A. Payment, Clearing, and Settlement
Activities
Framework. Maintaining continuity
of payment, clearing, and settlement (PCS) services is critical for
the orderly resolution of firms that are either users or providers,
12 or both, of PCS services. A firm should
demonstrate capabilities for continued access to PCS services essential
to an orderly resolution through a framework to support such access
by:
- Identifying clients,13 FMUs, and agent banks as key from the firm’s perspective,
using both quantitative (volume and value)14 and qualitative
criteria;
- Mapping material entities, critical operations, core
business lines, and key clients to both key FMUs and key agent banks;
and
- Developing a playbook for each key FMU and key agent
bank reflecting the firm’s role(s) as a user and/or provider
of PCS services.
The framework should address both direct relationships
(e.g., a firm’s direct membership in an FMU, a firm’s
provision of clients with PCS services through its own operations,
or a firm’s contractual relationship with an agent bank) and
indirect relationships (e.g., a firm’s provision of clients
with access to the relevant FMU or agent bank through the firm’s
membership in or relationship with that FMU or agent bank).
Playbooks for continued access
to PCS services. The firm is expected to provide a playbook for
each key FMU and key agent bank that addresses considerations that
would assist the firm and its key clients in maintaining continued
access to PCS services in the period leading up to and including the
firm’s resolution. Each playbook should provide analysis of
the financial and operational impact to the firm’s material
entities and key clients due to adverse actions that may be taken
by a key FMU or a key agent bank and contingency actions that may
be taken by the firm. Each playbook also should discuss any possible
alternative arrangements that would allow the firm and its key clients
continued access to PCS services in resolution. The firm is not expected
to incorporate a scenario in which it loses key FMU or key agent bank
access into its preferred resolution strategy or its RLEN/RCEN estimates.
The firm should continue to engage with key FMUs, key agent banks,
and key clients, and playbooks should reflect any feedback received
during such ongoing outreach.
Content related to users of PCS services. Individual
key FMU and key agent bank playbooks should include:
- Description of the firm’s relationship as a
user with the key FMU or key agent bank and the identification and
mapping of PCS services to material entities, critical operations,
and core business lines that use those PCS services;
- Discussion of the potential range of adverse actions
that may be taken by that key FMU or key agent bank when the firm
is in resolution,15 the operational and financial impact of such actions on each material
entity, and contingency arrangements that may be initiated by the firm
in response to potential adverse actions by the key FMU or key agent
bank; and
- Discussion of PCS-related liquidity sources and uses
in business-as-usual (BAU), in stress, and in the resolution period,
presented by currency type (with U.S. dollar equivalent) and by material
entity.
- o PCS liquidity sources:
These may include the amounts of intraday extensions of credit, liquidity
buffer, inflows from FMU participants, and key client prefunded amounts
in BAU, in stress, and in the resolution period. The playbook also
should describe intraday credit arrangements (e.g., facilities of
the key FMU, key agent bank, or a central bank) and any similar custodial
arrangements that allow ready access to a firm’s funds for PCS-related
key FMU and key agent bank obligations (including margin requirements)
in various currencies, including placements of firm liquidity at central
banks, key FMUs, and key agent banks.
- o PCS liquidity uses: These
may include firm and key client margin and prefunding and intraday
extensions of credit, including incremental amounts required during
resolution.
- o Intraday liquidity inflows
and outflows: The playbook should describe the firm’s ability
to control intraday liquidity inflows and outflows and to identify
and prioritize time-specific payments. The playbook also should describe
any account features that might restrict the firm’s ready access
to its liquidity sources.
Content related to providers of PCS services.16 Individual key FMU and key agent bank playbooks should include:
- Identification and mapping of PCS services to the
material entities, critical operations, and core business lines that
provide those PCS services, and a description of the scale and the
way in which each provides PCS services;
- Identification and mapping of PCS services to key
clients to whom the firm provides such PCS services and any related
credit or liquidity offered in connection with such services;
- Discussion of the potential range of firm contingency
arrangements available to minimize disruption to the provision of
PCS services to its key clients, including the viability of transferring
key client activity and any related assets, as well as any alternative
arrangements that would allow the firm’s key clients continued
access to PCS services if the firm could no longer provide such access
(e.g., due to the firm’s loss of key FMU or key agent bank access),
and the financial and operational impacts of such arrangements from
the firm’s perspective;
- Description of the range of contingency actions that
the firm may take concerning its provision of intraday credit to key
clients, including analysis quantifying the potential liquidity the
firm could generate by taking such actions in stress and in the resolution
period, such as (i) requiring key clients to designate or appropriately
preposition liquidity, including through prefunding of settlement
activity, for PCS-related key FMU and key agent bank obligations at
specific material entities of the firm (e.g., direct members of key
FMUs) or any similar custodial arrangements that allow ready access
to key clients’ funds for such obligations in various currencies;
(ii) delaying or restricting key client PCS activity; and (iii) restricting,
imposing conditions upon (e.g., requiring collateral), or eliminating
the provision of intraday credit or liquidity to key clients; and
- Description of how the firm will communicate to its
key clients the potential impacts of implementation of any identified
contingency arrangements or alternatives, including a description
of the firm’s methodology for determining whether any additional
communication should be provided to some or all key clients (e.g.,
due to the key client’s BAU usage of that access and/or related
intraday credit or liquidity), and the expected timing and form of
such communication.
