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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 149 / Thursday, August 2, 2012 / Rules and Regulations

sroberts on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with RULES

AMS will continue to seek assistance
across USDA as appropriate on this
issue.
A few commenters requested that the
NOP address concerns with the current
use of antibiotics in organic tree fruit
production through ensuring
compliance with § 205.206(a)(3).
Section 205.206(a) requires producers to
use management practices to prevent
disease through crop rotation, sanitation
measures and cultural practices. Section
205.206(a)(3) lists specific cultural
practices that enhance crop health,
including selection of plant species and
varieties with regard to suitability to
site-specific conditions and resistance to
prevalent pests, weeds, and diseases.
Certifying agents are responsible for
ensuring that all organic producers use
management practices to prevent
disease. Certifying agents verify that
organic producers are meeting all USDA
organic requirements including utilizing
preventative management practices to
prevent disease.
These same commenters also stated
that, as part of a strategy for addressing
fire blight in organic apple and pear
production, the NOP should consider
variances under § 205.290 to allow
antibiotic use in instances when fire
blight disease puts orchards at risk.
Temporary variances for the use of a
synthetic substance that is not on the
National List (i.e. use of tetracycline
after October 21, 2014) cannot be
granted per the current requirements at
§ 205.290(e).
F. Effective Date
This final rule reflects
recommendations submitted to the
Secretary by the NOSB. The amendment
to the listing of one exempted substance
and the addition of two substances to
the National List were based on
petitions from the industry and
evaluated by the NOSB using criteria in
OFPA and the NOP regulations. Because
the amendments have been subject to
extensive discussion and public
comment and are considered vital to
organic crops, processing and livestock
production, AMS believes that
producers and handlers should be able
to use them on their operations as soon
as possible. Furthermore, tetracycline is
due to expire from the National List on
October 21, 2012; this action must be
finalized by October 21, 2012, to ensure
that organic apple and pear producers
have access to this substance for two
additional years beyond its current
expiration date. Accordingly, AMS finds
that good cause exists under 5 U.S.C.
Available online at: http://www.nifa.usda.gov/
funding/rfas/pdfs/12_orei.pdf.

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553(d)(3) for not postponing the
effective date of this rule until 30 days
after publication in the Federal
Register.

Dated: July 27, 2012.
David R. Shipman,
Administrator, Agricultural Marketing
Service.

List of Subjects in 7 CFR Part 205

[FR Doc. 2012–18819 Filed 8–1–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 3410–02–P

Administrative practice and
procedure, Agriculture, Animals,
Archives and records, Imports, Labeling,
Organically produced products, Plants,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Seals and insignia, Soil
conservation.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, 7 CFR part 205, Subpart G is
amended as follows:
PART 205—NATIONAL ORGANIC
PROGRAM
1. The authority citation for 7 CFR
part 205 continues to read as follows:

■

Authority: 7 U.S.C. 6501–6522.

2. Section 205.601 paragraph (i)(12) is
revised to read as follows:

■

§ 205.601 Synthetic substances allowed
for use in organic crop production.

*

*
*
*
*
(i) * * *
(12) Tetracycline, for fire blight
control in apples and pears only until
October 21, 2014.
*
*
*
*
*
3. Section 205.603 is amended by:
A. Redesignating paragraphs (b)(2)
through (b)(7) as paragraphs (b)(3)
through (b)(8); and
■ B. Adding paragraph (b)(2) to read as
follows:
■
■

§ 205.603 Synthetic substances allowed
for use in organic livestock production.

*

*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(2) Formic acid (CAS # 64–18–6)—for
use as a pesticide solely within
honeybee hives.
*
*
*
*
*
4. In § 205.605(a), the substance
‘‘Attapulgite’’ is added in alphabetical
order to read as follows:

■

§ 205.605 Nonagricultural (nonorganic)
substances allowed as ingredients in or on
processed products labeled as ‘‘organic’’ or
‘‘made with organic (specified ingredients
or food groups(s)).’’

*

*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
Attapulgite—as a processing aid in
the handling of plant and animal oils.
*
*
*
*
*

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FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 234
[Regulation HH; Docket No. R–1412]
RIN 7100–AD 71

Financial Market Utilities
Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:

The Board is publishing a
final rule, Regulation HH, Designated
Financial Market Utilities. This rule
implements provisions of sections
805(a) and 806(e) of the Dodd-Frank
Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act (‘‘Dodd-Frank Act’’ or
‘‘Act’’), including risk-management
standards for financial market utilities
(‘‘FMUs’’) that are designated as
systemically important by the Financial
Stability Oversight Council (the
‘‘Council’’) and standards for
determining when a designated FMU is
required to provide advance notice of
proposed changes to its rules,
procedures, or operations that could
materially affect the nature or level of
risks presented by the designated FMU.
DATES: This final rule is effective
September 14, 2012.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Jennifer A. Lucier, Assistant Director
(202) 872–7581 or Kathy C. Wang,
Senior Financial Services Analyst (202)
872–4991, Division of Reserve Bank
Operations and Payment Systems;
Christopher W. Clubb, Senior Counsel
(202) 452–3904 or Kara L. Handzlik,
Senior Attorney (202) 452–3852, Legal
Division; for users of
Telecommunications Device for the Deaf
(TDD) only, contact (202) 263–4869.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:

I. Background
Title VIII of the Dodd-Frank Act,
titled the ‘‘Payment, Clearing, and
Settlement Supervision Act of 2010,’’
was enacted to mitigate systemic risk in
the financial system and to promote
financial stability, in part, through
enhanced supervision of designated
FMUs.1 Section 803 of the Dodd-Frank
1 The Dodd-Frank Act, Public Law 111–203, 124
Stat. 1376, was signed into law on July 21, 2010.

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Act defines an FMU as a person that
manages or operates a multilateral
system for the purpose of transferring,
clearing, or settling payments,
securities, or other financial
transactions among financial
institutions or between financial
institutions and the person. The basic
risks that FMUs must manage include
credit risk, liquidity risk, settlement
risk, operational risk, and legal risk.
These risks arise between financial
institutions and FMUs as they settle
payments and other financial
transactions. In order to maintain
financial stability, FMUs must be welldesigned and operated in a safe and
sound manner. If a systemically
important FMU fails to measure,
monitor, and manage its risks
effectively, it could pose significant risk
to its participants and the financial
system more broadly.
Under section 805(a)(1) of the DoddFrank Act, the Board is required to
promulgate risk-management standards
governing the operations related to the
payment, clearing, and settlement
(‘‘PCS’’) activities of certain FMUs that
are designated as systemically important
by the Council. Section 805(a)(1) of the
Act also requires the Board to take into
consideration relevant international
standards and existing prudential
requirements in prescribing the
regulations. For a designated FMU that
is a derivatives clearing organization
(‘‘DCO’’) registered under section 5b of
the Commodity Exchange Act or a
clearing agency registered under section
17A of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934 (collectively, ‘‘designated clearing
entities’’), the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission (‘‘CFTC’’) or the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(‘‘SEC’’), respectively, are granted
authority to prescribe regulations, in
consultation with the Council and the
Board, containing applicable riskmanagement standards.2
Section 805(b) of the Act sets out the
following objectives and principles for
the risk-management standards: (a)
Promote robust risk management, (b)
promote safety and soundness, (c)
reduce systemic risks, and (d) support
the stability of the broader financial
system. Section 805(c) of the Act states
that risk-management standards may
address areas such as (1) riskmanagement policies and procedures,
(2) margin and collateral requirements,
(3) participant or counterparty default
2 Under section 805(a)(2) of the Act, the CFTC
and the SEC are also required to take relevant
international standards and existing prudential
requirements into consideration in prescribing
regulations containing risk-management standards
governing designated clearing entities.

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policies and procedures, (4) the ability
to complete timely clearing and
settlement of financial transactions, (5)
capital and financial resource
requirements for designated FMUs, and
(6) other areas that are necessary to
achieve the objectives and principles for
risk-management standards.
In addition, section 806(e)(1) of the
Dodd-Frank Act requires a designated
FMU to provide 60 days’ advance notice
to its Supervisory Agency of any
proposed change to its rules,
procedures, or operations that could, as
defined in rules of each Supervisory
Agency, materially affect the nature or
level of risks presented by the
designated FMU. Under section 803(b)
of the Act, a ‘‘Supervisory Agency’’
means the federal agency that has
primary jurisdiction over a designated
FMU under federal banking, securities,
or commodity futures laws.3
In April 2011, the Board published for
comment a notice of proposed
rulemaking (‘‘NPRM’’) to propose a new
part to the Code of Federal Regulations
(12 CFR part 234, Regulation HH) to
establish risk-management standards for
designated FMUs and requirements for
advance notice of material changes to a
designated FMU’s rules, procedures, or
operations.4 The public comment period
closed on May 19, 2011.
II. Summary of Public Comments and
Analysis
The Board received twelve public
comment letters on the NPRM.
Comments were submitted by two
payment systems, seven industry and
other groups, one bank, and two other
commenters. In general, the comments
pertained broadly to three categories: (i)
Risk-management standards, (ii)
advance notice requirements and the
materiality definition, and (iii) other
miscellaneous comments. The Board
considered these comments in
developing its final rule as discussed in
more detail below.5
A. Risk-Management Standards
1. International Standards
Proposed § 234.3 sets out riskmanagement standards for designated
FMUs that are payment systems, and
3 A Supervisory Agency includes the SEC and
CFTC with respect to their respective designated
clearing entities (as defined above), the appropriate
federal banking agencies (including the Board) with
respect to FMUs that are institutions described in
section 3(q) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act
(12 U.S.C. 1813(q)), and the Board with respect to
a designated FMU that is otherwise not subject to
the jurisdiction of any of the agencies listed above.
4 See 76 FR 18445 (Apr. 4, 2011).
5 In addition, the Board is adopting several
changes intended to clarify the requirements of the
regulation.

