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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 189 / Monday, September 30, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
administrative costs to 15 percent of a
fiscal year’s available income. In 2012,
the USHBC’s administrative costs were
7.46 percent of available income, much
lower than the Order’s threshold.
No changes have been made to the
proposed rule based on these opposing
comments.
Other Comments
Two comments were received that did
not take a position on the proposed
assessment rate increase. One
commenter stated that she supports
promoting blueberries. Another
commenter asked about the amount of
funds used for administration versus
promotion, hoping that at least 75
percent of the funds are used for
promotion, research and information
projects. As previously mentioned,
section 1218.50(i) limits the funds that
the USHBC can spend for
administration to 15 percent of available
income for the year. In 2012, the
USHBC’s administrative costs were 7.46
percent of available income, much
lower than the Order’s threshold.
USHBC 2012 actual program expenses
were almost 80 percent of its total
expenditures.
After consideration of all relevant
matters presented, including the
information and recommendation
submitted by the USHBC and other
available information, it is hereby found
that this rule, as hereinafter set forth, is
consistent with and would effectuate
the purposes of the 1996 Act.
List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 1218
Administrative practice and
procedure, Advertising, Consumer
information, Marketing agreements,
Blueberry promotion, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, Part 1218, Chapter XI of Title
7 is amended as follows:
PART 1218—BLUEBERRY
PROMOTION, RESEARCH, AND
INFORMATION ORDER

Dated: September 24, 2013.
Rex A. Barnes,
Associate Administrator.
[FR Doc. 2013–23695 Filed 9–27–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–02–P

FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Parts 225 and 252
[Docket No. R–1463; RIN 7100 AE–01]

Regulations Y and YY: Application of
the Revised Capital Framework to the
Capital Plan and Stress Test Rules
Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System (Board).
ACTION: Interim final rule with request
for comment.
AGENCY:

The Board invites comment
on an interim final rule that amends the
capital plan and stress test rules to
require a bank holding company with
total consolidated assets of $50 billion
or more to estimate its tier 1 common
ratio using the methodology currently in
effect in 2013 under the existing capital
guidelines (not the rules as revised on
July 2, 2013). The interim final rule also
clarifies when a banking organization
would estimate its minimum regulatory
capital ratios using the advanced
approaches for a given capital plan and
stress test cycle and makes minor,
technical changes to the capital plan
rule.

SUMMARY:

■

This rule is effective on
September 30, 2013. Comments must be
received on or before November 25,
2013.

Authority: 7 U.S.C. 7411–7425; 7 U.S.C.
7401.

ADDRESSES:

DATES:

1. The authority citation for 7 CFR
part 1218 continues to read as follows:

2. In § 1218.52, paragraph (c) and the
first sentence of paragraph (d)(2) are
revised to read as follows:

■
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modified with the approval of the
Secretary.
(d) * * *
(2) The import assessment shall be
uniformly applied to imported fresh and
frozen blueberries that are identified by
the numbers 0810.40.0029 and
0811.90.2028, respectively, in the
Harmonized Tariff Schedule of the
United States or any other numbers
used to identify fresh and frozen
blueberries. * * *
*
*
*
*
*

§ 1218.52

Assessments.

*

*
*
*
*
(c) Such assessments shall be levied at
a rate of $18 per ton (or $0.01984 per
kg) on all blueberries. The assessment
rate will be reviewed, and may be

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You may submit comments,
identified by Docket R–1463 and RIN
No. 7100 AE 01, by any of the following
methods:
Agency Web site: http://
www.federalreserve.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments at
http://www.federalreserve.gov/apps/
foia/proposedregs.aspx.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: http://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.

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59779

Email: regs.comments@
federalreserve.gov. Include docket
number in the subject line of the
message.
Facsimile: (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/apps/foia/
proposedregs.aspx 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.) between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
on weekdays.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Lisa
Ryu, Deputy Associate Director, (202)
263–4833, Constance Horsley, Manager,
(202) 452–5239, or Ann McKeehan,
Senior Supervisory Financial Analyst,
(202) 973–6903, Division of Banking
Supervision and Regulation; Laurie
Schaffer, Associate General Counsel,
(202) 452–2272, Ben McDonough,
Senior Counsel, (202) 452–2036, or
Christine Graham, Senior Attorney,
(202) 452–3005, Legal Division, Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, 20th Street and Constitution
Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20551.
Users of Telecommunication Device for
Deaf (TDD) only, call (202) 263–4869.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
On July 2, 2013, the Board approved
revised risk-based and leverage capital
requirements for banking organizations
that implement the Basel III regulatory
capital reforms and certain changes
required by the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act
(revised capital framework).1 The
revised capital framework introduces a
new common equity tier 1 capital ratio
and supplementary leverage ratio, raises
the minimum tier 1 ratio and, for certain
banking organizations, leverage ratio,
implements strict eligibility criteria for
regulatory capital instruments, and
1 See, Regulatory Capital Rules: Regulatory
Capital, Implementation of Basel III, Capital
Adequacy, Transition Provisions, Prompt Corrective
Action, Standardized Approach for Risk-weighted
Assets, Market Discipline and Disclosure
Requirements, Advanced Approaches Risk-Based
Capital Rule, and Market Risk Capital Rule (July 2,
2013), available at: http://www.federalreserve.gov/
newsevents/press/bcreg/20130702a.htm (revised
capital framework).

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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 189 / Monday, September 30, 2013 / Rules and Regulations

introduces a standardized methodology
for calculating risk-weighted assets. The
new minimum regulatory capital ratios
and the eligibility criteria for regulatory
capital instruments will begin to take
effect as of January 1, 2014, subject to
transition provisions, for banking
organizations that meet the criteria for
the advanced approaches rule
(advanced approaches banking
organizations).2 All other banking
organizations must begin to comply
with the revised capital framework
beginning on January 1, 2015.
As the revised regulatory capital
framework comes into effect, banking
organizations will be required to reflect
the new capital rules in their capital
plans submitted under the Board’s
capital plan rule and in their stress tests
conducted under the Board’s rules
implementing the stress test
requirements of the Dodd-Frank Wall
Street Reform and Consumer Protection
Act.

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II. Capital Plan Rule
Pursuant to the Board’s capital plan
rule and Board’s related supervisory
process, the Comprehensive Capital
Analysis and Review (CCAR), the Board
assesses the internal capital planning
process of a bank holding company with
total consolidated assets of $50 billion
or more (large bank holding company)
and its ability to maintain sufficient
capital to continue its operations under
expected and stressful conditions.3
Under the capital plan rule, a large bank
holding company is required to submit
an annual capital plan to the Board that
contains estimates of its minimum
regulatory capital ratios and its tier 1
common ratio under expected
conditions and under a range of stressed
scenarios over a nine-quarter planning
horizon (planning horizon).4 A capital
plan also must include a discussion of
how the large bank holding company
will maintain a pro forma tier 1
common ratio above 5 percent under
expected conditions and stressed
scenarios.5
The tier 1 common ratio is a measure
that the Federal Reserve has used for
supervisory purposes during and after
the financial crisis, including CCAR—it
is not a minimum capital requirement.6
The capital plan rule defines the tier 1
2 A banking organization is subject to the
advanced approaches rule if it has consolidated
assets greater than or equal to $250 billion, if it has
total consolidated on-balance sheet foreign
exposures of at least $10 billion, or if it elects to
apply the advanced approaches rule.
3 76 FR 74631 (Dec. 1, 2011) (codified at 12 CFR
225.8) (capital plan rule).
4 See generally 12 CFR 225.8.
5 Id. at § 225.8(d)(2)(i)(B).
6 76 FR 74631, 74636 (December 1, 2011).

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common ratio as the ratio of a bank
holding company’s tier 1 common
capital to its total risk-weighted assets.
Tier 1 common capital is defined as tier
1 capital less non-common elements in
tier 1 capital, including perpetual
preferred stock and related surplus,
minority interest in subsidiaries, trust
preferred securities and mandatory
convertible preferred securities.7 The 5
percent threshold reflected a
supervisory assessment of the minimum
capital needed to provide a high level of
confidence that a BHC can continue to
be a going concern throughout stressful
conditions and on a post-stress basis,
based on an analysis of the historical
distribution of earnings by large banking
organizations.8
The preamble to the capital plan rule
noted that the Basel III framework
proposed by the Basel Committee on
Bank Supervision includes a different
definition of tier 1 common capital and
that the Board and the other federal
banking agencies continued to work on
implementing Basel III in the United
States.9 The capital plan rule’s
definition of ‘‘tier 1 common ratio’’
states that the definition will remain in
effect until the Board adopts an
alternative tier 1 common ratio
definition as a minimum regulatory
capital ratio.10
III. Stress Test Rules
The Board’s stress test rules for large
bank holding companies and nonbank
financial companies supervised by the
Board 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.11 Under the
supervisory stress tests, the Board uses
data as of September 30 of each year to
assess a covered company’s capital
levels and regulatory capital ratios and
its tier 1 common ratio, over the ninequarter planning horizon of a given
stress test cycle.12 Similarly, the annual
and semi-annual stress tests conducted
by a covered company require it to
report, among other elements, its
8 Basel Committee on Banking Supervision,
Calibrating regulatory minimum capital
requirements and capital buffers: A top-down
approach (October 2010), available at http://
www.bis.org/publ/bcbs180.htm.
9 76 FR 74631, 74637 (December 1, 2011).
10 Id.at § 225.8(c)(9).
11 77 FR 62378 (Oct. 12, 2012) (codified at 12 CFR
part 252, subparts F and G). The changes in this
interim final rule will apply to nonbank financial
companies supervised by the Board after they
become subject to stress test requirements.
12 12 CFR 252.134(a).

