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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 198 / Friday, October 12, 2012 / Rules and Regulations

Subpart H [Reserved]
Subpart I [Reserved]
By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, October 5, 2012.
Robert deV. Frierson,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 2012–24987 Filed 10–11–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P

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

Annual Company-Run Stress Test
Requirements for Banking
Organizations With Total Consolidated
Assets Over $10 Billion Other Than
Covered Companies
Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System (Board).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:

The Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act
(Dodd-Frank Act or Act) requires the
Board to issue regulations that require
financial companies with total
consolidated assets of more than $10
billion and for which the Board is the
primary federal financial regulatory
agency to conduct stress tests on an
annual basis. The Board is adopting this
final rule to implement the companyrun stress test requirements in the
Dodd-Frank Act regarding company-run
stress tests for bank holding companies
with total consolidated assets greater
than $10 billion but less than $50
billion and state member banks and
savings and loan holding companies
with total consolidated assets greater
than $10 billion. This final rule does not
apply to any banking organization with
total consolidated assets of less than $10
billion. Furthermore, implementation of
the stress testing requirements for bank
holding companies, savings and loan
holding companies, and state member
banks with total consolidated assets of
greater than $10 billion but less than
$50 billion is delayed until September
2013.
DATES: This rule is effective November
15, 2012.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Tim
Clark, Senior Associate Director, (202)
452–5264, Lisa Ryu, Assistant Director,
(202) 263–4833, Constance Horsley,
Manager, (202) 452–5239, or David
Palmer, Senior Supervisory Financial
Analyst, (202) 452–2904, Division of
Banking Supervision and Regulation;

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SUMMARY:

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Laurie Schaffer, Associate General
Counsel, (202) 452–2272, Benjamin W.
McDonough, Senior Counsel, (202) 452–
2036 or Christine E. Graham, Senior
Attorney, (202) 452–3005, Legal
Division.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Table of Contents
I. Background
II. Overview of Comments
III. Description of Final Rule
A. Scope of Application
B. Effective Date
C. Annual Stress Test Requirements
IV. Administrative Law Matters
A. Use of Plain Language
B. Riegle Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act
C. Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis
D. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis

I. Background
The Board has long held the view that
a banking organization, such as a bank
holding company or insured depository
institution, should operate with capital
levels well above its minimum
regulatory capital ratios and
commensurate with its risk profile.1 A
banking organization should also have
internal processes for assessing its
capital adequacy that reflect a full
understanding of its risks and ensure
that it holds capital commensurate with
those risks.2 Moreover, a banking
organization that is subject to the
Board’s advanced approaches risk-based
capital requirements must satisfy
specific requirements relating to their
internal capital adequacy processes in
order to use the advanced approaches to
calculate its minimum risk-based capital
requirements.3 Stress testing is one tool
that helps both bank supervisors and a
banking organization measure the
sufficiency of capital available to
support the banking organization’s
operations throughout periods of stress.4
1 See 12 CFR part 225, Appendix A; see also
Supervision and Regulation Letter SR 99–18,
Assessing Capital Adequacy in Relation to Risk at
Large Banking Organizations and Others with
Complex Risk Profiles (July 1, 1999), available at
http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/srletters/
1999/SR9918.HTM (hereinafter SR 99–18).
2 See Supervision and Regulation Letter SR 09–
4, Applying Supervisory Guidance and Regulations
on the Payment of Dividends, Stock Redemptions,
and Stock Repurchases at Bank Holding Companies
(Mar. 27, 2009), available at http://
www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/srletters/2009/
SR0904.htm (hereinafter SR 09–4).
3 See 12 CFR part 225, Appendix G, section 22(a);
see also, Supervisory Guidance: Supervisory
Review Process of Capital Adequacy (Pillar 2)
Related to the Implementation of the Basel II
Advanced Capital Framework, 73 FR 44620 (July
31, 2008).
4 A full assessment of a company’s capital
adequacy must take into account a range of risk
factors, including those that are specific to a
particular industry or company.

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The Board and the other federal banking
agencies previously have highlighted
the use of stress testing as a means to
better understand the range of a banking
organization’s potential risk exposures.5
In particular, as part of its effort to
stabilize the U.S. financial system
during the recent financial crisis, the
Board, along with other federal financial
regulatory agencies and the Federal
Reserve system, conducted stress tests
of large, complex bank holding
companies through the Supervisory
Capital Assessment Program (SCAP).
The SCAP was a forward-looking
exercise designed to estimate revenue,
losses, and capital needs under an
adverse economic and financial market
scenario. By looking at the broad capital
needs of the financial system and the
specific needs of individual companies,
these stress tests provided valuable
information to market participants,
reduced uncertainty about the financial
condition of the participating bank
holding companies under a scenario
that was more adverse than that which
was anticipated to occur at the time, and
had an overall stabilizing effect.
Building on the SCAP and other
supervisory work coming out of the
crisis, the Board initiated the annual
Comprehensive Capital Analysis and
Review (CCAR) in late 2010 to assess
the capital adequacy and the internal
capital planning processes of large,
complex bank holding companies and to
incorporate stress testing as part of the
Board’s regular supervisory program for
5 See, e.g., Supervisory Guidance on Stress
Testing for Banking Organizations With More Than
$10 Billion in Total Consolidated Assets, 77 FR
29458 (May 17, 2011); Supervision and Regulation
Letter SR 10–6, Interagency Policy Statement on
Funding and Liquidity Risk Management (Mar. 17,
2010), available at http://www.federalreserve.gov/
boarddocs/srletters/2010/sr1006.htm; Supervision
and Regulation Letter SR 10–1, Interagency
Advisory on Interest Rate Risk (Jan. 11, 2010),
available at http://www.federalreserve.gov/
boarddocs/srletters/2010/sr1001.htm; SR 09–4,
supra note2note2170; Supervision and Regulation
Letter SR 07–1, Interagency Guidance on
Concentrations in Commercial Real Estate (Jan. 4,
2007), available at http://www.federalreserve.gov/
boarddocs/srletters/2007/SR0701.htm; SR 99–18,
supra note 11boarddocs/srletters/2007/SR0701.htm;
Supervision and Regulation Letter SR 12–7,
Supervisory Guidance on Stress Testing for Banking
Organizations with More Than $10 Billion in Total
Consolidated Assets, 77 FR 29458 (May 14, 2012),
available at http://www.federalreserve.gov/
bankinforeg/srletters/sr1207.htm; SR 99–18, supra
note 169; Supervisory Guidance: Supervisory
Review Process of Capital Adequacy (Pillar 2)
Related to the Implementation of the Basel II
Advanced Capital Framework, 73 FR 44620 (Jul. 31,
2008); The Supervisory Capital Assessment
Program: SCAP Overview of Results (May 7, 2009),
available at http://www.federalreserve.gov/
newsevents/press/bcreg/bcreg20090507a1.pdf; and
Comprehensive Capital Analysis and Review:
Objectives and Overview (Mar. 18, 2011), available
at http://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/
bcreg/bcreg20110318a1.pdf.

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assessing capital adequacy and capital
planning practices at large bank holding
companies. The CCAR represents a
substantial strengthening of previous
approaches to assessing capital
adequacy and promotes thorough and
robust processes at large banking
organizations for measuring capital
needs and for managing and allocating
capital resources. The CCAR focuses on
the risk measurement and management
practices supporting organizations’
capital adequacy assessments, including
their ability to deliver credible inputs to
their loss estimation techniques, as well
as the governance processes around
capital planning practices.
In the wake of the financial crisis,
Congress enacted the Dodd-Frank Act,
which requires the Board to issue
regulations that require bank holding
companies with total consolidated
assets of $50 billion or more (large bank
holding companies) and nonbank
financial companies that the Financial
Stability Oversight Committee has
designated to be supervised by the
Board (together, covered companies) to
conduct stress tests semi-annually, and
requires other financial companies with
total consolidated assets of more than
$10 billion and for which the Board is
the primary federal financial regulatory
agency to conduct stress tests on an
annual basis (company-run stress
tests).6 The Act requires that the Board
issue regulations that: (i) Define the
term ‘‘stress test’’; (ii) establish
methodologies for the conduct of the
company-run stress tests that provide
for at least three different sets of
conditions, including baseline, adverse,
and severely adverse conditions; (iii)
establish the form and content of the
report that companies subject to the
regulation must submit to the Board;
and (iv) require companies to publish a
summary of the results of the required
stress tests.7
On January 5, 2012, the Board invited
public comment on a notice of proposed
rulemaking (proposal or NPR) that
would implement the enhanced
prudential standards required to be
established under section 165 of the
Dodd-Frank Act and the early
remediation requirements established
under Section 166 of the Act, including
6 In this final rule, the Board is implementing the
requirements for bank holding companies with total
consolidated assets of greater than $10 billion but
less than $50 billion and savings and loan holding
companies and state member banks with total
consolidated assets of greater than $10 billion. The
requirements applicable bank holding companies
with $50 billion or more in total consolidated assets
are contained in a concurrently issued final rule
being published in today’s issue of the Federal
Register.
7 See 12 U.S.C. 5365(i)(2)(C).

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proposed rules regarding company-run
stress tests.8 The proposed rules would
have required each bank holding
company, state member bank, and
savings and loan holding company with
more than $10 billion in total
consolidated assets to conduct an
annual company-run stress test using
data as of September 30 of each year and
the three scenarios provided by the
Board. In addition, each state member
bank, bank holding company, and
savings and loan holding company
would be required to disclose a
summary of the results of its companyrun stress tests within 90 days of
submitting the results to the Board.
The Dodd-Frank Act mandates that
the OCC and the FDIC adopt rules
implementing stress testing
requirements for the depository
institutions that they supervise, and the
OCC and FDIC invited public comment
on proposed rules in January of 2012.9
The Board is finalizing the stress
testing frameworks in two separate
rules. First, the Board is issuing this
final rule, which implements the
company-run stress testing requirements
applicable to bank holding companies
with total consolidated assets greater
than $10 billion but less than $50
billion and savings and loan holding
companies and state member banks with
total consolidated assets greater than
$10 billion. Second, the Board is
concurrently issuing a final rule
implementing the supervisory and semiannual company-run stress testing
requirements applicable to large bank
holding companies and nonbank
financial companies supervised by the
Board.
II. Overview of Comments
The Board received approximately
100 comments on its NPR on enhanced
prudential standards and early
remediation requirements.
Approximately 40 of these comments
pertained to the proposed stress testing
requirements. Commenters ranged from
individual banking organizations to
trade and industry groups and public
interest groups. In general, commenters
expressed support for stress testing as a
valuable tool for identifying and
managing both micro- and macroprudential risk. However, several
commenters recommended changes to,
or clarification of, certain provisions of
the proposed rule, including its timeline
for implementation, reporting
8 Enhanced Prudential Standards and Early
Remediation Requirements for Covered Companies,
77 FR 594 (Jan. 5, 2012).
9 Annual Stress Test, 77 FR 3408 (Jan. 24, 2012)
(OCC); Annual Stress Test, 77 FR 3166 (Jan. 17,
2012) (FDIC).

