to establish
the bank holding company’s liquidity
risk tolerance at least annually. The
proposal defined liquidity risk tolerance
as the acceptable level of liquidity risk
that a company may assume in
connection with its operating strategies.
The preamble to the proposed rule
explained that the liquidity risk
50 Id. The proposed U.S. LCR would apply to all
bank holding companies, certain savings and loan
holding companies, and depository institutions
with more than $250 billion in total assets or more
than $10 billion in on-balance sheet foreign
exposure, and to their consolidated subsidiaries
that are depository institutions with $10 billion or
more in total consolidated assets. The proposed
U.S. LCR would also apply to nonbank financial
companies supervised by the Board that do not
have significant insurance operations and to their
consolidated subsidiaries that are depository
institutions with $10 billion or more in total
consolidated assets.
51 Id. For instance, the modified liquidity
coverage ratio standard is based on a 21-calendar
day stress scenario rather than a 30-calendar day
stress scenario.

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tolerance should reflect the board of
directors’ assessment of tradeoffs
between the costs and benefits of
liquidity, and should be articulated in a
way that all levels of management can
clearly understand and properly apply
the articulated approach to all aspects of
liquidity risk management throughout
the organization.
The proposed rule would have
required the board of directors to review
information provided by senior
management at least semi-annually to
determine whether the company is
managed in accordance with the
established liquidity risk tolerance. The
proposal also would have required the
board of directors to review and approve
the bank holding company’s
contingency funding plan 52 at least
annually and whenever the company
materially revises the plan.
Some commenters asserted that the
governance requirements for the board
of directors in the proposal should be
more flexible. Commenters also
criticized the proposed rule for
assigning what they described as
operational responsibilities to the board
of directors and the risk committee, and
argued that those responsibilities were
more appropriate for senior
management. While some commenters
believed that the board of directors
should have responsibility for
approving liquidity risk policies, others
stated that the proposed responsibilities
would interfere with directors’ oversight
duties, perhaps shifting their focus from
areas presenting more significant risks
than liquidity risk. Similarly, other
commenters requested flexibility to
reflect their varying business models, or
to allow companies to respond to
changing business conditions. One
commenter suggested that the Board
make directors and chief executive
officers personally responsible for
liquidity risk management and require
them to attest to the soundness of
liquidity risk estimates.
The Board believes that the board of
directors should have responsibility for
oversight of liquidity risk management
because the directors have ultimate
responsibility for the direction of the
entire company, but that certain risk
management responsibilities are
appropriately assigned to senior
management. Accordingly, in response
to comments, the Board has adjusted the
requirements of the final rule.
The final rule requires the board of
directors to approve the company’s
52 The contingency funding plan is the company’s
compilation of policies, procedures, and action
plans for managing liquidity stress events, as
described more fully in section III.C.5 of this
preamble.

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liquidity risk tolerance at least annually,
receive, and review information from
senior management at least semiannually to determine whether the bank
holding company is operating in
accordance with its established liquidity
risk tolerance, and to approve and
periodically review the liquidity risk
management strategies, policies, and
procedures established by senior
management. Unlike the proposal,
however, it assigns responsibility for
reviewing and approving the
contingency funding plan to the risk
committee, as further discussed below.
In addition, the text of the final rule
locates the obligations of the board of
directors in a separate paragraph from
the responsibilities of the risk
committee to clarify these
responsibilities.
The final rule does not assign
personal responsibility to directors and
chief executive officers for liquidity risk
management or require them to attest to
the soundness of liquidity risk
estimates. The Board typically does not
apply personal liability to directors and
chief executive officers and believes that
assigning responsibility to the board of
directors is sufficient for achieving the
Board’s safety and soundness goals.
b. Risk Committee
The proposal would have required the
risk committee or a designated
subcommittee of the risk committee to
review and approve the liquidity costs,
benefits, and risk of each significant
new business line and each significant
new product before the company
implements the business line or offers
the product. It would have required the
risk committee to consider whether the
liquidity risk of the new strategy or
product under both current and stressed
conditions would be within the
established liquidity risk tolerance. In
addition, the risk committee or
designated subcommittee would have
been required at least annually to
review and approve significant business
lines and products to determine
whether the liquidity risk of each aligns
with the company’s liquidity risk
tolerance. The proposal would also have
required the risk committee or a
designated subcommittee thereof to
review the cash flow projections,
approve liquidity risk limits, and review
and approve elements relating to
liquidity stress tests at least quarterly,
periodically to review the independent
validation of the liquidity stress tests
produced under the rule,53 and to
53 The independent validation and liquidity stress
testing requirements are described more fully in
section III.C.3 and 8 of this preamble.

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establish procedures governing the
content of senior management reports
on the liquidity risk profile of the
company and other information
provided regarding compliance with the
rule.
Commenters asserted that the
requirements for the risk committee
inappropriately dictated the frequency
of reviews of various liquidity reports
and limits and asserted that the
requirements inappropriately included
operational responsibilities. As an
alternative, one commenter stated that
the risk committee should be required
only to review material stress-testing
practices, methodologies, and
assumptions, with discretion as to the
level of review. Another commenter
requested that the Board clarify
‘‘significant’’ in reference to the risk
committee’s obligations regarding
significant business lines and products.
In response to these comments, the
Board has modified the requirement to
require senior management, rather than
the risk committee, to review and
approve new products and business
lines and evaluate liquidity costs,
benefits, and risks related to each new
business line and product that could
have a significant effect on the
company’s liquidity risk profile and to
annually review the liquidity risk of
each significant business line and
product.54 Similarly, in response to the
concern that the proposed quarterly
reviews would be operational duties
inappropriate for the risk committee, the
final rule requires senior management,
and not the risk committee, to perform
these reviews.
In addition, as described above, the
final rule requires the risk committee or
a designated subcommittee thereof,55
rather than the board of directors, to
review and approve the contingency
funding plan at least annually and
whenever the company materially
revises the plan. The Board believes that
this change is appropriate given that the
risk committee is responsible for
understanding the liquidity risks
associated with different business lines
and products and is composed of a
subset of directors with the appropriate
level of risk-management expertise to
conduct an in-depth review of the
contingency funding plan. While the
directors of the board should
understand and periodically review the
54 The Board is clarifying that a ‘‘significant’’
business line or product is one that could have a
significant effect on the company’s liquidity risk
profile.
55 For purposes of the rule’s liquidity risk
management requirements, a designated
subcommittee of the risk committee must be
composed of members of the board of directors.

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contingency funding plan, the risk
committee and senior management have
close proximity to the operational-level
details included in the contingency
funding plan and can evaluate and
modify the contingency funding plan as
needed.
c. Senior Management
The proposed rule would have
established responsibilities for the
senior management of a bank holding
company with total consolidated assets
of $50 billion or more, including
requirements to establish and
implement liquidity risk management
strategies, policies, and procedures and
to oversee the development and
implementation of liquidity risk
measurement, monitoring and reporting
systems, cash-flow projections, liquidity
stress testing and associated buffers,
specific limits, and the contingency
funding plan. The proposed rule also
would have required senior
management to report regularly to the
risk committee, or designated
subcommittee thereof, on the liquidity
risk profile of the company and provide
other information, as necessary, to the
board of directors or risk committee.
The Board noted in the preamble to the
proposed rule that it would expect
management to report as frequently as
conditions warrant, but no less
frequently than quarterly. The Board is
finalizing these requirements
substantially as proposed.
As explained above, the proposed rule
required the risk committee to review
and approve the liquidity risk
management strategies, policies, and
procedures established by senior
management, and the Board has
reassigned certain responsibilities from
the risk committee to senior
management in response to comments.
Specifically, the final rule requires
senior management to review and
approve new products and business
lines and evaluate liquidity costs,
benefits, and risks related to each new
business line and product that could
have a significant effect on the
company’s liquidity risk profile and to
annually review the liquidity risk of
each significant business line and
product. It requires senior management
to establish the liquidity risk limits
specified in the final rule (as discussed
in section III.C.6 of this preamble), and
to review the company’s compliance
with those limits at least quarterly. In
addition, it requires senior management
to review the cash flow projections
required by the final rule at least
quarterly (as discussed in section III.C.4
of this preamble) and to review and
approve certain aspects of the liquidity

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stress testing framework (as discussed in
sections III.C.8 and 9 of this preamble)
at specified intervals. Senior
management must conduct more
frequent reviews than those required in
the final rule if the financial condition
of the company or market conditions
indicate that the liquidity risk tolerance,
business strategies and products, or
contingency funding plan of the
company should be reviewed or
modified.
In the Board’s view, this change is
appropriate given that senior
management has the appropriate level of
seniority and expertise to conduct these
reviews. Senior management maintains
proximity to the operational-level
details that comprise such reports and
limit structures. In addition, senior
management is required to update the
risk committee or the board of directors
on a regular basis, and is thereby in a
position to raise issues to the risk
committee or board of director’s
attention, as appropriate. The Board
notes that a company may assign the
responsibilities assigned to senior
management described above to its chief
risk officer, as this officer would be
considered a member of the senior
management of a company.
3. Independent Review
Under the proposed rule, a bank
holding company with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more would have been required to
establish and maintain a review
function to evaluate its liquidity risk
management that was independent of
management functions that execute
funding. The Board is finalizing the
substance of these requirements as
proposed. The Board believes that an
independent review function is a
critical element of a sound liquidity risk
management governance program. As
such, the independent review function
is required to review and evaluate the
adequacy and effectiveness of the bank
holding company’s liquidity risk
management processes regularly, but no
less frequently than annually. It is also
required to assess whether the
company’s liquidity risk management
function complies with applicable laws,
regulations, supervisory guidance, and
sound business practices. To the extent
permitted by applicable law, the
independent review function must also
report material liquidity risk
management issues in writing to the
board of directors or the risk committee
for corrective action.
An appropriate internal review
conducted by the independent review
function should address all relevant
elements of the liquidity risk

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management processes, including
adherence to the established policies
and procedures, and the adequacy of
liquidity risk identification,
measurement, and reporting processes.
Personnel conducting these reviews
should seek to understand, test, and
evaluate the liquidity risk management
processes, document their review, and
recommend solutions for any identified
weaknesses.
One commenter requested that the
Board clarify whether the independent
review function is required to be
independent of the liquidity risk
management function. The Board is
clarifying that the independent review
function is not required to be
independent of the liquidity risk
management function. However, in the
final rule, consistent with the proposal,
the independent review function must
be independent of management
functions that execute funding (e.g., the
treasury function).
As discussed in section III.C.8 of this
preamble, the Board has revised the
proposed requirement that liquidity
stress test processes and assumptions be
independently validated to require that
the liquidity stress test processes and
assumptions be subject to independent
review, subject to review by the chief
risk officer. This is reflected in the final
rule text.
4. Cash-Flow Projections
The proposed rule would have
required a bank holding company with
total consolidated assets of $50 billion
or more to produce comprehensive
projections that project short-term and
long-term cash flows from assets,
liabilities, and off-balance sheet
exposures. The required projections
would have included cash flows arising
from contractual maturities and
intercompany transactions, as well as
cash flows from new business, funding
renewals, customer options, and other
potential events that may have an
impact on liquidity over appropriate
time periods. The proposal would have
required firms to identify and quantify
discrete and cumulative cash-flow
mismatches over these time periods.
The proposed rule also would have
required firms to produce analyses that
incorporated reasonable assumptions
regarding the future behavior of assets,
liabilities, and off-balance sheet
exposures in projected cash flows and
reflected the company’s capital
structure, risk profile, complexity,
activities, size, and other appropriate
risk-related factors. The proposal would
have also required the company
adequately to document its cash flow
methodology and assumptions and

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conduct short-term cash-flow
projections daily and long-term cash
flows on a monthly basis.
Commenters suggested that instead of
requiring a specific type of cash-flow
projection, the final rule should allow
each company to formulate liquidity
and funding projections in a manner
most appropriate for its business model.
As an example, commenters asserted
that the prescribed method did not
accurately measure the liquidity risk for
bank holding companies with large
broker-dealer subsidiaries. Commenters
asserted that it was unnecessary to
produce frequent cash-flow projections
when companies have ample liquidity,
and therefore the requirement should be
graduated to reflect different market or
firm-specific circumstances. Other
commenters generally criticized the
proposed time horizons as inflexible
and unnecessary. One commenter asked
the Board to confirm that it does not
expect firms to develop cash-flow
projections over horizons longer than
one year.
The Board believes that standardized
cash-flow projections performed over a
range of time horizons, updated daily
for short-term projections and monthly
for long-term projections, are
appropriate for all bank holding
companies with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more to capture
shifts in liquidity vulnerabilities over
time. The Board believes that the
proposal provided sufficient flexibility
for bank holding companies subject to
the rule to adapt the cash-flow
projection requirements to their
particular circumstances, such as if they
have significant broker-dealer activities.
The final rule clarifies that cash-flow
projections must provide sufficient
detail to reflect the capital structure,
risk profile, complexity, currency
exposure, activities, and size of the bank
holding company, including, where
appropriate, analyses by business line,
currency, or legal entity, and must be
performed, at a minimum, over short
and long-term time horizons.
Accordingly, the Board is finalizing the
rule substantially as proposed.
While the final rule implements a
minimum standard for frequency of
projections, more frequent cash-flow
reports may be appropriate for
companies with more complex risk
profiles or for all companies during
times of stress. Similarly, while the final
rule does not require cash-flow
projections over time horizons longer
than one year, it may be appropriate for
companies to produce cash-flow
projections for longer time periods, for
instance to account for long-term debt
maturities, if circumstances warrant.

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5. Contingency Funding Plan
As part of a robust regulatory
framework to promote comprehensive
liquidity risk management, the proposal
would have required a bank holding
company to establish and maintain a
contingency funding plan. As described
in the proposal, a contingency funding
plan is a compilation of policies,
procedures, and action plans for
managing liquidity stress events that,
together, provide a plan for responding
to a liquidity crisis. Under the proposed
rule, the contingency funding plan
would have been required to be
commensurate with the company’s
capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, size and
established liquidity risk tolerance. The
proposal also would have required the
contingency funding plan to be updated
annually or more often if necessary.
Under the proposed rule, the
contingency funding plan would have
included two components: A
quantitative assessment and an eventmanagement process. The proposed rule
also would have required the
contingency funding plan to include
procedures for monitoring risk.
In the quantitative assessment, a bank
holding company would have been
required to identify stress events that
have a significant impact on the
company’s liquidity, assess the level
and nature of the impact on the bank
holding company’s liquidity of such
stress events, and assess available
funding sources and needs during
identified liquidity stress events.
Liquidity stress events could include a
deterioration in asset quality, a
widening of credit default swap spreads,
or other events that call into question
the company’s ability to meet its
obligations. The required analysis
would have included all material onand off-balance sheet cash flows and
their related effects and would have
required a firm to incorporate
information generated by liquidity stress
testing to determine liquidity needs and
funding sources. The proposed rule
would also have required a bank
holding company to identify alternative
funding sources that may be accessed
during identified liquidity stress events.
The preamble to the proposed rule
observed that since some of these
alternative funding sources will rarely
be used in the normal course of
business, a bank holding company
should conduct advance planning and
periodic testing (as further discussed
below) to make sure that the funding
sources are available when needed, and
put into place administrative
procedures and agreements. The

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preamble to the proposed rule also
noted that discount window credit may
be incorporated into contingency
funding plans as a potential source of
funds in a manner consistent with the
terms provided by the Federal Reserve
Banks, and that contingency funding
plans that incorporate borrowing from
the discount window should specify the
actions that the company will take to
replace discount window borrowing
with more permanent funding,
including the proposed time frame for
these actions.
The proposal would have required the
contingency funding plan to include an
event-management process that set forth
procedures for managing liquidity
during identified liquidity stress events.
The proposed rule would have also
required the contingency funding plan
to include procedures for monitoring
emerging liquidity stress events and for
identifying early warning indicators of
emerging liquidity stress events that are
tailored to a bank holding company’s
capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, size, and other
appropriate risk-related factors. The
preamble to the proposed rule noted
that such early warning indicators may
include, but are not limited to, negative
publicity concerning an asset class
owned by the bank holding company,
potential deterioration in the bank
holding company’s financial condition,
widening debt or credit default swap
spreads, and increased concerns over
the funding of off-balance-sheet items.
Finally, the proposed rule would have
required a bank holding company
periodically to test the components of
the contingency funding plan to assess
its reliability during liquidity stress
events, including trial runs of the
operational elements of the contingency
funding plan to ensure that they work
as intended during a liquidity stress
event. The preamble to the proposed
rule noted that the tests should include
operational simulations to test
communications, coordination, and
decision-making involving relevant
managers, including managers at
relevant legal entities within the
corporate structure, as well as methods
the bank holding company intends to
use to access alternate funding.
Some commenters supported the
domestic proposal’s approach to
contingency funding planning, finding
it sufficiently flexible to accommodate
firms’ liquidity risk management
practices. Other commenters, however,
criticized the proposed requirement that
contingency funding plans incorporate
the quantitative results of liquidity
stress tests and be updated annually.
Instead, these commenters asserted that

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the Board should allow management to
have a contingency funding plan that
outlines qualitative strategies to address
a variety of scenarios that may be
generically implemented in the face of
an actual crisis, rather than require
management mechanically to update
every aspect of the contingency funding
plan at set intervals. Commenters also
expressed concern that requiring an
institution to book transactions as a
means of testing the plan could be
detrimental to the financial institution
overall. Instead, they asserted that bank
holding companies should be able to
adequately test components of the
contingency funding plan through ‘‘war
room’’ simulations.
The Board is clarifying that it does not
expect every aspect of the contingency
funding plan to be modified at set
intervals. For example, many of the
qualitative items in a contingency
funding plan, such as the eventmanagement process, reporting
requirements, contact lists, scenario
descriptions, and general stress testing
assumptions will not change at every
review period. At the same time, the
Board continues to believe that an
appropriate time interval for reviewing
and updating (as necessary) key aspects
of the contingency funding plan is
important to the maintenance of an
effective and relevant contingency
funding plan. Because a firm’s balance
sheet changes over time, the analysis
must be refreshed at regular intervals to
ensure its ongoing relevance.
Additionally, while the qualitative
aspects of a contingency funding plan
are important, quantitative analysis is
necessary to achieve a higher level of
effectiveness in identifying the size,
scope, and timing of potential liquidity
needs and liquidity resources that are
available to meet those needs. The
contingency funding plan must be
updated whenever changes to market
and idiosyncratic conditions would
have a material impact on the plan.
Regarding testing, the Board is
clarifying in connection with the final
rule that, in some cases, effective
implementation of the contingency
funding plan for a bank holding
company should include, in part,
periodic liquidation of assets, including
portions of the bank holding company’s
liquidity buffer, which can be through
outright sale or repo of buffer assets. In
the Board’s experience, many aspects of
the contingency plan can actually be
tested with trades executed, and with
advance notification to counterparties
that a simulation is taking place,
without sending a distress signal to the
marketplace, and such exercises are
critical in demonstrating treasury

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control over assets and an ability to
convert the assets into cash to be used
to offset outflows. However, testing the
contingency funding plan does not
necessarily require the booking of
transactions for each contingency
funding option. Rather, the focus of the
contingency funding plan testing
requirements is on the operational
aspects of such sources, which can often
be tested via ‘‘table top’’ or ‘‘war room’’
type exercises.
One commenter requested that the
Board clarify whether a bank holding
company may include advances from
Federal Home Loan Banks (FHLBs) in
its contingency funding plan. The Board
is clarifying that lines of credit, such as
FHLB advances, may be included as
sources of funds in contingency funding
plans; however, firms should consider
the characteristics of such funding and
how the counterparties may behave in
times of stress. For example,
counterparties may require more
collateral with greater haircuts in a time
of stress, and accordingly this
possibility should also be considered
when including these potential sources
of liquidity in a company’s contingency
funding plan.
Discount window credit may be
incorporated into contingency funding
plans as a potential source of funds for
a bank holding company in a manner
consistent with terms provided by
Federal Reserve Banks. For example,
primary credit is currently available on
a collateralized basis for financially
sound institutions as a backup source of
funds for short-term funding needs.
Contingency funding plans that
incorporate borrowing from the
discount window should specify the
actions that would be taken to replace
discount window borrowing with more
permanent funding, and include the
proposed time frame for these actions.
The Board is also modifying the
event-management process requirement
to provide that a bank holding company
must identify the circumstances in
which it will implement its contingency
funding plan. These circumstances must
include a failure to meet any minimum
liquidity requirement established by the
Board, which may include a final
version of the proposed U.S. LCR, if
adopted by the Board. Accordingly, the
Board believes it is important that a
company include a failure to meet any
minimum requirement the Board may
impose in the future in its
considerations of when to implement its
contingency funding plan. With the
exception of these modifications, the
Board is adopting the substance of the
proposed contingency funding planning
requirements without change.

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6. Liquidity Risk Limits
To enhance management of liquidity
risk, the proposed rule would have
required a bank holding company with
total consolidated assets of $50 billion
or more to establish and maintain limits
on potential sources of liquidity risk,
including three specified sources of
liquidity risk: Concentrations of funding
by instrument type, single counterparty,
counterparty type, secured and
unsecured funding, and other liquidity
risk identifiers; the amount of liabilities
that mature within various time
horizons; and off-balance sheet
exposures and other exposures that
could create funding needs during
liquidity stress events.56
Several commenters suggested that
the specific limits in the proposal were
too constraining, and requested that the
Board incorporate increased flexibility
into the limits. The Board believes that
the specific types of limits enumerated
are critical components of the liquidity
risk management framework, as they
address concentration, time horizons,
and off-balance sheet exposures, each of
which is an element of liquidity risk
management that may prove critical
during a crisis. The Board notes, further,
that the final rule requires each bank
holding company to establish limits
appropriate to its size, complexity,
capital structure, risk profile, and
activities, among other things. The final
rule therefore requires a bank holding
company to address these types of
liquidity risk, but does not establish a
particular limit for any given company.
The Board believes, therefore, that the
final rule provides sufficient flexibility
for each bank holding company to
establish appropriately individualized
limits, and is finalizing this aspect of
the proposal without change.
7. Collateral, Legal Entity, and Intraday
Liquidity Risk Monitoring
The proposed rule would have
required a bank holding company with
total consolidated assets of $50 billion
or more to monitor liquidity risk related
to collateral positions, liquidity risks
across the enterprise, and intraday
liquidity positions. Under the proposal,
a company would have been required to
establish and maintain procedures for
monitoring assets it has pledged as
collateral for an obligation or position,
and assets that are available to be
pledged. To promote effective
56 Such exposures may be contractual or noncontractual exposures, and include unfunded loan
commitments, lines of credit supporting asset sales
or securitizations, collateral requirements for
derivative transactions, and a letter of credit
supporting a variable demand note.

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monitoring across a banking
organization, the proposed rule would
have required a company to establish
and maintain procedures for monitoring
and controlling liquidity risk exposures
and funding needs within and across
significant legal entities, currencies, and
business lines. As stated in the
proposal, the company should maintain
sufficient liquidity in light of possible
obstacles to cash movements between
specific legal entities or between
separately regulated entities are
recognized in normal times and during
liquidity stress events.
The proposed rule would have
required a bank holding company to
establish and maintain procedures for
monitoring its intraday liquidity risk
exposure. To ensure that liquidity risk
is appropriately monitored, the Board
explained in the preamble to the
proposed rule that it expects a bank
holding company to provide for
integrated oversight of intraday
exposures within the operational risk
and liquidity risk functions. The Board
also observed that it expects the
procedures for monitoring and
managing intraday liquidity positions to
reflect, in stringency and complexity,
the scope of operations of the company.
Commenters expressed concern about
the monitoring standards, stating that
they were inflexible and burdensome.
For example, commenters asserted that
each company should be able to decide
which intraday metrics should be
tracked. In addition, some commenters
asserted that smaller institutions might
struggle to meet the monitoring
requirements related to the intraday
liquidity position. However, some
commenters opined that larger
institutions, such as institutions
involved with payments processing,
should be held to a higher standard.
Intraday liquidity monitoring is an
important component of the liquidity
risk management process for a bank
holding company engaged in significant
payment, settlement, and clearing
activities. Given the interdependencies
that exist among payment systems, a
bank holding company with more than
$50 billion in total consolidated assets
that is unable to meet critical payments
has the potential to lead to systemic
disruptions that can prevent the smooth
functioning of payments systems and
money markets. Furthermore, the Board
believes that the monitoring
requirements are appropriate for all
bank holding companies with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more. To the extent that such a bank
holding company has higher intraday
risk, the final rule would require more
monitoring. As a result, the Board is

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finalizing the substance of the
monitoring standards as proposed.
8. Liquidity Stress Testing
a. Overview
Under the proposal, bank holding
companies with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more would have
been required to perform regular stress
tests on cash-flow projections by
identifying liquidity stress scenarios
based on the company’s full set of
activities, exposures and risks, both onand off-balance sheet, and by taking into
account non-contractual sources of
risks, such as reputational risks. The
proposed rule would have then required
an assessment of the effects of those
scenarios on the company’s cash flow
and liquidity. Under the proposed rule,
the bank holding company would have
used the results of the stress tests to
determine the size of its liquidity buffer,
and would have incorporated
information generated by stress testing
into the quantitative component of the
contingency funding plan. Although
many commenters were generally
supportive of the goals of the liquidity
stress testing in the domestic proposal,
some expressed specific concerns about
the proposed requirements, as discussed
below.

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b. Scope and Frequency
The proposed rule would have
required a bank holding company to
conduct liquidity stress tests at least
monthly, as well as to maintain the
capacity for ‘‘ad hoc’’ stress tests to
address unexpected circumstances.
Several commenters argued that the
proposed frequency of liquidity stress
testing was excessive and suggested that
stress testing should be conducted
semiannually and supplemented by
monitoring of the liquidity position of
the firm through management of
established metrics. One commenter
stated that stress testing should be
required less frequently for smaller
organizations than for larger ones.
The Board believes that frequent
liquidity stress testing is an essential
part of a robust liquidity stress test
regime. Regular stress testing is
particularly important for effective
evaluation of liquidity resources and
risk management because of the
dynamic nature of a firm’s liquid assets,
inflows, and outflows. Frequent
evaluations of the firm’s position against
a scenario where regular sources of
liquidity could rapidly vanish or be
curtailed are essential to understanding
the firm’s readiness for an unanticipated
liquidity stress event. The Board
therefore believes that the requirement

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for monthly stress testing is appropriate
and is finalizing this requirement as
proposed. The Board observes that this
requirement is consistent with current
supervisory expectations that bank
holding companies conduct liquidity
stress tests regularly.57 In addition, the
Board believes that most bank holding
companies subject to the rule already
conduct liquidity stress tests at the
frequency required by the rule. The
Board further observes that the final
rule, like the proposal, provides
flexibility within the stress-testing
framework for stress testing to be
tailored based on a firm’s size,
complexity, and operations. This
tailoring may require analyses by
business line or legal entity, as well as
stress scenarios that use more time
horizons than the minimum required by
the final rule.
c. Liquidity Stress Testing Scenario
Requirements
The proposal would have required a
bank holding company with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more to incorporate in its stress tests a
minimum of three stress scenarios that
could significantly impact the
company’s liquidity. These would have
included scenarios to account for
adverse market conditions, an
idiosyncratic stress event, and
combined market and idiosyncratic
stresses. The stress scenarios would
have also been required to address the
potential for market disruptions and the
actions of other market participants
experiencing simultaneous stress. The
proposal would also have required a
bank holding company’s stress tests to
include a minimum of four periods over
which the relevant stressed projections
extend: Overnight, 30-day, 90-day, and
one-year time horizons, and additional
time horizons as appropriate.
Furthermore, as explained in the
proposal, stress testing should be
sufficiently dynamic that it would be
able to incorporate a variety of changes
in the bank holding company’s internal
position and external circumstances,
including risks that may arise over time
from idiosyncratic events,
macroeconomic and financial market
developments, or a combination
thereof.58 Therefore, additional
scenarios, based on the company’s
financial condition, size, complexity,
risk profile, scope of operations, or
activities, should be used as needed to
ensure that all of the significant aspects
57 See the Interagency Liquidity Risk Policy
Statement, supra note 47.
58 77 FR 594, 607.

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of liquidity risks to the company have
been modeled.
The proposed rule would have
required a bank holding company’s
liquidity stress testing comprehensively
to address its activities, exposures, and
risks, including off-balance sheet
exposures. The preamble to the proposal
indicated that stress testing should
address non-contractual sources of risk,
such as reputational risk, and risk
arising from the covered company’s use
of sponsored vehicles that issue debt
instruments periodically to the markets,
such as asset-backed commercial paper
and similar conduits.
Many commenters supported these
proposed liquidity stress testing
requirements because they were flexible
and permitted bank holding companies
to develop their own liability run-off
factors and other assumptions. One
commenter objected to the Board’s
statement in the proposal that a bank
holding company should incorporate
liquidity risks arising from sponsored
vehicles in its liquidity stress tests,
asserting that sponsored vehicles have a
broad diversity of risk. The Board has
adopted the substance of the proposed
liquidity stress testing requirements as
proposed, and has adjusted certain
aspects of the regulatory language to
clarify the minimum requirements set
forth in the rule. With respect to
sponsored vehicles, the Board reiterates
that bank holding companies should
include sponsored vehicles and similar
conduits in their stress tests, as these
vehicles received unanticipated support
from some banking institutions in the
recent financial crisis, and similar
liquidity risks may arise in the future.
Under the proposal, a bank holding
company would have been required to
discount the fair value of an asset that
is used as a cash-flow source to offset
projected funding needs in order to
reflect any credit risk and market
volatility of the asset, and to have
diversified sources of funding
throughout each stress test planning
horizon. The final rule maintains these
requirements, but in light of comments
received on the proposed liquidity
buffer discussed below, excludes cash
and securities issued by the United
States, a U.S. government agency,59 or a
U.S. government-sponsored
enterprise,60 from the diversification
59 A U.S. government agency is defined in the
proposed rule as an agency or instrumentality of the
United States whose obligations are fully and
explicitly guaranteed as to the timely payment of
principal and interest by the full faith and credit of
the United States.
60 A U.S. government-sponsored enterprise is
defined in the proposed rule as an entity originally
established or chartered by the U.S. government to

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requirement. However, a bank holding
company should ensure that
concentrations in all assets, including
those excluded from the rule’s
diversification requirement, are
appropriate in light of the risk profile of
the bank holding company and market
conditions.
Similarly, bank holding companies
are expected to make conservative
assumptions about the types of cashflow sources that would be available
over a 30-day stress period. The final
rule clarifies that a line of credit may
qualify as a cash flow source for
purposes of a stress test with a planning
horizon that exceeds 30 days, but not for
purposes of a stress test with a planning
horizon of 30 days or less. In addition,
net cash outflows may include some
cash inflows, but these should be
generally limited to contractual
maturities within the 30 days.
In addition to the stress-testing
requirements described above, the
proposed rule would have established
requirements for oversight and control
functions, including an independent
validation function; and requirements
for management information systems
sufficient to enable the bank holding
company effectively and reliably to
collect, sort, and aggregate data and
other information. Several commenters
requested clarification of what is meant
by the requirement that the stresstesting process and its assumptions be
validated, including clarification that
the validation function can be an
internal function. In response to these
comments and in light of the potential
operational burden of validation, the
Board has revised the requirement in
the final rule to require instead that a
bank holding company appropriately
incorporate conservative assumptions in
developing its stress test scenarios and
the other elements of the stress test
process and that these assumptions take
into consideration the company’s
capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, size, business
lines, legal entity or jurisdiction, and
other relevant factors, and the
assumptions must be approved by the
chief risk officer and subject to
independent review as described in
section III.C.3 of this preamble.
In addition to the changes described
above, the final rule includes technical,
non-substantive revisions that clarify
the liquidity stress testing requirements.
serve public purposes specified by the U.S.
Congress, but whose obligations are not explicitly
guaranteed by the full faith and credit of the United
States.

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9. Liquidity Buffer
The proposed rule would have
required a bank holding company with
total consolidated assets of $50 billion
or more to hold highly liquid assets
(known as a buffer) sufficient to meet
liquidity needs as identified by the
internal stress test. The proposal would
have required the liquidity buffer to be
composed of unencumbered highly
liquid assets sufficient to meet projected
net cash outflows for 30 days over the
range of liquidity stress scenarios used
in the internal stress testing.
A commenter argued that requiring
companies to comply with a 30-day
buffer requirement may induce
companies to create stress scenarios
without the appropriate level of
severity. In its supervisory reviews, the
Board will review the companies’
scenarios to ensure that they are
sufficiently severe to expose key
funding vulnerabilities, and the Board
intends to reinforce these expectations.
The final rule provides that the liquidity
buffer must be sufficient to meet the
projected net stressed cash flow need
over the 30-day planning horizon of a
liquidity stress test under each of an
adverse market condition scenario, an
idiosyncratic stress event scenario, and
a combined market and idiosyncratic
stresses scenario.
a. Criteria for Highly Liquid Assets
The proposed definition of highly
liquid assets included cash and
securities issued or guaranteed by the
U.S. government, a U.S. government
agency, or a U.S. government-sponsored
enterprise, because these securities have
remained liquid even during prolonged
periods of severe liquidity stress. In
addition, recognizing that other assets
could also be highly liquid, the
proposed definition included a
provision that would allow a bank
holding company to include other types
of assets in the buffer if the bank
holding company demonstrated to the
satisfaction of the Board that those
assets: (i) Have low credit and market
risk; (ii) are traded in an active
secondary two-way market that has
observable market prices, committed
market makers, a large number of
market participants, and a high trading
volume; and (iii) are types of assets that
investors historically have purchased in
periods of financial market distress
during which liquidity has been
impaired.
Several commenters asserted that the
criteria for highly liquid assets were too
limited, and requested further guidance
on the full range of assets that might
qualify. These commenters also

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requested that correlation statistics,
performance comparisons to benchmark
securities or indices, and portfolio
diversification benefits be considered
among eligibility criteria. The
commenters asked the Board to revise
the definition of highly liquid assets
specifically to enumerate a broader
scope of assets, such as foreign
sovereign obligations and obligations
issued by multi-lateral development and
central banks; claims against central
banks of acceptable sovereign issuers;
gold; FHLB borrowing capacity;
committed lines of credit; inventory
positions (including equities)
maintained by the broker-dealer
operations of a bank holding company,
if any; municipal securities; shares of
money market mutual funds holding
U.S. government securities; and
collateral accepted by the discount
window. One commenter suggested that
the Board establish a mechanism
whereby the Board would regularly
notify firms of other approved highly
liquid asset categories. By contrast, one
commenter asserted that the proposal
was too permissive, and that bank
holding companies should only be
allowed to include cash and short-term
U.S. government securities in their
buffer.
Liquidity characteristics of assets may
vary under different types of stress
scenarios. The proposed definition of
highly liquid asset provided companies
discretion to determine whether an asset
would be liquid under a particular
scenario. The Board also believes that
restricting the assets available for
liquidity coverage to cash and securities
issued or guaranteed by the United
States, a U.S. government agency, or a
U.S. government-sponsored enterprise is
unnecessarily limited, and could have
negative effects on market liquidity
generally. As a result, consistent with
the proposal, the final rule defines
highly liquid assets to include cash,
securities issued or guaranteed by the
United States, a U.S. government
agency, or a U.S. government-sponsored
enterprise, and any other asset that a
bank holding company demonstrates to
the satisfaction of the Board meets
defined characteristics of liquidity.
Assets that are high-quality liquid
assets under the proposed U.S. LCR
(which include equities included in the
S&P 500 index or comparable indices
and investment grade corporate bonds)
would be liquid under most scenarios;
however, the bank holding company
would be required to make the
demonstration to the Board required by
the final rule, meet the diversification
requirement discussed below, and
ensure that the inclusion of these assets

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in the buffer would be appropriate
taking into consideration the liquidity
risk profile of the company. A bank
holding company is required to assign
appropriate haircuts to all highly liquid
assets, including assets that qualify as
high-quality liquid assets under the
proposed U.S. LCR: those haircuts may
be different from the haircuts assigned
in the proposed U.S. LCR.
Some commenters expressed concern
that the specified criteria for highly
liquid assets would result in institutions
holding a narrow band of asset classes,
including concentrations in sovereign
debt, and opined that limiting the
criteria could lead to increased financial
stability risks. As explained above, the
Board believes the specified criteria for
the buffer are not overly constraining
and allow for a diverse set of assets to
be included in the liquidity buffer. The
Board believes that, in some cases,
sovereign debt issued by foreign
countries will meet the criteria for
highly liquid assets, and the criteria
should not result in undue
concentrations in those asset classes. In
addition, the diversification
requirement (as discussed in more detail
below) is included in the final rule
specifically to address the problem of
inappropriate asset concentration in the
buffer generally. Additionally,
supervisors will scrutinize any
concentrations in assets held to meet the
buffer requirement as they evaluate
overall whether the composition of a
company’s buffer is appropriately
tailored to its specific liquidity risks.
Several commenters requested
clarification on how to account for
reverse repo transactions, particularly
those secured by highly liquid assets, in
the buffer and how the tenor of the
agreement would play a role in the
availability of the asset in a company’s
highly liquid asset calculation under the
proposed rule. The Board clarifies that
if firms are able to rehypothecate
collateral they hold that has been
pledged to them to secure a loan (but
have not done so), they may count that
collateral as a highly liquid asset with
appropriate haircuts. Appropriate
haircuts and measurements of inflows
and outflows would depend on the
specific terms of the reverse repo
transaction. Inflows related to secured
loans can be considered in the
measurement of net cash need, but the
firm should also consider the stress
scenario and reputational factors to
determine if they would continue to
renew and make new loans.

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b. Requirement That Assets Be
Unencumbered
In order to ensure that liquid assets
held by a bank holding company to
meet liquidity needs under stress would
be freely available for sale or pledge at
all times in order to generate funds for
the company, the proposal required that
highly liquid assets in the liquidity
buffer be unencumbered. The proposed
definition of unencumbered, with
respect to an asset, was that (i) the asset
is not pledged, does not secure,
collateralize, or provide credit
enhancement to any transaction, and is
not subject to any lien; (ii) the asset is
free of legal, contractual, or other
restrictions on the ability of the
company to sell or transfer; and (iii) the
asset is not designated as a hedge on a
trading position.
A number of commenters criticized
the definition of ‘‘unencumbered’’ in the
proposed rule. Some commenters
expressed concern that the proposed
definition excluded assets that are
technically encumbered but, as they can
be freed from encumbrance at any point,
are typically treated as unencumbered
by bank holding companies for liquidity
management purposes. As examples of
such ‘‘technically’’ encumbered assets,
the commenters mentioned: (i) Assets
pledged to central banks; (ii) assets
pledged to a clearing counterparty in
excess of the amounts required for
clearing; and (iii) assets subject to
ordinary course ‘‘banker’s liens’’ that
apply to exposures held in depository
accounts or custody accounts.
Other commenters expressed concern
that the definition of unencumbered
assets in the proposed rule assumes that
a firm must actually sell an asset in
order to generate liquidity from it,
asserting that this is inconsistent with
the economic reality of liquidity risk
management. In particular, these
commenters asserted that assets that
hedge trading positions should not be
treated as encumbered, as companies
can still monetize the asset. They argued
that, whether the asset is a trading
position or a hedge on a trading
position, a company would still be able
to generate liquidity from the asset
through repurchase agreements or
central bank facilities. The commenters
recommended that the definition of
‘‘unencumbered’’ assets include assets
that are comingled with or used as
hedges on trading positions or pledged
to clearing houses, and asserted that a
requirement that assets be segregated in
order to qualify as unencumbered
would add operational complexity and
cost to the practice of liquidity risk
management, without a commensurate

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benefit. Finally, one commenter
suggested that highly liquid assets
pledged to an FHLB pursuant to a
blanket lien that the FHLB does not
require as collateral for outstanding
advances and other extensions of credit
should be deemed unencumbered, as
these assets could be released for use
elsewhere without diminishing the level
of outstanding advances.
The Board is modifying the proposed
definition of ‘‘unencumbered’’ in the
final rule to allow assets that are used
as a hedge position to meet the
definition, as long as they otherwise
meet the other criteria in the definition.
The Board believes this change is
appropriate to reduce the potential
operational burden cited by commenters
in identifying and isolating such assets.
Further, the Board does not believe that
this change would substantially impede
the ability of bank holding companies,
under most stressed situations, to
generate liquidity from these assets as
needed. Generally, under the final rule,
an asset would be unencumbered if the
company is able to demonstrate that it
has the ability to monetize the asset and
that the proceeds could be made
available to the liquidity management
function of the company without
conflicting with a business risk or
management strategy of the company.
The Board also believes that assets that
are pledged to a central bank or a U.S.
government-sponsored enterprise,
including FHLBs (if the asset is not
securing credit that has been extended
and remains outstanding), may be
considered as unencumbered. This
provision is added to the final rule’s
definition of unencumbered.
However, the Board believes it is
generally not appropriate for a bank
holding company to include assets
pledged to a counterparty for
provisional needs as unencumbered
highly liquid assets. In response to
commenters’ questions regarding assets
pledged to a clearing counterparty in
excess of the amounts required for
clearing and assets subject to ‘‘banker’s
liens,’’ the Board believes these assets
must be considered encumbered in most
scenarios, as their encumbrance is an
ongoing requirement for conducting
business with such counterparties,
potentially complicating the use of these
assets to offset potential outflows in
times of stress.
As further support to ensure that
highly liquid assets in the buffer are
available for a bank holding company’s
liquidity needs, the bank holding
company should periodically monetize
a representative portion of its highly
liquid assets, through repo or outright
sale, in order to test its access to the

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market and the effectiveness of its
processes for monetization. In addition,
the Board would expect the quantity of
assets included in the liquidity buffer to
vary by the stress scenario type. For
example, in computing the liquidity
buffer under a scenario in which a
banking organization may expect to be
forced to post additional collateral (such
as a scenario involving idiosyncratic
financial deterioration), a bank holding
company that has pledged securities in
excess of contractual requirements
would count a lower portion (or none at
all) of the excess pledged assets in its
buffer.
c. Discounting and Diversification of
Assets in the Liquidity Buffer
As discussed above, in computing the
amount of an asset included in the
liquidity buffer, the bank holding
company must discount the fair value of
the asset to reflect any credit risk and
market volatility of the asset. Several
commenters asked for more clarification
on computing the discounts that would
be applied to assets included in the
buffer. Such discounts should vary
depending upon the type and severity of
the scenario and should reflect a wide
range of risks that could limit a
company’s ability to liquidate the asset,
including discounts associated with
currency conversions. The final rule
does not dictate the discount
percentages that would apply to asset
classes in the final rule because the
stress tests are based on firm-specific
assumptions and a variety of securities,
and the appropriate discount percentage
may vary based upon the institution to
which the stress is applied.
In addition, the proposal provided
that the pool of unencumbered highly
liquid assets included in the liquidity
buffer must be sufficiently diversified
by instrument type, counterparty,
geographic market, and other liquidity
risk identifiers. One commenter
suggested that U.S. and foreign
sovereign securities be excluded from
these diversification requirements. The
final rule clarifies that the
diversification requirement which
applies to most buffer assets does not
apply to U.S. Treasuries and U.S.
agency securities because of their
demonstrated liquid nature under
stressed conditions.
In judging the amount of a particular
asset class that will be included in its
liquidity buffer, a bank holding
company should consider all the
liquidity risks of the asset class. For
instance, the Board observes that
currency matching of projected cash
inflows and outflows is an important
aspect of liquidity risk that a bank

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holding company should account for in
its stress tests and that the risks
associated with currency mismatches
should be incorporated in a company’s
liquidity buffer.
d. Use of the Buffer
The proposal did not provide
guidance on the circumstances under
which a banking organization would be
able to use the assets in its liquidity
buffer. Commenters requested
clarification and provided suggestions
relating to the usability of the buffer.
One commenter requested that the
Board clarify in the rule that, during
times of stress, companies may use the
liquidity buffer, temporarily falling
below the minimum requirement
without any adverse outcomes.
While a banking organization
generally would be required to maintain
an amount of liquid assets in order to
meet its 30-day stress projections, there
are circumstances under which
permitting the banking organization to
use these assets would be beneficial for
the safety and soundness of the firm and
potentially for financial stability.
Therefore, the Board anticipates that
any supervisory decisions in response to
a reduction of a banking organization’s
liquidity buffer will take into
consideration the particular
circumstances surrounding the
reduction. If a banking organization is
experiencing idiosyncratic or systemic
stress and is otherwise practicing good
liquidity risk management, the Board
expects that supervisors would observe
the company closely as it uses its liquid
resources and work with the company
to determine how to rebuild these
resources once the stress has passed,
through a plan or similar process.
However, a supervisory or enforcement
action may be appropriate when a
company’s buffer is reduced
substantially, or falls below its stressed
liquidity needs as identified by the
stress test, because of operational issues
or inadequate liquidity risk
management. Under these
circumstances, as with other regulatory
violations, a bank holding company may
be required to enter into a written
agreement if it does not meet the
proposed minimum requirement within
an appropriate period of time. As
discussed further below, a bank holding
company is required to develop a
contingency funding plan in which it
must identify liquidity stress events and
design an event management process
that sets out its procedures for managing
liquidity during identified liquidity
stress events. These procedures must
anticipate reductions and subsequent
replenishment of highly liquid assets.

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10. Short-Term Debt Limits
In the preamble to the proposed rule,
the Board noted that the Dodd-Frank
Act contemplates additional enhanced
prudential standards, including a limit
on short-term debt, and requested
comment on whether it should establish
short-term debt limits in the future.
Several respondents were in favor of
implementing additional limits on
short-term funding. One proponent
suggested such limits would help render
a bank’s funding structure more stable
in times of market disruption, asserting
that there are shortcomings related to
over-reliance on stress testing. Another
commenter suggested that a short-term
debt limit could work in conjunction
with the proposed U.S. LCR, a net stable
funding ratio requirement (NSFR),61 and
single counterparty credit limits to
mitigate the risk of a disruption in repo
markets. However, several commenters
asserted that short-term debt limits were
inappropriate. Some commenters
asserted that a limit on short-term debt
would not enhance prudent liquidity
risk management, and argued that shortterm debt levels should be overseen by
prudential supervision on a bank-bybank basis. One commenter argued that
the appropriate level of short-term debt
maintained by a company depends
upon the mix of its assets and liabilities,
and that limits on short-term debt are
best addressed as part of limit-setting
around liquidity stress testing. Although
the Board is not adopting a short-term
debt limit requirement in connection
with the final rule, the Board is
continuing to study and evaluate the
benefits to systemic stability from
imposing limits on short-term debt.
D. Debt-to-Equity Limits for Bank
Holding Companies
Section 165(j) of the Dodd-Frank Act
provides that the Board must require a
bank holding company to maintain a
debt-to-equity ratio of no more than 15to-1 if the Council determines that such
company poses a ‘‘grave threat’’ to the
financial stability of the United States
and that the imposition of such
requirement is necessary to mitigate the
risk that such company or foreign
61 While the Basel III LCR is focused on
measuring liquidity resilience over a short-term
period of severe stress, the NSFR is designed to
promote resilience over a one-year time horizon by
creating additional incentives for banking
organizations and other financial companies that
would be subject to the standard to fund their
activities with stable sources and encouraging a
sustainable maturity structure of assets and
liabilities. Currently, the NSFR is in an
international observation period, and global
implementation is scheduled for 2018. See Basel
Committee principles for liquidity risk
management, supra note 47.

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banking organization poses to the
financial stability of the United States.62
The Board is required to promulgate
regulations to establish procedures and
timelines for compliance with section
165(j).
The domestic proposal defined key
terms used in the statute and
established a process for applying the
debt-to-equity ratio. Under the proposal,
‘‘debt’’ and ‘‘equity’’ would have had
the same meaning as ‘‘total liabilities’’
and ‘‘total equity capital’’ respectively,
as calculated in an identified company’s
reports of financial condition. The 15to-1 debt-to-equity ratio would have
been calculated as the ratio of total
liabilities to total equity capital minus
goodwill. A bank holding company for
which the Council has made the grave
threat determination would receive
written notice from the Council, or from
the Board on behalf of the Council, of
the Council’s determination. Within 180
calendar days from the date of receipt of
the notice, the bank holding company
would have been required to come into
compliance with the 15-to-1 debt-toequity ratio requirement. The proposal
would have permitted a company
subject to the debt-to-equity ratio
requirement to request up to two
extension periods of 90 days each to
come into compliance with this
requirement. Requests for an extension
of time to comply would have been
required in writing not less than 30 days
prior to the expiration of the existing
time period for compliance, and the
proposal would have required the
company to provide information
sufficient to demonstrate that the
company has made good faith efforts to
comply with the debt-to-equity ratio
requirement and that each extension
would be in the public interest. In the
event that an extension of time is
requested, the Board would have
reviewed the request in light of the
relevant facts and circumstances,
including the extent of the company’s
efforts to comply with the ratio and
whether the extension would be in the
public interest. A company would no
longer be subject to the debt-to-equity
62 The Dodd-Frank Act requires that, in making
its determination, the Council must take into
consideration the criteria in Dodd-Frank Act
sections 113(a) and (b) and any other risk-related
factors that the Council deems appropriate. These
factors include, among other things, the extent of
the leverage of the company, the nature, scope, size,
scale, concentration, interconnectedness, and mix
of the activities of the company, and the importance
of the company as a source of credit for U.S.
households, businesses, and State and local
governments and as a source of liquidity for the
U.S. financial system. The statute expressly
exempts any federal home loan bank from the debtto-equity ratio requirement. See 12 U.S.C.
5366(j)(1).

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ratio requirement of the proposed rule
as of the date it receives notice of a
determination by the Council that the
company no longer poses a grave threat
to the financial stability of the United
States and that the imposition of a debtto-equity requirement is no longer
necessary.
Some commenters requested that the
Board clarify the language of ‘‘pose a
grave threat to the financial stability of
the United States,’’ arguing that the
statutory meaning is vague. However,
the Board’s rule establishes the process
after the Council makes the ‘‘grave
threat’’ determination. Because the
Council makes the determination of
whether a company ‘‘poses a grave
threat to the financial stability of the
United States,’’ the Council is the
appropriate party to provide clarity on
the grave threat standard.
Some commenters argued that the
substitution of ‘‘total liabilities’’ for the
statutory term ‘‘debt’’ would be
inappropriate, especially as applied to
insurance companies. According to
commenters, under statutory accounting
principles, insurers account for future
liabilities arising from underwritten
insurance policies and hold reserves in
anticipation of those future liabilities,
which are treated as liabilities under
accounting rules. Other commenters
contended that the measure was
duplicative and unnecessary of other
measures of leverage, and, as applied to
insurance companies, should exclude
separate accounts. Another commenter
suggested that the measure should focus
on activities, arguing that insurance
companies measure leverage differently
from banks when evaluating the impact
of debt issuance on capital adequacy
and on financial condition.
There are several common methods of
calculating a debt-to-equity ratio,
including taking the measure of total
liabilities to total equity. The Board
chose to define ‘‘debt’’ on the basis of
‘‘total liabilities’’ as included a
company’s report of financial condition
as set forth on the Board’s Form FR Y–
9C because the measure of ‘‘total
liabilities’’ is well understood, objective,
transparent, and readily available across
all bank holding companies. The
alternatives suggested by commenters,
which would require the Board to
identify categories of liabilities that
would be included as ‘‘debt’’ or to trace
liabilities to certain activities of an
institution, would result in a nontransparent system that may result in
arbitrary distinctions between certain
types of liabilities. In addition, in
response to concerns about the debt-toequity ratio as a duplicative measure,
the Board notes that these ratios

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measure leverage as a ratio of assets to
equity rather than debt to equity. With
regard to the application of the measure
to insurance companies, as further
described above, the final rule does not
apply the standards to nonbank
financial companies supervised by the
Board, and the Board will consider such
comments in connection with the
application of these standards to
nonbank financial companies
supervised by the Board.
Some commenters suggested that the
Board define ‘‘equity’’ as ‘‘tangible
common equity,’’ rather than ‘‘total
equity capital.’’ Commenters argued that
tangible common equity would be
understood and able to absorb losses in
times of financial stress, whereas ‘‘total
equity capital’’ would include
components such as unrealized gains on
securities available for sale and
accumulated net gains on cash-flow
hedges that are unlikely to be available
to absorb losses in times of financial
stress. To maintain balance with the
broad definition of ‘‘debt’’ as ‘‘total
liabilities,’’ the final rule maintains the
definition of ‘‘equity’’ as ‘‘total equity
capital.’’ While the Board agrees with
commenters that ‘‘tangible common
equity’’ is more able to absorb losses in
times of stress, the Board notes that a
bank holding company subject to this
determination will remain subject to the
common equity tier 1 capital ratio and
capital conservation buffers, which are
based on a definition of ‘‘common
equity tier 1’’ that is more stringent than
‘‘tangible common equity.’’
Accordingly, a bank holding company
subject to this determination will be
required to maintain loss-absorbing
capital independent of the debt-toequity ratio.
Commenters also provided views on
the proposed time period in which a
company would have been required to
comply with the debt-to-equity ratio.
Some commenters argued that a shorter
period, such as 120 days, would be
warranted if a company posed a grave
threat to U.S. financial stability. In
contrast, another commenter suggested
that the Board preserve flexibility to
grant additional extensions where more
rapid efforts to achieve full compliance
may cause a ‘‘fire sale’’ of assets. The
Board is adopting the requirements as
proposed because the combination of
the initial 180-day period with the two
potential 90-day extension periods
balances the certainty of a fixed
timetable for a company to come into
compliance with regulatory flexibility if
additional time is appropriate. Like the
proposed rule, the final rule does not
establish a specific set of actions to be
taken by a company in order to comply

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with the debt-to-equity ratio
requirement. The company would,
however, be expected to come into
compliance with the ratio in a manner
that is consistent with the company’s
safe and sound operation and the
preservation of financial stability. For
example, a company generally would be
expected to make a good faith effort to
increase equity capital through limits on
distributions, share offerings, or other
capital raising efforts prior to
liquidating margined assets in order to
achieve the required ratio. The Board
has amended the final rule for bank
holding companies to reflect the
procedures for requesting an extension
of time in the text of the regulation,
making it consistent with the rule for
foreign banking organizations.
IV. Enhanced Prudential Standards for
Foreign Banking Organizations
A. Background

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1. Considerations in Developing the
Proposal
The Board is responsible for the
overall supervision and regulation of the
U.S. operations of all foreign banking
organizations.63 Other federal and state
regulators are responsible for
supervising and regulating certain parts
of the U.S. operations of foreign banking
organizations, such as branches,
agencies, or bank and nonbank
subsidiaries.64 Under the Board’s
historic framework for foreign banking
organizations, supervisors have
monitored the individual legal entities
of the U.S. operations of these
companies, and the Federal Reserve has
aggregated information it receives
through its own supervisory process and
from other U.S. supervisors to form a
view of the financial condition of the
combined U.S. operations of the
company. In addition, the Federal
Reserve has relied on the home country
supervisor to supervise a foreign
banking organization on a global basis
consistent with international standards,
and has relied on the foreign banking
organization to support its U.S.
63 International Banking Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C.
3101 et seq.) and Foreign Bank Supervision
Enhancement Act of 1991 (12 U.S.C. 3101 note).
64 For example, the SEC is the primary financial
regulatory agency with respect to any registered
broker-dealer, registered investment company, or
registered investment adviser of a foreign banking
organization. State insurance authorities are the
primary financial regulatory agencies with respect
to the insurance subsidiaries of a foreign banking
organization. The OCC, the FDIC, and the state
banking authorities have supervisory authority over
the national and state bank subsidiaries and federal
and state branches and agencies of foreign banking
organizations, respectively, in addition to the
Board’s supervisory and regulatory responsibilities
over some of these entities.

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operations under both normal and
stressed conditions.
As discussed in the proposal, the
profile of foreign bank operations in the
United States changed substantially in
the period preceding the financial crisis.
U.S. branches and agencies of foreign
banking organizations as a group moved
from a position of receiving funding
from their parent organizations on a net
basis in 1999 to providing significant
funding to non-U.S. affiliates by the
mid-2000s.65 In 2008, U.S. branches and
agencies provided more than $600
billion on a net basis to non-U.S.
affiliates. As U.S. operations of foreign
banking organizations received less
funding, on net, from their parent
companies over the past decade, they
became more reliant on less stable,
short-term U.S. dollar wholesale
funding, contributing in some cases to a
buildup in maturity mismatches. Trends
in the global balance sheets of foreign
banking organizations from this period
reveal that short-term U.S. dollar
funding raised in the United States was
used to provide long-term U.S. dollardenominated project and trade finance
around the world as well as to finance
non-U.S. affiliates’ investments in U.S.
dollar-denominated asset-backed
securities.66 Because U.S. supervisors,
as host authorities, have more limited
access to timely information on the
global operations of foreign banking
organizations than to similar
information on U.S.-based banking
organizations, the totality of the risk
profile of the U.S. operations of a
foreign banking organization can be
obscured when these U.S. entities fund
activities outside the United States.
In addition to funding vulnerabilities,
the U.S. operations of foreign banking
organizations became increasingly
concentrated, interconnected, and
complex after the mid-1990s. By 2007,
the top ten foreign banking
organizations accounted for over 60
65 Many U.S. branches of foreign banks shifted
from the ‘‘lending branch’’ model to a ‘‘funding
branch’’ model, in which U.S. branches of foreign
banks borrowed large volumes of U.S. dollars to
upstream to their foreign bank parents. These
‘‘funding branches’’ went from holding 40 percent
of foreign bank branch assets in the mid-1990s to
holding 75 percent of foreign bank branch assets by
2009. See Form FFIEC 002.
66 The amount of U.S. dollar-denominated assetbacked securities and other securities held by
Europeans increased significantly from 2003 to
2007, much of it financed by U.S. short-term dollardenominated liabilities of European banks. See Ben
S. Bernanke, Carol Bertaut, Laurie Pounder
DeMarco, and Steven Kamin, International Capital
Flows and the Returns to Safe Assets in the United
States, 2003–2007, Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System International Finance
Discussion Papers Number 1014 (February 2011),
available at: http://www.federalreserve.gov/pubs/
ifdp/2011/1014/ifdp1014.htm.

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percent of foreign banking
organizations’ U.S. assets, up from 40
percent in 1995.67 Moreover, U.S.
broker-dealer assets of large foreign
banking organizations as a share of their
U.S. assets grew rapidly after the mid1990s.68 In 2012, five of the top-ten U.S.
broker-dealers were owned by foreign
banking organizations. In contrast,
commercial and industrial lending
originated by U.S. branches and
agencies of foreign banking
organizations as a share of their thirdparty U.S. liabilities dropped after
2003.69
2. The Financial Stability Mandate of
the Dodd-Frank Act
In response to the financial crisis,
Congress enacted the Dodd-Frank Act,
which included multiple measures to
promote the financial stability of the
United States.70 Section 165 of the
Dodd-Frank Act directs the Board to
establish enhanced prudential standards
in order to prevent or mitigate risks to
U.S. financial stability that could arise
from the material financial distress or
failure or ongoing activities of U.S. and
foreign banking organizations that have
total consolidated assets of $50 billion
or more. The enhanced prudential
standards for foreign banking
organizations must include risk-based
and leverage capital, liquidity, stress
test, and risk management and risk
committee requirements, resolution
plan and credit exposure report
requirements, concentration limits, and
a debt-to-equity limit for companies that
pose a grave threat to the financial
stability of the United States. Section
165 also authorizes the Board to
establish a contingent capital
requirement, enhanced public
disclosures, short-term debt limits, and
‘‘other prudential standards’’ that the
Board determines are ‘‘appropriate.’’
In applying section 165 to a foreignbased bank holding company, the DoddFrank Act directs the Board to give due
regard to the principle of national
treatment and equality of competitive
opportunity, and to take into account
the extent to which the foreign banking
organization is subject, on a
consolidated basis, to home country
standards that are comparable to those
applied to financial companies in the
67 See Forms FR Y–9C, FFIEC 002, FR 2886B,
FFIEC 031/041, FR–Y7N/S, X–17A–5 Part II (SEC
Form 1695), and X–17A–5 Part IIA (SEC Form
1696).
68 See Forms FR Y–9C, FFIEC 002, FR–Y7, FR
2886B, FFIEC 031/041, FR–Y7N/S, X–17A–5 Part II
(SEC Form 1695), and X–17A–5 Part IIA (SEC Form
1696).
69 See Form FFIEC 002.
70 S. Rep. No. 111–176, p. 2 (April 15, 2010).

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United States.71 Section 165 also directs
the Board to take into account
differences among nonbank financial
companies, bank holding companies,
and foreign banking organizations based
on a number of factors.72
3. Summary of the Proposal
In December 2012, the Board sought
comment on the foreign proposal. The
proposal presented a set of targeted
adjustments to the Board’s regulation of
the U.S. operations of foreign banking
organizations to address risks posed by
those entities and to implement the
enhanced prudential standards in
section 165 of the Dodd-Frank Act.73 In
the proposal, the Board sought to
implement section 165 in a manner that
enhanced the Board’s current regulatory
framework for foreign banking
organizations in order to mitigate the
risks posed to U.S. financial stability by
the U.S. activities of foreign banking
organizations. These proposed changes
were designed to facilitate consistent
regulation and supervision of the U.S.
operations of large foreign banking
organizations. The proposed changes
would have also bolstered the capital
and liquidity positions of the U.S.
operations of foreign banking
organizations to improve their resiliency
in adverse economic and financial
conditions, and help them withstand
deteriorations in asset-quality as well as
funding shocks. Together, these changes
were expected to increase the resiliency
of the U.S. operations of foreign banking
organizations during normal and
stressed periods. A summary of the
major components of the proposal is set
forth below.