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regulatory capital ratios, including its
tier 1 common ratio, for each quarter of
a nine-quarter planning horizon.13 The
stress test rule defines the tier 1
common ratio by cross-reference to the
capital plan rule, which, as previously
described, provides that the tier 1
common ratio is to remain in effect until
the Board adopts an alternative tier 1
common ratio definition.14
IV. Incorporating the Revised Capital
Framework Into Capital Plan and
Stress Tests
Because the revised capital framework
introduces a methodology for
computing a common equity tier 1
capital ratio and a new minimum
common equity tier 1 capital ratio, it is
necessary to clarify how bank holding
companies should calculate their tier 1
common ratio for the upcoming capital
plan and stress test cycle.
With respect to a bank holding
company’s estimates of its regulatory
capital ratios and the applicable
minimum capital requirements, the
bank holding company must project its
regulatory capital ratios and meet the
minimum capital requirements for each
quarter of the planning horizon in
accordance with the minimum capital
requirements that are in effect during
that quarter. Accordingly, under the
revised capital framework, a bank
holding company that is an advanced
approaches banking organization would
be required to calculate its common
equity tier 1 capital ratio beginning in
2014, in accordance with the transition
period arrangements, and meet a 4.0
percent minimum in 2014 and a 4.5
percent minimum in 2015. A bank
holding company that is not advanced
approaches banking organizations
would be required to calculate its
common equity tier 1 capital ratio
beginning in 2015, in accordance with
the transition period arrangements, and
meet a 4.5 percent minimum in 2015. A
state member bank that is a subsidiary
of a bank holding company with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more will reflect the new capital rules
in the same manner as its bank holding
company parent in projecting its capital
for the upcoming stress test cycle.
With respect to a bank holding
company’s estimates of the tier 1
common ratio, the bank holding
company must use the definitions of tier
1 capital and total risk-weighted assets
currently in effect in 2013 under the
existing capital guidelines for each
quarter of the planning horizon, and not
incorporate the new definition of
13 Id.
14 Id.

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at 252.146(a).
at 252.132(q), 252.142(t).

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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 189 / Monday, September 30, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
common equity tier 1 that is part of the
revised capital framework that will
become effective in 2014 and 2015.
Preserving the tier 1 common ratio
methodology maintains consistency
with previous capital plan cycles during
the phase-in of the new common equity
tier 1 capital minimum requirement.
Moreover, the new minimum common
equity tier 1 capital ratio will be phased
in over several years. Using the new
methodology with the lower first year
phase-in minimum ratio for the capital
plan and stress test cycle that begins
October 1, 2013, would likely result in
large bank holding companies being
subject to a common equity capital

standard in the first quarters of the
planning horizon that is less stringent
than the standard used in previous
capital plan and stress test cycles. Once
the new minimum common equity tier
1 capital ratio reaches its permanent
level of 4.5 percent in 2015, the Board
expects that the combination of changes
in the methodology for computing the
common equity tier 1 ratio and the
minimum level of 4.5 percent will be
more stringent than the current capital
plan tier 1 common ratio of 5.0 percent.
Under the new common equity tier 1
capital definition, most elements of
accumulated other comprehensive
income (AOCI), such as gains and losses

59781

on available-for-sale debt securities, will
flow through to common equity, except
in the case of non-advanced approaches
banking organizations that make an
AOCI opt-out election.15 In addition,
more assets will be subject to deduction,
including investments in
unconsolidated financial institutions
and all deferred tax assets that arise
from operating losses and tax credit
carry forwards.
Table 1 illustrates the minimum
common equity capital ratios to which
large bank holding companies will be
subject in the capital plan and stress test
cycles that begin October 1, 2013.

TABLE 1—COMMON EQUITY RATIOS APPLICABLE TO LARGE BANK HOLDING COMPANIES IN THE CAPITAL PLAN AND
STRESS TEST CYCLES THAT BEGIN OCTOBER 1, 2013
Q4
2013

Q1
2014

Q2
2014

Q3
2014

Q4
2014

Q1
2015

Q2
2015

Q3
2015

Q4
2015

Advanced approaches
bank holding companies.

Current T1C
ratio of
5.0%.

Non-advanced approaches bank holding companies.

Current T1C
ratio of
5.0%.

Current T1C
ratio of
5.0%.
CET1 ratio of
4.0%.
Current T1C
ratio of
5.0%.

Current T1C
ratio of
5.0%.
CET1 ratio of
4.0%.
Current T1C
ratio of
5.0%.

Current T1C
ratio of
5.0%.
CET1 ratio of
4.0%.
Current T1C
ratio of
5.0%.

Current T1C
ratio of
5.0%.
CET1 ratio of
4.0%.
Current T1C
ratio of
5.0%.

Current T1C
ratio of
5.0%.
CET1 ratio of
4.5%.
Current T1C
ratio of
5.0%.
CET1 ratio of
4.5%.

Current T1C
ratio of
5.0%.
CET1 ratio of
4.5%.
Current T1C
ratio of
5.0%.
CET1 ratio of
4.5%.

Current T1C
ratio of
5.0%.
CET1 ratio of
4.5%.
Current T1C
ratio of
5.0%.
CET1 ratio of
4.5%.

Current T1C
ratio of
5.0%
CET1 ratio of
4.5%.
Current T1C
ratio of
5.0%
CET1 ratio of
4.5%.

Current T1C ratio: the ratio of a bank holding company’s tier 1 common capital calculated using the definitions in place as of the effective date of the interim final
rule (i.e., tier 1 capital as defined under Appendix A of 12 CFR part 225, less the non-common elements of tier 1 capital, over total risk-weighted assets as defined
under Appendices A, E, and G of 12 CFR part 225).
CET1 ratio: a bank holding company’s common equity tier 1 capital ratio as calculated under 12 CFR part 217, including the transition provisions of 12 CFR part
§ 217.300, as applicable within each quarter of the capital plan and stress test cycles that begin October 1, 2013.

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V. Parallel Run Notification Date
In light of the issuance of the revised
capital framework, the Board is also
providing clarity on when a banking
organization would be required to
estimate its minimum regulatory capital
ratios over the planning horizon using
the advanced approaches for a given
capital planning and stress testing cycle.
A bank holding company that is an
advanced approaches banking
organization is required to use the
advanced approaches to calculate its
minimum regulatory capital ratios if it
has conducted a satisfactory parallel
run, which is defined as a period of no
less than four consecutive calendar
quarters during which a banking
organization complies with certain
qualification requirements of the
advanced approaches.16 Currently, all
advanced approaches banking
organizations are in parallel run, but it
is possible that firms could complete a
satisfactory parallel run in the near term
and, as a result, be required to calculate
their regulatory capital ratios using the
advanced approaches Under the current
capital plan rule and stress test rule, an
15 See

Revised capital framework, § ___.22(b)(2).

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advanced approaches banking
organization would be required to
estimate its capital ratios over the
planning horizon using the advanced
approaches if the firm is notified any
time before January 5, which is the date
on which a banking organization must
submit its capital plan and its stress test
results to the Board.
In order to provide additional notice
to an advanced approaches banking
organization regarding when it must
begin to estimate its advanced
approaches regulatory capital ratios
under stressed conditions in a given
capital plan or stress test cycle, the
interim final rule provides that a bank
holding company must be notified that
it has completed its parallel run by
September 30 of a given year in order
to be required to estimate its capital
ratios using the advanced approaches
for the capital plan or stress test cycle
that begins on October 1 of that year.
VI. Technical Changes
The interim final rule makes minor
technical changes to the capital plan
rule. It clarifies that a covered company
that has not filed the FR Y–9C report for
16 12

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the four most recent consecutive
quarters will calculate its total
consolidated assets as reported on the
company’s available FR Y–9C reports
for the most recent quarter or
consecutive quarters. It clarifies that the
Board (or the Reserve Bank, with
concurrence of the Board) may extend
the resubmission period for a capital
plan beyond an initial 60 day extension
if the Board or Reserve Bank determines
that such longer period is appropriate.
The interim final rule modifies the
capital plan rule to reflect the Board’s
current practice of publicly disclosing
its decision to object or not object to a
bank holding company’s capital plan
along with a summary of the Board’s
analyses of that company. The rule
provides that any disclosure will occur
by March 31 of each calendar year,
unless the Board determines that
another date is appropriate. With regard
to the Board’s review of bank holding
companies’ capital plans, the Board
expects the summary results largely will
be similar to the results disclosed in
previous CCAR exercises, unless the
Board determines that different or

CFR part 225, Appendix G, section 21(c).

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additional disclosures would be
appropriate.
The interim final rule also corrects a
typographical numbering error and
removes the clarification of the start of
the stress test cycle for the stress test
cycle that began in 2012.
VII. Effective Date; Solicitation of
Comments
This interim final rule is effective
September 30, 2013. Pursuant to the
Administrative Procedure Act (APA), at
5 U.S.C. 553(b)(B), notice and comment
are not required prior to the issuance of
a final rule if an agency, for good cause,
finds that ‘‘notice and public procedure
thereon are impracticable, unnecessary,
or contrary to the public interest.’’ 17
Similarly, a final rule may be published
with an immediate effective date if an
agency finds good cause and publishes
such with the final rule.18
Consistent with section 553(b)(B) of
the APA, the Board finds that issuing
this rule as an interim final rule is
necessary to clarify how a large bank
holding company must incorporate the
revised capital framework adopted July
2, 2013, into its capital plan and stress
tests for purposes of the capital plan and
stress test cycles that begin October 1,
2013. This interim final rule also
clarifies when a bank holding company
would be required to calculate its
minimum regulatory capital ratios using
the advanced approaches for a given
capital plan and stress testing cycle.
Obtaining notice and comment prior to
issuing the interim final rule would be
impracticable and contrary to the public
interest. The capital rules were only
recently revised and the short effective
date of those revisions provide good
cause to publish the interim final rule
with an immediate effective date in
order to remove uncertainty about the
standards in the capital plan rule and
reduce the burden of requiring firms to
change their capital calculations in
advance of the effective date.
The approval by the Board of the
revised capital framework in July, 2013,
prompted a need to clarify how a large
bank holding company would
incorporate these rules into its capital
plan and stress tests for the capital plan
and stress test cycles that begin October
1, 2013. In addition, the definition of
‘‘tier 1 common ratio’’ used in the
capital plan rule, and incorporated by
cross reference in the stress test rules,
stated that the definition would remain
in effect until the Board had adopted an
alternative tier 1 common ratio
definition as a minimum regulatory
17 5

U.S.C. 553(b)(B).

