FR Doc 03-23757
[Federal Register: October 1, 2003 (Volume 68, Number 190)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Page 56568-56586]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr01oc03-30]
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Proposed Rules
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains notices to the public of
the proposed issuance of rules and regulations. The purpose of these
notices is to give interested persons an opportunity to participate in
the rule making prior to the adoption of the final rules.
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[[Page 56568]]
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
12 CFR Part 3
[Docket No. 03-22]
RIN 1557-AC77
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Parts 208 and 225
[Regulations H and Y; Docket No. R-1162]
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
12 CFR Part 325
RIN 3064-AC75
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of Thrift Supervision
12 CFR Part 567
[No. 2003-47]
RIN 1550-AB81
Risk-Based Capital Guidelines; Capital Adequacy Guidelines;
Capital Maintenance: Asset-Backed Commercial Paper Programs and Early
Amortization Provisions
AGENCIES: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Treasury; Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System; Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation; and Office of Thrift Supervision, Treasury.
ACTION: Joint notice of proposed rulemaking.
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SUMMARY: The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board), Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC), and Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS)
(collectively, the agencies) are proposing to amend their risk-based
capital standards by removing a sunset provision in order to permit
sponsoring banks, bank holding companies, and thrifts (collectively,
sponsoring banking organizations) to continue to exclude from their
risk-weighted asset base those assets in asset-backed commercial paper
(ABCP) programs that are consolidated onto sponsoring banking
organizations' balance sheets as a result of a recently issued
accounting interpretation, Financial Accounting Standards Board
Interpretation No. 46, Consolidation of Variable Interest Entities (FIN
46). The removal of the sunset provision is contingent upon the
agencies implementing alternative, more risk-sensitive risk-based
capital requirements for credit exposures arising from involvement with
ABCP programs. See Section I of the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION for
discussion of a related joint interim final rule published concurrently
with this notice of proposed rulemaking.
The agencies also are proposing to require banking organizations to
hold risk-based capital against liquidity facilities with an original
maturity of one year or less that organizations provide to ABCP
programs, regardless of whether the organization sponsors the program
or must consolidate the program under GAAP. This treatment recognizes
that such facilities expose banking organizations to credit risk and is
consistent with the industry's practice of internally allocating
economic capital against this risk associated with such facilities. A
separate capital charge on liquidity facilities provided to an ABCP
program would not be required if a banking organization must or chooses
to consolidate the program for purposes of risk-based capital.
In addition, the agencies are proposing a risk-based capital charge
for certain types of securitizations of revolving retail credit
facilities (for example, credit card receivables) that incorporate
early amortization provisions. The effect of these capital proposals
will be to more closely align the risk-based capital requirements with
the associated risk of the exposures.
Finally, the agencies are proposing to amend their risk-based
capital standards by deleting tables and attachments that summarize
risk categories, credit conversion factors, and transitional
arrangements.
DATES: Comments on the joint notice of proposed rulemaking must be
received by November 17, 2003.
ADDRESSES: Comments should be directed to:
OCC: You should send comments to the Public Information Room,
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Mailstop 1-5, Attention:
Docket No. 03-22, 250 E Street, SW., Washington, DC 20219. Due to
delays in the delivery of paper mail in the Washington area and at the
OCC, commenters are encouraged to submit comments by fax or e-mail.
Comments may be sent by fax to (202) 874-4448, or by e-mail to regs.comments@occ.treas.gov.
You can make an appointment to inspect and photocopy the comments by calling
the Public Information Room at (202) 874-5043.
Board: Comments should refer to Docket No. R-1162 and may be mailed
to Ms. Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary, Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, 20th and Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington,
DC 20551. However, because paper mail in the Washington area and at the
Board of Governors is subject to delay, please consider submitting your comments by e-mail to
regs.comments@federalreserve.gov, or faxing them to the Office of the Secretary at 202/452-3819
or 202/452-3102. Members of the public may inspect comments in Room MP-500 of the Martin
Building between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. weekdays pursuant to Sec. 261.12,
except as provided in Sec. 261.14, of the Board's Rules Regarding
Availability of Information, 12 CFR 261.12 and 261.14.
FDIC: Written comments should be addressed to Robert E. Feldman,
Executive Secretary, Attention: Comments/OES, Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, 550 17th Street, NW., Washington, DC 20429. Comments may
be hand delivered to the guard station at the rear of the 550 17th
Street Building (located on F Street), on business days between 7 a.m.
and 5 p.m. (Fax number: (202) 898-3838; Internet address: comments@fdic.gov).
Comments may be inspected and photocopied in the FDIC Public Information Center,
Room 100, 801 17th Street, NW., Washington, DC, between 9 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. on
business days.
OTS: Send comments to Regulation Comments, Chief Counsel's Office,
Office of Thrift Supervision, 1700 G
[[Page 56569]]
Street, NW., Washington, DC 20552, Attention: No. 2003-47.
Delivery: Hand deliver comments to the Guard's Desk, East Lobby
Entrance, 1700 G Street, NW., from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. on business days,
Attention: Regulation Comments, Chief Counsel's Office, Attention: No.
2003-47.
Facsimiles: Send facsimile transmissions to FAX Number (202) 906-
6518, Attention: No. 2003-47. E-Mail: Send e-mails to regs.comments@ots.treas.gov, Attention: No.
2003-47 and include your name and telephone number. Due to temporary
disruptions in mail service in the Washington, DC area, commenters are
encouraged to send comments by fax or e-mail, if possible.
Availability of comments: OTS will post comments and the related
index on the OTS Internet Site at http://www.ots.treas.gov. In
addition, you may inspect comments at the Public Reading Room, 1700 G
Street, NW., by appointment. To make an appointment for access, call (202) 906-5922,
send an e-mail to public.info@ots.treas.gov, or send a facsimile transmission to (202)
906-7755. (Please identify the materials you would like to inspect to assist us in serving you.)
We schedule appointments on business days between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. In
most cases, appointments will be available the business day after the date we
receive a request.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
OCC: Amrit Sekhon, Risk Expert, Capital Policy Division, (202) 874-
5211; Mauricio Claver-Carone, Attorney, or Ron Shimabukuro, Special
Counsel, Legislative and Regulatory Activities Division, (202) 874-
5090, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, 250 E Street, SW.,
Washington, DC 20219.
Board: Thomas R. Boemio, Senior Supervisory Financial Analyst,
(202) 452-2982, David Kerns, Supervisory Financial Analyst, (202) 452-
2428, Barbara Bouchard, Assistant Director, (202) 452-3072, Division of
Banking Supervision and Regulation; or Mark E. Van Der Weide, Counsel,
(202) 452-2263, Legal Division. For the hearing impaired only,
Telecommunication Device for the Deaf (TDD), (202) 263-4869.
FDIC: Jason C. Cave, Chief, Policy Section, Capital Markets Branch,
(202) 898-3548, Robert F. Storch, Chief Accountant, (202) 898-8906,
Division of Supervision and Consumer Protection; Michael B. Phillips,
Counsel, (202) 898-3581, Supervision and Legislation Branch, Legal
Division, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20429.
OTS: Michael D. Solomon, Senior Program Manager for Capital Policy,
(202) 906-5654, David W. Riley, Project Manager, Supervision Policy,
(202) 906-6669; or Teresa A. Scott, Counsel (Banking and Finance),
(202) 906-6478, Office of Thrift Supervision, 1700 G Street, NW,
Washington, DC 20552.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Asset-Backed Commercial Paper Programs
Background
An asset-backed commercial paper (ABCP) program typically is a
program through which a banking organization provides funding to its
corporate customers by sponsoring and administering a bankruptcy-remote
special purpose entity that purchases asset pools from, or extends
loans to, those customers. The asset pools in an ABCP program might
include, for example, trade receivables, consumer loans, or asset-
backed securities. The ABCP program raises cash to provide funding to
the banking organization's customers through the issuance of commercial
paper into the market. Typically, the sponsoring banking organization
provides liquidity and credit enhancements to the ABCP program, which
aid the program in obtaining high quality credit ratings that
facilitate the issuance of the commercial paper.\1\
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\1\ For the purposes of this proposed rule, a banking
organization is considered the sponsor of an ABCP program if it
establishes the program; approves the sellers permitted to
participate in the program; approves the asset pools to be purchased
by the programs; or administers the ABCP program by monitoring the
assets, arranging for debt placement, compiling monthly reports, or
ensuring compliance with the program documents and with the
program's credit and investment policy.
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In January 2003, the Financial Accounting Standards Board (FASB)
issued interpretation No. 46, ``Consolidation of Variable Interest
Entities'' (FIN 46), requiring the consolidation of variable interest
entities (VIEs) onto the balance sheets of companies deemed to be the
primary beneficiaries of those entities.\2\ FIN 46 likely will result
in the consolidation of many ABCP programs onto the balance sheets of
banking organizations beginning in the third quarter of 2003. In
contrast, under pre-FIN 46 accounting standards, the sponsors of ABCP
programs normally have not been required to consolidate the assets of
these programs. Banking organizations that are required to consolidate
ABCP program assets will have to include all of the program assets
(mostly receivables and securities) and liabilities (mainly commercial
paper) on their September 30, 2003 balance sheets for purposes of the
bank Reports of Condition and Income (Call Report), the Thrift
Financial Report (TFR), and the bank holding company financial
statements (FR Y-9C Report). If no changes were made to regulatory
capital standards, the resulting increase in the asset base would lower
both the tier 1 leverage and risk-based capital ratios of banking
organizations that must consolidate the assets held in ABCP programs.
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\2\ Under FIN 46, the FASB broadened the criteria for
determining when one entity is deemed to have a controlling
financial interest in another entity and, therefore, when an entity
must consolidate another entity in its financial statements. An
entity generally does not need to be analyzed under FIN 46 if it is
designed to have ``adequate capital,'' as described in FIN 46, and
its shareholders control the entity with their share votes and are
allocated its profits and losses. If the entity fails these
criteria, it typically is deemed a VIE and each stakeholder in the
entity (a group that can include, but is not limited to, legal-form
equity holders, creditors, sponsors, guarantors, and servicers) must
assess whether it is the entity's ``primary beneficiary'' using the
FIN 46 criteria. This analysis considers whether effective control
exists by evaluating the entity's risks and rewards. In the end, the
stakeholder who holds the majority of the entity's risks or rewards
is the primary beneficiary and must consolidate the VIE.
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The agencies believe that the consolidation of ABCP program assets
could result in risk-based capital requirements that do not
appropriately reflect the risks faced by banking organizations involved
with these programs. In the view of the agencies, banking organizations
generally face limited risk exposure to ABCP programs. This risk
usually is confined to the credit enhancements and liquidity facility
arrangements that banking organizations provide to these programs. In
addition, operational controls and structural provisions, along with
overcollateralization or other credit enhancements provided by the
companies that sell assets into ABCP programs mitigate the risk to
which sponsoring banking organizations are exposed.
Because of the limited risks, in a related joint interim rule
published elsewhere in today's Federal Register, the agencies amended
their risk-based capital standards to permit sponsoring banking
organizations to exclude ABCP program assets that must be consolidated
by the organization under FIN 46 from risk-weighted assets for purposes
of calculating the risk-based capital ratios through the end of the
first quarter of 2004. The agencies also amended their risk-based
capital rules to exclude from tier 1 and total risk-based capital any
minority interest in sponsored ABCP programs that are
[[Page 56570]]
consolidated under FIN 46. Exclusion of minority interests associated
with consolidated ABCP programs is appropriate when such programs'
assets are not included in a sponsoring organization's risk-weighted
asset base and, thus, are not assessed a risk-based capital charge.
This interim risk-based capital treatment will expire on April 1, 2004.
The period during which the interim rule is in effect provides the
agencies with additional time to develop appropriate risk-based capital
requirements for banking organizations' sponsorship and other
involvement with ABCP programs and to receive comments from the
industry on this proposal.
The interim risk-based capital treatment does not alter any
accounting requirements as established by GAAP or the manner in which
banking organizations report consolidated on-balance sheet assets. In
addition, the risk-based capital treatment set forth in the interim
final rule and its proposed continuation in this joint notice of
proposed rulemaking does not affect the denominator of the tier 1
leverage capital ratio, which would continue to be based primarily on
on-balance sheet assets as reported under GAAP. Thus, as a result of
FIN 46, banking organizations must include all assets of consolidated
ABCP programs in on-balance sheet assets for purposes of calculating
the tier 1 leverage capital ratio.
In contrast to most other cases where minority interests in
consolidated subsidiaries are included as a component of tier 1 capital
and, hence, are incorporated into the tier 1 leverage capital ratio
calculation, minority interests related to sponsoring banking
organizations' ABCP program assets consolidated as a result of FIN 46
are not to be included in tier 1 capital. Thus, the reported tier 1
leverage capital ratio for a sponsoring banking organization would
likely be lower than it would be if only the ABCP program assets were
consolidated. The agencies do not anticipate that the exclusion of
minority interests related to consolidated ABCP programs assets would
significantly affect the tier 1 leverage capital ratio of sponsoring
banking organizations because the amount of equity in ABCP programs
generally is small relative to the capital levels of the sponsoring
organizations.
Proposed Risk-Based Capital Treatment for ABCP Exposures
In this notice of proposed rulemaking, the agencies are proposing
to amend their risk-based capital standards by removing the April 1,
2004 sunset provision so that ABCP program assets consolidated under
FIN 46 and any associated minority interests continue to be excluded
from risk-weighted assets and tier 1 capital, respectively, when
sponsoring banking organizations calculate their tier 1 and total risk-
based capital ratios. The proposed removal of the sunset provision is
contingent upon the agencies implementing an alternative, more risk-
sensitive approach to the risk exposures arising from ABCP programs.
Accordingly, the agencies are proposing to amend their risk-based
capital requirements to assess more appropriate capital charges against
the credit exposures that arise from ABCP programs, including liquidity
facilities with an original maturity of one year or less (that is,
short-term liquidity facilities). The agencies believe that this
proposal would result in a capital requirement that is more
commensurate with the credit risk to which banking organizations are
exposed as a result of their sponsorship and other involvement with
ABCP programs. The capital charge for short-term liquidity facilities
that are provided to ABCP programs generally would apply even if FIN 46
would not require the program to be consolidated.
Liquidity facilities extended to ABCP programs are commitments to
lend to, or purchase assets from, the programs in the event that funds
are needed to repay maturing commercial paper. Typically, this need for
liquidity is due to a timing mismatch between cash collections on the
underlying assets in the program and scheduled repayments of the
commercial paper issued by the program. Currently, liquidity facilities
with an original maturity of over one year (that is, long-term
liquidity facilities) are converted to an on-balance sheet credit
equivalent amount using the 50 percent credit conversion factor. Short-
term liquidity facilities are converted to an on-balance sheet credit
equivalent amount utilizing the zero percent credit conversion factor.
