81_FR_55542 81 FR 55381 - Mandatory Contractual Stay Requirements for Qualified Financial Contracts

81 FR 55381 - Mandatory Contractual Stay Requirements for Qualified Financial Contracts

DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency

Federal Register Volume 81, Issue 161 (August 19, 2016)

Page Range55381-55402
FR Document2016-19671

The OCC is proposing to add a new part to its rules to enhance the resilience and the safety and soundness of federally chartered and licensed financial institutions by addressing concerns relating to the exercise of default rights of certain financial contracts that could interfere with the orderly resolution of certain systemically important financial firms. Under this proposed rule, a covered bank would be required to ensure that a covered qualified financial contract (1) contains a contractual stay-and-transfer provision analogous to the statutory stay-and-transfer provision imposed under Title II of the Dodd-Frank Act and in the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, and (2) limits the exercise of default rights based on the insolvency of an affiliate of the covered bank. In addition, this proposed rule would make conforming amendments to the OCC's Capital Adequacy Standards and the Liquidity Risk Measurement Standards in its regulations. The requirements of this proposed rule are substantively identical to those contained in a notice of proposed rulemaking issued by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System on May 3, 2016.

Federal Register, Volume 81 Issue 161 (Friday, August 19, 2016)
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 161 (Friday, August 19, 2016)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 55381-55402]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2016-19671]


========================================================================
Proposed Rules
                                                Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________

This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains notices to the public of 
the proposed issuance of rules and regulations. The purpose of these 
notices is to give interested persons an opportunity to participate in 
the rule making prior to the adoption of the final rules.

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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 161 / Friday, August 19, 2016 / 
Proposed Rules

[[Page 55381]]



DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY

Office of the Comptroller of the Currency

12 CFR Parts 3, 47 and 50

[Docket ID OCC-2016-0009]
RIN 1557-AE05


Mandatory Contractual Stay Requirements for Qualified Financial 
Contracts

AGENCY: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Treasury (OCC).

ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.

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SUMMARY: The OCC is proposing to add a new part to its rules to enhance 
the resilience and the safety and soundness of federally chartered and 
licensed financial institutions by addressing concerns relating to the 
exercise of default rights of certain financial contracts that could 
interfere with the orderly resolution of certain systemically important 
financial firms. Under this proposed rule, a covered bank would be 
required to ensure that a covered qualified financial contract (1) 
contains a contractual stay-and-transfer provision analogous to the 
statutory stay-and-transfer provision imposed under Title II of the 
Dodd-Frank Act and in the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, and (2) limits 
the exercise of default rights based on the insolvency of an affiliate 
of the covered bank. In addition, this proposed rule would make 
conforming amendments to the OCC's Capital Adequacy Standards and the 
Liquidity Risk Measurement Standards in its regulations. The 
requirements of this proposed rule are substantively identical to those 
contained in a notice of proposed rulemaking issued by the Board of 
Governors of the Federal Reserve System on May 3, 2016.

DATES: Comments must be received by October 18, 2016.

ADDRESSES: Because paper mail in the Washington, DC area and at the OCC 
is subject to delay, commenters are encouraged to submit comments 
through the Federal eRulemaking Portal or email, if possible. Please 
use the title ``Mandatory Contractual Stay Requirements for Qualified 
Financial Contracts'' to facilitate the organization and distribution 
of the comments. You may submit comments by any of the following 
methods:
     Federal eRulemaking Portal--``Regulations.gov'': Go to 
www.regulations.gov. Enter ``Docket ID OCC-2016-0009'' in the Search 
Box and click ``Search.'' Click on ``Comment Now'' to submit public 
comments.
     Click on the ``Help'' tab on the Regulations.gov home page 
to get information on using Regulations.gov, including instructions for 
submitting public comments.
     Email: [email protected].
     Mail: Legislative and Regulatory Activities Division, 
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, 400 7th Street SW., Suite 
3E-218, Mail Stop 9W-11, Washington, DC 20219.
     Hand Delivery/Courier: 400 7th Street SW., Suite 3E-218, 
Mail Stop 9W-11, Washington, DC 20219.
     Fax: (571) 465-4326.
    Instructions: You must include ``OCC'' as the agency name and 
``Docket ID OCC-2016-0009'' in your comment. In general, OCC will enter 
all comments received into the docket and publish them on the 
Regulations.gov Web site without change, including any business or 
personal information that you provide such as name and address 
information, email addresses, or phone numbers. Comments received, 
including attachments and other supporting materials, are part of the 
public record and subject to public disclosure. Do not include any 
information in your comment or supporting materials that you consider 
confidential or inappropriate for public disclosure.
    You may review comments and other related materials that pertain to 
this rulemaking action by any of the following methods:
     Viewing Comments Electronically: Go to 
www.regulations.gov. Enter ``Docket ID OCC-2016-0009'' in the Search 
box and click ``Search.'' Click on ``Open Docket Folder'' on the right 
side of the screen and then ``Comments.'' Comments can be filtered by 
clicking on ``View All'' and then using the filtering tools on the left 
side of the screen.
     Click on the ``Help'' tab on the Regulations.gov home page 
to get information on using Regulations.gov. Supporting materials may 
be viewed by clicking on ``Open Docket Folder'' and then clicking on 
``Supporting Documents.'' The docket may be viewed after the close of 
the comment period in the same manner as during the comment period.
     Viewing Comments Personally: You may personally inspect 
and photocopy comments at the OCC, 400 7th Street SW., Washington, DC. 
For security reasons, the OCC requires that visitors make an 
appointment to inspect comments. You may do so by calling (202) 649-
6700 or, for persons who are deaf or hard of hearing, TTY, (202) 649-
5597. Upon arrival, visitors will be required to present valid 
government-issued photo identification and submit to security screening 
in order to inspect and photocopy comments.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Valerie Song, Assistant Director, or 
Scott Burnett, Attorney, Bank Activities and Structure Division, (202) 
649-5500; Rima Kundnani, Attorney, or Ron Shimabukuro, Senior Counsel, 
Legislative and Regulatory Activities Division, (202) 649-6282, 400 7th 
Street SW., Washington, DC 20219.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: 

Table of Contents

I. Introduction
II. Background
    A. Qualified Financial Contracts, Default Rights, and Financial 
Stability
    B. QFC Default Rights and GSIB Resolution Strategies
    C. Default Rights and Relevant Resolution Laws
III. Description of the Proposal
    A. Overview, Purpose, and Authority
    B. Covered Banks
    C. Covered QFCs
    D. Definition of ``Default Right''
    E. Required Contractual Provisions Related to U.S. Special 
Resolution Regimes
    F. Prohibited Cross-Default Rights
    G. Process for Approval of Enhanced Creditor Protections
    H. Transition Periods
    I. Amendments to Capital Rules
IV. Request for Comments
V. Regulatory Analysis
    A. Paperwork Reduction Act
    B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
    C. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
    D. Riegle Community Development and Regulatory Improvement Act 
of 1994

[[Page 55382]]

I. Introduction

    In the wake of the financial crisis of 2007-08, U.S. and 
international financial regulators have placed increased focus on 
improving the resolvability of large, complex financial institutions 
that operate in multiple jurisdictions, often called global 
systemically important banking organizations (GSIBs).
    In connection with these ongoing efforts, on May 3, 2016, the Board 
of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (FRB or Board) issued a 
notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) pursuant to section 165 of the 
Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank 
Act) as part of its ongoing efforts to improve the resolvability of 
U.S. GSIBs and foreign GSIBs that operate in the United States 
(collectively, ``covered entities'' \1\).\2\ The OCC is issuing this 
parallel proposed rule applicable to OCC-regulated institutions that 
are part of a covered entity under the FRB NPRM. The OCC intends this 
proposed rule to complement and work in tandem with the FRB NPRM.
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    \1\ The FRB NPRM applies to ``covered entities.'' The term 
``covered entity'' includes: any U.S. top-tier bank holding company 
identified as a GSIB under the Board's NPRM establishing risk-based 
capital surcharges for GSIBs, set forth at 12 CFR 217.402; any 
subsidiary of such bank holding company (other than a ``covered 
bank''); and any U.S. subsidiary, U.S. branch, or U.S. agency of a 
foreign GSIB (other than a ``covered bank''). See FRB NPRM Sec.  
252.82. The term ``covered entity'' does not include ``covered 
banks,'' which are instead covered by the provisions of this 
proposed rule.
    \2\ ``Restrictions on Qualified Financial Contracts of 
Systemically Important U.S. Banking Organizations and the U.S. 
Operations of Systemically Important Foreign Banking Organizations; 
Revisions to the Definition of Qualifying Master Netting Agreement 
and Related Definitions,'' 81 FR 29691, 29170 (May 11, 2016) (FRB 
Proposal, FRB NPRM, Board's Proposal, or Board's NPRM).
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    The purpose of the Board's NPRM is to improve the resolvability of 
covered entities by ``limiting disruptions to a failed GSIB through its 
financial contracts with other companies.'' \3\ Specifically, the 
Board's NPRM addresses a threat to financial stability posed by the 
potential disorderly exercise of default rights contained in several 
important categories of financial contracts collectively known as 
``qualified financial contracts'' (QFCs).\4\
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    \3\ Id. at 29170.
    \4\ Id. The Board's Proposal adopts the definition of 
``qualified financial contract'' set out in section 210(c)(8)(D) of 
the Dodd-Frank Act, 12 U.S.C. 5390(c)(8)(D). See Board's Proposal 
Sec.  252.81. This definition includes, among other things, 
derivatives, repurchase agreements (also known as ``repos'') and 
reverse repos, and securities lending and borrowing agreements.
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    As described more fully in the Board's NPRM and in the Background 
section of this preamble, this threat to financial stability arises 
because GSIBs are interconnected with other financial firms, including 
other GSIBs, through large volumes of QFCs. The failure of one entity 
within a GSIB can trigger disruptive terminations of these contracts if 
the counterparties of both the failed entity and its affiliates 
exercise their contractual rights to terminate the contracts and 
liquidate collateral.\5\ These terminations, especially if 
counterparties lose confidence in the GSIB quickly, and in large 
numbers, can destabilize the financial system and potentially spark a 
financial crisis through several channels. For example, they can 
destabilize the failed entity's otherwise solvent affiliates, causing 
them to weaken or fail with adverse consequences to their 
counterparties that can result in a chain reaction that ripples through 
the financial system. They also may result in ``fire sales'' of large 
volumes of financial assets, in particular, the collateral that secures 
the contracts, which can in turn weaken and cause stress for other 
firms by depressing the value of similar assets that they hold.
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    \5\ As used in this proposed rule, the term ``GSIB'' can refer 
to any entity in the GSIB group, including the top-tier parent 
entity or any subsidiary thereof. The term ``GSIB entity'' is 
sometimes used to refer to an individual component of the GSIB 
group.
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    As discussed in detail in the Section I.B., the OCC, as the primary 
regulator for national banks, Federal savings associations (FSAs), and 
Federal branches and agencies, has a strong safety and soundness 
interest in preventing such a disorderly termination of QFCs upon a 
GSIB's entry into resolution proceedings. QFCs are typically entered 
into by various operating entities in the GSIB group, which will often 
include a large depository institution that is subject to the OCC's 
supervision. These OCC-supervised entities are some of the largest 
entities by asset size in the GSIB group, and often a party to large 
volumes of QFCs, making these entities highly interconnected with other 
large financial firms.\6\ The exercise of default rights against an 
otherwise healthy national bank, FSA, or Federal branch or agency 
resulting from the failure of its affiliate, for example its top-tier 
U.S. holding company, may cause it to weaken or fail, and in turn 
spread contagion throughout the financial system, including among the 
system of federally chartered and licensed institutions that the OCC 
supervises, by causing a chain of failures by other financial 
institutions--including other national banks, FSAs, or Federal branches 
or agencies--that are its QFC counterparties. Furthermore, if an OCC-
supervised entity itself were to fail, it is imperative that the 
default rights triggered by such an event are exercised in an orderly 
manner, both by domestic and foreign counterparties, to ensure that 
contagion does not spread to other federally chartered and licensed 
institutions and beyond throughout the Federal banking system.\7\
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    \6\ 81 FR 29619, 29172 (``From the standpoint of financial 
stability, the most important of these operating subsidiaries are 
generally a U.S. insured depository institution, a U.S. broker-
dealer, and similar entities organized in other countries.'').
    \7\ As used in this proposed rule, the term ``Federal banking 
system'' refers to all OCC-supervised entities, including national 
banks, Federal savings associations, and Federal branches and 
agencies. Accordingly, references to impacts on the Federal banking 
system refer to how destabilization can adversely affect all such 
entities, not just covered banks.
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    Accordingly, OCC-supervised affiliates or branches of U.S. or 
foreign GSIBs are exposed, through the interconnectedness of their QFCs 
and their affiliates' QFCs, to destabilizing effects if their 
counterparties or the counterparties of their affiliates exercise 
default rights upon the entry into resolution of the covered bank 
itself or its GSIB affiliate. These potential destabilizing effects are 
best addressed by requiring all GSIB entities to amend their QFCs to 
include contractual provisions aimed at avoiding such destabilization. 
As the primary supervisor of covered banks, the OCC has a significant 
interest in preventing or mitigating these destabilizing effects; 
otherwise, the result will be adverse to safety and soundness of 
covered banks individually and collectively, with the potential for 
spill-over beyond GSIB-affiliated banks and Federal branches and 
agencies to the Federal banking system.
    As described in the Board's NPRM, measures aimed at improving 
financial stability and the probability of a successful resolution of 
GSIBs likely will affect the operations of GSIB subsidiaries. In most 
cases, the largest GSIB subsidiary by asset size is a national bank 
supervised by the OCC. While the ultimate aim of the Board's NPRM and 
this proposed rule is focused on the resolution of a GSIB, the proposed 
preventative measures would be required to be implemented by GSIBs 
while they are going concerns. The OCC has an inherent supervisory 
interest in ensuring that measures aimed at improving resolvability in 
the event of a GSIB's failure are also consistent with

[[Page 55383]]

the safe and sound operation of the OCC-supervised subsidiary as a 
going concern. Accordingly, to ensure that the QFCs entered into by 
such entities do not threaten the stability or safety and soundness of 
covered banks individually or collectively, the OCC is issuing this 
proposed rule, which imposes substantively identical requirements 
contained in the FRB NPRM on national banks, FSAs, and Federal branches 
and agencies (covered banks). The OCC worked closely with the FRB to 
develop this proposed rule.\8\ In addition, the OCC plans to work with 
the FRB to coordinate the development of the final rule and may share 
comments received in response to the proposed rule, as appropriate.
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    \8\ 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(4) (requiring the Board to consult with 
each Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC) member that 
primarily supervises any subsidiary when any prudential standard is 
likely to have a ``significant impact'' on such subsidiary).
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II. Background

    The following background discussion describes in detail the 
financial contracts that are the subject of this proposed rule, the 
default rights often contained in such contracts, and impacts on 
financial stability resulting from the exercise of such default rights. 
This section also provides background information on the resolution 
strategies for GSIBs and how they fit within the resolution frameworks 
in the United States.\9\
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    \9\ See 81 FR 29169, 29170-73 (May 11, 2016), from which this 
discussion is adapted.
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A. Qualified Financial Contracts, Default Rights, and Financial 
Stability

    The proposed rule covers QFCs, which include swaps, other 
derivative contracts, repurchase agreements (repos) and reverse repos, 
and securities lending and borrowing agreements. GSIB entities enter 
into QFCs to borrow money to finance their investments, to lend money, 
to manage risk, to attempt to profit from market movements, and to 
enable their clients and counterparties to perform these financial 
activities.
    QFCs play a role in economically valuable financial intermediation 
when markets are functioning normally. But they are also a major source 
of financial interconnectedness, which may pose a threat to financial 
stability in times of stress. This proposed rule, along with the FRB 
NPRM, focuses on one of the most serious threats to both a global 
systemically important bank holding company (BHC) and its covered banks 
subsidiaries--the failure of a GSIB that is party to large volumes of 
QFCs, which are likely to involve QFCs with counterparties that are 
themselves systemically important.
    By contract, a party to a QFC generally has the right to take 
certain actions if its counterparty defaults on the QFC (that is, if it 
fails to meet certain contractual obligations). Common default rights 
include the right to suspend performance of the non-defaulting party's 
obligations, the right to terminate or accelerate the contract, the 
right to set off amounts owed between the parties, the right to seize 
and liquidate the defaulting party's collateral. In general, default 
rights allow a party to a QFC to reduce the credit risk associated with 
the QFC by granting it the right to exit the QFC and thereby reduce its 
exposure to its counterparty upon the occurrence of a specified 
condition, such as its counterparty's entry into resolution 
proceedings.
    This proposed rule focuses on two distinct scenarios in which a 
non-defaulting party to a QFC is commonly able to exercise default 
rights. These two scenarios involve a default that occurs when either 
the defaulting party to the QFC or an affiliate of that party enters a 
resolution proceeding.\10\
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    \10\ This preamble uses phrases such as ``entering a resolution 
proceeding'' and ``going into resolution'' to refer to the concept 
of ``becoming subject to a receivership, insolvency, liquidation, 
resolution, or similar proceeding.'' These phrases refer to 
proceedings established by law to deal with a failed legal entity. 
In the context of the failure of a global systemically important 
bank holding company, the most relevant types of resolution 
proceeding include: (1) For most U.S.-based legal entities, the 
bankruptcy process established by the U.S. Bankruptcy Code (Title 
11, United States Code); (2) for U.S. insured depository 
institutions, a receivership administered by the Federal Deposit 
Insurance Corporation (FDIC) under the Federal Deposit Insurance Act 
(12 U.S.C. 1821); (3) for companies whose ``resolution under 
otherwise applicable Federal or State law would have serious adverse 
effects on the financial stability of the United States,'' the Dodd-
Frank Act's Orderly Liquidation Authority (12 U.S.C. 5383(b)(2)); 
and, (4) for entities based outside the United States, resolution 
proceedings created by foreign law.
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    The first scenario occurs when a legal entity that is itself a 
party to the QFC enters a resolution proceeding. This proposed rule 
refers to such a scenario as a ``direct default'' and refers to the 
contractual default rights that arise from a direct default as ``direct 
default rights.'' \11\
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    \11\ For convenience, this preamble uses the general term 
``default'' to refer specifically to a default that occurs when a 
QFC party or its affiliate enters a resolution proceeding.
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    The second scenario occurs when an affiliate of the legal entity 
that is a direct party to the QFC (such as the direct party's parent 
holding company) enters a resolution proceeding. This proposed rule 
refers to such a scenario as a ``cross-default'' and refers to 
contractual default rights that arise from a cross-default as ``cross-
default rights.'' For example, a GSIB parent entity might guarantee the 
derivatives transactions of its subsidiaries and those derivatives 
contracts could contain cross-default rights against a subsidiary of 
the GSIB that would be triggered by the bankruptcy filing of the GSIB 
parent entity even though the subsidiary continues to meet all of its 
financial obligations.
    Direct default rights and cross-default rights are referred to 
collectively in this proposed rule as ``default rights.''
    As noted in the FRB NPRM, if a significant number of QFC 
counterparties exercise their default rights precipitously and in a 
manner that would impede an orderly resolution of a GSIB, all QFC 
counterparties and the broader financial system, including institutions 
supervised by the OCC, may potentially be worse off and less stable.
    The destabilization can occur in several ways. First, 
counterparties' exercise of default rights may drain liquidity from the 
troubled GSIB, forcing it to sell off assets at depressed prices, both 
because the sales must be done on a short timeframe and because the 
elevated supply will push prices down. These asset ``fire sales'' may 
cause or deepen balance-sheet insolvency at the GSIB, reducing the 
amount that its other creditors can recover and thereby imposing losses 
on those creditors and threatening their solvency (and, indirectly, the 
solvency of their own creditors, and so on). The GSIB may also respond 
by withdrawing liquidity that it had offered to other firms, forcing 
them to engage in asset fire sales. Alternatively, if the GSIB's QFC 
counterparty itself liquidates the QFC collateral at fire sale prices, 
the effect will again be to weaken the GSIB's balance sheet, because 
the debt satisfied by the liquidation would be less than what the value 
of the collateral would have been outside the fire sale context. The 
counterparty's setoff rights may allow it to further drain the GSIB's 
capital and liquidity by withholding payments owed to the GSIB. The 
GSIB may also have rehypothecated collateral that it received from QFC 
counterparties, for instance in back-to-back repo or securities lending 
transactions, in which case demands from those counterparties for the 
early return of their rehypothecated collateral could be especially 
disruptive.
    The asset fire sales can also spread contagion throughout the 
financial system by increasing volatility and by lowering the value of 
similar assets held by other financial institutions, potentially 
causing them to suffer

[[Page 55384]]

diminished market confidence in their own solvency, mark-to-market 
losses, margin calls, and creditor runs (which could lead to further 
fire sales, worsening the contagion). Finally, the early terminations 
of derivatives that the defaulting GSIB relied on to hedge its risks 
could leave major risks unhedged, increasing the GSIB's probable losses 
going forward.
    Where there are significant simultaneous terminations and these 
effects occur contemporaneously, such as upon the failure of a GSIB 
that is party to a large volume of QFCs, they may pose a substantial 
risk to financial stability. In short, QFC continuity is important for 
the orderly resolution of a GSIB so that the instability caused by 
asset fire sales can be avoided.\12\
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    \12\ The Board and the FDIC identified the exercise of default 
rights in financial contracts as a potential obstacle to orderly 
resolution in the context of resolution plans filed pursuant to 
section 165(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act and, accordingly, instructed 
the most systemically important firms to demonstrate that they are 
``amending, on an industry-wide and firm-specific basis, financial 
contracts to provide for a stay of certain early termination rights 
of external counterparties triggered by insolvency proceedings.'' 
FRB and FDIC, ``Agencies Provide Feedback on Second Round Resolution 
Plans of `First-Wave' Filers'' (August 5, 2014), available at http://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/bcreg/20140805a.htm. See 
also FRB and FDIC, ``Agencies Provide Feedback on Resolution Plans 
of Three Foreign Banking Organizations'' (March 23, 2015), available 
at http://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/bcreg/20150323a.htm; FRB and FDIC, ``Guidance for 2013 165(d) Annual 
Resolution Plan Submissions by Domestic Covered Companies that 
Submitted Initial Resolution Plans in 2012'' 5-6 (April 15, 2013), 
available at http://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/bcreg/bcreg20130415c2.pdf.
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    As will be discussed further, the proposed rule is primarily 
concerned only with default rights that run against a GSIB--that is, 
direct default rights and cross-default rights that arise from the 
entry into resolution of a GSIB. The proposed rule would not affect 
contractual default rights that a GSIB (or any other entity) may have 
against a counterparty that is not a GSIB. The OCC believes that this 
limited scope is appropriate because the risk posed to financial 
stability by the exercise of QFC default rights is greatest when the 
defaulting counterparty is a GSIB.

B. QFC Default Rights and GSIB Resolution Strategies

    Under the Dodd-Frank Act, many complex GSIBs are required to submit 
resolution plans to the Board and the Federal Deposit Insurance 
Corporation (FDIC), detailing how the company can be resolved in a 
rapid and orderly manner in the event of material financial distress or 
failure of the company. In response to these requirements, these firms 
have developed resolution strategies that, broadly speaking, fall into 
two categories: The single-point-of-entry (SPOE) strategy and the 
multiple-point-of-entry (MPOE) strategy. As noted in the Board's 
Proposal, cross-default rights in QFCs pose a potential obstacle to the 
implementation of either of these strategies.
    In an SPOE resolution, only a single legal entity--the GSIB's top-
tier BHC--would enter a resolution proceeding. The losses that led to 
the GSIB's failure would be passed up from the operating subsidiaries 
that incurred the losses to the holding company and would then be 
imposed on the equity holders and unsecured creditors of the holding 
company through the resolution process. This strategy is designed to 
help ensure that the GSIB's subsidiaries remain adequately capitalized. 
An SPOE resolution could thereby prevent those operating subsidiaries 
from failing or entering resolution themselves and allow them to 
instead continue normal operations. The expectation that the holding 
company's equity holders and unsecured creditors would absorb the 
GSIB's losses in the event of failure would help to maintain the 
confidence of the operating subsidiaries' creditors and counterparties 
(including QFC counterparties), reducing their incentive to engage in 
potentially destabilizing funding runs or margin calls and thus 
lowering the risk of asset fire sales.
    An SPOE proceeding can avoid the need for covered banks to be 
placed into receivership or similar proceedings, as they would continue 
to operate as going concerns, only if the parent's entry into 
resolution proceedings does not trigger the exercise of cross-default 
rights. Accordingly, this proposed rule, by limiting such cross-default 
rights based on an affiliate's entry into resolution proceedings, 
enables the SPOE strategy, and in turn, would assist in stabilizing 
both the covered bank and the Federal banking system.
    This proposed rule would also yield benefits for resolution under 
the MPOE strategy. Unlike the SPOE strategy, an MPOE strategy involves 
several entities in the GSIB group entering proceedings. For example, 
an MPOE strategy might involve a foreign GSIB's U.S. intermediate 
holding company going into resolution or a GSIB's U.S. insured 
depository institution entering resolution under the Federal Deposit 
Insurance Act. Similar to the benefits associated with the SPOE 
strategy, this proposed rule would help support the continued operation 
of affiliates of an entity experiencing resolution to the extent the 
affiliate continues to perform on its QFCs.