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a. Structural Requirements
Presently, foreign banking
organizations operate through a variety
of structures in the United States. This
diversity in structure presented
significant challenges to the Board’s task
of applying the standards mandated by
the Dodd-Frank Act both consistently
across the U.S. operations of foreign
banking organizations, and in
comparable ways to large U.S. bank
holding companies and foreign banking
71 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(2). Section 165(b)(2) of the
Dodd-Frank Act refers to ‘‘foreign-based bank
holding company.’’ Section 102 of the Dodd-Frank
Act defines ‘‘bank holding company’’ for purposes
of Title I of the Dodd-Frank Act to include foreign
banking organizations that are treated as bank
holding companies under section 8(a) of the
International Banking Act (12 U.S.C. 3106(a)).
72 These factors are described in section I.A of
this preamble.
73 The proposal also addressed early remediation
requirements in Dodd-Frank Act section 166. As
noted above, the Board is not adopting a final rule
relating to section 166 at this time.

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organizations. The foreign proposal
would have applied a structural
enhanced prudential standard under
which foreign banking organizations
with total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more and combined U.S.
assets of $10 billion or more (excluding
U.S. branch and agency assets and
section 2(h)(2) companies) 74 would
have been required to form a U.S.
intermediate holding company. The
foreign banking organization would
have been required to hold its interest
in U.S. bank and nonbank subsidiaries
of the company, except for any company
held under section 2(h)(2) of the Bank
Holding Company Act, through the U.S.
intermediate holding company.
As noted in the proposal, the U.S.
intermediate holding company
requirement would have provided
consistency in the application of
enhanced prudential standards to the
U.S. operations of foreign banking
organizations with a large U.S.
subsidiary presence. In addition, a U.S.
intermediate holding company structure
would have provided the Board, as
umbrella supervisor of the U.S.
operations of foreign banking
organizations, with a more uniform
platform on which to implement its
supervisory program across the U.S.
operations of foreign banking
organizations. A foreign banking
organization would have been permitted
to continue to operate in the United
States through branches and agencies
subject to the enhanced prudential
standards included in the proposal for
U.S. branches and agencies of foreign
banks.75
b. Capital Requirements
Under the proposal, a U.S.
intermediate holding company would
have been subject to the same risk-based
and leverage capital standards
applicable to U.S. bank holding
companies, regardless of whether it
controlled a subsidiary depository
institution. These standards include
minimum risk-based and leverage
capital requirements and applicable
74 Under the proposal, U.S. non-branch assets
would have been calculated based on the total
consolidated assets of each top-tier U.S. subsidiary
of the foreign banking organization (excluding any
section 2(h)(2) company). A company would have
been permitted to reduce its combined U.S. assets
for this purpose by the amount corresponding to
balances and transactions between any U.S.
subsidiaries that would be eliminated in
consolidation were a U.S. intermediate holding
company already formed.
75 The proposal would have referred to all U.S.
branches and U.S. agencies of a foreign bank as the
‘‘U.S. branch and agency network.’’ The final rule
does not use the defined term ‘‘U.S. branch and
agency network,’’ and simply refers to ‘‘U.S.
branches and U.S. agencies of a foreign bank.

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capital buffers. In addition, under the
proposal, U.S. intermediate holding
companies with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more would have
been subject to the capital plan rule.76
Furthermore, any foreign banking
organization with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more generally
would have been required to meet home
country risk-based and leverage capital
standards at the consolidated level that
are consistent with internationallyagreed risk-based capital and leverage
standards published by the Basel
Committee (Basel Capital Framework),
including the risk-based capital and
leverage requirements included in Basel
III, on an ongoing basis.77 Absent homecountry standards consistent with the
Basel Capital Framework, a foreign
banking organization would have been
required to demonstrate to the Board’s
satisfaction that it would have met Basel
Capital Framework standards at the
consolidated level were those standards
applied.
The risk-based and leverage capital
requirements were intended to
strengthen the capital position of the
U.S. operations of foreign banking
organizations and provide a
consolidated capital treatment for these
operations. Aligning the capital
requirements for U.S. intermediate
holding companies formed by foreign
banking organizations and U.S. bank
holding companies is in line with longstanding international capital
agreements, which provide flexibility to
host jurisdictions to establish capital
requirements on a national treatment
basis for local subsidiaries of foreign
banking organizations.
c. Risk Management Requirements
The proposal would have required
any foreign banking organization with
publicly traded stock and total
consolidated assets of $10 billion or
more and any foreign banking
organization, regardless of whether its
stock is publicly traded, with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more, to certify that it maintains a U.S.
risk committee. In addition, a foreign
banking organization with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more and combined U.S. assets of $50
billion or more would have been
required to employ a U.S. chief risk
officer and implement enhanced risk
76 See

12 CFR 225.8.
Basel III: A global framework for more
resilient banks and banking systems (December
2010), available at: http://www.bis.org/publ/
bcbs189.pdf. Consistency with the internationallyagreed standards would be measured in accordance
with the transition period set forth in the Basel
Capital Framework.
77 See

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management requirements generally
consistent with the requirements in the
domestic proposal. However, the foreign
proposal would have implemented
these requirements in a manner that
provided some flexibility for foreign
banking organizations and recognized
the complexity in applying riskmanagement standards to foreign
banking organizations that maintain
U.S. branches and agencies, as well as
bank and nonbank subsidiaries.
d. Liquidity Requirements

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The proposal would have applied a
set of enhanced liquidity standards to
the U.S. operations of foreign banking
organizations with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more and
combined U.S. assets of $50 billion or
more that were comparable to those
proposed for large U.S. bank holding
companies in the domestic proposal.
These standards include requirements
to conduct monthly liquidity stress tests
over a series of time intervals out to one
year, and to hold a buffer of highly
liquid assets to cover the first 30 days
of stressed cash-flow needs. These
standards were designed to increase the
resiliency of the U.S. operations of
foreign banking organizations during
times of stress and to reduce the risk of
asset fire sales if U.S. dollar funding
channels became strained and shortterm debt could not easily be rolled
over.
Under the proposal, the liquidity
buffer would have separately applied to
the U.S. branches and agencies of a
foreign bank and the U.S. intermediate
holding company of a foreign banking
organization with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more. The proposal
would have required the U.S.
intermediate holding company to
maintain the entire 30-day buffer in the
United States. In recognition that U.S.
branches and agencies are not separate
legal entities from their parent foreign
bank but can assume liquidity risk in
the United States, the proposal would
have required the U.S. branches and
agencies of a foreign bank to maintain
the first 14 days of their 30-day liquidity
buffer in the United States and would
have permitted the U.S. branches and
agencies to meet the remainder of this
requirement at the consolidated level.
e. Stress Testing
The proposal would have
implemented stress-test requirements
for a U.S. intermediate holding
company in a manner parallel to those
applied to U.S. bank holding

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companies.78 The parallel
implementation would have helped to
ensure that U.S. intermediate holding
companies have sufficient capital in the
United States to withstand a severely
adverse stress scenario. In addition, a
foreign banking organization with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more that maintained U.S. branches and
agencies would have been required to be
subject to a consolidated capital stress
testing regime that is broadly consistent
with the stress-test requirements in the
United States. If the foreign banking
organization had combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more, the proposal
would have required it to provide
information to the Board regarding the
results of the consolidated stress tests.
The foreign proposal also included
single counterparty credit limits and
early remediation requirements.
However, these standards are still under
development and so are not discussed
here.
4. Targeted Adjustments to Foreign
Bank Regulation
a. Policy Considerations for the Proposal
As discussed above, the Federal
Reserve traditionally has relied on the
home-country supervisor to supervise a
foreign banking organization on a global
basis, consistent with international
standards, which are intended to
address the risks posed by the
consolidated organization and to help
achieve global competitive equity. The
Federal Reserve has relied on the parent
foreign banking organization to support
its U.S. operations under both normal
and stressed conditions.79 The proposal
would have adjusted this traditional
approach by requiring a foreign banking
organization to organize its U.S.
subsidiaries under a single U.S.
intermediate holding company and
applying enhanced prudential standards
to the U.S. intermediate holding
company.
Some commenters supported the
proposal as an enhancement of U.S.
financial stability and expressed the
view that the proposal would reduce
reliance on a foreign banking
organization to keep its U.S. entities
solvent, particularly where both the
home-country parent and the U.S.
operations come under simultaneous
stress. However, other commenters
questioned the need for such adjustment
and asserted that the Board already has
adequate tools and information for
78 See 77 FR 62378 (October 12, 2012); 77 FR
62396 (October 12, 2012).
79 International Banking Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C.
3101 et seq.) and Foreign Bank Supervision
Enhancement Act of 1991 (12 U.S.C. 3101 note).

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supervising the U.S. operations of
foreign banking organizations.
Commenters asserted that the goals of
the proposal could be achieved without,
for example, the U.S. intermediate
holding company requirement. For
example, as an alternative to the
proposal, some commenters suggested
that the Board supplement its existing
regulatory approach by requiring more
information from home-country
supervisors. Another commenter
suggested that, instead of finalizing the
proposed rules, the Board condition
exemptions to regulatory requirements
on the receipt of appropriate
information and use its strength-ofsupport assessment process 80 as a
framework for evaluating home-country
regulation.
Congress directed the Board to adopt
enhanced prudential standards for
foreign banking organizations in order
to mitigate risks to U.S. financial
stability posed by foreign banking
organizations. As discussed above, the
concentration, complexity, and
interconnectedness of the U.S.
operations of foreign banking
organizations present risks to U.S.
financial stability that are not addressed
by the traditional framework. The
modifications to the Board’s current
supervisory approach suggested by
commenters—such as providing the
Federal Reserve with additional
information, or building upon the
existing strength-of-support
framework—would not provide a
consistent platform for regulating and
supervising the U.S. operations of
foreign banking organizations or
facilitate the application of enhanced
prudential standards to the U.S. nonbranch operations of a foreign banking
organization.
Many commenters suggested that the
Board did not adequately tailor the
enhanced prudential standards set forth
in the proposal to the systemic risk
posed by foreign banking organizations.
According to these commenters, the
proposal did not reflect consideration of
either the meaningful differences among
foreign banking organizations in their
systemic risk characteristics or whether
actual threats to U.S. financial stability
would justify the requirement for a
given foreign banking organization. One
commenter expressed the view that only
a very small subset of foreign banking
organizations has the potential to
present risks to U.S. financial stability.
Others asserted that a global
consolidated assets measure would
overstate the U.S. systemic risk posed
80 See, e.g., Supervision & Regulation Letter 00–
14 (October 23, 2000).

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by many foreign banking organizations.
Similarly, other commenters observed
that many foreign banking organizations
do not rely on their U.S. branches as a
net source of U.S. dollar funding for
their non-U.S. operations.
The Dodd-Frank Act requires the
Board to impose enhanced prudential
standards on all foreign banking
organizations with global consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more, and
contemplates that the Board will tailor
the requirements depending on the risk
presented to U.S. financial stability by
these institutions. The Board believes
that the measures included in the final
rule are appropriate for managing the
risks to U.S. financial stability that may
be posed by such firms. The standards
that the Board has developed are
tailored such that a foreign banking
organization with U.S. operations that
pose less risk will generally make fewer
changes to their U.S. operations to come
into compliance with the new
standards. For instance, the standards
applicable to foreign banking
organizations with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more but
combined U.S. assets of less than $50
billion are substantially less as
compared to those applicable to foreign
banking organizations with combined
U.S. assets of $50 billion or more. In
addition, as explained in more detail in
section IV.B of this preamble, a foreign
banking organization with less than $50
billion in U.S. non-branch assets will
not be required to form a U.S.
intermediate holding company. The
liquidity requirements applicable to a
foreign banking organization with
combined U.S. operations of $50 billion
or more are calibrated such that a
foreign banking organization whose U.S.
operations have maturity-matched cash
inflows and outflows is unlikely to be
substantially affected by these
requirements. The risk-based capital
rules applicable to U.S. intermediate
holding companies also calibrate capital
requirements to the level of risk posed
by the assets and off-balance sheet
exposures of the U.S. intermediate
holding company, including the degree
of interconnectivity. Foreign banking
organizations that already maintain
sufficient risk-based or leverage capital
at their U.S. operations will not have to
reallocate to or raise capital for those
operations.
The proposal also described recent
modifications to the regulation of
internationally active banks adopted or
contemplated by other national
authorities.81 These modifications
include increased local liquidity and
81 See

77 FR 76631 note 13.

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capital requirements, limits on
intragroup exposures of domestic banks
to foreign subsidiaries, and
requirements to prioritize or segregate
home country retail operations.
Commenters argued that it would be
premature for the Board to modify its
regulatory approach before these
adjustments are complete. Commenters
also argued that the Board should
consider home-country legal or political
developments that could potentially
limit a foreign bank parent’s ability to
support its U.S. operations in the overall
context of factors that would determine
a foreign banking organization’s
practical ability to support its U.S.
operations.
While the Board considered these
modifications and legal and political
developments as factors in its
assessment of the likelihood that a
foreign bank parent will be willing and
able to support its U.S. operations in the
future, the proposal and the final rule
respond to a broader set of
considerations that are intended to
address the financial stability risks
posed by the U.S. operations of foreign
banking organizations. While the Board
recognizes the important initiatives
under development in other countries,
the Board does not believe it is
appropriate to await the outcomes of
such initiatives before adopting
enhanced prudential standards to
address risks to U.S. financial stability.
As discussed below, the Board will
monitor supervisory approaches that are
implemented throughout the world and
may take further action in the future as
appropriate.
Some commenters asserted that the
proposal’s narrative describing the
period leading up to and during the
financial crisis omitted the role that
foreign banking organizations played in
supporting financial stability, such as
through acquisitions of failed bank and
nonbank operations of U.S. financial
companies. One commenter stated that
foreign banking organizations undertook
such acquisitions with an expectation
that cross-border supervisory and
regulatory standards would not be
significantly disrupted.
The Board recognizes the important
role that foreign banking organizations
play in the U.S. financial sector. The
presence of foreign banking
organizations in the United States has
brought competitive and countercyclical
benefits to U.S. markets. The Board
acknowledges that there have been
significant developments, both in the
United States and overseas, to
strengthen capital positions since the
crisis. However, these changes in the
international regulatory landscape, and

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the likelihood of changes still to come,
are not a substitute for enhancing
regulation of the foreign banking
organizations that have large U.S.
operations and pose risks to U.S.
financial stability.
While the Board acknowledges that
some foreign banking organizations
undertook cross-border acquisitions
during the financial crisis, the crisis also
highlighted weaknesses in the existing
framework for supervising, regulating,
and otherwise constraining the risks of
major financial companies, including
the U.S. operations of foreign banking
organizations. The Board believes the
requirements contained in the final rule
are appropriate in light of the statutory
directive to impose enhanced prudential
standards on domestic and foreign firms
that address these risks, and by the
Board’s mandate to minimize risks to
U.S. financial stability.
Some commenters argued that the
proposal would prevent foreign banking
organizations from managing capital
and liquidity on a centralized basis.
These commenters asserted that the
proposal would inhibit diversification
of risk and could reduce a foreign
banking organization’s flexibility to
respond to stress in other parts of the
organization on a continual basis. These
commenters also indicated that they
expected the proposed requirements to
increase the need for foreign banking
organizations to take advantage of
‘‘lender of last resort’’ government
facilities, because banks that currently
manage capital and liquidity on a
centralized basis would lose the ability
efficiently to move those resources to
the branches or operations that need it
the most.
While the proposed requirements
could incrementally increase costs and
reduce flexibility of internationally
active banks that primarily manage their
capital and liquidity on a centralized
basis, they would increase the resiliency
of the U.S. operations of a foreign
banking organization, the ability of the
U.S. operations to respond to stresses in
the United States, and the stability of
the U.S. financial system. A firm that
relies significantly on centralized
resources may not be able to provide
support to all parts of its organization.
The Board believes that the final rule
reduces the need for a foreign banking
organization to contribute additional
capital and liquidity to its U.S.
operations during times of homecountry or other international stresses,
thereby reducing the likelihood that a
banking organization that comes under
stress in multiple jurisdictions will be
required to choose which of its
operations to support. Finally, the Board

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notes that requiring foreign banking
organizations to maintain financial
resources in the jurisdictions in which
they operate subsidiaries is consistent
with existing Basel Committee
agreements and international regulatory
practice. U.S. banking organizations
operate in overseas markets that apply
local regulatory requirements to
commercial and investment banking
activities conducted in locally
incorporated subsidiaries of foreign
banks. In the Board’s view, the final rule
establishes a regulatory approach to
foreign banking organizations that is
similar in substance to that in other
jurisdictions.
b. Taking Into Account Home-Country
Standards
In applying section 165 to a foreignbased bank holding company, the DoddFrank Act directs the Board to take into
account the extent to which the foreign
banking organization is subject, on a
consolidated basis, to home country
standards that are comparable to those
applied to financial companies in the
United States.82 This direction requires
the Board to consider the regulatory
regimes applicable to foreign banking
organizations abroad when designing
the enhanced prudential standards for
foreign banking organizations.
Commenters argued that the Board
did not adequately take into account
home country standards when
developing the proposal. For instance,
commenters urged the Board to rely on
home country standards in applying the
enhanced prudential standards, absent a
material inconsistency that could be
addressed through targeted U.S.
regulation. Other commenters suggested
that the Board incorporate a
‘‘substituted compliance’’ framework
into the rule, which would defer to
home-country standards where the
home country has adopted standards
similar to those included in the
proposal.
The Board has taken into account
home country standards as required by
section 165 in the development of the
proposed and final rules. In recognition
of the home-country standards and the
home-country supervisory regime
applicable to foreign banks, the final
rule continues to permit foreign banks
to operate through branches and
agencies in the United States on the
basis of their home-country capital.
Accordingly, the final rule does not
apply risk-based or leverage capital
standards or stress testing standards to
U.S. branches and agencies of foreign
banking organizations. In addition, the
82 See

supra note 71.

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proposed and final risk management
standards provide flexibility for foreign
banking organizations to rely on homecountry governance structures to
implement certain elements of the final
rule’s risk-management requirements by
generally permitting a foreign banking
organization to establish its U.S. risk
committee as a committee of its global
board of directors.
While taking home country standards
into account, the final rule recognizes
that foreign jurisdictions do not
calibrate or construct their home
country standards to address U.S.
exposures or the potential impact of
those exposures on the U.S. financial
system.83 The consideration of the home
country standards applicable to foreign
banking organizations must be done in
light of the general purpose of section
165, which is ‘‘to prevent or mitigate
risks to the financial stability of the
United States that could arise from the
material financial distress or failure, or
ongoing activities,’’ of these firms. The
final rule, with the requirement that
large foreign banking organizations
establish a U.S. intermediate holding
company and look to home country
standards in operating branches in the
United States, attempts to balance these
two considerations.84
Commenters argued that the Board is
required to engage in an institution83 Section 165(b)(2) requires the Board to give due
regard to the principle of national treatment and
equality of competitive opportunity. In addition,
section 165(b)(3)(A) requires the Board to ‘‘take into
account differences among nonbank financial
companies supervised by the Board of Governors
and bank holding companies [with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or more], based
on the factors described in section 113(a) and (b)
of the Dodd-Frank Act,’’ which include ‘‘the
amount and nature of the United States financial
assets of the company,’’ ‘‘the amount and nature of
the liabilities of the company used to fund activities
and operations in the United States, including the
degree of reliance on short-term funding,’’ and ‘‘the
extent and nature of the United States related offbalance-sheet exposures of the company.’’ The
proposed enhanced prudential standards were
designed to ensure that financial resources required
to be maintained in the United States would
appropriately take into account the U.S. financial
assets, liquidity, and off-balance-sheet exposures of,
and the systemic risk posed by, the U.S. operations
of foreign banking organizations, in accordance
with the statutory factors.
84 Where courts have reviewed agency
interpretations of statutes which require an agency
to ‘‘take into account’’ a number of factors, courts
have given the agencies broad discretion to balance
those factors. Courts require that the agency
compile a record on which it based its decision, but
generally defer to the expertise of the agency in
determining how to apply the factors and the
relative weight given to each factor. See Lignite
Energy v. EPA, 198 F.3d 930 (D.C. Cir. 1999);
Weyerhaeuser v. EPA, 590 F.2d 1011 (D.C. Cir.
1978); National Wildlife Federation v. EPA, 286
F.3d 554 (D.C. Cir. 2002); Trans World Airlines, Inc.
v. Civil Aeronautics Board, 637 F.2d 62 (2d Cir.
1980).

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specific analysis of comparable
consolidated home-country standards
because of the statute’s use of the
singular term ‘‘foreign financial
company.’’ Commenters further argued
that that directive requires the Board to
consider the home-country regime
applicable to a foreign banking
organization and the effect of that
regime on the U.S. operations of the
specific foreign banking organization.85
The Board observes that the statute
permits it to promulgate standards by
regulation and permits the Board to
tailor standards by category of
institution, suggesting that Congress did
not require an institution-specific
analysis in establishing the standards.
Furthermore, the final rule applies an
institution-specific analysis in
evaluating comparable consolidated
home-country standards in determining
whether the home-country capital and
stress test standards meet the
requirements of the final rule, as
discussed further in those sections of
the preamble. With respect to all
standards, the Board’s supervisory
approach will be tailored to the size and
complexity of the company.
Other commenters argued that,
because of parallel statutory language
regarding home country standards, the
Board’s implementation of section 165
should parallel its implementation of
the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act
provision 86 regarding a foreign banking
organization’s ability to qualify as a
financial holding company.87 These
provisions of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley
Act do not reference home-country
standards, and, furthermore, were not
motivated by the financial stability
concerns that motivated Title I of the
Dodd-Frank Act. Therefore, in
85 Section 165(b)(2) provides: ‘‘In applying the
standards set forth in paragraph (1) to any foreign
nonbank financial company supervised by the
Board of Governors or foreign-based bank holding
company, the Board shall—(A) give due regard to
the principle of national treatment and equality of
competitive opportunity, and (B) take into account
the extent to which the foreign financial company
is subject on a consolidated basis to home country
standards that are comparable to those applied to
financial companies in the United States.’’
86 Section 141 of Public Law 106–102, 113 stat.
1139 (1999) (providing that, in permitting a foreign
banking organization to engage in expanded
financial activities permissible for a bank holding
company that is a financial holding company, ‘‘the
Board shall apply comparable capital and
management standards to a foreign bank that
operates a branch or agency or owns or controls a
commercial lending company in the United States,
giving due regard to the principle of national
treatment and equality of competitive
opportunity.’’)
87 See 12 CFR 225.90 (requiring that a foreign
banking organization be well capitalized and well
managed and setting forth the standards to
determine whether a foreign banking organization
is well capitalized and well managed).

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interpreting the standards the Board
must apply to foreign banking
organizations under section 165 of the
Dodd-Frank Act, the Board does not
believe that the Gramm-Leach-Bliley
Act provisions are controlling.
c. National Treatment
The Dodd-Frank Act requires the
Board to give due regard to national
treatment and equality of competitive
opportunity, which generally means
that foreign banking organizations
operating in the United States should be
treated no less favorably than similarlysituated U.S. banking organizations and
should generally be subject to the same
restrictions and obligations in the
United States as those that apply to the
domestic operations of U.S. banking
organizations.
While some commenters endorsed the
proposal as facilitating equal treatment
of large foreign banking organizations
and domestic bank holding companies,
other commenters suggested that
particular elements of the proposal did
not give adequate regard to the principle
of national treatment. For instance,
many commenters argued that foreign
banking organizations were
disadvantaged by the fact that the
enhanced prudential standards would
apply to them on a sub-consolidated
level (meaning, only to their U.S.
operations), whereas the standards
would apply to U.S. bank holding
companies on a consolidated basis.
The principles of national treatment
and equality of competitive opportunity
were central considerations in the
design of the enhanced prudential
standards for foreign banking
organizations. The standards applied to
the U.S. operations of foreign banking
organizations are broadly consistent
with the standards applicable to U.S.
bank holding companies. In particular,
a U.S. firm that proposes to conduct
both banking operations and nonbank
financial operations must (with a few
limited exceptions) form a bank holding
company or savings and loan holding
company subject to supervision and
regulation by the Board. The U.S.
intermediate holding company
requirement subjects foreign banking
organizations with large U.S. banking
operations to comparable organizational
and prudential standards. Foreign
banking organizations operating in the
United States generally are treated no
less favorably, and are subject to similar
restrictions and obligations, as
similarly-situated U.S. banking
organizations.
To the extent that there are
differences in the application of the
standards for U.S. bank holding

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companies and foreign banks, the
differences generally reflect the
structural differences between foreign
banking organizations’ operations in the
United States and U.S. bank holding
companies. For instance, because the
final rule permits U.S. branches and
agencies of foreign banks to continue to
operate on the basis of the foreign
bank’s capital, the final rule does not
impose capital or stress testing
requirements on U.S. branches and
agencies of foreign banks.
Commenters’ concerns regarding
national treatment with respect to
particular enhanced prudential
standards, and the Board’s response to
such concerns, are discussed further in
the relevant section below describing
each prudential standard.
d. International Regulatory Cooperation
Many commenters asserted that the
proposal represented a retreat from the
Board’s past practice of international
regulatory coordination and
cooperation. These commenters stated
that the Board’s international
commitments place a strong emphasis
on cooperation, sharing of information,
and coordination for internationally
active banks. Many of these commenters
urged the Board to follow the G–20’s
call for regulatory cooperation, and
asserted that the Board should work
within the international fora to address
its concerns about systemic stability.88
Several commenters requested that the
Board conduct a quantitative impact
study on the effect of the proposal or on
particular aspects of the proposal before
adopting a final rule. One commenter
suggested that the Board should
recommend steps that banking
organizations and regulators could take
to foster international cooperation and
asserted that the Board should work
through international agreements by, for
example, obtaining pledges among
regulators to maintain intra-group
services and support, requiring home
country consultation before host
country supervisors may make
managerial changes, and providing a
sunset date for any provision of the final
rule that is addressed by an
international agreement in the future.
The Board has long worked to foster
cooperation among international
regulators, and actively participates in
international efforts to improve
88 For example, commenters cited ‘‘Declaration:
Summit on Financial Markets and the World
Economy’’ (Nov. 15, 2008), available at: http://
www.g20.utoronto.ca/2008/
2008declarationlll5.html; and ‘‘The G–20 Toronto
Summit Declaration’’ (June 26–27, 2010), available
at: http://www.g20.utoronto.ca/2010/tocommunique.html.

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cooperation among supervisors around
the world. As a general matter, these
supervisors have responded to the
lessons learned during the recent
financial crisis by enhancing the
supervisory and regulatory standards
that apply to their banking
organizations. The Board has been
working closely with its international
counterparts and through international
fora, such as the Basel Committee and
the FSB, to develop common
approaches that strengthen financial
stability as well as the regulation of
financial organizations. While these
efforts often lead to unified approaches,
such as the Basel III capital and
liquidity frameworks, in some cases
countries move at different paces and
develop supplemental solutions that are
tailored to the legal framework,
regulatory system, and industry
structure in each jurisdiction. For
example, the United States has required
U.S. banking organizations to meet a
minimum leverage ratio since the 1980s,
and the United States has long had strict
activity restrictions on companies that
control banks.
The Board will continue to work with
its international counterparts to
strengthen the global financial system
and financial stability. As regulatory
and supervisory standards are
implemented throughout the world, the
Board and its international supervisory
colleagues will gain further insight into
which approaches are most effective in
improving the resilience of banking
organizations and in protecting financial
stability, and the Board will take further
action as appropriate.
While the Board considered
commenters’ proposals for various
regulatory agreements, the Board is
concerned that such proposals may not
adequately address risks to U.S.
financial stability. Localized stress on
internationally active financial
institutions may trigger divergent
national interests and increase systemic
instability. Commenters’ concerns
regarding regulatory fragmentation also
should be mitigated by the final rule’s
emphasis on the Basel Capital
Framework, both in the United States
and overseas. With respect to
commenters’ proposals for sunset dates,
the Board intends to take further action
as necessary depending on the outcomes
of international regulatory agreements,
but does not believe that a sunset
provision in the final rule would be
appropriate.
Several commenters focused on the
potential effect of the proposal on crossborder resolution. One commenter
approved of the proposal on the grounds
that requiring a U.S. intermediate

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holding company for large foreign
banking organizations would create a
consolidated U.S. legal entity that can
be spun off from a troubled parent or
placed into receivership under Title II of
the Dodd-Frank Act. However, most
commenters asserted that the proposal
would present impediments to effective
cross-border resolution. Commenters
argued that the Board was signaling that
it lacks confidence in cross-border
resolution, which could reduce other
regulators’ incentives to cooperate, both
in advance of and during a crisis. The
Board notes, however, that multiple
jurisdictions apply prudential
requirements to commercial and
investment banking activities conducted
in locally incorporated subsidiaries of
foreign banks. In the Board’s view, and
as noted above, the final rule will result
in a regulatory approach that is
substantively similar to that which now
exists in some other jurisdictions, and is
therefore not inconsistent with
coordinated resolution. Further, a U.S.
intermediate holding company would
facilitate an orderly cross-border
resolution of a foreign banking
organization with large U.S. subsidiaries
by providing one top-tier U.S. holding
company to interface with the parent
foreign banking organization in a singlepoint-of-entry resolution conducted by
its home country resolution authority
(which is the preferred resolution
strategy of many foreign banking
organizations) or to serve as the focal
point of a separate resolution of the U.S.
operations of a foreign banking
organization in a multiple-point-of-entry
resolution (which is the preferred
resolution strategy of other foreign
banking organizations).
Commenters also asserted that the
Board had not shown that it adequately
considered the risks to financial
stability that could result from measures
taken by other jurisdictions in response
to the final rule. Most of these
commenters asserted that the proposal
could invite retaliatory measures from
other jurisdictions, and argued that
fragmented, nationalized financial
regulation would make the United
States less financially stable. The Board
has considered the possibility that the
proposal may affect the environment for
U.S. banking organizations operating
overseas. As noted above, U.S. banking
organizations already operate in a
number of overseas markets that apply
local regulatory requirements to their
local commercial banking and
investment banking subsidiaries. In
addition, the United Kingdom, which is
host to substantial operations of U.S.
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liquidity standards to commercial
banking and broker-dealer subsidiaries
of non-U.K. banks operating in their
market that are similar to the
requirements included in the Board’s
proposal. While most other jurisdictions
have not imposed similar liquidity
requirements on branches and agencies,
the Board took into account the
particular role of U.S. branches and
agencies in funding markets, especially
in U.S.-dollar denominated short-term
wholesale funding markets, in its
evaluation of measures for protecting
U.S. financial stability, and has
determined that the requirements
imposed upon branches and agencies
that operate in the United States are
appropriate. With respect to requests for
quantitative impact studies on the
proposal as a whole or on aspects of the
proposal in particular, as noted above,
the Board and its international
supervisory colleagues will gain further
insight into which regulatory
approaches are most effective in
improving the resilience of banking
organizations and in protecting financial
stability over time, and the Board will
take further action as appropriate.
Some commenters expressed concern
that the proposal could jeopardize
transatlantic trade agreement
negotiations, or that the proposal was
protectionist and antithetical to fair, free
and open markets. The final rule,
however, provides no barriers to entry
or operation in the United States that
contravene national treatment. The final
rule imposes requirements on foreign
banking organizations that are
comparable to those required of U.S.
organizations and are based in
prudential regulation.
B. U.S. Intermediate Holding Company
Requirement
Under the proposal, foreign banking
organizations with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more and U.S.
non-branch assets of $10 billion or
more 89 would have been required to
form a U.S. intermediate holding
company. The foreign banking
organization would have been required
to hold its interest in U.S. bank and
nonbank subsidiaries of the company,
except for any company held under
section 2(h)(2) of the Bank Holding
Company Act, through the U.S.
intermediate holding company.
89 Under the proposal, U.S. non-branch assets
would have been based on the total consolidated
assets of each top-tier U.S. subsidiary of the foreign
banking organization (excluding any section 2(h)(2)
company).

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1. Adopting the U.S. Intermediate
Holding Company Requirement as an
Additional Prudential Standard
Some commenters questioned
whether the Board could adopt the U.S.
intermediate holding company
requirement because it is not an
enumerated standard in section 165. In
support of their view, commenters
argued that the U.S. intermediate
holding company was a policy measure
that would be appropriately established
through the legislative, rather than the
rulemaking, process. Commenters
argued that the Board’s authority to
adopt ‘‘additional prudential standards’’
gives the Board flexibility to create
targeted prudential requirements such
as contingent capital and short-term
debt requirements, and characterized
the U.S. intermediate holding company
requirement as a more significant
change not within that authority. These
commenters also contended that the fact
that Congress had provided for the
establishment of a U.S. intermediate
holding company in other sections of
the Dodd-Frank Act in different contexts
suggested that Congress did not intend
for a U.S. intermediate holding
company to be used in establishing
enhanced prudential standards under
section 165.90 Commenters also
questioned whether the Board had
adequately demonstrated that the
proposed U.S. intermediate holding
company standard was appropriate to
address the financial stability concerns
posed by the U.S. operations of foreign
banking organizations.
Section 165 does not itself require
that a foreign banking organization
establish a U.S. intermediate holding
company. However, section 165 permits
the Board to establish any additional
prudential standard for covered
companies if the Board determines that
the standard is appropriate. Section 165
does not define what it means for an
additional prudential standard to be
appropriate, although it would be
consistent with the standards of legal
interpretation to look to the purpose of
the authority to impose the requirement.
In this case, section 165 specifically
explains that its purpose is to prevent or
mitigate 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 financial institutions.91
The U.S. intermediate holding company
requirement directly addresses the risks
to the financial stability of the United
90 See

sections 167(b) and 626 of the Dodd-Frank

Act.
91 Section 165(a)(1) of the Dodd-Frank Act; 12
U.S.C. 5365(a)(1).

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States by increasing the resiliency of the
U.S. operations of large foreign banking
organizations. Foreign banking
organizations with U.S. non-branch
assets of $50 billion or more are large,
complex, and interconnected
institutions, and generally have a U.S.
risk profile similar to U.S. bank holding
companies of total consolidated assets
of $50 billion or more. The U.S.
intermediate holding company
requirement also provides for consistent
application of capital, liquidity, and
other prudential requirements across the
U.S. non-branch operations of the
foreign banking organization and a
single nexus for risk management of
those U.S. non-branch operations,
facilitating application of the mandatory
enhanced prudential standards,
increasing the safety and soundness of
and providing for consolidated
supervision of these operations. Last,
the U.S. intermediate holding company
requirement facilitates a level playing
field between foreign and U.S. banking
organizations operating in the United
States, in furtherance of national
treatment and competitive equity. For
these reasons, the Board believes that
the U.S. intermediate holding company
is an appropriate additional enhanced
prudential standard under section 165,
in furtherance of the statutory directive
to prevent or mitigate risks to U.S.
financial stability.
While commenters argued that the
inclusion of an intermediate holding
company requirement in other sections
of the Dodd-Frank Act suggests that
Congress did not intend for the Board to
adopt the requirement in connection
with Dodd-Frank Act section 165, the
Board believes that the provisions that
commenters cite serve to acknowledge
the U.S. intermediate holding company
as a tool to facilitate the supervision of
financial activities of a company by
requiring the company to move the
activities into or under a single entity.92
The U.S. intermediate holding company
requirement would assist in the
supervision of financial activities of the
U.S. intermediate holding company,
while permitting subsidiaries held
under section 2(h)(2) of the Bank
92 Under section 167 of the Dodd-Frank Act, the
Board may require a nonbank financial company
that conducts commercial and financial activities to
establish a U.S. intermediate holding company and
conduct all or a portion of its financial activities in
that intermediate holding company. 12 U.S.C. 5367.
Similarly, under section 626 of the Dodd-Frank Act,
the Board may require a grandfathered unitary
savings and loan holding company that conducts
commercial activities to establish and conduct all
or a portion of its financial activities in or through
a U.S. intermediate holding company, which shall
be a savings and loan holding company. 12 U.S.C.
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Holding Company Act 93 to remain
outside of the U.S. intermediate holding
company.
In establishing the enhanced
prudential standards under section 165,
the statute requires the Board to
consider a number of factors, including
those relating to a foreign banking
organization’s complexity. This suggests
that the Board could adopt additional
prudential standards to address such
complexity. The Board also is
authorized by the Bank Holding
Company Act,94 the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act,95 and the International
Banking Act 96 to ensure that bank
holding companies and foreign banking
organizations operating in the United
States conduct their operations in a safe
and sound manner. Consistent with all
of these authorities, the provisions in
the final rule will help the Board
supervise foreign banking organizations
for safety and soundness.
In addition to the requirements of the
final rule, foreign banking organizations
will continue to be subject to Board
rules and guidance that are otherwise
applicable. For instance, a foreign
banking organization will be subject to
all applicable requirements in the Bank
Holding Company Act, Regulation Y,
and Regulation K.97 In addition, U.S.
intermediate holding companies that are
bank holding companies will generally
be subject to the rules and regulations
applicable to a bank holding company
(other than the enhanced prudential
standards for bank holding companies
set forth in this final rule or otherwise
as specifically provided).
2. Restructuring Costs
Some commenters expressed concern
that the costs of the corporate
reorganization necessary to comply with
the proposed U.S. intermediate holding
company requirement would not be
justified by the financial stability benefit
of the requirement. Commenters argued
that the initial costs of the proposal
could be in the hundreds of millions of
dollars, and one commenter estimated
that the one-time cost of coming into
compliance with the proposal could be
$100 million to $250 million, with
annual ongoing costs of $25–50 million
(excluding tax costs). Commenters cited
a variety of costs for restructuring their
operations to transfer subsidiaries to the
93 As further described below in section IV.B.5 of
this preamble, the final rule also permits limited
types of other subsidiaries to be held outside the
U.S. intermediate holding company.
94 12 U.S.C. 1841 et seq.
95 12 U.S.C. 1818 et seq.
96 12 U.S.C. 3101 et seq.
97 12 U.S.C. 1841 et seq; 12 CFR Part 211; 12 CFR
Part 225.

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intermediate holding company,
including obtaining valuation opinions
and third-party consents, restructuring
transaction-booking trade flows,
reallocating assets, revising employment
contracts, and novating contracts and
guarantees. Commenters also cited the
costs of creating additional management
and governance structures and systems
for calculating capital; modifying
information technology systems;
establishing new governance and
funding mechanisms; and issuing equity
instead of debt to capitalize the U.S.
intermediate holding company. Other
commenters focused on the range of
processes, tools, and resources that
would need to be deployed to manage
stress-testing requirements. Commenters
also observed that U.S. bank holding
companies would not be subject to the
costs of the reorganization.98
Commenters also expressed concern
that the tax costs of restructuring the
U.S. operations would be significant.
The tax costs cited included foreign
transfer taxes and other non-U.S. costs,
as well as costs imposed by the U.S. tax
authorities and various state taxes. One
commenter requested that the Board
discuss with tax authorities or other
relevant authorities the application of a
simple accounting and tax treatment for
transferring subsidiaries to a U.S.
intermediate holding company.
Commenters also specifically cited the
applicability of the U.S. tax
consolidation rules and the effect of the
European Commission’s proposal for a
financial transaction tax.
Commenters argued that these costs
were exacerbated by the proposed oneyear transition period, particularly in
light of the costs associated with
complying with other regulatory
initiatives. Some commenters argued
that the Board should provide a 2-year
or 36-month transition period, and other
commenters requested that the
transition period be harmonized with
the transition period for the agreements
reached by the Basel Committee in Basel
III or the adoption of other jurisdictions’
comparable regulations.
The restructuring costs cited by
commenters will in many cases depend
on the existing complexity of a given
foreign banking organization’s U.S.
98 Commenters also expressed concern that
foreign banking organizations using the advanced
approaches risk-based capital rules would be forced
to develop U.S.-specific models for calculating riskweighted assets, and urged the Board to permit
foreign banking organizations to use methodologies
approved by home-country supervisors. In the final
rule, and as described further below, U.S.
intermediate holding companies are not subject to
the advanced approaches risk-based capital rules,
regardless of whether they meet the thresholds for
application of those rules.

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operations. Some foreign banking
organizations subject to the U.S.
intermediate holding company
requirement in the final rule may have
complex operations that will require
substantial reorganization to comply
with the requirement. Other foreign
banking organizations, however, may
already hold the bulk of their assets
under an existing holding company
structure or in a small number of
subsidiaries. Accordingly, the Board
does not believe that all foreign banking
organizations will incur substantial
costs in reorganizing their U.S.
operations. On the whole, the Board
believes that the financial stability
benefits of the U.S. intermediate holding
company, as discussed above, outweigh
the costs of the one-time reorganization.
In order to permit foreign banking
organizations to conduct the necessary
restructuring in an orderly way, the
final rule extends the transition period
for forming a U.S. intermediate holding
company until July 1, 2016, for foreign
banking organizations that meet or
exceed the relevant asset threshold on
July 1, 2015. Under the final rule, a
foreign banking organization that meets
or exceeds the threshold for formation
of a U.S. intermediate holding company
(U.S. non-branch assets of $50 billion)
on July 1, 2015, is required to organize
its U.S. operations such that most of its
U.S. subsidiaries are held by the U.S.
intermediate holding company by July
1, 2016. Such a foreign banking
organization and its U.S. intermediate
holding company must be in
compliance with the enhanced
prudential standards (other than the
leverage ratio and the stress-testing
requirements) on that date.
The final rule provides additional
transition time for completing the
structural reorganization for foreign
banking organizations that must form a
U.S. intermediate holding company by
July 1, 2016. As commenters explained,
many foreign banking organizations’
operational structures arose through
historical acquisitions that may be
costly or complicated to reorganize. By
July 1, 2016, the U.S. intermediate
holding company must hold the foreign
banking organization’s ownership
interest in any U.S. bank holding
company subsidiary and any depository
institution subsidiary and in U.S.
subsidiaries representing 90 percent of
the foreign banking organization’s assets
not held by the bank holding company
or depository institution. The final rule
provides a foreign banking organization
until July 1, 2017, to transfer its
ownership interest in any residual U.S.
subsidiaries to the U.S. intermediate
holding company. This additional

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accommodation should mitigate some
tax and restructuring costs for foreign
banking organizations with numerous
small nonbank subsidiaries, while
ensuring that the majority of a foreign
banking organization’s U.S. non-branch
assets are held by the U.S. intermediate
holding company and are subject to
enhanced prudential standards,
consistent with safety and soundness
and mitigation of systemic stability risks
by July 1, 2016.
The Board also extended the
compliance period for a foreign banking
organization that meets or exceeds the
threshold for formation of a U.S.
intermediate holding company after July
1, 2015. Under the final rule, a foreign
banking organization that meets or
exceeds the asset threshold after July 1,
2015, would be required to establish a
U.S. intermediate holding company
beginning on the first day of the ninth
quarter after it meets or exceeds the
asset threshold, unless that time is
accelerated or extended by the Board in
writing. These extended transition
periods should mitigate the tax and
reorganization costs by providing
affected foreign banking organizations
additional time to plan and execute the
required restructuring in the way that
most comports with their tax-planning
and internal organizational needs.
3. Scope of the Application of the U.S.
Intermediate Holding Company
Requirement
Commenters also proposed
modifications to the application of the
U.S. intermediate holding company
requirement. For instance, some
commenters argued that the Board
should impose the U.S. intermediate
holding company requirement based on
a case-by-case assessment of the
immediate or actual risks posed by an
individual foreign banking organization
or its U.S. operations. In this context,
several commenters suggested that
foreign banking organizations owned by
sovereign wealth funds should be
exempt from the requirement to form a
U.S. intermediate holding company. By
contrast, some commenters argued that
a case-by-case determination for a U.S.
intermediate holding company would
subject foreign banking organizations to
too much uncertainty. Others suggested
that the Board should create a waiver for
or exempt from the U.S. intermediate
holding company requirement any
foreign banking organization that is able
to demonstrate a comparable home
country supervisory regime, that has
U.S. subsidiaries deemed to be
adequately capitalized or managed, or
that poses no danger to systemic
stability in the United States. Some

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commenters asserted that the Board
should differentiate between the risks
posed by foreign banking organizations
and should apply stricter requirements
to foreign banking organizations with
predominantly broker-dealer operations.
A number of commenters suggested that
the Board raise the asset threshold for
the U.S. intermediate holding company
requirement, expressing the view that a
foreign banking organization should be
required to form a U.S. intermediate
holding company when its U.S. nonbranch assets were equal to or greater
than $50 billion, rather than $10 billion.
The Board chose to base the proposed
U.S. intermediate holding company
requirement on asset size because it is
a measure that is objective, transparent,
readily available, and comparable
among foreign banking organizations.
The Board believes that imposing the
U.S. intermediate holding company
requirement based on a case-by-case
assessment of the immediate or actual
risks, by the identity of the ultimate
shareholder, or by an evaluation of the
practices of the home-country regulator
would be less transparent for foreign
banking organizations and market
participants, and would create too much
uncertainty. The lack of transparency
may limit the ability of foreign banking
organizations to anticipate whether they
would be subject to the U.S.
intermediate holding company
requirement in the future and limit their
ability to make strategic decisions about
their U.S. operations. Furthermore, if
the Board were to impose a U.S.
intermediate holding company
requirement on a case-by-case basis as
suggested by commenters, market
participants may view the imposition of
a U.S. intermediate holding company
requirement as a signal that the Board
has concerns about a particular foreign
banking organization’s parent company,
U.S. operations, or home-country
supervisor, and could cause market
participants to limit their exposure to
that firm or other firms from that
country, thereby increasing stress in the
market. In addition, a case-by-case
assessment may result in disparate
treatment of foreign banking
organizations that compete in the same
markets. Accordingly, the final rule
would base the U.S. intermediate
holding company requirement on the
size of the firm’s U.S. non-branch assets
and does not provide for any
exemptions or waivers based on the
factors described by commenters.
In light of these comments, however,
the Board reviewed the proposed $10
billion threshold in light of the
applicable considerations under section
165, including the systemic risk posed

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by operations of this size and the
Board’s authority to tailor application of
the standards pursuant to section
165(a)(2). Based on its review, the Board
has determined that it would be
appropriate to raise the threshold in the
final rule for the U.S. intermediate
holding company requirement from $10
billion to $50 billion of U.S. non-branch
assets. This threshold will reduce the
burden on a foreign banking
organization with a smaller U.S.
presence, but will maintain the U.S.
intermediate holding company
requirement for the larger foreign
banking organizations that present
greater risks to U.S. financial stability.99
Moreover, the Board believes that
establishing a minimum threshold for
forming a U.S. intermediate holding
company at $50 billion helps to advance
the principle of national treatment and
equality of competitive opportunity in
the United States by more closely
aligning standards applicable to the U.S.
non-branch operations of foreign
banking organizations under section 165
with the threshold for domestic U.S.
bank holding companies that are subject
to enhanced prudential standards under
Title I of the Dodd-Frank Act.
Some commenters argued that the
final rule should exempt foreign
banking organizations that do not have
a U.S. insured depository subsidiary
from the U.S. intermediate holding
company requirement. Other
commenters expressed concern that the
proposal would impose minimum
capital requirements for banks or bank
holding companies on U.S. intermediate
holding companies without subsidiary
insured depository institutions. The
Board believes that imposing these
standards on a foreign bank’s U.S.
operations is warranted, regardless of
whether the foreign bank has a U.S.
insured depository institution, and
therefore has not adopted this suggested
change in the final rule. First, all foreign
banking organizations subject to the
final rule have banking operations in the
United States (either through a U.S.
branch or agency, or through a bank
holding company subsidiary). Foreign
banking organizations that have
branches and agencies are treated as if

they were bank holding companies for
purposes of the Bank Holding Company
Act and the Dodd-Frank Act.100 In
addition, by statute, both uninsured and
insured U.S. branches and agencies of
foreign banks may receive Federal
Reserve advances on the same terms and
conditions that apply to domestic
insured state member banks. The risks
to financial stability presented by
foreign banking organizations with U.S.
branches and agencies generally are not
dependent on whether the foreign
banking organization has a U.S. insured
depository institution. In many cases,
insured depository institution
subsidiaries of foreign banks form a
small percentage of their U.S. assets.
Accordingly, the final rule applies the
U.S. intermediate holding company
requirement to all foreign banking
organizations that meet the asset
threshold and have a banking presence
in the United States, regardless of
whether they own a U.S. insured
depository institution.101 The Board
notes that a foreign bank that has a
banking presence through a U.S. branch
or agency (in lieu of or in addition to
operating an insured depository
institution) would be permitted to
continue to operate the branch or
agency outside of the U.S. intermediate
holding company.
One commenter asserted that the U.S.
intermediate holding company
requirement should be an alternative to
any domestic regulatory-capital
surcharge that would be imposed on a
U.S. intermediate holding company
with a parent that is a global
systemically-important bank. The Board
is considering the appropriate
framework for domestic systemicallyimportant banking organizations, and
will consider such comments in
connection with any rulemaking
relating to domestic systemicallyimportant banking organizations.
4. Method for Calculating the Asset
Threshold
Several commenters expressed views
on the proposed method for calculating
U.S. non-branch assets for purposes of
applying the U.S. intermediate holding
100 12

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99 See,

e.g. Supervision and Regulation
Assessments for Bank Holding Companies and
Savings and Loan Holding Companies With Total
Consolidated Assets of $50 billion or More and
Nonbank Financial Companies Supervised by the
Federal Reserve, 78 FR 52391 (August 23, 2013)
(‘‘Larger companies are often more complex
companies, with associated risks that play a large
role in determining the supervisory resources
necessary in relation to that company. The largest
companies, because of their increased complexity,
risk, and geographic footprints, usually receive
more supervisory attention.’’).

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U.S.C. 3106(a); 12 U.S.C. 5311(a).
final rule also provides that a top-tier
foreign banking organization that is organized in
any ‘‘State’’ of the United States (including the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, the Commonwealth
of the Northern Mariana Islands, American Samoa,
Guam, or the United States Virgin Islands) will not
be subject to the requirements applicable to foreign
banking organizations. These organizations qualify
as bank holding companies under the Bank Holding
Company Act, are fully subject to U.S. capital and
other regulatory requirements, and thus are subject
to the enhanced prudential standards applicable to
domestic bank holding companies.
101 The

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company requirement. Under the
proposal, a foreign banking organization
generally would have calculated its U.S.
non-branch assets by taking the average
of the total consolidated assets of each
top-tier U.S. subsidiary of the foreign
banking organization (excluding any
section 2(h)(2) company) for the
previous four quarters. Some
commenters argued that foreign banking
organizations should be allowed to
exclude certain assets from the
calculation of total combined U.S.
assets, including low-risk assets, such as
U.S. government bonds, cash, or U.S.
Treasuries; assets of regulated U.S.
broker-dealer subsidiaries; high-quality
liquid assets; and reserves on deposit at
Federal Reserve Banks. Conversely, one
commenter suggested that combined
U.S. assets should include consideration
of off-balance sheet exposures at the
U.S. top-tier holding company. As
discussed in greater detail in section
IV.B.5 of this preamble, commenters
also suggested that certain subsidiaries
be excluded from the U.S. intermediate
holding company requirement and that
assets held by these subsidiaries be
excluded from the calculation of U.S.
non-branch assets.
After considering these comments, the
Board has determined to finalize the
definition of U.S. non-branch assets
largely as proposed. In general, the
Board believes that a foreign banking
organization should measure its U.S.
non-branch assets using a similar
methodology to that used by a U.S. bank
holding company to measure its total
consolidated assets for purposes of
section 165. In calculating its total
consolidated assets for purposes of the
enhanced prudential standards in
section 165, a U.S. bank holding
company includes all on-balance sheet
assets, including those associated with
low-risk activities and functionally
regulated subsidiaries, and does not
include off-balance sheet exposures.
Furthermore, the Board believes that a
simple approach to the calculation of
U.S. non-branch assets is appropriate
and will facilitate planning for foreign
banking organizations, particularly for
those that are near the threshold for
formation of a U.S. intermediate holding
company. Accordingly, and consistent
with the final rule’s requirement to
move virtually all subsidiaries under the
U.S. intermediate holding company,
discussed further below, the final rule’s
definition of U.S. non-branch assets
includes all on-balance sheet assets
(other than assets held by a section
2(h)(2) company or by a DPC branch
subsidiary).
The proposal would have permitted a
foreign banking organization to reduce

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its U.S. non-branch assets by the
amount corresponding to any balances
and transactions between any U.S.
subsidiaries that would be eliminated in
consolidation were a U.S. intermediate
holding company already formed.
Commenters supported this aspect of
the proposal and recommended that the
final rule also exclude, for purposes of
this calculation, intercompany balances
and transactions between U.S.
subsidiaries and U.S. branches and
agencies, and between the U.S.
intermediate holding company’s
subsidiaries and non-U.S. affiliates.
The final rule requires a foreign
banking organization to reduce its U.S.
non-branch assets by the amount
corresponding to any balances and
transactions between any top tier U.S.
subsidiaries that would be eliminated in
consolidation were a U.S. intermediate
holding company already formed. The
final rule does not permit a foreign
banking organization to reduce its U.S.
non-branch assets by the amount
corresponding to balances and
transactions between U.S. subsidiaries,
on the one hand, and branches or
agencies or non-U.S. affiliates, on the
other. The purpose of netting
intercompany balances between U.S.
subsidiaries that would be eliminated in
consolidation is to mirror, as closely as
possible, the assets of the final
consolidated U.S. intermediate holding
company. As the final rule does not
provide for consolidated treatment of
branches and agencies or non-U.S.
affiliates with the U.S. intermediate
holding company, netting would not be
appropriate in this context.
5. Formation of the U.S. Intermediate
Holding Company
Under the proposal, a foreign banking
organization that met the U.S. nonbranch asset threshold for U.S.
intermediate holding company
formation would have been required to
hold its interest in any U.S. subsidiary,
other than a section 2(h)(2) company,
through the U.S. intermediate holding
company. The proposal defined the
term ‘‘subsidiary’’ to include any
company directly or indirectly
‘‘controlled’’ by another company. The
foreign banking organization would
have ‘‘control’’ of a U.S. company, and
thus be required to move that company
under the U.S. intermediate holding
company, if it (i) directly or indirectly,
or acting through one or more other
persons, owned, controlled, or had
power to vote 25 percent or more of any
class of voting securities of the
company; (ii) controlled in any manner
the election of a majority of the directors
or trustees of the company; or (iii)

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directly or indirectly exercised a
controlling influence over the
management or policies of the
company.102 The proposal would have
provided an exception for U.S.
subsidiaries held under section 2(h)(2)
of the Bank Holding Company Act.
Section 2(h)(2) of the Bank Holding
Company Act allows qualifying foreign
banking organizations to retain certain
interests in foreign commercial firms
that conduct business in the United
States.103
Commenters provided several
comments on the use of the Bank
Holding Company Act definition of
‘‘control’’ for identifying companies to
be held under the U.S. intermediate
holding company. In addition,
commenters suggested other types of
subsidiaries that should be excluded
from the requirement to transfer U.S.
subsidiaries to a U.S. intermediate
holding company, and requested
clarification regarding the
circumstances in which the Board may
permit exceptions to the U.S.
intermediate holding company
requirement. These comments are
discussed below.
a. The Definition of ‘‘Control’’
First, several commenters argued that
the Bank Holding Company Act
definition of ‘‘control’’ would require a
foreign banking organization to hold a
broader set of entities through its U.S.
intermediate holding company than
commenters viewed as necessary to
achieve the goals of the proposal.
Commenters suggested a variety of
alternatives to the Board’s use of the
Bank Holding Company Act definition,
including requesting that the Board
adopt a 25 percent threshold (as is used
in the resolution plan rule 104), a tailormade standard for Title I of the DoddFrank Act, a standard under which a
foreign banking organization would be
required to hold any subsidiary that it
‘‘practically controlled’’ through the
U.S. intermediate holding company, or
a GAAP consolidation standard. Other
commenters asserted that the Board
should permit an exemption for
subsidiaries that are only partially
owned, particularly if integrating those
subsidiaries into a U.S. intermediate
holding company would disrupt their
102 12

U.S.C. 1841(a)(2).
permitting this exception, the Board has
taken into account the nonfinancial activities and
affiliations of a foreign banking organization. The
proposal would have also provided the Board with
authority to approve multiple U.S. intermediate
holding companies or alternative organizational
structures, as further discussed in section IV.B.5 of
this preamble.
104 12 CFR 243.2.
103 In

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17273

traditional reporting and consolidation
structures. Commenters also asserted
that a foreign banking organization
might not have or be able to obtain
sufficient information to determine
whether it has direct or indirect control
of U.S. companies under the Bank
Holding Company Act definition of
control.
The Board based its incorporation of
the Bank Holding Company Act
definition of ‘‘control’’ on the DoddFrank Act, which incorporates that
definition.105 Moreover, the use of this
definition maintains regulatory parity
between foreign banking organizations’
U.S. operations and U.S. bank holding
companies. The Bank Holding Company
Act definition of ‘‘control’’ does not
require a shareholder to have absolute
control over management and policies
of a banking organization or other
company in order to exert a significant
amount of control over the management
and policies of that organization, or to
be exposed to the direct or indirect risks
(e.g., reputational risks) incurred by that
subsidiary. To the extent that a foreign
banking organization is able to exercise
such control, the Board believes it is
appropriate for the ownership interest
in that subsidiary to be held by the U.S.
intermediate holding company and
subject to the risk-management regime
applied to the U.S. intermediate holding
company’s operations.
As a general matter, although foreign
banking organizations expressed
concern that they might not be able to
determine whether they or any of their
subsidiaries own more than 25 percent
of or exert a controlling influence over
an entity, the Board believes that a
foreign banking organization should
have that information about its
holdings.106 To the extent that a foreign
banking organization needs time to
gather this information, the extended
transition period, described above in
section II.B.2 of the preamble, will
enable this due diligence process. With
respect to comments requesting that the
Board adopt a 25 percent standard or
tailor-made standard, the definition of
control is based on the Dodd-Frank Act.
Moreover, as noted, the Board believes
that it is important to maintain parity
with bank holding companies in
determining which companies are
‘‘subsidiaries.’’ The Board understands
that the application of the control
definition may not be appropriate in all
cases, and has provided a mechanism
105 Section 2 of the Dodd-Frank Act; 12 U.S.C.
5301.
106 For instance, foreign banking organizations are
required to file the Report of Changes in
Organizational Structure (Form Y–10) upon the
acquisition of control of a nonbanking entity.