18

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capital ratio.19 The approach taken in
the interim final rule is consistent with
the Board’s previous interpretations of
the capital plan and stress test rules.20
It also ensures that the tier 1 common
ratio is no less stringent than the ratio
used in previous cycles.
In addition, the interim final rule
provides that a bank holding company
must be notified that it has completed
its parallel run by September 30 of a
given year in order to be required to
estimate its capital ratios using the
advanced approaches for that year’s
capital plan or stress test cycle. This
change provides clearer notice to an
advanced approaches banking
organization so that it could anticipate
when it will be required to calculate its
regulatory capital ratios using the
advanced approaches in a given capital
plan or stress test cycle.
Moreover, the interim final rule
should not impose any incremental
burden on these firms. The interim final
rule relieves burden on them by
clarifying the process for their
upcoming capital plan submissions and
company-run stress tests and providing
additional time to build systems and
processes necessary to effectively
implement in a stress test the regulatory
capital requirements of the advanced
approaches rules.
Although notice and comment are not
required prior to the effective date of
this interim final rule, the Board invites
comment on all aspects of this
rulemaking and will revise this interim
final rule if necessary or appropriate in
light of the comments received. The
Board is seeking comments on all
aspects of the interim final rule. In
particular:
Question 1. What, if any, additional
transitional arrangements should the
Board consider for future capital plan
and stress test cycles? Should the Board
remove the capital plan’s tier 1 common
ratio of 5.0 percent, or conversely,
maintain the tier 1 common ratio of 5.0
percent, but require bank holding
companies to calculate the ratio using
the more stringent definition of capital?
Question 2. What, if any,
modifications should be made to the
advanced approaches notification date
to better facilitate the timely notification
of advanced approaches banking
organizations of their need to use the
advanced approaches in estimating their
regulatory capital ratios for the capital
plan and stress test purposes?
19 Id.at

§ 225.8(c)(9).
Federal Reserve System Comprehensive
Capital Analysis and Review: Summary Instructions
and Guidance (November 22, 2011), available at:
http://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/
bcreg/bcreg20111122d1.pdf.
20 See

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VIII. Regulatory Analysis
A. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
The Board has considered the
potential impact of the interim 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 interim final rule will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
Nevertheless, the Board is publishing a
regulatory flexibility analysis.
For the reason discussed in the
Supplementary Information above, the
agencies are issuing this interim final
rule to clarify the requirements for
certain companies required to submit
capital plans to the Board on January 5,
2014, and conduct Dodd-Frank Act
company run stress tests in the stress
test cycle that commences on October 1,
2013. 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). The interim final rule
would apply to bank holding companies
with total consolidated asset of $50
billion or more and nonbank financial
companies supervised by the Board.
Companies that would be subject to the
interim finale rule therefore
substantially exceed the $500 million
total asset threshold at which a
company is considered a small company
under SBA regulations. In light of the
foregoing, the Board does not believe
that the interim final rule would have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
B. Solicitation of Comments on Use of
Plain Language
Section 722 of the Gramm-LeachBliley Act required the Federal banking
agencies to use plain language in all
proposed and final rules published after
January 1, 2000. The Board invites
comment on how to make this interim
final rule easier to understand. For
example:
• Has the Board organized the
material to suit your needs? If not, how
could the rule be more clearly stated?
• Are the requirements in the rule
clearly stated? If not, how could the rule
be more clearly stated?
• Do the regulations contain technical
language or jargon that is not clear? If
so, which language requires
clarification?
• Would a different format (grouping
and order of sections, use of headings,
paragraphing) make the regulation

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easier to understand? If so, what
changes would make the regulation
easier to understand?
• Would more, but shorter, sections
be better? If so, which sections should
be changed?
• What else could the Board do to
make the regulation easier to
understand?
C. Paperwork Reduction Act
This interim final rule references
currently approved collections of
information under the Paperwork
Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501–3520)
provided for in the capital plan rules.
This interim final rule does not
introduce any new collections of
information nor does it substantively
modify the collections of information
that Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) has approved. Therefore, no
Paperwork Reduction Act submissions
to OMB are required.
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 225
Administrative practice and
procedure; Banks, banking; Capital
Planning; Holding companies; Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements;
Securities, Stress Testing.
12 CFR Part 252
Administrative practice and
procedure, Banks, Banking, Capital
Planning; Federal Reserve System,
Holding companies, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Securities,
Stress Testing.
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons stated in the
Supplementary Information, the Board
of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System amends 12 CFR chapter II as
follows:
PART 225—BANK HOLDING
COMPANIES AND CHANGE IN BANK
CONTROL (REGULATION Y)
1. The authority citation for part 225
continues to read as follows:

■

Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1817(j)(13), 1818,
1828(o), 1831i, 1831p–1, 1843(c)(8), 1844(b),
1972(1), 3106, 3108, 3310, 3331–3351, 3906,
3907, and 3909; 15 U.S.C. 1681s, 1681w,
6801 and 6805.

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Subpart A—General Provisions
■

2. Revise § 225.8 to read as follows:

§ 225.8

Capital planning.

(a) Purpose. This section establishes
capital planning and prior notice and
approval requirements for capital
distributions by certain bank holding
companies.

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(b) Scope and effective date. (1) This
section applies to every top-tier bank
holding company domiciled in the
United States:
(i) With average total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more. Average
total consolidated assets means the
average of the total consolidated assets
as reported by a bank holding company
on its Consolidated Financial
Statements for Bank Holding Companies
(FR Y–9C) for the four most recent
consecutive quarters. If the bank
holding company has not filed the FR
Y–9C for each of the four most recent
consecutive quarters, average total
consolidated assets means the average of
the company’s total consolidated assets,
as reported on the company’s FR Y–9C,
for the most recent quarter or
consecutive quarters. Average total
consolidated assets are measured on the
as-of date of the most recent FR Y–9C
used in the calculation of the average;
or
(ii) That is subject to this section, in
whole or in part, by order of the Board
based on the institution’s size, level of
complexity, risk profile, scope of
operations, or financial condition.
(2) Beginning on December 23, 2011,
the provisions of this section shall apply
to any bank holding company that is
subject to this section pursuant to
paragraph (b)(1), provided that:
(i) Until July 21, 2015, this section
will not apply to any bank holding
company subsidiary of a foreign banking
organization that is currently relying on
Supervision and Regulation Letter SR
01–01 issued by the Board (as in effect
on May 19, 2010, available at http://
www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/
srletters/2001/sr0101.htm); and
(ii) A bank holding company that
becomes subject to this section pursuant
to paragraph (b)(1)(i) after the 5th of
January of a calendar year shall not be
subject to the requirements of
paragraphs (d)(1)(ii), (d)(4), and (f)(1)(iii)
of this section until January 1 of the
next calendar year.
(3) Notwithstanding any other
requirement in this section, for a given
capital plan cycle (including the January
5 submission of a capital plan under
paragraph (d)(1) of this section and any
resubmission of the capital plan under
paragraph (d)(4) of this section during
the capital plan cycle), a bank holding
company’s estimates of its pro forma
regulatory capital ratios and its pro
forma tier 1 common ratio over the
planning horizon shall not include
estimates using the advanced
approaches if the bank holding
company is notified on or after the first
day of that capital plan cycle (October
1) that the bank holding company is

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required to calculate its risk-based
capital requirements using the advanced
approaches.
(4) Nothing in this section shall limit
the authority of the Federal Reserve to
issue a capital directive or take any
other supervisory or enforcement action,
including action to address unsafe or
unsound practices or conditions or
violations of law.
(c) Definitions. For purposes of this
section, the following definitions apply:
(1) Advanced approaches means the
risk-weighted assets calculation
methodologies at 12 CFR part 225,
appendix G, and 12 CFR part 217,
subpart E, as applicable, and any
successor regulation.
(2) Capital action means any issuance
of a debt or equity capital instrument,
any capital distribution, and any similar
action that the Federal Reserve
determines could impact a bank holding
company’s consolidated capital.
(3) Capital distribution means a
redemption or repurchase of any debt or
equity capital instrument, a payment of
common or preferred stock dividends, a
payment that may be temporarily or
permanently suspended by the issuer on
any instrument that is eligible for
inclusion in the numerator of any
minimum regulatory capital ratio, and
any similar transaction that the Federal
Reserve determines to be in substance a
distribution of capital.
(4) Capital plan means a written
presentation of a bank holding
company’s capital planning strategies
and capital adequacy process that
includes the mandatory elements set
forth in paragraph (d)(2) of this section.
(5) Capital plan cycle means the
period beginning on October 1 of a
calendar year and ending on September
30 of the following calendar year.
(6) Capital policy means a bank
holding company’s written assessment
of the principles and guidelines used for
capital planning, capital issuance, usage
and distributions, including internal
capital goals; the quantitative or
qualitative guidelines for dividend and
stock repurchases; the strategies for
addressing potential capital shortfalls;
and the internal governance procedures
around capital policy principles and
guidelines.
(7) Minimum regulatory capital ratio
means any minimum regulatory capital
ratio that the Federal Reserve may
require of a bank holding company, by
regulation or order, including, as
applicable, the bank holding company’s
tier 1 and supplementary leverage ratios
and common equity tier 1, tier 1, and
total risk-based capital ratios as
calculated under appendices A, D, E,
and G to this part (12 CFR part 225) and