C. Default Rights and Relevant Resolution Laws

    In order to understand the connection between direct defaults, 
cross-defaults, the SPOE and MPOE resolution strategies, and the 
threats to financial stability discussed previously, it is necessary to 
understand how QFCs, and the default rights contained therein, are 
treated when an entity enters resolution. The following sections 
discuss the treatment of QFCs in greater detail under three U.S. 
resolution laws: the Bankruptcy Code, the Orderly Liquidation 
Authority, and the Federal Deposit Insurance Act. As discussed in these 
sections, each of these resolution laws has special provisions 
detailing the treatment of QFCs upon an entity's entry into such 
proceedings.
    U.S. Bankruptcy Code. While covered banks themselves are not 
subject to resolution under the Bankruptcy Code, in general, if a BHC 
were to fail, it would be resolved under the Bankruptcy Code. When an 
entity goes into resolution under the Bankruptcy Code, attempts by the 
creditors of the debtor to enforce their debts through any means other 
than participation in the bankruptcy proceeding (for instance, by suing 
in another court, seeking enforcement of a preexisting judgment, or 
seizing and liquidating collateral) are generally blocked by the 
imposition of an automatic stay, which generally persists throughout 
the bankruptcy proceeding.\13\ A key purpose of the automatic stay, and 
of bankruptcy law in general, is to maximize the value of the 
bankruptcy estate and the creditors' ultimate recoveries by 
facilitating an orderly liquidation or restructuring of the debtor. As 
a result, the automatic stay addresses the collective action problem, 
in which the creditors' individual incentives to race to recover as 
much from the debtor as possible, before other creditors can do so, 
collectively cause a value-destroying disorderly liquidation of the 
debtor.\14\
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    \13\ See 11 U.S.C. 362.
    \14\ See, e.g., Aiello v. Providian Financial Corp., 239 F.3d 
876, 879 (7th Cir. 2001).
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    The Bankruptcy Code, however, largely exempts QFC counterparties 
from the automatic stay through special ``safe harbor'' provisions.\15\ 
Under these provisions, any contractual rights that a QFC counterparty 
has to terminate the contract, set off obligations, and liquidate 
collateral in response to a direct default or cross-default are not

[[Page 55385]]

subject to the stay and may be exercised at any time.\16\
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    \15\ 11 U.S.C. 362(b)(6), (7), (17), (27), 362(o), 555, 556, 
559, 560, 561.
    \16\ The Bankruptcy Code does not itself confer any default 
rights upon QFC counterparties; it merely permits QFC counterparties 
to exercise certain contractual rights that they have under the 
terms of the QFC. This proposed rule does not propose to restrict 
the exercise of any default rights that fall within the Bankruptcy 
Code's safe harbor provisions, which are described here to provide 
context.
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    Where the failed firm is a GSIB's holding company with covered 
banks that are going concerns and are party to large volumes of QFCs, 
the mass exercise of default rights under the QFCs based on the 
affiliate default represents a significant impediment to the SPOE 
resolution strategy.\17\ This is because the failure of a covered 
bank's affiliate will trigger the mass exercise of cross-default rights 
against the covered bank, which will not be stayed by the affiliate's 
entry into bankruptcy proceedings. This will in turn lead to fire sales 
that will threaten the ongoing viability of the covered bank and the 
successful resolution of the particular GSIB--and thus will also pose a 
threat to the federal banking system and broader financial system.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \17\ As noted previously, the MPOE strategy will similarly 
benefit from the override of cross-defaults. The SPOE strategy is 
used here for illustrative purposes only.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Special Resolution Regimes Under U.S. Law. For purposes of this 
proposed rule, there are two special resolution regimes under U.S. law: 
Title II of the Dodd-Frank Act and the Orderly Liquidation Authority 
(OLA); and the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (FDIA). While these 
regimes both impose certain limitations on the ability of 
counterparties to exercise default rights--thus mitigating the 
potential for disorderly resolution due to the exercise by 
counterparties of such default rights--these limitations may not be 
applicable or clearly enforceable in certain contexts.
    Title II of the Dodd-Frank Act and the Orderly Resolution 
Authority. Title II of the Dodd-Frank Act establishes an alternative 
resolution framework intended ``to provide the necessary authority to 
liquidate failing financial companies that pose a significant risk to 
the financial stability of the United States in a manner that mitigates 
such risk and minimizes moral hazard.'' \18\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \18\ 12 U.S.C. 5384(a) (Section 204(a) of the Dodd-Frank Act).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    As noted, although a failed BHC would generally be resolved under 
the Bankruptcy Code, Congress recognized that a U.S. financial company 
might fail under extraordinary circumstances, in which an attempt to 
resolve it through the bankruptcy process would have serious adverse 
effects on financial stability in the United States. Title II therefore 
authorizes the Secretary of the Treasury, upon the recommendation of 
other government agencies and a determination that several 
preconditions are met, to place a U.S. financial company into a 
receivership conducted by the FDIC as an alternative to bankruptcy.
    Title II empowers the FDIC, when it acts as receiver in an OLA 
resolution, to protect financial stability against the QFC-related 
threats discussed previously. Title II addresses direct default rights 
in a number of ways. First, Title II empowers the FDIC to transfer the 
QFCs to some other financial company that is not in a resolution 
proceeding.\19\ To give the FDIC time to effect this transfer, Title II 
temporarily stays QFC counterparties of the failed entity from 
exercising termination, netting, and collateral liquidation rights 
``solely by reason of or incidental to'' the failed entity's entry into 
OLA resolution, its insolvency, or its financial condition.\20\ Second, 
once the QFCs are transferred in accord with the statute, Title II 
permanently stays the exercise of those direct default rights based on 
the prior event of default and receivership.\21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \19\ 12 U.S.C. 5390(c)(9).
    \20\ 12 U.S.C. 5390(c)(10)(B)(i)(I). This temporary stay 
generally lasts until 5:00 p.m. eastern time on the business day 
following the appointment of the FDIC as receiver.
    \21\ If the QFCs are transferred to a solvent third party before 
the stay expires, the counterparty is permanently enjoined from 
exercising such rights based upon the appointment of the FDIC as 
receiver of the financial company (or the insolvency or financial 
condition of the financial company), but is not stayed from 
exercising such rights based upon other events of default. 12 U.S.C. 
5390(c)(10)(B)(i)(II).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Title II addresses cross-default rights through a similar 
procedure. It empowers the FDIC ``to enforce contracts of subsidiaries 
or affiliates'' of the failed company that are guaranteed or otherwise 
supported by or linked to the covered financial company, 
notwithstanding any contractual right to cause the termination, 
liquidation, or acceleration of such contracts based solely on the 
insolvency, financial condition, or receivership of the failed company, 
so long as the FDIC takes certain steps to protect the QFC 
counterparty's interests by the end of the business day following the 
company's entry into OLA resolution.\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \22\ 12 U.S.C. 5390(c)(16); 12 CFR 380.12.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    These stay-and-transfer provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act go far to 
mitigate the threat posed by QFC default rights by preventing mass 
closeouts against the entity that has entered into OLA proceedings or 
its going concern affiliates. At the same time, they allow for 
appropriate protections for QFC counterparties of the failed financial 
company. They only stay the exercise of default rights based on the 
failed company's entry into resolution, the fact of its insolvency, or 
its financial condition. And the stay period is brief, unless the FDIC 
transfers the QFCs to another financial company that is not in 
resolution and should therefore be capable of performing under the 
QFCs.
    Federal Deposit Insurance Act. Under the FDIA, a failing insured 
depository institution would generally enter a receivership 
administered by the FDIC.\23\ The FDIA addresses direct default rights 
in the failed bank's QFCs with stay-and-transfer provisions that are 
substantially similar to the provisions of Title II of the Dodd-Frank 
Act as discussed.\24\ However, the FDIA does not address cross-default 
rights, leaving the QFC counterparties of the failed depository 
institution's affiliates free to exercise any contractual rights they 
may have to terminate, net, and liquidate collateral based on the 
depository institution's entry into resolution.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \23\ 12 U.S.C. 1821(c).
    \24\ See 12 U.S.C. 1821(e)(8)-(10).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

III. Description of the Proposal

A. Overview, Purpose, and Authority

    As discussed previously, and in the Board's Proposal, the exercise 
of default rights by counterparties of a failed GSIB can have a 
significant impact on financial stability. This financial stability 
concern is necessarily intertwined with the safety and soundness of 
covered banks and the federal banking system--the disorderly exercise 
of default rights can produce a sudden, contemporaneous threat to the 
safety and soundness of individual institutions throughout the system, 
which in turn threatens the system as a whole.[hairsp] Accordingly, 
national banks, FSAs, and Federal branches and agencies are affected by 
financial instability--even if such instability is precipitated outside 
the Federal banking system--and can themselves also be sources of 
financial destabilization due to the interconnectedness of these 
institutions to each other and to other entities within the financial 
system. Thus, safety and soundness of individual national banks, FSAs, 
and Federal branches and agencies, the federal banking system, and 
financial stability of the system as a whole are interconnected.

[[Page 55386]]

    The purpose of this proposed rule is to enhance the safety and 
soundness of covered banks and the federal banking system, thereby also 
bolstering financial stability generally, by addressing the two main 
issues raised by covered QFCs with the orderly resolution of these 
covered banks as generally described in the Board's Proposal.
    While Title II and the FDIA empower the use of the QFC stay-and-
transfer provisions, a court in a foreign jurisdiction may decline to 
enforce these important provisions. The proposed rule directly improves 
the safety and soundness of covered banks by clarifying the 
applicability of U.S. special resolution regimes to all counterparties, 
whether they are foreign or domestic. Although domestic entities are 
clearly subject to the temporary stay provisions of OLA and the FDIA, 
these stays may be difficult to enforce in a cross-border context. As a 
result, domestic counterparties of a failed U.S. financial institution 
may be disadvantaged relative to foreign counterparties, as the 
domestic counterparties would be subject to the stay, and accompanying 
potential market volatility, while if the stay was not enforced by 
foreign authorities, foreign counterparties could close out 
immediately. Furthermore, a mass close out by such foreign 
counterparties would likely exacerbate market volatility, which in turn 
would likely magnify harm to the stayed U.S. counterparties' positions, 
which are likely to include other national banks and FSAs. This 
proposed rule would eliminate the potential for these adverse 
consequences by requiring covered banks to condition the exercise of 
default rights in covered contracts on the stay provisions of OLA and 
the FDIA.
    In spite of the QFC stay-and-transfer provisions in Title II and 
the FDIA, the affiliates of a global systemically important BHC that 
goes into resolution under the Bankruptcy Code may face disruptions to 
their QFCs as their counterparties exercise cross-default rights. Thus, 
a healthy covered bank whose parent BHC entered resolution proceedings 
could fail due to its counterparties exercising cross-default rights. 
This is clearly both a safety and soundness concern for the otherwise 
healthy covered bank, but it also has the additional negative effect of 
defeating the orderly resolution of the GSIB, since a key element of 
SPOE resolution in the United States is ensuring that critical 
operating subsidiaries--such as covered banks--continue to operate on a 
going concern basis. This proposed rule would address this issue by 
generally restricting the exercise of cross-default rights by 
counterparties against a covered bank.
    Moreover, a disorderly resolution like that described previously 
could jeopardize not just the covered bank and the orderly resolution 
of its failed parent BHC, but all surviving counterparties, many of 
which are likely to be other national banks and other FSAs, regardless 
of size or interconnectedness, by harming the overall condition of the 
Federal banking system and the financial system as a whole. A 
disorderly resolution could result in additional defaults, fire sales 
of collateral, and other consequences likely to amplify the systemic 
fallout of the resolution of a covered bank.
    The proposed rule is designed to minimize such disorder, and 
therefore enhance the safety and soundness of all individual national 
banks, FSAs, and Federal branches and agencies, the Federal banking 
system, and the broader financial system. This is particularly 
important because financial institutions are more sensitive than other 
firms to the overall health of the financial system.\25\
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    \25\ The OCC, along with the FDIC and FRB, recently made this 
point in the swap margin NPRM. 79 FR 57348, 57361 (September 24, 
2014) (``Financial firms present a higher level of risk than other 
types of counterparties because the profitability and viability of 
financial firms is more tightly linked to the health of the 
financial system than other types of counterparties. Because 
financial counterparties are more likely to default during a period 
of financial stress, they pose greater systemic risk and risk to the 
safety and soundness of the covered swap entity.'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The proposed rule covers the OCC-supervised operations of foreign 
banking organizations (FBOs) designated as systemically important, 
including national bank and FSA subsidiaries, as well as Federal 
branches and agencies, of these FBOs. As with a national bank or FSA 
subsidiary of a U.S. global systemically important BHC, the OCC 
believes that this proposed rule should apply to a national bank or FSA 
subsidiary of a global systematically important FBO for essentially the 
same reasons. While the national bank or FSA may not be considered 
systemically important itself, as part of a GSIB, the disorderly 
resolution of the covered national banks and FSAs could have a 
significant negative impact on the Federal banking system and on the 
U.S. financial system, in general.
    Specifically, the proposed rule is designed to prevent the failure 
of a global systemically important FBO from disrupting the ongoing 
operations or orderly resolution of the covered bank by protecting the 
healthy national bank or FSA from the mass triggering of default rights 
by the QFC counterparties. Additionally, the application of this 
proposed rule to the QFCs of these national bank and FSA subsidiaries 
should avoid creating what may otherwise be an incentive for 
counterparties to concentrate QFCs in these firms because they are 
subject to fewer counterparty restrictions.
    Similarly, it is important to cover any Federal branch or agency of 
a global systemically important FBO in order to ensure the orderly 
resolution of these entities if the parent FBO were to be placed into 
resolution in its home jurisdiction. However, to avoid unduly broad 
application of the proposed rule and imposing unnecessary restrictions 
on the QFCs of global systemically important FBOs, the proposed rule 
would exclude certain QFCs that do not have a clear nexus to its U.S. 
operations. Specifically, the proposed rule would exclude covered QFCs 
under multi-branch arrangements that either are not booked at the 
Federal branch or agency or do not provide for payment or delivery at 
the Federal branch or agency. The OCC believes that this provides a 
reasonable limitation on the scope of the proposed rule to those QFCs 
of covered Federal branches and agencies that have a direct effect on 
the Federal banking system and the general financial stability of the 
United States.
    The OCC is issuing this proposed rule under its authorities under 
the National Bank Act (12 U.S.C. 1 et seq.), the Home Owners' Loan Act 
(12 U.S.C. 1461 et seq.), and the International Banking Act of 1978 (12 
U.S.C. 3101 et seq.), including its general rulemaking authorities.\26\ 
As discussed in detail in Section I. B., the OCC views the proposed 
rule as consistent with its overall statutory mandate of assuring the 
safety and soundness of entities subject to its supervision, including 
national banks, FSAs, and Federal branches and agencies.\27\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \26\ See 12 U.S.C. 93a, 1463(a)(2), and 3108(a).
    \27\ See 12 U.S.C. 1. This primary responsibility is also 
defined in various provisions throughout the OCC's express statutory 
authorities with respect to each institution type under their 
respective statutes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

B. Covered Banks (Section 47.3(a), (b), (c))

    The proposed rule would apply to all ``covered banks.'' The term 
``covered bank'' would be defined to include (i) any national bank or 
FSA that is a subsidiary of a global systemically important BHC that 
has been designated pursuant to subpart I of 12 CFR part 252 of this 
title (FRB Regulation YY); or (ii) is a national bank or FSA 
subsidiary, or Federal branch or agency of a global systemically 
important FBO that has

[[Page 55387]]

been designated pursuant to FRB Regulation YY.
    The proposed rule defines global systemically important BHC and 
global systemically important FBO by cross-reference to newly added 
subpart I of 12 CFR part 252 of the Board's Proposal. The list of 
banking organizations that meet the methodology proposed in the FRB 
NPRM is currently the same set of banking organizations that meet the 
Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS) definition of a GSIB.\28\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \28\ In November 2015, the Financial Stability Board and BCBS 
published a list of banks that meet the BCBS definition of a global 
systemically important bank (BCBS G-SIB) based on year-end 2014 
data. A list based on year-end 2014 data was published November 3, 
2015 (available at http://www.fsb.org/wp-content/uploads/2015-update-of-list-of-global-systemically-important-banks-G-SIBs.pdf). 
The U.S. top-tier BHCs that are currently identified as a BCBS G-
SIBs are Bank of America Corporation, Bank of New York Mellon 
Corporation, Citigroup Inc., Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., JP Morgan 
Chase & Co., Morgan Stanley, State Street Corporation, and Wells 
Fargo & Company.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    This proposed rule covers national bank and FSA subsidiaries of 
global systemically important BHCs and FBOs, and Federal branches and 
agencies of global systemically important FBOs. In the United States, 
covered QFCs typically are entered into at the subsidiary level, which 
would include through the national bank, FSA or Federal branch or 
agency, rather than through the U.S. intermediate holding company.\29\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \29\ Under the clean holding company component of the FRB's 
recent Total Loss-Absorbing Capacity (TLAC) proposal, the U.S. 
intermediate holding companies of foreign GSIB entities would be 
prohibited from entering into QFCs with third parties. See 80 FR 
74926 (November 30, 2015).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The OCC believes if the orderly resolution of a covered entity as 
defined under the FRB's Proposal is to be successful, then it is 
necessary that all national banks, FSAs, and Federal branches and 
agencies of systemically important global systemically important BHCs 
and FBOs be subject to the mandatory contractual requirements in this 
proposed rule. Moreover, this proposed rule would make clear that the 
mandatory contractual stay requirements apply to the subsidiaries of 
any national bank, FSA, or Federal branch or agency that is a covered 
bank. Under the proposed rule, the term covered bank also includes any 
subsidiary of a national bank, FSA, or Federal branch or agency. The 
definition of ``subsidiary of covered bank'' in the proposed rule 
mirrors the definition of subsidiary in the FRB's Regulation YY (12 CFR 
252.2), and it is intended to be substantially the same as the FRB's 
definition with respect to a subsidiary of a covered bank. Essentially, 
for the same reasons that it is necessary to cover all national banks, 
FSAs, and Federal branches and agencies of global systemically 
important BHCs and FBOs under the proposed rule, the OCC believes that 
it is necessary that all subsidiaries of those covered banks also be 
subject to the mandatory contractual stay requirements. As mentioned, 
unless all entities that are part of a GSIB are covered, counterparties 
might have incentives to migrate their covered QFCs to uncovered 
entities.
    Question 1: While the exercise of mass closeout rights against any 
individual national bank, FSA or Federal branch or agency would raise 
concerns, the OCC is especially concerned about the potential spill-
over effect such mass closeouts would have, either individually or 
collectively, on the Federal banking system if the entity itself is 
systemically important or part of a larger banking group that is 
systemically important. Are there alternative approaches for 
determining which national banks, FSAs and Federal branches and 
agencies should be considered systemically important?
    Question 2: While the primary focus of this rule is on, covered 
banks--i.e., those that are subsidiaries or branches of U.S. or foreign 
GSIBS--there is some concern that given the interconnected nature of 
QFCs, a market disruption could significantly impact all national 
banks, FSAs and Federal branches and agencies. Should this proposed 
rule be expanded to cover more OCC-regulated entities, for example, 
those national banks, FSAs or Federal branches and agencies with 
material levels of QFC activities? How could material levels of QFC 
activities be defined and measured?
    Question 3: Conversely, is the scope of this proposed rule too 
broad? The proposed rule would apply to all covered QFCs of covered 
banks as well as all of their subsidiaries, regardless of size or 
volume of transactions. A key policy concern is that unless all 
subsidiaries of a covered bank are subject to the direct and cross-
default restrictions of the proposed rule, covered banks and their 
counterparties would have the incentive to transfer their QFCs to 
unprotected subsidiaries of the covered bank. Could the scope of 
entities covered by the proposed rule be narrowed while still achieving 
its policy objectives? If so, what criteria could be used? For example, 
should a subsidiary of covered banks that only engages in some de 
minimis level of covered QFCs be safely excluded from the scope of this 
proposed rule? Are there alternative ways to define what will be 
considered subsidiaries for purposes of this rule?
    Question 4: Some of the subsidiaries of covered banks under the 
proposed rule could be subject to additional supervision by another 
U.S. agency, such as the case of a broker-dealer subsidiary of a 
national bank. Does the issue of potentially conflicting jurisdiction 
need to be addressed? If so, how? For example, should the rule provide 
a carve out for a subsidiary of a covered bank that is subject to 
comparable requirements under the regulations of another agency?
    Question 5: The scope of this proposed rule is designed to cover 
any national bank or FSA that is a subsidiary of a global systemically 
important BHC or FBO under the FRB NPRM. While this scope of coverage 
ensures that all national banks or FSAs under a global systemically 
important BHC or FBO would be subject to the same substantive 
contractual mandatory stay under the FRB NPRM, the proposed rule does 
not take into account the potential situation of a standalone national 
bank or FSA, not under a BHC, that might itself be considered 
systemically important. Although no such entity exists currently, the 
OCC is considering whether to amend the definition of covered bank to 
include any national bank or FSB that meets a certain asset threshold 
test. In this case, the OCC is considering using the $700 billion in 
total consolidated assets that is used in the Enhanced Supplementary 
Leverage Ratio.\30\ Should the OCC decide to address standalone 
national banks and FSBs, what methodology and factors should the OCC 
consider in deciding which institutions to include?
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \30\ See 79 FR 24528 (May 1, 2014).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

C. Covered QFCs (Sections 47.4(a), 47.5(a), 47.7, 47.8)

    General requirement. The proposed rule would require covered banks 
to ensure that each ``covered QFC'' conforms to the requirements of 
sections 47.4 and 47.5. These sections require that a covered QFC (1) 
contain contractual stay-and-transfer provisions similar to those 
imposed under Title II of the Dodd-Frank Act and the FDIA, and (2) 
limit the exercise of default rights based on the insolvency of an 
affiliate of the covered bank. A ``covered QFC'' is generally defined 
as any QFC that a covered bank enters, executes, or otherwise becomes 
party to. A party to a QFC includes a party acting as agent under the 
QFC. ``Qualified financial contract'' or ``QFC'' would be defined to 
have the same meaning as in section 210(c)(8)(D) of Title II of the 
Dodd-Frank

[[Page 55388]]

Act and would include derivatives, swaps, repurchase, reverse 
repurchase, and securities lending and borrowing transactions.
    Except for certain QFCs under multi-branch master agreements, the 
definition of QFC would include a single QFC, but also all QFCs under a 
master agreement. Master agreements are contracts that contain general 
terms that the parties wish to apply to multiple transactions between 
them; having executed the master agreement, the parties can then 
include those terms in future contracts through reference to the master 
agreement. The proposed rule defines master agreement as defined by 
Title II of the Dodd-Frank Act or any master agreement designated by 
regulation by the FDIC. Under the definition, master agreements for 
QFCs, together with all supplements to the master agreement (including 
underlying transactions), would be treated as a single QFC.\31\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \31\ 12 U.S.C. 5390(c)(8)(D)(viii); see also 12 U.S.C. 
1821(e)(8)(D)(vii); 109 H. Rpt. 31, Part 1 (April 8, 2005) 
(explaining that a ``master agreement for one or more securities 
contracts, commodity contracts, forward contracts, repurchase 
agreements or swap agreements will be treated as a single QFC under 
the FDIA or the FCUA (but only with respect to the underlying 
agreements are themselves QFCs)'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The proposed definition of ``QFC'' is intended to cover those 
financial transactions whose disorderly unwind has substantial 
potential to frustrate, directly or indirectly, the orderly resolution 
of the covered bank or any affiliate of such covered bank. The Dodd-
Frank Act uses its definition of ``qualified financial contract'' to 
determine the scope of the stay-and-transfer provisions that it applies 
to direct default and cross-default rights in an OLA resolution. By 
adopting the Dodd-Frank Act's definition, the proposed rule would track 
Congress's judgment as to which financial transactions could, if not 
subject to appropriate restrictions, pose an obstacle to the orderly 
resolution of a systemically important financial company.
    Question 6: With regard to the proposed definitions of ``QFC'' and 
``covered QFC'' are there other types of financial contracts or 
transactions that should be included in the definition of a ``covered 
QFC'' in the proposed rule because they could pose a similar risk to 
the safety and soundness of the covered national banks, FSAs, and 
Federal branches and agencies and to the Federal banking system? 
Conversely, is the definition of covered QFC too broad? Are there types 
of financial contracts that fall within the definition of covered QFC 
that could be excluded without compromising the policy objectives of 
the proposed rule?
    Question 7: Should this proposed rule include a reservation of 
authority provision that would maintain OCC's supervisory flexibility, 
on a case-by-case basis, to include or exclude from the proposed rule 
(1) specific OCC-supervised entities (and their subsidiaries) and (2) 
financial contracts or transactions, if consistent with the purposes of 
the proposed rule?
    Exclusion of cleared QFCs. The proposed rule would exclude from the 
definition of ``covered QFC'' all QFCs that are cleared through a 
central counterparty (CCP). The OCC continues to consider the 
appropriate treatment of centrally cleared QFCs, in light of 
differences between cleared and uncleared QFCs with respect to 
contractual arrangements, counterparty credit risk, default management, 
and supervision.
    Question 8: Should the QFCs between a CCP (or other financial 
market utility) and a member covered bank be subject to the 
requirements of this proposed rule? What additional risks do such 
cleared QFCs pose to the orderly resolution of covered banks and the 
Federal banking system? What other factors should be considered?
    Exclusion of certain QFCs under foreign bank multi-branch master 
agreements. Under the proposed rule, the definition of a ``QFC'' would 
include a master agreement that covers other QFCs. In addition, under 
this definition those QFCs covered by the master agreement would be 
treated as a single QFC. By design, this definition of QFC is intended 
to ensure that the proposed rule would apply to all of the relevant 
QFCs entered into by a covered bank. However, as applied to the QFCs of 
Federal branches and agencies under a multi-branch master agreement, 
this definition may be too broad in its scope.
    Foreign banks have multi-branch master agreements that permit 
transactions to be entered into both at a U.S. branch or agency of the 
foreign bank and at a foreign branch (located outside of the United 
States) of the foreign bank. Under this proposed rule, a QFC of a 
Federal branch or agency, as well as all of the QFCs entered into by 
foreign branches under the same multi-branch master agreement would be 
treated as a single QFC of the Federal branch or agency, and would 
therefore be subject to the requirements of this proposed rule. Where 
the QFC of the foreign branch has some U.S. nexus, such as permitting 
payment or delivery in the United States, the OCC believes that 
subjecting those QFCs to this proposed rule is reasonable and 
consistent with protecting the safety and soundness of the Federal 
banking system. However, where the QFC of the foreign branch does not 
permit any payment or delivery in the United States, the OCC believes 
that applying this proposed rule to such QFCs lacks a sufficient 
connection to the U.S. operations of the Federal branch or agency and 
may be unduly broad.
    Absent the possibility under the QFC of payment or delivery in the 
United States, the OCC believes that the impact of such QFCs on the 
Federal branch or agency covered by this proposed rule, or on the 
Federal banking system and the United States as a whole, is indirect 
and relatively immaterial. For this reason, the proposed rule would 
exclude QFCs under such a ``multi-branch master agreement'' that are 
not booked at a Federal branch or agency covered by this proposed rule, 
and for which no payment or delivery may be made at the Federal branch 
or agency. Conversely, the multi-branch master agreement would be a 
covered QFC with respect to QFC transactions that are booked and 
permits payment and delivery at a Federal branch or agency covered by 
this proposed rule.
    Question 9: Should the scope of the proposed rule be limited to 
only those transactions that are booked, or provide for payment and 
delivery, at the Federal branch or agency?