As a result, such short-term facilities currently are not subject to a
risk-based capital charge.
In the agencies' view, a banking organization that provides
liquidity facilities to ABCP programs is exposed to credit risk
regardless of the tenure of the liquidity facilities. For example, an
ABCP program may draw on a liquidity facility at the first sign of
deterioration in the credit quality of an asset pool to buy out the
assets and remove them from the program. In such an event, a draw
exposes the banking organization providing the liquidity facility to
credit risk. The agencies believe that the existing risk-based capital
rules do not adequately reflect the risks associated with short-term
liquidity facilities extended to ABCP programs.
Although the agencies are of the view that liquidity facilities
expose banking organizations to credit risk, the agencies also believe
that the short tenure of commitments with an original maturity of one
year or less exposes banking organizations to a lower degree of credit
risk than longer tenure commitments. This difference in degree of
credit risk exposure should be reflected in any potential capital
requirement. The agencies, therefore, are proposing to convert short-
term liquidity facilities provided to ABCP programs to on-balance sheet
credit equivalent amounts utilizing the 20 percent credit conversion
factor, as opposed to the 50 percent credit conversion factor applied
to commitments with an original maturity of greater than one year. This
amount would then be risk-weighted according to the underlying assets
or the obligor, after considering any collateral or guarantees, or
external credit ratings, if applicable. For example, if a short-term
liquidity facility provided to an ABCP program covered an asset-backed
security (ABS) externally rated AAA, then the amount of the security
would be converted at 20 percent to an on-balance sheet credit
equivalent amount and assigned to the 20 percent risk category
appropriate for AAA-rated ABS.\3\
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\3\ See 12 CFR part 3, appendix A, Section 4(d) (OCC); 12 CFR
parts 208 and 225, appendix A, III.B.3.c. (FRB); 12 CFR part 325,
appendix A, II.B.5.d. (FDIC); 12 CFR 567.6(b) (OTS).
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In many cases, a banking organization may have multiple exposures
that may be drawn under varying circumstances within a single ABCP
program (for example, both a credit enhancement and a liquidity
facility). The agencies do not intend to subject a banking organization
to duplicative risk-based capital requirements against these multiple
exposures where they overlap and cover the same underlying asset pool.
Rather, a banking organization must hold risk-based capital only once
for the position covered by the overlapping exposures. Where the
overlapping exposures are subject to different risk-based capital
requirements, the banking organization must apply the risk-based
capital treatment resulting in the highest capital charge to the
overlapping portion of the exposures.
For example, assume a banking organization provides a program-wide
credit enhancement covering 10 percent of the underlying asset pools in
an ABCP program and pool-specific liquidity facilities covering 100
percent
[[Page 56571]]
of each of the underlying asset pools. The banking organization would
be required to hold capital against 10 percent of the underlying asset
pools because it is providing the program-wide credit enhancement. The
banking organization also would be required to hold capital against 90
percent of the liquidity facilities it is providing to each of the
underlying asset pools. Moreover, if a banking organization had to
consolidate ABCP program assets onto its balance sheet for risk-based
capital purposes because, for example, the organization was not the
sponsor of the program, the organization would not be required also to
hold risk-based capital against any credit enhancements or liquidity
facilities that cover those same program assets.
If different banking organizations provide overlapping exposures,
however, each organization must hold capital against the entire maximum
amount of its exposure. As a result, while duplication of capital
charges will not occur for individual banking organizations, it may
occur where multiple banking organizations have overlapping exposures
to the same ABCP program.
The agencies also are proposing that banking organizations that are
subject to the market risk capital rules would not be permitted to
apply those rules to any liquidity facilities held in the trading book.
Rather, organizations will be required to convert the notional amount
of all liquidity facilities to ABCP programs using the appropriate
credit conversion factor to determine the credit equivalent amount for
liquidity facilities that are structured or characterized as
derivatives or other trading book assets. Thus, for example, all
liquidity facilities to ABCP programs with an original maturity of one
year or less will be subject to a 20 percent conversion factor as
described above, regardless of whether the exposure is carried in the
trading account or the banking book. The agencies request comment on
this prohibition and its implications.
In order for a liquidity facility, either short-or long-term,
provided to an ABCP program not to be considered a recourse obligation
or a direct credit substitute, draws on the facility must be subject to
a reasonable asset quality test that precludes funding assets that are
60 days or more past due or in default. Assets that are past due 60
days or more generally are considered ineligible for financing based
upon standard industry practice and rating agency guidelines for trade
receivables. The funding of assets past due 60 days or more using a
liquidity facility exposes the institution to a greater degree of
credit risk compared to the purchase of assets of a more current
nature. It is the agencies' view that liquidity facilities that are
eligible for the 20 percent or 50 percent conversion factors should not
be used to fund assets with the higher degree of credit risk typically
associated with seriously delinquent assets.
In addition, if the assets a banking organization would be required
to fund pursuant to a liquidity facility are initially externally rated
exposures, the facility can be used to fund only those exposures that
are externally rated investment grade at the time of funding.
Furthermore, the liquidity facility must contain provisions that, prior
to any draws, reduce the banking organization's funding obligation to
cover only those assets that would meet the funding criteria under the
facility's asset quality tests. In other words, the amount of coverage
provided by the liquidity facility must decrease as assets that meet
the asset quality test decrease so that the liquidity facility would
cover only those assets satisfying the asset quality test. If the asset
quality tests were violated, the liquidity facility would be considered
a direct credit substitute and would be converted at 100 percent as
opposed to 20 or 50 percent.
Additional Risk-Based Capital Considerations
The agencies recognize that FIN 46 may affect whether consolidation
is required of other VIE structures in addition to ABCP programs
sponsored by banking organizations. While the current proposal would
permit banking organizations to exclude from risk-weighted assets only
sponsored ABCP program assets, the agencies seek comment on whether
other structures or asset types affected by FIN 46 should be eligible
for risk-based capital treatment similar to that proposed for banking
organization-sponsored ABCP program assets. In addition, the agencies
request feedback on whether banking organizations expect any
difficulties in tracking these consolidated ABCP program assets on an
ongoing basis. The agencies also request comment on any alternative
regulatory capital approaches that should be considered, beyond what
has been proposed.
II. Early Amortization Capital Charge
The Agencies also are seeking comment on the assessment of a risk-
based capital charge against the risks associated with early
amortization, a common feature in securitizations of revolving retail
credit exposures (for example, credit card receivables). When assets
are securitized, the extent to which the selling or sponsoring entity
transfers the risks associated with the assets depends on the structure
of the securitization and the nature of the underlying assets. The
early amortization provision often present in securitizations of
revolving retail credit facilities increases the likelihood that
investors will be repaid before being subject to any risk of
significant credit losses. For example, if a securitized asset pool
begins to experience credit deterioration to the point where the early
amortization provision is triggered, then the asset-backed securities
begin to pay down rapidly. This occurs because, after an early
amortization provision is triggered, if new receivables are generated
from the accounts designated to the securitization trust, they are no
longer sold to investors, but instead are retained on the sponsoring
banking organization's balance sheet.
Early amortization provisions raise several distinct concerns about
the risks to selling banking organizations. First, the seller's
interest in the securitized assets effectively is subordinated to the
interests of the investors by the payment allocation formula applied
during early amortization. Investors effectively get paid first, and,
as a result, the seller's residual interest likely will absorb a
disproportionate share of credit losses.
Second, early amortization can create liquidity problems for
selling organizations. For example, a credit card issuer must fund a
steady stream of new credit card receivables when a securitization
trust is no longer able to purchase new receivables due to early
amortization. The selling organization must either find an alternative
buyer for the receivables or else the receivables will accumulate on
the seller's balance sheet, creating the need for another source of
funding and potentially the need for additional regulatory capital.
Third, the first two risks to the selling banking organization can
create an incentive for the seller to provide implicit support to the
securitization transaction--credit enhancement beyond any pre-existing
contractual obligations--to prevent an early amortization. Incentives
to provide implicit support are, to some extent, present in other types
of securitizations because of concerns about damage to the selling
organization's reputation and its ability to securitize assets going
forward if one of its transactions performs poorly. However, the early
amortization provision creates additional and more direct financial
incentives to prevent early amortization through the provision of
implicit support.
[[Page 56572]]
This is not the first time that the agencies have addressed the
question of whether to impose a capital charge on securitizations of
revolving credit exposures incorporating early amortization provisions.
On March 8, 2000, the agencies published a notice of proposed
rulemaking on recourse and direct credit substitutes (65 FR 12320). In
that proposal, the agencies proposed a fixed conversion factor of 20
percent to be applied to the amount of assets under management in all
revolving securitizations that contained early amortization features,
in recognition of the risks associated with these structures. The
agencies acknowledge that the March 2000 proposal was not particularly
risk sensitive and would have required the same amount of capital for
all securitizations of revolving credit exposures that contained early
amortization features, regardless of the risk present in the
securitization transaction. In a subsequent November 2001 rulemaking
(66 FR 59614), which implemented many of the proposals in the March
2000 proposal, the agencies reiterated their concerns with early
amortization, indicating that the risks associated with securitization,
including those posed by an early amortization feature, are not fully
captured in the current capital rules.
In the interim, the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BSC)
has set forth a more risk-sensitive proposal that would assess capital
against securitizations of revolving exposures with early amortization
features based on key indicators of risk, such as excess spread levels.
Virtually all securitizations of revolving retail credit facilities
that include early amortization provisions rely on excess spread as an
early amortization trigger. For example, early amortization generally
commences once excess spread falls below zero for a given period of
time. International supervisors recognize that there is a connection
between early amortization and excess spread levels. In a separate
rulemaking, the agencies currently are seeking comment on the proposals
the BSC has set forth for large, internationally active banking
organizations.\4\ The risk-based capital charge, on which comment is
sought in this proposed rulemaking for the exposures arising from early
amortization structures, is based on the proposal set forth by the
Basel Supervisors Committee.\5\
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\4\ On August 4, 2003, the agencies published an advanced notice
of proposed rulemaking (ANPR) in the Federal Register seeking public
comment on the implementation of the new Basel Capital Accord in the
United States. The ANPR presents an overview of the proposed
implementation in the United States of the advance, approaches to
determining risk-based capital requirements for credit and
operational risk.
\5\ The credit conversation factors used in this proposed
rulemaking mirror in the agencies' July 2003 Advanced Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking for non-controlled early amortization of
uncommitted retail credit lines.
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The agencies believe that the risks associated with early
amortization exist for all banking organizations that utilize
securitizations of revolving exposures to fund their operations.
Further, the agencies acknowledge that while early amortization events
are infrequent, an increasing number of securitizations have been
forced to unwind and repay investors earlier than planned. Given these
concerns, the agencies are requesting comment on whether to impose a
more risk-sensitive approach for assessing capital against
securitizations of revolving retail credit exposures that incorporate
early amortization provisions, which would apply to all banking
organizations that use these vehicles to fund their operations.
Such an early amortization capital charge would be applied to
securitizations of revolving retail credit facilities that include
early amortization provisions, which are expected predominantly to be
credit card securitizations. Since risk-based capital already is held
against the on-balance sheet seller's interest, such a capital charge
would be assessed against only the off-balance sheet investors'
interest and only in the event that the excess spread in the
transaction has declined to a predetermined level. The proposed capital
requirement would assess increasing amounts of risk-based capital as
the level of excess spread approaches the early amortization trigger
(typically, a three-month average excess spread of zero). Therefore, as
the probability of an early amortization event increases, the capital
charge against the off-balance sheet portion of the securitization also
would increase.
At this time, the agencies are only requesting comment on whether
to assess risk-based capital against securitizations of revolving
retail credit exposures (defined to include personal and business
credit card accounts), even though there are some transactions that
securitize revolving corporate exposures, such as certain
collateralized loan obligations. The agencies are considering the
appropriateness of applying an early amortization capital charge to
securitizations of non-retail revolving credit exposures and request
comment on this issue.
The maximum risk-based capital requirement that would be assessed
under the proposal would be equal to the greater of (i) the capital
requirement for residual interests or (ii) the capital requirement that
would have applied if the securitized assets were held on the
securitizing banking organization's balance sheet. The latter capital
charge generally is 8 percent for credit card receivables. For example,
if a banking organization, after securitizing a credit card portfolio,
retains a combination of an interest-only strips receivable, a spread
account, and a subordinated tranche that equaled 12 percent of the
transaction, then under the agencies' risk-based capital standards the
organization would be assessed a dollar-for-dollar capital charge
against the 12 percent of retained, subordinated securitization
exposures, net of any associated deferred tax liabilities. In this
example, there would be no incremental charge for early amortization
risk. Alternatively, if the amount of the retained exposures were less
than 8 percent, which is the risk-based capital charge for credit card
receivables held on the balance sheet, then the charge against the
retained securitization exposures plus any early amortization capital
charge would be limited to 8 percent. Potentially, if the exposure were
limited by contract, the risk-based capital requirement could be
limited to that contractual amount under the low-level exposure rule.
In order to determine whether a banking organization securitizing
revolving retail credit facilities containing early amortization
provisions must hold risk-based capital against the off-balance sheet
portion of its securitization (that is, the investors' interest), the
three-month average excess spread must be compared against the
difference between (i) the point at which the securitization trust
would be required by the securitization documents to trap excess spread
(spread trapping point) in a spread or reserve account and (ii) the
excess spread level at which early amortization would be triggered.
This differential would be referred to as the excess spread
differential (ESD). If the securitization documents do not require
excess spread to be trapped, then for purposes of this calculation the
spread trapping point is deemed to be 450 basis points higher than the
early amortization trigger. If such a securitization does not employ
the concept of excess spread as a transaction's determining factor of
when an early amortization is triggered, then a 10 percent credit
conversion factor is applied to the outstanding principal
[[Page 56573]]
balance of the investors' interest at the securitization's inception,
regardless of the level of the transaction's excess spread. Once the
difference between the spread trapping point and the early amortization
trigger is determined, this difference must be divided into four equal
segments.
For example, if the spread trapping point is 4.5 percent and the
early amortization trigger is zero, then the 450 basis point difference
would be divided into four equal segments of 112.5 basis points. A
credit conversion factor of zero percent would be applied to the
outstanding principal balance of the off-balance sheet investors'
interest if a securitization's three-month average excess spread
equaled or exceeded the spread trapping point (4.5 percent in the
example). Credit conversion factors of 5 percent, 10 percent, 50
percent, and 100 percent are assigned to each segment in descending
order beginning at the spread trapping point as the securitization
approaches early amortization as follows:
Example of Credit Conversion Factor Assignment by Segment
Segment of excess spread differential Credit
conversion
factor
(percent)
450 bp or more............................................. 0
Less than 450 bp to 337.5 bp............................... 5
Less than 337.5 bp to 225 bp............................... 10
Less than 225 bp to 112.5 bp............................... 50
Less than 112.5 bp......................................... 100
In this example, if the three-month average excess spread is
greater than 450 or equal to basis points, the banking organization
would not incur a risk-based capital charge for early amortization.
