Attachment A—Effective
January 13, 2020
Q1. If an advanced approaches
banking organization expects to meet the definition of a Category
III or Category IV banking organization on December 31, 2019, and
plans to opt-out of the requirement to recognize Accumulated Other
Comprehensive Income (AOCI) in regulatory capital, when should the
banking organization make its election to opt-out of the requirement
to recognize AOCI in regulatory capital?
A1. Section 22(b)(ii) of the capital rule provides
that a Category III or Category IV banking organization must make
its AOCI opt-out election during the first reporting period after
the banking organization meets the definition of a Category III or
Category IV banking organization. Accordingly, a banking organization
that meets the definition of a Category III or Category IV banking
organization as of December 31, 2019, would make its election during
the first quarter of 2020 on the applicable reporting form—the
call report or FR Y-9C, as applicable—with a March 31, 2020,
as-of date. Such a banking organization would no longer be required
to recognize elements of AOCI in regulatory capital beginning January
1, 2020. A banking organization that was not eligible to make an AOCI
opt-out election prior to the effective date of the tailoring rule
must recognize elements of AOCI in regulatory capital in its reporting
forms filed as of December 31, 2019.
Q2. Under the tailoring rules, a holding company that is a Category IV
banking organization is not subject to the Liquidity Coverage Ratio
(LCR) unless it has average weighted short-term wholesale funding
of $50 billion or more. For purposes of initial transitions, when
may a banking organization with average weighted short-term wholesale
funding below $50 billion discontinue complying with LCR requirements?
Is a holding company that is a Category IV banking organization required
to disclose information required pursuant to 12 CFR 249.90 for the
fourth quarter of 2019?
A2. A covered
depository institution holding company that is subject to minimum
liquidity standards under the LCR rule is required to publicly disclose
information regarding its liquidity position each calendar quarter.
A banking organization identified as a Category IV banking organization
as of December 31, 2019, that has average weighted short-term wholesale
funding of less than $50 billion will not be subject to the LCR rule.
Accordingly, the banking organization would not be required to comply
with disclosure requirements included in subpart J of the LCR rule.
Q3. A foreign banking organization with average
combined U.S. assets of $100 billion or more must determine the category
of its combined U.S. operations based on the FR Y-15 filed as-of June
30, 2020. Standards applicable to the combined U.S. operations of
a foreign banking organization with combined U.S. assets of $100 billion
or more include FR 2052a reporting requirements and liquidity risk
management and buffer requirements. A foreign banking organization
with average combined U.S. assets of less than $100 billion is not
subject to these requirements. For purposes of initial transitions,
when may a foreign banking organization with less than $100 billion
in average combined U.S. assets discontinue complying with these requirements?
A3. The final tailoring rule provides a
delay in the initial categorization of, and changes in requirements
applied to, the combined U.S. operations of foreign banking organizations.
This is to account for foreign banking organizations filing the FR
Y-15 on behalf of their combined U.S. operations for the first time
as-of June 30, 2020. A foreign banking organization with average combined
U.S. assets of less than $100 billion is not subject to a category
of standards, including FR 2052a reporting requirements and liquidity
risk management and buffer requirements. Accordingly, a foreign banking
organization with average combined U.S. assets of less than $100 billion
as of December 31, 2019, may discontinue FR 2052a reporting requirements
and liquidity stress testing and buffer requirements beginning on
December 31, 2019, including the FR 2052a report with a December 31,
2019, as-of date.
For purposes of this answer and the final tailoring rule,
average combined U.S. assets means the average of combined U.S. assets
for the four most recent calendar quarters or, if the banking organization
has not reported combined U.S. assets for each of the four most recent
calendar quarters, the combined U.S. assets for the most recent calendar
quarter or average of the most recent calendar quarters, as applicable.
Combined U.S. assets is reported on the FR Y-7Q.
Q4. Under Category IV liquidity standards, the tailoring
final rule reduces the required frequency of internal liquidity stress
testing to at least quarterly, rather than monthly. For purposes of
this requirement, should a holding company subject to Category IV
standards interpret “quarterly” to mean once every three
months, once in a quarter, or as of the end of each calendar quarter?
A4. Banking organizations subject to Category
IV standards are required to conduct an internal liquidity stress
test at least quarterly, or at least once every three months. In any
case, a banking organization’s internal liquidity stress test
function is subject to governance requirements in section 252.157(a)(7),
238.124(a)(7), or 252.35(a)(7), as applicable, and its internal liquidity
stress testing must be tailored to the risk profile of the banking
organization (See sections 252.157(a)(6); 238.124(a)(6); and
252.35(a)(6)).
