80_FR_44253 80 FR 44111 - Application of Enhanced Prudential Standards and Reporting Requirements to General Electric Capital Corporation

80 FR 44111 - Application of Enhanced Prudential Standards and Reporting Requirements to General Electric Capital Corporation

FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM

Federal Register Volume 80, Issue 142 (July 24, 2015)

Page Range44111-44128
FR Document2015-18124

General Electric Capital Corporation (GECC) is a nonbank financial company that the Financial Stability Oversight Council (Council) has designated under section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act) for supervision by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board). Section 165 of the Dodd-Frank Act provides that the Board must, as part of its supervision of a nonbank financial firm designated by the Council, adopt enhanced prudential standards for the firm that help prevent or mitigate risks to the financial stability of the United States that could arise from the material financial distress or failure of the firm. This final order establishes these enhanced prudential standards for GECC. In light of the substantial similarity of GECC's activities and risk profile to that of a similarly sized bank holding company, the enhanced prudential standards adopted by the Board are similar to those that apply to large bank holding companies, including capital requirements; capital-planning and stress-testing requirements; liquidity requirements; risk-management and risk-committee requirements; and reporting requirements. The Board has tailored these standards to reflect GECC's risk profile and its ongoing plan to divest certain assets and business lines and reorganize its operations. The Board has also deferred application of the enhanced capital, liquidity, governance, and reporting provisions until January 1, 2018.

Federal Register, Volume 80 Issue 142 (Friday, July 24, 2015)
[Federal Register Volume 80, Number 142 (Friday, July 24, 2015)]
[Notices]
[Pages 44111-44128]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2015-18124]


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FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM

[Docket No. R-1503]


Application of Enhanced Prudential Standards and Reporting 
Requirements to General Electric Capital Corporation

AGENCY: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.

ACTION: Final order applying enhanced prudential standards and 
reporting requirements to General Electric Capital Corporation.

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SUMMARY: General Electric Capital Corporation (GECC) is a nonbank 
financial company that the Financial Stability Oversight Council 
(Council) has designated under section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Wall 
Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act) for 
supervision by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System 
(Board). Section 165 of the Dodd-Frank Act provides that the Board 
must, as part of its supervision of a nonbank financial firm designated 
by the Council, adopt enhanced prudential standards for the firm that 
help prevent or mitigate risks to the financial stability of the United 
States that could arise from the material financial distress or failure 
of the firm. This final order establishes these enhanced prudential 
standards for GECC. In light of the substantial similarity of GECC's 
activities and risk profile to that of a similarly sized bank holding 
company, the enhanced prudential standards adopted by the Board are 
similar to those that apply to large bank holding companies, including 
capital requirements; capital-planning and stress-testing requirements; 
liquidity requirements; risk-management and risk-committee 
requirements; and reporting requirements. The Board has tailored these 
standards to reflect GECC's risk profile and its ongoing plan to divest 
certain assets and business lines and reorganize its operations. The 
Board has also deferred application of the enhanced capital, liquidity, 
governance, and reporting provisions until January 1, 2018.

DATES: The final order is effective in two phases. Phase I 
Requirements, as described more fully below, are effective on January 
1, 2016. Phase II Requirements, as described more fully below, are 
effective on January 1, 2018, unless otherwise noted.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ann Misback, Associate Director, (202) 
452-3799, Jyoti Kohli, Senior Supervisory Financial Analyst, (202) 452-
2539, or Elizabeth MacDonald, Senior Supervisory Financial Analyst, 
(202) 475-6316, Division of Banking Supervision and Regulation; or 
Laurie Schaffer, Associate General Counsel, (202) 452-2277, Tate 
Wilson, Counsel, (202) 452-3696, or Dan Hickman, Attorney, (202) 973-
7432, Legal Division.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Table of Contents

I. Introduction
II. Framework for Supervision of GECC and Enhanced Prudential 
Standards
    A. Phase I Requirements
    1. Capital Requirements
    2. Liquidity Requirements
    B. Phase II Requirements
    1. Risk-Management and Risk Committee Requirements
    2. Capital Requirements--Additional Risk-Based and Leverage 
Capital Requirements
    3. Capital Planning Requirements--Capital Plan Rule
    4. Stress Testing Requirements
    5. Liquidity Requirements
    6. Other Prudential Standards: Restrictions on Intercompany 
Transactions
    7. Future Standards

[[Page 44112]]

    C. Reporting Requirements
    1. Phase I Requirements
    2. Phase II Requirements
III. Paperwork Reduction Act
IV. Final Order

I. Introduction

    General Electric Capital Corporation (GECC) is a major financial 
company with approximately $482 billion in total assets as of March 31, 
2015, approximately 55 percent of which are in the United States. It 
provides a wide variety of credit and other financial products to 
consumers and businesses in the United States and overseas. These 
include commercial loans and leases, equipment financing, consumer 
mortgages, various types of consumer loans, commercial real estate 
financing, auto loans, credit cards, private mortgage insurance, and 
other financial services. GECC also operates two large insured 
depository institutions, Synchrony Bank and GE Capital Bank, with 
combined total assets of approximately $74 billion as of March 31, 
2015. In addition to the funding obtained by these insured depository 
institutions through collection of deposits, GECC is a large issuer of 
commercial paper, with approximately $25 billion outstanding as of 
March 31, 2015. GECC is wholly owned by General Electric Company (GE).
    After reviewing the activities, structure, size, scope, and risks 
of GECC's operations and activities, the Financial Stability Oversight 
Council (Council) determined that GECC should be subject to supervision 
by the Board in order to help mitigate the risks that the failure of 
GECC might pose to financial stability in the United States. The Dodd-
Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act) 
provides the Board with the authority to examine GECC, including its 
operations, activities and risk management, and to take a variety of 
supervisory actions to protect the financial stability of the United 
States. As a result of this designation, the Federal Reserve has 
already initiated a program to examine and supervise the operations, 
activities, and risk management of GECC. In addition, because GECC has 
for some time controlled and currently continues to control a savings 
association, GECC is a savings and loan holding company subject to 
examination, supervision, and other regulatory requirements under the 
Home Owners' Loan Act, as amended.\1\
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    \1\ 12 U.S.C. 1461, et. seq.
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    In addition to these supervisory and regulatory requirements, 
section 165 of the Dodd-Frank Act directs the Board to establish 
enhanced prudential standards for nonbank financial companies that the 
Council has determined should be supervised by the Board (as well as 
for certain bank holding companies) in order to prevent or mitigate 
risks to U.S. financial stability that could arise from the material 
financial distress or failure, or ongoing activities of, these 
companies.\2\ By statute, the enhanced prudential standards must 
include risk-based and leverage capital requirements, liquidity 
requirements, risk-management and risk-committee requirements, 
resolution-planning requirements, single-counterparty credit limits, 
stress-test requirements, and a debt-to-equity limit under certain 
circumstances.\3\ Section 165 also permits the Board to establish 
additional enhanced prudential standards, including a contingent 
capital requirement, an enhanced public disclosure requirement, a 
short-term debt limit, and any other prudential standards that the 
Board determines are appropriate.\4\
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    \2\ 12 U.S.C. 5365.
    \3\ 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(1)(A), (e), and (i). The debt-to-equity 
limit applies if the Council also determines the firm poses a grave 
threat to the financial stability of the United States, a finding 
the Council has not made in the case of GECC. See 12 U.S.C. 5365(j).
    \4\ 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(1)(B).
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    In prescribing enhanced prudential standards, section 165(a)(2) of 
the Dodd-Frank Act permits the Board to tailor the enhanced prudential 
standards among companies on an individual basis, taking into 
consideration their ``capital structure, riskiness, complexity, 
financial activities (including the financial activities of their 
subsidiaries), size, and any other risk-related factors that the Board 
of Governors deems appropriate.'' \5\ In addition, under section 
165(b)(3) of the Dodd-Frank Act, the Board is required to take into 
account differences among bank holding companies covered by section 165 
and nonbank financial companies supervised by the Board.\6\
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    \5\ 12 U.S.C. 5365(a)(2).
    \6\ 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(3).
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    The Board has issued by rule an integrated set of enhanced 
prudential standards for large bank holding companies and foreign 
banking organizations. These enhanced prudential standards include a 
capital planning rule,\7\ a stress testing rule,\8\ a resolution plan 
rule,\9\ and enhanced liquidity requirements.\10\ The Board also 
adopted an enhanced supplementary leverage ratio for the largest, most 
complex bank holding companies and has proposed a risk-based capital 
surcharge framework for U.S. global systemically-important banks (G-
SIBs).\11\ This integrated set of standards is designed to enhance the 
resiliency of these companies and mitigate the risk that their failure 
or material financial distress could pose to U.S. financial stability. 
The Board may issue additional standards through rulemakings in the 
future.
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    \7\ 12 CFR 225.8.
    \8\ 12 CFR part 252.
    \9\ 12 CFR part 243. The Board's resolution plan rule applies by 
its terms to all nonbank financial companies supervised by the 
Board, including GECC. See 12 CFR 243.1(b), .2(f)(1)(i).
    \10\ See 12 CFR part 249; see also 79 FR 17240, 17252 (March 27, 
2014).
    \11\ See 79 FR 24528 (May 1, 2014); 79 FR 75473 (December 18, 
2014).
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    In considering the application of enhanced prudential standards to 
nonbank financial companies supervised by the Board, the Board has 
stated that it intends to take account of the business model, capital 
structure, risk profile, and systemic footprint of a designated 
company.\12\ Consistent with this approach, in November 2014, the Board 
proposed a number of enhanced prudential standards for GECC.\13\
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    \12\ See Enhanced Prudential Standards for Bank Holding 
Companies and Foreign Banking organizations, 79 FR 17240, 17245 
(March 27, 2014).
    \13\ Application of Enhanced Prudential Standards and Reporting 
Requirements to General Electric Capital Corporation, 79 FR 71768 
(December 3, 2014) (Proposed Order).
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    In light of the substantial similarity of GECC's current activities 
and risk profile to that of a similarly sized bank holding company, the 
Board proposed to apply enhanced prudential standards to GECC that are 
similar to those that apply to large bank holding companies. 
Specifically, the Board proposed to apply: (1) Capital requirements; 
(2) capital-planning and stress-testing requirements; (3) liquidity 
requirements; and (4) risk-management and risk-committee requirements. 
The Board also proposed certain additional enhanced prudential 
standards for GECC in light of the unique aspects of GECC's activities, 
risk profile, and structure. These included certain independence 
requirements for GECC's board of directors and restrictions on 
intercompany transactions between GECC and its parent, GE, and certain 
affiliates. In addition, the Board proposed to require GECC to file 
certain reports with the Board that are similar to the reports required 
of bank holding companies. GECC was separately required by rule to 
submit a resolution plan.\14\
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    \14\ 12 CFR 243.3(a).

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[[Page 44113]]

    The Board invited comment on this proposal from the public.\15\ The 
Board received 21 comments on the proposed order including comments 
from certain of GE's directors, GECC, other companies, industry 
associations, and individuals. Several commenters supported application 
of the proposed enhanced prudential standards to GECC, and asserted 
that it was appropriate to require GECC to comply with standards 
similar to those applicable to bank holding companies. In its comments, 
GECC recognized the importance of the Federal Reserve's supervision in 
ensuring the safety and soundness of the U.S. financial system, and the 
purpose of enhanced prudential standards generally for a large, 
interconnected, and complicated financial firm such as the current 
GECC.
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    \15\ Proposed Order, 79 FR at 71769.
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    Some commenters, including GECC, asserted however that the proposed 
standards were not sufficiently tailored to GECC. For example, GECC and 
a financial services trade association suggested that standards for G-
SIBs should not be applied to GECC because they believed GECC's 
business model, capital structure, risk profile, and systemic footprint 
were unlike those of the U.S. G-SIBs. Several commenters, including 
GECC, investment advisers, and corporate governance associations also 
criticized the corporate governance standards in the proposed order, 
arguing that they were inconsistent with Delaware law and inappropriate 
for GECC. In addition, GECC and financial services trade associations 
requested that GECC be granted additional time for compliance with the 
standards and the reporting requirements set forth in the proposed 
order in order to help GECC address operational and technological 
challenges associated with compliance. Some commenters, including trade 
associations for insurance companies, argued that it was inappropriate 
to issue an order for a specific nonbank financial company.\16\ These 
commenters also expressed concern that the Board might apply similar 
standards to nonbank financial companies with predominantly insurance 
activities. A detailed discussion of the comments on particular aspects 
of the proposal is provided below.
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    \16\ Some commenters, in particular trade associations for 
insurance companies, asserted that, while they did not have any 
particular view on GECC's structure or the appropriateness of bank 
holding company standards for GECC, the Board should develop 
standards for insurance companies that are specific to the insurance 
industry, and should propose those standards through a public 
rulemaking process. The Board followed a public comment process in 
proposing and adopting enhanced prudential standards for GECC. The 
Board expects to follow a public comment process when proposing and 
establishing enhanced prudential standards for other companies 
designated by the Council, and will determine the appropriate 
process and appropriate enhanced prudential standards based on each 
case.
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    In April 2015, after the Board invited comment on its proposed 
order regarding GECC, GE and GECC announced plans to significantly 
reorganize and refocus GECC. Under this proposal, GECC would divest or 
liquidate much of its commercial lending and leasing operations and all 
of its consumer lending businesses, including its U.S. banking 
operations, and shrink its total assets from approximately $482 billion 
to approximately $140 billion by year-end 2017. The divestitures are 
subject to a detailed plan with a definitive timeline. GECC has already 
begun to implement this plan, including by selling an indirect interest 
in its savings association and selling a significant amount of 
commercial real estate assets, and GECC has stated that it expects to 
complete its reorganization plan within three years. GECC plans to 
retain only those businesses directly related to GE's core industrial 
businesses, which it identifies as aviation, energy, and health-care. 
As part of this divestiture plan, GECC has indicated that it intends to 
seek rescission of the Council designation when appropriate.\17\
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    \17\ GE Press Release, April 10, 2014 (GE Announcement), 
available at: http://www.genewsroom.com/press-releases/ge-create-simpler-more-valuable-industrial-company-selling-most-ge-capital-assets.
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II. Framework for Supervision of GECC and Enhanced Prudential Standards

    The Board is required to consider a variety of factors when 
establishing enhanced prudential standards for large bank holding 
companies and nonbank financial companies supervised by the Board and 
to adapt those standards as appropriate in light of the predominant 
lines of business of the companies.\18\ The Board is also permitted by 
statute to tailor application of enhanced prudential standards based on 
the capital structure, riskiness, complexity, financial activities, 
size, and other risk factors regarding the company as the Board deems 
appropriate.\19\
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    \18\ 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(3).
    \19\ 12 U.S.C. 5365(a)(2).
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    The Board has taken these factors into account, as well as 
information and views provided by GE and the public commenters, in 
establishing enhanced prudential standards for GECC. One commenter 
asserted that GECC differs substantially from bank holding companies 
and that standards for bank holding companies were inappropriate for 
GECC. This commenter asserted that, because GECC is a financing arm of 
an industrial company, its activities, objectives, and risk profile 
differ from those of a bank holding company. The commenter also 
asserted that the proposal would adversely affect financing for 
businesses and consumers that purchase products from GE. Several other 
commenters argued, on the other hand, that standards developed for bank 
holding companies are appropriate for GECC, and urged the Board to 
strengthen standards further for both bank holding companies and GECC.
    As a starting point for assessing appropriate prudential standards, 
the Board notes that GECC engages in financial activities that are very 
similar to those of the largest bank holding companies. GECC's 
leverage, off-balance-sheet exposures, risk profile, asset composition, 
interconnectedness with other large financial firms, and mix of 
activities are substantially similar to those of many large bank 
holding companies. GECC is a significant participant in financing 
activities, including as a provider of consumer and commercial credit 
in the United States. As noted above, like many of the largest bank 
holding companies, GECC focuses its activities primarily on lending and 
leasing to commercial companies and on consumer financing and deposit 
products. GECC holds a large portfolio of on-balance sheet financial 
assets, such as commercial and consumer loans and investment 
securities, that is comparable to those of the largest bank holding 
companies.
    Moreover, GECC borrows in the wholesale funding markets by issuing 
commercial paper and long-term debt to wholesale counterparties, and 
makes significant use of derivatives to hedge interest rate risk, 
foreign exchange risk, and other financial risks. GECC currently 
controls two insured depository institutions that offer traditional 
banking products to both consumer and commercial customers.\20\ Similar 
to the insured depository institutions of large bank holding companies, 
GECC's subsidiary insured depository institutions serve as a 
significant source of funding and as a source of credit for a portion 
of its lending activities.
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    \20\ As discussed above, GECC intends to divest Synchrony Bank 
and GE Capital Bank.
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    To address the similarities in these risks, structure, and 
activities, and to account for the unique characteristics of GECC and 
its ongoing restructuring plan, the Board has determined to establish a 
supervisory program and framework of enhanced prudential

[[Page 44114]]

standards for GECC that would proceed in two stages.\21\
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    \21\ The final order applies to GECC and to any successor to 
GECC, without further action by the Board.
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    As explained more fully below, in order to ensure that GECC has 
adequate capital and liquidity to support its current operations and to 
mitigate the risk to financial stability that might occur if GECC were 
to come under stress while implementing its divestiture plan, effective 
January 1, 2016, the final order applies capital standards applicable 
to bank holding companies, liquidity standards applicable to the 
largest bank holding companies, and certain reporting requirements. 
These Phase I Requirements require GECC to comply with the standardized 
risk-based capital requirements, restrictions on distributions and 
certain discretionary bonus payments associated with the capital 
conservation buffer, the traditional balance-sheet leverage ratio 
requirement in the Board's regulatory capital framework, as well as 
with the liquidity coverage ratio rule (LCR rule) applicable to bank 
holding companies with $250 billion or more in total consolidated 
assets or $10 billion or more in on-balance-sheet foreign exposures 
(advanced approaches banking organizations), as described further 
below. Beginning January 1, 2016, GECC would also be required to comply 
with certain reporting requirements that support the risk-based capital 
requirements, the leverage ratio, the LCR rule, and the Board's 
supervision of GECC to mitigate risks to the financial stability of the 
United States.
    GECC is currently subject to a number of statutory, regulatory, and 
supervisory requirements, and will continue to be subject to these 
requirements in addition to the Phase I Requirements. GECC is subject 
to examination by the Federal Reserve, the enforcement authority of the 
Board, resolution planning requirements, and approval requirements for 
expansion proposals.\22\ GECC is also subject to limits on 
concentrations that generally prohibit GECC from merging with or 
acquiring another company if the resulting company's liabilities upon 
consummation would exceed 10 percent of the aggregate liabilities of 
all financial companies.\23\ The Board has been supervising GECC 
pursuant to the consolidated supervision framework for large financial 
companies.\24\ Finally, the final order does not preempt or otherwise 
alter the Board's authority to supervise GE, GECC, and GE Consumer 
Finance, as savings and loan holding companies under the Home Owners' 
Loan Act,\25\ so long as they control a savings association.
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    \22\ See 12 U.S.C. 5361(b) (establishing examination authority); 
5362 (establishing enforcement authority), 5365(d) (requiring 
submission of a resolution plan), and 5363(b) (requiring the prior 
approval of the Board for certain acquisitions).
    \23\ See 12 CFR part 251.
    \24\ See Supervision and Regulation Letter SR 12-17, 
Consolidated Supervision Framework for Large Financial Institutions 
(December 17, 2012) (SR 12-17) (establishing risk-management 
guidance and supervisory expectations for nonbank financial 
companies supervised by the Board), available at: http://www.federalreserve.gov/bankinforeg/srletters/sr1217.htm.
    \25\ 12 U.S.C. 1467a, et. seq.
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    The Board also believes that certain enhanced prudential standards 
should be applied in the supervision of GECC. These Phase II 
Requirements are more stringent than the minimum requirements 
applicable to bank holding companies. At the same time, the Board has 
tailored the enhanced standards to account for certain unique 
structures and risks at GECC. Moreover, in light of the reorganization 
plan currently underway at GECC and the amount of resources and systems 
necessary to implement these enhanced prudential standards, the Board 
has delayed the imposition of these standards until January 1, 2018.
    As explained more fully below, these enhanced prudential standards 
include general risk management standards, enhanced capital standards, 
capital planning, stress testing, enhanced liquidity risk management 
standards, and restrictions on intercompany transactions. They also 
include requirements to file additional reports with the Board.
    The delayed timing of the Phase II Requirements reflects the public 
commitment that GE and GECC have made to their divestiture and 
reorganization plans, progress observed to date on GECC's execution of 
its plans, and other changes at GE and GECC since issuance of the 
proposed order. GECC has noted that it intends to request that the 
Council rescind its designation in 2016.\26\ If the designation of GECC 
is rescinded prior to January 1, 2018, these enhanced prudential 
standards would not apply to GECC. In the event that GECC is unable to 
complete or implement the divestiture plan as expected or if the 
Council does not rescind GECC's designation, the effective date of 
January 1, 2018, for the Phase II Requirements provides GECC with 
sufficient time to prepare for compliance with the requirements of the 
final order.
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    \26\ Letter from Keith S. Sherin, Chairman & CEO, GECC, to 
Robert deV. Frierson, Secretary, Board of Governors of the Federal 
Reserve System, May 4, 2015, available at: http://www.federalreserve.gov/SECRS/2015/May/20150506/R-1503/R-1503_050415_129930_568761743161_1.pdf.
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    The Board expects to continue to monitor and assess GECC's 
activities and risk profile, and, in accordance with the requirements 
of section 165 of the Dodd-Frank Act, to take into account any 
additional factors or considerations, as necessary, in the adoption of 
future standards, or in tailoring of any standards imposed in the 
future.

A. Phase I Requirements

1. Capital Requirements
    The Board has long held the view that a bank holding company 
generally should maintain capital that is commensurate with its risk 
profile and activities so that the firm can meet its obligations to 
creditors and other counterparties, as well as continue to serve as a 
financial intermediary, through periods of financial and economic 
stress.\27\ Bank holding companies that are comparable in size, 
complexity, activities, and risk to GECC are subject to a capital 
framework that includes a minimum common equity tier 1 risk-based 
capital ratio of 4.5 percent, a minimum tier 1 risk-based capital ratio 
of 6 percent, a minimum total risk-based capital ratio of 8 percent, a 
common equity tier 1 capital conservation buffer of 2.5 percent of 
risk-weighted assets, a standardized methodology for calculating risk-
weighted assets, and a 4 percent minimum leverage ratio of tier 1 
capital to average total consolidated assets (the generally applicable 
leverage ratio).
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    \27\ See 12 CFR part 217; 12 CFR 225.8; SR 12-17, supra note 24; 
Supervision and Regulation Letter 99-18, Assessing Capital Adequacy 
in Relation to Risk at Large Banking Organizations and Others with 
Complex Risk Profiles (July 1, 1999) (SR 99-18), available at: 
http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/srletters/1999/SR9918.HTM.
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    Because GECC's activities and balance sheet are substantially 
similar to those of a large bank holding company, the Board proposed to 
apply the same capital framework to GECC. The final order requires 
GECC, beginning on January 1, 2016, to maintain the minimum risk-based 
capital ratios and the generally applicable leverage ratio described 
above, to comply with restrictions on capital distributions and certain 
discretionary bonus payments associated with the capital conservation 
buffer, and to calculate risk-weighted assets using the standardized 
methodology.\28\ These regulatory capital requirements will help to 
ensure that GECC maintains high-quality regulatory capital in amounts 
commensurate with

[[Page 44115]]

its risk as it executes its divestiture plan. Compliance with these 
basic capital requirements should not require substantial incremental 
operational investments by GECC.
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    \28\ See 12 CFR part 217, subpart D.
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2. Liquidity Requirements
    On September 3, 2014, the Board adopted the LCR rule, which 
implements a quantitative liquidity requirement consistent with the 
liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) standard established by the Basel 
Committee on Banking Supervision.\29\ The LCR rule is designed to 
promote the resilience of the short-term liquidity risk profile of 
large complex banking organizations, thereby improving the banking 
sector's ability to measure and manage liquidity risk and to absorb 
shocks arising from financial and economic stress. The LCR rule 
requires a company subject to the rule to maintain an amount of high-
quality liquid assets (HQLA) (the numerator of the ratio) that is equal 
to or greater than its total expected net cash outflows over a 
prospective 30 calendar-day period (the denominator of the ratio).
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    \29\ 79 FR 61440 (October 10, 2014); see 12 CFR part 249.
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    The LCR rule does not by its terms apply automatically to nonbank 
financial companies supervised by the Board such as GECC. Rather, the 
Board indicated when it adopted the LCR rule that, following 
designation of a nonbank financial company for supervision by the 
Board, the Board would assess the business model, capital structure, 
and risk profile of the designated company to determine whether the LCR 
rule should apply to the company, and, if appropriate, would tailor 
application of the rule's requirements by order or regulation to that 
nonbank financial company or to a category of nonbank financial 
companies.
    The Board proposed to apply to GECC the requirements in the LCR 
rule that apply to advanced approaches banking organizations beginning 
July 1, 2015. The proposed order would have adopted the same transition 
periods and compliance timelines for GECC as applied to advanced 
approaches banking organizations that have less than $700 billion in 
total consolidated assets and less than $10 trillion in assets under 
custody. These transition periods would have permitted GECC to conduct 
LCR calculations on a monthly (rather than daily) basis until July 1, 
2016, and would have required GECC to maintain an LCR of at least 80 
percent from July 1, 2015 to December 31, 2015, an LCR of at least 90 
percent from January 1, 2016 to December 31, 2016, and an LCR of at 
least 100 percent thereafter.\30\
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    \30\ 12 CFR 249.50(b).
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    In comments on the proposed order, GECC requested that the Board 
defer the requirement to calculate its LCR daily until January 1, 2018. 
GECC also requested that application of the LCR rule to GECC be 
tailored to reflect GECC's inability to hold significant Federal 
Reserve Bank balances and its holding of substantial amounts of 
deposits at third-party banks. GECC noted that it maintains a greater 
proportion of its cash liquidity in third-party commercial bank 
deposits that are not credited as HQLA and are subject to a 75 percent 
cap on net inflows. GECC requested that the LCR requirements as applied 
to GECC count GECC's deposits in third-party commercial banks as 
inflows in the denominator of the LCR, consistent with the LCR that 
applies to bank holding companies, and that the inflows not be subject 
to the 75 percent cap if the third-party commercial bank or its holding 
company is subject to the full LCR or a foreign equivalent and the 
deposits are not concentrated in any one affiliated group of banks.
    The final order requires GECC to comply with the LCR rule beginning 
January 1, 2016, to maintain an LCR of at least 90 percent from January 
1, 2016 to December 31, 2016, and to maintain an LCR of at least 100 
percent thereafter. The January 1, 2016, effective date for the 90 
percent requirement is consistent with the proposed order and with the 
liquidity levels already maintained by GECC. The ability to rapidly 
monetize HQLA is expected to assist GECC in meeting its liquidity needs 
during a period of acute short-term liquidity stress and therefore both 
improve the firm's resiliency and reduce the likelihood of fire-sales 
of less liquid assets, which can damage financial stability. Because 
the LCR rule applies outflow and inflow rates that are based on the 
particular risk profile and activities of a company subject to the 
rule, the LCR requirements would be appropriately tailored to GECC's 
activities, balance sheet, and risk profile, and would help ensure that 
GECC holds a sufficient amount of HQLA to meet its expected net cash 
outflows over a 30 calendar-day stress period.\31\
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    \31\ As indicated in the supplementary information section of 
the LCR rule, the Board anticipated separately seeking comment on 
proposed regulatory reporting requirements and instructions 
pertaining to the LCR. 79 FR 61440, 61445 (October 10, 2014). In 
December 2014, the Board proposed revisions to liquidity reporting 
requirements that would relate to the LCR calculation. The Board 
proposed these reporting requirements and instructions to apply to 
any nonbank financial company supervised by the Board that the Board 
has required by rule or order to comply with the LCR. 79 FR 71416, 
71417 (December 2, 2014).
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    As noted above, GECC requested that the Board tailor the 
application of the LCR rule to reflect its inability to hold 
significant Federal Reserve Bank balances and its greater proportion of 
liquidity maintained in third-party commercial banks. Central bank 
reserves are not, however, the only qualifying HQLA under the LCR rule. 
Various high-credit-quality securities are also counted as HQLA under 
the LCR rule. Further, reducing the cash inflow cap and allowing GECC 
to rely heavily on inflows from deposits at third-party banks to offset 
cash outflows would increase the interconnectedness of the financial 
system and could reduce systemic stability. As the Board noted in the 
preamble to the final LCR rule,\32\ such deposits do not meet the 
Board's LCR criteria for HQLA because during a liquidity stress event 
many commercial banks may exhibit the same liquidity stress correlation 
and wrong-way risk. Further, adopting GECC's modification regarding 
third-party commercial bank deposits could reduce the value of 
horizontal comparisons between GECC and other companies with similar 
balance sheets and risk profiles. The final order therefore adopts this 
aspect of the proposal without change.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \32\ See 79 FR 61440, 61457 (October 10, 2014).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In recognition of the infrastructure necessary for daily LCR 
calculations, the Board has determined to defer requiring GECC to 
perform daily LCR calculations until January 1, 2018. Accordingly, the 
final order provides that GECC may calculate its LCR monthly on each 
calculation date that is the last business day of the applicable 
calendar month until January 1, 2018.

