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Speech
Governor Susan Schmidt Bies

At the Bank Administration Institute Treasury Management Conference, Orlando, Florida
May 4, 2006

Supervisory Perspective on Current Bank Capital, Market Risk, and Loan Product
Issues
Thank you for the invitation to speak today. I know we have a mix of bankers in the audience from
institutions of all sizes that are engaged in asset/liability and treasury management. So I am going to
discuss some issues that are relevant to banks of various types. First, I am going to comment on the
proposed guidance for commercial real estate and nontraditional mortgages. Then, I want to discuss
changing risk exposures in market risk and the related capital regulations. Finally, I will focus on
recent regulatory actions that relate to small bank holding company capital and trust preferred
securities.
Proposed Supervisory Guidance
It is my understanding that many of you are aware of proposed supervisory guidance relating to
commercial real estate and nontraditional mortgages. We have received many comments on both
proposals--perhaps even from some of you. Naturally, bankers may be somewhat concerned about
the effect that this proposed guidance could have on their business. But I think it is helpful to
remember that the primary responsibility of regulators is to ensure that the United States has a safe
and sound banking system. When we see possibly excessive risk-taking or inappropriate risk
management or controls, we must act. While most U.S. banks operate in a safe and sound manner,
we must always be vigilant for problems that may arise in the future.
Commercial Real Estate
First, I would like to underscore that the proposed commercial real estate (CRE) guidance focuses
on "true" CRE loans. It does not concern commercial loans for which a bank looks to a borrower's
cash flow as the source of repayment and accepts real estate collateral as a secondary source of
repayment. Rather, it addresses bank lending on commercial real estate projects for which
repayment is dependent on third-party rental income or the sale, refinancing, or permanent financing
of the property. With "true" commercial real estate lending, repayment depends on the condition and
performance of the real estate market.
I would also like to mention up front that the proposed guidance is not intended to cap or restrict
banks' participation in the commercial real estate sector, but rather to remind institutions that proper
risk management and adequate capital are essential components of a sound CRE lending strategy. In
fact, both of these components are already in place at many institutions. No element of the proposed
guidance is intended to act as a "trigger" or "hard limit" signaling the need for an immediate cutback
in or reversal of CRE lending; rather, the thresholds in the proposed guidance are intended as
benchmarks identifying cases for further review.
Supervisors focus on commercial real estate because that sector played a central role in the banking
problems of the late 1980s and early 1990s and has historically been a highly volatile asset class.
Past problems in the sector have generally come at times when the broader market encountered
difficulties. Therefore, banks should not be surprised by the emphasis of the proposed guidance on
the importance of portfolio risk management and concentrations. One reason supervisors are
proposing CRE guidance at this point is that we are seeing high and rising concentrations of CRE
loans relative to capital. For certain groups of banks, such as those with assets between $100 million

and $1 billion, average CRE concentrations are about 300 percent of total capital. This is twice the
concentration level of about 150 percent in the late 1980s and early 1990s for this same bank group,
when we last went through the bottom of a CRE credit cycle.
While banks' underwriting standards are generally stronger now than in the 1980s and 1990s, the
agencies are proposing the guidance now to reinforce sound portfolio-management principles that a
bank should have in place when pursuing a commercial real estate lending strategy. In addition to
monitoring the performance of individual loans, bankers should also be monitoring the mix of
property types and performance of their portfolio as a whole and the performance of local real estate
markets in which they are lending. A bank targeting commercial real estate lending as a primary
business activity needs to consider that the risk exposure arising from the performance of its total
CRE loan portfolio--the concentration risk--depends on broader real estate market conditions. For
example, if a bank has several borrowers with similar projects that encounter problems--such as
longer absorption periods, higher marketing costs, or higher vacancy rates--weaknesses in the
broader real estate market can have a cascading effect on the quality of the bank's CRE portfolio as
real estate values erode.