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proposed § 234.4 sets out riskmanagement standards for central
counterparties (‘‘CCPs’’) and central
securities depositories (‘‘CSDs’’), based
on the international risk-management
standards developed by the Committee
on Payment and Settlement Systems
(‘‘CPSS’’) and the Technical Committee
of the International Organization of
Securities Commissions (‘‘IOSCO’’).
These international standards were the
Core Principles for Systemically
Important Payment Systems (the ‘‘Core
Principles’’) developed by the CPSS in
2001, and the Recommendations for
Securities Settlement Systems and the
Recommendations for Central
Counterparties (collectively, the ‘‘CPSS–
IOSCO Recommendations’’) developed
jointly by the CPSS and IOSCO in 2001
and 2004, respectively. The Board
believes these standards are the
appropriate basis for setting initial riskmanagement standards under Title VIII
for several reasons. First, section
805(a)(1) of the Act directs the Board to
consider relevant international
standards in prescribing riskmanagement standards under Title VIII.
As explained in the NPRM, the Core
Principles and the CPSS–IOSCO
Recommendations were the
international standards most relevant to
risk management of FMUs.6 Second,
FMUs are familiar with these standards
as the long-standing basis for Part I of
the Federal Reserve Policy on Payment
System Risk (‘‘PSR policy’’).7 Third, the
Board has significant experience
applying these international standards
to large-value payment and settlement
systems pursuant to its PSR policy.
CPSS and IOSCO recently conducted
a comprehensive review of riskmanagement standards for PCS systems.
On April 16, 2012, CPSS and IOSCO
issued the final report on the
‘‘Principles for Financial Market
Infrastructures,’’ which includes an
updated, harmonized, and strengthened
set of international risk-management
standards (the ‘‘PFMI’’).8 CPSS and
IOSCO intend for the PFMI to replace
the Core Principles and CPSS–IOSCO
Recommendations. As noted in the
NPRM, the Board anticipates that it will
review the new international standards,
consult with other appropriate agencies
and the Council, and seek public
comment on the adoption of revised
6 See

76 FR at 18447.
PSR policy is available on the Board’s
public Web site at: http://www.federalreserve.gov/
paymentsystems/psr_policy.htm.
8 The Principles for Financial Market
Infrastructures are available at http://www.bis.org/
publ/cpss101a.pdf. The final report reflects
comments received during the public consultation
period from March 10, 2011 to July 29, 2011.
7 The

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standards for designated FMUs based on
the new international standards.
Commenters generally appeared to
support the Board’s approach of using
the Core Principles and CPSS–IOSCO
Recommendations as a basis for its riskmanagement standards for designated
FMUs under section 805 of the Act. Two
commenters explicitly stated their
support for the Board’s approach. Two
other commenters stated that the
proposed risk-management standards
were largely prudent and sensible.
One commenter was also supportive
of the Board’s intention to evaluate the
new international standards once they
are final for the purposes of revising
Regulation HH. Two other commenters
expressed some general reservations
with respect to the new international
standards; one of the commenters
cautioned the Board against adopting
the new international standards ‘‘in
full,’’ because doing so would include
principles that may not directly relate to
the risks posed by the designated FMUs
and contemplated by Title VIII.
After considering the public
comments and for the reasons stated
above, the Board continues to believe
that the most suitable approach to
establishing initial risk-management
standards under Title VIII of the Act is
to use the Core Principles and CPSS–
IOSCO Recommendations as the basis
for the standards promulgated by this
notice, and to proceed with
consideration of the PFMI as the basis
for any future revisions. The Board
agrees with commenters that
international standards that are not, in
some way or to some degree, related to
existing or potential risks posed to or by
a designated FMU should not be
adopted for purposes of section 805 of
the Act. As noted in the NPRM, the
Board acknowledged that the scope of
the Core Principles and CPSS–IOSCO
Recommendations is broad and
proposed to adopt by regulation
particular standards, or portions thereof,
that relate to the risks presented to or by
a designated FMU, rather than those
standards, or portions thereof, that
apply more generally to financial
markets or regulators. Similarly, the
Board anticipates evaluating the
appropriateness of each of the new
PFMI for the purpose of possible
revisions to Regulation HH.
2. Applicability of Standards to Retail
Payment Systems
Proposed § 234.3 is based on the
entire set of the Core Principles. Some
commenters questioned whether three
standards included in the Core
Principles could be applied to retail
payment systems, particularly

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automated clearinghouses (‘‘ACH’’) and
check clearinghouses, should those
systems be designated as systemically
important by the Council. Specifically,
proposed § 234.3(a)(3) would require
any FMU that is designated on the basis
of its role as operator of a payment
system to have clearly defined
procedures for the management of credit
risks and liquidity risks, which specify
the respective responsibilities of the
system operator and the participants
and which provide appropriate
incentives to manage and contain those
risks. Proposed § 234.3(a)(4) would
require any designated FMU that is
designated on the basis of its role as
operator of a payment system to provide
prompt final settlement on the day of
value, preferably during the day and at
a minimum at the end of the day.
Proposed § 234.3(a)(5) would require
any designated FMU that is designated
on the basis of its role as operator of a
payment system, and in which
multilateral netting takes place, to, at a
minimum, be capable of ensuring the
timely completion of daily settlements
in the event of an inability to settle by
the participant with the largest single
settlement obligation.
The Board received several comments
on the applicability of these riskmanagement standards to retail payment
systems, should they be designated by
the Council. Several commenters stated
their support for an exemption for retail
payment systems from designation as
systemically important by the Council
under the Dodd-Frank Act. The Council,
however, determined not to
categorically exclude FMUs operating
retail payment or other systems in its
rule regarding the FMU designation
process.9 As a result, commenters
provided feedback on the ability of
retail payment systems to meet certain
of the Board’s proposed riskmanagement standards in the event the
Council decides to designate them.
One commenter specifically
referenced proposed § 234.3(a)(3)–(5) as
risk-management standards that, while
appropriate risk controls for truly
systemically important payment
systems, were generally inapplicable (or
had no relevance) to payments systems
such as ACH clearing arrangements that
permit the return of transactions within
a certain timeframe. One commenter
argued that the standard in proposed
§ 234.3(a)(3) regarding the management
of credit and liquidity risk would have
no application where a system that did
not assume credit and liquidity risks in
the first place by committing to pay
funds that it had not received and where
9 See

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45909

the payment system participants expect
to manage their own credit and liquidity
risks. Two commenters also stated that
proposed § 234.3(a)(4) on settlement
finality contradicts long-standing and
established practices of ACH rules that
allow for certain transactions to be
reversed or returned for any reason until
the banking day after the settlement
date. One commenter stated that
application of proposed § 234.3(a)(5)
regarding the ability to complete
settlement in the event the single largest
participant is unable to settle would
require a fundamental change in the
nature of ACH debit transactions and
the abolishment of the right to return
the transaction. In general, these
commenters stated that they do not
believe that, if designated, retail
payment systems would be able to
comply with these proposed standards
and, accordingly, asked that such
systems be exempted from them.
The Board notes that the proposed
risk-management standards were
designed to apply to large-value
payment systems. This approach is
consistent with the direction of the
Council expressed in its final rule on
the FMU designation process.
Specifically, the Council stated that,
within payment systems, it expects to
focus at this time on FMUs that operate
large-value systems and not on FMUs
that operate low-value systems (such as
check and ACH).10 The Council also
decided not to include considerations
more narrowly tailored to the
characteristics of retail payment systems
because the Council did not believe they
were necessary or appropriate given the
current focus for designations.
Given the Council’s focus on largevalue systems, the Board does not
anticipate that the Council will
designate a FMU under Title VIII on the
basis of its role as operator of a retail
payment system. However, because the
authority to designate systemically
important FMUs resides with the
Council, not the Board, the Board
cannot be assured of the type of FMU
the Council may designate in the future.
In the event that the Council designates
an FMU on the basis of its role as
operator of a retail payment system, the
Board would review, at that time,
whether the risk-management standards
in § 234.3 were appropriate for that
10 See 76 FR at 44769. The Council also decided,
however, against including in the final rule any
categorical exclusion for FMUs operating retail
payment or other systems, both because there are
not clear distinctions between various types of
systems, and because such an exclusion would
impair the Council’s ability to respond
appropriately to new information, changed
circumstances, and future developments.

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designated FMU, as it would for any
type of newly designated FMU.
In order to accommodate this review
in the event that an unanticipated type
of FMU is designated, and in
consideration of the comments, the
Board is adopting in the final rule a
modification to proposed §§ 234.3(b)
and 234.4(b) that clarifies that the
application of individual riskmanagement standards could be waived
in a situation where such standards
could not appropriately be applied to a
particular designated FMU. Both
§§ 234.3(b) and 234.4(b) will be
amended by inserting text that states
‘‘[t]he Board, by order, may waive the
application of a standard or standards to
a particular designated financial market
utility where the risks presented by or
the design of that designated financial
market utility would make the
application of the standard or standards
inappropriate.’’ This revision is
intended to bridge any gap between
Council designation of a new type of
designated FMU and the process of
promulgating regulations appropriate
for the new type of designated FMU, if
necessary.
In addition, the Board notes that with
respect to a designated FMU that
operates more than one payment system
(e.g., one large-value and one retail),
standards would apply only with
respect to the system that provided the
basis for the Council’s designation of the
FMU. The Board is modifying § 234.3(a)
and (b) to clarify this point. The Board
also is making a parallel modification to
§ 234.4(a) and (b).11
The Board is also modifying
§§ 234.3(a) and 234.4(a) to require a
designated FMU to ‘‘implement rules,
procedures, or operations designed to
ensure that it meets or exceeds’’ the
risk-management standards set forth in
these sections. In addition, the word
‘‘should’’ has been deleted from the
individual standards to clarify that these
are requirements with which a
designated FMU must comply.
3. Scope of Risk-Management Standards
As noted above, the proposed riskmanagement standards for designated
FMUs that operate as payment systems,
CCPs, or CSDs are based on the Core
Principles and CPSS–IOSCO
Recommendations. Each set includes
separate standards relating to efficiency,
access criteria, and governance. Several
commenters suggested that the Board
eliminate some or all of these three
proposed standards for payment
systems, arguing that they address
11 To conform to these modifications, the Board
is revising the definitions in § 234.2 (a), (b), and (e).

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system operating issues that are outside
the scope of the systemic risk issues
contemplated by Title VIII of the DoddFrank Act. Specifically, the commenters
questioned whether proposed
§ 234.3(a)(8), (9), and (10) regarding
efficiency, access criteria, and
governance, respectively, were relevant
to systemic risk.12 The applicability of
the efficiency standard was a common
concern of the commenters that raised
questions about the scope of the riskmanagement standards; a subset of these
commenters also questioned whether
either the access criteria or governance
standard was within the scope of risk
management. These standards in general
were viewed as admirable goals that
designated FMUs should aim to achieve,
but nevertheless as goals that should be
driven by market forces and not by
regulatory mandate.
Efficiency. The efficiency standard in
proposed § 234.3(a)(8) states that an
FMU that is designated on the basis of
its role as operator of a payment system
should provide a means of making
payments that is practical for its users
and efficient for the economy. Several
commenters argued that the efficiency
standard exceeds the Act’s objectives
because it addresses operating system
issues and not risk matters. One
commenter argued that whether a form
of payment is practical and efficient is
largely a matter of judgment that is
better left to the market and its
participants.
The Board believes the efficiency
standard furthers the objectives set out
in Title VIII of the Act to reduce
systemic risks and support the stability
of the broader financial system.
A designated FMU supports the
ongoing functioning and stability of the
market it serves by providing effective,
reliable PCS services to its participants
and, in particular, completing timely
clearing and settlement of financial
transactions. An FMU that is designed
or managed inefficiently or
impractically may ultimately distort
financial activity and market structure,
increasing not only the financial and
other risks of an FMU’s participants, but
also the risks of their customers and end
users. To avoid such outcomes, a
designated FMU should consider the
tradeoffs between, and seek a reasonable
balance of, safety (i.e., risk management)
and efficiency (i.e., direct and indirect
costs) when designing and managing the
system. For example, overly demanding
financial resource requirements may
12 One commenter raised similar concerns with
the corresponding access criteria and governance
standards in proposed § 234.4(a)(2) and (8) with
respect to CSDs and CCPs.