B. Phase II Requirements

1. Risk-Management and Risk Committee Requirements
    Sound enterprise-wide risk management by a large financial company 
reduces the likelihood of its material distress or failure and thus 
promotes financial stability. Section 165(b)(1)(A) of the Dodd-Frank 
Act requires the Board to establish enhanced risk-management 
requirements for nonbank financial companies supervised by the Board 
and bank holding companies with total consolidated assets of $50 
billion or more.\33\ In addition, section 165(h) directs the Board to 
issue regulations requiring publicly traded nonbank financial companies 
and publicly traded

[[Page 44116]]

bank holding companies with total consolidated assets of $10 billion or 
more to establish risk committees.\34\ Section 165(h) requires the risk 
committee to be responsible for the oversight of the enterprise-wide 
risk-management practices of the company, to have such number of 
independent directors as the Board determines appropriate, and to 
include at least one risk-management expert with experience in 
identifying, assessing, and managing risk exposures of large, complex 
firms.\35\
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    \33\ 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(1)(A)(iii).
    \34\ 12 U.S.C. 5365(h); see also 12 CFR 252.2(p) (defining 
publicly traded).
    \35\ 12 U.S.C. 5365(h)(3).
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    The Board has adopted risk-management standards in Regulation YY 
that require a covered bank holding company to tailor its compliance 
framework to the particular size, complexity, structure, risk profile, 
and activities of the organization. The Board has required all bank 
holding companies with $50 billion or more in total consolidated assets 
to establish a risk committee that is an independent committee of the 
company's board of directors, is chaired by an independent director, 
and has at least one member who has experience in identifying, 
assessing and managing risk exposures of large, complex financial 
firms.\36\ The risk committee is required to approve and periodically 
review the risk-management policies of the bank holding company's 
global operations, oversee the operation of the bank holding company's 
global risk-management framework, and oversee the bank holding 
company's compliance with the liquidity risk-management requirements of 
Regulation YY.\37\ In addition, a covered bank holding company is 
required to appoint a chief risk officer with experience in 
identifying, assessing and managing risk exposures of large, complex 
financial firms, and who has responsibility for establishing 
enterprise-wide risk limits for the company and monitoring compliance 
with such limits.\38\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \36\ 12 CFR 252.33(a)(3), (4).
    \37\ 12 CFR 252.33(a).
    \38\ 12 CFR 252.33(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Under Regulation YY, each covered bank holding company is required 
to establish a global risk-management framework that is commensurate 
with the company's structure, risk profile, complexity, activities, and 
size.\39\ The risk-management framework is required to include policies 
and procedures for the establishment of risk-management governance and 
risk-control infrastructure of the company's global operations. In 
addition, the risk-management framework must include processes and 
systems for identifying and reporting risk-management deficiencies in 
an effective and timely manner, must establish managerial and employee 
responsibilities for risk management, must ensure the independence of 
the risk-management function, and must integrate risk management and 
associated controls with management goals and with the compensation 
structure for the global operations of the company.\40\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \39\ 12 CFR 252.33(a)(2).
    \40\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The proposed order would have required GECC to adopt a risk 
management framework that is consistent with the supervisory 
expectations established for bank holding companies of a similar size 
beginning July 1, 2015. The proposal also included a requirement that 
GECC establish a dedicated risk committee at GECC that would be 
responsible for the oversight of GECC's risk management.
    The Board noted in the proposed order that in implementing these 
requirements, GECC would be expected to tailor its risk-management 
framework to suit the company's structure. The proposed order would 
also have applied additional risk-management requirements that were 
tailored to reflect GECC's structure as an intermediate holding company 
of a larger, publicly traded company.\41\ To ensure that GECC's board 
of directors included members who were independent of GE, and whose 
attention was focused on the business operations and safety and 
soundness of GECC, the proposed order would have required that two or 
more of the directors of GECC be independent of GECC's management and 
of GE's management and board of directors. One of these directors would 
have been required to serve as the chair of GECC's risk committee.\42\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \41\ Proposed Order, 79 FR at 71778.
    \42\ 12 CFR 252.33(a)(4).
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    In addition, consistent with Regulation YY, GECC would have been 
required to maintain at least one director with expertise in 
``identifying, assessing, and managing risk exposures of large, complex 
financial firms'' on its risk committee.\43\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \43\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Commenters, including GECC and the independent directors of GE, as 
well as several investment advisers and corporate governance 
associations, recognized the importance and heightened obligations of 
management of large financial firms for risk management and supported 
heightened enterprise wide risk management requirements, including a 
risk committee with expertise and independent leadership. GECC and the 
independent directors of GE pointed out that GE and GECC already have 
adopted several of the requirements in the Board's proposed order.
    Several commenters, including GECC and the independent directors of 
GE, argued, however, that the proposal to require GECC to maintain at 
least two directors independent of GE's board of directors as well as 
GE and GECC management would create uncertainty about the 
responsibilities of those independent directors, who would be expected 
under the Board's proposed order to focus on the risks at GECC alone, 
and who simultaneously would owe a fiduciary duty under Delaware law to 
GE as the sole shareholder of GECC. Some commenters also questioned the 
Board's authority under the Dodd-Frank Act to impose this 
requirement.\44\ GECC and the independent directors of GE proposed, 
instead, that independent directors on the GE board be permitted to 
comprise the majority of GECC's board of directors. They argued that 
this would ensure that the majority of directors at GECC were 
independent of both management of GE and management of GECC. GECC and 
the independent directors of GE asserted that the independent directors 
currently offer strong oversight of GECC's risk management that is 
independent of the management of either GE or GECC, and are well 
informed about the risks to GECC, including risks posed by the 
interactions between GE and GECC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \44\ Although GECC does not have publicly traded shares of 
common equity, the company has debt securities that are publicly 
traded on the New York Stock Exchange under section 12(b) of the 
Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    After considering the public comments, including those provided by 
GECC and GECC's current independent directors, the Board believes that 
requiring a specific number of individuals to serve on the GECC board 
who are not also members of the GE board is unnecessary in this case 
for achieving the overarching supervisory interest of ensuring that 
GECC board members are capable of dedicating time and resources to the 
unique issues and risks of GECC and focusing appropriate attention on 
ensuring that its operations are safe and sound and consistent with 
financial stability. The Board understands that GE has established a 
dedicated risk committee that oversees the risk management of GE and 
GECC. In this regard, the GE independent directors have devoted a 
significant

[[Page 44117]]

amount of time over the past three years to providing the type of 
independent oversight contemplated by the Dodd-Frank Act and have 
demonstrated the willingness and ability to continue to remain fully 
engaged in their oversight of GECC.
    Accordingly, the final order modifies the proposed risk-management 
requirements to require that a majority of the GECC board of directors 
be independent directors, unaffiliated with GE management or GECC 
management, with an independent director chair of the board and risk 
committee at GECC. This provision becomes effective on January 1, 2018. 
The final order does not require that the independent directors on 
GECC's board also be independent of the GE board.\45\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \45\ The Board intends to monitor the effectiveness of GECC's 
independent directors and if the facts and circumstances indicate 
that the independent directors are unable to focus their attention 
on the business operations and safety and soundness of GECC, then 
the corporate governance and risk management requirements may be 
revised.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The final order also requires GECC to comply with the risk 
committee and risk-management framework requirements in section 252.33 
of the Board's Regulation YY, beginning January 1, 2018.\46\ The Board 
believes that consistent with the designation of GECC as a nonbank 
financial company, GECC's risk-management framework should have a 
dedicated risk committee at the company that is solely responsible for 
the oversight of GECC's risk management. In addition, the final order 
requires the entire GECC risk committee to be comprised of independent 
directors, unaffiliated with GE management or GECC management.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \46\ 12 CFR 252.33.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Board believes these requirements satisfy the requirements of 
section 165(b)(1)(A) and (h) of the Dodd-Frank Act and establish a risk 
management structure that can be effective in identifying, monitoring, 
and mitigating risks at GECC. These requirements ensure that the 
perspectives of qualified individuals independent of the management of 
GE and GECC will have a strong voice in the governance of GECC and 
counterbalance any tendency to operate GECC in a manner that, while 
advantageous to GE as the sole shareholder of GECC, may pose risks to 
the financial stability of the United States.
2. Capital Requirements--Additional Risk-Based and Leverage Capital 
Requirements
    In the proposed order, the Board would have required GECC, 
beginning on July 1, 2015, to comply with the regulatory capital 
framework applicable to a large bank holding company, including the 
minimum common equity tier 1, tier 1, and total risk-based capital 
ratios, the minimum generally-applicable leverage ratio, and any 
restrictions on capital distributions or discretionary bonus payments 
associated with the capital conservation buffer, described above. In 
addition to the generally applicable capital adequacy requirements 
described above, the capital framework contains supplemental measures 
applicable to the largest, most interconnected bank holding companies. 
For advanced approaches banking organizations, these include the 
advanced approaches risk-based capital rule, a supplementary leverage 
ratio of tier 1 capital to total leverage exposure of 3 percent, a 
requirement to include accumulated other comprehensive income (AOCI) in 
tier 1 capital, and a countercyclical capital buffer. The proposed 
order would also have applied these requirements, except for the 
requirement to comply with the advanced approaches rule.\47\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \47\ Proposed Order, 79 FR at 71772.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In comments on the proposed order, GECC requested that the enhanced 
capital requirements be deferred pending completion of GE and GECC's 
divestiture plan. In the alternative, GECC requested that the Board 
allow it to exclude recognition of AOCI in regulatory capital relating 
to investment securities held by legacy insurance businesses that it is 
winding-down. GECC argued that these securities are generally held for 
the long term, are used to support future payment obligations on 
outstanding insurance contracts, and are subject to fluctuations in 
value that can result in volatility in AOCI.
    The Board believes that the enhanced capital framework adopted for 
the largest bank holding companies, including the requirement to 
recognize most elements of AOCI in regulatory capital, is an 
appropriate capital framework for GECC because of the similarities in 
activities, size, risk, and exposures of GECC to large bank holding 
companies. The maintenance of a strong base of capital by GECC, which 
the Council has designated as systemically important, is particularly 
important because capital shortfalls at GECC could endanger the 
financial health of the firm and contribute to systemic distress. Thus, 
the Board believes the regulatory capital framework applicable to 
advanced approaches bank holding companies represents the appropriate 
enhanced prudential standard for GECC, with the exception noted above 
regarding compliance with the advanced approaches rule. The Board notes 
that GECC appears to meet or exceed minimum levels required in the 
enhanced capital framework for the largest bank holding companies. 
However, as explained below, the Board has deferred application of 
these requirements until January 1, 2018, in light of GECC's ongoing 
restructuring efforts.
    The proposed order also would have required GECC to meet a 
supplementary leverage ratio of 5 percent (eSLR) in order to avoid 
restrictions on capital distributions and discretionary bonus payments 
to executive officers.\48\ The eSLR is designed to minimize leverage at 
banking organizations that pose substantial systemic risk, thereby 
strengthening the ability of such organizations to remain going 
concerns during times of economic stress and minimizing the likelihood 
that problems at these organizations would contribute to financial 
instability.\49\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \48\ 12 CFR 217.11(a)(4).
    \49\ See 79 FR 24528 (May 1, 2014).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    GECC asserted that subjecting GECC to the eSLR was inappropriate 
because GECC does not meet the size threshold for application of the 
eSLR and should be exempt from the eSLR just as a bank holding company 
of similar size and risks. In the alternative, GECC argued that the 
Board should tailor the ratio to GECC's smaller systemic footprint. 
GECC also requested that, for purposes of calculation of the eSLR and 
other reporting requirements, GECC be permitted to phase in the daily 
averaging of on-balance sheet exposures beginning on July 1, 2018. GECC 
suggested that a phase-in schedule would allow GECC the time to 
implement all of the operational infrastructure necessary to complete 
daily averaging.
    Consistent with the Dodd-Frank Act's requirement to apply enhanced 
leverage requirements to nonbank financial companies supervised by the 
Board, the final order retains the eSLR standard for GECC, but tailors 
the standard to GECC's risk profile, complexity, activities, and size. 
Specifically, the final order requires GECC to exceed a 4 percent 
supplementary leverage ratio in order to avoid restrictions on capital 
distributions and certain discretionary bonus payments, as opposed to 
the 5 percent supplementary leverage ratio required for other 
institutions subject to the eSLR. The lower requirement in the final 
order is intended to reflect GECC's

[[Page 44118]]

smaller systemic footprint compared to other banking organizations 
subject to the eSLR, while still minimizing leverage at GECC and 
reducing the likelihood that problems at GECC would cause it to fail in 
a manner that affects financial stability. The Board has also 
determined to defer application of the eSLR until January 1, 2018. 
Because GECC will not be required to comply with either the SLR or the 
eSLR prior to January 1, 2018, the Board will not require daily 
averaging prior to that time.
    With the exception of an eSLR, the Board is not through this order 
applying to GECC other standards established for G-SIBs. Accordingly, 
the Board would not, without further action, impose the proposed G-SIB 
risk-based capital surcharge to GECC or otherwise define GECC as a G-
SIB. As the Board adopts additional standards for G-SIBs, the Board 
will consider whether it is appropriate to require GECC to comply with 
these additional standards and would seek notice and comment prior to 
applying such standards to GECC. Most commenters supported this 
approach.
3. Capital Planning Requirements--Capital Plan Rule
    The recent financial crisis highlighted a need for large bank 
holding companies to incorporate into their capital planning forward-
looking assessments of capital adequacy under stressed conditions. The 
crisis also underscored the importance of strong internal capital 
planning practices and processes among large bank holding companies. 
The Board issued the capital plan rule to ensure that large bank 
holding companies have robust systems and processes that incorporate 
forward-looking projections of revenue and losses to monitor and 
maintain their internal capital adequacy. By helping to ensure that the 
largest bank holding companies have sufficient capital to withstand 
significant stress and to continue to operate, the capital plan rule 
helps to ensure that the financial system as a whole can continue to 
function under stressed conditions.
    The capital plan rule requires each bank holding company with $50 
billion or more in total consolidated assets to develop an annual 
capital plan describing its planned capital actions and demonstrating 
its ability to meet a 5 percent tier 1 common capital ratio and 
maintain capital ratios above the regulatory minimum requirements under 
both baseline and stressed conditions over a forward-looking planning 
horizon.\50\ A capital plan must also include an assessment of a bank 
holding company's sources and expected uses of capital, reflecting the 
size, complexity, risk profile, and scope of operations of the company, 
assuming both expected and stressed conditions. In addition, each bank 
holding company must describe its process for assessing capital 
adequacy, its capital policy, and provide a discussion of any expected 
changes to the bank holding company's business plan that are likely to 
have a material impact on the company's capital adequacy or liquidity.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \50\ See 12 CFR 225.8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Under the capital plan rule, the Board annually evaluates a large 
bank holding company's capital adequacy and capital planning practices 
and the comprehensiveness of the capital plan, including the strength 
of the underlying analysis. The Comprehensive Capital Analysis and 
Review (CCAR) is the Board's supervisory process for reviewing capital 
plans submitted by bank holding companies under the capital plan rule. 
As part of CCAR, the Board conducts a quantitative assessment of each 
large bank holding company's capital adequacy under an assumption of 
stressed conditions and conducts a qualitative assessment of the 
company's internal capital planning practices. If the Board objects to 
a bank holding company's capital plan, the company may not make any 
capital distribution other than those approved in writing by the Board 
or the appropriate Reserve Bank. A bank holding company that receives 
an objection may submit a revised capital plan for review by the Board.
    To ensure that GECC continues to maintain sufficient capital and 
has internal processes for assessing its capital adequacy that 
appropriately account for the company's risks, the proposed order would 
have required GECC to comply with the Board's capital plan rule \51\ 
for the capital plan cycle beginning January 1, 2016, and to submit its 
first submission under the capital plan rule on April 5, 2016.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \51\ 12 CFR 225.8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Several commenters, including GECC and a public interest group, 
agreed generally that the application of capital planning to GECC would 
be appropriate. In particular, GECC acknowledged that capital planning 
would be an effective tool for ensuring its capital strength and 
safeguarding it in its interactions with GE. GECC, however, requested 
that the Board defer implementation of capital planning in order to 
allow it sufficient time to develop necessary internal systems and to 
focus its capital plan compliance efforts on the business and assets it 
intends to retain after the divestiture plan.
    The Board has determined to adopt the capital planning 
requirements. As described above, GECC's activities, risk profile, and 
balance sheet are similar to those of large bank holding companies. 
Requiring GECC to comply with the Board's capital plan rule as if it 
were a large bank holding company will help ensure that GECC holds 
capital that is commensurate with its risk profile and activities, can 
meet its obligations to creditors and other counterparties, and can 
continue to serve as a financial intermediary through periods of 
financial and economic stress.\52\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \52\ See 12 CFR part 217; 12 CFR 225.8; SR 12-17, supra note 24; 
SR 99-18, supra note 27.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Board recognizes that, unlike domestic bank holding companies, 
GECC is an intermediate holding company of a larger, publicly-traded 
company. However, GECC is itself a significant entity designated by the 
Council for supervision by the Federal Reserve because of the threat 
posed by the material financial distress of GECC to financial 
stability. Notwithstanding the recently announced guarantee of much of 
GECC's debt, GE is not obligated to provide capital or other financial 
support to GECC and, during a period of stress, may not be able to 
provide that support. A robust capital planning process at GECC will 
help ensure that GECC manages its capital, and any capital 
distributions to its parent, in a manner that is commensurate with its 
risks and consistent with its safety and soundness.\53\ The capital 
plan rule acts as a counterweight to pressures that a company may face 
to make capital distributions during a period of economic stress, 
thereby helping to mitigate the risk of material financial distress at 
GECC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \53\ In addition to GECC, other intermediate holding companies 
are subject to the capital plan rule. Notably, some U.S. bank 
holding company subsidiaries of foreign banking organizations 
participate in CCAR. In addition, under the Board's Regulation YY, 
all foreign banking organizations with $50 billion or more in U.S. 
non-branch assets are required to form a U.S. intermediate holding 
company subject to the capital plan rule. See 12 CFR 252, subpart O.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    To account for the efforts that GE and GECC are undergoing to 
reorganize their operations, the Board has also determined to make the 
capital planning requirements effective beginning January 1, 2018. The 
Board recognizes that GECC likely will need time to build and implement 
the internal systems and infrastructure necessary fully to meet the 
requirements of the capital plan rule and the CCAR process. Moreover, 
for GECC's first capital plan cycle

[[Page 44119]]

beginning on January 1, 2018, the quantitative assessment of GECC's 
capital plan under the capital plan rule will not be based on 
supervisory stress test estimates conducted pursuant to the Board's 
stress test rules.\54\ Instead, the Board intends to conduct a more 
limited quantitative assessment of GECC's capital plan based on GECC's 
own stress scenario and any scenarios provided by the Board and a 
qualitative assessment of GECC's capital planning processes and 
supporting practices. This approach would be consistent with the 
capital plan review process that the Board used to evaluate the initial 
capital plan submissions of bank holding companies that were subject to 
the capital plan rule but that did not participate in the 2009 
Supervisory Capital Assessment Program.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \54\ See 12 CFR part 252, subpart E.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Board also expects to communicate to GECC the Board's 
expectations on capital planning practices and capital adequacy 
processes in connection with its first capital plan submission. The 
Board intends to tailor its supervisory expectations on capital 
planning practices and capital adequacy processes for GECC to account 
for any material changes in the size, scope of activities, and risks of 
the company that result from the implementation of its divestiture 
plan.
4. Stress Testing Requirements
    Section 165 of the Dodd-Frank Act requires the Board to conduct 
annual supervisory stress tests of each nonbank financial company 
supervised by the Board and requires the Board to issue regulations 
that require those companies to conduct company-run stress tests semi-
annually.\55\ In 2012, the Board, in coordination with the Federal 
Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Office of the Comptroller of the 
Currency, and the Federal Insurance Office, adopted stress testing 
rules under section 165(i) of the Dodd-Frank Act (stress test 
rules).\56\ The stress test rules establish a framework for the Board 
to conduct annual supervisory stress tests and require covered 
companies to conduct semi-annual company-run stress tests.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \55\ 12 U.S.C. 5365(i).
    \56\ 77 FR 62378 (October 12, 2012); 12 CFR part 252, subparts E 
and F.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The stress tests conducted under the Board's stress test rules are 
complementary to the Board's review of a company's capital plan in the 
CCAR process. The Board's stress test rules require the use of stylized 
capital action assumptions to calculate the post-stress capital ratios, 
while the CCAR post-stress capital ratios use the company's planned 
capital actions in the baseline scenario provided by the Board under 
the stress test rules. The capital action assumptions in the Board's 
stress test rules are intended to make the results of the stress tests 
more comparable across institutions, which enhances the quality of the 
required public disclosure of the stress-testing results. Under the 
stress test rules, covered companies are also subject to mid-cycle 
company-run stress tests, in which companies develop and employ their 
own baseline, adverse, and severely adverse scenarios in conducting 
internal stress tests. For both the annual and mid-cycle company-run 
stress tests, covered companies must disclose the results of their 
company-run stress test conducted under the severely adverse scenario.
    The proposed order would have required GECC to comply with the 
stress-testing requirements applicable to bank holding companies with 
$50 billion or more in total consolidated assets under the stress test 
rules \57\ in the cycle beginning January 1, 2017. Several commenters, 
including GECC and a public interest group, agreed generally with the 
application of stress testing to GECC, asserting that it would be an 
important safeguard for GECC in its interactions with GE. GECC also 
acknowledged that stress testing would be an effective tool for 
ensuring its capital strength. GECC requested, however, that the Board 
defer implementation of stress testing requirements to January 1, 2018, 
in order to allow it sufficient time to develop the necessary internal 
systems and, ultimately, focus its stress-testing efforts on the 
business and assets it intends to retain after the divestiture plan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \57\ 12 CFR part 252, subparts E and F.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Board has determined to apply the stress test rules to GECC in 
the same manner as they currently apply to large bank holding companies 
because of the similarity in activities, risk profile, and balance 
sheet composition between GECC and large bank holding companies. 
Compliance with the stress testing requirements would enhance the 
capital planning process for GECC and regularly test the adequacy of 
GECC's capital against hypothetical stressed situations to ensure that 
its capital raising and capital distribution efforts adequately prepare 
the firm for potential stress environments. The stress testing 
requirements under the Board's stress test rules thus would enhance the 
resiliency of GECC and lessen the potential that its failure would have 
a significant adverse effect on financial stability. Because the 
supervisory stress tests are conducted on the basis of standardized 
scenarios and capital assumptions, supervisory stress testing of GECC 
would also allow supervisors and markets to assess GECC's capital 
adequacy compared with that of large bank holding companies that have 
comparable activities, risk profiles, and balance sheets.
    The stress testing rules require a rigorous analysis and are 
dependent on accurate and detailed information regarding the 
composition, historical performance, and sensitivity to stress of the 
assets held by the company. GECC has not been subject to the stress-
testing information collection requirements to date and its current 
divestiture efforts could have a significant impact on its ability to 
collect and report data that will reflect the nature of the company's 
activities during the nine-quarter period for the stress test. 
Consequently, to account for the divestiture plan and to allow GECC 
time to develop systems and processes for conducting stress tests and 
allow the Board adequate time to further assess the activities and risk 
profile of GECC and appropriately tailor the stress testing 
requirements based on GECC's systemic footprint, the Board has 
determined to require GECC to comply with the stress testing 
requirements starting with the stress testing cycle beginning January 
1, 2019.
5. Liquidity Requirements
    Section 165(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act directs the Board to adopt 
enhanced liquidity requirements for nonbank financial companies 
supervised by the Board as well for as bank holding companies with 
total consolidated assets of $50 billion or more.\58\ Liquidity is 
measured by a company's capacity to efficiently meet its expected and 
unexpected cash outflows and collateral needs at a reasonable cost 
without adversely affecting the daily operations or the financial 
condition of the company. As noted above, the financial crisis of 2008-
2009 illustrated that liquidity can evaporate quickly and cause severe 
stress at financial firms and in the financial markets, and 
demonstrated that even solvent financial companies may experience 
material financial distress if they do not manage their liquidity in a 
prudent manner. Through recent rulemakings and guidance, the Board has 
established quantitative liquidity requirements and qualitative 
liquidity risk-management standards in order to ensure the

[[Page 44120]]

resiliency of financial companies during periods of financial market 
stress.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \58\ 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(1)(A)(ii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    To complement the LCR requirements described above, the proposed 
order would have applied the individualized liquidity risk-management 
requirements established in Regulation YY to GECC beginning July 1, 
2015. The liquidity risk-management requirements of Regulation YY 
include requirements that the board of directors of a covered bank 
holding company approve an acceptable level of liquidity risk that the 
bank holding company may assume in connection with its operating 
strategies (liquidity risk tolerance), receive and review information 
from senior management regarding the company's compliance with the 
established liquidity risk tolerance, and approve and periodically 
review liquidity risk-management strategies, policies, and procedures 
established by senior management.\59\ Regulation YY requires senior 
management of a covered bank holding company to establish and implement 
liquidity risk-management strategies, policies, and procedures, 
approved by the company's board of directors; review and approve new 
products and business lines; and evaluate liquidity costs, benefits and 
risks related to new business lines and products.\60\ In addition, 
Regulation YY requires a covered bank holding company to establish and 
maintain procedures for monitoring collateral, legal entity exposures, 
and intraday liquidity risks, and requires an independent review of a 
covered bank holding company's liquidity risk-management processes and 
its liquidity stress-testing processes and assumptions.\61\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \59\ 12 CFR 252.34(a).
    \60\ 12 CFR 252.34(c).
    \61\ 12 CFR 252.34(d), (h).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Regulation YY also requires covered bank holding companies to 
produce comprehensive cash-flow projections that project cash flows 
arising from assets, liabilities, and off-balance sheet exposures over 
short-term and long-term horizons.\62\ In addition, a covered bank 
holding company must establish and maintain a contingency funding plan 
that sets forth strategies for addressing liquidity and funding needs 
during liquidity stress events.\63\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \62\ 12 CFR 252.34(e).
    \63\ 12 CFR 252.34(f).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The liquidity requirements in Regulation YY are designed to 
complement the requirements of the LCR rule. The internal liquidity 
stress-test requirements in Regulation YY provide a view of an 
individual firm under multiple scenarios and include assumptions 
tailored to the idiosyncratic aspects of a firm's liquidity risk 
profile, while the standardized measure of liquidity adequacy under the 
LCR is designed to facilitate a transparent assessment of a covered 
bank holding company's liquidity position under a standard stress 
scenario and to facilitate comparisons across firms.
    Finally, the Board also proposed to apply SR Letter 10-6, 
Interagency Policy Statement on Funding and Liquidity Risk Management 
(SR 10-6) to GECC, and to require compliance with the guidance outlined 
in that letter by July 1, 2015.\64\ SR 10-6 provides guidance on sound 
practices for managing the funding and liquidity risks of depository 
institutions. The guidance also explains the expectation that 
institutions manage liquidity risk using processes and systems that are 
commensurate with the institution's complexity, risk profile, and scope 
of operations.
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    \64\ Supervision and Regulation Letter SR 10-6, Interagency 
Policy Statement on Funding and Liquidity Risk Management (March 17, 
2010) (SR 10-6), available at: http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/srletters/2010/sr1006.htm. SR 10-6 reiterates the process 
that institutions should follow to appropriately identify, measure, 
monitor, and control their funding and liquidity risk. In 
particular, the guidance re-emphasizes the importance of cash-flow 
projections, diversified funding sources, stress testing, a cushion 
of liquid assets, and a formal well-developed contingency funding 
plan as primary tools for measuring and managing liquidity risk.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In comments on the proposed order, GECC argued that the Board 
should not apply intraday liquidity monitoring requirements, asserting 
that GECC's business mix does not result in high intraday liquidity 
volatility. GECC also argued that any intraday liquidity monitoring 
requirement should be applied only after an evaluation of whether such 
a requirement is necessary in light of GECC's liquidity profile and the 
costs required to develop and maintain such a monitoring system.
    In order to promote the resilience of GECC, improve its ability to 
withstand financial and economic stress, and mitigate the potential 
adverse effects on other financial firms and markets, the Board has 
determined to require GECC to manage its liquidity in a manner that is 
comparable to a bank holding company subject to Regulation YY and SR 
10-6.\65\ GECC, like a large bank holding company, is primarily a 
lender and lessor to commercial entities and consumers, and is 
substantially involved in the provision of credit in the United States. 
Similar to large bank holding companies, GECC is also an active 
participant in the capital markets and relies on wholesale funding, 
such as commercial paper held by institutional investors and committed 
lines of credit provided by large commercial banks, exposing the 
company to liquidity risks.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \65\ See 12 CFR 252.34, .35.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The firm-specific liquidity risk management and stress testing 
requirements of Regulation YY would enhance the resilience of GECC and 
mitigate the potential risks to U.S. financial stability by helping to 
ensure that GECC develops the necessary risk management infrastructure 
to evaluate the liquidity risk profile of its operations on a 
continuing basis, including in stressed environments. The liquidity 
risk management and stress testing requirements of Regulation YY 
require each covered company to tailor its compliance framework to the 
particular size, complexity, structure, risk profile, and activities of 
the organization. Thus, in implementing these requirements, GECC would 
be expected to tailor its risk management framework to suit the 
company's liquidity risks.
    Intraday monitoring is an important liquidity risk management 
process that is designed to address the risk that a large banking 
organization is unable to receive or make critical payments, which can 
lead to systemic disruptions. A company's procedures for monitoring and 
managing intraday liquidity positions should, however, reflect in 
stringency and complexity the scope of operations of the company. 
Consistent with Regulation YY, under the final order, GECC may tailor 
its intraday liquidity monitoring procedures to its business mix and 
risk.
    In order to account for the effect that the divestitures proposed 
under the GECC reorganization plan will have on the liquidity needs and 
sources for GECC and the time required to establish the necessary 
monitoring systems, the Board has determined to defer these 
requirements until January 1, 2018.
6. Other Prudential Standards: Restrictions on Intercompany 
Transactions
    Section 165(b)(1)(B) of the Dodd-Frank Act allows the Board to 
establish additional enhanced prudential standards for nonbank 
financial companies supervised by the Board and for bank holding 
companies with assets of $50 billion or more.\66\ The Board proposed to 
apply as an enhanced prudential standard certain restrictions on 
transactions between GECC and its affiliated entities that are not 
under GECC's control. In particular, the Board proposed that GECC 
comply with the

[[Page 44121]]

requirements of section 23B of the Federal Reserve Act and the 
corresponding provisions of Regulation W (subpart F of 12 CFR part 223) 
in all transactions between GECC (or any of its subsidiaries) with any 
other affiliate, as if GECC (or any of its subsidiaries) were a 
``member bank'' and GE (or any of its subsidiaries other than GECC and 
subsidiaries of GECC) were an ``affiliate.'' \67\ This requirement has 
the effect of requiring that all transactions between GECC (or any of 
its subsidiaries) and an affiliate of GECC be on market terms or, if a 
market does not exist for the transaction, on terms that are at least 
as favorable to GECC as those in a transaction between GECC and an 
unaffiliated third party.
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    \66\ 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(1)(B).
    \67\ 12 U.S.C. 371c-1; 12 CFR part 223, subpart F.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    GECC acknowledged that the proposed restriction on affiliate 
transactions was an appropriate safeguard that could protect GECC from 
conflicts of interest and inappropriate transfers of risk from GE to 
GECC. GECC requested, however, that the Board apply those requirements 
only on a prospective basis. GECC argued that retroactive application 
of these requirements to transactions that already exist between GECC 
and GE affiliates would disturb existing contractual relationships, and 
would be time-consuming, costly, and of limited benefit.
    The application of section 23B of the Federal Reserve Act to 
transactions between GECC and its affiliates is designed to enhance the 
safety and soundness of GECC and to reduce the risk of material 
financial distress at GECC by ensuring that GECC is not engaging in 
transactions with affiliates on terms unfavorable to GECC, or in 
transactions that would not have been conducted, but for the 
affiliation between the companies. The Board believes that ensuring the 
long-term safe and sound operation of GECC is served by requiring all 
affiliate transactions to comply with the requirements of section 23B 
of the Federal Reserve Act and the corresponding provisions of 
Regulation W. While the Board recognizes that there could be costs in 
conforming existing arrangements to section 23B, the costs exist only 
to the extent that GE and its affiliates have received terms in 
transactions with GECC that are not at least as favorable to GECC as 
would be available in the marketplace. At the same time, these 
transactions result in GECC providing a subsidy to GE or is affiliates, 
thereby increasing the cost and risk to GECC. Accordingly, the Board 
has determined to require that certain transactions that are 
outstanding between GECC and any of its affiliates on January 1, 2018, 
be conformed to the requirements of section 23B and all transactions 
between GECC and its affiliates initiated on or after that date be in 
conformance with section 23B.
7. Future Standards
    The Board continues to consider whether it would be appropriate to 
develop additional standards for nonbank financial companies supervised 
by the Board and large bank holding companies, and if it proposes to 
adopt additional standards, the Board will do so in a process that 
allows for public participation.\68\
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    \68\ For example, the Board's initial proposed rules to 
implement the requirements of section 165 and 166 of the Dodd-Frank 
Act included single-counterparty credit limits and early remediation 
requirements for the companies covered under sections 165 and 166 of 
the Dodd-Frank Act.
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    As noted above, if the Council rescinds its determination under 
section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Act that GECC should be subject to 
supervision by the Board and enhanced prudential standards, the 
enhanced prudential standards imposed by the Board order will no longer 
apply to GECC. No further action by the Board will be necessary to 
terminate the order's application to GECC or any successor. So long as 
GE or GECC controls a savings association, they are subject to the 
requirements and supervisory standards applicable under the Home 
Owners' Loan Act, as amended.