In evaluating the impact of their commercial real estate concentrations, bankers should also pay
attention to geographic factors. A bank may lend successfully within a certain geographic area but
may encounter problems when it begins to lend outside its market, or "footprint," for which it
typically has better market intelligence. In recent years, supervisors have observed banks, in order to
maintain a customer relationship, going beyond their established footprint and lending in real estate
markets with which they have less experience. The challenge can be even greater when the borrower
is also venturing into a new market. In prior CRE credit downturns, such practices have led to
significant losses.
Nontraditional Mortgage Products
Over the past few years, the agencies have observed an increase in the number of residential
mortgage loans that allow borrowers to defer repayment of principal and, sometimes, interest. These
loans, often referred to as nontraditional mortgage loans, include "interest-only" (IO) mortgage
loans, on which the borrower pays no loan principal for the first few years of the loan, and
"payment-option" adjustable-rate mortgages (option ARMs), for which the borrower has flexible
payment options--and which could also result in negative amortization.
IOs and option ARMs are estimated to have accounted for almost one-third of all U.S. mortgage
originations in 2005, compared with less than 10 percent in 2003. Despite their recent growth,
however, these products, it is estimated, still account for less than 20 percent of aggregate domestic
mortgages outstanding of $8 trillion. While the credit quality of residential mortgages generally
remains strong, the Federal Reserve and other banking supervisors are concerned that current riskmanagement techniques may not fully address the level of risk inherent in nontraditional mortgages,
a risk that would be heightened by a downturn in the housing market.
Mortgages with some of the characteristics of nontraditional mortgage products have been available
for many years; however, they have historically been offered to higher-income borrowers. More
recently, they have been offered to a wider spectrum of consumers, including subprime borrowers,
who may be less suited for these types of mortgages and may not fully recognize the embedded
risks. These borrowers are more likely to experience an unmanageable payment shock during the
life of the loan, meaning that they may be more likely to default on the loan. Further, nontraditional
mortgage loans are becoming more prevalent in the subprime market at the same time risk
tolerances in the capital markets have increased. Banks need to be prepared for the resulting impact
on liquidity and pricing if and when risk spreads return to more "normal" levels and competition in
the mortgage banking industry intensifies.
Supervisors have also observed that lenders are increasingly combining nontraditional mortgage
loans with weaker mitigating controls on credit exposures--for example, by accepting less
documentation in evaluating an applicant's creditworthiness and not evaluating the borrower's ability
to meet increasing monthly payments when amortization begins or when interest rates rise. These

"risk layering" practices have become more and more prevalent in mortgage originations. Thus,
while some banks may have used elements of the product structure successfully in the past, the
easing of traditional underwriting controls and sales of products to subprime borrowers may have
unforeseen effects on losses realized in these products.
In view of these industry trends, the Federal Reserve and the other banking agencies decided to
issue the draft guidance on nontraditional mortgage products. The proposed guidance emphasizes
that an institution's risk-management processes should allow it to adequately identify, measure,
monitor, and control the risk associated with these products. It reminds lenders of the importance of
assessing a borrower's ability to repay the loan including when amortization begins and interest rates
rise. These products warrant strong risk-management standards as well as appropriate capital and
loan-loss reserves. Further, bankers should consider the impact of prepayment penalties for ARMs.
Lenders should provide borrowers with enough information to clearly understand, before choosing a
product or payment option, the terms of and risks associated with these loans, particularly the extent
to which monthly payments may rise and that negative amortization may increase the amount owed
above the amount originally borrowed. Lenders should recognize that certain nontraditional
mortgage loans are untested in a stressed environment; for instance, nontraditional mortgage loans
to investors that rely on collateral values could be particularly affected by a housing price decline.
Investors have represented an unusually large share of home purchases in the last two years. Past
loan performance indicated that investors are more likely to default on a loan when housing prices
decline, than owner occupants.
Ongoing Efforts to Update and Improve the Market Risk Amendment
Let me now describe the changes that are occurring in market risk capital. While only banks with
large trading books hold capital for market risk, the issues that the proposed changes are designed to
address can be considered by treasurers, asset/liability managers, and traders to determine whether
their risk management practices are keeping pace with the changing nature of risks.