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for granting exemptions from the
requirement in the final rule, as
described below.
b. Exemptions for Specific Subsidiaries
Commenters also provided examples
of subsidiaries that they asserted should
not be required to be held within the
U.S. intermediate holding company,
including: (1) Subsidiaries that do not
pose a material risk to U.S. financial
stability, or subsidiaries below a de
minimis asset or liability threshold,
such as subsidiaries with no more than
$1 billion or $10 billion in total
consolidated assets; (2) subsidiaries that
are fully and unconditionally
guaranteed by the parent, conduits for
funding, or U.S. subsidiaries of foreign
financial subsidiaries; (3) property
casualty insurers; (4) investment funds,
including registered and unregistered
funds under the Investment Company
Act of 1940; (5) branch subsidiaries,
particularly those that are significantly
related to the U.S. branch’s operations;
(6) investments held in satisfaction of
debts previously contracted in good
faith (DPC assets); (7) non-U.S.
subsidiaries of the foreign banking
organization, even if they were held by
a U.S. subsidiary; and (8) joint ventures
with another foreign banking
organization. Commenters asserted that
requiring funding subsidiaries, in
particular, to be transferred to the U.S.
intermediate holding company would
increase funding costs for foreign
banking organizations. Some
commenters also asked the Board to
exclude non-U.S. subsidiaries that are
consolidated under the U.S.
intermediate holding company from
U.S. regulations.
As discussed above, the Board is
adopting a transparent, objective
threshold standard for determining
whether a U.S. intermediate holding
company is required and which entities
must be held by that company.
Excluding the subsidiaries described
above would be at odds with the
transparency and objectivity of the
standard, and, furthermore, would limit
the extent to which these subsidiaries
would be subject to enhanced
prudential standards in a manner
consistent with U.S. bank holding
companies. The Board believes it is
necessary for virtually all legal entities
incorporated in the United States,
including those mentioned above, to be
organized under the U.S. intermediate
holding company. This will facilitate
application of the capital, liquidity, and
other enhanced prudential standards to
the operations of these subsidiaries,
promoting the financial stability goals
discussed earlier. Also, as discussed

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above, one of the aims of the proposal,
and of the final rule, is to provide a
platform for consistent supervision and
regulation of the U.S. operations of a
foreign banking organization. The
alternatives suggested by commenters
would undermine these goals.
Commenters also requested
exclusions for merchant banking
subsidiaries or U.S. subsidiaries
engaged in or holding non-financial
assets, such as private equity
investments in non-financial assets, or
oil and gas and other similar
investments from the U.S. intermediate
holding company requirement. In the
final rule, the Board has also decided
not to exclude from the U.S.
intermediate holding company
requirement such subsidiaries. These
types of subsidiaries have historically
been included within a consolidated
banking organization subject to
supervision by the Board.
In response to comments regarding
DPC assets, the final rule provides an
exemption from the requirement to hold
U.S. subsidiaries through the U.S.
intermediate holding company for DPC
branch subsidiaries, defined as
subsidiaries of a U.S. branch or a U.S.
agency acquired, or formed to hold
assets acquired, in the ordinary course
of business and for the sole purpose of
securing or collecting debt previously
contracted in good faith by that branch
or agency. To the extent the liabilities in
satisfaction of which such assets are
held pertain to the U.S. branch or
agency, it is appropriate for the branch
or agency to continue holding the assets
and dispose of them. Such DPC assets
may only be held for a short term
(typically two to five years) during
which the banking organization (in this
case, the branch or agency) must make
good-faith efforts to dispose of the
assets.107 Accordingly, the Board does
not believe that it is necessary to require
foreign banking organizations to transfer
such subsidiaries to the U.S.
intermediate holding company.
In response to commenters’ requests
for clarity regarding its approach to nonU.S. subsidiaries of a U.S. intermediate
holding company, the Board will apply
the enhanced prudential standards to
the consolidated operations of a U.S.
intermediate holding company, which
would include the foreign subsidiaries
of a U.S. intermediate holding company.
Commenters also asked whether the
foreign banking organization’s entire
ownership interest in a controlled
subsidiary would need to be transferred
to the U.S. intermediate holding
company, or whether foreign banking
107 See

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organizations could maintain dual
ownership of a U.S. subsidiary through
the parent and the U.S. intermediate
holding company. Commenters asserted
that so long as a subsidiary was
consolidated with the U.S. intermediate
holding company, it should be
unnecessary for the foreign banking
organization to transfer its minority
interest in the U.S. subsidiary to the
U.S. intermediate holding company. In
the final rule, in response to these
comments, the Board is clarifying the
types and amount of interests that must
be transferred to the U.S. intermediate
holding company.
The final rule provides that a foreign
banking organization must transfer all of
its ownership interests in a U.S.
subsidiary (other than a section 2(h)(2)
company or DPC branch subsidiary) to
the U.S. intermediate holding company,
and may not retain any ownership
interest in the U.S. subsidiary directly
or through other subsidiaries of the
foreign banking organization. The Board
believes that the U.S. intermediate
holding company’s role as a consistent
platform for supervision, regulation and
risk-management could be undermined
by allowing multiple ownership
structures for U.S. subsidiaries and
attendant uncertainties as to the U.S.
intermediate holding company’s control
over the U.S. subsidiaries. The
transition periods should mitigate the
difficulties a foreign banking
organization may experience in
transferring its ownership interest in its
U.S. subsidiaries to the U.S.
intermediate holding company.
c. Alternative Organizational Structures
The proposal would have provided
the Board with authority to permit a
foreign banking organization to establish
multiple U.S. intermediate holding
companies or to use an alternative
organizational structure to hold its U.S.
operations. The proposal expressly
provided that the Board would consider
exercising this authority when a foreign
banking organization controls multiple
lower-tier foreign banking organizations
that have separate U.S. operations or
when, under applicable home country
law, the foreign banking organization
may not control its U.S. subsidiaries
through a single U.S. intermediate
holding company. Finally, the proposal
would have provided the Board with
authority on an exceptional basis to
approve a modified U.S. organizational
structure based on the foreign banking
organization’s activities, scope of
operations, structure, or similar
considerations.
Although commenters supported this
aspect of the proposal, they also

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requested that the Board clarify the
circumstances under which it would
permit alternative U.S. intermediate
holding company structures. As
discussed above, commenters requested
that the Board provide an exception to
a foreign banking organization to the
extent that the foreign banking
organization does not have sufficient
control to cause a U.S. subsidiary to be
made a subsidiary of its intermediate
holding company. Other commenters
suggested that the Board permit certain
foreign banking organizations, such as
holding companies with multiple,
separate banking operations in the
United States, to form multiple U.S.
intermediate holding companies
depending on the global entity’s
structure or other considerations.
Commenters cited a variety of potential
justifications for multiple U.S.
intermediate holding companies, such
as limiting disruption of existing
businesses, restructuring costs, or tax
considerations. Some commenters asked
that they be allowed to designate a
lower-tier entity as the U.S.
intermediate holding company in order
to avoid restructuring costs. Others
argued that the Board should allow a
foreign banking organization with a
subsidiary insured depository
institution to form separate U.S.
intermediate holding companies above
bank and nonbank operations, and not
apply capital standards to the U.S.
intermediate holding company with
nonbank operations.
The final rule provides that the Board
may permit alternate or multiple U.S.
intermediate holding company
structures. In determining whether to
permit an alternate structure, the final
rule provides that the Board may
consider whether applicable home
country law would prevent the foreign
banking organization from controlling
its U.S. subsidiaries through a single
U.S. intermediate holding company, or
where the activities, scope of
operations, or structure of the foreign
banking organization’s subsidiaries in
the United States warrant consideration
of alternative structures, such as where
a foreign banking organization controls
multiple lower-tier foreign banking
organizations that have separate U.S.
operations. If it authorizes the formation
of more than one intermediate holding
company by a foreign banking
organization, the Board generally will
treat any additional U.S. intermediate
holding company as a U.S. intermediate
holding company with $50 billion or
more in total consolidated assets, even
if its assets are below that threshold. In
the narrow circumstance where the

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Board permits a foreign banking
organization to hold its interest in a U.S.
subsidiary outside of a U.S.
intermediate holding company (for
instance, where a foreign banking
organization demonstrates that it cannot
transfer its ownership interest in the
subsidiary to the U.S. intermediate
holding company or otherwise
restructure its investment), the Board
expects to require passivity
commitments or other supervisory
agreements to limit the exposure to and
transactions between the U.S.
intermediate holding company and the
U.S. subsidiary that remains outside of
the U.S. intermediate holding company.
With respect to requests that the
Board permit a company to designate a
lower-tier subsidiary as the U.S.
intermediate holding company or
permit multiple U.S. intermediate
holding companies over different types
of functionally regulated subsidiaries,
the Board does not expect to permit an
alternative structure where the purpose
or primary effect of the alternate
structure is to reduce the impact of the
Board’s regulatory capital rules or other
prudential requirements. Thus, the
Board would be unlikely to permit a
foreign banking organization to form a
separate U.S. intermediate holding
company for the sole purpose of holding
a nonbank subsidiary separate from the
banking operations, other than under
circumstances of the types noted above,
or to designate a company that is not the
top-tier company in the United States as
the U.S. intermediate holding company.
d. Corporate Form, Designation of
Existing Company, and Dissolution of
the U.S. Intermediate Holding Company
The proposal would have required a
U.S. intermediate holding company to
be organized under the laws of the
United States, any of the fifty states of
the United States, or the District of
Columbia. While the proposal generally
would have provided flexibility in the
corporate form of the U.S. intermediate
holding company, the U.S. intermediate
holding company could not be
structured in a manner that would
prevent it from meeting the
requirements in the proposal. In
addition, the U.S. intermediate holding
company would have been required to
have a board of directors or equivalent
thereto to help ensure a strong,
centralized corporate governance
system.
Commenters generally supported the
flexibility provided in the proposal, but
also requested that the Board permit the
U.S. intermediate holding company to
be a foreign legal entity. Some
commenters asked the Board to clarify

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who might be permitted to sit on the
board of directors of the U.S.
intermediate holding company,
observing that state law may govern
citizenship requirements for members of
the board of directors.
In the final rule, the Board has
retained the flexibility for U.S.
intermediate holding companies to
choose a corporate form, provided that
the U.S. intermediate holding company
is organized under the laws of the
United States, any of the fifty states
thereof, or the District of Columbia. The
final rule does not permit the U.S.
intermediate holding company to be a
foreign legal entity, as this would limit
the Board’s ability to supervise the U.S.
operations of a foreign banking
organization in a manner similar to the
operations of a U.S. bank holding
company and therefore could
complicate application of the enhanced
prudential standards. To the extent that
state law affects the membership of the
board of directors, the U.S. intermediate
holding company will need to be in
compliance with the law of the state in
which it is chartered. In addition, as
discussed in section IV.D.2 of this
preamble, a U.S. intermediate holding
company must establish and maintain a
risk committee to oversee the risks of its
operations.
Several commenters observed that the
requirement to form a U.S. intermediate
holding company could disrupt the
existing capitalization structure of a
foreign banking organization’s U.S.
operations. Among other things,
commenters asked the Board to clarify
whether a foreign banking organization
would be required to form a new
holding company or whether it could
instead designate an existing company
as the U.S. intermediate holding
company. One of these commenters
requested that the Board allow a newlyformed top-tier U.S. intermediate
holding company to include in common
equity tier 1 minority interest any
minority interest arising from the
issuance of common shares by the
subsidiary bank holding company.
The final rule clarifies that a foreign
banking organization may designate an
existing entity as the U.S. intermediate
holding company, provided that that
entity is the top-tier entity in the United
States. While the final rule does not
provide that a bank holding company
subsidiary could be treated as a
depository institution for purposes of
the recognition of minority interest, a
foreign banking organization that has a
bank holding company subsidiary can
designate that bank holding company as
its U.S. intermediate holding company.
Doing so would allow the foreign

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banking organization to use the bank
holding company’s existing capital as
the U.S. intermediate holding
company’s capital, which should
address some of the concerns regarding
inclusion of minority interests in
capital. The Board also has discretion
during the transition period to address
particular and idiosyncratic issues that
may arise in connection with a foreign
banking organization’s reorganization.
Commenters also requested
clarification on whether a foreign
banking organization required to form a
U.S. intermediate holding company
would need to maintain the U.S.
intermediate holding company if its
assets fall below the applicable
threshold. In response to this comment,
the Board is clarifying that a foreign
banking organization may dissolve the
U.S. intermediate holding company if
its U.S. non-branch assets fall below the
$50 billion threshold for four
consecutive quarters. If the foreign
banking organization’s U.S. non-branch
assets were, subsequently, to exceed the
$50 billion threshold for four
consecutive quarters, the foreign
banking organization would be required
to re-form its U.S. intermediate holding
company and hold its entire ownership
interest in such subsidiaries through the
U.S. intermediate holding company. If
the foreign banking organization retains
an entity that is a bank holding
company, that bank holding company
would be subject to certain of the
enhanced prudential standards if it had
over $10 billion in assets, such as riskmanagement standards and stress
testing standards applicable to domestic
bank holding companies.
Consistent with the proposal, the final
rule generally does not require a foreign
banking organization to transfer assets
held through a U.S. branch or agency to
the U.S. intermediate holding company.
However, subsidiaries of branches and
agencies, other than DPC branch
subsidiaries, are required to be
transferred to the U.S. intermediate
holding company. Some commenters
expressed concerns that foreign banking
organizations might attempt to relocate
risky activities from the U.S.
intermediate holding company to a U.S.
branch or agency. The Board intends to
monitor how foreign banking
organizations adapt their operations in
response to the U.S. intermediate
holding company requirement,
including whether foreign banking
organizations relocate activities from
U.S. subsidiaries into their U.S.
branches and agencies.

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e. Implementation Plan
The proposal would have required a
foreign banking organization to notify
the Board after it had formed its U.S.
intermediate holding company.
Commenters generally supported this
requirement, but a number of
commenters requested that the Board
clarify the process for forming a U.S.
intermediate holding company and
transferring U.S. subsidiaries to that
company.
The final rule does not prescribe a
process by which a foreign banking
organization must complete the required
transfer of ownership to the U.S.
intermediate holding company by the
date set forth in the final rule. In
response to commenters requesting
guidance on the process that the Board
envisions for transferring ownership
interests to the U.S. intermediate
holding company, the final rule
includes the requirement that a foreign
banking organization submit an
implementation plan outlining its
proposed process to come into
compliance with the final rule’s
requirements. Requiring an
implementation plan will facilitate
dialogue between the organization and
the Federal Reserve early in the process
to help ensure that the plan is consistent
with the transition period and the
Board’s expectations for compliance.
A foreign banking organization’s
implementation plan must contain a list
of its U.S. subsidiaries and more
detailed information relating to U.S.
subsidiaries either that the foreign
banking organization is not required to
hold through its U.S. intermediate
holding company (i.e., section 2(h)(2)
companies or DPC branch subsidiaries)
or for which the foreign banking
organization intends to seek an
exemption from the U.S. intermediate
holding company requirement. The
implementation plan must also contain
a projected timeline for the transfer by
the foreign banking organization of its
ownership interest in U.S. subsidiaries
to the U.S. intermediate holding
company, a timeline of all planned
capital actions or strategies for capital
accumulation that will facilitate the U.S.
intermediate holding company’s
compliance with the risk-based and
leverage capital requirements, and
quarterly pro forma financial statements
for the U.S. intermediate holding
company covering the period from
January 1, 2015 to January 1, 2018. In
addition, the implementation plan must
include a description of the risk
management and liquidity stress testing
practices of the foreign banking
organization, and a description of how

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the foreign banking organization intends
to come into compliance with those
requirements. Through the supervisory
process, the Board may request that a
foreign banking organization include
additional information in its
implementation plan. A foreign banking
organization is not required to file
routine updates to its implementation
plan; however, the foreign banking
organization should notify the Board if
it anticipates that it will deviate
materially from the plan.
The implementation plan must be
submitted on or before January 1, 2015,
from each foreign banking organization
that has U.S. non-branch assets of $50
billion or more as of June 30, 2014. The
Board acknowledges, however, that a
foreign banking organization that is
above the threshold on that date may try
to reduce its U.S. non-branch assets
prior to the date on which it would be
required to form a U.S. intermediate
holding company. In such case, the
implementation plan would be required
to contain a description of the foreign
banking organization’s plan for reducing
its U.S. non-branch assets below $50
billion for four consecutive quarters
prior to July 1, 2016, consistent with
safety and soundness. The Board may
also require an implementation plan
from a foreign banking organization that
meets or exceeds the threshold for
formation of a U.S. intermediate holding
company after June 30, 2014, if the
Board determines that an
implementation plan is appropriate for
that foreign banking organization. The
Board would expect to evaluate all
implementation plans, including those
expressing the intent to reduce assets,
for reasonableness and achievability.
Two commenters requested that the
Board consider waivers of section 23A
of the Federal Reserve Act for
institutions subject to the proposal in
order to facilitate transfers to the U.S.
intermediate holding company. The
final rule is not the appropriate vehicle
in which to grant or deny such waivers.
Any request for a waiver will be
considered under the processes set forth
in section 23A of the Federal Reserve
Act, which require notice and nonobjection from the FDIC.108 The Board
expects that companies will identify
instances in which such waivers may be
necessary in connection with their
implementation plans.

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f. Interaction of the U.S. Intermediate
Holding Company Requirement With
Other Regulatory Requirements
i. Other Regulatory Regimes
Commenters also requested
clarification about the interaction
between the proposal and the rules
proposed by the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission (CFTC) under
section 710 of the Dodd-Frank Act. The
Board has brought the comment to the
attention of the CFTC for consideration
in their rulemaking process, which is
still ongoing.

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ii. Source of Strength
Commenters asked whether the Board
expects a U.S. intermediate holding
company to serve as a source of strength
for its subsidiaries that are not insured
depository institutions. The Board is
clarifying that the final rule does not
require a U.S. intermediate holding
company to serve as a source of strength
for its subsidiaries that are not insured
depository institutions. The final rule
does not affect any other source of
strength obligations that would
otherwise apply to the U.S. intermediate
holding company.109
iii. ‘‘Fed Lite’’ Provisions of the Bank
Holding Company Act
Section 5(c)(3) of the Bank Holding
Company Act, commonly known as the
‘‘Fed lite’’ provision, prohibits the
Board from imposing ‘‘rules, guidelines,
standards, or requirements on any
functionally regulated subsidiary of a
bank holding company.’’ 110
Commenters argued that the U.S.
intermediate holding company
requirement was inconsistent with these
provisions. In support of their argument,
they described the U.S. intermediate
holding company requirement as
‘‘targeted’’ towards imposing capital
requirements on broker-dealer affiliates
of foreign banking organizations, and
asserted that the proposal is the
equivalent of doing indirectly what the
Board cannot do directly. These
commenters also asserted that the
proposal would impose additional
regulatory burdens on broker-dealers
owned by foreign banking organizations
compared to stand-alone domestic
broker-dealers, and thereby would
violate national treatment.
The final rule applies to the U.S.
operations of all foreign banking
organizations, regardless of whether
they have significant broker-dealer
activities, and requires a foreign banking
organization to place all U.S.
109 See,
110 12

e.g., 12 U.S.C. 1831o–1.
U.S.C. 1844(c)(3).

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subsidiaries (other than section 2(h)(2)
companies and DPC branch
subsidiaries) under a U.S. intermediate
holding company, regardless of the type
of subsidiary. Accordingly, U.S.
intermediate holding companies will
have a range of functionally regulated
subsidiaries, including broker-dealers,
insurance companies, and insured
depository institutions, and some may
have larger functionally regulated
subsidiaries than others. The final rule
imposes rules on the U.S. intermediate
holding company, not on functionally
regulated subsidiaries of the foreign
banking organization, in the same way
that those rules are applied to domestic
bank holding companies, including
those with significant broker-dealer
activities. Accordingly, the rule does not
target foreign banking organizations
with broker-dealer activities.
Under section 165(b)(4), the Board is
required to consult with the primary
financial regulator of a functionally
regulated subsidiary before imposing
any prudential requirements under
section 165 that are likely to have a
significant impact on that functionally
regulated subsidiary. The Board
consulted with the relevant primary
financial regulators, including the SEC,
the OCC, the CFTC, and the FDIC in
establishing the U.S. intermediate
holding company requirement, thus
satisfying its statutory obligation. More
generally, and consistent with its
current practice, the Board intends to
coordinate with functional regulators in
the ordinary course of supervising
compliance with the enhanced
prudential standards.
Last, the Board notes that the final
rule applies only to those foreign
banking organizations that have a
banking presence, such as a branch or
an agency, in the United States.
Accordingly, the broker-dealer
subsidiaries of those foreign banking
organizations are not similarly situated
to stand-alone broker-dealers or brokerdealers owned by foreign banks without
a U.S. banking presence. Foreign
banking organizations with a banking
presence in the United States are subject
to regulation by the Board, whereas
those other entities are not.
6. Virtual U.S. Intermediate Holding
Company
A few commenters suggested that in
order to mitigate the costs of the
proposal, rather than requiring
formation of a U.S. intermediate holding
company, the Board should permit a
‘‘virtual’’ U.S. intermediate holding
company. According to the commenters,
a foreign banking organization opting to
adopt a virtual U.S. intermediate

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holding company structure would
calculate, measure and report its capital
and liquidity as if its U.S. subsidiaries
were consolidated under a U.S.
intermediate holding company, and
would be subject to examination and
safety and soundness review, but no
intermediate holding company would
actually exist, and no reorganization
would therefore be necessary. If needed,
additional capital or liquidity would be
provided to one or more of the foreign
banking organization’s major U.S.
subsidiaries. The commenters argued
that the subsidiaries could be resolved
if necessary. Some commenters
suggested that the ‘‘virtual’’ U.S.
intermediate holding company house all
U.S. subsidiaries of the foreign banking
organization, while others suggested
that the ‘‘virtual’’ intermediate holding
company house only the systemicallysignificant nonbank U.S.-based
subsidiaries of the foreign banking
organization.
As discussed in the proposal, and as
described further above, the wide
variety of foreign banking organization
structures and operations make it
difficult to consistently apply enhanced
prudential standards to foreign banking
organizations’ U.S. operations using a
virtual U.S. intermediate holding
company approach. However, the final
rule would not permit an institution to
form a ‘‘virtual’’ U.S. intermediate
holding company. A virtual U.S.
intermediate holding company would
retain a fractured organizational
structure that can reduce the
effectiveness of attempts of the foreign
banking organization to manage the
risks of its U.S. operations. It also would
not enable the Board to apply the
enhanced prudential standards
transparently and consistently across
the U.S. operations of foreign banking
organizations, hindering achievement of
the policy goals and implementation of
section 165 of the Dodd-Frank Act.
The Board believes that a ‘‘virtual’’
U.S. intermediate holding company
would not provide a consistent platform
for supervision and regulation
comparable to a U.S. intermediate
holding company. For example,
determining the appropriate risk
management structure and the location
of capital and liquidity for a ‘‘virtual’’
U.S. intermediate holding company
would require a case-by-case
supervisory assessment, which, as
described above, would not address the
risks that foreign banking organizations
with $50 billion in U.S. non-branch
assets pose to U.S. financial stability. In
addition, the ‘‘virtual’’ U.S. intermediate
holding company would not have a
centralized risk function, which would

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hinder risk management at the U.S.
intermediate holding company.
Last, the Board believes that a virtual
structure would also not materially
enhance the ability to resolve the U.S.
operations of a foreign banking
organization. Given the substantial
uncertainty surrounding the operational
challenges of a ‘‘virtual’’ U.S.
intermediate holding company, and
attendant concerns regarding whether
the ‘‘virtual’’ U.S. intermediate holding
company can effectively mitigate the
systemic risk posed by a foreign banking
organization with more than $50 billion
in U.S. non-branch assets, the Board is
not permitting foreign banking
organizations to comply with the final
rule by using a ‘‘virtual’’ U.S.
intermediate holding company.
7. Transitional Application of the
Enhanced Prudential Standards to a
Bank Holding Company That Is a
Subsidiary of a Foreign Banking
Organization
The proposed rule provided that a
U.S. intermediate holding company that
was a bank holding company would be
subject to the enhanced prudential
standards applicable to U.S.
intermediate holding companies and not
to the standards applicable to U.S. bank
holding companies, regardless of
whether the company had total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more. The final rule adopts the
approach set forth in the proposed rule.
It further clarifies that, prior to the
formation of the U.S. intermediate
holding company, a bank holding
company with total consolidated assets
of $50 billion or more controlled by a
foreign banking organization is subject
to the enhanced prudential standards
applicable to bank holding companies
that are contained in this final rule
beginning on January 1, 2015 and
ending on the date on which the U.S.
intermediate holding company formed
or designated by the parent foreign
banking organization becomes subject to
parallel requirements under the foreign
final rule.
As discussed below in sections IV.C.1
and IV.F.1 of this preamble, the final
rule generally delays the application of
the leverage capital requirements and
stress test requirements to the U.S.
intermediate holding company until
January 1, 2018 and October 1, 2017,
respectively. The final rule clarifies that
each subsidiary bank holding company
and insured depository institution of a
foreign banking organization must
continue to comply with the applicable
leverage requirements under the Board’s
Regulation Q (12 CFR Part 217) and
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subparts F, G, or H of Regulation YY, as
applicable, until the U.S. intermediate
holding company becomes subject to
those requirements under the final rule.
If the foreign banking organization
designated an existing bank holding
company as its U.S. intermediate
holding company, that bank holding
company would continue to be subject
to capital requirements under 12 CFR
Part 217 until December 31, 2017, and
stress test requirements under subparts
F, G, or H of Regulation YY until
September 30, 2017.
The Board may accelerate the
application of the leverage and stress
testing requirements to a U.S.
intermediate holding company if it
determines that the foreign banking
organization has taken actions to evade
the application of this subpart. Actions
to evade application of the subpart
would include, for instance, the transfer
of assets from a bank holding company
subsidiary to the U.S. intermediate
holding company in order to minimize
application of the leverage requirements
prior to January 1, 2018.
The final rule also includes a
reservation of authority for the Board to
modify application of the enhanced
prudential standards during the
transition period if appropriate to
accommodate the organizational
structure of a foreign banking
organization or characteristics specific
to such foreign banking organization
and the modification is appropriate and
consistent with the capital structure,
size, complexity, risk profile, scope of
operations, or financial condition of the
U.S. intermediate holding company,
safety and soundness, and the financial
stability mandate of section 165 of the
Dodd-Frank Act. As foreign banking
organizations engage in the
restructuring necessary to come into
compliance with the final rule, the
Board retains the authority to address
idiosyncratic issues and discontinuities
arising out of the application of the
enhanced prudential standards to the
U.S. operations. For example, the Board
could use this authority where a
temporary location for capital would
significantly reduce capital at a holding
company through application of the
minority interest rules.
C. Capital Requirements
Section 165(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act
requires the Board to impose enhanced
risk-based and leverage capital
requirements on foreign banking
organizations with $50 billion or more
of total consolidated assets. The
proposal would have required a U.S.
intermediate holding company,
including a U.S. intermediate holding

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company that does not have a
subsidiary depository institution, to
comply with the Board’s risk-based and
leverage capital requirements as if it
were a bank holding company. The
proposal would also have applied the
Board’s capital plan rule to U.S.
intermediate holding companies with
total consolidated assets of $50 billion
or more in light of the more significant
risks posed by these firms. The proposal
would have required a foreign banking
organization with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more to certify
or otherwise demonstrate to the Board’s
satisfaction that it meets capital
adequacy standards at the consolidated
level that are consistent with the Basel
Capital Framework.
As discussed below, the final rule
would adopt the proposal largely as
proposed, but in order to reduce burden
on U.S. intermediate holding companies
that meet the thresholds for application
of the advanced approaches risk-based
capital rules (the advanced approaches
rules), the final rule would provide that
such U.S. intermediate holding
companies do not have to comply with
the advanced approaches rules, even
where the U.S. intermediate holding
company is a bank holding company.
1. Risk-Based and Leverage Capital
Requirements Applicable to U.S.
Intermediate Holding Companies
The proposal would have applied the
Board’s risk-based and leverage capital
rules to the U.S. intermediate holding
company. Thus, under the proposal
(following implementation of the
revised capital framework), the U.S.
intermediate holding company would
have been required to meet a minimum
common equity tier 1 risk-based capital
requirement of 4.5 percent, a minimum
tier 1 risk-based capital requirement of
6 percent, a total risk-based capital
requirement of 8 percent, and a
minimum leverage ratio of tier 1 capital
to average total consolidated assets of 4
percent (the generally-applicable
leverage ratio). In addition, U.S.
intermediate holding companies with
total consolidated assets of $250 billion
or more or on-balance sheet foreign
exposure equal to $10 billion or more
would have been required to meet a
minimum supplementary leverage ratio,
which takes into account off-balance
sheet exposures, of 3 percent. The U.S.
intermediate holding company would
have been subject to the capital
conservation buffer, and, if applicable,
the countercyclical capital buffer, which
would limit the U.S. intermediate
holding company’s ability to make
capital distributions and certain
discretionary bonus payments if it did

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not hold a specified amount of common
equity tier 1 capital in excess of the
amount necessary to meet its minimum
risk-based capital requirements. As the
U.S. intermediate holding company
would consolidate the U.S. subsidiaries
of the foreign banking organization, the
U.S. intermediate holding company
would have been required to comply
with these requirements based on the
exposures and capital of its U.S.
subsidiaries (and the subsidiaries
thereof).

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a. Comments on Capital Requirements
for the U.S. Intermediate Holding
Company
1. U.S. Financial Markets and U.S.
Financial Stability
The risk-based and leverage capital
requirements proposed to apply to U.S.
intermediate holding companies were
intended to strengthen the capital
position of U.S. operations of foreign
banking organizations in furtherance of
section 165’s financial stability
mandate. However, commenters
expressed concern that the proposal
would instead have negative effects on
U.S. financial markets and U.S.
financial stability. Commenters asserted
that the requirements would create
incentives for foreign banking
organizations to reduce their U.S.
activities, particularly repo activities.
According to commenters, foreign
banking organizations, particularly
smaller firms dominated by brokerdealer operations, would reduce assets
to avoid requirements, and firms would
reconsider any strategies to expand in
the United States. In the view of these
commenters, these assets and activities
would shift to U.S. bank holding
companies and unregulated institutions,
concentrating financial assets and
activities in fewer entities and
increasing systemic instability.
Commenters also asserted that the
proposed leverage capital requirements
would penalize firms with low-risk
assets and create incentives for foreign
banking organizations to increase the
riskiness of their balance sheets.
Many of these comments rest on
implicit assumptions about the costs of
the proposed capital requirements and
assume that a foreign banking
organization would choose to reduce its
activities rather than comply with the
requirements under the final rule. Some
foreign banking organizations, however,
will be able to meet the new U.S.
intermediate holding company capital
requirements by retaining more earnings
in their U.S. operations or by
contributing equity capital held at the
parent to the U.S. intermediate holding

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company without having to do an
external capital raise.
In addition, commenters’ arguments
that the proposal would increase
systemic instability by increasing
concentration among U.S. bank holding
companies fail to account for the
broader changes in the regulatory
environment in which the foreign
banking organizations and their U.S.
competitors operate. The Board has
made a number of enhancements to its
regulation and supervision of bank
holding companies and foreign banking
organizations in the years following the
financial crisis. As a result of these
enhancements and the final rule, U.S.
bank holding companies with
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more are subject to enhanced prudential
standards parallel to those applied to
U.S. intermediate holding companies,
thus balancing the effect of the foreign
proposal on competition and
concentration of activities among
domestic and foreign banking
organizations. With respect to
commenters’ assertions that foreign
banking organizations will reduce their
activities in response to the final rule,
the Board believes, on balance, that if a
large foreign banking organization or a
domestic bank holding company were to
reduce its systemic footprint in response
to the final rule, this would be
consistent with the Board’s overall goal
of financial stability.
In response to commenters’ assertions
that the final rule will concentrate
activities in unregulated financial
institutions, the Board will continue to
monitor the migration of risk from the
regulated banking system to unregulated
entities, and to inform its policy
decisions with the results of its
monitoring.
Some commenters asserted that the
proposed requirements for both U.S.
bank holding companies and U.S.
intermediate holding companies were
too low, and should be strengthened.
The Board notes that the final rule is
one component of the Board’s
comprehensive reforms to improve the
resiliency of large U.S. banking
organizations and the U.S. operations of
foreign banking organizations and
systemic stability, and should be
considered in the context of those
comprehensive reforms. More generally,
the Board continues to review
requirements and consider policy
actions as necessary to address emerging
risks.
2. Consolidated Capital at the Parent
and Parent Support
Multiple commenters asserted that the
Board should rely on the capital

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adequacy of the foreign banking
organization and not impose capital
requirements separately on the U.S.
intermediate holding company.
Commenters argued that a foreign
banking organization would in practice
support its operations in the United
States to avoid the reputational and
legal consequences of permitting a
subsidiary in a host jurisdiction to fail.
Commenters noted that European banks
provided funding to their U.S.
operations during the Eurozone crisis of
2011 as an example of such support.
Commenters also opined that the
proposal could accelerate withdrawal of
foreign banking organizations from U.S.
markets in the event of a home-country
crisis, because it would be hard for such
entities to justify maintaining capital
and liquidity in the United States.
The Board agrees with commenters
that the financial strength of the foreign
bank parent, and its reputation, are
important to that institution’s ability to
support its U.S. operations. The final
rule takes this into account by allowing
foreign banks to continue to operate in
the United States through branches on
the basis of the capital of the foreign
bank parent. The Board does not
believe, however, that it is appropriate
to rely solely on the expectation that a
foreign banking organization would
support its U.S. operations in order to
protect the financial stability of the
United States. Even if the foreign bank
parent is financially strong in stable
times, multiple factors may limit its
ability to support its U.S. operations
during a period of stress. For example,
as the proposal observed, home country
political and legal developments may
hamper a foreign bank parent’s ability to
support its offshore affiliates. While
foreign banks have strong business and
reputational incentives to support their
U.S. operations, to the extent that the
U.S. operations of a foreign banking
organization depend on parent support
and the parent foreign banking
organization experiences financial or
other stress, foreign banking
organizations and their home-country
supervisors may be forced to choose
between the costs involved in
supporting U.S. operations and the
implications for home country
operations. Having considered these
risks to U.S. financial stability and the
Dodd-Frank Act’s mandate to impose
enhanced prudential standards,
including enhanced risk-based and
leverage capital requirements, on
foreign banking organizations, the Board
believes it is appropriate to impose
capital requirements on U.S.
intermediate holding companies.

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Commenters also argued that the
proposal did not give adequate regard to
the principles of national treatment, as
required by the Dodd-Frank Act,
because it would have subjected foreign
banking organizations to what they
described as more stringent capital
requirements than their U.S.
counterparts. Commenters alleged that
under the proposal, foreign banking
organizations would receive no credit
for capital that may be held in entities
outside the United States that could
otherwise offset the Board’s capital
requirements. Some commenters
asserted that the U.S. operations of
foreign banking organizations could
appear riskier on a stand-alone basis
than they would if considered as part of
the consolidated entity.
The final rule permits U.S. branches
and agencies of foreign banks to
continue to operate on the basis of the
foreign bank’s capital and does not
impose capital or stress testing
requirements on U.S. branches and
agencies of foreign banking
organizations. Therefore, the final rule
does give credit to foreign banking
organizations for capital held at the
foreign banking organization because it
relies on a home country’s
implementation of the Basel Capital
Framework in evaluating the capital
adequacy of the foreign banking
organization. As discussed above,
notwithstanding capital adequacy at the
parent, however, the Board believes that
it is appropriate for the U.S.
intermediate holding company to meet
capital adequacy standards in the
United States separately from the parent
foreign bank.
Commenters also argued that the
proposed requirements would be
disruptive to the consolidated entity
and would hamper its ability to support
its global operations. These commenters
criticized the application of risk-based
and leverage capital requirements to the
U.S. intermediate holding company.
They argued not only that the
requirements would prevent centralized
resource management throughout the
organization, consistent with comments
described above in section IV.A.4 of this
preamble, but also that the proposal
would effectively and inappropriately
raise capital requirements on parent
foreign banking organizations.
Specifically, some commenters asserted
that some home-country regulation or
supervisors would reflect the ‘‘trapping’’
of capital in the United States by
requiring those firms to meet higher
stand-alone parent capital requirements,
or excluding from the parent’s
regulatory capital any capital held in the
United States. In either case,

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commenters asserted that the proposal
would require foreign banking
organizations to raise additional capital
at the parent, which commenters
asserted would effectively impose home
country capital requirements in excess
of that required by a home-country’s
implementation of the Basel Capital
Framework. Commenters also argued
that home-country regulations limiting
the recognition of minority interest in
parent capital would create
disincentives for foreign banking
organizations to capitalize their U.S.
intermediate holding companies
through the sale of equity interests in
the U.S. intermediate holding
companies to third parties.
The Board acknowledges that some
home-country regulation may require a
foreign banking organization that
contributes capital to its U.S.
intermediate holding company or raises
capital through sales of equity in the
U.S. intermediate holding company to
reduce its capital for purposes of its
parent-only or consolidated capital
calculations. In these cases, the parent
may be required to raise additional
capital. However, even in these
instances, the Board believes that it is
important for a U.S. intermediate
holding company to hold capital in the
United States. To the extent that home
country regulations limit a foreign
banking organization’s ability to rely on
capital held in the United States in
calculating consolidated or parent-only
capital, the Board would be concerned
that the foreign banking organization
might not be able to downstream
adequate capital to its U.S. operations
during a time of significant stress
because it could be considered
undercapitalized under its homecountry regime. The Board therefore
believes that requiring the foreign
banking organization to position capital
at its U.S. intermediate holding
company is appropriate to protect U.S.
financial stability.
However, to mitigate transitional costs
for foreign banking organizations and
the U.S. economy that may occur from
the capital requirements and other
aspects of the final rule, the final rule
generally extends the initial compliance
date for foreign banking organizations
from July 1, 2015, to July 1, 2016.
Furthermore, the leverage ratios of the
final rule will not become applicable to
the U.S. intermediate holding company
until January 1, 2018.111 This transition
111 The final rule also provides that a subsidiary
bank holding company or insured depository
institution prior to formation of the U.S.
intermediate holding company must continue to
comply with the leverage capital requirements
applied to that bank holding company or insured

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period should help foreign banking
organizations manage the costs of
moving capital to the United States, and
therefore should mitigate the impact
that capital requirements might
otherwise have on foreign banking
organizations’ U.S. activities.
Other commenters contended that
even if, in the final rule, the Board
determined not to rely on the adequacy
of the parent’s consolidated capital
position, the Board should still modify
its requirements to recognize types of
capital instruments for the U.S.
intermediate holding company which
are in addition to those recognized in
the Board’s revised capital framework.
Specifically, the commenters suggested
that the Board should allow the U.S.
intermediate holding company to count
as capital instruments representing
claims on the parent, including
contingent capital, keepwell
agreements, debt, and parent guarantees.
These commenters suggested that the
Board recognize these instruments on
the grounds that the U.S. intermediate
holding company would differ from a
U.S. bank holding company in the ways
it would raise capital and that it would
be adequately supported by the parent
through these types of instruments and
agreements.
The final rule does not recognize
alternative forms of capital that do not
meet the criteria for capital instruments
under the Board’s capital rules for bank
holding companies. First, the types of
capital instruments that the Board
recognizes in its revised capital
framework are those that provide
sufficient loss-absorbency at times of
stress. The Board is concerned that the
instruments cited by the commenters
are not similarly loss-absorbent and may
be contingent forms of capital support
that could be curtailed if both the U.S.
and the home-country operations
experienced simultaneous stress.
Furthermore, requiring the same types
of capital instruments for U.S.
intermediate holding companies and
U.S. bank holding companies is
consistent with national treatment and
equality of competitive opportunity.
b. Comments on Applying Capital
Regulations at a Sub-Consolidated Level
1. Burdens and Costs of Multiple
Systems
Commenters also criticized the Board
for requiring the U.S. intermediate
holding company to calculate its riskbased and leverage capital requirements
as a stand-alone entity. Commenters
focused on the implementation and
depository institution under the Board’s Regulation
Q (12 CFR Part 217) until December 31, 2017.

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compliance burden of the multiple
capital calculations required for foreign
banking organizations, asserting that
they would have to create costly and
redundant systems for complying with
multiple sets of local rules. These
commenters asserted that requiring
compliance with the home-country
advanced approaches rule (as
applicable), home-country Basel I rules,
U.S. advanced approaches rules (as
applicable), and the U.S. standardized
approach was burdensome and
unnecessary for systemic stability. In
particular, commenters cited the need to
create additional models for compliance
with the U.S. advanced approaches
rules that would be different from and
inconsistent with home-country models.
Several commenters asked the Board to
clarify whether the foreign exposures
test for application of the advanced
approaches rules would apply to a U.S.
intermediate holding company.
In response to commenters’ concerns
regarding the burdens of implementing
the U.S. advanced approaches rules, the
Board has determined that the U.S.
intermediate holding company will not
be subject to the advanced approaches
rules, even if the U.S. intermediate
holding company meets the thresholds
for application of those rules. This
exemption also applies to a U.S.
intermediate holding company that is a
bank holding company. A bank holding
company subsidiary of a foreign banking
organization that is subject to the
advanced approaches rules may opt out
of complying with the U.S. advanced
approaches rules with the Board’s prior
approval.112 This modification responds
to comments about both duplicative
model-based calculations required for
the U.S. intermediate holding company
and whether a U.S. intermediate
holding company would have sufficient
foreign exposures to require application
of the advanced approaches rules. The
capital adequacy of a U.S. intermediate
holding company will be addressed by
standardized risk-based capital rules,
leverage rules, and capital planning and
supervisory stress testing requirements.
A U.S. intermediate holding company
that meets the threshold for the
advanced approaches rules will,
nonetheless, be subject to the other
requirements that apply to advanced
approaches banking organizations,
including restrictions on distributions
and discretionary bonus payments
associated with the countercyclical
capital buffer, the supplementary
leverage ratio provided for in subpart B
112 U.S. intermediate holding companies may,
however, elect to comply with the advanced
approaches rules.

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of the revised capital framework, and
the requirement to include accumulated
other comprehensive income in
regulatory capital.113 These are aspects
of the revised capital framework that
apply to institutions that meet the
thresholds for application of the
advanced approaches rules, but are not
part of the advanced approaches rules.
The final rule does not, however,
require a U.S. intermediate holding
company that meets the threshold for
application of the advanced approaches
rules to deduct from common equity tier
1 or tier 1 capital its expected credit loss
that exceeds eligible credit reserves,
because the U.S. intermediate holding
company would be subject to the
standardized approach set forth in the
revised capital framework, and that
deduction is associated with the
advanced approaches risk-based capital
requirements. In addition, a bank
holding company that is a subsidiary of
a foreign banking organization and that
currently is subject to the advanced
approaches rules may, with the Board’s
prior written approval, elect not to
comply with the advanced approaches
rules.
Finally, with respect to commenters’
concerns about requiring jurisdictionspecific systems for complying with
local rules, as noted above, consistent
with the Basel Capital Framework,
multiple jurisdictions apply hostcountry regulation to the locally
incorporated subsidiaries of global
banking organizations. Maintaining
operations in multiple jurisdictions may
therefore require a foreign banking
organization to create systems that take
into account different regulatory
regimes and approaches. The U.S.
intermediate holding company
requirement, with its attendant riskbased and leverage capital requirements,
applies only to those institutions with
$50 billion or more in U.S. non-branch
assets, which are institutions that are
large and sophisticated and capable of
implementing such systems. In
addition, the enhanced prudential
standards rely on the Basel Capital
Framework, with which the foreign
banking organizations subject to the
final rule should already be familiar.
113 As discussed above, the final rule provides
that a foreign banking organization that has a bank
holding company subsidiary prior to formation of
the U.S. intermediate holding company must
continue to comply with the leverage capital
requirements under the Board’s Regulation Q until
December 31, 2017. Under Regulation Q, such bank
holding company subsidiary of a foreign banking
organization will be required to calculate and report
a supplementary leverage ratio, if applicable.

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2. Applying the Leverage Ratio to the
U.S. Intermediate Holding Company
Commenters expressed concerns
about the burdens of complying with
both U.S. and home-country leverage
requirements, asserting that
inconsistencies among the standards
would force U.S. intermediate holding
companies to manage to the stricter
requirement. Many commenters
criticized application of the generallyapplicable leverage ratio of 4 percent to
a U.S. intermediate holding company
prior to adoption of the international
leverage ratio provided for in Basel III
(the Basel III leverage ratio).114 Other
commenters argued that the requirement
would result in extraterritorial
application of the Board’s rules, and
asserted that having a single global
leverage ratio would be preferable to
having multiple local leverage ratios.
Consistent with the principle of
national treatment, the final rule
imposes the same leverage capital
requirements on U.S. intermediate
holding companies as it does on U.S.
bank holding companies. These leverage
capital requirements include the
generally-applicable leverage ratio and
the supplementary leverage ratio for
U.S. intermediate holding companies
that meet the scope of application for
that ratio. These requirements do not
result in extraterritorial application of
the Board’s rules, because the final rule
applies the leverage ratios only to the
U.S. operations of the foreign banking
organization, and not to the foreign
banking organization parent. The Board
has longstanding experience with
leverage measures as complements to
risk-based capital measures. From a
safety-and-soundness perspective, each
type of requirement offsets potential
weaknesses of the other, and the two
sets of requirements working together
are more effective than either would be
in isolation. The Board believes that
requiring the U.S. intermediate holding
company to meet these ratios, as
applicable, on the basis of its U.S.
capital and exposures will strengthen
the U.S. intermediate holding
company’s capital position in the same
way that it strengthens the capital
position of U.S. bank holding
114 As part of Basel III, the Basel Committee
introduced a minimum leverage capital requirement
of 3 percent as a backstop measure to the risk-based
capital requirements, designed to improve the
resilience of the banking system worldwide by
limiting the amount of leverage that a banking
organization may incur. The Basel III leverage ratio
is defined as the ratio of tier 1 capital to a
combination of on- and off-balance sheet exposures.

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companies.115 The Board intends to
apply the supplementary leverage ratio
to a U.S. intermediate holding company
that meets the scope of application of
that ratio based on its U.S. assets and
exposures because it believes that it will
similarly strengthen the capital position
of a U.S. intermediate holding company.
Many commenters criticized
application of the generally-applicable
leverage ratio to foreign banking
organizations with predominantly
broker-dealer activities in the United
States. Some commenters asserted that
the U.S. intermediate holding
companies of several foreign banking
organizations would be comprised of
over 90 percent U.S. broker-dealer
subsidiary assets, making the generallyapplicable leverage ratio particularly
burdensome. Commenters also argued
that if U.S. bank holding companies
with large broker-dealer subsidiaries
were judged on a sub-consolidated
level, the generally-applicable leverage
ratio might cause them to appear
undercapitalized, and that this
illustrated the proposal’s departure from
the principles of national treatment and
competitive equality. Some of these
commenters also objected to the
application of the generally-applicable
leverage ratio to broker-dealerdominated U.S. intermediate holding
companies on the grounds that the
generally-applicable leverage ratio treats
low-risk broker-dealer activities as risky,
and suggested that the generallyapplicable leverage ratio exclude what
the commenters’ characterized as lowrisk assets or assets meeting the
definition of highly liquid assets under
the rule. Other commenters suggested
that as an alternative to the generallyapplicable leverage ratio, the Board
should rely on the results of stress tests
of risk-based capital measures.
The final rule does not distinguish
between U.S. intermediate holding
companies on the basis of their
activities. While the U.S. intermediate
holding companies of some foreign
banking organizations may engage
primarily in broker-dealer activities, the
U.S. intermediate holding companies of
other foreign banking organizations will
be more focused on commercial banking
or other financial activities. The
operations of domestic banking
115 The supplementary leverage ratio cited by the
commenters, which is expected to be implemented
internationally in 2018 consistent with the Basel
Capital Framework transition period, is a measure
that is applied only to the largest, most
internationally active U.S. banking organizations.
The revised capital framework requires an
advanced approaches banking organization to meet
the supplementary leverage ratio starting on January
1, 2018, consistent with the Basel Capital
Framework transitions period.

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organizations, all of which the Board
requires to comply with the minimum
generally-applicable leverage ratio,
exhibit a similar level of diversity. Rules
applicable to U.S. bank holding
companies do not vary depending on
whether a U.S. bank holding company
has predominantly broker-dealer
operations.116 The leverage capital
requirements contained in the final rule
similarly apply to a foreign banking
organization’s U.S. intermediate holding
company on a consolidated basis
regardless of its overall activities.
Moreover, the Board notes that
commenters’ assertions that certain U.S.
bank holding companies might not meet
the generally-applicable leverage ratio if
it were applied on a sub-consolidated
basis were based on commenters’
analyses of the generally-applicable
leverage ratios of the broker-dealer
subsidiaries of those bank holding
companies. These comparisons overlook
the capital that U.S. bank holding
companies maintain at the holding
company level or at U.S. subsidiaries
other than the broker-dealer, and
accordingly, are not relevant
comparisons.
For all of the reasons discussed in this
section, the final rule applies leverage
requirements to the U.S. intermediate
holding company as proposed. These
leverage requirements include the
generally-applicable leverage ratio of 4
percent and, for U.S. intermediate
holding companies with total
consolidated assets of $250 billion or
more or total consolidated on-balance
sheet foreign exposures of $10 billion or
more, the minimum supplementary
leverage ratio of 3 percent. To mitigate
the transitional burdens cited by
commenters, the final rule generally
delays application of the generallyapplicable leverage ratio to the U.S.
intermediate holding company until
January 1, 2018.117 As described above,
in section IV.B.7 of this preamble, to the
extent that the foreign banking
organization controlled a U.S. bank
holding company prior to the formation
of the U.S. intermediate holding
company, that U.S. bank holding
company continues to be subject to the
generally-applicable leverage ratio until
the U.S. intermediate holding company
becomes subject to leverage
requirements at the consolidated level.
116 See,

e.g., 12 CFR part 217.
with the Basel III transition
periods, a banking organization that meets or
exceeds the thresholds for application of the
supplementary leverage ratio must maintain a
minimum supplementary leverage ratio of 3 percent
beginning on January 1, 2018.
117 Consistent

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c. Disclosure Requirements
The final rule, by subjecting a U.S.
intermediate holding company to the
Board’s regulatory capital rules, also
requires a U.S. intermediate holding
company to make public disclosures
according to subpart D of the revised
capital framework. Some commenters
argued that the disclosure requirements
would disproportionately burden
foreign banking organizations, which
would have to make disclosures at a
sub-consolidated level. The disclosure
requirement in subpart D, however, has
an exception for a subsidiary of a
foreign banking organization that is
subject to comparable public disclosure
requirements in its home jurisdiction.
The Board expects that any parent
foreign banking organization that is able
to certify that it meets home-country
requirements at a consolidated level that
are consistent with the Basel Capital
Framework will be making public
disclosures that are comparable to those
set forth in subpart D of the revised
capital framework. In most cases,
therefore, a U.S. intermediate holding
company will not be required to make
the disclosures under subpart D of the
revised capital framework.118 For a
parent foreign banking organization that
is unable to demonstrate to the
satisfaction of the Board that it meets
home country standards that are
consistent with the Basel Capital
Framework, the Board will evaluate
home-country disclosures for general
consistency with the disclosures set
forth in subpart D of the revised capital
framework and will notify the parent
and the U.S. intermediate holding
company, through the supervisory
process, whether disclosures by the U.S.
intermediate holding company would
be necessary.
2. Capital Planning Requirements
The foreign proposal provided that all
U.S. intermediate holding companies
with total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more would have been
required to comply with the capital plan
rule in the same manner and to the same
extent as a bank holding company
subject to that section.119 The capital
plan rule currently applies to all U.S.
domiciled bank holding companies with
total consolidated assets of $50 billion
or more (except that U.S. domiciled
bank holding companies with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more that are relying on Supervision &
Regulation Letter 01–01 are not required
118 12
119 12

CFR 217.61.
CFR 225.8. See 76 FR 74631 (December 1,

2011).

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to comply with the capital plan rule
until July 21, 2015).120
Under the foreign proposal, a U.S.
intermediate holding company with
total consolidated assets of $50 billion
or more would be required to submit an
annual capital plan to the Federal
Reserve in which it demonstrated an
ability to maintain capital above the
Board’s minimum risk-based capital
ratios under both baseline and stressed
conditions over a minimum ninequarter, forward-looking planning
horizon. The proposal provided that a
U.S. intermediate holding company that
is unable to satisfy these requirements
generally may not make any capital
distributions (other than those capital
distributions with respect to which the
Board has indicated in writing its nonobjection) until it provided a
satisfactory capital plan to the Board.
Although some commenters
supported the foreign proposal’s
requirement that a U.S. intermediate
holding company engage in capital
planning, others asserted that requiring
capital planning at the U.S. intermediate
holding company level was
inappropriate. Commenters criticized
the foreign proposal’s capital planning
requirement on grounds similar to their
overall criticism of the foreign proposal,
arguing that home-country consolidated
capital regulation and parent support
were sufficient. Commenters argued that
capital planning should be evaluated in
the context of the global organization
and consider the financial condition of
the parent foreign banking organization
and developments in the foreign
banking organization’s home country.
Commenters asserted that in the absence
of material concern about a foreign
banking organization’s capital planning
process or financial strength, the Board
should not require the U.S. intermediate
holding company to meet additional
proposed capital standards.
Commenters suggested that instead of
applying the capital plan rule, the Board
should use the supervisory process to
impose dividend distribution
restrictions or additional capital
planning and stress-testing requirements
on the U.S. intermediate holding
company if necessary based on the
financial condition of the parent foreign
banking organization.
Other commenters expressed concern
that applying the capital plan rule
would add a ‘‘hidden buffer’’ to the
minimum requirements applicable to
the U.S. intermediate holding company
120 Supervision & Regulation Letter 01–01
(January 5, 2001), available at: http://
www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/srletters/2001/
sr0101.htm.

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and argued that the capital plan rule’s
5 percent minimum tier 1 common ratio
over a nine-quarter stress horizon
effectively requires the company to hold
capital in excess of the minimum
requirements in the Basel Capital
Framework. In particular, commenters
suggested that applying the capital plan
rule to U.S. intermediate holding
companies with predominantly brokerdealer operations would impose
significant new regulatory requirements
on broker-dealers. Commenters also
criticized the burdens associated with
creating a localized capital-planning
infrastructure and producing multiple
calculations of risk-weighted assets and
capital in connection with capital
planning. Some commenters argued that
the generally-applicable leverage ratio
should not be applied as part of the
capital plan rule, or, if applied, should
be adjusted for assets collateralized by
U.S. government or agency debt, or
other high-quality collateral.
The capital plan rule is a critical
element of the Board’s overall capital
adequacy framework for large bank
holding companies. As applied to U.S.
intermediate holding companies, the
capital plan rule will help to ensure that
such companies hold capital
commensurate with the risks they
would face under stressed financial
conditions and reduce the probability of
their failure by limiting their capital
distributions if they are unable to
demonstrate the ability to meet
minimum capital requirements under
these stressed financial conditions.
While applying the requirements to the
U.S. intermediate holding company
does not present a complete picture of
the consolidated foreign banking
organization, it does evaluate whether
the foreign banking organization holds
sufficient capital in the United States to
support its U.S. operations.
In addition, the Board believes that
applying the standards to U.S.
intermediate holding companies with
total consolidated assets of $50 billion
or more would further national
treatment and competitive equity. The
capital plan rule applies to all bank
holding companies with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more and does not distinguish between
bank holding companies based on their
operations. Applying these standards to
the U.S. intermediate holding company
of a foreign banking organization in the
same way that they are applied to U.S.
bank holding companies puts these
firms on equal footing with U.S. bank
holding companies that compete in the
same markets.
One commenter stated that the Board
should allow surplus capital in local

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entities above regulatory thresholds to
be deployable to other entities within
the group. A U.S. intermediate holding
company will be permitted to pay
dividends or make other capital
distributions under the same conditions
in which a U.S. bank holding company
could do so.
Commenters also had a variety of
requests for flexibility in capital
planning as applied to U.S. intermediate
holding companies, particularly
requesting that the Board permit a U.S.
intermediate holding company to reflect
parent support in its capital plan. The
Board expects U.S. intermediate holding
companies to reflect parent support of
the U.S. intermediate holding company,
through guarantees and keepwell
agreements, in their capital plan.
However, in demonstrating an ability to
meet minimum capital requirements,
U.S. intermediate holding companies
would not be permitted to reflect these
agreements as sources of capital. As
discussed above in section IV.A.4 of this
preamble, the Board believes that it is
important for foreign banks to have
sufficient capital in the United States to
support their U.S. operations, and that
there may be a number of factors that
limit a foreign bank’s ability to support
its U.S. operations during a period of
stress. Furthermore, several U.S. bank
holding company subsidiaries of foreign
banking organizations already comply
with the Board’s capital planning and
stress-testing requirements.
Accordingly, the Board is finalizing the
capital plan requirement for U.S.
intermediate holding companies as
proposed. A U.S. intermediate holding
company formed by July 1, 2016 will be
required to submit its first capital plan
in January 2017.121
Commenters suggested that the Board
apply any capital planning standards in
consultation and coordination with
home-country supervisors. The Board
will continue to work with homecountry supervisors in its supervision of
foreign banking organizations and their
U.S. intermediate holding companies.
3. Parent Capital Requirements
The proposal provided that a foreign
banking organization with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more would have been required to
certify or otherwise demonstrate to the
Board’s satisfaction that it meets capital
adequacy standards at the consolidated
121 The Board intends to expand the reporting
panel for the FR Y–14 to provide that a U.S.
intermediate holding company must begin filing the
FR Y–14A in the reporting cycle after formation of
the U.S. intermediate holding company, subject to
the transition provisions for new reporters of the FR
Y–14 schedules.

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level that are consistent with the Basel
Capital Framework, as defined below.
This requirement was intended to help
ensure that the consolidated capital base
supporting the activities of U.S.
branches and agencies remains strong,
and to lessen the degree to which
weaknesses at the consolidated foreign
parent could undermine the financial
strength of its U.S. operations.
The proposal defined the Basel
Capital Framework as the regulatory
capital framework published by the
Basel Committee, as amended from time
to time. This requirement would have
included the standards in Basel III for
minimum risk-based capital ratios, any
leverage ratio, and restrictions and
limitations if capital conservation
buffers above the minimum ratios are
not maintained, as these requirements
would come into effect under the
transitional provisions included in
Basel III.122
Under the foreign proposal, a
company could satisfy this requirement
by certifying that it meets the capital
adequacy standards established by its
home-country supervisor, including
with respect to the types of capital
instruments that would satisfy
requirements for common equity tier 1,
additional tier 1, and tier 2 capital and
for calculating its risk-weighted assets,
if those capital adequacy standards are
consistent with the Basel Capital
Framework. If a foreign banking
organization’s home country standards
are not consistent with the Basel Capital
Framework, the proposal provided that
the foreign banking organization may
demonstrate to the Board’s satisfaction
that it meets standards consistent with
the Basel Capital Framework.
In addition, under the foreign
proposal, a foreign banking organization
would have been required to provide to
the Board certain information on a
consolidated basis. This information
would have included its risk-based
capital ratios (including its tier 1 riskbased capital ratio and total risk-based
capital ratio and amount of tier 1 capital
and tier 2 capital), risk-weighted assets,
and total assets and, consistent with the
transition period in Basel III, the
common equity tier 1 ratio, leverage
ratio and amount of common equity tier
1 capital, additional tier 1 capital, and
122 Basel III establishes minimum risk-based
capital standards of 4.5 percent common equity tier
1 to risk-weighted assets, 6.0 percent tier 1 capital
to risk-weighted assets, and 8.0 percent total capital
to risk-weighted assets. In addition, Basel III
includes restrictions on capital distributions and
certain discretionary bonus payments if a banking
organization does not hold common equity tier 1
sufficient to exceed the minimum risk-weighted
ratio requirements outlined above by at least 2.5
percent. See 78 FR 62018.

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total leverage assets on a consolidated
basis.123 The Board intends to propose
separately for notice and comment an
amendment to the FR Y–7Q to
incorporate these items.
Commenters asked the Board to
clarify how it would assess whether a
home country’s capital standards are
consistent with the Basel Capital
Framework, and urged the Board to be
flexible when making such
determinations, stating that the Board
should look for general consistency with
the Basel Capital Framework, rather
than requiring point-by-point
equivalence. For purposes of the final
rule, the Board is clarifying that it
intends to consider materiality when
assessing consistency with the Basel
standards, including whether the home
country regulator timely implements
any standards made part of the Basel
Capital Framework. The Board also
intends to take into account analysis
regarding the comparability of capital
standards, such as the Basel
Committee’s peer review process.
The proposal provided that if a
foreign banking organization did not
certify or otherwise demonstrate to the
Board’s satisfaction that it met capital
adequacy standards at the consolidated
level that were consistent with the Basel
Capital Framework or provide the
required information relating to its
capital levels and ratios, the Board
could impose conditions or restrictions
relating to the activities or business
operations of the U.S. operations of the
foreign banking organization. The
proposal further provided that the Board
would coordinate with any relevant
State or Federal regulator in the
implementation of such conditions or
restrictions. The Board is finalizing the
substance of this provision as proposed.
In the event that the foreign banking
organization does not make the
certification or provide the required
information, the Board expects to
impose requirements, conditions, or
restrictions, including risk-based or
leverage capital requirements, on or
relating to the activities or business
operations of the U.S. operations of the
foreign banking organization, but may
also take other action as the Board
determines is appropriate.
Some commenters requested that the
Board establish a standard procedure
before imposing conditions or
restrictions on the U.S. operations of
foreign banking organizations if the
foreign banking organization is unable
123 This information would have been required to
be provided as of the close of the most recent
quarter and as of the close of the most recent
audited reporting period.