C. Reporting Requirements

    Section 161(a) of the Dodd-Frank Act authorizes the Board to 
require a nonbank financial company supervised by the Board, and any 
subsidiary thereof, to submit reports to the Board related to the 
financial condition of the company or subsidiary, systems of the 
company or subsidiary for monitoring and controlling financial, 
operating, and other risks, and the extent to which the activities and 
operations of the company or subsidiary pose a threat to the financial 
stability of the United States.\69\ The Board may also require reports 
in order to monitor compliance by the company or subsidiary with the 
requirements of Title I of the Dodd-Frank Act, which includes the 
enhanced prudential standards to which nonbank financial companies are 
subject.\70\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \69\ 12 U.S.C. 5361(a).
    \70\ Id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Pursuant to this authority, the Board proposed to require GECC to 
file the reports identified below. Other than the FR Y-14 series 
reporting forms, the proposed order would have required GECC to file 
each of the reports identified below beginning on July 1, 2015. The 
Board proposed to require GECC to file the FR Y-14A on April 5, 2016, 
and the FR Y-14Q and Y-14M reports as of one calendar year before the 
as-of date of its first supervisory and company-run stress test under 
the Board's stress test rules. In comments on the proposed order, GECC 
requested that, for those subsidiaries that would be unwound or sold as 
part of the divestiture plan, GECC be permitted to defer the quarterly 
and annual reporting of standalone financial statements until the first 
quarter of 2018. As is discussed more fully below, the Board is 
adopting reporting requirements that align with the effective dates of 
the Phase I and Phase II Requirements to support the respective 
standards adopted as part of each phase.
1. Phase I Requirements
    Beginning on January 1, 2016, GECC must file the following reports 
with the Board (in accordance with the timelines set forth in the 
applicable instructions to each reporting form):
    a. FR Y-6 report (Annual Report of Holding Companies);
    b. FR Y-9C report (Consolidated Financial Statements for Holding 
Companies) and FR Y-9LP report (Parent Company Only Financial 
Statements for Large Holding Companies);
    c. FR Y-10 report (Report of Changes in Organizational Structure); 
and
    d. FR Y-11 report and FR Y-11S report (Financial Statements of U.S. 
Nonbank Subsidiaries of U.S. Holding Companies).
    GECC is already filing each of the reports listed above and must 
continue to file each of these reports in accordance with the timelines 
set forth in their respective reporting instructions for as long as 
GECC is supervised by the Board. The Board intends to confer with GECC 
on a case-by-case basis to identify any report schedules that may not 
be necessary for GECC to provide based on its risk profile, structure, 
activities, or other characteristics.\71\ In addition, if

[[Page 44122]]

GECC sells, distributes, or otherwise disposes of any of its 
subsidiaries during the applicable reporting period for a particular 
form, GECC should consult with the appropriate Reserve Bank to 
determine whether it is necessary to submit information regarding the 
subsidiary.
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    \71\ GECC is currently a savings and loan holding company 
supervised by the Board. So long as GECC remains a registered 
savings and loan holding company, GECC continues to be subject to 
all reporting requirements applicable to a savings and loan holding 
company. Consistent with section 161(a)(2) of the Dodd-Frank Act, 
the Board intends to confer with GECC as to whether the information 
requested in the required reports may be available from other 
sources, and, to the extent any reporting requirements overlap, GECC 
will not be subjected to duplicative reporting requirements as both 
a savings and loan holding company and a nonbank financial company 
supervised by the Board. 12 U.S.C. 5361(a)(2). In the event that 
GECC is deregistered as a savings and loan holding company by the 
Board, GECC would still be subject to the reporting requirements 
required in the final order.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The FR Y-6 (Annual Report of Holding Companies) is an annual 
information collection of financial data, an organization chart, 
verification of domestic branch data, and information about certain 
shareholders. The FR Y-9C (Consolidated Financial Statements for 
Holding Companies) and FR Y-9LP (Parent Company Only Financial 
Statements for Large Holding Companies) reports are standardized 
financial statements and consist of consolidated data from filers. The 
FR Y-9LP collects basic financial data on a consolidated, parent-only 
basis in the form of a balance sheet, an income statement, and 
supporting schedules relating to investments, cash flow, and certain 
memoranda items. The FR Y-10 (Report of Changes in Organizational 
Structure) is an event-generated information collection that captures 
changes to a filer's regulated investments and activities. The 
information in this report, in conjunction with the information in the 
FR Y-6, will capture the legal entity structure of GECC. The FR Y-11 
and FR Y-11S (Financial Statements of U.S. Nonbank Subsidiaries of U.S. 
Holding Companies) reports collect financial information for individual 
non-functionally regulated subsidiaries on a quarterly basis. These 
reports consist of a balance sheet and income statement; information on 
changes in equity capital, changes in the allowance for loan and lease 
losses, off-balance-sheet items, and loans; and a memoranda section. 
The information collected through the FR Y-11 and FR Y-11S reports 
serves to identify material legal entities.
    The Board expects to use the information collected through reports 
to monitor the financial condition and activities of GECC. This 
information will also be used by the Board to monitor the extent to 
which the activities and operations of GECC pose a threat to the 
financial stability of the United States and GECC's compliance with the 
requirements of Title I of the Dodd-Frank Act, the enhanced prudential 
standards that are imposed on GECC, and other relevant law. In 
addition, this information will be used to capture the legal entity 
structure of GECC and monitor progress by GECC in implementing its 
divestiture plan. The Board also expects to use this information to 
monitor intercompany transactions.
2. Phase II Requirements
    Except as otherwise noted below, beginning on January 1, 2018, GECC 
must file the following reports with the Board (in accordance with the 
timelines set forth in the applicable instructions to each reporting 
form):
    a. FR Y-14A, FR Y-14Q, and FR Y-14M reports (Capital Assessments 
and Stress Testing);
    b. FR Y-15 report (Banking Organization Systemic Risk Report);
    c. FR 2314 and FR 2314S reports (Financial Statements of Foreign 
Subsidiaries of U.S. Banking Organizations);
    d. FFIEC 009 report (Country Exposure Report) and FFIEC 009a report 
(Country Exposure Information Report); and
    e. FFIEC 102 report (Market Risk Regulatory Report for Institutions 
Subject to the Market Risk Capital Rule).\72\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \72\ GECC would become subject to the FFIEC 102 report in the 
event the company meets the aggregate trading assets and trading 
liabilities threshold for application of the Board's market risk 
capital rule. See 12 CFR 217.201(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Submitted as part of the Board's CCAR and stress testing processes, 
the FR Y-14A, FR Y-14M, and FR Y-14Q (Capital Assessments and Stress 
Testing) reports collect detailed financial information, including 
quantitative projections of balance sheet, income, losses, and capital 
across a range of macroeconomic scenarios and qualitative information 
on methodologies used to develop internal projections of capital across 
scenarios, with certain projections and information collected on a 
semi-annual basis. The FR Y-14A report is an annual collection of 
quantitative projections of balance sheet, income, losses, and capital 
across a range of macroeconomic scenarios and qualitative information 
on methodologies used to develop internal projections of capital across 
scenarios, with certain projections and information collected on a 
semi-annual basis. The FR Y-14M report is a monthly submission that 
comprises three loan- and portfolio-level collections of data 
concerning domestic residential mortgages, domestic home equity loans 
and home equity lines of credit, and domestic credit card loans, and 
one detailed address-matching collection to supplement two of the loan- 
and portfolio-level collections. The FR Y-14Q report is a quarterly 
collection of granular data on various asset classes and pre-provision 
net revenue for the reporting period, including information pertaining 
to securities, retail loans, wholesale loans, mortgage servicing 
rights, regulatory capital instruments, operational risk, and trading, 
private equity, and other fair-value assets. Collectively, the Y-14 
data is used to assess the capital adequacy of filers using forward-
looking projections of revenue and losses, and to support supervisory 
stress test models and continuous monitoring efforts. GECC is required 
to file its first FR Y-14A submission on April 5, 2018, as part of its 
capital plan. In addition, GECC is required to submit its first FR Y-
14Q and Y-14M reports by December 31, 2017, which is one calendar year 
before the as of date of its first supervisory and company-run stress 
test under the Board's stress test rules. The FR Y-15 report (Banking 
Organization Systemic Risk Report) collects consolidated systemic risk 
data. The FR 2314 and FR 2314S (Financial Statements of Foreign 
Subsidiaries of U.S. Banking Organizations) reports collect financial 
information for non-functionally regulated direct or indirect foreign 
subsidiaries on a quarterly or annual basis. The FR 2314 and FR 2314S 
reports consist of a balance sheet and income statement; information on 
changes in equity capital, changes in the allowance for loan and lease 
losses, off-balance-sheet items, and loans; and a memoranda section. 
The FFIEC 009 (Country Exposure Report) and FFIEC 009a (Country 
Exposure Information Report) reports are quarterly information 
collections currently submitted for countries in which GECC has $30 
million or more in claims on residents of foreign countries. The FFIEC 
009 collects detailed information on the distribution, by country, of 
claims on local residents held by GECC. The FFIEC 009a is a supplement 
to the FFIEC 009 that provides specific information about GECC's 
exposures to particular countries. This information may be used to 
analyze the extent to which GECC's credit exposures pose a threat to 
the financial stability of the United States.
    The FFIEC 102 (Market Risk Regulatory Report for Institutions 
Subject to the Market Risk Capital Rule) report is designed to 
implement the reporting requirements for institutions that are subject 
to the federal banking agencies' market risk capital rule under the 
revised capital framework.\73\ The

[[Page 44123]]

reports are quarterly information collections used to assess the 
reasonableness and accuracy of a market risk institution's calculation 
of its minimum capital requirements under the market risk capital rule 
and to evaluate such an institution's capital in relation to its risks. 
Although GECC would not currently be subject to the Board's market risk 
capital rule because it does not meet the applicable aggregate trading 
assets and trading liabilities thresholds, the order requires GECC to 
submit the FFIEC 102 as a Phase II Requirement in order to determine 
whether GECC becomes subject to the Board's market risk capital rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \73\ See 12 CFR part 217, subpart F. The Federal Financial 
Institutions Examination Council (FFIEC) is a formal interagency 
body empowered to prescribe uniform principles, standards, and 
report forms for the federal examination of financial institutions 
by the Board, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the 
National Credit Union Administration, the Office of the Comptroller 
of the Currency, and the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau and to 
make recommendations to promote uniformity in the supervision of 
financial institutions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Board expects to use the information collected in these reports 
to assess GECC's internal assessments of its capital adequacy under a 
stressed scenario, and to conduct the Federal Reserve's supervisory 
stress tests that assess GECC's ability to withstand stress in a manner 
consistent with bank holding companies subject to the Board's capital 
plan and stress testing rules. In addition, this information will be 
used to support ongoing monitoring of changes in GECC's risk profile 
and composition. The data from the reports regarding foreign activities 
will be used to identify current and potential problems at the foreign 
subsidiaries of GECC and to monitor their activities. The information 
collected through these reports also will allow the Federal Reserve and 
GECC to monitor exposures to counterparties, the types of claim being 
reported, and credit derivative exposure.

III. Paperwork Reduction Act

    Certain provisions of the Board's final order contain ``collection 
of information'' requirements within the meaning of the Paperwork 
Reduction Act (PRA) of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-3521). In accordance with 
the requirements of the PRA, the Board may not conduct or sponsor, and 
a respondent is not required to respond to, an information collection 
unless it displays a currently valid Office of Management and Budget 
(OMB) control number. The Board reviewed the final order under the 
authority delegated to the Board by OMB. The Board received no comments 
on the PRA section of the proposed order.
    The final order contains reporting requirements subject to the PRA 
and would require GECC to submit the following reporting forms in the 
same manner as a bank holding company:
    (1) Country Exposure Report and Country Exposure Information Report 
(FFIEC 009 and FFIEC 009a; OMB No. 7100-0035);
    (2) Market Risk Regulatory Report for Institutions Subject to the 
Market Risk Capital Rule (FFIEC 102; OMB No. 7100-0365);
    (3) Financial Statements of Foreign Subsidiaries of U.S. Banking 
Organizations; and Abbreviated Financial Statements of Foreign 
Subsidiaries of U.S. Banking Organizations (FR 2314 and FR 2314S; OMB 
No. 7100-0073);
    (4) Annual Report of Holding Companies (FR Y-6; OMB No. 7100-0297);
    (5) Consolidated Financial Statements for Holding Companies (FR Y-
9C; OMB No. 7100-0128);
    (6) Parent Company Only Financial Statements for Large Holding 
Companies (FR Y-9LP; OMB No. 7100-0128);
    (7) Report of Changes in Organizational Structure (FR Y-10; OMB No. 
7100-0297);
    (8) Financial Statements of U.S. Nonbank Subsidiaries of U.S. 
Holding Companies; and Abbreviated Financial Statements of U.S. Nonbank 
Subsidiaries of U.S. Holding Companies (FR Y-11 and FR Y-11S; OMB No. 
7100-0244);
    (9) Capital Assessments and Stress Testing (FR Y-14A, FR Y-14M, and 
FR Y-14Q; OMB No. 7100-0341); and
    (10) Banking Organization Systemic Risk Report (FR Y-15; OMB No. 
7100-0352).
    The final order contains reporting, recordkeeping, or disclosure 
requirements subject to the PRA and would require GECC to comply with 
the following information collections in the same manner as a bank 
holding company:
    (1) Funding and Liquidity Risk Management Guidance (FR 4198; OMB 
No. 7100-0326). See the Enhanced Prudential Standards for Bank Holding 
Companies and Foreign Banking Organizations final rule (79 FR 17239) 
published on March 27, 2014.
    (2) Risk-Based Capital Standards: Advanced Capital Adequacy 
Framework Information Collection (FR 4200; OMB No. 7100-0313). See the 
Regulatory Capital Rules final rule (78 FR 62017) published on October 
11, 2013, and the Regulatory Capital Rules final rule (79 FR 57725) 
published on September 26, 2014.
    (3) Risk-Based Capital Guidelines: Market Risk (FR 4201; OMB No. 
7100-0314). See the Regulatory Capital Rules final rule (78 FR 62017) 
published on October 11, 2013.
    (4) Recordkeeping and Reporting Requirements Associated with 
Regulation Y (Capital Plans) (Reg. Y-13; OMB No. 7100-0342). See the 
Capital Plans final rule (76 FR 74631) published on December 1, 2011, 
the Supervisory and Company-Run Stress Test Requirements for Covered 
Companies final rule (77 FR 62377) published on October 12, 2012, and 
the Capital Plan and Stress Test Rules final rule (79 FR 64025) 
published on October 27, 2014.
    (5) Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements Associated with 
Regulation WW (Liquidity Coverage Ratio: Liquidity Risk Measurement, 
Standards, and Monitoring) (Reg. WW; OMB No. 7100-0367). See the 
Liquidity Coverage Ratio final rule (79 FR 61439) published on October 
10, 2014.
    (6) Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Disclosure Requirements 
Associated with Regulation YY (Enhanced Prudential Standards) (Reg. YY; 
OMB No. 7100-0350). See the Supervisory and Company-Run Stress Test 
Requirements for Covered Companies final rule (77 FR 62377) published 
on October 12, 2012, and the Enhanced Prudential Standards for Bank 
Holding Companies and Foreign Banking Organizations final rule (79 FR 
17239) published on March 27, 2014.
    The Board has a continuing interest in the public's opinions of 
collections of information. At any time, comments regarding the burden 
estimate, or any other aspect of this collection of information, 
including suggestions for reducing the burden, may be sent to: 
Secretary, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 20th and C 
Streets NW., Washington, DC 20551; and to the Office of Management and 
Budget, Paperwork Reduction Project, Washington, DC 20503.

IV. Final Order

FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM

General Electric Capital Corporation Norwalk, Connecticut
Order Imposing Enhanced Prudential Standards and Reporting Requirements

I. Background

    In July 2013, the Financial Stability Oversight Council (Council) 
determined that material financial distress at General Electric Capital 
Corporation (GECC) could pose a threat to U.S. financial stability and 
that GECC should be subject to supervision by the Board of Governors of 
the Federal Reserve

[[Page 44124]]

System (Board) and to enhanced prudential standards.\1\ The Council's 
basis for its final determination noted GECC's interconnections with 
financial intermediaries through its financing activities and its 
funding model as well as a large portfolio of on-balance-sheet assets 
comparable to those of the largest U.S. bank holding companies. In 
particular, the Council noted GECC's significant use of wholesale 
funding, including short-term wholesale funding (commercial paper), and 
use of long-term debt and securitization debt, which could expose other 
large financial institutions to GECC's distress, among other reasons 
for its determination.\2\ GECC became subject to the Board's 
supervision immediately upon the Council's final determination.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \1\ Financial Stability Oversight Council, Basis of the 
Financial Stability Oversight Council's Final Determination 
Regarding General Electric Capital Corporation, Inc. (July 8, 2013) 
(GECC Determination). The GECC Determination did not conclude that 
GECC was experiencing material financial distress. Rather, 
consistent with the statutory standard for determinations by the 
Council under section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Act, the Council 
determined that material financial distress at GECC, if it were to 
occur, could pose a threat to U.S. financial stability.
    \2\ Id., at pp. 2, 6-8.
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    Since July 2013, the Board's supervisory program for GECC has been 
based on previously published supervisory guidance for consolidated 
supervision of large financial institutions (SR 12-17).\3\ The SR 12-17 
framework provides core areas of focus (capital, liquidity, governance, 
and recovery and resolution) and supervisory expectations that enhance 
the resiliency of large financial institutions and reduce the impact on 
the financial system and the broader economy of a large financial 
institution's failure or material financial distress. Consistent with 
the SR 12-17 framework, the supervision of GECC has focused on capital 
and liquidity planning and positions, corporate governance, recovery 
planning, and resolution planning. The Board also maintains a GECC-
dedicated supervisory team that regularly meets with senior management 
and the boards of directors of General Electric Company (GE) and GECC, 
reviews management information systems, and engages in a broad range of 
continuous monitoring efforts.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \3\ See Supervision and Regulation Letter 12-17, Consolidated 
Supervision Framework for Large Financial Institutions (December 12, 
2012) (SR 12-17), available at: http://www.federalreserve.gov/bankinforeg/srletters/sr1217.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In April 2015, GE and GECC announced plans to sell or otherwise 
distribute much of GECC's commercial lending and leasing operations and 
all of its consumer lending businesses, including the entirety of its 
U.S. depository institution operations. GECC plans to retain only those 
businesses directly related to GE's core industrial businesses.\4\ The 
divestitures are subject to a detailed plan with a definitive timeline. 
GECC has begun executing the plan and has made demonstrable progress. 
GE also announced an intent to further reduce GECC's use of commercial 
paper to $5 billion by the end of 2015 and amended its income 
maintenance agreement with GECC to guarantee all tradable senior and 
subordinated debt securities and all commercial paper issued or 
guaranteed by GECC.\5\ The Board is closely monitoring the asset sales 
and other proposed changes under the divestiture and reorganization 
plans and any impact they may have on GECC's systemic footprint and the 
Board's supervision of GECC and its subsidiaries.
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    \4\ GE Press Release, April 10, 2014 (GE Announcement), 
available at: http://www.genewsroom.com/press-releases/ge-create-simpler-more-valuable-industrial-company-selling-most-ge-capital-assets.
    \5\ Id.
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    Related to the divestiture plan and other announced changes, GECC 
has indicated that it will seek rescission of the Council's designation 
in 2016. In light of the reorganization plan currently underway at GECC 
and the amount of resources and systems necessary to implement enhanced 
prudential standards, the Board is implementing the enhanced prudential 
standards in two phases--Phase I and Phase II.
    In Phase I, beginning January 1, 2016, in order to ensure that GECC 
has adequate capital and liquidity to support its current operations 
and mitigate the risk to financial stability that may occur if GECC 
were to experience material financial distress while implementing its 
divestiture plan, GECC shall comply with certain capital, liquidity, 
and reporting standards (Phase I Requirements). The Phase I 
Requirements require GECC to comply with the standardized risk-based 
capital requirements and the balance-sheet leverage requirement in the 
Board's regulatory capital framework, as described further below, as 
well as with the liquidity coverage ratio rule (LCR rule) applicable to 
bank holding companies with $250 billion or more in total consolidated 
assets or $10 billion or more in on-balance-sheet foreign exposures 
(advanced approaches banking organizations). GECC is also required to 
file certain reports that support the Phase I Requirements and the 
Board's supervision of GECC.
    In Phase II, beginning January 1, 2018, GECC shall comply with 
certain additional standards, including risk management, capital, 
capital planning, stress testing, liquidity risk management, and 
restrictions on intercompany transactions (Phase II Requirements). GECC 
is required to file certain additional reports with the Board, 
generally beginning January 1, 2018, that support the Phase II 
requirements.

II. Enhanced prudential standards

a. Phase I Requirements

    GECC shall comply with the following requirements beginning January 
1, 2016.

Capital

    To ensure that GECC continues to maintain sufficient capital and 
has internal processes for assessing its capital adequacy that 
appropriately account for the company's risks, GECC shall comply with 
the Board's capital framework, set forth in 12 CFR part 217 (Regulation 
Q), including the deductions required under 12 CFR 248.12, as 
applicable, as if GECC were a bank holding company that calculates 
risk-weighted assets solely under the standardized approach (subpart D 
to 12 CFR part 217), including the leverage ratio in 12 CFR 
217.10(b)(4).
    At this time, GECC's activities, risk profile, and balance sheet 
are similar to those of large bank holding companies supervised by the 
Board. Accordingly, requiring GECC to comply with the Board's 
Regulation Q will help ensure that GECC holds capital that is 
commensurate with its risk profile and activities, can meet its 
obligations to creditors and other counterparties, can continue to 
serve as a financial intermediary through periods of financial and 
economic stress, and meets capital standards that help prevent or 
mitigate the risk to U.S. financial stability that could arise from the 
material financial distress or failure of GECC.

Liquidity

    To ensure that GECC maintains sufficient liquidity to absorb shocks 
it may experience under stress, GECC shall comply with the LCR rule, 
set forth in 12 CFR part 249, as a covered nonbank company (as that 
term is defined in 12 CFR 249.3), pursuant to 12 CFR 249.1(b)(1)(iv) 
and 12 CFR 249.3, subject to the transition periods set forth under 12 
CFR 249.50(b). GECC shall calculate and maintain an LCR of at least 90 
percent from January 1, 2016, to December 31, 2016, and calculate and

[[Page 44125]]

maintain an LCR of at least 100 percent thereafter. Until January 1, 
2018, GECC may calculate its LCR monthly on each calculation date that 
is the last business day of the applicable calendar month, after which 
time it must calculate its LCR daily.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \6\ See 12 CFR part 249.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The application of the LCR rule to GECC will help promote the 
resilience of the short-term liquidity risk profile of GECC, thereby 
improving its ability to measure and manage liquidity risk and to 
absorb shocks arising from financial and economic stress. Because the 
LCR rule applies cash outflow and inflow rates that are based on the 
particular risk profile and activities of companies like GECC, the LCR 
requirements are tailored to and appropriate for GECC's activities, 
balance sheet, and risk profile. The application of the LCR rule will 
help ensure that GECC holds a sufficient amount of high-quality liquid 
assets based on its activities to meet its net cash outflows over a 30-
calendar-day stress period.

b. Phase II Requirements

    GECC shall comply with the following requirements beginning January 
1, 2018, except as may be otherwise noted below.

Risk-Management and Risk-Committee Standards

    To reduce the likelihood of GECC experiencing material financial 
distress and to promote financial stability, beginning January 1, 2018, 
GECC shall comply with the risk-committee and risk-management standards 
under section 252.33 of the Board's Regulation YY as though it were a 
bank holding company with $50 billion or more in total consolidated 
assets.\7\ In addition, beginning January 1, 2018, GECC shall comply 
with the following additional risk-management standards: (1) GECC must 
maintain a board of directors with a majority of directors who do not 
hold management positions at either GE or GECC (independent directors); 
(2) the chair of GECC's board of directors must be an independent 
director; and (3) all members of the risk committee of the GECC board 
of directors, established pursuant to Regulation YY, must be 
independent directors. The risk-management standards in Regulation YY 
require a company subject to its provisions to implement a risk-
management framework that is commensurate with the company's capital 
structure, risk profile, complexity, activities, size, and other 
appropriate risk-related factors, and GECC is expected to tailor its 
risk-management framework accordingly.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \7\ 12 CFR 252.33.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Application of the risk-management standards in Regulation YY and 
the risk-management guidance and supervisory expectations for nonbank 
financial companies supervised by the Board \8\ will strengthen GECC's 
ability to prevent and respond to material distress or failure and 
promote financial stability. The additional measures related to GECC's 
board of directors and risk committee will help ensure that GECC's 
independent directors are able to focus appropriate attention on the 
unique businesses and complexities of GECC, that GECC's operations are 
safe and sound, and that perspectives of qualified individuals 
independent of the management of GE and GECC have a strong voice in the 
governance of GECC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \8\ See SR 12-17, supra note 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Risk-Based and Leverage Capital

    Beginning January 1, 2018, GECC shall comply with the Board's 
capital framework, set forth in Regulation Q, including the deductions 
required under 12 CFR 248.12, as applicable, as if GECC were a bank 
holding company that is an advanced approaches Board-regulated 
institution and a covered BHC (as each term is defined under 12 CFR 
217.2); provided, however, that notwithstanding 12 CFR 217.100(b), GECC 
is not required to comply with subpart E of 12 CFR part 217 or to 
calculate an advanced measure for market risk under 12 CFR 217.204.\9\ 
To strengthen GECC's ability to remain a going concern during times of 
stress and to minimize the likelihood that distress at GECC would 
contribute to financial instability, GECC shall maintain a 
supplementary leverage ratio in excess of 4 percent (eSLR) in order to 
avoid restrictions on capital distributions and discretionary bonus 
payments to executive officers.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \9\ Pursuant to Regulation Q, GECC's computation of capital 
shall take into account any off-balance-sheet activities of the 
company. See 12 CFR 217.10 and 217.33; see also 12 U.S.C. 5365(k).
    \10\ 12 CFR 217.11(a)(2)(v).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The enhanced capital framework adopted for advanced approaches bank 
holding companies, including the requirement to recognize most elements 
of accumulated other comprehensive income in regulatory capital, is an 
appropriate capital framework for GECC because of the similarities in 
its activities, size, risk, and exposures to those of large bank 
holding companies. The 4 percent eSLR is intended to reflect GECC's 
smaller systemic footprint compared to other banking organizations 
subject to a 5 percent eSLR, while still minimizing leverage at GECC 
and reducing the likelihood that problems at GECC would cause it to 
fail in a manner that affects financial stability. The maintenance of a 
strong base of capital by GECC is particularly important because a 
capital shortfall has the potential to result in significant adverse 
economic consequences and to contribute to systemic distress.