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requirements, and disclosure
requirements. Commenters also urged
greater interagency coordination
regarding stress tests.
A. Delayed Compliance Date
Commenters suggested that
companies with total consolidated
assets less than $50 billion that have not
previously been subject to stress-testing
requirements need more time to develop
the systems and procedures to be able
to conduct company-run stress tests and
to collect the information that the Board
may require in connection with these
tests. In response to these comments
and to reduce burden on these
institutions, the final rule requires most
bank holding companies, savings and
loan holding companies, and state
member banks to conduct their first
stress test in the fall of 2013. In
addition, the final rule requires bank
holding companies, savings and loan
holding companies, and state member
banks with less than $50 billion in total
consolidated assets to begin publicly
disclosing their stress test results in
2015 with respect to the stress test
conducted in the fall of 2014.10 Banking
organizations that become subject to the
rule’s requirements after November 15,
2012 must comply with the
requirements beginning in the fall of the
calendar year that follows the year the
company meets the asset threshold,
unless that time is extended by the
Board in writing.11 For example, a
company that becomes subject to the
rule on March 31, 2013 must conduct its
first stress test in the fall of 2014 and
report the results in 2015.
B. Tailoring
The proposed rule would have
applied consistent annual company-run
stress test requirements, including the
compliance date and the disclosure
requirements, to all banking
organizations with total consolidated
assets of more than $10 billion.12 The
Board sought public comment on
whether the stress testing requirements
should be tailored, particularly for
10 A ‘‘stress test cycle’’ is defined as the period
between October 1 of a calendar year and
September 30 of the following calendar year.
11 In extending a time period under the final rule,
the Board will consider the activities, level of
complexity, risk profile, scope of operations, and
the regulatory capital of the company, and any
other relevant factors.
12 Under the proposal, savings and loan holding
companies would not have been subject to the
proposed requirements, including timing of
required submissions to the Board, until savings
and loan holding companies were subject to
minimum risk-based capital and leverage
requirements.

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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 198 / Friday, October 12, 2012 / Rules and Regulations

financial companies that are not large
bank holding companies.
Several commenters expressed
concern that the NPR that would have
applied stress testing requirements
previously applicable only to large bank
holding companies, such as those
conducted under the CCAR, to smaller,
less complex banking organizations
with smaller systemic footprints.
The Board recognizes that bank
holding companies, savings and loan
holdings companies, and state member
banks with total consolidated assets less
than $50 billion are generally less
complex and pose more limited risk to
U.S. financial stability than larger
banking organizations. As a result, the
Board has modified the requirements in
the final rule for these institutions, and
expects to use a tailored approach in
implementation.
The final rule modifies the
requirements for smaller banking
organizations in a number of ways.
First, as noted above, most banking
organizations, other than state member
bank subsidiaries of the large bank
holding companies that participated in
the SCAP, are not required to conduct
their first stress test until 2013. The
final rule also provides a longer period
for smaller banking organizations to
conduct their stress tests. Under the
final rule, smaller banking
organizations, other than state member
bank subsidiaries of SCAP bank holding
companies, are not required to report
the results of the stress test until March
31. The final rule also modifies the
public disclosure requirements,
generally requiring less detailed
disclosure for smaller banking
organizations than for larger banking
organizations. Separately, the Board
intends to seek comment on reporting
forms that smaller banking
organizations would use in reporting the
results of their stress tests to the Board,
which are expected to be significantly
more limited than the reporting forms
applicable to large banking
organizations.
As described in section III.C.3 of this
preamble, banking organizations may be
required to include additional
components in their adverse and
severely adverse scenarios or to use
additional scenarios in their stress tests.
The Board expects to apply such
additional components and additional
scenarios to large, complex banking
organizations. For example, the Board
expects to require large banking
organizations with significant trading
activities to include global market shock
components in their adverse and
severely adverse scenarios, and may
require large or complex banking

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organizations to use additional
components in the adverse and severely
adverse scenarios or to use additional
scenarios that are designed to capture
salient risks to specific lines of business.
Finally, the Board plans to issue
supervisory guidance to provide more
detail describing supervisory
expectation for company-run stress
tests. This guidance will be tailored to
banking organizations with total
consolidated assets greater than $10
billion but less than $50 billion.
C. Coordination
Many commenters emphasized the
need for the federal banking agencies to
coordinate stress testing requirements
for parent holding companies and
depository institution subsidiaries and
more generally in regard to stress testing
frameworks. Commenters recommended
that the Board, the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), and
the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC) coordinate in
implementing the Dodd-Frank Act stress
testing requirements in order to
minimize regulatory burden.
Commenters asked that the agencies
eliminate duplicative requirements and
use an interagency forum, like the
Federal Financial Institutions
Examination Council, to develop
common forms, policies, procedures,
assumptions, methodologies, and
application of results.
The Board has coordinated closely
with the FDIC and the OCC to help to
ensure that the company-run stress
testing regulations are consistent and
comparable across depository
institutions and depository institution
holding companies and to address any
burden that may be associated with
having multiple entities within one
organizational structure subject to stress
testing requirements. The Board
anticipates that it will continue to
consult with the FDIC and OCC in the
implementation of the final rule, and in
particular, in the development of stress
scenarios. The Board plans to develop
scenarios each year in close
consultation with the FDIC and the
OCC, so that, to the greatest extent
possible, a common set of scenarios can
be used for the supervisory stress tests
and the annual company-run stress tests
across various banking entities within
the same organizational structure.
D. Consolidated Publication and GroupWide Systems and Models
In addition to requesting better
coordination, commenters inquired as to
whether a company-run stress test
conducted by a parent holding company
would satisfy the stress testing

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requirements applicable to that holding
company’s subsidiary depository
institutions. Commenters recommended
that, in order to reduce burden, the
Board develop and require the use of a
single set of scenarios for a bank holding
company and any depository institution
subsidiary of the bank holding
company, if the Board imposed separate
stress testing requirements on both the
bank holding company and bank.
In order to reduce burden on banking
organizations, the final rule provides
that a subsidiary depository institution
generally will disclose its stress testing
results as part of the results disclosed by
its bank holding company parent.
Disclosure by the bank holding
company of its stress test results and
those of any subsidiary state member
bank generally will satisfy any
disclosure requirements applicable to
the state member bank subsidiary.
Moreover, a state member bank that is
controlled by a bank holding company
may rely on the systems and models of
its parent bank holding company if its
systems and models fully capture the
state member bank’s risks. For example,
under those circumstances, the bank
holding company and state member
bank may use the same data collection
processes and methods and models for
projecting and calculating potential
losses, pre-provision net revenues,
provision for loan and lease losses, and
pro forma capital positions over the
stress testing planning horizon.
III. Description of the Final Rule
A. Scope of Application
The final rule applies to any bank
holding company with average total
consolidated assets of greater than $10
billion but less than $50 billion, and any
state member bank and savings and loan
holding company that have average total
consolidated assets of more than $10
billion (‘‘asset threshold’’). Average total
consolidated assets is based on the
average of the total consolidated assets
as reported on bank holding company’s
or savings and loan holding company’s
four most recent Consolidated Financial
Statement for Bank Holding Companies
(FR Y–9C) or a state member bank’s four
most recent Consolidated Report of
Condition and Income (Call Report). If
the bank holding company, savings and
loan holding company, or state member
bank has not filed the FR Y–9C or Call
Report, as applicable, for each of the
four most recent quarters, average total
consolidated assets will be based on the
average of the company’s total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
company’s FR Y–9C or Call Report, as
applicable, for the most recent quarter

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or consecutive quarters. In either case,
average total consolidated assets are
measured on the as-of date of the
relevant regulatory report.
Once a bank holding company,
savings and loan holding company, or
state member bank meets the asset
threshold, the company will remain
subject to the final rule’s requirements
unless and until the total consolidated
assets of the company are less than $10
billion, as reported on four
consecutively filed FR Y–9C or Call
Report, as applicable (measured on the
as-of date of the relevant FR Y–9C or
Call Report, as applicable). A bank
holding company, state member bank,
or savings and loan holding company
that has reduced its total consolidated
assets to below $10 billion will again
become subject to the requirements of
this rule if it meets the asset threshold
again at a later date.
However, if a bank holding company’s
total consolidated assets equal or exceed
$50 billion or a savings and loan
holding company becomes designated
as a nonbank financial company
supervised by the Board, such
companies will be required to conduct
stress tests under subpart G of the
Board’s Regulation YY (12 CFR part 252
subpart G). Such a company will be
required to comply with this final rule
until it is required to conduct stress
tests under subpart G.
The final rule does not apply to
foreign banking organizations. The
Board expects to issue a separate
rulemaking on the application of
enhanced prudential standards to
foreign banking organizations. A U.S.domiciled bank holding company
subsidiary of a foreign banking
organization that has total consolidated
assets of $10 billion or more is subject
to the requirements of this rule.13
B. Effective Date
Under the proposal, the company-run
stress testing requirements applicable to
bank holding companies and state
member banks would have become
effective upon adoption of the final rule.
A bank holding company, savings and
loan holding company, or state member
bank that met the rule’s asset threshold
as of the adoption of the rule would
have been required to immediately
comply with its requirements. A bank
holding company, savings and loan
holding company, or state member bank
that met the proposal’s asset threshold
13 A U.S.-domiciled bank holding company
subsidiary of a foreign banking organization that is
currently relying on Supervision and Regulation
Letter SR 01–01 issued by the Board (as in effect
on May 19, 2010) is not required to comply with
the final rule’s requirements until October 1, 2015.