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12 CFR part 217, as applicable,
including the transition provisions at 12
CFR 217.1(f)(4) and 12 CFR 217.300, or
any successor regulation.
(8) Planning horizon means the period
of at least nine quarters, beginning with
the quarter preceding the quarter in
which the bank holding company
submits its capital plan, over which the
relevant projections extend.
(9) Tier 1 capital has the same
meaning as under appendix A to this
part or under 12 CFR part 217, as
applicable, or any successor regulation.
(10) Tier 1 common capital means tier
1 capital as defined under appendix A
to this part less the non-common
elements of tier 1 capital, including
perpetual preferred stock and related
surplus, minority interest in
subsidiaries, trust preferred securities
and mandatory convertible preferred
securities.
(11) Tier 1 common ratio means the
ratio of a bank holding company’s tier
1 common capital to total risk-weighted
assets as defined under appendices A
and E to this part.
(d) General requirements—(1) Annual
capital planning. (i) A bank holding
company must develop and maintain a
capital plan.
(ii) A bank holding company must
submit its complete capital plan to the
appropriate Reserve Bank and the Board
each year by the 5th of January, or such
later date as directed by the Board or the
appropriate Reserve Bank, with
concurrence of the Board.
(iii) The bank holding company’s
board of directors or a designated
committee thereof must at least
annually and prior to submission of the
capital plan under paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of
this section:
(A) Review the robustness of the bank
holding company’s process for assessing
capital adequacy,
(B) Ensure that any deficiencies in the
bank holding company’s process for
assessing capital adequacy are
appropriately remedied; and
(C) Approve the bank holding
company’s capital plan.
(2) Mandatory elements of capital
plan. A capital plan must contain at
least the following elements:
(i) An assessment of the expected uses
and sources of capital over the planning
horizon that reflects the bank holding
company’s size, complexity, risk profile,
and scope of operations, assuming both
expected and stressful conditions,
including:
(A) Estimates of projected revenues,
losses, reserves, and pro forma capital
levels, including any minimum
regulatory capital ratios (for example,
leverage, tier 1 risk-based, and total risk-

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based capital ratios) and any additional
capital measures deemed relevant by the
bank holding company, over the
planning horizon under expected
conditions and under a range of stressed
scenarios, including any scenarios
provided by the Federal Reserve and at
least one stressed scenario developed by
the bank holding company appropriate
to its business model and portfolios;
(B) A calculation of the pro forma tier
1 common ratio over the planning
horizon under expected conditions and
under a range of stressed scenarios and
discussion of how the company will
maintain a pro forma tier 1 common
ratio above 5 percent under expected
conditions and the stressed scenarios
required under paragraphs (d)(2)(i)(A)
and (ii) of this section;
(C) A discussion of the results of any
stress test required by law or regulation,
and an explanation of how the capital
plan takes these results into account;
and
(D) A description of all planned
capital actions over the planning
horizon.
(ii) A detailed description of the bank
holding company’s process for assessing
capital adequacy, including:
(A) A discussion of how the bank
holding company will, under expected
and stressful conditions, maintain
capital commensurate with its risks,
maintain capital above the minimum
regulatory capital ratios and above a tier
1 common ratio of 5 percent, and serve
as a source of strength to its subsidiary
depository institutions;
(B) A discussion of how the bank
holding company will, under expected
and stressful conditions, maintain
sufficient capital to continue its
operations by maintaining ready access
to funding, meeting its obligations to
creditors and other counterparties, and
continuing to serve as a credit
intermediary;
(iii) The bank holding company’s
capital policy; and
(iv) A discussion of any expected
changes to the bank holding company’s
business plan that are likely to have a
material impact on the firm’s capital
adequacy or liquidity.
(3) Data collection. Upon the request
of the Board or appropriate Reserve
Bank, the bank holding company shall
provide the Federal Reserve with
information regarding—
(i) The bank holding company’s
financial condition, including its
capital;
(ii) The bank holding company’s
structure;
(iii) Amount and risk characteristics
of the bank holding company’s on- and
off-balance sheet exposures, including

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exposures within the bank holding
company’s trading account, other
trading-related exposures (such as
counterparty-credit risk exposures) or
other items sensitive to changes in
market factors, including, as
appropriate, information about the
sensitivity of positions to changes in
market rates and prices;
(iv) The bank holding company’s
relevant policies and procedures,
including risk management policies and
procedures;
(v) The bank holding company’s
liquidity profile and management; and
(vi) Any other relevant qualitative or
quantitative information requested by
the Board or the appropriate Reserve
Bank to facilitate review of the bank
holding company’s capital plan under
this section.
(4) Re-submission of a capital plan. (i)
A bank holding company must update
and re-submit its capital plan to the
appropriate Reserve Bank within 30
calendar days of the occurrence of one
of the following events:
(A) The bank holding company
determines there has been or will be a
material change in the bank holding
company’s risk profile, financial
condition, or corporate structure since
the bank holding company adopted the
capital plan;
(B) The Board or the appropriate
Reserve Bank objects to the capital plan;
or
(C) The Board or the appropriate
Reserve Bank, with concurrence of the
Board, directs the bank holding
company in writing to revise and
resubmit its capital plan for any of the
following reasons:
(1) The capital plan is incomplete or
the capital plan, or the bank holding
company’s internal capital adequacy
process, contains material weaknesses;
(2) There has been or will likely be a
material change in the bank holding
company’s risk profile (including a
material change in its business strategy
or any risk exposure), financial
condition, or corporate structure;
(3) The stressed scenario(s) developed
by the bank holding company is not
appropriate to its business model and
portfolios, or changes in financial
markets or the macro-economic outlook
that could have a material impact on a
bank holding company’s risk profile and
financial condition require the use of
updated scenarios; or
(4) The capital plan or the condition
of the bank holding company raise any
of the issues described in paragraph
(e)(2)(ii) of this section.
(ii) The Board or the appropriate
Reserve Bank, with concurrence of the
Board, may, at its discretion, extend the

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30-day period in paragraph (d)(4)(i) of
this section for up to an additional 60
calendar days, or such longer period as
the Board or the appropriate Reserve
Bank, with concurrence of the Board,
determines appropriate.
(iii) Any updated capital plan must
satisfy all the requirements of this
section; however, a bank holding
company may continue to rely on
information submitted as part of a
previously submitted capital plan to the
extent that the information remains
accurate and appropriate.
(e) Review of capital plans by the
Federal Reserve; publication of
summary results—(1) Considerations
and inputs. (i) The Board or the
appropriate Reserve Bank, with
concurrence of the Board, will consider
the following factors in reviewing a
bank holding company’s capital plan:
(A) The comprehensiveness of the
capital plan, including the extent to
which the analysis underlying the
capital plan captures and addresses
potential risks stemming from activities
across the firm and the company’s
capital policy;
(B) The reasonableness of the bank
holding company’s assumptions and
analysis underlying the capital plan and
its methodologies for reviewing the
robustness of its capital adequacy
process; and
(C) The bank holding company’s
ability to maintain capital above each
minimum regulatory capital ratio and
above a tier 1 common ratio of 5 percent
on a pro forma basis under expected and
stressful conditions throughout the
planning horizon, including but not
limited to any stressed scenarios
required under paragraph (d)(2)(i)(A)
and (ii) of this section.
(ii) The Board or the appropriate
Reserve Bank, with concurrence of the
Board, will also consider the following
information in reviewing a bank holding
company’s capital plan:
(A) Relevant supervisory information
about the bank holding company and its
subsidiaries;
(B) The bank holding company’s
regulatory and financial reports, as well
as supporting data that would allow for
an analysis of the bank holding
company’s loss, revenue, and reserve
projections;
(C) As applicable, the Federal
Reserve’s own pro forma estimates of
the firm’s potential losses, revenues,
reserves, and resulting capital adequacy
under expected and stressful conditions,
including but not limited to any stressed
scenarios required under paragraph
(d)(2)(i)(A) and (ii) of this section, as
well as the results of any stress tests

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conducted by the bank holding
company or the Federal Reserve; and
(D) Other information requested or
required by the appropriate Reserve
Bank or the Board, as well as any other
information relevant, or related, to the
bank holding company’s capital
adequacy.
(2) Federal Reserve action on a capital
plan. (i) The Board or the appropriate
Reserve Bank, with concurrence of the
Board, will object, in whole or in part,
to the capital plan or provide the bank
holding company with a notice of nonobjection to the capital plan:
(A) By March 31 of the calendar year
in which a capital plan was submitted
pursuant to paragraph (d)(1)(ii) of this
section, and
(B) By the date that is 75 calendar
days after the date on which a capital
plan was resubmitted pursuant to
paragraph (d)(4) of this section.
(ii) The Board or the appropriate
Reserve Bank, with concurrence of the
Board, may object to a capital plan if it
determines that:
(A) The bank holding company has
material unresolved supervisory issues,
including but not limited to issues
associated with its capital adequacy
process;
(B) The assumptions and analysis
underlying the bank holding company’s
capital plan, or the bank holding
company’s methodologies for reviewing
the robustness of its capital adequacy
process, are not reasonable or
appropriate;
(C) The bank holding company has
not demonstrated an ability to maintain
capital above each minimum regulatory
capital ratio and above a tier 1 common
ratio of 5 percent, on a pro forma basis
under expected and stressful conditions
throughout the planning horizon; or
(D) The bank holding company’s
capital planning process or proposed
capital distributions otherwise
constitute an unsafe or unsound
practice, or would violate any law,
regulation, Board order, directive, or
any condition imposed by, or written
agreement with, the Board. In
determining whether a capital plan or
any proposed capital distribution would
constitute an unsafe or unsound
practice, the appropriate Reserve Bank
would consider whether the bank
holding company is and would remain
in sound financial condition after giving
effect to the capital plan and all
proposed capital distributions.
(iii) The Board or the appropriate
Reserve Bank, with concurrence of the
Board, will notify the bank holding
company in writing of the reasons for a
decision to object to a capital plan.

