(a) Information to assess systemic importance.
(1) Financial
market utilities. The Council is authorized to require any financial
market utility to submit such information as the Council may require
for the sole purpose of assessing whether that financial market utility
is systemically important, but only if the Council has reasonable
cause to believe that the financial market utility meets the standards
for systemic importance set forth in section 804.
(2) Financial
institutions engaged in payment, clearing, or settlement activities. The Council is authorized to require any financial institution to
submit such information as the Council may require for the sole purpose
of assessing whether any payment, clearing, or settlement activity
engaged in or supported by a financial institution is systemically
important, but only if the Council has reasonable cause to believe
that the activity meets the standards for systemic importance set
forth in section 804.
(b) Reporting after designation.
(1) Designated
financial market utilities. The Board of Governors and the Council
may each require a designated financial market utility to submit reports
or data to the Board of Governors and the Council in such frequency
and form as deemed necessary by the Board of Governors or the Council
in order to assess the safety and soundness of the utility and the
systemic risk that the utility’s operations pose to the financial
system.
(2) Financial institutions subject to standards
for designated activities. The Board of Governors and the Council
may each require 1 or more financial institutions subject to the standards
prescribed under section 805(a) for a designated activity to submit,
in such frequency and form as deemed necessary by the Board of Governors
or the Council, reports and data to the Board of Governors and the
Council solely with respect to the conduct of the designated activity
and solely to assess whether—
(A) the rules, orders,
or standards prescribed under section 805(a) with respect to the designated
activity appropriately address the risks to the financial system presented
by such activity; and
(B) the financial institutions are in compliance with this title
and the rules and orders prescribed under section 805(a) with respect
to the designated activity.
(3) Limitation. The Board of Governors may, upon an affirmative vote by a majority
of the Council, prescribe regulations under this section that impose
a recordkeeping or reporting requirement on designated clearing entities
or financial institutions engaged in designated activities that are
subject to standards that have been prescribed under section 805(a)(2).
(c) Coordination
with appropriate federal supervisory agency.
(1) Advance coordination. Before requesting any material information from, or imposing reporting
or recordkeeping requirements on, any financial market utility or
any financial institution engaged in a payment, clearing, or settlement
activity, the Board of Governors or the Council shall coordinate with
the Supervisory Agency for a financial market utility or the appropriate
financial regulator for a financial institution to determine if the
information is available from or may be obtained by the agency in
the form, format, or detail required by the Board of Governors or
the Council.
(2) Supervisory reports. Notwithstanding any
other provision of law, the Supervisory Agency, the appropriate financial
regulator, and the Board of Governors are authorized to disclose to
each other and the Council copies of its examination reports or similar
reports regarding any financial market utility or any financial institution
engaged in payment, clearing, or settlement activities.
(d) Timing of response
from appropriate federal supervisory agency. If the information,
report, records, or data requested by the Board of Governors or the
Council under subsection (c)(1) are not provided in full by the Supervisory
Agency or the appropriate financial regulator in less than 15 days
after the date on which the material is requested, the Board of Governors
or the Council may request the information or impose recordkeeping
or reporting requirements directly on such persons as provided in
subsections (a) and (b) with notice to the agency.
(e) Sharing of information.
(1) Material
concerns. Notwithstanding any other provision of law, the Board
of Governors, the Council, the appropriate financial regulator, and
any Supervisory Agency are authorized to—
(A) promptly
notify each other of material concerns about a designated financial
market utility or any financial institution engaged in designated
activities; and
(B)
share appropriate reports, information, or data relating to such concerns.
(2) Other information. Notwithstanding any
other provision of law, the Board of Governors, the Council, the appropriate
financial regulator, or any Supervisory Agency may, under such terms
and conditions as it deems appropriate, provide confidential supervisory
information and other information obtained under this title to each
other, and to the Secretary, Federal Reserve Banks, State financial
institution supervisory agencies, foreign financial supervisors, foreign
central banks, and foreign finance ministries, subject to reasonable assurances
of confidentiality, provided, however, that no person or entity receiving
information pursuant to this section may disseminate such information
to entities or persons other than those listed in this paragraph without
complying with applicable law, including section 8 of the Commodity
Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 12).
(f) Privilege maintained. The Board of Governors,
the Council, the appropriate financial regulator, and any Supervisory
Agency providing reports or data under this section shall not be deemed
to have waived any privilege applicable to those reports or data,
or any portion thereof, by providing the reports or data to the other
party or by permitting the reports or data, or any copies thereof,
to be used by the other party.
(g) Disclosure exemption. Information obtained
by the Board of Governors, the Supervisory Agencies, or the Council
under this section and any materials prepared by the Board of Governors,
the Supervisory Agencies, or the Council regarding their assessment
of the systemic importance of financial market utilities or any payment,
clearing, or settlement activities engaged in by financial institutions,
and in connection with their supervision of designated financial market
utilities and designated activities, shall be confidential supervisory
information exempt from disclosure under section 552 of title 5, United
States Code. For purposes of such section 552, this subsection shall
be considered a statute described in subsection (b)(3) of such section
552.
(h) Data standards.
(1) Requirement. The Board of Governors shall adopt data standards
for all information that, through a collection of information, is
regularly filed with or submitted to the Board or the Council by any
financial market utility or financial institution under subsection
(a) or (b).
(2) Consistency. The data standards required
under paragraph (1) shall incorporate, and ensure compatibility with
(to the extent feasible), all applicable data standards established
in the rules promulgated under section 124 of the Financial Stability
Act of 2010, including, to the extent practicable, by having the characteristics
described in clauses (i) through (vi) of subsection (c)(1)(B) of such
section 124.
[12 USC 5468. As amended
by act of Dec. 23, 2022 (136 Stat. 3435).]