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more than 90 days before September 30
of a given year would be subject to
stress testing requirements beginning in
that calendar year. The Board received
comments with regard to the timing of
the first stress test for institutions that
meet the asset threshold upon the rule’s
effective date and for institutions that
meet the asset threshold at a later date,
and has modified both aspects of the
final rule.
1. First Stress Test for Bank Holding
Companies and State Member Banks
That Meet the Asset Threshold On or
Before December 31, 2012
Commenters indicated that smaller
and mid-sized banking organizations
need more time to develop the systems
and procedures to conduct companyrun stress tests and to collect the
information requested by the Board in
connection with these tests. In response
to these comments, the Board is
delaying the date that existing, smaller
companies are required to conduct their
first stress test, as described below.
a. Bank Holding Companies
Under the final rule, a bank holding
company that meets the asset threshold
on or before December 31, 2012, must
conduct its first stress test beginning in
the fall of 2013, unless that time is
extended by the Board in writing.14
Such a bank holding company is not
required to publicly disclose the results
of its stress test until June 2015.
b. State Member Banks
Under the final rule, a state member
bank that meets the asset threshold on
or before November 15, 2012, and is a
subsidiary of a bank holding company
that participated in the SCAP, or
successor to such bank holding
company,15 must comply with the
requirements of this subpart beginning
in the fall of 2012, unless that time is
extended by the Board in writing.
Any other state member bank that
meets the asset threshold on or before
December 31, 2012, must comply with
the requirements of this subpart
14 In exercising its authority to extend a deadline
under the final rule, the Board intends to consider
the activities, level of complexity, risk profile,
scope of operations, and the regulatory capital of
the bank holding company or nonbank financial
company in addition to any other relevant factors.
15 The bank holding companies that participated
in SCAP were: American Express Company, Bank
of America Corporation, BB&T Corporation, Bank of
New York Mellon Corporation, Capital One
Financial Corp., Citigroup, Inc., Fifth Third
Bancorp, GMAC LLC (now Ally Financial Inc.),
Goldman Sachs Group Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Co.,
KeyCorp, MetLife Inc., Morgan Stanley, PNC
Financial Services Group, Regions Financial
Corporation, State Street Corp., SunTrust Banks,
Inc., U.S. Bancorp, and Wells Fargo & Company.

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beginning in the fall of 2013, unless that
time is extended by the Board in
writing. If such a state member bank has
total consolidated assets of less than $50
billion as of December 31, 2012, it is not
required to publicly disclose the results
of its stress test until June 2015.
2. First Stress Test for Bank Holding
Companies and State Member Banks
Subject to Stress Testing Requirements
After December 31, 2012
Commenters similarly expressed
concern that bank holding companies,
state member banks, and savings and
loan holding companies met the rule’s
asset threshold after the effective date of
the final rule would not have sufficient
time to build the systems, contract with
outside vendors, recruit experienced
personnel, and develop stress testing
models that are unique to their
organization under the proposed
compliance date. In addition, the
Federal Advisory Council recommended
that the Board phase in disclosure
requirements to minimize risk, build
precedent, and allow banks and
supervisors to gain experience,
expertise, and mutual understanding of
stress testing models.
In response to these comments, the
Board extended the compliance date
applicable to bank holding companies
and state member banks that exceed the
final rule’s asset threshold after
December 31, 2012. Under the final rule,
these companies will be required to
conduct their first stress tests beginning
in the fall of the calendar year after they
meet the asset threshold, unless that
time is extended by the Board in
writing.
3. First Stress Test for Savings and Loan
Holding Companies
Under the final rule, a savings and
loan holding company will not be
required to conduct its first stress test
until after it is subject to minimum
capital requirements. A savings and
loan holding company that meets the
asset threshold when it becomes subject
to minimum capital requirements will
be required to conduct this first stress
test in the fall of the calendar year after
it first becomes subject to capital
requirements, unless the Board
accelerates or extends the time in
writing.16
A savings and loan holding company
that meets the asset threshold after it
becomes subject to capital requirements
16 In accelerating or extending the time period for
savings and loan holding companies, the Board will
consider the activities, level of complexity, risk
profile, scope of operations, and the regulatory
capital of the savings and loan holding company,
and any other relevant factors.

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will be required to conduct its first
stress test beginning in the fall of the
calendar year after it meets the asset
threshold, unless that time is extended
by the Board in writing.
C. Annual Stress Tests Requirements
1. Timing of Stress Testing
Requirements
The Board proposed the following
timeline for company-run tests in the
NPR. The Board would have required an
as-of date of September 30 of
information to be submitted to the
Board. By no later than mid-November
of each calendar year, the Board would
provide bank holding companies, state
member banks, and savings and loan
holding companies with scenarios for
annual stress tests. By January 5 of the
following calendar year, these
companies would be required to submit
regulatory reports to the Board on their
stress tests. By early April of that
calendar year, companies would be
required to make public disclosure of
results.
Several commenters provided
suggestions on the proposed timeline.
Those comments focused on the as-of
date for data to be submitted by bank
holding companies, state member banks,
and savings and loan holding
companies, the date for submitting
results to the Board, and the dates when
public disclosures of stress test results
are to be made. For instance, some
commenters suggested that the Board
should use data collected at as-of dates
other than September 30, such as June
30 or December 31, and make
corresponding changes to the timing of
public disclosure in order to reduce
burden on companies during the yearend period. One commenter suggested
having a floating submission date,
allowing organizations to submit their
results at the point in the year when it
is most convenient. Some commenters
also requested that the Board release the
scenarios earlier to provide banking
organizations more time to prepare the
required reports for the stress tests.

The final rule maintains the as-of date
for data for the purposes of the annual
company-run stress tests so that the
same set of scenarios can be used to
conduct annual company-run stress
tests for large bank holding companies
and their subsidiary state-member
banks. The Board believes, and several
commenters noted, that such alignment
is beneficial. Furthermore, using the
same scenarios for all firms subject to
stress testing requirements will decrease
market confusion, minimize burden on
institutions, and provide for
comparability across institutions. As
stated in the concurrent final rule for
covered companies, it was necessary to
maintain the September 30 as-of date for
stress test requirements for large bank
holding companies in order to align the
stress testing requirements with the
capital planning requirements
applicable to these institutions under
section 225.8 of the Board’s Regulation
Y.17
Commenters requested that the Board
release the scenarios earlier in the
annual stress test cycle to provide
banking organizations more time to
prepare the reports for company-run
stress tests. Under the final rule, the
Board will provide descriptions of the
baseline, adverse, and severely adverse
scenarios generally applicable to
companies no later than November 15 of
each year, and provide any additional
components or scenarios by December
1. The Board believes that providing
scenarios earlier than November could
result in the scenarios being stale,
particularly in a rapidly changing
economic environment, and that it is
important to incorporate economic or
financial market data that are as current
as possible while providing sufficient
time for companies to incorporate the
scenarios in their annual company-run
stress tests.
Commenters suggested that smaller
banking organizations be allowed
additional time to conduct their
company-run stress tests in light of
resource constraints faced by these
institutions. In response to these

comments, the Board has delayed the
timing of report submission to the Board
for most banking organizations.
Consistent with the requirements
imposed on large bank holding
companies under subpart G, the final
rule requires a state member bank that
is controlled by a bank holding
company that has average total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more and a savings and loan holding
company that has average total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more to conduct its stress test and
submit its results to the Board by
January 5, unless that time is extended
by the Board in writing. All other bank
holding companies, savings and loan
holding companies, and state member
banks are required to conduct their
stress tests and submit the results to the
Board by March 31.
Commenters also noted that the
proposed public disclosure deadlines
would interfere with so-called ‘‘quiet
periods’’ that some publicly traded
banking organizations enforce in the
lead up to earnings announcements.
These quiet periods are designed to
limit communications that could
disseminate proprietary company
information prior to earnings
announcements.
In light of these comments, the Board
adjusted the disclosure date to avoid
interfering with firms’ quiet periods.
Under the final rule, a savings and loan
holding company with total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more or a state member bank that is a
subsidiary of a bank holding company
with total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more is required to disclose
the results of its stress tests between
March 15 and March 31 of each year.
All other banking organizations will be
required to disclose their results
between June 15 and June 31.
Table 1 below describes the steps for
the company-run stress test cycle for
bank holding companies, state member
banks, and savings and loan holding
companies, including general
timeframes for each step.

TABLE 1—PROCESS OVERVIEW OF ANNUAL COMPANY-RUN STRESS TEST
Company-run stress test steps

Timeframe

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Board publishes scenarios for upcoming annual cycle .........................................................................................

No later than November 15.

State member banks that are subsidiaries of large bank holding companies and savings and loan holding companies with total
consolidated assets of more than $50 billion
Companies complete stress test and submit required regulatory report to the Board on their stress tests ........

17 12

By January 5.

CFR 225.8.

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62401

TABLE 1—PROCESS OVERVIEW OF ANNUAL COMPANY-RUN STRESS TEST—Continued
Company-run stress test steps

Timeframe

Companies disclose summary results of the annual company-run stress test ....................................................

Between March 15 and March
31.

Bank holding companies, savings and loan holding companies with total consolidated assets of less than $50 billion, and state
member banks that are not subsidiaries of large bank holding companies
Companies complete stress test and submit required regulatory report to the Board on their stress tests ........
Companies disclose summary results of the annual company-run stress test ....................................................