D. Definition of ``Default Right''

    As discussed previously, a party to a QFC generally has a number of 
rights that it can exercise if its counterparty defaults on the QFC by 
failing to meet certain contractual obligations. These rights are 
generally, but not always, contractual in nature. One common default 
right is a setoff right which is the right to reduce the total amount 
that the non-defaulting party must pay by the amount that its 
defaulting counterparty owes. A second common default right is the 
right to liquidate pledged collateral and use the proceeds to pay the 
defaulting party's net obligation to the non-defaulting party. Other 
common rights include the ability to suspend or delay the non-
defaulting party's performance under the contract or to accelerate the 
obligations of the defaulting party.
    Finally, the non-defaulting party typically has the right to 
terminate the QFC, meaning that the parties would not make payments 
that would have been required under the QFC in the future. The phrase 
``default right'' in the proposed rule text at Sec.  47.2 is broadly 
defined to include these common rights as well as ``any similar 
rights.'' Additionally, the definition includes all

[[Page 55389]]

such rights regardless of source, including rights existing under 
contract, statute, or common law.
    However, the proposed definition excludes two rights that are 
typically associated with the business-as-usual functioning of a QFC. 
First, same-day netting that occurs during the life of the QFC in order 
to reduce the number and amount of payments each party owes the other 
is excluded from the definition of ``default right.'' \32\ Second, 
contractual margin requirements that arise solely from the change in 
the value of the collateral or the amount of an economic exposure are 
also excluded from the definition.\33\ The effect of these exclusions 
is to leave such rights unaffected by the proposed rule. The exclusions 
are appropriate because the proposed rule is intended to improve 
resolvability by addressing default rights that could disrupt an 
orderly resolution, and not to interrupt the parties' business-as-usual 
dealings under a QFC.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \32\ See Proposed Rule Sec.  47.2.
    \33\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    However, certain QFCs are also commonly subject to rights that 
would increase the amount of collateral or margin that the defaulting 
party (or a guarantor) must provide upon an event of default. The 
financial impact of such default rights on a covered bank could be 
similar to the impact of the liquidation and acceleration rights 
discussed previously. Therefore, the proposed definition of ``default 
right'' includes such rights (with the exception discussed in the 
previous paragraph for margin requirements that depend solely on the 
value of collateral or the amount of an economic exposure).\34\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \34\ See id.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Finally, contractual rights to terminate without the need to show 
cause, including rights to terminate on demand and rights to terminate 
at contractually specified intervals, are excluded from the definition 
of ``default right'' for purposes the proposed rule's restrictions on 
cross-default rights (section 47.5 of the proposed rule).\35\ This is 
consistent with the proposed rule's objective of restricting only 
default rights that are related, directly or indirectly, to the entry 
into resolution of an affiliate of the covered bank, while leaving 
other default rights unrestricted.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \35\ See Proposed Rule Sec. Sec.  47.2 and 47.5.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Question 10: The OCC invites comment on all aspects of the proposed 
definition of ``default right'' In particular, are the proposed 
exclusions appropriate in light of the objectives of the proposal? To 
what extent does the exclusion of rights that allow a party to 
terminate the contract ``on demand or at its option at a specified 
time, or from time to time, without the need to show cause'' create an 
incentive for firms to include these rights in future contracts to 
evade the proposed restrictions? To what extent should other regulatory 
requirements (e.g., liquidity coverage ratio or the short-term 
wholesale funding components of the GSIB surcharge rule) be revised to 
create a counterincentive? Would additional exclusions be appropriate? 
To what extent should it be clarified that the ``need to show cause'' 
includes the need to negotiate alternative terms with the other party 
prior to termination or similar requirements (e.g., Master Securities 
Loan Agreement, Annex III--Term Loans)?

E. Required Contractual Provisions Related to U.S. Special Resolution 
Regimes (Section 47.4)

    Under the proposed rule, a covered QFC would be required to 
explicitly provide both (a) that the transfer of the QFC (and any 
interest or obligation in or under it and any property collateralizing 
it) from the covered bank to a transferee would be effective to the 
same extent as it would be under the U.S. special resolution regimes if 
the covered QFC were governed by the laws of the United States or of a 
state of the United States and (b) that default rights with respect to 
the covered QFC that could be exercised against a covered bank could be 
exercised to no greater extent than they could be exercised under the 
U.S. special resolution regimes if the covered QFC were governed by the 
laws of the United States or of a state of the United States.\36\ The 
proposed rule would define the term ``U.S. Special Resolution Regimes'' 
to mean the FDIA \37\ and Title II of the Dodd-Frank Act,\38\ along 
with regulations issued under those statutes.\39\
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    \36\ See Proposed Rule Sec.  47.4.
    \37\ 12 U.S.C. 1811-1835a.
    \38\ 12 U.S.C. 5381-5394.
    \39\ See Proposed Rule Sec.  47.2.
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    The proposed requirements are not intended to imply that a given 
covered QFC is not governed by the laws of the United States or of a 
state of the United States, or that the statutory stay-and-transfer 
provisions would not in fact apply to a given covered QFC. This section 
of the proposed rule would not have any substantive impact on those 
covered QFCs that are already subject to the U.S. special resolution 
regimes. Rather, the requirements are intended to provide certainty 
that all covered QFCs would be treated the same way in the context of a 
receivership of a covered bank under the Dodd-Frank Act or the FDIA. 
Thus, the purpose of this provision is to ensure that if a national 
bank or FSA covered by this proposed rule is placed into receivership 
under any U.S. special resolution regime, the stay-and-transfer 
provisions would extend to all foreign counterparties as a matter of 
contract law.
    The stay-and-transfer provisions of the U.S. special resolution 
regimes should be enforced with respect to all contracts of any U.S. 
GSIB entity that enters resolution under a U.S. special resolution 
regime as well as all transactions of the subsidiaries of such an 
entity. Nonetheless, it is possible that a court in a foreign 
jurisdiction would decline to enforce those provisions in cases brought 
before it (such as a case regarding a covered QFC between a covered 
bank and a non-U.S. entity that is governed by non-U.S. law and secured 
by collateral located outside the United States). By requiring that the 
effect of the statutory stay-and-transfer provisions be incorporated 
directly into the QFC contractually, the proposed requirement would 
help ensure that a court in a foreign jurisdiction would enforce the 
effect of those provisions, regardless of whether the court would 
otherwise have decided to enforce the U.S. statutory provisions 
themselves.\40\ For example, the proposed provisions should prevent a 
U.K. counterparty of a U.S. GSIB from persuading a U.K. court that it 
should be permitted to seize and liquidate collateral located in the 
United Kingdom in response to the U.S. GSIB's entry into OLA 
resolution. And the knowledge that a court in a foreign jurisdiction 
would reject the purported exercise of default rights in violation of 
the required provisions would deter covered banks' counterparties from 
attempting to exercise such rights.
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    \40\ See generally Financial Stability Board, ``Principles for 
Cross-border Effectiveness of Resolution Actions'' (November 3, 
2015), available at http://www.fsb.org/wp-content/uploads/Principles-for-Cross-border-Effectiveness-of-Resolution-Actions.pdf.
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    The OCC believes that this proposed rule directly addresses a major 
QFC-related obstacle to the orderly resolution of covered banks. As 
discussed previously, restrictions on the exercise of QFC default 
rights are an important prerequisite for an orderly GSIB resolution. 
Congress recognized the importance of such restrictions when it enacted 
the stay-and-transfer provisions of the U.S. special resolution 
regimes. As demonstrated by the 2007-2009 financial crisis, the modern 
financial system is global in scope, and covered banks are party to 
large volumes of

[[Page 55390]]

QFCs with connections to foreign jurisdictions. The stay-and-transfer 
provisions of the U.S. special resolution regimes would not achieve 
their purpose of facilitating orderly resolution in the context of the 
failure of a GSIB with large volumes of such QFCs if QFCs could escape 
the effect of those provisions. As discussed in detail in Section I of 
this proposed rule, the OCC has a supervisory interest in preventing or 
mitigating the destabilizing effects of a disorderly GSIB resolution; 
otherwise, the result will be adverse to safety and soundness of 
covered banks individually and collectively, as well as the broader 
Federal banking system. To remove any doubt about the scope of coverage 
of these provisions, the proposed requirement would ensure that the 
stay-and-transfer provisions apply as a matter of contract to all 
covered QFCs, wherever the transaction. This will advance the 
resolvability goals of the Dodd-Frank Act and the FDIA.\41\
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    \41\ As noted in the Board's Proposal, this proposed rule is 
consistent with efforts by regulators in other jurisdictions to 
address similar risks by requiring that financial firms within their 
jurisdictions ensure that the effect of the similar provisions under 
these foreign jurisdictions' respective special resolution regimes 
would be enforced by courts in other jurisdictions, including the 
United States. See e.g., PRA Rulebook: CRR Firms and Non-Authorised 
Persons: Stay in Resolution Instrument 2015, available at http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/pra/Documents/publications/ps/2015/ps2515app1.pdf; see also Bank of England, Prudential Regulation 
Authority, ``Contractual stays in financial contracts governed by 
third-country law'' (PS25/15).
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    Question 11: While the direct default requirements are proposed to 
apply broadly to all covered QFCs of covered banks, the primary focus 
of this requirements is with QFCs with foreign counterparties not 
directly subject to the U.S. special resolution regimes. U.S. 
counterparties are less of a concern because these counterparties would 
already be subject to the stay-and-transfer requirements under 
statutory requirements of the U.S. special resolution regimes. With 
respect to the direct default requirements, the proposed rule does not 
distinguish between U.S. and foreign counterparties because the OCC 
believes that the broad application of this proposed rule would be 
simpler to implement and less burdensome given the standardized nature 
of QFCs and their associated master netting agreements. Should the 
direct default requirements of the proposed rule apply only to covered 
QFCs with foreign counterparties not subject to U.S. special resolution 
regimes? What would be the costs and regulatory burden associated with 
identifying and maintaining separate versions of covered QFCs for U.S. 
and foreign counterparties?

F. Prohibited Cross-Default Rights (Section 47.5)

    Definitions. Section 47.5 of the proposed rule pertains to cross-
default rights in QFCs between covered banks and their counterparties, 
many of which are subject to credit enhancements (such as guarantees) 
provided by an affiliate of the covered bank. Because credit 
enhancements on QFCs are themselves ``qualified financial contracts'' 
under the Dodd-Frank Act's definition of that term (which this proposed 
rule would adopt), the proposed rule includes the following additional 
definitions in order to precisely describe the relationships to which 
this section applies.
    First, the proposed rule distinguishes between a credit enhancement 
and a ``direct QFC,'' which is defined as any QFC that is not a credit 
enhancement. The proposed rule also defines ``direct party'' to mean a 
covered bank that itself is a party to the direct QFC, as distinct from 
an entity that provide a credit enhancement. In addition, the proposed 
rule defines ``affiliate credit enhancement'' to mean ``a credit 
enhancement that is provided by an affiliate of the party to the direct 
QFC that the credit enhancement supports,'' as distinct from a credit 
enhancement provided by either the direct party itself or by an 
unaffiliated party. Moreover, the proposed rule defines ``covered 
affiliate credit enhancement'' to mean an affiliate credit enhancement 
provided by a covered bank, or a covered entity under the Board's 
proposal, and defines ``covered affiliate support provider to mean the 
covered bank that provides the covered affiliate credit enhancement. 
Finally, the proposed rule defines the term ``supported party'' to mean 
any party that is the beneficiary of a covered affiliate credit 
enhancement (that is, the QFC counterparty of a direct party, assuming 
that the direct QFC is subject to a covered affiliate credit 
enhancement).
    General Prohibition. Subject to the substantial exceptions to be 
discussed, the proposed rule would prohibit a covered bank from being a 
party to a covered QFC that allows for the exercise of any default 
right that is related, directly or indirectly, to the entry into 
resolution of an affiliate of the covered bank. The proposed rule also 
would generally prohibit a covered bank from being party to a covered 
QFC that would prohibit the transfer of any credit enhancement 
applicable to the QFC (such as another entity's guarantee of the 
covered bank's obligations under the QFC), along with associated 
obligations or collateral, upon the entry into resolution of an 
affiliate of the covered bank.\42\
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    \42\ This prohibition would be subject to an exception that 
would allow supported parties to exercise default rights with 
respect to a QFC if the supported party would be prohibited from 
being the beneficiary of a credit enhancement provided by the 
transferee under any applicable law, including the Employee 
Retirement Income Security Act of 1974 and the Investment Company 
Act of 1940. This exception is substantially similar to an exception 
to the transfer restrictions in section 2(f) of the ISDA 2014 
Resolution Stay Protocol (2014 Protocol) and the ISDA 2015 Universal 
Resolution Stay Protocol, which was added to address the concerns 
expressed by asset managers during the drafting of the 2014 
Protocol.
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    A primary purpose of the proposed restrictions is to facilitate the 
resolution of a GSIB outside of Title II, including under the 
Bankruptcy Code. As discussed in the background section, the potential 
for the mass exercise of QFC default rights is a major reason why the 
failure of a global systemically important BHC could have a severe 
negative impact on financial stability and on the Federal banking 
system. In the context of an SPOE resolution, if the global 
systemically important BHC's entry into resolution triggers the mass 
exercise of cross-default rights by the subsidiaries' QFC 
counterparties of the covered QFCs against the national bank or FSA 
subsidiary, then the national bank or FSA could themselves experience 
financial distress or failure. Moreover, the mass exercise of covered 
QFC default rights would entail asset fire sales, which could affect 
other U.S. financial companies and undermine financial stability of the 
U.S. financial system. Similar disruptive results can occur with an 
MPOE resolution of an affiliate of an otherwise performing entity 
triggers default rights on QFCs involving the performing covered bank.
    In an SPOE resolution, this damage can be avoided if actions of the 
following two types are prevented: The exercise of direct default 
rights against the top-tier holding company that has entered 
resolution, and the exercise of cross-default rights against the 
national bank and FSA subsidiaries and other operating subsidiaries 
based on their parent's entry into resolution. Direct default rights 
against the national bank or FSA subsidiary would not be exercisable, 
because that subsidiary would continue normal operations and would not 
enter resolution. In an MPOE resolution, this damage occurs from the 
exercise of default rights against a performing entity based on the 
failure of an affiliate.
    Under the OLA, the Dodd-Frank Act's stay-and-transfer provisions 
would address both direct default rights and cross-default rights. But, 
as explained in the Background section, no similar

[[Page 55391]]

statutory provisions would apply to a resolution under the Bankruptcy 
Code. This proposed rule attempts to address these obstacles to orderly 
resolution under the Bankruptcy Code by extending the stay-and 
transfer-provisions to any type of resolution. Similarly, the proposed 
rule would facilitate a transfer of the GSIB parent's interests in its 
subsidiaries, along with any credit enhancements it provides for those 
subsidiaries, to a solvent financial company by prohibiting covered 
banks from having QFCs that would allow the QFC counterparty to prevent 
such a transfer or to use it as a ground for exercising default rights. 
Accordingly, the proposed rule would broadly prevent the unanticipated 
failure of any one GSIB entity from bringing about the disorderly 
failures of its affiliates by preventing the affiliates' QFC 
counterparties from using the first entity's failure as a ground for 
exercising default rights against those affiliates that continue meet 
to their obligations.\43\
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    \43\ As noted in the Board's Proposal, this proposed rule will 
also facilitate many approaches to GSIB resolution, including where 
the U.S. intermediate holding company of a foreign GSIB enters 
proceedings as part of a broader MPOE resolution.
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    The proposed rule is intended to enhance the potential for orderly 
resolution of a GSIB under the Bankruptcy Code, the FDIA, or similar 
resolution proceedings. In doing so, the proposed rule would advance 
the Dodd-Frank Act's goal of making orderly resolution of a workable 
covered bank under the Bankruptcy Code.\44\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \44\ See 12 U.S.C. 5365(d).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The proposed rule could also prevent the disorderly failure of the 
national bank or FSA subsidiary and allow it to continue normal 
operations. In addition, while it may be in the individual interest of 
any given counterparty to exercise any available contractual rights to 
run on the national bank or FSA subsidiary, the mass exercise of such 
rights could harm the collective interest of all the counterparties by 
causing the subsidiary to fail. Therefore, like the automatic stay in 
bankruptcy, which also serves to maximize creditors' ultimate 
recoveries by preventing a disorderly liquidation of the debtor, the 
proposed rule would mitigate this collective action problem to the 
benefit of the creditors and counterparties of covered banks by 
preventing a disorderly resolution. And because many of these 
counterparties and creditors are themselves covered banks, or other 
systemically important financial firms, improving outcomes for these 
creditors and counterparties would further protect the safety and 
soundness of the Federal banking system and financial stability of the 
United States.
    General creditor protections. While the proposed restrictions would 
facilitate orderly resolution, they would also have the effect of 
diminishing the ability of the counterparties of the covered banks to 
include protections for themselves in covered QFCs. In order to reduce 
this effect, the proposed rule includes several significant exceptions 
to the proposed restrictions. These permitted creditor protections are 
intended to allow creditors to exercise cross-default rights outside of 
an orderly resolution of a GSIB (as described previously and in the 
Board's Proposal) and therefore would not be expected to undermine such 
a resolution.
    First, to ensure that the proposed prohibitions would apply only to 
cross-default rights (and not direct default rights), the proposed rule 
would provide that a covered QFC may permit the exercise of default 
rights based on the direct party's entry into a resolution proceeding, 
other than a proceeding under a U.S. or foreign special resolution 
regime.\45\ This provision would help ensure that, if the direct party 
to a QFC were to enter bankruptcy, its QFC counterparties could 
exercise any relevant direct default rights. Thus, a covered bank's 
direct QFC counterparties would not risk the delay and expense 
associated with becoming involved in a bankruptcy proceeding, and would 
be able to take advantage of default rights that would fall within the 
Bankruptcy Code's safe harbor provisions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \45\ Special resolution regimes typically stay direct default 
rights, but may not stay cross-default rights. For example, as 
discussed previously, the FDIA stays direct default rights, see 12 
U.S.C. 1821(e)(10)(B), but does not stay cross-default rights, 
whereas the Dodd-Frank Act's OLA stays direct default rights and 
cross-defaults arising from a parent's receivership, see 12 U.S.C. 
5390(c)(10)(B), 5390(c)(16).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The proposed rule would also allow covered QFCs to permit the 
exercise of default rights based on the failure of (1) the direct 
party, (2) a covered affiliate support provider, or (3) a transferee 
that assumes a credit enhancement to satisfy its payment or delivery 
obligations under the direct QFC or credit enhancement. Moreover, the 
proposed rule would allow covered QFCs to permit the exercise of a 
default right in one QFC that is triggered by the direct party's 
failure to satisfy its payment or delivery obligations under another 
contract between the same parties. This exception takes appropriate 
account of the interdependence that exists among the contracts in 
effect between the same counterparties.
    The proposed exceptions for the creditor protections described are 
intended to help ensure that the proposed rule permits a covered bank's 
QFC counterparties to protect themselves from imminent financial loss 
and does not create a risk of delivery gridlocks or daisy-chain 
effects, in which a covered bank's failure to make a payment or 
delivery when due leaves its counterparty unable to meet its own 
payment and delivery obligations (the daisy-chain effect would be 
prevented because the covered bank's counterparty would be permitted to 
exercise its default rights, such as by liquidating collateral). These 
exceptions are generally consistent with the treatment of payment and 
delivery obligations under the U.S. special resolution regimes.\46\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \46\ See 12 U.S.C. 1821(e)(8)(G)(ii), 5390(c)(8)(F)(ii) 
(suspending payment and delivery obligations for one business day or 
less).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    These exceptions also help to ensure that a covered entity's QFC 
counterparty would not risk the delay and expense associated with 
becoming involved in a bankruptcy proceeding, since, unlike a typical 
creditor of an entity that enters bankruptcy, the QFC counterparty 
would retain its ability under the Bankruptcy Code's safe harbors to 
exercise direct default rights. This should further reduce the 
counterparty's incentive to run. Reducing incentives to run in the lead 
up to resolution promotes orderly resolution because a QFC creditor run 
(such as a mass withdrawal of repo funding) could lead to a disorderly 
resolution and pose a threat to financial stability.
    Additional creditor protections for supported QFCs. The proposed 
rule would allow additional creditor protections for a non-defaulting 
counterparty that is the beneficiary of a credit enhancement from an 
affiliate of the covered bank that is also a covered bank under the 
proposed rule. The proposed rule would allow these creditor protections 
in recognition of the supported party's interest in receiving the 
benefit of its credit enhancement. The Board has concluded that these 
creditor protections would not undermine an SPOE resolution of a 
GSIB.\47\
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    \47\ See 81 FR 29169 (May 11, 2016).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Where a covered QFC is supported by a covered affiliate credit 
enhancement,\48\ the covered QFC and

[[Page 55392]]

the credit enhancement would be permitted to allow the exercise of 
default rights under the circumstances after the expiration of a stay 
period. Under the proposed rule, the applicable stay period would begin 
when the credit support provider enters resolution and would end at the 
later of 5:00 p.m. (eastern time) on the next business day and 48 hours 
after the entry into resolution. This portion of the proposed rule is 
similar to the stay treatment provided in a resolution under the OLA or 
the FDIA.\49\
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    \48\ Note that the proposed rule would not apply with respect to 
credit enhancements that are not covered affiliate credit 
enhancements. In particular, it would not apply with respect to a 
credit enhancement provided by a non-U.S. entity of a foreign GSIB, 
which would not be a covered bank under the proposed rule.
    \49\ See U.S.C. 1821(e)(10)(B)(I), 5390(c)(10)(B)(i), 
5390(c)(16)(A). While the proposed stay period is similar to the 
stay periods that would be imposed by the U.S. special resolution 
regimes, it could run longer than those stay periods under some 
circumstances.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Under the proposed rule, default rights could be exercised at the 
end of the stay period if the covered affiliate credit enhancement has 
not been transferred away from the covered affiliate support provider 
and that support provider becomes subject to a resolution proceeding 
other than a proceeding under Chapter 11 of the Bankruptcy Code.\50\ 
Default rights could also be exercised at the end of the stay period if 
the transferee (if any) of the credit enhancement enters a resolution 
proceeding, protecting the supported party from a transfer of the 
credit enhancement to a transferee that is unable to meet its financial 
obligations.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \50\ Chapter 11 (11 U.S.C. 1101-1174) is the portion of the 
Bankruptcy Code that provides for the reorganization of the failed 
company, as opposed to its liquidation, and, relative to special 
resolution regimes, is generally well-understood by market 
participants.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Default rights could also be exercised at the end of the stay 
period if the original credit support provider does not remain, and no 
transferee becomes, obligated to the same (or substantially similar) 
extent as the original credit support provider was obligated 
immediately prior to entering a resolution proceeding (including a 
Chapter 11 proceeding) with respect to (a) the credit enhancement 
applicable to the covered QFC, (b) all other credit enhancements 
provided by the credit support provider on any other QFCs between the 
same parties, and (c) all credit enhancements provided by the credit 
support provider between the direct party and affiliates of the direct 
party's QFC counterparty. Such creditor protections would be permitted 
to prevent the support provider or the transferee from ``cherry 
picking'' by assuming only those QFCs of a given counterparty that are 
favorable to the support provider or transferee. Title II of the Dodd-
Frank Act and the FDIA contain similar provisions to prevent cherry 
picking.
    Finally, if the covered affiliate credit enhancement is transferred 
to a transferee, then the non-defaulting counterparty could exercise 
default rights at the end of the stay period unless either (a) all of 
the support provider's ownership interests in the direct party are also 
transferred to the transferee or (b) reasonable assurance is provided 
that substantially all of the support provider's assets (or the net 
proceeds from the sale of those assets) will be transferred to the 
transferee in a timely manner. These conditions would help to assure 
the supported party that the transferee would be at least roughly as 
financially capable of providing the credit enhancement as the covered 
affiliate support provider.
    Creditor protections related to FDIA proceedings. Moreover, in the 
case of a covered QFC that is supported by a covered affiliate credit 
enhancement, both the covered QFC and the credit enhancement would be 
permitted to allow the exercise of default rights related to the credit 
support provider's entry into resolution proceedings under the FDIA 
\51\ under the following circumstances: (a) After the FDIA stay 
period,\52\ if the credit enhancement is not transferred under the 
relevant provisions of the FDIA \53\ and associated regulations, and 
(b) during the FDIA stay period, to the extent that the default right 
permits the supported party to suspend performance under the covered 
QFC to the same extent as that party would be entitled to do if the 
covered QFC were with the credit support provider itself and were 
treated in the same manner as the credit enhancement. This provision is 
intended to ensure that a QFC counterparty of a subsidiary of a covered 
bank that goes into FDIA receivership can receive the same level of 
protection that the FDIA provides to QFC counterparties of the covered 
bank itself.
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    \51\ As discussed, the FDIA stays direct default rights against 
the failed depository institution but does not stay the exercise of 
cross-default rights against its affiliates.
    \52\ Under the FDIA, the relevant stay period runs until 5:00 
p.m. (eastern time) on the business day following the appointment of 
the FDIC as receiver. 12 U.S.C. 1821(e)(10)(B)(I).
    \53\ 12 U.S.C. 1821(e)(9)-(10).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Prohibited terminations. In case of a legal dispute as to a party's 
right to exercise a default right under a covered QFC, the proposed 
rule would require that a covered QFC must provide that, after an 
affiliate of the direct party has entered a resolution proceeding, (a) 
the party seeking to exercise the default right shall bear the burden 
of proof that the exercise of that right is indeed permitted by the 
covered QFC and (b) the party seeking to exercise the default right 
must meet a ``clear and convincing evidence'' standard,\54\ a similar 
standard, or a more demanding standard.
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    \54\ The reference to a ``similar'' burden of proof is intended 
to allow covered QFCs to provide for the application of a standard 
that is analogous to clear and convincing evidence in jurisdictions 
that do not recognize that particular standard. A covered QFC would 
not be permitted to provide for a lower standard.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The purpose of this proposed requirement is to prevent QFC 
counterparties from circumventing the limitations on resolution-related 
default rights in this proposal by exercising other contractual default 
rights in instances where such QFC counterparty cannot demonstrate that 
the exercise of such other contractual default rights is unrelated to 
the affiliate's entry into resolution.
    Agency transactions. In addition to entering into QFCs as 
principal, GSIBs may engage in QFCs as agent for other principals. For 
example, a GSIB subsidiary may enter into a master securities lending 
arrangement with a foreign bank as agent for a U.S.-based pension fund. 
The GSIB would document its role as agent for the pension fund, often 
through an annex to the master agreement, and would generally provide 
to its customer (the principal party) a securities replacement 
guarantee or indemnification for any shortfall in collateral in the 
event of the default of the foreign bank.\55\ A covered bank may also 
enter into a QFC as principal where there is an agent acting on its 
behalf or on behalf of its counterparty.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \55\ The definition of QFC under Title II of the Dodd-Frank Act 
includes security agreements and other credit enhancements as well 
as master agreements (including supplements). 12 U.S.C. 
5390(c)(8)(D).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    This proposed rule would apply to a covered QFC regardless of 
whether the covered bank or the covered bank's direct counterparty is 
acting as a principal or as an agent. This proposed rule does not 
distinguish between agents and principals with respect to default 
rights or transfer restrictions applicable to covered QFCs. The 
proposed rule would limit default rights and transfer restrictions that 
the principal and its agent may have against a covered bank consistent 
with the U.S. special resolution regimes. This proposed rule would 
ensure that, subject to the enumerated creditor protections, neither 
the agent nor the

[[Page 55393]]

principal could exercise cross-default rights under the covered QFC 
against the covered bank based on the resolution of an affiliate of the 
covered bank.\56\
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    \56\ If a covered bank (acting as agent) is a direct party to a 
covered QFC, then the general prohibitions of section 47.5(d) would 
only affect the substantive rights of the agent's principal(s) to 
the extent that the covered QFC provides default rights based 
directly or indirectly on the entry into resolution of an affiliate 
of the covered bank (acting as agent).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Question 12: With respect to the proposed restrictions on cross-
default rights in covered banks' QFCs, is the proposed rule 
sufficiently clear, such that parties to a conforming QFC will 
understand what default rights are, and are not exercisable, in the 
context of a GSIB resolution? How could the proposed restrictions be 
further clarified?
    Question 13: Section 47.5(e)(2) of the proposed rule, addressing 
general creditor protections, would permit the exercise of default 
rights based on the failure of the direct party to satisfy its payment 
or delivery obligations under the covered QFC or ``another contract 
between the same parties'' that give rise to a default right in the 
covered QFC. This exception is not limited to covered QFCs but is 
intended to reflect the interdependence among all contracts between the 
same counterparties. Does the scope of the terms ``contract'' and 
``same parties'' need to be clarified? Should the term ``same parties'' 
be clarified to include affiliate credit support providers as well as 
counterparties?
    Question 14: Are the proposed restrictions on cross-default rights 
under-inclusive, such that the proposed terms would permit default 
rights that would have the same or similar potential to undermine an 
orderly SPOE resolution and should therefore be subjected to similar 
restrictions?
    Question 15: Would it be appropriate for the prohibition to 
explicitly cover default rights that are based on or related to the 
``financial condition'' of an affiliate of the direct party (for 
example, rights based on an affiliate's credit rating, stock price, or 
regulatory capital levels)?
    Question 16: Should the proposed restrictions be expanded to cover 
contractual rights that a QFC counterparty may have to exit the 
termination at will or without cause, including rights that arise on a 
periodic basis? Could such rights be used to circumvent the proposed 
restrictions on cross-default rights? If so, how, if at all, should the 
proposed rule regulate such contractual rights?
    Question 17: With respect to the proposed provisions permitting 
specific creditor protections in a covered QFC, does the proposed rule 
draw an appropriate balance between protecting financial stability from 
risks associated with QFC unwinds and maintaining important creditor 
protections? Should the proposed set of permitted creditor protections 
be expanded to allow for other creditor protections that would fall 
within the proposed restrictions? Is the proposed set of permitted 
creditor protections sufficiently clear?
    Question 18: With respect to the proposed requirement for burden-
of-proof provisions in a covered QFC, is the standard clear? Would the 
proposed requirement advance the goals of this proposed rule? Would 
those goals be better advanced by alternative or complementary 
provisions?
    Question 19: Should the proposed rule require periodic legal review 
of the legal enforceability of the required provisions in relevant 
jurisdictions? If periodic legal review is not required, should covered 
banks be required to monitor the applicable law in the relevant 
jurisdiction for material changes in law?
    Question 20: The OCC invites comment on all aspects of the proposed 
treatment of agency transactions, including whether credit protections 
should apply to QFCs where the direct party is acting as agent under 
the QFC.