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create a liquidity demand so high that
it would be impractical for participants
to meet. Although liquidity is very
important, an FMU that accumulates
excessive liquid resources from its
participants intraday may increase the
participants’ opportunity cost of
sending each payment. In such cases,
participants that become liquidity
constrained may be forced to delay
submitting certain time- or missioncritical payments.
Additionally, an FMU’s design,
operating structure, scope of PCS
activities, and use of technology can
influence its efficiency and can
ultimately provide incentives for market
participants to use, or not use, the
FMU’s services. For example, in certain
cases, inefficiently designed systems
may increase costs to the point where it
would be cost-prohibitive for
participants to use the FMU, and
possibly drive market participants
toward less safe alternatives, such as
bilateral clearing or settlement on the
books of the participants. In such cases,
risks to the market participants increase
as they seek less safe opportunities to
lower direct costs; this behavior may
reintroduce risk into the market that the
FMU was intended to mitigate.
As these examples suggest, a
designated FMU must function
efficiently, as well as safely, and
provide services that are appropriate to
the needs of its users without becoming
cost-prohibitive to use. A designated
FMU that is inefficient can have a
direct, negative impact on financial
stability. Accordingly, the Board
believes that it is appropriate for a
supervisor of a designated FMU to take
into account the need for practical and
efficient design of the designated FMU
as part of the set of risk-management
standards set forth in Regulation HH.
For these reasons, the Board is adopting
the efficiency standards in proposed
§§ 234.3(a)(8) and 234.4(a)(6) essentially
as set out in the NPRM.
Access criteria. The access criteria
standard in proposed § 234.3(a)(9) states
that a payment system should have
objective and publicly disclosed criteria
for participation, which permit fair and
open access. Some commenters argued
that the access criteria standard did not
relate to any of the risks contemplated
by Title VIII of the Act. One commenter
stated that the actions taken by the
payment system, CSD, or CCP, create or
mitigate risk, not the rules governing
who can participate in them. Another
commenter noted that the participation
structure for payment systems can vary
broadly and, while the participation
criteria for these systems could be an
issue for competition law, it was

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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 149 / Thursday, August 2, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
difficult to see how the criteria could
directly affect the risks that were the
focus of Title VIII.
The Board believes that access criteria
are important to a designated FMU’s
risk-management framework and affect
the level of risk a designated FMU
presents to the financial system. Access
criteria are typically referred to as an
FMU’s ‘‘first line of defense’’ in
ensuring it admits financial institutions
that will be able to meet their
obligations and not expose the FMU or
its other participants to unacceptable
risk. Access criteria need to be designed
to ensure that participants meet
appropriate operational, financial, and
legal requirements to allow them to
meet their obligations on a timely
basis.13 However, these criteria need to
be balanced against the FMU’s ability to
effectively serve the market it supports,
in particular markets that are subject to
a statutory requirement for central
clearing or settlement through an FMU.
Although a designated FMU may use
risk-based measures to control access,
requirements that are unnecessarily
discriminatory or overly restrictive can
minimize the FMU’s overall
effectiveness.
Criteria that allow for fair and open
access also may help achieve the Title
VIII objectives of reducing systemic risk
and supporting the overall stability of
the financial system. A fair and open
approach to participation criteria may
help prevent the concentration of
financial activity (and therefore risk)
into a few large participants. By
encouraging the reduction of risk
concentration, the proposed standard
helps lower the likelihood that a few
financial institutions will be perceived
as ‘‘too big to fail.’’ Broad participation
in a designated FMU can, for example,
increase the effectiveness of multilateral
netting, facilitate crisis management by
applying a consistent set of rules and
procedures (e.g., default management,
loss mutualization), and improve overall
market transparency by increasing the
number of transactions processed by the
FMU. Accordingly, access criteria that
do not permit fair and open access may
reduce the overall risk-reduction
benefits that a designated FMU can
offer.
For these reasons, the Board is
adopting the access criteria standards in
proposed §§ 234.3(a)(9) and 234.4(a)(2)
essentially as set out in the NPRM.
Governance. The governance standard
in proposed § 234.3(a)(10) states that a
payment system’s governance
13 For example, a designated FMU may set access
criteria based on risk measures such as capital
ratios, risk ratings, or other indicators.

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arrangements should be effective,
accountable, and transparent. Some
commenters claimed that although the
decisions made by a designated FMU’s
governing body can affect the risks it
presents, the particular governance
structure itself presents no such risks.
Conversely, one commenter supported
inclusion of the governance standard,
stating that weak governance practices
and poor risk-management procedures
at designated FMUs could pose hazards
both to participating financial
institutions and to the market as a
whole. Another commenter stated that
risk management effectively
encompasses governance, among other
areas.
The Board believes that effective,
accountable, and transparent
governance arrangements are critical to
the effective risk management of a
designated FMU. A strong governance
arrangement provides a sound basis for
compliance with the other riskmanagement standards in Regulation
HH. A number of tools or techniques
discussed in the Core Principles with
respect to the governance standard have
proved to be effective in ensuring
effective governance, such as written
strategic objectives and plans for
achieving them and separation of risk
management and audit functions from
day-to-day operations. The Board
expects supervisors to review a
designated FMU’s governance
arrangements against the background of
these and other relevant techniques in
order to promote robust risk
management. In addition, given the role
of the FMU’s board of directors in
setting the overall risk-management
framework of the designated FMU, the
Board believes that a weak or ineffective
governance structure could have
systemic implications for the
participants of the service, other FMUs,
and other markets. Accordingly, the
Board believes that a supervisor should
consider a designated FMU’s
governance arrangements when
performing its systemic risk review. For
these reasons, the Board is adopting the
governance standard in proposed
§§ 234.3(a)(10) and 234.4(a)(8)
essentially as set out in the NPRM.

performance of the CCP’s margin
models and the related parameters and
assumptions associated with such
models by a qualified person who does
not perform functions associated with
the CCP’s margin models (except as part
of the annual model validation) and also
does not report to such a person.14 Two
commenters noted that proposed
§ 234.4(a)(17)(i), although on the right
track, should stress explicitly the
complete independence of the
organization conducting the validation.
One of the commenters believed models
must be validated annually by a
qualified and independent organization
with no financial stake in the outcome
because no employee of a systemically
important CCP should be expected to
resist the inevitable direct and indirect
pressures of management who may have
incentives to achieve a less-appropriate
and less-independent outcome. The
other commenter also stated that model
validation must be performed by a truly
independent party with no financial
stake in the outcome of the validation
and expressed concern that a validator
that is not sufficiently independent
would face the conflict of interest that
would lead designated FMUs to lower
their margins in order to attract business
and increase profits.
The Board believes that a validator
must be able to offer independent,
unbiased conclusions and
recommendations as part of the margin
model validation process. It is unlikely
that the person who was responsible for
initially developing the margin model
would be able to provide an
independent, unbiased assessment of
the product. Similarly, it appears
unlikely that a person under the
functional control of the developer
would be able to provide independent,
unbiased validation of the model
without the influence of the developer
and concern for employment security.
Accordingly, proposed § 234.4(a)(17)(i)
would require that the model validation
be conducted by a qualified person who
does not perform functions associated
with the CCP’s margin model, such as
development and implementation, and
does not report to such a person.15

4. Independent Model Validation
Proposed § 234.4(a)(17) requires a
designated FMU that operates as a CCP
to use margin requirements to limit its
credit exposures to participants in
normal market conditions and use riskbased models and parameters that are
reviewed regularly. In addition,
proposed § 234.4(a)(17)(i) would require
a CCP to provide for annual model
validation consisting of evaluating the

14 Proposed § 234.4(a)(17)(i) inadvertently
referred to the margin models of the ‘‘clearing
agency.’’ The Board has revised these references to
‘‘central counterparty’’ in the final rule.
15 This position is generally consistent with
current supervisory guidance on model risk
management by banks. See SR letter 11–7, p.3 (Apr.
4, 2011), which states:
Validation involves a degree of independence
from model development and use. Generally,
validation is done by staff who are not responsible
for model development or use and do not have a
stake in whether a model is determined to be valid.

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The Board recognizes the concern
expressed in the comments that there
may be financial considerations beyond
the validator’s immediate employment
security, and that there may be
situations where a validator from
outside the CCP may be needed to
provide an appropriately independent
validation. In such cases, the Board may
hold a particular designated FMU to a
stricter definition of independent
validation that is appropriate for the
level of risk presented by the designated
FMU. Proposed § 234.4(b) allows for the
Board, by order, to apply heightened
risk-management standards to a
particular designated FMU in response
to the risks presented by that designated
FMU. As a generally applicable
standard, however, the Board believes it
is appropriate to recognize basic
requirements for an independent
validation. For these reasons, the Board
is adopting proposed § 234.4(a)(17)(i)
essentially as set out in the NPRM.
5. Financial Resource Coverage

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Proposed § 234.4(a)(15) would require
a designated FMU that is acting as a
CSD to institute risk controls that
include collateral requirements and
limits, and ensure timely settlement in
the event that the participant with the
largest payment obligation is unable to
settle when the CSD extends intraday
credit. Proposed § 234.4(a)(18) would
require a designated FMU that is acting
as a CCP to maintain sufficient financial
resources to withstand, at a minimum,
a default by the participant to which it
has the largest exposure in extreme but
plausible market conditions. The Board
specifically requested comment on
whether such designated FMUs should
be required to maintain sufficient
financial resources to withstand the
default by the participant with the
largest exposure or obligation in
extreme but plausible market
conditions, where the ‘‘participant’’
means the family of affiliated
participants when there is more than
one affiliated participant (‘‘cover one’’),
or whether such designated FMUs
should be required to maintain
sufficient financial resources to
withstand the defaults by the two
participants, plus any affiliated
participants, with the largest exposures
As a practical matter, some validation work may be
most effectively done by model developers and
users; it is essential, however, that such validation
work be subject to critical review by an
independent party, who should conduct additional
activities to ensure proper validation. Overall, the
quality of the validation process is indicated by
critical review by objective, knowledgeable parties
and the actions taken to address issues identified
by those parties.