2. Conduct of a Stress Test

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Under the final rule, a bank holding
company, savings and loan holding
company, or state member bank that
meets the asset threshold will be
required to conduct an annual stress test
using scenarios provided by the Board.
A stress test is defined as a process to
assess the potential impact of the
scenarios provided by the Board on the
consolidated earnings, losses, and
capital of a company over the planning
horizon, taking into account the current
condition of the company and the
company’s risks, exposures, strategies,
and activities.18
A bank holding company, savings and
loan holding company, or state member
bank will be required to use the
scenarios provided by the Board, which
will include, at minimum, baseline,
adverse, and severely adverse scenarios.
The Board will provide descriptions of
the baseline, adverse, and severely
adverse scenarios generally applicable
to subject companies no later than
November 15 of a calendar year.
As described above in section E of
this preamble, the Board may require a
company with significant trading
activity, as determined by the Board as
specified in the Capital Assessments
and Stress Testing information
collection (FR Y–14), to include a global
market shock component in the adverse
and severely adverse scenarios that
measures potential stress losses from
trading activities and counterparty
exposures in its stress test.19
18 ‘‘Planning horizon’’ is defined as the period of
at least nine quarters, beginning on the first day of
a stress test cycle (on October 1), over which the
relevant projections extend. One commenter
requested that the Board shorten the planning
horizon. The Board has maintained a nine-quarter
planning horizon in the final rule because it
believes that a firm should be able to make
informed projections of its financial and capital
position for a two-year calendar period.
19 As of September 30, 2012, companies subject
to the global market shock scenario included those
bank holding companies with total consolidated
assets of $500 billion or more that were subject to
the market-risk measure set forth in Appendix E of
the Board’s Regulation Y (12 CFR Part 225,
Appendix E).

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In addition, depending on the
systemic footprint and scope of
operations and activities of a bank
holding company, savings and loan
holding company, or state member
bank, the Board may require the
company to include additional
components in its adverse and severely
adverse scenarios or to use additional
scenarios that are designed to capture
salient risks stemming from specific
lines of business.20 Scenarios may also
include stress factors, such as
operational risk, that materially affect
the financial condition of a company
but are not directly correlated to
macroeconomic or financial
assumptions.
The Board will notify a company in
writing no later than September 30 that
it will be required to include an
additional component in its adverse and
severely adverse scenarios or to use an
additional scenario in its stress test. The
notification will include the basis for
requiring the company to include the
additional component or additional
scenario in its stress test. Within 14
calendar days of receipt of a
notification, a company may request in
writing that the Board reconsider the
requirement that the company include
additional components or use additional
scenarios, including an explanation as
to why the reconsideration should be
granted. The Board will respond in
writing within 14 calendar days of
receipt of the company’s request. The
Board will provide a company with a
description of any additional
component or additional scenario by
December 1.
3. Methodologies and Practices
Consistent with the proposal, in
conducting a stress test, a company will
be required to calculate for each
scenario, over each quarter of the
planning horizon, pre-provision net
revenue, losses, provision for loan and
lease losses, and net income; and the
20 In making this assessment, the Board will
consider the financial condition, size, complexity,
risk profile, scope of operations, or activities, or
risks to the U.S. economy of the company.

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By March 31.
Between June 15 and June 30.

potential impact of the scenarios on pro
forma regulatory capital levels and pro
forma capital ratios (including
regulatory and any other capital ratios
specified by the Board). Estimates of pro
forma capital levels and capital ratios
must incorporate the effects of any
capital actions over the planning
horizon and maintenance of an
allowance for loan losses appropriate for
credit exposures throughout the
planning horizon.
Several commenters asked that the
Board generally adopt the disclosure
approach it used in CCAR 2012, which
included some common assumptions of
capital actions across bank holding
companies. In response to these
commenters and to enable comparisons
across firms and between the companyrun and supervisory stress test, the final
rule requires a bank holding company or
savings and loan holding company to
make the following assumptions
regarding its capital actions over the
planning horizon. For the first quarter of
the planning horizon, the company
must take into account its actual capital
actions as of the end of the calendar
quarter. For each of the second through
ninth quarters of the planning horizon,
the company must include the following
items in the projections of capital: (i)
Common stock dividends equal to the
quarterly average dollar amount of
common stock dividends that the
company paid in the previous year (that
is, the first quarter of the planning
horizon and the preceding three
calendar quarters); (ii) payments on any
other instrument that is eligible for
inclusion in the numerator of a
regulatory capital ratio equal to the
stated dividend, interest, or principal
due on such instrument during the
quarter; and (iii) an assumption of no
redemption or repurchase of any capital
instrument that is eligible for inclusion
in the numerator of a regulatory capital
ratio. The Board is providing for these
assumptions to ensure that the publicly
disclosed results of company run stress
tests are comparable across institutions
and reflect the effect of common
macroeconomic scenarios on net income

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and capital but not company-specific
assumptions about capital distributions.
The proposed rule would have
required a subject company to establish
and maintain a system of controls,
oversight, and documentation,
including policies and procedures,
designed to ensure that the stress testing
processes were effective. It also would
have required the board of directors and
senior management of the company to
annually review the controls, oversight,
and documentation established
pursuant to the final rule.
Several commenters asked for
clarification on the roles of the board of
directors and senior management in
establishing and reviewing these
controls. In response to these
commenters, the final rule clarifies that
the senior management of a bank
holding company, savings and loan
holding company, or state member bank
is responsible for establishing and
maintaining the system of controls,
oversight, and documentation,
including policies and procedures,
designed to ensure that the stress testing
processes used by the company are
effective in meeting the requirements of
the final rule. The board of directors, or
an appropriate committee thereof, is
responsible for approving and reviewing
the policies and procedures governing
the stress testing processes as frequently
as economic conditions or the condition
of the company may warrant, but no less
than annually. The board of directors
and senior management of the company
must receive a summary of the results
of the stress test.
The final rule also requires the board
of directors and senior management of
each bank holding company, savings
and loan holding company, or state
member bank to consider the results of
the stress tests in the normal course of
business, including but not limited to,
the banking organization’s capital
planning, assessment of capital
adequacy, and risk management
practices.21
4. Report to the Board of Stress Test
Results and Related Information
As required by the Dodd-Frank Act,
the final rule requires each bank
holding, state member bank, and savings
and loan holding company to report the
results of the stress tests conducted by
the company in the manner and form
prescribed by the Board.
Savings and loan holding companies
with average total consolidated assets of
21 The capital plan requirements under the
Board’s 12 CFR 225.8 of the Board’s Regulation Y
(12 CFR 225.8) apply only to bank holding
companies with $50 billion or more in total
consolidated assets.

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$50 billion or more and state member
bank subsidiaries of large bank holding
companies are required to submit
reports to the Board by January 5. All
other bank holding companies, savings
and loan holding companies, and state
member banks are required to submit
reports to the Board by March 31.
The report of the results of the stress
test must include, under the baseline,
adverse, and severely adverse scenarios,
a description of the types of risks
included in the stress test, a summary
description of the methodologies used
in the stress test, for each quarter of the
planning horizon, aggregate losses, preprovision net revenue, provision for
loan and lease losses, net income, and
pro forma capital ratios (including
regulatory and any other capital ratios
specified by the Board), an explanation
of the most significant causes for the
changes in regulatory capital ratios; and
any other information required by the
Board. This reporting requirement will
remain applicable until such time as the
Board issues a reporting form to collect
the results of the company-run stress
test.
In the future, the Board plans to
publish, for notice and comment, any
new data schedules that would be used
to report the results of stress tests
conducted under the rule. The Board
expects that it would tailor the data
schedules for bank holding companies,
state member banks, and saving and
loan holding companies with total
consolidated assets greater than $10
billion but less than $50 billion to
reduce reporting burden on those
companies.
The Board may also request
supplemental information, as needed.
5. Supervisory Review of Companies’
Stress Test Processes and Results
Based on information submitted by a
bank holding company, state member
bank, or savings and loan holding
company, as well as other relevant
information, the Board will conduct an
analysis of the quality of the company’s
stress tests processes and related results.
The Board expects to provide feedback
about such analysis to a company
through the supervisory process. The
Board may also require other actions
consistent with safety and soundness of
the company.
6. Publication of Results by the
Company
Under the proposal, each bank
holding company, state member bank,
and savings and loan holding company
would be required to disclose a
summary of the results of its companyrun stress tests within 90 days of

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submitting its required report to the
Board. The Board asked commenters to
provide information on the benefits and
drawbacks associated with companyspecific disclosures, specific concerns
about the possible release of a
company’s proprietary information, and
alternatives to the company-specific
disclosures being proposed.
In response, nearly all commenters
advocated that the Board curtail
disclosure requirements for the
company-run stress tests, in particular,
strongly recommending against the
disclosure of the results under the
baseline scenario. Commenters
indicated the baseline scenario results
would be perceived as earnings
guidance, which may compel a banking
organization to prioritize short-term
results over more appropriate longerterm risk management and sustained
long term results. Commenters also
indicated that baseline results may force
the premature disclosure of future plans
by the institution, create confusion
among investors and the public, and
give rise to liability under securities
laws.
Several commenters suggested that
the Board adopt the template used in
reporting the CCAR results, which they
likened to publication of only the
severely adverse results. Commenters
expressed the view that the CCAR
disclosure regime was appropriately
balanced by providing useful
information to market participants
while simultaneously ensuring that
disclosure of stress test results does not
result in providing earnings guidance.
As noted above, the Board believes
that public disclosure is a key
component of stress test requirements
mandated by the Act, and helps to
provide valuable information to market
participants, enhance transparency, and
facilitate market discipline. However,
the Board also understands the concern
that the disclosure of results
(particularly baseline results) could be
viewed as earnings guidance to the
market. Thus, the final rule requires
banking organizations to disclose only
the severely adverse results. As
companies begin conducting companyrun stress tests, submitting the results of
all scenarios to the Board, and
disclosing a summary of their results
under the severely adverse scenario, the
Board expects to evaluate whether
public disclosure of the results of the
adverse and potentially baseline
scenarios would assist in informing the
company and its investors about the
condition of the banking organization.
Thus, the Board expects to revisit the
scope of required public disclosure from
time to time, and may determine to