However, once the three-month average excess spread declines below 450
basis points, a positive credit conversion factor would be applied
against the outstanding principal balance of the off-balance sheet
investors' interest to calculate the credit equivalent amount of assets
that is to be risk weighted according to the asset type, typically the
100 percent risk weight category.
On the other hand, if the spread trapping point instead were 6
percent and the early amortization trigger were 2 percent, then the ESD
would be 4 percent, resulting in four equal segments of 100 basis
points. The 5 percent credit conversion factor would be applied to the
off-balance sheet investors' interest when the three-month average
excess spread declined to between 6 percent and 5 percent.
The agencies seek comment on whether to adopt such a treatment of
securitization of revolving credit facilities containing early
amortization mechanisms. Would such a treatment satisfactorily address
the potential risks such transactions pose to originators? Are there
other approaches, treatments, or factors that the agencies should
consider? Comments also are invited on the interplay and timing between
this proposal and the proposed capital treatment for securitization
structures contained in the agencies' July 2003 advanced notice of
proposed rulemaking regarding the implementation of the proposed Basel
Capital Accord.
III. Elimination of Summary Sections of Rules Text
The agencies also are proposing to amend their risk-based capital
standards by deleting tables and attachments that summarize the risk
categories, credit conversion factors, and transitional arrangements.
These tables and attachments have become outdated and unnecessary
because the substance of these summaries is included in the main text
of the risk-based capital standards. Furthermore, these summary tables
and attachments were originally provided to assist banking
organizations unfamiliar with the new framework during the transition
period when the agencies' risk-based capital requirements were
initially implemented. Deleting the tables and attachments will remove
unnecessary regulatory text.
IV. Regulatory Analysis
Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
Pursuant to section 605(b) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, the
Agencies have determined that this proposed rule would not have a
significant impact on a substantial number of small entities in
accordance with the spirit and purposes of the Regulatory Flexibility
Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.). The agencies believe that this proposed
rule should not impact a substantial number of small banking
organizations because such organizations typically do not sponsor ABCP
programs, provide liquidity facilities to such programs, or engage in
securitizations of revolving retail credit facilities. Accordingly, a
regulatory flexibility analysis is not required.
Paperwork Reduction Act
The Agencies have determined that this proposed rule does not
involve a collection of information pursuant to the provisions of the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
OCC: Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995, Pub.
L. 104-4 (Unfunded Mandates Act) requires that an agency prepare a
budgetary impact statement before promulgating a rule that includes a
Federal mandate that may result in expenditure by State, local, and
tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the private sector, of $100
million or more in any one year. If a budgetary impact statement is
required, section 205 of the Unfunded Mandates Act also requires an
agency to identify and consider a reasonable number of regulatory
alternatives before promulgating a rule. The OCC believes that
exclusion of consolidated ABCP program assets from risk-weighted assets
for risk-based capital purposes will not result in a significant impact
for national banks because the exclusion of consolidated ABCP program
assets is designed to offset the effect of FIN 46 on risk-based
capital. With respect to the proposed capital treatment of liquidity
facilities, because national banks that provide liquidity facilities to
ABCP programs currently exceed regulatory minimum capital requirements,
the OCC does not believe these banks will be required to raise
additional capital. Finally, while the OCC and the other Federal
banking agencies do not currently collect data on the excess spread
levels for individual revolving securitizations, the OCC does not
believe that the proposed capital charge on revolving securitizations
will have a significant impact on the capital requirements of national
banks because currently, most revolving securitizations are operating
with excess spread levels above the proposed capital triggers.
OTS: Section 202 of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995, Pub.
L. 104-4 (Unfunded Mandates Act) requires that an agency prepare a
budgetary impact statement before promulgating a rule that includes a
Federal mandate that may result in expenditure by State, local, and
tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the private sector, of $100
million or more in any one year. If a budgetary impact statement is
required, section 205 of the Unfunded Mandates Act also requires an
agency to identify and consider a reasonable number of regulatory
alternatives before promulgating a rule.
Plain Language
Section 722 of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley (GLB) Act requires the
Federal banking agencies to use ``plain language'' in all proposed and
final rules published after January 1, 2000. In light of this
requirement, the agencies
[[Page 56574]]
have sought to present their proposed rules in a simple and
straightforward manner. The agencies invite comments on whether there
are additional steps the agencies could take to make the rules easier
to understand.
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 3
Administrative practice and procedure, Capital, National banks,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Risk.
12 CFR Part 208
Accounting, Agriculture, Banks, Banking, Confidential business
information, Crime, Currency, Federal Reserve System, Mortgages,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Securities.
12 CFR Part 225
Administrative practice and procedure, Banks, Banking, Federal
Reserve System, Holding companies, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Securities.
12 CFR Part 325
Administrative practice and procedure, Bank deposit insurance,
Banks, Banking, Capital adequacy, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Savings associations, State non-member banks.
12 CFR Part 567
Capital, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Savings
associations.
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
12 CFR Chapter 1
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set out in the joint preamble, part 3 of chapter I
of title 12 of the Code of Federal Regulations is proposed to be
amended as follows:
PART 3--MINIMUM CAPITAL RATIOS; ISSUANCE OF DIRECTIVES
1. The authority citation for part 3 continues to reads as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 93a, 161, 1818, 1828(n), 1828 note, 1831n
note, 1835, 3907, and 3909.
2. Appendix A to part 3 is amended as follows:
A. In section 1, paragraphs (c)(3) and (c)(30) are republished.
B. In section 2, paragraph (a)(3) is revised.
C. In section 3, paragraphs (b)(2)(ii), (b)(3)(i), and (b)(4)(i)
are revised; and new paragraph (b)(3)(ii) is added.
D. In section 4:
i. Paragraphs (a)(5) through (a)(16) are redesignated as paragraphs
(a)(7) through (a)(18); newly redesignated paragraphs (a)(15) through
(a)(18) are redesignated as paragraphs (a)(16) through (a)(19); and new
paragraphs (a)(5), (a)(6) and (a)(15) are added.
ii. Paragraphs (j) and (k) are revised;
iii. New paragraphs (l) and (m) are added.
E. In section 5, Tables 1 through 4 are removed.
Appendix A to Part 3--Risk-Based Capital Guidelines
Section 1. Purpose, Applicability of Guidelines and Definitions
* * * * *
(c) * * *
(3) Asset-backed commercial paper program means a program that
issues commercial paper backed by assets or other exposures held in
a bankruptcy-remote, special-purpose entity.
* * * * *
(30) Sponsor means a bank that:
(i) Establishes an asset-backed commercial paper program;
(ii) Approves the sellers permitted to participate in an asset-
backed commercial paper program;
(iii) Approves the asset pools to be purchased by an asset-
backed commercial paper program; or
(iv) Administers the asset-backed commercial paper program by
monitoring the assets, arranging for debt placement, compiling
monthly reports, or ensuring compliance with the program documents
and with the program's credit and investment policy.
* * * * *
Section 2. Components of Capital
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(3) Minority interests in the equity accounts of consolidated
subsidiaries, except that the following are not included in Tier 1
capital or total capital:
(i) Minority interests in a small business investment company or
investment fund that holds nonfinancial equity investments and
minority interests in a subsidiary that is engaged in a nonfinancial
activities and is held under one of the legal authorities listed in
section 1(c)(21) of this appendix A.
(ii) Minority interests in consolidated asset-backed commercial
paper programs sponsored by a bank if the consolidated assets are
excluded from risk-weighted assets pursuant to section 4(j)(1) of
this appendix A.
* * * * *
Section 3. Risk Categories/Weights for On-Balance Sheet Assets and
Off-Balance Sheet Items
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(2) * * *
(ii) Unused portion of commitments, including home equity lines
of credit, and eligible liquidity facilities (as defined in
accordance with section 4(l)(2) of this appendix A) provided to
asset-backed commercial paper programs, in form or in substance,
with an original maturity exceeding one-year \17\; and
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\17\ Participations in commitments are treated in accordance
with section 4 of this appendix A.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
(3) * * * (i) Trade-related contingencies which are short-term
self-liquidating instruments used to finance the movement of goods
and are collateralized by the underlying shipment (an example is a
commercial letter of credit); and
(ii) Unused portion of eligible liquidity facilities (as defined
in accordance with section 4(l)(2) of this appendix A) provided to
an asset-backed commercial paper program, in form or in substance,
with an original maturity of one year or less.
(4) * * * (i) Unused portion of commitments, including liquidity
facilities not provided to asset-backed commercial paper programs,
with an original maturity of one year or less;
* * * * *
Section 4. Recourse, Direct Credit Substitutes and Positions in
Securitizations
* * * * *
(a) * * *
(5) Early amortization trigger means a contractual requirement
that, if triggered, would cause a securitization to begin repaying
investors prior to the originally scheduled payment dates.
(6) Excess spread generally means gross finance charge
collections and other income received by the trust or special
purpose entity minus certificate interest, servicing fees, charge-
offs, and other trust or special purpose entity expenses.
* * * * *
(15) Revolving retail credit means an exposure to an individual
or a business where the borrower is permitted to vary both the drawn
amount and the amount of repayment within an agreed limit under a
line of credit (such as personal or business credit card accounts).
* * * * *
(j) Asset-backed commercial paper programs subject to
consolidation. (1) A bank that qualifies as a primary beneficiary
and must consolidate an asset-backed commercial paper program as a
variable interest entity under generally accepted accounting
principles may exclude the consolidated asset-backed commercial
paper program assets from risk-weighted assets if the bank is the
sponsor of the consolidated asset-backed commercial paper program.
(2) If a bank excludes such consolidated asset-backed commercial
paper program assets from risk-weighted assets, the bank must assess
the appropriate risk-based capital charge against any risk exposures
of the bank arising in connection with such asset-backed commercial
paper program, including direct credit substitutes, recourse
obligations, residual interests, liquidity facilities, and loans, in
accordance with sections 3 and 4(b) of this appendix A.
[[Page 56575]]
(3) If a bank either elects not to exclude consolidated asset-
backed commercial paper program assets from its risk-weighted assets
in accordance with section 4(j)(1) of this appendix A, or is not
permitted to exclude consolidated asset-backed commercial paper
program assets, the bank must assess a risk-based capital charge
based on the appropriate risk weight of the consolidated asset-
backed commercial paper program assets in accordance with section
3(a) of this appendix A. In such case, direct credit substitutes and
recourse obligations (including residual interests), and loans that
sponsoring banks provide to such asset-backed commercial paper
programs are not subject to any capital charge under section 4 of
this appendix A.
(k) Other variable interest entities subject to consolidation.
If a bank is required to consolidate the assets of a variable
interest entity under generally accepted accounting principles, the
bank must assess a risk-based capital charge based on the
appropriate risk weight of the consolidated assets in accordance
with section 3(a) of this appendix A. In such case, direct credit
substitutes and recourse obligations (including residual interests),
and loans that sponsoring banks provide to such asset-backed
commercial paper programs are not subject to any capital charge
under section 4 of this appendix A.
(l) Liquidity facility provided to an asset-backed commercial
paper program. (1) Noneligible liquidity facilities treated as
recourse or direct credit substitute. Liquidity facilities extended
to asset-backed commercial paper programs that do not meet the
criteria for an eligible liquidity facility provided to an asset-
backed commercial paper program in accordance with section 4(l)(2)
of this appendix A must be treated as recourse or as a direct credit
substitute, and assessed the appropriate risk-based capital charge
in accordance to section 4 of this appendix A.
(2) Eligible liquidity facility. In order for a liquidity
facility provided to an asset-backed commercial paper program to be
eligible for either the 50 percent or 20 percent credit conversion
factors under section 3(b)(2) or 3(b)(3)(ii) of this appendix A, the
liquidity facility must satisfy the following criteria:
(i) At the time of draw, the liquidity facility must be subject
to a reasonable asset quality test that:
(A) Precludes funding of assets that are 60 days or more past
due or in default; and
(B) If the assets that a liquidity facility is required to fund
are externally rated securities (at the time they are transferred
into the program), the facility must be used to fund only securities
that are externally rated investment grade at the time of funding.
If the assets are not externally rated at the time they are
transferred into the program, then they are not subject to this
investment grade requirement.
(ii) The liquidity facility must provide that, prior to any
draws, the bank's funding obligation is reduced to cover only those
assets that satisfy the funding criteria under the asset quality
test of the liquidity facility.
(m) Early amortization. (1) Additional capital charge for
revolving retail securitization with early amortization trigger. A
bank that originates a securitization of revolving retail credits
that contains early amortization triggers must risk weight the off-
balance sheet portion of such a securitization (investors' interest)
by multiplying the outstanding principal amount of the investors'
interest by the appropriate credit conversion factor in accordance
with Table F in section 4(m)(3) of this appendix A, and then
assigning the resulting credit equivalent amount to the appropriate
risk weight category pursuant to section 3(a) of this appendix A. In
order to determine the appropriate credit conversion factor, the
bank must compare the most recent three-month average excess spread
level of the securitization to the excess spread ranges in Table F
of section 4(m)(3) of this appendix A, and apply the corresponding
credit conversion factor.
(2) Excess spread differential. Before the bank can apply Table
F in section 4(m)(3) of this appendix A, the bank must calculate the
upper and lower bounds for each excess spread range. To calculate
the upper and lower bounds, the bank must first determine the excess
spread differential of the securitization. The excess spread
differential is equal to the difference between the point at which
the bank is required by the securitization to divert and trap excess
spread (spread trapping point) in a spread or reserve account and
the excess spread level at which early amortization of the
securitization is triggered (early amortization trigger). If the
securitization does not require excess spread to be diverted to a
spread or reserve account at a certain excess spread level, the
spread differential is equal to 4.5 percentage points. If the
securitization does not use excess spread as an early amortization
trigger, then a 10 percent credit conversion factor is applied to
the outstanding principal balance of the investors' interest at the
securitization's inception.
(3) Excess spread differential segments. Once the excess spread
differential is determined, the standard excess spread differential
value must be calculated by dividing the excess spread differential
by 4. The upper and lower bounds for each of the excess spread
differential segments is calculated using the spread trapping point
and the standard excess spread differential value in accordance with
the formulas provided in Table F of section 4(m)(3) of this appendix
A. As provided in Table F of section 4(m)(3) of this appendix A, if
the three-month excess spread level equals or exceeds the spread
trapping point, the credit conversion factor is zero (resulting in
no capital charge on the investors' interest). If the spread
trapping point exceeds the three-month excess spread level, then the
corresponding credit conversion factor applied to the investors'
interest increases in steps from 5 percent to 100 percent as the
three-month excess spread level approaches the early amortization
trigger.