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to demonstrate that its home country
standards are consistent with the Basel
Capital Framework. In response to these
comments, the final rule also includes a
notice procedure by which the Board
would notify a company before it
imposes one or more requirements,
conditions, or restrictions; describe the
basis for imposing any requirement,
condition, or restriction; and provide
the company an opportunity to request
the Board reconsider such requirement,
condition, or restriction.
Commenters also urged the Board to
allow for flexible application of the
definition of ‘‘foreign banking
organization’’ in determining whether a
foreign banking organization means a
top-tier holding company or a direct
parent of a U.S. subsidiary. As described
above in section IV.B.5 of this preamble,
the Board has reserved flexibility to
modify the standards as necessary to
accommodate alternative organizational
structures. The Board is therefore
finalizing the substance of the parent
capital requirements as proposed.
D. Risk-Management Requirements for
Foreign Banking Organizations
Section 165(b)(1)(A) of the DoddFrank Act requires the Board to
establish risk-management requirements
as part of the enhanced prudential
standards to ensure that strong risk
management standards are part of the
regulatory and supervisory framework
for large bank holding companies and
large foreign banking organizations.124
Section 165(h) of the Dodd-Frank Act
directs the Board to issue regulations
requiring publicly traded bank holding
companies with total consolidated
assets of $10 billion or more to establish
risk committees.125
In the proposal, the Board sought to
apply the risk-committee and chief risk
officer requirements proposed for U.S.
banking organizations to foreign
banking organizations in a way that
would strengthen a foreign banking
organization’s oversight and risk
management of its combined U.S.
operations and would require a foreign
banking organization with a large U.S.
presence to aggregate and monitor risks
on a combined U.S. operations basis.
The proposal permitted a foreign
banking organization flexibility to
structure the oversight of the risks of its
U.S. operations in a manner that is
efficient and effective in light of its
broader enterprise-wide riskmanagement structure.
While expressing general support for
enhanced risk management standards,
124 12
125 12

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many commenters advocated that the
Board rely on local corporate
governance norms and permit greater
flexibility in implementing the U.S. risk
committee and chief risk officer
requirements. Many commenters also
urged the Board to defer to home
country risk-management standards
rather than imposing separate
requirements on foreign banking
organizations, asserting that foreign
regulators already monitor or plan to
monitor risk-management practices and
have a better perspective on the riskmanagement practices of a foreign
banking organization. Some commenters
expressed concern about separating the
U.S. risk-management framework from
the global risk-management framework.
Additionally, a few commenters
asserted that the proposed rule does not
adequately take into account the extent
to which a foreign company is subject
on a consolidated basis to comparable
home country risk-management
standards. One commenter asserted that
the Board has significantly more
authority to tailor the risk-management
requirements to foreign banking
organizations than it exercised in the
proposal.
The Board recognizes that foreign
banking organizations generally are
subject to consolidated riskmanagement standards in their home
countries and that many foreign
regulators have strengthened their riskmanagement requirements since the
financial crisis. However, consolidated
risk-management practices have not
always ensured that a foreign banking
organization fully understands the risks
undertaken by its U.S. operations. For
example, these practices may limit the
ability of large foreign banking
organizations to aggregate, monitor, and
report risks across their U.S. legal
entities in an effective and timely
manner. In light of the risks posed to
U.S. financial stability by foreign
banking organizations with a large U.S.
presence, the Board believes that it is
important for such organizations to
aggregate and monitor risks on a
combined U.S. operations basis.
Consistent with section 165(b)(2) of
the Dodd-Frank Act, the Board has
taken into account the extent to which
foreign financial companies are subject
on a consolidated basis to home country
standards that are comparable to those
applied to financial companies in the
United States. In deference to existing
home-country governance standards, the
final rule generally provides flexibility
for the foreign banking organization to
locate its U.S. risk committee as either
a committee of its home office or its U.S.
intermediate holding company. For the

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reasons discussed above, the Board
believes that foreign banking
organizations with a sizable U.S.
presence should aggregate and monitor
the risks of their combined U.S.
operations to ensure the resiliency of
such operations. The proposal was
tailored to permit foreign banking
organizations to structure their riskmanagement functions based on their
unique circumstances while ensuring
strong oversight of risks on a combined
U.S. operations basis.
Some commenters asserted that
fragmented, country-specific riskmanagement requirements could
increase operational risk or hinder
communication regarding risk
management within an organization and
requested that foreign banking
organizations be permitted to design
their own risk-management systems and
structures. A few commenters asserted
that, as an alternative to the proposed
rule, the Board should work with its
foreign counterparts to create an
international standard for assessing riskmanagement practices.
The final rule is intended to address
the financial stability risks posed by the
U.S. operations of foreign banking
organizations. The framework
established by the final rule helps
foreign banking organizations to
effectively aggregate, monitor, and
report risks across their U.S. legal
entities on a timely basis and helps U.S.
supervisors to understand risks posed to
U.S. financial stability by the U.S.
operations of foreign banking
organizations. The Board expects that
the U.S. risk-management requirements
would be integrated and coordinated
with the foreign banking organization’s
enterprise-wide risk-management
practices and therefore would not lead
to a fragmented approach to riskmanagement. The Board will continue
to work through the Basel Committee,
the FSB, and other international
coordinating bodies to promote safe and
effective risk-management practices.
Many commenters asserted that the
proposed rule was did not adequately
consider the diversity among foreign
banking organizations and that, because
foreign banking organizations structure
their global and U.S. operations in
diverse ways, the proposal would be
costly to implement. Several
commenters expressed concern that the
proposal was too rigid to accommodate
the risk profiles of all foreign banking
organizations, such as foreign banking
organizations with significant nonbank
operations. One commenter asserted
that the requirements in the proposed
rule would be cumbersome if
compliance is strictly enforced at a

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foreign banking organization’s U.S.
subsidiary. Another commenter asserted
that the proposed rule should not apply
to a foreign banking organization’s U.S.
subsidiary that has $50 billion or more
in assets but does not transact with third
parties and is established solely for tax,
accounting, or administrative purposes.
The Board recognizes that the level
and types of risks posed by foreign
banking organizations vary based on the
size and nature of their U.S. operations,
and believes that the final rule strikes an
appropriate balance between mandating
specific risk-management approaches
and permitting foreign banking
organizations to structure their riskmanagement oversight as needed to fit
their circumstances. Furthermore, the
Board believes that the requirements of
the final rule are flexible enough to
cover a variety of organizational
structures. For instance, a foreign
banking organization with a branch or
agency may maintain its U.S. risk
committee at either the global board of
directors or at the U.S. intermediate
holding company.126
One commenter asserted that the
proposed risk-management
requirements might not accurately
capture U.S. risks because, for example,
certain trading positions booked by a
U.S. broker-dealer may be hedged by
positions booked at the U.S. branch or
outside of the United States. Under the
final rule, as under the proposal, a
foreign banking organization must take
appropriate measures to ensure that its
combined U.S. operations provide
sufficient information to the U.S. risk
committee to enable the U.S. risk
committee to carry out its
responsibilities. Thus, a U.S. risk
committee should obtain information
relevant to hedges booked at the U.S.
branch. With respect to positions
booked outside of the United States, the
Board expects that a U.S. risk committee
and U.S. chief risk officer’s overview of
the risks of the foreign banking
organization’s combined U.S. operations
will be informed by frequent
consultation with the global risk
committee and global chief risk officer.
Several commenters stated that the
Board’s existing framework for riskmanagement oversight of foreign
banking organizations is sufficiently
robust and that the proposal was
therefore unnecessary. The Board
emphasizes that the enhanced U.S. riskmanagement requirements contained in
this final rule supplement the Board’s
existing risk-management guidance and
126 As further described below, the final rule
provides that a U.S. intermediate holding company
must have its own risk committee.

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supervisory expectations for foreign
banking organizations.127 All foreign
banking organizations supervised by the
Board should continue to follow such
guidance to ensure appropriate
oversight of and limitations on risk. The
final rule creates additional standards
regarding the aggregating and
monitoring of risks on a combined U.S.
operations basis. For the reasons
discussed above, the Board believes that
these enhanced prudential standards are
important for protecting the stability of
the U.S. financial system.
1. Risk Committee Requirements for
Foreign Banking Organizations With
$10 Billion or More in Total
Consolidated Assets But Less Than $50
Billion in Combined U.S. Assets

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a. General Comments
Consistent with the requirements of
section 165(h) of the Dodd-Frank Act
and with the proposed rule, the final
rule requires a foreign banking
organization with a U.S. presence that
has any class of stock (or similar
interest) that is publicly traded and total
consolidated assets of $10 billion or
more, and a foreign banking
organization with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more but
combined U.S. assets of $50 billion or
less, regardless of whether its stock is
publicly traded, to certify to the Board,
on an annual basis, that it maintains a
U.S. risk committee of its board of
directors or equivalent home-country
governance structure that (1) oversees
the U.S. risk-management policies of the
combined U.S. operations of the
company, and (2) has at least one
member having experience in
identifying, assessing, and managing
risk exposures of large, complex firms.
This certification must be filed on an
annual basis with the Board
concurrently with the foreign banking
organization’s Federal Reserve Form FR
Y–7, Annual Report of Foreign Banking
Organizations. The proposed rule would
have required the foreign banking
organization to take appropriate
measures to ensure that its combined
U.S. operations implement the risk
management policies overseen by the
U.S. risk committee, and that its
combined U.S. operations provide
sufficient information to the U.S. risk
127 See Supervision and Regulation Letter SR 08–
8 (Oct. 16, 2008), available at: http://
www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/srletters/2008/
SR0808.htm; Supervision and Regulation Letter SR
08–9 (Oct. 16, 2008), available at: http://
www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/srletters/2008/
SR0809.htm; Supervision and Regulation Letter SR
12–17 (December 17, 2012), available at: http://
www.federalreserve.gov/bankinforeg/srletters/
sr1217.htm.

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committee to enable the U.S. risk
committee to carry out the
responsibilities of the proposal. It
provided that the Board may impose
conditions or restrictions relating to the
activities or business operations of the
combined U.S. operations of the foreign
banking organization if the foreign
banking organization was unable to
satisfy these requirements.
Several commenters asserted that the
asset thresholds that would subject a
foreign banking organization to the risk
management and risk committee
requirements were too low. One
commenter urged the Board to exempt
all foreign banking organizations with
less than $50 billion in combined U.S.
assets. Another commenter proposed an
exemption for foreign banking
organizations with less than $10 billion
in combined U.S. assets. The asset
thresholds governing the overall riskmanagement requirements and the risk
committee requirement are set by
sections 165(a) and 165(h) of the DoddFrank Act. Accordingly, the Board is
finalizing this aspect of the proposal
without change. The final rule also
clarifies that a foreign banking
organization is a ‘‘publicly traded
company’’ under the statute if any class
of stock (or similar interest, such as an
American Depositary Receipt) is
publicly traded.
b. Qualifications of Risk-Committee
Members
Under the proposal, at least one
member of the U.S. risk committee of a
publicly traded foreign banking
organization with total consolidated
assets of $10 billion or more and a
foreign banking organization with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more but combined U.S. assets of $50
billion or less, regardless of whether it
was publicly traded, would have been
required to have risk-management
expertise that is commensurate with the
capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, size, and other
appropriate risk-related factors of the
foreign banking organization’s
combined U.S. operations. A few
commenters urged the Board not to
adopt by regulation minimum
qualifications to fulfill the riskmanagement expertise requirement.
These commenters suggested that riskmanagement expertise be left to homecountry discretion.
Although the final rule does not
specify by regulation minimum
educational or professional credentials
for a foreign banking organization’s risk
committee members, it is appropriate, in
light of the requirements of the DoddFrank Act, to ensure that at least one

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member of a foreign banking
organization’s risk committee has riskmanagement experience. Under the final
rule, a risk committee of foreign banking
organizations with $10 billion or more
in total consolidated assets but less than
$50 billion in combined U.S. assets
must include at least one member
having experience in identifying,
assessing, and managing risk exposures
of large, complex firms.128 Similar to the
requirements for risk-management
experience for bank holding companies
with total consolidated assets of at least
$10 billion but less than $50 billion
under the domestic rule, experience in
a nonbanking or nonfinancial field may
satisfy the requirements of the rule for
a foreign banking organization with $10
billion or more in total consolidated
assets but less than $50 billion in
combined U.S. assets, as long as the
experience includes the identification,
assessment, and management of risk of
large, complex firms. Additional
discussion of the qualifications
necessary for risk-management expertise
is presented in section III.B.2 of this
preamble.
Consistent with the proposed rule, in
order to accommodate the diversity in
corporate governance practices across
different jurisdictions, the final rule
does not require the U.S. risk committee
of a foreign banking organization with
total consolidated assets of $10 billion
or more but combined U.S. assets of less
than $50 billion to maintain a specific
number of independent directors on the
U.S. risk committee.129
2. Risk-Management and Risk
Committee Requirements for Foreign
Banking Organizations With Combined
U.S. Assets of $50 Billion or More
The proposed rule would have
established additional requirements
regarding responsibilities and structure
for the U.S. risk committee of a foreign
banking organization with combined
U.S. assets of $50 billion or more. In
finalizing these requirements, the Board
has generally sought to maintain
consistency with the risk-management
requirements included in the final rule
for domestic companies with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more, with certain adaptations to
account for the unique characteristics of
foreign banking organizations.
128 This provision is consistent with the
requirement in section 165(h)(3)(C) of the DoddFrank Act and mirrors the requirement in the
Board’s final rule for U.S. companies, discussed
above in section III.B of this preamble. 12 U.S.C.
5365(h)(3)(C).
129 As described below, the final rule requires a
foreign banking organization with combined U.S.
assets of $50 billion or more to maintain an
independent director on its U.S. risk committee.

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a. Responsibilities of U.S. Risk
Committee

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Under the proposal, a U.S. risk
committee of a foreign banking
organization with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more would have been
required to review and approve the riskmanagement practices of the combined
U.S. operations and to oversee the
operation of an appropriate riskmanagement framework that is
commensurate with the capital
structure, risk profile, complexity,
activities, size, and other appropriate
risk-related factors of the company’s
combined U.S. operations. The proposal
would have required the risk
management framework for the
combined U.S. operations to be
consistent with the enterprise-wide risk
management policies and include
enumerated policies, procedures,
policies, and systems.
Some commenters opposed the
proposed establishment of specific roles
and responsibilities for the U.S. risk
committee. For example, one foreign
bank stated that the U.S. risk committee
should be permitted to rely on the
parent company’s global policies and
procedures and that establishing standalone policies and procedures for the
company’s U.S. operations would be
duplicative and result in increased costs
and complexity. Some commenters
requested additional clarity regarding
the relationship between the U.S. risk
committee and the global riskmanagement function. A few
commenters also asserted that the U.S.
risk committee’s responsibilities and its
relationship to management and the
board of directors should be left to the
discretion of the foreign banking
organization.
The required elements of a foreign
banking organization’s risk management
framework under the final rule are
crucial elements of effective risk
management and are consistent with
international risk-management
standards.130 Therefore, because of the
risks posed by the companies covered
by the final rule, the Board believes that
it is important to specify the
responsibilities for their U.S. risk
committees. Accordingly, the Board is
finalizing the responsibilities of the U.S.
risk committee generally as proposed,
130 See, e.g., ‘‘Principles for Enhancing Corporate
Governance,’’ (October 2010), available at: http://
www.bis.org/publ/bcbs176.pdf (stating that large,
internationally active banks should have a boardlevel risk committee responsible for overseeing
implementation of a risk management framework
that includes procedures for identifying, assessing,
monitoring, and reporting key risks and risk
mitigation measures).

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with some modifications, as discussed
below.
As noted above, the risk management
framework for a foreign banking
organization’s U.S. operations must be
consistent with its global framework,
and foreign banking organizations
generally may rely on their parent
company’s enterprise-wide risk
management policies, as long as those
policies and procedures fulfill the
minimum requirements established by
the final rule. Consistent with the final
rule for bank holding companies, as
discussed in section III.B of this
preamble, the final rule requires the
U.S. risk committee to approve and
periodically review the riskmanagement policies, rather than the
risk-management practices, of the
combined U.S. operations. Additionally,
the final rule does not require a foreign
banking organization to certify that it
has a U.S. risk committee because the
Board expects to gain sufficient
information through the supervisory
process to evaluate whether the U.S.
risk committee meets the requirements
of this section.
Under the proposal, a U.S. risk
committee would have had to meet at
least quarterly and more frequently as
needed, and fully document and
maintain records of its proceedings,
including risk-management decisions.
One commenter supported the
requirement that a U.S. risk committee
meet quarterly, but another urged the
Board not to adopt a minimum number
of meetings for the U.S. risk committee.
Based on its supervisory experience, the
Board understands that quarterly
meetings of board committees are
standard in the financial industry and
the Board believes that this standard is
consistent with good risk management
practices, as it helps ensure the risk
committee receives timely information
about the risk profile of the institution.
Accordingly, the Board is adopting
these provisions as proposed. In
addition to the responsibilities
described above, under the proposal, the
U.S. risk committee would have been
responsible for certain liquidity riskmanagement responsibilities. These
liquidity risk-management
responsibilities are components of the
U.S. risk-management framework. The
Board has adopted the proposed
liquidity risk-management
responsibilities with some
modifications in response to comments
and other considerations, as further
discussed in section IV.E.2.

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b. Independent Member of the U.S. Risk
Committee
Under the proposal, the U.S. risk
committee of a foreign banking
organization with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more must include at
least one member who (1) is not an
officer or employee of the company or
its affiliates and has not been an officer
or employee of the company or its
affiliates during the previous three
years, and (2) is not a member of the
immediate family of a person who is, or
has been within the last three years, an
executive officer of the company or its
affiliates. This requirement was adapted
from director independence
requirements of certain U.S. securities
exchanges and was similar to the
requirement in the domestic proposal
that the chair of the risk committee of
a U.S. bank holding company be
independent. The proposed requirement
applied regardless of where the foreign
banking organization’s U.S. risk
committee was located.
A few commenters asserted that the
independent director requirement is not
necessary to achieve the U.S. risk
committee’s purposes. One commenter
stated that the independence
requirement could hinder the efficacy of
the U.S. risk committee because the
independent director would not be
familiar with the day-to-day operation
of the business. One commenter urged
the Board to consider allowing foreign
banking organizations to include an
autonomous reporting line to the chief
executive officer or the board of
directors in lieu of an independence
requirement. Other commenters urged
the Board to defer to home country
independence standards. One
commenter stated that the Board should
focus on the U.S. risk committee’s
independence from business lines,
rather than on a particular director’s
independence from the foreign banking
organization.
The Board believes that requiring one
member of the U.S. risk committee to be
independent from the foreign banking
organization helps to ensure that an
objective view of the company’s U.S.
operations is represented on the
committee. Further, given the variation
in independence requirements across
jurisdictions, the final rule, consistent
with the proposal, establishes
independence standards to ensure
consistency among companies subject to
the rule. The Board therefore believes
that the independence standards set out
in the proposal are appropriate
minimum requirements. Thus, the
Board is adopting the director-

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independence requirements as
proposed.
In addition, the proposal would have
required at least one member of the U.S.
risk committee to have risk-management
expertise. In the final rule, the risk
committee of a foreign banking
organization with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more must include at
least one member having experience in
identifying, assessing, and managing
risk exposures of large, complex
financial firms. This is consistent with
the final rule’s requirement for bank
holding companies with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more.
c. Placement of the Risk Committee
Under the proposal, in most cases, a
foreign banking organization would
have been permitted to maintain its U.S.
risk committee either as a committee of
the global board of directors, on a
standalone basis or as part of its
enterprise-wide risk committee, or as a
committee of the board of directors of its
U.S. intermediate holding company, if
applicable. The proposal would have
required a foreign banking organization
that has combined U.S. assets of $50
billion or more and operates in the
United States solely through a U.S.
intermediate holding company to
maintain its U.S. risk committee at the
U.S. intermediate holding company.
Several commenters supported the
proposed rule’s option to house the U.S.
risk committee at either the U.S.
intermediate holding company or the
parent company. A few commenters
urged the Board to permit additional
flexibility. Two commenters suggested
that the Board should permit a foreign
banking organization to comply with the
risk committee requirements by
establishing a management committee
or an independent risk-management
function. Another foreign bank
requested that the final rule allow
supervisors authority to adjust the riskmanagement requirements where the
foreign banking organization operates in
the United States only through U.S.
subsidiaries. One commenter asserted
that the Board should allow the U.S.
risk committee to be placed at a
company’s U.S. branch. One commenter
opined that the responsibilities of the
U.S. risk committee are more important
than its placement. Some commenters,
however, indicated that it would be
appropriate for foreign banking
organizations with large U.S. operations
to maintain a risk function in the United
States rather than in the company’s
head office.
The Board believes that it is important
to ensure that a senior committee of the

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board of directors of the foreign banking
organization or of the U.S. intermediate
holding company has primary
responsibility for oversight of the risks
of the combined U.S. operations. A
management or independent committee
or representatives of a U.S. branch may
not have the requisite ability to oversee
the risks of the combined operations.
Under the final rule, the risk committee
for the combined U.S. operations
generally must be a committee either of
the global board of directors of the
foreign banking organization or of the
U.S. intermediate holding company.131
Furthermore, the final rule requires
each U.S. intermediate holding
company to have a risk committee to
oversee the risk function of the U.S.
intermediate holding company. As
described above, the final rule raises the
threshold for formation of a U.S.
intermediate holding company from $10
billion to $50 billion in U.S. non-branch
assets. In consideration of this change,
and the systemic footprint of a foreign
banking organization that is required to
form a U.S. intermediate holding
company, the Board believes that each
U.S. intermediate holding company
must have a risk committee to oversee
the risk function of the U.S.
intermediate holding company. The risk
committee of the U.S. intermediate
holding company may also fulfill the
responsibilities of the U.S. risk
committee described above.
d. U.S. Chief Risk Officer
Under the proposal, a foreign banking
organization with combined U.S.
operations of $50 billion or more would
have been required to appoint a U.S.
chief risk officer. The U.S. chief risk
officer would have been required to be
employed by the U.S. branch, U.S.
agency, U.S. intermediate holding
company, or other U.S. subsidiary.
i. Responsibilities
Under the proposal, the U.S. chief risk
officer was directly responsible for the
measurement, aggregation, and
monitoring of risks undertaken by the
company’s combined U.S. operations.
The U.S. chief risk officer would have
been directly responsible for the regular
provision of information to the U.S. risk
committee, the global chief risk officer,
and the Board or Federal Reserve
131 For those foreign banking organizations that
operate in the United States solely through U.S.
intermediate holding companies, the Board also has
retained the requirement that such a foreign
banking organization place its U.S. risk committee
at the U.S. intermediate holding company as an
appropriate means for the U.S. risk committee to
have exposure to the foreign banking organization’s
U.S. operations and to ensure that the U.S. risk
committee is accessible to U.S. supervisors.

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supervisory staff.132 Such information
would have included information
regarding the nature of and changes to
material risks undertaken by the
company’s combined U.S. operations,
including risk management deficiencies
and emerging risks, and how such risks
relate to the global operations of the
company. The proposal also provided
that the U.S. chief risk officer would be
expected to oversee regularly scheduled
meetings, as well as special meetings,
with the Board to assess compliance
with its risk-management
responsibilities. The proposal would
have required the U.S. chief risk officer
to be available to respond to supervisory
inquiries from the Board as needed. The
proposal also included several
additional risk-management
responsibilities for which a U.S. chief
risk officer was directly responsible.
Many commenters asserted that the
proposal was overly restrictive and
advocated for additional flexibility in
the U.S. chief risk officer role. One
commenter asserted that the U.S. chief
risk officer requirement is unnecessary,
so long as the foreign banking
organization is able to identify an officer
inside of the organization to serve as the
point of contact for the Board regarding
U.S. risk-management practices.
Another commenter asserted that the
responsibilities of the U.S. chief risk
officer should vary depending on the
foreign banking organization’s activities
in the United States. On the other hand,
one commenter stated that the
responsibilities assigned to the U.S.
chief risk officer by the proposed rule
were appropriate.
The Board believes that requiring a
foreign banking organization with over
$50 billion in combined U.S. assets to
have a single point of contact within a
foreign banking organization that is
required to oversee the management of
risks within the organization’s
combined U.S. operations will help
reduce the risks posed by foreign
banking organizations. Such a structure
ensures accountability within the
foreign banking organization and
facilitates communication between the
organization and supervisors. Although
the relative emphasis on the
responsibilities assigned to the U.S.
chief risk officer by the final rule may
vary depending on the foreign banking
organization’s U.S. activities, each
responsibility is a crucial component of
the role of the U.S. chief risk officer for
every foreign banking organization with
a large U.S. presence. Accordingly, the
final rule continues to require that the
132 The reporting would generally take place
through the traditional supervisory process.

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U.S. chief risk officer report directly and
regularly provide to the U.S. risk
committee and global chief risk officer
and regularly meet and provide
information to the Board regarding risk
management and compliance with this
section. In other cases, consistent with
the discussion in section III.B.4 of this
preamble, the U.S. chief risk officer of
a foreign banking organization may
execute his or her responsibilities by
working with, or through, others in the
organization. Accordingly, the final rule
requires the U.S. chief risk officer to
‘‘oversee’’ the execution of certain of the
responsibilities, rather than to be
directly responsible for them.
In addition, the U.S. chief risk officer
is responsible for certain liquidity riskmanagement responsibilities discussed
in section IV.E.2 of this preamble. The
final rule includes a cross reference to
these responsibilities.
ii. Structural Requirements
Under the proposal, a U.S. chief risk
officer generally would have reported
directly to the U.S. risk committee and
the company’s global chief risk officer.
The preamble to the proposal indicated
that the Board may approve an
alternative structure on a case-by-case
basis if the company demonstrated that
the proposed reporting requirements
would create an exceptional hardship
for the company.
Several commenters advocated for
greater flexibility in the reporting
structure for the U.S. chief risk officer,
asserting that each company should be
able to determine reporting lines
consistent with its organization and
business lines. The Board believes that,
in general, it is important for the U.S.
chief risk officer to report directly to
both the risk committee and the global
chief risk officer to ensure that both
management and the board are kept
apprised of risks facing the company’s
U.S. operations. The Board’s ability to
approve an alternative reporting
structure on a case-by-case basis
provides for sufficient flexibility for
companies for which the dual reporting
structure would be an exceptional
hardship. Accordingly, the Board is
adopting the U.S. chief risk officer
reporting structure as proposed.
In the proposal, the Board noted that
it expects that the primary
responsibility of the U.S. chief risk
officer would be risk management
oversight of the combined U.S.
operations and that the U.S. chief risk
officer would not also serve as the
company’s global chief risk officer.
Several commenters opposed this aspect
of the proposal and a few commenters
stated that the Board should not

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prohibit the U.S. chief risk officer from
fulfilling other roles within the
organization, as it may be beneficial for
the U.S. chief risk officer to have a
broad scope of duties. One commenter
asserted that the U.S. chief risk officer
should be permitted to fulfill other
responsibilities appropriate for his or
her level of experience.
The Board continues to believe that,
in order to ensure that the U.S. chief
risk officer is primarily focused on the
risk management oversight of the
foreign banking organization’s
combined U.S. operations, the U.S. chief
risk officer should not fulfill other roles
within the organization. The separation
of the U.S. chief risk officer’s duties is
important to ensure that the oversight of
risks facing the foreign banking
organization’s combined U.S. operations
is not compromised by the U.S. chief
risk officer devoting attention to other
matters within the organization.
Accordingly, the Board expects that the
U.S. chief risk officer’s primary
responsibility will be risk management
oversight of the combined U.S.
operations of the foreign banking
organization. The U.S. chief risk officer
also should not serve as the company’s
global chief risk officer.
The proposal would have required the
U.S. chief risk officer to be employed by
the U.S. branch, U.S. agency, U.S.
intermediate holding company, or
another U.S. subsidiary. One commenter
stated that requiring the U.S. chief risk
officer to be employed by a U.S. entity
would increase parent company costs.
However, in order for the U.S. chief risk
officer to have appropriate exposure to
the foreign banking organization’s U.S.
operations and to ensure that the U.S.
chief risk officer is accessible to U.S.
supervisors, the final rule retains the
requirement that the U.S. chief risk
officer be employed by a U.S. entity and
further clarifies that the U.S. chief risk
officer must also be located at a U.S.
entity.
The proposal stated that a U.S. chief
risk officer must have risk-management
expertise that is commensurate with the
capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, and size of the
foreign banking organization’s
combined U.S. operations. In the
proposal, the Board solicited comment
on whether it should specify by
regulation the minimum qualifications,
including educational attainment and
professional experience, for a U.S. chief
risk officer. Several commenters
asserted that establishing minimum
qualifications for the U.S. chief risk
officer is unnecessary. These
commenters encouraged the Board to
allow a foreign banking organization to

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make its own determination as to
whether a U.S. chief risk officer
candidate is qualified. A few
commenters asserted that the U.S. chief
risk officer should not be required to
hold any specific educational or
professional qualifications. One
commenter supported minimum
qualifications for the U.S. chief risk
officer but noted that, as a practical
matter, few candidates might initially
meet the formal requirements.
Although a foreign banking
organization generally should have
flexibility to determine the particular
qualifications it desires in a U.S. chief
risk officer, in light of the risks posed by
foreign banking organizations with
combined U.S. assets of $50 billion or
more, a U.S. chief risk officer should
satisfy certain minimum standards.
Consistent with the Board’s final rule
for domestic companies, for the reasons
set forth in section III.B.4 of the
preamble, the final rule requires a U.S.
chief risk officer to have experience in
identifying, assessing, and managing
risk exposures of large, complex
financial firms.
One commenter urged the Board to
include other relevant supervisory
authorities, including state supervisors
in the case of state-licensed foreign
banking organizations, in meetings with
the U.S. chief risk officer. Consistent
with its current practice, the Board
expects that other relevant supervisory
authorities will be involved throughout
the supervision process as appropriate.
In addition, the proposal would have
required the U.S. chief risk officer to
receive compensation consistent with
providing an objective assessment of
risks. The Board is finalizing the
substance of this requirement as
proposed.
E. Liquidity Requirements for Foreign
Banking Organizations
Similar to the domestic proposal, the
foreign proposal would have required a
foreign banking organization with
combined U.S. assets of $50 billion or
more to establish a framework for
managing liquidity risk, conduct
monthly liquidity stress tests, and
maintain a buffer of highly liquid assets
to cover cash-flow needs under stressed
conditions. The proposal would have
applied a more limited set of liquidity
requirements to a foreign banking
organization with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more and
combined U.S. assets of less than $50
billion. These organizations would have
been required to report to the Board on
an annual basis the results of an internal
liquidity stress test for either the
consolidated operations of the company

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or its combined U.S. operations only,
conducted consistently with the Basel
committee principles for liquidity risk
management 133 and incorporating 30day, 90-day, and one-year stress test
horizons.134
In certain cases, commenters provided
views on the liquidity provisions of the
proposal that were also applicable to
U.S. bank holding companies. Many of
the comments and final rule changes
applicable to both the foreign and
domestic liquidity requirements have
been addressed in section III.C of this
preamble. Foreign banking
organizations seeking more information
on the adjustments made to the
proposed enhanced prudential
standards should therefore also refer to
section III.C of this preamble.
1. General Comments
Several commenters expressed
support for the proposed rule, stating
that many of the requirements would
formalize standards already in
development within the industry and
would align with the liquidity standards
applied by other jurisdictions, including
liquidity requirements on foreign
companies in the United Kingdom. One
commenter asserted that the proposal
would help foreign banking
organizations to withstand small runs
and reduce those institutions’ reliance
on emergency programs. Other
commenters raised concerns that the
requirements, and particularly the
proposed liquidity buffer, discussed
further below, could have a potential
negative impact on economic growth
and reduce the availability of funding in
the United States. These commenters
also argued against the proposal on
systemic stability grounds, asserting that
liquidity would be better managed on an
integrated or enterprise-wide basis and
that local liquidity requirements,
particularly for branches operating in
the United States, would significantly
compromise the ability of a foreign
banking organization to manage its
liquidity efficiently and effectively on
global basis. One commenter expressed
concern that local liquidity
requirements in the United States could
exacerbate the U.S. financial system’s
exposure to contagion by reducing a
foreign banking organization’s ability to
divert liquid assets from U.S. operations
to address a shock abroad. Another
commenter suggested that excess
liquidity above the minimum amounts
required should be permitted to flow
133 See Basel Committee principles for liquidity
risk management, supra note 47.
134 See discussion of reporting of stress test
results in section III.C.

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freely outside of the United States to
address needs in other parts of a foreign
banking organization’s operations.
As discussed above in section IV.A of
this preamble, in a circumstance where
multiple parts of a foreign banking
organization come under stress
simultaneously, a firm that manages its
liquidity on a centralized basis may not
have sufficient resources to provide
support to all parts of the organization,
and indeed, during the recent financial
crisis, many foreign organizations relied
on substantial amounts of Federal
Reserve lending to meet liquidity needs
in the United States. Further, as noted
above in section IV.A of this preamble,
foreign banking organizations’ increased
use of short-term funding in the lead-up
to the financial crisis exposed them, in
certain cases, to maturity mismatch.
While maturity transformation is central
to the bank intermediation function, it
can also pose risks from both a firmspecific perspective and a broader
financial stability perspective.
Therefore, the Board is requiring a
foreign banking organization to establish
a framework for managing liquidity risk
and stress-test its liquidity in the United
States, as well as maintain a minimum
amount of liquidity in the United States.
The liquidity requirements contained in
the final rule are designed to help
address these risks.
The impact of the requirements on a
particular foreign banking organization
will vary based on a variety of factors.
The Board believes the positive impact
of the rule in helping to improve the
liquidity risk management and position
of the U.S. operations of foreign banking
organizations justifies the required
approach. The Board notes that the final
rule continues to permit foreign banking
organizations to raise funding in the
United States for home-country or other
overseas operations, provided that they
do so in compliance with the
requirements in the final rule. The
Board has calibrated the requirements
so as not to limit excessively a foreign
banking organization’s ability to manage
liquidity risk on a global basis, and
under the proposal and the final rule
excess liquidity held in the United
States may be used outside the United
States to address needs in other parts of
the foreign banking organization’s
operations.
Many commenters asserted that
instead of the proposed rule, there
should be a global agreement on
monitoring and managing liquidity on a
consolidated basis, potentially through
standards implemented under the Basel
Committee principles for liquidity risk
management. Several commenters
suggested that the proposed

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requirements are not appropriate for a
foreign banking organization whose
home country has fully adopted the
Basel III LCR. Some commenters
requested that the Board exempt from
the standards foreign banking
organizations that meet certain criteria,
such as strength of supervision in the
home jurisdiction, parent support, and
willingness to provide information, or
reduce requirements applicable to those
entities. Commenters also recommended
that instead of establishing enhanced
prudential standards for liquidity, the
Board should defer to a foreign banking
organization’s implementation of homecountry liquidity standards, particularly
where home-country standards for
liquidity monitoring are comparable to
those of the proposed enhanced
prudential standards, and coordinate
with home-country supervisors to
evaluate the liquidity adequacy and risk
management of the foreign banking
organization’s U.S. operations. Other
commenters argued that the proposed
liquidity requirements should be more
closely aligned with the liquidity
standards under the Basel Committee
principles for liquidity risk
management. Some stated that the
proposal would cause confusion as to
how the requirements for foreign
banking organizations would align with
the proposed U.S. LCR. In addition, one
commenter suggested that the Board
should synchronize the implementation
of liquidity standards under section 165
of the Dodd-Frank Act with the
implementation of the Basel III LCR.
The Board remains committed to
international cooperation among
supervisors and will continue to work
on a bilateral and multilateral basis to
improve the supervision of international
banking organizations. At the same
time, the Board does not believe that
deferring to home-country supervisors’
liquidity supervision adequately
addresses foreign banking organizations’
liquidity risk in the United States and
the associated risks to financial stability.
The final rule will ensure that all
foreign banking organizations with
combined U.S. assets of $50 billion or
more have uniform requirements that
are also consistent with the
requirements for domestic institutions.
For the reasons described in section
III.C of this preamble in connection with
the domestic final rule, above, the Board
believes that the final liquidity
requirements, which are firm-specific in
nature, complement the Basel III LCR,
which is a standard, quantitative
liquidity requirement. The Board
intends through future separate
rulemakings to implement the

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quantitative liquidity standards
included in Basel III for the U.S.
operations of some or all foreign
banking organization with 50 billion or
more in combined U.S. assets.
A number of commenters asserted
that the proposed liquidity requirements
were unnecessary to mitigate risks to the
U.S. financial system posed by the U.S.
operations of foreign banking
organizations. These commenters
contended that existing regulations,
including section 23A of the Federal
Reserve Act, Financial Industry
Regulatory Authority rule 10–57, and
the SEC’s net capital rules already create
an effective framework to mitigate the
liquidity risk of exposures to affiliates.
Although existing requirements may
address aspects of liquidity risks at
certain subsidiaries, the requirements in
the final rule are meant to establish a
framework to address liquidity risk
across a foreign banking organization’s
combined U.S. operations. The existing
regulations cited by the commenters
may be helpful in mitigating risk, but
they do not address liquidity risk across
a foreign banking organization’s entire
U.S. operations.
One commenter requested that the
Board clarify that intercompany
transactions would be netted for
purposes of calculating whether a
foreign banking organization would be
subject to the liquidity standards. In
calculating combined U.S. assets for
determining applicability of these
requirements, the final rule will rely on
‘‘Total combined assets of U.S.
operations, net of intercompany
balances and transactions between U.S.
domiciled affiliates, branches and
agencies’’ as reported on the FR Y–7
form (as of March 31, 2014), which nets
interoffice transactions between U.S.
entities.
The final rule requires a foreign
banking organization with combined
U.S. assets of $50 billion or more to
establish a framework for managing
liquidity risk, engage in independent
review and cash-flow projections,
establish a contingency funding plan
and specific limits, engage in
monitoring, stress test its combined U.S.
operations and its U.S. intermediate
holding company and its U.S. branches
and agencies (if any), and hold certain
liquidity buffers. Each of these elements
of the final rule is discussed below.
2. Framework for Managing Liquidity
Risk
As discussed above in section IV.D of
this preamble, the foreign proposal
would have required foreign banking
organizations with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more and

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combined U.S. assets of $50 billion or
more to establish a U.S. risk committee
to oversee the risk management of the
combined U.S. operations of the
company and to appoint a chief risk
officer to be responsible for
implementing the company’s riskmanagement practices for the combined
U.S. operations. The foreign proposal
would have required the U.S. risk
committee of a foreign banking
organization with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more to oversee the
liquidity risk management processes of
the U.S. operations of the foreign
banking organization, and to review and
approve the liquidity risk management
strategies, policies, and procedures. As
part of these responsibilities, the U.S.
risk committee would have been
required to review and approve the
company’s liquidity risk tolerance for its
U.S. operations at least annually. As
discussed in the preamble to the foreign
proposal, in reviewing the liquidity risk
tolerance of a foreign banking
organization’s U.S. operations, the U.S.
risk committee would have been
required to consider the capital
structure, risk profile, complexity,
activities, and size of the company’s
U.S. operations in order to help ensure
that the established liquidity risk
tolerance is appropriate for the
company’s business strategy with
respect to its U.S. operations and the
role of those operations in the U.S.
financial system. The proposal provided
that the liquidity risk tolerance for the
U.S. operations should be consistent
with the enterprise-wide liquidity risk
tolerance established for the
consolidated organization by the board
of directors or the enterprise-wide risk
committee. The liquidity risk tolerance
should reflect the U.S. risk committee’s
assessment of tradeoffs between the
costs and benefits of liquidity. The
foreign proposal provided that the U.S.
risk committee should communicate the
liquidity risk tolerance to management
within the U.S. operations such that
they understand the U.S. risk
committee’s policy for managing the
trade-offs between the risk of
insufficient liquidity and generating
profit and are able to apply the policy
to liquidity risk management throughout
the U.S. operations.
The foreign proposal would have
required the U.S. chief risk officer to
review and approve the liquidity costs,
benefits, and risk of each significant
new business line and significant new
product of the U.S. operations before the
foreign banking organization
implements the line or offers the
product. At least annually, the U.S.

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chief risk officer would have been
required to review approved significant
business lines and products to
determine whether each line or product
has created any unanticipated liquidity
risk, and to determine whether the
liquidity risk of each line or product
continues to be within the established
liquidity risk tolerance of the U.S.
operations. As discussed below, a
foreign banking organization with
combined U.S. assets of $50 billion or
more would have also been required to
establish a contingency funding plan for
its combined U.S. operations. The U.S.
chief risk officer would have been
required to review and approve the U.S.
operations’ contingency funding plan at
least annually and whenever the
company materially revises the plan
either for the company as a whole or for
the combined U.S. operations
specifically. As part of ongoing liquidity
risk management within the U.S.
operations, the proposal would have
required the U.S. chief risk officer, at
least quarterly, to conduct an
enumerated set of reviews and to
establish procedures governing the
content of reports on the liquidity risk
profile of the combined U.S. operations.
The proposal would have also required
the U.S. chief risk officer to review
strategies and policies for managing
liquidity risk established by senior
managers and regularly report to the
U.S. risk committee.
A few commenters asserted that the
proposed governance provisions were
too limiting and intruded into parallel
governance, risk-management, internal
and supervisory reporting, audit and
independent review, stress-testing, and
IT requirements being imposed by
foreign banking organizations’ home
jurisdictions. While the Board
recognizes that foreign banking
organizations may be subject to parallel
liquidity risk management requirements
in their home countries, the Board
believes that foreign banking
organizations should specifically
manage the liquidity risks of their
combined U.S. operations through a
designated U.S. risk committee and U.S.
chief risk officer. The liquidity risk
management requirements of the final
rule are informed by the liquidity stress
that the U.S. operations of foreign
banking organizations faced during the
recent financial crisis and the risks to
U.S. financial stability that could result
if foreign banking organizations came
under similar stress in the future. As
discussed above, during the recent
crisis, many foreign banking
organizations experienced funding
difficulties in their U.S. operations, and

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the stressed conditions of these
operations posed risks to the U.S.
financial system. The Board believes
that sound liquidity risk management is
vital to ensuring the safety and
soundness of the U.S. operations of a
foreign banking organization and
understands that companies already
employ such practices in order to
monitor and manage liquidity risk for
their U.S. operations.
The Board has adjusted the
responsibilities assigned to the U.S. risk
committee in the final rule in light of
the comments received and in keeping
with the Interagency Liquidity Risk
Policy Statement. The final rule requires
that, rather than the chief risk officer,
the U.S. risk committee or a designated
subcommittee thereof must review the
contingency funding plan of the foreign
banking organization. The U.S. chief
risk officer is required to approve each
new business line and new product and
ensure that the liquidity costs, benefits,
and risks of each new business line and
each new product offered, managed or
sold through the company’s combined
U.S. operations that could have a
significant effect on the company’s
liquidity risk profile are consistent with
the company’s liquidity risk tolerance,
and to review at least annually
significant business lines and products
offered, managed or sold through the
combined U.S. operations to determine
whether such business or product has
anticipated liquidity risk and to confirm
that the strategy or product is within the
established liquidity risk tolerance.
The Board is finalizing the other
requirements assigned to the U.S. chief
risk officer generally as proposed.
3. Independent Review
Under the proposed rule, a foreign
banking organization with combined
U.S. assets of $50 billion or more would
have been required to establish and
maintain an independent review
function to evaluate the liquidity risk
management of its combined U.S.
operations. The review function would
have been independent of management
functions that execute the firm’s
funding strategy (i.e., the corporate
treasury function). The independent
review function would have been
required to review and evaluate the
adequacy and effectiveness of the U.S.
operations’ liquidity risk management
processes regularly, and at least
annually. The independent review
function would also have been required
to assess whether the U.S. operations’
liquidity risk management complies
with applicable laws, regulations,
supervisory guidance, and sound
business practices, and to report

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statutory and regulatory noncompliance
and other material liquidity risk
management issues to the U.S. risk
committee and the enterprise-wide risk
committee (or designated
subcommittee), in writing, for corrective
action. The proposal provided that an
appropriate internal review conducted
by the independent review function
must address all relevant elements of
the liquidity risk management process
for the U.S. operations, including
adherence to the established policies
and procedures, and the adequacy of
liquidity risk identification,
measurement, and reporting processes.
Personnel conducting these reviews
should seek to understand, test,
document, and evaluate the liquidity
risk management processes, and
recommend solutions to any identified
weaknesses.
The Board continues to believe these
requirements are important to a
comprehensive liquidity risk
management framework and is
finalizing the independent review
requirement as proposed.
4. Cash-Flow Projections
To ensure that a foreign banking
organization with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more has a sound
process for identifying and measuring
liquidity risk, the proposed rule would
have required comprehensive cash-flow
projections for the company’s U.S.
operations that include forecasts of cash
flows arising from assets, liabilities, and
off-balance sheet exposures over shortterm and long-term time periods, and
that identify and quantify discrete and
cumulative cash-flow mismatches over
these time periods. The proposed rule
would have required a foreign banking
organization to establish a methodology
for making cash-flow projections for its
U.S. operations; use reasonable
assumptions regarding the future
behavior of assets, liabilities, and offbalance sheet exposures in the
projections; and adequately document
its methodology and assumptions.135
The preamble to the proposal stated that
the Board would expect a company to
use dynamic analysis of cash-flow
projections because static projections
may inadequately quantify important
aspects of potential liquidity risk that
could have a significant effect on the
liquidity risk profile of the U.S.
operations. In addition, the proposal
would have required the U.S. chief risk
135 The projections would have been required to
reflect cash flows arising from contractual
maturities and intercompany transactions, as well
as cash flows from new business, funding renewals,
customer options, and other potential events that
may affect the liquidity of the U.S. operations.

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officer to review cash flow projections at
least quarterly, and the preamble to the
proposal stated that the Board would
expect senior management periodically
to review and approve the assumptions
used in the cash-flow projections for the
U.S. operations to ensure that they are
reasonable and appropriate.
Several commenters objected to the
proposed cash-flow projection
requirements on the basis that other
liquidity controls, such as the liquidity
stress tests, already provide an
indication of potential liquidity issues.
The Board believes that the level of
detail required of cash-flow projections
under the proposal is consistent with
industry standards and that the proposal
allows for significant flexibility by
permitting cash-flow projections to be
commensurate with the risk profile,
complexity, and activities of the U.S.
operations. While cash-flow projections
and stress tests may at times identify a
common element of liquidity exposure,
the two exercises are complementary
tools. Cash-flow projections are most
often prepared under business-as-usual
base case scenarios and are useful for
identifying any funding surpluses or
shortfalls on the horizon, while stress
tests identify funding vulnerabilities
based on adverse market conditions and
play a key role in shaping the
institution’s contingency planning. The
Board is adopting the substance of the
cash-flow projection requirement
without change.
In the proposed rule, the Board
requested comment on whether foreign
banking organizations should be
required to provide statements of cash
flows for all activities conducted in U.S.
dollars, without reference to whether
those activities were conducted through
their U.S. operations. Several
respondents stated generally that any
potential risk would be better addressed
through other means, such as
assessments of the effectiveness of
liquidity risk management (for example,
stress testing, or the contingency
funding plan) conducted by individual
banks on a global basis. One commenter
stated that cash flows associated with
repos involving U.S. government bonds
held by non-U.S. entities should be
exempted from the requirement because
the purpose of such cash flows is
evident. Further, commenters requested
that the Board give due consideration to
the additional burden caused by such
reporting. One commenter was generally
supportive of a requirement to provide
global U.S. dollar cash-flow statements
but only if foreign banking organizations
that provide such data are not required
to hold capital and liquidity buffers in
the United States.

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Though the Board sees value in
foreign banking organizations producing
U.S. dollar cash-flow statements on a
periodic basis to help identify potential
U.S. dollar mismatches, given
considerations cited by commenters,
particularly the estimated resources
required to produce such a report, the
final rule does not require global cashflow statements for activities conducted
in U.S. dollars. However, the Board
continues to consider the issue and may
separately seek comment in the future
on regulatory reporting requirements or
information collections pertaining to a
company’s global U.S. dollar flow
activities.
5. Contingency Funding Plan
As part of comprehensive liquidity
risk management, the proposal would
have required a foreign banking
organization with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more to establish and
maintain a contingency funding plan to
set out the company’s strategies for
addressing liquidity needs during
liquidity stress events. The contingency
funding plan would have been required
to be commensurate with the foreign
banking organization’s capital structure,
risk profile, size, and complexity,
among other characteristics. The
objectives of the contingency funding
plan were to provide a plan for
responding to a liquidity crisis, to
identify alternate liquidity sources that
the U.S. operations can access during
liquidity stress events, and to describe
steps that should be taken to ensure that
the company’s sources of liquidity are
sufficient to fund its operating costs and
meet its commitments while minimizing
additional costs and disruption. Under
the proposed rule, the contingency
funding plan would have included a
quantitative assessment, an eventmanagement process, and procedures
for monitoring emerging liquidity risk
events. In addition, a foreign banking
organization would have been required
to test periodically the components of
its contingency funding plan and to
update the contingency funding plan
annually or more often if necessary.
One commenter asked whether loans
from FHLBs and other similar sources of
funding, or parent support could be
included in the contingency funding
plan. The Board is clarifying in this
preamble that lines of credit may be
included as sources of funds in
contingency funding plans; however,
firms should consider the characteristics
of such funding and how the
counterparties may behave in times of
stress. Similarly, the Board expects that
parent support may be included in the
contingency funding plan, but the

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foreign banking organization must
consider limitations on those funds,
including the probability of
simultaneous stress.
As discussed in the proposal,
discount window credit may be
incorporated into contingency funding
plans as a potential source of funds for
a foreign bank’s U.S. branches and
agencies or subsidiary U.S. insured
depository institutions, in a manner
consistent with terms provided by
Federal Reserve Banks. For example,
primary credit is currently available on
a collateralized basis for financially
sound institutions as a backup source of
funds for short-term funding needs.
Contingency funding plans that
incorporate borrowing from the
discount window should specify the
actions that would be taken to replace
discount window borrowing with more
permanent funding, and include the
proposed time frame for these actions.
The Board is generally adopting the
contingency funding plan requirements
as proposed, with modifications
consistent with the modifications made
to the contingency funding plan
requirements for U.S. bank holding
companies discussed in section III.C of
this preamble. For the reasons discussed
in that section, the focus of the
contingency funding plan requirements
is on the operational aspects of such
sources, which can often be tested via
‘‘table top’’ or ‘‘war room’’ type
exercises; however, the implementation
of the contingency funding plan for a
foreign banking organization should
include periodic liquidation of assets,
including portions of the foreign
banking organization’s liquidity buffer
in certain instances.
Under the proposal, as part of its
event-management process, a foreign
banking organization would have been
required to identify the circumstances
in which it will implement its
contingency funding plan. In order to
maintain consistency with the rule
applicable to bank holding companies,
the final rule clarifies that these
circumstances must include a failure to
meet any minimum liquidity
requirement established by the Board
for the foreign banking organization’s
U.S. operations. Foreign banking
organizations seeking additional detail
on the Board’s general supervisory
expectations for contingency funding
plans should refer to section III.C.5 of
this preamble.
6. Liquidity Risk Limits
To enhance management of liquidity
risk, the proposed rule would have
required a foreign banking organization
with combined U.S. assets of $50 billion

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or more to establish and maintain limits
on potential sources of liquidity risk.
Proposed limitations would have
included limits on: Concentrations of
funding by instrument type, single
counterparty, counterparty type,
secured and unsecured funding, and
other liquidity risk identifiers; the
amount of specified liabilities that
mature within various time horizons;
and off-balance sheet exposures and
other exposures that could create
funding needs during liquidity stress
events. The U.S. operations would also
have been required to monitor intraday
liquidity risk exposure in accordance
with procedures established by the
foreign banking organization.
A foreign banking organization would
additionally have been required to
monitor its compliance with all limits
established and maintained under the
specific limit requirements. The size of
each limit would have been required to
reflect the U.S. operations’ capital
structure, risk profile, complexity,
activities, size, and other appropriate
risk-related factors, and established
liquidity risk tolerance.
One commenter objected to the
establishment of specific limits, stating
that fixed limits could preclude
management from taking reasonable and
necessary actions to remain funded
during times of stress. The Board views
a robust limit structure as an important
tool in a liquidity risk governance
structure and believes that specific
limits would not prevent a firm from
taking necessary actions to manage
through a crisis. The limits set by the
firm must be reflective of the foreign
banking organization’s structure as well
as the risk appetite set by management
and the board of directors. The Board
expects that there are circumstances that
may warrant exceeding a limit
threshold; for limits to be effective they
should be monitored and have
escalation procedures for any breaches
that may include notification of senior
management, the risk committee, and
possibly the Board depending on the
severity and impact of the limit breach.
Therefore the Board is adopting the
limits in the final rule as proposed.
7. Collateral, Legal Entity, and Intraday
Liquidity Risk Monitoring
The proposed rule would have
required a foreign banking organization
with combined U.S. assets of $50 billion
or more to monitor liquidity risk related
to collateral positions of the U.S.
operations, liquidity risks across its U.S.
operations, and intraday liquidity
positions for its combined U.S.
operations. Commenters primarily
objected to the intraday liquidity

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monitoring requirement, stating that
collecting and aggregating relevant
information from all entities under the
U.S. intermediate holding company
would be burdensome. One commenter
stated that if intraday liquidity
monitoring on settlement activities
conducted through a correspondent
bank (a direct participating bank in
settlement) is expected, it would be
impossible unless the correspondent
bank discloses relevant information
(which may require some type of
regulation to enforce). The Board
emphasizes that the final rule contains
an internal monitoring requirement,
which requires foreign banking
organizations to establish and maintain
procedures for monitoring intraday
liquidity risk on the combined U.S.
operations. The Board continues to
believe intraday liquidity monitoring is
an important component of the liquidity
risk management process and therefore
the final rule adopts the monitoring
requirements as proposed.
8. Liquidity Stress Testing
The proposal would have required a
foreign banking organization with
combined U.S. assets of $50 billion or
more to conduct monthly liquidity
stress tests separately for its U.S.
intermediate holding company and its
U.S. branches and agencies. As noted in
the preamble to the proposal, the Board
believes that stress tests conducted by a
foreign banking organization can
identify vulnerabilities; quantify the
depth, source, and degree of potential
liquidity strain in its U.S. operations;
and provide information to analyze how
severely adverse events, conditions, and
outcomes would affect the liquidity risk
of its U.S. branches and agencies and its
U.S. intermediate holding company.
When combined with comprehensive
information about an institution’s
funding position, stress testing can serve
as an important tool for effective
liquidity risk management.
The proposed rule set forth general
parameters for companies’ internal
liquidity stress testing and would have
required each foreign banking
organization to take into account its
own business model and associated
exposure to liquidity risks. The
proposed rule would have required the
stress testing to incorporate a range of
forward-looking stress scenarios that
include, at a minimum, separate stress
scenarios for adverse conditions due to
market stress, idiosyncratic stress, and
combined market and idiosyncratic
stresses. To ensure that a company’s
stress testing for its U.S. operations
contemplated a range of stress events,
the proposed rule would have required

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that the stress scenarios use a minimum
of four time horizons including an
overnight, a 30-day, a 90-day, and a oneyear time horizon.
Many commenters asserted that the
Board should rely on stress tests
performed at the home country or
consolidated level and not separately
impose stress-testing requirements for
the U.S. operations. Several commenters
stated that the proposal’s assumption
that the parent foreign banking
organization would fail to provide
liquidity to the U.S. operations under
stress is unrealistic. These commenters
stated that there is a low likelihood that
a foreign banking organization would
sacrifice major subsidiaries to protect
the parent without failure of the foreign
banking organization as well.
Commenters suggested that the Board
should instead use the supervisory
process to assess resolution plans and
determine if additional protections are
required. One commenter requested
clarification on whether a company may
rely on support from a parent entity or
an affiliate for a time horizon that is
longer than 30 days. Other commenters
expressed the view that the proposal
would be too burdensome.
The Board agrees that liquidity stress
testing at the level of the consolidated
parent provides valuable information
about the organization’s ability to
manage liquidity risk on an enterprisewide basis. The final rule requires the
foreign banking organization parent of a
U.S. intermediate holding company to
make available the results of homecountry liquidity stress testing for Board
review. However, the Board does not
view liquidity stress testing at the
parent as a substitute for stress testing
at the combined U.S. operations. As
explained above, the Board believes that
the U.S. and non-U.S. operations of a
foreign banking organization could face
simultaneous funding pressures, which
could hinder the ability of the foreign
bank parent to provide the necessary
liquidity support to its U.S. operations.
Given that risk, the Board does not
believe it would be appropriate to
modify the proposed requirements to
reflect an assumption that foreign
banking organizations would provide
such liquidity, or to rely solely on the
supervisory process to address
remaining risks. Therefore, as described
further below, for purposes of the stress
test used to calculate the liquidity buffer
requirement for U.S. intermediate
holding companies and U.S. branches
and agencies, internal cash inflows can
only be used to offset internal cash
outflows. However, the Board is
clarifying that in stress tests with time
horizons longer than 30 days, internal

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inflows can be considered to offset both
internal and external outflows. For the
reasons described in section III.C of this
preamble, for stress tests beyond 30
days, a foreign banking organization
may include lines of credit as cash flow
sources, but should fully consider the
constraints associated with those lines
of credit.
Commenters also asserted that
liquidity stress-tests should be tailored
to the foreign banking organization’s
business mix and risk profile. One
commenter encouraged the Board to
clarify that a foreign banking
organization may apply its own models
and assumptions for run-off rates and
haircuts when conducting liquidity
stress tests and when calculating the
liquidity buffer. As discussed above and
further below, the stress testing
requirement is based on internal
models. When conducting liquidity
stress tests and when calculating the
liquidity buffer, each foreign banking
organization, consistent with the rules
applied to domestic institutions, is
required to apply its own models and
assumptions for run-off rates and
haircuts that are appropriate for its
liquidity risks and business model. The
final rule does not require a foreign
banking organization’s U.S. operations
to use standardized models or
assumptions. Accordingly, the liquidity
stress tests are tailored by their nature
to the business mix and risk profile of
the U.S. operations of the foreign
banking organization. In addition,
because the liquidity stress tests
required by the final rule use firmderived stress scenarios, the Board
would expect the stress scenarios to
incorporate historical and hypothetical
scenarios to assess the effect on
liquidity of various events and
circumstances, including variations
thereof. As in the proposed rule, the
final rule requires a company to
incorporate stress scenarios for its U.S.
operations that account for adverse
conditions due to market stress,
idiosyncratic stress, and combined
market and idiosyncratic stresses.
Additional scenarios should be used as
needed to ensure that all of the
significant aspects of liquidity risks to
the relevant U.S. operations have been
modeled. The Board expects foreign
banking organizations to derive their
own assumptions (subject to
supervisory review) as they measure the
potential sources and uses of liquidity
of the U.S. operations under various
stress scenarios, rather than simply
adopt standardized haircuts and runoff
rates of assets and liabilities, such as
those prescribed in the Basel III LCR.

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Under the final rule, and as discussed
above, only those foreign banking
organizations with $50 billion or more
in U.S. non-branch assets will be
required to form a U.S. intermediate
holding company. Accordingly, the final
rule clarifies that stress testing must be
conducted for the combined U.S.
operations (including the U.S.
intermediate holding company, if any,
or the foreign banking organization’s
U.S. subsidiaries, if there is no U.S.
intermediate holding company, and any
U.S. branches and agencies) and
separately for each of the U.S.
intermediate holding company, if any,
and the U.S. branches and agencies of
the foreign bank. The Board generally
expects that any liquid assets and cashflow sources considered for purposes of
the stress tests would be in the same
location and legal entity as the outflows.
In addition to monthly stress testing,
the foreign banking organization would
have been required to conduct more
frequent stress tests, upon the request of
the Board, to address rapidly emerging
risks or consider the effect of sudden
events. The Board could, for example,
require the U.S. operations of a
company to perform additional stress
tests when there has been a significant
deterioration in the company’s earnings,
asset quality, or overall financial
condition; when there are negative
trends or heightened risks associated
with a particular product line of the
U.S. operations; or when there are
increased concerns over the company’s
funding of off-balance sheet exposures
related to U.S. operations. The proposal
further provided that liquidity stress
testing must be tailored to, and provide
sufficient detail to reflect, the capital
structure, risk profile, complexity,
activities, size, and other relevant
characteristics of the U.S. operations.
This tailoring may require analyses by
business line, legal entity, or
jurisdiction, as well as stress scenarios
that use more time horizons than the
minimum required under the final rule.
The Board is finalizing these
requirements generally as proposed,
with clarifications to the proposed
standards that are consistent with the
clarifications to the liquidity stress
testing requirements for U.S. bank
holding companies.
To account for deteriorations in asset
valuations when there is market stress,
the proposed rule would have required
the foreign banking organization to
discount the fair value of an asset that
is used as a cash flow source to offset
projected funding needs in order to
reflect any credit risk and market price
volatility of the asset. The proposed rule
would have also required that sources of

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funding used to generate cash to offset
projected outflows be diversified by
collateral, counterparty, or lender (in
the case of stress tests longer than 30
days for the U.S. intermediate holding
company or 14 days for the U.S. branch
and agency), or other factors associated
with the liquidity risk of the assets
throughout each stress test planning
horizon. Thus, if a foreign banking
organization’s U.S. operations held high
quality assets other than cash and
securities issued or guaranteed by the
U.S. government, a U.S. government
agency, or a U.S. government-sponsored
enterprise to meet future outflows, the
assets must be diversified by collateral
and counterparty and other liquidity
risk identifiers. The Board is finalizing
the substance of these requirements as
proposed.
The proposed rule would have
required that the U.S. operations of a
foreign banking organization maintain
policies and procedures that outline
those operations’ liquidity stress testing
practices, methodologies, and
assumptions, and provide for the
enhancement of stress testing practices
as risks change and as techniques
evolve. The proposal would have
required the foreign banking
organization to have an effective system
of controls and oversight over the stress
test function. The final rule maintains
these requirements generally as
proposed.
The proposal would also have
required the company to provide to the
Board the results of its stress test for
U.S. operations on a monthly basis
within 14 days of the end of each
month. Foreign banking organizations
also would have been required to
provide to the Board a summary of the
results of any liquidity stress test and
liquidity buffers established by their
home country regulators, on a quarterly
basis and within 14 days of completion
of the stress test. Several commenters
took issue with the requirement that
reports be provided within 14 days of
completing the stress tests, stating that
the requirement would present
challenges for foreign banking
organizations, and requesting a longer
timeframe. To reduce reporting burden,
in the final rule, the Board has revised
the reporting requirement to require that
the results of liquidity stress testing
must be made available to the Board in
a timely manner, rather than requiring
that the results be reported within 14
days.
9. Liquidity Buffer
The proposal would have required a
foreign banking organization to hold
separate liquidity buffers for its U.S.