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(iv) If the Board or the appropriate
Reserve Bank, with concurrence of the
Board, objects to a capital plan and until
such time as the Board or the
appropriate Reserve Bank, with
concurrence of the Board, issues a nonobjection to the bank holding company’s
capital plan, the bank holding company
may not make any capital distribution,
other than those capital distributions
with respect to which the Board or the
appropriate Reserve Bank has indicated
in writing its non-objection.
(v) The Board may disclose publicly
its decision to object or not object to a
bank holding company’s capital plan
under this section, along with a
summary of the Board’s analyses of that
company. Any disclosure under this
paragraph (e)(2)(v) will occur by March
31, unless the Board determines that a
later disclosure date is appropriate.
(3) Request for reconsideration or
hearing. Within 10 calendar days of
receipt of a notice of objection to a
capital plan by the Board or the
appropriate Reserve Bank:
(i) A bank holding company may
submit a written request to the Board
requesting reconsideration of the
objection, including an explanation of
why reconsideration should be granted.
Within 10 calendar days of receipt of
the bank holding company’s request, the
Board will notify the company of its
decision to affirm or withdraw the
objection to the bank holding company’s
capital plan or a specific capital
distribution; or
(ii) As an alternative to paragraph
(e)(3)(i) of this section, a bank holding
company may submit a written request
to the Board for a hearing. Any hearing
shall follow the procedures described in
paragraph (f)(5)(ii) through (iii) of this
section.
(f) Approval requirements for certain
capital actions—(1) Circumstances
requiring approval. Notwithstanding a
notice of non-objection under paragraph
(e)(2)(i) of this section a bank holding
company may not make a capital
distribution under the following
circumstances, unless it receives
approval from the Board or appropriate
Reserve Bank pursuant to paragraph
(f)(4) of this section:
(i) After giving effect to the capital
distribution, the bank holding company
would not meet a minimum regulatory
capital ratio or a tier 1 common ratio of
at least 5 percent;
(ii) The Board or the appropriate
Reserve Bank, with concurrence of the
Board, notifies the company in writing
that the Federal Reserve has determined
that the capital distribution would
result in a material adverse change to
the organization’s capital or liquidity

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structure or that the company’s earnings
were materially underperforming
projections;
(iii) Except as provided in paragraph
(f)(2) of this section, the dollar amount
of the capital distribution will exceed
the amount described in the capital plan
for which a non-objection was issued
under this section; or
(iv) The capital distribution would
occur after the occurrence of an event
requiring resubmission under
paragraphs (d)(4)(i)(A) and (C) of this
section and before the Federal Reserve
acted on the resubmitted capital plan.
(2) Exception for well capitalized
bank holding companies. (i) A bank
holding company may make a capital
distribution for which the dollar amount
exceeds the amount described in the
capital plan for which a non-objection
was issued under this section if the
following conditions are satisfied:
(A) The bank holding company is, and
after the capital distribution would
remain, well capitalized as defined in
§ 225.2(r) of Regulation Y (12 CFR
225.2(r));
(B) The bank holding company’s
performance and capital levels are, and
after the capital distribution would
remain, consistent with its projections
under expected conditions as set forth
in its capital plan under this paragraph
(d)(2)(i);
(C) The annual aggregate dollar
amount of all capital distributions
(beginning on April 1 of a calendar year
and ending on March 31 of the
following calendar year) would not
exceed the total amounts described in
the company’s capital plan for which
the bank holding company received a
notice of non-objection by more than
1.00 percent multiplied by the bank
holding company’s tier 1 capital, as
reported to the Federal Reserve on the
bank holding company’s first quarter FR
Y–9C;
(D) The bank holding company
provides the appropriate Reserve Bank
with notice 15 calendar days prior to a
capital distribution that includes the
elements described in paragraph (f)(3) of
this section; and
(E) The Board or the appropriate
Reserve Bank, with concurrence of the
Board, does not object to the transaction
proposed in the notice. In determining
whether to object to the proposed
transaction, the Board or the appropriate
Reserve Bank, with concurrence of the
Board, shall apply the criteria described
in paragraph (f)(4)(iv) of this section.
(ii) The exception in this paragraph
(f)(2) shall not apply if the Board or the
appropriate Reserve Bank notifies the
bank holding company in writing that it

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may not take advantage of this
exception.
(3) Contents of request. (i) A request
for a capital distribution under this
section shall be filed with the
appropriate Reserve Bank and the Board
and shall contain the following
information:
(A) The bank holding company’s
current capital plan or an attestation
that there have been no changes to the
capital plan since it was last submitted
to the Federal Reserve;
(B) The purpose of the transaction;
(C) A description of the capital
distribution, including for redemptions
or repurchases of securities, the gross
consideration to be paid and the terms
and sources of funding for the
transaction, and for dividends, the
amount of the dividend(s); and
(D) Any additional information
requested by the Board or the
appropriate Reserve Bank (which may
include, among other things, an
assessment of the bank holding
company’s capital adequacy under a
revised stress scenario provided by the
Federal Reserve, a revised capital plan,
and supporting data).
(ii) Any request submitted with
respect to a capital distribution
described in paragraph (f)(1)(i) of this
section shall also include a plan for
restoring the bank holding company’s
capital to an amount above a minimum
level within 30 days and a rationale for
why the capital distribution would be
appropriate.
(4) Approval of certain capital
distributions. (i) A bank holding
company must obtain approval from the
Board or the appropriate Reserve Bank,
with concurrence of the Board, before
making a capital distribution described
in paragraph (f)(1) of this section.
(ii) A request for a capital distribution
under this section must be filed with the
appropriate Reserve Bank and contain
all the information set forth in
paragraph (f)(3) of this section.
(iii) The Board or the appropriate
Reserve Bank, with concurrence of the
Board, will act on a request under this
paragraph (f)(4) within 30 calendar days
after the receipt of a complete request
under paragraph (f)(4)(ii) of this section.
The Board or the appropriate Reserve
Bank may, at any time, request
additional information that it believes is
necessary for its decision.
(iv) In acting on a request under this
paragraph, the Board or appropriate
Reserve Bank will apply the
considerations and principles in
paragraph (e) of this section. In
addition, the Board or the appropriate
Reserve Bank may disapprove the
transaction if the bank holding company

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does not provide all of the information
required to be submitted under
paragraphs (f)(3) and (f)(5)(iii) of this
section.
(5) Disapproval and hearing. (i) The
Board or the appropriate Reserve Bank
will notify the bank holding company in
writing of the reasons for a decision to
disapprove any proposed capital
distribution. Within 10 calendar days
after receipt of a disapproval by the
Board, the bank holding company may
submit a written request for a hearing.
(ii) The Board will order a hearing
within 10 calendar days of receipt of the
request if it finds that material facts are
in dispute, or if it otherwise appears
appropriate. Any hearing conducted
under this paragraph shall be held in
accordance with the Board’s Rules of
Practice for Formal Hearings (12 CFR
part 263).
(iii) At the conclusion of the hearing,
the Board will by order approve or
disapprove the proposed capital
distribution on the basis of the record of
the hearing.
PART 252—ENHANCED PRUDENTIAL
STANDARDS (Regulation YY).
3. The authority citation for part 252
continues to read as follows:

■

Authority: 12 U.S.C. 321–338a, 1467a(g),
1818, 1831p-1, 1844(b), 1844(c), 5361, 5365,
5366.

4. Subpart F to part 252 is revised to
read as follows:

■

Subpart F—Supervisory Stress Test
Requirements for Covered Companies
Sec.
252.131 Authority and purpose.
252.132 Definitions.
252.133 Applicability
252.134 Annual analysis conducted by the
Board.
252.135 Data and information required to
be submitted in support of the Board’s
analyses.
252.136 Review of the Board’s analysis;
publication of summary results.
252.137 Use requirement.
§ 252.131

Authority and purpose.

(a) Authority. 12 U.S.C. 321–338a,
1467a(g), 1818, 1831p-1, 1844(b),
1844(c), 5361, 5365, 5366.
(b) Purpose. This subpart implements
section 165(i)(1) of the Dodd-Frank Act
(12 U.S.C. 5365(i)(1)), which requires
the Board to conduct annual analyses of
nonbank financial companies
supervised by the Board and bank
holding companies with $50 billion or
more in total consolidated assets to
evaluate whether such companies have
the capital, on a total consolidated basis,
necessary to absorb losses as a result of
adverse economic conditions.

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§ 252.132

Definitions.