Attachment B—Effective August
11, 2020
Q1. How should a first-time filer
of Form FR Y-15 report items that require averages and what is the
basis for the average calculation?
A1. The
risk-based indicators—average cross-jurisdictional activity,
average weighted short-term wholesale funding, size, average off-balance
sheet exposure, and average non-bank assets—are calculated as
the average of the amounts reported by the banking organization for
the four most recent calendar quarters for which the banking organization
has reported the indicator. If a banking organization has not reported
a risk-based indicator for each of the four most recent calendar quarters,
the banking organization must use either the amount from the most
recent quarter (if the banking organization has not reported the risk-based
indicator prior to that quarter) or the average of the most recent
quarter and the previous quarters (if the banking organization has
reported the risk-based based indicator for the previous two or three
quarters), calculated consistent with the instructions of the applicable
form. Banking organizations report information regarding risk-based
indicators on the Form FR Y-15, Form FR Y-7Q, and Form FR Y-9LP. For
a discussion of how to measure weighted short-term wholesale funding
at a reporting date, see FAQ 2 below.
In addition, certain line items in the Substitutability
Category of Form FR Y-15 are flow variables with a reported value
that is measured over a period of time (i.e., trading volume, underwriting
and payments activity). The instructions to Form FR Y-15 require the
use of a pro-rata approach for flow variables when a banking organization
has less than 12 months of data. This approach applies a pro-rata
annualized factor to each flow variable until the banking organization
has four full quarters to provide an annual figure.
Q2.a. Should the unweighted average amounts of elements of
short-term wholesale funding reported for the combined U.S. operations
of a foreign banking organization (FBO) as of June 30, 2020, be based
on the average of daily or monthly observations across a full year
(July 1, 2019 to June 30, 2020)?
A2.a. The
instructions for Schedule N of Form FR Y-15 provide that an FBO that
reported Form FR 2052a daily for the last twelve months must report
each unweighted average value using daily data for the combined
U.S. operations of the FBO. All other respondents must report the
unweighted average values using monthly data (i.e., for each reported
unweighted item provide the average of the twelve month-end balances
within the last four quarters). Therefore, only an FBO that has submitted
Form FR 2052a on a daily basis for one year is required to report
each unweighted value for its combined U.S. operations on Form FR
Y-15 using a 12-month daily average. If an FBO submitted Form FR 2052a
on a monthly basis for all or part of the prior year, it must report
each unweighted average value for its combined U.S. operations on
Form FR Y-15 using the average of the prior 12 month-end values. Similarly,
if an FBO subsequently transitions to submitting Form FR 2052a on
a daily, T+2 basis, the FBO should continue reporting the average
values for Schedule N of Form FR Y-15 using the average of the prior
12 month-end values until the FBO has accumulated the daily Form FR
2052a observations for twelve months.
Q2.b. Similarly, should an FBO determine its applicable category of standards
based on the reported wSTWF value as of June 30, 2020, or based on
its history of previously submitted Form 2052a data?
A2.b. A banking organization must determine its applicable
category of standards based on risk-based indicators as reported on
Form FR Y-15, Form FR Y-9LP, or Form FR Y-7Q. If a banking organization
has not reported a risk-based indicator for each of the four most
recent calendar quarters, the banking organization must use either
the amount from the most recent quarter (if the banking organization
has not reported the risk-based indicator prior to that quarter) or
the average of the previous quarters (if the banking organization
has reported the risk-based indicator for the previous two or three
quarters), calculated consistent with the instructions of the applicable
form. With respect to their combined U.S. operations, FBOs will begin
reporting risk-based indicators on Form FR Y-15 beginning with the
form submitted with an as-of date of June 30, 2020.
1
Accordingly, an FBO must determine the average wSTWF of
its combined U.S. operations based solely on information reported
on Form FR Y-15 as of June 30, 2020, regardless of its history of
filing Form FR 2052a. A U.S. intermediate holding company subsidiary
of an FBO (IHC) must determine its category of standards based on
its risk-based indicators as reported on Form FR Y-15 for the four
most recent calendar quarters. If the IHC or the FBO on behalf of
its IHC has not reported risk-based indicators for the IHC for each
of the four most recent calendar quarters, the IHC must use the average
of the most recent quarter or quarters, as applicable.