G. Process for Approval of Enhanced Creditor Protections (Section 47.6)

    As discussed previously, the proposed restrictions would leave many 
creditor protections that are commonly included in QFCs unaffected. The 
proposed rule would also allow any covered bank to submit to the OCC a 
request to approve as compliant with the proposed rule one or more QFCs 
that contain additional creditor protections--that is, creditor 
protections that would be impermissible under the proposed restrictions 
set forth previously. A covered bank making such a request would be 
required to explain how its request is consistent with the purposes of 
this proposed rule, including an analysis of the contractual terms for 
which approval is requested in light of a range of factors that are 
laid out by the proposed rule and intended to facilitate the OCC's 
consideration of whether permitting the contractual terms would be 
consistent with the proposed restrictions. The OCC expects to consult 
with the FDIC and Board during its consideration of a request under 
this section.
    The first two factors concern the potential impact of the requested 
creditor protections on GSIB resilience and resolvability. The next 
four concern the potential scope of the covered bank's request: 
Adoption on an industry-wide basis, coverage of existing and future 
transactions, coverage of one or multiple QFCs, and coverage of some or 
all covered banks. Creditor protections that may be applied on an 
industry-wide basis may help to ensure that impediments to resolution 
are addressed on a uniform basis, which could increase market 
certainty, transparency, and equitable treatment. Creditor protections 
that apply broadly to a range of QFCs and covered banks would increase 
the chance that all of a GSIB's QFC counterparties would be treated the 
same way during a resolution of that GSIB and may improve the prospects 
for an orderly resolution of that GSIB. By contrast, covered bank 
requests that would expand counterparties' rights beyond those afforded 
under existing QFCs would conflict with the proposed rule's goal of 
reducing the risk of mass unwinds of GSIB QFCs. The proposed rule also 
includes three factors that focus on the creditor protections specific 
to supported parties. The OCC may weigh the appropriateness of 
additional protections for supported QFCs against the potential impact 
of such provisions on the orderly resolution of a GSIB.
    In addition to analyzing the request under the enumerated factors, 
a covered bank requesting that the OCC approve enhanced creditor 
protections would be required to submit a legal opinion stating that 
the requested terms would be valid and enforceable under the applicable 
law of the relevant jurisdictions, along with any additional relevant 
information requested by the OCC.
    Under the proposed rule, the OCC could approve a request for an 
alternative set of creditor protections if the terms of that QFC, as 
compared to a covered QFC containing only the limited exceptions 
discussed previously, would promote the orderly resolution of federally 
chartered or licensed institutions or their affiliates, prevent or 
mitigate risks to the financial stability of the United States or the 
Federal banking system that could arise from the failure of a global 
systemically important BHC or global systemically important FBO, and 
protect the safety and soundness of covered banks to at least the same 
extent. The proposed request-and-approval process would improve 
flexibility by allowing for an industry-proposed alternative to the set 
of creditor protections permitted by the proposed rule while ensuring 
that any

[[Page 55394]]

approved alternative would serve the proposed rule's policy goals to at 
least the same extent.
    Compliance with the International Swaps and Derivatives Association 
(ISDA) 2015 Universal Resolution Stay Protocol. In lieu of the process 
for the approval of enhanced creditor protections that are described 
previously, a covered bank would be permitted to comply with the 
proposed rule by amending a covered QFC through adherence to the ISDA 
2015 Universal Resolution Stay Protocol (including immaterial 
amendments to the Protocol).\57\ The Protocol ``enables parties to 
amend the terms of their financial contracts to contractually recognize 
the cross-border application of special resolution regimes applicable 
to certain financial companies and support the resolution of certain 
financial companies under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code.'' \58\ The Protocol 
amends ISDA Master Agreements, which are used for derivatives 
transactions. Market participants also may amend their master 
agreements for securities financing transactions by adhering to the 
Securities Financing Transaction Annex \59\ to the Protocol and may 
amend all other QFCs by adhering to the Other Agreements Annex. Thus, a 
covered bank would be able to comply with the proposed rule with 
respect to all of its covered QFCs through adherence to the Protocol 
and the annexes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \57\ International Swaps and Derivatives Association, Inc., 
``ISDA 2015 Universal Resolution Stay Protocol'' (November 4, 2015), 
available at http://assets.isda.org/media/ac6b533f-3/5a7c32f8-pdf/. 
The Protocol was developed by a working group of member institutions 
of the ISDA, in coordination with the FRB, the FDIC, the OCC, and 
foreign financial supervisory agencies. ISDA is expected to 
supplement the Protocol with ISDA Resolution Stay Jurisdictional 
Modular Protocols for the United States and other jurisdictions. A 
U.S. module that is the same in all respects to the Protocol aside 
from exempting QFCs between adherents that are not covered banks 
would be consistent with the current proposed rule.
    \58\ Protocol Press Release at http://www2.isda.org/functional-areas/protocol-management/protocol/22.
    \59\ The Securities Financing Transaction Annex was developed by 
the International Capital Markets Association, the International 
Securities Lending Association, and the Securities Industry and 
Financial Markets Association, in coordination with the ISDA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Protocol has the same general objective as the proposed rule, 
which is to make GSIB entities more resolvable by amending their 
contracts to, in effect, contractually recognize the applicability of 
special resolution regimes (including the OLA and the FDIA) and to 
restrict cross-default provisions to facilitate orderly resolution 
under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. The provisions of the Protocol largely 
track the requirements of the proposed rule.\60\ However, the Protocol 
does have a narrower scope than the proposed rule,\61\ and it allows 
for somewhat stronger creditor protections than would otherwise be 
permitted under the proposed rule.\62\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \60\ For example, sections 2(a) and 2(b) of the Protocol impose 
general prohibitions on cross-default rights based on the entry of 
an affiliate of the direct party into the most common U.S. 
resolution proceedings, including resolution under the Bankruptcy 
Code. By allowing the exercise of ``Performance Default Rights'' and 
``Unrelated Default Rights,'' as those terms are defined in section 
6 of the Protocol, sections 2(a) and 2(b) also generally permit the 
creditor protections that would be allowed under the proposed rule. 
Section 2(f) of the Protocol overrides certain contractual 
provisions that would block the transfer of a credit enhancement to 
a transferee entity. Section 2(i), complemented by the Protocol's 
definition of the term ``Unrelated Default Rights,'' provides that a 
party seeking to exercise permitted default rights must bear the 
burden of establishing by clear and convincing evidence that those 
rights may indeed be exercised.
    \61\ The restrictions on default rights imposed by section 2 of 
the Protocol apply only when an affiliate of the direct party enters 
``U.S. Insolvency Proceedings,'' which is defined to include 
proceedings under Chapters 7 and 11 of the Bankruptcy Code, the 
FDIA, and the Securities Investor Protection Act. By contrast, 
section 47.4 of the proposed rule would apply broadly to default 
rights related to affiliates of the direct party ``becoming subject 
to a receivership, insolvency, liquidation, resolution, or similar 
proceeding,'' which encompasses proceedings under State and foreign 
law.
    \62\ For example, the Protocol allows a non-defaulting party to 
exercise cross-default rights based on the entry of an affiliate of 
the direct party into certain resolution proceedings if the direct 
party's U.S. parent has not gone into resolution. See paragraph (b) 
of the Protocol's definition of ``Unrelated Default Rights''; see 
also sections 1 and 3(b) of the Protocol. As another example, if the 
affiliate credit support provider that has entered bankruptcy 
remains obligated under the credit enhancement, rather than 
transferring it to a transferee, then the Protocol's restrictions on 
the exercise of default rights continue to apply beyond the stay 
period only if the Bankruptcy Court issues a ``Creditor Protection 
Order.'' Such an order would, among other things, grant 
administrative expense status to the non-defaulting party's claims 
under the credit enhancement. See sections 2(b)(i)(B) and 
2(b)(iii)(B) of the Protocol and the Protocol's definitions of 
``Creditor Protection Order'' and ``DIP Stay Conditions.''
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The Protocol also includes a feature, not included in the proposed 
rule, that compensates for the Protocol's narrower scope and allowance 
for stronger creditor protections: When an entity (whether or not it is 
a covered bank) adheres to the Protocol, it necessarily adheres to the 
Protocol with respect to all covered entities that have also adhered to 
the Protocol.\63\ Thus, if all covered banks adhere to the Protocol, 
any other entity that chooses to adhere will simultaneously adhere with 
respect to all covered entities and covered banks. By allowing for all 
covered QFCs to be modified by the same contractual terms, this ``all-
or-none'' feature would promote transparency, predictability, and equal 
treatment with respect to counterparties' default rights during the 
resolution of a GSIB entity and thereby advance the proposed rule's 
objective of increasing the likelihood that such a resolution could be 
carried out in an orderly manner.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \63\ Under section 4(a) of the Protocol, the Protocol is 
generally effective as between any two adhering parties, once the 
relevant effective date has arrived. Under section 4(b)(ii), an 
adhering party that is not a covered bank may choose to opt out of 
section 2 of the Protocol with respect to its contracts with any 
other adhering party that is also not a covered bank. However, the 
Protocol will apply to relationships between any covered bank that 
adheres and any other adhering party.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Like section 47.5 of the proposed rule, section 2 of the Protocol 
was developed to increase GSIB resolvability under the Bankruptcy Code 
and other U.S. insolvency regimes. The Protocol does allow for somewhat 
broader creditor protections than would otherwise be permitted under 
the proposed rule, but, consistent with the Protocol's purpose, those 
additional creditor protections would not materially diminish the 
prospects for the orderly resolution of a GSIB. And the Protocol 
carries the desirable all-or-none feature, which would further increase 
a GSIB entity's resolvability and which the proposed rule otherwise 
lacks. For these reasons, and consistent with the broad policy 
objective of enhancing the stability of the U.S. financial system by 
increasing the resolvability of systemically important financial 
companies in the United States, the proposed rule would allow a covered 
bank to bring its covered QFCs into compliance by amending them through 
adherence to the Protocol (and, as relevant, the annexes to the 
Protocol).
    Question 21: Are the proposed considerations for the approval of 
enhanced credit protections the appropriate factors for the OCC to take 
into account in deciding whether to grant a request for approval? What 
other considerations are potentially relevant to such a decision?
    Question 22: Should the OCC provide greater specificity for the 
process and procedures for the submission and approval of requests for 
alternative enhanced credit protections? If so, what processes and 
procedures could be adopted without imposing undue regulatory burden?
    Question 23: The OCC invites comment on its proposal to treat as 
compliant with section 47.6 of the proposal any covered QFC that has 
been amended by the Protocol. Does adherence to the Protocol suffice to 
meet the goals of this proposed rule, appropriately protect the Federal 
banking system and safeguard U.S. financial stability? Should 
additional

[[Page 55395]]

guidance be provided that would clarify the consultation process with 
the FRB or any other relevant supervisory agency?

H. Transition Periods (Sections 47.4 and 47.5)

    Under this proposed rule, the final rule would take effect on the 
first day of the first calendar quarter that begins at least one year 
after the issuance of the final rule (effective date).\64\ National 
banks, FSAs, and Federal branches and agencies that are covered banks 
when the final rule is issued would be required to comply with the 
proposed requirements beginning on the effective date. Thus, a covered 
bank would be required to ensure that covered QFCs entered into on or 
after the effective date comply with the rule's requirements. Moreover, 
a covered bank would be required to bring preexisting covered QFCs 
entered into prior to the effective date into compliance with the rule 
no later than the first date on or after the effective date on which 
the covered bank enters into a new covered QFC with the counterparty to 
the preexisting covered QFC or with an affiliate of that counterparty. 
Thus, a covered bank would not be required to conform a preexisting QFC 
if that covered bank does not enter into any new QFCs with the same 
counterparty or an affiliate of that counterparty on or after the 
effective date. Finally, a national bank, FSA, or Federal branch or 
agency that becomes a covered bank after the final rule is issued would 
be required to comply by the first day of the first calendar quarter 
that begins at least one year after it becomes a covered bank.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \64\ Under section 302(b) of the Riegle Community Development 
and Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994, new regulations that impose 
requirements on insured depository institutions generally must 
``take effect on the first day of a calendar quarter which begins on 
or after the date on which the regulations are published in final 
form.'' 12 U.S.C. 4802(b).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    By permitting a covered bank to remain party to nonconforming QFCs 
entered into before the effective date unless the covered bank enters 
into new QFCs with the same counterparty or its affiliate, the proposed 
rule draws a balance between ensuring QFC continuity if a global 
systemically important BHC or FBO were to fail and ensuring that 
covered banks and their existing counterparties can avoid any 
compliance costs associated with conforming existing QFCs by refraining 
from entering into new QFCs and avoiding unnecessary disruption to 
existing QFCs. The requirement that a covered bank ensure that all 
existing QFCs are compliant before entering into a new QFC with the 
same counterparty or its affiliate will provide covered banks with an 
incentive to seek the modifications necessary to ensure that their QFCs 
with the most significant counterparties are compliant.
    A covered bank would be required to bring a preexisting covered QFC 
entered into prior to the effective date into compliance with the rule 
no later than the first date on or after the effective date on which 
the covered bank or an affiliate (that is also a covered entity or 
covered bank) enters into a new covered QFC with the counterparty to 
the preexisting covered QFC or an affiliate of the counterparty. The 
OCC believes such an approach is warranted to ensure that adoption of 
the contractual provisions required by the proposed rule are consistent 
between a given counterparty, any affiliate of the counterparty, and 
the covered bank and all of the affiliates of the covered bank (which 
would essentially be all of the entities under a global systemically 
important BHC or FBO). The OCC is concerned that to allow 
counterparties to adopt the required contractual provisions with 
affiliated covered entities, but not the covered bank, poses a risk to 
the safety and soundness of the covered bank and would frustrate the 
goal of facilitating the orderly resolution of the covered bank (and 
its affiliate covered entities). Furthermore, the OCC expects that, as 
a practical matter, the decision of how to comply with this proposed 
rule and the FRB Proposal with respect to a given counterparty, and its 
affiliates, will be made in close coordination between the covered bank 
and its affiliated covered entities.
    The OCC believes that adoption of the modifications required by the 
proposed rule should be consistent between a given counterparty and all 
entities under a global systemically important BHC or FBO, which 
necessitates allowing a trade by either a covered bank or a covered 
entity to trigger adoption of the required provisions. Moreover, the 
volume of nonconforming covered QFCs outstanding can be expected to 
decrease over time and eventually to reach zero. In light of these 
considerations, and to avoid creating potentially inappropriate 
compliance costs with respect to existing QFCs (which a covered bank 
would generally be unable to modify without its counterparty's 
consent), it may be appropriate to permit a limited number of 
nonconforming QFCs to remain outstanding, in keeping with the terms 
described previously. The OCC will monitor covered banks' levels of 
nonconforming QFCs and evaluate the risk, if any, that they pose to the 
safety and soundness of the covered banks or to the Federal banking 
system and to U.S. financial stability.
    Question 24: With respect to the proposed transaction periods, 
would there be a reasonable basis for adopting different compliance 
deadlines with respect to different classes of QFCs? If so, how should 
those classes be distinguished, and what would be a reasonable time 
frame for compliance?
    Question 25: Is it necessary for a covered bank to bring 
preexisting covered QFCs entered into prior to the effective date into 
compliance with the rule based on a covered bank's affiliate's (that is 
also a covered entity or covered bank) transaction with a counterparty 
or its affiliates? Is it appropriate to ensure consistent treatment 
across all affiliated covered banks, covered entities, and affiliated 
counterparties?

I. Amendments to Capital Rules

    The Basel III Capital Framework, as implemented by the OCC and the 
other banking agencies, permits a bank to measure exposure from certain 
types of financial contracts on a net basis and recognize the risk-
mitigating effect of financial collateral for other types of exposures, 
provided that the contracts are subject to a ``qualifying master 
netting agreement,'' a collateral agreement, eligible margin loan, or 
repo-style transaction (collectively referred to as netting agreements) 
that provides for certain rights upon a counterparty default. With 
limited exception, to qualify for netting treatment, a qualifying 
netting agreement must permit a bank to terminate, apply close-out 
netting, and promptly liquidate or set-off collateral upon an event of 
default of the counterparty (default rights), thereby reducing its 
counterparty exposure and market risks.\65\ Measuring the amount of 
exposure of these contracts on a net basis, rather than a gross basis, 
results in a lower measure of exposure, and thus, a lower capital 
requirement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \65\ See 12 CFR 3.2 definition of collateral agreement, eligible 
margin loan, repo-style transaction, and qualifying master netting 
agreement.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    An exception to the immediate close-out requirement is made for the 
stay of default rights if the financial company is in receivership, 
conservatorship, or resolution under Title II of the Dodd-Frank 
Act,\66\ or the FDIA.\67\ Accordingly, transactions conducted under 
netting agreements where default rights may be stayed under Title II of 
the

[[Page 55396]]

Dodd-Frank Act or the FDIA would not be disqualified from netting 
treatment.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \66\ See 12 U.S.C. 5390(c)(8)-(16).
    \67\ See 12 U.S.C. 1821(e)(8)-(13).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    On December 30, 2014, the OCC and the FRB issued an interim final 
rule (effective January 1, 2015) that amended the definitions of 
``qualifying master netting agreement,'' ``collateral agreement,'' 
``eligible margin loan,'' and ``repo-style transaction,'' in the OCC 
and FRB regulatory capital rules, and ``qualifying master netting 
agreement'' in the OCC and FRB liquidity coverage ratio (LCR) rules to 
expand the exception to the immediate close-out requirement to ensure 
that the current netting treatment under the regulatory capital, 
liquidity, and lending limits rules for over-the-counter (OTC) 
derivatives, repo-style transactions, eligible margin loans, and other 
collateralized transactions would be unaffected by the adoption of 
various foreign special resolution regimes through the ISDA 
Protocol.\68\ In particular, the interim final rule amended these 
definitions to provide that a relevant netting agreement or collateral 
agreement may provide for a limited stay or avoidance of rights where 
the agreement is subject by its terms to, or incorporates, certain 
resolution regimes applicable to financial companies, including Title 
II of the Dodd-Frank Act, the FDIA, or any similar foreign resolution 
regime that provides for limited stays substantially similar to the 
stay for qualified financial contracts provided in Title II of the 
Dodd-Frank Act or the FDIA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \68\ The FDIC issued a NPRM on January 30, 2015 to propose these 
conforming amendments. See 80 FR 5063 (January 30, 2015).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Section 47.4 of the proposed rule essentially limits the default 
rights exercisable against a covered bank to the same stay and transfer 
restrictions imposed under the U.S. special resolution regime against a 
direct counterparty. Section 47.4 of the proposed rule mirrors the 
contractual stay and transfer restrictions reflected in the ISDA 
Protocol with one notable difference. While adoption of the ISDA 
Protocol is voluntary, covered banks subject to the proposed rule must 
conform their covered QFCs to the stay and transfer restrictions in 
section 47.4.
    With respect to limitations on cross-default rights in proposed 
section 47.5, the OCC is proposing amendments in order to maintain the 
existing netting treatment for covered QFCs for purposes of the 
regulatory capital, liquidity, and lending limits rules. Specifically, 
the OCC is proposing to amend the definition of ``qualifying master 
netting agreement,'' as well as to make conforming amendments to 
``collateral agreement, ``eligible margin loan,'' and ``repo-style 
transaction,'' in the regulatory capital rules in part 3, and 
``qualifying master netting agreement'' in the LCR rules in part 50 to 
ensure that the regulatory capital, liquidity, and lending limits 
treatment of OTC derivatives, repo-style transactions, eligible margin 
loans, and other collateralized transactions would be unaffected by the 
adoption of proposed section 47.5. Without these proposed amendments, 
covered banks that amend their covered QFCs to comply with this 
proposed rule would no longer be permitted to recognize covered QFCs as 
subject to a qualifying master netting agreement or satisfying the 
criteria necessary for the current regulatory capital, liquidity, and 
lending limits treatment, and would be required to measure exposure 
from these contracts on a gross, rather than net, basis. This result 
would undermine the proposed requirements in section 47.5. The OCC does 
not believe that the disqualification of covered QFCs from master 
netting agreements would accurately reflect the risk posed by these OTC 
derivative transactions.
    Although the proposed rule reformats some of the definitions in 
parts 3 and 50 to include the text from the interim final rule, the 
proposed amendments do not alter the substance or effect of the prior 
amendment adopted by the interim final rule.
    The rule establishing margin and capital requirements for covered 
swap entities (swap margin rule) defines the term ``eligible master 
netting agreement'' in a manner similar to the definition of 
``qualifying master netting agreement.'' \69\ Thus, it may also be 
appropriate to amend the definition of ``eligible master netting 
agreement'' to account for the proposed restrictions on covered 
entities' QFCs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \69\ 80 FR 74840, 74861-74862 (November 30, 2015).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Question 26: As noted, the requirements of this proposed rule are 
mandatory for all covered banks with respect to their covered QFCs. 
Under the proposed rule failure by a covered bank to conform its 
covered QFCs to the mandatory requirements would be a violation of the 
rule. In light of the important policy objectives of this proposed 
rule, should the regulatory capital and LCR rules require that 
nonconforming covered QFCs that violate the requirements of the 
proposed rule be disqualified from netting treatment?
    Question 27. In order to qualify for netting treatment under the 
regulatory capital rules, eligible margin loans, qualifying master 
netting agreements, and repo-style transactions require national banks 
and FSAs to conduct sufficient legal review to ensure that the 
provisions of these financial contracts would be enforceable in all 
relevant jurisdictions. Should the scope of the legal review 
requirement be expanded to explicitly include the enforceability of the 
direct default and cross-default provisions required by the proposed 
rule?

IV. Request for Comments

    In addition to the specifically enumerated questions in the 
preamble, the OCC requests comment on all aspects of this proposed 
rule. The OCC requests that, for the specifically enumerated questions, 
commenters include the number of the question in their response to make 
review of the comments more efficient.

V. Regulatory Analysis

A. Paperwork Reduction Act

    In accordance with section 3512 of the Paperwork Reduction Act 
(PRA) of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-3521) (as amended), the OCC 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.
    Certain provisions of the proposed rule contain ``collection of 
information'' requirements within the meaning of the PRA. In accordance 
with the requirements of the PRA, the OCC may not conduct or sponsor, 
and the respondent is not required to respond to, an information 
collection unless it displays a currently-valid OMB control number. The 
information collection requirements contained in this proposed 
rulemaking have been submitted to OMB for review and approval under 
section 3507(d) of the PRA (44 U.S.C. 3507(d)) and section 1320.11 of 
the OMB's implementing regulations (5 CFR 1320).
    Comments are invited on:
    (a) Whether the collections of information are necessary for the 
proper performance of the OCC's functions, including whether the 
information has practical utility;
    (b) The accuracy of the estimates of the burden of the information 
collections, including the validity of the methodology and assumptions 
used;
    (c) Ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the 
information to be collected;
    (d) Ways to minimize the burden of the information collections on 
respondents, including through the use

[[Page 55397]]

of automated collection techniques or other forms of information 
technology; and
    (e) Estimates of capital or start-up costs and costs of operation, 
maintenance, and purchase of services to provide information.
    All comments will become a matter of public record. Comments on 
aspects of this notice that may affect reporting, recordkeeping, or 
disclosure requirements and burden estimates should be sent to the 
addresses listed in the ADDRESSES section of this document. A copy of 
the comments may also be submitted to the OMB desk officer for the 
agencies: by mail to U.S. Office of Management and Budget, 725 17th 
Street NW., #10235, Washington, DC 20503; by facsimile to (202) 395-
5806; or by email to: [email protected], Attention, Federal 
Banking Agency Desk Officer.
    Title of Information Collection: Mandatory Contractual Stay 
Requirements for Qualified Financial Contracts.
    Affected Public: Businesses or other for-profit.
    Respondents: Banks or FSAs (including any subsidiary of a bank or 
FSA) that are subsidiaries of a global systemically important BHC that 
has been designated pursuant to 252.82(a)(1) of the Federal Reserve 
Board's Regulation YY; Banks or FSAs (including any subsidiary of a 
bank or FSA) that are subsidiaries of a global systemically important 
FBO designated pursuant to section 252.87 of the Federal Reserve 
Board's Regulation YY; and Federal branches and agencies (including any 
U.S. subsidiary of a Federal branch or agency), of a global 
systemically important FBO that has been designated pursuant to section 
252.87 of the Federal Reserve Board's Regulation YY.
    Abstract: Section 47.6 provides that a covered bank may request 
that the OCC approve as compliant with the requirements of section 
47.5, regarding insolvency proceedings, provisions of one or more forms 
of covered QFCs, or amendments to one or more forms of covered QFCs, 
with enhanced creditor protection conditions. The request must include: 
(1) an analysis of the proposal under each consideration of the 
relevance of creditor protection provisions; (2) a written legal 
opinion verifying that proposed provisions or amendments would be valid 
and enforceable under applicable law of the relevant jurisdictions, 
including, in the case of proposed amendments, the validity and 
enforceability of the proposal to amend the covered QFCs; and (3) any 
additional information relevant to its approval that the OCC requests.
    Burden Estimates:
    Estimated Number of Respondents: 42.
    Estimated Burden per Respondent:
    Reporting (Sec.  47.7): 40 hours.
    Total Estimated Burden: 1,680 hours.

B. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis

    The Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq. (``RFA''), 
generally requires that, in connection with a NPRM, an agency prepare 
and make available for public comment an initial regulatory flexibility 
analysis that describes the impact of a proposed rule on small 
entities.\70\ The Small Business Administration has defined ``small 
entities'' for banking purposes to include a bank or savings 
association with $175 million or less in assets.\71\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \70\ See 5 U.S.C. 603(a).
    \71\ See 13 CFR 121.201.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The OCC currently supervises approximately 1,032 small entities. 
The scope of the proposal is limited to large banks and their 
affiliates. Therefore, the proposed rule will not impact any OCC-
supervised small entities. Accordingly, the proposal will not have a 
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.

C. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995

    The OCC has analyzed the proposed rule under the factors in the 
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA).\72\ Under this analysis, 
the OCC considered whether the proposed rule includes a Federal mandate 
that may result in the expenditure by State, local, and tribal 
governments, in the aggregate, or by the private sector, of $100 
million or more in any one year (adjusted annually for inflation). The 
UMRA does not apply to regulations that incorporate requirements 
specifically set forth in law.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \72\ 2 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The OCC's estimated UMRA cost is less than $2 million. Therefore, 
the OCC finds that the proposed rule does not trigger the UMRA cost 
threshold. Accordingly, the OCC has not prepared the written statement 
described in section 202 of the UMRA.

D. Riegle Community Development and Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994

    Pursuant to section 302(a) of the Riegle Community Development and 
Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994 (RCDRI Act),\73\ in determining the 
effective date and administrative compliance requirements for new 
regulations that impose additional reporting, disclosure, or other 
requirements on insured depository institutions, the OCC will consider, 
consistent with the principles of safety and soundness and the public 
interest: (1) Any administrative burdens that the proposed rule would 
place on depository institutions, including small depository 
institutions and customers of depository institutions, and (2) the 
benefits of the proposed rule. The OCC requests comment on any 
administrative burdens that the proposed rule would place on depository 
institutions, including small depository institutions, and their 
customers, and the benefits of the proposed rule that the OCC should 
consider in determining the effective date and administrative 
compliance requirements for a final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \73\ 12 U.S.C. 4802(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

List of Subjects

12 CFR Part 3

    Administrative practice and procedure; Capital; Federal savings 
associations; National banks; Reporting and recordkeeping requirements; 
Risk.

12 CFR Part 47

    Administrative practice and procedure; Banks and banking; Bank 
resolution; Default rights; Federal savings associations, National 
banks, Qualified financial contracts; Reporting and recordkeeping 
requirements; Securities.

12 CFR Part 50

    Administrative practice and procedure; Banks and banking; 
Liquidity; Reporting and recordkeeping requirements; Savings 
associations.

Authority and Issuance

    For the reasons stated in the Supplementary Information, the Office 
of the Comptroller of the Currency proposes to amend part 3, add a new 
part 47, and amend part 50 as follows:

PART 3--CAPITAL ADEQUACY STANDARDS

0
1. The authority citation for part 3 continues to read as follows:

    Authority: 12 U.S.C. 93a, 161, 1462, 1462a, 1463, 1464, 1818, 
1828(n), 1828 note, 1831n note, 1835, 3907, 3909, and 5412(b)(2)(B).

0
2. Section 3.2 is amended by:
0
a. Revising the definition of ``collateral agreement'' by:
0
i. Removing the word ``or'' at the end of paragraph (1);
0
ii. Removing the period at the end of paragraph (2) and adding in its 
place ``; or''; and
0
iii. Adding a new paragraph (3).

[[Page 55398]]

0
b. Revising paragraph (1)(iii) of the definition of ``eligible margin 
loan''; and
0
c. Revising the definition of ``qualifying master netting agreement'' 
by:
0
i. Removing the word ``or'' at the end of paragraph (2)(i);
0
ii. Removing the '';'' at the end of paragraph (2)(ii) and adding in 
its place ``; or''; and
0
iii. Adding a new paragraph (2)(iii).
0
d. Revising paragraph (3)(ii)(A) of the definition of ``repo-style 
transaction''.
    The revisions are set forth below:


Sec.  3.2  Definitions.

* * * * *
    Collateral agreement means * * *
* * * * *
    (3) Where the right to accelerate, terminate, and close-out on a 
net basis all transactions under the agreement and to liquidate or set-
off collateral promptly upon an event of default of the counterparty is 
limited only to the extent necessary to comply with the requirements of 
part 47 of this title 12 or any similar requirements of another U.S. 
Federal banking agency, as applicable.
* * * * *
    Eligible margin loan means: (1) * * *
* * * * *
    (iii) The extension of credit is conducted under an agreement that 
provides the national bank or Federal savings association the right to 
accelerate and terminate the extension of credit and to liquidate or 
set-off collateral promptly upon an event of default, including upon an 
event of receivership, insolvency, liquidation, conservatorship, or 
similar proceeding, of the counterparty, provided that, in any such 
case, any exercise of rights under the agreement will not be stayed or 
avoided under applicable law in the relevant jurisdictions, other than:
    (A) In receivership, conservatorship, or resolution under the 
Federal Deposit Insurance Act, Title II of the Dodd-Frank Act, or under 
any similar insolvency law applicable to GSEs,\5\ or laws of foreign 
jurisdictions that are substantially similar \6\ to the U.S. laws 
referenced in this paragraph in order to facilitate the orderly 
resolution of the defaulting counterparty; or
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \5\ This requirement is met where all transactions under the 
agreement are (i) executed under U.S. law and (ii) constitute 
``securities contracts'' under section 555 of the Bankruptcy Code 
(11 U.S.C. 555), qualified financial contracts under section 
11(e)(8) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, or netting contracts 
between or among financial institutions under sections 401-407 of 
the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Improvement Act or the 
FRB's Regulation EE (12 CFR part 231).
    \6\ The OCC expects to evaluate jointly with the FRB and FDIC 
whether foreign special resolution regimes meet the requirements of 
this paragraph.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (B) Where the right to accelerate, terminate, and close-out on a 
net basis all transactions under the agreement and to liquidate or set-
off collateral promptly upon an event of default of the counterparty is 
limited only to the extent necessary to comply with the requirements of 
part 47 of this title 12 or any similar requirements of another U.S. 
Federal banking agency, as applicable;
    or
* * * * *
    Qualifying master netting agreement means a written, legally 
enforceable agreement provided that:
* * * * *
    (2) * * *
* * * * *
    (iii) Where the right to accelerate, terminate, and close-out on a 
net basis all transactions under the agreement and to liquidate or set-
off collateral promptly upon an event of default of the counterparty is 
limited only to the extent necessary to comply with the requirements of 
part 47 of this title 12 or any similar requirements of another U.S. 
Federal banking agency, as applicable.
* * * * *
    Repo-style transaction means a repurchase or reverse repurchase 
transaction, or a securities borrowing or securities lending 
transaction, including a transaction in which the national bank or 
Federal savings association acts as agent for a customer and 
indemnifies the customer against loss, provided that:
* * * * *
    (3) * * *
    (ii) * * *
    (A) The transaction is executed under an agreement that provides 
the national bank or Federal savings association the right to 
accelerate, terminate, and close-out the transaction on a net basis and 
to liquidate or set-off collateral promptly upon an event of default, 
including upon an event of receivership, insolvency, liquidation, or 
similar proceeding, of the counterparty, provided that, in any such 
case, any exercise of rights under the agreement will not be stayed or 
avoided under applicable law in the relevant jurisdictions, other than:
    (1) In receivership, conservatorship, or resolution under the 
Federal Deposit Insurance Act, Title II of the Dodd-Frank Act, or under 
any similar insolvency law applicable to GSEs, or laws of foreign 
jurisdictions that are substantially similar \8\ to the U.S. laws 
referenced in this paragraph (3)(ii)(a) in order to facilitate the 
orderly resolution of the defaulting counterparty; or
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \8\ The OCC expects to evaluate jointly with the FRB and FDIC 
whether foreign special resolution regimes meet the requirements of 
this paragraph.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    (2) Where the right to accelerate, terminate, and close-out on a 
net basis all transactions under the agreement and to liquidate or set-
off collateral promptly upon an event of default of the counterparty is 
limited only to the extent necessary to comply with the requirements of 
part 47 of this title 12 or any similar requirements of another U.S. 
Federal banking agency, as applicable; or
* * * * *

PART 47--MANDATORY CONTRACTUAL STAY REQUIREMENTS FOR QUALIFIED 
FINANCIAL CONTRACTS

0
3. The authority citation for Part 47 shall read as follows:

    Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1, 93a, 481, 1462a, 1463, 1464, 1467a, 
1818, 1828, 1831n, 1831o, 1831p-1, 1831w, 1835, 3102(b), 3108(a), 
5412(b)(2)(B), (D)-(F).
0
4. Add new Part 47 to read as follows:

PART 47--MANDATORY CONTRACTUAL STAY REQUIREMENTS FOR QUALIFIED 
FINANCIAL CONTRACTS

Sec.
47.1 Authority and Purpose.
47.2 Definitions.
47.3 Applicability.
47.4 U.S. Special Resolution Regimes.
47.5 Insolvency Proceedings.
47.6 Approval of Enhanced Creditor Protection Conditions.
47.7 Exclusion of Certain QFCs.
47.8 Foreign Bank Multi-Branch Master Agreements.

PART 47--MANDATORY CONTRACTUAL STAY REQUIREMENTS FOR QUALIFIED 
FINANCIAL CONTRACTS


Sec.  47.1  Authority and Purpose.

    (a) Authority. 12 U.S.C. 1, 93a, 1462a, 1463, 1464, 1467a, 1818, 
1828, 1831n, 1831p-1, 1831w, 1835, 3102(b), 3108(a), 5412(b)(2)(B), 
(D)-(F).
    (b) Purpose. The purpose of this part is to promote the safety and 
soundness of federally chartered or licensed institutions by mitigating 
the potential destabilizing effects of the resolution of a global 
significantly important banking entity on an affiliate that is a 
covered bank (as defined by this part) by requiring covered banks to 
include in financial contracts covered by this part certain mandatory 
contractual

[[Page 55399]]

provisions relating to stays on acceleration and close out rights and 
transfer rights.


Sec.  47.2  Definitions.

    Central counterparty or CCP has the same meaning as in section 
252.81 of the Federal Reserve Board's Regulation YY (12 CFR 252.81).
    Chapter 11 proceeding means a proceeding under the provisions of 
Chapter 11 of the bankruptcy laws of the United States at 11 U.S.C. 
1101-74 (Chapter 11 of Title 11, United States Code).
    Covered entity has the same meaning as in section 252.82(a) of the 
Federal Reserve Board's Regulation YY (12 CFR 252.82).
    Covered QFC means a QFC as defined in sections 47.4(a) and 47.5(a) 
of this part.
    Credit enhancement means a QFC of the type set forth in Title II of 
the Dodd-Frank Act at section 210(c)(8)(D)(ii)(XII), (iii)(X), (iv)(V), 
(v)(VI), or (vi)(VI), 12 U.S.C. 5390(c)(8)(D)(ii)(XII), (iii)(X), 
(iv)(V), (v)(VI), or (vi)(VI); or a credit enhancement that the Federal 
Deposit Insurance Corporation determines by regulation is a QFC 
pursuant to section 210(c)(8)(D)(i), 12 U.S.C. 5390(c)(8)(D)(i), of the 
Dodd-Frank Act.
    Default right (1) Means, with respect to a QFC, any:
    (i) Right of a party, whether contractual or otherwise (including, 
without limitation, rights incorporated by reference to any other 
contract, agreement, or document, and rights afforded by statute, civil 
code, regulation, and common law), to liquidate, terminate, cancel, 
rescind, or accelerate such agreement or transactions thereunder, set 
off or net amounts owing in respect thereto (except rights related to 
same-day payment netting), exercise remedies in respect of collateral 
or other credit support or property related thereto (including the 
purchase and sale of property), demand payment or delivery thereunder 
or in respect thereof (other than a right or operation of a contractual 
provision arising solely from a change in the value of collateral or 
margin or a change in the amount of an economic exposure), suspend, 
delay, or defer payment or performance thereunder, or modify the 
obligations of a party thereunder, or any similar rights; and
    (ii) Right or contractual provision that alters the amount of 
collateral or margin that must be provided with respect to an exposure 
thereunder, including by altering any initial amount, threshold amount, 
variation margin, minimum transfer amount, the margin value of 
collateral, or any similar amount, that entitles a party to demand the 
return of any collateral or margin transferred by it to the other party 
or a custodian or that modifies a transferee's right to reuse 
collateral or margin (if such right previously existed), or any similar 
rights, in each case, other than a right or operation of a contractual 
provision arising solely from a change in the value of collateral or 
margin or a change in the amount of an economic exposure;
    (2) With respect to section 47.5 of this part, does not include any 
right under a contract that allows a party to terminate the contract on 
demand, or at its option at a specified time, or from time to time, 
without the need to show cause.
    Dodd-Frank Act means the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer 
Protection Act, Pub. L. 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (July 21, 2010).
    FDIA proceeding means a proceeding in which the Federal Deposit 
Insurance Corporation is appointed as conservator or receiver under 
section 11 of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, 12 U.S.C. 1821.
    FDIA stay period means, in connection with an FDIA proceeding, the 
period of time during which a party to a QFC whose counterparty is 
subject to an FDIA proceeding may not exercise any right that the 
counterparty has to terminate, liquidate, or net such QFC, in 
accordance with section 11(e) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, 12 
U.S.C. 1821(e), and any implementing regulations.
    Master agreement means a QFC of the type set forth in Title II of 
the Dodd-Frank Act at section 210(c)(8)(D)(ii)(XI), (iii)(IX), 
(iv)(IV), (v)(V), or (vi)(V), 12 U.S.C. 5390(c)(8)(D)(ii)(XI), 
(iii)(IX), (iv)(IV), (v)(V), or (vi)(V); or a master agreement that the 
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation determines by regulation is a QFC 
pursuant to section 210(c)(8)(D)(i) of the Dodd-Frank Act, 12 U.S.C. 
5390(c)(8)(D)(i).
    QFC or qualified financial contract has the same meaning as in 
section 210(c)(8)(D) of Title II of the Dodd-Frank Act, 12 U.S.C. 
5390(c)(8)(D).
    Subsidiary of covered bank means any operating subsidiary of a 
national bank, Federal savings association, or Federal branch or agency 
as defined in 12 CFR 5.34 (national banks) or 12 CFR 5.38 (FSAs), or 
any other subsidiary of a covered bank as defined in section 
252.82(a)(2) and (3) of the Federal Reserve Board's Regulation YY (12 
CFR 252.82(a)(2) and (3)).
    U.S. special resolution regimes means the Federal Deposit Insurance 
Act at 12 U.S.C. 1811-1835a and regulations promulgated thereunder and 
Title II of the Dodd-Frank Act, 12 U.S.C. 5381-5394, and regulations 
promulgated thereunder.


Sec.  47.3  Applicability.

    (a) Scope of applicability. This part applies to a ``covered 
bank,'' which includes:
    (i) A national bank or Federal savings association (including any 
subsidiary of a national bank or a Federal savings association) that is 
a subsidiary of a global systemically important bank holding company 
that has been designated pursuant to section 252.82(a)(1) of the 
Federal Reserve Board's Regulation YY (12 CFR 252.82(a)(1)); or
    (ii) A national bank or Federal savings association (including any 
subsidiary of a national bank or a Federal savings association) that is 
a subsidiary of a global systemically important foreign banking 
organization that has been designated pursuant to section 252.87 of the 
Federal Reserve Board's Regulation YY (12 CFR 252.87); or
    (iii) A Federal branch or agency, as defined in the Subpart B of 
Part 28 of this Chapter (governing Federal branches and agencies), and 
any U.S. subsidiary of the Federal branch or agency, of a global 
systemically important foreign banking organization that has been 
designated pursuant to section 252.87 of the Federal Reserve Board's 
Regulation YY (12 CFR 252.87).
    (b) Subsidiary of a covered bank. This part generally applies to 
the subsidiary of any national bank, Federal savings association, or 
Federal branch or agency that is a covered bank under paragraph (a)(1) 
of this section. Specifically, the covered bank is required to ensure 
that a covered QFC to which the subsidiary is a party (as a direct 
counterparty or a support provider) satisfies the requirements of 
sections 47.4 and 47.5 of this part in the same manner and to the same 
extent applicable to the covered bank.
    (c) Initial applicability of requirements for covered QFCs. A 
covered bank must comply with the requirements of sections 47.4 and 
47.5 beginning on the later of
    (1) The first day of the calendar quarter immediately following 365 
days (1 year) after becoming a covered bank; or
    (2) The date this subpart first becomes effective.
    (d) Rule of construction. For purposes of this subpart, the 
exercise of a default right with respect to a covered QFC includes the 
automatic or deemed exercise of the default right pursuant to the terms 
of the QFC or other arrangement.

[[Page 55400]]

Sec.  47.4  U.S. Special Resolution Regimes.

    (a) QFCs required to be conformed. (1) A covered bank must ensure 
that each of its covered QFCs conforms to the requirements of this 
section 47.4.
    (2) For purposes of this section 47.4, a covered QFC means a QFC 
that the covered bank:
    (i) Enters, executes, or otherwise becomes a party to; or
    (ii) Entered, executed, or otherwise became a party to before the 
date this subpart first becomes effective, if the covered bank or any 
affiliate that is a covered bank or covered entity also enters, 
executes, or otherwise becomes a party to a QFC with the same person or 
affiliate of the same person on or after the date this subpart first 
becomes effective.
    (3) To the extent that the covered bank is acting as agent with 
respect to a QFC, the requirements of this section apply to the extent 
the transfer of the QFC relates to the covered bank or the default 
rights relate to the covered bank or an affiliate of the covered bank.
    (b) Provisions required. A covered QFC must explicitly provide 
that:
    (1) The transfer of the covered QFC (and any interest and 
obligation in or under, and any property securing, the covered QFC) 
from the covered bank will be effective to the same extent as the 
transfer would be effective under the U.S. special resolution regimes 
if the covered QFC (and any interest and obligation in or under, and 
any property securing, the covered QFC) were governed by the laws of 
the United States or a state of the United States and the covered bank 
were under the U.S. special resolution regime; and
    (2) Default rights with respect to the covered QFC that may be 
exercised against the covered bank are permitted to be exercised to no 
greater extent than the default rights could be exercised under the 
U.S. special resolution regimes if the covered QFC was governed by the 
laws of the United States or a state of the United States and the 
covered bank were under the U.S. special resolution regime.
    (c) Relevance of creditor protection provisions. The requirements 
of this section apply notwithstanding paragraphs (e), (g), and (i) of 
section 47.5.


Sec.  47.5  Insolvency Proceedings.

    (a) QFCs required to be conformed. (1) A covered bank must ensure 
that each covered QFC conforms to the requirements of this section 
47.5.
    (2) For purposes of this section 47.5, a covered QFC has the same 
definition as in paragraph (a)(2) of section 47.4.
    (3) To the extent that the covered bank is acting as agent with 
respect to a QFC, the requirements of this section apply to the extent 
the transfer of the QFC relates to the covered bank or the default 
rights relate to an affiliate of the covered bank.
    (b) General Prohibitions. (1) A covered QFC may not permit the 
exercise of any default right with respect to the covered QFC that is 
related, directly or indirectly, to an affiliate of the direct party 
becoming subject to a receivership, insolvency, liquidation, 
resolution, or similar proceeding.
    (2) A covered QFC may not prohibit the transfer of a covered 
affiliate credit enhancement, any interest or obligation in or under 
the covered affiliate credit enhancement, or any property securing the 
covered affiliate credit enhancement to a transferee upon an affiliate 
of the direct party becoming subject to a receivership, insolvency, 
liquidation, resolution, or similar proceeding unless the transfer 
would result in the supported party being the beneficiary of the credit 
enhancement in violation of any law applicable to the supported party.
    (c) Definitions relevant to the general prohibitions and this part. 
(1) Direct party. Direct party means covered bank, or covered entity 
referenced in section 47.2, that is a party to the direct QFC.
    (2) Direct QFC. Direct QFC means a QFC that is not a credit 
enhancement, provided that, for a QFC that is a master agreement that 
includes an affiliate credit enhancement as a supplement to the master 
agreement, the direct QFC does not include the affiliate credit 
enhancement.
    (3) Affiliate credit enhancement. Affiliate credit enhancement 
means a credit enhancement that is provided by an affiliate of a party 
to the direct QFC that the credit enhancement supports.
    (d) Treatment of agent transactions. With respect to a QFC that is 
a covered QFC for a covered bank solely because the covered bank is 
acting as agent under the QFC, the covered bank is the direct party.
    (e) General creditor protections. Notwithstanding paragraph (b) of 
this section, a covered direct QFC and covered affiliate credit 
enhancement that supports the covered direct QFC may permit the 
exercise of a default right with respect to the covered QFC that arises 
as a result of:
    (1) The direct party becoming subject to a receivership, 
insolvency, liquidation, resolution, or similar proceeding other than a 
receivership, conservatorship, or resolution under the Federal Deposit 
Insurance Act, Title II of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and 
Consumer Protection Act, or laws of foreign jurisdictions that are 
substantially similar to the U.S. laws referenced in this paragraph 
(e)(1) in order to facilitate the orderly resolution of the direct 
party;
    (2) The direct party not satisfying a payment or delivery 
obligation pursuant to the covered QFC or another contract between the 
same parties that gives rise to a default right in the covered QFC; or
    (3) The covered affiliate support provider or transferee not 
satisfying a payment or delivery obligation pursuant to a covered 
affiliate credit enhancement that supports the covered direct QFC.
    (f) Definitions relevant to the general creditor protections and 
this part. (1) Covered direct QFC. Covered direct QFC means a direct 
QFC to which a covered bank, or a covered entity referenced in section 
47.2, is a party.
    (2) Covered affiliate credit enhancement. Covered affiliate credit 
enhancement means an affiliate credit enhancement in which a covered 
bank, or a covered entity referenced in section 47.2, is the obligor of 
the credit enhancement.
    (3) Covered affiliate support provider. Covered affiliate support 
provider means, with respect to a covered affiliate credit enhancement, 
the affiliate of the direct party that is obligated under the covered 
affiliate credit enhancement and is not a transferee.
    (4) Supported party. Supported party means, with respect to a 
covered affiliate credit enhancement and the direct QFC that the 
covered affiliate credit enhancement supports, a party that is a 
beneficiary of the covered affiliate support provider's obligation 
under the covered affiliate credit enhancement.
    (g) Additional creditor protections for supported QFCs. 
Notwithstanding paragraph (b) of this section, with respect to a 
covered direct QFC that is supported by a covered affiliate credit 
enhancement, the covered direct QFC and the covered affiliate credit 
enhancement may permit the exercise of a default right that is related, 
directly or indirectly, to the covered affiliate support provider after 
the stay period if:
    (1) The covered affiliate support provider that remains obligated 
under the covered affiliate credit enhancement becomes subject to a 
receivership, insolvency, liquidation, resolution, or similar 
proceeding other than a Chapter 11 proceeding;
    (2) Subject to paragraph (i) of this section, the transferee, if 
any, becomes subject to a receivership, insolvency,

[[Page 55401]]

liquidation, resolution, or similar proceeding;
    (3) The covered affiliate support provider does not remain, and a 
transferee does not become, obligated to the same, or substantially 
similar, extent as the covered affiliate support provider was obligated 
immediately prior to entering the receivership, insolvency, 
liquidation, resolution, or similar proceeding with respect to:
    (i) The covered affiliate credit enhancement,
    (ii) All other covered affiliate credit enhancements provided by 
the covered affiliate support provider in support of other covered 
direct QFCs between the direct party and the supported party under the 
covered affiliate credit enhancement referenced in paragraph 
47(g)(3)(i), and
    (iii) All covered affiliate credit enhancements provided by the 
covered affiliate support provider in support of covered direct QFCs 
between the direct party and affiliates of the supported party 
referenced in paragraph 47.5(g)(3)(ii); or
    (4) In the case of a transfer of the covered affiliate credit 
enhancement to a transferee:
    (i) All of the ownership interests of the direct party directly or 
indirectly held by the covered affiliate support provider are not 
transferred to the transferee; or
    (ii) Reasonable assurance has not been provided that all or 
substantially all of the assets of the covered affiliate support 
provider (or net proceeds therefrom), excluding any assets reserved for 
the payment of costs and expenses of administration in the 
receivership, insolvency, liquidation, resolution, or similar 
proceeding, will be transferred or sold to the transferee in a timely 
manner.
    (h) Definitions relevant to the additional creditor protections for 
supported QFCs and this part. (1) Stay period. Stay period means, with 
respect to a receivership, insolvency, liquidation, resolution, or 
similar proceeding, the period of time beginning on the commencement of 
the proceeding and ending at the later of 5:00 p.m. (eastern time) on 
the business day following the date of the commencement of the 
proceeding and 48 hours after the commencement of the proceeding.
    (2) Business day. Business day means a day on which commercial 
banks in the jurisdiction the proceeding is commenced are open for 
general business (including dealings in foreign exchange and foreign 
currency deposits).
    (3) Transferee. Transferee means a person to whom a covered 
affiliate credit enhancement is transferred upon the covered affiliate 
support provider entering a receivership, insolvency, liquidation, 
resolution, or similar proceeding or thereafter as part of the 
restructuring or reorganization involving the covered affiliate support 
provider.
    (i) Creditor protections related to FDIA proceedings. 
Notwithstanding paragraph (b) of this section, with respect to a 
covered direct QFC that is supported by a covered affiliate credit 
enhancement, the covered direct QFC and the covered affiliate credit 
enhancement may permit the exercise of a default right that is related, 
directly or indirectly, to the covered affiliate support provider 
becoming subject to FDIA proceedings:
    (1) After the FDIA stay period, if the covered affiliate credit 
enhancement is not transferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1821(e)(9)-(e)(10) 
and any regulations promulgated thereunder; or
    (2) During the FDIA stay period, if the default right may only be 
exercised so as to permit the supported party under the covered 
affiliate credit enhancement to suspend performance with respect to the 
supported party's obligations under the covered direct QFC to the same 
extent as the supported party would be entitled to do if the covered 
direct QFC were with the covered affiliate support provider and were 
treated in the same manner as the covered affiliate credit enhancement.
    (j) Prohibited terminations. A covered QFC must require, after an 
affiliate of the direct party has become subject to a receivership, 
insolvency, liquidation, resolution, or similar proceeding:
    (1) The party seeking to exercise a default right to bear the 
burden of proof that the exercise is permitted under the covered QFC; 
and
    (2) Clear and convincing evidence or a similar or higher burden of 
proof to exercise a default right.


Sec.  47.6  Approval of Enhanced Creditor Protection Conditions.