Capital Planning

    For the capital plan cycle beginning January 1, 2018, GECC shall 
comply with the capital plan rule set forth in 12 CFR 225.8 (capital 
plan rule) as a nonbank financial company supervised by the Board (as 
that term is defined in 12 CFR 225.8(d)(9)), pursuant to 12 CFR 
225.8(b)(1)(iv).
    The recent financial crisis highlighted a need for certain 
financial institutions, such as GECC, to incorporate into their capital 
planning forward-looking assessments of capital adequacy under stressed 
conditions. The capital plan rule will help ensure that GECC has robust 
systems and processes that incorporate forward-looking projections of 
revenue and losses to monitor and maintain its internal capital 
adequacy.
    The capital plan rule requires GECC to submit an annual capital 
plan to the Board describing its planned capital actions and 
demonstrating its ability to meet a 5 percent tier 1 common capital 
ratio and to maintain capital ratios above the Board's minimum 
regulatory capital requirements under both baseline and stressed 
conditions over a forward-looking planning horizon.\11\ GECC's capital 
plan must include an assessment of the company's sources and expected 
uses of capital that reflects the size, complexity, risk profile, and 
scope of operations, assuming both expected and stressed conditions. In 
addition, GECC must describe its process for assessing capital adequacy 
and its capital policy and must provide a discussion of any expected 
changes to the company's business plan that are likely to have a 
material impact on its capital adequacy.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \11\ See 12 CFR 225.8.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Under the capital plan rule, the Board will annually evaluate 
GECC's capital adequacy and capital planning practices and the 
comprehensiveness of the capital plan, including the strength of the 
underlying analysis. The Comprehensive Capital Analysis and Review 
(CCAR) is the Board's supervisory process for reviewing capital plans 
submitted by companies under the capital plan rule. As part of CCAR, 
the Board conducts a quantitative assessment of each company's capital 
adequacy under an

[[Page 44126]]

assumption of stressed conditions and conducts a qualitative assessment 
of the company's internal capital planning practices, each of which can 
provide a basis on which the Board may object to a company's capital 
plan.
    The Federal Reserve conducts its quantitative assessment of a 
company's capital plan based on the supervisory stress test conducted 
under the Board's rules implementing the stress tests required under 
the Dodd-Frank Act combined with the company's planned capital actions 
under the baseline scenario. This assessment will help determine 
whether GECC would be capable of meeting supervisory expectations for 
its regulatory capital ratios even if stressed conditions emerge and 
the company does not reduce planned capital distributions. The Board 
will evaluate GECC's risk-identification, risk-measurement, and risk-
management practices supporting the capital planning process, including 
estimation practices used to produce stressed loss, revenue, and 
capital ratios, as well as the governance and controls around these 
practices. In reviewing GECC's capital plan, the Board will consider 
the comprehensiveness of the capital plan, the reasonableness of the 
company's assumptions and analysis underlying the capital plan, and the 
company's methodologies for reviewing the robustness of its capital 
adequacy process.

Stress Testing

    To ensure that GECC develops the necessary systems and processes to 
evaluate its capital adequacy on an ongoing basis, starting with the 
stress testing cycle beginning on January 1, 2019, GECC shall comply 
with the stress testing requirements set forth in subparts E and F of 
Regulation YY (12 CFR part 252, subparts E and F) (together, the stress 
test rules) as a nonbank financial company supervised by the Board (as 
that term is defined in 12 CFR 252.42(i) and 252.52(j), respectively), 
pursuant to 12 CFR 252.43(a)(1)(iii) and 12 CFR 252.53(a)(1)(iii).
    The Board is applying its stress test rules to GECC in the same 
manner that it applies them to large bank holding companies due to the 
similarity in activities, risk profiles, and balance sheets between 
GECC and large bank holding companies. Moreover, because the Board's 
supervisory stress tests are conducted on the basis of standardized 
scenarios and capital assumptions, application of the Board's stress 
test rules to GECC allows the Board to compare GECC's capital adequacy 
against that of large bank holding companies that have comparable 
activities, risk profiles, and balance sheets. The stress tests 
conducted under the Board's stress test rules are complementary to the 
Board's review of GECC's capital plan in CCAR.

Liquidity

    Beginning January 1, 2018, GECC shall comply with the liquidity 
requirements, set forth in sections 252.34 and 252.35 of the Board's 
Regulation YY,\12\ as though it were a bank holding company with $50 
billion or more in total consolidated assets. GECC shall also comply 
with the Board's supervisory guidance on funding and liquidity risk 
management (SR 10-6).\13\ The liquidity risk management and stress 
testing requirements of Regulation YY complement the LCR requirements 
and require a company subject to its provisions to tailor compliance to 
the company's size, complexity, structure, risk profile, and 
activities. In complying with Regulation YY, GECC is expected to tailor 
its liquidity risk-management framework to suit the organization's 
structure. Additionally, as discussed above, GECC will be required to 
calculate its LCR daily beginning January 1, 2018.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \12\ 12 CFR 252.34 and 252.35.
    \13\ Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Division 
of Banking Supervision and Regulation (2010), ``Interagency Policy 
Statement on Funding and Liquidity Risk Management,'' Supervision 
and Regulation Letter SR 10-6 (March 17, 2010); 75 FR 13656 (March 
22, 2010); available at: http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/srletters/2010/sr1006.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    GECC, like a large bank holding company, is primarily a lender and 
lessor to commercial entities and consumers and is substantially 
involved in the provision of credit in the United States. Similar to 
large bank holding companies, GECC is also an active participant in the 
capital markets and relies on wholesale funding, such as commercial 
paper, exposing the company to liquidity risks. The Board is requiring 
GECC to manage its liquidity in a manner that is comparable to a bank 
holding company subject to the LCR rule, Regulation YY, and SR 10-6 to 
ensure that GECC has sufficient liquidity to meet outflows during a 
period of significant financial stress, to improve its ability to 
withstand financial and economic stress, and to mitigate the potential 
adverse effects on other financial firms and markets.\14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \14\ See 12 CFR 252.34 and 252.35.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Restrictions on Intercompany Transactions

    Beginning January 1, 2018, GECC shall comply with the requirements 
of section 23B of the Federal Reserve Act and the corresponding 
provisions of Regulation W (12 CFR part 223, subpart F) \15\ as if GECC 
(or any of its subsidiaries) were a member bank and GE (or any of its 
subsidiaries other than GECC and subsidiaries of GECC) were an 
affiliate (as each term is defined in section 23B of the Federal 
Reserve Act and Regulation W) for all transactions:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \15\ 12 U.S.C. 371c-1; 12 CFR part 223, subpart F.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    1. Described in 12 U.S.C. 371c(b)(7)(A) or (E) that existed prior 
to January 1, 2018, and remain outstanding on or after January 1, 2018; 
and
    2. Described in 12 U.S.C. 371c-1(a)(2) that occur on or after 
January 1, 2018.
    This standard does not apply to any transaction between GECC and 
any person unaffiliated with GECC involving proceeds that are used for 
the benefit of, or transferred to, an affiliate of GECC, which would 
otherwise be a covered transaction under section 23A(a)(2) of the 
Federal Reserve Act and section 223.16 of Regulation W.\16\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \16\ 12 U.S.C. 371c(a)(2); 12 CFR 223.16.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Future Standards

    Nothing in this order limits the Board's authority to impose 
additional enhanced prudential standards on GECC in the future. The 
Board reserves the right to modify or supplement these standards, if 
appropriate, to ensure the safe and sound operation of GECC or to 
promote financial stability.

c. Reporting \17\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \17\ Reporting requirements are adopted pursuant to section 
161(a) of the Dodd-Frank Act. 12 U.S.C. 5361(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Phase I Requirements

    Beginning on January 1, 2016, GECC shall file the following reports 
with the Board (in accordance with the timelines set forth in the 
applicable instructions to each reporting form):
    a. FR Y-6 report (Annual Report of Holding Companies);
    b. FR Y-9C report (Consolidated Financial Statements for Holding 
Companies) and FR Y-9LP report (Parent Company Only Financial 
Statements for Large Holding Companies);
    c. FR Y-10 report (Report of Changes in Organizational Structure); 
and
    d. FR Y-11 and FR Y-11S reports (Financial Statements of U.S. 
Nonbank Subsidiaries of U.S. Holding Companies).

Phase II Requirements

    Except as otherwise noted below, beginning on January 1, 2018, GECC 
shall file the following reports with the Board (in accordance with the 
timelines

[[Page 44127]]

set forth in the applicable instructions to each reporting form):
    a. FR Y-14A, FR Y-14Q, and FR Y-14M reports (Capital Assessments 
and Stress Testing);
    b. FR Y-15 report (Banking Organization Systemic Risk Report);
    c. FR 2314 and FR 2314S reports (Financial Statements of Foreign 
Subsidiaries of U.S. Banking Organizations);
    d. FFIEC 009 report (Country Exposure Report) and FFIEC 009a report 
(Country Exposure Information Report); and
    e. FFIEC 102 report (Market Risk Regulatory Report for Institutions 
Subject to the Market Risk Capital Rule).\18\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \18\ GECC shall become subject to the FFIEC 102 report in the 
event the company meets the aggregate trading assets and trading 
liabilities threshold for application of the Board's market risk 
capital rule. See 12 CFR 217.201(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The FR Y-14Q and Y-14M reports support the stress testing standard 
and must be filed by December 31, 2017. Likewise the FR Y-14A report 
supports capital planning and must be filed by April 5, 2018, as part 
of the capital plan.
    The Board intends to confer with GECC to determine whether GECC 
should modify any reporting schedules that may not be necessary for 
GECC to provide, based on its profile, structure, activities, risks, or 
other characteristics. In addition, if GECC sells, distributes, or 
otherwise disposes of any of its subsidiaries during the applicable 
reporting period for a particular form, GECC should consult with the 
Reserve Bank to determine whether it is necessary to submit information 
regarding the subsidiary.

III. Other requirements

    GECC remains subject to a number of other statutory and regulatory 
requirements and the Board's existing supervisory framework, 
notwithstanding the application of enhanced prudential standards 
implemented through this order pursuant to section 165 of the Dodd-
Frank Act. Nothing in this order limits the applicability of those 
requirements, rules, and authorities. These other requirements include, 
but are not limited to, the following matters:

Examinations

    Pursuant to section 161(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act, the Board has 
examination authority over nonbank financial companies supervised by 
the Board, including GECC.\19\ This examination authority is to inform 
the Board of (A) the nature of the operations and financial condition 
of the company and its subsidiaries; (B) the financial, operational, 
and other risks of the company and its subsidiaries that may pose a 
threat to the safety and soundness of the company or its subsidiaries 
or to the financial stability of the United States; (C) the systems for 
monitoring and controlling such risk; and (D) compliance by the company 
or its subsidiaries with Title I of the Dodd-Frank Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \19\ 12 U.S.C. 5361(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Resolution Planning

    Pursuant to section 165(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act, all nonbank 
financial companies supervised by the Board shall report periodically 
to the Board the plan of such company for rapid and orderly resolution 
in the event of material financial distress or failure (Resolution 
Plan).\20\ As a nonbank financial company supervised by the Board, GECC 
is required to submit a Resolution Plan for review by the Board and the 
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC).\21\ The Resolution Plan 
must describe GECC's strategy for rapid and orderly resolution under 
the U.S. bankruptcy code in the event of material financial distress or 
failure of the company.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \20\ 12 U.S.C. 5365(d). See 12 CFR part 243.
    \21\ GECC was required to submit its initial Resolution Plan to 
the Board by July 1, 2014, and did so. GECC must file subsequent 
Resolution Plan submissions by December 31 of each year. The Board 
anticipates providing feedback and guidance to GECC prior to the 
submission of its next Resolution Plan.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Single-Counterparty Credit Limits

    Pursuant to section 165(e) of the Dodd-Frank Act, the Board has 
proposed standards that limit single-counterparty credit exposure.\22\ 
The Board continues to develop single-counterparty credit limits and 
will in the future prescribe limits that may apply to GECC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \22\ 12 U.S.C. 5365(e). See 77 FR 594, 612 (January 5, 2012) 
(proposing single-counterparty credit limits pursuant to section 
165(e) of the Dodd-Frank Act); 79 FR 17240, 17243 (March 27, 2014) 
(indicating that the Board continues to study and develop single-
counterparty credit limits). The Board has previously indicated that 
it will coordinate development of credit exposure reports pursuant 
to section 165(d)(2) of the Dodd-Frank Act, 12 U.S.C. 5365(d)(2), 
with the single-counterparty credit exposure limits. See 76 FR 
67323, 67327 (November 1, 2011).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Acquisitions of Financial Companies

    Pursuant to section 163(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act, nonbank financial 
companies supervised by the Board, including GECC, shall not acquire 
direct or indirect ownership or control of any voting shares of any 
company (other than an insured depository institution) that is engaged 
in activities described in section 4(k) of the BHC Act having total 
consolidated assets of $10 billion or more without providing prior 
written notice to the Board.\23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \23\ 12 U.S.C. 5363(b). Pursuant to section 163(b)(2) of the 
Dodd-Frank Act, the prior-notice requirement does not apply to the 
acquisition of shares that would qualify for the exemptions in 
section 4(c) or section 4(k)(4)(E) of the BHC Act. See 12 U.S.C. 
5363(b)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Concentration Limits on Large Financial Companies

    Pursuant to section 622 of the Dodd-Frank Act (which amended the 
Bank Holding Company Act of 1956 (BHC Act) to add a new section 14), 
GECC is prohibited from merging or consolidating with, or acquiring, 
another company if the resulting company's liabilities upon 
consummation would exceed 10 percent of the aggregate liabilities of 
all financial companies.\24\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \24\ See 12 U.S.C. 1852; see also 12 CFR part 251 (the Board's 
regulation implementing section 622 of the Dodd-Frank Act and 
section 14 of the BHC Act).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Supervisory Letter SR 12-17 (Consolidated Supervision Framework for 
Large Financial Institutions)

    GECC remains subject to the Board's risk-management guidance and 
supervisory expectations for nonbank financial companies, which include 
expectations concerning capital and liquidity planning, corporate 
governance, recovery planning, management of core business lines, and 
resolution planning.\25\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \25\ SR 12-17, supra note 3.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

IV. Applicability

    All references to GECC in this order include any successor to GECC, 
and if GECC is succeeded by or replaced with another company controlled 
by GE this order shall apply to that company. No further action by the 
Board will be necessary to apply these enhanced prudential standards or 
any of the Board's other statutory authorities and powers related to 
the Board's supervision of GECC to that company.
    If the Council rescinds its determination under section 113 of the 
Dodd-Frank Act that GECC should be subject to supervision by the Board 
and to enhanced prudential standards, this order shall no longer apply 
to GECC. No further action by the Board will be necessary to terminate 
the order's application to GECC (or any successor).

    By order of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve 
System,\26\ effective July __, 2015.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \26\ Voting for the action: [ ].
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Robert deV. Frierson

Secretary of the Board

[[Page 44128]]


    By order of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve 
System, July 20, 2015.
Robert deV. Frierson,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 2015-18124 Filed 7-23-15; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE 6210-01-P



                                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 142 / Friday, July 24, 2015 / Notices                                               44111

                                                    prices. Do consumers have sufficient                       D All hand-delivered or messenger-                  the Council, adopt enhanced prudential
                                                    information to easily compare video                      delivered paper filings for the                       standards for the firm that help prevent
                                                    services and price offerings? What do                    Commission’s Secretary must be                        or mitigate risks to the financial stability
                                                    consumers value most when choosing                       delivered to FCC Headquarters at 445                  of the United States that could arise
                                                    between and among MVPDs, broadcast                       12th Street SW., Room TW–A325,                        from the material financial distress or
                                                    stations, and OVDs? What reasons do                      Washington, DC 20554. The filing hours                failure of the firm. This final order
                                                    consumers give for switching from                        are 8:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. All hand                   establishes these enhanced prudential
                                                    MVPD services to reliance on OVDs                        deliveries must be held together with                 standards for GECC. In light of the
                                                    and/or over-the-air services (e.g., price,               rubber bands or fasteners. Any                        substantial similarity of GECC’s
                                                    programming)?                                            envelopes must be disposed of before                  activities and risk profile to that of a
                                                                                                             entering the building.                                similarly sized bank holding company,
                                                    IV. Additional Issues                                      D Commercial overnight mail (other                  the enhanced prudential standards
                                                       42. With this Notice, we seek data,                   than U.S. Postal Service Express Mail                 adopted by the Board are similar to
                                                    information, and comment on a wide                       and Priority Mail) must be sent to 9300               those that apply to large bank holding
                                                    range of issues in order to report on the                East Hampton Drive, Capitol Heights,                  companies, including capital
                                                    status of competition in the market for                  MD 20743.                                             requirements; capital-planning and
                                                    the delivery of video programming. To                      D U.S. Postal Service first-class,                  stress-testing requirements; liquidity
                                                    make the 17th Report as useful as                        Express, and Priority mail must be                    requirements; risk-management and
                                                    possible, are there other issues,                        addressed to 445 12th Street SW.,                     risk-committee requirements; and
                                                    additional information, or data we                       Washington, DC 20554.                                 reporting requirements. The Board has
                                                    should include in the report? In the                       D People with Disabilities: Contact the             tailored these standards to reflect
                                                    interest of streamlining the report, we                  FCC to request materials in accessible                GECC’s risk profile and its ongoing plan
                                                    request comment on issues, information,                  formats for people with disabilities                  to divest certain assets and business
                                                    and data that could be modified or                       (braille, large print, electronic files,              lines and reorganize its operations. The
                                                    eliminated without impairing the value                   audio format), send an email to fcc504@               Board has also deferred application of
                                                    of the 17th Report to Congress on the                    fcc.gov or call the Consumer &                        the enhanced capital, liquidity,
                                                    status of competition in the marketplace                 Governmental Affairs Bureau at 202–                   governance, and reporting provisions
                                                    for the delivery of video programming.                   418–0530 (voice), 202–418–0432 (TTY).                 until January 1, 2018.
                                                                                                               47. For further information about this              DATES: The final order is effective in two
                                                    Procedural Matters                                       Notice, please contact Dan Bring at (202)             phases. Phase I Requirements, as
                                                       43. Ex Parte Rules. There are no ex                   418–2164, danny.bring@fcc.gov, or                     described more fully below, are effective
                                                    parte or disclosure requirements                         Marcia Glauberman at (202) 418–7046,                  on January 1, 2016. Phase II
                                                    applicable to this proceeding pursuant                   marcia.glauberman@fcc.gov.                            Requirements, as described more fully
                                                    to 47 CFR 1.204(b)(1).                                   Federal Communications Commission.                    below, are effective on January 1, 2018,
                                                       44. Comment Information. Pursuant to                  Thomas Horan,                                         unless otherwise noted.
                                                    §§ 1.415 and 1.419 of the Commission’s                   Chief of Staff.                                       FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Ann
                                                    rules, 47 CFR 1.415 and 1.419,                           [FR Doc. 2015–18215 Filed 7–23–15; 8:45 am]           Misback, Associate Director, (202) 452–
                                                    interested parties may file comments                                                                           3799, Jyoti Kohli, Senior Supervisory
                                                                                                             BILLING CODE 6712–01–P
                                                    and reply comments on or before the                                                                            Financial Analyst, (202) 452–2539, or
                                                    dates indicated on the first page of this                                                                      Elizabeth MacDonald, Senior
                                                    document. Comments may be filed                                                                                Supervisory Financial Analyst, (202)
                                                    using the Commission’s Electronic                        FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
                                                                                                                                                                   475–6316, Division of Banking
                                                    Comment Filing System (ECFS). See                        [Docket No. R–1503]                                   Supervision and Regulation; or Laurie
                                                    Electronic Filing of Documents in                                                                              Schaffer, Associate General Counsel,
                                                    Rulemaking Proceedings, 63 FR 24121                      Application of Enhanced Prudential                    (202) 452–2277, Tate Wilson, Counsel,
                                                    (1998). All filings concerning matters                   Standards and Reporting                               (202) 452–3696, or Dan Hickman,
                                                    referenced in this document should                       Requirements to General Electric                      Attorney, (202) 973–7432, Legal
                                                    refer to MB Docket No. 12–203.                           Capital Corporation                                   Division.
                                                       45. Electronic Filers: Comments may                   AGENCY:  Board of Governors of the                    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                                                    be filed electronically using the Internet               Federal Reserve System.
                                                    by accessing the ECFS: http://                                                                                 Table of Contents
                                                                                                             ACTION: Final order applying enhanced
                                                    fjallfoss.fcc.gov/ecfs2/.                                prudential standards and reporting                    I. Introduction
                                                       46. Paper Filers: Parties who choose                  requirements to General Electric Capital              II. Framework for Supervision of GECC and
                                                    to file by paper must file an original and               Corporation.                                                Enhanced Prudential Standards
                                                    one copy of each filing. If more than one                                                                         A. Phase I Requirements
                                                    docket or rulemaking number appears in                   SUMMARY:   General Electric Capital                      1. Capital Requirements
                                                    the caption of this proceeding, filers                                                                            2. Liquidity Requirements
                                                                                                             Corporation (GECC) is a nonbank                          B. Phase II Requirements
                                                    must submit two additional copies for                    financial company that the Financial                     1. Risk-Management and Risk Committee
                                                    each additional docket or rulemaking                     Stability Oversight Council (Council)                       Requirements
                                                    number.                                                  has designated under section 113 of the
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                                                                                                                                      2. Capital Requirements—Additional Risk-
                                                       Filings can be sent by hand or                        Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and                           Based and Leverage Capital
                                                    messenger delivery, by commercial                        Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank                         Requirements
                                                    overnight courier, or by first-class or                  Act) for supervision by the Board of                     3. Capital Planning Requirements—Capital
                                                    overnight U.S. Postal Service mail. All                  Governors of the Federal Reserve                            Plan Rule
                                                                                                                                                                      4. Stress Testing Requirements
                                                    filings must be addressed to the                         System (Board). Section 165 of the                       5. Liquidity Requirements
                                                    Commission’s Secretary, Office of the                    Dodd-Frank Act provides that the Board                   6. Other Prudential Standards: Restrictions
                                                    Secretary, Federal Communications                        must, as part of its supervision of a                       on Intercompany Transactions
                                                    Commission.                                              nonbank financial firm designated by                     7. Future Standards



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                                                    44112                               Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 142 / Friday, July 24, 2015 / Notices

                                                       C. Reporting Requirements                                establish enhanced prudential standards                   liquidity requirements.10 The Board also
                                                       1. Phase I Requirements                                  for nonbank financial companies that                      adopted an enhanced supplementary
                                                       2. Phase II Requirements                                 the Council has determined should be                      leverage ratio for the largest, most
                                                    III. Paperwork Reduction Act                                supervised by the Board (as well as for                   complex bank holding companies and
                                                    IV. Final Order
                                                                                                                certain bank holding companies) in                        has proposed a risk-based capital
                                                    I. Introduction                                             order to prevent or mitigate risks to U.S.                surcharge framework for U.S. global
                                                       General Electric Capital Corporation                     financial stability that could arise from                 systemically-important banks (G–
                                                    (GECC) is a major financial company                         the material financial distress or failure,               SIBs).11 This integrated set of standards
                                                    with approximately $482 billion in total                    or ongoing activities of, these                           is designed to enhance the resiliency of
                                                    assets as of March 31, 2015,                                companies.2 By statute, the enhanced                      these companies and mitigate the risk
                                                    approximately 55 percent of which are                       prudential standards must include risk-                   that their failure or material financial
                                                    in the United States. It provides a wide                    based and leverage capital requirements,                  distress could pose to U.S. financial
                                                    variety of credit and other financial                       liquidity requirements, risk-                             stability. The Board may issue
                                                    products to consumers and businesses                        management and risk-committee                             additional standards through
                                                    in the United States and overseas. These                    requirements, resolution-planning                         rulemakings in the future.
                                                    include commercial loans and leases,                        requirements, single-counterparty credit
                                                                                                                                                                             In considering the application of
                                                    equipment financing, consumer                               limits, stress-test requirements, and a
                                                                                                                                                                          enhanced prudential standards to
                                                    mortgages, various types of consumer                        debt-to-equity limit under certain
                                                                                                                                                                          nonbank financial companies
                                                    loans, commercial real estate financing,                    circumstances.3 Section 165 also
                                                                                                                                                                          supervised by the Board, the Board has
                                                    auto loans, credit cards, private                           permits the Board to establish
                                                                                                                                                                          stated that it intends to take account of
                                                    mortgage insurance, and other financial                     additional enhanced prudential
                                                                                                                                                                          the business model, capital structure,
                                                    services. GECC also operates two large                      standards, including a contingent
                                                                                                                                                                          risk profile, and systemic footprint of a
                                                    insured depository institutions,                            capital requirement, an enhanced public
                                                                                                                                                                          designated company.12 Consistent with
                                                    Synchrony Bank and GE Capital Bank,                         disclosure requirement, a short-term
                                                                                                                                                                          this approach, in November 2014, the
                                                    with combined total assets of                               debt limit, and any other prudential
                                                                                                                standards that the Board determines are                   Board proposed a number of enhanced
                                                    approximately $74 billion as of March                                                                                 prudential standards for GECC.13
                                                    31, 2015. In addition to the funding                        appropriate.4
                                                                                                                   In prescribing enhanced prudential                        In light of the substantial similarity of
                                                    obtained by these insured depository
                                                                                                                standards, section 165(a)(2) of the Dodd-                 GECC’s current activities and risk
                                                    institutions through collection of
                                                    deposits, GECC is a large issuer of                         Frank Act permits the Board to tailor the                 profile to that of a similarly sized bank
                                                    commercial paper, with approximately                        enhanced prudential standards among                       holding company, the Board proposed
                                                    $25 billion outstanding as of March 31,                     companies on an individual basis,                         to apply enhanced prudential standards
                                                    2015. GECC is wholly owned by General                       taking into consideration their ‘‘capital                 to GECC that are similar to those that
                                                    Electric Company (GE).                                      structure, riskiness, complexity,                         apply to large bank holding companies.
                                                       After reviewing the activities,                          financial activities (including the                       Specifically, the Board proposed to
                                                    structure, size, scope, and risks of                        financial activities of their subsidiaries),              apply: (1) Capital requirements; (2)
                                                    GECC’s operations and activities, the                       size, and any other risk-related factors                  capital-planning and stress-testing
                                                    Financial Stability Oversight Council                       that the Board of Governors deems                         requirements; (3) liquidity
                                                    (Council) determined that GECC should                       appropriate.’’ 5 In addition, under                       requirements; and (4) risk-management
                                                    be subject to supervision by the Board                      section 165(b)(3) of the Dodd-Frank Act,                  and risk-committee requirements. The
                                                    in order to help mitigate the risks that                    the Board is required to take into                        Board also proposed certain additional
                                                    the failure of GECC might pose to                           account differences among bank holding                    enhanced prudential standards for
                                                    financial stability in the United States.                   companies covered by section 165 and                      GECC in light of the unique aspects of
                                                    The Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and                       nonbank financial companies                               GECC’s activities, risk profile, and
                                                    Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank                         supervised by the Board.6                                 structure. These included certain
                                                    Act) provides the Board with the                               The Board has issued by rule an                        independence requirements for GECC’s
                                                    authority to examine GECC, including                        integrated set of enhanced prudential                     board of directors and restrictions on
                                                    its operations, activities and risk                         standards for large bank holding                          intercompany transactions between
                                                    management, and to take a variety of                        companies and foreign banking                             GECC and its parent, GE, and certain
                                                    supervisory actions to protect the                          organizations. These enhanced                             affiliates. In addition, the Board
                                                    financial stability of the United States.                   prudential standards include a capital                    proposed to require GECC to file certain
                                                    As a result of this designation, the                        planning rule,7 a stress testing rule,8 a                 reports with the Board that are similar
                                                    Federal Reserve has already initiated a                     resolution plan rule,9 and enhanced                       to the reports required of bank holding
                                                    program to examine and supervise the                                                                                  companies. GECC was separately
                                                    operations, activities, and risk                                 2 12
                                                                                                                       U.S.C. 5365.
                                                                                                                                                                          required by rule to submit a resolution
                                                    management of GECC. In addition,                                 3 12
                                                                                                                       U.S.C. 5365(b)(1)(A), (e), and (i). The debt-to-   plan.14
                                                    because GECC has for some time                              equity limit applies if the Council also determines
                                                    controlled and currently continues to                       the firm poses a grave threat to the financial              10 See 12 CFR part 249; see also 79 FR 17240,
                                                                                                                stability of the United States, a finding the Council     17252 (March 27, 2014).
                                                    control a savings association, GECC is a                    has not made in the case of GECC. See 12 U.S.C.             11 See 79 FR 24528 (May 1, 2014); 79 FR 75473
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                                                    savings and loan holding company                            5365(j).                                                  (December 18, 2014).
                                                    subject to examination, supervision, and                      4 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(1)(B).
                                                                                                                                                                            12 See Enhanced Prudential Standards for Bank
                                                    other regulatory requirements under the                       5 12 U.S.C. 5365(a)(2).
                                                                                                                                                                          Holding Companies and Foreign Banking
                                                                                                                  6 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(3).
                                                    Home Owners’ Loan Act, as amended.1                                                                                   organizations, 79 FR 17240, 17245 (March 27,
                                                                                                                  7 12 CFR 225.8.                                         2014).
                                                       In addition to these supervisory and
                                                                                                                  8 12 CFR part 252.                                        13 Application of Enhanced Prudential Standards
                                                    regulatory requirements, section 165 of                       9 12 CFR part 243. The Board’s resolution plan          and Reporting Requirements to General Electric
                                                    the Dodd-Frank Act directs the Board to                     rule applies by its terms to all nonbank financial        Capital Corporation, 79 FR 71768 (December 3,
                                                                                                                companies supervised by the Board, including              2014) (Proposed Order).
                                                      1 12   U.S.C. 1461, et. seq.                              GECC. See 12 CFR 243.1(b), .2(f)(1)(i).                     14 12 CFR 243.3(a).