Table F.--Credit Conversion Factors for Revolving Retail Securitizations with Early Amortization Triggers
Excess Spread Ranges Credit
conversion
factor
(percent)
Excess spread equals or exceeds the spread trapping
point.................................................. 0
Upper Bound < Spread Trapping Point................. 5
Lower Bound = Spread Trapping Point--(1 x SESDV)
Upper Bound < Spread Trapping Point--(1 x SESDV).... 10
Lower Bound = Spread Trapping Point--(2 x SESDV)
Upper Bound < Spread Trapping Point--(2 x SESDV).... 50
Lower Bound = Spread Trapping Point--(3 x SESDV)
Upper Bound < Spread Trapping Point--(3 x SESDV).... 100
Lower Bound = None
Note: SESDV is the standard excess spread differential value.
(5) Limitations on risk-based capital requirements. For a bank
subject to the early amortization requirements in section 4(m) of
this appendix A, the total risk-based capital requirement for all of
the bank's exposures to a securitization of revolving retail credits
is limited to the greater of the risk-based capital requirement for
residual interests, as defined in accordance with section 4(a)(14)
of this appendix A, or the risk-based capital requirement for the
underlying securitized assets calculated as if the bank continued to
hold the assets on its balance sheet.
* * * * *
3. Appendix B to part 3 is amended by adding a new sentence at the
end of
[[Page 56576]]
section 2, paragraph (a) to read as follows:
Appendix B to Part 3--Risk-Based Capital Guidelines; Market Risk
Adjustment
* * * * *
Section 2. Definitions
* * * * *
(a) * * * Liquidity facilities provided to asset-backed
commercial paper programs in a bank's trading account are excluded
from covered positions, and instead, are subject to the risk-based
capital requirements as provided in appendix A of this part.
Dated: September 4, 2003.
John D. Hawke,
Comptroller of the Currency.
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Chapter II
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the joint preamble, the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System proposes to amend parts 208 and
225 of chapter II of title 12 of the Code of Federal Regulations as
follows:
PART 208--MEMBERSHIP OF STATE BANKING INSTITUTIONS IN THE FEDERAL
RESERVE SYSTEM (REGULATION H)
1. The authority citation for part 208 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 24, 36, 92a, 93a, 248(a), 248(c), 321-338a,
371d, 461, 481-486, 601, 611, 1814, 1816, 1818, 1820(d)(9), 1823(j),
1828(o), 1831, 1831o, 1831p-1, 1831r-1, 1831w, 1831x, 1835a, 1882,
2901-2907, 3105, 3310, 3331-3351, and 3906-3909; 15 U.S.C. 78b,
78l(b), 78l(g), 78l(i), 78o-4(c)(5), 78q, 78q-1, and 78w; 31 U.S.C.
5318; 42 U.S.C. 4012a, 4104a, 4104b, 4106, and 4128.
2. In Appendix A to part 208, the following amendments are
proposed:
a. Section II.A.1.c. is revised.
b. In section III.B.3--
i. Paragraph a., Definitions, is revised.
ii. Paragraph g., Limitations on risk-based capital requirements,
is redesignated as paragraph h.
iii. A new paragraph g., Early amortization triggers, is added.
iv. A new paragraph iv., is added to the redesignated paragraph h.
c. Section III.B.6. is revised.
d. In section III.D--
i. The last sentence of the introductory paragraph is removed.
ii. In paragraph 2., Items with a 50 percent conversion factor, the
third undesignated paragraph is revised, the fourth undesignated
paragraph is removed, and the five remaining undesignated paragraphs
are designated as 2.a. through 2.c.
iii. In paragraph 3, Items with a 20 percent conversion factor, the
first undesignated paragraph is designated as 3.a. and a new paragraph
3.b. is added.
iv. The first sentence in paragraph 4., Items with a zero percent
conversion factor, is revised.
v. Footnote 54 is removed and reserved.
e. Attachments IV, V, and VI are removed.
Appendix A to Part 208--Capital Adequacy Guidelines for State Member
Banks: Risk-Based Measure
* * * * *
II. * * *
A. * * *
1. * * *
c. Minority interest in equity accounts of consolidated
subsidiaries. This element is included in Tier 1 because, as a
general rule, it represents equity that is freely available to
absorb losses in operating subsidiaries whose assets are included in
a bank's risk-weighted asset base. While not subject to an explicit
sublimit within Tier 1, banks are expected to avoid using minority
interest in the equity accounts of consolidated subsidiaries as an
avenue for introducing into their capital structures elements that
might not otherwise qualify as Tier 1 capital or that would, in
effect, result in an excessive reliance on preferred stock within
Tier 1. Minority interests in small business investment companies,
investment funds that hold nonfinancial equity investments (as
defined in section II.B.5.b. of this appendix A), and subsidiaries
engaged in nonfinancial activities, are not included in the bank's
Tier 1 or total capital base if the bank's interest in the company
or fund is held under one of the legal authorities listed in section
II.B.5.b. In addition, minority interests in consolidated asset-
backed commercial paper programs (as defined in section III.B.6. of
this appendix) that are sponsored by a bank are not to be included
in the bank's Tier 1 or total capital base when the bank excludes
the consolidated assets of such programs from risk-weighted assets
pursuant to section III.B.6. of this appendix.
* * * * *
III. * * *
B. * * *
a. Definitions--i. Credit derivative means a contract that
allows one party (the ``protection purchaser'') to transfer the
credit risk of an asset or off-balance sheet credit exposure to
another party (the ``protection provider''). The value of a credit
derivative is dependent, at least in part, on the credit performance
of the ``reference asset.''
ii. Credit-enhancing representations and warranties means
representations and warranties that are made or assumed in
connection with a transfer of assets (including loan servicing
assets) and that obligate the bank to protect investors from losses
arising from credit risk in the assets transferred or the loans
serviced. Credit-enhancing representations and warranties include
promises to protect a party from losses resulting from the default
or nonperformance of another party or from an insufficiency in the
value of the collateral. Credit-enhancing representations and
warranties do not include:
1. Early default clauses and similar warranties that permit the
return of, or premium refund clauses covering, 1-4 family
residential first mortgage loans that qualify for a 50 percent risk
weight for a period not to exceed 120 days from the date of
transfer. These warranties may cover only those loans that were
originated within 1 year of the date of transfer;
2. Premium refund clauses that cover assets guaranteed, in whole
or in part, by the U.S. Government, a U.S. Government agency or a
government-sponsored enterprise, provided the premium refund clauses
are for a period not to exceed 120 days from the date of transfer;
or
3. Warranties that permit the return of assets in instances of
misrepresentation, fraud or incomplete documentation.
iii. Direct credit substitute means an arrangement in which a
bank assumes, in form or in substance, credit risk associated with
an on- or off-balance sheet credit exposure that was not previously
owned by the bank (third-party asset) and the risk assumed by the
bank exceeds the pro rata share of the bank's interest in the third-
party asset. If the bank has no claim on the third-party asset, then
the bank's assumption of any credit risk with respect to the third
party asset is a direct credit substitute. Direct credit substitutes
include, but are not limited to:
1. Financial standby letters of credit that support financial
claims on a third party that exceed a bank's pro rata share of
losses in the financial claim;
2. Guarantees, surety arrangements, credit derivatives, and
similar instruments backing financial claims that exceed a bank's
pro rata share in the financial claim;
3. Purchased subordinated interests or securities that absorb
more than their pro rata share of losses from the underlying assets;
4. Credit derivative contracts under which the bank assumes more
than its pro rata share of credit risk on a third party exposure;
5. Loans or lines of credit that provide credit enhancement for
the financial obligations of an account party;
6. Purchased loan servicing assets if the servicer is
responsible for credit losses or if the servicer makes or assumes
credit-enhancing representations and warranties with respect to the
loans serviced. Mortgage servicer cash advances that meet the
conditions of section III.B.3.a.viii. of this appendix are not
direct credit substitutes; and
7. Clean-up calls on third party assets. Clean-up calls that are
10 percent or less of the original pool balance that are exercisable
at the option of the bank are not direct credit substitutes.
8. Liquidity facilities extended to ABCP programs that are not
eligible liquidity facilities (as defined in section III.B.3.a. of
this appendix).
iv. Early amortization triggers mean contractual requirements
that, if triggered, would cause a securitization to begin repaying
investors prior to the originally scheduled payment dates.
v. Eligible liquidity facility means a facility subject to a
reasonable asset quality test at
[[Page 56577]]
the time of draw that precludes funding against assets that are 60
days or more past due or in default. In addition, if the assets that
an eligible liquidity facility is required to fund against are
externally rated exposures at the inception of the facility, the
facility can be used to fund only exposures that are externally
rated investment grade at the time of funding. Furthermore, an
eligible liquidity facility must contain provisions that, prior to
any draws, reduces the bank's funding obligation to cover only those
assets that would meet the funding criteria under the facility's
asset quality tests.
vi. Excess Spread means gross finance charge collections and
other income received by the trust or special purpose entity (SPE)
minus certificate interest, servicing fees, charge-offs, and other
trust or SPE expenses.
vii. Externally rated means that an instrument or obligation has
received a credit rating from a nationally-recognized statistical
rating organization.
viii. Face amount means the notional principal, or face value,
amount of an off-balance sheet item; the amortized cost of an asset
not held for trading purposes; and the fair value of a trading
asset.
ix. Financial asset means cash or other monetary instrument,
evidence of debt, evidence of an ownership interest in an entity, or
a contract that conveys a right to receive or exchange cash or
another financial instrument from another party.
x. Financial standby letter of credit means a letter of credit
or similar arrangement that represents an irrevocable obligation to
a third-party beneficiary:
1. To repay money borrowed by, or advanced to, or for the
account of, a second party (the account party), or
2. To make payment on behalf of the account party, in the event
that the account party fails to fulfill its obligation to the
beneficiary.
xi. Mortgage servicer cash advance means funds that a
residential mortgage loan servicer advances to ensure an
uninterrupted flow of payments, including advances made to cover
foreclosure costs or other expenses to facilitate the timely
collection of the loan. A mortgage servicer cash advance is not a
recourse obligation or a direct credit substitute if:
1. The servicer is entitled to full reimbursement and this right
is not subordinated to other claims on the cash flows from the
underlying asset pool; or
2. For any one loan, the servicer's obligation to make
nonreimbursable advances is contractually limited to an
insignificant amount of the outstanding principal balance of that
loan.
xii. Nationally recognized statistical rating organization
(NRSRO) means an entity recognized by the Division of Market
Regulation of the Securities and Exchange Commission (or any
successor Division) (Commission) as a nationally recognized
statistical rating organization for various purposes, including the
Commission's uniform net capital requirements for brokers and
dealers.
xiii. Recourse means the retention, by a bank, in form or in
substance, of any credit risk directly or indirectly associated with
an asset it has transferred and sold that exceeds a pro rata share
of the bank's claim on the asset. If a bank has no claim on a
transferred asset, then the retention of any risk of credit loss is
recourse. A recourse obligation typically arises when a bank
transfers assets and retains an explicit obligation to repurchase
the assets or absorb losses due to a default on the payment of
principal or interest or any other deficiency in the performance of
the underlying obligor or some other party. Recourse may also exist
implicitly if a bank provides credit enhancement beyond any
contractual obligation to support assets it has sold. The following
are examples of recourse arrangements:
1. Credit-enhancing representations and warranties made on the
transferred assets;
2. Loan servicing assets retained pursuant to an agreement under
which the bank will be responsible for credit losses associated with
the loans being serviced. Mortgage servicer cash advances that meet
the conditions of section III.B.3.a.viii. of this appendix are not
recourse arrangements;
3. Retained subordinated interests that absorb more than their
pro rata share of losses from the underlying assets;
4. Assets sold under an agreement to repurchase, if the assets
are not already included on the balance sheet;
5. Loan strips sold without contractual recourse where the
maturity of the transferred loan is shorter than the maturity of the
commitment under which the loan is drawn;
6. Credit derivatives issued that absorb more than the bank's
pro rata share of losses from the transferred assets; and
7. Clean-up calls at inception that are greater than 10 percent
of the balance of the original pool of transferred loans. Clean-up
calls that are 10 percent or less of the original pool balance that
are exercisable at the option of the bank are not recourse
arrangements.
8. Liquidity facilities extended to ABCP programs that are not
eligible liquidity facilities (as defined in section III.B.3.a. of
this appendix).
xiv. Residual interest means any on-balance sheet asset that
represents an interest (including a beneficial interest) created by
a transfer that qualifies as a sale (in accordance with generally
accepted accounting principles) of financial assets, whether through
a securitization or otherwise, and that exposes the bank to credit
risk directly or indirectly associated with the transferred assets
that exceeds a pro rata share of the bank's claim on the assets,
whether through subordination provisions or other credit enhancement
techniques. Residual interests generally include credit-enhancing I/
Os, spread accounts, cash collateral accounts, retained subordinated
interests, other forms of over-collateralization, and similar assets
that function as a credit enhancement. Residual interests further
include those exposures that, in substance, cause the bank to retain
the credit risk of an asset or exposure that had qualified as a
residual interest before it was sold. Residual interests generally
do not include interests purchased from a third party, except that
purchased credit-enhancing I/Os are residual interests for purposes
of this appendix.
xv. Revolving retail credit facility means an exposure to an
individual where the borrower is permitted to vary both the drawn
amount and the amount of repayment within an agreed limit under a
line of credit (such as credit card accounts). Revolving retail
credits include business credit card accounts.
xvi. Risk participation means a participation in which the
originating party remains liable to the beneficiary for the full
amount of an obligation (e.g., a direct credit substitute)
notwithstanding that another party has acquired a participation in
that obligation.
xvii. Securitization means the pooling and repackaging by a
special purpose entity of assets or other credit exposures into
securities that can be sold to investors. Securitization includes
transactions that create stratified credit risk positions whose
performance is dependent upon an underlying pool of credit
exposures, including loans and commitments.
xviii. Sponsor means a bank that establishes an asset-backed
commercial paper program; approves the sellers permitted to
participate in the program; approves the asset pools to be purchased
by the program; or administers the asset-backed commercial paper
program by monitoring the assets, arranging for debt placement,
compiling monthly reports, or ensuring compliance with the program
documents and with the program's credit and investment policy.
xix. Structured finance program means a program where receivable
interests and asset-backed securities issued by multiple
participants are purchased by a special purpose entity that
repackages those exposures into securities that can be sold to
investors. Structured finance programs allocate credit risks,
generally, between the participants and credit enhancement provided
to the program.
xx. Traded position means a position that is externally rated
and is retained, assumed, or issued in connection with an asset
securitization, where there is a reasonable expectation that, in the
near future, the rating will be relied upon by unaffiliated
investors to purchase the position; or an unaffiliated third party
to enter into a transaction involving the position, such as a
purchase, loan, or repurchase agreement.