For purposes of this subpart F, the
following definitions apply:
(a) Advanced approaches means the
risk-weighted assets calculation
methodologies at 12 CFR part 225,
appendix G, and 12 CFR part 217,
subpart E, as applicable, and any
successor regulation.
(b) Adverse scenario means a set of
conditions that affect the U.S. economy
or the financial condition of a covered
company that are more adverse than
those associated with the baseline
scenario and may include trading or
other additional components.
(c) Average total consolidated assets
means the average of the total
consolidated assets as reported by a
bank holding company on its
Consolidated Financial Statements for
Bank Holding Companies (FR Y–9C) for
the four most recent consecutive
quarters. If the bank holding company
has not filed the FR Y–9C for each of the
four most recent consecutive quarters,
average total consolidated assets means
the average of the company’s total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
company’s FR Y–9C, for the most recent
quarter or consecutive quarters. Average
total consolidated assets are measured
on the as-of date of the most recent FR
Y–9C used in the calculation of the
average.
(d) Bank holding company has the
same meaning as in § 225.2(c) of the
Board’s Regulation Y (12 CFR 225.2(c)).
(e) Baseline scenario means a set of
conditions that affect the U.S. economy
or the financial condition of a covered
company and that reflect the consensus
views of the economic and financial
outlook.
(f) Covered company means:
(1) A bank holding company (other
than a foreign banking organization)
with average total consolidated assets of
$50 billion or more; and
(2) A nonbank financial company
supervised by the Board.
(g) Depository institution has the same
meaning as in section 3 of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C.
1813(c)).
(h) Foreign banking organization has
the same meaning as in § 211.21(o) of
the Board’s Regulation K (12 CFR
211.21(o)).
(i) Nonbank financial company
supervised by the Board means a
nonbank financial company that the
Financial Stability Oversight 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.

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(j) Planning horizon means the period
of at least nine quarters, beginning on
the first day of a stress test cycle (on
October 1) over which the relevant
projections extend.
(k) Pre-provision net revenue means
the sum of net interest income and noninterest income less expenses before
adjusting for loss provisions.
(l) Provision for loan and lease losses
means the provision for loan and lease
losses as reported by the covered
company on the FR Y–9C.
(m) Regulatory capital ratio means a
capital ratio for which the Board
established minimum requirements for
the company by regulation or order,
including, as applicable, the company’s
tier 1 and supplementary leverage ratios
and common equity tier 1, tier 1, and
total risk-based capital ratios as
calculated under appendices A, D, E,
and G to this part (12 CFR part 225) and
12 CFR part 217, as applicable,
including the transition provisions at 12
CFR 217.1(f)(4) and 12 CFR 217.300, or
any successor regulation.
(n) Scenarios are those sets of
conditions that affect the U.S. economy
or the financial condition of a covered
company that the Board annually
determines are appropriate for use in
the supervisory stress tests, including,
but not limited to, baseline, adverse,
and severely adverse scenarios.
(o) Severely adverse scenario means a
set of conditions that affect the U.S.
economy or the financial condition of a
covered company and that overall are
more severe than those associated with
the adverse scenario and may include
trading or other additional components.
(p) Stress test cycle means the period
between October 1 of a calendar year
and September 30 of the following
calendar year.
(q) Subsidiary has the same meaning
as in § 225.2(o) the Board’s Regulation Y
(12 CFR 225.2).
(r) Tier 1 common ratio has the same
meaning as in the Board’s Regulation Y
(12 CFR 225.8).
§ 252.133

Applicability.

(a) Compliance date for bank holding
companies that are covered companies
as of November 15, 2012—(1) In general.
Except as provided in paragraph (a)(2)
or (3) of this section, a bank holding
company that is a covered company as
of November 15, 2012, must comply
with the requirements of this subpart
beginning with the stress test cycle that
commences on October 1, 2013, unless
that time is extended by the Board in
writing.
(2) 2009 Supervisory Capital
Assessment Program. A bank holding
company that participated in the 2009

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Supervisory Capital Assessment
Program, or a successor to such a bank
holding company, must comply with
the requirements of this subpart
beginning with the stress test cycle that
commences on November 15, 2012,
unless that time is extended by the
Board in writing.
(3) SR Letter 01–01. A U.S.-domiciled
bank holding company that is a covered
company as of November 15, 2012, and
is a subsidiary of a foreign banking
organization that is currently relying on
Supervision and Regulation Letter SR
01–01 issued by the Board (as in effect
on May 19, 2010) must comply with the
requirements of this subpart beginning
with the stress test cycle that
commences on October 1, 2015, unless
that time is extended by the Board in
writing.
(b) Compliance date for institutions
that become covered companies after
November 15, 2012—(1) Bank holding
companies. A bank holding company
that becomes a covered company after
November 15, 2012, must comply with
the requirements of this subpart
beginning with the stress test cycle that
commences in the calendar year after
the year in which the bank holding
company becomes a covered company,
unless that time is extended by the
Board in writing.
(2) Nonbank financial companies
supervised by the Board. A company
that becomes a nonbank financial
company supervised by the Board must
comply with the requirements of this
subpart beginning with the stress test
cycle that commences in the calendar
year after the year in which the
company first becomes subject to the
Board’s minimum regulatory capital
requirements, unless the Board
accelerates or extends the compliance
date.
(c) Ongoing application. A bank
holding company that is a covered
company will remain subject to the
requirements of this subpart unless and
until its total consolidated assets fall
below $50 billion for each of four
consecutive quarters, as reported on the
FR Y–9C. The calculation will be
effective on the as-of date of the fourth
consecutive FR Y–9C.
(d) Advanced approaches.
Notwithstanding any other requirement
in this section, the Board’s analysis of
a covered company’s capital in a given
stress test cycle will not include
estimates using the advanced
approaches if the covered company is
notified on or after the first day of that
stress test cycle (October 1) that the
covered company is required to
calculate its risk-based capital

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requirements using the advanced
approaches.
§ 252.134 Annual analysis conducted by
the Board.

(a) In general. (1) On an annual basis,
the Board will conduct an analysis of
each covered company’s capital, on a
total consolidated basis, taking into
account all relevant exposures and
activities of that covered company, to
evaluate the ability of the covered
company to absorb losses in specified
economic and financial conditions.
(2) The analysis will include an
assessment of the projected losses, net
income, and pro forma capital levels
and regulatory capital ratios, tier 1
common ratio, and other capital ratios
for the covered company and use such
analytical techniques that the Board
determines are appropriate to identify,
measure, and monitor risks of the
covered company that may affect the
financial stability of the United States.
(3) In conducting the analyses, the
Board will coordinate with the
appropriate primary financial regulatory
agencies and the Federal Insurance
Office, as appropriate.
(b) Economic and financial scenarios
related to the Board’s analysis. The
Board will conduct its analysis under
this section using a minimum of three
different scenarios, including a baseline
scenario, adverse scenario, and severely
adverse scenario. The Board will notify
covered companies of the scenarios that
the Board will apply to conduct the
analysis for each stress test cycle by no
later than November 15 of each year,
except with respect to trading or any
other components of the scenarios and
any additional scenarios that the Board
will apply to conduct the analysis,
which will be communicated by no later
than December 1.

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§ 252.135 Data and information required to
be submitted in support of the Board’s
analyses.

(a) Regular submissions. Each covered
company must submit to the Board such
data, on a consolidated basis, that the
Board determines is necessary in order
for the Board to derive the relevant pro
forma estimates of the covered company
over the planning horizon under the
scenarios described in section
252.134(b).
(b) Additional submissions required
by the Board. The Board may require a
covered company to submit any other
information on a consolidated basis that
the Board deems necessary in order to:
(1) Ensure that the Board has
sufficient information to conduct its
analysis under this subpart; and
(2) Project a company’s pre-provision
net revenue, losses, provision for loan

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and lease losses, and net income; and,
pro forma capital levels, regulatory
capital ratios, tier 1 common ratio, and
any other capital ratio specified by the
Board under the scenarios described in
§ 252.134(b).
(c) Confidential treatment of
information submitted. The
confidentiality of information submitted
to the Board under this subpart and
related materials shall be determined in
accordance with the Freedom of
Information Act (5 U.S.C. 552(b)) and
the Board’s Rules Regarding Availability
of Information (12 CFR part 261).

■

§ 252.136 Review of the Board’s analysis;
publication of summary results.

(a) Authority. 12 U.S.C. 321–338a,
1467a(g), 1818, 1831p-1, 1844(b),
1844(c), 5361, 5365, 5366.
(b) Purpose. This subpart implements
section 165(i)(2) of the Dodd-Frank Act
(12 U.S.C. 5365(i)(2)), which requires a
covered company to conduct annual
and semi-annual stress tests. This
subpart also establishes definitions of
stress test and related terms,
methodologies for conducting stress
tests, and reporting and disclosure
requirements.

(a) Review of results. Based on the
results of the analysis conducted under
this subpart, the Board will conduct an
evaluation to determine whether the
covered company has the capital, on a
total consolidated basis, necessary to
absorb losses and continue its operation
by maintaining ready access to funding,
meeting its obligations to creditors and
other counterparties, and continuing to
serve as a credit intermediary under
baseline, adverse and severely adverse
scenarios, and any additional scenarios.
(b) Communication of results to
covered companies. The Board will
convey to a covered company a
summary of the results of the Board’s
analyses of such covered company
within a reasonable period of time, but
no later than March 31.
(c) Publication of results by the Board.
By March 31 of each calendar year, the
Board will disclose a summary of the
results of the Board’s analyses of a
covered company.
§ 252.137

Use requirement.