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require disclosure of the results under
the adverse and baseline scenario in the
future.
Additionally, commenters
recommended simpler and more limited
disclosure requirements, particularly for
smaller companies, so that these
companies would not need to rely on
vendors or third-party professionals to
produce the summary of results. In
response to commenters, the Board
modified the disclosure requirements to
include a more limited set of
information. Under the final rule, a bank
holding company, savings and loan
holding company, or a state member
bank not controlled by a bank holding
company is required to disclose a
summary of results under the severely
adverse scenario, which must include,
at a minimum: (i) A description of the
types of risks being included in the
stress test; (ii) a summary description of
the methodologies used in the stress
test; (iii) estimates of aggregate losses,
pre-provision net revenue, provision for
loan and lease losses, net income, and
pro forma capital ratios (including
regulatory and any other capital ratios
specified by the Board); and, (iv) an
explanation of the most significant
causes for the changes in regulatory
capital ratios. The Board expects the
summary description under (ii) above to
include a general description of
methodologies used to estimate losses,
pre-provision net revenue, net income,
and changes in capital positions over
the planning horizon.
Several commenters suggested that
regulatory agencies coordinate
disclosure requirements for multiple
banking organizations within a single
parent company as the release of
conflicting test results could confuse
market participants. In the final rule,
bank holding companies and savings
and loan holding companies must
disclose a summary of results of the
stress test conducted by any insured
depository institution subsidiary that
meets the asset threshold.22 The
summary must include, with respect to
the severely adverse scenario, any
changes in regulatory capital ratios of
the depository institution subsidiary
and an explanation of the most
significant causes for the changes in
regulatory capital ratios. For subsidiary
state member banks, the Board expects
that this disclosure will include a
general description of methodologies
used to estimate capital actions over the
planning horizon. Such disclosure will
be deemed to satisfy disclosure
22 A parallel provision is included in the final
rule applicable to bank holding companies with
total consolidated assets of $50 billion or more.

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requirements applicable to state member
bank subsidiaries under section
165(i)(2) of the Dodd-Frank Act, unless
the Board determines that the
disclosures at the holding company
level do not adequately capture the
potential impact of the scenarios on the
capital of the state member bank. In this
case, the state member bank would be
required to make the same disclosure
required of a state member bank not
controlled by a bank holding company.
In addition, commenters requested
that the Board not require publication of
information as of each quarter-end of
the planning horizon. In response to
these comments, the rule clarifies that
the disclosure of aggregate losses, preprovision net revenue, provision for
loan and lease losses, and net income
requires disclosure of only the
cumulative totals over the planning
horizon, and the disclosure of regulatory
capital ratios requires disclosure of the
beginning value, ending value and
minimum value of each ratio over the
planning horizon.
As in the proposed rule, the final rule
provides that the summary could be
published on the Web site of the
banking organization or in any other
forum that is reasonably accessible to
the public.
7. Scenarios
The proposal provided that the Board
would publish a minimum of three
different sets of economic and financial
conditions, including baseline, adverse,
and severely adverse scenarios, under
which the Board would conduct its
annual analyses and companies would
conduct their annual company-run
stress tests. The Board would update,
make additions to, or otherwise revise
these scenarios as appropriate, and
would publish any such changes to the
scenarios in advance of conducting each
year’s stress test.
Commenters suggested that significant
changes in scenarios from year to year
could cause a banking organization’s
stress testing results to dramatically
change. To ameliorate this volatility,
commenters suggest that the federal
banking agencies have a uniform
approach for identifying stress scenarios
or establish a ‘‘quantitative severity
limit’’ in the final rule to ensure that
scenarios do not drastically change from
year to year. Commenters pointed out
that consistency in annual scenario
development will make comparability of
stress test results between institutions
and across time periods more accurate,
increase market confidence in the
results of stress tests, and make for more
dependable capital planning by banking
organizations. Commenters also

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62403

requested the opportunity to provide
input on the scenarios.
The Board believes that it is important
to have a consistent and transparent
framework to support scenario design.
To further this goal, the final rule
clarifies the definition of ‘‘scenarios’’
and includes definitions of baseline,
adverse, and severely adverse scenarios.
In the final rule, ‘‘scenarios’’ are defined
as those sets of conditions that affect the
U.S. economy or the financial condition
of a bank holding company, savings and
loan holding company, or state member
bank that the Board annually
determines are appropriate for use in
the company-run stress tests, including,
but not limited to, baseline, adverse,
and severely adverse scenarios.
The baseline scenario is defined as a
set of conditions that affect the U.S.
economy or the financial condition of a
bank holding company, savings and
loan holding company, or state member
bank, and that reflect the consensus
views of the economic and financial
outlook. The adverse scenario is defined
as a set of conditions that affect the U.S.
economy or the financial condition of a
bank holding company, savings and
loan holding company, or state member
bank that are more adverse than those
associated with the baseline scenario
and may include trading or other
additional components. The severely
adverse scenario is defined as a set of
conditions that affect the U.S. economy
or the financial condition of a bank
holding company, savings and loan
holding company, or state member bank
and that overall are more severe than
those associated with the adverse
scenario and may include trading or
other additional components.
In general, the baseline scenario will
reflect the consensus views of the
macroeconomic outlook expressed by
professional forecasters, government
agencies, and other public-sector
organizations as of the beginning of the
annual stress-test cycle. The Board
expects that the severely adverse
scenario will, at a minimum, include
the paths of economic variables that are
generally consistent with the paths
observed during severe post-war U.S.
recessions. Each year, the Board expects
to take into account of salient risks that
affect the U.S. economy or the financial
condition of a bank holding company,
savings and loan holding company, and
state member bank that may not be
observed in a typical severe recession.
The Board expects that the adverse
scenario will, at a minimum, include
the paths of economic variables that are
generally consistent with mild to
moderate recessions. The Board may
vary the approach it uses for the adverse

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scenario each year so that the results of
the scenario provide the most value to
supervisors, given the current
conditions of the economy and the
banking industry. Some of the
approaches the Board may consider
using include, but are not limited to, a
less severe version of the severely
adverse scenario or specifically
capturing, in the adverse scenario, risks
that the Board believes should be
understood better or should be
monitored.
The scenarios will consist of a set of
conditions that affect the U.S. economy
or the financial condition of a bank
holding company, savings and loan
holding company, or state member bank
over the stress test planning horizon.
These conditions will include
projections for a range of
macroeconomic and financial
indicators, such as real Gross Domestic
Product (GDP), the unemployment rate,
equity and property prices, and various
other key financial variables, and will
be updated each year to reflect changes
in the outlook for economic and
financial conditions. The paths of these
economic variables could reflect risks to
the economic and financial outlook that
are especially salient but were not
prevalent in recessions of the past.
Depending on the systemic footprint
and scope of operations and activities of
a company, the Board may require that
company to include additional
components in its adverse or severely
adverse scenarios or to use additional
scenarios or more complex scenarios
that are designed to capture salient risks
to specific lines of business.23 For
example, the Board recognizes that
certain trading positions and tradingrelated exposures are highly sensitive to
adverse market events, potentially
leading to large short-term volatility in
certain companies’ earnings. To address
this risk, the Board will require
companies with significant trading
activities to include market price and
rate ‘‘shocks,’’ as specified by the Board,
that are consistent with historical or
other adverse market events. The final
rule also provides that the Board may
impose this trading shock on a state
member bank that is subject to the
Board’s market risk rule (12 CFR part
208, appendix E) and that is a
subsidiary of a bank holding company
subject to the trading shock under the
final rule or under the Board’s
company-run stress test rule for covered
companies (12 CFR 252.144(b)(2)(i)).
23 In making this assessment, the Board will
consider the financial condition, size, complexity,
risk profile, scope of operations, or activities, or
risks to the U.S. economy of the company.

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The Board is making this modification
to allow for coordination of the trading
shock between a bank holding company
and any state member bank subsidiary
that is subject to the market risk rule.
In addition, the scenarios, in some
cases, may also include stress factors
that may not be directly correlated to
macroeconomic or financial
assumptions but nevertheless can
materially affect covered companies’
risks, such as factors that affect
operational risks. The process by which
the Board may require a company to
include additional components or use
additional scenarios is described under
section D.2 of this preamble.
Some commenters suggested that the
Board adopt a tailored approach to
scenarios to better capture idiosyncratic
characteristics of each company. For
example, commenters representing the
insurance industry suggested that any
stress testing regime applicable to
insurance companies incorporate shocks
relating to the exogenous factors that
actually impact a particular company,
such as a shock to the insurance
company’s insurance policy portfolio
arising from a natural disaster, and deemphasize shocks arising from
traditional banking activities.
In the Board’s view, a generally
uniform set of scenarios is necessary to
provide a basis for comparison across
companies. However, the Board expects
that each company’s stress testing
practices will be tailored to its business
model and lines of business, and that
the company may not use all of the
variables provided in the scenario, if
those variables are not appropriate to
the firm’s line of business, or may add
additional variables, as appropriate.24 In
addition, the Board expects banking
organizations to consider other
scenarios that are more idiosyncratic to
their operations and associated risks, as
part of their ongoing internal analyses of
capital adequacy.
IV. Administrative Law Matters
A. Use of Plain Language
Section 722 of the Gramm-LeachBliley Act (Pub. L. 106–102, 113 Stat.
1338, 1471, 12 U.S.C. 4809) requires the
Federal banking agencies to use plain
language in all proposed and final rules
published after January 1, 2000. The
Board invited comment on whether the
proposed rule was written plainly and
clearly, or whether there were ways the
24 The Board expects banking organizations to
ensure that the paths of such additional variables
are consistent with the scenarios the Board
provided. For example, the path of any local
economic variable should be consistent with the
path of a national economic variable that the Board
provides.