* * * * *
g. Early Amortization Triggers. i. A bank that originates
securitizations of revolving retail credit facilities that contain
early amortization triggers must incorporate the off-balance sheet
portion of such a securitization (that is, the investors' interest)
into the bank's risk-weighted assets by multiplying the outstanding
principal amount of the investors' interest by the appropriate
credit conversion factor and then assigning the resultant credit
equivalent amount to the appropriate risk weight category. The
credit conversion factor to be applied to such a securitization
generally is a function of the securitization's most recent three-
month average excess spread level, the point at which excess spread
in the securitization must be trapped in a spread or reserve
account, and the excess spread level
[[Page 56578]]
at which an early amortization of the securitization is triggered.
ii. In order to determine the appropriate credit conversion
factor to be applied to the outstanding principal balance of the
investors' interest, the originating bank must compare the
securitization's most recent three-month average excess spread level
against the difference between the point at which the bank is
required by the securitization documents to divert and trap excess
spread (spread trapping point) in a spread or reserve account and
the excess spread level at which early amortization of the
securitization is triggered (early amortization trigger). The
difference between the spread trapping point and the early
amortization trigger is referred to as the excess spread
differential (ESD). In a securitization of revolving retail credit
facilities that employs the concept of excess spread to determine
when an early amortization is triggered but where the
securitization's transaction documents do not require excess spread
to be diverted to a spread or reserve account at a certain level,
the ESD is deemed to be 4.5 percentage points.
iii. If a securitization of revolving retail credit facilities
does not employ the concept of excess spread as the transaction's
determining factor of when an early amortization is triggered, then
a 10 percent credit conversion factor is applied to the outstanding
principal balance of the investors' interest at the securitization's
inception.
iv. The ESD must then be divided to create four equal ESD
segments. For example, when the ESD is 4.5 percent, this amount is
divided into 4 equal ESD segments of 112.5 basis points. A credit
conversion factor of zero percent would be applied to the
outstanding principal balance of the investors' interest if the
securitization's three-month average excess spread equaled or
exceeded the securitization's spread trapping point (4.5 percent in
the example). Credit conversion factors of 5 percent, 10 percent, 50
percent, and 100 percent are then assigned to each of the four equal
ESD segments in descending order beginning at the spread trapping
point as the securitization approaches early amortization. For
instance, when the ESD is 4.5 percent, the credit conversion factors
would be applied to the outstanding balance of the investors'
interest as follows:
Example of Credit Conversion Factor Assignment by Segment of Excess Spread Differential
Segment of excess spread differential Credit
conversion
factor
(percent)
450 bp or more............................................. 0
Less than 450 bp to 337.5 bp............................... 5
Less than 337.5 bp to 225 bp............................... 10
Less than 225 bp to 112.5 bp............................... 50
Less than 112.5 bp......................................... 100
h. Limitations on risk-based capital requirements. * * *
iv. For a bank subject to the early amortization treatment in
section III.B.3.g. of this appendix, the total risk-based capital
requirement for all of the bank's exposures to a securitization of
revolving retail credit facilities is limited to the greater of the
risk-based capital requirement for residual interests, as defined in
section III.B.3.a. of this appendix, or the risk-based capital
requirement for the underlying securitized assets calculated as if
the bank continued to hold the assets on its balance sheet.
* * * * *
6. Asset-backed commercial paper programs. a. An asset-backed
commercial paper (ABCP) program typically is a program through which
a bank provides funding to its corporate customers by sponsoring and
administering a bankruptcy-remote special purpose entity that
purchases asset pools from, or extends loans to, the bank's
customers. The ABCP program raises the cash to provide the funding
through the issuance of commercial paper in the market.
b. A bank that qualifies as a primary beneficiary and must
consolidate an ABCP program that is defined as a variable interest
entity under GAAP may exclude the consolidated ABCP program assets
from risk-weighted assets provided that the bank is the sponsor of
the consolidated ABCP program. If a bank excludes such consolidated
ABCP program assets, the bank must assess the appropriate risk-based
capital charge against any risk exposures of the bank arising in
connection with such ABCP programs, including direct credit
substitutes, recourse obligations, residual interests, liquidity
facilities, and loans, in accordance with sections III.B.3, III.C.
and III.D. of this appendix.
* * * * *
III. * * *
D. * * *
2. Items with a 50 percent conversion factor. * * *
c. Commitments are defined as any legally binding arrangements
that obligate a bank to extend credit in the form of loans or
leases; to purchase loans, securities, or other assets; or to
participate in loans and leases. They also include overdraft
facilities, revolving credit, home equity and mortgage lines of
credit, eligible liquidity facilities to asset-backed commercial
paper programs-,(in form or in substance), and similar transactions.
Normally, commitments involve a written contract or agreement and a
commitment fee, or some other form of consideration. Commitments are
included in weighted-risk assets regardless of whether they contain
``material adverse change'' clauses or other provisions that are
intended to relieve the issuer of its funding obligation under
certain conditions. In the case of commitments structured as
syndications, where the bank is obligated solely for its pro rata
share, only the bank's proportional share of the syndicated
commitment is taken into account in calculating the risk-based
capital ratio. Banks that are subject to the market risk rules are
required to convert the notional amount of long-term covered
positions carried in the trading account that act as eligible
liquidity facilities to ABCP programs, in form or in substance, at
50 percent to determine the appropriate credit equivalent amount for
those facilities even though they are structured or characterized as
derivatives or other trading book assets.
* * * * *
3. Items with a 20 percent conversion factor. * * *
a. * * *
b. Undrawn portions of eligible liquidity facilities with an
original maturity of one year or less that banks provide to asset-
backed commercial paper (ABCP) programs also are converted at 20
percent. The resulting credit equivalent amount is then assigned to
the risk category appropriate to the underlying assets or the
obligor, after consideration of any collateral or guarantees, or
external credit ratings, if applicable. Banks that comply with the
market risk rules are required to convert the notional amount of
short-term covered positions carried in the trading account that act
as liquidity facilities to ABCP programs, in form or in substance,
at 20 percent to determine the appropriate credit equivalent amount
for those facilities even though they are structured or
characterized as derivatives or other trading book assets. Liquidity
facilities extended to ABCP programs that do not meet the following
criteria are to be considered recourse obligations or direct credit
substitutes and assessed the appropriate risk-based capital
requirement in accordance with section III.B.3. of this appendix.
Eligible liquidity facilities must be subject to a reasonable asset
quality test at the time of draw that precludes funding against
assets in the ABCP program that are 60 days or more past due or in
default. In addition, if the assets that eligible liquidity
facilities are required to fund against are externally rated
exposures, the facility can be used to fund only those exposures
that are externally rated investment grade at the time of funding.
Furthermore, liquidity facilities should contain provisions that,
prior to any draws, reduces the bank's funding obligation to cover
only those assets that would meet the funding criteria under the
facilities' asset quality tests.
4. * * * These include unused portions of commitments, with the
exception of eligible liquidity facilities provided to ABCP
programs, with an original maturity of one year or less,\54\ or
which are unconditionally cancelable at any time, provided a
separate credit decision is made before each drawing under the
facility. * * *
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\54\ [Reserved]
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
* * * * *
3. Amend appendix E to part 208 by adding two new sentences at the
end of section 2.(a). to read as follows:
Appendix E to Part 208--Capital Adequacy Guidelines for State Member
Banks; Market Risk Measure
* * * * *
Section 2. Definitions * * *
(a) *** Covered positions exclude all positions in a bank's
trading account that, in form or in substance, act as eligible
liquidity facilities (as defined in section III.B.3.a. of
[[Page 56579]]
appendix A of this part) to asset-backed commercial paper programs
(as defined in section III.B.6. of appendix A of this part). Such
excluded positions are subject to the risk-based capital
requirements set forth in appendix A of this part.
* * * * *
PART 225--BANK HOLDING COMPANIES AND CHANGE IN BANK CONTROL
(REGULATION Y)
1. The authority citation for part 225 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1817(j)(13), 1818, 1828(o), 1831i, 1831p-1,
1843( c)(8), 1844(b), 1972(1), 3106, 3108, 3310, 3331-3351, 3907,
and 3909; 15 U.S.C. 6801 and 6805.
2. In Appendix A to part 225, the following amendments are
proposed:
a. Section II.A.1.c. is revised.
b. In section III.B.3--
i. Paragraph a., Definitions, is revised.
ii. Paragraph g., Limitations on risk-based capital requirements,
is redesignated as paragraph h.
iii. A new paragraph g., Early amortization triggers, is added.
iv. A new paragraph iv., is added to the redesignated paragraph h.
c. Section III.B.6. is revised.
d. In section III.D--
i. The last sentence of the introductory paragraph is removed.
ii. In paragraph 2., Items with a 50 percent conversion factor, the
third undesignated paragraph is revised, the fourth undesignated
paragraph is removed, and the five remaining undesignated paragraphs
are designated as 2.a. through 2.e
iii. In paragraph 3, Items with a 20 percent conversion factor, the
first undesignated paragraph is designated as 3.a. and a new paragraph
3.b. is added.
iv. The first sentence in the paragraph 4., Items with a zero
percent conversion factor, is revised.
d. Attachments IV, V, and VI are removed.
Appendix A to Part 225--Capital Adequacy Guidelines for Bank Holding
Companies: Risk-Based Measure
* * * * *
II. * * *
A. * * *
1. * * *
c. Minority interest in equity accounts of consolidated
subsidiaries. This element is included in Tier 1 because, as a
general rule, it represents equity that is freely available to
absorb losses in operating subsidiaries whose assets are included in
a bank organization's risk-weighted asset base. While not subject to
an explicit sublimit within Tier 1, banking organizations are
expected to avoid using minority interest in the equity accounts of
consolidated subsidiaries as an avenue for introducing into their
capital structures elements that might not otherwise qualify as Tier
1 capital or that would, in effect, result in an excessive reliance
on preferred stock within Tier 1. Minority interests in small
business investment companies, investment funds that hold
nonfinancial equity investments (as defined in section II.B.5.b. of
this appendix A), and subsidiaries engaged in nonfinancial
activities are not included in the banking organization's Tier 1 or
total capital base if the organization's interest in the company or
fund is held under one of the legal authorities listed in section
II.B.5.b. In addition, minority interests in consolidated asset-
backed commercial paper programs (as defined in section III.B.6. of
this appendix) that are sponsored by a banking organization are not
to be included in the organization's Tier 1 or total capital base if
the bank holding company excludes the consolidated assets of such
programs from risk-weighted assets pursuant to section III.B.6. of
this appendix.
* * * * *
III. * * *
B. * * *
a. Definitions--i. Credit derivative means a contract that
allows one party (the ``protection purchaser'') to transfer the
credit risk of an asset or off-balance sheet credit exposure to
another party (the ``protection provider''). The value of a credit
derivative is dependent, at least in part, on the credit performance
of the ``reference asset.''
ii. Credit-enhancing representations and warranties means
representations and warranties that are made or assumed in
connection with a transfer of assets (including loan servicing
assets) and that obligate the bank holding company to protect
investors from losses arising from credit risk in the assets
transferred or the loans serviced. Credit-enhancing representations
and warranties include promises to protect a party from losses
resulting from the default or nonperformance of another party or
from an insufficiency in the value of the collateral. Credit-
enhancing representations and warranties do not include:
1. Early default clauses and similar warranties that permit the
return of, or premium refund clauses covering, 1-4 family
residential first mortgage loans that qualify for a 50 percent risk
weight for a period not to exceed 120 days from the date of
transfer. These warranties may cover only those loans that were
originated within 1 year of the date of transfer;
2. Premium refund clauses that cover assets guaranteed, in whole
or in part, by the U.S. Government, a U.S. Government agency or a
government-sponsored enterprise, provided the premium refund clauses
are for a period not to exceed 120 days from the date of transfer;
or
3. Warranties that permit the return of assets in instances of
misrepresentation, fraud or incomplete documentation.
iii. Direct credit substitute means an arrangement in which a
bank holding company assumes, in form or in substance, credit risk
associated with an on- or off-balance sheet credit exposure that was
not previously owned by the bank holding company (third-party asset)
and the risk assumed by the bank holding company exceeds the pro
rata share of the bank holding company's interest in the third-party
asset. If the bank holding company has no claim on the third-party
asset, then the bank holding company's assumption of any credit risk
with respect to the third party asset is a direct credit substitute.
Direct credit substitutes include, but are not limited to:
1. Financial standby letters of credit that support financial
claims on a third party that exceed a bank holding company's pro
rata share of losses in the financial claim;
2. Guarantees, surety arrangements, credit derivatives, and
similar instruments backing financial claims that exceed a bank
holding company's pro rata share in the financial claim;
3. Purchased subordinated interests or securities that absorb
more than their pro rata share of losses from the underlying assets;
4. Credit derivative contracts under which the bank holding
company assumes more than its pro rata share of credit risk on a
third party exposure;
5. Loans or lines of credit that provide credit enhancement for
the financial obligations of an account party;
6. Purchased loan servicing assets if the servicer is
responsible for credit losses or if the servicer makes or assumes
credit-enhancing representations and warranties with respect to the
loans serviced. Mortgage servicer cash advances that meet the
conditions of section III.B.3.a.viii. of this appendix are not
direct credit substitutes; and
7. Clean-up calls on third party assets. Clean-up calls that are
10 percent or less of the original pool balance that are exercisable
at the option of the bank holding company are not direct credit
substitutes.