Q3. For purposes of the cross-jurisdictional
indicator as applied to FBOs, does the term “intercompany”
have the same meaning as the term “inter-affiliate”? Do
the terms intercompany and inter-affiliate include the foreign banking
organization’s banking and non-banking subsidiaries?
A3. The term “intercompany” has
the same meaning as the term “inter-affiliate.” An FBO
may exclude from the cross-jurisdictional activity indicator all inter-affiliate
(intercompany) liabilities and inter-affiliate (intercompany) claims
to the extent that these claims are secured by financial collateral.
Additionally, for the combined U.S. operations of an FBO, the measure
of cross-jurisdictional activity would exclude all claims between
the FBO’s U.S. domiciled affiliates, branches, and agencies
to the extent such items are not already eliminated in consolidation.
For the IHC, the measure of cross-jurisdictional activity would eliminate
through consolidation all inter-affiliate (intercompany) claims and
liabilities among subsidiaries of the IHC. The measure of cross-jurisdictional
activity for the IHC would include transactions with U.S. affiliates,
including subsidiaries of the foreign parent and U.S. branches and
agencies, which are not consolidated subsidiaries of the IHC.
Q4. Should an FBO with no IHC file information
for its non-branch assets use the column under Form FR Y-15 that is
designated for U.S. intermediate holding company information?
A4. No, an FBO should only report IHC information
on Form FR Y-15 if the foreign banking organization has a subsidiary
IHC. An FBO with $100 billion or more in combined U.S. assets must
report information regarding its non-branch assets using the column
under Form FR Y-15 that is designated for information regarding the
FBO’s combined U.S. operations.
Q5. How should an FBO determine the scope of its combined U.S. operations?
A5. An FBO’s combined U.S. operations
include its U.S. branches and agencies and the U.S. subsidiaries of
the foreign banking organization (excluding any section 2(h)(2) company),
and subsidiaries of such U.S. subsidiaries. An FBO’s U.S. subsidiaries
include any company that is owned or controlled directly or indirectly
by the FBO and that is incorporated in or organized under the laws
of the United States, a state, or any territory or possession of the
United States. See 12 CFR 252.2 and the definitions of “subsidiary”
and “U.S. subsidiary” for additional details. In addition,
a subsidiary of an IHC generally would be included in an FBO’s
combined U.S. operations even if the subsidiary was not itself incorporated
in or organized under the laws of the United States, any state, or
any territory or possession of the United States.
An FBO should calculate and report information
on Form FR Y-15 as if the FBO were a consolidated entity according
to the netting rules applicable to IHCs, BHCs, and SLHCs for that
line item.
2 Note
that an FBO may report information on Form 2052a that extends beyond
its combined U.S. operations. If an FBO reports information on Form
FR 2052a for a material entity outside the United States that is managed
from the United States, the reporting FBO should only include on Form
FR Y-15 Schedule N the material entity managed from the United States
to the extent that it falls within the scope of the FBO’s combined
U.S. operations.
Q6. How should an FBO
calculate adjusted cross-jurisdictional claims for securities financing
and repurchase transactions under the final rule?
A6. The instructions to Schedule L of Form FR Y-15
indicate that exposure amounts for claims with a foreign office reported
should be calculated in accordance with the methodology for collateralized
transactions in 12 CFR 217.37 of the capital rule and the definition
of financial collateral in 12 CFR 217.2 of the capital rule.
Specifically, with respect to a
resale agreement or securities financing transaction included as a
claim under Form FFIEC 009 and that meets the definition of a “repo-style
transaction” under the capital rule, an FBO would calculate
the adjusted value of the claim by determining the difference between
the exposure and the collateral (E − C), and adding this amount
to the product of the absolute value of the net position of the instrument
and market price volatility haircut (Es × Hs), and the product
of the absolute value of the net position of the instrument times
the currency mismatch haircut (Efx × Hfx).
Permitting the reduction of certain claims
on non-U.S. affiliates if the collateral meets the definition of financial
collateral helps to ensure that the collateral is liquid, while the
use of supervisory haircuts limits risk associated with price volatility
and settlement currency mismatch. In addition, relying on the capital
rule’s definition of financial collateral provides
clarity regarding the types of collateral eligible to reduce the amount
of cross-jurisdictional claims under this approach. In some cases,
the value reported for an adjusted cross-jurisdictional claim may
exceed the value reported on an FBO’s balance sheet.