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17295

branches and agencies and its U.S.
intermediate holding company, if any,
that are equal to their respective net
stressed cash-flow needs as identified
by the required stress tests. The
proposal provided that each calculation
of the net stressed cash-flow need
described below would need to be
performed for the U.S. branches and
agencies and U.S. intermediate holding
company separately. These calculations
assess the stressed cash-flow need both
with respect to intragroup transactions
and transactions with unaffiliated
parties to quantify the liquidity
vulnerabilities of the U.S. operations
during the 30-day stress horizon. As
discussed below, the Board has
modified some provisions of the
proposed requirements in the final rule
in response to comments. Notably, the
final rule only requires U.S. branches
and agencies to maintain a liquidity
buffer for days 1 through 14 of a 30-day
stress scenario.
a. General Comments on the Liquidity
Buffer
Several commenters argued that the
proposed requirement to hold liquid
assets in the United States would cause
foreign banking organizations subject to
the rule to incur costs that would reduce
the amount of financing available for
long-term lending, and argued that the
proposal could negatively affect U.S.
wholesale investors by driving demand
for wholesale funding away from the
United States or to riskier sources of
financing. Commenters also stated that
the requirement to maintain the
liquidity buffer in the United States to
cover potential outflows in the United
States would create inefficiencies and
operational risks, and could cause many
foreign banking organizations to
reconsider and possibly reduce their
U.S. operations. Commenters argued
that the proposal could reduce credit
availability by disrupting cross-border
funding and hedging of international
transactions, and increasing reliance on
local funding. One commenter asserted
that it would be more appropriate to
tailor the liquidity buffer to the
individual institution’s stress situation.
According to commenters, an
individually tailored liquidity buffer,
which may be larger or smaller than any
predefined liquidity buffer, would
provide greater flexibility to regulators
than a ‘‘one-size-fits-all’’ approach and
result in a more efficient use of liquidity
under non-stressed circumstances.
Some commenters stated that the buffer
should be tailored at the time that early
remediation is invoked.
For the reasons described above in
section IV.B.3 of this preamble

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regarding the U.S. intermediate holding
company, the Board does not think that
a case-by-case determination for
applying the enhanced prudential
standards to foreign banking
organizations is appropriate. The final
rule allows an institution to tailor the
liquidity buffer according to the
institution’s individual liquidity risk
profile. The Board believes that it is
appropriate to have a minimum highly
liquid asset buffer to offset outflows
over the first 30 days for the U.S.
intermediate holding company and the
first 14 days for the U.S. branch or
agency to ensure that the U.S.
operations can withstand a short period
of severe liquidity stress. The Board also
believes that it is not appropriate to
expect firms to be able to build a buffer
just prior to or during a stress event to
respond to the causes and consequences
of the stressed liquidity conditions. The
liquidity buffer is designed so that the
firm will have pre-positioned assets that
can be used in a time of stress to offset
outflows. The liquidity buffer is
calculated based on the firm’s liquidity
stress-test results, and the stress test
reflects a firm’s capital structure, risk
profile, complexity, activities, size and
other relevant characteristics of the U.S.
operations. This buffer should give the
firm more flexibility in a crisis and the
pre-positioning of liquidity should give
market participants more comfort in a
firm’s ability to meet short-term
obligations during a crisis.
Several commenters asserted that the
proposed liquidity requirements would
increase foreign banking organizations’
overall consolidated liquidity
requirement, resulting in a larger overall
consolidated liquidity buffer. The
primary goal of the proposal and the
final rule is to ensure that firms have
adequate liquidity buffers in the United
States to offset net cash outflows
associated with short-term U.S.
liabilities. As a general matter, the
Board does not believe the final rule
will result in a substantially higher
consolidated liquidity requirement
since the requirements included in the
final rule require liquid assets to be
maintained in the U.S. to offset
potential funding vulnerabilities in the
U.S. and the liquidity maintained in the
United States will often count toward
the foreign banking organization’s
consolidated requirement. However, the
Board acknowledges that the final rule
may result in a larger liquidity buffer
requirement in certain cases, such as
where previously unidentified areas of
risk are measured in a more thorough
manner as a result of the new
requirements.

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The Board also believes that requiring
firms to maintain a liquidity buffer in
the United States to cover potential
liquidity needs is consistent with global
liquidity monitoring and management of
liquidity risk. The Basel Committee
principles for liquidity risk management
indicate that firms should actively
monitor and control liquidity risks at
the level of individual legal entities and
foreign subsidiaries as well as the
consolidated group. As many
commenters noted, the Board’s proposal
is generally consistent with liquidity
standards currently in place in other
jurisdictions, including the United
Kingdom, to address similar concerns
with the operations of banks foreign to
those jurisdictions.
One commenter suggested that the
proposed buffer requirements were not
strong enough, noting that during the
2007–2008 financial crisis several
foreign banking organizations borrowed
heavily from the Federal Reserve for
more than one year to deal with their
liquidity stress, and urged the Board to
require a buffer for more than 30 days.
The Board believes that a 30-day
liquidity buffer balances the need to
ensure adequate liquidity in individual
companies, on the one hand, against the
availability of adequate liquidity in the
market generally, on the other, and will
help to provide an institution that is
under stress with the required flexibility
to meet its most important funding
obligations. The Board nonetheless
recognizes the importance of
maintaining liquidity for time periods
both longer and shorter than 30 days
and, as such, is requiring that
companies conduct stress tests over a
minimum of four time horizons,
including a one-year horizon. Consistent
with the final rule for bank holding
companies, the final rule clarifies that
the minimum liquidity buffer must be
sufficient to meet the projected net
stressed cash flow need over the 30-day
planning horizon of a liquidity stress
test that incorporates an adverse market
condition scenario, an idiosyncratic
stress event scenario, and a combined
market and idiosyncratic stresses
scenario. The Board expects, however,
that a foreign banking organization will
consider the results of its stress tests to
determine the appropriate time period
for which to hold a liquidity buffer. The
Board will continue to monitor liquidity
at individual companies and in the
market generally.
b. Calculation of Net Stressed CashFlow Need
The proposed rule provided that the
net stressed cash-flow need, calculated
for each of the U.S. intermediate

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holding company, if any, and the U.S.
branches and agencies, would be equal
to the sum of (1) the net external
stressed cash-flow need and (2) the net
intragroup stressed cash-flow need. The
calculation of external and intragroup
stressed cash-flow needs is conducted
separately in order to provide different
treatment for these two sets of cash
flows when determining the liquidity
buffer needs of the U.S. operations. The
proposal would have treated these cash
flows differently in order to address the
risk that internal cash-flow sources may
not be available in times of stress.
Specifically, the proposed methodology
would have permitted internal cashflow sources of the U.S. branches and
agencies or U.S. intermediate holding
company to offset internal cash-flow
needs of the U.S. branches and agencies
or U.S. intermediate holding company
only to the extent that the term of the
internal cash-flow source is the same as,
or shorter than, the term of the internal
cash-flow need. These assumptions
reflect the risk that under stressed
circumstances, the U.S. operations, the
head office, and other affiliated
counterparties may come under stress
simultaneously. Under such a scenario,
the head office may be unable or
unwilling to return funds to the U.S.
branches and agencies of the foreign
bank or the U.S. intermediate holding
company when those funds are most
needed.
Under the proposal, the net external
stressed cash-flow need was defined as
the difference between (1) the amount
that the U.S. branches and agencies or
the U.S. intermediate holding company,
respectively, must pay unaffiliated
parties over the relevant period in the
stress test horizon and (2) the amount
that unaffiliated parties must pay the
U.S. branches and agencies or the U.S.
intermediate holding company,
respectively, over the relevant period in
the stress test horizon.
The net intragroup stressed cash-flow
need was defined as the greatest daily
cumulative cash-flow need of the U.S.
branches and agencies or a U.S.
intermediate holding company,
respectively, with respect to
transactions with the head office and
other affiliated parties during the stress
horizon. The daily cumulative cash-flow
need was calculated as the sum of the
net intragroup cash-flow need
calculated for that day and the net
intragroup cash-flow need calculated for
each previous day of the stress test
horizon. The methodology used to
calculate the net intragroup stressed
cash-flow need was designed to provide
a foreign banking organization with an
incentive to minimize maturity

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17297

mismatches in transactions between the
U.S. branches and agencies or U.S.
intermediate holding company, on the

one hand, and the company’s head
office or affiliates, on the other hand.

Figure 1 below illustrates the steps
required to calculate the components of
the liquidity buffer.

Tables 3, 4, and 5, below, set forth an
example of a calculation of net stressed
cash-flow need as required under the
proposal, using a stress period of five

days. For simplification, the cash flows
relate to uncollateralized positions. For
purposes of the example, cash-flow
needs are represented as negative, and

cash-flow sources are represented as
positive.

TABLE 3—EXAMPLE OF NET EXTERNAL STRESSED CASH-FLOW NEED
Day 1

Day 3

Day 4

Day 5

Period total

5

5

6

6

6

28

Total non-affiliate cash-flow
sources ...................................
Non-affiliate cash-flow needs:
Maturing wholesale funding/deposits

5

5

6

6

6

28

(12)

(8)

(8)

(7)

(7)

(42)

Total non-affiliate cash-flow
needs .....................................
Net external stressed cash-flow need .....

(12)
(7)

(8)
(3)

(8)
(2)

(7)
(1)

(7)
(1)

(42)
(14)

TABLE 4—EXAMPLE OF NET INTRAGROUP STRESSED CASH-FLOW NEED
Day 1
Affiliate cash-flow sources:
Maturing loans to parent ...................

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Day 2

2

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3

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1

10

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Non-affiliate cash-flow sources:
Maturing
loans/placements
with
other firms .....................................

Day 2

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TABLE 4—EXAMPLE OF NET INTRAGROUP STRESSED CASH-FLOW NEED—Continued
Day 1

Day 2

Day 3

Day 4

Period total

Maturing loans to non-U.S. entities ..

0

0

1

1

2

4

Total affiliate cash-flow sources
Affiliate cash-flow needs:
Maturing funding from parent ...........
Maturing deposit from non-U.S. entities .................................................

2

2

4

3

3

14

0

(4)

(10)

0

0

(14)

(1)

(1)

(1)

0

0

(3)

(1)
1
1

(5)
(3)
(2)

(11)
(7)
(9)

0
3
(6)

0
3
(3)

(17)
(3)
........................

........................

(2)

(9)

(6)

(3)

........................

........................
........................

........................
........................

(9)
(9)

........................
........................

........................
........................

........................
(9)

Total affiliate cash-flow needs ...
Net intragroup cash-flows ........................
Daily cumulative net intragroup cash-flow
Daily cumulative net intragroup cash-flow
need ......................................................
Greatest daily cumulative net intragroup
cash-flow need .....................................
Net intragroup stressed cash-flow need ..

TABLE 5—EXAMPLE OF NET STRESSED determining inter-company cash flow
needs the Board believes it is critical to
CASH-FLOW NEED CALCULATION

allow foreign banking organizations to
count inflows to meet its internal
stressed cash-flow needs only to the
extent that the term of an internal cashNet external stressed cash-flow
flow source is the same as, or shorter
need ..............................................
(14)
than, the term of the internal cash-flow
Net intragroup stressed cash-flow
need ..............................................
(9) need. This ensures that, to the extent the
foreign banking organization is reliant
on intercompany inflows to offset
Total net stressed cash-flow need
calculation ..................................
(23) intercompany outflows, they are
Liquidity buffer ..................................
23 scheduled to occur at the same time or
before the outflows, limiting maturity
Many commenters provided views on mismatch for internal cash flows. The
the proposal’s approach to intragroup
concept of maturity matching ensures
cash flows. For instance, some
that firms with outflows at the
commenters asserted that intragroup
beginning of the period cannot for
cash flows should be available to offset
purposes of the final rule recognize
external cash-flow needs unless the
inflows that will occur at the end of the
Board has significant, specific reasons to stressed period to meet those outflows.
believe that the intragroup cash flows
One commenter expressed the view
would not be available under stressed
that the bifurcated treatment of internal
conditions. Several commenters argued
and external flows would interfere with
that, at minimum, some internal
the ordinary course of financial
funding sources should be allowed to
intermediation between affiliates,
offset external outflows, and that the
specifically for foreign banking
appropriate level could be tailored to
organizations that use their U.S.
the company or situation, depending
operations to perform U.S. dollar-based
upon the level of resources available
activities for other non-U.S. members of
and parent strength.
their corporate group. For example, a
The Board believes that it is
foreign banking organization might use
appropriate to limit the extent to which
a single U.S. corporate affiliate to
internal inflows may offset external
conduct certain transactions, such as
outflows within the 30-day period. As
clearing, hedging, or cash management,
shown during the recent financial crisis, on behalf of other non-U.S. affiliates,
a foreign banking organization and its
with the U.S. subsidiary receiving
U.S. operations could come under
funding from its non-U.S. parent to fund
simultaneous liquidity stress, limiting
activity with an external counterparty,
the ability of the foreign banking
such as a U.S. central counterparty or
organization to provide support to its
other clearing and settlement system.
U.S. operations. Additionally, during
Though the Board recognizes that the
times of stress, unforeseen impediments rule could alter the manner in which
may arise that do not allow the timely
some of the services that U.S. operations
repayment of intercompany loans.
have routinely provided for the global
Accordingly, the final rule does not
entity are delivered, the Board also
allow internal inflows to offset external
notes that a U.S. subsidiary or branch
cash flow needs of a foreign banking
that acts as an intermediary for a nonorganization. Additionally, when
U.S. affiliate or office of the foreign bank
Period
total

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parent is subject to liquidity risk with
respect to the non-U.S. affiliate or other
office of the foreign bank parent. To the
extent the non-U.S. affiliate or office of
the foreign bank parent booking the
transaction experiences liquidity stress
and is unable to return the funding to
the U.S. subsidiary or branch, the U.S.
subsidiary or branch would need to
raise the required funds on its own,
placing a strain on the U.S. entity.
Several commenters also raised a
concern about securities financing
transactions, whereby a foreign banking
organization would use its U.S.
subsidiaries or branches to provide
access to the U.S. financing markets by
engaging in matched back-to-back repo,
reverse repo and other securities
lending and borrowing transactions.
One commenter argued that although
these transactions present almost no risk
to the intermediate entity, which would
book two matched, collateralized
obligations, the methodology of
calculating internal and external
liquidity buffers would prevent the cash
due from the affiliate from offsetting the
U.S. entity’s external cash-flow need.
The Board believes the proposed
liquidity buffer calculation
appropriately addresses the risks
associated with the types of back-toback financing arrangements
commenters describe. For example, if a
U.S. subsidiary or branch has assumed
that the inflows from a maturing reverse
repo with the head office can be used to
offset the outflows associated with a
maturing repo with an external
counterparty, the failure of the head
office to fulfill its obligation could
create an incremental liquidity need on
the part of the U.S. subsidiary or branch.
Therefore, the Board believes it is
appropriate to require the U.S.
subsidiary or branch to hold an amount
of highly liquid assets against this risk
based on stress-test results. The amount

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of highly liquid assets may, among other
things, reflect the types of collateral
involved in the back-to-back
transactions and the identity and type of
counterparties. Notably, the leg of the
transaction between the U.S. subsidiary
or branch and the head office generally
would not be reflected in the net
internal cash-flow calculation of the
U.S. subsidiary or branch if it is secured
by highly liquid assets, as net internal
cash-flow calculations would exclude
internal cash-flow sources and internal
cash-flow needs that are secured by
such assets.
One commenter requested that the
final rule clarify that excess liquidity
above and beyond stress requirements at
an entity held by the U.S. intermediate
holding company (such as a brokerdealer) should be available to offset net
cash outflows of subsidiaries of the U.S.
intermediate holding company. Nothing
in the rule would prevent a foreign
banking organization from using any
liquidity that is held at a subsidiary of
the U.S. intermediate holding company
to offset potential outflows elsewhere
within the U.S. intermediate holding
company structure, to the extent that
those funds are freely available to the
U.S. intermediate holding company.
Many commenters contended that the
final rule should allow U.S.
intermediate holding companies to
deposit cash portions of their liquidity
buffer with affiliated branches or U.S.
agencies. One commenter requested that
if an organization could not deposit
funds at an affiliated branch or agency
they should be able to maintain their
buffer at the Federal Reserve. In these
commenters’ views, the Board has
ample supervisory authority to prevent
evasion or misuse of those accounts.
While the final rule would allow a U.S.
intermediate holding company to
maintain its liquidity buffer at a
subsidiary of the U.S. intermediate
holding company, allowing the U.S.
intermediate holding company to
maintain its liquidity buffer at the
foreign banking organization’s U.S.
branches or agencies is at odds with the
requirement that external outflows not
be offset with internal inflows. If a U.S.
intermediate holding company were
permitted to maintain its liquidity
buffer at the foreign banking
organization’s U.S. branches or agencies
and the U.S. intermediate holding
company needed to use assets in that
buffer to cover outflows during a stress
event, that action could exacerbate
funding problems at the U.S. branches
or agencies at a point in time when it
is already likely to be facing liquidity
stress. Thus, the final rule adopts this
aspect of the proposal without change.

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Organizations that have affiliates within
the U.S. intermediate holding company
with access to the Federal Reserve can
maintain portions of their buffers at the
Federal Reserve; however, for those U.S.
intermediate holding companies that do
not have access to the Federal Reserve,
the Board believes there are sufficient
eligible assets for the U.S. intermediate
holding company to invest in to
maintain an appropriate buffer.
The proposal also would have
required the U.S. intermediate holding
company and the U.S. branches and
agencies of a foreign bank to maintain
the liquidity buffer in the United States.
One commenter requested that
maintenance of the buffer in the United
States should mean that the U.S.
intermediate holding company or the
U.S. branches and agencies have the
power of disposition. The Board is
clarifying that maintenance of assets in
the U.S. means that the assets should be
reflected on the balance sheet of the
U.S. intermediate holding company or
the U.S. branches or agency. As noted
below, the Board anticipates that highquality liquid assets under the proposed
U.S. LCR would generally be liquid
under most scenarios. The Board
acknowledges there may be highly
liquid assets that trade on secondary
markets and that in order for the U.S.
operations of the foreign banking
organization to own the assets, the
assets must be maintained in an offshore
custodial account. The Board further
clarifies that cash held in deposits at
other banks is a loan and therefore an
inflow, not an asset that may be counted
in the buffer. For the reasons stated
above, the Board is finalizing the
substance of these requirements as
proposed. In the final rule, the Board
has separated the calculations of the net
stressed cash flow need for U.S.
intermediate holding companies and for
U.S. branches and agencies for
readability.
The proposal also sought comment on
three alternative approaches to address
intragroup transactions in determining
the size of the required U.S. liquidity
buffer: (1) Assume that any cash flows
expected to be received by U.S.
operations from the head office or
affiliates are received one day after the
scheduled maturity date; (2) allow the
U.S. operations to net all intragroup
cash-flow needs and sources over the
entire stress period, regardless of the
maturities within the stress horizon, but
apply a 50 percent haircut to all
intragroup cash-flow sources within the
stress horizon; or (3) assume that all
intragroup cash-flow needs during the
relevant stress period mature and rolloff at a 100 percent rate and that all

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intragroup cash-flow sources within the
relevant stress period are not received
(that is, they could not be used to offset
cash-flow needs).
Commenters requested that the Board
not adopt any of these alternative
approaches, raising a number of
concerns about the technical challenges
they might pose. The final rule does not
adopt these alternative proposals. The
Board believes it will be in a better
position to assess the need for
additional measures to address
intragroup transactions, as well as the
potential impact of such measures on
firms, after the requirements contained
in the final rule are implemented. The
Board also expects that the intraday
monitoring required in the final rule
will capture intraday liquidity risk
(internally and externally) and prompt
mitigating action when necessary.
Therefore, the Board is not adopting
these alternative approaches as part of
the final rule.
c. National Treatment
Several commenters argued that the
limitations on recognizing intragroup
cash flow sources unfairly affect foreign
banking organizations, and therefore,
the Board did not give adequate regard
to national treatment in designing the
standards. These commenters argued
that because U.S. bank holding
companies are permitted to rely on
global sources of liquidity to meet
liquidity needs identified by their
internal stress tests, the proposed
requirements placed a more substantial
burden on foreign banking
organizations.
Under the foreign proposal, foreign
banking organizations would not have
been permitted to assume that liquid
assets held at the consolidated level will
be available to offset potential U.S.
outflows during the first 30 days of a
stress scenario. The domestic proposal,
however, would have allowed U.S. bank
holding companies to take into account
highly liquid assets that they held in
foreign jurisdictions, while requiring
them to recognize foreign outflows, with
the expectation that local liquidity
requirements must be met before an
asset will be considered a liquidity
source to meet U.S. obligations.
The liquidity requirements applied to
foreign banking organizations treat
intragroup flows differently than the
requirements applied to U.S. bank
holding companies in recognition of the
structural differences between U.S. and
foreign banking organizations.
Simultaneous funding pressures at the
U.S. and non-U.S. operations of the
foreign banking organization could
hinder the ability of the foreign bank

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parent to provide the necessary liquidity
support to its U.S. operations. As
explained above, the Board believes that
it is important for a foreign banking
organization to maintain liquidity in the
United States to support its U.S.
operations.
While the same stresses could affect a
U.S. bank holding company, through the
supervisory process, the Board has and
will continue to ensure that U.S. bank
holding companies maintain sufficient
liquid assets to offset potential outflows.
The Board observes that the proposed
rules are only one aspect of the
enhanced liquidity framework
applicable to U.S. bank holding
companies and foreign companies, and
that the Board will continue to give due
regard to national treatment in
implementing section 165.
d. Buffers for the U.S. Branches and
Agencies of a Foreign Bank
Under the proposal, a U.S.
intermediate holding company and the
U.S. branches and agencies of a foreign
banking organization would have been
required to maintain a liquidity buffer
equal to their respective net stressed
cash-flow need over a 30-day stress
horizon. The proposal would have
required the U.S. intermediate holding
company to maintain the entire 30-day
buffer in the United States. In
recognition that U.S. branches and
agencies are not separate legal entities
from their parent foreign bank and can
engage only in banking activities by the
terms of their licenses, the proposal
would have required the U.S. branches
and agencies to maintain days 1 through
14 of their 30-day liquidity buffer in the
United States, and permitted the
remaining requirement to be held at the
consolidated level.
Many commenters stated that there
should be no separate buffer
requirement for U.S. branches and
agencies. These commenters argued that
a foreign banking organization could
calculate its liquidity according to home
country regulatory rules and should not
be required to specifically hold liquidity
in its U.S. branches (for example, it
could continue to manage its liquidity
on a consolidated basis according to its
global liquidity management model).
One commenter observed that liabilities
are generally due and payable at the
head office as well as the branch. One
commenter approved of the Board’s
approach of matching liquidity risk and
the liquidity buffer across the U.S.
branches and agencies rather than on an
individual branch basis.
As discussed in the proposal, the
Board proposed the U.S. branch and
agency liquidity requirements in order

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to address the risks created by reliance
on short-term funding by U.S. branches
and agencies. U.S. branches and
agencies exhibited many of the same
funding vulnerabilities during the crisis
as other foreign banking entities. As a
result, the Board generally is finalizing
the requirement for U.S. branches and
agencies as proposed. However, to
reduce the burden on the foreign
banking organization, the final rule does
not require that U.S. branches and
agencies maintain a buffer for days 15
through 30 of the 30-day stress
scenario.136 This recognizes the unique
legal structure of branches and agencies
and addresses the fact that buffer assets
located outside of the U.S. may not be
isolated on the parent organization’s
balance sheet. The Board believes that a
buffer maintained outside of the U.S.
may be a part of the organization’s
global liquidity risk management
strategy. The Board expects, however,
that foreign banking organizations
would hold additional liquidity
resources, either at the home office or in
the United States, to protect against
longer periods of funding pressure at
their U.S. branches and agencies.
7. Composition of the Liquidity Buffer
The liquidity buffer under the foreign
proposal would have been required to
be composed of unencumbered highly
liquid assets. The proposed definition of
highly liquid assets included cash and
securities issued or guaranteed by the
U.S. government, a U.S. government
agency, or a U.S. government-sponsored
enterprise because these securities have
remained liquid even during prolonged
periods of severe liquidity stress. In
addition, recognizing that other assets
could also be highly liquid, the
proposed definition included a
provision that would allow a foreign
banking organization to include other
types of assets in the foreign banking
organization’s U.S. liquidity buffer if the
foreign banking organization
demonstrated to the satisfaction of the
Federal Reserve that those assets: (i)
Have low credit and market risk; (ii) are
traded in an active secondary two-way
market that has observable market
prices, committed market makers, a
large number of market participants,
and a high trading volume; and (iii) are
types of assets that investors historically
136 The final rule clarifies that for U.S. branches
and agencies, the minimum liquidity buffer must be
sufficient to meet the first 14 days of the projected
net stressed cash flow need over the 30-day
planning horizon of a liquidity stress test that
incorporates an adverse market condition scenario,
an idiosyncratic stress event scenario, and a
combined market and idiosyncratic stresses
scenario.

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have purchased in periods of financial
market distress during which liquidity
is impaired. Several commenters
requested that the definition of ‘‘highly
liquid assets’’ eligible for inclusion in a
covered foreign banking organization’s
liquidity buffer be expanded to include
high quality foreign sovereign debt, all
assets eligible for inclusion in the Basel
III LCR buffer under the Basel
Committee standard, and collateral
eligible to be pledged at the discount
window. One commenter stated that the
proposed definition would be unduly
narrow and that the Board should
‘‘preapprove’’ additional classes of
assets in its final rule to provide
certainty. Another commenter indicated
that high quality securities issued by
sovereigns are used extensively as
collateral and their exclusion could
disrupt the market for non-U.S.
sovereign debt and increase systemic
risk. One commenter stated that the
Board should publish guidelines for
qualifying assets and clarify the
standards it would apply to reject an
asset, and that these guidelines should
be the same as those followed by U.S.
domestic bank holding companies.
One commenter requested
confirmation from the Board that G–7
sovereign debt securities held in the
United States by a foreign banking
organization’s branches and agencies
would be eligible to meet the buffer
requirement for the first 14 days.
Additionally, this commenter requested
confirmation from the Board that G–7
sovereign debt that is pledged as
collateral with Federal Reserve banks
would be eligible for meeting the first 14
days of the branch liquidity buffer
requirement. One commenter asserted
that preapproving U.S. sovereign debt
but not debt of other sovereigns may
provide U.S. bank holding companies
with an advantage relative to a foreign
banking organization. For the reasons
discussed in connection with the
domestic rule in section III.C.9 of this
preamble, the final rule does not
specifically enumerate assets other than
securities issued or guaranteed by the
United States, a U.S. government
agency, or a U.S. government-sponsored
enterprise, or eliminate any assets from
consideration for inclusion as highly
liquid assets, although, consistent with
the domestic final rule, the Board
anticipates that high-quality liquid
assets under the proposed U.S. LCR will
qualify as highly liquid assets for
purposes of the buffer.
The proposal also provided that
highly liquid assets in the liquidity
buffer must be unencumbered and thus
readily available at all times to meet a
foreign banking organization’s liquidity

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needs. The proposal would have
defined unencumbered, with respect to
an asset, to mean that: (i) The asset is
not pledged, does not secure,
collateralize, or provide credit
enhancement to any transaction, and is
not subject to any lien; (ii) the asset is
free of legal, contractual, or other
restrictions on the ability of the
company to sell or transfer; and (iii) the
asset is not designated as a hedge on a
trading position. Commenters requested
clarification as to whether assets used to
hedge positions would be treated as
unencumbered. For the reasons
described above in section III.C.9 of this
preamble, the final rule’s definition of
‘‘unencumbered’’ has been modified.
Several commenters requested
clarification on how to account for
reverse repo transactions in the buffer,
particularly those secured by highly
liquid assets, and how the tenor of the
agreement would play a role in the
availability of the asset in a company’s
highly liquid asset calculation. The
Board has addressed these concepts in
section III.C.9 of this preamble in
connection with the final rule.
One commenter requested
clarification as to whether assets held to
satisfy the OCC’s Capital Equivalency
Deposit requirement or state law assetpledge requirements would be
considered ‘‘encumbered’’ and thus, not
eligible for inclusion in the proposed
liquidity buffer. For example, a
federally-licensed branch must maintain
deposits generally equivalent to 5
percent of the branch’s total third-party
liabilities in one or more accounts with
unaffiliated banks in the state where the
branch is located. The commenter
objected to considering such assets
encumbered, as the encumbrance of
those assets is the result of unique bank
regulatory and supervisory requirements
and therefore, in the commenter’s view,
these assets should not be viewed as
privately pledged or encumbered.
Under the final rule, consistent with
the proposal, the Board observes that for
assets to be considered highly liquid
assets, they must be available for use in
the event of a liquidity stress to mitigate
cash outflows. Assets required to be
pledged to other entities or maintained
in segregated accounts due to regulatory
requirements may not be available for
use in a stress scenario and thus, should
not be characterized as highly liquid
assets. Should this regulatory
requirement be certain to be lowered in
a prescribed stressed environment, the
firm could include the portion of highly
liquid assets that would be made
available when simulating such a
scenario.

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Several commenters recommended
that the Board permit a foreign banking
organization to hold its liquidity buffer
in multiple currencies, and asserted that
restricting eligible currencies to only
U.S. dollars was unnecessary and
inappropriate, as well as inconsistent
with the Basel III LCR and home
country definitions of highly liquid
assets. The commenter argued that
diversification provided by a mixedcurrency liquidity buffer would be
beneficial, and asserted that many U.S.
branches and subsidiaries have both
U.S. dollar and non-U.S.-dollar
liabilities. The commenter also argued
that if a branch or intermediate holding
company’s liquidity risk is denominated
in another currency, the buffer for that
risk should be permitted to be in that
other currency.
The final rule, like the proposal, does
not disqualify foreign-currencydenominated assets from inclusion in
the buffer. However, currency matching
of projected cash inflows and outflows
is an important aspect of liquidity risk
management that should be monitored
on a regular basis and accounted for in
the composition of a foreign banking
organization’s liquidity buffer. Stress
testing should consider vulnerabilities
associated with currency mismatches of
highly liquid assets to potential
outflows. When determining
appropriate haircuts for buffer assets,
currency mismatches should be
considered as well as potential frictions
associated with currency conversions in
certain stress scenarios. In order to
ensure robust buffer composition, the
proposed rule would also have required
a foreign banking organization to
impose a discount to the fair value of an
asset included in the liquidity buffer to
reflect any credit risk and market
volatility of the asset. In addition, the
proposed rule would have required the
pool of unencumbered highly liquid
assets to be sufficiently diversified. The
final rule adopts these provisions as
proposed.
Several commenters requested that
the Board clarify when assets in the
liquidity buffers could be used to meet
liquidity needs and the potential
consequences if such use led to a buffer
smaller than the net outflows as
measured by the stress test. One
commenter urged the Board to align the
final rule with certain components of
the Basel III LCR that allow firms to use
their liquidity buffers in a ‘‘situation of
financial stress’’ and provide guidelines
for how banking regulators should
evaluate a firm’s use of its branches’
liquidity buffer. The Board describes the
appropriate parameters for the use of the
buffer in response to similar comments

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on the domestic proposal in section
III.C.9 of this preamble.
10. Liquidity Requirements for Foreign
Banking Organizations With Total
Consolidated Assets of $50 Billion or
More and Combined U.S. Assets of Less
Than $50 Billion
Under the proposal, a foreign banking
organization with $50 billion or more in
total consolidated assets and combined
U.S. assets of less than $50 billion
would have been required to report to
the Board on an annual basis the results
of an internal liquidity stress test for
either the consolidated operations of the
company or its combined U.S.
operations only, conducted consistently
with the Basel Committee principles for
liquidity risk management 137 and
incorporating 30-day, 90-day, and oneyear stress test horizons. A company
that does not comply with this
requirement must cause its combined
U.S. operations to remain in a net due
to funding position or a net due from
funding position with non-U.S.
affiliated entities equal to no more than
25 percent of the third-party liabilities
of its combined U.S. operations on a
daily basis. One commenter asserted
that, in the absence of effective
management and exit strategies from the
due from position, this level was too
high, and that a lower percentage or
permitting a due to position would be
appropriate. The Board proposed the net
due from limitation as a precautionary
measure, because in the event that the
foreign banking organization does not
provide the results of an internal
liquidity stress test report, the Board
would have difficulty in assessing the
liquidity risk position and management
of the foreign banking organization. The
Board notes that this requirement
applies only when a foreign banking
organization with over $50 billion in
total consolidated assets but combined
U.S. assets of less than $50 billion is
unable to report to the Board on an
annual basis the results of an internal
liquidity stress test for either the
consolidated operations of the company
or its combined U.S. operations,
conducted consistently with the Basel
Committee principles for liquidity risk
management. The Board believes that
these restrictions are appropriate for a
company that is unable to make such a
report, and is finalizing these standards
as proposed.
11. Short-Term Debt Limits
The Board noted in the preamble to
the proposed rule that the Dodd-Frank
137 Basel Committee principles for liquidity risk
management, supra note 47.

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Act contemplated additional enhanced
prudential standards, including a limit
on short-term debt, and requested
comment on whether it should establish
short term debt limits in addition to, or
in place of, the Basel Committee
principles for liquidity risk management
in the future. Most commenters felt that
establishing short term debt limits
would be overbroad and that there are
other more effective tools in place, and
that such regulatory requirements are
best handled via the Basel III LCR and
the NSFR and bank-prepared liquidity
stress tests. One commenter suggested
that the Board should refrain from
implementing a short-term debt limit
until after it determined how the other
aspects of the proposal work in practice.
One commenter was in favor of such a
limit, stating that if a short term debt
limit were set low enough, it could
mitigate the effects of shortfalls in dollar
funding caused by transient shocks to
financial markets.
As discussed above, the Board has
sought comment on the proposed U.S.
LCR, and it continues to work with the
Basel Committee to improve the Basel
Committee principles for liquidity risk
management. The Board will continue
to evaluate whether short-term debt
limits would be appropriate in light of
the developing liquidity regulatory and
supervisory framework, and may seek
comment on a proposal in the future.

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F. Stress-Test Requirements for Foreign
Banking Organizations
Section 165(i)(1) of the Dodd-Frank
Act requires the Board to conduct
annual stress tests of bank holding
companies with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more, including
foreign banking organizations. In
addition, section 165(i)(2) requires the
Board to issue regulations establishing
requirements for certain regulated
financial companies, including foreign
banking organizations and foreign
savings and loan holding companies
with total consolidated assets of more
than $10 billion, to conduct companyrun stress tests.
On October 9, 2012, the Board issued
a final rule implementing the
supervisory and company-run stress
testing requirements for bank holding
companies with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more and
nonbank financial companies
supervised by the Board.138
Concurrently, the Board issued a final
rule implementing the company-run
stress testing requirements for bank
holding companies with total
138 See

77 FR 62378 (October 12, 2012).

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consolidated assets of more than $10
billion but less than $50 billion.139
The foreign proposal sought to adapt
the requirements of the final stress
testing rules currently applicable to
bank holding companies to the U.S.
operations of foreign banking
organizations. Under the proposal, U.S.
intermediate holding companies with
total consolidated assets of more than
$10 billion but less than $50 billion
would have been required to conduct
annual company-run stress tests. U.S.
intermediate holding companies with
assets of $50 billion or more would have
been required to conduct semi-annual
company-run stress tests and would
have been subject to annual supervisory
stress tests. These requirements are
similar to the requirements that apply to
bank holding companies.
Under the foreign proposal, the
remaining U.S. operations of a foreign
banking organization—the branches and
agencies and, to the extent that a foreign
banking organization does not establish
a U.S. intermediate holding company,
the foreign banking organization’s U.S.
subsidiaries—would have been subject
to a separate stress testing standard.
Under this standard, a foreign banking
organization would have been required
to meet the requirements of its home
country stress test regime (provided that
the home country stress test regime
meets certain minimum standards). In
addition, certain foreign banking
organizations would have been required
to submit the information required by
the rule.
The proposal provided that if any of
the conditions above were not met, then
the U.S. branches and agencies of a
foreign banking organization would
have been subject to an assetmaintenance requirement and,
potentially, other requirements, and the
foreign banking organization would
have been required to conduct an
annual stress test of any U.S. subsidiary
not held under a U.S. intermediate
holding company (other than a section
2(h)(2) company), separately or as part
of an enterprise-wide stress test. In
addition, the foreign proposal would
have applied stress testing requirements
to foreign banking organizations with
total consolidated assets of more than
$10 billion, but combined U.S. assets of
less than $50 billion, and foreign
savings and loan holding companies
with total consolidated assets of more
than $10 billion. Consistent with the
approach taken in the final stress testing
rules for U.S. firms, the proposal would
have tailored the stress testing
requirements based on the size of the
139 See

PO 00000

77 FR 62396 (October 12, 2012).

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U.S. operations of the foreign banking
organizations.
1. U.S. Intermediate Holding Companies
Under the proposal, U.S. intermediate
holding companies with total
consolidated assets of more than $10
billion but less than $50 billion would
have been subject to the annual
company-run stress-testing
requirements set forth in Regulation YY,
including the reporting and disclosure
requirements. As discussed previously,
the Board has raised the threshold for
requiring formation of a U.S.
intermediate holding company to $50
billion. Accordingly, the final rule does
not include this provision. A U.S. bank
holding company with total
consolidated assets greater than $10
billion but less than $50 billion that was
a subsidiary of a foreign banking
organization would be subject to subpart
B (renumbered in connection with this
final rule, as described above) under the
terms of that subpart.
Under the proposal, U.S. intermediate
holding companies with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more would have been subject to the
annual supervisory and semi-annual
company-run stress-testing
requirements set forth in subparts F and
G of Regulation YY.140 The Board would
have conducted an annual supervisory
stress test of the U.S. intermediate
holding company in the same manner as
the Board conducts supervisory stress
tests under subpart F of Regulation YY
and disclosed the results of the stress
test. The U.S. intermediate holding
company would have been required to
report information to the Board to
support the supervisory stress tests. The
U.S. intermediate holding company
would also have been required to
conduct two company-run stress tests
per year in the same manner as a bank
holding company under subpart G of
Regulation YY. The first test would have
used scenarios provided by the Board
(the annual test) and the second would
have used scenarios developed by the
company (the mid-cycle test). In
connection with the annual test, the
U.S. intermediate holding company
would have been required to file a
regulatory report containing the results
of its stress test with the Board by
January 5 of each year and publicly
disclose a summary of the results under
the severely adverse scenario between
March 15 and March 31.141 In
140 See 77 FR 62378 (October 12, 2012); 77 FR
62396 (October 12, 2012).
141 The annual company-run stress tests would
satisfy some of a large intermediate holding
company’s proposed obligations under the Board’s
capital plan rule (12 CFR 225.8).

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connection with the mid-cycle test, the
company would have been required to
file a regulatory report containing the
results of this stress test by July 5 of
each year and disclose a summary of
results between September 15 and
September 30.
a. General Comments
While one commenter expressed the
view that the stress-testing requirements
were appropriately calibrated for a
foreign banking organization without a
U.S. branch or agency, other
commenters expressed views that the
Board should fully defer to the home
country stress-testing regimes and
receive information on home-country
reports, rather than impose stress-testing
requirements on the U.S. intermediate
holding companies. Commenters argued
that stress testing is most effective when
applied on a consolidated basis, and
that requiring U.S. intermediate holding
companies to conduct a separate stress
test would be redundant and would not
accurately reflect the ability of the U.S.
intermediate holding company to absorb
losses. Several commenters requested
that the Board align U.S. intermediate
holding company stress tests with stress
tests conducted by the foreign banking
organization, and permit the U.S.
intermediate holding company to follow
the stress-testing framework,
methodology, and timing used by the
foreign bank in its home country stress
tests. In these commenters’ views,
aligning the requirements would avoid
conflicts, inconsistent results, and
duplicative efforts.
The Board agrees that stress testing at
the level of the consolidated parent
provides valuable information about the
organization’s ability to maintain
adequate capital through stressed
circumstances on an enterprise-wide
basis. The final rule requires the foreign
banking organization parent of a U.S.
intermediate holding company to be
subject to a home-country stress testing
regime and to report the results of those
stress tests to the Board. However, these
parent stress tests are not a substitute for
stress tests at the U.S. intermediate
holding company level, which provide
information on the capital adequacy of
the U.S. intermediate holding company
and on its ability to support its U.S.
operations during a period of stress. As
discussed in sections IV.A and IV.C of
this preamble, the Board believes that it
is important for the U.S. operations of
a foreign banking organization to hold
capital in the United States with respect
to their operations, and for the same
reasons, U.S. intermediate holding
companies should be able to
demonstrate an ability to absorb losses

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and continue operations in times of
stress.
While the Board recognizes that the
stress tests conducted at the U.S.
intermediate holding company might
involve different assumptions than
those conducted at the foreign bank
parent, the stress test conducted by the
U.S. intermediate holding company will
be consistent with and comparable to
those conducted by similarly-sized U.S.
firms. The Board uses a consistent
stress-testing approach across
companies to conduct the supervisory
stress test and requires companies to
conduct company-run stress tests under
the supervisory stress test scenarios to
permit supervisors, firms, and the
public to facilitate comparison of the
results across companies. Similarly, the
Board prescribes a set of capital action
assumptions for holding companies to
use in their company-run stress tests,
uses those same capital assumptions in
its supervisory stress test, and discloses
the results of its stress test during the
same timeframe that bank holding
companies are required to disclose the
results of their company-run stress tests.
Permitting U.S. intermediate holding
companies to deviate from the stress-test
requirements for U.S. bank holding
companies in favor of the regime in the
home country of their foreign bank
parents would reduce comparability
across companies and with the results of
the Board’s supervisory stress tests.
One commenter argued that the
proposed U.S. intermediate holding
company requirements would increase
operating costs and could potentially
misalign U.S. intermediate holding
company and foreign banking
organization risk management, creating
the possibility of operational risk. For
instance, one commenter suggested that
a foreign bank might maintain hedges of
trades booked at the U.S. broker-dealer
outside of the United States, so that
these hedges would not be reflected in
the stress tests. Commenters noted that
foreign banking organizations are
already subject to Basel III and homecountry supervision, and that the Board
should focus on building international
regulatory networks. Commenters also
requested that the Board allow U.S.
intermediate holding companies to
account for the capital and financial
strength of the parent and support from
the parent and affiliates in stress testing
projections, provided the U.S.
intermediate holding company can
demonstrate that the parent could
provide support under a given scenario.
During periods of financial stress,
subsidiaries of foreign banking
organizations may not be able to rely on
support from their home-country parent,

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17303

and therefore, these subsidiaries should
have the ability to absorb losses and
maintain ready access to funding, meet
obligations to creditors and other
counterparties, and continue to serve as
credit intermediaries without assuming
such support. Accordingly, under the
final rule, a U.S. intermediate holding
company must project its regulatory
capital ratios in its stress tests without
additional consideration of possible
support from its home-country parent.
As noted above in section IV.D of this
preamble, the Board expects the U.S.
risk-management requirements under
the final rule to be integrated and
coordinated with the foreign banking
organization’s enterprise-wide riskmanagement practices, and therefore the
Board believes that the final rule will
not lead to a fragmented approach to
risk management.
Some commenters argued that the
Board did not adequately take into
account home country standards in
developing the proposed stress testing
requirements and that the proposed
requirements were inconsistent with
national treatment because they
required stress testing at a subsidiary
level, rather than at the consolidated
parent level. According to these
commenters, the proposal could result
in extraterritorial application if U.S.
authorities imposed stricter
requirements on foreign banking
organizations than home-country
supervisors.
The final rule relies on the homecountry stress-test regime in applying
stress-testing requirements to branches
and agencies of foreign banks, in
recognition that branches and agencies
of foreign banks are not separate legal
entities from their parent foreign
bank.142 It imposes stress-testing
standards on U.S. intermediate holding
companies because they are separate
legal entities, and may not be able to
rely on support from their home-country
parent in times of stress as discussed
above. In addition, the stress-testing
requirements promote market discipline
for foreign banking organizations and
U.S. bank holding companies by
ensuring that all banking organizations
with $50 billion or more in assets in the
United States are subject to comparable
stress-testing requirements. Bank
holding companies with over $50
billion in total consolidated assets—
including some bank holding companies
owned by foreign banking
organizations—are already subject to
142 The Board notes that the requirement to take
into account comparable home country standards
pursuant to section 165(b)(2) does not by its terms
apply to the stress testing requirement in section
165(i) of the Dodd-Frank Act.

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stress-test requirements. Furthermore,
foreign subsidiaries of U.S. bank
holding companies may be required to
comply with stress-test requirements
imposed by host-country regulators, and
in some circumstances, may be subject
to requirements similar to those
included in the final rule.
b. Reporting and Disclosure
Under the proposal, U.S. intermediate
holding companies would have been
subject to reporting obligations in
connection with their company-run and
supervisory stress tests, and would have
been required to publicly disclose the
results of their company-run stress tests.
In connection with the annual stress
test, a U.S. intermediate holding
company would have been required to
file a regulatory report containing the
results of its stress test with the Board
by January 5 of each year and publicly
disclose a summary of the results under
the severely adverse scenario between
March 15 and March 31.143 In
connection with the mid-cycle test, the
company would have been required to
file a regulatory report containing the
results of this stress test by July 5 of
each year and disclose a summary of
results between September 15 and
September 30. The U.S. intermediate
holding company would have been
required to file regulatory reports that
contain information to support the
Board’s supervisory stress tests. The
Board would disclose a summary of the
results of its supervisory stress test no
later than March 31 of each calendar
year.
Commenters suggested that the
reporting requirements should be more
limited for U.S. intermediate holding
companies than for U.S. bank holding
companies, which are required to file
the Board’s Forms FR Y–14A, Q, and M
(Capital Assessments and stress testing
(FR Y–14)), because U.S. intermediate
holding companies are likely to be
nonpublic subsidiaries of foreign
banking organizations.
The Board uses the FR Y–14
regulatory report to receive information
necessary to support its supervisory
stress test and for it to review the stress
tests that a company conducts. Because
U.S. intermediate holding companies
will be required to conduct companyrun stress tests and will be subject to the
Board’s supervisory stress test, it will be
necessary for U.S. intermediate holding
companies to file similar regulatory
reports with the Board. Moreover, the
143 As noted above, the annual company-run
stress tests would satisfy some of a large
intermediate holding company’s proposed
obligations under the Board’s capital plan rule (12
CFR 225.8).

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Board notes that some wholly-owned
U.S. bank holding company subsidiaries
of foreign banking organizations have
already filed the FR Y–14 in connection
with their first supervisory stress test.
The Board intends to expand the
reporting panel for the FR Y–14 to
provide that a U.S. intermediate holding
company must begin filing the FR
Y–14A in the reporting cycle after
formation of the U.S. intermediate
holding company, subject to the
transition provisions for new reporters
of the FR Y–14 schedules. For U.S.
intermediate holding companies formed
by July 1, 2016, the first FR Y–14A
report is expected to be due in January
2017.
Commenters also criticized the
proposed stress-testing disclosure
requirements. Some commenters stated
that publication of stress-test results
should not be required because U.S.
intermediate holding companies do not
operate separately from their foreign
bank parents. One commenter argued
that U.S. intermediate holding
companies are unlikely to have external
equity shareholders, and disclosure of
stress-test results would be likely to
confuse the parent foreign banking
organization’s investors without a
corresponding benefit. In addition, one
commenter argued that requiring public
disclosure of U.S. intermediate holding
company stress-test results would
disadvantage foreign banking
organizations, which would publish on
a U.S. intermediate holding company
level, against their U.S. peers, which
could publish on a total bank holding
company level. Another commenter
suggested that the Board should consult
with industry and individual U.S.
intermediate holding companies before
disclosing stress-test results.
The Board believes that the public
disclosure of the results of supervisory
and company-run stress tests helps to
provide valuable information to market
participants, enhance transparency, and
facilitate market discipline. While a U.S.
intermediate holding company may not
have external shareholders, the
company’s external creditors,
counterparties, and clients would
benefit from the enhanced information
about the capital adequacy of the U.S.
intermediate holding company. Further,
public disclosure is a key component of
the stress-test requirements mandated
by the Dodd-Frank Act. The Dodd-Frank
Act requires disclosure by all financial
companies, including bank holding
companies that are not publicly
traded.144
144 12

PO 00000

U.S.C. 165(i)(2)(C)(iv).

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The final rule’s stress-testing
disclosure requirements for U.S.
intermediate holding companies set
only the minimum standard of
disclosure and would not limit the
ability of a foreign banking organization
or its U.S. intermediate holding
company to publish additional
information on the stress test results.
For instance, to the extent that a U.S.
intermediate holding company’s
disclosures are different from
disclosures required of the foreign
parent, the foreign banking organization
could describe the differences between
the stress testing methodologies that led
to the divergent results. The final rule
maintains the timing and content of the
disclosures in order to facilitate the
comparability of stress tests results
across companies subject to Dodd-Frank
Act stress tests.
c. Timing of Stress Tests
Several commenters requested that
the Board provide additional time for
foreign banks to come into compliance.
Some commenters suggested that the
Board allow two or three years to phase
in the stress-test requirements,
suggesting that this additional time
would give time for markets and firms
to adjust and for policymakers to
monitor and modify the stress-test
regime as necessary. More specifically,
one commenter suggested that the Board
phase in application of the rule, such
that in the initial years of the
framework, U.S. intermediate holding
companies would be required to
conduct stress tests and report to the
Board, but would not be required to
publicly report the results or be
sanctioned for deficiencies. This
commenter cited the Board’s treatment
of U.S. bank holding companies with
over $50 billion in total consolidated
assets that participated in the Capital
Plan Review exercise as precedent for
this approach.
Commenters indicated that a phase-in
period would be particularly important
for those U.S. intermediate holding
companies that do not own U.S.
depository institutions and are not
currently subject to the Board’s stresstesting regimes. Similarly, one
commenter suggested that a longer
phase-in period would be appropriate
for foreign banks with U.S. assets of less
than $50 billion, as they would face a
more onerous implementation process.
One commenter also suggested that the
Board should allow extensions as
necessary for additional time to meet
the structural requirements of the
proposal. As discussed previously in
section II.B of this preamble, the Board
has extended the compliance period for

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all companies in order to give them
adequate time to comply with all of the
standards, including the stress testing
standards. The stress-test cycle for a
U.S. intermediate holding company
formed by July 1, 2016 will begin in
October 2017.145

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2. Stress-Test Requirements for
Branches and Agencies of Foreign Banks
With Combined U.S. Assets of $50
Billion or More
In addition to the U.S. intermediate
holding company requirements
described above, the proposal provided
that a foreign banking organization with
combined U.S. assets of $50 billion or
more must be subject to a consolidated
capital stress testing regime that
included an annual supervisory stress
test conducted by the foreign banking
organization’s home-country
supervisor.146 Alternatively, an annual
evaluation and review by the foreign
banking organization’s home-country
supervisor of an internal capital
adequacy stress test conducted by the
foreign banking organization would
have met the requirements. In either
case, the proposal provided that in order
to be recognized by the stress-testing
framework of the proposed rule, the
home-country capital stress-testing
regime must set forth requirements for
governance and controls of stress testing
practices by relevant management and
the board of directors (or equivalent
thereof) of the foreign banking
organization. The foreign banking
organization would have been required
to conduct such stress tests or be subject
to a supervisory stress test and meet any
minimum standards set by its homecountry supervisor with respect to the
stress tests.
Many commenters expressed broad
support for the approach to stress tests
for U.S. branches and agencies. These
commenters expressed the view that the
proposed stress-test framework would
provide additional insight to U.S.specific capital adequacy assessments
and contains straightforward and
common-sense steps. Some commenters
requested more information about the
145 The final rule also provides that if the foreign
banking organization parent of the U.S.
intermediate holding company has a subsidiary
bank holding company or insured depository
institution that was subject to the Board’s stresstesting requirements prior to formation of the U.S.
intermediate holding company, the subsidiary bank
holding company or insured depository institution
will continue to be subject to the applicable stresstesting requirements until September 30, 2017, after
which time the stress testing requirements will be
applied at the U.S. intermediate holding company
level.
146 For these purposes, the central bank may be
the home country supervisor provided that the
requirements of the rule are met.

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Board’s metrics for evaluating whether a
home-country stress testing framework
is consistent with Dodd-Frank Act stress
testing. Commenters asked for
clarification that the elements described
above are the only elements required to
satisfy the requirement that stress tests
be broadly consistent with the U.S.
stress-testing requirements, and others
suggested that the comparison should
not match the U.S. stress testing regime
point-by-point to the home-country
regime. Other commenters requested
more clarity on desired home-country
requirements for governance and
controls over stress tests. Some
commenters asked that the Board
provide flexibility for small deviations
from the enumerated standard, for
example, allowing for a multi-year
rather than annual, stress test cycle.
The Board believes that all elements
set forth in the final rule are appropriate
standards for stress testing, and a homecountry stress test must meet all of the
elements of the final rule. For instance,
the requirement that a company conduct
a stress test at least annually ensures
that the stress test results do not become
stale and signifies that stress tests are
integrated into the home-country
supervisory process. Similarly, the
requirement that stress testing practices
be subject to governance and controls by
relevant management and the board of
directors (or equivalent thereof) of the
foreign banking organization helps to
ensure that the stress tests produce
meaningful results that inform a
company’s business and risk
management decisions, and that those
tests function as intended. The rule
requires governance and controls of
stress testing practices by relevant
management and the board of directors
(or equivalent thereof) of the foreign
banking organization but is flexible
regarding appropriate standards for
governance and controls because of the
variety of risk-management structures
and practices across countries. A foreign
banking organization could satisfy the
governance standards required under
the final rule by maintaining
appropriate oversight of stress-testing
practices, policies and procedures, and
the use of stress-test results by senior
management and the board of directors
in their decision-making. Similarly, a
foreign banking organization could meet
the standards for controls by adopting
process verification, model validation,
documentation, and internal audit.
Under the proposal, if the U.S.
branches and agencies of a foreign
banking organization with combined
U.S. assets of $50 billion or more were
providing funding to the foreign
banking organization’s non-U.S. offices

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and non-U.S. affiliates on a net basis
over a stress test cycle, the foreign
banking organization would have also
been required to demonstrate to the
Board that it has adequate capital to
withstand stressed conditions.
Commenters requested clarification on
what standards the Board would apply
to determine whether a foreign banking
organization that has U.S. branches and
agencies in a net ‘‘due from’’ position
with respect to the foreign bank parent
or its international affiliates has
adequate capital to ‘‘absorb losses in
stressed conditions.’’ Commenters
expressed the view that the operative
standards should be based on the
foreign banking organization’s own
home country stress testing regime, and
not, for example, on Board-defined
criteria. In light of these comments, the
Board has removed this requirement in
the final rule. In the event that a foreign
banking organization were in a net ‘‘due
from’’ position, the Board would seek
more information from the foreign
banking organization regarding the
results of its supervisory stress test and
may take other supervisory actions.
However, the Board does not intend to
make a formal determination that the
foreign banking organization has
adequate capital to ‘‘absorb losses in
stressed conditions.’’
3. Information Requirements for Foreign
Banking Organizations With Combined
U.S. Assets of $50 Billion or More
Under the proposal, a foreign banking
organization with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more would have been
required to submit key information
regarding the results of its home-country
stress test that included: a description of
the types of risks included in the stress
test; a description of the conditions or
scenarios used in the stress test; a
summary description of the
methodologies used in the stress test;
estimates of the foreign banking
organization’s projected financial and
capital condition; and an explanation of
the most significant causes for any
changes in regulatory capital ratios.147
One commenter suggested that, if a
home-country supervisory authority
applies robust stress tests broadly
comparable to those in the United
States, the stress-testing reporting
147 Commenters asked for clarification as to
whether the reporting requirements apply to foreign
banking organizations with total consolidated assets
of $50 billion or more, or foreign banking
organizations with U.S. assets of $50 billion or
more. The final rule clarifies that the reporting
requirements apply only to foreign banking
organizations with combined U.S. assets of $50
billion or more.

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requirements should be waived for
those foreign banking organizations.
Commenters also asked for
clarification on the exact reporting
requirements, particularly if the level of
detail will be similar to that for the
Board’s FR Y–14A. Some commenters
suggested that the Board tailor the
proposal’s information reporting
requirements for foreign banking
organizations with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more to match the
content and timing of home country
stress testing. Commenters also asserted
that if home-country stress tests are
concluded on a different cycle than the
Board’s preferred cycle, the Board
should accept results from the homecountry stress tests at a reasonable
interval after their completion.
Similarly, commenters argued that if
home-country stress tests do not
produce the Board’s requested metrics,
the Board should accept alternative
metrics, provided they are generally
effective in depicting the soundness of
the institution.
The proposed reporting requirements
were intended to provide the Board
with important information regarding
stress test results. The stress test report
serves an important purpose, as it
allows the Board better to understand
the capital adequacy of the foreign
banking organization, its ability to
support its U.S. operations, and the
nature of the home-country stress
testing regime. The Board clarifies that
it does not presently intend to require
a specific reporting form for a foreign
banking organization to use to report its
company-run stress test results and has
attempted to minimize any conflict with
home-country standards regarding the
timing and content of a foreign banking
organization’s stress tests. Further, the
Board has not mandated a specific
timeline for when a stress test must be
conducted. By January 5 of each year,
the foreign banking organization must
report on its stress-testing activities and
results, but that report can consist of the
most recent stress test conducted by the
home-country supervisor or the foreign
banking organization, provided that the
foreign banking organization is subject
to capital stress testing at least annually.
If a foreign banking organization is
subject to slightly different home
country stress testing metrics, the Board
would expect to accept those metrics,
provided they included sufficient
information on the foreign banking
organization’s losses, revenues, changes
in expected loan losses, income, and
capital under stressed conditions. While
a foreign banking organization could
choose to provide the same type of
information as included on the FR Y–

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14A to report on the results of its stress
test, a more abbreviated report could
satisfy the foreign banking
organization’s requirements. Thus, these
requirements should not conflict with
the timing or content of the foreign
banking organization’s home country
stress-testing requirements.
Commenters also requested that the
Board take appropriate precautions to
protect the confidentiality of
information relating to home country
stress-test results provided to the Board,
including by treating all stress-test
results as confidential supervisory
information exempt from disclosure
under the Freedom of Information Act
and, if necessary, entering into
confidentiality agreements with the
foreign banking organization or its
home-country regulators. According to
these commenters, decisions regarding
the extent of public disclosure of a
foreign banking organization’s stress
tests results should lie solely with the
home-country supervisor. In response,
the Board notes that it would maintain
the confidentiality of any information
submitted to the Board with respect to
stress-testing results in accordance with
the Board’s rules regarding availability
of information.148 The Board has no
plans to disclose the results of foreign
banking organization home-country
stress tests.
4. Additional Information Required
From a Foreign Banking Organization
With U.S. Branches and Agencies That
Are in an Aggregate Net Due From
Position
Under the proposal, if the U.S.
branches and agencies of a foreign
banking organization were in a net due
from position to the foreign bank parent
or its foreign affiliates on an aggregate
basis, calculated as the average daily
position over the last stress test cycle
(from October 1 of a given year through
September 30 of the next year), the
foreign banking organization would
have been required to report additional
information to the Board regarding its
stress tests. The additional information
would have included a more detailed
description of the methodologies used
in the stress test, detailed information
regarding the organization’s projected
financial and capital position over the
planning horizon, and any additional
information that the Board deems
necessary in order to evaluate the ability
of the foreign banking organization to
absorb losses in stressed conditions. As
described in the proposal, the
heightened information requirements
reflect the greater risk to U.S. creditors
148 See

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and U.S. financial stability that may be
posed by U.S. branches and agencies
that serve as funding sources to their
foreign parent. All foreign banking
organizations with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more would have been
required to provide this information by
January 5 of each calendar year, unless
extended by the Board in writing.
Commenters requested clarification
on what additional information the
Board would require to evaluate the
ability of the foreign banking
organization to absorb losses in stressed
conditions. The exact additional
information that the Board will require
when the U.S. branch and agency
network is in a net due from position to
the foreign bank parent or its foreign
affiliates will be determined on a caseby-case basis, accounting for the size,
complexity, and business activities of
the foreign banking organization and its
U.S. operations. For instance, the Board
may require additional information on
particular portfolios or business lines
located in the United States, or that
have a significant connection to the
foreign banking organization’s U.S.
operations. The Board expects that the
information regarding a foreign banking
organization’s methodologies will
include those employed to estimate
losses, revenues, and changes in capital
positions. Information must be provided
for all elements of the stress tests,
including loss estimation, revenue
estimation, projections of the balance
sheet and risk-weighted assets, and
capital levels and ratios.
5. Supplemental Requirements for
Foreign Banking Organizations With
Combined U.S. Assets of $50 Billion or
More That Do Not Comply With StressTesting Requirements
Under the proposal, if a foreign
banking organization with combined
U.S. assets of $50 billion or more did
not meet the stress-test requirements
above, the Board would have required
its U.S. branches and agencies to meet
an asset-maintenance requirement by
maintaining eligible assets equal to 108
percent of third-party liabilities. The
mechanics of this asset-maintenance
requirement generally would align with
the asset-maintenance requirements that
may apply to U.S. branches and
agencies under existing federal or state
rules. In addition, the foreign banking
organization would have been required
to conduct an annual stress test of any
U.S. subsidiary not held under a U.S.
intermediate holding company (other
than a section 2(h)(2) company). The
stress test of such subsidiary could have

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been conducted separately or as part of
an enterprise-wide stress test.149
In addition to the asset-maintenance
requirement and the subsidiary-level
stress testing requirement described
above, the proposal would have
permitted the Board to impose
intragroup funding restrictions, or
increased local liquidity requirements,
on the U.S. branches and agencies of a
foreign bank, as well as any U.S.
subsidiary that is not part of a U.S.
intermediate holding company. Under
the proposal, if the Board determines
that it should impose intragroup
funding restrictions or increased local
liquidity requirements as a result of
failure to meet the Board’s stress-testing
requirements under this proposal, the
Board would have provided the
company with a notification no later
than 30 days before the Board proposed
to apply the funding restrictions or
increase local liquidity requirements.
The proposal provided that the
notification would include the basis for
imposing the additional requirement.
Within 14 calendar days of receipt of
the notification, the proposal provided
that the foreign banking organization
could request in writing that the Board
reconsider the requirement, including
an explanation as to why the
reconsideration should be granted. The
Board would then have been required to
respond in writing within 14 calendar
days of receipt of the company’s
request. The proposal also would have
required the foreign banking
organization to report summary
information about the results of the
stress test to the Board on an annual
basis.
Several commenters argued that none
of the supplemental requirements
should be mandatory, and that the
Board should retain discretion to
impose penalties based on financial
stability risks or a deficiency in home
country standards or reporting.
Commenters further suggested that
before imposing any penalties based on
inadequacy of home country standards,
the Federal Reserve should discuss the
penalties with home-country
supervisors. In addition, commenters
asserted that the Federal Reserve should
ensure that any penalties do not conflict
with requirements prescribed by state
supervisors or home-country
supervisors. Commenters argued that
asset-maintenance requirements are
typically under the jurisdiction of the
state or the OCC, that the Board should
eliminate the requirement or coordinate
149 The final rule clarifies that the Board must
approve an enterprise-wide stress test in order for
it to satisfy the requirements of this section.