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                                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 142 / Friday, July 24, 2015 / Notices                                                  44113

                                                       The Board invited comment on this                     financial companies with                              for GECC. This commenter asserted that,
                                                    proposal from the public.15 The Board                    predominantly insurance activities. A                 because GECC is a financing arm of an
                                                    received 21 comments on the proposed                     detailed discussion of the comments on                industrial company, its activities,
                                                    order including comments from certain                    particular aspects of the proposal is                 objectives, and risk profile differ from
                                                    of GE’s directors, GECC, other                           provided below.                                       those of a bank holding company. The
                                                    companies, industry associations, and                       In April 2015, after the Board invited             commenter also asserted that the
                                                    individuals. Several commenters                          comment on its proposed order                         proposal would adversely affect
                                                    supported application of the proposed                    regarding GECC, GE and GECC                           financing for businesses and consumers
                                                    enhanced prudential standards to GECC,                   announced plans to significantly                      that purchase products from GE. Several
                                                    and asserted that it was appropriate to                  reorganize and refocus GECC. Under                    other commenters argued, on the other
                                                    require GECC to comply with standards                    this proposal, GECC would divest or                   hand, that standards developed for bank
                                                    similar to those applicable to bank                      liquidate much of its commercial                      holding companies are appropriate for
                                                    holding companies. In its comments,                      lending and leasing operations and all                GECC, and urged the Board to
                                                    GECC recognized the importance of the                    of its consumer lending businesses,                   strengthen standards further for both
                                                    Federal Reserve’s supervision in                         including its U.S. banking operations,                bank holding companies and GECC.
                                                    ensuring the safety and soundness of the                 and shrink its total assets from                         As a starting point for assessing
                                                    U.S. financial system, and the purpose                   approximately $482 billion to                         appropriate prudential standards, the
                                                    of enhanced prudential standards                         approximately $140 billion by year-end                Board notes that GECC engages in
                                                    generally for a large, interconnected,                   2017. The divestitures are subject to a               financial activities that are very similar
                                                    and complicated financial firm such as                   detailed plan with a definitive timeline.             to those of the largest bank holding
                                                    the current GECC.                                        GECC has already begun to implement                   companies. GECC’s leverage, off-
                                                       Some commenters, including GECC,                      this plan, including by selling an                    balance-sheet exposures, risk profile,
                                                    asserted however that the proposed                       indirect interest in its savings                      asset composition, interconnectedness
                                                    standards were not sufficiently tailored                 association and selling a significant                 with other large financial firms, and mix
                                                    to GECC. For example, GECC and a                         amount of commercial real estate assets,              of activities are substantially similar to
                                                    financial services trade association                     and GECC has stated that it expects to                those of many large bank holding
                                                    suggested that standards for G–SIBs                      complete its reorganization plan within               companies. GECC is a significant
                                                    should not be applied to GECC because                    three years. GECC plans to retain only                participant in financing activities,
                                                    they believed GECC’s business model,                     those businesses directly related to GE’s             including as a provider of consumer and
                                                    capital structure, risk profile, and                     core industrial businesses, which it                  commercial credit in the United States.
                                                    systemic footprint were unlike those of                  identifies as aviation, energy, and                   As noted above, like many of the largest
                                                    the U.S. G–SIBs. Several commenters,                     health-care. As part of this divestiture              bank holding companies, GECC focuses
                                                    including GECC, investment advisers,                     plan, GECC has indicated that it intends              its activities primarily on lending and
                                                    and corporate governance associations                    to seek rescission of the Council                     leasing to commercial companies and
                                                    also criticized the corporate governance                 designation when appropriate.17                       on consumer financing and deposit
                                                    standards in the proposed order, arguing                                                                       products. GECC holds a large portfolio
                                                                                                             II. Framework for Supervision of GECC
                                                    that they were inconsistent with                                                                               of on-balance sheet financial assets,
                                                                                                             and Enhanced Prudential Standards
                                                    Delaware law and inappropriate for                                                                             such as commercial and consumer loans
                                                    GECC. In addition, GECC and financial                       The Board is required to consider a                and investment securities, that is
                                                    services trade associations requested                    variety of factors when establishing                  comparable to those of the largest bank
                                                    that GECC be granted additional time for                 enhanced prudential standards for large               holding companies.
                                                    compliance with the standards and the                    bank holding companies and nonbank                       Moreover, GECC borrows in the
                                                    reporting requirements set forth in the                  financial companies supervised by the                 wholesale funding markets by issuing
                                                    proposed order in order to help GECC                     Board and to adapt those standards as                 commercial paper and long-term debt to
                                                    address operational and technological                    appropriate in light of the predominant               wholesale counterparties, and makes
                                                    challenges associated with compliance.                   lines of business of the companies.18                 significant use of derivatives to hedge
                                                    Some commenters, including trade                         The Board is also permitted by statute                interest rate risk, foreign exchange risk,
                                                    associations for insurance companies,                    to tailor application of enhanced                     and other financial risks. GECC
                                                    argued that it was inappropriate to issue                prudential standards based on the                     currently controls two insured
                                                    an order for a specific nonbank financial                capital structure, riskiness, complexity,             depository institutions that offer
                                                    company.16 These commenters also                         financial activities, size, and other risk            traditional banking products to both
                                                    expressed concern that the Board might                   factors regarding the company as the                  consumer and commercial customers.20
                                                    apply similar standards to nonbank                       Board deems appropriate.19                            Similar to the insured depository
                                                                                                                The Board has taken these factors into             institutions of large bank holding
                                                      15 Proposed  Order, 79 FR at 71769.                    account, as well as information and                   companies, GECC’s subsidiary insured
                                                      16 Some  commenters, in particular trade               views provided by GE and the public                   depository institutions serve as a
                                                    associations for insurance companies, asserted that,     commenters, in establishing enhanced                  significant source of funding and as a
                                                    while they did not have any particular view on           prudential standards for GECC. One
                                                    GECC’s structure or the appropriateness of bank                                                                source of credit for a portion of its
                                                    holding company standards for GECC, the Board            commenter asserted that GECC differs                  lending activities.
                                                    should develop standards for insurance companies         substantially from bank holding                          To address the similarities in these
                                                                                                             companies and that standards for bank
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                                                    that are specific to the insurance industry, and                                                               risks, structure, and activities, and to
                                                    should propose those standards through a public          holding companies were inappropriate
                                                    rulemaking process. The Board followed a public                                                                account for the unique characteristics of
                                                    comment process in proposing and adopting                                                                      GECC and its ongoing restructuring
                                                                                                               17 GE Press Release, April 10, 2014 (GE
                                                    enhanced prudential standards for GECC. The                                                                    plan, the Board has determined to
                                                    Board expects to follow a public comment process         Announcement), available at: http://
                                                                                                             www.genewsroom.com/press-releases/ge-create-          establish a supervisory program and
                                                    when proposing and establishing enhanced
                                                    prudential standards for other companies                 simpler-more-valuable-industrial-company-selling-     framework of enhanced prudential
                                                    designated by the Council, and will determine the        most-ge-capital-assets.
                                                                                                               18 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(3).                              20 As discussed above, GECC intends to divest
                                                    appropriate process and appropriate enhanced
                                                    prudential standards based on each case.                   19 12 U.S.C. 5365(a)(2).                            Synchrony Bank and GE Capital Bank.



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                                                    44114                            Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 142 / Friday, July 24, 2015 / Notices

                                                    standards for GECC that would proceed                    consolidated supervision framework for                Phase II Requirements provides GECC
                                                    in two stages.21                                         large financial companies.24 Finally, the             with sufficient time to prepare for
                                                       As explained more fully below, in                     final order does not preempt or                       compliance with the requirements of the
                                                    order to ensure that GECC has adequate                   otherwise alter the Board’s authority to              final order.
                                                    capital and liquidity to support its                     supervise GE, GECC, and GE Consumer                      The Board expects to continue to
                                                    current operations and to mitigate the                   Finance, as savings and loan holding                  monitor and assess GECC’s activities
                                                    risk to financial stability that might                   companies under the Home Owners’                      and risk profile, and, in accordance with
                                                    occur if GECC were to come under stress                  Loan Act,25 so long as they control a                 the requirements of section 165 of the
                                                    while implementing its divestiture plan,                 savings association.                                  Dodd-Frank Act, to take into account
                                                    effective January 1, 2016, the final order                  The Board also believes that certain               any additional factors or considerations,
                                                    applies capital standards applicable to                  enhanced prudential standards should                  as necessary, in the adoption of future
                                                    bank holding companies, liquidity                        be applied in the supervision of GECC.                standards, or in tailoring of any
                                                    standards applicable to the largest bank                 These Phase II Requirements are more                  standards imposed in the future.
                                                    holding companies, and certain                           stringent than the minimum                            A. Phase I Requirements
                                                    reporting requirements. These Phase I                    requirements applicable to bank holding
                                                    Requirements require GECC to comply                      companies. At the same time, the Board                1. Capital Requirements
                                                    with the standardized risk-based capital                 has tailored the enhanced standards to                   The Board has long held the view that
                                                    requirements, restrictions on                            account for certain unique structures                 a bank holding company generally
                                                    distributions and certain discretionary                  and risks at GECC. Moreover, in light of              should maintain capital that is
                                                    bonus payments associated with the                       the reorganization plan currently                     commensurate with its risk profile and
                                                    capital conservation buffer, the                         underway at GECC and the amount of                    activities so that the firm can meet its
                                                    traditional balance-sheet leverage ratio                 resources and systems necessary to                    obligations to creditors and other
                                                    requirement in the Board’s regulatory                    implement these enhanced prudential                   counterparties, as well as continue to
                                                    capital framework, as well as with the                   standards, the Board has delayed the                  serve as a financial intermediary,
                                                    liquidity coverage ratio rule (LCR rule)                 imposition of these standards until                   through periods of financial and
                                                    applicable to bank holding companies                     January 1, 2018.                                      economic stress.27 Bank holding
                                                    with $250 billion or more in total                          As explained more fully below, these               companies that are comparable in size,
                                                    consolidated assets or $10 billion or                    enhanced prudential standards include                 complexity, activities, and risk to GECC
                                                    more in on-balance-sheet foreign                         general risk management standards,                    are subject to a capital framework that
                                                    exposures (advanced approaches                           enhanced capital standards, capital                   includes a minimum common equity
                                                    banking organizations), as described                     planning, stress testing, enhanced                    tier 1 risk-based capital ratio of 4.5
                                                    further below. Beginning January 1,                      liquidity risk management standards,                  percent, a minimum tier 1 risk-based
                                                    2016, GECC would also be required to                     and restrictions on intercompany                      capital ratio of 6 percent, a minimum
                                                    comply with certain reporting                            transactions. They also include                       total risk-based capital ratio of 8
                                                    requirements that support the risk-based                 requirements to file additional reports               percent, a common equity tier 1 capital
                                                    capital requirements, the leverage ratio,                with the Board.                                       conservation buffer of 2.5 percent of
                                                    the LCR rule, and the Board’s                               The delayed timing of the Phase II                 risk-weighted assets, a standardized
                                                    supervision of GECC to mitigate risks to                 Requirements reflects the public                      methodology for calculating risk-
                                                    the financial stability of the United                    commitment that GE and GECC have                      weighted assets, and a 4 percent
                                                    States.                                                  made to their divestiture and                         minimum leverage ratio of tier 1 capital
                                                       GECC is currently subject to a number                 reorganization plans, progress observed               to average total consolidated assets (the
                                                    of statutory, regulatory, and supervisory                to date on GECC’s execution of its plans,             generally applicable leverage ratio).
                                                    requirements, and will continue to be                    and other changes at GE and GECC since                   Because GECC’s activities and balance
                                                    subject to these requirements in                         issuance of the proposed order. GECC                  sheet are substantially similar to those
                                                    addition to the Phase I Requirements.                    has noted that it intends to request that             of a large bank holding company, the
                                                    GECC is subject to examination by the                    the Council rescind its designation in                Board proposed to apply the same
                                                    Federal Reserve, the enforcement                         2016.26 If the designation of GECC is                 capital framework to GECC. The final
                                                    authority of the Board, resolution                       rescinded prior to January 1, 2018, these             order requires GECC, beginning on
                                                    planning requirements, and approval                      enhanced prudential standards would                   January 1, 2016, to maintain the
                                                    requirements for expansion proposals.22                  not apply to GECC. In the event that                  minimum risk-based capital ratios and
                                                    GECC is also subject to limits on                        GECC is unable to complete or                         the generally applicable leverage ratio
                                                    concentrations that generally prohibit                   implement the divestiture plan as                     described above, to comply with
                                                    GECC from merging with or acquiring                      expected or if the Council does not                   restrictions on capital distributions and
                                                    another company if the resulting                         rescind GECC’s designation, the                       certain discretionary bonus payments
                                                    company’s liabilities upon                               effective date of January 1, 2018, for the            associated with the capital conservation
                                                    consummation would exceed 10 percent                                                                           buffer, and to calculate risk-weighted
                                                    of the aggregate liabilities of all financial               24 See Supervision and Regulation Letter SR 12–    assets using the standardized
                                                    companies.23 The Board has been                          17, Consolidated Supervision Framework for Large      methodology.28 These regulatory capital
                                                                                                             Financial Institutions (December 17, 2012) (SR 12–    requirements will help to ensure that
                                                    supervising GECC pursuant to the                         17) (establishing risk-management guidance and
                                                                                                             supervisory expectations for nonbank financial
                                                                                                                                                                   GECC maintains high-quality regulatory
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                                                       21 The final order applies to GECC and to any         companies supervised by the Board), available at:     capital in amounts commensurate with
                                                    successor to GECC, without further action by the         http://www.federalreserve.gov/bankinforeg/
                                                    Board.                                                   srletters/sr1217.htm.                                   27 See 12 CFR part 217; 12 CFR 225.8; SR 12–17,
                                                       22 See 12 U.S.C. 5361(b) (establishing                   25 12 U.S.C. 1467a, et. seq.                       supra note 24; Supervision and Regulation Letter
                                                    examination authority); 5362 (establishing                  26 Letter from Keith S. Sherin, Chairman & CEO,    99–18, Assessing Capital Adequacy in Relation to
                                                    enforcement authority), 5365(d) (requiring               GECC, to Robert deV. Frierson, Secretary, Board of    Risk at Large Banking Organizations and Others
                                                    submission of a resolution plan), and 5363(b)            Governors of the Federal Reserve System, May 4,       with Complex Risk Profiles (July 1, 1999) (SR 99–
                                                    (requiring the prior approval of the Board for           2015, available at: http://www.federalreserve.gov/    18), available at: http://www.federalreserve.gov/
                                                    certain acquisitions).                                   SECRS/2015/May/20150506/R-1503/R-1503_                boarddocs/srletters/1999/SR9918.HTM.
                                                       23 See 12 CFR part 251.                               050415_129930_568761743161_1.pdf.                       28 See 12 CFR part 217, subpart D.




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                                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 142 / Friday, July 24, 2015 / Notices                                                     44115

                                                    its risk as it executes its divestiture                  2016 to December 31, 2016, and an LCR                      As noted above, GECC requested that
                                                    plan. Compliance with these basic                        of at least 100 percent thereafter.30                   the Board tailor the application of the
                                                    capital requirements should not require                     In comments on the proposed order,                   LCR rule to reflect its inability to hold
                                                    substantial incremental operational                      GECC requested that the Board defer the                 significant Federal Reserve Bank
                                                    investments by GECC.                                     requirement to calculate its LCR daily                  balances and its greater proportion of
                                                                                                             until January 1, 2018. GECC also                        liquidity maintained in third-party
                                                    2. Liquidity Requirements                                                                                        commercial banks. Central bank
                                                                                                             requested that application of the LCR
                                                       On September 3, 2014, the Board                       rule to GECC be tailored to reflect                     reserves are not, however, the only
                                                    adopted the LCR rule, which                              GECC’s inability to hold significant                    qualifying HQLA under the LCR rule.
                                                    implements a quantitative liquidity                      Federal Reserve Bank balances and its                   Various high-credit-quality securities
                                                    requirement consistent with the                          holding of substantial amounts of                       are also counted as HQLA under the
                                                    liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) standard                  deposits at third-party banks. GECC                     LCR rule. Further, reducing the cash
                                                    established by the Basel Committee on                    noted that it maintains a greater                       inflow cap and allowing GECC to rely
                                                    Banking Supervision.29 The LCR rule is                   proportion of its cash liquidity in third-              heavily on inflows from deposits at
                                                    designed to promote the resilience of                    party commercial bank deposits that are                 third-party banks to offset cash outflows
                                                    the short-term liquidity risk profile of                 not credited as HQLA and are subject to                 would increase the interconnectedness
                                                    large complex banking organizations,                     a 75 percent cap on net inflows. GECC                   of the financial system and could reduce
                                                    thereby improving the banking sector’s                   requested that the LCR requirements as                  systemic stability. As the Board noted in
                                                    ability to measure and manage liquidity                  applied to GECC count GECC’s deposits                   the preamble to the final LCR rule,32
                                                    risk and to absorb shocks arising from                   in third-party commercial banks as                      such deposits do not meet the Board’s
                                                    financial and economic stress. The LCR                   inflows in the denominator of the LCR,                  LCR criteria for HQLA because during a
                                                    rule requires a company subject to the                   consistent with the LCR that applies to                 liquidity stress event many commercial
                                                    rule to maintain an amount of high-                      bank holding companies, and that the                    banks may exhibit the same liquidity
                                                    quality liquid assets (HQLA) (the                        inflows not be subject to the 75 percent                stress correlation and wrong-way risk.
                                                    numerator of the ratio) that is equal to                 cap if the third-party commercial bank                  Further, adopting GECC’s modification
                                                    or greater than its total expected net                   or its holding company is subject to the                regarding third-party commercial bank
                                                    cash outflows over a prospective 30                      full LCR or a foreign equivalent and the                deposits could reduce the value of
                                                    calendar-day period (the denominator of                  deposits are not concentrated in any one                horizontal comparisons between GECC
                                                    the ratio).                                              affiliated group of banks.                              and other companies with similar
                                                       The LCR rule does not by its terms                       The final order requires GECC to                     balance sheets and risk profiles. The
                                                    apply automatically to nonbank                           comply with the LCR rule beginning                      final order therefore adopts this aspect
                                                    financial companies supervised by the                    January 1, 2016, to maintain an LCR of                  of the proposal without change.
                                                    Board such as GECC. Rather, the Board                    at least 90 percent from January 1, 2016                   In recognition of the infrastructure
                                                    indicated when it adopted the LCR rule                   to December 31, 2016, and to maintain                   necessary for daily LCR calculations, the
                                                    that, following designation of a nonbank                 an LCR of at least 100 percent thereafter.              Board has determined to defer requiring
                                                    financial company for supervision by                     The January 1, 2016, effective date for                 GECC to perform daily LCR calculations
                                                    the Board, the Board would assess the                    the 90 percent requirement is consistent                until January 1, 2018. Accordingly, the
                                                    business model, capital structure, and                   with the proposed order and with the                    final order provides that GECC may
                                                    risk profile of the designated company                   liquidity levels already maintained by                  calculate its LCR monthly on each
                                                    to determine whether the LCR rule                        GECC. The ability to rapidly monetize                   calculation date that is the last business
                                                    should apply to the company, and, if                     HQLA is expected to assist GECC in                      day of the applicable calendar month
                                                    appropriate, would tailor application of                 meeting its liquidity needs during a                    until January 1, 2018.
                                                    the rule’s requirements by order or                      period of acute short-term liquidity                    B. Phase II Requirements
                                                    regulation to that nonbank financial                     stress and therefore both improve the
                                                    company or to a category of nonbank                      firm’s resiliency and reduce the                        1. Risk-Management and Risk
                                                    financial companies.                                     likelihood of fire-sales of less liquid                 Committee Requirements
                                                       The Board proposed to apply to GECC                   assets, which can damage financial                         Sound enterprise-wide risk
                                                    the requirements in the LCR rule that                    stability. Because the LCR rule applies                 management by a large financial
                                                    apply to advanced approaches banking                     outflow and inflow rates that are based                 company reduces the likelihood of its
                                                    organizations beginning July 1, 2015.                    on the particular risk profile and                      material distress or failure and thus
                                                    The proposed order would have                            activities of a company subject to the                  promotes financial stability. Section
                                                    adopted the same transition periods and                  rule, the LCR requirements would be                     165(b)(1)(A) of the Dodd-Frank Act
                                                    compliance timelines for GECC as                         appropriately tailored to GECC’s                        requires the Board to establish enhanced
                                                    applied to advanced approaches                           activities, balance sheet, and risk                     risk-management requirements for
                                                    banking organizations that have less                     profile, and would help ensure that                     nonbank financial companies
                                                    than $700 billion in total consolidated                  GECC holds a sufficient amount of                       supervised by the Board and bank
                                                    assets and less than $10 trillion in assets              HQLA to meet its expected net cash                      holding companies with total
                                                    under custody. These transition periods                  outflows over a 30 calendar-day stress                  consolidated assets of $50 billion or
                                                    would have permitted GECC to conduct                     period.31                                               more.33 In addition, section 165(h)
                                                                                                                                                                     directs the Board to issue regulations
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                                                    LCR calculations on a monthly (rather                         30 12
                                                                                                                     CFR 249.50(b).                                  requiring publicly traded nonbank
                                                    than daily) basis until July 1, 2016, and                     31 As
                                                                                                                     indicated in the supplementary information      financial companies and publicly traded
                                                    would have required GECC to maintain                     section of the LCR rule, the Board anticipated
                                                    an LCR of at least 80 percent from July                  separately seeking comment on proposed regulatory
                                                    1, 2015 to December 31, 2015, an LCR                     reporting requirements and instructions pertaining      any nonbank financial company supervised by the
                                                                                                             to the LCR. 79 FR 61440, 61445 (October 10, 2014).      Board that the Board has required by rule or order
                                                    of at least 90 percent from January 1,                                                                           to comply with the LCR. 79 FR 71416, 71417
                                                                                                             In December 2014, the Board proposed revisions to
                                                                                                             liquidity reporting requirements that would relate      (December 2, 2014).
                                                      29 79 FR 61440 (October 10, 2014); see 12 CFR                                                                    32 See 79 FR 61440, 61457 (October 10, 2014).
                                                                                                             to the LCR calculation. The Board proposed these
                                                    part 249.                                                reporting requirements and instructions to apply to       33 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(1)(A)(iii).




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                                                    44116                            Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 142 / Friday, July 24, 2015 / Notices

                                                    bank holding companies with total                        operations. In addition, the risk-                         enterprise wide risk management
                                                    consolidated assets of $10 billion or                    management framework must include                          requirements, including a risk
                                                    more to establish risk committees.34                     processes and systems for identifying                      committee with expertise and
                                                    Section 165(h) requires the risk                         and reporting risk-management                              independent leadership. GECC and the
                                                    committee to be responsible for the                      deficiencies in an effective and timely                    independent directors of GE pointed out
                                                    oversight of the enterprise-wide risk-                   manner, must establish managerial and                      that GE and GECC already have adopted
                                                    management practices of the company,                     employee responsibilities for risk                         several of the requirements in the
                                                    to have such number of independent                       management, must ensure the                                Board’s proposed order.
                                                    directors as the Board determines                        independence of the risk-management                           Several commenters, including GECC
                                                    appropriate, and to include at least one                 function, and must integrate risk                          and the independent directors of GE,
                                                    risk-management expert with                              management and associated controls                         argued, however, that the proposal to
                                                    experience in identifying, assessing, and                with management goals and with the                         require GECC to maintain at least two
                                                    managing risk exposures of large,                        compensation structure for the global                      directors independent of GE’s board of
                                                    complex firms.35                                         operations of the company.40                               directors as well as GE and GECC
                                                       The Board has adopted risk-                              The proposed order would have                           management would create uncertainty
                                                    management standards in Regulation                       required GECC to adopt a risk                              about the responsibilities of those
                                                    YY that require a covered bank holding                   management framework that is                               independent directors, who would be
                                                    company to tailor its compliance                         consistent with the supervisory                            expected under the Board’s proposed
                                                    framework to the particular size,                        expectations established for bank                          order to focus on the risks at GECC
                                                    complexity, structure, risk profile, and                 holding companies of a similar size                        alone, and who simultaneously would
                                                    activities of the organization. The Board                beginning July 1, 2015. The proposal                       owe a fiduciary duty under Delaware
                                                    has required all bank holding                            also included a requirement that GECC                      law to GE as the sole shareholder of
                                                    companies with $50 billion or more in                    establish a dedicated risk committee at                    GECC. Some commenters also
                                                    total consolidated assets to establish a                 GECC that would be responsible for the                     questioned the Board’s authority under
                                                    risk committee that is an independent                    oversight of GECC’s risk management.                       the Dodd-Frank Act to impose this
                                                    committee of the company’s board of                         The Board noted in the proposed                         requirement.44 GECC and the
                                                    directors, is chaired by an independent                  order that in implementing these                           independent directors of GE proposed,
                                                    director, and has at least one member                    requirements, GECC would be expected                       instead, that independent directors on
                                                    who has experience in identifying,                       to tailor its risk-management framework                    the GE board be permitted to comprise
                                                    assessing and managing risk exposures                    to suit the company’s structure. The                       the majority of GECC’s board of
                                                    of large, complex financial firms.36 The                 proposed order would also have applied                     directors. They argued that this would
                                                    risk committee is required to approve                    additional risk-management                                 ensure that the majority of directors at
                                                    and periodically review the risk-                        requirements that were tailored to                         GECC were independent of both
                                                    management policies of the bank                          reflect GECC’s structure as an                             management of GE and management of
                                                    holding company’s global operations,                     intermediate holding company of a                          GECC. GECC and the independent
                                                    oversee the operation of the bank                        larger, publicly traded company.41 To                      directors of GE asserted that the
                                                    holding company’s global risk-                           ensure that GECC’s board of directors                      independent directors currently offer
                                                    management framework, and oversee                        included members who were                                  strong oversight of GECC’s risk
                                                    the bank holding company’s compliance                    independent of GE, and whose attention                     management that is independent of the
                                                                                                             was focused on the business operations                     management of either GE or GECC, and
                                                    with the liquidity risk-management
                                                                                                             and safety and soundness of GECC, the                      are well informed about the risks to
                                                    requirements of Regulation YY.37 In
                                                                                                             proposed order would have required                         GECC, including risks posed by the
                                                    addition, a covered bank holding
                                                                                                             that two or more of the directors of                       interactions between GE and GECC.
                                                    company is required to appoint a chief                                                                                 After considering the public
                                                    risk officer with experience in                          GECC be independent of GECC’s
                                                                                                             management and of GE’s management                          comments, including those provided by
                                                    identifying, assessing and managing risk                                                                            GECC and GECC’s current independent
                                                    exposures of large, complex financial                    and board of directors. One of these
                                                                                                             directors would have been required to                      directors, the Board believes that
                                                    firms, and who has responsibility for                                                                               requiring a specific number of
                                                    establishing enterprise-wide risk limits                 serve as the chair of GECC’s risk
                                                                                                             committee.42                                               individuals to serve on the GECC board
                                                    for the company and monitoring                                                                                      who are not also members of the GE
                                                    compliance with such limits.38                              In addition, consistent with
                                                                                                             Regulation YY, GECC would have been                        board is unnecessary in this case for
                                                       Under Regulation YY, each covered                                                                                achieving the overarching supervisory
                                                    bank holding company is required to                      required to maintain at least one
                                                                                                             director with expertise in ‘‘identifying,                  interest of ensuring that GECC board
                                                    establish a global risk-management                                                                                  members are capable of dedicating time
                                                    framework that is commensurate with                      assessing, and managing risk exposures
                                                                                                             of large, complex financial firms’’ on its                 and resources to the unique issues and
                                                    the company’s structure, risk profile,                                                                              risks of GECC and focusing appropriate
                                                    complexity, activities, and size.39 The                  risk committee.43
                                                                                                                Commenters, including GECC and the                      attention on ensuring that its operations
                                                    risk-management framework is required                                                                               are safe and sound and consistent with
                                                                                                             independent directors of GE, as well as
                                                    to include policies and procedures for                                                                              financial stability. The Board
                                                                                                             several investment advisers and
                                                    the establishment of risk-management                                                                                understands that GE has established a
                                                                                                             corporate governance associations,
                                                    governance and risk-control                                                                                         dedicated risk committee that oversees
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                                                                                                             recognized the importance and
                                                    infrastructure of the company’s global                                                                              the risk management of GE and GECC.
                                                                                                             heightened obligations of management
                                                                                                             of large financial firms for risk                          In this regard, the GE independent
                                                      34 12 U.S.C. 5365(h); see also 12 CFR 252.2(p)
                                                                                                             management and supported heightened                        directors have devoted a significant
                                                    (defining publicly traded).
                                                      35 12 U.S.C. 5365(h)(3).
                                                                                                                                                                          44 Although GECC does not have publicly traded
                                                      36 12 CFR 252.33(a)(3), (4).                                40 Id.
                                                                                                                                                                        shares of common equity, the company has debt
                                                      37 12 CFR 252.33(a).                                        41 Proposed    Order, 79 FR at 71778.                 securities that are publicly traded on the New York
                                                      38 12 CFR 252.33(b).                                        42 12    CFR 252.33(a)(4).                            Stock Exchange under section 12(b) of the
                                                      39 12 CFR 252.33(a)(2).                                     43 Id.                                                Securities Exchange Act of 1934.