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Board could make the rule easier to
understand. The Board received no
comments on these matters and believes
that the final rule is written plainly and
clearly.
B. Riegle Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act
Section 302 of Riegle Community
Development and Regulatory
Improvement Act (12 U.S.C. 4802)
generally requires that regulations
prescribed by Federal banking agencies
which impose additional reporting,
disclosures or other new requirements
on insured depository institutions take
effect on the first day of a calendar
quarter which begins on or after the date
on which the regulation is published in
final form unless the agency determines,
for good cause published with the
regulation, that the regulation should
become effective before such time. The
final rule will be effective on November
15, 2012. The first day of a calendar
quarter which begins on or after the date
on which the final rule will be
published is January 1, 2013. As
discussed below, the Board has
determined for good cause that the
regulation should take effect on
November 15, 2012.
Stress tests provide important
forward-looking information to the
Board to assist in the overall assessment
of a state member bank’s capital
adequacy. Stress tests also help
determine whether additional analytical
techniques and exercises are
appropriate for a state member bank to
employ in identifying, measuring, and
monitoring risks to the financial
soundness of the bank. Further, stress
tests serve as an ongoing risk
management tool that support a state
member bank’s forward-looking
assessment of its risks and better equip
such institutions to address a range of
adverse outcomes.
It is necessary for a final rule to be in
place this fall to ensure that the six state
member bank subsidiaries of bank
holding companies that participated in
SCAP begin conducting annual stress
tests this year. A November 15, 2012,
effective date will facilitate integration
of these state member banks’ stress
testing systems and processes with the
systems and processes of its parent bank
holding company. These systems and
processes establish the basis for a bank’s
stress testing framework and will permit
the institution to provide critical
supervisory information in a timely
manner and help to ensure that the state
member bank is prepared for adverse
economic situations. In addition, a
November 15, 2012, effective date
permits the Board to synchronize its

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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 198 / Friday, October 12, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
supervisory efforts related to stress
testing with the OCC and the FDIC.
Accordingly, the Board finds good cause
for the final rule to take effect on
November 15, 2012, approximately one
month after publication in the Federal
Register.

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C. Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis
Request for Comment on Final
Information Collection
In accordance with section 3512 of
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501–3521) (PRA), the Board
may not conduct or sponsor, and a
respondent is not required to respond
to, an information collection unless it
displays a currently valid Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) control
number. The OMB control number will
be assigned. The Board reviewed the
final rule under the authority delegated
to the Board by OMB.
The final rule contains requirements
subject to the PRA. The recordkeeping
requirements are found in section
252.155(c) (formerly section
252.145(b)(1) in the proposed rule) and
the reporting requirements for state
member banks are found in section
252.156 (formerly section 252.148 in the
proposed rule). The burden for the
disclosure requirements for state
member banks in section 252.157 is
accounted for in section 252.156. These
information collection requirements
would implement section 165(i)(2) of
the Dodd-Frank Act for Board-regulated
companies with $10 billion or more in
total consolidated assets that are not
covered companies, as mentioned in the
Abstract below.
The reporting requirements for bank
holding companies and saving and loan
holding companies in section 252.156
will be addressed in a separate Federal
Register notice at a later date.
The Board received general comments
regarding the burden of the proposed
rule, particularly for companies with
less than $50 billion in total
consolidated assets. Commenters
suggested that companies with total
consolidated assets greater than $10
billion but less than $50 billion that
have not previously been subject to
stress-testing requirements need more
time to develop the necessary systems
and procedures to be able to conduct
company-run stress tests and to collect
the information that the Board may
require in connection with these tests.
In response to these comments and to
reduce burden, the final rule delays the
compliance date for most smaller
companies, extends the timeline for
most smaller companies to submit the
results of the test to the Board, tailors

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disclosure requirements, and
synchronizes the disclosure regime for
bank holding companies and their
depository institution subsidiaries.
The Board has an ongoing interest in
your comments.
Comments are invited on:
(a) Whether the proposed collections
of information are necessary for the
proper performance of the Federal
Reserve’s functions, including whether
the information has practical utility;
(b) The accuracy of the Federal
Reserve’s estimate of the burden of the
proposed information collections,
including the validity of the
methodology and assumptions used;
(c) Ways to enhance the quality,
utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected;
(d) Ways to minimize the burden of
the information collections on
respondents, including through the use
of automated collection techniques or
other forms of information technology;
and
(e) Estimates of capital or start up
costs and costs of operation,
maintenance, and purchase of services
to provide information.
All comments will become a matter of
public record. Comments on aspects of
this notice that may affect reporting,
recordkeeping, or disclosure
requirements and burden estimates
should be sent to the addresses listed in
the ADDRESSES section. A copy of the
comments may also be submitted to the
OMB desk officer for the Agencies: By
mail to U.S. Office of Management and
Budget, 725 17th Street NW., #10235,
Washington, DC 20503 or by facsimile
to 202–395–5806, Attention,
Commission and Federal Banking
Agency Desk Officer.
Title of Information Collection:
Recordkeeping and Disclosure
Requirements Associated with
Regulation YY (Subpart H).
Frequency of Response: Annual.
Affected Public: Businesses or other
for-profit.
Respondents: U.S. bank holding
companies, savings and loan holding
companies, and state member banks.
Abstract: Section 165 of the DoddFrank Act implements the enhanced
prudential standards. The enhanced
standards include risk-based capital and
leverage requirements, liquidity
standards, requirements for overall risk
management (including establishing a
risk committee), single-counterparty
credit limits, stress test requirements,
and debt-to-equity limits for companies
that the Council has determined pose a
grave threat to financial stability.
Section 252.155(c) requires that each
bank holding company, savings and

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loan holding company, or state member
bank must establish and maintain a
system of controls, oversight, and
documentation, including policies and
procedures, that are designed to ensure
that its stress testing processes are
effective in meeting the requirements in
Subpart H. These policies and
procedures must, at a minimum,
describe the company’s stress testing
practices and methodologies, and
processes for validating and updating
the company’s stress test practices and
methodologies consistent with
applicable laws, regulations, and
supervisory guidance.
Section 252.156 requires state
member banks with $50 billion or more
in total consolidated assets to report the
results of the stress test to the Board by
March 31 of each calendar year, unless
that time is extended by the Board in
writing. The report must include, under
the baseline scenario, adverse scenario,
and severely adverse scenario, a
description of the types of risks being
included in the stress test, a summary
description of the methodologies used
in the stress test, for each quarter of the
planning horizon, estimates of aggregate
losses, pre-provision net revenue,
provision for loan and lease losses, net
income, and regulatory capital ratios; an
explanation of the most significant
causes for the changes in regulatory
capital ratios; and any other information
required by the Board. This requirement
will remain applicable until such time
as the Board issues a reporting form to
collect the results of the stress test
required under section 252.154.
Estimated Paperwork Burden
Estimated Burden per Response:
Section 252.155(c) recordkeeping—40
hours (Initial setup 240 hours for
institutions over $10 million in total
consolidated assets).
Section 252.156 reporting—80 hours
(Initial setup 200 hours).
Number of respondents: For
recordkeeping requirements—39 U.S.
bank holding companies with total
consolidated assets over $10 billion and
less than $50 billion, 21 state member
banks with total consolidated assets
over $10 billion, 39 savings and loan
holding companies with total
consolidated assets over $10 billion.
For reporting requirements—6 large
state member banks.
Total estimated annual burden:
29,400 hours (24,960 hours for initial
setup and 4,440 hours for ongoing
compliance).
D. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
The Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5
U.S.C. 601 et seq. (RFA), requires each

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federal agency to prepare a final
regulatory flexibility analysis in
connection with the promulgation of a
final rule, or certify that the final rule
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities.25 The Board believes that the
final rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities, but
nonetheless is conducting the RFA
Analysis for this final rule.
In accordance with section 165(i) (2)
of the Dodd-Frank Act, the Board is
adopting the final rule as Regulation YY
and is adding new Part 252 (12 CFR part
252) to establish the requirements that
a holding company, savings and loan
holding company, or state member bank
conduct company-run stress tests
annually.26 The reasons and
justification for the final rule are
described in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION.
Under regulations issued by the Small
Business Administration (‘‘SBA’’), a
‘‘small entity’’ includes those firms
within the ‘‘Finance and Insurance’’
sector with asset sizes that vary from $7
million or less in assets to $175 million
or less in assets.27 The Board believes
that the Finance and Insurance sector
constitutes a reasonable universe of
firms for these purposes because such
firms generally engage in actives that are
financial in nature. Consequently, bank
holding companies, savings and loan
holding companies, or state member
banks with assets sizes of $175 million
or less are small entities for purposes of
the RFA.
As discussed in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION, the final rule applies to
bank holding companies with greater
than $10 billion but less than $50
billion in total consolidated assets and
state member banks and savings and
loan holding companies with greater
than $10 billion in total consolidated
assets. Companies that are subject to the
final rule therefore substantially exceed
the $175 million asset threshold at
which a banking entity is considered a
‘‘small entity’’ under SBA regulations.
As noted above, because the final rule
will not apply to any company with
assets of $175 million or less, the final
rule will not apply to any small entity
for purposes of the RFA. Moreover, as
discussed in the SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION, the Dodd-Frank Act
requires the Board to adopt rules
implementing the provisions of section
165(i)(2) of the Dodd-Frank Act. The
Board does not believe that the final
25 See

5 U.S.C. 603, 604 and 605.
12 U.S.C. 5365(d).
27 13 CFR 121.201.
26 See

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rule would have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities or that the final rule duplicates,
overlaps, or conflicts with any other
federal rules.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 252
Administrative practice and
procedure, Banks, Banking, Federal
Reserve System, Holding companies,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Securities, Stress Testing.
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System amends 12 CFR
part 252 as follows:
PART 252—ENHANCED PRUDENTIAL
STANDARDS (Regulation YY)
1. The authority citation for part 252
continues to read as follows:

■

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

2. Subpart H to part 252 is added to
read as follows:

■

Subpart H—Company-Run Stress Test
Requirements for Banking
Organizations With Total Consolidated
Assets Over $10 Billion That Are Not
Covered Companies
Sec.
252.151
252.152
252.153
252.154
252.155
252.156
252.157
§ 252.151

Authority and Purpose.
Definitions.
Applicability.
Annual stress test.
Methodologies and practices.
Reports of stress test results.
Disclosure of stress test results.
Authority and purpose.

(a) Authority. 12 U.S.C. 321–338a,
1467a(g), 1818, 1831o, 1831p–1,
1844(b), 1844(c), 3906–3909, 5365.
(b) Purpose. This subpart implements
section 165(i)(2) of the Dodd-Frank Act
(12 U.S.C. 5365(i)(2)), which requires a
bank holding company with total
consolidated assets of greater than $10
billion but less than $50 billion and
savings and loan holding companies
and state member banks with total
consolidated assets of greater than $10
billion to conduct annual stress tests.
This subpart also establishes definitions
of stress test and related terms,
methodologies for conducting stress
tests, and reporting and disclosure
requirements.
§ 252.152

Definitions.

