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3-050

Background and Summary of Regulation F

Regulation F, Interbank Liabilities, implements section 23 of the Federal Reserve Act, which requires the Board to prescribe standards to limit the risks posed by exposure of insured depository institutions to other depository institutions. The regulation requires banks, savings associations, and branches of foreign banks with deposits insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (referred to collectively as “banks”) to develop and implement internal prudential policies and procedures for evaluating and controlling exposure to the depository institutions with which they do business, referred to as “correspondents.”
The regulation establishes a general “limit,” stated in terms of the exposed bank’s capital, for overnight credit exposure to an individual correspondent. A bank ordinarily should limit its credit exposure to an individual correspondent to an amount equal tonot more than 25 percent of the exposed bank’s total capital, unless the bank can demonstrate that its correspondent is at least “adequately capitalized.” The regulation does not specify a limit on credit exposure to correspondents that are at least “adequately capitalized,” but a bank is required to establish and follow its own internal policies and procedures with regard to exposure to all correspondents, regardless of capital level.
“Credit exposure” to a correspondent includes assets and off-balance-sheet items against which the exposed bank must carry capital under the risk-based capital adequacy guidelines. Certain transactions that carry a low risk of loss, such as transactions that are fully secured by government securities or other readily marketable collateral, are excluded from calculation of a bank’s credit exposure. Netting of obligations under legally valid and enforceable netting contracts is permitted in calculating credit exposure.

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