8. Liquidity facilities extended to ABCP programs that are not
eligible liquidity facilities (as defined in section III.B.3.a. of
this appendix).
iv. Early Amortization Triggers mean contractual requirements
that, if triggered, would cause a securitization to begin repaying
investors prior to the originally scheduled payment dates.
v. Eligible liquidity facility means a facility subject to a
reasonable asset quality test at the time of draw that precludes
funding against assets that are 60 days or more past due or in
default. In addition, if the assets that an eligible liquidity
facility is required to fund against are externally rated exposures
at the inception of the facility, the facility can be used to fund
only those exposures that are externally rated investment grade at
the time of funding. Furthermore, an eligible liquidity facility
must contain provisions that, prior to any draws, reduces the bank
holding company's funding obligation to cover only those assets that
would meet the funding criteria under the facility's asset quality
tests.
vi. Excess Spread means gross finance charge collections and
other income received by the trust or special purpose entity (SPE)
minus certificate interest, servicing fees, charge-offs, and other
trust or SPE expenses.
vii. Externally rated means that an instrument or obligation has
received a credit rating from a nationally-recognized statistical
rating organization.
viii. Face amount means the notional principal, or face value,
amount of an off-balance sheet item; the amortized cost of an
[[Page 56580]]
asset not held for trading purposes; and the fair value of a trading
asset.
ix. Financial asset means cash or other monetary instrument,
evidence of debt, evidence of an ownership interest in an entity, or
a contract that conveys a right to receive or exchange cash or
another financial instrument from another party.
x. Financial standby letter of credit means a letter of credit
or similar arrangement that represents an irrevocable obligation to
a third-party beneficiary:
1. To repay money borrowed by, or advanced to, or for the
account of, a second party (the account party), or
2. To make payment on behalf of the account party, in the event
that the account party fails to fulfill its obligation to the
beneficiary.
xi. Mortgage servicer cash advance means funds that a
residential mortgage loan servicer advances to ensure an
uninterrupted flow of payments, including advances made to cover
foreclosure costs or other expenses to facilitate the timely
collection of the loan. A mortgage servicer cash advance is not a
recourse obligation or a direct credit substitute if:
1. The servicer is entitled to full reimbursement and this right
is not subordinated to other claims on the cash flows from the
underlying asset pool; or
2. For any one loan, the servicer's obligation to make
nonreimbursable advances is contractually limited to an
insignificant amount of the outstanding principal balance of that
loan.
xii. Nationally recognized statistical rating organization
(NRSRO) means an entity recognized by the Division of Market
Regulation of the Securities and Exchange Commission (or any
successor Division) (Commission) as a nationally recognized
statistical rating organization for various purposes, including the
Commission's uniform net capital requirements for brokers and
dealers.
xiii. Recourse means the retention, by a bank holding company,
in form or in substance, of any credit risk directly or indirectly
associated with an asset it has transferred and sold that exceeds a
pro rata share of the banking organization's claim on the asset. If
a banking organization has no claim on a transferred asset, then the
retention of any risk of credit loss is recourse. A recourse
obligation typically arises when a bank holding company transfers
assets and retains an explicit obligation to repurchase the assets
or absorb losses due to a default on the payment of principal or
interest or any other deficiency in the performance of the
underlying obligor or some other party. Recourse may also exist
implicitly if a bank holding company provides credit enhancement
beyond any contractual obligation to support assets it has sold. The
following are examples of recourse arrangements:
1. Credit-enhancing representations and warranties made on the
transferred assets;
2. Loan servicing assets retained pursuant to an agreement under
which the bank holding company will be responsible for credit losses
associated with the loans being serviced. Mortgage servicer cash
advances that meet the conditions of section III.B.3.a.viii. of this
appendix are not recourse arrangements;
3. Retained subordinated interests that absorb more than their
pro rata share of losses from the underlying assets;
4. Assets sold under an agreement to repurchase, if the assets
are not already included on the balance sheet;
5. Loan strips sold without contractual recourse where the
maturity of the transferred loan is shorter than the maturity of the
commitment under which the loan is drawn;
6. Credit derivatives issued that absorb more than the bank
holding company's pro rata share of losses from the transferred
assets; and
7. Clean-up calls at inception that are greater than 10 percent
of the balance of the original pool of transferred loans. Clean-up
calls that are 10 percent or less of the original pool balance that
are exercisable at the option of the bank are not recourse
arrangements.
8. Liquidity facilities extended to ABCP programs that are not
eligible liquidity facilities (as defined in section III.B.3.a. of
this appendix).
xiv. Residual interest means any on-balance sheet asset that
represents an interest (including a beneficial interest) created by
a transfer that qualifies as a sale (in accordance with generally
accepted accounting principles) of financial assets, whether through
a securitization or otherwise, and that exposes the bank holding
company to credit risk directly or indirectly associated with the
transferred assets that exceeds a pro rata share of the bank holding
company's claim on the assets, whether through subordination
provisions or other credit enhancement techniques. Residual
interests generally include credit-enhancing I/Os, spread accounts,
cash collateral accounts, retained subordinated interests, other
forms of over-collateralization, and similar assets that function as
a credit enhancement. Residual interests further include those
exposures that, in substance, cause the bank holding company to
retain the credit risk of an asset or exposure that had qualified as
a residual interest before it was sold. Residual interests generally
do not include interests purchased from a third party, except that
purchased credit-enhancing I/Os are residual interests for purposes
of this appendix.
xv. Revolving retail credit facility means an exposure to an
individual where the borrower is permitted to vary both the drawn
amount and the amount of repayment within an agreed limit under a
line of credit (such as credit card accounts). Revolving retail
credits include business credit card accounts.
xvi. Risk participation means a participation in which the
originating party remains liable to the beneficiary for the full
amount of an obligation (e.g., a direct credit substitute)
notwithstanding that another party has acquired a participation in
that obligation.
xvii. Securitization means the pooling and repackaging by a
special purpose entity of assets or other credit exposures into
securities that can be sold to investors. Securitization includes
transactions that create stratified credit risk positions whose
performance is dependent upon an underlying pool of credit
exposures, including loans and commitments.
xviii. Sponsor means a bank holding company that establishes an
asset-backed commercial paper program; approves the sellers
permitted to participate in the program; approves the asset pools to
be purchased by the program; or administers the asset-backed
commercial paper program by monitoring the assets, arranging for
debt placement, compiling monthly reports, or ensuring compliance
with the program documents and with the program's credit and
investment policy.
xix. Structured finance program means a program where receivable
interests and asset-backed securities issued by multiple
participants are purchased by a special purpose entity that
repackages those exposures into securities that can be sold to
investors. Structured finance programs allocate credit risks,
generally, between the participants and credit enhancement provided
to the program.
xx. Traded position means a position that is externally rated
and is retained, assumed, or issued in connection with an asset
securitization, where there is a reasonable expectation that, in the
near future, the rating will be relied upon by unaffiliated
investors to purchase the position; or an unaffiliated third party
to enter into a transaction involving the position, such as a
purchase, loan, or repurchase agreement.
* * * * *
g. Early Amortization Triggers. i. A bank holding company that
originates securitizations of revolving retail credit facilities
that contain early amortization triggers must incorporate the off-
balance sheet portion of such a securitization (that is, the
investors' interest) into the bank's risk-weighted assets by
multiplying the outstanding principal amount of the investors'
interest by the appropriate credit conversion factor and then
assigning the resultant credit equivalent amount to the appropriate
risk weight category. The credit conversion factor to be applied to
such a securitization generally is a function of the
securitization's most recent three-month average excess spread
level, the point at which excess spread in the securitization must
be trapped in a spread or reserve account, and the excess spread
level at which an early amortization of the securitization is
triggered.
ii. In order to determine the appropriate credit conversion
factor to be applied to the outstanding principal balance of the
investors' interest, the originating bank holding company must
compare the securitization's most recent three-month average excess
spread level against the difference between the point at which the
organization is required by the securitization documents to divert
and trap excess spread (spread trapping point) in a spread or
reserve account and the excess spread level at which early
amortization of the securitization is triggered (early amortization
trigger). The difference between the spread trapping point and the
early amortization trigger is referred to as the excess spread
differential (ESD). In
[[Page 56581]]
a securitization of revolving retail credit facilities that employs
the concept of excess spread to determine when an early amortization
is triggered but where the securitization's transaction documents do
not require excess spread to be diverted to a spread or reserve
account at a certain level, the ESD is deemed to be 4.5 percentage
points.
iii. If a securitization of revolving retail credit facilities
does not employ the concept of excess spread as the transaction's
determining factor of when an early amortization is triggered, then
a 10 percent credit conversion factor is applied to the outstanding
principal balance of the investors' interest at the securitization's
inception.
iv. The ESD must then be divided to create four equal ESD
segments. For example, when the ESD is 4.5 percent, this amount is
divided into 4 equal ESD segments of 112.5 basis points. A credit
conversion factor of zero percent would be applied to the
outstanding principal balance of the investors' interest if the
securitization's three-month average excess spread equaled or
exceeded the securitization's spread trapping point (4.5 percent in
the example). Credit conversion factors of 5 percent, 10 percent, 50
percent, and 100 percent are then assigned to each of the four equal
ESD segments in descending order beginning with the spread trapping
point as the securitization approaches early amortization. For
instance, when the ESD is 4.5 percent, the credit conversion factors
would be applied to the outstanding balance of the investors'
interest as follows:
Example of Credit Conversion Factor Assignment by Segment of Excess Spread Differential
Segment of excess spread differential Credit
conversion
factor
(percent)
450 bp or more............................................. 0
Less than 450 bp to 337.5 bp............................... 5
Less than 337.5 bp to 225 bp............................... 10
Less than 225 bp to 112.5 bp............................... 50
Less than 112.5 bp......................................... 100
h. Limitations on risk-based capital requirements. * * *
iv. For a bank holding company subject to the early amortization
treatment in section III.B.3.g. of this appendix, the total risk-
based capital requirement for all of the bank's exposures to a
securitization of revolving retail credit facilities is limited to
the greater of the risk-based capital requirement for residual
interests, as defined in section III.B.3.a. of this appendix, or the
risk-based capital requirement for the underlying securitized assets
calculated as if the bank holding company continued to hold the
assets on its balance sheet.
* * * * *
6. Asset-backed commercial paper programs. a. An asset-backed
commercial paper (ABCP) program typically is a program through which
a bank holding company provides funding to its corporate customers
by sponsoring and administering a bankruptcy-remote special purpose
entity that purchases asset pools from, or extends loans to, the
banking organization's customers. The ABCP program raises the cash
to provide the funding through the issuance of commercial paper in
the market.
b. A bank holding company that qualifies as a primary
beneficiary and must consolidate an ABCP program that is defined as
a variable interest entity under GAAP may exclude the consolidated
ABCP program assets from risk-weighted assets provided that the bank
is the sponsor of the consolidated ABCP program. If a bank holding
company excludes such consolidated ABCP program assets, the bank
holding company must assess the appropriate risk-based capital
charge against any risk exposures of the organization arising in
connection with such ABCP programs, including direct credit
substitutes, recourse obligations, residual interests, liquidity
facilities, and loans, in accordance with sections III.B.3, III.C.
and III.D. of this appendix.
* * * * *
III. * * *
D. * * *
2. Items with a 50 percent conversion factor. * * *
c. Commitments are defined as any legally binding arrangements
that obligate a banking organization to extend credit in the form of
loans or leases; to purchase loans, securities, or other assets; or
to participate in loans and leases. They also include overdraft
facilities, revolving credit, home equity and mortgage lines of
credit, eligible liquidity facilities to asset-backed commercial
paper programs (in form or in substance), and similar transactions.
Normally, commitments involve a written contract or agreement and a
commitment fee, or some other form of consideration. Commitments are
included in weighted-risk assets regardless of whether they contain
``material adverse change'' clauses or other provisions that are
intended to relieve the issuer of its funding obligation under
certain conditions. In the case of commitments structured as
syndications, where the banking organization is obligated solely for
its pro rata share, only the organization's proportional share of
the syndicated commitment is taken into account in calculating the
risk-based capital ratio. Banking organizations that are subject to
the market risk rules are required to convert the notional amount of
long-term covered positions carried in the trading account that act
as eligible liquidity facilities to ABCP programs, in form or in
substance, at 50 percent to determine the appropriate credit
equivalent amount for those facilities even though they are
structured or characterized as derivatives or other trading book
assets.
* * * * *
3. Items with a 20 percent conversion factor. * * *
a. * * *
b. Undrawn portions of eligible liquidity facilities with an
original maturity of one year or less, that banking organizations
provide to asset-backed commercial paper (ABCP) programs also are
converted at 20 percent. The resulting credit equivalent amount is
then assigned to the risk category appropriate to the underlying
assets or the obligor, after consideration of any collateral or
guarantees, or external credit ratings, if applicable. Banking
organizations that are subject to the market risk rules are required
to convert the notional amount of short-term covered positions
carried in the trading account that act as eligible liquidity
facilities to ABCP programs, in form or in substance, at 20 percent
to determine the appropriate credit equivalent amount for those
facilities even though they are structured or characterized as
derivatives or other trading book assets. Liquidity facilities
extended to ABCP programs that do not meet the following criteria
are to be considered recourse obligations or direct credit
substitutes and assessed the appropriate risk-based capital
requirement in accordance with section III.B.3. of this appendix.
Eligible liquidity facilities must be subject to a reasonable asset
quality test at the time of draw that precludes funding against
assets in the ABCP program that are 60 days or more past due or in
default. In addition, if the assets that eligible liquidity
facilities are required to fund against are externally rated
exposures, the facility can be used to fund only those exposures
that are externally rated investment grade at the time of funding.
Furthermore, liquidity facilities must contain provisions that,
prior to any draws, reduces the banking organization's funding
obligation to cover only those assets that would meet the funding
criteria under the facilities' asset quality tests.
4. * * * These include unused portions of commitments, with the
exception of eligible liquidity facilities provided to ABCP
programs, with an original maturity of one year or less, or which
are unconditionally cancelable at any time, provided a separate
credit decision is made before each drawing under the facility. * *
*
* * * * *
3. Amend appendix E to part 225 by adding two new sentences at the
end of section 2.(a). to read as follows:
Appendix E to Part 225--Capital Adequacy Guidelines for Bank Holding
Companies; Market Risk Measure
* * * * *
Section 2. Definitions * * *
(a) * * * Covered positions exclude all positions in a banking
organization's trading account that, in form or in substance, act as
eligible liquidity facilities (as defined in section III.B.3.a. of
appendix A of this part) to asset-backed commercial paper programs
(as defined in section III.B.6. of appendix A of this part). Such
excluded positions are subject to the risk-based capital
requirements set forth in appendix A of this part.
* * * * *
[[Page 56582]]
By order of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, September 12, 2003.
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
12 CFR Chapter III
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the joint preamble, the Board of
Directors of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation proposes to
amend part 325 of chapter III of title 12 of the Code of Federal
Regulations as follows:
PART 325--CAPITAL MAINTENANCE
1. The authority citation for part 325 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1815(a), 1815(b), 1816, 1818(a), 1818(b),
1818(c), 1818(t), 1819(Tenth), 1828(c), 1828(d), 1828(i), 1828(n),
1828(o), 1831o, 1835, 3907, 3909, 4808; Pub. L. 102-233, 105 Stat.
1761, 1789, 1790 (12 U.S.C. 1831n note); Pub. L. 102-242, 105 Stat.
2236, 2355, as amended by Pub. L. 103-325, 108 Stat. 2160, 2233 (12
U.S.C. 1828 note); Pub. L. 102-242, 105 Stat. 2236, 2386, as amended
by Pub. L. 102-550, 106 Stat. 3672, 4089 (12 U.S.C. 1828 note).