(a) In general. The board of directors
and senior management of each covered
company must consider the results of
the analysis conducted by the Board
under this subpart, as appropriate:
(1) As part of the covered company’s
capital plan and capital planning
process, including when making
changes to the covered company’s
capital structure (including the level
and composition of capital);
(2) When assessing the covered
company’s exposures, concentrations,
and risk positions; and
(3) In the development or
implementation of any plans of the
covered company for recovery or
resolution.
(b) Resolution plan updates. Each
covered company must update its
resolution plan as the Board determines
appropriate, based on the results of the
Board’s analyses of the covered
company under this subpart.

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3. Subpart G to part 252 is revised to
read as follows:
Subpart G—Company-Run Stress Test
Requirements for Covered Companies

Sec.
252.141
252.142
252.143
252.144
252.145
252.146
252.147
252.148
§ 252.141

§ 252.142

Authority and purpose.
Definitions.
Applicability.
Annual stress test.
Mid-cycle stress test.
Methodologies and practices.
Reports of stress test results.
Disclosure of stress test results.
Authority and purpose.

Definitions.

For purposes of this subpart, the
following definitions apply:
(a) Advanced approaches means the
risk-weighted assets calculation
methodologies at 12 CFR part 225,
appendix G, and 12 CFR part 217,
subpart E, as applicable, and any
successor regulation.
(b) Adverse scenario means a set of
conditions that affect the U.S. economy
or the financial condition of a covered
company that are more adverse than
those associated with the baseline
scenario and may include trading or
other additional components.
(c) Average total consolidated assets
means the average of the total
consolidated assets as reported by a
bank holding company on its
Consolidated Financial Statements for
Bank Holding Companies (FR Y–9C) for
the four most recent consecutive
quarters. If the bank holding company
has not filed the FR Y–9C for each of the
four most recent consecutive quarters,
average total consolidated assets means
the average of the company’s total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
company’s FR Y–9C, for the most recent
quarter or consecutive quarters. Average
total consolidated assets are measured
on the as-of date of the most recent FR
Y–9C used in the calculation of the
average.
(d) Bank holding company has the
same meaning as in section 225.2(c) of
the Board’s Regulation Y (12 CFR
225.2(c)).

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(e) Baseline scenario means a set of
conditions that affect the U.S. economy
or the financial condition of a covered
company and that reflect the consensus
views of the economic and financial
outlook.
(f) Capital action has the same
meaning as in section 225.8(c)(2) of the
Board’s Regulation Y (12 CFR
225.8(c)(2)).
(g) Covered company means:
(1) A bank holding company (other
than a foreign banking organization)
with average total consolidated assets of
$50 billion or more; and
(2) A nonbank financial company
supervised by the Board.
(h) Depository institution has the
same meaning as in section 3 of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12
U.S.C. 1813(c)).
(i) Foreign banking organization has
the same meaning as in section
211.21(o) of the Board’s Regulation K
(12 CFR 211.21(o)).
(j) Nonbank financial company
supervised by the Board means a
nonbank financial company that the
Financial Stability Oversight 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.
(k) Planning horizon means the period
of at least nine quarters, beginning on
the first day of a stress test cycle (on
October 1 or April 1, as appropriate)
over which the relevant projections
extend.
(l) Pre-provision net revenue means
the sum of net interest income and noninterest income less expenses before
adjusting for loss provisions.
(m) Provision for loan and lease losses
means the provision for loan and lease
losses as reported by the covered
company on the FR Y–9C.
(n) Regulatory capital ratio means a
capital ratio for which the Board
established minimum requirements for
the company by regulation or order,
including, as applicable, the company’s
tier 1 and supplementary leverage ratios
and common equity tier 1, tier 1, and
total risk-based capital ratios as
calculated under appendices A, D, E,
and G to this part (12 CFR part 225) and
12 CFR part 217, as applicable,
including the transition provisions at 12
CFR 217.1(f)(4) and 12 CFR 217.300, or
any successor regulation.
(o) Scenarios are those sets of
conditions that affect the U.S. economy
or the financial condition of a covered
company that the Board, or with respect
to the mid-cycle stress test required
under section 252.145 of this subpart,
the covered company, annually

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determines are appropriate for use in
the company-run stress tests, including,
but not limited to, baseline, adverse,
and severely adverse scenarios.
(p) Severely adverse scenario means a
set of conditions that affect the U.S.
economy or the financial condition of a
covered company and that overall are
more severe than those associated with
the adverse scenario and may include
trading or other additional components.
(q) Stress test means a process to
assess the potential impact of scenarios
on the consolidated earnings, losses,
and capital of a covered company over
the planning horizon, taking into
account its current condition, risks,
exposures, strategies, and activities.
(r) Stress test cycle means the period
between October 1 of a calendar year
and September 30 of the following
calendar year.
(s) Subsidiary has the same meaning
as in section 225.2(o) the Board’s
Regulation Y (12 CFR 225.2).
(t) Tier 1 common ratio has the same
meaning as in section 225.8 of the
Board’s Regulation Y (12 CFR 225.8).
§ 252.143

Applicability.

(a) Compliance date for bank holding
companies that are covered companies
as of November 15, 2012—(1) In general.
Except as provided in paragraph (a)(2)
or (3) of this section, a bank holding
company that is a covered company as
of November 15, 2012, must comply
with the requirements of this subpart
beginning with the stress test cycle
commencing on October 1, 2013, unless
that time is extended by the Board in
writing.
(2) 2009 Supervisory Capital
Assessment Program. A bank holding
company that participated in the 2009
Supervisory Capital Assessment
Program, or a successor to such a bank
holding company, must comply with
the requirements of this subpart
beginning with the stress test cycle
commencing on November 15, 2012,
unless that time is extended by the
Board in writing.
(3) SR Letter 01–01. A U.S.-domiciled
bank holding company that is a covered
company as of November 15, 2012, and
is a subsidiary of a foreign banking
organization that is currently relying on
Supervision and Regulation Letter SR
01–01 issued by the Board (as in effect
on May 19, 2010) must comply with the
requirements of this subpart beginning
with the stress test cycle commencing
on October 1, 2015, unless that time is
extended by the Board in writing.
(b) Compliance date for institutions
that become covered companies after
November 15, 2012—(1) Bank holding
companies. A bank holding company

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that becomes a covered company after
November 15, 2012, must comply with
the requirements of this subpart
beginning with the stress test cycle that
commences in the calendar year after
the year in which the bank holding
company becomes a covered company,
unless that time is extended by the
Board in writing.
(2) Nonbank financial companies
supervised by the Board. A company
that becomes a nonbank financial
company supervised by the Board must
comply with the requirements of this
subpart beginning with the stress test
cycle that commences in the calendar
year after the year in which company
first becomes subject to the Board’s
minimum regulatory capital
requirements, unless the Board
accelerates or extends the compliance
date.
(c) Ongoing application. A bank
holding company that is a covered
company will remain subject to the
requirements of this subpart unless and
until its total consolidated assets fall
below $50 billion for each of four
consecutive quarters, as reported on the
FR Y–9C. The calculation will be
effective on the as-of date of the fourth
consecutive FR Y–9C.
(d) Advanced approaches.
Notwithstanding any other requirement
in this section, for a given stress test
cycle, a covered company’s estimates of
its pro forma regulatory capital ratios
and the estimate of its pro forma tier 1
common ratio over the planning horizon
shall not include estimates using the
advanced approaches if the company is
notified on or after the first day of that
stress test cycle (October 1) that it is
required to calculate its risk-based
capital requirements using the advanced
approaches.
§ 252.144

Annual stress test.

(a) In general. A covered company
must conduct an annual stress test by
January 5 during each stress test cycle
based on data as of September 30 of the
preceding calendar year, unless the time
or the as of date is extended by the
Board in writing.
(b) Scenarios provided by the Board—
(1) In general. In conducting a stress test
under this section, a covered company
must use the scenarios provided by the
Board. Except as provided in paragraphs
(b)(2) and (3) of this section, the Board
will provide a description of the
scenarios to each covered company no
later than November 15 of that calendar
year.
(2) Additional components. (i) The
Board may require a covered company
with significant trading activity, as
determined by the Board and specified

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in the Capital Assessments and Stress
Testing report (FR Y–14), to include a
trading and counterparty component in
its adverse and severely adverse
scenarios in the stress test required by
this section. The data used in this
component will be as of a date between
October 1 and December 1 of that
calendar year selected by the Board, and
the Board will communicate the as-of
date and a description of the component
to the company no later than December
1 of the calendar year.
(ii) The Board may require a covered
company to include one or more
additional components in its adverse
and severely adverse scenarios in the
stress test required by this section based
on the company’s financial condition,
size, complexity, risk profile, scope of
operations, or activities, or risks to the
U.S. economy.
(3) Additional scenarios. The Board
may require a covered company to use
one or more additional scenarios in the
stress test required by this section based
on the company’s financial condition,
size, complexity, risk profile, scope of
operations, or activities, or risks to the
U.S. economy.
(4) Notice and response. If the Board
requires a covered company to include
one or more additional components in
its adverse and severely adverse
scenarios under paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of
this section or to use one or more
additional scenarios under paragraph
(b)(3) of this section, the Board will
notify the company in writing no later
than September 30. The notification will
include a general description of the
additional component(s) or additional
scenario(s) and the basis for requiring
the company to include the additional
component(s) or additional scenario(s).
Within 14 calendar days of receipt of a
notification under this paragraph, the
covered company may request in
writing that the Board reconsider the
requirement that the company include
the additional component(s) or
additional scenario(s), including an
explanation as to why the
reconsideration should be granted. The
Board will respond in writing within 14
calendar days of receipt of the
company’s request. The Board will
provide the covered company with a
description of any additional
component(s) or additional scenario(s)
by December 1.