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                                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 142 / Friday, July 24, 2015 / Notices                                                     44117

                                                    amount of time over the past three years                 on July 1, 2015, to comply with the                       represents the appropriate enhanced
                                                    to providing the type of independent                     regulatory capital framework applicable                   prudential standard for GECC, with the
                                                    oversight contemplated by the Dodd-                      to a large bank holding company,                          exception noted above regarding
                                                    Frank Act and have demonstrated the                      including the minimum common equity                       compliance with the advanced
                                                    willingness and ability to continue to                   tier 1, tier 1, and total risk-based capital              approaches rule. The Board notes that
                                                    remain fully engaged in their oversight                  ratios, the minimum generally-                            GECC appears to meet or exceed
                                                    of GECC.                                                 applicable leverage ratio, and any                        minimum levels required in the
                                                       Accordingly, the final order modifies                 restrictions on capital distributions or                  enhanced capital framework for the
                                                    the proposed risk-management                             discretionary bonus payments                              largest bank holding companies.
                                                    requirements to require that a majority                  associated with the capital conservation                  However, as explained below, the Board
                                                    of the GECC board of directors be                        buffer, described above. In addition to                   has deferred application of these
                                                    independent directors, unaffiliated with                 the generally applicable capital                          requirements until January 1, 2018, in
                                                    GE management or GECC management,                        adequacy requirements described above,                    light of GECC’s ongoing restructuring
                                                    with an independent director chair of                    the capital framework contains                            efforts.
                                                    the board and risk committee at GECC.                    supplemental measures applicable to                          The proposed order also would have
                                                    This provision becomes effective on                      the largest, most interconnected bank                     required GECC to meet a supplementary
                                                    January 1, 2018. The final order does                    holding companies. For advanced                           leverage ratio of 5 percent (eSLR) in
                                                    not require that the independent                         approaches banking organizations, these                   order to avoid restrictions on capital
                                                    directors on GECC’s board also be                        include the advanced approaches risk-                     distributions and discretionary bonus
                                                    independent of the GE board.45                           based capital rule, a supplementary                       payments to executive officers.48 The
                                                       The final order also requires GECC to                 leverage ratio of tier 1 capital to total                 eSLR is designed to minimize leverage
                                                    comply with the risk committee and                       leverage exposure of 3 percent, a                         at banking organizations that pose
                                                    risk-management framework                                requirement to include accumulated                        substantial systemic risk, thereby
                                                    requirements in section 252.33 of the                    other comprehensive income (AOCI) in                      strengthening the ability of such
                                                    Board’s Regulation YY, beginning                         tier 1 capital, and a countercyclical                     organizations to remain going concerns
                                                    January 1, 2018.46 The Board believes                    capital buffer. The proposed order                        during times of economic stress and
                                                    that consistent with the designation of                  would also have applied these                             minimizing the likelihood that problems
                                                    GECC as a nonbank financial company,                     requirements, except for the                              at these organizations would contribute
                                                    GECC’s risk-management framework                         requirement to comply with the                            to financial instability.49
                                                    should have a dedicated risk committee                   advanced approaches rule.47                                  GECC asserted that subjecting GECC
                                                    at the company that is solely                               In comments on the proposed order,                     to the eSLR was inappropriate because
                                                    responsible for the oversight of GECC’s                  GECC requested that the enhanced                          GECC does not meet the size threshold
                                                    risk management. In addition, the final                  capital requirements be deferred                          for application of the eSLR and should
                                                    order requires the entire GECC risk                      pending completion of GE and GECC’s                       be exempt from the eSLR just as a bank
                                                    committee to be comprised of                             divestiture plan. In the alternative,                     holding company of similar size and
                                                    independent directors, unaffiliated with                 GECC requested that the Board allow it                    risks. In the alternative, GECC argued
                                                    GE management or GECC management.                        to exclude recognition of AOCI in                         that the Board should tailor the ratio to
                                                       The Board believes these                              regulatory capital relating to investment                 GECC’s smaller systemic footprint.
                                                    requirements satisfy the requirements of                 securities held by legacy insurance                       GECC also requested that, for purposes
                                                    section 165(b)(1)(A) and (h) of the Dodd-                businesses that it is winding-down.                       of calculation of the eSLR and other
                                                    Frank Act and establish a risk                           GECC argued that these securities are                     reporting requirements, GECC be
                                                    management structure that can be                         generally held for the long term, are                     permitted to phase in the daily
                                                    effective in identifying, monitoring, and                used to support future payment                            averaging of on-balance sheet exposures
                                                    mitigating risks at GECC. These                          obligations on outstanding insurance                      beginning on July 1, 2018. GECC
                                                    requirements ensure that the                             contracts, and are subject to fluctuations                suggested that a phase-in schedule
                                                    perspectives of qualified individuals                    in value that can result in volatility in                 would allow GECC the time to
                                                    independent of the management of GE                      AOCI.                                                     implement all of the operational
                                                    and GECC will have a strong voice in                        The Board believes that the enhanced                   infrastructure necessary to complete
                                                    the governance of GECC and                               capital framework adopted for the                         daily averaging.
                                                    counterbalance any tendency to operate                   largest bank holding companies,                              Consistent with the Dodd-Frank Act’s
                                                    GECC in a manner that, while                             including the requirement to recognize                    requirement to apply enhanced leverage
                                                    advantageous to GE as the sole                           most elements of AOCI in regulatory                       requirements to nonbank financial
                                                    shareholder of GECC, may pose risks to                   capital, is an appropriate capital                        companies supervised by the Board, the
                                                    the financial stability of the United                    framework for GECC because of the                         final order retains the eSLR standard for
                                                    States.                                                  similarities in activities, size, risk, and               GECC, but tailors the standard to
                                                                                                             exposures of GECC to large bank                           GECC’s risk profile, complexity,
                                                    2. Capital Requirements—Additional                       holding companies. The maintenance of                     activities, and size. Specifically, the
                                                    Risk-Based and Leverage Capital                          a strong base of capital by GECC, which                   final order requires GECC to exceed a 4
                                                    Requirements                                             the Council has designated as                             percent supplementary leverage ratio in
                                                       In the proposed order, the Board                      systemically important, is particularly                   order to avoid restrictions on capital
                                                                                                             important because capital shortfalls at
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                                                    would have required GECC, beginning                                                                                distributions and certain discretionary
                                                                                                             GECC could endanger the financial                         bonus payments, as opposed to the 5
                                                      45 The Board intends to monitor the effectiveness      health of the firm and contribute to                      percent supplementary leverage ratio
                                                    of GECC’s independent directors and if the facts         systemic distress. Thus, the Board                        required for other institutions subject to
                                                    and circumstances indicate that the independent          believes the regulatory capital                           the eSLR. The lower requirement in the
                                                    directors are unable to focus their attention on the
                                                    business operations and safety and soundness of
                                                                                                             framework applicable to advanced                          final order is intended to reflect GECC’s
                                                    GECC, then the corporate governance and risk             approaches bank holding companies
                                                    management requirements may be revised.                                                                              48 12   CFR 217.11(a)(4).
                                                      46 12 CFR 252.33.                                           47 Proposed   Order, 79 FR at 71772.                   49 See   79 FR 24528 (May 1, 2014).



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                                                    44118                              Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 142 / Friday, July 24, 2015 / Notices

                                                    smaller systemic footprint compared to                     also include an assessment of a bank                      assets it intends to retain after the
                                                    other banking organizations subject to                     holding company’s sources and                             divestiture plan.
                                                    the eSLR, while still minimizing                           expected uses of capital, reflecting the                     The Board has determined to adopt
                                                    leverage at GECC and reducing the                          size, complexity, risk profile, and scope                 the capital planning requirements. As
                                                    likelihood that problems at GECC would                     of operations of the company, assuming                    described above, GECC’s activities, risk
                                                    cause it to fail in a manner that affects                  both expected and stressed conditions.                    profile, and balance sheet are similar to
                                                    financial stability. The Board has also                    In addition, each bank holding company                    those of large bank holding companies.
                                                    determined to defer application of the                     must describe its process for assessing                   Requiring GECC to comply with the
                                                    eSLR until January 1, 2018. Because                        capital adequacy, its capital policy, and                 Board’s capital plan rule as if it were a
                                                    GECC will not be required to comply                        provide a discussion of any expected                      large bank holding company will help
                                                    with either the SLR or the eSLR prior to                   changes to the bank holding company’s                     ensure that GECC holds capital that is
                                                    January 1, 2018, the Board will not                        business plan that are likely to have a                   commensurate with its risk profile and
                                                    require daily averaging prior to that                      material impact on the company’s                          activities, can meet its obligations to
                                                    time.                                                      capital adequacy or liquidity.                            creditors and other counterparties, and
                                                       With the exception of an eSLR, the                        Under the capital plan rule, the Board                  can continue to serve as a financial
                                                    Board is not through this order applying                   annually evaluates a large bank holding                   intermediary through periods of
                                                    to GECC other standards established for                    company’s capital adequacy and capital                    financial and economic stress.52
                                                    G–SIBs. Accordingly, the Board would                       planning practices and the                                   The Board recognizes that, unlike
                                                    not, without further action, impose the                    comprehensiveness of the capital plan,                    domestic bank holding companies,
                                                    proposed G–SIB risk-based capital                          including the strength of the underlying                  GECC is an intermediate holding
                                                    surcharge to GECC or otherwise define                      analysis. The Comprehensive Capital                       company of a larger, publicly-traded
                                                    GECC as a G–SIB. As the Board adopts                       Analysis and Review (CCAR) is the                         company. However, GECC is itself a
                                                    additional standards for G–SIBs, the                       Board’s supervisory process for                           significant entity designated by the
                                                    Board will consider whether it is                          reviewing capital plans submitted by                      Council for supervision by the Federal
                                                    appropriate to require GECC to comply                      bank holding companies under the                          Reserve because of the threat posed by
                                                    with these additional standards and                        capital plan rule. As part of CCAR, the                   the material financial distress of GECC
                                                    would seek notice and comment prior to                     Board conducts a quantitative                             to financial stability. Notwithstanding
                                                    applying such standards to GECC. Most                      assessment of each large bank holding                     the recently announced guarantee of
                                                    commenters supported this approach.                                                                                  much of GECC’s debt, GE is not
                                                                                                               company’s capital adequacy under an
                                                                                                                                                                         obligated to provide capital or other
                                                    3. Capital Planning Requirements—                          assumption of stressed conditions and
                                                                                                                                                                         financial support to GECC and, during
                                                    Capital Plan Rule                                          conducts a qualitative assessment of the
                                                                                                                                                                         a period of stress, may not be able to
                                                       The recent financial crisis highlighted                 company’s internal capital planning
                                                                                                                                                                         provide that support. A robust capital
                                                    a need for large bank holding companies                    practices. If the Board objects to a bank
                                                                                                                                                                         planning process at GECC will help
                                                    to incorporate into their capital                          holding company’s capital plan, the
                                                                                                                                                                         ensure that GECC manages its capital,
                                                    planning forward-looking assessments                       company may not make any capital
                                                                                                                                                                         and any capital distributions to its
                                                    of capital adequacy under stressed                         distribution other than those approved
                                                                                                                                                                         parent, in a manner that is
                                                    conditions. The crisis also underscored                    in writing by the Board or the
                                                                                                                                                                         commensurate with its risks and
                                                    the importance of strong internal capital                  appropriate Reserve Bank. A bank                          consistent with its safety and
                                                    planning practices and processes among                     holding company that receives an                          soundness.53 The capital plan rule acts
                                                    large bank holding companies. The                          objection may submit a revised capital                    as a counterweight to pressures that a
                                                    Board issued the capital plan rule to                      plan for review by the Board.                             company may face to make capital
                                                    ensure that large bank holding                               To ensure that GECC continues to                        distributions during a period of
                                                    companies have robust systems and                          maintain sufficient capital and has                       economic stress, thereby helping to
                                                    processes that incorporate forward-                        internal processes for assessing its                      mitigate the risk of material financial
                                                    looking projections of revenue and                         capital adequacy that appropriately                       distress at GECC.
                                                    losses to monitor and maintain their                       account for the company’s risks, the                         To account for the efforts that GE and
                                                    internal capital adequacy. By helping to                   proposed order would have required                        GECC are undergoing to reorganize their
                                                    ensure that the largest bank holding                       GECC to comply with the Board’s                           operations, the Board has also
                                                    companies have sufficient capital to                       capital plan rule 51 for the capital plan                 determined to make the capital planning
                                                    withstand significant stress and to                        cycle beginning January 1, 2016, and to                   requirements effective beginning
                                                    continue to operate, the capital plan                      submit its first submission under the                     January 1, 2018. The Board recognizes
                                                    rule helps to ensure that the financial                    capital plan rule on April 5, 2016.                       that GECC likely will need time to build
                                                    system as a whole can continue to                            Several commenters, including GECC                      and implement the internal systems and
                                                    function under stressed conditions.                        and a public interest group, agreed                       infrastructure necessary fully to meet
                                                       The capital plan rule requires each                     generally that the application of capital                 the requirements of the capital plan rule
                                                    bank holding company with $50 billion                      planning to GECC would be appropriate.                    and the CCAR process. Moreover, for
                                                    or more in total consolidated assets to                    In particular, GECC acknowledged that                     GECC’s first capital plan cycle
                                                    develop an annual capital plan                             capital planning would be an effective
                                                    describing its planned capital actions                     tool for ensuring its capital strength and                  52 See 12 CFR part 217; 12 CFR 225.8; SR 12–17,

                                                    and demonstrating its ability to meet a                    safeguarding it in its interactions with                  supra note 24; SR 99–18, supra note 27.
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                                                    5 percent tier 1 common capital ratio                      GE. GECC, however, requested that the                       53 In addition to GECC, other intermediate

                                                                                                               Board defer implementation of capital                     holding companies are subject to the capital plan
                                                    and maintain capital ratios above the                                                                                rule. Notably, some U.S. bank holding company
                                                    regulatory minimum requirements                            planning in order to allow it sufficient                  subsidiaries of foreign banking organizations
                                                    under both baseline and stressed                           time to develop necessary internal                        participate in CCAR. In addition, under the Board’s
                                                    conditions over a forward-looking                          systems and to focus its capital plan                     Regulation YY, all foreign banking organizations
                                                                                                               compliance efforts on the business and                    with $50 billion or more in U.S. non-branch assets
                                                    planning horizon.50 A capital plan must                                                                              are required to form a U.S. intermediate holding
                                                                                                                                                                         company subject to the capital plan rule. See 12
                                                      50 See   12 CFR 225.8.                                        51 12   CFR 225.8.                                   CFR 252, subpart O.



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                                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 142 / Friday, July 24, 2015 / Notices                                                   44119

                                                    beginning on January 1, 2018, the                        stress capital ratios use the company’s                   stability. Because the supervisory stress
                                                    quantitative assessment of GECC’s                        planned capital actions in the baseline                   tests are conducted on the basis of
                                                    capital plan under the capital plan rule                 scenario provided by the Board under                      standardized scenarios and capital
                                                    will not be based on supervisory stress                  the stress test rules. The capital action                 assumptions, supervisory stress testing
                                                    test estimates conducted pursuant to the                 assumptions in the Board’s stress test                    of GECC would also allow supervisors
                                                    Board’s stress test rules.54 Instead, the                rules are intended to make the results of                 and markets to assess GECC’s capital
                                                    Board intends to conduct a more limited                  the stress tests more comparable across                   adequacy compared with that of large
                                                    quantitative assessment of GECC’s                        institutions, which enhances the quality                  bank holding companies that have
                                                    capital plan based on GECC’s own stress                  of the required public disclosure of the                  comparable activities, risk profiles, and
                                                    scenario and any scenarios provided by                   stress-testing results. Under the stress                  balance sheets.
                                                    the Board and a qualitative assessment                   test rules, covered companies are also
                                                                                                                                                                          The stress testing rules require a
                                                    of GECC’s capital planning processes                     subject to mid-cycle company-run stress
                                                                                                                                                                       rigorous analysis and are dependent on
                                                    and supporting practices. This approach                  tests, in which companies develop and
                                                                                                             employ their own baseline, adverse, and                   accurate and detailed information
                                                    would be consistent with the capital                                                                               regarding the composition, historical
                                                    plan review process that the Board used                  severely adverse scenarios in
                                                                                                             conducting internal stress tests. For both                performance, and sensitivity to stress of
                                                    to evaluate the initial capital plan
                                                                                                             the annual and mid-cycle company-run                      the assets held by the company. GECC
                                                    submissions of bank holding companies
                                                                                                             stress tests, covered companies must                      has not been subject to the stress-testing
                                                    that were subject to the capital plan rule
                                                                                                             disclose the results of their company-                    information collection requirements to
                                                    but that did not participate in the 2009
                                                                                                             run stress test conducted under the                       date and its current divestiture efforts
                                                    Supervisory Capital Assessment
                                                                                                             severely adverse scenario.                                could have a significant impact on its
                                                    Program.
                                                      The Board also expects to                                 The proposed order would have                          ability to collect and report data that
                                                    communicate to GECC the Board’s                          required GECC to comply with the                          will reflect the nature of the company’s
                                                    expectations on capital planning                         stress-testing requirements applicable to                 activities during the nine-quarter period
                                                    practices and capital adequacy                           bank holding companies with $50                           for the stress test. Consequently, to
                                                    processes in connection with its first                   billion or more in total consolidated                     account for the divestiture plan and to
                                                    capital plan submission. The Board                       assets under the stress test rules 57 in the              allow GECC time to develop systems
                                                    intends to tailor its supervisory                        cycle beginning January 1, 2017. Several                  and processes for conducting stress tests
                                                    expectations on capital planning                         commenters, including GECC and a                          and allow the Board adequate time to
                                                    practices and capital adequacy                           public interest group, agreed generally                   further assess the activities and risk
                                                    processes for GECC to account for any                    with the application of stress testing to                 profile of GECC and appropriately tailor
                                                    material changes in the size, scope of                   GECC, asserting that it would be an                       the stress testing requirements based on
                                                    activities, and risks of the company that                important safeguard for GECC in its                       GECC’s systemic footprint, the Board
                                                    result from the implementation of its                    interactions with GE. GECC also                           has determined to require GECC to
                                                    divestiture plan.                                        acknowledged that stress testing would                    comply with the stress testing
                                                                                                             be an effective tool for ensuring its                     requirements starting with the stress
                                                    4. Stress Testing Requirements                           capital strength. GECC requested,                         testing cycle beginning January 1, 2019.
                                                       Section 165 of the Dodd-Frank Act                     however, that the Board defer
                                                                                                             implementation of stress testing                          5. Liquidity Requirements
                                                    requires the Board to conduct annual
                                                    supervisory stress tests of each nonbank                 requirements to January 1, 2018, in                          Section 165(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act
                                                    financial company supervised by the                      order to allow it sufficient time to                      directs the Board to adopt enhanced
                                                    Board and requires the Board to issue                    develop the necessary internal systems
                                                                                                                                                                       liquidity requirements for nonbank
                                                    regulations that require those companies                 and, ultimately, focus its stress-testing
                                                                                                                                                                       financial companies supervised by the
                                                    to conduct company-run stress tests                      efforts on the business and assets it
                                                                                                                                                                       Board as well for as bank holding
                                                    semi-annually.55 In 2012, the Board, in                  intends to retain after the divestiture
                                                                                                                                                                       companies with total consolidated
                                                    coordination with the Federal Deposit                    plan.
                                                                                                                The Board has determined to apply                      assets of $50 billion or more.58 Liquidity
                                                    Insurance Corporation, the Office of the                                                                           is measured by a company’s capacity to
                                                    Comptroller of the Currency, and the                     the stress test rules to GECC in the same
                                                                                                             manner as they currently apply to large                   efficiently meet its expected and
                                                    Federal Insurance Office, adopted stress                                                                           unexpected cash outflows and collateral
                                                    testing rules under section 165(i) of the                bank holding companies because of the
                                                                                                             similarity in activities, risk profile, and               needs at a reasonable cost without
                                                    Dodd-Frank Act (stress test rules).56 The                                                                          adversely affecting the daily operations
                                                    stress test rules establish a framework                  balance sheet composition between
                                                                                                             GECC and large bank holding                               or the financial condition of the
                                                    for the Board to conduct annual                                                                                    company. As noted above, the financial
                                                    supervisory stress tests and require                     companies. Compliance with the stress
                                                                                                             testing requirements would enhance the                    crisis of 2008–2009 illustrated that
                                                    covered companies to conduct semi-                                                                                 liquidity can evaporate quickly and
                                                    annual company-run stress tests.                         capital planning process for GECC and
                                                                                                             regularly test the adequacy of GECC’s                     cause severe stress at financial firms and
                                                       The stress tests conducted under the                                                                            in the financial markets, and
                                                    Board’s stress test rules are                            capital against hypothetical stressed
                                                                                                             situations to ensure that its capital                     demonstrated that even solvent
                                                    complementary to the Board’s review of                                                                             financial companies may experience
                                                    a company’s capital plan in the CCAR                     raising and capital distribution efforts
                                                                                                             adequately prepare the firm for potential                 material financial distress if they do not
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                                                    process. The Board’s stress test rules                                                                             manage their liquidity in a prudent
                                                    require the use of stylized capital action               stress environments. The stress testing
                                                                                                             requirements under the Board’s stress                     manner. Through recent rulemakings
                                                    assumptions to calculate the post-stress                                                                           and guidance, the Board has established
                                                    capital ratios, while the CCAR post-                     test rules thus would enhance the
                                                                                                             resiliency of GECC and lessen the                         quantitative liquidity requirements and
                                                      54 See                                                 potential that its failure would have a                   qualitative liquidity risk-management
                                                             12 CFR part 252, subpart E.
                                                      55 12 U.S.C. 5365(i).                                  significant adverse effect on financial                   standards in order to ensure the
                                                      56 77 FR 62378 (October 12, 2012); 12 CFR part

                                                    252, subparts E and F.                                        57 12   CFR part 252, subparts E and F.                58 12   U.S.C. 5365(b)(1)(A)(ii).



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                                                    44120                            Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 142 / Friday, July 24, 2015 / Notices

                                                    resiliency of financial companies during                 assumptions tailored to the                              and relies on wholesale funding, such as
                                                    periods of financial market stress.                      idiosyncratic aspects of a firm’s                        commercial paper held by institutional
                                                       To complement the LCR requirements                    liquidity risk profile, while the                        investors and committed lines of credit
                                                    described above, the proposed order                      standardized measure of liquidity                        provided by large commercial banks,
                                                    would have applied the individualized                    adequacy under the LCR is designed to                    exposing the company to liquidity risks.
                                                    liquidity risk-management requirements                   facilitate a transparent assessment of a                    The firm-specific liquidity risk
                                                    established in Regulation YY to GECC                     covered bank holding company’s                           management and stress testing
                                                    beginning July 1, 2015. The liquidity                    liquidity position under a standard                      requirements of Regulation YY would
                                                    risk-management requirements of                          stress scenario and to facilitate                        enhance the resilience of GECC and
                                                    Regulation YY include requirements                       comparisons across firms.                                mitigate the potential risks to U.S.
                                                    that the board of directors of a covered                    Finally, the Board also proposed to                   financial stability by helping to ensure
                                                    bank holding company approve an                          apply SR Letter 10–6, Interagency Policy                 that GECC develops the necessary risk
                                                    acceptable level of liquidity risk that the              Statement on Funding and Liquidity                       management infrastructure to evaluate
                                                    bank holding company may assume in                       Risk Management (SR 10–6) to GECC,                       the liquidity risk profile of its
                                                    connection with its operating strategies                 and to require compliance with the                       operations on a continuing basis,
                                                    (liquidity risk tolerance), receive and                  guidance outlined in that letter by July                 including in stressed environments. The
                                                    review information from senior                           1, 2015.64 SR 10–6 provides guidance                     liquidity risk management and stress
                                                    management regarding the company’s                       on sound practices for managing the                      testing requirements of Regulation YY
                                                    compliance with the established                          funding and liquidity risks of depository                require each covered company to tailor
                                                    liquidity risk tolerance, and approve                    institutions. The guidance also explains                 its compliance framework to the
                                                    and periodically review liquidity risk-                  the expectation that institutions manage                 particular size, complexity, structure,
                                                    management strategies, policies, and                     liquidity risk using processes and                       risk profile, and activities of the
                                                    procedures established by senior                         systems that are commensurate with the                   organization. Thus, in implementing
                                                    management.59 Regulation YY requires                     institution’s complexity, risk profile,                  these requirements, GECC would be
                                                    senior management of a covered bank                      and scope of operations.                                 expected to tailor its risk management
                                                    holding company to establish and                            In comments on the proposed order,                    framework to suit the company’s
                                                    implement liquidity risk-management                      GECC argued that the Board should not                    liquidity risks.
                                                    strategies, policies, and procedures,                    apply intraday liquidity monitoring                         Intraday monitoring is an important
                                                    approved by the company’s board of                       requirements, asserting that GECC’s                      liquidity risk management process that
                                                    directors; review and approve new                        business mix does not result in high                     is designed to address the risk that a
                                                    products and business lines; and                         intraday liquidity volatility. GECC also                 large banking organization is unable to
                                                    evaluate liquidity costs, benefits and                   argued that any intraday liquidity                       receive or make critical payments,
                                                    risks related to new business lines and                                                                           which can lead to systemic disruptions.
                                                                                                             monitoring requirement should be
                                                    products.60 In addition, Regulation YY                                                                            A company’s procedures for monitoring
                                                                                                             applied only after an evaluation of
                                                    requires a covered bank holding                                                                                   and managing intraday liquidity
                                                                                                             whether such a requirement is necessary
                                                    company to establish and maintain                                                                                 positions should, however, reflect in
                                                                                                             in light of GECC’s liquidity profile and
                                                    procedures for monitoring collateral,                                                                             stringency and complexity the scope of
                                                                                                             the costs required to develop and
                                                    legal entity exposures, and intraday                                                                              operations of the company. Consistent
                                                                                                             maintain such a monitoring system.
                                                    liquidity risks, and requires an                                                                                  with Regulation YY, under the final
                                                                                                                In order to promote the resilience of
                                                    independent review of a covered bank                                                                              order, GECC may tailor its intraday
                                                                                                             GECC, improve its ability to withstand
                                                    holding company’s liquidity risk-                                                                                 liquidity monitoring procedures to its
                                                                                                             financial and economic stress, and
                                                    management processes and its liquidity                                                                            business mix and risk.
                                                                                                             mitigate the potential adverse effects on
                                                    stress-testing processes and                                                                                         In order to account for the effect that
                                                                                                             other financial firms and markets, the
                                                    assumptions.61                                                                                                    the divestitures proposed under the
                                                                                                             Board has determined to require GECC
                                                       Regulation YY also requires covered                                                                            GECC reorganization plan will have on
                                                                                                             to manage its liquidity in a manner that
                                                    bank holding companies to produce                                                                                 the liquidity needs and sources for
                                                                                                             is comparable to a bank holding
                                                    comprehensive cash-flow projections                                                                               GECC and the time required to establish
                                                                                                             company subject to Regulation YY and
                                                    that project cash flows arising from                                                                              the necessary monitoring systems, the
                                                                                                             SR 10–6.65 GECC, like a large bank
                                                    assets, liabilities, and off-balance sheet                                                                        Board has determined to defer these
                                                                                                             holding company, is primarily a lender                   requirements until January 1, 2018.
                                                    exposures over short-term and long-term                  and lessor to commercial entities and
                                                    horizons.62 In addition, a covered bank                  consumers, and is substantially                          6. Other Prudential Standards:
                                                    holding company must establish and                       involved in the provision of credit in                   Restrictions on Intercompany
                                                    maintain a contingency funding plan                      the United States. Similar to large bank                 Transactions
                                                    that sets forth strategies for addressing                holding companies, GECC is also an                          Section 165(b)(1)(B) of the Dodd-
                                                    liquidity and funding needs during                       active participant in the capital markets                Frank Act allows the Board to establish
                                                    liquidity stress events.63
                                                       The liquidity requirements in                                                                                  additional enhanced prudential
                                                                                                               64 Supervision and Regulation Letter SR 10–6,

                                                    Regulation YY are designed to                            Interagency Policy Statement on Funding and
                                                                                                                                                                      standards for nonbank financial
                                                    complement the requirements of the                       Liquidity Risk Management (March 17, 2010) (SR           companies supervised by the Board and
                                                    LCR rule. The internal liquidity stress-                 10–6), available at: http://www.federalreserve.gov/      for bank holding companies with assets
                                                                                                             boarddocs/srletters/2010/sr1006.htm. SR 10–6             of $50 billion or more.66 The Board
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                                                    test requirements in Regulation YY                       reiterates the process that institutions should follow
                                                    provide a view of an individual firm                     to appropriately identify, measure, monitor, and
                                                                                                                                                                      proposed to apply as an enhanced
                                                    under multiple scenarios and include                     control their funding and liquidity risk. In             prudential standard certain restrictions
                                                                                                             particular, the guidance re-emphasizes the               on transactions between GECC and its
                                                      59 12
                                                                                                             importance of cash-flow projections, diversified         affiliated entities that are not under
                                                            CFR 252.34(a).                                   funding sources, stress testing, a cushion of liquid
                                                      60 12 CFR 252.34(c).                                   assets, and a formal well-developed contingency
                                                                                                                                                                      GECC’s control. In particular, the Board
                                                      61 12 CFR 252.34(d), (h).
                                                                                                             funding plan as primary tools for measuring and          proposed that GECC comply with the
                                                      62 12 CFR 252.34(e).                                   managing liquidity risk.
                                                      63 12 CFR 252.34(f).                                     65 See 12 CFR 252.34, .35.                              66 12   U.S.C. 5365(b)(1)(B).