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or obligations in extreme but plausible
market conditions (‘‘cover two’’).
Two commenters stated that, if the
Board continued to base its financial
resources standard on the number of
participants that pose large risk
exposures to a CCP, they supported the
higher cover two requirement. One
commenter cited the
‘‘interconnectedness of financial
institutions’’ as one of the central
dangers, which must be addressed by
financial reforms and a reason for
adopting a cover two standard. This
commenter also suggested that the
Board’s rule should conform to a similar
standard proposed by the CFTC for
systemically important DCOs, which
included a cover two requirement.16
The other commenter supported a cover
two standard because, during a period
of extreme market stress, it cannot be
guaranteed that there will be only a
single default. Neither commenter,
however, provided any analysis to
support its contention that a cover two
standard would be more appropriate as
a generally applicable standard.
Both commenters, however, expressed
a preference for a financial resource
coverage requirement based on an
additional measurement as determined
by a percentage of aggregate exposure,
and suggested that the default rate used
in stress tests be based on the larger of
(a) the two members representing the
largest exposure to the CCP and (b) the
members constituting at least 33 percent
of the exposures in aggregate to the CCP.
The two commenters believed that the
additional measurement captures the
risk of a diverse, but interconnected,
membership.
As noted in the NPRM, the Board’s
proposed financial resources standards
would apply a heightened cover one
requirement because the term
‘‘participant’’ would be interpreted as
the largest family of affiliated
participants if there was more than one
affiliated participant. The Board
believes that this interpretation will
address the interconnectedness of
participants through corporate
ownership structures. With respect to
risks presented by other types of
interconnectedness (i.e., through
common participation across markets or
FMUs), the standards for a designated
FMU’s financial resource coverage, as
with all other standards set out in the
16 On November 8, 2011, pursuant to its authority
under Title VII of the Dodd-Frank Act, the CFTC
published its final rule on risk-management
standards for DCOs. The CFTC elected to adopt a
cover one requirement for all DCOs, and delay riskmanagement related rulemakings for systemically
important DCOs until a later time. See 76 FR 69334
(Nov. 8, 2011).

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regulation, are generally applicable
standards. The Board expects that a
designated FMU would employ a riskmanagement framework that is
appropriate for the risks faced by the
FMU and the FMU may, at its own
initiative, institute a cover two financial
resource coverage requirement. In
addition, the Board may require, by
order, a particular designated FMU to
exceed the generally applicable
standards set out in the regulation to
address the risks presented by,
including those borne by, the FMU.17
Although the existing cover one
standard was adopted by the Board in
its PSR policy and applied in its
supervision of payment and settlement
systems since 1994, the Board has
applied heightened financial resource
coverage requirements when the
appropriate situation arose. Therefore,
although the Board agrees with the
commenters that, in some cases, a
higher requirement would be more
appropriate to the level of risk presented
by a particular designated FMU, the
Board believes, at this time, that the
most appropriate course is to adopt the
cover one standard as generally
applicable and impose a higher
standard, including possibly a cover two
standard, on a case-by-case basis when
appropriate. The Board will consider
the appropriateness of adopting a cover
two standard in the context of possible
revisions to Regulation HH in light of
the PFMI. Accordingly, the Board is
adopting the cover one standard in
§ 234.4(a)(15) and (18) essentially as set
out in the NPRM.
The Board believes the commenters’
concern regarding appropriately
addressing the interconnectedness of a
designated FMU’s participants and the
suggestion of applying the additional
measurement using a percentage of
aggregate exposure are important to
consider. Before determining the
viability of this approach, however, the
Board believes further analysis is
needed regarding how the suggested
additional measure would be applied,
and such analysis could include
identifying situations in which the
additional aggregate exposure measure
would capture risk that is not addressed
by either a cover one or cover two
standard, an explanation of how the
additional measure would be calculated
(including the appropriate time horizon
to use), and an explanation of why a 33
percent aggregate exposure standard
would be most appropriate for this
approach. The Board will consider this
approach further in the context of
revisions to Regulation HH in light of
17 See

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the PFMI. The Board welcomes and will
review any supporting research on this
issue that is submitted.
6. Legal Certainty of Netting
Arrangements
One commenter raised an issue
regarding designated FMUs that allow
netting of payments to and from
individual participants. The commenter
stated that, to ensure that the netting
will be honored in a bankruptcy or other
insolvency proceeding, Regulation HH
must require that the designated FMU
demonstrate that, under the policies,
procedures, and documentation of the
designated FMU, the netting permitted
by the designated FMU will be given
legal effect in default and insolvency
situations through an analysis provided
by outside legal counsel that is a
nationally recognized expert in matters
of corporate insolvency.
The Board recognizes the importance
of legal certainty of a designated FMU’s
transactions, not only during default
and insolvency situations, but also at all
other times. To address these concerns,
the Board proposed standards regarding
a designated FMU’s legal framework for
payment systems, as well as CSDs and
CCPs. For example, proposed
§ 234.4(a)(1) states that the CSD or CCP
should have a well-founded,
transparent, and enforceable legal
framework for each aspect of its
activities in all relevant jurisdictions. As
explained in the NPRM, the Board
expects that a designated FMU will
manage its legal risks within the context
of currently applicable statutes and
regulations, so it can ensure that its
rules, procedures, and contractual
provisions will be enforceable with a
high degree of certainty.18
Legal certainty of each aspect of a
designated FMU’s activities (including
its netting function) is expected to be
supported by existing law in all relevant
jurisdictions. Obtaining an opinion of
outside counsel is one method for a
designated FMU to judge legal certainty
of its rules and procedures, but it is not
the only method. In many cases, the
designated FMU’s in-house counsel may
be better positioned to evaluate the
intricacies of the designated FMU’s
netting arrangements and the law of the
jurisdictions that are relevant to the
designated FMU’s operations. In
addition, obtaining an opinion of
outside counsel could involve
significant expense for the designated
FMU, depending on the complexity and
number of relevant jurisdictions. The
Board does not believe it is appropriate
to impose such costs as a general
18 76

FR at 18447.

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expectation when they may not be
necessary in all cases. Whether legal
certainty must be supported by an
opinion of outside counsel or may be
verified by in-house counsel is a
decision that may be made initially by
management of the designated FMU. In
the event the Board determines in a
particular situation that an opinion by
outside counsel is warranted, it could
require such an opinion in that case. For
these reasons, the Board believes that
the legal framework standard as
proposed is sufficient to address the
concerns raised by the commenter.
7. Costs of Risk-Management Standards
to Participants
One commenter urged the Board to
ensure that the benefits of enhanced
risk-management standards exceed the
costs of implementing the standards on
banks and their customers. The
commenter stated that banks will feel
the effects of the risk-management
standards because any designated FMUs
with whom the banks transact business
will likely pass on the costs and
constraints of enhanced supervisory
oversight to their participants.
The Board is keenly aware of the need
to weigh the costs and benefits of
particular rulemakings. Section 805(a)
of the Act requires the Board to
prescribe risk-management standards
governing the operations related to the
PCS activities of designated FMUs. The
Board’s discretion lies not in whether
risk-management standards must be
promulgated, but rather in how the
Board can best avoid unnecessary
burden associated with the standards.
With respect to the benefits of the
risk-management standards, section
805(b) states that the objectives and
principles for the standards are to (1)
Promote robust risk management; (2)
promote safety and soundness; (3)
reduce systemic risks; and (4) support
the stability of the broader financial
system. The benefit of reducing
systemic risk is, of course, difficult to
quantify. Generally speaking, however,
an FMU that is better positioned to
withstand disruptive systemic events
would result in much smaller costs
being borne by the FMU, and its
participants, and, more generally, the
financial system and taxpayers.
The costs of the risk-management
standards can be viewed as a designated
FMU’s incremental expenses in
establishing and maintaining the
systems and procedures necessary to
meet the standards, and other
Regulation HH requirements, over and
above the risk-management measures
the FMU would have otherwise adopted
for business reasons. As the commenter

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noted, such costs are generally passed
on to a designated FMU’s participants.
These costs could take the form of
higher transaction costs, margin or
collateral costs, and capital
requirements. These costs should be
weighed against the societal benefit of
stability in the financial system and the
economy more broadly.
As explained in the NPRM, the Board
proposed to adopt the Core Principles
and CPSS–IOSCO Recommendations as
the basis for the risk-management
standards required by the Act, in part
because that approach strikes a
reasonable balance between furthering
the Act’s goals of enhanced risk
management and financial stability and
controlling the costs imposed on the
FMUs. As explained in the NPRM, the
Core Principles and CPSS–IOSCO
Recommendations were formulated by
central banks and securities regulators
over several years and with considerable
discussion and input from the financial
services industry. The Federal Reserve
collaborated with participating financial
system authorities in developing the
three sets of standards. In addition, the
SEC and CFTC participated in the
development of the CPSS–IOSCO
Recommendations. The three sets of
standards, particularly those relevant to
payment systems, have been
incorporated into the Board’s PSR
policy for many years. Further, the
Board has used these standards, in
conjunction with relevant laws and
other Federal Reserve policies, when
exercising its authority with respect to
supervising payment and securities
settlement systems.19 FMUs that are
likely to be designated by the Council,
as well as their participants, are wellacquainted with these standards and, in
many cases, such FMUs have already
incorporated these standards into their
governance, risk-management, and
operating frameworks. The Board,
therefore, does not anticipate material
additional costs associated with
adopting the Core Principles and CPSS–
IOSCO Recommendations into its
regulation for participants in payment
systems already managing towards these
standards.
Although these standards would be
generally applicable, the Board is
retaining the authority to impose a more
stringent standard or waive a standard
19 The Core Principles and the Recommendations
for Securities Settlement Systems were
incorporated into the PSR policy in 2004 (http://
www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/press/other/
2004/20041126/default.htm). The
Recommendations for Central Counterparties was
incorporated into the PSR policy in 2007 (http://
www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/other/
20070112a.htm).

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on a case-by-case basis in situations
where it is warranted.20 The Board
believes this is a more cost-effective
approach to achieving the risk
management objectives of Title VIII of
the Act. For example, when a situation
that warrants a higher standard is
discovered, the Board will exercise its
authority to tailor a higher standard for
the risks presented. In addition,
alternatively, if review of the PFMI
demonstrates that a higher standard is
more appropriate for general
application, the Board will consider a
revision to the regulation.
B. Advance Notice of Material Changes

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1. Materiality Threshold
Section 806(e) of the Act requires a
designated FMU to provide 60 days’
advance notice to its Supervisory
Agency of any proposed change to its
rules, procedures, or operations ‘‘that
could, as defined in rules of each
Supervisory Agency, materially affect
the nature or level of risks presented’’
by the designated FMU. Proposed
§ 234.5(c)(1) states that the term
‘‘materially affect the nature or level of
risks presented’’ means matters as to
which there is a ‘‘reasonable possibility
that the change could materially affect
the performance of clearing, settlement,
or payment functions or the overall
nature or level of risk presented by the
designated financial market utility.’’
Proposed § 234.5(c)(2) provides a nonexclusive list of changes that would
materially affect the nature or level of
risks presented, including changes that
affect participant eligibility or access
criteria; product eligibility; risk
management; settlement failure or
default procedures; financial resources;
business continuity and disaster
recovery plans; daily or intraday
settlement procedures; scope of
services; non-routine changes to the
underlying technological framework for
PCS functions; or governance. Proposed
§ 234.5(c)(3) provides a non-exclusive
list of changes that would not materially
affect the nature or level of risks
presented, including a change that does
not modify the contractual rights or
obligations of the designated FMU or its
participants; a change that does not
adversely affect the safeguarding of
securities, collateral, or funds for which
the designated FMU is responsible; a
routine technology upgrade; a routine
administrative change; or a nonsubstantive change to rules, procedures,
or other documentation.
20 One example of this approach is the financial
resource coverage standard in § 234.4(a)(15) and
(18) (cover one versus cover two).