Q7. What are the liquidity risk-management requirements
under Board Regulation YY for firms with greater than $250 billion
in global assets and less than $100 billion in CUSO assets?
A7. An FBO with average total consolidated
assets of $250 billion or more and average combined U.S. assets of
less than $100 billion must report to the Board on an annual basis
the results of an internal liquidity stress test for either the consolidated
operations of the FBO or its combined U.S. operations that are consistent
with Basel Committee principles for liquidity risk management and
must incorporate 30-day, 90-day, and one-year stress-test horizons. See 12 CFR 252.145(a). An FBO that does not comply with this
annual requirement is subject to limits on the aggregate amount owed
by the FBO’s non-U.S. offices and its non-U.S. affiliates to
the combined U.S. operations of the FBO. See 12 CFR 252.145(b).
Q8. Under the interagency tailoring rules,
a banking organization that changes from one category of applicable
standards to another category generally is provided a transition period
before it must comply with the requirements of the new category of
standards. For purposes of transitions between categories, when is
a banking organization deemed to qualify for a new category of standards?
A8. A banking organization’s category
is determined based on risk-based indicators as reported on its Call
Report, FR Y-9LP, or FR Y-15, or on averages of such reported items.
A banking organization meets the definition of the new category of
applicable standards in the quarter in which the banking organization
files the reporting form (e.g., Call Report, FR Y-9LP, or FR Y-15)
demonstrating that the banking organization meets the definition of
the new category. For example, a banking organization that is subject
to Category IV standards in the first quarter and that subsequently
files in the second quarter (as of March 31 report date) meeting the
criteria of $75 billion or more in average weighted short-term wholesale
funding (based on its amount of weighted short-term wholesale funding
reported on the FR Y-15) would be deemed to meet the definition of
a Category III banking organization in the second quarter.
3 In addition, any
transition period provided under certain requirements continues to
apply.
Q9. Section __.30(d) of the LCR
rule requires a banking organization whose outflow adjustment percentage
increases to begin using the higher outflow adjustment percentage
by the first day of the third calendar quarter after the increase;
a banking organization whose outflow adjustment percentage decreases
must continue using its previous higher outflow adjustment percentage
until the first day of the first calendar quarter following the decrease.
For purposes of these transition periods, when is a banking organization
deemed to qualify for a new outflow adjustment percentage?
A9. Section __.30(c) of the LCR rule assigns
outflow adjustment percentages to banking organizations based on their
category and amount of average weighted short-term wholesale funding.
Section __.3 of the LCR rule generally defines “average weighted
short-term wholesale funding” as the average of the weighted
short-term wholesale funding for each of the four most recent calendar
quarters as reported on the FR Y-15.
As described in response to question 8 above, a banking
organization is deemed to change categories during the quarter in
which the banking organization files the reporting form
demonstrating it meets the definition of a new category. Similarly,
a banking organization’s average weighted short-term wholesale
funding is deemed to change during the quarter in which the banking
organization files the FR Y-15 demonstrating its level of average
weighted short-term wholesale funding triggers an increased or decreased
outflow adjustment percentage under section __.30(c) of the LCR rule.
Accordingly, the date on which the banking organization
is deemed to be subject to a new outflow adjustment percentage is
the date on which the relevant information (used to determine category
eligibility or level of average weighted short-term wholesale funding)
is reported on the FR Y-15. For example, if a banking organization
subject to Category III standards and an 85 percent outflow adjustment
percentage subsequently files an FR Y-15 during the first quarter
of a calendar year (representing a December 31 as-of report date)
that reports an amount of weighted short-term wholesale funding such
that the banking organization’s average weighted short-term
wholesale funding is $75 billion or more, the banking organization
would be deemed to be subject to the higher outflow adjustment percentage
(100 percent) as of the first quarter and be required to comply with
a 100 percent outflow adjustment percentage no later than the first
day of the fourth quarter of that calendar year. If a Category III
banking organization subject to an 85 percent outflow adjustment percentage
submits an FR Y-15 during the first quarter (representing a December
31 as-of date) that demonstrates the organization meets the definition
of a Category IV banking organization with $50 billion or more in
average weighted short-term wholesale funding, the banking organization
would be deemed to qualify for a lower outflow adjustment percentage
(70 percent) as of the first quarter but be required to continue using
the 85 percent adjustment percentage until the first day of the second
quarter of the calendar year.
Frequently asked
questions of January 13, 2020 and August 11, 2020 (SR-20-2).