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                                                                                       Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 142 / Friday, July 24, 2015 / Notices                                                    44121

                                                    requirements of section 23B of the                         between GECC and any of its affiliates                 identified below beginning on July 1,
                                                    Federal Reserve Act and the                                on January 1, 2018, be conformed to the                2015. The Board proposed to require
                                                    corresponding provisions of Regulation                     requirements of section 23B and all                    GECC to file the FR Y–14A on April 5,
                                                    W (subpart F of 12 CFR part 223) in all                    transactions between GECC and its                      2016, and the FR Y–14Q and Y–14M
                                                    transactions between GECC (or any of its                   affiliates initiated on or after that date             reports as of one calendar year before
                                                    subsidiaries) with any other affiliate, as                 be in conformance with section 23B.                    the as-of date of its first supervisory and
                                                    if GECC (or any of its subsidiaries) were                                                                         company-run stress test under the
                                                                                                               7. Future Standards
                                                    a ‘‘member bank’’ and GE (or any of its                                                                           Board’s stress test rules. In comments on
                                                    subsidiaries other than GECC and                              The Board continues to consider                     the proposed order, GECC requested
                                                    subsidiaries of GECC) were an                              whether it would be appropriate to                     that, for those subsidiaries that would
                                                    ‘‘affiliate.’’ 67 This requirement has the                 develop additional standards for                       be unwound or sold as part of the
                                                    effect of requiring that all transactions                  nonbank financial companies                            divestiture plan, GECC be permitted to
                                                    between GECC (or any of its                                supervised by the Board and large bank                 defer the quarterly and annual reporting
                                                    subsidiaries) and an affiliate of GECC be                  holding companies, and if it proposes to               of standalone financial statements until
                                                    on market terms or, if a market does not                   adopt additional standards, the Board                  the first quarter of 2018. As is discussed
                                                    exist for the transaction, on terms that                   will do so in a process that allows for                more fully below, the Board is adopting
                                                    are at least as favorable to GECC as those                 public participation.68                                reporting requirements that align with
                                                    in a transaction between GECC and an                          As noted above, if the Council                      the effective dates of the Phase I and
                                                    unaffiliated third party.                                  rescinds its determination under section               Phase II Requirements to support the
                                                       GECC acknowledged that the                              113 of the Dodd-Frank Act that GECC                    respective standards adopted as part of
                                                    proposed restriction on affiliate                          should be subject to supervision by the                each phase.
                                                    transactions was an appropriate                            Board and enhanced prudential
                                                    safeguard that could protect GECC from                     standards, the enhanced prudential                     1. Phase I Requirements
                                                    conflicts of interest and inappropriate                    standards imposed by the Board order                      Beginning on January 1, 2016, GECC
                                                    transfers of risk from GE to GECC. GECC                    will no longer apply to GECC. No                       must file the following reports with the
                                                    requested, however, that the Board                         further action by the Board will be                    Board (in accordance with the timelines
                                                    apply those requirements only on a                         necessary to terminate the order’s                     set forth in the applicable instructions
                                                    prospective basis. GECC argued that                        application to GECC or any successor.                  to each reporting form):
                                                    retroactive application of these                           So long as GE or GECC controls a                          a. FR Y–6 report (Annual Report of
                                                    requirements to transactions that                          savings association, they are subject to               Holding Companies);
                                                    already exist between GECC and GE                          the requirements and supervisory                          b. FR Y–9C report (Consolidated
                                                    affiliates would disturb existing                          standards applicable under the Home                    Financial Statements for Holding
                                                    contractual relationships, and would be                    Owners’ Loan Act, as amended.                          Companies) and FR Y–9LP report
                                                    time-consuming, costly, and of limited                                                                            (Parent Company Only Financial
                                                    benefit.                                                   C. Reporting Requirements
                                                                                                                                                                      Statements for Large Holding
                                                       The application of section 23B of the                      Section 161(a) of the Dodd-Frank Act                Companies);
                                                    Federal Reserve Act to transactions                        authorizes the Board to require a                         c. FR Y–10 report (Report of Changes
                                                    between GECC and its affiliates is                         nonbank financial company supervised                   in Organizational Structure); and
                                                    designed to enhance the safety and                         by the Board, and any subsidiary                          d. FR Y–11 report and FR Y–11S
                                                    soundness of GECC and to reduce the                        thereof, to submit reports to the Board                report (Financial Statements of U.S.
                                                    risk of material financial distress at                     related to the financial condition of the              Nonbank Subsidiaries of U.S. Holding
                                                    GECC by ensuring that GECC is not                          company or subsidiary, systems of the                  Companies).
                                                    engaging in transactions with affiliates                   company or subsidiary for monitoring                      GECC is already filing each of the
                                                    on terms unfavorable to GECC, or in                        and controlling financial, operating, and              reports listed above and must continue
                                                    transactions that would not have been                      other risks, and the extent to which the               to file each of these reports in
                                                    conducted, but for the affiliation                         activities and operations of the company               accordance with the timelines set forth
                                                    between the companies. The Board                           or subsidiary pose a threat to the                     in their respective reporting instructions
                                                    believes that ensuring the long-term safe                  financial stability of the United States.69            for as long as GECC is supervised by the
                                                    and sound operation of GECC is served                      The Board may also require reports in                  Board. The Board intends to confer with
                                                    by requiring all affiliate transactions to                 order to monitor compliance by the                     GECC on a case-by-case basis to identify
                                                    comply with the requirements of section                    company or subsidiary with the                         any report schedules that may not be
                                                    23B of the Federal Reserve Act and the                     requirements of Title I of the Dodd-                   necessary for GECC to provide based on
                                                    corresponding provisions of Regulation                     Frank Act, which includes the enhanced                 its risk profile, structure, activities, or
                                                    W. While the Board recognizes that                         prudential standards to which nonbank                  other characteristics.71 In addition, if
                                                    there could be costs in conforming                         financial companies are subject.70
                                                    existing arrangements to section 23B,                         Pursuant to this authority, the Board                  71 GECC is currently a savings and loan holding

                                                    the costs exist only to the extent that GE                 proposed to require GECC to file the                   company supervised by the Board. So long as GECC
                                                    and its affiliates have received terms in                                                                         remains a registered savings and loan holding
                                                                                                               reports identified below. Other than the               company, GECC continues to be subject to all
                                                    transactions with GECC that are not at                     FR Y–14 series reporting forms, the                    reporting requirements applicable to a savings and
                                                    least as favorable to GECC as would be                     proposed order would have required                     loan holding company. Consistent with section
                                                    available in the marketplace. At the
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                                                                                                               GECC to file each of the reports                       161(a)(2) of the Dodd-Frank Act, the Board intends
                                                    same time, these transactions result in                                                                           to confer with GECC as to whether the information
                                                                                                                                                                      requested in the required reports may be available
                                                    GECC providing a subsidy to GE or is                         68 For example, the Board’s initial proposed rules
                                                                                                                                                                      from other sources, and, to the extent any reporting
                                                    affiliates, thereby increasing the cost                    to implement the requirements of section 165 and       requirements overlap, GECC will not be subjected
                                                    and risk to GECC. Accordingly, the                         166 of the Dodd-Frank Act included single-             to duplicative reporting requirements as both a
                                                                                                               counterparty credit limits and early remediation       savings and loan holding company and a nonbank
                                                    Board has determined to require that                       requirements for the companies covered under           financial company supervised by the Board. 12
                                                    certain transactions that are outstanding                  sections 165 and 166 of the Dodd-Frank Act.            U.S.C. 5361(a)(2). In the event that GECC is
                                                                                                                 69 12 U.S.C. 5361(a).
                                                                                                                                                                      deregistered as a savings and loan holding company
                                                      67 12   U.S.C. 371c–1; 12 CFR part 223, subpart F.         70 Id.                                                                                          Continued




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                                                    44122                            Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 142 / Friday, July 24, 2015 / Notices

                                                    GECC sells, distributes, or otherwise                    GECC and monitor progress by GECC in                   granular data on various asset classes
                                                    disposes of any of its subsidiaries                      implementing its divestiture plan. The                 and pre-provision net revenue for the
                                                    during the applicable reporting period                   Board also expects to use this                         reporting period, including information
                                                    for a particular form, GECC should                       information to monitor intercompany                    pertaining to securities, retail loans,
                                                    consult with the appropriate Reserve                     transactions.                                          wholesale loans, mortgage servicing
                                                    Bank to determine whether it is                                                                                 rights, regulatory capital instruments,
                                                                                                             2. Phase II Requirements
                                                    necessary to submit information                                                                                 operational risk, and trading, private
                                                    regarding the subsidiary.                                   Except as otherwise noted below,                    equity, and other fair-value assets.
                                                       The FR Y–6 (Annual Report of                          beginning on January 1, 2018, GECC                     Collectively, the Y–14 data is used to
                                                    Holding Companies) is an annual                          must file the following reports with the               assess the capital adequacy of filers
                                                    information collection of financial data,                Board (in accordance with the timelines                using forward-looking projections of
                                                    an organization chart, verification of                   set forth in the applicable instructions               revenue and losses, and to support
                                                    domestic branch data, and information                    to each reporting form):                               supervisory stress test models and
                                                    about certain shareholders. The FR Y–                       a. FR Y–14A, FR Y–14Q, and FR Y–                    continuous monitoring efforts. GECC is
                                                    9C (Consolidated Financial Statements                    14M reports (Capital Assessments and                   required to file its first FR Y–14A
                                                    for Holding Companies) and FR Y–9LP                      Stress Testing);                                       submission on April 5, 2018, as part of
                                                    (Parent Company Only Financial                              b. FR Y–15 report (Banking                          its capital plan. In addition, GECC is
                                                    Statements for Large Holding                             Organization Systemic Risk Report);                    required to submit its first FR Y–14Q
                                                    Companies) reports are standardized                         c. FR 2314 and FR 2314S reports                     and Y–14M reports by December 31,
                                                    financial statements and consist of                      (Financial Statements of Foreign                       2017, which is one calendar year before
                                                    consolidated data from filers. The FR Y–                 Subsidiaries of U.S. Banking                           the as of date of its first supervisory and
                                                    9LP collects basic financial data on a                   Organizations);                                        company-run stress test under the
                                                    consolidated, parent-only basis in the                      d. FFIEC 009 report (Country
                                                                                                                                                                    Board’s stress test rules. The FR Y–15
                                                    form of a balance sheet, an income                       Exposure Report) and FFIEC 009a report
                                                                                                                                                                    report (Banking Organization Systemic
                                                    statement, and supporting schedules                      (Country Exposure Information Report);
                                                                                                                                                                    Risk Report) collects consolidated
                                                    relating to investments, cash flow, and                  and
                                                                                                                e. FFIEC 102 report (Market Risk                    systemic risk data. The FR 2314 and FR
                                                    certain memoranda items. The FR Y–10                                                                            2314S (Financial Statements of Foreign
                                                                                                             Regulatory Report for Institutions
                                                    (Report of Changes in Organizational                                                                            Subsidiaries of U.S. Banking
                                                                                                             Subject to the Market Risk Capital
                                                    Structure) is an event-generated                                                                                Organizations) reports collect financial
                                                                                                             Rule).72
                                                    information collection that captures                                                                            information for non-functionally
                                                                                                                Submitted as part of the Board’s
                                                    changes to a filer’s regulated                                                                                  regulated direct or indirect foreign
                                                                                                             CCAR and stress testing processes, the
                                                    investments and activities. The                                                                                 subsidiaries on a quarterly or annual
                                                                                                             FR Y–14A, FR Y–14M, and FR Y–14Q
                                                    information in this report, in                                                                                  basis. The FR 2314 and FR 2314S
                                                                                                             (Capital Assessments and Stress
                                                    conjunction with the information in the                                                                         reports consist of a balance sheet and
                                                                                                             Testing) reports collect detailed
                                                    FR Y–6, will capture the legal entity                                                                           income statement; information on
                                                                                                             financial information, including
                                                    structure of GECC. The FR Y–11 and FR                                                                           changes in equity capital, changes in the
                                                                                                             quantitative projections of balance
                                                    Y–11S (Financial Statements of U.S.                                                                             allowance for loan and lease losses, off-
                                                                                                             sheet, income, losses, and capital across
                                                    Nonbank Subsidiaries of U.S. Holding                                                                            balance-sheet items, and loans; and a
                                                                                                             a range of macroeconomic scenarios and
                                                    Companies) reports collect financial                                                                            memoranda section. The FFIEC 009
                                                                                                             qualitative information on
                                                    information for individual non-                                                                                 (Country Exposure Report) and FFIEC
                                                                                                             methodologies used to develop internal
                                                    functionally regulated subsidiaries on a                                                                        009a (Country Exposure Information
                                                                                                             projections of capital across scenarios,
                                                    quarterly basis. These reports consist of                                                                       Report) reports are quarterly
                                                                                                             with certain projections and information
                                                    a balance sheet and income statement;                                                                           information collections currently
                                                                                                             collected on a semi-annual basis. The
                                                    information on changes in equity                                                                                submitted for countries in which GECC
                                                                                                             FR Y–14A report is an annual collection
                                                    capital, changes in the allowance for                                                                           has $30 million or more in claims on
                                                                                                             of quantitative projections of balance
                                                    loan and lease losses, off-balance-sheet                                                                        residents of foreign countries. The
                                                                                                             sheet, income, losses, and capital across
                                                    items, and loans; and a memoranda                                                                               FFIEC 009 collects detailed information
                                                                                                             a range of macroeconomic scenarios and
                                                    section. The information collected                                                                              on the distribution, by country, of
                                                                                                             qualitative information on
                                                    through the FR Y–11 and FR Y–11S                                                                                claims on local residents held by GECC.
                                                                                                             methodologies used to develop internal
                                                    reports serves to identify material legal                                                                       The FFIEC 009a is a supplement to the
                                                                                                             projections of capital across scenarios,
                                                    entities.                                                                                                       FFIEC 009 that provides specific
                                                       The Board expects to use the                          with certain projections and information
                                                                                                             collected on a semi-annual basis. The                  information about GECC’s exposures to
                                                    information collected through reports to                                                                        particular countries. This information
                                                    monitor the financial condition and                      FR Y–14M report is a monthly
                                                                                                             submission that comprises three loan-                  may be used to analyze the extent to
                                                    activities of GECC. This information                                                                            which GECC’s credit exposures pose a
                                                    will also be used by the Board to                        and portfolio-level collections of data
                                                                                                             concerning domestic residential                        threat to the financial stability of the
                                                    monitor the extent to which the                                                                                 United States.
                                                    activities and operations of GECC pose                   mortgages, domestic home equity loans
                                                                                                             and home equity lines of credit, and                      The FFIEC 102 (Market Risk
                                                    a threat to the financial stability of the                                                                      Regulatory Report for Institutions
                                                    United States and GECC’s compliance                      domestic credit card loans, and one
                                                                                                             detailed address-matching collection to                Subject to the Market Risk Capital Rule)
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                                                    with the requirements of Title I of the                                                                         report is designed to implement the
                                                    Dodd-Frank Act, the enhanced                             supplement two of the loan- and
                                                                                                             portfolio-level collections. The FR Y–                 reporting requirements for institutions
                                                    prudential standards that are imposed                                                                           that are subject to the federal banking
                                                    on GECC, and other relevant law. In                      14Q report is a quarterly collection of
                                                                                                                                                                    agencies’ market risk capital rule under
                                                    addition, this information will be used                     72 GECC would become subject to the FFIEC 102       the revised capital framework.73 The
                                                    to capture the legal entity structure of                 report in the event the company meets the aggregate
                                                                                                             trading assets and trading liabilities threshold for      73 See 12 CFR part 217, subpart F. The Federal

                                                    by the Board, GECC would still be subject to the         application of the Board’s market risk capital rule.   Financial Institutions Examination Council (FFIEC)
                                                    reporting requirements required in the final order.      See 12 CFR 217.201(b).                                 is a formal interagency body empowered to



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                                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 142 / Friday, July 24, 2015 / Notices                                          44123

                                                    reports are quarterly information                          The final order contains reporting                     (3) Risk-Based Capital Guidelines:
                                                    collections used to assess the                           requirements subject to the PRA and                   Market Risk (FR 4201; OMB No. 7100–
                                                    reasonableness and accuracy of a market                  would require GECC to submit the                      0314). See the Regulatory Capital Rules
                                                    risk institution’s calculation of its                    following reporting forms in the same                 final rule (78 FR 62017) published on
                                                    minimum capital requirements under                       manner as a bank holding company:                     October 11, 2013.
                                                    the market risk capital rule and to                        (1) Country Exposure Report and                        (4) Recordkeeping and Reporting
                                                    evaluate such an institution’s capital in                Country Exposure Information Report                   Requirements Associated with
                                                    relation to its risks. Although GECC                     (FFIEC 009 and FFIEC 009a; OMB No.                    Regulation Y (Capital Plans) (Reg. Y–13;
                                                    would not currently be subject to the                    7100–0035);                                           OMB No. 7100–0342). See the Capital
                                                    Board’s market risk capital rule because                   (2) Market Risk Regulatory Report for               Plans final rule (76 FR 74631) published
                                                    it does not meet the applicable aggregate                Institutions Subject to the Market Risk               on December 1, 2011, the Supervisory
                                                    trading assets and trading liabilities                   Capital Rule (FFIEC 102; OMB No.                      and Company-Run Stress Test
                                                    thresholds, the order requires GECC to                   7100–0365);                                           Requirements for Covered Companies
                                                    submit the FFIEC 102 as a Phase II                         (3) Financial Statements of Foreign                 final rule (77 FR 62377) published on
                                                    Requirement in order to determine                        Subsidiaries of U.S. Banking                          October 12, 2012, and the Capital Plan
                                                    whether GECC becomes subject to the                      Organizations; and Abbreviated                        and Stress Test Rules final rule (79 FR
                                                    Board’s market risk capital rule.                        Financial Statements of Foreign                       64025) published on October 27, 2014.
                                                       The Board expects to use the                          Subsidiaries of U.S. Banking                             (5) Reporting and Recordkeeping
                                                    information collected in these reports to                Organizations (FR 2314 and FR 2314S;                  Requirements Associated with
                                                    assess GECC’s internal assessments of                    OMB No. 7100–0073);                                   Regulation WW (Liquidity Coverage
                                                    its capital adequacy under a stressed                      (4) Annual Report of Holding                        Ratio: Liquidity Risk Measurement,
                                                    scenario, and to conduct the Federal                     Companies (FR Y–6; OMB No. 7100–                      Standards, and Monitoring) (Reg. WW;
                                                    Reserve’s supervisory stress tests that                  0297);                                                OMB No. 7100–0367). See the Liquidity
                                                    assess GECC’s ability to withstand stress                  (5) Consolidated Financial Statements               Coverage Ratio final rule (79 FR 61439)
                                                    in a manner consistent with bank                         for Holding Companies (FR Y–9C; OMB                   published on October 10, 2014.
                                                    holding companies subject to the                         No. 7100–0128);                                          (6) Reporting, Recordkeeping, and
                                                    Board’s capital plan and stress testing                    (6) Parent Company Only Financial                   Disclosure Requirements Associated
                                                    rules. In addition, this information will                Statements for Large Holding                          with Regulation YY (Enhanced
                                                    be used to support ongoing monitoring                    Companies (FR Y–9LP; OMB No. 7100–                    Prudential Standards) (Reg. YY; OMB
                                                    of changes in GECC’s risk profile and                    0128);                                                No. 7100–0350). See the Supervisory
                                                    composition. The data from the reports                     (7) Report of Changes in                            and Company-Run Stress Test
                                                    regarding foreign activities will be used                Organizational Structure (FR Y–10;                    Requirements for Covered Companies
                                                    to identify current and potential                        OMB No. 7100–0297);                                   final rule (77 FR 62377) published on
                                                                                                               (8) Financial Statements of U.S.                    October 12, 2012, and the Enhanced
                                                    problems at the foreign subsidiaries of
                                                                                                             Nonbank Subsidiaries of U.S. Holding                  Prudential Standards for Bank Holding
                                                    GECC and to monitor their activities.
                                                                                                             Companies; and Abbreviated Financial                  Companies and Foreign Banking
                                                    The information collected through these
                                                                                                             Statements of U.S. Nonbank                            Organizations final rule (79 FR 17239)
                                                    reports also will allow the Federal
                                                                                                             Subsidiaries of U.S. Holding Companies                published on March 27, 2014.
                                                    Reserve and GECC to monitor exposures
                                                                                                             (FR Y–11 and FR Y–11S; OMB No.                           The Board has a continuing interest in
                                                    to counterparties, the types of claim
                                                                                                             7100–0244);                                           the public’s opinions of collections of
                                                    being reported, and credit derivative                      (9) Capital Assessments and Stress
                                                    exposure.                                                                                                      information. At any time, comments
                                                                                                             Testing (FR Y–14A, FR Y–14M, and FR                   regarding the burden estimate, or any
                                                    III. Paperwork Reduction Act                             Y–14Q; OMB No. 7100–0341); and                        other aspect of this collection of
                                                                                                               (10) Banking Organization Systemic                  information, including suggestions for
                                                      Certain provisions of the Board’s final
                                                                                                             Risk Report (FR Y–15; OMB No. 7100–                   reducing the burden, may be sent to:
                                                    order contain ‘‘collection of
                                                                                                             0352).                                                Secretary, Board of Governors of the
                                                    information’’ requirements within the                      The final order contains reporting,
                                                    meaning of the Paperwork Reduction                                                                             Federal Reserve System, 20th and C
                                                                                                             recordkeeping, or disclosure                          Streets NW., Washington, DC 20551;
                                                    Act (PRA) of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501–                       requirements subject to the PRA and
                                                    3521). In accordance with the                                                                                  and to the Office of Management and
                                                                                                             would require GECC to comply with the                 Budget, Paperwork Reduction Project,
                                                    requirements of the PRA, the Board may                   following information collections in the
                                                    not conduct or sponsor, and a                                                                                  Washington, DC 20503.
                                                                                                             same manner as a bank holding
                                                    respondent is not required to respond                    company:                                              IV. Final Order
                                                    to, an information collection unless it                    (1) Funding and Liquidity Risk
                                                    displays a currently valid Office of                                                                           FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
                                                                                                             Management Guidance (FR 4198; OMB
                                                    Management and Budget (OMB) control                      No. 7100–0326). See the Enhanced                      General Electric Capital Corporation
                                                    number. The Board reviewed the final                     Prudential Standards for Bank Holding                 Norwalk, Connecticut
                                                    order under the authority delegated to                   Companies and Foreign Banking                         Order Imposing Enhanced Prudential
                                                    the Board by OMB. The Board received                     Organizations final rule (79 FR 17239)                Standards and Reporting Requirements
                                                    no comments on the PRA section of the                    published on March 27, 2014.
                                                    proposed order.                                            (2) Risk-Based Capital Standards:                   I. Background
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                                                                                                             Advanced Capital Adequacy Framework                      In July 2013, the Financial Stability
                                                    prescribe uniform principles, standards, and report
                                                    forms for the federal examination of financial
                                                                                                             Information Collection (FR 4200; OMB                  Oversight Council (Council) determined
                                                    institutions by the Board, the Federal Deposit           No. 7100–0313). See the Regulatory                    that material financial distress at
                                                    Insurance Corporation, the National Credit Union         Capital Rules final rule (78 FR 62017)                General Electric Capital Corporation
                                                    Administration, the Office of the Comptroller of the     published on October 11, 2013, and the                (GECC) could pose a threat to U.S.
                                                    Currency, and the Consumer Financial Protection
                                                    Bureau and to make recommendations to promote
                                                                                                             Regulatory Capital Rules final rule (79               financial stability and that GECC should
                                                    uniformity in the supervision of financial               FR 57725) published on September 26,                  be subject to supervision by the Board
                                                    institutions.                                            2014.                                                 of Governors of the Federal Reserve


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                                                    44124                            Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 142 / Friday, July 24, 2015 / Notices

                                                    System (Board) and to enhanced                           of its consumer lending businesses,                   support the Phase I Requirements and
                                                    prudential standards.1 The Council’s                     including the entirety of its U.S.                    the Board’s supervision of GECC.
                                                    basis for its final determination noted                  depository institution operations. GECC                  In Phase II, beginning January 1, 2018,
                                                    GECC’s interconnections with financial                   plans to retain only those businesses                 GECC shall comply with certain
                                                    intermediaries through its financing                     directly related to GE’s core industrial              additional standards, including risk
                                                    activities and its funding model as well                 businesses.4 The divestitures are subject             management, capital, capital planning,
                                                    as a large portfolio of on-balance-sheet                 to a detailed plan with a definitive                  stress testing, liquidity risk
                                                    assets comparable to those of the largest                timeline. GECC has begun executing the                management, and restrictions on
                                                    U.S. bank holding companies. In                          plan and has made demonstrable                        intercompany transactions (Phase II
                                                    particular, the Council noted GECC’s                     progress. GE also announced an intent                 Requirements). GECC is required to file
                                                    significant use of wholesale funding,                    to further reduce GECC’s use of                       certain additional reports with the
                                                    including short-term wholesale funding                   commercial paper to $5 billion by the                 Board, generally beginning January 1,
                                                    (commercial paper), and use of long-                     end of 2015 and amended its income                    2018, that support the Phase II
                                                    term debt and securitization debt, which                 maintenance agreement with GECC to                    requirements.
                                                    could expose other large financial                       guarantee all tradable senior and                     II. Enhanced prudential standards
                                                    institutions to GECC’s distress, among                   subordinated debt securities and all
                                                    other reasons for its determination.2                    commercial paper issued or guaranteed                 a. Phase I Requirements
                                                    GECC became subject to the Board’s                       by GECC.5 The Board is closely                           GECC shall comply with the following
                                                    supervision immediately upon the                         monitoring the asset sales and other                  requirements beginning January 1, 2016.
                                                    Council’s final determination.                           proposed changes under the divestiture
                                                       Since July 2013, the Board’s                                                                                Capital
                                                                                                             and reorganization plans and any
                                                    supervisory program for GECC has been                    impact they may have on GECC’s                           To ensure that GECC continues to
                                                    based on previously published                            systemic footprint and the Board’s                    maintain sufficient capital and has
                                                    supervisory guidance for consolidated                    supervision of GECC and its                           internal processes for assessing its
                                                    supervision of large financial                           subsidiaries.                                         capital adequacy that appropriately
                                                    institutions (SR 12–17).3 The SR 12–17                      Related to the divestiture plan and                account for the company’s risks, GECC
                                                    framework provides core areas of focus                   other announced changes, GECC has                     shall comply with the Board’s capital
                                                    (capital, liquidity, governance, and                     indicated that it will seek rescission of             framework, set forth in 12 CFR part 217
                                                    recovery and resolution) and                             the Council’s designation in 2016. In                 (Regulation Q), including the
                                                    supervisory expectations that enhance                    light of the reorganization plan                      deductions required under 12 CFR
                                                    the resiliency of large financial                        currently underway at GECC and the                    248.12, as applicable, as if GECC were
                                                    institutions and reduce the impact on                    amount of resources and systems                       a bank holding company that calculates
                                                    the financial system and the broader                     necessary to implement enhanced                       risk-weighted assets solely under the
                                                    economy of a large financial                             prudential standards, the Board is                    standardized approach (subpart D to 12
                                                    institution’s failure or material financial              implementing the enhanced prudential                  CFR part 217), including the leverage
                                                    distress. Consistent with the SR 12–17                   standards in two phases—Phase I and                   ratio in 12 CFR 217.10(b)(4).
                                                    framework, the supervision of GECC has                                                                            At this time, GECC’s activities, risk
                                                                                                             Phase II.
                                                    focused on capital and liquidity                                                                               profile, and balance sheet are similar to
                                                                                                                In Phase I, beginning January 1, 2016,
                                                    planning and positions, corporate                                                                              those of large bank holding companies
                                                                                                             in order to ensure that GECC has
                                                    governance, recovery planning, and                                                                             supervised by the Board. Accordingly,
                                                                                                             adequate capital and liquidity to
                                                    resolution planning. The Board also                                                                            requiring GECC to comply with the
                                                                                                             support its current operations and
                                                    maintains a GECC-dedicated                                                                                     Board’s Regulation Q will help ensure
                                                                                                             mitigate the risk to financial stability
                                                    supervisory team that regularly meets                                                                          that GECC holds capital that is
                                                                                                             that may occur if GECC were to
                                                    with senior management and the boards                                                                          commensurate with its risk profile and
                                                                                                             experience material financial distress
                                                    of directors of General Electric Company                                                                       activities, can meet its obligations to
                                                                                                             while implementing its divestiture plan,
                                                    (GE) and GECC, reviews management                                                                              creditors and other counterparties, can
                                                                                                             GECC shall comply with certain capital,               continue to serve as a financial
                                                    information systems, and engages in a
                                                                                                             liquidity, and reporting standards                    intermediary through periods of
                                                    broad range of continuous monitoring
                                                                                                             (Phase I Requirements). The Phase I                   financial and economic stress, and
                                                    efforts.
                                                                                                             Requirements require GECC to comply                   meets capital standards that help
                                                       In April 2015, GE and GECC
                                                                                                             with the standardized risk-based capital              prevent or mitigate the risk to U.S.
                                                    announced plans to sell or otherwise
                                                                                                             requirements and the balance-sheet                    financial stability that could arise from
                                                    distribute much of GECC’s commercial
                                                                                                             leverage requirement in the Board’s                   the material financial distress or failure
                                                    lending and leasing operations and all
                                                                                                             regulatory capital framework, as                      of GECC.
                                                       1 Financial Stability Oversight Council, Basis of     described further below, as well as with
                                                    the Financial Stability Oversight Council’s Final        the liquidity coverage ratio rule (LCR                Liquidity
                                                    Determination Regarding General Electric Capital         rule) applicable to bank holding                        To ensure that GECC maintains
                                                    Corporation, Inc. (July 8, 2013) (GECC                   companies with $250 billion or more in
                                                    Determination). The GECC Determination did not
                                                                                                                                                                   sufficient liquidity to absorb shocks it
                                                    conclude that GECC was experiencing material
                                                                                                             total consolidated assets or $10 billion              may experience under stress, GECC
                                                    financial distress. Rather, consistent with the          or more in on-balance-sheet foreign                   shall comply with the LCR rule, set
                                                    statutory standard for determinations by the             exposures (advanced approaches                        forth in 12 CFR part 249, as a covered
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                                                    Council under section 113 of the Dodd-Frank Act,         banking organizations). GECC is also
                                                    the Council determined that material financial
                                                                                                                                                                   nonbank company (as that term is
                                                    distress at GECC, if it were to occur, could pose a
                                                                                                             required to file certain reports that                 defined in 12 CFR 249.3), pursuant to 12
                                                    threat to U.S. financial stability.                                                                            CFR 249.1(b)(1)(iv) and 12 CFR 249.3,
                                                       2 Id., at pp. 2, 6–8.                                   4 GE Press Release, April 10, 2014 (GE
                                                                                                                                                                   subject to the transition periods set forth
                                                       3 See Supervision and Regulation Letter 12–17,        Announcement), available at: http://                  under 12 CFR 249.50(b). GECC shall
                                                    Consolidated Supervision Framework for Large             www.genewsroom.com/press-releases/ge-create-
                                                    Financial Institutions (December 12, 2012) (SR 12–       simpler-more-valuable-industrial-company-selling-     calculate and maintain an LCR of at
                                                    17), available at: http://www.federalreserve.gov/        most-ge-capital-assets.                               least 90 percent from January 1, 2016, to
                                                    bankinforeg/srletters/sr1217.htm.                          5 Id.                                               December 31, 2016, and calculate and


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                                                                                       Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 142 / Friday, July 24, 2015 / Notices                                             44125