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The Board requested comments on all
aspects of its proposed materiality rule,
particularly on the appropriateness of
the definition of ‘‘materially affect the
nature or level of risks presented’’ and
the utility of the non-exclusive lists for
material and non-material changes.
Commenters generally stated that the
materiality standard would benefit from
one or more of the following three
adjustments: (1) A narrower scope of the
definition itself, (2) a shorter list of
inclusions, or (3) a more expansive list
of exclusions.
‘‘Reasonable possibility.’’ Several
commenters stated that the definition of
‘‘materially affect the nature or level of
risks presented’’ is overly vague and
were concerned that the Board would be
flooded with advance notices of nonmaterial changes as a result. Three
commenters generally stated that the
definition of materiality is too vague
and suggest a more narrowly drawn
definition to provide for expeditious
review. One commenter suggested
revising the proposed materiality
standard, which requires notice of
proposed changes that have ‘‘a
reasonable possibility’’ of material
effect, to require notice only for those
changes that are ‘‘reasonably likely’’ to
have a material effect. The commenter
stated that, with the proposed
definition, designated FMUs were
highly likely to err in favor of
significantly ‘‘over-disclosing’’ changes
to their rules, procedures, and
operations, which would be overly
burdensome to both the Board and the
industry.
The Board believes the proposed
definition sets an appropriate minimum
threshold for advance notices at this
time. Proposed § 234.5(c) asks the
designated FMU to consider whether it
is reasonably possible that a change
could have a material effect on the
performance of its PCS functions or its
overall risk profile. The Board
recognizes that ‘‘possible’’ is a lower
threshold than ‘‘likely.’’ Section
806(e)(1) of the Act uses the phrase
‘‘could * * * materially affect’’ the PCS
functions or its overall risk profile of the
designated FMU. This word choice
indicates possibility, rather than
likelihood.21 If Congress had intended
that advance notices be submitted only
for changes that were likely to have a
material effect, it could easily have
framed it in that way. In addition, when
21 ‘‘Could’’ is commonly defined as the past tense
of ‘‘can,’’ and is used to indicate ‘‘possibility.’’
‘‘Likely’’ is defined as ‘‘possessing or displaying the
qualities or characteristics that make something
probable.’’ American Heritage Dictionary of the
English Language (Fourth Edition), http://
ahdictionary.com/.

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the Board seeks to fulfill its statutory
responsibility, the lower threshold is
appropriate to ensure that it is able to
review a broad sampling of the types of
material changes that the designated
FMU normally makes in its operations.
As the designated FMU submits
advance notices, the Board will be able
to provide feedback and filter out the
specific types of rule changes normally
considered by that particular designated
FMU that do not warrant advance
notices. Within this framework, the
Board anticipates that it will be able to
more precisely balance the regulatory
burden of the advance notice
requirement with its need to receive
advance notice of material changes for
the supervision of a particular
designated FMU contemplated by Title
VIII of the Act.
Further, the suggested revision would
require the designated FMU to
determine which changes were likely to
materially affect the performance of its
PCS functions or its overall risk profile.
Making this judgment without any input
from the Board would increase the risk
that the designated FMU would not
submit an advance notice to the Board
that the Board would determine could
have a material effect. This not only
could subject the designated FMU to
supervisory criticism and possible
modification or rescission of the change,
but also could prevent the Board from
obtaining valuable insight into the
operations of the designated FMU as
contemplated by the statute.
Although a lower materiality
threshold initially may result in a higher
number of advance notice filings, the
Board does not believe that this is a
reason to change the definition. The
Board will provide guidance, through
ongoing dialogue during the supervisory
process, to assist a designated FMU in
determining whether a proposed change
requires advanced notice. For the
reasons set out above, the Board is
retaining the ‘‘reasonable possibility’’
language in the definition of ‘‘materially
affect the nature or level of risks
presented’’ in § 234.5(c)(1) of the final
rule.
‘‘Performance of clearing, settlement,
or payment functions.’’ One commenter
suggested deleting from the materiality
definition the phrase ‘‘performance of
clearing, settlement, or payment
functions.’’ The commenter stated that
the proposed definition of materiality
overreaches the statutory purpose of
ensuring sound risk management by
requiring advance notice of changes that
affect the performance of PCS functions
in addition to the overall nature or level
or risks presented. The commenter
stated that changes implemented by the

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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 149 / Thursday, August 2, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
designated FMU that relate to the broad
category of ‘‘performance,’’ as opposed
to risk, are more appropriately vetted in
the competitive marketplace.
In referring to the performance of PCS
functions, the Board intended to
provide additional guidance to the
scope of the advance notice requirement
by including an express focus on the
PCS functions of a designated FMU. The
Board believes that the language in
proposed § 234.5(c)(1) appropriately
implements the statutory authority
provided by the Act. To address the
commenters’ concerns and provide
clarity regarding the scope of the
advance notice requirement in
§ 234.5(c)(1), the Board is adopting a
revision to the proposed regulatory text
to state that the term ‘‘materially affect
the nature or level of risks presented’’
means matters as to which there is a
reasonable possibility that the change
could ‘‘materially affect the overall
nature or level of risk presented by the
designated financial market utility,
including risk arising in the
performance of payment, clearing, or
settlement functions.’’ 22 This revision
ensures that the definition follows the
statutory authority, while also providing
an indication that the Board expects
designated FMUs to pay particular
attention to providing advance notice of
proposed changes to its rules,
procedures, or operations regarding the
performance of its PCS functions that
could materially affect the nature or
level of risks presented by the
designated FMU. The additional
guidance, however, does not limit the
scope of ‘‘materially affect the nature or
level of risks presented’’ to only those
risks arising in the performance of PCS
functions. A proposed change to any of
the designated FMU’s rules, procedures,
or operations that could materially
affect the nature or level of risks
presented by the designated FMU
should be the subject of an advance
notice, regardless of whether it is
regarding the performance of PCS
functions.
Non-exclusive lists. Four commenters
stated that the non-exclusive list of
material changes in proposed
§ 234.5(c)(2) was too broad or the nonexclusive list of non-material changes in
proposed § 234.5(c)(3) was too narrow.
The commenters acknowledged the
value of providing guidance regarding
changes that were material or not
material, but generally stated that the
22 The risks presented by the designated FMU’s
performance of its PCS functions can go beyond the
effect on the designated FMU itself and reach its
participants or the market more broadly.

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proposed lists did not appropriately
draw this dividing line.
One commenter stated that most items
included on the material list in
proposed § 234.5(c)(2) are described in a
manner that would require a designated
FMU to provide the Board notice of
changes that would not necessarily
affect the nature or level of risk in any
manner. In particular, the commenter
noted that ‘‘financial resources’’ is
included in the list in proposed
§ 234.5(c)(2)(v), but is not modified by
any quantitative or qualitative measure,
so a designated FMU would be required
to submit advance notice of any change
in its financial resources, even changes
that are not material, such as any
changes that in any way affect capital,
access to credit, or liquidity. Two
commenters cited the ‘‘scope of
services’’ item in proposed
§ 234.5(c)(2)(viii) as another example of
an overly broad requirement that is
unrelated to risk. For similar reasons,
two commenters suggested deleting the
‘‘governance’’ item in proposed
§ 234.5(c)(2)(x). One commenter also
suggested deleting the ‘‘participant
eligibility or access’’ item in proposed
§ 234.5(c)(2)(i).
The Board believes that material
changes in the areas listed in proposed
§ 234.5(c)(2) could affect a designated
FMU’s core functions and, as a result,
might affect its ability to manage its
risks appropriately and to continue to
conduct systemically important PCS
services. This may, in turn, affect the
designated FMU’s ability to comply
with the risk-management standards set
out in §§ 234.3 and 234.4 to which they
will be held. The list of material
changes provided in proposed
§ 234.5(c)(2) was intended to track those
risk-management standards, and the
reasons for including these items in the
list of material changes requiring an
advance notice are similar in most
cases. For example, the importance of
understanding material changes in the
financial resources of a designated FMU
acting as a payment system would be
critical to assessing the ability of the
designated FMU to continue to provide
systemically important PCS services in
the event of a default, as well as its
compliance with several of the proposed
risk-management standards, such as the
capability to ensure timely completion
of daily settlements as set out in
proposed § 234.3(a)(5).
To address the commenters’ concerns
that de minimis changes to the areas
listed in § 234.5(c)(2) would require an
advance notice, the Board is adopting
revised language in the final rule to
clarify that the changes that ‘‘materially
affect’’ the areas listed would be

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considered changes that materially
affect the nature or level of risks
presented by the designated FMU.
Also, as explained above regarding
the risk-management standard for
governance in proposed § 234.3(a)(10),
the Board believes that effective,
accountable, and transparent
governance arrangements are critical to
effective risk management of a
designated FMU. As a result, changes
that materially affect a designated
FMU’s governance arrangements should
be submitted pursuant to the advance
notice process.
Similarly, the Board believes that
access criteria can help ensure that a
designated FMU admits financial
institutions that will be able to meet
their obligations and not expose the
FMU or its other participants to risk,
including through risk measures such as
capital ratios, risk ratings, or other
indicators. For this reason, the Board
will have an interest in receiving
advance notice of any material changes
to a designated FMU’s participant
eligibility or access criteria. Finally,
understanding the scope of services
offered by an FMU that is designated on
the basis of its role as operator of a
payment system is fundamental to being
able to have a clear understanding of the
payment system’s risk profile. A
designated FMU’s services could affect
the financial risks participants face
through their participation in the
system, as well as the level of risk that
the designated FMU is incurring by
providing the services.
Commenters also suggested revising
the list of non-material changes in
proposed § 234.5(c)(3).23 One
commenter stated that certain examples
on the non-material list are so narrowly
drawn as to be unhelpful in marking a
reasonable line between circumstances
that may compel advance notice and
those that may not. As an example, the
commenter cited the example of ‘‘a
change that does not modify the
contractual rights or obligations of the
designated financial market utility or
persons using its payment, clearing, or
settlement services’’ set out in proposed
§ 234.5(c)(3)(i) and noted these types of
changes, in essence, would be the types
of clerical, non-substantive changes
separately identified in proposed
§ 234.5(c)(3)(v). Another commenter
23 One commenter suggested that the final rule
include in the non-material list of proposed
§ 234.5(c)(3) a greater range of operating rule
changes for designated FMUs participating in the
retail payment systems. As explained above,
however, the Council has indicated that it expects
to focus at this time on FMUs that operate largevalue systems and not on FMUs that operate lowvalue systems, such as check or ACH. 76 FR 44763,
44769 (July 2011).

