(a) Exposure amount for derivative contracts.
(1) Board-regulated
institution that is not an advanced approaches Board-regulated institution.
(i) A Board-regulated institution that
is not an advanced approaches Board-regulated institution must use
the current exposure methodology (CEM) described in paragraph (b)
of this section to calculate the exposure amount for all its OTC derivative
contracts, unless the Board-regulated institution makes the election
provided in paragraph (a)(1)(ii) of this section.
(ii) A Board-regulated institution that
is not an advanced approaches Board-regulated institution may elect
to calculate the exposure amount for all its OTC derivative contracts
under the standardized approach for counterparty credit risk (SA-CCR)
in section 217.132(c) by notifying the Board, rather than calculating
the exposure amount for all its derivative contracts using CEM. A
Board-regulated institution that elects under this paragraph (a)(1)(ii)
to calculate the exposure amount for its OTC derivative contracts
under SA-CCR must apply the treatment of cleared transactions under
section 217.133 to its derivative contracts that are cleared transactions
and to all default fund contributions associated with such derivative
contracts, rather than applying section 217.35. A Board-regulated
institution that is not an advanced approaches Board-regulated institution
must use the same methodology to calculate the exposure amount for
all its derivative contracts and, if a Board-regulated institution
has elected to use SA-CCR under this paragraph (a)(1)(ii), the Board-regulated
institution may change its election only with prior approval of the
Board.
(2) Advanced approaches Board-regulated
institution. An advanced approaches Board-regulated institution
must calculate the exposure amount for all its derivative contracts
using SA-CCR in section 217.132(c) for purposes of standardized total
risk-weighted assets. An advanced approaches Board-regulated institution
must apply the treatment of cleared transactions under section 217.133
to its derivative contracts that are cleared transactions and to all
default fund contributions associated with such derivative contracts
for purposes of standardized total risk-weighted assets.
(b) Current exposure methodology
exposure amount.
(1) Single OTC
derivative contract. Except as modified by paragraph (c) of this
section, the exposure amount for a single OTC derivative contract
that is not subject to a qualifying master netting agreement is equal
to the sum of the Board-regulated institution’s current credit exposure
and potential future credit exposure (PFE) on the OTC derivative contract.
(i) Current credit exposure. The current
credit exposure for a single OTC derivative contract is the greater
of the fair value of the OTC derivative contract or zero.
(ii) PFE.
(A) The PFE for a single OTC derivative contract,
including an OTC derivative contract with a negative fair value, is
calculated by multiplying the notional principal amount of the OTC
derivative contract by the appropriate conversion factor in Table
1 to this section.
Table 1 to section
217.34—Conversion factor matrix for derivative contracts
Remaining maturity2 |
Interest
rate |
Foreign
exchange rate and gold |
Credit
(investment grade reference asset)3 |
Credit
(non-investment-grade reference asset) |
Equity |
Precious
metals (except gold) |
Other |
One year or less |
0.00 |
0.01 |
0.05 |
0.10 |
0.06 |
0.07 |
0.10 |
Greater than one year and less than or equal
to five years |
0.005 |
0.05 |
0.05 |
0.10 |
0.08 |
0.07 |
0.12 |
Greater than five years |
0.015 |
0.075 |
0.05 |
0.10 |
0.10 |
0.08 |
0.15 |
1 For a derivative contract with multiple exchanges of
principal, the conversion factor is multiplied by the number of remaining
payments in the derivative contract.
2 For an OTC derivative contract
that is structured such that on specified dates any outstanding exposure
is settled and the terms are reset so that the fair value of the contract
is zero, the remaining maturity equals the time until the next reset
date. For an interest rate derivative contract with a remaining maturity
of greater than one year that meets these criteria, the minimum conversion
factor is 0.005.
3 A Board-regulated institution must use the column labeled
“Credit (investment-grade reference asset)” for a credit derivative
whose reference asset is an outstanding unsecured long-term debt security
without credit enhancement that is investment grade. A Board-regulated
institution must use the column labeled “Credit (non-investment-grade
reference asset)” for all other credit derivatives.
(B) For purposes
of calculating either the PFE under this paragraph (b)(1)(ii) or the
gross PFE under paragraph (b)(2)(ii)(A) of this section for exchange
rate contracts and other similar contracts in which the notional principal
amount is equivalent to the cash flows, notional principal amount
is the net receipts to each party falling due on each value date in
each currency.
(C) For an OTC derivative contract that does
not fall within one of the specified categories in Table 1 to this
section, the PFE must be calculated using the appropriate “other”
conversion factor.
(D)
A Board-regulated institution must use an OTC derivative contract’s
effective notional principal amount (that is, the apparent or stated
notional principal amount multiplied by any multiplier in the OTC
derivative contract) rather than the apparent or stated notional principal
amount in calculating PFE.
(E) The PFE of the protection provider of a credit derivative is
capped at the net present value of the amount of unpaid premiums.
(2) Multiple OTC derivative contracts subject to
a qualifying master netting agreement. Except as modified by
paragraph (c) of this section, the exposure amount for multiple OTC
derivative contracts subject to a qualifying master netting agreement
is equal to the sum of the net current credit exposure and the adjusted
sum of the PFE amounts for all OTC derivative contracts subject to
the qualifying master netting agreement.