                                                    maintain an LCR of at least 100 percent                    GECC is expected to tailor its risk-                    GECC and reducing the likelihood that
                                                    thereafter. Until January 1, 2018, GECC                    management framework accordingly.                       problems at GECC would cause it to fail
                                                    may calculate its LCR monthly on each                         Application of the risk-management                   in a manner that affects financial
                                                    calculation date that is the last business                 standards in Regulation YY and the risk-                stability. The maintenance of a strong
                                                    day of the applicable calendar month,                      management guidance and supervisory                     base of capital by GECC is particularly
                                                    after which time it must calculate its                     expectations for nonbank financial                      important because a capital shortfall has
                                                    LCR daily.6                                                companies supervised by the Board 8                     the potential to result in significant
                                                       The application of the LCR rule to                      will strengthen GECC’s ability to                       adverse economic consequences and to
                                                    GECC will help promote the resilience                      prevent and respond to material distress                contribute to systemic distress.
                                                    of the short-term liquidity risk profile of                or failure and promote financial
                                                    GECC, thereby improving its ability to                     stability. The additional measures                      Capital Planning
                                                    measure and manage liquidity risk and                      related to GECC’s board of directors and                   For the capital plan cycle beginning
                                                    to absorb shocks arising from financial                    risk committee will help ensure that                    January 1, 2018, GECC shall comply
                                                    and economic stress. Because the LCR                       GECC’s independent directors are able                   with the capital plan rule set forth in 12
                                                    rule applies cash outflow and inflow                       to focus appropriate attention on the                   CFR 225.8 (capital plan rule) as a
                                                    rates that are based on the particular                     unique businesses and complexities of                   nonbank financial company supervised
                                                    risk profile and activities of companies                   GECC, that GECC’s operations are safe                   by the Board (as that term is defined in
                                                    like GECC, the LCR requirements are                        and sound, and that perspectives of                     12 CFR 225.8(d)(9)), pursuant to 12 CFR
                                                    tailored to and appropriate for GECC’s                     qualified individuals independent of the                225.8(b)(1)(iv).
                                                    activities, balance sheet, and risk                        management of GE and GECC have a                           The recent financial crisis highlighted
                                                    profile. The application of the LCR rule                   strong voice in the governance of GECC.                 a need for certain financial institutions,
                                                    will help ensure that GECC holds a                                                                                 such as GECC, to incorporate into their
                                                                                                               Risk-Based and Leverage Capital                         capital planning forward-looking
                                                    sufficient amount of high-quality liquid
                                                    assets based on its activities to meet its                    Beginning January 1, 2018, GECC                      assessments of capital adequacy under
                                                    net cash outflows over a 30-calendar-                      shall comply with the Board’s capital                   stressed conditions. The capital plan
                                                    day stress period.                                         framework, set forth in Regulation Q,                   rule will help ensure that GECC has
                                                                                                               including the deductions required                       robust systems and processes that
                                                    b. Phase II Requirements                                   under 12 CFR 248.12, as applicable, as                  incorporate forward-looking projections
                                                       GECC shall comply with the following                    if GECC were a bank holding company                     of revenue and losses to monitor and
                                                    requirements beginning January 1, 2018,                    that is an advanced approaches Board-                   maintain its internal capital adequacy.
                                                    except as may be otherwise noted                           regulated institution and a covered BHC                    The capital plan rule requires GECC
                                                    below.                                                     (as each term is defined under 12 CFR                   to submit an annual capital plan to the
                                                                                                               217.2); provided, however, that                         Board describing its planned capital
                                                    Risk-Management and Risk-Committee                         notwithstanding 12 CFR 217.100(b),                      actions and demonstrating its ability to
                                                    Standards                                                  GECC is not required to comply with                     meet a 5 percent tier 1 common capital
                                                       To reduce the likelihood of GECC                        subpart E of 12 CFR part 217 or to                      ratio and to maintain capital ratios
                                                    experiencing material financial distress                   calculate an advanced measure for                       above the Board’s minimum regulatory
                                                    and to promote financial stability,                        market risk under 12 CFR 217.204.9 To                   capital requirements under both
                                                    beginning January 1, 2018, GECC shall                      strengthen GECC’s ability to remain a                   baseline and stressed conditions over a
                                                    comply with the risk-committee and                         going concern during times of stress and                forward-looking planning horizon.11
                                                    risk-management standards under                            to minimize the likelihood that distress                GECC’s capital plan must include an
                                                    section 252.33 of the Board’s Regulation                   at GECC would contribute to financial                   assessment of the company’s sources
                                                    YY as though it were a bank holding                        instability, GECC shall maintain a                      and expected uses of capital that reflects
                                                    company with $50 billion or more in                        supplementary leverage ratio in excess                  the size, complexity, risk profile, and
                                                    total consolidated assets.7 In addition,                   of 4 percent (eSLR) in order to avoid                   scope of operations, assuming both
                                                    beginning January 1, 2018, GECC shall                      restrictions on capital distributions and               expected and stressed conditions. In
                                                    comply with the following additional                       discretionary bonus payments to                         addition, GECC must describe its
                                                    risk-management standards: (1) GECC                        executive officers.10                                   process for assessing capital adequacy
                                                    must maintain a board of directors with                       The enhanced capital framework                       and its capital policy and must provide
                                                    a majority of directors who do not hold                    adopted for advanced approaches bank                    a discussion of any expected changes to
                                                    management positions at either GE or                       holding companies, including the                        the company’s business plan that are
                                                    GECC (independent directors); (2) the                      requirement to recognize most elements                  likely to have a material impact on its
                                                    chair of GECC’s board of directors must                    of accumulated other comprehensive                      capital adequacy.
                                                    be an independent director; and (3) all                    income in regulatory capital, is an                        Under the capital plan rule, the Board
                                                    members of the risk committee of the                       appropriate capital framework for GECC                  will annually evaluate GECC’s capital
                                                    GECC board of directors, established                       because of the similarities in its                      adequacy and capital planning practices
                                                    pursuant to Regulation YY, must be                         activities, size, risk, and exposures to                and the comprehensiveness of the
                                                    independent directors. The risk-                           those of large bank holding companies.                  capital plan, including the strength of
                                                    management standards in Regulation                         The 4 percent eSLR is intended to                       the underlying analysis. The
                                                    YY require a company subject to its                        reflect GECC’s smaller systemic                         Comprehensive Capital Analysis and
                                                                                                               footprint compared to other banking                     Review (CCAR) is the Board’s
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                                                    provisions to implement a risk-
                                                    management framework that is                               organizations subject to a 5 percent                    supervisory process for reviewing
                                                    commensurate with the company’s                            eSLR, while still minimizing leverage at                capital plans submitted by companies
                                                    capital structure, risk profile,                                                                                   under the capital plan rule. As part of
                                                                                                                    8 See
                                                                                                                       SR 12–17, supra note 3.
                                                    complexity, activities, size, and other                                                                            CCAR, the Board conducts a
                                                                                                                    9 Pursuant
                                                                                                                             to Regulation Q, GECC’s computation
                                                    appropriate risk-related factors, and                      of capital shall take into account any off-balance-
                                                                                                                                                                       quantitative assessment of each
                                                                                                               sheet activities of the company. See 12 CFR 217.10      company’s capital adequacy under an
                                                      6 See   12 CFR part 249.                                 and 217.33; see also 12 U.S.C. 5365(k).
                                                      7 12   CFR 252.33.                                         10 12 CFR 217.11(a)(2)(v).                              11 See   12 CFR 225.8.



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                                                    44126                            Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 142 / Friday, July 24, 2015 / Notices

                                                    assumption of stressed conditions and                    companies that have comparable                          section 23B of the Federal Reserve Act
                                                    conducts a qualitative assessment of the                 activities, risk profiles, and balance                  and the corresponding provisions of
                                                    company’s internal capital planning                      sheets. The stress tests conducted under                Regulation W (12 CFR part 223, subpart
                                                    practices, each of which can provide a                   the Board’s stress test rules are                       F) 15 as if GECC (or any of its
                                                    basis on which the Board may object to                   complementary to the Board’s review of                  subsidiaries) were a member bank and
                                                    a company’s capital plan.                                GECC’s capital plan in CCAR.                            GE (or any of its subsidiaries other than
                                                       The Federal Reserve conducts its                                                                              GECC and subsidiaries of GECC) were
                                                    quantitative assessment of a company’s                   Liquidity
                                                                                                                                                                     an affiliate (as each term is defined in
                                                    capital plan based on the supervisory                       Beginning January 1, 2018, GECC                      section 23B of the Federal Reserve Act
                                                    stress test conducted under the Board’s                  shall comply with the liquidity                         and Regulation W) for all transactions:
                                                    rules implementing the stress tests                      requirements, set forth in sections                        1. Described in 12 U.S.C.
                                                    required under the Dodd-Frank Act                        252.34 and 252.35 of the Board’s                        371c(b)(7)(A) or (E) that existed prior to
                                                    combined with the company’s planned                      Regulation YY,12 as though it were a                    January 1, 2018, and remain outstanding
                                                    capital actions under the baseline                       bank holding company with $50 billion                   on or after January 1, 2018; and
                                                    scenario. This assessment will help                      or more in total consolidated assets.                      2. Described in 12 U.S.C. 371c–1(a)(2)
                                                    determine whether GECC would be                          GECC shall also comply with the                         that occur on or after January 1, 2018.
                                                    capable of meeting supervisory                           Board’s supervisory guidance on                            This standard does not apply to any
                                                    expectations for its regulatory capital                  funding and liquidity risk management                   transaction between GECC and any
                                                    ratios even if stressed conditions emerge                (SR 10–6).13 The liquidity risk                         person unaffiliated with GECC
                                                    and the company does not reduce                          management and stress testing                           involving proceeds that are used for the
                                                    planned capital distributions. The Board                 requirements of Regulation YY                           benefit of, or transferred to, an affiliate
                                                    will evaluate GECC’s risk-identification,                complement the LCR requirements and                     of GECC, which would otherwise be a
                                                    risk-measurement, and risk-management                    require a company subject to its                        covered transaction under section
                                                    practices supporting the capital                         provisions to tailor compliance to the                  23A(a)(2) of the Federal Reserve Act and
                                                    planning process, including estimation                   company’s size, complexity, structure,                  section 223.16 of Regulation W.16
                                                    practices used to produce stressed loss,                 risk profile, and activities. In complying
                                                    revenue, and capital ratios, as well as                  with Regulation YY, GECC is expected                    Future Standards
                                                    the governance and controls around                       to tailor its liquidity risk-management                    Nothing in this order limits the
                                                    these practices. In reviewing GECC’s                     framework to suit the organization’s                    Board’s authority to impose additional
                                                    capital plan, the Board will consider the                structure. Additionally, as discussed                   enhanced prudential standards on GECC
                                                    comprehensiveness of the capital plan,                   above, GECC will be required to                         in the future. The Board reserves the
                                                    the reasonableness of the company’s                      calculate its LCR daily beginning                       right to modify or supplement these
                                                    assumptions and analysis underlying                      January 1, 2018.                                        standards, if appropriate, to ensure the
                                                    the capital plan, and the company’s                         GECC, like a large bank holding                      safe and sound operation of GECC or to
                                                    methodologies for reviewing the                          company, is primarily a lender and                      promote financial stability.
                                                    robustness of its capital adequacy                       lessor to commercial entities and
                                                    process.                                                 consumers and is substantially involved                 c. Reporting 17
                                                                                                             in the provision of credit in the United                Phase I Requirements
                                                    Stress Testing                                           States. Similar to large bank holding
                                                       To ensure that GECC develops the                      companies, GECC is also an active                         Beginning on January 1, 2016, GECC
                                                    necessary systems and processes to                       participant in the capital markets and                  shall file the following reports with the
                                                    evaluate its capital adequacy on an                      relies on wholesale funding, such as                    Board (in accordance with the timelines
                                                    ongoing basis, starting with the stress                  commercial paper, exposing the                          set forth in the applicable instructions
                                                    testing cycle beginning on January 1,                    company to liquidity risks. The Board is                to each reporting form):
                                                    2019, GECC shall comply with the stress                  requiring GECC to manage its liquidity                    a. FR Y–6 report (Annual Report of
                                                    testing requirements set forth in                        in a manner that is comparable to a bank                Holding Companies);
                                                    subparts E and F of Regulation YY (12                    holding company subject to the LCR                        b. FR Y–9C report (Consolidated
                                                    CFR part 252, subparts E and F)                          rule, Regulation YY, and SR 10–6 to                     Financial Statements for Holding
                                                    (together, the stress test rules) as a                   ensure that GECC has sufficient                         Companies) and FR Y–9LP report
                                                    nonbank financial company supervised                     liquidity to meet outflows during a                     (Parent Company Only Financial
                                                    by the Board (as that term is defined in                 period of significant financial stress, to              Statements for Large Holding
                                                    12 CFR 252.42(i) and 252.52(j),                          improve its ability to withstand                        Companies);
                                                    respectively), pursuant to 12 CFR                        financial and economic stress, and to                     c. FR Y–10 report (Report of Changes
                                                    252.43(a)(1)(iii) and 12 CFR                             mitigate the potential adverse effects on               in Organizational Structure); and
                                                    252.53(a)(1)(iii).                                       other financial firms and markets.14                      d. FR Y–11 and FR Y–11S reports
                                                       The Board is applying its stress test                                                                         (Financial Statements of U.S. Nonbank
                                                                                                             Restrictions on Intercompany                            Subsidiaries of U.S. Holding
                                                    rules to GECC in the same manner that
                                                                                                             Transactions                                            Companies).
                                                    it applies them to large bank holding
                                                    companies due to the similarity in                         Beginning January 1, 2018, GECC
                                                                                                                                                                     Phase II Requirements
                                                    activities, risk profiles, and balance                   shall comply with the requirements of
                                                    sheets between GECC and large bank                                                                                 Except as otherwise noted below,
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                                                    holding companies. Moreover, because                          12 12
                                                                                                                      CFR 252.34 and 252.35.                         beginning on January 1, 2018, GECC
                                                    the Board’s supervisory stress tests are
                                                                                                                13 Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve         shall file the following reports with the
                                                                                                             System, Division of Banking Supervision and             Board (in accordance with the timelines
                                                    conducted on the basis of standardized                   Regulation (2010), ‘‘Interagency Policy Statement
                                                    scenarios and capital assumptions,                       on Funding and Liquidity Risk Management,’’
                                                                                                                                                                       15 12
                                                                                                             Supervision and Regulation Letter SR 10–6 (March                U.S.C. 371c–1; 12 CFR part 223, subpart F.
                                                    application of the Board’s stress test                                                                             16 12
                                                                                                             17, 2010); 75 FR 13656 (March 22, 2010); available              U.S.C. 371c(a)(2); 12 CFR 223.16.
                                                    rules to GECC allows the Board to                        at: http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/              17 Reporting requirements are adopted pursuant
                                                    compare GECC’s capital adequacy                          srletters/2010/sr1006.pdf.                              to section 161(a) of the Dodd-Frank Act. 12 U.S.C.
                                                    against that of large bank holding                          14 See 12 CFR 252.34 and 252.35.                     5361(a).



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                                                                                     Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 142 / Friday, July 24, 2015 / Notices                                                       44127

                                                    set forth in the applicable instructions                 and financial condition of the company                  section 4(k) of the BHC Act having total
                                                    to each reporting form):                                 and its subsidiaries; (B) the financial,                consolidated assets of $10 billion or
                                                      a. FR Y–14A, FR Y–14Q, and FR Y–                       operational, and other risks of the                     more without providing prior written
                                                    14M reports (Capital Assessments and                     company and its subsidiaries that may                   notice to the Board.23
                                                    Stress Testing);                                         pose a threat to the safety and
                                                      b. FR Y–15 report (Banking                                                                                     Concentration Limits on Large Financial
                                                                                                             soundness of the company or its
                                                    Organization Systemic Risk Report);                                                                              Companies
                                                                                                             subsidiaries or to the financial stability
                                                      c. FR 2314 and FR 2314S reports                        of the United States; (C) the systems for                 Pursuant to section 622 of the Dodd-
                                                    (Financial Statements of Foreign                         monitoring and controlling such risk;                   Frank Act (which amended the Bank
                                                    Subsidiaries of U.S. Banking                             and (D) compliance by the company or                    Holding Company Act of 1956 (BHC
                                                    Organizations);                                          its subsidiaries with Title I of the Dodd-              Act) to add a new section 14), GECC is
                                                      d. FFIEC 009 report (Country                           Frank Act.                                              prohibited from merging or
                                                    Exposure Report) and FFIEC 009a report                                                                           consolidating with, or acquiring,
                                                    (Country Exposure Information Report);                   Resolution Planning                                     another company if the resulting
                                                    and                                                         Pursuant to section 165(d) of the                    company’s liabilities upon
                                                      e. FFIEC 102 report (Market Risk                       Dodd-Frank Act, all nonbank financial                   consummation would exceed 10 percent
                                                    Regulatory Report for Institutions                       companies supervised by the Board                       of the aggregate liabilities of all financial
                                                    Subject to the Market Risk Capital                       shall report periodically to the Board                  companies.24
                                                    Rule).18                                                 the plan of such company for rapid and
                                                      The FR Y–14Q and Y–14M reports                                                                                 Supervisory Letter SR 12–17
                                                                                                             orderly resolution in the event of
                                                    support the stress testing standard and                                                                          (Consolidated Supervision Framework
                                                                                                             material financial distress or failure
                                                    must be filed by December 31, 2017.                                                                              for Large Financial Institutions)
                                                                                                             (Resolution Plan).20 As a nonbank
                                                    Likewise the FR Y–14A report supports                    financial company supervised by the                        GECC remains subject to the Board’s
                                                    capital planning and must be filed by                    Board, GECC is required to submit a                     risk-management guidance and
                                                    April 5, 2018, as part of the capital plan.              Resolution Plan for review by the Board                 supervisory expectations for nonbank
                                                      The Board intends to confer with                       and the Federal Deposit Insurance                       financial companies, which include
                                                    GECC to determine whether GECC                           Corporation (FDIC).21 The Resolution                    expectations concerning capital and
                                                    should modify any reporting schedules                    Plan must describe GECC’s strategy for                  liquidity planning, corporate
                                                    that may not be necessary for GECC to                    rapid and orderly resolution under the                  governance, recovery planning,
                                                    provide, based on its profile, structure,                U.S. bankruptcy code in the event of                    management of core business lines, and
                                                    activities, risks, or other characteristics.             material financial distress or failure of               resolution planning.25
                                                    In addition, if GECC sells, distributes, or              the company.                                            IV. Applicability
                                                    otherwise disposes of any of its
                                                                                                             Single-Counterparty Credit Limits                         All references to GECC in this order
                                                    subsidiaries during the applicable
                                                    reporting period for a particular form,                    Pursuant to section 165(e) of the                     include any successor to GECC, and if
                                                    GECC should consult with the Reserve                     Dodd-Frank Act, the Board has                           GECC is succeeded by or replaced with
                                                    Bank to determine whether it is                          proposed standards that limit single-                   another company controlled by GE this
                                                    necessary to submit information                          counterparty credit exposure.22 The                     order shall apply to that company. No
                                                    regarding the subsidiary.                                Board continues to develop single-                      further action by the Board will be
                                                                                                             counterparty credit limits and will in                  necessary to apply these enhanced
                                                    III. Other requirements                                  the future prescribe limits that may                    prudential standards or any of the
                                                       GECC remains subject to a number of                   apply to GECC.                                          Board’s other statutory authorities and
                                                    other statutory and regulatory                                                                                   powers related to the Board’s
                                                                                                             Acquisitions of Financial Companies                     supervision of GECC to that company.
                                                    requirements and the Board’s existing
                                                    supervisory framework,                                     Pursuant to section 163(b) of the                       If the Council rescinds its
                                                    notwithstanding the application of                       Dodd-Frank Act, nonbank financial                       determination under section 113 of the
                                                    enhanced prudential standards                            companies supervised by the Board,                      Dodd-Frank Act that GECC should be
                                                    implemented through this order                           including GECC, shall not acquire direct                subject to supervision by the Board and
                                                    pursuant to section 165 of the Dodd-                     or indirect ownership or control of any                 to enhanced prudential standards, this
                                                    Frank Act. Nothing in this order limits                  voting shares of any company (other                     order shall no longer apply to GECC. No
                                                    the applicability of those requirements,                 than an insured depository institution)                 further action by the Board will be
                                                    rules, and authorities. These other                      that is engaged in activities described in              necessary to terminate the order’s
                                                    requirements include, but are not                                                                                application to GECC (or any successor).
                                                                                                                  20 12
                                                                                                                      U.S.C. 5365(d). See 12 CFR part 243.
                                                    limited to, the following matters:                            21 GECC
                                                                                                                                                                       By order of the Board of Governors of the
                                                                                                                         was required to submit its initial
                                                                                                             Resolution Plan to the Board by July 1, 2014, and
                                                                                                                                                                     Federal Reserve System,26 effective July ll,
                                                    Examinations                                                                                                     2015.
                                                                                                             did so. GECC must file subsequent Resolution Plan
                                                       Pursuant to section 161(b) of the                     submissions by December 31 of each year. The              llllllllllllllllllll
                                                    Dodd-Frank Act, the Board has                            Board anticipates providing feedback and guidance       Robert deV. Frierson
                                                                                                             to GECC prior to the submission of its next             Secretary of the Board
                                                    examination authority over nonbank                       Resolution Plan.
                                                    financial companies supervised by the                       22 12 U.S.C. 5365(e). See 77 FR 594, 612 (January
                                                                                                                                                                        23 12 U.S.C. 5363(b). Pursuant to section 163(b)(2)
                                                    Board, including GECC.19 This
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                                                                                                             5, 2012) (proposing single-counterparty credit limits
                                                                                                                                                                     of the Dodd-Frank Act, the prior-notice requirement
                                                    examination authority is to inform the                   pursuant to section 165(e) of the Dodd-Frank Act);
                                                                                                                                                                     does not apply to the acquisition of shares that
                                                    Board of (A) the nature of the operations                79 FR 17240, 17243 (March 27, 2014) (indicating
                                                                                                             that the Board continues to study and develop           would qualify for the exemptions in section 4(c) or
                                                                                                             single-counterparty credit limits). The Board has       section 4(k)(4)(E) of the BHC Act. See 12 U.S.C.
                                                       18 GECC shall become subject to the FFIEC 102
                                                                                                             previously indicated that it will coordinate            5363(b)(2).
                                                                                                                                                                        24 See 12 U.S.C. 1852; see also 12 CFR part 251
                                                    report in the event the company meets the aggregate      development of credit exposure reports pursuant to
                                                    trading assets and trading liabilities threshold for     section 165(d)(2) of the Dodd-Frank Act, 12 U.S.C.      (the Board’s regulation implementing section 622 of
                                                    application of the Board’s market risk capital rule.     5365(d)(2), with the single-counterparty credit         the Dodd-Frank Act and section 14 of the BHC Act).
                                                    See 12 CFR 217.201(b).                                   exposure limits. See 76 FR 67323, 67327 (November          25 SR 12–17, supra note 3.
                                                       19 12 U.S.C. 5361(b).                                 1, 2011).                                                  26 Voting for the action: [ ].




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                                                    44128                            Federal Register / Vol. 80, No. 142 / Friday, July 24, 2015 / Notices

                                                      By order of the Board of Governors of the                Please note: All public comment should be           the collection of information; and to
                                                    Federal Reserve System, July 20, 2015.                   submitted through the Federal eRulemaking             transmit or otherwise disclose the
                                                    Robert deV. Frierson,                                    portal (Regulations.gov) or by U.S. mail to the       information.
                                                                                                             address listed above.
                                                    Secretary of the Board.
                                                                                                                                                                   Proposed Project
                                                    [FR Doc. 2015–18124 Filed 7–23–15; 8:45 am]              FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:              To
                                                    BILLING CODE 6210–01–P                                   request more information on the                         Screening and Counseling of Male
                                                                                                             proposed project or to obtain a copy of               EVD Survivors to reduce Risk of
                                                                                                             the information collection plan and                   Sexually Transmitting Ebola Virus—
                                                                                                             instruments, contact the Information                  New—Center for Global Health (CGH),
                                                    DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND                                                                                       Centers for Disease Control and
                                                    HUMAN SERVICES                                           Collection Review Office, Centers for
                                                                                                             Disease Control and Prevention, 1600                  Prevention (CDC).
                                                    Centers for Disease Control and                          Clifton Road NE., MS–D74, Atlanta,                    Background and Brief Description
                                                    Prevention                                               Georgia 30329; phone: 404–639–7570;                      Much progress has been made in the
                                                    [60-Day–FY–15AWA; Docket No. CDC–
                                                                                                             Email: omb@cdc.gov.                                   year since the CDC first responded to
                                                    2015–0055]                                               SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Under the                  the Ebola outbreak in West Africa, but
                                                                                                             Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA)                 the agency’s efforts must continue until
                                                    Proposed Data Collection Submitted                       (44 U.S.C. 3501–3520), Federal agencies               there are zero new cases of Ebola virus
                                                    for Public Comment and                                   must obtain approval from the Office of               disease (EVD). In order to reach the
                                                    Recommendations                                          Management and Budget (OMB) for each                  international goal of zero new EVD
                                                                                                             collection of information they conduct                cases in 2015, the agency must intensify
                                                    AGENCY: Centers for Disease Control and
                                                                                                             or sponsor. In addition, the PRA also                 its efforts to identify and prevent every
                                                    Prevention (CDC), Department of Health
                                                                                                             requires Federal agencies to provide a                potential route of human disease
                                                    and Human Services (HHS).
                                                                                                             60-day notice in the Federal Register                 transmission and to understand the
                                                    ACTION: Notice with comment period.                      concerning each proposed collection of                most current community barriers to
                                                    SUMMARY:   The Centers for Disease                       information, including each new                       reaching that final goal.
                                                    Control and Prevention (CDC), as part of                 proposed collection, each proposed                       The ‘‘Screening and Counseling of
                                                    its continuing efforts to reduce public                  extension of existing collection of                   Male EVD Survivors to reduce Risk of
                                                    burden and maximize the utility of                       information, and each reinstatement of                Sexually Transmitting Ebola Virus’’
                                                    government information, invites the                      previously approved information                       information collection will help inform
                                                    general public and other Federal                         collection before submitting the                      male Ebola infection survivors ≥15 years
                                                    agencies to take this opportunity to                     collection to OMB for approval. To                    of age of Ebola virus detected in their
                                                    comment on proposed and/or                               comply with this requirement, we are                  semen through voluntary laboratory
                                                    continuing information collections, as                   publishing this notice of a proposed                  testing performed in each country.
                                                    required by the Paperwork Reduction                      data collection as described below.                   Participants for the semen testing
                                                    Act of 1995. This notice invites                            Comments are invited on: (a) Whether               program will be recruited by trained
                                                    comment on a proposed information                        the proposed collection of information                study staff from Ebola treatment units
                                                    collection entitled ‘‘Screening and                      is necessary for the proper performance               and survivor registries in Sierra Leone.
                                                    Counseling of Male EVD Survivors to                      of the functions of the agency, including             Participants will be followed up at
                                                    reduce Risk of Sexually Transmitting                     whether the information shall have                    study sites in government hospitals.
                                                    Ebola Virus’’. This activity will collect                practical utility; (b) the accuracy of the               Specimens will be tested for Ebola
                                                    information on participants’ laboratory                  agency’s estimate of the burden of the                Virus ribonucleic acid (RNA) by reverse
                                                    results and sexual activity prior to and                 proposed collection of information; (c)               transcription polymerase chain reaction
                                                    during participation in the screening                    ways to enhance the quality, utility, and             test (RT–PCR). Semen specimens will be
                                                    program.                                                 clarity of the information to be                      collected and tested every two weeks
                                                                                                             collected; (d) ways to minimize the                   until two consecutive negative RT–PCR
                                                    DATES: Written comments must be                          burden of the collection of information               results are obtained.
                                                    received on or before September 22,                      on respondents, including through the                    Participants will be asked follow-up
                                                    2015.                                                    use of automated collection techniques                questions until their semen specimens
                                                    ADDRESSES:   You may submit comments,                    or other forms of information                         test negative twice consecutively. They
                                                    identified by Docket No. CDC–2015–                       technology; and (e) estimates of capital              will receive tokens of appreciation for
                                                    0055 by any of the following methods:                    or start-up costs and costs of operation,             their participation at the initial visit and
                                                      • Federal eRulemaking Portal:                          maintenance, and purchase of services                 again at every subsequent follow-up
                                                    Regulation.gov. Follow the instructions                  to provide information. Burden means                  visit and a supply of condoms. A
                                                    for submitting comments.                                 the total time, effort, or financial                  trained study data manager will collect
                                                      • Mail: Leroy A. Richardson,                           resources expended by persons to                      test results for all participants in a
                                                    Information Collection Review Office,                    generate, maintain, retain, disclose or               laboratory results form. Results and
                                                    Centers for Disease Control and                          provide information to or for a Federal               analyses are needed to update relevant
                                                    Prevention, 1600 Clifton Road NE., MS–                   agency. This includes the time needed                 counseling messages and
                                                    D74, Atlanta, Georgia 30329.                             to review instructions; to develop,                   recommendations from the Sierra Leone
                                                      Instructions: All submissions received                 acquire, install and utilize technology               Ministry of Health, World Health
asabaliauskas on DSK5VPTVN1PROD with NOTICES




                                                    must include the agency name and                         and systems for the purpose of                        Organization, and CDC.
                                                    Docket Number. All relevant comments                     collecting, validating and verifying                     This program will provide the
                                                    received will be posted without change                   information, processing and                           information that is critical to the
                                                    to Regulations.gov, including any                        maintaining information, and disclosing               development of public health measures,
                                                    personal information provided. For                       and providing information; to train                   such as recommendations about sexual
                                                    access to the docket to read background                  personnel and to be able to respond to                activity and approaches to evaluation of
                                                    documents or comments received, go to                    a collection of information, to search                survivors to determine whether they can
                                                    Regulations.gov.                                         data sources, to complete and review                  safely resume sexual activity. These


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Document Created: 2018-02-23 09:25:21
Document Modified: 2018-02-23 09:25:21
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionNotices
ActionFinal order applying enhanced prudential standards and reporting requirements to General Electric Capital Corporation.
DatesThe final order is effective in two phases. Phase I Requirements, as described more fully below, are effective on January 1, 2016. Phase II Requirements, as described more fully below, are effective on January 1, 2018, unless otherwise noted.
ContactAnn Misback, Associate Director, (202) 452-3799, Jyoti Kohli, Senior Supervisory Financial Analyst, (202) 452- 2539, or Elizabeth MacDonald, Senior Supervisory Financial Analyst, (202) 475-6316, Division of Banking Supervision and Regulation; or Laurie Schaffer, Associate General Counsel, (202) 452-2277, Tate Wilson, Counsel, (202) 452-3696, or Dan Hickman, Attorney, (202) 973- 7432, Legal Division.
FR Citation80 FR 44111 

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