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with states and the OCC, and that
unilateral Board action may result in
confusion and cause undue burden.
The Board believes that the
mandatory asset-maintenance
requirement is a clear, transparent
regulatory response to companies that
are unable to satisfy the stress-test
requirements. In most cases, the Board
anticipates that it would notify homecountry supervisors and any relevant
state and federal banking supervisors
before the requirement is imposed. As
requested by commenters, the Board
notes that the consolidated branch and
agency asset-maintenance requirements
would not pre-empt state assetmaintenance requirements or otherwise
affect the ability of state supervisors to
impose asset-maintenance requirements.
Given that asset-maintenance
requirements are a common supervisory
tool, the use of an asset-maintenance
requirement is unlikely to conflict with
requirements prescribed by a homecountry supervisor.
Commenters also addressed the
proposed calculation of the assetmaintenance requirement. One
commenter suggested that the Board
should not calculate asset maintenance
on an aggregate basis for all U.S.
branches and agencies of a foreign bank.
According to the commenter, this
approach fails to consider that eligible
assets may reside in different state
jurisdictions or experience varying rates
of deterioration.
The final rule retains the proposed
calculation of the asset-maintenance
requirement. The Board believes that
applying an asset-maintenance
requirement on a consolidated branch or
agency basis is appropriate in this
context because this asset-maintenance
requirement is triggered by the
adequacy of the foreign banking
organization’s stress testing on a
consolidated basis, not because of
weaknesses at a particular U.S. branch
or agency. The requirements of this rule
do not supersede any existing assetmaintenance requirements that U.S.
branches and agencies of a foreign bank
may be subject to, and U.S. branches
and agencies of a foreign bank will be
expected to meet both the requirements
under the final rule and any state-level
asset-maintenance requirements.
Other commenters suggested that the
Board expand the definition of eligible
assets for asset-maintenance
requirements, either to include all assets
that are permitted for investment
purposes by a U.S. bank, with
appropriate haircuts to adequately
reflect any credit risk associated with
such assets, or to align the assets with
the assets available under the liquidity

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coverage ratio. Under the proposal,
definitions of the terms ‘‘eligible assets’’
and ‘‘liabilities’’ were generally
consistent with the definitions of the
terms ‘‘eligible assets’’ and ‘‘liabilities
requiring cover’’ used in the New York
State Superintendent’s regulations.150
The proposal, and final rule, align the
definition of ‘‘eligible assets’’ with the
asset-maintenance requirements that are
familiar to many U.S. branches and
agencies under existing rules.
The final rule makes minor
adjustments to the proposed definition
of eligible assets. In the proposal,
eligible assets would have excluded
amounts due from the home office,
other offices and affiliates, including
income accrued but uncollected on such
amounts; however, the definition would
have permitted the Board to treat
amounts due from other offices or
affiliates located in the United States as
eligible assets. The Board has
determined that such treatment would
be inappropriate, and has removed that
provision from the final rule. In
addition, the Board has removed the
specific valuation rules for Brady Bonds
and precious metals. If Brady Bonds
qualify as marketable debt securities,
they would be valued at their principal
amount or market value, whichever is
lower, consistent with the final rule.
Precious metals and other assets not
listed in the final rule would be valued
as recorded on the general ledger
(reduced by the amount of any
specifically allocated reserves held in
the United States and recorded on the
general ledger of the U.S. branch or U.S.
agency in connection with such assets).
One commenter suggested that the
asset-maintenance provisions, taken
together with intragroup funding
restrictions and local liquidity
requirements, may be too onerous and
seriously limit the types of assets or
investments that an institution could
hold. The commenter also argued that
the timing for intragroup funding
restrictions may be impractical if
serious liquidity issues exist. Under the
final rule, the Board has retained
discretion in applying the intragroup
funding restrictions and local liquidity
requirements, and, on a case-by-case
basis, will assess whether the
interaction of these additional
restrictions with the asset-maintenance
requirement would have results other
that the intended increase in safety and
soundness. The Board has modified the
notice provisions to provide that, if a
company requests a reconsideration of
the requirement, the Board will respond
in writing to the company’s request for
150 3

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reconsideration prior to applying the
condition, but not necessarily within 14
days.
The preamble to the foreign proposal
raised a question as to whether the
Board should consider conducting
supervisory loss estimates on the U.S.
branches and agencies of large foreign
banking organizations, or whether the
Board should consider requiring a
foreign banking organization to conduct
internal stress tests of its U.S. branches
and agencies. Several commenters
suggested that the Board should not
impose additional requirements on the
U.S. branches and agencies of a foreign
banking organization, asserting that
such additional collection would be
burdensome but not meaningful.
However, one commenter argued that
the Board should gather data from such
networks similar to the data gathered
from U.S. bank holding companies,
conduct supervisory loss estimates, and
require foreign banking organizations to
conduct internal stress test on their U.S.
branch and agency networks to equalize
the treatment with foreign-owned
subsidiaries and also with U.S. banks.
The Board has decided against
imposing such additional requirements
at this time. U.S. branches and agencies
do not hold capital separately from their
parent foreign banking organization, and
the losses on assets borne by the branch
or agency would be due and payable by
the parent. For these reasons, the branch
would be required to make a number of
assumptions that would reduce the
utility of the analysis, and in the Board’s
view, the cost and burden to firms of
conducting the test would therefore at
present outweigh the supervisory
benefit.
6. Stress-Test Requirements for Foreign
Banking Organizations With Total
Consolidated Assets of More Than $50
Billion But Combined U.S. Assets of
Less Than $50 Billion
Under the proposal, a foreign banking
organization with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more but
combined U.S. assets of less than $50
billion would have been required to be
subject to a home-country stress testing
regime that satisfied the same
requirements applied to foreign banking
organizations with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more. Under these
requirements, the home-country stress
testing regime would have been
required to include an annual
supervisory capital stress test or an
annual supervisory evaluation and
review of a company-run stress test, and
requirements for governance and
controls of the stress-testing practices by
relevant management and the board of

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directors (or equivalent thereof) of the
company. A foreign banking
organization with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more but
combined U.S. assets of less than $50
billion would have been required to
meet the minimum standards set by its
home-country supervisor with respect to
the stress tests.
If a foreign banking organization did
not meet the stress-testing standards
above, the Board would require the
foreign banking organization’s U.S.
branches and agencies, as applicable, to
maintain eligible assets equal to 105
percent of third-party liabilities,
calculated on an aggregate basis. As
discussed in the proposal, the Board
would require a 105 percent assetmaintenance requirement (instead of the
108 percent requirement applied to
foreign banking organizations with
combined U.S. assets of $50 billion or
more) in light of the more limited risks
to U.S. financial stability posed by
foreign banking organizations with
combined U.S. assets of less than $50
billion as compared to risks posed by
foreign banking organizations with a
larger presence. In addition, the
proposal would have required the
foreign banking organization to conduct
an annual stress test of its U.S.
subsidiaries (other than a section 2(h)(2)
company).151 The company would have
been required to report high-level
summary information about the results
of such stress test to the Board on an
annual basis.
Some commenters argued that the
asset-maintenance requirement should
be parallel regardless of the size of the
institution. The final rule maintains the
105 percent requirement for an
institution with a smaller U.S. presence
in light of its smaller systemic footprint.
In addition, the final rule clarifies that
an enterprise-wide stress test conducted
by a foreign banking organization is
subject to the Board’s approval to the
extent it is used to satisfy the U.S.
subsidiary stress testing requirement.
7. Stress-Test Requirements for Other
Foreign Banking Organizations and
Foreign Savings and Loan Holding
Companies With Total Consolidated
Assets of More Than $10 Billion
The Dodd-Frank Act requires the
Board to impose stress-testing
requirements on its regulated entities
(including bank holding companies,
state member banks, and savings and
loan holding companies) with total
151 As described above in section IV.B of this
preamble, a foreign banking organization with U.S.
non-branch assets of less than $50 billion would not
be required to form a U.S. intermediate holding
company.

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consolidated assets of more than $10
billion.152 The proposal would apply
the stress-testing requirements to foreign
banking organizations with total
consolidated assets of more than $10
billion but less than $50 billion and
foreign savings and loan holding
companies with total consolidated
assets of more than $10 billion that were
consistent with the requirements
described in section III.F.7 above
applicable to foreign banking
organizations with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more but
combined U.S. assets of less than $50
billion.
Commenters suggested that the Board
should not apply stress-testing
requirements for smaller foreign
banking organizations with less than
$50 billion in combined U.S. assets,
asserting that these entities may not
pose any risks to U.S. financial stability.
These commenters argued that the
Board has discretion to use U.S. assets
rather than global assets as the threshold
for application under section 165(i)(2) of
the Dodd-Frank Act. One commenter
also suggested that the Board exempt
foreign banking organizations from
jurisdictions where similar banks are
subject to consolidated supervision.
Section 165(i)(2) of the Dodd-Frank
Act states that ‘‘financial companies that
have total consolidated assets of more
than $10,000,000,000 and are regulated
by a primary Federal financial
regulatory agency shall conduct annual
stress tests.’’ Accordingly, the final rule
applies to these companies. However,
foreign banking organizations with less
than $50 billion in combined U.S. assets
are likely to pose more limited risks to
U.S. financial stability than larger
companies. Accordingly, the Board
sought in the final rule to minimize any
undue regulatory burden on those
companies by allowing them to use a
home-country stress test, while ensuring
that the requirements meet the statutory
requirements of the Dodd-Frank Act.
Responses to other comments received
on these standards are discussed in
section III.F.6 of this preamble.
G. Debt-to-Equity Limits for Foreign
Banking Organizations
Section 165(j) provides that the Board
must require a foreign banking
organization to maintain a debt-toequity ratio of no more than 15-to-1 if
the Council determines that such
company poses a ‘‘grave threat’’ to the
financial stability of the United States
and that the imposition of such
requirement is necessary to mitigate the
152 Section 165(i)(2) of the Dodd-Frank Act; 12
U.S.C. 5363(i)(2).

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risk that such foreign banking
organization poses to the financial
stability of the United States.153 The
Board is required to promulgate
regulations to establish procedures and
timelines for compliance with section
165(j).154
The proposal would have
implemented the debt-to-equity ratio
limitation with respect to a foreign
banking organization by applying a 15to-1 debt-to-equity limitation on its U.S.
intermediate holding company and any
U.S. subsidiary not organized under a
U.S. intermediate holding company
(other than a section 2(h)(2) company),
and a 108 percent asset-maintenance
requirement on its U.S. branches and
agencies as an equivalent to a debt-toequity limitation. Unlike the other
provisions of this proposal, the debt-toequity ratio limitation would be
effective on the effective date of the
final rule.
Under the proposal, a foreign banking
organization for which the Council has
made the determination described above
would receive written notice from the
Council, or from the Board on behalf of
the Council, of the Council’s
determination. The proposal provided
that within 180 calendar days from the
date of receipt of the notice, the foreign
banking organization must come into
compliance with the proposal’s
requirements. The proposal would have
permitted a company subject to the
debt-to-equity ratio requirement to
request up to two extension periods of
90 days each to come into compliance
with this requirement. The proposal
provided that requests for an extension
of time to comply must be received in
writing by the Board not less than 30
days prior to the expiration of the
existing time period for compliance and
must provide information sufficient to
demonstrate that the company has made
good faith efforts to comply with the
debt-to-equity ratio requirement and
that each extension would be in the
public interest. In the event that an
extension of time is requested, the
Board would review the request in light
of the relevant facts and circumstances,
including the extent of the company’s
efforts to comply with the ratio and
whether the extension would be in the
public interest. A company would no
longer be subject to the debt-to-equity
153 The Act requires that, in making its
determination, the Council must take into
consideration the criteria in Dodd-Frank Act
sections 113(a) and (b) and any other risk-related
factors that the Council deems appropriate. The
statute expressly exempts any federal home loan
bank from the debt to equity ratio requirement. See
12 U.S.C. 5366(j)(1).
154 12 U.S.C. 5366(j)(3).

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ratio requirement of this subpart as of
the date it receives notice of a
determination by the Council that the
company no longer poses a grave threat
to the financial stability of the United
States and that the imposition of a debtto-equity requirement is no longer
necessary.
Consistent with comments received
on the domestic proposal, some
commenters argued that the substitution
of ‘‘total liabilities’’ for the statutory
term ‘‘debt’’ would be inappropriate,
especially as applied to insurance
companies. As discussed in detail in
section III.D of this preamble, the Board
chose to define ‘‘debt’’ and ‘‘equity’’ on
the basis of ‘‘total liabilities’’ and ‘‘total
equity capital’’ included in a company’s
report of financial condition.
Commenters also noted that the section
165(j) debt-to-equity ratio is not based
on any applicable international standard
and could prompt reciprocal measures
from foreign governments, and one
commenter stated that the debt-to-equity
limits should be integrated into a single
equity standard applied at the parent
level. Two of the commenters argued
that the Board should consult with
home country regulators before
imposing the debt-to-equity ratio. One
commenter asserted that assetmaintenance requirements are typically
the jurisdiction of the state or the OCC,
and that the Board’s asset-maintenance
requirement was unnecessary.
While the Board recognizes that
section 165(j) debt-to-equity ratio is not
an international standard, it is a
standard that is required by the DoddFrank Act and is imposed after the
Council (and not the Board) makes the
‘‘grave threat’’ determination. Were the
Council to make such a determination
regarding a foreign banking
organization, the Board expects that it or
the Council would notify the
appropriate home country regulator
before the expiration of the compliance
period. For the reasons described above
in section IV.F of this preamble, the
Board believes that the assetmaintenance requirement is an
appropriate standard. The Board is
adopting the debt-to-equity
requirements as proposed.
V. Administrative Law Matters
A. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Board has considered the
potential impact of the final rule on
small companies in accordance with the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C.
603(b)). Based on its analysis and for the
reasons stated below, the Board believes
that the final rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a

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substantial number of small entities.
Nevertheless, the Board is publishing a
final regulatory flexibility analysis.
Under regulations issued by the Small
Business Administration (‘‘SBA’’), a
small entity includes a depository
institution, bank holding company, or
savings and loan holding company with
total assets of $500 million or less (a
small banking organization).155 The
final rule establishes risk committee and
company-run stress test requirements
for bank holding companies and foreign
banking organizations with total
consolidated assets of more than $10
billion and establishes enhanced
prudential standards for bank holding
companies and foreign banking
organizations with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more. Companies
that are subject to the final rule
therefore substantially exceed the $175
or $500 million asset threshold at which
a banking entity is considered a ‘‘small
entity’’ under SBA regulations.156
The Board did not receive any
comments on the proposed rules
regarding their impact on small entities.
In light of the foregoing, the Board does
not believe that the final rule would
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
B. Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with section 3512 of
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501–3521) (PRA), the Board
may not conduct or sponsor, and a
respondent is not required to respond
to, an information collection unless it
displays a currently valid Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) control
number. The OMB control number is
7100–0350. The Board reviewed the
final rule under the authority delegated
to the Board by OMB. The Board did not
receive any specific comments on the
PRA; however, most commenters
expressed concern about the amount of
burden imposed by the requirements of
the rule.
The final rule contains requirements
subject to the PRA. The reporting
requirements are found in sections
252.122(b)(1)(iii); 252.132(a), (b), and
(d); 252.143(a), (b), and (c); 252.144(a),
(b), and (d); 252.145(a);
252.146(c)(1)(iii); 252.153(a)(3);
252.153(c)(3); 252.153(d); 252.154(a),
(b), and (c); 252.157(b); 252.158(c)(1);
155 13

CFR 121.201.
Dodd-Frank Act provides that the Board
may, on the recommendation of the Council,
increase the $50 billion asset threshold for the
application of certain of the enhanced standards.
See 12 U.S.C. 5365(a)(2)(B). However, neither the
Board nor the Council has the authority to lower
such threshold.
156 The

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252.158(c)(2); and 252.158(d)(1)(ii).157
The recordkeeping requirements are
found in sections 252.34(e)(3), 252.34(f),
252.34(h), 252.35(a)(7), 252.153(e)(5),
252.156(e), 252.156(g), and
252.157(a)(7). The disclosure
requirements are found in section
252.153(e)(5). These information
collection requirements would
implement section 165 of the DoddFrank Act, as mentioned in the Abstract
below.
The reporting requirements in
sections 252.153(b)(2) and 252.153(e)(5)
will be addressed in a separate Federal
Register notice at a later date.
Comments are invited on:
(a) Whether the proposed collections
of information are necessary for the
proper performance of the Federal
Reserve’s functions, including whether
the information has practical utility;
(b) The accuracy of the Federal
Reserve’s estimate of the burden of the
proposed information collections,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
(c) Ways to enhance the quality,
utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected;
(d) Ways to minimize the burden of
the information collections on
respondents, including through the use
of automated collection techniques or
other forms of information technology;
and
(e) Estimates of capital or startup costs
and costs of operation, maintenance,
and purchase of services to provide
information.
All comments will become a matter of
public record. Comments on aspects of
this notice that may affect reporting,
recordkeeping, or disclosure
requirements and burden estimates
should be sent to: Secretary, Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, 20th and C Streets NW.,
Washington, DC 20551. A copy of the
comments may also be submitted to the
OMB desk officer: By mail to U.S. Office
of Management and Budget, 725 17th
Street NW., #10235, Washington, DC
20503 or by facsimile to 202–395–5806,
Attention, Agency Desk Officer.
Proposed Revisions, With Extension, to
the Following Information Collection
Title of Information Collection:
Reporting, Recordkeeping, and
Disclosure Requirements Associated
with Regulation YY (Enhanced
Prudential Standards).
157 Most of the recordkeeping requirements for
Subpart D pertaining to the Liquidity Requirements
have been addressed in the Funding and Liquidity
Risk Management Guidance (FR 4198; OMB No.
7100–0326). Only new recordkeeping requirements
are being addressed with this final rulemaking.

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Agency Form Number: Reg YY.
OMB Control Number: 7100–0350.
Frequency of Response: Annual,
semiannual, quarterly, and on occasion.
Affected Public: Businesses or other
for-profit.
Respondents: State member banks,
U.S. bank holding companies, savings
and loan holding companies, nonbank
financial companies, foreign banking
organizations, U.S. intermediate holding
companies, foreign saving and loan
holding companies, and foreign
nonbank financial companies
supervised by the Board.
Abstract: Section 165 of the DoddFrank Act requires the Board to
implement enhanced prudential
standards for bank holding companies
and foreign banking organizations with
total consolidated assets of $50 billion
or more. The enhanced prudential
standards include risk-based and
leverage capital requirements, liquidity
standards, requirements for overall risk
management (including establishing a
risk committee), stress test
requirements, and debt-to-equity limits
for companies that the Financial
Stability Oversight Council has
determined pose a grave threat to
financial stability.
Reporting Requirements
Section 252.122(b)(1)(iii) (formerly
section 252.264(b)(2) in the proposed
rule) would require, unless the Board
otherwise determines in writing, a
foreign banking organization with total
consolidated assets of more than $10
billion but less than $50 billion or a
foreign savings and loan holding
company with total consolidated assets
of $10 billion or more that does not
meet the home-country stress testing
standards set forth in the rule to report
on an annual basis a summary of the
results of the stress test to the Board that
includes a description of the types of
risks included in the stress test, a
description of the conditions or
scenarios used in the stress test, a
summary description of the
methodologies used in the stress test,
estimates of aggregate losses, preprovision net revenue, total loan loss
provisions, net income before taxes and
pro forma regulatory capital ratios
required to be computed by the homecountry supervisor of the foreign
banking organization or foreign savings
and loan holding company and any
other relevant capital ratios, and an
explanation of the most significant
causes for any changes in regulatory
capital ratios.
Section 252.132(a) would require a
foreign banking organization with a
class of stock (or similar interest) that is

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publicly traded and total consolidated
assets of at least $10 billion but less
than $50 billion, must, on an annual
basis, certify to the Board that it
maintains a committee of its global
board of directors (or equivalent
thereof), on a standalone basis or as part
of its enterprise-wide risk committee (or
equivalent thereof) that (1) oversees the
risk management policies of the
combined U.S. operations of the foreign
banking organization and (2) includes at
least one member having experience in
identifying, assessing, and managing
risk exposures of large, complex firms.
Section 252.132(b) would require the
certification to be filed on an annual
basis with the Board concurrently with
the Annual Report of Foreign Banking
Organizations (FR Y–7; OMB No. 7100–
0297).
Section 252.132(d) would require that
if a foreign banking organization does
not satisfy the requirements of this
section, the Board may impose
requirements, conditions, or restrictions
relating to the activities or business
operations of the combined U.S.
operations of the foreign banking
organization. The Board will coordinate
with any relevant State or Federal
regulator in the implementation of such
requirements, conditions, or
restrictions. If the Board determines to
impose one or more requirements,
conditions, or restrictions under this
paragraph, the Board will notify the
company before it applies any
requirement, condition or restriction,
and describe the basis for imposing such
requirement, condition, or restriction.
Within 14 calendar days of receipt of a
notification under this paragraph, the
company may request in writing that the
Board reconsider the requirement,
condition, or restriction. The Board will
respond in writing to the company’s
request for reconsideration prior to
applying the requirement, condition, or
restriction.
Section 252.143(a) would require a
foreign banking organization with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more and combined U.S. assets of less
than $50 billion to certify to the Board
that it meets capital adequacy standards
on a consolidated basis established by
its home-country supervisor that are
consistent with the Basel Capital
Framework. Home country capital
adequacy standards that are consistent
with the Basel Capital Framework
include all minimum risk-based capital
ratios, any minimum leverage ratio, and
all restrictions based on any applicable
capital buffers set forth in Basel III, each
as applicable and as implemented in
accordance with the Basel III, including
any transitional provisions set forth

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therein. In the event that a homecountry supervisor has not established
capital adequacy standards that are
consistent with the Basel Capital
Framework, the foreign banking
organization must demonstrate to the
satisfaction of the Board that it would
meet or exceed capital adequacy
standards on a consolidated basis that
are consistent with the Basel Capital
Framework were it subject to such
standards.
Section 252.143(b) would require a
foreign banking organization with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more to provide to the Board reports
relating to its compliance with the
capital adequacy measures concurrently
with filing the Capital and Asset Report
for Foreign Banking Organizations (FR
Y–7Q; OMB No. 7100–0125).
Section 252.143(c) would require that
if a foreign banking organization does
not satisfy the requirements of this
section, the Board may impose
requirements, conditions, or
restrictions, including risk-based or
leverage capital requirements, relating
to the activities or business operations
of the U.S. operations of the foreign
banking organization. The Board will
coordinate with any relevant State or
Federal regulator in the implementation
of such requirements, conditions, or
restrictions. If the Board determines to
impose one or more requirements,
conditions, or restrictions under this
paragraph, the Board will notify the
company before it applies any
requirement, condition or restriction,
and describe the basis for imposing such
requirement, condition, or restriction.
Within 14 calendar days of receipt of a
notification under this paragraph, the
company may request in writing that the
Board reconsider the requirement,
condition, or restriction. The Board will
respond in writing to the company’s
request for reconsideration prior to
applying the requirement, condition, or
restriction.
Section 252.144(a) would require a
foreign banking organization with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more and combined U.S. assets of less
than $50 billion to, on an annual basis,
certify to the Board that it maintains a
committee of its global board of
directors (or equivalent thereof), on a
standalone basis or as part of its
enterprise-wide risk committee (or
equivalent thereof) that (1) oversees the
risk management policies of the
combined U.S. operations of the foreign
banking organization and (2) includes at
least one member having experience in
identifying, assessing, and managing
risk exposures of large, complex firms.

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Section 252.144(b) would require the
certification to be filed on an annual
basis with the Board concurrently with
its FR Y–7.
Section 252.144(d) would require that
if a foreign banking organization does
not satisfy the requirements of that
section, the Board may impose
requirements, conditions, or restrictions
relating to the activities or business
operations of the combined U.S.
operations of the foreign banking
organization. The Board will coordinate
with any relevant State or Federal
regulator in the implementation of such
requirements, conditions, or
restrictions. If the Board determines to
impose one or more requirements,
conditions, or restrictions under this
paragraph, the Board will notify the
company before it applies any
requirement, condition, or restriction,
and describe the basis for imposing such
requirement, condition, or restriction.
Within 14 calendar days of receipt of a
notification under this paragraph, the
company may request in writing that the
Board reconsider the requirement,
condition, or restriction. The Board will
respond in writing to the company’s
request for reconsideration prior to
applying the requirement, condition, or
restriction.
Section 252.145(a) (formerly section
252.231(a) in the proposed rule) would
require a foreign banking organization
with total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more and combined U.S.
assets of less than $50 billion to report
to the Board on an annual basis the
results of an internal liquidity stress test
for either the consolidated operations of
the foreign banking organization or the
combined U.S. operations of the foreign
banking organization.
Section 252.146(c)(1)(iii) would
require, unless the Board otherwise
determines in writing, a foreign banking
organization with total consolidated
assets of more than $50 billion but
combined U.S. assets of less than $50
billion that does not meet does not meet
the home-country stress testing
standards set forth in the rule to report
on an annual basis a summary of the
results of the stress test to the Board that
includes a description of the types of
risks included in the stress test, a
description of the conditions or
scenarios used in the stress test, a
summary description of the
methodologies used in the stress test,
estimates of aggregate losses, preprovision net revenue, total loan loss
provisions, net income before taxes and
pro forma regulatory capital ratios
required to be computed by the homecountry supervisor of the foreign
banking organization and any other

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relevant capital ratios, and an
explanation of the most significant
causes for any changes in regulatory
capital ratios.
Section 252.153(a)(3) (formerly
section 252.203(b) in the proposed rule)
would require that within 30 days of
establishing or designating a U.S.
intermediate holding company, a
foreign banking organization with U.S.
non-branch assets of $50 billion or more
would provide to the Board (1) a
description of the U.S. intermediate
holding company, including its name,
location, corporate form, and
organizational structure; (2) a
certification that the U.S. intermediate
holding company meets the
requirements of this subpart; and (3) any
other information that the Board
determines is appropriate.
Section 252.153(c)(3) (formerly
section 252.202(b) in the proposed rule)
would require a foreign banking
organization with U.S. non-branch
assets of $50 billion or more that
submits a request to establish or
designate multiple U.S. intermediate
holding companies to be submitted to
the Board 180 days before the foreign
banking organization forms a U.S.
intermediate holding company. A
request not to transfer any ownership
interest in a subsidiary must be
submitted to the Board either 180 days
before the foreign banking organization
acquires the ownership interest in such
U.S. subsidiary, or in a shorter period of
time if permitted by the Board. The
request must include a description of
why the request should be granted and
any other information the Board may
require.
Section 252.153(d) 158 would require a
foreign banking organization that, as of
June 30, 2014, has U.S. non-branch
assets of $50 billion or more to submit
an implementation plan to the Board by
January 1, 2015, unless that time is
accelerated or extended by the Board.
An implementation plan must contain
(1) a list of all U.S. subsidiaries
controlled by the foreign banking
organization setting forth the ownership
interest in each subsidiary and an
organizational chart showing the
ownership hierarchy; (2) for each U.S.
subsidiary that is a section 2(h)(2)
company or a debts previously
contracted in good faith (DPC) branch
subsidiary, the name, asset size, and a
description of why the U.S. subsidiary
qualifies as a section 2(h)(2) or a DPC
158 This reporting requirement was added in
response to a public comment received asking for
further clarity on the requirements and process for
foreign banking organizations to re-organize its U.S.
legal entities under one intermediate holding
company.

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branch subsidiary; (3) for each U.S.
subsidiary for which the foreign banking
organization expects to request an
exemption from the requirement to
transfer all or a portion of its ownership
interest in the subsidiary to the U.S.
intermediate holding company, the
name, asset size, and a description of
the reasons why the foreign banking
organization intends to request that the
Board grant it an exemption from the
U.S. intermediate holding company
requirement; (4) a projected timeline for
the transfer by the foreign banking
organization of its ownership interest in
U.S. subsidiaries to the U.S.
intermediate holding company, and
quarterly pro forma financial statements
for the U.S. intermediate holding
company, including pro forma
regulatory capital ratios, beginning
December 31, 2015, to January 1, 2018;
(5) a projected timeline for, and
description of, all planned capital
actions or strategies for capital accretion
that will facilitate the U.S. intermediate
holding company’s compliance with the
risk-based and leverage capital
requirements set forth in paragraph
(e)(2) of this section; (6) a description of
the risk-management practices of the
combined U.S. operations of the foreign
banking organization and a description
of how the foreign banking organization
and U.S. intermediate holding company
will come into compliance with the
final rule’s requirements; and (7) a
description of the current liquidity
stress testing practices of the U.S.
operations of the foreign banking
organization and a description of how
the foreign banking organization and
U.S. intermediate holding company will
come into compliance with the final
rule’s requirements.
If a foreign banking organization plans
to reduce its U.S. non-branch assets
below $50 billion for four consecutive
quarters prior to July 1, 2016, the foreign
banking organization may submit a plan
that describes how it intends to reduce
its U.S. non-branch assets below $50
billion and any other information the
Board determines is appropriate.
The Board may require a foreign
banking organization that meets or
exceeds the threshold for application of
this section after June 30, 2014, to
submit an implementation plan
containing the information described
above if the Board determines that an
implementation plan is appropriate for
such foreign banking organization.
Section 252.154(a) would require a
foreign banking organization with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more and combined U.S. assets of $50
billion or more to certify to the Board
that it meets capital adequacy standards

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on a consolidated basis established by
its home-country supervisor that are
consistent with the regulatory capital
framework published by the Basel
Committee on Banking Supervision, as
amended from time to time (Basel
Capital Framework). Home country
capital adequacy standards that are
consistent with the Basel Capital
Framework include all minimum riskbased capital ratios, any minimum
leverage ratio, and all restrictions based
on any applicable capital buffers set
forth in Basel III, each as applicable and
as implemented in accordance with the
Basel III, including any transitional
provisions set forth therein. In the event
that a home-country supervisor has not
established capital adequacy standards
that are consistent with the Basel
Capital Framework, the foreign banking
organization must demonstrate to the
satisfaction of the Board that it would
meet or exceed capital adequacy
standards at the consolidated level that
are consistent with the Basel Capital
Framework were it subject to such
standards.
Section 252.154(b) would require a
foreign banking organization with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more to provide to the Board reports
relating to its compliance with the
capital adequacy measures concurrently
with filing the FR Y–7Q.
Section 252.154(c) would require that
if a foreign banking organization does
not satisfy the requirements of this
section, the Board may impose
requirements, conditions, or restrictions
relating to the activities or business
operations of the U.S. operations of the
foreign banking organization. The Board
will coordinate with any relevant State
or Federal regulator in the
implementation of such requirements,
conditions, or restrictions. If the Board
determines to impose one or more
requirements, conditions, or restrictions
under this paragraph, the Board will
notify the company before it applies any
requirement, condition or restriction,
and describe the basis for imposing such
requirement, condition, or restriction.
Within 14 calendar days of receipt of a
notification under this paragraph, the
company may request in writing that the
Board reconsider the requirement,
condition, or restriction. The Board will
respond in writing to the company’s
request for reconsideration prior to
applying the requirement, condition, or
restriction.
Section 252.157(b) (formerly section
252.226(c) in the proposed rule) would
require a foreign banking organization
with combined U.S. assets of $50 billion
or more to make available to the Board,
in a timely manner, the results of any

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liquidity internal stress tests and
establishment of liquidity buffers
required by regulators in its home
jurisdiction. The report required under
this paragraph must include the results
of its liquidity stress test and liquidity
buffer, if required by the laws or
regulations implemented in the home
jurisdiction, or expected under
supervisory guidance.
Section 252.158(c)(1) (formerly
section 252.263(b)(1) in the proposed
rule) would require a foreign banking
organization with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more to report to the
Board by January 5 of each calendar
year, unless such date is extended by
the Board, summary information about
its stress-testing activities and results,
including the following quantitative and
qualitative information (1) a description
of the types of risks included in the
stress test; (2) a description of the
conditions or scenarios used in the
stress test; (3) a summary description of
the methodologies used in the stress
test; (4) estimates of (a) aggregate losses,
(b) pre-provision net revenue, (c) total
loan loss provisions, (d) net income
before taxes, and (e) pro forma
regulatory capital ratios required to be
computed by the home-country
supervisor of the foreign banking
organization and any other relevant
capital ratios; and (5) an explanation of
the most significant causes for any
changes in regulatory capital ratios.
Section 252.158(c)(2) (formerly
section 252.263(b)(2) in the proposed
rule) would require that if, on a net
basis, the U.S. branches and agencies of
a foreign banking organization with
combined U.S. assets of $50 billion or
more provide funding to the foreign
banking organization’s non-U.S. offices
and non-U.S. affiliates, calculated as the
average daily position over a stress test
cycle for a given year, the foreign
banking organization must report the
following information to the Board by
January 5 of each calendar year, unless
such date is extended by the Board (1)
a detailed description of the
methodologies used in the stress test,
including those employed to estimate
losses, revenues, and changes in capital
positions; (2) estimates of realized losses
or gains on available-for-sale and heldto-maturity securities, trading and
counterparty losses, if applicable; and
loan losses (dollar amount and as a
percentage of average portfolio balance)
in the aggregate and by material subportfolio; and (3) any additional
information that the Board requests.
Section 252.158(d)(1)(ii) (formerly
section 252.263(c)(2) in the proposed
rule) would require a foreign banking
organization with combined U.S. assets

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of $50 billion or more that does not
meet the home-country stress testing
standards set forth in the rule and
provide requested information to the
Board must to the extent that a foreign
banking organization has not formed a
U.S. intermediate holding company,
conduct an annual stress test of its U.S.
subsidiaries to determine whether those
subsidiaries have the capital necessary
to absorb losses as a result of adverse
economic conditions and report on an
annual basis a summary of the results of
that stress test of this section to the
Board that includes the qualitative and
quantitative information required for
home country supervisory stress and
any other information specified by the
Board.
Recordkeeping Requirements
Section 252.34(e)(3) (formerly section
252.61 in the proposed rule) would
require a bank holding company with
total consolidated assets of $50 billion
or more to adequately document its
methodology for making cash flow
projections and the included
assumptions and submit such
documentation to the risk committee.
Section 252.34(f) (formerly section
252.58 in the proposed rule) would
require a bank holding company with
total consolidated assets of $50 billion
or more to establish and maintain a
contingency funding plan that sets out
the company’s strategies for addressing
liquidity needs during liquidity stress
events. The contingency funding plan
must be commensurate with the
company’s capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, size, and
established liquidity risk tolerance. The
company must update the contingency
funding plan at least annually, and
when changes to market and
idiosyncratic conditions warrant. The
contingency funding plan must include
specified quantitative elements.
The contingency funding plan must
include an event management process
that sets out the bank holding
company’s procedures for managing
liquidity during identified liquidity
stress events. The contingency funding
plan must include procedures for
monitoring emerging liquidity stress
events. The procedures must identify
early warning indicators that are
tailored to the company’s capital
structure, risk profile, complexity,
activities, and size.
Section 252.34(h)(1) (formerly section
252.60(a) in the proposed rule) would
require a bank holding company with
total consolidated assets of $50 billion
or more to establish and maintain
policies and procedures to monitor
assets that have been, or are available to

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be, pledged as collateral in connection
with transactions to which it or its
affiliates are counterparties and sets
forth minimum standards for those
procedures.
Section 252.34(h)(2) (formerly section
252.60(b) in the proposed rule) would
require a bank holding company with
total consolidated assets of $50 billion
or more to establish and maintain
procedures for monitoring and
controlling liquidity risk exposures and
funding needs within and across
significant legal entities, currencies, and
business lines, taking into account legal
and regulatory restrictions on the
transfer of liquidity between legal
entities.
Section 252.34(h)(3) (formerly section
252.60(c) in the proposed rule) would
require a bank holding company with
total consolidated assets of $50 billion
or more to establish and maintain
procedures for monitoring intraday
liquidity risk exposure. These
procedures must address how the
management of the bank holding
company will (1) monitor and measure
expected daily gross liquidity inflows
and outflows, (2) manage and transfer
collateral to obtain intraday credit, (3)
identify and prioritize time-specific
obligations so that the bank holding
company can meet these obligations as
expected and settle less critical
obligations as soon as possible, (4)
control the issuance of credit to
customers where necessary, and (5)
consider the amounts of collateral and
liquidity needed to meet payment
systems obligations when assessing the
bank holding company’s overall
liquidity needs.
Section 252.35(a)(7) (formerly section
252.56(c) in the proposed rule) would
require a bank holding company with
total consolidated assets of $50 billion
or more to establish and maintain
policies and procedures governing its
liquidity stress testing practices,
methodologies, and assumptions that
provide for the incorporation of the
results of liquidity stress tests in future
stress testing and for the enhancement
of stress testing practices over time. The
bank holding company would establish
and maintain a system of controls and
oversight that is designed to ensure that
its liquidity stress testing processes are
effective in meeting the final rule’s
stress testing requirements. The bank
holding company would maintain
management information systems and
data processes sufficient to enable it to
effectively and reliably collect, sort, and
aggregate data and other information
related to liquidity stress testing.
Section 252.156(e) (formerly section
252.228 in the proposed rule) would

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require a foreign banking organization
with combined U.S. assets of $50 billion
or more to establish and maintain a
contingency funding plan for its
combined U.S. operations that sets out
the foreign banking organization’s
strategies for addressing liquidity needs
during liquidity stress events. The
contingency funding plan must be
commensurate with the capital
structure, risk profile, complexity,
activities, size, and the established
liquidity risk tolerance for the combined
U.S. operations. The foreign banking
organization must update the
contingency funding plan for its
combined U.S. operations at least
annually, and when changes to market
and idiosyncratic conditions warrant.
The contingency funding plan must
include specified quantitative elements.
The contingency funding plan for a
foreign banking organization’s
combined U.S. operations must include
an event management process that sets
out the foreign banking organization’s
procedures for managing liquidity
during identified liquidity stress events
for the combined U.S. operations as set
forth in the final rule. The contingency
funding plan must include procedures
for monitoring emerging liquidity stress
events. The procedures must identify
early warning indicators that are
tailored to the capital structure, risk
profile, complexity, activities, and size
of the foreign banking organization and
its combined U.S. operations.
Section 252.156(g)(1) (formerly
section 252.230(a) in the proposed rule)
would require a foreign banking
organization with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more to establish and
maintain policies and procedures to
monitor assets that have been or are
available to be pledged as collateral in
connection with transactions to which
entities in its U.S. operations are
counterparties. These policies and
procedures must provide that the
foreign banking organization (1)
calculates all of the collateral positions
for its combined U.S. operations on a
weekly basis (or more frequently, as
directed by the Board), specifying the
value of pledged assets relative to the
amount of security required under the
relevant contracts and the value of
unencumbered assets available to be
pledged, (2) monitors the levels of
unencumbered assets available to be
pledged by legal entity, jurisdiction, and
currency exposure, (3) monitors shifts in
the foreign banking organization’s
funding patterns, including shifts
between intraday, overnight, and term
pledging of collateral, and (4) tracks
operational and timing requirements
associated with accessing collateral at

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its physical location (for example, the
custodian or securities settlement
system that holds the collateral).
Section 252.156(g)(2) (formerly
section 252.230(b) in the proposed rule)
would require a foreign banking
organization with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more to establish and
maintain procedures for monitoring and
controlling liquidity risk exposures and
funding needs within and across
significant legal entities, currencies, and
business lines for its combined U.S.
operations, taking into account legal and
regulatory restrictions on the transfer of
liquidity between legal entities.
Section 252.156(g)(3) (formerly
section 252.230(c) in the proposed rule)
would require a foreign banking
organization with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more to establish and
maintain procedures for monitoring
intraday liquidity risk exposure for its
combined U.S. operations. These
procedures must address how the
management of the combined U.S.
operations will (1) monitor and measure
expected daily inflows and outflows, (2)
maintain, manage and transfer collateral
to obtain intraday credit, (3) identify
and prioritize time-specific obligations
so that the foreign banking organizations
can meet these obligations as expected
and settle less critical obligations as
soon as possible, (4) control the
issuance of credit to customers where
necessary, and (5) consider the amounts
of collateral and liquidity needed to
meet payment systems obligations when
assessing the overall liquidity needs of
the combined U.S. operations.
Section 252.157(a)(7) (formerly
section 252.230(c) in the proposed rule)
would require a foreign banking
organization with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more, within its
combined U.S. operations and its
enterprise-wide risk management, to
establish and maintain policies and
procedures governing its liquidity stress
testing practices, methodologies, and
assumptions that provide for the
incorporation of the results of liquidity
stress tests in future stress testing and
for the enhancement of stress testing
practices over time. The foreign banking
organization must establish and
maintain a system of controls and
oversight that is designed to ensure that
its liquidity stress testing processes are
effective in meeting the requirements of
this section. The foreign banking
organization must maintain
management information systems and
data processes sufficient to enable it to
effectively and reliably collect, sort, and
aggregate data and other information
related to the liquidity stress testing of
its combined U.S. operations.

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Recordkeeping and Disclosure
Requirements
Section 252.153(e)(5) (formerly
section 252.262 in the proposed rule)
would require a U.S. intermediate
holding company to comply with the
requirements of this subparts E and F of
this part and any successor regulation in
the same manner as a bank holding
company.
Other Changes
The following subparts have been
renumbered, no content has been
changed. ‘‘Subpart F—Supervisory
Stress Test Requirements for Covered
Companies’’ is now ‘‘Subpart E—
Supervisory Stress Test Requirements
for U.S. Bank Holding Companies with
$50 Billion or More in Total
Consolidated Assets and Nonbank
Financial Companies Supervised by the
Board.’’ ‘‘Subpart G—Company-Run
Stress Test Requirements for Covered
Companies’’ is now ‘‘Subpart F—
Company-Run Stress Test Requirements
for U.S. Bank Holding Companies with
$50 Billion or More in Total
Consolidated Assets and Nonbank
Financial Companies Supervised by the
Board.’’ ‘‘Subpart H—Company-Run
Stress Test Requirements for Banking
Organizations With Total Consolidated
Assets Over $10 Billion That Are Not
Covered Companies’’ is now ‘‘Subpart
B—Company-Run Stress Test
Requirements for Certain U.S. Banking
Organizations with Total Consolidated
Assets Over $10 Billion and less than
$50 Billion.’’
Estimated Paperwork Burden
Estimated Burden per Response:

Foreign Banking Organizations With
Total Consolidated Assets of $50 Billion
or More and U.S. Non-Branch Assets of
$50 Billion or More
Section 252.153(a)(3)—20 hours.
Section 252.153(c)(3)—160 hours.
Section 252.153(d)—Initial setup 750
hours.
Foreign Banking Organizations and
Foreign Savings and Loan Holding
Companies With Total Consolidated
Assets Over $10 Billion and Less Than
$50 Billion
Section 252.122(b)(1)(iii)—80 hours.
Publicly Traded Foreign Banking
Organizations With Total Consolidated
Assets Equal to or Greater Than $10
Billion and Less Than $50 Billion
Section 252.132(a) and (b)—1 hour.
Section 252.132(d)—10 hours.
Recordkeeping Burden
Bank Holding Companies With Total
Consolidated Assets of $50 Billion or
More
Sections 252.34(e)(3), 252.34(f),
252.34(h), and 252.35(a)(7)—200 hours
(Initial setup 160 hours).
Intermediate Holding Companies
Section 252.153(e)(5)—40 hours
(Initial setup 280 hours).
Foreign Banking Organizations With
Total Consolidated Assets of $50 Billion
or More and Combined U.S. Assets of
$50 Billion or More
Sections 252.156(e), 252.156(g), and
252.157(a)(7)—200 hours (Initial setup
160 hours).
Disclosure Burden

Reporting Burden

Intermediate Holding Companies

Foreign Banking Organizations With
Total Consolidated Assets of $50 Billion
or More But Combined U.S. Assets of
Less Than $50 Billion

Section 252.153(e)(5)—80 hours
(Initial setup 200 hours).
Number of respondents: 24 U.S. bank
holding companies with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more, 46 U.S. bank holding companies
with total consolidated assets over $10
billion and less than $50 billion, 21
state member banks with total
consolidated assets over $10 billion, 39
savings and loan holding companies
with total consolidated assets over $10
billion, 24 foreign banking organizations
with total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more and combined U.S.
assets of $50 billion or more, 17 U.S.
intermediate holding companies, and
102 foreign banking organizations with
total consolidated assets of more than
$10 billion and combined U.S. assets of
less than $50 billion.
Current estimated annual burden:
59,320 hours (48,080 hours for initial

Section 252.143(a) and (b)—1 hour.
Section 252.143(c)—10 hours.
Section 252.144(a) and (b)—1 hour.
Section 252.144(d)—10 hours.
Section 252.145(a)—50 hours.
Section 252.146(c)(1)(iii)—80 hours.
Foreign Banking Organizations With
Total Consolidated Assets of $50 Billion
or More and Combined U.S. Assets of
$50 Billion or More
Section 252.154(a) and (b)—1 hour.
Section 252.154(c)—10 hours.
Section 252.157(b)—40 hours.
Section 252.158(c)(1)—40 hours.
Section 252.158(c)(2)—40 hours.
Section 252.158(d)(1)(ii)—80 hours.

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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 59 / Thursday, March 27, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
setup and 11,240 hours for ongoing
compliance).
Proposed revisions only estimated
annual burden: 59,226 hours (31,990
hours for initial setup and 27,236 hours
for ongoing compliance).
Total estimated annual burden:
118,546 hours (80,070 hours for initial
setup and 38,476 hours for ongoing
compliance).
C. Plain Language
Section 722 of the Gramm-Leach
Bliley Act (Pub. L. 106–102, 113 Stat.
1338, 1471, 12 U.S.C. 4809) requires the
Federal banking agencies to use plain
language in all proposed and final rules
published after January 1, 2000. The
Board invited comment on whether the
proposed rule was written plainly and
clearly, or whether there were ways the
Board could make the rule easier to
understand. The Board received no
comments on these matters and believes
that the final rule is written plainly and
clearly.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 252

§ 252.2

Administrative practice and
procedure, Banks, Banking, Federal
Reserve System, Holding companies,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Securities.
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System further amends
part 252, as amended on March 11,
2014, at 79 FR 13498, effective April 15,
2014, as follows:
PART 252—ENHANCED PRUDENTIAL
STANDARDS (REGULATION YY)
1. The authority citation for part 252
is revised to read as follows:

■

Authority: 12 U.S.C. 321–338a, 481–486,
1467a, 1818, 1828, 1831n, 1831o, 1831p–l,
1831w, 1835, 1844(b), 3101 et seq., 3101
note, 3904, 3906–3909, 4808, 5362, 5365,
5367, and 5368.

2. Subpart A is added to read as
follows:

■

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Subpart A—General Provisions
Sec.
252.1 Authority and purpose.
252.2 Definitions.
252.3 Reservation of authority.
252.4 Nonbank financial companies
supervised by the Board.

Subpart A—General Provisions
§ 252.1

Authority and purpose.

(a) Authority. This part is issued by
the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System (the Board) under
sections 162, 165, 167, and 168 of Title

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I of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act (the
Dodd-Frank Act) (Pub. L. 111–203, 124
Stat. 1376, 1423–1432, 12 U.S.C. 5362,
5365, 5367, and 5368); section 9 of the
Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 321–
338a); section 5(b) of the Bank Holding
Company Act (12 U.S.C. 1844(b));
section 10(g) of the Home Owners’ Loan
Act, as amended (12 U.S.C. 1467a(g));
sections 8 and 39 of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1818(b) and
1831p–1); the International Banking Act
(12 U.S.C. 3101 et seq.); the Foreign
Bank Supervision Enhancement Act (12
U.S.C. 3101 note); and 12 U.S.C. 3904,
3906–3909, and 4808.
(b) Purpose. This part implements
certain provisions of section 165 of the
Dodd-Frank Act (12 U.S.C. 5365), which
require the Board to establish enhanced
prudential standards for bank holding
companies and foreign banking
organizations with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more, nonbank
financial companies supervised by the
Board, and certain other companies.
Definitions.

Unless otherwise specified, the
following definitions apply for purposes
of this part:
(a) Affiliate has the same meaning as
in section 2(k) of the Bank Holding
Company Act (12 U.S.C. 1841(k)) and
section 225.2(a) of the Board’s
Regulation Y (12 CFR 225.2(a)).
(b) Applicable accounting standards
means U.S. generally accepted
accounting principles, international
financial reporting standards, or such
other accounting standards that a
company uses in the ordinary course of
its business in preparing its
consolidated financial statements.
(c) Bank holding company has the
same meaning as in section 2(a) of the
Bank Holding Company Act (12 U.S.C.
1841(a)) and section 225.2(c) of the
Board’s Regulation Y (12 CFR 225.2(c)).
(d) Board means the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System.
(e) Combined U.S. operations of a
foreign banking organization means:
(1) Its U.S. branches and agencies, if
any; and
(2)(i) If the foreign banking
organization has established a U.S.
intermediate holding company, the U.S.
intermediate holding company and the
subsidiaries of such U.S. intermediate
holding company; or
(ii) If the foreign banking organization
has not established a U.S. intermediate
holding company, the U.S. subsidiaries
of the foreign banking organization
(excluding any section 2(h)(2) company,

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17315

if applicable), and subsidiaries of such
U.S. subsidiaries.
(f) Company means a corporation,
partnership, limited liability company,
depository institution, business trust,
special purpose entity, association, or
similar organization.
(g) Control has the same meaning as
in section 2(a) of the Bank Holding
Company Act (12 U.S.C. 1841(a)), and
the terms controlled and controlling
shall be construed consistently with the
term control.
(h) Council means the Financial
Stability Oversight Council established
by section 111 of the Dodd-Frank Act
(12 U.S.C. 5321).
(i) DPC branch subsidiary means any
subsidiary of a U.S. branch or a U.S.
agency acquired, or formed to hold
assets acquired, in the ordinary course
of business and for the sole purpose of
securing or collecting debt previously
contracted in good faith by that branch
or agency.
(j) Foreign banking organization has
the same meaning as in section
211.21(o) of the Board’s Regulation K
(12 CFR 211.21(o)), provided that if the
top-tier foreign banking organization is
incorporated in or organized under the
laws of any State, the foreign banking
organization shall not be treated as a
foreign banking organization for
purposes of this part.
(k) FR Y–7Q means the Capital and
Asset Report for Foreign Banking
Organizations reporting form.
(l) FR Y–7 means the Annual Report
of Foreign Banking Organizations
reporting form.
(m) FR Y–9C means the Consolidated
Financial Statements for Holding
Companies reporting form.
(n) Nonbank financial company
supervised by the Board means a
company that the Council has
determined under section 113 of the
Dodd-Frank Act (12 U.S.C. 5323) shall
be supervised by the Board and for
which such determination is still in
effect.
(o) Non-U.S. affiliate means any
affiliate of a foreign banking
organization that is incorporated or
organized in a country other than the
United States.
(p) Publicly traded means an
instrument that is traded on:
(1) Any exchange registered with the
U.S. Securities and Exchange
Commission as a national securities
exchange under section 6 of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15
U.S.C. 78f); or
(2) Any non-U.S.-based securities
exchange that:

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(i) Is registered with, or approved by,
a non-U.S. national securities regulatory
authority; and
(ii) Provides a liquid, two-way market
for the instrument in question, meaning
that there are enough independent bona
fide offers to buy and sell so that a sales
price reasonably related to the last sales
price or current bona fide competitive
bid and offer quotations can be
determined promptly and a trade can be
settled at such price within a reasonable
time period conforming with trade
custom.
(3) A company can rely on its
determination that a particular nonU.S.-based securities exchange provides
a liquid two-way market unless the
Board determines that the exchange
does not provide a liquid two-way
market.
(q) Section 2(h)(2) company has the
same meaning as in section 2(h)(2) of
the Bank Holding Company Act (12
U.S.C. 1841(h)(2)).
(r) State means any state,
commonwealth, territory, or possession
of the United States, the District of
Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico, the Commonwealth of the
Northern Mariana Islands, American
Samoa, Guam, or the United States
Virgin Islands.
(s) Subsidiary has the same meaning
as in section 3 of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1813).
(t) U.S. agency has the same meaning
as the term ‘‘agency’’ in section
211.21(b) of the Board’s regulation K (12
CFR 211.21(b)).
(u) U.S. branch has the same meaning
as the term ‘‘branch’’ in section
211.21(e) of the Board’s Regulation K
(12 CFR 211.21(e)).
(v) U.S. branches and agencies means
the U.S. branches and U.S. agencies of
a foreign banking organization.
(w) U.S. government agency means an
agency or instrumentality of the United
States whose obligations are fully and
explicitly guaranteed as to the timely
payment of principal and interest by the
full faith and credit of the United States.
(x) U.S. government-sponsored
enterprise means an entity originally
established or chartered by the U.S.
government to serve public purposes
specified by the U.S. Congress, but
whose obligations are not explicitly
guaranteed by the full faith and credit
of the United States.
(y) U.S. intermediate holding
company means the top-tier U.S.
company that is required to be
established pursuant to § 252.153.
(z) U.S. subsidiary means any
subsidiary that is incorporated in or

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organized under the laws of the United
States or in any State, commonwealth,
territory, or possession of the United
States, the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico, the Commonwealth of the North
Mariana Islands, the American Samoa,
Guam, or the United States Virgin
Islands.
§ 252.3

Reservation of authority.

(a) In general. Nothing in this part
limits the authority of the Board under
any provision of law or regulation to
impose on any company additional
enhanced prudential standards,
including, but not limited to, additional
risk-based or leverage capital or
liquidity requirements, leverage limits,
limits on exposures to single
counterparties, risk-management
requirements, stress tests, or other
requirements or restrictions the Board
deems necessary to carry out the
purposes of this part or Title I of the
Dodd-Frank Act, or to take supervisory
or enforcement action, including action
to address unsafe and unsound practices
or conditions, or violations of law or
regulation.
(b) Modifications or extensions of this
part. The Board may extend or
accelerate any compliance date of this
part if the Board determines that such
extension or acceleration is appropriate.
In determining whether an extension or
acceleration is appropriate, the Board
will consider the effect of the
modification on financial stability, the
period of time for which the
modification would be necessary to
facilitate compliance with this part, and
the actions the company is taking to
come into compliance with this part.
§ 252.4 Nonbank financial companies
supervised by the Board.

(a) U.S. nonbank financial companies
supervised by the Board. The Board will
establish enhanced prudential standards
for a nonbank financial company
supervised by the Board that is
incorporated in or organized under the
laws of the United States or any State
(U.S. nonbank financial company) by
rule or order. In establishing such
standards, the Board will consider the
factors set forth in sections 165(a)(2) and
(b)(3) of the Dodd-Frank Act, including:
(1) The nature, scope, size, scale,
concentration, interconnectedness, and
mix of the activities of the U.S. nonbank
financial company;
(2) The degree to which the U.S.
nonbank financial company is already
regulated by one or more primary
financial regulatory agencies; and

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(3) Any other risk-related factor that
the Board determines is appropriate.
(b) Foreign nonbank financial
companies supervised by the Board. The
Board will establish enhanced
prudential standards for a nonbank
financial company supervised by the
Board that is organized or incorporated
in a country other than the United
States (foreign nonbank financial
company) by rule or order. In
establishing such standards, the Board
will consider the factors set forth in
sections 165(a)(2), (b)(2), and (b)(3) of
the Dodd-Frank Act, including:
(1) The nature, scope, size, scale,
concentration, interconnectedness, and
mix of the activities of the foreign
nonbank financial company;
(2) The extent to which the foreign
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; and
(3) Any other risk-related factor that
the Board determines is appropriate.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. Subpart C is added to read as
follows:
Subpart C—Risk Committee Requirement
for Publicly Traded Bank Holding
Companies With Total Consolidated Assets
Equal to or Greater Than $10 Billion and
Less Than $50 Billion
Sec.
252.20 [Reserved].
252.21 Applicability.
252.22 Risk committee requirement for
publicly traded bank holding companies
with total consolidated assets of $10
billion or more.

Subpart C—Risk Committee
Requirement for Publicly Traded Bank
Holding Companies With Total
Consolidated Assets of $10 Billion or
Greater and Less Than $50 Billion
§ 252.20

[Reserved].

§ 252.21

Applicability.

(a) General applicability. Subject to
the initial applicability provisions of
paragraph (c) of this section, a bank
holding company with any class of
stock that is publicly traded must
comply with the risk-committee
requirements set forth in this subpart
beginning on the first day of the ninth
quarter following the later of the date on
which its total consolidated assets equal
or exceed $10 billion and the date on
which any class of its stock becomes
publicly traded.

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(b) Total consolidated assets. Total
consolidated assets of a bank holding
company for purposes of this subpart
are equal to its consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
bank holding company’s total
consolidated assets in the four most
recent quarters as reported quarterly on
its FR Y–9C. If the bank holding
company has not filed the FR Y–9C for
each of the four most recent consecutive
quarters, total consolidated assets means
the average of its total consolidated
assets, as reported on the FR Y–9C, for
the most recent quarter or consecutive
quarters, as applicable. Total
consolidated assets are measured on the
as-of date of the most recent FR Y–9C
used in the calculation of the average.
(c) Initial applicability provisions. A
bank holding company that, as of June
30, 2014, has total consolidated assets of
$10 billion or more and has a class of
stock that is publicly traded must
comply with the requirements of this
subpart beginning on July 1, 2015.
(d) Cessation of requirements. A bank
holding company will remain subject to
the requirements of this subpart until
the earlier of the date on which:
(1) Its reported total consolidated
assets on the FR Y–9C are below $10
billion for each of four consecutive
calendar quarters;
(2) It becomes subject to the
requirements of subpart D of this part;
and
(3) It ceases to have a class of stock
that is publicly traded.

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§ 252.22 Risk committee requirement for
publicly traded bank holding companies
with total consolidated assets of $10 billion
or more.