(i) Net current credit exposure. The net current
credit exposure is the greater of the net sum of all positive and
negative fair values of the individual OTC derivative contracts subject
to the qualifying master netting agreement or zero.
(ii) Adjusted
sum of the PFE amounts. The adjusted sum of the PFE amounts,
Anet, is calculated as Anet = (0.4 × Agross) + (0.6 × NGR × Agross),
where:
(A) Agross = the gross PFE (that is, the sum
of the PFE amounts as determined under paragraph (b)(1)(ii) of this
section for each individual derivative contract subject to the qualifying
master netting agreement); and
(B) Net-to-gross Ratio (NGR) = the ratio of
the net current credit exposure to the gross current credit exposure.
In calculating the NGR, the gross current credit exposure equals the
sum of the positive current credit exposures (as determined
under paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this section) of all individual derivative
contracts subject to the qualifying master netting agreement.
(c) Recognition of credit risk mitigation of collateralized OTC derivative
contracts.
(1) A Board-regulated institution using
CEM under paragraph (b) of this section may recognize the credit risk
mitigation benefits of financial collateral that secures an OTC derivative
contract or multiple OTC derivative contracts subject to a qualifying
master netting agreement (netting set) by using the simple approach
in section 217.37(b).
(2) As an alternative to the simple approach, a Board-regulated institution
using CEM under paragraph (b) of this section may recognize the credit
risk mitigation benefits of financial collateral that secures such
a contract or netting set if the financial collateral is marked-to-fair
value on a daily basis and subject to a daily margin maintenance requirement
by applying a risk weight to the uncollateralized portion of the exposure,
after adjusting the exposure amount calculated under paragraph (b)(1)
or (2) of this section using the collateral haircut approach in section
217.37(c). The Board-regulated institution must substitute the exposure
amount calculated under paragraph (b)(1) or (2) of this section for
SE in the equation in section 217.37(c)(2).
(d) Counterparty credit risk
for credit derivatives.
(1) Protection
purchasers. A Board-regulated institution that purchases a credit
derivative that is recognized under section 217.36 as a credit risk
mitigant for an exposure that is not a covered position under subpart
F of this part is not required to compute a separate counterparty
credit risk capital requirement under this subpart provided that the
Board-regulated institution does so consistently for all such credit
derivatives. The Board-regulated institution must either include all
or exclude all such credit derivatives that are subject to a qualifying
master netting agreement from any measure used to determine counterparty
credit risk exposure to all relevant counterparties for risk-based
capital purposes.
(2) Protection providers.
(i) A Board-regulated
institution that is the protection provider under a credit derivative
must treat the credit derivative as an exposure to the underlying
reference asset. The Board-regulated institution is not required to
compute a counterparty credit risk capital requirement for the credit
derivative under this subpart, provided that this treatment is applied
consistently for all such credit derivatives. The Board-regulated
institution must either include all or exclude all such credit derivatives
that are subject to a qualifying master netting agreement from any
measure used to determine counterparty credit risk exposure.
(ii) The provisions of this
paragraph (d)(2) apply to all relevant counterparties for risk-based
capital purposes unless the Board-regulated institution is treating
the credit derivative as a covered position under subpart F of this
part, in which case the Board-regulated institution must compute a
supplemental counterparty credit risk capital requirement under this
section.
(e) Counterparty credit risk for equity derivatives.
(1) A Board-regulated institution
must treat an equity derivative contract as an equity exposure and
compute a risk-weighted asset amount for the equity derivative contract
under sections 217.51 through 217.53 (unless the Board-regulated institution
is treating the contract as a covered position under subpart F of
this part).
(2) In
addition, the Board-regulated institution must also calculate a risk-based
capital requirement for the counterparty credit risk of an equity
derivative contract under this section if the Board-regulated institution
is treating the contract as a covered position under subpart F of
this part.
(3) If the
Board-regulated institution risk weights the contract under the Simple
Risk-Weight Approach (SRWA) in section 217.52, the Board-regulated
institution may choose not to hold risk-based capital against the counterparty
credit risk of the equity derivative contract, as long as it does
so for all such contracts. Where the equity derivative contracts are
subject to a qualified master netting agreement, a Board-regulated
institution using the SRWA must either include all or exclude all
of the contracts from any measure used to determine counterparty credit
risk exposure.
(f) Clearing member Board-regulated institution’s
exposure amount. The exposure amount of a clearing member Board-regulated
institution using CEM under paragraph (b) of this section for a client-facing
derivative transaction or netting set of client-facing derivative
transactions equals the exposure amount calculated according to paragraph
(b)(1) or (2) of this section multiplied by the scaling factor the
square root of ½ (which equals 0.707107). If the Board-regulated institution
determines that a longer period is appropriate, the Board-regulated
institution must use a larger scaling factor to adjust for a longer
holding period as follows:
Figure 1. DISPLAY EQUATION
$$
\text{Scaling factor = } \sqrt{\frac{H}{10}}
$$
Where H = the holding period greater
than or equal to five days.
Additionally, the Board may require the Board-regulated
institution to set a longer holding period if the Board determines
that a longer period is appropriate due to the nature, structure,
or characteristics of the transaction or is commensurate with the
risks associated with the transaction.