For purposes of this subpart, the
following definitions apply:
(a) Adverse scenario means a set of
conditions that affect the U.S. economy

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or the financial condition of a bank
holding company, savings and loan
holding company, or state member bank
that are more adverse than those
associated with the baseline scenario
and may include trading or other
additional components.
(b) Asset threshold means—
(1) For a bank holding company,
average total consolidated assets of
greater than $10 billion but less than
$50 billion, and
(2) For a savings and loan holding
company or state member bank, average
total consolidated assets of greater than
$10 billion.
(c) Average total consolidated assets
means the average of the total
consolidated assets as reported by a
bank holding company, savings and
loan holding company, or state member
bank on its Consolidated Financial
Statements for Bank Holding Companies
(FR Y–9C) or Consolidated Report of
Condition and Income (Call Report), as
applicable, for the four most recent
consecutive quarters. If the bank
holding company, savings and loan
holding company, or state member bank
has not filed the FR Y–9C or Call
Report, as applicable, for each of the
four most recent consecutive quarters,
average total consolidated assets means
the average of the company’s total
consolidated assets, as reported on the
company’s FR Y–9C or Call Report, as
applicable, for the most recent quarter
or consecutive quarters. Average total
consolidated assets are measured on the
as-of date of the most recent FR Y–9C
or Call Report, as applicable, used in the
calculation of the average.
(d) Bank holding company has the
same meaning as in section 225.2(c) of
the Board’s Regulation Y (12 CFR
225.2(c)).
(e) Baseline scenario means a set of
conditions that affect the U.S. economy
or the financial condition of a bank
holding company, savings and loan
holding company, or state member
bank, and that reflect the consensus
views of the economic and financial
outlook.
(f) Capital action has the same
meaning as in section 225.8(c)(1) of the
Board’s Regulation Y (12 CFR
225.8(c)(1)).
(g) Covered company subsidiary
means a state member bank that is a
subsidiary of a covered company as
defined in subpart F of this part.
(h) Depository institution has the
same meaning as in section 3 of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12
U.S.C. 1813(c)).
(i) Foreign banking organization has
the same meaning as in section

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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 198 / Friday, October 12, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
211.21(o) of the Board’s Regulation K
(12 CFR 211.21(o)).
(j) Planning horizon means the period
of at least nine quarters, beginning on
the first day of a stress test cycle (on
October 1) over which the relevant
projections extend.
(k) Pre-provision net revenue means
the sum of net interest income and noninterest income less expenses before
adjusting for loss provisions.
(l) Provision for loan and lease losses
means the provision for loan and lease
losses as reported by the bank holding
company, savings and loan holding
company, or state member bank on the
FR Y–9C or Call Report, as appropriate.
(m) Regulatory capital ratio means a
capital ratio for which the Board
established minimum requirements by
regulation or order, including a
company’s leverage ratio and tier 1 and
total risk-based capital ratios as
calculated under the Board’s
regulations, including appendices A, D,
E, and G to 12 CFR part 225 and
appendices A, B, E, and F to 12 CFR
part 208 or any successor regulation.
(n) Savings and loan holding
company has the same meaning as in
section 238.2(m) of the Board’s
Regulation LL (12 CFR 238.2(m)).
(o) Scenarios are those sets of
conditions that affect the U.S. economy
or the financial condition of a bank
holding company, savings and loan
holding company, or state member bank
that the Board annually determines are
appropriate for use in the company-run
stress tests, including, but not limited
to, baseline, adverse, and severely
adverse scenarios.
(p) Severely adverse scenario means a
set of conditions that affect the U.S.
economy or the financial condition of a
bank holding company, savings and
loan holding company, or state member
bank and that overall are more severe
than those associated with the adverse
scenario and may include trading or
other additional components.
(q) State member bank has the same
meaning as in section 208.2(g) of the
Board’s Regulation H (12 CFR 208.2(g)).
(r) Stress test means a process to
assess the potential impact of scenarios
on the consolidated earnings, losses,
and capital of a bank holding company,
savings and loan holding company, or
state member bank over the planning
horizon, taking into account the current
condition, risks, exposures, strategies,
and activities.
(s) Stress test cycle means the period
between October 1 of a calendar year
and September 30 of the following
calendar year. For the purposes of the
stress test cycle commencing in 2012,

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such cycle will begin on November 15,
2012.
(t) Subsidiary has the same meaning
as in section 225.2(o) the Board’s
Regulation Y (12 CFR 225.2(o)).
§ 252.153

Applicability.

(a) Compliance date for bank holding
companies and state member banks that
meet the asset threshold on or before
December 31, 2012—(1) Bank holding
companies—(i) In general. Except as
provided in paragraph (a)(1)(ii) of this
section, a bank holding company that
meets the asset threshold on or before
December 31, 2012, must comply with
the requirements of this subpart
beginning with the stress test cycle that
commences on October 1, 2013, unless
that time is extended by the Board in
writing.
(ii) SR Letter 01–01. A U.S.-domiciled
bank holding company that is a
subsidiary of a foreign banking
organization that is currently relying on
Supervision and Regulation Letter SR
01–01 issued by the Board (as in effect
on May 19, 2010) must comply with the
requirements of this subpart beginning
with the stress test cycle that
commences on October 1, 2015, unless
that time is extended by the Board in
writing.
(2) State member banks. (i) A state
member bank that meets the asset
threshold as of November 15, 2012, and
is a subsidiary of a bank holding
company that participated in the 2009
Supervisory Capital Assessment
Program, or a successor to such bank
holding company, must comply with
the requirements of this subpart
beginning with the stress test cycle that
commences on November 15, 2012,
unless that time is extended by the
Board in writing.
(ii) A state member bank that meets
the asset threshold on or before
December 31, 2012, and is not described
in paragraph (a)(2)(i) of this section
must comply with the requirements of
this subpart beginning with the stress
test cycle that commences on October 1,
2013, unless that time is extended by
the Board in writing.
(b) Compliance date for bank holding
companies and state member banks that
meet the asset threshold after December
31, 2012. A bank holding company or
state member bank that meets the asset
threshold after December 31, 2012, must
comply with the requirements of this
subpart beginning with the stress test
cycle that commences in the calendar
year after the year in which the
company meets the asset threshold,
unless that time is extended by the
Board in writing.

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62407

(c) Compliance date for savings and
loan holding companies. (1) A savings
and loan holding company that meets
the asset threshold on or before the date
on which it is subject to minimum
regulatory capital requirements must
comply with the requirements of this
subpart beginning with the stress test
cycle that commences in the calendar
year after the year in which the
company becomes subject to the Board’s
minimum regulatory capital
requirements, unless the Board
accelerates or extends the compliance
date.
(2) A savings and loan holding
company that meets the asset threshold
after the date on which it is subject to
minimum regulatory capital
requirements must comply with the
requirements of this subpart beginning
with the stress test cycle that
commences in the calendar year after
the year in which the company becomes
subject to the Board’s minimum
regulatory capital requirements, unless
that time is extended by the Board in
writing.
(d) Ongoing application. A bank
holding company, savings and loan
holding company, or state member bank
that meets the asset threshold will
remain subject to the requirements of
this subpart unless and until its total
consolidated assets fall below $10
billion for each of four consecutive
quarters, as reported on the FR Y–9C or
Call Report, as applicable. The
calculation will be effective on the asof date of the fourth consecutive FR Y–
9C or Call Report, as applicable.
(e) Interaction with 12 CFR part 252,
subpart G. Notwithstanding paragraph
(d) of this section, a bank holding
company or savings and loan holding
company that becomes a covered
company as defined in subpart G of this
part and conducts a stress test pursuant
to that subpart is not subject to the
requirements of this subpart.
§ 252.154

Annual stress test.

(a) General requirements—(1) Savings
and loan holding companies with
average total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more and state member banks
that are covered company subsidiaries.
A savings and loan holding company
with average total consolidated assets of
$50 billion or more or a state member
bank that is a covered company
subsidiary or must conduct a stress test
by January 5 of each calendar year based
on data as of September 30 of the
preceding calendar year, unless the time
or the as-of date is extended by the
Board in writing.
(2) Bank holding companies, savings
and loan holding companies with total

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consolidated assets of less than $50
billion, and state member banks that are
not covered company subsidiaries.
Except as provided in paragraph (a)(1)
of this section, a bank holding company,
savings and loan holding company, or
state member bank must conduct a
stress test by March 31 of each calendar
year using financial statement data as of
September 30 of the preceding calendar
year, unless the time or the as-of date is
extended by the Board in writing.
(b) Scenarios provided by the Board—
(1) In general. In conducting a stress test
under this section, a bank holding
company, savings and loan holding
company, or state member bank must
use the scenarios provided by the Board.
Except as provided in paragraphs (b)(2)
and (3) of this section, the Board will
provide a description of the scenarios to
each bank holding company, savings
and loan holding company, or state
member bank no later than November
15 of that calendar year.
(2) Additional components. (i) The
Board may require a bank holding
company, savings and loan holding
company, or state member bank with
significant trading activity, as
determined by the Board and specified
in the Capital Assessments and Stress
Testing report (FR Y–14), to include a
trading and counterparty component in
its adverse and severely adverse
scenarios in the stress test required by
this section. The Board may also require
a state member bank that is subject to
12 CFR part 208, Appendix E and that
is a subsidiary of a bank holding
company subject to this paragraph
(b)(2)(i) or 12 CFR 252.144(b)(2)(i) to
include a trading and counterparty
component in the state member bank’s
adverse and severely adverse scenarios
in the stress test required by this
section. The data used in this
component will be as of a date between
October 1 and December 1 of that
calendar year selected by the Board, and
the Board will communicate the as-of
date and a description of the component
to the company no later than December
1 of the calendar year.
(ii) The Board may require a bank
holding company, savings and loan
holding company, or state member bank
to include one or more additional
components in its adverse and severely
adverse scenarios in the stress test
required by this section based on the
company’s financial condition, size,
complexity, risk profile, scope of
operations, or activities, or risks to the
U.S. economy.
(3) Additional scenarios. The Board
may require a bank holding company,
savings and loan holding company, or
state member bank to include one or

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more additional scenarios in the stress
test required by this section based on
the company’s financial condition, size,
complexity, risk profile, scope of
operations, or activities, or risks to the
U.S. economy.
(4) Notice and response. If the Board
requires a bank holding company,
savings and loan holding company, or
state member bank to include one or
more additional components in its
adverse and severely adverse scenarios
under paragraph (b)(2)(ii) of this section
or to use one or more additional
scenarios under paragraph (b)(3) of this
section, the Board will notify the
company in writing no later than
September 30. The notification will
include a general description of the
additional component(s) or additional
scenario(s) and the basis for requiring
the company to include the additional
component(s) or additional scenario(s).
Within 14 calendar days of receipt of a
notification under this paragraph, the
bank holding company, savings and
loan holding company, or state member
bank may request in writing that the
Board reconsider the requirement that
the company include the additional
component(s) or additional scenario(s),
including an explanation as to why the
reconsideration should be granted. The
Board will respond in writing within 14
calendar days of receipt of the
company’s request. The Board will
provide the bank holding company,
savings and loan holding company, or
state member bank with a description of
any additional component(s) or
additional scenario(s) by December 1.
§ 252.155

Methodologies and practices.