B. Managing, Identifying, and Valuing
Collateral
The firm should have capabilities related
to managing, identifying, and valuing the collateral that it receives
from and posts to external parties and its affiliates. Specifically,
the firm should:
- Be able to query and provide aggregate statistics
for all qualified financial contracts concerning cross-default clauses,
downgrade triggers, and other key collateral-related contract terms—not
just those terms that may be impacted in an adverse economic environment—across
contract types, business lines, legal entities, and jurisdictions;
- Be able to track both firm collateral sources (i.e.,
counterparties that have pledged collateral) and uses (i.e., counterparties
to whom collateral has been pledged) at the CUSIP level on at least
a t + 1 basis;
- Have robust risk measurements for cross-entity and
cross-contract netting, including consideration of where collateral
is held and pledged;
- Be able to identify CUSIP and asset class level information
on collateral pledged to specific central counterparties by legal
entity on at least a t + 1 basis;
- Be able to track and report on inter-branch collateral
pledged and received on at least a t + 1 basis and have clear policies
explaining the rationale for such inter-branch pledges, including
any regulatory considerations; and
- Have a comprehensive collateral management policy
that outlines how the firm as a whole approaches collateral and serves
as a single source for governance. 17
C. Management Information Systems
The firm should have the management information systems
(MIS) capabilities to readily produce data on a legal entity basis
and have controls to ensure data integrity and reliability. The firm
also should perform a detailed analysis of the specific types of financial
and risk data that would be required to execute the preferred resolution
strategy and how frequently the firm would need to produce the information,
with the appropriate level of granularity.
D. Shared
and Outsourced Services
The firm should maintain
a fully actionable implementation plan to ensure the continuity of
shared services that support critical operations and robust arrangements
to support the continuity of shared and outsourced services, including
without limitation appropriate plans to retain key personnel relevant
to the execution of the firm’s strategy. The firm should (A)
maintain an identification of all shared services that support critical
operations (critical services);
18 (B) maintain a mapping of how/where these services
support its core business lines and critical operations; (C) incorporate
such mapping into legal entity rationalization criteria and implementation
efforts; and (D) mitigate identified continuity risks through establishment
of service-level agreements (SLAs) for all critical shared services.
These SLAs should fully describe the services provided, reflect pricing
considerations on an arm’s length basis where appropriate, and
incorporate appropriate terms and conditions to (A) prevent automatic
termination upon certain resolution-related events and (B) achieve
continued provision of such services during resolution. The firm should
also store SLAs in a central repository or repositories in a searchable
format, develop and document contingency strategies and arrangements
for replacement of critical shared services, and complete re-alignment
or restructuring of activities within its corporate structure. In
addition, the firm should ensure the financial resilience of internal
shared service providers by maintaining working capital for six months
(or through the period of stabilization as required in the firm’s
preferred strategy) in such entities sufficient to cover contract
costs, consistent with the preferred resolution strategy.
The firm should identify all critical
outsourced services that support critical operations and could not
be promptly substituted. The firm should (A) evaluate the agreements
governing these services to determine whether there are any that could
be terminated despite continued performance upon the parent’s
bankruptcy filing, and (B) update contracts to incorporate appropriate
terms and conditions to prevent automatic termination and facilitate
continued provision of such services during resolution. Relying on
entities projected to survive during resolution to avoid contract
termination is insufficient to ensure continuity. In the plan, the
firm should document the amendment of any such agreements governing
these services.
E. Legal Obstacles Associated
with Emergency Motions
The Plan should
address legal issues associated with the implementation of the stay
on cross-default rights described in section 2 of the International
Swaps and Derivatives Association 2015 Universal Resolution Stay Protocol
(Protocol), similar provisions of any U.S. protocol,
19 or other contractual provisions that comply with the agencies’
rules regarding stays from the exercise of cross-default rights in
qualified financial contracts, to the extent relevant.
20 Generally, the Protocol
provides two primary methods of satisfying the stay conditions for
covered agreements for which the affiliate in Chapter 11 proceedings
has provided a credit enhancement: (A) transferring all such credit
enhancements to a Bankruptcy Bridge Company (as defined in the Protocol)
(bridge transfer); or (B) having such affiliate remain obligated with
respect to such credit enhancements in the Chapter 11 proceeding (elevation).