2. In Appendix A to part 325, the following amendments are
proposed:
a. Section I.A.1. is revised.
b. In section II.B.5 --
i. Paragraph (a), Definitions, is revised.
ii. Paragraph (h), Limitations on risk-based capital requirements,
and paragraph (i), Alternative Capital Calculation for Small Business
Obligations, are redesignated as paragraphs (i) and (j) respectively.
iii. A new paragraph (h), Early amortization triggers, is added.
iv. A new paragraph (4), is added to the redesignated paragraph
(i).
c. Section II.B.6. is revised.
d. In section II.D--
i. The last sentence of the introductory paragraph is removed;
ii. In paragraph 2., Items With a 50 Percent Conversion Factor, the
four undesignated paragraphs are designated 2.a. through 2.d. and newly
designated 2.c. is revised;
iii. In paragraph 3, Items With a 20 Percent Conversion Factor, the
first undesignated paragraph is designated as 3.a. and a new paragraph
3.b. is added;
iv. The first sentence in paragraph 4., Items With a Zero Percent
Conversion Factor, is revised.
e. Tables III and IV are removed.
APPENDIX A TO PART 325--STATEMENT OF POLICY ON RISK-BASED CAPITAL
* * * * *
I. * * *
A. * * *
1. Core capital elements (Tier 1) consists of:
i. Common stockholders' equity capital (includes common stock
and related surplus, undivided profits, disclosed capital reserves
that represent a segregation of undivided profits, and foreign
currency translation adjustments, less net unrealized holding losses
on available-for-sale equity securities with readily determinable
fair values);
ii. Noncumulative perpetual preferred stock,\2\ including any
related surplus; and
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Preferred stock issues where the dividend is reset
periodically based, in whole or in part, upon the bank's current
credit standing, including but not limited to, auction rate, money
market or remarketable preferred stock, are assigned to Tier 2
capital, regardless of whether the dividends are cumulative or
noncumulative.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
iii. Minority interests in the equity capital accounts of
consolidated subsidiaries.
(a) At least 50 percent of the qualifying total capital base
should consist of Tier 1 capital. Core (Tier 1) capital is defined
as the sum of core capital elements minus all intangible assets
(other than mortgage servicing assets, nonmortgage servicing assets
and purchased credit card relationships eligible for inclusion in
core capital pursuant to Sec. 325.5(f),\3\ minus credit-enhancing
interest-only strips that are not eligible for inclusion in core
capital pursuant to Sec. 325.5(f), minus any disallowed deferred
tax assets, and minus any amount of nonfinancial equity investments
required to be deducted pursuant to section II.B.(6) of this
Appendix.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ An exception is allowed for intangible assets that are
explicitly approved by the FDIC as part of the bank's regulatory
capital on a specific case basis. These intangibles will be included
in capital for risk-based capital purposes under the terms and
conditions that are specifically approved by the FDIC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
(b) Although nonvoting common stock, noncumulative perpetual
preferred stock, and minority interests in the equity capital
accounts of consolidated subsidiaries are normally included in Tier
1 capital, voting common stockholders' equity generally will be
expected to be the dominant form of Tier 1 capital. Thus, banks
should avoid undue reliance on nonvoting equity, preferred stock and
minority interests.
(c) Although minority interests in consolidated subsidiaries are
generally included in regulatory capital, exceptions to this general
rule will be made if the minority interests fail to provide
meaningful capital support to the consolidated bank. Such a
situation could arise if the minority interests are entitled to a
preferred claim on essentially low risk assets of the subsidiary.
Similarly, although credit-enhancing interest-only strips and
intangible assets in the form of mortgage servicing assets,
nonmortgage servicing assets and purchased credit card relationships
are generally recognized for risk-based capital purposes, the
deduction of part or all of the credit-enhancing interest-only
strips, mortgage servicing assets, nonmortgage servicing assets and
purchased credit card relationships may be required if the carrying
amounts of these assets are excessive in relation to their market
value or the level of the bank's capital accounts. Credit-enhancing
interest-only strips, mortgage servicing assets, nonmortgage
servicing assets, purchased credit card relationships and deferred
tax assets that do not meet the conditions, limitations and
restrictions described in Sec. 325.5(f) and (g) of this part will
not be recognized for risk-based capital purposes.
(d) Minority interests in small business investment companies,
investment funds that hold nonfinancial equity investments (as
defined in section II.B.(6)(ii) of this appendix A), and
subsidiaries that are engaged in nonfinancial activities are not
included in the bank's Tier 1 or total capital base if the bank's
interest in the company or fund is held under one of the legal
authorities listed in section II.B.(6)(ii) of this appendix A. In
addition, minority interests in consolidated asset-backed commercial
paper programs that are sponsored by a bank are not to be included
in the bank's Tier 1 or total capital base if the bank excludes the
consolidated assets of such programs from risk-weighted assets
pursuant to section II.B.6. of this appendix.
* * * * *
II. * * *
B. * * *
5. * * *
a. Definitions--(1) Credit derivative means a contract that
allows one party (the ``protection purchaser'') to transfer the
credit risk of an asset or off-balance sheet credit exposure to
another party (the ``protection provider''). The value of a credit
derivative is dependent, at least in part, on the credit performance
of the ``reference asset.''
(2) Credit-enhancing interest only strip is defined in Sec.
325.2(g).
(3) Credit-enhancing representations and warranties means
representations and warranties that are made or assumed in
connection with a transfer of assets (including loan servicing
assets) and that obligate the bank to protect investors from losses
arising from credit risk in the assets transferred or the loans
serviced. Credit-enhancing representations and warranties include
promises to protect a party from losses resulting from the default
or nonperformance of another party or from an insufficiency in the
value of the collateral. Credit-enhancing representations and
warranties do not include:
(i) Early default clauses and similar warranties that permit the
return of, or premium refund clauses covering, 1-4 family
residential first mortgage loans that qualify for a 50 percent risk
weight for a period not to exceed 120 days from the date of
transfer. These warranties may cover only those loans that were
originated within 1 year of the date of transfer;
(ii) Premium refund clauses that cover assets guaranteed, in
whole or in part, by the U.S. Government, a U.S. Government agency
or a government-sponsored enterprise, provided the premium refund
clauses are for a period not to exceed 120 days from the date of
transfer; or
(iii) Warranties that permit the return of assets in instances
of misrepresentation, fraud or incomplete documentation.
[[Page 56583]]
(4) Direct credit substitute means an arrangement in which a
bank assumes, in form or in substance, credit risk associated with
an on-or off-balance sheet credit exposure that was not previously
owned by the bank (third-party asset) and the risk assumed by the
bank exceeds the pro rata share of the bank's interest in the third-
party asset. If the bank has no claim on the third-party asset, then
the bank's assumption of any credit risk with respect to the third
party asset is a direct credit substitute. Direct credit substitutes
include, but are not limited to:
(i) Financial standby letters of credit, which includes any
letter of credit or similar arrangement, however named or described,
that support financial claims on a third party that exceed a bank's
pro rata share of losses in the financial claim;
(ii) Guarantees, surety arrangements, credit derivatives, and
irrevocable guarantee-type instruments backing financial claims such
as outstanding loans, or other financial claims, or that back off-
balance-sheet items against which risk-based capital must be
maintained;
(iii) Purchased subordinated interests or securities that absorb
more than their pro rata share of credit losses from the underlying
assets. Purchased subordinated interests that are credit-enhancing
interest-only strips are subject to the higher capital charge
specified in section II.B.5.(f) of this appendix A;
(iv) Entering into a credit derivative contract under which the
bank assumes more than its pro rata share of credit risk on a third
party asset or exposure;
(v) Loans or lines of credit that provide credit enhancement for
the financial obligations of an account party;
(vi) Purchased loan servicing assets if the servicer:
(A) Is responsible for credit losses with the loans being
serviced,
(B) Is responsible for making servicer cash advances (unless the
advances are not direct credit substitutes because they meet the
conditions specified in section II.B.5(a)(9) of this appendix A), or
(C) Makes or assumes credit-enhancing representations and
warranties with respect to the loans serviced; and
(vii) Clean-up calls on third party assets. Clean-up calls that
are exercisable at the option of the bank (as servicer or as an
affiliate of the servicer) when the pool balance is 10 percent or
less of the original pool balance are not direct credit substitutes.
(viii.) Liquidity facilities extended to ABCP programs that are
not eligible liquidity facilities (as defined in section II.B.5.a.
of this appendix).
(5) Early amortization triggers mean contractual requirements
that, if triggered, would cause a securitization to begin repaying
investors prior to the originally scheduled payment dates.
(6) Eligible liquidity facility means a facility subject to a
reasonable asset quality test at the time of draw that precludes
funding against assets in the ABCP program that are 60 days or more
past due or in default. In addition, if the assets that an eligible
liquidity facility is required to fund against are externally rated
exposures at the inception of the facility, the facility can be used
to fund only those exposures that are externally rated investment
grade at the time of funding. Furthermore, an eligible liquidity
facility must contain provisions that, prior to any draws, reduces
the bank's funding obligation to cover only those assets that would
meet the funding criteria under the facility's asset quality tests.
(7) Excess spread means gross finance charge collections and
other income received by the trust or special purpose entity (SPE)
minus certificate interest, servicing fees, charge-offs, and other
trust or SPE expenses.
(8) Externally rated means that an instrument or obligation has
received a credit rating from a nationally-recognized statistical
rating organization.
(9) Face amount means the notional principal, or face value,
amount of an off-balance sheet item; the amortized cost of an asset
not held for trading purposes; and the fair value of a trading
asset.
(10) Financial asset means cash or other monetary instrument,
evidence of debt, evidence of an ownership interest in an entity, or
a contract that conveys a right to receive or exchange cash or
another financial instrument from another party.
(11) Financial standby letter of credit means a letter of credit
or similar arrangement that represents an irrevocable obligation to
a third-party beneficiary:
(i) To receive money borrowed by, or advanced to, or advanced
to, or for the account of, a second party (the account party), or
(ii) To make payment on behalf of the account party, in the
event that the account party fails to fulfill its obligation to the
beneficiary.
(12) Mortgage servicer cash advance means funds that a
residential mortgage servicer advances to ensure an uninterrupted
flow of payments or the timely collection of residential mortgage
loans, including disbursements made to cover foreclosure costs or
other expenses arising from a mortgage loan to facilitate its timely
collection. A mortgage servicer cash advance is not a recourse
obligation or a direct credit substitute if:
(i) The mortgage servicer is entitled to full reimbursement or,
for any one residential mortgage loan, nonreimbursable advances are
contractually limited to an insignificant amount of the outstanding
principal on that loan, and
(ii) the servicer's entitlement to reimbursement in not
subordinated.
(13) Nationally recognized statistical rating organization
(NRSRO) means an entity recognized by the Division of Market
Regulation of the Securities and Exchange Commission (or any
successor Division) (Commission) as a nationally recognized
statistical rating organization for various purposes, including the
Commission's uniform net capital requirements for brokers and
dealers (17 CFR 240.15c3-1).
(14) Recourse means an arrangement in which a bank retains, in
form or in substance, of any credit risk directly or indirectly
associated with an asset it has sold (in accordance with generally
accepted accounting principles) that exceeds a pro rata share of the
bank's claim on the asset. If a bank has no claim on an asset it has
sold, then the retention of any credit risk is recourse. A recourse
obligation typically arises when an institution transfers assets in
a sale and retains an obligation to repurchase the assets or absorb
losses due to a default of principal or interest or any other
deficiency in the performance of the underlying obligor or some
other party. Recourse may exist implicitly where a bank provides
credit enhancement beyond any contractual obligation to support
assets it has sold. The following are examples of recourse
arrangements:
(i) Credit-enhancing representations and warranties made on the
transferred assets;
(ii) Loan servicing assets retained pursuant to an agreement
under which the bank:
(A) Is responsible for losses associated with the loans being
serviced,
(B) Is responsible for making mortgage servicer cash advances
(unless the advances are not a recourse obligation because they meet
the conditions specified in section II.B.5(a)(12) of this appendix
A), or
(C) Makes or assumes credit-enhancing representations and
warranties on the serviced loans;
(iii) Retained subordinated interests that absorb more than
their pro rata share of losses from the underlying assets;
(iv) Assets sold under an agreement to repurchase, if the assets
are not already included on the balance sheet;
(v) Loan strips sold without contractual recourse where the
maturity of the transferred portion of the loan is shorter than the
maturity of the commitment under which the loan is drawn;
(vi) Credit derivative contracts under which the bank retains
more than its pro rata share of credit risk on transferred assets;
and
(vii) Clean-up calls. Clean-up calls that are exercisable at the
option of the bank (as servicer or as an affiliate of the servicer)
when the pool balance is 10 percent or less of the original pool
balance are not recourse arrangements.
(viii.) Liquidity facilities extended to ABCP programs that are
not eligible liquidity facilities (as defined in section II.B.5.a.
of this appendix).
(15) Residual interest means any on-balance sheet asset that
represents an interest (including a beneficial interest) created by
a transfer that qualifies as a sale (in accordance with generally
accepted accounting principles) of financial assets, whether through
a securitization or otherwise, and that exposes a bank to credit
risk directly or indirectly associated with the transferred assets
that exceeds a pro rata share of the bank's claim on the assets,
whether through subordination provisions or other credit enhancement
techniques. Residual interests generally include credit-enhancing I/
Os, spread accounts, cash collateral accounts, retained subordinated
interests, other forms of over-collateralization, and similar assets
that function as a credit enhancement. Residual interests further
include those exposures that, in substance, cause the bank to retain
the credit risk of an asset or exposure that had qualified as a
residual interest before it was sold. Residual interests generally
do not include interests purchased
[[Page 56584]]
from a third party, except that purchased credit-enhancing I/Os are
residual interests.
(16) Revolving retail credit facility means an exposure to an
individual where the borrower is permitted to vary both the drawn
amount and the amount of repayment within an agreed limit under a
line of credit (such as credit card accounts). Revolving retail
credits include business credit card accounts.
(17) Risk participation means a participation in which the
originating party remains liable to the beneficiary for the full
amount of an obligation (e.g., a direct credit substitute)
notwithstanding that another party has acquired a participation in
that obligation.
(18) Securitization means the pooling and repackaging by a
special purpose entity of assets or other credit exposures into
securities that can be sold to investors. Securitization includes
transactions that generally create stratified credit risk positions
whose performance is dependent upon an underlying pool of credit
exposures, including loans and commitments.
(19) Sponsor means a bank that establishes an asset-backed
commercial paper program; approves the sellers permitted to
participate in the program; approves the asset pools to be purchased
by the program; or administers the asset-backed commercial paper
program by monitoring the assets, arranging for debt placement,
compiling monthly reports, or ensuring compliance with the program
documents and with the program's credit and investment policy.
(20) Structured finance program means a program where receivable
interests and asset-backed securities issued by multiple
participants are purchased by a special purpose entity that
repackages those exposures into securities that can be sold to
investors. Structured finance programs allocate credit risks,
generally, between the participants and credit enhancement provided
to the program.