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supported a broad application of the
example set forth in § 234.5(c)(3)(ii) (‘‘a
change to an existing procedure,
control, or service that does not
adversely affect the safeguarding of
securities, collateral, or funds in the
custody or control of the designated
financial market utility or for which it
is responsible’’).
After taking into consideration the
comments noted above and reexamining
the list of non-material changes, the
Board is eliminating the examples in
proposed §§ 234.5(c)(3)(i) and (ii). With
respect to proposed § 234.5(c)(3)(i), the
Board recognizes the commenter’s
concern; however, the Board believes it
is more prudent to capture a wider
range of proposed changes at this time
and therefore is reluctant to expand the
example’s breadth. In addition, the
Board is concerned that a broad
application of the non-material change
set forth in proposed § 234.5(c)(3)(ii)
might inadvertently create an overlap
with the advance notice requirement for
material change set forth in
§ 234.5(c)(2)(iii) because both changes
fall broadly within the area of risk
management. In order to avoid this
overlap, and any resulting confusion,
the Board is removing the example in
proposed § 234.5(c)(3)(ii).
The list provided by the Board in
§ 234.5(c)(3) is not meant to be
exhaustive. The Board believes that it is
difficult to draw a bright line that could
be uniformly applicable to all
designated FMUs between changes that
would require advance notice and those
that would not because of the range of
different designs and functions. The
Board believes, at this time, that routine
changes like those listed in the
remaining examples of § 234.5(c)(3)
would be considered clearly nonmaterial for the purposes of triggering
the 60-day advance notice requirement.
In addition, the Board believes that
changes to fees, prices, or other charges
for services provided by the designated
FMU constitute business decisions that
would not require advance notice. To
that end, the Board is adopting an
explicit exclusion for fees, prices, or
other charges in § 234.5(c)(3)(ii). As
mentioned above, as the supervisory
process develops with a particular
designated FMU, the Board anticipates
that it will reach an understanding with
the FMU about what constitutes a nonmaterial rule change for that FMU that
would not require advance notice.
2. Expedited Review
Proposed § 234.5(a) includes
procedural requirements regarding
advance notices of material changes,
such as the required content of the

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notices and the procedures and timing
for the methods for approving such
changes. These provisions essentially
reiterate similar provisions in section
806(e) of the Dodd-Frank Act. Some
commenters were concerned that the
open-ended time frame for the Board to
request additional information on a
material change would unnecessarily
delay action on certain changes to rules,
procedures, or operations that are time
sensitive, but do not materially affect
the level of risks posed by the
designated FMU. As a means of
expediting the processing of advance
notice submissions, commenters made
several suggestions to limit the time of
the Board’s review, such as (a)
establishing a 10-day preliminary
determination window in which the
Board determines whether a proposed
change requires advance notice or a full
60-day review and (b) limiting the
Board’s authority to request additional
information to assess the effects of the
proposed change to within the first 30
days of the review period. The
commenters were generally concerned
that the Board would engage in an
indefinite and extended review of
advance notices that would hinder a
designated FMU’s ability to manage its
business.
As a general matter, the Board
recognizes the importance of reducing
regulatory burden and being diligent in
reviewing proposed material changes in
a timely manner. Section 806(e)(1)(I) of
the Act permits a designated FMU to
implement a change in less than 60 days
from the filing of the advance notice if
its Supervisory Agency notifies the
designated FMU that it does not object
to the proposed change and authorizes
the designated FMU to implement the
change at an earlier date. The Board
incorporated this statutory provision in
proposed § 234.5(a)(8) and is retaining
this provision in the final rule. This
provision provides a mechanism for the
Board to complete its review and inform
the designated FMU that it may proceed
before the expiration of the 60-day
advance notice period. The Board
expects to use this procedure as
appropriate. The Board, however,
recognizes that it must balance the need
for expediency with the need to conduct
a thorough review of any necessary
supporting documentation or
information related to a proposed
change, in order to make an informed
decision consistent with its statutory
responsibilities. Therefore, the
timeliness of the Board’s review may
depend, in part, on the completeness of
the information provided by and level of
engagement with the designated FMU

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prior to and following the submission of
the advance notice.
3. Advance Notice by Rule-Setting
Bodies
Two commenters responsible for
developing and setting rules for retail
payment systems suggested that the
Board’s advance notice procedure
permit the submission of a proposed
rule change by the rule-writing body
and that such submission satisfy the
advance notice requirement for any
designated payment system operating
subject to the rules. As an initial matter,
the Board will be mindful of the need
for efficiency and minimizing regulatory
burden, while also ensuring that the
Board receives the necessary
information on a timely basis in order
to fulfill its responsibilities under the
Act. The Board notes, however, that
although such rule-writing
arrangements exist for several retail
payment networks, as noted above, such
systems are not expected to be
designated by the Council as
systemically important at this time. If
the Council designates any payment
systems subject to such rule-writing
arrangements and the Board is the
Supervisory Agency for that system, the
Board would review, at that time, the
appropriate means for such systems to
submit advance notices.
4. Emergency Changes
One commenter requested that the
Board take care in allowing designated
FMUs to make immediate emergency
changes to their governing rules under
proposed § 234.5(b), particularly with
respect to customer collateral and
margin requirements. The commenter
stated that situations that justify
alteration of loss mutualization
standards from international standards
are rare and should be carefully
scrutinized. The commenter also
requested that the Board incorporate
CPSS–IOSCO principles with regard to
customer collateral and margin
requirements so as to ensure that
designated FMUs will apply loss
mutualization standards that comport
with international standards.
Section 806(e)(2) of the Act
contemplates the possibility that
designated FMUs may need to
implement material changes to their
rules, procedures, or operations in
emergency situations and includes a
mechanism allowing for the ex-post
notification of the Supervisory Agency
regarding such emergency material
changes. This mechanism was
incorporated into proposed § 234.5(b).
In order to take advantage of the
emergency change process, a designated

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FMU is required to explain to the Board
within 24 hours of the implementation
of the change, among other things, the
nature of the emergency and the reason
the changes was necessary for the
designated FMU to continue to provide
its services in a safe and sound manner.
Pursuant to Title VIII and the proposed
rule, the Board may require
modification or rescission of the change
if it finds that the change is not
consistent with the purposes of the Act
or rules or standards prescribed
thereunder. The Board expects that
emergency changes, including any
changes to customer collateral and
margin requirements, will occur rarely
and will be carefully scrutinized.
5. Advance Notice and Competitive
Issues
Two commenters raised concerns
regarding the advance notice procedure
for designated FMUs that offer services
that compete with services offered by
the Federal Reserve Banks (‘‘Reserve
Banks’’). One commenter involved in
check imaging stated that if Reserve
Banks engaged in check image services
were not subject to the advance notice
procedure under proposed § 234.5(a)
and private-sector check-imageexchange rules were subject to the
advance notice procedure, the Reserve
Banks would enjoy a significant
competitive advantage over the privatesector competitors. This commenter
believed that the Reserve Banks would
be able to change their check-image
rules without being subject to the same
delay and uncertainty as the competing
designated FMU under the advance
notice procedure. The commenter
suggested that the Board include within
the final rule provisions that seek to
mitigate the potential for a negative
impact on competition that may arise
from the advance notice procedure for
designated FMUs. Another commenter
stated that it was beyond the scope of
systemic risk regulation for the Board to
‘‘force a delay in implementing
business-related changes; particularly in
a competitive market in which the
Reserve Banks offer the competing
alternative.’’
The Board is cognizant of the
competition between the Reserve Banks
and private-sector service providers in
certain financial services, including
check and funds transfer services, and
has long-standing policies to address
such competitive issues. Under the
Federal Reserve Act, the Board has
general supervisory authority over the
Reserve Banks, including the Reserve
Banks’ provision of payment and
settlement services (‘‘Reserve Bank
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extensive in scope than the authority
provided under Title VIII over
designated FMUs.24 In practice, Board
oversight of the Reserve Banks in many
ways goes beyond the typical
supervisory framework for privatesector entities, including the framework
provided by Title VIII. For example, the
Board applies robust risk-management
standards to the relevant Reserve Bank
financial services; conducts regular
examinations; and reviews key strategic
initiatives, prices and service terms,
proposed material changes, and ongoing
operations.
The Board conducts regular
examinations of the Reserve Bank
financial services covering, among other
things, operational safety and soundness
and management effectiveness. It also
regularly monitors the services’
operations and initiatives through
reports, discussions with Reserve Bank
management, and its oversight liaison
roles on various Reserve Bank
management groups. The Board is also
involved in reviewing or approving
proposed changes to the Reserve Banks’
rules, procedures, and operations,
including those involving Reserve Bank
financial services, from their inception.
The Board’s oversight of these proposed
changes is significantly broader and
more detailed than the Title VIII
advance notice procedures. For
example, the Board reviews all changes
to the Reserve Banks’ operating
circulars, approves the Reserve Banks’
budgets, including budgets related to
the Reserve Bank financial services, and
approves major strategic initiatives, and
the associated expenditures.
Moreover, the Board recognizes the
critical role Reserve Bank financial
services, particularly the Fedwire Funds
and Fedwire Securities services, play in
the financial system and is committed to
strong and effective supervision of these
services that is comparable to, or
exceeds, the requirements placed on
similar private-sector entities. For
example, the Board expects the Fedwire
services to meet or exceed the Board’s
PSR policy standards, which are
consistent with the Regulation HH
standards applied to designated FMUs.
In addition, the Board will hold the
Reserve Banks to advance notice
requirements with respect to proposed
material changes to Fedwire rules,
procedures, and operations that are the
same as, or higher than, the
requirements for designated FMUs that
are supervised by the Board.25
24 12

U.S.C. 221 et seq.
the Board’s policy on ‘‘Oversight of Key
Financial Infrastructures’’ related to Reserve Bank
25 See

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Moreover, if the Council designates an
FMU on the basis of its role as operator
of a payment system that competes with
another Reserve Bank service, the Board
will ensure that the competing Reserve
Bank service is held to the same or
higher requirements as those set forth in
Regulation HH.
In addition, in order to address any
competitive inequalities between
Reserve Bank priced services and
similar services provided by private
sector entities, the Monetary Control Act
of 1980 (the ‘‘MCA’’) requires Reserve
Bank priced services to be priced
explicitly and that fees be established
on basis of all direct and indirect costs
actually incurred, including taxes that
would have been paid and a return on
capital that would have been provided
had the services been furnished by a
private business firm.26 As required by
the MCA, the Board also has established
a set of pricing principles that governs
the schedule of fees for the Reserve
Bank priced services, which must give
due regard to competitive factors.27
Board policy also requires that Federal
Reserve actions are implemented in a
manner that ensures fairness to other
providers of payment services.28 In light
of these policies, the Board believes that
changes to Reserve Bank priced services
rules or operating circulars are subject
to no less scrutiny, and in many cases
more scrutiny, than the review
contemplated by Title VIII’s advance
notice procedure.
III. Administrative Law Matters
A. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.) (‘‘RFA’’) generally
requires an agency to perform an initial
and a final regulatory flexibility analysis
on the impact a rule is expected to have
on small entities. However, under
section 605(b) of the RFA, the regulatory
flexibility analysis otherwise required
under section 604 of the RFA is not
required if an agency certifies, along
with a statement providing the factual
basis for such certification, that the rule
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. Based on current information,
the Board believes that the payment
systems that would likely be designated
by the Council would not be ‘‘small
entities’’ for purposes of the RFA, and
Systems at http://www.federalreserve.gov/
paymentsystems/over_rbsystems.htm.
26 12 U.S.C. 248a. These costs are included in the
private-sector adjustment factor for pricing Reserve
Bank priced services.
27 12 U.S.C. 248a(c)(3).
28 The Board policy can be found at: http://
www.federalreserve.gov/paymentsystems/
pfs_standards.htm.