    (a) Protocol compliance. A covered QFC may permit the exercise of a 
default right with respect to the covered QFC if the covered QFC has 
been amended by the ISDA 2015 Universal Resolution Stay Protocol, 
including the Securities Financing Transaction Annex and Other 
Agreements Annex published by the International Swaps and Derivatives 
Association, Inc., as of May 3, 2016, and minor or technical amendments 
thereto.
    (b) Proposal of enhanced creditor protection conditions. (1) A 
covered bank may request that the OCC approve as compliant with the 
requirements of section 47.5 of this part provisions of one or more 
forms of covered QFCs, or amendments to one or more forms of covered 
QFCs, with enhanced creditor protection conditions.
    (2) Enhanced creditor protection conditions means a set of limited 
exemptions to the requirements of section 47.5(b) of this part that are 
different than that of paragraphs (e), (g), and (i) of section 46.5 of 
this part.
    (3) A covered bank making a request under paragraph (b)(1) of this 
section must provide:
    (i) An analysis of the proposal that addresses each consideration 
in paragraph (d) of this section;
    (ii) A written legal opinion verifying that proposed provisions or 
amendments would be valid and enforceable under applicable law of the 
relevant jurisdictions, including, in the case of proposed amendments, 
the validity and enforceability of the proposal to amend the covered 
QFCs; and
    (iii) Any other relevant information that the OCC requests.
    (c) OCC approval. The OCC may approve, subject to any conditions or 
commitments the OCC may impose, a proposal by a covered bank under 
paragraph (b) of this section if the proposal, as compared to a covered 
QFC that contains only the limited exemptions in paragraphs of (e), 
(g), and (i) of section 47.5 of this part, would promote the safety and 
soundness of federally chartered or licensed institutions by mitigating 
the potential destabilizing effects of the resolution of a global 
significantly important banking entity that is an affiliate of the 
covered bank, at least to the same extent.
    (d) Considerations. In reviewing a proposal under this section, the 
OCC may consider all facts and circumstances related to the proposal, 
including:
    (1) Whether, and the extent to which, the proposal would reduce the 
resiliency of such covered banks during distress or increase the impact 
of the failure of one or more of the covered banks;
    (2) Whether, and the extent to which, the proposal would materially 
decrease the ability of a covered bank, or an affiliate of a covered 
bank, to be resolved in a rapid and orderly manner in the event of the 
financial distress or failure of the entity that is required to submit 
a resolution plan pursuant to Section 165(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act, 12 
U.S.C. 5635(d), and the implementing regulations in 12 CFR

[[Page 55402]]

part 243 (FRB) and 12 CFR part 381 (FDIC);
    (3) Whether, and the extent to which, the set of conditions or the 
mechanism in which they are applied facilitates, on an industry-wide 
basis, contractual modifications to remove impediments to resolution 
and increase market certainty, transparency, and equitable treatment 
with respect to the default rights of non-defaulting parties to a 
covered QFC;
    (4) Whether, and the extent to which, the proposal applies to 
existing and future transactions;
    (5) Whether, and the extent to which, the proposal would apply to 
multiple forms of QFCs or multiple covered banks;
    (6) Whether the proposal would permit a party to a covered QFC that 
is within the scope of the proposal to adhere to the proposal with 
respect to only one or a subset of covered banks;
    (7) With respect to a supported party, the degree of assurance the 
proposal provides to the supported party that the material payment and 
delivery obligations of the covered affiliate credit enhancement and 
the covered direct QFC it supports will continue to be performed after 
the covered affiliate support provider enters a receivership, 
insolvency, liquidation, resolution, or similar proceeding;
    (8) The presence, nature, and extent of any provisions that require 
a covered affiliate support provider or transferee to meet conditions 
other than material payment or delivery obligations to its creditors;
    (9) The extent to which the supported party's overall credit risk 
to the direct party may increase if the enhanced creditor protection 
conditions are not met and the likelihood that the supported party's 
credit risk to the direct party would decrease or remain the same if 
the enhanced creditor protection conditions are met; and
    (10) Whether the proposal provides the counterparty with additional 
default rights or other rights.


Sec.  47.7  Exclusion of Certain QFCs.

    (a) Exclusion of CCP-cleared QFCs. A covered bank is not required 
to conform a covered QFC to which a CCP is a party to the requirements 
of sections 47.4 and 47.5.
    (b) Exclusion of covered entity QFCs. A covered bank is not 
required to conform a covered QFC to the requirements of sections 47.4 
and 47.5 to the extent that a covered entity is required to conform the 
covered QFC to similar requirements of the Federal Reserve Board if the 
QFC is either a direct QFC to which a covered entity is a direct party 
or an affiliate credit enhancement to which a covered entity is the 
obligor.


Sec.  47.8  Foreign Bank Multi-branch Master Agreements.

    (a) Treatment of foreign bank multi-branch master agreements. With 
respect to a Federal branch or agency of a globally significant foreign 
banking organization, a foreign bank multi-branch master agreement that 
is a covered QFC solely because the master agreement permits agreements 
or transactions that are QFCs to be entered into at one or more Federal 
branches or agencies of the globally significant foreign banking 
organization will be considered a covered QFC for purposes of this 
subpart only with respect to such agreements or transactions booked at 
such Federal branches or agencies or for which a payment or delivery 
may be made at such Federal branches or agencies.
    (b) Definition of foreign bank multi-branch master agreements. A 
foreign bank multi-branch master agreement means a master agreement 
that permits a Federal branch or agency and another place of business 
of a foreign bank that is outside the United States to enter 
transactions under the agreement.

PART 50--LIQUIDITY RISK MEASUREMENT STANDARDS

0
5. The authority citation for part 50 continues to read as follows:

    Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1 et seq., 93a, 481, 1818, and 1462 et seq.

0
6. Section 50.3 is amended by revising the definition of ``qualifying 
master netting agreement'' by:
0
i. Removing the word ``or'' at the end of paragraph (2)(i);
0
ii. Removing the '';'' at the end of paragraph (2)(ii) and adding in 
its place ``; or''; and
0
iii. Adding a new paragraph (2)(iii).
    The revisions are set forth below:


Sec.  50.3  Definitions.

* * * * *
    Qualifying master netting agreement means a written, legally 
enforceable agreement provided that:
* * * * *
    (2) * * *
* * * * *
    (iii) Where the right to accelerate, terminate, and close-out on a 
net basis all transactions under the agreement and to liquidate or set-
off collateral promptly upon an event of default of the counterparty is 
limited only to the extent necessary to comply with the requirements of 
part 47 of this title 12 or any similar requirements of another U.S. 
Federal banking agency, as applicable.
* * * * *

    Dated: August 10, 2016.
Thomas J. Curry,
Comptroller of the Currency.
[FR Doc. 2016-19671 Filed 8-18-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810-33-P



                                                                                                                                                                                                       55381

                                                    Proposed Rules                                                                                                Federal Register
                                                                                                                                                                  Vol. 81, No. 161

                                                                                                                                                                  Friday, August 19, 2016



                                                    This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER                    encouraged to submit comments                            • Click on the ‘‘Help’’ tab on the
                                                    contains notices to the public of the proposed          through the Federal eRulemaking Portal                Regulations.gov home page to get
                                                    issuance of rules and regulations. The                  or email, if possible. Please use the title           information on using Regulations.gov.
                                                    purpose of these notices is to give interested          ‘‘Mandatory Contractual Stay                          Supporting materials may be viewed by
                                                    persons an opportunity to participate in the            Requirements for Qualified Financial                  clicking on ‘‘Open Docket Folder’’ and
                                                    rule making prior to the adoption of the final
                                                    rules.
                                                                                                            Contracts’’ to facilitate the organization            then clicking on ‘‘Supporting
                                                                                                            and distribution of the comments. You                 Documents.’’ The docket may be viewed
                                                                                                            may submit comments by any of the                     after the close of the comment period in
                                                    DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY                              following methods:                                    the same manner as during the comment
                                                                                                               • Federal eRulemaking Portal—                      period.
                                                    Office of the Comptroller of the                        ‘‘Regulations.gov’’: Go to                               • Viewing Comments Personally: You
                                                    Currency                                                www.regulations.gov. Enter ‘‘Docket ID                may personally inspect and photocopy
                                                                                                            OCC–2016–0009’’ in the Search Box and                 comments at the OCC, 400 7th Street
                                                    12 CFR Parts 3, 47 and 50                               click ‘‘Search.’’ Click on ‘‘Comment                  SW., Washington, DC. For security
                                                    [Docket ID OCC–2016–0009]                               Now’’ to submit public comments.                      reasons, the OCC requires that visitors
                                                                                                               • Click on the ‘‘Help’’ tab on the                 make an appointment to inspect
                                                    RIN 1557–AE05                                           Regulations.gov home page to get                      comments. You may do so by calling
                                                                                                            information on using Regulations.gov,                 (202) 649–6700 or, for persons who are
                                                    Mandatory Contractual Stay                              including instructions for submitting
                                                    Requirements for Qualified Financial                                                                          deaf or hard of hearing, TTY, (202) 649–
                                                                                                            public comments.                                      5597. Upon arrival, visitors will be
                                                    Contracts                                                  • Email: regs.comments@                            required to present valid government-
                                                    AGENCY: Office of the Comptroller of the                occ.treas.gov.                                        issued photo identification and submit
                                                    Currency, Treasury (OCC).                                  • Mail: Legislative and Regulatory                 to security screening in order to inspect
                                                    ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.                  Activities Division, Office of the                    and photocopy comments.
                                                                                                            Comptroller of the Currency, 400 7th
                                                    SUMMARY:    The OCC is proposing to add                 Street SW., Suite 3E–218, Mail Stop                   FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                                    a new part to its rules to enhance the                  9W–11, Washington, DC 20219.                          Valerie Song, Assistant Director, or
                                                    resilience and the safety and soundness                    • Hand Delivery/Courier: 400 7th                   Scott Burnett, Attorney, Bank Activities
                                                    of federally chartered and licensed                     Street SW., Suite 3E–218, Mail Stop                   and Structure Division, (202) 649–5500;
                                                    financial institutions by addressing                    9W–11, Washington, DC 20219.                          Rima Kundnani, Attorney, or Ron
                                                    concerns relating to the exercise of                       • Fax: (571) 465–4326.                             Shimabukuro, Senior Counsel,
                                                    default rights of certain financial                        Instructions: You must include                     Legislative and Regulatory Activities
                                                    contracts that could interfere with the                 ‘‘OCC’’ as the agency name and ‘‘Docket               Division, (202) 649–6282, 400 7th Street
                                                    orderly resolution of certain                           ID OCC–2016–0009’’ in your comment.                   SW., Washington, DC 20219.
                                                    systemically important financial firms.                 In general, OCC will enter all comments               SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
                                                    Under this proposed rule, a covered                     received into the docket and publish
                                                    bank would be required to ensure that                   them on the Regulations.gov Web site                  Table of Contents
                                                    a covered qualified financial contract (1)              without change, including any business                I. Introduction
                                                    contains a contractual stay-and-transfer                or personal information that you                      II. Background
                                                    provision analogous to the statutory                    provide such as name and address                         A. Qualified Financial Contracts, Default
                                                    stay-and-transfer provision imposed                     information, email addresses, or phone                      Rights, and Financial Stability
                                                    under Title II of the Dodd-Frank Act and                numbers. Comments received, including                    B. QFC Default Rights and GSIB Resolution
                                                    in the Federal Deposit Insurance Act,                   attachments and other supporting                            Strategies
                                                    and (2) limits the exercise of default                  materials, are part of the public record                 C. Default Rights and Relevant Resolution
                                                    rights based on the insolvency of an                    and subject to public disclosure. Do not                    Laws
                                                    affiliate of the covered bank. In                       include any information in your                       III. Description of the Proposal
                                                    addition, this proposed rule would                                                                               A. Overview, Purpose, and Authority
                                                                                                            comment or supporting materials that                     B. Covered Banks
                                                    make conforming amendments to the                       you consider confidential or                             C. Covered QFCs
                                                    OCC’s Capital Adequacy Standards and                    inappropriate for public disclosure.                     D. Definition of ‘‘Default Right’’
                                                    the Liquidity Risk Measurement                             You may review comments and other                     E. Required Contractual Provisions Related
                                                    Standards in its regulations. The                       related materials that pertain to this                      to U.S. Special Resolution Regimes
                                                    requirements of this proposed rule are                  rulemaking action by any of the                          F. Prohibited Cross-Default Rights
                                                    substantively identical to those                        following methods:                                       G. Process for Approval of Enhanced
                                                    contained in a notice of proposed                          • Viewing Comments Electronically:                       Creditor Protections
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    rulemaking issued by the Board of                       Go to www.regulations.gov. Enter                         H. Transition Periods
                                                    Governors of the Federal Reserve                        ‘‘Docket ID OCC–2016–0009’’ in the                       I. Amendments to Capital Rules
                                                    System on May 3, 2016.                                                                                        IV. Request for Comments
                                                                                                            Search box and click ‘‘Search.’’ Click on             V. Regulatory Analysis
                                                    DATES: Comments must be received by                     ‘‘Open Docket Folder’’ on the right side                 A. Paperwork Reduction Act
                                                    October 18, 2016.                                       of the screen and then ‘‘Comments.’’                     B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
                                                    ADDRESSES: Because paper mail in the                    Comments can be filtered by clicking on                  C. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995
                                                    Washington, DC area and at the OCC is                   ‘‘View All’’ and then using the filtering                D. Riegle Community Development and
                                                    subject to delay, commenters are                        tools on the left side of the screen.                       Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994



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                                                    55382                     Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 161 / Friday, August 19, 2016 / Proposed Rules

                                                    I. Introduction                                             As described more fully in the Board’s               contagion throughout the financial
                                                                                                             NPRM and in the Background section of                   system, including among the system of
                                                       In the wake of the financial crisis of                                                                        federally chartered and licensed
                                                                                                             this preamble, this threat to financial
                                                    2007–08, U.S. and international                                                                                  institutions that the OCC supervises, by
                                                                                                             stability arises because GSIBs are
                                                    financial regulators have placed                                                                                 causing a chain of failures by other
                                                                                                             interconnected with other financial
                                                    increased focus on improving the                                                                                 financial institutions—including other
                                                                                                             firms, including other GSIBs, through
                                                    resolvability of large, complex financial                                                                        national banks, FSAs, or Federal
                                                                                                             large volumes of QFCs. The failure of
                                                    institutions that operate in multiple                                                                            branches or agencies—that are its QFC
                                                                                                             one entity within a GSIB can trigger
                                                    jurisdictions, often called global                                                                               counterparties. Furthermore, if an OCC-
                                                                                                             disruptive terminations of these
                                                    systemically important banking                                                                                   supervised entity itself were to fail, it is
                                                                                                             contracts if the counterparties of both
                                                    organizations (GSIBs).                                                                                           imperative that the default rights
                                                                                                             the failed entity and its affiliates
                                                       In connection with these ongoing                      exercise their contractual rights to                    triggered by such an event are exercised
                                                    efforts, on May 3, 2016, the Board of                    terminate the contracts and liquidate                   in an orderly manner, both by domestic
                                                    Governors of the Federal Reserve                         collateral.5 These terminations,                        and foreign counterparties, to ensure
                                                    System (FRB or Board) issued a notice                    especially if counterparties lose                       that contagion does not spread to other
                                                    of proposed rulemaking (NPRM)                            confidence in the GSIB quickly, and in                  federally chartered and licensed
                                                    pursuant to section 165 of the Dodd-                     large numbers, can destabilize the                      institutions and beyond throughout the
                                                    Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer                    financial system and potentially spark a                Federal banking system.7
                                                    Protection Act (Dodd-Frank Act) as part                  financial crisis through several                           Accordingly, OCC-supervised
                                                    of its ongoing efforts to improve the                    channels. For example, they can                         affiliates or branches of U.S. or foreign
                                                    resolvability of U.S. GSIBs and foreign                  destabilize the failed entity’s otherwise               GSIBs are exposed, through the
                                                    GSIBs that operate in the United States                  solvent affiliates, causing them to                     interconnectedness of their QFCs and
                                                    (collectively, ‘‘covered entities’’ 1).2 The             weaken or fail with adverse                             their affiliates’ QFCs, to destabilizing
                                                    OCC is issuing this parallel proposed                    consequences to their counterparties                    effects if their counterparties or the
                                                    rule applicable to OCC-regulated                         that can result in a chain reaction that                counterparties of their affiliates exercise
                                                    institutions that are part of a covered                  ripples through the financial system.                   default rights upon the entry into
                                                    entity under the FRB NPRM. The OCC                       They also may result in ‘‘fire sales’’ of               resolution of the covered bank itself or
                                                    intends this proposed rule to                            large volumes of financial assets, in                   its GSIB affiliate. These potential
                                                    complement and work in tandem with                       particular, the collateral that secures the             destabilizing effects are best addressed
                                                    the FRB NPRM.                                            contracts, which can in turn weaken                     by requiring all GSIB entities to amend
                                                       The purpose of the Board’s NPRM is                    and cause stress for other firms by                     their QFCs to include contractual
                                                    to improve the resolvability of covered                  depressing the value of similar assets                  provisions aimed at avoiding such
                                                    entities by ‘‘limiting disruptions to a                  that they hold.                                         destabilization. As the primary
                                                    failed GSIB through its financial                           As discussed in detail in the Section                supervisor of covered banks, the OCC
                                                    contracts with other companies.’’ 3                      I.B., the OCC, as the primary regulator                 has a significant interest in preventing
                                                    Specifically, the Board’s NPRM                           for national banks, Federal savings                     or mitigating these destabilizing effects;
                                                    addresses a threat to financial stability                associations (FSAs), and Federal                        otherwise, the result will be adverse to
                                                    posed by the potential disorderly                        branches and agencies, has a strong                     safety and soundness of covered banks
                                                    exercise of default rights contained in                  safety and soundness interest in                        individually and collectively, with the
                                                    several important categories of financial                preventing such a disorderly                            potential for spill-over beyond GSIB-
                                                    contracts collectively known as                          termination of QFCs upon a GSIB’s                       affiliated banks and Federal branches
                                                    ‘‘qualified financial contracts’’ (QFCs).4               entry into resolution proceedings. QFCs                 and agencies to the Federal banking
                                                                                                             are typically entered into by various                   system.
                                                       1 The FRB NPRM applies to ‘‘covered entities.’’
                                                                                                             operating entities in the GSIB group,                      As described in the Board’s NPRM,
                                                    The term ‘‘covered entity’’ includes: any U.S. top-      which will often include a large                        measures aimed at improving financial
                                                    tier bank holding company identified as a GSIB                                                                   stability and the probability of a
                                                    under the Board’s NPRM establishing risk-based           depository institution that is subject to
                                                    capital surcharges for GSIBs, set forth at 12 CFR        the OCC’s supervision. These OCC-                       successful resolution of GSIBs likely
                                                    217.402; any subsidiary of such bank holding             supervised entities are some of the                     will affect the operations of GSIB
                                                    company (other than a ‘‘covered bank’’); and any         largest entities by asset size in the GSIB              subsidiaries. In most cases, the largest
                                                    U.S. subsidiary, U.S. branch, or U.S. agency of a                                                                GSIB subsidiary by asset size is a
                                                    foreign GSIB (other than a ‘‘covered bank’’). See        group, and often a party to large
                                                    FRB NPRM § 252.82. The term ‘‘covered entity’’           volumes of QFCs, making these entities                  national bank supervised by the OCC.
                                                    does not include ‘‘covered banks,’’ which are            highly interconnected with other large                  While the ultimate aim of the Board’s
                                                    instead covered by the provisions of this proposed       financial firms.6 The exercise of default               NPRM and this proposed rule is focused
                                                    rule.                                                                                                            on the resolution of a GSIB, the
                                                       2 ‘‘Restrictions on Qualified Financial Contracts     rights against an otherwise healthy
                                                                                                             national bank, FSA, or Federal branch                   proposed preventative measures would
                                                    of Systemically Important U.S. Banking
                                                    Organizations and the U.S. Operations of                 or agency resulting from the failure of                 be required to be implemented by GSIBs
                                                    Systemically Important Foreign Banking                   its affiliate, for example its top-tier U.S.            while they are going concerns. The OCC
                                                    Organizations; Revisions to the Definition of
                                                                                                             holding company, may cause it to                        has an inherent supervisory interest in
                                                    Qualifying Master Netting Agreement and Related                                                                  ensuring that measures aimed at
                                                    Definitions,’’ 81 FR 29691, 29170 (May 11, 2016)         weaken or fail, and in turn spread
                                                    (FRB Proposal, FRB NPRM, Board’s Proposal, or                                                                    improving resolvability in the event of
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                                                    Board’s NPRM).                                              5 As used in this proposed rule, the term ‘‘GSIB’’   a GSIB’s failure are also consistent with
                                                       3 Id. at 29170.                                       can refer to any entity in the GSIB group, including
                                                       4 Id. The Board’s Proposal adopts the definition      the top-tier parent entity or any subsidiary thereof.     7 As used in this proposed rule, the term ‘‘Federal

                                                    of ‘‘qualified financial contract’’ set out in section   The term ‘‘GSIB entity’’ is sometimes used to refer     banking system’’ refers to all OCC-supervised
                                                    210(c)(8)(D) of the Dodd-Frank Act, 12 U.S.C.            to an individual component of the GSIB group.           entities, including national banks, Federal savings
                                                    5390(c)(8)(D). See Board’s Proposal § 252.81. This          6 81 FR 29619, 29172 (‘‘From the standpoint of       associations, and Federal branches and agencies.
                                                    definition includes, among other things,                 financial stability, the most important of these        Accordingly, references to impacts on the Federal
                                                    derivatives, repurchase agreements (also known as        operating subsidiaries are generally a U.S. insured     banking system refer to how destabilization can
                                                    ‘‘repos’’) and reverse repos, and securities lending     depository institution, a U.S. broker-dealer, and       adversely affect all such entities, not just covered
                                                    and borrowing agreements.                                similar entities organized in other countries.’’).      banks.



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                                                                            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 161 / Friday, August 19, 2016 / Proposed Rules                                               55383

                                                    the safe and sound operation of the                     counterparties that are themselves                        default rights that arise from a cross-
                                                    OCC-supervised subsidiary as a going                    systemically important.                                   default as ‘‘cross-default rights.’’ For
                                                    concern. Accordingly, to ensure that the                   By contract, a party to a QFC                          example, a GSIB parent entity might
                                                    QFCs entered into by such entities do                   generally has the right to take certain                   guarantee the derivatives transactions of
                                                    not threaten the stability or safety and                actions if its counterparty defaults on                   its subsidiaries and those derivatives
                                                    soundness of covered banks                              the QFC (that is, if it fails to meet certain             contracts could contain cross-default
                                                    individually or collectively, the OCC is                contractual obligations). Common                          rights against a subsidiary of the GSIB
                                                    issuing this proposed rule, which                       default rights include the right to                       that would be triggered by the
                                                    imposes substantively identical                         suspend performance of the non-                           bankruptcy filing of the GSIB parent
                                                    requirements contained in the FRB                       defaulting party’s obligations, the right                 entity even though the subsidiary
                                                    NPRM on national banks, FSAs, and                       to terminate or accelerate the contract,                  continues to meet all of its financial
                                                    Federal branches and agencies (covered                  the right to set off amounts owed                         obligations.
                                                    banks). The OCC worked closely with                     between the parties, the right to seize                      Direct default rights and cross-default
                                                    the FRB to develop this proposed rule.8                 and liquidate the defaulting party’s                      rights are referred to collectively in this
                                                    In addition, the OCC plans to work with                 collateral. In general, default rights                    proposed rule as ‘‘default rights.’’
                                                    the FRB to coordinate the development                   allow a party to a QFC to reduce the                         As noted in the FRB NPRM, if a
                                                    of the final rule and may share                         credit risk associated with the QFC by                    significant number of QFC
                                                    comments received in response to the                    granting it the right to exit the QFC and                 counterparties exercise their default
                                                    proposed rule, as appropriate.                          thereby reduce its exposure to its                        rights precipitously and in a manner
                                                                                                            counterparty upon the occurrence of a                     that would impede an orderly resolution
                                                    II. Background                                          specified condition, such as its                          of a GSIB, all QFC counterparties and
                                                       The following background discussion                  counterparty’s entry into resolution                      the broader financial system, including
                                                    describes in detail the financial                       proceedings.                                              institutions supervised by the OCC, may
                                                    contracts that are the subject of this                     This proposed rule focuses on two                      potentially be worse off and less stable.
                                                    proposed rule, the default rights often                 distinct scenarios in which a non-                           The destabilization can occur in
                                                    contained in such contracts, and                        defaulting party to a QFC is commonly                     several ways. First, counterparties’
                                                    impacts on financial stability resulting                able to exercise default rights. These                    exercise of default rights may drain
                                                    from the exercise of such default rights.               two scenarios involve a default that                      liquidity from the troubled GSIB,
                                                    This section also provides background                   occurs when either the defaulting party                   forcing it to sell off assets at depressed
                                                    information on the resolution strategies                to the QFC or an affiliate of that party                  prices, both because the sales must be
                                                    for GSIBs and how they fit within the                   enters a resolution proceeding.10                         done on a short timeframe and because
                                                    resolution frameworks in the United                        The first scenario occurs when a legal                 the elevated supply will push prices
                                                    States.9                                                entity that is itself a party to the QFC                  down. These asset ‘‘fire sales’’ may
                                                                                                            enters a resolution proceeding. This                      cause or deepen balance-sheet
                                                    A. Qualified Financial Contracts,                       proposed rule refers to such a scenario                   insolvency at the GSIB, reducing the
                                                    Default Rights, and Financial Stability                 as a ‘‘direct default’’ and refers to the                 amount that its other creditors can
                                                       The proposed rule covers QFCs,                       contractual default rights that arise from                recover and thereby imposing losses on
                                                    which include swaps, other derivative                   a direct default as ‘‘direct default                      those creditors and threatening their
                                                    contracts, repurchase agreements (repos)                rights.’’ 11                                              solvency (and, indirectly, the solvency
                                                    and reverse repos, and securities                          The second scenario occurs when an                     of their own creditors, and so on). The
                                                    lending and borrowing agreements.                       affiliate of the legal entity that is a direct            GSIB may also respond by withdrawing
                                                    GSIB entities enter into QFCs to borrow                 party to the QFC (such as the direct                      liquidity that it had offered to other
                                                    money to finance their investments, to                  party’s parent holding company) enters                    firms, forcing them to engage in asset
                                                    lend money, to manage risk, to attempt                  a resolution proceeding. This proposed                    fire sales. Alternatively, if the GSIB’s
                                                    to profit from market movements, and to                 rule refers to such a scenario as a ‘‘cross-              QFC counterparty itself liquidates the
                                                    enable their clients and counterparties                 default’’ and refers to contractual                       QFC collateral at fire sale prices, the
                                                    to perform these financial activities.                                                                            effect will again be to weaken the GSIB’s
                                                       QFCs play a role in economically                        10 This preamble uses phrases such as ‘‘entering       balance sheet, because the debt satisfied
                                                                                                            a resolution proceeding’’ and ‘‘going into                by the liquidation would be less than
                                                    valuable financial intermediation when                  resolution’’ to refer to the concept of ‘‘becoming
                                                    markets are functioning normally. But                   subject to a receivership, insolvency, liquidation,
                                                                                                                                                                      what the value of the collateral would
                                                    they are also a major source of financial               resolution, or similar proceeding.’’ These phrases        have been outside the fire sale context.
                                                    interconnectedness, which may pose a                    refer to proceedings established by law to deal with      The counterparty’s setoff rights may
                                                                                                            a failed legal entity. In the context of the failure of   allow it to further drain the GSIB’s
                                                    threat to financial stability in times of               a global systemically important bank holding
                                                    stress. This proposed rule, along with                  company, the most relevant types of resolution
                                                                                                                                                                      capital and liquidity by withholding
                                                    the FRB NPRM, focuses on one of the                     proceeding include: (1) For most U.S.-based legal         payments owed to the GSIB. The GSIB
                                                    most serious threats to both a global                   entities, the bankruptcy process established by the       may also have rehypothecated collateral
                                                                                                            U.S. Bankruptcy Code (Title 11, United States             that it received from QFC
                                                    systemically important bank holding                     Code); (2) for U.S. insured depository institutions,
                                                    company (BHC) and its covered banks                     a receivership administered by the Federal Deposit
                                                                                                                                                                      counterparties, for instance in back-to-
                                                    subsidiaries—the failure of a GSIB that                 Insurance Corporation (FDIC) under the Federal            back repo or securities lending
                                                    is party to large volumes of QFCs, which                Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1821); (3) for           transactions, in which case demands
                                                                                                            companies whose ‘‘resolution under otherwise              from those counterparties for the early
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                                                    are likely to involve QFCs with                         applicable Federal or State law would have serious
                                                                                                            adverse effects on the financial stability of the
                                                                                                                                                                      return of their rehypothecated collateral
                                                       8 12 U.S.C. 5365(b)(4) (requiring the Board to       United States,’’ the Dodd-Frank Act’s Orderly             could be especially disruptive.
                                                    consult with each Financial Stability Oversight         Liquidation Authority (12 U.S.C. 5383(b)(2)); and,           The asset fire sales can also spread
                                                    Council (FSOC) member that primarily supervises         (4) for entities based outside the United States,         contagion throughout the financial
                                                    any subsidiary when any prudential standard is          resolution proceedings created by foreign law.            system by increasing volatility and by
                                                    likely to have a ‘‘significant impact’’ on such            11 For convenience, this preamble uses the
                                                    subsidiary).                                            general term ‘‘default’’ to refer specifically to a
                                                                                                                                                                      lowering the value of similar assets held
                                                       9 See 81 FR 29169, 29170–73 (May 11, 2016),          default that occurs when a QFC party or its affiliate     by other financial institutions,
                                                    from which this discussion is adapted.                  enters a resolution proceeding.                           potentially causing them to suffer