(a) Potential impact on capital. In
conducting a stress test under § 252.154,
for each quarter of the planning horizon,
a bank holding company, savings and
loan holding company, or state member
bank must estimate the following for
each scenario required to be used:
(1) Losses, pre-provision net revenue,
provision for loan and lease losses, and
net income; and
(2) The potential impact on pro forma
regulatory capital levels and pro forma
capital ratios (including regulatory
capital ratios and any other capital
ratios specified by the Board),
incorporating the effects of any capital
actions over the planning horizon and
maintenance of an allowance for loan
losses appropriate for credit exposures
throughout the planning horizon.
(b) Assumptions regarding capital
actions. In conducting a stress test
under § 252.154 of this part, a bank
holding company or savings and loan
holding company is required to make
the following assumptions regarding its

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capital actions over the planning
horizon—
(1) For the first quarter of the
planning horizon, the bank holding
company or savings and loan holding
company must take into account its
actual capital actions as of the end of
that quarter; and
(2) For each of the second through
ninth quarters of the planning horizon,
the bank holding company or savings
and loan holding company must include
in the projections of capital—
(i) Common stock dividends equal to
the quarterly average dollar amount of
common stock dividends that the
company paid in the previous year (that
is, the first quarter of the planning
horizon and the preceding three
calendar quarters);
(ii) Payments on any other instrument
that is eligible for inclusion in the
numerator of a regulatory capital ratio
equal to the stated dividend, interest, or
principal due on such instrument
during the quarter; and
(iii) An assumption of no redemption
or repurchase of any capital instrument
that is eligible for inclusion in the
numerator of a regulatory capital ratio.
(c) Controls and oversight of stress
testing processes—(1) In general. The
senior management of a bank holding
company, savings and loan holding
company, or state member bank must
establish and maintain a system of
controls, oversight, and documentation,
including policies and procedures, that
are designed to ensure that its stress
testing processes are effective in
meeting the requirements in this
subpart. These policies and procedures
must, at a minimum, describe the
company’s stress testing practices and
methodologies, and processes for
validating and updating the company’s
stress test practices and methodologies
consistent with applicable laws,
regulations, and supervisory guidance.
(2) Oversight of stress testing
processes. The board of directors, or a
committee thereof, of a bank holding
company, savings and loan holding
company, or state member bank must
approve and review the policies and
procedures of the stress testing
processes as frequently as economic
conditions or the condition of the
company may warrant, but no less than
annually. The board of directors and
senior management of the bank holding
company, savings and loan holding
company, or state member bank must
receive a summary of the results of the
stress test conducted under this section.
(3) Role of stress testing results. The
board of directors and senior
management of a bank holding
company, savings and loan holding

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Federal Register / Vol. 77, No. 198 / Friday, October 12, 2012 / Rules and Regulations
company, or state member bank must
consider the results of the stress test in
the normal course of business, including
but not limited to, the banking
organization’s capital planning,
assessment of capital adequacy, and risk
management practices.

wreier-aviles on DSK5TPTVN1PROD with RULES3

§ 252.156

Reports of stress test results.

(a) Reports to the Board of stress test
results—(1) Savings and loan holding
companies with average total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more and state member banks that are
covered company subsidiaries. A
savings and loan holding company with
average total consolidated assets of $50
billion or more or a state member bank
that is a covered company subsidiary
must report the results of the stress test
to the Board by January 5 of each
calendar year in the manner and form
prescribed by the Board, unless that
time is extended by the Board in
writing.
(2) Bank holding companies, savings
and loan holding companies, and state
member banks. Except as provided in
paragraph (a)(1) of this section, a bank
holding company, savings and loan
holding company, or state member bank
must report the results of the stress test
to the Board by March 31 of each
calendar year in the manner and form
prescribed by the Board, unless that
time is extended by the Board in
writing.
(b) Contents of reports. The report
required under paragraph (a) of this
section must include, under the baseline
scenario, adverse scenario, severely
adverse scenario, and any other scenario
required under § 252.154(b)(3) of this
part, a description of the types of risks
being included in the stress test; a
summary description of the
methodologies used in the stress test;
and, for each quarter of the planning
horizon, estimates of aggregate losses,
pre-provision net revenue, provision for
loan and lease losses, net income, and
regulatory capital ratios. In addition, the
report must include an explanation of
the most significant causes for the
changes in regulatory capital ratios and
any other information required by the
Board. This paragraph will remain
applicable until such time as the Board
issues a reporting form to collect the
results of the stress test required under
§ 252.154 of this part.
(c) Confidential treatment of
information submitted. The
confidentiality of information submitted
to the Board under this subpart and
related materials shall be determined in
accordance with applicable exemptions
under the Freedom of Information Act
(5 U.S.C. 552(b)) and the Board’s Rules

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Regarding Availability of Information
(12 CFR part 261).
§ 252.157

Disclosure of stress test results.

(a) Public disclosure of results—(1) In
general. (i) Except as provided in
paragraph (a)(1)(ii) or (b)(2) of this
section, a bank holding company,
savings and loan holding company, or
state member bank must disclose a
summary of the results of the stress test
in the period beginning on June 15 and
ending on June 30 unless that time is
extended by the Board in writing.
(ii) Except as provided in paragraph
(b)(2) of this section, a state member
bank that is a covered company
subsidiary or a savings and loan holding
company with average total
consolidated assets of $50 billion or
more must disclose a summary of the
results of the stress test in the period
beginning on March 15 and ending on
March 31, unless that time is extended
by the Board in writing.
(2) Initial disclosure. A bank holding
company, savings and loan holding
company, or state member bank that has
total consolidated assets of less than $50
billion on or before December 31, 2012,
must comply with the requirements of
this section beginning with the stress
test cycle commencing on October 1,
2014.
(3) Disclosure method. The summary
required under this section may be
disclosed on the Web site of a bank
holding company, savings and loan
holding company, or state member
bank, or in any other forum that is
reasonably accessible to the public.
(b) Summary of results—(1) Bank
holding companies and savings and
loan holding companies. A bank
holding company or savings and loan
holding company must disclose, at a
minimum, the following information
regarding the severely adverse scenario:
(i) A description of the types of risks
included in the stress test;
(ii) A summary description of the
methodologies used in the stress test;
(iii) Estimates of—
(A) Aggregate losses;
(B) Pre-provision net revenue;
(C) Provision for loan and lease losses;
(D) Net income; and
(E) Pro forma regulatory capital ratios
and any other capital ratios specified by
the Board;
(iv) An explanation of the most
significant causes for the changes in
regulatory capital ratios; and
(v) With respect to a stress test
conducted by an insured depository
institution subsidiary of the bank
holding company or savings and loan
holding company pursuant to section
165(i)(2) of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street

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62409

Reform and Consumer Protection Act,
changes in regulatory capital ratios and
any other capital ratios specified by the
Board of the depository institution
subsidiary over the planning horizon,
including an explanation of the most
significant causes for the changes in
regulatory capital ratios.
(2) State member banks that are
subsidiaries of bank holding companies.
A state member bank that is a subsidiary
of a bank holding company will satisfy
the public disclosure requirements
under section 165(i)(2) of the DoddFrank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act when the bank holding
company publicly discloses summary
results of its stress test pursuant to this
section or section 252.148 of this part,
unless the Board determines that the
disclosures at the holding company
level do not adequately capture the
potential impact of the scenarios on the
capital of the state member bank. In this
case, the state member bank must make
the same disclosure as required by
paragraph (b)(3) of this section.
(3) State member banks that are not
subsidiaries of bank holding companies.
A state member bank that is not a
subsidiary of a bank holding company
must disclose, at a minimum, the
following information regarding the
severely adverse scenario:
(i) A description of the types of risks
being included in the stress test;
(ii) A summary description of the
methodologies used in the stress test;
(iii) Estimates of—
(A) Aggregate losses;
(B) Pre-provision net revenue
(C) Provision for loan and lease losses;
(D) Net income; and
(E) Pro forma regulatory capital ratios
and any other capital ratios specified by
the Board; and
(iv) An explanation of the most
significant causes for the changes in
regulatory capital ratios.
(c) Content of results. (1) The
disclosure of aggregate losses, preprovision net revenue, provision for
loan and lease losses, and net income
that is required under paragraph (b) of
this section must be on a cumulative
basis over the planning horizon.
(2) The disclosure of pro forma
regulatory capital ratios and any other
capital ratios specified by the Board that
is required under paragraph (b) of this
section must include the beginning
value, ending value and minimum value
of each ratio over the planning horizon.
By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, October 5, 2012.
Robert deV. Frierson,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 2012–24988 Filed 10–11–12; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P

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