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so, the final rule likely would not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
The authority to designate FMUs,
however, resides with the Council,
rather than the Board, and the Board
therefore cannot be assured of the
identity of the FMUs that the Council
may designate in the future.
Accordingly, the Board has prepared the
following final regulatory flexibility
analysis pursuant to section 604 of the
RFA.
1. Statement of the need for, and
objectives of, the final rule. In
accordance with Sections 805(a) and
806(e) of the Dodd-Frank Act, the Board
is adopting the final rule as Regulation
HH, new Part 234 of Title 12 of the Code
of Federal Regulations. The final rule
establishes risk-management standards
for systemically important FMUs and
standards for determining when
advance notice is required to be
provided by a designated FMU that
proposes to change to its rules,
procedures, or operations that could
materially affect the nature or level of
risks presented by the designated
financial market utility. The reasons and
justification for the final rule are
described above in the Supplementary
Information.
2. Summary of the significant issues
raised by public comment on Board’s
initial analysis, the Board’s assessment
of such issues, and a statement of any
changes made as a result of such
comments. The Board did not receive
any public comments regarding its
initial regulatory flexibility analysis.
3. Small entities affected by the final
rule. The final rule would affect FMUs
that the Council designates as
systemically important to the U.S.
financial system for which the Board is
the Supervisory Agency. The Board
estimates that fewer than five largevalue payment systems would meet
these conditions and be affected by this
rule. Pursuant to regulations issued by
the Small Business Administration (the
‘‘SBA’’) (13 CFR 121.201), a ‘‘small
entity’’ includes an establishment
engaged in providing financial
transaction processing, reserve and
liquidity services, or clearinghouse
services with an average revenue of $7
million or less (NAICS code 522320). As
noted in the NPRM, the Board does not
currently believe that any of the
payment systems that would likely be
designated by the Council would be
‘‘small entities’’ pursuant to the SBA
regulation. In addition, the Board does
not believe at this time that, pursuant to
section 803(8) of the Dodd-Frank Act, it
would be the Supervisory Agency for
any FMU that operates as a central

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securities depository or central
counterparty and that would likely be
designated by the Council.
4. Recordkeeping, reporting, and
compliance requirements. The final rule
imposes certain reporting and
recordkeeping requirements for a
designated FMU. (See, for example,
§ 234.3(a)(3) (requiring clearly defined
procedures for the management of credit
risks and liquidity risks); § 234.5(a)(1)
and (2) (requiring advance notice of
changes that could materially affect the
nature or level of risks presented by the
designated FMU), and § 234.5(b)(2) and
(3) (requiring notice of an emergency
change implemented by a designated
FMU).) The final rule also contains a
number of compliance requirements,
including the standards that the
designated FMU must meet, such as
having a well-founded legal basis under
all relevant jurisdictions and having
rules and procedures that enable
participants to understand clearly the
FMU’s impact on each of the financial
risks they incur by participation in it.
Payment systems under the Board’s
jurisdiction (including certain payment
systems the Board believes could be
designated as systemically important)
are generally already expected to meet
these standards, or are at least familiar
with these standards, so the rule would
not likely impose material additional
costs on those payment systems.
5. Significant alternatives to the
revisions. Section 805(a) of the Act
requires the Board to prescribe riskmanagement standards governing the
operations related to PCS activities of
designated FMUs, so other
administrative methods for
accomplishing the goals of the Act were
not considered. One alternative to
adopting risk-management standards
based on the relevant international
standards was to develop a different set
of risk-management standards
specifically for purposes of section
805(a) of the Act. As explained in the
NPRM and above, the Board proposed to
adopt the Core Principles and CPSS–
IOSCO Recommendations as the basis
for establishing initial risk-management
standards required by section 805(a) of
the Act, in part, because this approach
presented advantageous cost efficiencies
for the regulators and the FMUs.
Furthermore, the new standards set
forth in the PFMI were still under
development at the time of the NPRM
and not available for consideration as an
alternative. As explained above, the
Core Principles and CPSS–IOSCO
Recommendations were formulated by
central banks and securities regulators
with considerable discussion and
industry consultation. In particular, the

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Federal Reserve collaborated with
participating financial system
authorities and consulted with FMUs
and their participants in developing the
standards. In addition, the SEC and
CFTC participated in the development
of the CPSS–IOSCO Recommendations.
The Board incorporated these standards
in its PSR policy in 2004 and 2007 and
has been guided by the policy, in
conjunction with relevant laws and
other Federal Reserve policies, when
exercising its authority with respect to
supervising large-value payment and
securities settlement systems.29
Payment systems that would likely be
designated by the Council, therefore,
would likely be familiar with the Core
Principles and could implement them
promptly with relatively less burden
than if the Board developed a different
set of standards to implement section
805(a) of the Act.
B. Competitive Impact Analysis
As a matter of policy, the Board
subjects all operational and legal
changes that could have a substantial
effect on payment system participants to
a competitive impact analysis, even if
competitive effects are not apparent on
the face of the proposal.30 Pursuant to
this policy, the Board assesses whether
proposed changes ‘‘would have a direct
and material adverse effect on the
ability of other service providers to
compete effectively with the Federal
Reserve in providing similar services’’
and whether any such adverse effect
‘‘was due to legal differences or due to
a dominant market position deriving
from such legal differences.’’ If, as a
result of this analysis, the Board
identifies an adverse effect on the ability
to compete, the Board then assesses
whether the associated benefits—such
as improvements to payment system
efficiency or integrity—can be achieved
while minimizing the adverse effect on
competition.
This final rule promulgates riskmanagement standards and advance
notice requirements for designated
FMUs, as required by Title VIII of the
Act. Some FMUs may be designated on
the basis of their role as operators of
payment systems that compete with
similar services provided by the Reserve
Banks, and designation subjects the
FMU to an enhanced supervisory
framework. Commenters have raised
concerns regarding the Reserve Banks
obtaining a competitive advantage over
private-sector competitors through the
29 See

footnote 19.
‘‘The Federal Reserve in the Payments
System,’’ Fed. Res. Reg. Svc. § 9–1550, 9–1558 (Apr.
2009).
30 See

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Board imposing a less-stringent
supervisory framework on the Reserve
Banks priced services than would be
imposed on a competing designated
FMU. As noted above, Board oversight
of the Reserve Banks goes well beyond
the typical supervisory framework for
private-sector entities, including the
framework provided by Title VIII. The
Board applies risk-management
standards to the Reserve Banks’ Fedwire
and other financial services that are at
least as stringent as those applied to
designated FMUs pursuant to Title VIII.
Further, the Board will hold Reserve
Banks to procedural requirements that
are the same as, or higher than, the
requirements for designated FMUs
supervised by the Board, with respect to
advance notice of material changes to
the rules, procedures, or operations of
Reserve Bank priced services that
compete with designated FMUs.
Therefore, the Board does not believe
the final rule promulgating riskmanagement standards or advance
notice requirements for designated
FMUs under Title VIII will have any
direct and material adverse effect on the
ability of other service providers to
compete with the Reserve Banks.
C. Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis
In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3506;
5 CFR part 1320, Appendix A.1), the
Board reviewed the final rule under the
authority delegated to the Board by the
Office of Management and Budget. As
noted in the proposal, for purposes of
calculating burden under the Paperwork
Reduction Act, a ‘‘collection of
information’’ involves 10 or more
respondents. Any collection of
information addressed to all or a
substantial majority of an industry is
presumed to involve 10 or more
respondents (5 CFR 1320.3(c),
1320.3(c)(4)(ii)). The Board estimates
there are fewer than 10 respondents,
and these respondents do not represent
all or a substantial majority of the
participants in payment, clearing, and
settlement systems. Therefore, no
collections of information pursuant to
the Paperwork Reduction Act are
contained in the final rule. The Board
did not receive any comments on this
analysis.
The Board has a continuing interest in
the public’s opinion of the collection of
information. Comments on the
collection of information should be sent
to Cynthia Ayouch, Acting Federal
Reserve Board Clearance Officer,
Division of Research and Statistics, Mail
Stop 95–A, Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, Washington,
DC 20551, with copies of such

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comments sent to the Office of
Management and Budget, Paperwork
Reduction Project (7100–0199),
Washington, DC 20503.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 234
Banks, Banking, Credit, Electronic
funds transfers, Financial market
utilities, Securities.
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Board amends 12 CFR,
Chapter II by adding part 234, as set
forth below.
PART 234—DESIGNATED FINANCIAL
MARKET UTILITIES (REGULATION HH)
Sec.
234.1 Authority, purpose, and scope.
234.2 Definitions.
234.3 Standards for payment systems.
234.4 Standards for central securities
depositories and central counterparties.
234.5 Changes to rules, procedures, or
operations.
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 5461 et seq.
§ 234.1

Authority, purpose, and scope.

(a) Authority. This part is issued
under the authority of sections 805, 806,
and 810 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act
(Dodd-Frank Act) (Pub. L. 111–203, 124
Stat. 1376; 12 U.S.C. 5464, 5465, and
5469).
(b) Purpose and scope. This part
establishes risk-management standards
governing the operations related to the
payment, clearing, and settlement
activities of designated financial market
utilities. The risk-management
standards do not apply, however, to a
designated financial market utility that
is a derivatives clearing organization
registered under section 5b of the
Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 7a–
1) or a clearing agency registered with
the Securities and Exchange
Commission under section 17A of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15
U.S.C. 78q–1), which are governed by
the risk-management standards
promulgated by the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission or the Securities
and Exchange Commission,
respectively, for which each is the
Supervisory Agency (as defined below).
In addition, this part sets out
requirements and procedures for a
designated financial market utility that
proposes to make a change to its rules,
procedures, or operations that could
materially affect the nature or level of
risks presented by the designated
financial market utility and for which
the Board is the Supervisory Agency.

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§ 234.2

45919

Definitions.

As used in this part:
(a) Central counterparty means an
entity that interposes itself between the
counterparties to trades, acting as the
buyer to every seller and the seller to
every buyer.
(b) Central securities depository
means an entity that holds securities in
custody to enable securities transactions
to be processed by means of book
entries or an entity that enables
securities to be transferred and settled
by book entry either free of or against
payment.
(c) Designated financial market utility
means a financial market utility (as
defined in paragraph (d) of this section)
that the Financial Stability Oversight
Council has designated under section
804 of the Dodd-Frank Act (12 U.S.C.
5463).
(d) Financial market utility has the
same meaning as the term defined in
section 803(6) of the Dodd-Frank Act
(12 U.S.C. 5462(6)).
(e) Payment system means a set of
payment instructions, procedures, and
rules for the transfer of funds among
system participants.
(f) Supervisory Agency has the same
meaning as the term is defined in
section 803(8) of the Dodd-Frank Act
(12 U.S.C. 5462(8)).
§ 234.3

Standards for payment systems.