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                                                    55384                    Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 161 / Friday, August 19, 2016 / Proposed Rules

                                                    diminished market confidence in their                     developed resolution strategies that,                C. Default Rights and Relevant
                                                    own solvency, mark-to-market losses,                      broadly speaking, fall into two                      Resolution Laws
                                                    margin calls, and creditor runs (which                    categories: The single-point-of-entry
                                                    could lead to further fire sales,                         (SPOE) strategy and the multiple-point-                 In order to understand the connection
                                                    worsening the contagion). Finally, the                    of-entry (MPOE) strategy. As noted in                between direct defaults, cross-defaults,
                                                    early terminations of derivatives that the                the Board’s Proposal, cross-default                  the SPOE and MPOE resolution
                                                    defaulting GSIB relied on to hedge its                    rights in QFCs pose a potential obstacle             strategies, and the threats to financial
                                                    risks could leave major risks unhedged,                   to the implementation of either of these             stability discussed previously, it is
                                                    increasing the GSIB’s probable losses                     strategies.                                          necessary to understand how QFCs, and
                                                    going forward.                                               In an SPOE resolution, only a single              the default rights contained therein, are
                                                       Where there are significant                            legal entity—the GSIB’s top-tier BHC—                treated when an entity enters resolution.
                                                    simultaneous terminations and these                       would enter a resolution proceeding.                 The following sections discuss the
                                                    effects occur contemporaneously, such                     The losses that led to the GSIB’s failure            treatment of QFCs in greater detail
                                                    as upon the failure of a GSIB that is                     would be passed up from the operating                under three U.S. resolution laws: the
                                                    party to a large volume of QFCs, they                     subsidiaries that incurred the losses to             Bankruptcy Code, the Orderly
                                                    may pose a substantial risk to financial                  the holding company and would then be                Liquidation Authority, and the Federal
                                                    stability. In short, QFC continuity is                    imposed on the equity holders and                    Deposit Insurance Act. As discussed in
                                                    important for the orderly resolution of a                 unsecured creditors of the holding                   these sections, each of these resolution
                                                    GSIB so that the instability caused by                    company through the resolution                       laws has special provisions detailing the
                                                    asset fire sales can be avoided.12                        process. This strategy is designed to
                                                       As will be discussed further, the                                                                           treatment of QFCs upon an entity’s
                                                                                                              help ensure that the GSIB’s subsidiaries
                                                    proposed rule is primarily concerned                                                                           entry into such proceedings.
                                                                                                              remain adequately capitalized. An SPOE
                                                    only with default rights that run against                 resolution could thereby prevent those                  U.S. Bankruptcy Code. While covered
                                                    a GSIB—that is, direct default rights and                 operating subsidiaries from failing or               banks themselves are not subject to
                                                    cross-default rights that arise from the                  entering resolution themselves and                   resolution under the Bankruptcy Code,
                                                    entry into resolution of a GSIB. The                      allow them to instead continue normal                in general, if a BHC were to fail, it
                                                    proposed rule would not affect                            operations. The expectation that the                 would be resolved under the
                                                    contractual default rights that a GSIB (or                holding company’s equity holders and                 Bankruptcy Code. When an entity goes
                                                    any other entity) may have against a                      unsecured creditors would absorb the                 into resolution under the Bankruptcy
                                                    counterparty that is not a GSIB. The                      GSIB’s losses in the event of failure                Code, attempts by the creditors of the
                                                    OCC believes that this limited scope is                   would help to maintain the confidence                debtor to enforce their debts through
                                                    appropriate because the risk posed to                     of the operating subsidiaries’ creditors             any means other than participation in
                                                    financial stability by the exercise of QFC                and counterparties (including QFC                    the bankruptcy proceeding (for instance,
                                                    default rights is greatest when the                       counterparties), reducing their incentive            by suing in another court, seeking
                                                    defaulting counterparty is a GSIB.                        to engage in potentially destabilizing               enforcement of a preexisting judgment,
                                                    B. QFC Default Rights and GSIB                            funding runs or margin calls and thus                or seizing and liquidating collateral) are
                                                    Resolution Strategies                                     lowering the risk of asset fire sales.               generally blocked by the imposition of
                                                                                                                 An SPOE proceeding can avoid the                  an automatic stay, which generally
                                                       Under the Dodd-Frank Act, many                         need for covered banks to be placed into
                                                    complex GSIBs are required to submit                                                                           persists throughout the bankruptcy
                                                                                                              receivership or similar proceedings, as
                                                    resolution plans to the Board and the                                                                          proceeding.13 A key purpose of the
                                                                                                              they would continue to operate as going
                                                    Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation                                                                          automatic stay, and of bankruptcy law
                                                                                                              concerns, only if the parent’s entry into
                                                    (FDIC), detailing how the company can                     resolution proceedings does not trigger              in general, is to maximize the value of
                                                    be resolved in a rapid and orderly                        the exercise of cross-default rights.                the bankruptcy estate and the creditors’
                                                    manner in the event of material                           Accordingly, this proposed rule, by                  ultimate recoveries by facilitating an
                                                    financial distress or failure of the                      limiting such cross-default rights based             orderly liquidation or restructuring of
                                                    company. In response to these                             on an affiliate’s entry into resolution              the debtor. As a result, the automatic
                                                    requirements, these firms have                            proceedings, enables the SPOE strategy,              stay addresses the collective action
                                                                                                              and in turn, would assist in stabilizing             problem, in which the creditors’
                                                       12 The Board and the FDIC identified the exercise
                                                                                                              both the covered bank and the Federal                individual incentives to race to recover
                                                    of default rights in financial contracts as a potential                                                        as much from the debtor as possible,
                                                    obstacle to orderly resolution in the context of
                                                                                                              banking system.
                                                    resolution plans filed pursuant to section 165(d) of         This proposed rule would also yield               before other creditors can do so,
                                                    the Dodd-Frank Act and, accordingly, instructed the       benefits for resolution under the MPOE               collectively cause a value-destroying
                                                    most systemically important firms to demonstrate          strategy. Unlike the SPOE strategy, an               disorderly liquidation of the debtor.14
                                                    that they are ‘‘amending, on an industry-wide and         MPOE strategy involves several entities
                                                    firm-specific basis, financial contracts to provide for                                                           The Bankruptcy Code, however,
                                                    a stay of certain early termination rights of external    in the GSIB group entering proceedings.              largely exempts QFC counterparties
                                                    counterparties triggered by insolvency                    For example, an MPOE strategy might                  from the automatic stay through special
                                                    proceedings.’’ FRB and FDIC, ‘‘Agencies Provide           involve a foreign GSIB’s U.S.
                                                    Feedback on Second Round Resolution Plans of                                                                   ‘‘safe harbor’’ provisions.15 Under these
                                                    ‘First-Wave’ Filers’’ (August 5, 2014), available at
                                                                                                              intermediate holding company going                   provisions, any contractual rights that a
                                                    http://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/           into resolution or a GSIB’s U.S. insured             QFC counterparty has to terminate the
                                                    bcreg/20140805a.htm. See also FRB and FDIC,               depository institution entering
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    ‘‘Agencies Provide Feedback on Resolution Plans of
                                                                                                                                                                   contract, set off obligations, and
                                                                                                              resolution under the Federal Deposit
                                                    Three Foreign Banking Organizations’’ (March 23,                                                               liquidate collateral in response to a
                                                                                                              Insurance Act. Similar to the benefits
                                                    2015), available at http://www.federalreserve.gov/                                                             direct default or cross-default are not
                                                    newsevents/press/bcreg/20150323a.htm; FRB and             associated with the SPOE strategy, this
                                                    FDIC, ‘‘Guidance for 2013 165(d) Annual                   proposed rule would help support the                   13 See
                                                    Resolution Plan Submissions by Domestic Covered                                                                         11 U.S.C. 362.
                                                                                                              continued operation of affiliates of an                14 See,
                                                    Companies that Submitted Initial Resolution Plans                                                                        e.g., Aiello v. Providian Financial Corp.,
                                                    in 2012’’ 5–6 (April 15, 2013), available at http://
                                                                                                              entity experiencing resolution to the                239 F.3d 876, 879 (7th Cir. 2001).
                                                    www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/press/bcreg/            extent the affiliate continues to perform              15 11 U.S.C. 362(b)(6), (7), (17), (27), 362(o), 555,

                                                    bcreg20130415c2.pdf.                                      on its QFCs.                                         556, 559, 560, 561.



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                                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 161 / Friday, August 19, 2016 / Proposed Rules                                                 55385

                                                    subject to the stay and may be exercised                 serious adverse effects on financial                    proceedings or its going concern
                                                    at any time.16                                           stability in the United States. Title II                affiliates. At the same time, they allow
                                                       Where the failed firm is a GSIB’s                     therefore authorizes the Secretary of the               for appropriate protections for QFC
                                                    holding company with covered banks                       Treasury, upon the recommendation of                    counterparties of the failed financial
                                                    that are going concerns and are party to                 other government agencies and a                         company. They only stay the exercise of
                                                    large volumes of QFCs, the mass                          determination that several                              default rights based on the failed
                                                    exercise of default rights under the                     preconditions are met, to place a U.S.                  company’s entry into resolution, the fact
                                                    QFCs based on the affiliate default                      financial company into a receivership                   of its insolvency, or its financial
                                                    represents a significant impediment to                   conducted by the FDIC as an alternative                 condition. And the stay period is brief,
                                                    the SPOE resolution strategy.17 This is                  to bankruptcy.                                          unless the FDIC transfers the QFCs to
                                                    because the failure of a covered bank’s                     Title II empowers the FDIC, when it                  another financial company that is not in
                                                    affiliate will trigger the mass exercise of              acts as receiver in an OLA resolution, to               resolution and should therefore be
                                                    cross-default rights against the covered                 protect financial stability against the                 capable of performing under the QFCs.
                                                    bank, which will not be stayed by the                    QFC-related threats discussed                              Federal Deposit Insurance Act. Under
                                                    affiliate’s entry into bankruptcy                        previously. Title II addresses direct                   the FDIA, a failing insured depository
                                                    proceedings. This will in turn lead to                   default rights in a number of ways. First,              institution would generally enter a
                                                    fire sales that will threaten the ongoing                Title II empowers the FDIC to transfer                  receivership administered by the
                                                    viability of the covered bank and the                    the QFCs to some other financial                        FDIC.23 The FDIA addresses direct
                                                    successful resolution of the particular                  company that is not in a resolution                     default rights in the failed bank’s QFCs
                                                    GSIB—and thus will also pose a threat                    proceeding.19 To give the FDIC time to                  with stay-and-transfer provisions that
                                                    to the federal banking system and                        effect this transfer, Title II temporarily              are substantially similar to the
                                                    broader financial system.                                stays QFC counterparties of the failed                  provisions of Title II of the Dodd-Frank
                                                       Special Resolution Regimes Under                      entity from exercising termination,                     Act as discussed.24 However, the FDIA
                                                    U.S. Law. For purposes of this proposed                  netting, and collateral liquidation rights              does not address cross-default rights,
                                                    rule, there are two special resolution                   ‘‘solely by reason of or incidental to’’                leaving the QFC counterparties of the
                                                    regimes under U.S. law: Title II of the                  the failed entity’s entry into OLA                      failed depository institution’s affiliates
                                                    Dodd-Frank Act and the Orderly                           resolution, its insolvency, or its                      free to exercise any contractual rights
                                                    Liquidation Authority (OLA); and the                     financial condition.20 Second, once the                 they may have to terminate, net, and
                                                    Federal Deposit Insurance Act (FDIA).                    QFCs are transferred in accord with the                 liquidate collateral based on the
                                                    While these regimes both impose certain                  statute, Title II permanently stays the                 depository institution’s entry into
                                                    limitations on the ability of                            exercise of those direct default rights                 resolution.
                                                    counterparties to exercise default                       based on the prior event of default and
                                                    rights—thus mitigating the potential for                 receivership.21                                         III. Description of the Proposal
                                                    disorderly resolution due to the exercise                   Title II addresses cross-default rights
                                                    by counterparties of such default                        through a similar procedure. It                         A. Overview, Purpose, and Authority
                                                    rights—these limitations may not be                      empowers the FDIC ‘‘to enforce                             As discussed previously, and in the
                                                    applicable or clearly enforceable in                     contracts of subsidiaries or affiliates’’ of            Board’s Proposal, the exercise of default
                                                    certain contexts.                                        the failed company that are guaranteed                  rights by counterparties of a failed GSIB
                                                       Title II of the Dodd-Frank Act and the                or otherwise supported by or linked to                  can have a significant impact on
                                                    Orderly Resolution Authority. Title II of                the covered financial company,                          financial stability. This financial
                                                    the Dodd-Frank Act establishes an                        notwithstanding any contractual right to                stability concern is necessarily
                                                    alternative resolution framework                         cause the termination, liquidation, or                  intertwined with the safety and
                                                    intended ‘‘to provide the necessary                      acceleration of such contracts based                    soundness of covered banks and the
                                                    authority to liquidate failing financial                 solely on the insolvency, financial                     federal banking system—the disorderly
                                                    companies that pose a significant risk to                condition, or receivership of the failed                exercise of default rights can produce a
                                                    the financial stability of the United                    company, so long as the FDIC takes                      sudden, contemporaneous threat to the
                                                    States in a manner that mitigates such                   certain steps to protect the QFC                        safety and soundness of individual
                                                    risk and minimizes moral hazard.’’ 18                    counterparty’s interests by the end of                  institutions throughout the system,
                                                       As noted, although a failed BHC                       the business day following the                          which in turn threatens the system as a
                                                    would generally be resolved under the                    company’s entry into OLA resolution.22                  whole.A Accordingly, national banks,
                                                    Bankruptcy Code, Congress recognized                        These stay-and-transfer provisions of                FSAs, and Federal branches and
                                                    that a U.S. financial company might fail                 the Dodd-Frank Act go far to mitigate                   agencies are affected by financial
                                                    under extraordinary circumstances, in                    the threat posed by QFC default rights                  instability—even if such instability is
                                                    which an attempt to resolve it through                   by preventing mass closeouts against the                precipitated outside the Federal banking
                                                    the bankruptcy process would have                        entity that has entered into OLA                        system—and can themselves also be
                                                                                                               19 12
                                                                                                                                                                     sources of financial destabilization due
                                                      16 The Bankruptcy Code does not itself confer any                U.S.C. 5390(c)(9).
                                                    default rights upon QFC counterparties; it merely          20 12   U.S.C. 5390(c)(10)(B)(i)(I). This temporary
                                                                                                                                                                     to the interconnectedness of these
                                                    permits QFC counterparties to exercise certain           stay generally lasts until 5:00 p.m. eastern time on    institutions to each other and to other
                                                    contractual rights that they have under the terms of     the business day following the appointment of the       entities within the financial system.
                                                    the QFC. This proposed rule does not propose to          FDIC as receiver.                                       Thus, safety and soundness of
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    restrict the exercise of any default rights that fall       21 If the QFCs are transferred to a solvent third
                                                    within the Bankruptcy Code’s safe harbor
                                                                                                                                                                     individual national banks, FSAs, and
                                                                                                             party before the stay expires, the counterparty is
                                                    provisions, which are described here to provide          permanently enjoined from exercising such rights        Federal branches and agencies, the
                                                    context.                                                 based upon the appointment of the FDIC as receiver      federal banking system, and financial
                                                      17 As noted previously, the MPOE strategy will         of the financial company (or the insolvency or          stability of the system as a whole are
                                                    similarly benefit from the override of cross-defaults.   financial condition of the financial company), but      interconnected.
                                                    The SPOE strategy is used here for illustrative          is not stayed from exercising such rights based
                                                    purposes only.                                           upon other events of default. 12 U.S.C.
                                                      18 12 U.S.C. 5384(a) (Section 204(a) of the Dodd-      5390(c)(10)(B)(i)(II).                                   23 12   U.S.C. 1821(c).
                                                    Frank Act).                                                 22 12 U.S.C. 5390(c)(16); 12 CFR 380.12.              24 See   12 U.S.C. 1821(e)(8)–(10).



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                                                    55386                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 161 / Friday, August 19, 2016 / Proposed Rules

                                                       The purpose of this proposed rule is                 restricting the exercise of cross-default                default rights by the QFC
                                                    to enhance the safety and soundness of                  rights by counterparties against a                       counterparties. Additionally, the
                                                    covered banks and the federal banking                   covered bank.                                            application of this proposed rule to the
                                                    system, thereby also bolstering financial                  Moreover, a disorderly resolution like                QFCs of these national bank and FSA
                                                    stability generally, by addressing the                  that described previously could                          subsidiaries should avoid creating what
                                                    two main issues raised by covered QFCs                  jeopardize not just the covered bank and                 may otherwise be an incentive for
                                                    with the orderly resolution of these                    the orderly resolution of its failed parent              counterparties to concentrate QFCs in
                                                    covered banks as generally described in                 BHC, but all surviving counterparties,                   these firms because they are subject to
                                                    the Board’s Proposal.                                   many of which are likely to be other                     fewer counterparty restrictions.
                                                       While Title II and the FDIA empower                  national banks and other FSAs,                              Similarly, it is important to cover any
                                                    the use of the QFC stay-and-transfer                    regardless of size or interconnectedness,                Federal branch or agency of a global
                                                    provisions, a court in a foreign                        by harming the overall condition of the                  systemically important FBO in order to
                                                    jurisdiction may decline to enforce                     Federal banking system and the                           ensure the orderly resolution of these
                                                    these important provisions. The                         financial system as a whole. A                           entities if the parent FBO were to be
                                                    proposed rule directly improves the                     disorderly resolution could result in                    placed into resolution in its home
                                                    safety and soundness of covered banks                   additional defaults, fire sales of                       jurisdiction. However, to avoid unduly
                                                    by clarifying the applicability of U.S.                 collateral, and other consequences                       broad application of the proposed rule
                                                    special resolution regimes to all                       likely to amplify the systemic fallout of                and imposing unnecessary restrictions
                                                    counterparties, whether they are foreign                the resolution of a covered bank.                        on the QFCs of global systemically
                                                    or domestic. Although domestic entities                    The proposed rule is designed to                      important FBOs, the proposed rule
                                                    are clearly subject to the temporary stay               minimize such disorder, and therefore                    would exclude certain QFCs that do not
                                                    provisions of OLA and the FDIA, these                   enhance the safety and soundness of all                  have a clear nexus to its U.S. operations.
                                                    stays may be difficult to enforce in a                  individual national banks, FSAs, and                     Specifically, the proposed rule would
                                                    cross-border context. As a result,                      Federal branches and agencies, the                       exclude covered QFCs under multi-
                                                    domestic counterparties of a failed U.S.                Federal banking system, and the broader                  branch arrangements that either are not
                                                    financial institution may be                            financial system. This is particularly                   booked at the Federal branch or agency
                                                    disadvantaged relative to foreign                       important because financial institutions                 or do not provide for payment or
                                                    counterparties, as the domestic                         are more sensitive than other firms to                   delivery at the Federal branch or
                                                    counterparties would be subject to the                  the overall health of the financial                      agency. The OCC believes that this
                                                    stay, and accompanying potential                        system.25                                                provides a reasonable limitation on the
                                                    market volatility, while if the stay was                   The proposed rule covers the OCC-                     scope of the proposed rule to those
                                                    not enforced by foreign authorities,                    supervised operations of foreign                         QFCs of covered Federal branches and
                                                    foreign counterparties could close out                  banking organizations (FBOs)                             agencies that have a direct effect on the
                                                    immediately. Furthermore, a mass close                  designated as systemically important,                    Federal banking system and the general
                                                    out by such foreign counterparties                      including national bank and FSA                          financial stability of the United States.
                                                    would likely exacerbate market                          subsidiaries, as well as Federal branches                   The OCC is issuing this proposed rule
                                                    volatility, which in turn would likely                  and agencies, of these FBOs. As with a                   under its authorities under the National
                                                    magnify harm to the stayed U.S.                         national bank or FSA subsidiary of a                     Bank Act (12 U.S.C. 1 et seq.), the Home
                                                    counterparties’ positions, which are                    U.S. global systemically important BHC,                  Owners’ Loan Act (12 U.S.C. 1461 et
                                                    likely to include other national banks                  the OCC believes that this proposed rule                 seq.), and the International Banking Act
                                                    and FSAs. This proposed rule would                      should apply to a national bank or FSA                   of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3101 et seq.),
                                                    eliminate the potential for these adverse               subsidiary of a global systematically                    including its general rulemaking
                                                    consequences by requiring covered                       important FBO for essentially the same                   authorities.26 As discussed in detail in
                                                    banks to condition the exercise of                      reasons. While the national bank or FSA                  Section I. B., the OCC views the
                                                    default rights in covered contracts on                  may not be considered systemically                       proposed rule as consistent with its
                                                    the stay provisions of OLA and the                      important itself, as part of a GSIB, the                 overall statutory mandate of assuring
                                                    FDIA.                                                   disorderly resolution of the covered                     the safety and soundness of entities
                                                       In spite of the QFC stay-and-transfer                national banks and FSAs could have a                     subject to its supervision, including
                                                    provisions in Title II and the FDIA, the                significant negative impact on the                       national banks, FSAs, and Federal
                                                    affiliates of a global systemically                     Federal banking system and on the U.S.                   branches and agencies.27
                                                    important BHC that goes into resolution                 financial system, in general.                            B. Covered Banks (Section 47.3(a), (b),
                                                    under the Bankruptcy Code may face                         Specifically, the proposed rule is                    (c))
                                                    disruptions to their QFCs as their                      designed to prevent the failure of a
                                                    counterparties exercise cross-default                   global systemically important FBO from                      The proposed rule would apply to all
                                                    rights. Thus, a healthy covered bank                    disrupting the ongoing operations or                     ‘‘covered banks.’’ The term ‘‘covered
                                                    whose parent BHC entered resolution                     orderly resolution of the covered bank                   bank’’ would be defined to include (i)
                                                    proceedings could fail due to its                       by protecting the healthy national bank                  any national bank or FSA that is a
                                                    counterparties exercising cross-default                 or FSA from the mass triggering of                       subsidiary of a global systemically
                                                    rights. This is clearly both a safety and                                                                        important BHC that has been designated
                                                    soundness concern for the otherwise                        25 The OCC, along with the FDIC and FRB,              pursuant to subpart I of 12 CFR part 252
                                                    healthy covered bank, but it also has the               recently made this point in the swap margin NPRM.        of this title (FRB Regulation YY); or (ii)
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    additional negative effect of defeating                 79 FR 57348, 57361 (September 24, 2014)                  is a national bank or FSA subsidiary, or
                                                                                                            (‘‘Financial firms present a higher level of risk than   Federal branch or agency of a global
                                                    the orderly resolution of the GSIB, since               other types of counterparties because the
                                                    a key element of SPOE resolution in the                 profitability and viability of financial firms is more   systemically important FBO that has
                                                    United States is ensuring that critical                 tightly linked to the health of the financial system
                                                                                                            than other types of counterparties. Because                26 See 12 U.S.C. 93a, 1463(a)(2), and 3108(a).
                                                    operating subsidiaries—such as covered
                                                                                                            financial counterparties are more likely to default        27 See 12 U.S.C. 1. This primary responsibility is
                                                    banks—continue to operate on a going                    during a period of financial stress, they pose greater   also defined in various provisions throughout the
                                                    concern basis. This proposed rule                       systemic risk and risk to the safety and soundness       OCC’s express statutory authorities with respect to
                                                    would address this issue by generally                   of the covered swap entity.’’).                          each institution type under their respective statutes.