(a) Risk committee. A bank holding
company with any class of stock that is
publicly traded and total consolidated
assets of $10 billion or more must
maintain a risk committee that approves
and periodically reviews the riskmanagement policies of its global
operations and oversees the operation of
its global risk-management framework.
(b) Risk-management framework. The
bank holding company’s global riskmanagement framework must be
commensurate with its structure, risk
profile, complexity, activities, and size
and must include:
(1) Policies and procedures
establishing risk-management
governance, risk-management
procedures, and risk-control
infrastructure for its global operations;
and
(2) Processes and systems for
implementing and monitoring
compliance with such policies and
procedures, including:

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(i) Processes and systems for
identifying and reporting risks and riskmanagement deficiencies, including
regarding emerging risks, and ensuring
effective and timely implementation of
actions to address emerging risks and
risk-management deficiencies for its
global operations;
(ii) Processes and systems for
establishing managerial and employee
responsibility for risk management;
(iii) Processes and systems for
ensuring the independence of the riskmanagement function; and
(iv) Processes and systems to integrate
risk management and associated
controls with management goals and its
compensation structure for its global
operations.
(c) Corporate governance
requirements. The risk committee must:
(1) Have a formal, written charter that
is approved by the bank holding
company’s board of directors.
(2) Meet at least quarterly, and
otherwise as needed, and fully
document and maintain records of its
proceedings, including riskmanagement decisions.
(d) Minimum member requirements.
The risk committee must:
(1) Include at least one member
having experience in identifying,
assessing, and managing risk exposures
of large, complex firms; and
(2) Be chaired by a director who:
(i) Is not an officer or employee of the
bank holding company and has not been
an officer or employee of the bank
holding company during the previous
three years;
(ii) Is not a member of the immediate
family, as defined in section
225.41(b)(3) of the Board’s Regulation Y
(12 CFR 225.41(b)(3)), of a person who
is, or has been within the last three
years, an executive officer of the bank
holding company, as defined in section
215.2(e)(1) of the Board’s Regulation O
(12 CFR 215.2(e)(1)); and
(iii)(A) Is an independent director
under Item 407 of the Securities and
Exchange Commission’s Regulation S–K
(17 CFR 229.407(a)), if the bank holding
company has an outstanding class of
securities traded on an exchange
registered with the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission as a national
securities exchange under section 6 of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15
U.S.C. 78f) (national securities
exchange); or
(B) Would qualify as an independent
director under the listing standards of a
national securities exchange, as
demonstrated to the satisfaction of the
Board, if the bank holding company
does not have an outstanding class of

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securities traded on a national securities
exchange.
■ 4. Subpart D is added to read as
follows:
Subpart D—Enhanced Prudential Standards
for Bank Holding Companies With Total
Consolidated Assets of $50 Billion or More
Sec.
252.30 Scope.
252.31 Applicability.
252.32 Risk-based and leverage capital and
stress test requirements.
252.33 Risk-management and risk
committee requirements.
252.34 Liquidity risk-management
requirements.
252.35 Liquidity stress testing and buffer
requirements.

Subpart D—Enhanced Prudential
Standards for Bank Holding
Companies With Total Consolidated
Assets of $50 Billion or More
§ 252.30

Scope.

This subpart applies to bank holding
companies with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more. Total
consolidated assets of a bank holding
company are equal to the consolidated
assets of the bank holding company, as
calculated in accordance with
§ 252.31(b).
§ 252.31

Applicability.

(a) General applicability. Subject to
the initial applicability provisions of
paragraphs (c) and (e) of this section, a
bank holding company must comply
with the risk-management and riskcommittee requirements set forth in
§ 252.33 and the liquidity riskmanagement and liquidity stress test
requirements set forth in §§ 252.34 and
252.35 beginning on the first day of the
fifth quarter following the date on
which its total consolidated assets equal
or exceed $50 billion.
(b) Total consolidated assets. Total
consolidated assets of a bank holding
company for purposes of this subpart
are equal to its consolidated assets,
calculated based on the average of the
bank holding company’s total
consolidated assets in the four most
recent quarters as reported quarterly on
the FR Y–9C. If the bank holding
company has not filed the FR Y–9C for
each of the four most recent consecutive
quarters, total consolidated assets means
the average of its total consolidated
assets, as reported on the FR Y–9C, for
the most recent quarter or consecutive
quarters, as applicable. Total
consolidated assets are measured on the
as-of date of the most recent FR Y–9C
used in the calculation of the average.
(c) Initial applicability. A bank
holding company that, as of June 30,
2014, has total consolidated assets of

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$50 billion or more, as calculated
according to paragraph (b) of this
section, must comply with the riskmanagement and risk-committee
requirements set forth in § 252.33 and
the liquidity risk-management and
liquidity stress test requirements set
forth in §§ 252.34 and 252.35, beginning
on January 1, 2015.
(d) Cessation of requirements. Except
as provided in paragraph (e) of this
section, a bank holding company is
subject to the risk-management and risk
committee requirements set forth in
§ 252.33 and the liquidity riskmanagement and liquidity stress test
requirements set forth in §§ 252.34 and
252.35 until its reported total
consolidated assets on the FR Y–9C are
below $50 billion for each of four
consecutive calendar quarters.
(e) Applicability for bank holding
companies that are subsidiaries of
foreign banking organizations. In the
event that a bank holding company that
has total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more is controlled by a foreign
banking organization, such bank
holding company is subject to the riskmanagement and risk committee
requirements set forth in § 252.33 and
the liquidity risk-management and
liquidity stress test requirements set
forth in §§ 252.34 and 252.35 beginning
on January 1, 2015 and ending on June
30, 2016. Beginning on July 1, 2016, the
U.S. intermediate holding company
established or designated by the foreign
banking organization must comply with
the risk-management and risk
committee requirements set forth in
§ 252.153(e)(3) and the liquidity riskmanagement and liquidity stress test
requirements set forth in § 252.153(e)(4).
§ 252.32 Risk-based and leverage capital
and stress test requirements.

A bank holding company with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more must comply with, and hold
capital commensurate with the
requirements of, any regulations
adopted by the Board relating to capital
planning and stress tests, in accordance
with the applicability provisions set
forth therein.

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§ 252.33 Risk-management and risk
committee requirements.

(a) Risk committee—(1) General. A
bank holding company with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more must maintain a risk committee
that approves and periodically reviews
the risk-management policies of the
bank holding company’s global
operations and oversees the operation of
the bank holding company’s global riskmanagement framework. The risk

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committee’s responsibilities include
liquidity risk-management as set forth in
§ 252.34(b).
(2) Risk-management framework. The
bank holding company’s global riskmanagement framework must be
commensurate with its structure, risk
profile, complexity, activities, and size
and must include:
(i) Policies and procedures
establishing risk-management
governance, risk-management
procedures, and risk-control
infrastructure for its global operations;
and
(ii) Processes and systems for
implementing and monitoring
compliance with such policies and
procedures, including:
(A) Processes and systems for
identifying and reporting risks and riskmanagement deficiencies, including
regarding emerging risks, and ensuring
effective and timely implementation of
actions to address emerging risks and
risk-management deficiencies for its
global operations;
(B) Processes and systems for
establishing managerial and employee
responsibility for risk management;
(C) Processes and systems for
ensuring the independence of the riskmanagement function; and
(D) Processes and systems to integrate
risk management and associated
controls with management goals and its
compensation structure for its global
operations.
(3) Corporate governance
requirements. The risk committee must:
(i) Have a formal, written charter that
is approved by the bank holding
company’s board of directors;
(ii) Be an independent committee of
the board of directors that has, as its
sole and exclusive function,
responsibility for the risk-management
policies of the bank holding company’s
global operations and oversight of the
operation of the bank holding
company’s global risk-management
framework;
(iii) Report directly to the bank
holding company’s board of directors;
(iv) Receive and review regular
reports on not less than a quarterly basis
from the bank holding company’s chief
risk officer provided pursuant to
paragraph (b)(3)(ii) of this section; and
(v) Meet at least quarterly, or more
frequently as needed, and fully
document and maintain records of its
proceedings, including riskmanagement decisions.
(4) Minimum member requirements.
The risk committee must:
(i) Include at least one member having
experience in identifying, assessing, and

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managing risk exposures of large,
complex financial firms; and
(ii) Be chaired by a director who:
(A) Is not an officer or employee of
the bank holding company and has not
been an officer or employee of the bank
holding company during the previous
three years;
(B) Is not a member of the immediate
family, as defined in section
225.41(b)(3) of the Board’s Regulation Y
(12 CFR 225.41(b)(3)), of a person who
is, or has been within the last three
years, an executive officer of the bank
holding company, as defined in section
215.2(e)(1) of the Board’s Regulation O
(12 CFR 215.2(e)(1)); and
(C)(1) Is an independent director
under Item 407 of the Securities and
Exchange Commission’s Regulation S–K
(17 CFR 229.407(a)), if the bank holding
company has an outstanding class of
securities traded on an exchange
registered with the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission as a national
securities exchange under section 6 of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15
U.S.C. 78f) (national securities
exchange); or
(2) Would qualify as an independent
director under the listing standards of a
national securities exchange, as
demonstrated to the satisfaction of the
Board, if the bank holding company
does not have an outstanding class of
securities traded on a national securities
exchange.
(b) Chief risk officer—(1) General. A
bank holding company with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more must appoint a chief risk officer
with experience in identifying,
assessing, and managing risk exposures
of large, complex financial firms.
(2) Responsibilities. (i) The chief risk
officer is responsible for overseeing:
(A) The establishment of risk limits
on an enterprise-wide basis and the
monitoring of compliance with such
limits;
(B) The implementation of and
ongoing compliance with the policies
and procedures set forth in paragraph
(a)(2)(i) of this section and the
development and implementation of the
processes and systems set forth in
paragraph (a)(2)(ii) of this section; and
(C) The management of risks and risk
controls within the parameters of the
company’s risk control framework, and
monitoring and testing of the company’s
risk controls.
(ii) The chief risk officer is
responsible for reporting riskmanagement deficiencies and emerging
risks to the risk committee and resolving
risk-management deficiencies in a
timely manner.

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(3) Corporate governance
requirements. (i) The bank holding
company must ensure that the
compensation and other incentives
provided to the chief risk officer are
consistent with providing an objective
assessment of the risks taken by the
bank holding company; and
(ii) The chief risk officer must report
directly to both the risk committee and
chief executive officer of the company.

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§ 252.34 Liquidity risk-management
requirements.

(a) Responsibilities of the board of
directors—(1) Liquidity risk tolerance.
The board of directors of a bank holding
company with total consolidated assets
of $50 billion or more must:
(i) Approve the acceptable level of
liquidity risk that the bank holding
company may assume in connection
with its operating strategies (liquidity
risk tolerance) at least annually, taking
into account the bank holding
company’s capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, and size; and
(ii) Receive and review at least semiannually information provided by
senior management to determine
whether the bank holding company is
operating in accordance with its
established liquidity risk tolerance.
(2) Liquidity risk-management
strategies, policies, and procedures. The
board of directors must approve and
periodically review the liquidity riskmanagement strategies, policies, and
procedures established by senior
management pursuant to paragraph
(c)(1) of this section.
(b) Responsibilities of the risk
committee. The risk committee (or a
designated subcommittee of such
committee composed of members of the
board of directors) must approve the
contingency funding plan described in
paragraph (f) of this section at least
annually, and must approve any
material revisions to the plan prior to
the implementation of such revisions.
(c) Responsibilities of senior
management—(1) Liquidity risk. (i)
Senior management of a bank holding
company with total consolidated assets
of $50 billion or more must establish
and implement strategies, policies, and
procedures designed to effectively
manage the risk that the bank holding
company’s financial condition or safety
and soundness would be adversely
affected by its inability or the market’s
perception of its inability to meet its
cash and collateral obligations (liquidity
risk). The board of directors must
approve the strategies, policies, and
procedures pursuant to paragraph (a)(2)
of this section.

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(ii) Senior management must oversee
the development and implementation of
liquidity risk measurement and
reporting systems, including those
required by this section and § 252.35.
(iii) Senior management must
determine at least quarterly whether the
bank holding company is operating in
accordance with such policies and
procedures and whether the bank
holding company is in compliance with
this section and § 252.35 (or more often,
if changes in market conditions or the
liquidity position, risk profile, or
financial condition warrant), and
establish procedures regarding the
preparation of such information.
(2) Liquidity risk tolerance. Senior
management must report to the board of
directors or the risk committee
regarding the bank holding company’s
liquidity risk profile and liquidity risk
tolerance at least quarterly (or more
often, if changes in market conditions or
the liquidity position, risk profile, or
financial condition of the company
warrant).
(3) Business lines or products. (i)
Senior management must approve new
products and business lines and
evaluate the liquidity costs, benefits,
and risks of each new business line and
each new product that could have a
significant effect on the company’s
liquidity risk profile. The approval is
required before the company
implements the business line or offers
the product. In determining whether to
approve the new business line or
product, senior management must
consider whether the liquidity risk of
the new business line or product (under
both current and stressed conditions) is
within the company’s established
liquidity risk tolerance.
(ii) Senior management must review
at least annually significant business
lines and products to determine
whether any line or product creates or
has created any unanticipated liquidity
risk, and to determine whether the
liquidity risk of each strategy or product
is within the company’s established
liquidity risk tolerance.
(4) Cash-flow projections. Senior
management must review the cash-flow
projections produced under paragraph
(e) of this section at least quarterly (or
more often, if changes in market
conditions or the liquidity position, risk
profile, or financial condition of the
bank holding company warrant) to
ensure that the liquidity risk is within
the established liquidity risk tolerance.
(5) Liquidity risk limits. Senior
management must establish liquidity
risk limits as set forth in paragraph (g)
of this section and review the
company’s compliance with those limits

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17319

at least quarterly (or more often, if
changes in market conditions or the
liquidity position, risk profile, or
financial condition of the company
warrant).
(6) Liquidity stress testing. Senior
management must:
(i) Approve the liquidity stress testing
practices, methodologies, and
assumptions required in § 252.35(a) at
least quarterly, and whenever the bank
holding company materially revises its
liquidity stress testing practices,
methodologies or assumptions;
(ii) Review the liquidity stress testing
results produced under § 252.35(a) at
least quarterly;
(iii) Review the independent review
of the liquidity stress tests under
§ 252.34(d) periodically; and
(iv) Approve the size and composition
of the liquidity buffer established under
§ 252.35(b) at least quarterly.
(d) Independent review function. (1) A
bank holding company with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more must establish and maintain a
review function that is independent of
management functions that execute
funding to evaluate its liquidity risk
management.
(2) The independent review function
must:
(i) Regularly, but no less frequently
than annually, review and evaluate the
adequacy and effectiveness of the
company’s liquidity risk management
processes, including its liquidity stress
test processes and assumptions;
(ii) Assess whether the company’s
liquidity risk-management function
complies with applicable laws,
regulations, supervisory guidance, and
sound business practices; and
(iii) Report material liquidity risk
management issues to the board of
directors or the risk committee in
writing for corrective action, to the
extent permitted by applicable law.
(e) Cash-flow projections. (1) A bank
holding company with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more must produce comprehensive
cash-flow projections that project cash
flows arising from assets, liabilities, and
off-balance sheet exposures over, at a
minimum, short- and long-term time
horizons. The bank holding company
must update short-term cash-flow
projections daily and must update
longer-term cash-flow projections at
least monthly.
(2) The bank holding company must
establish a methodology for making
cash-flow projections that results in
projections that:
(i) Include cash flows arising from
contractual maturities, intercompany
transactions, new business, funding

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renewals, customer options, and other
potential events that may impact
liquidity;
(ii) Include reasonable assumptions
regarding the future behavior of assets,
liabilities, and off-balance sheet
exposures;
(iii) Identify and quantify discrete and
cumulative cash flow mismatches over
these time periods; and
(iv) Include sufficient detail to reflect
the capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, currency exposure,
activities, and size of the bank holding
company and include analyses by
business line, currency, or legal entity
as appropriate.
(3) The bank holding company must
adequately document its methodology
for making cash flow projections and
the included assumptions and submit
such documentation to the risk
committee.
(f) Contingency funding plan. (1) A
bank holding company with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more must establish and maintain a
contingency funding plan that sets out
the company’s strategies for addressing
liquidity needs during liquidity stress
events. The contingency funding plan
must be commensurate with the
company’s capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, size, and
established liquidity risk tolerance. The
company must update the contingency
funding plan at least annually, and
when changes to market and
idiosyncratic conditions warrant.
(2) Components of the contingency
funding plan—(i) Quantitative
assessment. The contingency funding
plan must:
(A) Identify liquidity stress events
that could have a significant impact on
the bank holding company’s liquidity;
(B) Assess the level and nature of the
impact on the bank holding company’s
liquidity that may occur during
identified liquidity stress events;
(C) Identify the circumstances in
which the bank holding company would
implement its action plan described in
paragraph (f)(2)(ii)(A) of this section,
which circumstances must include
failure to meet any minimum liquidity
requirement imposed by the Board;
(D) Assess available funding sources
and needs during the identified
liquidity stress events;
(E) Identify alternative funding
sources that may be used during the
identified liquidity stress events; and
(F) Incorporate information generated
by the liquidity stress testing required
under § 252.35(a) of this subpart.
(ii) Liquidity event management
process. The contingency funding plan
must include an event management

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process that sets out the bank holding
company’s procedures for managing
liquidity during identified liquidity
stress events. The liquidity event
management process must:
(A) Include an action plan that clearly
describes the strategies the company
will use to respond to liquidity
shortfalls for identified liquidity stress
events, including the methods that the
company will use to access alternative
funding sources;
(B) Identify a liquidity stress event
management team that would execute
the action plan described in paragraph
(f)(2)(ii)(A) of this section;
(C) Specify the process,
responsibilities, and triggers for
invoking the contingency funding plan,
describe the decision-making process
during the identified liquidity stress
events, and describe the process for
executing contingency measures
identified in the action plan; and
(D) Provide a mechanism that ensures
effective reporting and communication
within the bank holding company and
with outside parties, including the
Board and other relevant supervisors,
counterparties, and other stakeholders.
(iii) Monitoring. The contingency
funding plan must include procedures
for monitoring emerging liquidity stress
events. The procedures must identify
early warning indicators that are
tailored to the company’s capital
structure, risk profile, complexity,
activities, and size.
(iv) Testing. The bank holding
company must periodically test:
(A) The components of the
contingency funding plan to assess the
plan’s reliability during liquidity stress
events;
(B) The operational elements of the
contingency funding plan, including
operational simulations to test
communications, coordination, and
decision-making by relevant
management; and
(C) The methods the bank holding
company will use to access alternative
funding sources to determine whether
these funding sources will be readily
available when needed.
(g) Liquidity risk limits—(1) General.
A bank holding company with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more must monitor sources of liquidity
risk and establish limits on liquidity
risk, including limits on:
(i) Concentrations in sources of
funding by instrument type, single
counterparty, counterparty type,
secured and unsecured funding, and as
applicable, other forms of liquidity risk;
(ii) The amount of liabilities that
mature within various time horizons;
and

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(iii) Off-balance sheet exposures and
other exposures that could create
funding needs during liquidity stress
events.
(2) Size of limits. Each limit
established pursuant to paragraph (g)(1)
of this section must be consistent with
the company’s established liquidity risk
tolerance and must reflect the
company’s capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, and size.
(h) Collateral, legal entity, and
intraday liquidity risk monitoring. A
bank holding company with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more must establish and maintain
procedures for monitoring liquidity risk
as set forth in this paragraph.
(1) Collateral. The bank holding
company must establish and maintain
policies and procedures to monitor
assets that have been, or are available to
be, pledged as collateral in connection
with transactions to which it or its
affiliates are counterparties. These
policies and procedures must provide
that the bank holding company:
(i) Calculates all of its collateral
positions on a weekly basis (or more
frequently, as directed by the Board),
specifying the value of pledged assets
relative to the amount of security
required under the relevant contracts
and the value of unencumbered assets
available to be pledged;
(ii) Monitors the levels of
unencumbered assets available to be
pledged by legal entity, jurisdiction, and
currency exposure;
(iii) Monitors shifts in the bank
holding company’s funding patterns,
such as shifts between intraday,
overnight, and term pledging of
collateral; and
(iv) Tracks operational and timing
requirements associated with accessing
collateral at its physical location (for
example, the custodian or securities
settlement system that holds the
collateral).
(2) Legal entities, currencies and
business lines. The bank holding
company must establish and maintain
procedures for monitoring and
controlling liquidity risk exposures and
funding needs within and across
significant legal entities, currencies, and
business lines, taking into account legal
and regulatory restrictions on the
transfer of liquidity between legal
entities.
(3) Intraday exposures. The bank
holding company must establish and
maintain procedures for monitoring
intraday liquidity risk exposure. These
procedures must address how the
management of the bank holding
company will:

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(i) Monitor and measure expected
daily gross liquidity inflows and
outflows;
(ii) Manage and transfer collateral to
obtain intraday credit;
(iii) Identify and prioritize timespecific obligations so that the bank
holding company can meet these
obligations as expected and settle less
critical obligations as soon as possible;
(iv) Manage the issuance of credit to
customers where necessary; and
(v) Consider the amounts of collateral
and liquidity needed to meet payment
systems obligations when assessing the
bank holding company’s overall
liquidity needs.

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§ 252.35 Liquidity stress testing and buffer
requirements.

(a) Liquidity stress testing
requirement—(1) General. A bank
holding company with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more must conduct stress tests to assess
the potential impact of the liquidity
stress scenarios set forth in paragraph
(a)(3) on its cash flows, liquidity
position, profitability, and solvency,
taking into account its current liquidity
condition, risks, exposures, strategies,
and activities.
(i) The bank holding company must
take into consideration its balance sheet
exposures, off-balance sheet exposures,
size, risk profile, complexity, business
lines, organizational structure, and other
characteristics of the bank holding
company that affect its liquidity risk
profile in conducting its stress test.
(ii) In conducting a liquidity stress
test using the scenarios described in
paragraphs (a)(3)(i) and (iii) of this
section, the bank holding company must
address the potential direct adverse
impact of associated market disruptions
on the bank holding company and
incorporate the potential actions of
other market participants experiencing
liquidity stresses under the market
disruptions that would adversely affect
the bank holding company.
(2) Frequency. The liquidity stress
tests required under paragraph (a)(1) of
this section must be performed at least
monthly. The Board may require the
bank holding company to perform stress
testing more frequently.
(3) Stress scenarios. (i) Each liquidity
stress test conducted under paragraph
(a)(1) of this section must include, at a
minimum:
(A) A scenario reflecting adverse
market conditions;
(B) A scenario reflecting an
idiosyncratic stress event for the bank
holding company; and
(C) A scenario reflecting combined
market and idiosyncratic stresses.

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(ii) The bank holding company must
incorporate additional liquidity stress
scenarios into its liquidity stress test, as
appropriate, based on its financial
condition, size, complexity, risk profile,
scope of operations, or activities. The
Board may require the bank holding
company to vary the underlying
assumptions and stress scenarios.
(4) Planning horizon. Each stress test
conducted under paragraph (a)(1) of this
section must include an overnight
planning horizon, a 30-day planning
horizon, a 90-day planning horizon, a
one-year planning horizon, and any
other planning horizons that are
relevant to the bank holding company’s
liquidity risk profile. For purposes of
this section, a ‘‘planning horizon’’ is the
period over which the relevant stressed
projections extend. The bank holding
company must use the results of the
stress test over the 30-day planning
horizon to calculate the size of the
liquidity buffer under paragraph (b) of
this section.
(5) Requirements for assets used as
cash-flow sources in a stress test. (i) To
the extent an asset is used as a cash flow
source to offset projected funding needs
during the planning horizon in a
liquidity stress test, the fair market
value of the asset must be discounted to
reflect any credit risk and market
volatility of the asset.
(ii) Assets used as cash-flow sources
during a planning horizon must be
diversified by collateral, counterparty,
borrowing capacity, and other factors
associated with the liquidity risk of the
assets.
(iii) A line of credit does not qualify
as a cash flow source for purposes of a
stress test with a planning horizon of 30
days or less. A line of credit may qualify
as a cash flow source for purposes of a
stress test with a planning horizon that
exceeds 30 days.
(6) Tailoring. Stress testing must be
tailored to, and provide sufficient detail
to reflect, a bank holding company’s
capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, and size.
(7) Governance—(i) Policies and
procedures. A bank holding company
with total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more must establish and
maintain policies and procedures
governing its liquidity stress testing
practices, methodologies, and
assumptions that provide for the
incorporation of the results of liquidity
stress tests in future stress testing and
for the enhancement of stress testing
practices over time.
(ii) Controls and oversight. A bank
holding company with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more must establish and maintain a

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17321

system of controls and oversight that is
designed to ensure that its liquidity
stress testing processes are effective in
meeting the requirements of this
section. The controls and oversight must
ensure that each liquidity stress test
appropriately incorporates conservative
assumptions with respect to the stress
scenario in paragraph (a)(3) of this
section and other elements of the stress
test process, taking into consideration
the bank holding company’s capital
structure, risk profile, complexity,
activities, size, business lines, legal
entity or jurisdiction, and other relevant
factors. The assumptions must be
approved by the chief risk officer and be
subject to the independent review under
§ 252.34(d) of this subpart.
(iii) Management information
systems. The bank holding company
must maintain management information
systems and data processes sufficient to
enable it to effectively and reliably
collect, sort, and aggregate data and
other information related to liquidity
stress testing.
(b) Liquidity buffer requirement. (1) A
bank holding company with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more must maintain a liquidity buffer
that is sufficient to meet the projected
net stressed cash-flow need over the 30day planning horizon of a liquidity
stress test conducted in accordance with
paragraph (a) of this section under each
scenario set forth in paragraph (a)(3)(i)
through (iii) of this section.
(2) Net stressed cash-flow need. The
net stressed cash-flow need for a bank
holding company is the difference
between the amount of its cash-flow
need and the amount of its cash flow
sources over the 30-day planning
horizon.
(3) Asset requirements. The liquidity
buffer must consist of highly liquid
assets that are unencumbered, as
defined in paragraph (b)(3)(ii) of this
section:
(i) Highly liquid asset. A highly liquid
asset includes:
(A) Cash;
(B) Securities issued or guaranteed by
the United States, a U.S. government
agency, or a U.S. government-sponsored
enterprise; or
(C) Any other asset that the bank
holding company demonstrates to the
satisfaction of the Board:
(1) Has low credit risk and low market
risk;
(2) Is traded in an active secondary
two-way market that has committed
market makers and independent bona
fide offers to buy and sell so that a price
reasonably related to the last sales price
or current bona fide competitive bid and
offer quotations can be determined

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within one day and settled at that price
within a reasonable time period
conforming with trade custom; and
(3) Is a type of asset that investors
historically have purchased in periods
of financial market distress during
which market liquidity has been
impaired.
(ii) Unencumbered. An asset is
unencumbered if it:
(A) Is free of legal, regulatory,
contractual, or other restrictions on the
ability of such company promptly to
liquidate, sell or transfer the asset; and
(B) Is either:
(1) Not pledged or used to secure or
provide credit enhancement to any
transaction; or
(2) Pledged to a central bank or a U.S.
government-sponsored enterprise, to the
extent potential credit secured by the
asset is not currently extended by such
central bank or U.S. governmentsponsored enterprise or any of its
consolidated subsidiaries.
(iii) Calculating the amount of a
highly liquid asset. In calculating the
amount of a highly liquid asset included
in the liquidity buffer, the bank holding
company must discount the fair market
value of the asset to reflect any credit
risk and market price volatility of the
asset.
(iv) Diversification. The liquidity
buffer must not contain significant
concentrations of highly liquid assets by
issuer, business sector, region, or other
factor related to the bank holding
company’s risk, except with respect to
cash and securities issued or guaranteed
by the United States, a U.S. government
agency, or a U.S. government-sponsored
enterprise.
■ 5. Subpart L is added to read as
follows:

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Subpart L—Company-Run Stress Test
Requirements for Foreign Banking
Organizations and Foreign Savings and
Loan Holding Companies With Total
Consolidated Assets Over $10 Billion and
Less Than $50 Billion
Sec.
252.120 Definitions.
252.121 Applicability.
252.122 Capital stress testing requirements.

Subpart L—Company-Run Stress Test
Requirements for Foreign Banking
Organizations and Foreign Savings
and Loan Holding Companies With
Total Consolidated Assets Over $10
Billion but Less Than $50 billion
§ 252.120

Definitions.

For purposes of this subpart, the
following definitions apply:
(a) Eligible asset means any asset of
the U.S. branch or U.S. agency held in
the United States that is recorded on the

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general ledger of a U.S. branch or U.S.
agency of the foreign banking
organization (reduced by the amount of
any specifically allocated reserves held
in the United States and recorded on the
general ledger of the U.S. branch or U.S.
agency in connection with such assets),
subject to the following exclusions and,
for purposes of this definition, as
modified by the rules of valuation set
forth in paragraph (a)(2) of this section.
(1) The following assets do not qualify
as eligible assets:
(i) Equity securities;
(ii) Any assets classified as loss at the
preceding examination by a regulatory
agency, outside accountant, or the
bank’s internal loan review staff;
(iii) Accrued income on assets
classified loss, doubtful, substandard or
value impaired, at the preceding
examination by a regulatory agency,
outside accountant, or the bank’s
internal loan review staff;
(iv) Any amounts due from the home
office, other offices and affiliates,
including income accrued but
uncollected on such amounts;
(v) The balance from time to time of
any other asset or asset category
disallowed at the preceding
examination or by direction of the Board
for any other reason until the
underlying reasons for the disallowance
have been removed;
(vi) Prepaid expenses and
unamortized costs, furniture and
fixtures and leasehold improvements;
and
(vii) Any other asset that the Board
determines should not qualify as an
eligible asset.
(2) The following rules of valuation
apply:
(i) A marketable debt security is
valued at its principal amount or market
value, whichever is lower;
(ii) An asset classified doubtful or
substandard at the preceding
examination by a regulatory agency,
outside accountant, or the bank’s
internal loan review staff, is valued at
50 percent and 80 percent, respectively;
(iii) With respect to an asset classified
value impaired, the amount
representing the allocated transfer risk
reserve that would be required for such
exposure at a domestically chartered
bank is valued at 0 and the residual
exposure is valued at 80 percent; and
(iv) Real estate located in the United
States and carried on the accounting
records as an asset are valued at net
book value or appraised value,
whichever is less.
(b) Foreign savings and loan holding
company means a savings and loan
holding company as defined in section
10 of the Home Owners’ Loan Act (12

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U.S.C. 1467a(a)) that is incorporated or
organized under the laws of a country
other than the United States.
(c) Liabilities of all U.S. branches and
agencies of a foreign banking
organization means all liabilities of all
U.S. branches and agencies of the
foreign banking organization, including
acceptances and any other liabilities
(including contingent liabilities), but
excluding:
(1) Amounts due to and other
liabilities to other offices, agencies,
branches and affiliates of such foreign
banking organization, including its head
office, including unremitted profits; and
(2) Reserves for possible loan losses
and other contingencies.
(d) Pre-provision net revenue means
revenue less expenses before adjusting
for total loan loss provisions.
(e) Stress test cycle has the same
meaning as in subpart F of this part.
(f) Total loan loss provisions means
the amount needed to make reserves
adequate to absorb estimated credit
losses, based upon management’s
evaluation of the loans and leases that
the company has the intent and ability
to hold for the foreseeable future or
until maturity or payoff, as determined
under applicable accounting standards.
§ 252.121

Applicability.

(a) Applicability for foreign banking
organizations with total consolidated
assets of more than $10 billion but less
than $50 billion—(1) General
applicability. Subject to the initial
applicability provisions of paragraph
(a)(3) of this section, a foreign banking
organization must comply with the
stress test requirements set forth in this
section beginning on the first day of the
ninth quarter following the date on
which its total consolidated assets
exceed $10 billion.
(2) Total consolidated assets. For
purposes of this subpart, total
consolidated assets of a foreign banking
organization are equal to the average of
the total assets for the two most recent
periods as reported by the foreign
banking organization on the FR Y–7.
Total consolidated assets are measured
on the as-of date of the most recent FR
Y–7 used in the calculation of the
average.
(3) Initial applicability. A foreign
banking organization that, as of June 30,
2015, has total consolidated assets of
$10 billion or more must comply with
the requirements of this subpart
beginning on July 1, 2016.
(4) Cessation of requirements. A
foreign banking organization will
remain subject to the requirements of
this subpart until the earlier of the date
on which:

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(i) Its reported total consolidated
assets on the FR Y–7 are below $10
billion for each of four consecutive
calendar quarters; and
(ii) It becomes subject to the
requirements of subpart N or subpart O
of this subpart, as applicable.
(b) Applicability for foreign savings
and loan holding companies with total
consolidated assets of more than $10
billion—(1) General. A foreign savings
and loan holding company must comply
with the stress test requirements set
forth in this section beginning on the
first day of the ninth quarter following
the date on which its total consolidated
assets exceed $10 billion.
(2) Total consolidated assets. Total
consolidated assets of a foreign savings
and loan holding company for purposes
of this subpart are equal to the average
of total assets for the four most recent
consecutive quarters as reported by the
foreign savings and loan holding
company on its applicable regulatory
report. If the foreign savings and loan
holding company has not filed four
regulatory reports, total consolidated
assets are equal to the average of total
assets as reported for the most recent
period or consecutive periods. Total
consolidated assets are measured on the
as-of date of the most recent regulatory
reporting form used in the calculation of
the average.
(3) Cessation of requirements. A
foreign savings and loan holding
company will remain subject to
requirements of this subpart until the
date on which the foreign savings and
loan holding company’s total
consolidated assets on its applicable
regulatory report are below $10 billion
for each of four consecutive calendar
quarters.

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§ 252.122 Capital stress testing
requirements.

(a) In general. (1) A foreign banking
organization with total consolidated
assets of more than $10 billion but less
than $50 billion and a foreign savings
and loan holding company with total
consolidated assets of more than $10
billion must:
(i) Be subject on a consolidated basis
to a capital stress testing regime by its
home-country supervisor that meets the
requirements of paragraph (a)(2) of this
section; and
(ii) Conduct such stress tests or be
subject to a supervisory stress test and
meet any minimum standards set by its
home-country supervisor with respect to
the stress tests.
(2) The capital stress testing regime of
a foreign banking organization or foreign
savings and loan holding company’s
home-country supervisor must include:

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(i) An annual supervisory capital
stress test conducted by the relevant
home-country supervisor or an annual
evaluation and review by the homecountry supervisor of an internal capital
adequacy stress test conducted by the
foreign banking organization; and
(ii) Requirements for governance and
controls of stress testing practices by
relevant management and the board of
directors (or equivalent thereof).
(b) Additional standards. (1) Unless
the Board otherwise determines in
writing, a foreign banking organization
or a foreign savings and loan holding
company that does not meet each of the
requirements in paragraph (a)(1) and (2)
of this section must:
(i) Maintain eligible assets in its U.S.
branches and agencies that, on a daily
basis, are not less than 105 percent of
the average value over each day of the
previous calendar quarter of the total
liabilities of all branches and agencies
operated by the foreign banking
organization in the United States;
(ii) Conduct an annual stress test of its
U.S. subsidiaries to determine whether
those subsidiaries have the capital
necessary to absorb losses as a result of
adverse economic conditions; and
(iii) Report on an annual basis a
summary of the results of the stress test
to the Board that includes a description
of the types of risks included in the
stress test, a description of the
conditions or scenarios used in the
stress test, a summary description of the
methodologies used in the stress test,
estimates of aggregate losses, preprovision net revenue, total loan loss
provisions, net income before taxes and
pro forma regulatory capital ratios
required to be computed by the homecountry supervisor of the foreign
banking organization or foreign savings
and loan holding company and any
other relevant capital ratios, and an
explanation of the most significant
causes for any changes in regulatory
capital ratios.
(2) An enterprise-wide stress test that
is approved by the Board may meet the
stress test requirement of paragraph
(b)(1)(ii) of this section.
■ 6. Subpart M is added to read as
follows:
Subpart M—Risk Committee Requirement
for Publicly Traded Foreign Banking
Organizations With Total Consolidated
Assets Equal to or Greater Than $10 Billion
and Less Than $50 Billion
Sec.
252.130 [Reserved].
252.131 Applicability.
252.132 Risk-committee requirements for
foreign banking organizations with total
consolidated assets of $10 billion or
more but less than $50 billion.

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17323

Subpart M—Risk Committee
Requirement for Publicly Traded
Foreign Banking Organizations With
Total Consolidated Assets of at Least
$10 Billion but Less Than $50 Billion
§ 252.130

[Reserved].

§ 252.131

Applicability.

(a) General applicability. Subject to
the initial applicability provisions of
paragraph (c) of this section, a foreign
banking organization with total
consolidated assets of at least $10
billion but less than $50 billion and any
class of stock (or similar interest) that is
publicly traded must comply with the
risk-committee requirements set forth in
this subpart beginning on the first day
of the ninth quarter following the later
of the date on which its total
consolidated assets equal or exceed $10
billion and the date on which any class
of its stock (or similar interest) becomes
publicly traded.
(b) Total consolidated assets. For
purposes of this subpart, total
consolidated assets of a foreign banking
organization for purposes of this subpart
are equal to the average of the total
assets for the two most recent periods as
reported by the foreign banking
organization on the FR Y–7. Total
consolidated assets are measured on the
as-of date of the most recent FR Y–7
used in the calculation of the average.
(c) Initial applicability. A foreign
banking organization that, as of June 30,
2015, has total consolidated assets of
$10 billion or more and has a class of
stock (or similar interest) that is
publicly traded must comply with the
risk-committee requirements of this
section beginning on July 1, 2016.
(d) Cessation of requirements. A
foreign banking organization will
remain subject to the risk-committee
requirements of this section until the
earlier of the date on which: (i) its
reported total consolidated assets on the
FR Y–7 are below $10 billion for each
of four consecutive calendar quarters;
(ii) it becomes subject to the
requirements of subpart N of this part;
and (iii) it ceases to have a class of stock
(or similar interest) that is publicly
traded.
§ 252.132 Risk-committee requirements for
foreign banking organizations with total
consolidated assets of $10 billion or more
but less than $50 billion.

(a) U.S. risk committee certification. A
foreign banking organization with a
class of stock (or similar interest) that is
publicly traded and total consolidated
assets of at least $10 billion but less
than $50 billion, must, on an annual
basis, certify to the Board that it
maintains a committee of its global

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board of directors (or equivalent
thereof), on a standalone basis or as part
of its enterprise-wide risk committee (or
equivalent thereof) that:
(1) Oversees the risk management
policies of the combined U.S. operations
of the foreign banking organization; and
(2) Includes at least one member
having experience in identifying,
assessing, and managing risk exposures
of large, complex firms.
(b) Timing of certification. The
certification required under paragraph
(a) of this section must be filed on an
annual basis with the Board
concurrently with the FR Y–7.
(c) Responsibilities of the foreign
banking organization. The foreign
banking organization must take
appropriate measures to ensure that its
combined U.S. operations implement
the risk management policies overseen
by the U.S. risk committee described in
paragraph (a) of this section, and its
combined U.S. operations provide
sufficient information to the U.S. risk
committee to enable the U.S. risk
committee to carry out the
responsibilities of this subpart.
(d) Noncompliance with this section.
If a foreign banking organization does
not satisfy the requirements of this
section, the Board may impose
requirements, conditions, or restrictions
relating to the activities or business
operations of the combined U.S.
operations of the foreign banking
organization. The Board will coordinate
with any relevant State or Federal
regulator in the implementation of such
requirements, conditions, or
restrictions. If the Board determines to
impose one or more requirements,
conditions, or restrictions under this
paragraph, the Board will notify the
company before it applies any
requirement, condition or restriction,
and describe the basis for imposing such
requirement, condition, or restriction.
Within 14 calendar days of receipt of a
notification under this paragraph, the
company may request in writing that the
Board reconsider the requirement,
condition, or restriction. The Board will
respond in writing to the company’s
request for reconsideration prior to
applying the requirement, condition, or
restriction.
■ 7. Subpart N is added to read as
follows:
Subpart N—Enhanced Prudential Standards
for Foreign Banking Organizations With
Total Consolidated Assets of $50 Billion or
More But Combined U.S. Assets of Less
Than $50 Billion
Sec.
252.140 Scope.
252.141 [Reserved].

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252.142 Applicability.
252.143 Risk-based and leverage capital
requirements for foreign banking
organizations with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more but
combined U.S. assets of less than $50
billion.
252.144 Risk-management and risk
committee requirements for foreign
banking organizations with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more but combined U.S. assets of less
than $50 billion.
252.145 Liquidity risk-management
requirements for foreign banking
organizations with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more but
combined U.S. assets of less than $50
billion.
252.146 Capital stress testing requirements
for foreign banking organizations with
total consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more but combined U.S. assets of less
than $50 billion.

Subpart N—Enhanced Prudential
Standards for Foreign Banking
Organizations With Total Consolidated
Assets of $50 Billion or More But
Combined U.S. Assets of Less Than
$50 Billion
§ 252.140

Scope.

This subpart applies to foreign
banking organizations with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more, but combined U.S. assets of less
than $50 billion. Total consolidated
assets of a foreign banking organization
are equal to the consolidated assets of
the foreign banking organization, and
combined U.S. assets of a foreign
banking organization are equal to the
sum of the consolidated assets of each
top-tier U.S. subsidiary of the foreign
banking organization (excluding any
section 2(h)(2) company, if applicable)
and the total assets of each U.S. branch
and U.S. agency of the foreign banking
organization, each as defined in section
§ 252.142(b).
§ 252.141

[Reserved].

§ 252.142

Applicability.

(a) General applicability. Subject to
the initial applicability provisions in
paragraph (c) of this section, a foreign
banking organization with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more and combined U.S. assets of less
than $50 billion must comply with the
capital requirements, risk-management
and risk committee requirements,
liquidity risk-management
requirements, and the capital stress
testing requirements set forth in this
subpart beginning on the first day of the
ninth quarter following the date on
which its total consolidated assets equal
or exceed $50 billion.

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(b) Asset measures—(1) Total
consolidated assets. Total consolidated
assets of a foreign banking organization
are equal to the consolidated assets of
the foreign banking organization. For
purposes of this subpart, ‘‘total
consolidated assets’’ are calculated as
the average of the foreign banking
organization’s total assets for the four
most recent consecutive quarters as
reported by the foreign banking
organization on the FR Y–7Q. If the
foreign banking organization has not
filed the FR Y–7Q for the four most
recent consecutive quarters, the Board
shall use an average of the foreign
banking organization’s total
consolidated assets reported on its most
recent two FR Y–7Qs. Total
consolidated assets are measured on the
as-of date of the most recent FR Y–7Q
used in the calculation of the average.
(2) Combined U.S. assets. Combined
U.S. assets of a foreign banking
organization are equal to the sum of the
consolidated assets of each top-tier U.S.
subsidiary of the foreign banking
organization (excluding any section
2(h)(2) company, if applicable) and the
total assets of each U.S. branch and U.S.
agency of the foreign banking
organization. For purposes of this
subpart, combined U.S. assets are
calculated as the average of the total
combined assets of U.S. operations for
the four most recent consecutive
quarters as reported by the foreign
banking organization on the FR Y–7Q,
or, if the foreign banking organization
has not reported this information on the
FR Y–7Q for each of the four most
recent consecutive quarters, the average
of the combined U.S. assets for the most
recent quarter or consecutive quarters as
reported on the FR Y–7Q. Combined
U.S. assets are measured on the as-of
date of the most recent FR Y–7Q used
in the calculation of the average.
(c) Initial applicability. A foreign
banking organization that, as of June 30,
2015, has total consolidated assets of
$50 billion or more but combined U.S.
assets of less than $50 billion must
comply with the capital requirements,
risk-management requirements,
liquidity requirements, and the capital
stress test requirements set forth in this
subpart beginning on July 1, 2016.
(d) Cessation of requirements. A
foreign banking organization will
remain subject to the requirements set
forth in this subpart until its reported
total assets on the FR Y–7Q are below
$50 billion for each of four consecutive
calendar quarters, or it becomes subject
to the requirements of subpart O of this
part.

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§ 252.143 Risk-based and leverage capital
requirements for foreign banking
organizations with total consolidated assets
of $50 billion or more but combined U.S.
assets of less than $50 billion.

(a) General requirements. (1) A foreign
banking organization with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more and combined U.S. assets of less
than $50 billion must certify to the
Board that it meets capital adequacy
standards on a consolidated basis
established by its home-country
supervisor that are consistent with the
regulatory capital framework published
by the Basel Committee on Banking
Supervision, as amended from time to
time (Basel Capital Framework).
(i) For purposes of this paragraph,
home-country capital adequacy
standards that are consistent with the
Basel Capital Framework include all
minimum risk-based capital ratios, any
minimum leverage ratio, and all
restrictions based on any applicable
capital buffers set forth in ‘‘Basel III: A
global regulatory framework for more
resilient banks and banking systems’’
(2010) (Basel III Accord), each as
applicable and as implemented in
accordance with the Basel III Accord,
including any transitional provisions set
forth therein.
(ii) [Reserved]
(2) In the event that a home-country
supervisor has not established capital
adequacy standards that are consistent
with the Basel Capital Framework, the
foreign banking organization must
demonstrate to the satisfaction of the
Board that it would meet or exceed
capital adequacy standards on a
consolidated basis that are consistent
with the Basel Capital Framework were
it subject to such standards.
(b) Reporting. A foreign banking
organization with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more and
combined U.S. assets of less than $50
billion must provide to the Board
reports relating to its compliance with
the capital adequacy measures
described in paragraph (a) of this
section concurrently with filing the FR
Y–7Q.
(c) Noncompliance with the Basel
Capital Framework. If a foreign banking
organization does not satisfy the
requirements of this section, the Board
may impose requirements, conditions,
or restrictions, including risk-based or
leverage capital requirements, relating
to the activities or business operations
of the U.S. operations of the foreign
banking organization. The Board will
coordinate with any relevant State or
Federal regulator in the implementation
of such requirements, conditions, or
restrictions. If the Board determines to

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impose one or more requirements,
conditions, or restrictions under this
paragraph, the Board will notify the
company before it applies any
requirement, condition or restriction,
and describe the basis for imposing such
requirement, condition, or restriction.
Within 14 calendar days of receipt of a
notification under this paragraph, the
company may request in writing that the
Board reconsider the requirement,
condition, or restriction. The Board will
respond in writing to the company’s
request for reconsideration prior to
applying the requirement, condition, or
restriction.
§ 252.144 Risk-management and risk
committee requirements for foreign banking
organizations with total consolidated assets
of $50 billion or more but combined U.S.
assets of less than $50 billion.

(a) U.S. risk committee certification. A
foreign banking organization with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more and combined U.S. assets of less
than $50 billion must, on an annual
basis, certify to the Board that it
maintains a committee of its global
board of directors (or equivalent
thereof), on a standalone basis or as part
of its enterprise-wide risk committee (or
equivalent thereof) that:
(1) Oversees the risk management
policies of the combined U.S. operations
of the foreign banking organization; and
(2) Includes at least one member
having experience in identifying,
assessing, and managing risk exposures
of large, complex firms.
(b) Timing of certification. The
certification required under paragraph
(a) of this section must be filed on an
annual basis with the Board
concurrently with the FR Y–7.
(c) Responsibilities of the foreign
banking organization. The foreign
banking organization must take
appropriate measures to ensure that its
combined U.S. operations implement
the risk management policies overseen
by the U.S. risk committee described in
paragraph (a) of this section, and that its
combined U.S. operations provide
sufficient information to the U.S. risk
committee to enable the U.S. risk
committee to carry out the
responsibilities of this subpart.
(d) Noncompliance with this section.
If a foreign banking organization does
not satisfy the requirements of this
section, the Board may impose
requirements, conditions, or restrictions
relating to the activities or business
operations of the combined U.S.
operations of the foreign banking
organization. The Board will coordinate
with any relevant State or Federal
regulator in the implementation of such

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17325

requirements, conditions, or
restrictions. If the Board determines to
impose one or more requirements,
conditions, or restrictions under this
paragraph, the Board will notify the
company before it applies any
requirement, condition, or restriction,
and describe the basis for imposing such
requirement, condition, or restriction.
Within 14 calendar days of receipt of a
notification under this paragraph, the
company may request in writing that the
Board reconsider the requirement,
condition, or restriction. The Board will
respond in writing to the company’s
request for reconsideration prior to
applying the requirement, condition, or
restriction.
§ 252.145 Liquidity risk-management
requirements for foreign banking
organizations with total consolidated assets
of $50 billion or more but combined U.S.
assets of less than $50 billion.

(a) A foreign banking organization
with total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more and combined U.S.
assets of less than $50 billion must
report to the Board on an annual basis
the results of an internal liquidity stress
test for either the consolidated
operations of the foreign banking
organization or the combined U.S.
operations of the foreign banking
organization. Such liquidity stress test
must be conducted consistently with the
Basel Committee principles for liquidity
risk management and must incorporate
30-day, 90-day, and one-year stress-test
horizons. The ‘‘Basel Committee
principles for liquidity risk
management’’ means the document
titled ‘‘Principles for Sound Liquidity
Risk Management and Supervision’’
(September 2008) as published by the
Basel Committee on Banking
Supervision, as supplemented and
revised from time to time.
(b) A foreign banking organization
that does not comply with paragraph (a)
of this section must limit the net
aggregate amount owed by the foreign
banking organization’s non-U.S. offices
and its non-U.S. affiliates to the
combined U.S. operations to 25 percent
or less of the third party liabilities of its
combined U.S. operations, on a daily
basis.
§ 252.146 Capital stress testing
requirements for foreign banking
organizations with total consolidated assets
of $50 billion or more but combined U.S.
assets of less than $50 billion.

(a) Definitions. For purposes of this
section, the following definitions apply:
(1) Eligible asset means any asset of
the U.S. branch or U.S. agency held in
the United States that is recorded on the
general ledger of a U.S. branch or U.S.

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agency of the foreign banking
organization (reduced by the amount of
any specifically allocated reserves held
in the United States and recorded on the
general ledger of the U.S. branch or U.S.
agency in connection with such assets),
subject to the following exclusions and,
for purposes of this definition, as
modified by the rules of valuation set
forth in paragraph (a)(1)(ii) of this
section.
(i) The following assets do not qualify
as eligible assets:
(A) Equity securities;
(B) Any assets classified as loss at the
preceding examination by a regulatory
agency, outside accountant, or the
bank’s internal loan review staff;
(C) Accrued income on assets
classified loss, doubtful, substandard or
value impaired, at the preceding
examination by a regulatory agency,
outside accountant, or the bank’s
internal loan review staff;
(D) Any amounts due from the home
office, other offices and affiliates,
including income accrued but
uncollected on such amounts;
(E) The balance from time to time of
any other asset or asset category
disallowed at the preceding
examination or by direction of the Board
for any other reason until the
underlying reasons for the disallowance
have been removed;
(F) Prepaid expenses and unamortized
costs, furniture and fixtures and
leasehold improvements; and
(G) Any other asset that the Board
determines should not qualify as an
eligible asset.
(ii) The following rules of valuation
apply:
(A) A marketable debt security is
valued at its principal amount or market
value, whichever is lower;
(B) An asset classified doubtful or
substandard at the preceding
examination by a regulatory agency,
outside accountant, or the bank’s
internal loan review staff, is valued at
50 percent and 80 percent, respectively;
(C) With respect to an asset classified
value impaired, the amount
representing the allocated transfer risk
reserve that would be required for such
exposure at a domestically chartered
bank is valued at 0 and the residual
exposure is valued at 80 percent; and
(D) Real estate located in the United
States and carried on the accounting
records as an asset are valued at net
book value or appraised value,
whichever is less.
(2) Liabilities of all U.S. branches and
agencies of a foreign banking
organization means all liabilities of all
U.S. branches and agencies of the
foreign banking organization, including

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acceptances and any other liabilities
(including contingent liabilities), but
excluding:
(i) Amounts due to and other
liabilities to other offices, agencies,
branches and affiliates of such foreign
banking organization, including its head
office, including unremitted profits; and
(ii) Reserves for possible loan losses
and other contingencies.
(3) Pre-provision net revenue means
revenue less expenses before adjusting
for total loan loss provisions.
(4) Stress test cycle has the same
meaning as in subpart F of this part.
(5) Total loan loss provisions means
the amount needed to make reserves
adequate to absorb estimated credit
losses, based upon management’s
evaluation of the loans and leases that
the company has the intent and ability
to hold for the foreseeable future or
until maturity or payoff, as determined
under applicable accounting standards.
(b) In general. (1) A foreign banking
organization with total consolidated
assets of more than $50 billion and
combined U.S. assets of less than $50
billion must:
(i) Be subject on a consolidated basis
to a capital stress testing regime by its
home-country supervisor that meets the
requirements of paragraph (b)(2) of this
section; and
(ii) Conduct such stress tests or be
subject to a supervisory stress test and
meet any minimum standards set by its
home-country supervisor with respect to
the stress tests.
(2) The capital stress testing regime of
a foreign banking organization’s homecountry supervisor must include:
(i) An annual supervisory capital
stress test conducted by the foreign
banking organization’s home-country
supervisor or an annual evaluation and
review by the foreign banking
organization’s home-country supervisor
of an internal capital adequacy stress
test conducted by the foreign banking
organization; and
(ii) Requirements for governance and
controls of stress testing practices by
relevant management and the board of
directors (or equivalent thereof) of the
foreign banking organization;
(c) Additional standards. (1) Unless
the Board otherwise determines in
writing, a foreign banking organization
that does not meet each of the
requirements in paragraphs (b)(1) and
(2) of this section must:
(i) Maintain eligible assets in its U.S.
branches and agencies that, on a daily
basis, are not less than 105 percent of
the average value over each day of the
previous calendar quarter of the total
liabilities of all branches and agencies

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operated by the foreign banking
organization in the United States;
(ii) Conduct an annual stress test of its
U.S. subsidiaries to determine whether
those subsidiaries have the capital
necessary to absorb losses as a result of
adverse economic conditions; and
(iii) Report on an annual basis a
summary of the results of the stress test
to the Board that includes a description
of the types of risks included in the
stress test, a description of the
conditions or scenarios used in the
stress test, a summary description of the
methodologies used in the stress test,
estimates of aggregate losses, preprovision net revenue, total loan loss
provisions, net income before taxes and
pro forma regulatory capital ratios
required to be computed by the homecountry supervisor of the foreign
banking organization and any other
relevant capital ratios, and an
explanation of the most significant
causes for any changes in regulatory
capital ratios.
(2) An enterprise-wide stress test that
is approved by the Board may meet the
stress test requirement of paragraph
(c)(1)(ii) of this section.
8. Subpart O is added to read as
follows:

■

Subpart O—Enhanced Prudential Standards
for Foreign Banking Organizations With
Total Consolidated Assets of $50 Billion or
More and Combined U.S. Assets of $50
Billion or More
Sec.
252.150 Scope.
252.151 [Reserved].
252.152 Applicability.
252.153 U.S. intermediate holding
company requirement for foreign
banking organizations with U.S. nonbranch assets of $50 billion or more.
252.154 Risk-based and leverage capital
requirements for foreign banking
organizations with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more.
252.155 Risk-management and risk
committee requirements for foreign
banking organizations with combined
U.S. assets of $50 billion or more.
252.156 Liquidity risk-management
requirements for foreign banking
organizations with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more.
252.157 Liquidity stress testing and buffer
requirements for foreign banking
organizations with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more.
252.158 Capital stress testing requirements
for foreign banking organizations with
combined U.S. assets of $50 billion or
more.

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Federal Register / Vol. 79, No. 59 / Thursday, March 27, 2014 / Rules and Regulations
Subpart O—Enhanced Prudential
Standards for Foreign Banking
Organizations With Total Consolidated
Assets of $50 Billion or More and
Combined U.S. Assets of $50 Billion or
More
§ 252.150

Scope.

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(a) This subpart applies to foreign
banking organizations with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more and combined U.S. assets of $50
billion or more. Foreign banking
organizations with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more and U.S. nonbranch assets of $50 billion or more are
also subject to the U.S. intermediate
holding company requirement
contained in § 252.153.
(b) Total consolidated assets of a
foreign banking organization are equal
to the consolidated assets of the foreign
banking organization. Combined U.S.
assets of a foreign banking organization
are equal to the sum of the consolidated
assets of each top-tier U.S. subsidiary of
the foreign banking organization
(excluding any section 2(h)(2) company,
if applicable) and the total assets of each
U.S. branch and U.S. agency of the
foreign banking organization. U.S. nonbranch assets are equal to the sum of the
consolidated assets of each top-tier U.S.
subsidiary of the foreign banking
organization (excluding any section
2(h)(2) company and DPC branch
subsidiary, if applicable).
§ 252.151

[Reserved].

§ 252.152

Applicability.

(a) General applicability. Subject to
the initial applicability provisions in
paragraph (c) of this section, a foreign
banking organization must:
(1) Comply with the requirements of
this subpart (other than the U.S.
intermediate holding company
requirement set forth in § 252.153)
beginning on the first day of the ninth
quarter following the date on which its
combined U.S. assets equal or exceed
$50 billion; and
(2) Comply with the U.S. intermediate
holding company requirement set forth
in § 252.153 beginning on the first day
of the ninth quarter following the date
on which its U.S. non-branch assets
equal or exceed $50 billion.
(b) Asset measures—(1) Combined
U.S. assets. Combined U.S. assets of a
foreign banking organization are equal
to the sum of the consolidated assets of
each top-tier U.S. subsidiary of the
foreign banking organization (excluding
any section 2(h)(2) company, if
applicable) and the total assets of each
U.S. branch and U.S. agency of the
foreign banking organization. For

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purposes of this subpart, ‘‘combined
U.S. assets’’ are calculated as the
average of the total combined assets of
U.S. operations for the four most recent
consecutive quarters as reported by the
foreign banking organization on the FR
Y–7Q, or, if the foreign banking
organization has not reported this
information on the FR Y–7Q for each of
the four most recent consecutive
quarters, the average of the combined
U.S. assets for the most recent quarter or
consecutive quarters as reported on the
FR Y–7Q. Combined U.S. assets are
measured on the as-of date of the most
recent FR Y–7Q used in the calculation
of the average.
(2) U.S. non-branch assets. U.S. nonbranch assets are equal to the sum of the
consolidated assets of each top-tier U.S.
subsidiary of the foreign banking
organization (excluding any section
2(h)(2) company and DPC branch
subsidiary, if applicable).
(i) For purposes of this subpart, U.S.
non-branch assets of a foreign banking
organization are calculated as the
average of the sum of the total
consolidated assets of the top-tier U.S.
subsidiaries of the foreign banking
organization (excluding any section
2(h)(2) company and DPC branch
subsidiary) for the four most recent
consecutive quarters, as reported to the
Board on the FR Y–7Q, or, if the foreign
banking organization has not reported
this information on the FR Y–7Q for
each of the four most recent consecutive
quarters, the average for the most recent
quarter or consecutive quarters as
reported on the FR Y–7Q.
(ii) In calculating U.S. non-branch
assets, a foreign banking organization
must reduce its U.S. non-branch assets
calculated under this paragraph by the
amount corresponding to balances and
transactions between a top-tier U.S.
subsidiary and any other top-tier U.S.
subsidiary (excluding any 2(h)(2)
company or DPC branch subsidiary) to
the extent such items are not already
eliminated in consolidation.
(iii) U.S. non-branch assets are
measured on the as-of date of the most
recent FR Y–7Q used in the calculation
of the average.
(c) Initial applicability. (1) A foreign
banking organization that, as of June 30,
2015, has combined U.S. assets of $50
billion or more must comply with the
requirements of this subpart, as
applicable, beginning on July 1, 2016.
(2) A foreign banking organization
that, as of June 30, 2015, has U.S. nonbranch assets of $50 billion or more
must comply with the requirements of
this subpart beginning on July 1, 2016.
In addition, the foreign banking
organization must:

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17327

(i) By July 1, 2016, establish a U.S.
intermediate holding company and
transfer its entire ownership interest in
any bank holding company subsidiary
(if not designated as its U.S.
intermediate holding company), any
insured depository institution
subsidiary, and U.S. subsidiaries
holding at least 90 percent of its U.S.
non-branch assets not owned by such
subsidiary bank holding company or
insured depository institution
subsidiary, if any, as such assets are
measured as of June 30, 2015, to the
U.S. intermediate holding company; and
(ii) By July 1, 2017, hold its
ownership interest in all U.S.
subsidiaries (other than section 2(h)(2)
companies and DPC branch
subsidiaries) through its U.S.
intermediate holding company.
(d) Cessation of requirements—(1)
Enhanced prudential standards
applicable to the foreign banking
organization. Subject to paragraph (d)(2)
of this section, a foreign banking
organization will remain subject to the
applicable requirements of this subpart
until its reported combined U.S. assets
on the FR Y–7Q are below $50 billion
for each of four consecutive calendar
quarters.
(2) Intermediate holding company
requirement. A foreign banking
organization will remain subject to the
U.S. intermediate holding company
requirement set forth in § 252.153 until
the sum of the total consolidated assets
of the top-tier U.S. subsidiaries of the
foreign banking organization (excluding
any section 2(h)(2) company and DPC
branch subsidiary) is below $50 billion
for each of four consecutive calendar
quarters.
§ 252.153 U.S. intermediate holding
company requirement for foreign banking
organizations with U.S. non-branch assets
of $50 billion or more.