21 A
firm must file a motion for emergency relief (emergency motion) seeking
approval of an order to effect either of these alternatives on the
first day of its bankruptcy case.
First-day issues. For each alternative the firm
selects, the resolution plan should present the firm’s analysis
of issues that are likely to be raised at the hearing on the emergency
motion and its best arguments in support of the emergency motion.
A firm should include supporting legal precedent and describe the
evidentiary support that the firm would anticipate presenting to the
bankruptcy court—e.g., declarations or other expert testimony
evidencing the solvency of transferred subsidiaries and that recapitalized
entities have sufficient liquidity to perform their ongoing obligations.
For either alternative, the firm should address all potential
significant legal obstacles identified by the firm. For example, the
firm should address due process arguments likely to be made by creditors
asserting that they have not had sufficient opportunity to respond
to the emergency motion given the likelihood that a creditors’
committee will not yet have been appointed. The firm also should consider,
and discuss in its plan, whether it would enhance the successful implementation
of its preferred strategy to conduct outreach to interested parties,
such as potential creditors of the holding company and the bankruptcy
bar, regarding the strategy.
If the firm chooses the bridge transfer alternative, its
analysis and arguments should address at a minimum the following potential
issues: (A) the legal basis for transferring the parent holding company’s
equity interests in certain subsidiaries (transferred subsidiaries)
to a Bankruptcy Bridge Company, including the basis upon which the
Bankruptcy Bridge Company would remain obligated for credit enhancements;
(B) the ability of the bankruptcy court to retain jurisdiction, issue
injunctions, or take other actions to prevent third parties from interfering
with, or making collateral attacks on (i) a Bankruptcy Bridge Company,
(ii) its transferred subsidiaries, or (iii) a trust or other legal
entity designed to hold all ownership interests in a Bankruptcy Bridge
Company (new ownership entity); and (C) the role of the bankruptcy
court in granting the emergency motion due to public policy concerns—e.g.,
to preserve financial stability. The firm should also provide a draft
agreement (e.g., trust agreement) detailing the preferred post-transfer
governance relationships between the bankruptcy estate, the new ownership
entity, and the Bankruptcy Bridge Company, including the proposed
role and powers of the bankruptcy court and creditors’ committee.
Alternative approaches to these proposed post-transfer governance
relationships should also be described, particularly given the strong
interest that parties will have in the ongoing operations of the Bankruptcy
Bridge Company and the likely absence of an appointed creditors’
committee at the time of the hearing.
If the firm chooses the elevation alternative, the analysis
and arguments should address at a minimum the following potential
issues: (A) the legal basis upon which the parent company would seek
to remain obligated for credit enhancements; (B) the ability of the
bankruptcy court to retain jurisdiction, issue injunctions, or take
other actions to prevent third parties from interfering with, or making
collateral attacks on, the parent in bankruptcy or its subsidiaries;
and (C) the role of the bankruptcy court in granting the emergency
motion due to public policy concerns—e.g., to preserve financial
stability.
Regulatory implications. The plan should include
a detailed explanation of the steps the firm would take to ensure
that key domestic and foreign authorities would support, or not object
to, the emergency motion (including specifying the expected approvals
or forbearances and the requisite format—i.e., formal, affirmative
statements of support or, alternatively, “non-objections”).
The potential impact on the firm’s preferred resolution strategy
if a specific approval or forbearance cannot be timely obtained should
also be detailed.
Contingencies if preferred structure
fails. The plan should consider contingency arrangements in the
event the bankruptcy court does not grant the emergency motion—e.g.,
whether alternative relief could satisfy the Transfer Conditions and/or
U.S. Parent debtor-in-possession (DIP) Conditions of the Protocol;22 the extent to which action upon certain aspects of the emergency
motion may be deferred by the bankruptcy court without interfering
with the resolution; and whether, if the credit-enhancement-related
protections are not satisfied, there are alternative strategies to
prevent the closeout of qualified financial contracts with credit
enhancements (or reduce such counterparties’ incentives to closeout)
and the feasibility of the alternative(s).
Format. If the firm analyzed and addressed an issue
noted in this section in a prior plan submission, the plan may incorporate
this analysis and arguments and should build upon it to at least the
extent required above. A bankruptcy playbook, which includes a sample
emergency motion and draft documents setting forth the post-transfer
governance terms substantially in the form they would be presented
to the bankruptcy court, is an appropriate vehicle for detailing the
issues outlined in this section. In preparing analysis of these issues,
the firm may consult with law firms and other experts on these matters.
The agencies do not object to appropriate collaboration among firms,
including through trade organizations and with the academic community
and bankruptcy bar, to develop analysis of common legal challenges
and available mitigants.