that calendar year, unless the time or
the as-of date is extended by the Board
in writing.
(b) Scenarios related to mid-cycle
stress tests—(1) In general. A covered
company must develop and employ a
minimum of three scenarios, including
a baseline scenario, adverse scenario,
and severely adverse scenario, that are
appropriate for its own risk profile and
operations, in conducting the stress test
required by this section.
(2) Additional components. The
Board may require a covered company
to include one or more additional
components in its adverse and severely
adverse scenarios in the stress test
required by this section based on the
company’s financial condition, size,
complexity, risk profile, scope of
operations, or activities, or risks to the
U.S. economy.
(3) Additional scenarios. The Board
may require a covered company to use
one or more additional scenarios in the
stress test required by this section based
on the company’s financial condition,
size, complexity, risk profile, scope of
operations, or activities, or risks to the
U.S. economy.
(4) Notice and response. If the Board
requires a covered company to include
one or more additional components in
its adverse and severely adverse
scenarios under paragraph (b)(2) of this
section or one or more additional
scenarios under paragraph (b)(3) of this
section, the Board will notify the
company in writing no later than March
31. The notification will include a
general description of the additional
component(s) or additional scenario(s)
and the basis for requiring the company
to include the additional component(s)
or additional scenario(s). Within 14
calendar days of receipt of a notification
under this paragraph, the covered
company may request in writing that the
Board reconsider the requirement that
the company include the additional
component(s) or additional scenario(s),
including an explanation as to why the
reconsideration should be granted. The
Board will respond in writing within 14
calendar days of receipt of the
company’s request. The Board will
provide the covered company with a
description of any additional
component(s) or additional scenario(s)
by June 1.

§ 252.145

§ 252.146

Mid-cycle stress test.

(a) Mid-cycle stress test requirement.
In addition to the stress test required
under section 252.144 of this subpart, a
covered company must conduct a stress
test by July 5 during each stress test
cycle based on data as of March 31 of

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Methodologies and practices.

(a) Potential impact on capital. In
conducting a stress test under sections
252.144 and 252.145, for each quarter of
the planning horizon, a covered
company must estimate the following
for each scenario required to be used:

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(1) Losses, pre-provision net revenue,
provision for loan and lease losses, and
net income; and
(2) The potential impact on pro forma
regulatory capital levels and pro forma
capital ratios (including regulatory
capital ratios, the tier 1 common ratio,
and any other capital ratios specified by
the Board), incorporating the effects of
any capital actions over the planning
horizon and maintenance of an
allowance for loan losses appropriate for
credit exposures throughout the
planning horizon.
(b) Assumptions regarding capital
actions. In conducting a stress test
under §§ 252.144 and 252.145, a
covered company is required to make
the following assumptions regarding its
capital actions over the planning
horizon—
(1) For the first quarter of the
planning horizon, the covered company
must take into account its actual capital
actions as of the end of that quarter; and
(2) For each of the second through
ninth quarters of the planning horizon,
the covered company must include in
the projections of capital:
(i) Common stock dividends equal to
the quarterly average dollar amount of
common stock dividends that the
company paid in the previous year (that
is, the first quarter of the planning
horizon and the preceding three
calendar quarters);
(ii) Payments on any other instrument
that is eligible for inclusion in the
numerator of a regulatory capital ratio
equal to the stated dividend, interest, or
principal due on such instrument
during the quarter; and
(iii) An assumption of no redemption
or repurchase of any capital instrument
that is eligible for inclusion in the
numerator of a regulatory capital ratio.
(c) Controls and oversight of stress
testing processes—(1) In general. The
senior management of a covered
company must establish and maintain a
system of controls, oversight, and
documentation, including policies and
procedures, that are designed to ensure
that its stress testing processes are
effective in meeting the requirements in
this subpart. These policies and
procedures must, at a minimum,
describe the covered company’s stress
testing practices and methodologies,
and processes for validating and
updating the company’s stress test
practices and methodologies consistent
with applicable laws, regulations, and
supervisory guidance. Policies of
covered companies must also describe
processes for scenario development for
the mid-cycle stress test required under
§ 252.145.

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Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 189 / Monday, September 30, 2013 / Rules and Regulations
(2) Oversight of stress testing
processes. The board of directors, or a
committee thereof, of a covered
company must approve and review the
policies and procedures of the stress
testing processes as frequently as
economic conditions or the condition of
the covered company may warrant, but
no less than annually. The board of
directors and senior management of the
covered company must receive a
summary of the results of any stress test
conducted under this subpart.
(3) Role of stress testing results. The
board of directors and senior
management of each covered company
must consider the results of the analysis
it conducts under this subpart, as
appropriate:
(i) As part of the covered company’s
capital plan and capital planning
process, including when making
changes to the covered company’s
capital structure (including the level
and composition of capital);
(ii) When assessing the covered
company’s exposures, concentrations,
and risk positions; and
(iii) In the development or
implementation of any plans of the
covered company for recovery or
resolution.
§ 252.147

Reports of stress test results.

(a) Reports to the Board of stress test
results. (1) A covered company must
report the results of the stress test
required under § 252.144 to the Board
by January 5 of each calendar year in the
manner and form prescribed by the
Board, unless that time is extended by
the Board in writing.
(2) A covered company must report
the results of the stress test required
under § 252.145 to the Board by July 5
of each calendar year in the manner and
form prescribed by the Board, unless
that time is extended by the Board in
writing.
(b) Confidential treatment of
information submitted. The
confidentiality of information submitted
to the Board under this subpart and
related materials shall be determined in
accordance with applicable exemptions
under the Freedom of Information Act
(5 U.S.C. 552(b)) and the Board’s Rules
Regarding Availability of Information
(12 CFR part 261).

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§ 252.148

Disclosure of stress test results.

(a) Public disclosure of results—(1) In
general. (i) A covered company must
disclose a summary of the results of the
stress test required under section
252.144 in the period beginning on
March 15 and ending on March 31,
unless that time is extended by the
Board in writing.

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(ii) A covered company must disclose
a summary of the results of the stress
test required under § 252.145 in the
period beginning on September 15 and
ending on September 30, unless that
time is extended by the Board in
writing.
(2) Disclosure method. The summary
required under this section may be
disclosed on the Web site of a covered
company, or in any other forum that is
reasonably accessible to the public.
(b) Summary of results. A covered
company must disclose, at a minimum,
the following information regarding the
severely adverse scenario:
(1) A description of the types of risks
included in the stress test;
(2) A general description of the
methodologies used in the stress test,
including those employed to estimate
losses, revenues, provision for loan and
lease losses, and changes in capital
positions over the planning horizon;
(3) Estimates of—
(i) Pre-provision net revenue and
other revenue;
(ii) Provision for loan and lease losses,
realized losses or gains on available-forsale and held-to-maturity securities,
trading and counterparty losses, and
other losses or gains;
(iii) Net income before taxes;
(iv) Loan losses (dollar amount and as
a percentage of average portfolio
balance) in the aggregate and by
subportfolio, including: domestic
closed-end first-lien mortgages;
domestic junior lien mortgages and
home equity lines of credit; commercial
and industrial loans; commercial real
estate loans; credit card exposures; other
consumer loans; and all other loans; and
(v) Pro forma regulatory capital ratios
and the tier 1 common ratio and any
other capital ratios specified by the
Board;
(4) An explanation of the most
significant causes for the changes in
regulatory capital ratios and the tier 1
common ratio; and
(5) With respect to a stress test
conducted pursuant to section 165(i)(2)
of the Dodd-Frank Act by an insured
depository institution that is a
subsidiary of the covered company and
that is required to disclose a summary
of its stress tests results under
applicable regulations, changes in
regulatory capital ratios and any other
capital ratios specified by the Board of
the depository institution subsidiary
over the planning horizon, including an
explanation of the most significant
causes for the changes in regulatory
capital ratios.
(c) Content of results. (1) The
following disclosures required under
paragraph (b) of this section must be on

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a cumulative basis over the planning
horizon:
(i) Pre-provision net revenue and
other revenue;
(ii) Provision for loan and lease losses,
realized losses/gains on available-forsale and held-to-maturity securities,
trading and counterparty losses, and
other losses or gains;
(iii) Net income before taxes; and
(iv) Loan losses in the aggregate and
by subportfolio.
(2) The disclosure of pro forma
regulatory capital ratios, the tier 1
common ratio, and any other capital
ratios specified by the Board that is
required under paragraph (b) of this
section must include the beginning
value, ending value, and minimum
value of each ratio over the planning
horizon.
By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, September 24, 2013.
Robert deV. Frierson,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 2013–23618 Filed 9–27–13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P

FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 252
[Docket No. R–1464; RIN 7100 AE 02]

Annual Company-Run Stress Tests at
Banking Organizations With Total
Consolidated Assets of More Than $10
Billion But Less Than $50 Billion; OneYear Transition Period to Revised
Regulatory Capital Framework for
2013–2014 Stress Test Cycle
Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System (Board).
ACTION: Interim final rule with request
for comment.
AGENCY:

The Board invites comment
on an interim final rule that provides a
one-year transition period during which
bank holding companies and most state
member banks with more than $10
billion but less than $50 billion in total
consolidated assets would not be
required to reflect the revised regulatory
capital framework that the Board
approved on July 2, 2013 (revised
capital framework) in their stress tests
for the stress test cycle that begins
October 1, 2013. For this stress test
cycle, these companies will be required
to estimate their pro forma capital levels
and ratios over the full nine-quarter
planning horizon using the Board’s
current regulatory capital rules. The
interim final rule also clarifies when a
banking organization would estimate its
minimum regulatory capital ratios using

SUMMARY:

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