(a) A designated financial market
utility that is designated on the basis of
its role as the operator of a payment
system must implement rules,
procedures, or operations designed to
ensure that it meets or exceeds the
following risk-management standards
with respect to the payment, clearing,
and settlement activities of that
payment system:
(1) The payment system has a wellfounded legal basis under all relevant
jurisdictions.
(2) The payment system’s rules and
procedures enable participants to have a
clear understanding of the payment
system’s impact on each of the financial
risks they incur through participation in
it.
(3) The payment system has clearly
defined procedures for the management
of credit risks and liquidity risks, which
specify the respective responsibilities of
the payment system operator and the
participants and which provide
appropriate incentives to manage and
contain those risks.
(4) The payment system provides
prompt final settlement on the day of
value, during the day and at a minimum
at the end of the day.
(5) A payment system in which
multilateral netting takes place is, at a

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minimum, capable of ensuring the
timely completion of daily settlements
in the event of an inability to settle by
the participant with the largest single
settlement obligation.
(6) Assets used for settlement are a
claim on the central bank or other assets
that carry little or no credit risk and
little or no liquidity risk.
(7) The payment system ensures a
high degree of security and operational
reliability and has contingency
arrangements for timely completion of
daily processing.
(8) The payment system provides a
means of making payments that is
practical for its users and efficient for
the economy.
(9) The payment system has objective
and publicly disclosed criteria for
participation, which permit fair and
open access.
(10) The payment system’s
governance arrangements are effective,
accountable, and transparent.
(b) The Board, by order, may apply
heightened risk-management standards
to a particular designated financial
market utility in accordance with the
risks presented by that designated
financial market utility. The Board, by
order, may waive the application of a
standard or standards to a particular
designated financial market utility
where the risks presented by or the
design of that designated financial
market utility would make the
application of the standard or standards
inappropriate.

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§ 234.4 Standards for central securities
depositories and central counterparties.

(a) A designated financial market
utility that is designated on the basis of
its role as a central securities depository
or a central counterparty must
implement rules, procedures, or
operations designed to ensure that it
meets or exceeds the following riskmanagement standards with respect to
the payment, clearing, and settlement
activities of that central securities
depository or central counterparty:
(1) The central securities depository
or central counterparty has a wellfounded, transparent, and enforceable
legal framework for each aspect of its
activities in all relevant jurisdictions.
(2) The central securities depository
or central counterparty requires
participants to have sufficient financial
resources and robust operational
capacity to meet obligations arising from
participation in the central securities
depository or central counterparty. The
central securities depository or central
counterparty has procedures in place to
monitor that participation requirements
are met on an ongoing basis. The central

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securities depository’s or central
counterparty’s participation
requirements are objective and publicly
disclosed, and permit fair and open
access.
(3) The central securities depository
or central counterparty holds assets in a
manner whereby risk of loss or of delay
in its access to them is minimized.
Assets invested by a central securities
depository or central counterparty are
held in instruments with minimal
credit, market, and liquidity risks.
(4) The central securities depository
or central counterparty identifies
sources of operational risk and
minimizes them through the
development of appropriate systems,
controls, and procedures; has systems
that are reliable and secure, and has
adequate, scalable capacity; and has
business continuity plans that allow for
timely recovery of operations and
fulfillment of the central securities
depository’s or central counterparty’s
obligations.
(5) The central securities depository
or central counterparty employs money
settlement arrangements that eliminate
or strictly limit its settlement bank risks,
that is, its credit and liquidity risks from
the use of banks to effect money
settlements with its participants and
requires funds transfers to the central
securities depository or central
counterparty be final when effected.
(6) The central securities depository
or central counterparty is cost-effective
in meeting the requirements of
participants while maintaining safe and
secure operations.
(7) The central securities depository
or central counterparty evaluates the
potential sources of risks that can arise
when the central securities depository
or central counterparty establishes links
either cross-border or domestically to
settle transactions or clear trades, and
ensures that the risks are managed
prudently on an ongoing basis.
(8) The central securities depository
or central counterparty has governance
arrangements that are clear and
transparent to fulfill public interest
requirements and to support the
objectives of owners and participants
and promotes the effectiveness of a
central securities depository’s or central
counterparty’s risk-management
procedures.
(9) The central securities depository
or central counterparty provides market
participants with sufficient information
for them to identify and evaluate
accurately the risks and costs associated
with using its services.
(10) The central securities depository
or central counterparty establishes
default procedures that ensures that the

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central securities depository or central
counterparty can take timely action to
contain losses and liquidity pressures
and to continue meeting its obligations
and provides for key aspects of the
default procedures to be publicly
available.
(11) The central securities depository
or central counterparty ensures that
final settlement occurs no later than the
end of the settlement day and requires
that intraday or real-time finality be
provided where necessary to reduce
risks.
(12) The central securities depository
or central counterparty eliminates
principal risk by linking securities
transfers to funds transfers in a way that
achieves delivery versus payment.
(13) The central securities depository
or central counterparty states its
obligations with respect to physical
deliveries, and the risks from these
obligations are identified and managed.
(14) The central securities depository
immobilizes or dematerializes securities
certificates and transfers them by book
entry to the greatest extent possible.
(15) The central securities depository
institutes risk controls that include
collateral requirements and limits, and
ensure timely settlement in the event
that the participant with the largest
payment obligation is unable to settle
when the central securities depository
extends intraday credit.
(16) The central counterparty
measures its credit exposures to its
participants at least once a day and
limits its exposures to potential losses
from defaults by its participants in
normal market conditions so that the
operations of the central counterparty
would not be disrupted and nondefaulting participants would not be
exposed to losses that they cannot
anticipate or control.
(17) The central counterparty uses
margin requirements to limit its credit
exposures to participants in normal
market conditions and uses risk-based
models and parameters to set margin
requirements and reviews them
regularly. Specifically, the central
counterparty—
(i) Provides for annual model
validation consisting of evaluating the
performance of the central
counterparty’s margin models and the
related parameters and assumptions
associated with such models by a
qualified person who does not perform
functions associated with the central
counterparty’s margin models (except as
part of the annual model validation) and
does not report to such a person.
(ii) Reviews and backtests margin
models and parameters at least
quarterly.

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(18) The central counterparty
maintains sufficient financial resources
to withstand, at a minimum, a default
by the participant to which it has the
largest exposure in extreme but
plausible market conditions.
(b) The Board, by order, may apply
heightened risk-management standards
to a particular designated financial
market utility in accordance with the
risks presented by that designated
financial market utility. The Board, by
order, may waive the application of a
standard or standards to a particular
designated financial market utility
where the risks presented by or the
design of that designated financial
market utility would make the
application of the standard or standards
inappropriate.

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§ 234.5 Changes to rules, procedures, or
operations.

(a) Advance notice.
(1) A designated financial market
utility shall provide at least 60-days
advance notice to the Board of any
proposed change to its rules,
procedures, or operations that could
materially affect the nature or level of
risks presented by the designated
financial market utility.
(2) The notice of the proposed change
shall describe—
(i) The nature of the change and
expected effects on risks to the
designated financial market utility, its
participants, or the market; and
(ii) How the designated financial
market utility plans to manage any
identified risks.
(3) The Board may require the
designated financial market utility to
provide additional information
necessary to assess the effect the
proposed change would have on the
nature or level of risks associated with
the utility’s payment, clearing, or
settlement activities and the sufficiency
of any proposed risk-management
techniques.
(4) A designated financial market
utility shall not implement a change to
which the Board has an objection.
(5) The Board will notify the
designated financial market utility of
any objection before the end of 60 days
after the later of—
(i) The date the Board receives the
notice of proposed change; or
(ii) The date the Board receives any
further information it requests for
consideration of the notice.
(6) A designated financial market
utility may implement a change if it has
not received an objection to the
proposed change before the end of 60
days after the later of—
(i) The date the Board receives the
notice of proposed change; or

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(ii) The date the Board receives any
further information it requests for
consideration of the notice.
(7) With respect to proposed changes
that raise novel or complex issues, the
Board may, by written notice during the
60-day review period, extend the review
period for an additional 60 days. Any
extension under this paragraph will
extend the time periods under
paragraphs (a)(5) and (a)(6) of this
section to 120 days.
(8) A designated financial market
utility may implement a proposed
change before the expiration of the
applicable review period if the Board
notifies the designated financial market
utility in writing that the Board does not
object to the proposed change and
authorizes the designated financial
market utility to implement the change
on an earlier date, subject to any
conditions imposed by the Board.
(b) Emergency changes.
(1) A designated financial market
utility may implement a change that
would otherwise require advance notice
under this section if it determines that—
(i) An emergency exists; and
(ii) Immediate implementation of the
change is necessary for the designated
financial market utility to continue to
provide its services in a safe and sound
manner.
(2) The designated financial market
utility shall provide notice of any such
emergency change to the Board as soon
as practicable and no later than 24 hours
after implementation of the change.
(3) In addition to the information
required for changes requiring advance
notice in paragraph (a)(2) of this section,
the notice of an emergency change shall
describe—
(i) The nature of the emergency; and
(ii) The reason the change was
necessary for the designated financial
market utility to continue to provide its
services in a safe and sound manner.
(4) The Board may require
modification or rescission of the change
if it finds that the change is not
consistent with the purposes of the
Dodd-Frank Act or any applicable rules,
order, or standards prescribed under
section 805(a) of the Dodd-Frank Act.
(c) Materiality.
(1) The term ‘‘materially affect the
nature or level of risks presented’’ in
paragraph (a)(1) of this section means
matters as to which there is a reasonable
possibility that the change would
materially affect the overall nature or
level of risk presented by the designated
financial market utility, including risk
arising in the performance of payment,
clearing, or settlement functions.
(2) A change to rules, procedures, or
operations that would materially affect

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45921

the nature or level of risks presented
includes, but is not limited to, changes
that materially affect any one or more of
the following:
(i) Participant eligibility or access
criteria;
(ii) Product eligibility;
(iii) Risk management;
(iv) Settlement failure or default
procedures;
(v) Financial resources;
(vi) Business continuity and disaster
recovery plans;
(vii) Daily or intraday settlement
procedures;
(viii) The scope of services, including
the addition of a new service or
discontinuation of an existing service;
(ix) Technical design or operating
platform, which results in non-routine
changes to the underlying technological
framework for payment, clearing, or
settlement functions; or
(x) Governance.
(3) A change to rules, procedures, or
operations that does not meet the
conditions of paragraph (c)(2) of this
section and would not materially affect
the nature or level of risks presented
includes, but is not limited to the
following:
(i) A routine technology systems
upgrade;
(ii) A change in a fee, price, or other
charge for services provided by the
designated financial market utility;
(iii) A change related solely to the
administration of the designated
financial market utility or related to the
routine, daily administration, direction,
and control of employees; or
(iv) A clerical change and other nonsubstantive revisions to rules,
procedures, or other documentation.
By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, July 27, 2012.
Robert deV. Frierson,
Deputy Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 2012–18762 Filed 8–1–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P

DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 21
Alaskan Fuel Hauling as a Restricted
Category Special Purpose Flight
Operation
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), (DOT).
ACTION: Notice of policy.
AGENCY:

This notice of policy
announces Alaskan fuel hauling as a
restricted category special purpose

SUMMARY:

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