(a) Requirement to form a U.S.
intermediate holding company. (1) A
foreign banking organization with U.S.
non-branch assets of $50 billion or more
must establish a U.S. intermediate
holding company, or designate an
existing subsidiary that meets the
requirements of paragraph (a)(2) of this
section, as its U.S. intermediate holding
company.
(2) The U.S. intermediate holding
company must be:
(i) Organized under the laws of the
United States, any one of the fifty states
of the United States, or the District of
Columbia; and
(ii) Be governed by a board of
directors or managers that is elected or
appointed by the owners and that
operates in an equivalent manner, and

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has equivalent rights, powers,
privileges, duties, and responsibilities,
to a board of directors of a company
chartered as a corporation under the
laws of the United States, any one of the
fifty states of the United States, or the
District of Columbia.
(3) Notice. Within 30 days of
establishing or designating a U.S.
intermediate holding company under
this section, a foreign banking
organization must provide to the Board:
(i) A description of the U.S.
intermediate holding company,
including its name, location, corporate
form, and organizational structure;
(ii) A certification that the U.S.
intermediate holding company meets
the requirements of this subpart; and
(iii) Any other information that the
Board determines is appropriate.
(b) Holdings and regulation of the
U.S. intermediate holding company—(1)
General. Subject to paragraph (c) of this
section, a foreign banking organization
that is required to form a U.S.
intermediate holding company under
paragraph (a) of this section must hold
its entire ownership interest in any U.S.
subsidiary (excluding each section
2(h)(2) company or DPC branch
subsidiary, if any) through its U.S.
intermediate holding company.
(2) Reporting. Each U.S. intermediate
holding company shall submit
information in the manner and form
prescribed by the Board.
(3) Examinations and inspections.
The Board may examine or inspect any
U.S. intermediate holding company and
each of its subsidiaries and prepare a
report of their operations and activities.
(c) Alternative organizational
structure—(1) General. Upon a written
request by a foreign banking
organization, the Board may permit the
foreign banking organization: to
establish or designate multiple U.S.
intermediate holding companies; use an
alternative organizational structure to
hold its combined U.S. operations; or
not transfer its ownership interests in
certain subsidiaries to its U.S.
intermediate holding company.
(2) Factors. In making a determination
under paragraph (c)(1) of this section,
the Board may consider whether
applicable law would prohibit the
foreign banking organization from
owning or controlling one or more of its
U.S. subsidiaries through a single U.S.
intermediate holding company, or
whether circumstances otherwise
warrant an exception based on the
foreign banking organization’s activities,
scope of operations, structure, or similar
considerations.
(3) Request. A request under this
section to establish or designate

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multiple U.S. intermediate holding
companies must be submitted to the
Board 180 days before the foreign
banking organization must form a U.S.
intermediate holding company. A
request not to transfer any ownership
interest in a subsidiary must be
submitted to the Board either 180 days
before the foreign banking organization
acquires the ownership interest in such
U.S. subsidiary, or in a shorter period of
time if permitted by the Board. The
request must include a description of
why the request should be granted and
any other information the Board may
require.
(4) Conditions. (i) The Board may
grant relief under this section upon such
conditions as the Board deems
appropriate, including, but not limited
to, requiring the U.S. operations of the
relevant foreign banking organization to
comply with additional enhanced
prudential standards, or requiring such
foreign banking organization to enter
into supervisory agreements governing
such alternative organizational
structure.
(ii) If the Board permits a foreign
banking organization to form two or
more U.S. intermediate holding
companies under this section and one or
more of those U.S. intermediate holding
companies does not meet an asset
threshold governing applicability of any
section of this subpart, such U.S.
intermediate holding company shall be
required to comply with those subparts
as though it met or exceeded the
applicable thresholds.
(iii) The Board may modify the
application of any section of this
subpart to a foreign banking
organization that is required to form a
U.S. intermediate holding company or
to such U.S. intermediate holding
company if appropriate to accommodate
the organizational structure of the
foreign banking organization or
characteristics specific to such foreign
banking organization and such
modification is appropriate and
consistent with the capital structure,
size, complexity, risk profile, scope of
operations, or financial condition of
each U.S. intermediate holding
company, safety and soundness, and the
financial stability mandate of section
165 of the Dodd-Frank Act.
(d) Implementation plan—(1) General.
A foreign banking organization must, by
January 1, 2015, submit an
implementation plan to the Board, if the
sum of the total consolidated assets of
the U.S. subsidiaries of the foreign
banking organization, in aggregate,
exceed $50 billion as of June 30, 2014
(excluding any section 2(h)(2) company
and DPC branch subsidiary and reduced

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by amounts corresponding to balances
and transactions between a top-tier U.S.
subsidiary and any other top-tier U.S.
subsidiary (excluding any 2(h)(2)
company or DPC branch subsidiary) to
the extent such items are not already
eliminated in consolidation). The Board
may accelerate or extend the date by
which the implementation plan must be
filed.
(2) Mandatory elements of
implementation plan. An
implementation plan must contain:
(i) A list of all U.S. subsidiaries
controlled by the foreign banking
organization setting forth the ownership
interest in each subsidiary and an
organizational chart showing the
ownership hierarchy;
(ii) For each U.S. subsidiary that is a
section 2(h)(2) company or a DPC
branch subsidiary, the name, asset size,
and a description of why the U.S.
subsidiary qualifies as a section 2(h)(2)
or a DPC branch subsidiary;
(iii) For each U.S. subsidiary for
which the foreign banking organization
expects to request an exemption from
the requirement to transfer all or a
portion of its ownership interest in the
subsidiary to the U.S. intermediate
holding company, the name, asset size,
and a description of the reasons why the
foreign banking organization intends to
request that the Board grant it an
exemption from the U.S. intermediate
holding company requirement;
(iv) A projected timeline for the
transfer by the foreign banking
organization of its ownership interest in
U.S. subsidiaries to the U.S.
intermediate holding company, and
quarterly pro forma financial statements
for the U.S. intermediate holding
company, including pro forma
regulatory capital ratios, for the period
from December 31, 2015 to January 1,
2018;
(v) A projected timeline for, and
description of, all planned capital
actions or strategies for capital accretion
that will facilitate the U.S. intermediate
holding company’s compliance with the
risk-based and leverage capital
requirements set forth in paragraph
(e)(2) of this section;
(vi) A description of the riskmanagement practices of the combined
U.S. operations of the foreign banking
organization and a description of how
the foreign banking organization and
U.S. intermediate holding company will
come into compliance with § 252.155;
and
(vii) A description of the current
liquidity stress testing practices of the
U.S. operations of the foreign banking
organization and a description of how
the foreign banking organization and

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U.S. intermediate holding company will
come into compliance with §§ 252.156
and 252.157.
(3) If a foreign banking organization
plans to reduce its U.S. non-branch
assets below $50 billion for four
consecutive quarters prior to July 1,
2016, the foreign banking organization
may submit a plan that describes how
it intends to reduce its U.S. non-branch
assets below $50 billion and any other
information the Board determines is
appropriate, instead of the information
described in paragraph (d)(2) of this
section.
(4) The Board may require a foreign
banking organization that meets or
exceeds the threshold for application of
this section after June 30, 2014 to
submit an implementation plan
containing the information described in
paragraph (d)(2) of this section if the
Board determines that an
implementation plan is appropriate.
(e) Enhanced prudential standards for
U.S. intermediate holding companies—
(1) Applicability—(i) Ongoing
application. Subject to the initial
applicability provisions in paragraph
(e)(1)(ii) of this section, a U.S.
intermediate holding company must
comply with the capital, risk
management, and liquidity
requirements set forth in paragraphs
(e)(2) through (4) of this section
beginning on the date it is required to
be established, and must comply with
the stress test requirements set forth in
paragraph (e)(5) beginning with the
stress test cycle the calendar year
following that in which it becomes
subject to regulatory capital
requirements.
(ii) Initial applicability—(A) General.
A U.S. intermediate holding company
required to be established by July 1,
2016 must comply with the risk-based
capital and capital plan requirements,
risk management, and liquidity
requirements set forth in paragraphs
(e)(2) through (4) of this section
beginning on July 1, 2016.
(B) Transition provisions for leverage.
(1) A U.S. intermediate holding
company required to be established by
July 1, 2016 must comply with the
leverage capital requirements set forth
in paragraph (e)(2)(i) of this section
beginning on January 1, 2018, provided
that each subsidiary bank holding
company and insured depository
institution controlled by the foreign
banking organization immediately prior
to the establishment or designation of
the U.S. intermediate holding company,
and each bank holding company and
insured depository institution acquired
by the foreign banking organization after
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holding company, is subject to leverage
capital requirements under 12 CFR part
217 until December 31, 2017.
(2) The Board may accelerate the
application of the leverage ratio to a
U.S. intermediate holding company if it
determines that the foreign banking
organization has taken actions to evade
the application of this subpart.
(C) Transition provisions for stress
testing. (1) A U.S. intermediate holding
company required to be established by
July 1, 2016 must comply with the stress
test requirements set forth in paragraph
(e)(5) of this section beginning on
October 1, 2017, provided that each
subsidiary bank holding company and
insured depository institution
controlled by the foreign banking
organization immediately prior to the
establishment or designation of the U.S.
intermediate holding company, and
each bank holding company and
insured depository institution acquired
by the foreign banking organization after
establishment of the intermediate
holding company, must comply with
the stress test requirements in subparts
B, E, or F of this subpart, as applicable,
until September 30, 2017.
(2) The Board may accelerate the
application of the stress testing
requirements to a U.S. intermediate
holding company if it determines that
the foreign banking organization has
taken actions to evade the application of
this subpart.
(2) Capital requirements for a U.S.
intermediate holding company—(i)
Risk-based capital and leverage
requirements. (A) A U.S. intermediate
holding company must calculate and
meet all applicable capital adequacy
standards set forth in 12 CFR part 217
and any successor regulation, other than
subpart E of 12 CFR part 217 and any
successor regulation, and comply with
all restrictions associated with
applicable capital buffers, in the same
manner as a bank holding company.
(B) A U.S. intermediate holding
company may choose to comply with
subpart E of 12 CFR part 217.
(C) Notwithstanding 12 CFR
217.100(b), if a bank holding company
is a subsidiary of a foreign banking
organization that is subject to this
section and the bank holding company
is subject to subpart E of 12 CFR part
217, the bank holding company, with
the Board’s prior written approval, may
elect not to comply with subpart E of 12
CFR 217.
(ii) Capital planning. A U.S.
intermediate holding company must
comply with section 225.8 of Regulation
Y and any successor regulation in the
same manner as a bank holding
company.

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(3) Risk management and risk
committee requirements—(i) General. A
U.S. intermediate holding company
must establish and maintain a risk
committee that approves and
periodically reviews the risk
management policies and oversees the
risk-management framework of the U.S.
intermediate holding company. The risk
committee must be a committee of the
board of directors of the U.S.
intermediate holding company (or
equivalent thereof). The risk committee
may also serve as the U.S. risk
committee for the combined U.S.
operations required pursuant to
§ 252.155(a).
(ii) Risk-management framework. The
U.S. intermediate holding company’s
risk-management framework must be
commensurate with the structure, risk
profile, complexity, activities, and size
of the U.S. intermediate holding
company and consistent with the risk
management policies for the combined
U.S. operations of the foreign banking
organization. The framework must
include:
(A) Policies and procedures
establishing risk-management
governance, risk-management
procedures, and risk-control
infrastructure for the U.S. intermediate
holding company; and
(B) Processes and systems for
implementing and monitoring
compliance with such policies and
procedures, including:
(1) Processes and systems for
identifying and reporting risks and riskmanagement deficiencies at the U.S.
intermediate holding company,
including regarding emerging risks and
ensuring effective and timely
implementation of actions to address
emerging risks and risk-management
deficiencies;
(2) Processes and systems for
establishing managerial and employee
responsibility for risk management of
the U.S. intermediate holding company;
(3) Processes and systems for ensuring
the independence of the riskmanagement function of the U.S.
intermediate holding company; and
(4) Processes and systems to integrate
risk management and associated
controls with management goals and the
compensation structure of the U.S.
intermediate holding company.
(iii) Corporate governance
requirements. The risk committee of the
U.S. intermediate holding company
must meet at least quarterly and
otherwise as needed, and must fully
document and maintain records of its
proceedings, including riskmanagement decisions.

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(iv) Minimum member requirements.
The risk committee must:
(A) Include at least one member
having experience in identifying,
assessing, and managing risk exposures
of large, complex financial firms; and
(B) Have at least one member who:
(1) Is not an officer or employee of the
foreign banking organization or its
affiliates and has not been an officer or
employee of the foreign banking
organization or its affiliates during the
previous three years; and
(2) Is not a member of the immediate
family, as defined in section
225.41(b)(3) of the Board’s Regulation Y
(12 CFR 225.41(b)(3)), of a person who
is, or has been within the last three
years, an executive officer, as defined in
section 215.2(e)(1) of the Board’s
Regulation O (12 CFR 215.2(e)(1)) of the
foreign banking organization or its
affiliates.
(v) The U.S. intermediate holding
company must take appropriate
measures to ensure that it implements
the risk management policies for the
U.S. intermediate holding company and
it provides sufficient information to the
U.S. risk committee to enable the U.S.
risk committee to carry out the
responsibilities of this subpart.
(4) Liquidity requirements. A U.S.
intermediate holding company must
comply with the liquidity riskmanagement requirements in § 252.156
and conduct liquidity stress tests and
hold a liquidity buffer pursuant to
§ 252.157.
(5) Stress test requirements. A U.S.
intermediate holding company must
comply with the requirements of
subparts E and F of this part and any
successor regulation in the same manner
as a bank holding company.

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§ 252.154 Risk-based and leverage capital
requirements for foreign banking
organizations with combined U.S. assets of
$50 billion or more.

(a) General requirements. (1) A foreign
banking organization with combined
U.S. assets of $50 billion or more must
certify to the Board that it meets capital
adequacy standards on a consolidated
basis established by its home-country
supervisor that are consistent with the
regulatory capital framework published
by the Basel Committee on Banking
Supervision, as amended from time to
time (Basel Capital Framework).
(i) For purposes of this paragraph,
home-country capital adequacy
standards that are consistent with the
Basel Capital Framework include all
minimum risk-based capital ratios, any
minimum leverage ratio, and all
restrictions based on any applicable
capital buffers set forth in ‘‘Basel III: A

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global regulatory framework for more
resilient banks and banking systems’’
(2010) (Basel III Accord), each as
applicable and as implemented in
accordance with the Basel III Accord,
including any transitional provisions set
forth therein.
(ii) [Reserved]
(2) In the event that a home-country
supervisor has not established capital
adequacy standards that are consistent
with the Basel Capital Framework, the
foreign banking organization must
demonstrate to the satisfaction of the
Board that it would meet or exceed
capital adequacy standards at the
consolidated level that are consistent
with the Basel Capital Framework were
it subject to such standards.
(b) Reporting. A foreign banking
organization with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more must provide to
the Board reports relating to its
compliance with the capital adequacy
measures described in paragraph (a) of
this section concurrently with filing the
FR Y–7Q.
(c) Noncompliance with the Basel
Capital Framework. If a foreign banking
organization does not satisfy the
requirements of this section, the Board
may impose requirements, conditions,
or restrictions relating to the activities
or business operations of the U.S.
operations of the foreign banking
organization. The Board will coordinate
with any relevant State or Federal
regulator in the implementation of such
requirements, conditions, or
restrictions. If the Board determines to
impose one or more requirements,
conditions, or restrictions under this
paragraph, the Board will notify the
company before it applies any
requirement, condition or restriction,
and describe the basis for imposing such
requirement, condition, or restriction.
Within 14 calendar days of receipt of a
notification under this paragraph, the
company may request in writing that the
Board reconsider the requirement,
condition, or restriction. The Board will
respond in writing to the company’s
request for reconsideration prior to
applying the requirement, condition, or
restriction.
§ 252.155 Risk-management and riskcommittee requirements for foreign banking
organizations with combined U.S. assets of
$50 billion.

(a) U.S. risk committee—(1) General.
Each foreign banking organization with
combined U.S. assets of $50 billion or
more must maintain a U.S. risk
committee that approves and
periodically reviews the risk
management policies of the combined
U.S. operations of the foreign banking

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organization and oversees the riskmanagement framework of such
combined U.S. operations. The U.S. risk
committee’s responsibilities include the
liquidity risk-management
responsibilities set forth in § 252.156(a).
(2) Risk-management framework. The
foreign banking organization’s riskmanagement framework for its
combined U.S. operations must be
commensurate with the structure, risk
profile, complexity, activities, and size
of its combined U.S. operations and
consistent with its enterprise-wide risk
management policies. The framework
must include:
(i) Policies and procedures
establishing risk-management
governance, risk-management
procedures, and risk-control
infrastructure for the combined U.S.
operations of the foreign banking
organization; and
(ii) Processes and systems for
implementing and monitoring
compliance with such policies and
procedures, including:
(A) Processes and systems for
identifying and reporting risks and riskmanagement deficiencies, including
regarding emerging risks, on a combined
U.S. operations basis and ensuring
effective and timely implementation of
actions to address emerging risks and
risk-management deficiencies;
(B) Processes and systems for
establishing managerial and employee
responsibility for risk management of
the combined U.S. operations;
(C) Processes and systems for
ensuring the independence of the riskmanagement function of the combined
U.S. operations; and
(D) Processes and systems to integrate
risk management and associated
controls with management goals and the
compensation structure of the combined
U.S. operations.
(3) Placement of the U.S. risk
committee. (i) A foreign banking
organization that conducts its
operations in the United States solely
through a U.S. intermediate holding
company must maintain its U.S. risk
committee as a committee of the board
of directors of its U.S. intermediate
holding company (or equivalent
thereof).
(ii) A foreign banking organization
that conducts its operations through
U.S. branches or U.S. agencies (in
addition to through its U.S. intermediate
holding company, if any) may maintain
its U.S. risk committee either:
(A) As a committee of the global board
of directors (or equivalent thereof), on a
standalone basis or as a joint committee
with its enterprise-wide risk committee
(or equivalent thereof); or

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(B) As a committee of the board of
directors of its U.S. intermediate
holding company (or equivalent
thereof), on a standalone basis or as a
joint committee with the risk committee
of its U.S. intermediate holding
company required pursuant to
§ 252.153(e)(3).
(4) Corporate governance
requirements. The U.S. risk committee
must meet at least quarterly and
otherwise as needed, and must fully
document and maintain records of its
proceedings, including riskmanagement decisions.
(5) Minimum member requirements.
The U.S. risk committee must:
(i) Include at least one member having
experience in identifying, assessing, and
managing risk exposures of large,
complex financial firms; and
(ii) Have at least one member who:
(A) Is not an officer or employee of
the foreign banking organization or its
affiliates and has not been an officer or
employee of the foreign banking
organization or its affiliates during the
previous three years; and
(B) Is not a member of the immediate
family, as defined in § 225.41(b)(3) of
the Board’s Regulation Y (12 CFR
225.41(b)(3)), of a person who is, or has
been within the last three years, an
executive officer, as defined in
§ 215.2(e)(1) of the Board’s Regulation O
(12 CFR 215.2(e)(1)) of the foreign
banking organization or its affiliates.
(b) U.S. chief risk officer—(1) General.
A foreign banking organization with
combined U.S. assets of $50 billion or
more or its U.S. intermediate holding
company, if any, must appoint a U.S.
chief risk officer with experience in
identifying, assessing, and managing
risk exposures of large, complex
financial firms.
(2) Responsibilities. (i) The U.S. chief
risk officer is responsible for overseeing:
(A) The measurement, aggregation,
and monitoring of risks undertaken by
the combined U.S. operations;
(B) The implementation of and
ongoing compliance with the policies
and procedures for the foreign banking
organization’s combined U.S. operations
set forth in paragraph (a)(2)(i) of this
section and the development and
implementation of processes and
systems set forth in paragraph (a)(2)(ii)
of this section; and
(C) The management of risks and risk
controls within the parameters of the
risk-control framework for the combined
U.S. operations, and the monitoring and
testing of such risk controls.
(ii) The U.S. chief risk officer is
responsible for reporting risks and riskmanagement deficiencies of the
combined U.S. operations, and resolving

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such risk-management deficiencies in a
timely manner.
(3) Corporate governance and
reporting. The U.S. chief risk officer
must:
(i) Receive compensation and other
incentives consistent with providing an
objective assessment of the risks taken
by the combined U.S. operations of the
foreign banking organization;
(ii) Be employed by and located in the
U.S. branch, U.S. agency, U.S.
intermediate holding company, if any,
or another U.S. subsidiary;
(iii) Report directly to the U.S. risk
committee and the global chief risk
officer or equivalent management
official (or officials) of the foreign
banking organization who is responsible
for overseeing, on an enterprise-wide
basis, the implementation of and
compliance with policies and
procedures relating to risk-management
governance, practices, and risk controls
of the foreign banking organization,
unless the Board approves an alternative
reporting structure based on
circumstances specific to the foreign
banking organization;
(iv) Regularly provide information to
the U.S. risk committee, global chief risk
officer, and the Board regarding the
nature of and changes to material risks
undertaken by the foreign banking
organization’s combined U.S.
operations, including risk-management
deficiencies and emerging risks, and
how such risks relate to the global
operations of the foreign banking
organization; and
(v) Meet regularly and as needed with
the Board to assess compliance with the
requirements of this section.
(4) Liquidity risk-management
requirements. The U.S. chief risk officer
must undertake the liquidity riskmanagement responsibilities set forth in
§ 252.156(b).
(c) Responsibilities of the foreign
banking organization. The foreign
banking organization must take
appropriate measures to ensure that its
combined U.S. operations implement
the risk management policies overseen
by the U.S. risk committee described in
paragraph (a) of this section, and its
combined U.S. operations provide
sufficient information to the U.S. risk
committee to enable the U.S. risk
committee to carry out the
responsibilities of this subpart.
(d) Noncompliance with this section.
If a foreign banking organization does
not satisfy the requirements of this
section, the Board may impose
requirements, conditions, or restrictions
relating to the activities or business
operations of the combined U.S.
operations of the foreign banking

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17331

organization. The Board will coordinate
with any relevant State or Federal
regulator in the implementation of such
requirements, conditions, or
restrictions.
§ 252.156 Liquidity risk-management
requirements for foreign banking
organizations with combined U.S. assets of
$50 billion.

(a) Responsibilities of the U.S. risk
committee. (1) The U.S. risk committee
established by a foreign banking
organization pursuant to § 252.155(a) (or
a designated subcommittee of such
committee composed of members of the
board of directors (or equivalent thereof)
of the U.S. intermediate holding
company or the foreign banking
organization, as appropriate) must:
(i) Approve at least annually the
acceptable level of liquidity risk that the
foreign banking organization may
assume in connection with the
operating strategies for its combined
U.S. operations (liquidity risk
tolerance), with concurrence from the
foreign banking organization’s board of
directors or its enterprise-wide risk
committee, taking into account the
capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, size of the foreign
banking organization and its combined
U.S. operations and the enterprise-wide
liquidity risk tolerance of the foreign
banking organization; and
(ii) Receive and review information
provided by the senior management of
the combined U.S. operations at least
semi-annually to determine whether the
combined U.S. operations are operating
in accordance with the established
liquidity risk tolerance and to ensure
that the liquidity risk tolerance for the
combined U.S. operations is consistent
with the enterprise-wide liquidity risk
tolerance established for the foreign
banking organization.
(iii) Approve the contingency funding
plan for the combined U.S. operations
described in paragraph (e) of this
section at least annually and whenever
the foreign banking organization revises
its contingency funding plan, and
approve any material revisions to the
contingency funding plan for the
combined U.S. operations prior to the
implementation of such revisions.
(b) Responsibilities of the U.S. chief
risk officer—(1) Liquidity risk. The U.S.
chief risk officer of a foreign banking
organization with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more must review the
strategies and policies and procedures
established by senior management of the
U.S. operations for managing the risk
that the financial condition or safety
and soundness of the foreign banking
organization’s combined U.S. operations

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would be adversely affected by its
inability or the market’s perception of
its inability to meet its cash and
collateral obligations (liquidity risk).
(2) Liquidity risk tolerance. The U.S.
chief risk officer of a foreign banking
organization with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more must review
information provided by the senior
management of the U.S. operations to
determine whether the combined U.S.
operations are operating in accordance
with the established liquidity risk
tolerance. The U.S. chief risk officer
must regularly, and, at least semiannually, report to the foreign banking
organization’s U.S. risk committee and
enterprise-wide risk committee, or the
equivalent thereof (if any) (or a
designated subcommittee of such
committee composed of members of the
relevant board of directors (or
equivalent thereof)) on the liquidity risk
profile of the foreign banking
organization’s combined U.S. operations
and whether it is operating in
accordance with the established
liquidity risk tolerance for the U.S.
operations, and must establish
procedures governing the content of
such reports.
(3) Business lines or products. (i) The
U.S. chief risk officer of a foreign
banking organization with combined
U.S. assets of $50 billion or more must
approve new products and business
lines and evaluate the liquidity costs,
benefits, and risks of each new business
line and each new product offered,
managed or sold through the foreign
banking organization’s combined U.S.
operations that could have a significant
effect on the liquidity risk profile of the
U.S. operations of the foreign banking
organization. The approval is required
before the foreign banking organization
implements the business line or offers
the product through its combined U.S.
operations. In determining whether to
approve the new business line or
product, the U.S. chief risk officer must
consider whether the liquidity risk of
the new business line or product (under
both current and stressed conditions) is
within the foreign banking
organization’s established liquidity risk
tolerance for its combined U.S.
operations.
(ii) The U.S. risk committee must
review at least annually significant
business lines and products offered,
managed or sold through the combined
U.S. operations to determine whether
each business line or product creates or
has created any unanticipated liquidity
risk, and to determine whether the
liquidity risk of each strategy or product
is within the foreign banking
organization’s established liquidity risk

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tolerance for its combined U.S.
operations.
(4) Cash-flow projections. The U.S.
chief risk officer of a foreign banking
organization with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more must review the
cash-flow projections produced under
paragraph (d) of this section at least
quarterly (or more often, if changes in
market conditions or the liquidity
position, risk profile, or financial
condition of the foreign banking
organization or the U.S. operations
warrant) to ensure that the liquidity risk
of the foreign banking organization’s
combined U.S. operations is within the
established liquidity risk tolerance.
(5) Liquidity risk limits. The U.S. chief
risk officer of a foreign banking
organization with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more must establish
liquidity risk limits as set forth in
paragraph (f) of this section and review
the foreign banking organization’s
compliance with those limits at least
quarterly (or more often, if changes in
market conditions or the liquidity
position, risk profile, or financial
condition of the U.S. operations of the
foreign banking organization warrant).
(6) Liquidity stress testing. The U.S.
chief risk officer of a foreign banking
organization with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more must:
(i) Approve the liquidity stress testing
practices, methodologies, and
assumptions required in § 252.157(a) at
least quarterly, and whenever the
foreign banking organization materially
revises its liquidity stress testing
practices, methodologies or
assumptions;
(ii) Review the liquidity stress testing
results produced under § 252.157(a) of
this subpart at least quarterly; and
(iii) Approve the size and
composition of the liquidity buffer
established under § 252.157(c) of this
subpart at least quarterly.
(c) Independent review function. (1) A
foreign banking organization with
combined U.S. assets of $50 billion or
more must establish and maintain a
review function that is independent of
the management functions that execute
funding for its combined U.S.
operations to evaluate the liquidity risk
management for its combined U.S.
operations.
(2) The independent review function
must:
(i) Regularly, but no less frequently
than annually, review and evaluate the
adequacy and effectiveness of the
foreign banking organization’s liquidity
risk management processes within the
combined U.S. operations, including its
liquidity stress test processes and
assumptions;

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(ii) Assess whether the foreign
banking organization’s liquidity risk
management function of its combined
U.S. operations complies with
applicable laws, regulations,
supervisory guidance, and sound
business practices; and
(iii) Report material liquidity risk
management issues to the U.S. risk
committee and the enterprise-wide risk
committee in writing for corrective
action, to the extent permitted by
applicable law.
(d) Cash-flow projections. (1) A
foreign banking organization with
combined U.S. assets of $50 billion or
more must produce comprehensive
cash-flow projections for its combined
U.S. operations that project cash flows
arising from assets, liabilities, and offbalance sheet exposures over, at a
minimum, short- and long-term time
horizons. The foreign banking
organization must update short-term
cash-flow projections daily and must
update longer-term cash-flow
projections at least monthly.
(2) The foreign banking organization
must establish a methodology for
making cash-flow projections for its
combined U.S. operations that results in
projections which:
(i) Include cash flows arising from
contractual maturities, intercompany
transactions, new business, funding
renewals, customer options, and other
potential events that may impact
liquidity;
(ii) Include reasonable assumptions
regarding the future behavior of assets,
liabilities, and off-balance sheet
exposures;
(iii) Identify and quantify discrete and
cumulative cash-flow mismatches over
these time periods; and
(iv) Include sufficient detail to reflect
the capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, currency exposure,
activities, and size of the foreign
banking organization and its combined
U.S. operations, and include analyses by
business line, currency, or legal entity
as appropriate.
(e) Contingency funding plan. (1) A
foreign banking organization with
combined U.S. assets of $50 billion or
more must establish and maintain a
contingency funding plan for its
combined U.S. operations that sets out
the foreign banking organization’s
strategies for addressing liquidity needs
during liquidity stress events. The
contingency funding plan must be
commensurate with the capital
structure, risk profile, complexity,
activities, size, and the established
liquidity risk tolerance for the combined
U.S. operations. The foreign banking
organization must update the

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contingency funding plan for its
combined U.S. operations at least
annually, and when changes to market
and idiosyncratic conditions warrant.
(2) Components of the contingency
funding plan—(i) Quantitative
assessment. The contingency funding
plan for the combined U.S. operations
must:
(A) Identify liquidity stress events
that could have a significant impact on
the liquidity of the foreign banking
organization and its combined U.S.
operations;
(B) Assess the level and nature of the
impact on the liquidity of the foreign
banking organization and its combined
U.S. operations that may occur during
identified liquidity stress events;
(C) Identify the circumstances in
which the foreign banking organization
would implement its action plan
described in paragraph (e)(2)(ii)(A) of
this section, which circumstances must
include failure to meet any minimum
liquidity requirement imposed by the
Board on the foreign banking
organization’s U.S. operations;
(D) Assess available funding sources
and needs during the identified
liquidity stress events;
(E) Identify alternative funding
sources that may be used during the
identified liquidity stress events; and
(F) Incorporate information generated
by the liquidity stress testing required
under § 252.157(a) of this subpart.
(ii) Liquidity event management
process. The contingency funding plan
for the combined U.S. operations must
include an event management process
that sets out the foreign banking
organization’s procedures for managing
liquidity during identified liquidity
stress events for the combined U.S.
operations. The liquidity event
management process must:
(A) Include an action plan that clearly
describes the strategies that the foreign
banking organization will use to
respond to liquidity shortfalls in its
combined U.S. operations for identified
liquidity stress events, including the
methods that the company or the
combined U.S. operations will use to
access alternative funding sources;
(B) Identify a liquidity stress event
management team that would execute
the action plan in paragraph (e)(2)(i) of
this section for the combined U.S.
operations;
(C) Specify the process,
responsibilities, and triggers for
invoking the contingency funding plan,
describe the decision-making process
during the identified liquidity stress
events, and describe the process for
executing contingency measures
identified in the action plan; and

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(D) Provide a mechanism that ensures
effective reporting and communication
within the combined U.S. operations of
the foreign banking organization and
with outside parties, including the
Board and other relevant supervisors,
counterparties, and other stakeholders.
(iii) Monitoring. The contingency
funding plan for the combined U.S.
operations must include procedures for
monitoring emerging liquidity stress
events. The procedures must identify
early warning indicators that are
tailored to the capital structure, risk
profile, complexity, activities, and size
of the foreign banking organization and
its combined U.S. operations.
(iv) Testing. A foreign banking
organization must periodically test:
(A) The components of the
contingency funding plan to assess the
plan’s reliability during liquidity stress
events;
(B) The operational elements of the
contingency funding plan, including
operational simulations to test
communications, coordination, and
decision-making by relevant
management; and
(C) The methods it will use to access
alternative funding sources for its
combined U.S. operations to determine
whether these funding sources will be
readily available when needed.
(f) Liquidity risk limits—(1) General.
A foreign banking organization with
combined U.S. assets of $50 billion or
more must monitor sources of liquidity
risk and establish limits on liquidity
risk for the combined U.S. operations,
including limits on:
(i) Concentrations in sources of
funding by instrument type, single
counterparty, counterparty type,
secured and unsecured funding, and if
applicable, other forms of liquidity risk;
(ii) The amount of liabilities that
mature within various time horizons;
and
(iii) Off-balance sheet exposures and
other exposures that could create
funding needs during liquidity stress
events.
(2) Size of limits. Each limit
established pursuant to paragraph (f)(1)
of this section must be consistent with
the established liquidity risk tolerance
for the combined U.S. operations and
reflect the capital structure, risk profile,
complexity, activities, and size of the
combined U.S. operations.
(g) Collateral, legal entity, and
intraday liquidity risk monitoring. A
foreign banking organization with
combined U.S. assets of $50 billion or
more must establish and maintain
procedures for monitoring liquidity risk
as set forth in this paragraph.

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(1) Collateral. The foreign banking
organization must establish and
maintain policies and procedures to
monitor assets that have been or are
available to be pledged as collateral in
connection with transactions to which
entities in its U.S. operations are
counterparties. These policies and
procedures must provide that the
foreign banking organization:
(i) Calculates all of the collateral
positions for its combined U.S.
operations on a weekly basis (or more
frequently, as directed by the Board),
specifying the value of pledged assets
relative to the amount of security
required under the relevant contracts
and the value of unencumbered assets
available to be pledged;
(ii) Monitors the levels of
unencumbered assets available to be
pledged by legal entity, jurisdiction, and
currency exposure;
(iii) Monitors shifts in the foreign
banking organization’s funding patterns,
including shifts between intraday,
overnight, and term pledging of
collateral; and
(iv) Tracks operational and timing
requirements associated with accessing
collateral at its physical location (for
example, the custodian or securities
settlement system that holds the
collateral).
(2) Legal entities, currencies and
business lines. The foreign banking
organization must establish and
maintain procedures for monitoring and
controlling liquidity risk exposures and
funding needs of its combined U.S.
operations, within and across significant
legal entities, currencies, and business
lines and taking into account legal and
regulatory restrictions on the transfer of
liquidity between legal entities.
(3) Intraday exposure. The foreign
banking organization must establish and
maintain procedures for monitoring
intraday liquidity risk exposure for its
combined U.S. operations. These
procedures must address how the
management of the combined U.S.
operations will:
(i) Monitor and measure expected
daily inflows and outflows;
(ii) Maintain, manage and transfer
collateral to obtain intraday credit;
(iii) Identify and prioritize timespecific obligations so that the foreign
banking organizations can meet these
obligations as expected and settle less
critical obligations as soon as possible;
(iv) Control the issuance of credit to
customers where necessary; and
(v) Consider the amounts of collateral
and liquidity needed to meet payment
systems obligations when assessing the
overall liquidity needs of the combined
U.S. operations.

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§ 252.157 Liquidity stress testing and
buffer requirements for foreign banking
organizations with combined U.S. assets of
$50 billion.

(a) Liquidity stress testing
requirement—(1) General. (i) A foreign
banking organization with combined
U.S. assets of $50 billion or more must
conduct stress tests to separately assess
the potential impact of liquidity stress
scenarios on the cash flows, liquidity
position, profitability, and solvency of:
(A) Its combined U.S. operations as a
whole;
(B) Its U.S. branches and agencies on
an aggregate basis; and
(C) Its U.S. intermediate holding
company, if any.
(ii) Each liquidity stress test required
under this paragraph (a)(1) must use the
stress scenarios described in paragraph
(a)(3) of this section and take into
account the current liquidity condition,
risks, exposures, strategies, and
activities of the U.S. operations.
(iii) The liquidity stress tests required
under this paragraph (a)(1) must take
into consideration the balance sheet
exposures, off-balance sheet exposures,
size, risk profile, complexity, business
lines, organizational structure and other
characteristics of the foreign banking
organization and its combined U.S.
operations that affect the liquidity risk
profile of the U.S. operations.
(iv) In conducting a liquidity stress
test using the scenarios described in
paragraphs (a)(3)(i) and (iii) of this
section, the bank holding company must
address the potential direct adverse
impact of associated market disruptions
on the foreign banking organization’s
combined U.S. operations and the
related indirect effect such impact could
have on the combined U.S. operations of
the foreign banking organization and
incorporate the potential actions of
other market participants experiencing
liquidity stresses under the market
disruptions that would adversely affect
the foreign banking organization or its
combined U.S. operations.
(2) Frequency. The liquidity stress
tests required under paragraph (a)(1) of
this section must be performed at least
monthly. The Board may require the
foreign banking organization to perform
stress testing more frequently than
monthly.
(3) Stress scenarios. (i) Each liquidity
stress test conducted under paragraph
(a)(1) of this section must include, at a
minimum:
(A) A scenario reflecting adverse
market conditions;
(B) A scenario reflecting an
idiosyncratic stress event for the U.S.
branches/agencies and the U.S.

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intermediate holding company, if any;
and
(C) a scenario reflecting combined
market and idiosyncratic stresses.
(ii) The foreign banking organization
must incorporate additional liquidity
stress scenarios into its liquidity stress
test as appropriate based on the
financial condition, size, complexity,
risk profile, scope of operations, or
activities of the combined U.S.
operations, the U.S. branches and
agencies, and the U.S. intermediate
holding company, as applicable. The
Board may require the foreign banking
organization to vary the underlying
assumptions and stress scenarios.
(4) Planning horizon. Each stress test
conducted under paragraph (a)(1) of this
section must include an overnight
planning horizon, a 30-day planning
horizon, a 90-day planning horizon, a 1year planning horizon, and any other
planning horizons that are relevant to
the liquidity risk profile of the
combined U.S. operations, the U.S.
branches and agencies, and the U.S.
intermediate holding company, if any.
For purposes of this section, a
‘‘planning horizon’’ is the period over
which the relevant stressed projections
extend. The foreign banking
organization must use the results of the
stress test over the 30-day planning
horizon to calculate the size of the
liquidity buffers under paragraph (c) of
this section.
(5) Requirements for assets used as
cash-flow sources in a stress test. (i) To
the extent an asset is used as a cash flow
source to offset projected funding needs
during the planning horizon in a
liquidity stress test, the fair market
value of the asset must be discounted to
reflect any credit risk and market
volatility of the asset.
(ii) Assets used as cash-flow sources
during the planning horizon must be
diversified by collateral, counterparty,
borrowing capacity, or other factors
associated with the liquidity risk of the
assets.
(iii) A line of credit does not qualify
as a cash flow source for purposes of a
stress test with a planning horizon of 30
days or less. A line of credit may qualify
as a cash flow source for purposes of a
stress test with a planning horizon that
exceeds 30 days.
(6) Tailoring. Stress testing must be
tailored to, and provide sufficient detail
to reflect, the capital structure, risk
profile, complexity, activities, and size
of the combined U.S. operations of the
foreign banking organization and, as
appropriate, the foreign banking
organization as a whole.
(7) Governance—(i) Stress test
function. A foreign banking organization

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with combined U.S. assets of $50 billion
or more, within its combined U.S.
operations and its enterprise-wide risk
management, must establish and
maintain policies and procedures
governing its liquidity stress testing
practices, methodologies, and
assumptions that provide for the
incorporation of the results of liquidity
stress tests in future stress testing and
for the enhancement of stress testing
practices over time.
(ii) Controls and oversight. The
foreign banking organization must
establish and maintain a system of
controls and oversight that is designed
to ensure that its liquidity stress testing
processes are effective in meeting the
requirements of this section. The
controls and oversight must ensure that
each liquidity stress test appropriately
incorporates conservative assumptions
with respect to the stress scenario in
paragraph (a)(3) of this section and other
elements of the stress-test process,
taking into consideration the capital
structure, risk profile, complexity,
activities, size, and other relevant
factors of the U.S. operations. These
assumptions must be approved by U.S.
chief risk officer and subject to
independent review consistent with the
standards set out in § 252.156(c).
(iii) Management information
systems. The foreign banking
organization must maintain
management information systems and
data processes sufficient to enable it to
effectively and reliably collect, sort, and
aggregate data and other information
related to the liquidity stress testing of
its combined U.S. operations.
(b) Reporting of liquidity stress tests
required by home-country regulators. A
foreign banking organization with
combined U.S. assets of $50 billion or
more must make available to the Board,
in a timely manner, the results of any
liquidity internal stress tests and
establishment of liquidity buffers
required by regulators in its home
jurisdiction. The report required under
this paragraph must include the results
of its liquidity stress test and liquidity
buffer, if required by the laws or
regulations implemented in the home
jurisdiction, or expected under
supervisory guidance.
(c) Liquidity buffer requirement—(1)
General. A foreign banking organization
with combined U.S. assets of $50 billion
or more must maintain a liquidity buffer
for its U.S. intermediate holding
company, if any, calculated in
accordance with paragraph (c)(2) of this
section, and a separate liquidity buffer
for its U.S. branches and agencies, if
any, calculated in accordance with
paragraph (c)(3) of this section.

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(2) Calculation of U.S. intermediate
holding company buffer requirement. (i)
The liquidity buffer for the U.S.
intermediate holding company must be
sufficient to meet the projected net
stressed cash-flow need over the 30-day
planning horizon of a liquidity stress
test conducted in accordance with
paragraph (a) of this section under each
scenario set forth in paragraphs (a)(3)(i)
through (iii) of this section.
(ii) Net stressed cash-flow need. The
net stressed cash-flow need for the U.S.
intermediate holding company is equal
to the sum of its net external stressed
cash-flow need (calculated pursuant to
paragraph (c)(2)(iii) of this section) and
its net internal stressed cash-flow need
(calculated pursuant to paragraph
(c)(2)(iv) of this section) over the 30-day
planning horizon.
(iii) Net external stressed cash-flow
need calculation. The net external
stressed cash-flow need for a U.S.
intermediate holding company equals
the difference between:
(A) The projected amount of cashflow needs that results from transactions
between the U.S. intermediate holding
company and entities that are not its
affiliates; and
(B) The projected amount of cash-flow
sources that results from transactions
between the U.S. intermediate holding
company and entities that are not its
affiliates.
(iv) Net internal stressed cash-flow
need calculation—(A) General. The net
internal stressed cash-flow need for the
U.S. intermediate holding company
equals the greater of:
(1) The greatest daily cumulative net
intragroup cash-flow need over the 30day planning horizon as calculated
under paragraph (c)(2)(iv)(B) of this
section; and
(2) Zero.
(B) Daily cumulative net intragroup
cash-flow need calculation. The daily
cumulative net intragroup cash-flow
need for the U.S. intermediate holding
company for purposes of paragraph
(c)(2)(iv)(A) of this section is calculated
as follows:
(1) Daily cumulative net intragroup
cash-flow need. For any given day in the
stress-test horizon, the daily cumulative
net intragroup cash-flow need is a daily
cumulative net intragroup cash flow
that is greater than zero.
(2) Daily cumulative net intragroup
cash flow. For any given day of the
planning horizon, the daily cumulative
net intragroup cash flow equals the sum
of the net intragroup cash flow
calculated for that day and the net
intragroup cash flow calculated for each
previous day of the stress-test horizon,

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as calculated in accordance with
paragraph (c)(2)(iv)(C) of this section.
(C) Net intragroup cash flow. For any
given day of the stress-test horizon, the
net intragroup cash flow equals the
difference between:
(1) The amount of cash-flow needs
resulting from transactions between the
U.S. intermediate holding company and
its affiliates (including any U.S. branch
or U.S. agency) for that day of the
planning horizon; and
(2) The amount of cash-flow sources
resulting from transactions between the
U.S. intermediate holding company and
its affiliates (including any U.S. branch
or U.S. agency) for that day of the
planning horizon.
(D) Amounts secured by highly liquid
assets. For the purposes of calculating
net intragroup cash flow under this
paragraph, the amounts of intragroup
cash-flow needs and intragroup cashflow sources that are secured by highly
liquid assets (as defined in paragraph
(c)(7) of this section) must be excluded
from the calculation.
(3) Calculation of U.S. branch and
agency liquidity buffer requirement. (i)
The liquidity buffer for the foreign
banking organization’s U.S. branches
and agencies must be sufficient to meet
the projected net stressed cash-flow
need of the U.S. branches and agencies
over the first 14 days of a stress test with
a 30-day planning horizon, conducted
in accordance with paragraph (a) of this
section under the scenarios described in
paragraphs (a)(3)(i) through (iii) of this
section.
(ii) Net stressed cash-flow need. The
net stressed cash-flow need of the U.S.
branches and agencies of a foreign
banking organization is equal to the sum
of its net external stressed cash-flow
need (calculated pursuant to paragraph
(c)(3)(iii) of this section) and net
internal stressed cash-flow need
(calculated pursuant to paragraph
(c)(3)(iv) of this section) over the first 14
days of the 30-day planning horizon.
(iii) Net external stressed cash-flow
need calculation. (A) The net external
stressed cash-flow need of the U.S.
branches and agencies equals the
difference between:
(1) The projected amount of cash-flow
needs that results from transactions
between the U.S. branches and agencies
and entities other than the foreign
bank’s non-U.S. offices and its U.S. and
non-U.S. affiliates; and
(2) The projected amount of cash-flow
sources that results from transactions
between the U.S. branches and agencies
and entities other than the foreign
bank’s non-U.S. offices and its U.S. and
non-U.S. affiliates.

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(iv) Net internal stressed cash-flow
need calculation—(A) General. The net
internal stressed cash-flow need of the
U.S. branches and agencies of the
foreign banking organization equals the
greater of:
(1) The greatest daily cumulative net
intragroup cash-flow need over the first
14 days of the 30-day planning horizon,
as calculated under paragraph
(c)(3)(iv)(B) of this section; and
(2) Zero.
(B) Daily cumulative net intragroup
cash-flow need calculation. The daily
cumulative net intragroup cash-flow
need of the U.S. branches and agencies
of a foreign banking organization for
purposes of paragraph (c)(3)(iv) of this
section is calculated as follows:
(1) Daily cumulative net intragroup
cash-flow need. For any given day of the
stress-test horizon, the daily cumulative
net intragroup cash-flow need of the
U.S. branches and agencies means a
daily cumulative net intragroup cash
flow that is greater than zero.
(2) Daily cumulative net intragroup
cash flow. For any given day of the
planning horizon, the daily cumulative
net intragroup cash flow of the U.S.
branches and agencies equals the sum of
the net intragroup cash flow calculated
for that day and the net intragroup cash
flow calculated for each previous day of
the planning horizon, each as calculated
in accordance with this paragraph
(c)(3)(iv)(C) of this section.
(C) Net intragroup cash flow. For any
given day of the planning horizon, the
net intragroup cash flow must equal the
difference between:
(1) The amount of projected cash-flow
needs resulting from transactions
between a U.S. branch or U.S. agency
and the foreign bank’s non-U.S. offices
and its affiliates; and
(2) The amount of projected cash-flow
sources resulting from transactions
between a U.S. branch or U.S. agency
and the foreign bank’s non-U.S. offices
and its affiliates.
(D) Amounts secured by highly liquid
assets. For the purposes of calculating
net intragroup cash flow of the U.S.
branches and agencies under this
paragraph, the amounts of intragroup
cash-flow needs and intragroup cashflow sources that are secured by highly
liquid assets (as defined in paragraph
(c)(7) of this section) must be excluded
from the calculation.
(4) Location of liquidity buffer—(i)
U.S. intermediate holding companies. A
U.S. intermediate holding company
must maintain in accounts in the United
States the highly liquid assets
comprising the liquidity buffer required
under this section. To the extent that the
assets consist of cash, the cash may not

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be held in an account located at a U.S.
branch or U.S. agency of the affiliated
foreign banking organization or other
affiliate that is not controlled by the
U.S. intermediate holding company.
(ii) U.S. branches and agencies. The
U.S. branches and agencies of a foreign
banking organization must maintain in
accounts in the United States the highly
liquid assets comprising the liquidity
buffer required under this section. To
the extent that the assets consist of cash,
the cash may not be held in an account
located at the foreign banking
organization’s U.S. intermediate holding
company or other affiliate.
(7) Asset requirements. The liquidity
buffer required in this section for the
U.S. intermediate holding company or
the U.S. branches and agencies must
consist of highly liquid assets that are
unencumbered, as set forth below:
(i) Highly liquid asset. The asset must
be a highly liquid asset. For these
purposes, a highly liquid asset includes:
(A) Cash;
(B) Securities issued or guaranteed by
the United States, a U.S. government
agency, or a U.S. government-sponsored
enterprise; or
(C) Any other asset that the foreign
banking organization demonstrates to
the satisfaction of the Board:
(1) Has low credit risk and low market
risk;
(2) Is traded in an active secondary
two-way market that has committed
market makers and independent bona
fide offers to buy and sell so that a price
reasonably related to the last sales price
or current bona fide competitive bid and
offer quotations can be determined
within one day and settled at that price
within a reasonable time period
conforming with trade custom; and
(3) Is a type of asset that investors
historically have purchased in periods
of financial market distress during
which market liquidity has been
impaired.
(ii) Unencumbered. The asset must be
unencumbered. For these purposes, an
asset is unencumbered if it:
(A) Is free of legal, regulatory,
contractual, or other restrictions on the
ability of such company promptly to
liquidate, sell or transfer the asset; and
(B) Is either:
(1) Not pledged or used to secure or
provide credit enhancement to any
transaction; or
(2) Pledged to a central bank or a U.S.
government-sponsored enterprise, to the
extent potential credit secured by the
asset is not currently extended by such
central bank or U.S. governmentsponsored enterprise or any of its
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(iii) Calculating the amount of a
highly liquid asset. In calculating the
amount of a highly liquid asset included
in the liquidity buffer, the bank holding
company must discount the fair market
value of the asset to reflect any credit
risk and market price volatility of the
asset.
(iv) Diversification. The liquidity
buffer must not contain significant
concentrations of highly liquid assets by
issuer, business sector, region, or other
factor related to the foreign banking
organization’s risk, except with respect
to cash and securities issued or
guaranteed by the United States, a U.S.
government agency, or a U.S.
government-sponsored enterprise.
§ 252.158 Capital stress testing
requirements for foreign banking
organizations with combined U.S. assets of
$50 billion or more.

(a) Definitions. For purposes of this
section, the following definitions apply:
(1) Eligible asset means any asset of
the U.S. branch or U.S. agency held in
the United States that is recorded on the
general ledger of a U.S. branch or U.S.
agency of the foreign banking
organization (reduced by the amount of
any specifically allocated reserves held
in the United States and recorded on the
general ledger of the U.S. branch or U.S.
agency in connection with such assets),
subject to the following exclusions, and,
for purposes of this definition, as
modified by the rules of valuation set
forth in paragraph (a)(1)(ii) of this
section.
(i) The following assets do not qualify
as eligible assets:
(A) Equity securities;
(B) Any assets classified as loss at the
preceding examination by a regulatory
agency, outside accountant, or the
bank’s internal loan review staff;
(C) Accrued income on assets
classified loss, doubtful, substandard or
value impaired, at the preceding
examination by a regulatory agency,
outside accountant, or the bank’s
internal loan review staff;
(D) Any amounts due from the home
office, other offices and affiliates,
including income accrued but
uncollected on such amounts;
(E) The balance from time to time of
any other asset or asset category
disallowed at the preceding
examination or by direction of the Board
for any other reason until the
underlying reasons for the disallowance
have been removed;
(F) Prepaid expenses and unamortized
costs, furniture and fixtures and
leasehold improvements; and
(G) Any other asset that the Board
determines should not qualify as an
eligible asset.

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(ii) The following rules of valuation
apply:
(A) A marketable debt security is
valued at its principal amount or market
value, whichever is lower;
(B) An asset classified doubtful or
substandard at the preceding
examination by a regulatory agency,
outside accountant, or the bank’s
internal loan review staff, is valued at
50 percent and 80 percent, respectively;
(C) With respect to an asset classified
value impaired, the amount
representing the allocated transfer risk
reserve that would be required for such
exposure at a domestically chartered
bank is valued at 0 and the residual
exposure is valued at 80 percent; and
(D) Real estate located in the United
States and carried on the accounting
records as an asset are valued at net
book value or appraised value,
whichever is less.
(2) Liabilities of all U.S. branches and
agencies of a foreign banking
organization means all liabilities of all
U.S. branches and agencies of the
foreign banking organization, including
acceptances and any other liabilities
(including contingent liabilities), but
excluding:
(i) Amounts due to and other
liabilities to other offices, agencies,
branches and affiliates of such foreign
banking organization, including its head
office, including unremitted profits; and
(ii) Reserves for possible loan losses
and other contingencies.
(3) Pre-provision net revenue means
revenue less expenses before adjusting
for total loan loss provisions.
(4) Stress test cycle has the same
meaning as in subpart F of this part.
(5) Total loan loss provisions means
the amount needed to make reserves
adequate to absorb estimated credit
losses, based upon management’s
evaluation of the loans and leases that
the company has the intent and ability
to hold for the foreseeable future or
until maturity or payoff, as determined
under applicable accounting standards.
(b) In general. (1) A foreign banking
organization with combined U.S. assets
of $50 billion or more and that has a
U.S. branch or U.S. agency must:
(i) Be subject on a consolidated basis
to a capital stress testing regime by its
home-country supervisor that meets the
requirements of paragraph (b)(2) of this
section;
(ii) Conduct such stress tests or be
subject to a supervisory stress test and
meet any minimum standards set by its
home-country supervisor with respect to
the stress tests; and
(iii) Provide to the Board the
information required under paragraph
(c) of this section.

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(2) The capital stress testing regime of
a foreign banking organization’s homecountry supervisor must include:
(i) An annual supervisory capital
stress test conducted by the foreign
banking organization’s home-country
supervisor or an annual evaluation and
review by the foreign banking
organization’s home-country supervisor
of an internal capital adequacy stress
test conducted by the foreign banking
organization; and
(ii) Requirements for governance and
controls of stress testing practices by
relevant management and the board of
directors (or equivalent thereof) of the
foreign banking organization;
(c) Information requirements—(1) In
general. A foreign banking organization
with combined U.S. assets of $50 billion
or more must report to the Board by
January 5 of each calendar year, unless
such date is extended by the Board,
summary information about its stresstesting activities and results, including
the following quantitative and
qualitative information:
(i) A description of the types of risks
included in the stress test;
(ii) A description of the conditions or
scenarios used in the stress test;
(iii) A summary description of the
methodologies used in the stress test;
(iv) Estimates of:
(A) Aggregate losses;
(B) Pre-provision net revenue;
(C) Total loan loss provisions;
(D) Net income before taxes; and
(E) Pro forma regulatory capital ratios
required to be computed by the homecountry supervisor of the foreign
banking organization and any other
relevant capital ratios; and
(v) An explanation of the most
significant causes for any changes in
regulatory capital ratios.
(2) Additional information required
for foreign banking organizations in a
net due from position. If, on a net basis,
the U.S. branches and agencies of a
foreign banking organization with
combined U.S. assets of $50 billion or
more provide funding to the foreign
banking organization’s non-U.S. offices
and non-U.S. affiliates, calculated as the
average daily position over a stress test
cycle for a given year, the foreign
banking organization must report the
following information to the Board by
January 5 of each calendar year, unless
such date is extended by the Board:
(i) A detailed description of the
methodologies used in the stress test,
including those employed to estimate
losses, revenues, and changes in capital
positions;
(ii) Estimates of realized losses or
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counterparty losses, if applicable; and
loan losses (dollar amount and as a
percentage of average portfolio balance)
in the aggregate and by material subportfolio; and
(iii) Any additional information that
the Board requests.
(d) Imposition of additional standards
for capital stress tests. (1) Unless the
Board otherwise determines in writing,
a foreign banking organization that does
not meet each of the requirements in
paragraph (b)(1) and (2) of this section
must:
(i) Maintain eligible assets in its U.S.
branches and agencies that, on a daily
basis, are not less than 108 percent of
the average value over each day of the
previous calendar quarter of the total
liabilities of all U.S. branches and
agencies of the foreign banking
organization; and
(ii) To the extent that a foreign
banking organization has not
established a U.S. intermediate holding
company, conduct an annual stress test
of its U.S. subsidiaries to determine
whether those subsidiaries have the
capital necessary to absorb losses as a
result of adverse economic conditions;
and report to the Board on an annual
basis a summary of the results of the
stress test that includes the information
required under paragraph (b)(1) of this
section and any other information
specified by the Board.
(2) An enterprise-wide stress test that
is approved by the Board may meet the
stress test requirement of paragraph
(d)(1)(ii) of this section.
(3) Intragroup funding restrictions or
liquidity requirements for U.S.
operations. If a foreign banking
organization does not meet each of the
requirements in paragraphs (b)(1) and
(2) of this section, the Board may
require the U.S. branches and agencies
of the foreign banking organization and,
if the foreign banking organization has
not established a U.S. intermediate
holding company, any U.S. subsidiary
of the foreign banking organization, to
maintain a liquidity buffer or be subject
to intragroup funding restrictions.
(e) Notice and response. If the Board
determines to impose one or more
conditions under paragraph (d)(3) of
this section, the Board will notify the
company before it applies the condition,
and describe the basis for imposing the
condition. Within 14 calendar days of
receipt of a notification under this
paragraph, the company may request in
writing that the Board reconsider the
requirement. The Board will respond in
writing to the company’s request for
reconsideration prior to applying the
condition.

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9. Subpart U is added to read as
follows:

■

Subpart U—Debt-to-Equity Limits for U.S.
and Foreign Banking Organizations
Sec.
252.220 Debt-to-equity limits for U.S. bank
holding companies.
252.221 Debt-to-equity limits for foreign
banking organizations.

Subpart U—Debt-to-Equity Limits for
U.S. Bank Holding Companies and
Foreign Banking Organizations
§ 252.220 Debt-to-equity limits for U.S.
bank holding companies.

(a) Definitions—(1) Debt-to-equity
ratio means the ratio of a company’s
total liabilities to a company’s total
equity capital less goodwill.
(2) Debt and equity have the same
meaning as ‘‘total liabilities’’ and ‘‘total
equity capital,’’ respectively, as reported
by a bank holding company on the FR
Y–9C.
(b) Notice and maximum debt-toequity ratio requirement. The Council,
or the Board on behalf of the Council,
will provide written notice to a bank
holding company to the extent that the
Council makes a determination,
pursuant to section 165(j) of the DoddFrank Act, that a bank holding company
poses a grave threat to the financial
stability of the United States and that
the imposition of a debt-to-equity
requirement is necessary to mitigate
such risk. Beginning no later than 180
days after receiving written notice from
the Council or from the Board on behalf
of the Council, the bank holding
company must achieve and maintain a
debt-to-equity ratio of no more than 15to-1.
(c) Extension. The Board may, upon
request by the bank holding company
for which the Council has made a
determination pursuant to section 165(j)
of the Dodd-Frank Act, extend the time
period for compliance established under
paragraph (b) of this section for up to
two additional periods of 90 days each,
if the Board determines that the
identified company has made good faith
efforts to comply with the debt-to-equity
ratio requirement and that each
extension would be in the public
interest. Requests for an extension must
be received in writing by the Board not
less than 30 days prior to the expiration
of the existing time period for
compliance and must provide
information sufficient to demonstrate
that the bank holding company has
made good faith efforts to comply with
the debt-to-equity ratio requirement and
that each extension would be in the
public interest.

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(d) Termination. The debt-to-equity
ratio requirement in paragraph (b) of
this section shall cease to apply to a
bank holding company as of the date it
receives notice from the Council of a
determination that the bank holding
company no longer poses a grave threat
to the financial stability of the United
States and that the imposition of a debtto-equity requirement is no longer
necessary.
§ 252.221 Debt-to-equity limits for foreign
banking organizations.

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(a) Definitions. For purposes of this
subpart, the following definitions apply:
(1) Debt and equity have the same
meaning as ‘‘total liabilities’’ and ‘‘total
equity capital,’’ respectively, as reported
by a U.S. intermediate holding company
or U.S. subsidiary on the FR Y–9C, or
other reporting form prescribed by the
Board.
(2) Debt-to-equity ratio means the
ratio of total liabilities to total equity
capital less goodwill.
(3) Eligible assets and liabilities of all
U.S. branches and agencies of a foreign
bank have the same meaning as in
§ 252.158(a).
(b) Notice and maximum debt-toequity ratio requirement. Beginning no
later than 180 days after receiving
written notice from the Council or from
the Board on behalf of the Council that

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the Council has made a determination,
pursuant to section 165(j) of the DoddFrank Act, that the foreign banking
organization poses a grave threat to the
financial stability of the United States
and that the imposition of a debt-toequity requirement is necessary to
mitigate such risk:
(1) The U.S. intermediate holding
company, or if the foreign banking
organization has not established a U.S.
intermediate holding company, and any
U.S. subsidiary (excluding any section
2(h)(2) company or DPC branch
subsidiary, if applicable), must achieve
and maintain a debt-to-equity ratio of no
more than 15-to-1; and
(2) The U.S. branches and agencies of
the foreign banking organization must
maintain eligible assets in its U.S.
branches and agencies that, on a daily
basis, are not less than 108 percent of
the average value over each day of the
previous calendar quarter of the total
liabilities of all branches and agencies
operated by the foreign banking
organization in the United States.
(c) Extension. The Board may, upon
request by a foreign banking
organization for which the Council has
made a determination pursuant to
section 165(j) of the Dodd-Frank Act,
extend the time period for compliance
established under paragraph (b) of this

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section for up to two additional periods
of 90 days each, if the Board determines
that such company has made good faith
efforts to comply with the debt to equity
ratio requirement and that each
extension would be in the public
interest. Requests for an extension must
be received in writing by the Board not
less than 30 days prior to the expiration
of the existing time period for
compliance and must provide
information sufficient to demonstrate
that the foreign banking organization
has made good faith efforts to comply
with the debt-to-equity ratio
requirement and that each extension
would be in the public interest.
(d) Termination. The requirements in
paragraph (b) of this section cease to
apply to a foreign banking organization
as of the date it receives notice from the
Council of a determination that the
company no longer poses a grave threat
to the financial stability of the United
States and that imposition of the
requirements in paragraph (b) of this
section are no longer necessary.
By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, March 11, 2014.
Michael J. Lewandowski,
Associate Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 2014–05699 Filed 3–21–14; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P

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27MRR2