As you are no doubt aware, about a decade ago the U.S. banking agencies developed regulatory
capital requirements specifically for market risk. These requirements, set forth in the Market Risk
Amendment (MRA) to the Basel Capital Accord, were an attempt to keep up with the financial
innovation that was occurring in the industry. The Basel MRA is only applied to banks with sizable
market risk exposures. The U.S. banking agencies adopted the internal models approach to
capturing the market risk arising from traded exposures. The internal models approach, which is the
only one offered in the United States, is based on the widely used value-at-risk (VaR) methodology
with a uniform ten-day holding period and a 99 percent confidence interval. At the time the Market
Risk Amendment was adopted, the soundness standard set forth in the internal models approach
worked well for the traded positions of a large number of banks. However, even then, banks and
supervisors recognized that certain risks, such as fat tails and model risks, were not well captured in
VaR models. Supervisors were led to impose a multiplier of 3 on internally modeled estimates of
general market risk and a multiplier of 4 on internally modeled estimates of specific market risk that
do not adequately capture event and default risk.
Since adoption of the Market Risk Amendment, banks' trading activities have become more
sophisticated and have given rise to a wider range of risks that are not easily captured in a VaR
model. For example, more products related to credit risk, such as credit default swaps and tranches
of collateralized debt obligations, are now included in the trading book. These products can give rise
to default risks that are not captured well in models specifying a ten-day holding period and a 99
percent confidence interval, particularly if the bank has concentrations across various trading
portfolios, such as bonds, credit derivatives, and other structured credit products. In addition,
structured and exotic traded products may give rise to liquidity, correlation, concentration, and skew
risks, which are difficult to capture adequately in a VaR model. The inability of VaR calculations to
adequately measure the risks of certain traded positions may give rise to arbitrage opportunities
between the banking book and the trading book because of the lower capital charge that may be
afforded trading positions under a VaR approach that is not optimally risk sensitive.
When the Basel Committee published its revised capital framework in June 2004,1 the focus was on

banks' credit and operational risks, not on their trading activities. However, in releasing the revised
framework, the Basel Committee indicated that work should begin immediately on applying the
revised framework to banks' exposures arising from trading activities. Thus was convened a
working group that included representatives of both the Basel Committee and the International
Organization of Securities Commissions (IOSCO), given the interest of the securities regulators in
the same issues related to trading book risks. The Basel-IOSCO working group issued a consultative
paper in April 2005 and subsequently received comments from banks, investment firms, industry
associations, supervisory authorities, and other interested parties. The working group considered
these comments in formulating revisions to the MRA, which were published in July 2005.2 The
revisions attempt to enhance the risk sensitivity of the capital charges for positions assigned to the
trading book by promoting improved market risk methodologies.
The U.S. banking agencies are in the process of developing a notice of proposed rulemaking to
implement the Basel-IOSCO market risk revisions in this country. We expect that the current market
risk revisions, like the current U.S. rules implementing the MRA for U.S. banking organizations,
will apply only to banking organizations meeting the current threshold criteria for application of the
market risk rules--that is, to those organizations having aggregate trading assets and liabilities, as
reported on the Call Report, of (1) 10 percent or more of total assets or (2) $1 billion or more. These
revised market risk amendments would be applied by banking organizations meeting either
criterion, whether or not the organization is adopting the credit and operational portions of the Basel
II framework. We expect that a small number of banking organizations will remain under the Basel I
rules (as amended) but will also compute a market risk charge. Banking organizations that do not
meet one of the criteria would not be subject to a market risk capital charge, regardless of whether
they apply the Basel I or Basel II rules for credit and operational risk. This expectation is consistent
with our view--since the inception of the market risk rules--that imposing the burden of calculating a
market risk capital charge is not appropriate when market risk exposure does not meet the threshold
criteria.