(21) Traded position means a position or asset-backed security
that is retained, assumed or issued in connection with a
securitization that is externally rated, where there is a reasonable
expectation that, in the near future, the rating will be relied upon
by
(i) Unaffiliated investors to purchase the position; or
(ii) An unaffiliated third party to enter into a transaction
involving the position, such as a purchase, loan, or repurchase
agreement.
* * * * *
(h) Early Amortization Triggers. i. A bank that originates
securitizations of revolving retail credit facilities that contain
early amortization triggers must incorporate the off-balance sheet
portion of such a securitization (that is, the investors' interest)
into the bank's risk-weighted assets by multiplying the outstanding
principal amount of the investors' interest by the appropriate
credit conversion factor and then assigning the resultant credit
equivalent amount to the appropriate risk weight category. The
credit conversion factor to be applied to such a securitization
generally is a function of the securitizations' most recent three-
month average excess spread level, the point at which excess spread
in the securitization must be trapped in a spread or reserve
account, and the excess spread level at which an early amortization
of the securitization is triggered.
ii. In order to determine the appropriate credit conversion
factor to be applied to the outstanding principal balance of the
investors' interest, the originating bank must compare the
securitization's most recent three-month average excess spread level
against the difference between the point at which the bank is
required by the securitization documents to divert and trap excess
spread (spread trapping point) in a spread or reserve account and
the excess spread level at which early amortization of the
securitization is triggered (early amortization trigger). The
difference between the spread trapping point and the early
amortization trigger is referred to as the excess spread
differential (ESD). In a securitization of revolving retail credit
facilities that employs the concept of excess spread to determine
when an early amortization is triggered but where the
securitization's transaction documents do not require excess spread
to be diverted to a spread or reserve account at a certain level,
the ESD is deemed to be 4.5 percentage points.
iii. If a securitization of revolving retail credit facilities
does not employ the concept of excess spread as the transaction's
determining factor of when an early amortization is triggered, then
a 10 percent credit conversion factor is applied to the outstanding
principal balance of the investors' interest at the securitization's
inception.
iv. The ESD must then be divided to create four equal ESD
segments. For example, when the ESD is 4.5 percent, this amount is
divided into 4 equal ESD segments of 112.5 basis points. A credit
conversion factor of zero percent would be applied to the
outstanding principal balance of the investors' interest if the
securitization's three-month average excess spread equaled or
exceeded a securitization's spread trapping point (4.5 percent in
the example). Credit conversion factors of 5 percent, 10 percent, 50
percent, and 100 percent are then assigned to each of the four equal
ESD segments in descending order beginning at the spread trapping
point as the securitization approaches early amortization. For
instance, when the ESD is 4.5 percent, the credit conversion factors
would be applied to the outstanding balance of the investors'
interest as follows:
Example of Credit Conversion Factor Assignment by Segment of Excess Spread Differential
Segment of excess spread differential Credit
conversion
factor
(percent)
450 bp or more............................................. 0
Less than 450 bp to 337.5 bp............................... 5
Less than 337.5 bp to 225 bp............................... 10
Less than 225 bp to 112.5 bp............................... 50
Less than 112.5 bp......................................... 100
i. Limitations on risk-based capital requirements. * * *
(4) For a bank subject to the early amortization treatment in
section III.B.3.g. of this appendix, the total risk-based capital
requirement for all of the bank's exposures to a securitization of
revolving retail credit facilities is limited to the greater of the
risk-based capital requirement for residual interests, as defined in
section III.B.3.a. of this appendix, or the risk-based capital
requirement for the underlying securitized assets calculated as if
the bank continued to hold the assets on its balance sheet.
* * * * *
6. Asset-backed commercial paper programs. a. An asset-backed
commercial paper (ABCP) program typically is a program through which
a bank provides funding to its corporate customers by sponsoring and
administering a bankruptcy-remote special purpose entity that
purchases asset pools from, or extends loans to, the bank's
customers. The ABCP program raises the cash to provide the funding
through the issuance of commercial paper in the market.
b. A bank that qualifies as a primary beneficiary and must
consolidate an ABCP program that is defined as a variable interest
entity under GAAP may exclude the consolidated ABCP program assets
from risk-weighted assets provided that the bank is the sponsor of
the consolidated ABCP program. If a bank excludes such consolidated
ABCP program assets, the bank must assess the appropriate risk-based
capital charge against any risk exposures of the bank arising in
connection with such ABCP programs, including direct credit
substitutes, recourse obligations, residual interests, liquidity
facilities, and loans, in accordance with sections II.B.5, II.C. and
II.D. of this appendix.
* * * * *
II. * * *
D. * * *
2. Items With a 50 Percent Conversion Factor. * * *
* * * * *
c. Commitments, for risk-based capital purposes, are defined as
any legally binding arrangements that obligate a bank to extend
credit in the form of loans or lease financing receivables; to
purchase loans, securities, or other assets; or to participate in
loans and leases. Commitments also include overdraft facilities,
revolving credit, home equity and mortgage lines of credit, eligible
liquidity facilities to asset-backed commercial paper programs (in
form and in substance), and similar transactions. Normally,
commitments involve a written contract or agreement and a commitment
fee, or some other form of consideration. Commitments are included
in weighted-risk assets regardless of whether they contain material
adverse change clauses or other provisions that are intended to
relieve the issuer of its funding obligation under certain
conditions. Banks that are subject to the market risk rules are
required to convert the notional amount of long-term covered
positions carried in the trading account that act as eligible
liquidity facilities to ABCP programs, in form or in substance, at
50 percent to determine the appropriate
[[Page 56585]]
credit equivalent amount for those facilities even though they are
structured or characterized as derivatives or other trading book
assets.
* * * * *
3. Items with a 20 percent conversion factor. * * *
a. * * *
b. Undrawn portions of eligible liquidity facilities with an
original maturity of one year or less that banks provide to asset-
backed commercial paper (ABCP) programs also are converted at 20
percent. The resulting credit equivalent amount is then assigned to
the risk category appropriate to the underlying assets or the
obligor, after consideration of any collateral or guarantees, or
external credit ratings, if applicable. Banks that are subject to
the market risk rules are required to convert the notional amount of
short-term covered positions carried in the trading account that act
as eligible liquidity facilities to ABCP programs, in form or in
substance, at 20 percent to determine the appropriate credit
equivalent amount for those facilities even though they are
structured or characterized as derivatives or other trading book
assets. Liquidity facilities extended to ABCP programs that do not
meet the following criteria are to be considered recourse
obligations or direct credit substitutes and assessed the
appropriate risk-based capital requirement in accordance with
section II.B.5. of this appendix. Eligible liquidity facilities must
be subject to a reasonable asset quality test at the time of draw
that precludes funding against assets in the ABCP program that are
60 days or more past due or in default. In addition, if the assets
that eligible liquidity facilities are required to fund against are
externally rated exposures, the facility can be used to fund only
those exposures that are externally rated investment grade at the
time of funding. Furthermore, eligible liquidity facilities must
contain provisions that, prior to any draws, reduces the bank's
funding obligation to cover only those assets that would meet the
funding criteria under the facilities' asset quality tests. * * *
4. * * * These include unused portions of commitments, with the
exception of eligible liquidity facilities provided to ABCP
programs, with an original maturity of one year or less, or which
are unconditionally cancelable at any time, provided a separate
credit decision is made before each drawing under the facility. * *
*
* * * * *
3. In appendix C to part 325, add two new sentences to the end of
section 2.(a) to read as follows:
Appendix C to Part 325--Risk-Based Capital for State Non-Member Banks;
Market Risk
Section 2. Definitions.
(a) * * * Covered positions exclude all positions in a bank's
trading account that, in form or in substance, act as eligible
liquidity facilities (as defined in section II.B.5.a. of appendix A
of this part), to asset-backed commercial paper programs (as defined
in section II.B.6. of appendix A of this part). Such excluded
positions are subject to the risk-based capital requirements set
forth in appendix A of this part.
* * * * *
Dated at Washington, DC, this 5th day of September 2003.
By order of the Board of Directors.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Robert E. Feldman,
Executive Secretary.
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of Thrift Supervision
12 CFR Chapter V
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set out in the preamble, part 567 of chapter V of
title 12 of the Code of Federal Regulations is proposed to be amended
as follows:
PART 567--CAPITAL
1. The authority citation for part 567 continues to read as
follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1462, 1462a, 1463, 1464, 1467a, 1828
(note).
2. Section 567.1 is amended by adding definitions of early
amortization trigger, excess spread, qualifying liquidity facility, and
revolving retail credit in alphabetical order to read as follows:
Sec. 567.1 Definitions.
* * * * *
Early amortization trigger. The term early amortization trigger
means a contractual requirement that, if triggered, would cause a
securitization to begin repaying investors prior to the originally
scheduled payment dates.
* * * * *
Excess spread. The term excess spread means gross finance charge
collections and other income received by the trust or special purpose
entity minus certificate interest, servicing fees, charge-offs, and
other trust or special purpose entity expenses.
* * * * *
Qualifying liquidity facility. The term qualifying liquidity
facility means a liquidity facility provided to an ABCP program
provided that:
(1) At the time of the draw, the liquidity facility must be subject
to a reasonable asset quality test that precludes funding against or
purchase of assets from the ABCP program that are 60 days or more past
due or in default;
(2) If the assets that the liquidity facility is required to fund
are externally rated securities, (at the time they are transferred into
the program) the facility can be used to fund only exposures that are
externally rated investment grade at the time of funding; and
(3) The liquidity facility must provide that, prior to any draws,
the savings association's funding obligation is reduced to cover only
those assets that satisfy the funding criteria under the asset quality
test of the liquidity facility.
* * * * *
Revolving retail credit. The term revolving retail credit means an
exposure to an individual or a business where the borrower is permitted
to vary both the drawn amount and the amount of repayment within an
agreed limit under a line of credit (such as personal or business
credit card accounts).
* * * * *
3. Amend Sec. 567.5 by revising paragraph (a)(1)(iii) to read as
follows:
Sec. 567.5 Components of capital.
(a) * * *
(1) * * *
(iii) Minority interests in the equity accounts of subsidiaries
that are fully consolidated. However, minority interests in
consolidated ABCP programs sponsored by a savings association are
excluded from the association's core capital or total capital base if
the consolidated assets are excluded from risk-weighted assets pursuant
to Sec. 567.6 (a)(3);
* * * * *
4. Amend Sec. 567.6 by:
A. Revising paragraph (a)(2)(ii)(B);
B. Redesignating paragraph (a)(2)(iii) as paragraph (a)(2)(iii)(A);
C. Adding paragraph (a)(2)(iii)(B);
D. Revising paragraph (a)(2)(iv)(A);
E. Removing paragraph (a)(3)(iv);
F. Adding paragraph (b)(9).
Sec. 576.6 Risk-based capital credit risk-weight categories.
(a) * * *
(2) * * *
(ii) * * *
(B) Unused portions of commitments, including home equity lines of
credit and qualifying liquidity facilities with an original maturity
exceeding one year except those listed in paragraph (a)(2)(iv) of this
section; and
* * * * *
(iii) 20 percent credit conversion factor (Group C). * * *
(B) Undrawn portions of qualifying liquidity facilities with an
original maturity of one year or less that a savings association
provides to ABCP programs.
(iv) Zero percent credit conversion factor (Group D). (A) Unused
commitments, with the exception of liquidity facilities provided to
ABCP
[[Page 56586]]
programs, with an original maturity of one year or less.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(9) Early amortization. (i) A savings association that originates a
securitization of revolving retail credits that contains early
amortization triggers must risk weight the off-balance sheet portion of
such a securitization (investors' interest) by multiplying the
outstanding principal amount of the investors' interest by the
appropriate credit conversion factor as provided by paragraph
(b)(9)(ii) or (iii) of this section and then assigning the resultant
credit equivalent amount to the appropriate risk weight category.
(ii) Calculation of credit conversion factor. (A) The credit
conversion factor to be applied to such a securitization generally is a
function of the securitizations' most recent three-month average excess
spread level, the point at which excess spread in the securitization
must be trapped in a spread or reserve account (spread trapping point),
and the excess spread level at which an early amortization of the
securitization is triggered (early amortization trigger). This
difference between the spread trapping point and the early amortization
trigger is the excess spread differential.
(B) The excess spread differential must then be divided by four to
create the standard excess spread differential value. This value will
be used to determine the appropriate credit conversion factor in
accordance with Table D of this section. The upper and lower bounds for
each of the excess spread differential segments is calculated using the
spread trapping point and the standard excess spread differential value
in accordance with the formulas provided in Table D of this section.
However, if the securitization documents do not require excess spread
to be diverted to a spread or reserve account at a certain level, the
excess spread differential is equal to 4.5 percentage points.
(C) (1) If the three-month average excess spread equals or exceeds
the securitization's spread trapping point, then the credit conversion
factor is equal to zero. If the three-month average excess spread is
less than the spread trapping point, then the credit conversion factors
(5 percent, 10 percent, 50 percent, and 100 percent) are then assigned
to each of the four equal excess spread differential segments in
descending order, beginning at the spread trapping point as the
securitization approaches early amortization, in accordance with Table
D of this section.
(2) If the securitization does not use the excess spread as an
early amortization trigger, then a 10 percent credit conversion factor
is applied to the current outstanding principal balance of the
investors' interest.
Table D.--Calculation of Credit Conversion Factors for Early Amortizations
Excess spread differential
segments Excess spread ranges Credit
Conversion
factor
(percent)
1 Excess spread equals or exceeds the trapping point 0
2 Upper Bound < Spread Trapping Point
Lower Bound = Spread Trapping Point—(1 × SESDV) 5
3 Upper Bound < Spread Trapping Point—(1 × SESDV)
Lower Bound = Spread Trapping Point—(2 × SESDV) 10
4 Upper Bound < Spread Trapping Point—(2 × SESDV)
Lower Bound = Spread Trapping Point—(3 × SESDV) 50
5 Upper Bound < Spread Trapping Point—(3 × SESDV)
Lower Bound = None 100
Note: SESDV is the standard excess spread differential value.
(iii) Limitations on risk-based capital requirements. For a savings
association subject to the early amortization requirements in paragraph
(b)(9) of this section, the total risk-based capital requirement for
all of the savings association's exposures to a securitization of
revolving retail credits is limited to the greater of the risk-based
capital requirement for residual interests or the risk-based capital
requirement for the underlying securitized assets calculated as if the
savings association continued to hold the assets on its balance sheet.
* * * * *
Dated: September 9, 2003.
By the Office of Thrift Supervision.
James E. Gilleran,
Director.
[FR Doc. 03-23757 Filed 9-30-03; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4801-01-P