These Pillar 1 revisions in the area of market risk are supplemented and supported by revisions in
the areas of supervisory review (Pillar 2) and market discipline (Pillar 3), just as are the revisions for
credit risk and operational risk. The Pillar 2 changes seek to strengthen firms' assessments of their
internal capital adequacy in the area of market risk, taking into account the output of their VaR
models, valuation adjustments, and stress tests. Internal capital assessments must factor in:
illiquidity; concentrated positions; nonlinear and deep out-of-the-money products; events and
jumps-to-default; and significant shifts in correlations. The Pillar 3 changes increase the robustness
of trading book disclosures; specifically, firms must demonstrate how they combine their risk
measurement approaches to arrive at an overall internal capital assessment. We expect to issue this
NPR sometime this summer.
Innovations in Capital Instruments
Naturally, in determining capital adequacy ratios, supervisors focus not just on defining risk
positions--the denominator--but also on defining the components of capital--the numerator. Over the
years there have been a number of innovations in capital instruments; one particularly innovative
area has been the structuring of preferred stock and hybrid securities for inclusion in tier 1 capital.
The Federal Reserve refined its framework for the components of tier 1 capital in a final rule issued
in March 2005. The final rule allows bank holding companies to continue to include trust preferred
securities in tier 1 capital, much of which they invest in the common stock of their depository
institution subsidiaries. However, the final rule also imposes stricter quantitative limits and
qualitative standards on trust preferred securities and on other restricted core capital elements
included in tier 1 capital. The Federal Reserve's goal in framing the final rule was to allow
innovation and adaptation in capital funding for bank holding companies--much of which are aimed
at increased cost effectiveness--while ensuring consistency with the Federal Reserve's focus on the
quality and strength of institutions' capital bases. To this end, the final rule states that common stock
and noncumulative perpetual preferred stock should make up no less than three quarters of a
banking organization's tier 1 capital. We believe that the continued strength of the capital base of
U.S. bank holding companies is a critical component of the safety and soundness of the industry we
supervise.

The Federal Reserve considers many factors when it evaluates eligible capital for BHCs, especially
for innovative capital instruments. Thus, our decision to allow BHCs to continue to include trust
preferred stock in tier 1 capital came only with stricter quantitative standards that apply to a range of
non-common equity capital elements. In our view, the continued inclusion of trust preferred
securities in tier 1 capital is merited because our experience has shown that this instrument can
provide financial support to banking organizations if their financial condition deteriorates. Also,
from a competitive point of view, poolings of trust preferred stock have enabled smaller BHCs to
enter the capital markets for tier 1 capital, which larger BHCs have long been able to access.
A recent innovation that banking organizations have been considering is a modified trust preferred
security that continues to receive tier 1 capital treatment but is given increased equity credit from the
rating agencies. Although the Federal Reserve is working with institutions on possible modifications
to conventional trust preferred securities that meet this objective, our focus is on ensuring that the
instruments continue to provide capital strength and do not give rise to supervisory problems. Our
experience with conventional trust preferred securities has been largely positive, and we hope to
maintain that track record with any modified trust preferred securities we eventually approve. Thus,
while we are cognizant that a large volume of trust preferred securities will begin to become callable
at the end of this year, making institutions especially keen to find a replacement security with higher
rating-agency equity credit, we intend to move judiciously in approving modifications. As always,
we will do our best to respond to the business needs of the banking organizations we supervise in a
timely manner and to accommodate them to the extent possible within the bounds of our prudential
framework.
Changes to the Small Bank Holding Company Policy Statement
Finally, knowing that many of you represent smaller banks, I want to highlight a recent change in
the Federal Reserve's Small Bank Holding Company Policy Statement. That statement was
originally issued in 1980 to facilitate the transfer of ownership of small community-based banks in a
safe and sound manner. It permits the formation and expansion of small bank holding companies
(BHCs) that have debt levels higher than would be permitted for larger BHCs. The statement
previously applied to those BHCs (qualifying small BHCs) that had pro forma consolidated assets of
less than $150 million and met certain qualitative criteria.
The Federal Reserve follows the general principle that bank holding companies should be a source
of strength for their subsidiary banks. When a bank holding company incurs debt and relies on the
earnings of its subsidiary banks to repay the debt, the probable effect on the financial condition of
the holding company and its subsidiary bank or banks becomes a concern. The Federal Reserve
believes that a high level of debt at the parent holding company level can impair the BHC's ability to
provide financial assistance to its subsidiary bank or banks; in some cases, the servicing
requirements on such debt may be a significant drain on the bank's resources. Nevertheless, the
Federal Reserve recognizes the need for flexibility in the formation and expansion of small bank
holding companies that have debt levels higher than would be permitted for larger bank holding
companies. Notably, approval of the higher debt levels has been given on the condition that the
small bank holding companies demonstrate the ability to service debt without straining the capital of
their subsidiary banks and, further, that the companies restore their ability to serve as a source of
strength for their subsidiary bank within a relatively short period.
In September 2005, the Federal Reserve requested comment on proposed amendments to the rule.
After reviewing the comments on the proposal, the Federal Reserve in February 2006 approved a
final rule very similar to the proposal. The final rule raised the small BHC asset size threshold from
$150 million to $500 million for determining whether a small BHC would be eligible for the Policy
Statement and exempt from the Capital Guidelines. The Federal Reserve also adopted several
modifications to the qualitative criteria under which a BHC not exceeding the asset size threshold
nevertheless would be ineligible for application of the Policy Statement and would be subject to the
Capital Guidelines. These modifications were intended to ensure that factors related to safety and
soundness, not just to size, are also taken into account. The final rule also clarified that subordinated
debt associated with issuances of trust preferred securities generally would be considered debt for
most purposes under the Policy Statement, but provided a five-year transition period for

subordinated debt issued before the date of the proposed rule.
The new threshold and amended qualitative criteria are designed to reflect changes in the industry
since the Policy Statement was first issued in 1980. With respect to the amended qualitative criteria,
the final rule excludes from Policy Statement eligibility any small BHC that is engaged in
significant nonbanking activities; is engaged in significant off-balance sheet activities, including
securitizations or assets under management; or has a material amount of debt registered with the
Securities and Exchange Commission or equity securities outstanding. Federal Reserve staff expect
that relatively few small BHCs will be excluded under these criteria.
Whereas the treatment of subordinated debt associated with trust preferred securities was not
previously defined, the final rule clarifies that such subordinated debt is considered debt for most
purposes under the Policy Statement. It provides for a five-year transition period, however, to give
qualifying small BHCs sufficient time to conform their debt structures. The rule also allows small
BHCs to refinance existing issuances of trust preferred securities without losing the exempt status of
the related subordinated debt during the transition period, so long as the amount of the BHC's
subordinated debt does not increase in the aggregate.
Finally, the notice informs the public that the Federal Reserve expects to review the asset threshold
at least once every five years to determine whether further adjustments might be appropriate.
Conclusion
The Federal Reserve believes that ensuring strong capital levels and good risk management at U.S.
banking organizations is critical to the health of our banking and financial system. Our regulatory
and supervisory efforts support this broad objective. That is why we provide guidance around
emerging risk issues, such as the current proposals for commercial real estate and nontraditional
mortgages. We also work to make sure innovations in financial instruments are encouraged and used
in appropriate risk-management frameworks, and we periodically will change regulatory policy to
support sound risk management. At the end of the day, it is our job as bank supervisor and central
bank to ensure that banks are operating in a safe and sound manner, and that financial stability is
maintained.
Thank you.

Footnotes
1. Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, International Convergence of Capital Measurement
and Capital Standards: A Revised Framework (Basel, June 2004), available online at
www.bis.org/publ/bcbs107.htm. Return to text
2. See Bank for International Settlements, Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, The
Application of Basel II to Trading Activities and the Treatment of Double Default Effects (July
2005), www.bis.org. Return to text
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