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                                                                            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 161 / Friday, August 19, 2016 / Proposed Rules                                                55387

                                                    been designated pursuant to FRB                         subsidiary of a covered bank.                         ways to define what will be considered
                                                    Regulation YY.                                          Essentially, for the same reasons that it             subsidiaries for purposes of this rule?
                                                      The proposed rule defines global                      is necessary to cover all national banks,                Question 4: Some of the subsidiaries
                                                    systemically important BHC and global                   FSAs, and Federal branches and                        of covered banks under the proposed
                                                    systemically important FBO by cross-                    agencies of global systemically                       rule could be subject to additional
                                                    reference to newly added subpart I of 12                important BHCs and FBOs under the                     supervision by another U.S. agency,
                                                    CFR part 252 of the Board’s Proposal.                   proposed rule, the OCC believes that it               such as the case of a broker-dealer
                                                    The list of banking organizations that                  is necessary that all subsidiaries of those           subsidiary of a national bank. Does the
                                                    meet the methodology proposed in the                    covered banks also be subject to the                  issue of potentially conflicting
                                                    FRB NPRM is currently the same set of                   mandatory contractual stay                            jurisdiction need to be addressed? If so,
                                                    banking organizations that meet the                     requirements. As mentioned, unless all                how? For example, should the rule
                                                    Basel Committee on Banking                              entities that are part of a GSIB are                  provide a carve out for a subsidiary of
                                                    Supervision (BCBS) definition of a                      covered, counterparties might have                    a covered bank that is subject to
                                                    GSIB.28                                                 incentives to migrate their covered                   comparable requirements under the
                                                      This proposed rule covers national                    QFCs to uncovered entities.                           regulations of another agency?
                                                    bank and FSA subsidiaries of global                        Question 1: While the exercise of                     Question 5: The scope of this
                                                    systemically important BHCs and FBOs,                   mass closeout rights against any                      proposed rule is designed to cover any
                                                    and Federal branches and agencies of                    individual national bank, FSA or                      national bank or FSA that is a
                                                    global systemically important FBOs. In                  Federal branch or agency would raise                  subsidiary of a global systemically
                                                    the United States, covered QFCs                         concerns, the OCC is especially                       important BHC or FBO under the FRB
                                                    typically are entered into at the                       concerned about the potential spill-over              NPRM. While this scope of coverage
                                                    subsidiary level, which would include                   effect such mass closeouts would have,                ensures that all national banks or FSAs
                                                    through the national bank, FSA or                       either individually or collectively, on               under a global systemically important
                                                    Federal branch or agency, rather than                   the Federal banking system if the entity              BHC or FBO would be subject to the
                                                    through the U.S. intermediate holding                   itself is systemically important or part of           same substantive contractual mandatory
                                                    company.29                                              a larger banking group that is                        stay under the FRB NPRM, the proposed
                                                      The OCC believes if the orderly                       systemically important. Are there                     rule does not take into account the
                                                    resolution of a covered entity as defined               alternative approaches for determining                potential situation of a standalone
                                                    under the FRB’s Proposal is to be                       which national banks, FSAs and Federal                national bank or FSA, not under a BHC,
                                                    successful, then it is necessary that all               branches and agencies should be                       that might itself be considered
                                                    national banks, FSAs, and Federal                       considered systemically important?                    systemically important. Although no
                                                                                                               Question 2: While the primary focus                such entity exists currently, the OCC is
                                                    branches and agencies of systemically
                                                                                                            of this rule is on, covered banks—i.e.,               considering whether to amend the
                                                    important global systemically important
                                                                                                            those that are subsidiaries or branches               definition of covered bank to include
                                                    BHCs and FBOs be subject to the
                                                                                                            of U.S. or foreign GSIBS—there is some                any national bank or FSB that meets a
                                                    mandatory contractual requirements in
                                                                                                            concern that given the interconnected                 certain asset threshold test. In this case,
                                                    this proposed rule. Moreover, this
                                                                                                            nature of QFCs, a market disruption                   the OCC is considering using the $700
                                                    proposed rule would make clear that the
                                                                                                            could significantly impact all national               billion in total consolidated assets that
                                                    mandatory contractual stay
                                                                                                            banks, FSAs and Federal branches and                  is used in the Enhanced Supplementary
                                                    requirements apply to the subsidiaries
                                                                                                            agencies. Should this proposed rule be                Leverage Ratio.30 Should the OCC
                                                    of any national bank, FSA, or Federal
                                                                                                            expanded to cover more OCC-regulated                  decide to address standalone national
                                                    branch or agency that is a covered bank.                entities, for example, those national                 banks and FSBs, what methodology and
                                                    Under the proposed rule, the term                       banks, FSAs or Federal branches and                   factors should the OCC consider in
                                                    covered bank also includes any                          agencies with material levels of QFC                  deciding which institutions to include?
                                                    subsidiary of a national bank, FSA, or                  activities? How could material levels of
                                                    Federal branch or agency. The                                                                                 C. Covered QFCs (Sections 47.4(a),
                                                                                                            QFC activities be defined and
                                                    definition of ‘‘subsidiary of covered                                                                         47.5(a), 47.7, 47.8)
                                                                                                            measured?
                                                    bank’’ in the proposed rule mirrors the                    Question 3: Conversely, is the scope                  General requirement. The proposed
                                                    definition of subsidiary in the FRB’s                   of this proposed rule too broad? The                  rule would require covered banks to
                                                    Regulation YY (12 CFR 252.2), and it is                 proposed rule would apply to all                      ensure that each ‘‘covered QFC’’
                                                    intended to be substantially the same as                covered QFCs of covered banks as well                 conforms to the requirements of sections
                                                    the FRB’s definition with respect to a                  as all of their subsidiaries, regardless of           47.4 and 47.5. These sections require
                                                                                                            size or volume of transactions. A key                 that a covered QFC (1) contain
                                                       28 In November 2015, the Financial Stability

                                                    Board and BCBS published a list of banks that meet
                                                                                                            policy concern is that unless all                     contractual stay-and-transfer provisions
                                                    the BCBS definition of a global systemically            subsidiaries of a covered bank are                    similar to those imposed under Title II
                                                    important bank (BCBS G–SIB) based on year-end           subject to the direct and cross-default               of the Dodd-Frank Act and the FDIA,
                                                    2014 data. A list based on year-end 2014 data was       restrictions of the proposed rule,                    and (2) limit the exercise of default
                                                    published November 3, 2015 (available at http://        covered banks and their counterparties
                                                    www.fsb.org/wp-content/uploads/2015-update-of-
                                                                                                                                                                  rights based on the insolvency of an
                                                    list-of-global-systemically-important-banks-G-          would have the incentive to transfer                  affiliate of the covered bank. A ‘‘covered
                                                    SIBs.pdf). The U.S. top-tier BHCs that are currently    their QFCs to unprotected subsidiaries                QFC’’ is generally defined as any QFC
                                                    identified as a BCBS G–SIBs are Bank of America         of the covered bank. Could the scope of               that a covered bank enters, executes, or
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    Corporation, Bank of New York Mellon                    entities covered by the proposed rule be
                                                    Corporation, Citigroup Inc., Goldman Sachs Group,
                                                                                                                                                                  otherwise becomes party to. A party to
                                                    Inc., JP Morgan Chase & Co., Morgan Stanley, State      narrowed while still achieving its policy             a QFC includes a party acting as agent
                                                    Street Corporation, and Wells Fargo & Company.          objectives? If so, what criteria could be             under the QFC. ‘‘Qualified financial
                                                       29 Under the clean holding company component         used? For example, should a subsidiary                contract’’ or ‘‘QFC’’ would be defined to
                                                    of the FRB’s recent Total Loss-Absorbing Capacity       of covered banks that only engages in                 have the same meaning as in section
                                                    (TLAC) proposal, the U.S. intermediate holding
                                                    companies of foreign GSIB entities would be
                                                                                                            some de minimis level of covered QFCs                 210(c)(8)(D) of Title II of the Dodd-Frank
                                                    prohibited from entering into QFCs with third           be safely excluded from the scope of
                                                    parties. See 80 FR 74926 (November 30, 2015).           this proposed rule? Are there alternative               30 See   79 FR 24528 (May 1, 2014).



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                                                    55388                     Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 161 / Friday, August 19, 2016 / Proposed Rules

                                                    Act and would include derivatives,                       without compromising the policy                       consistent with protecting the safety and
                                                    swaps, repurchase, reverse repurchase,                   objectives of the proposed rule?                      soundness of the Federal banking
                                                    and securities lending and borrowing                        Question 7: Should this proposed rule              system. However, where the QFC of the
                                                    transactions.                                            include a reservation of authority                    foreign branch does not permit any
                                                       Except for certain QFCs under multi-                  provision that would maintain OCC’s                   payment or delivery in the United
                                                    branch master agreements, the                            supervisory flexibility, on a case-by-case            States, the OCC believes that applying
                                                    definition of QFC would include a                        basis, to include or exclude from the                 this proposed rule to such QFCs lacks
                                                    single QFC, but also all QFCs under a                    proposed rule (1) specific OCC-                       a sufficient connection to the U.S.
                                                    master agreement. Master agreements                      supervised entities (and their                        operations of the Federal branch or
                                                    are contracts that contain general terms                 subsidiaries) and (2) financial contracts             agency and may be unduly broad.
                                                    that the parties wish to apply to                        or transactions, if consistent with the                  Absent the possibility under the QFC
                                                    multiple transactions between them;                      purposes of the proposed rule?                        of payment or delivery in the United
                                                    having executed the master agreement,                       Exclusion of cleared QFCs. The                     States, the OCC believes that the impact
                                                    the parties can then include those terms                 proposed rule would exclude from the                  of such QFCs on the Federal branch or
                                                    in future contracts through reference to                 definition of ‘‘covered QFC’’ all QFCs                agency covered by this proposed rule, or
                                                    the master agreement. The proposed                       that are cleared through a central                    on the Federal banking system and the
                                                    rule defines master agreement as                         counterparty (CCP). The OCC continues                 United States as a whole, is indirect and
                                                    defined by Title II of the Dodd-Frank                    to consider the appropriate treatment of              relatively immaterial. For this reason,
                                                    Act or any master agreement designated                   centrally cleared QFCs, in light of                   the proposed rule would exclude QFCs
                                                    by regulation by the FDIC. Under the                     differences between cleared and                       under such a ‘‘multi-branch master
                                                    definition, master agreements for QFCs,                  uncleared QFCs with respect to                        agreement’’ that are not booked at a
                                                    together with all supplements to the                     contractual arrangements, counterparty                Federal branch or agency covered by
                                                    master agreement (including underlying                   credit risk, default management, and                  this proposed rule, and for which no
                                                    transactions), would be treated as a                     supervision.                                          payment or delivery may be made at the
                                                    single QFC.31                                               Question 8: Should the QFCs between                Federal branch or agency. Conversely,
                                                       The proposed definition of ‘‘QFC’’ is                 a CCP (or other financial market utility)             the multi-branch master agreement
                                                    intended to cover those financial                        and a member covered bank be subject                  would be a covered QFC with respect to
                                                    transactions whose disorderly unwind                     to the requirements of this proposed                  QFC transactions that are booked and
                                                    has substantial potential to frustrate,                  rule? What additional risks do such                   permits payment and delivery at a
                                                    directly or indirectly, the orderly                      cleared QFCs pose to the orderly                      Federal branch or agency covered by
                                                    resolution of the covered bank or any                    resolution of covered banks and the                   this proposed rule.
                                                    affiliate of such covered bank. The                      Federal banking system? What other                       Question 9: Should the scope of the
                                                    Dodd-Frank Act uses its definition of                    factors should be considered?                         proposed rule be limited to only those
                                                    ‘‘qualified financial contract’’ to                         Exclusion of certain QFCs under                    transactions that are booked, or provide
                                                    determine the scope of the stay-and-                     foreign bank multi-branch master                      for payment and delivery, at the Federal
                                                    transfer provisions that it applies to                   agreements. Under the proposed rule,                  branch or agency?
                                                    direct default and cross-default rights in               the definition of a ‘‘QFC’’ would include
                                                                                                             a master agreement that covers other                  D. Definition of ‘‘Default Right’’
                                                    an OLA resolution. By adopting the
                                                    Dodd-Frank Act’s definition, the                         QFCs. In addition, under this definition                 As discussed previously, a party to a
                                                    proposed rule would track Congress’s                     those QFCs covered by the master                      QFC generally has a number of rights
                                                    judgment as to which financial                           agreement would be treated as a single                that it can exercise if its counterparty
                                                                                                             QFC. By design, this definition of QFC                defaults on the QFC by failing to meet
                                                    transactions could, if not subject to
                                                                                                             is intended to ensure that the proposed               certain contractual obligations. These
                                                    appropriate restrictions, pose an
                                                                                                             rule would apply to all of the relevant               rights are generally, but not always,
                                                    obstacle to the orderly resolution of a
                                                                                                             QFCs entered into by a covered bank.                  contractual in nature. One common
                                                    systemically important financial
                                                                                                             However, as applied to the QFCs of                    default right is a setoff right which is the
                                                    company.
                                                       Question 6: With regard to the                        Federal branches and agencies under a                 right to reduce the total amount that the
                                                    proposed definitions of ‘‘QFC’’ and                      multi-branch master agreement, this                   non-defaulting party must pay by the
                                                    ‘‘covered QFC’’ are there other types of                 definition may be too broad in its scope.             amount that its defaulting counterparty
                                                                                                                Foreign banks have multi-branch                    owes. A second common default right is
                                                    financial contracts or transactions that
                                                                                                             master agreements that permit                         the right to liquidate pledged collateral
                                                    should be included in the definition of
                                                                                                             transactions to be entered into both at a             and use the proceeds to pay the
                                                    a ‘‘covered QFC’’ in the proposed rule
                                                                                                             U.S. branch or agency of the foreign                  defaulting party’s net obligation to the
                                                    because they could pose a similar risk
                                                                                                             bank and at a foreign branch (located                 non-defaulting party. Other common
                                                    to the safety and soundness of the
                                                                                                             outside of the United States) of the                  rights include the ability to suspend or
                                                    covered national banks, FSAs, and
                                                                                                             foreign bank. Under this proposed rule,               delay the non-defaulting party’s
                                                    Federal branches and agencies and to
                                                                                                             a QFC of a Federal branch or agency, as               performance under the contract or to
                                                    the Federal banking system? Conversely,
                                                                                                             well as all of the QFCs entered into by               accelerate the obligations of the
                                                    is the definition of covered QFC too
                                                                                                             foreign branches under the same multi-                defaulting party.
                                                    broad? Are there types of financial
                                                                                                             branch master agreement would be                         Finally, the non-defaulting party
                                                    contracts that fall within the definition
                                                                                                             treated as a single QFC of the Federal                typically has the right to terminate the
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    of covered QFC that could be excluded
                                                                                                             branch or agency, and would therefore                 QFC, meaning that the parties would
                                                      31 12 U.S.C. 5390(c)(8)(D)(viii); see also 12 U.S.C.   be subject to the requirements of this                not make payments that would have
                                                    1821(e)(8)(D)(vii); 109 H. Rpt. 31, Part 1 (April 8,     proposed rule. Where the QFC of the                   been required under the QFC in the
                                                    2005) (explaining that a ‘‘master agreement for one      foreign branch has some U.S. nexus,                   future. The phrase ‘‘default right’’ in the
                                                    or more securities contracts, commodity contracts,       such as permitting payment or delivery                proposed rule text at § 47.2 is broadly
                                                    forward contracts, repurchase agreements or swap
                                                    agreements will be treated as a single QFC under
                                                                                                             in the United States, the OCC believes                defined to include these common rights
                                                    the FDIA or the FCUA (but only with respect to the       that subjecting those QFCs to this                    as well as ‘‘any similar rights.’’
                                                    underlying agreements are themselves QFCs)’’).           proposed rule is reasonable and                       Additionally, the definition includes all


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                                                                            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 161 / Friday, August 19, 2016 / Proposed Rules                                                  55389

                                                    such rights regardless of source,                       terminate the contract ‘‘on demand or at              context of a receivership of a covered
                                                    including rights existing under contract,               its option at a specified time, or from               bank under the Dodd-Frank Act or the
                                                    statute, or common law.                                 time to time, without the need to show                FDIA. Thus, the purpose of this
                                                       However, the proposed definition                     cause’’ create an incentive for firms to              provision is to ensure that if a national
                                                    excludes two rights that are typically                  include these rights in future contracts              bank or FSA covered by this proposed
                                                    associated with the business-as-usual                   to evade the proposed restrictions? To                rule is placed into receivership under
                                                    functioning of a QFC. First, same-day                   what extent should other regulatory                   any U.S. special resolution regime, the
                                                    netting that occurs during the life of the              requirements (e.g., liquidity coverage                stay-and-transfer provisions would
                                                    QFC in order to reduce the number and                   ratio or the short-term wholesale                     extend to all foreign counterparties as a
                                                    amount of payments each party owes                      funding components of the GSIB                        matter of contract law.
                                                    the other is excluded from the definition               surcharge rule) be revised to create a                   The stay-and-transfer provisions of
                                                    of ‘‘default right.’’ 32 Second, contractual            counterincentive? Would additional                    the U.S. special resolution regimes
                                                    margin requirements that arise solely                   exclusions be appropriate? To what                    should be enforced with respect to all
                                                    from the change in the value of the                     extent should it be clarified that the                contracts of any U.S. GSIB entity that
                                                    collateral or the amount of an economic                 ‘‘need to show cause’’ includes the need              enters resolution under a U.S. special
                                                    exposure are also excluded from the                     to negotiate alternative terms with the               resolution regime as well as all
                                                    definition.33 The effect of these                       other party prior to termination or                   transactions of the subsidiaries of such
                                                    exclusions is to leave such rights                      similar requirements (e.g., Master                    an entity. Nonetheless, it is possible that
                                                    unaffected by the proposed rule. The                    Securities Loan Agreement, Annex III—                 a court in a foreign jurisdiction would
                                                    exclusions are appropriate because the                  Term Loans)?                                          decline to enforce those provisions in
                                                    proposed rule is intended to improve                                                                          cases brought before it (such as a case
                                                                                                            E. Required Contractual Provisions                    regarding a covered QFC between a
                                                    resolvability by addressing default
                                                                                                            Related to U.S. Special Resolution                    covered bank and a non-U.S. entity that
                                                    rights that could disrupt an orderly
                                                                                                            Regimes (Section 47.4)                                is governed by non-U.S. law and
                                                    resolution, and not to interrupt the
                                                    parties’ business-as-usual dealings                        Under the proposed rule, a covered                 secured by collateral located outside the
                                                    under a QFC.                                            QFC would be required to explicitly                   United States). By requiring that the
                                                       However, certain QFCs are also                       provide both (a) that the transfer of the             effect of the statutory stay-and-transfer
                                                    commonly subject to rights that would                   QFC (and any interest or obligation in                provisions be incorporated directly into
                                                    increase the amount of collateral or                    or under it and any property                          the QFC contractually, the proposed
                                                    margin that the defaulting party (or a                  collateralizing it) from the covered bank             requirement would help ensure that a
                                                    guarantor) must provide upon an event                   to a transferee would be effective to the             court in a foreign jurisdiction would
                                                    of default. The financial impact of such                same extent as it would be under the                  enforce the effect of those provisions,
                                                    default rights on a covered bank could                  U.S. special resolution regimes if the                regardless of whether the court would
                                                    be similar to the impact of the                         covered QFC were governed by the laws                 otherwise have decided to enforce the
                                                    liquidation and acceleration rights                     of the United States or of a state of the             U.S. statutory provisions themselves.40
                                                    discussed previously. Therefore, the                    United States and (b) that default rights             For example, the proposed provisions
                                                    proposed definition of ‘‘default right’’                with respect to the covered QFC that                  should prevent a U.K. counterparty of a
                                                    includes such rights (with the exception                could be exercised against a covered                  U.S. GSIB from persuading a U.K. court
                                                    discussed in the previous paragraph for                 bank could be exercised to no greater                 that it should be permitted to seize and
                                                    margin requirements that depend solely                  extent than they could be exercised                   liquidate collateral located in the United
                                                    on the value of collateral or the amount                under the U.S. special resolution                     Kingdom in response to the U.S. GSIB’s
                                                    of an economic exposure).34                             regimes if the covered QFC were                       entry into OLA resolution. And the
                                                       Finally, contractual rights to                       governed by the laws of the United                    knowledge that a court in a foreign
                                                    terminate without the need to show                      States or of a state of the United                    jurisdiction would reject the purported
                                                    cause, including rights to terminate on                 States.36 The proposed rule would                     exercise of default rights in violation of
                                                    demand and rights to terminate at                       define the term ‘‘U.S. Special Resolution             the required provisions would deter
                                                    contractually specified intervals, are                  Regimes’’ to mean the FDIA 37 and Title               covered banks’ counterparties from
                                                    excluded from the definition of ‘‘default               II of the Dodd-Frank Act,38 along with                attempting to exercise such rights.
                                                    right’’ for purposes the proposed rule’s                regulations issued under those                           The OCC believes that this proposed
                                                    restrictions on cross-default rights                    statutes.39                                           rule directly addresses a major QFC-
                                                    (section 47.5 of the proposed rule).35                     The proposed requirements are not                  related obstacle to the orderly resolution
                                                    This is consistent with the proposed                    intended to imply that a given covered                of covered banks. As discussed
                                                    rule’s objective of restricting only                    QFC is not governed by the laws of the                previously, restrictions on the exercise
                                                    default rights that are related, directly or            United States or of a state of the United             of QFC default rights are an important
                                                    indirectly, to the entry into resolution of             States, or that the statutory stay-and-               prerequisite for an orderly GSIB
                                                    an affiliate of the covered bank, while                 transfer provisions would not in fact                 resolution. Congress recognized the
                                                    leaving other default rights unrestricted.              apply to a given covered QFC. This                    importance of such restrictions when it
                                                       Question 10: The OCC invites                         section of the proposed rule would not                enacted the stay-and-transfer provisions
                                                    comment on all aspects of the proposed                  have any substantive impact on those                  of the U.S. special resolution regimes.
                                                    definition of ‘‘default right’’ In                      covered QFCs that are already subject to              As demonstrated by the 2007–2009
                                                                                                                                                                  financial crisis, the modern financial
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    particular, are the proposed exclusions                 the U.S. special resolution regimes.
                                                    appropriate in light of the objectives of               Rather, the requirements are intended to              system is global in scope, and covered
                                                    the proposal? To what extent does the                   provide certainty that all covered QFCs               banks are party to large volumes of
                                                    exclusion of rights that allow a party to               would be treated the same way in the
                                                                                                                                                                     40 See generally Financial Stability Board,

                                                      32 See
                                                                                                                                                                  ‘‘Principles for Cross-border Effectiveness of
                                                             Proposed Rule § 47.2.                            36 See Proposed Rule § 47.4.                        Resolution Actions’’ (November 3, 2015), available
                                                      33 See id.                                              37 12 U.S.C. 1811–1835a.
                                                                                                                                                                  at http://www.fsb.org/wp-content/uploads/
                                                      34 See id.                                              38 12 U.S.C. 5381–5394.
                                                                                                                                                                  Principles-for-Cross-border-Effectiveness-of-
                                                      35 See Proposed Rule §§ 47.2 and 47.5.                  39 See Proposed Rule § 47.2.                        Resolution-Actions.pdf.



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                                                    55390                    Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 161 / Friday, August 19, 2016 / Proposed Rules

                                                    QFCs with connections to foreign                         F. Prohibited Cross-Default Rights                   resolution of an affiliate of the covered
                                                    jurisdictions. The stay-and-transfer                     (Section 47.5)                                       bank.42
                                                    provisions of the U.S. special resolution                   Definitions. Section 47.5 of the                     A primary purpose of the proposed
                                                    regimes would not achieve their                          proposed rule pertains to cross-default              restrictions is to facilitate the resolution
                                                    purpose of facilitating orderly resolution               rights in QFCs between covered banks                 of a GSIB outside of Title II, including
                                                    in the context of the failure of a GSIB                                                                       under the Bankruptcy Code. As
                                                                                                             and their counterparties, many of which
                                                    with large volumes of such QFCs if                                                                            discussed in the background section, the
                                                                                                             are subject to credit enhancements (such
                                                    QFCs could escape the effect of those                                                                         potential for the mass exercise of QFC
                                                                                                             as guarantees) provided by an affiliate of
                                                    provisions. As discussed in detail in                                                                         default rights is a major reason why the
                                                                                                             the covered bank. Because credit
                                                    Section I of this proposed rule, the OCC                                                                      failure of a global systemically
                                                                                                             enhancements on QFCs are themselves
                                                    has a supervisory interest in preventing                                                                      important BHC could have a severe
                                                                                                             ‘‘qualified financial contracts’’ under
                                                    or mitigating the destabilizing effects of                                                                    negative impact on financial stability
                                                                                                             the Dodd-Frank Act’s definition of that
                                                    a disorderly GSIB resolution; otherwise,                                                                      and on the Federal banking system. In
                                                                                                             term (which this proposed rule would
                                                    the result will be adverse to safety and                                                                      the context of an SPOE resolution, if the
                                                                                                             adopt), the proposed rule includes the
                                                    soundness of covered banks                                                                                    global systemically important BHC’s
                                                                                                             following additional definitions in order
                                                    individually and collectively, as well as                                                                     entry into resolution triggers the mass
                                                                                                             to precisely describe the relationships to           exercise of cross-default rights by the
                                                    the broader Federal banking system. To
                                                                                                             which this section applies.                          subsidiaries’ QFC counterparties of the
                                                    remove any doubt about the scope of                         First, the proposed rule distinguishes
                                                    coverage of these provisions, the                                                                             covered QFCs against the national bank
                                                                                                             between a credit enhancement and a
                                                    proposed requirement would ensure                                                                             or FSA subsidiary, then the national
                                                                                                             ‘‘direct QFC,’’ which is defined as any
                                                    that the stay-and-transfer provisions                                                                         bank or FSA could themselves
                                                                                                             QFC that is not a credit enhancement.
                                                    apply as a matter of contract to all                                                                          experience financial distress or failure.
                                                                                                             The proposed rule also defines ‘‘direct
                                                    covered QFCs, wherever the transaction.                                                                       Moreover, the mass exercise of covered
                                                                                                             party’’ to mean a covered bank that itself           QFC default rights would entail asset
                                                    This will advance the resolvability goals
                                                                                                             is a party to the direct QFC, as distinct            fire sales, which could affect other U.S.
                                                    of the Dodd-Frank Act and the FDIA.41
                                                       Question 11: While the direct default                 from an entity that provide a credit                 financial companies and undermine
                                                    requirements are proposed to apply                       enhancement. In addition, the proposed               financial stability of the U.S. financial
                                                    broadly to all covered QFCs of covered                   rule defines ‘‘affiliate credit                      system. Similar disruptive results can
                                                    banks, the primary focus of this                         enhancement’’ to mean ‘‘a credit                     occur with an MPOE resolution of an
                                                    requirements is with QFCs with foreign                   enhancement that is provided by an                   affiliate of an otherwise performing
                                                    counterparties not directly subject to the               affiliate of the party to the direct QFC             entity triggers default rights on QFCs
                                                    U.S. special resolution regimes. U.S.                    that the credit enhancement supports,’’              involving the performing covered bank.
                                                    counterparties are less of a concern                     as distinct from a credit enhancement                   In an SPOE resolution, this damage
                                                    because these counterparties would                       provided by either the direct party itself           can be avoided if actions of the
                                                    already be subject to the stay-and-                      or by an unaffiliated party. Moreover,               following two types are prevented: The
                                                    transfer requirements under statutory                    the proposed rule defines ‘‘covered                  exercise of direct default rights against
                                                    requirements of the U.S. special                         affiliate credit enhancement’’ to mean               the top-tier holding company that has
                                                    resolution regimes. With respect to the                  an affiliate credit enhancement                      entered resolution, and the exercise of
                                                    direct default requirements, the                         provided by a covered bank, or a                     cross-default rights against the national
                                                    proposed rule does not distinguish                       covered entity under the Board’s                     bank and FSA subsidiaries and other
                                                    between U.S. and foreign counterparties                  proposal, and defines ‘‘covered affiliate            operating subsidiaries based on their
                                                    because the OCC believes that the broad                  support provider to mean the covered                 parent’s entry into resolution. Direct
                                                    application of this proposed rule would                  bank that provides the covered affiliate             default rights against the national bank
                                                    be simpler to implement and less                         credit enhancement. Finally, the                     or FSA subsidiary would not be
                                                    burdensome given the standardized                        proposed rule defines the term                       exercisable, because that subsidiary
                                                    nature of QFCs and their associated                      ‘‘supported party’’ to mean any party                would continue normal operations and
                                                    master netting agreements. Should the                    that is the beneficiary of a covered                 would not enter resolution. In an MPOE
                                                    direct default requirements of the                       affiliate credit enhancement (that is, the           resolution, this damage occurs from the
                                                    proposed rule apply only to covered                      QFC counterparty of a direct party,                  exercise of default rights against a
                                                    QFCs with foreign counterparties not                     assuming that the direct QFC is subject              performing entity based on the failure of
                                                    subject to U.S. special resolution                       to a covered affiliate credit                        an affiliate.
                                                    regimes? What would be the costs and                     enhancement).                                           Under the OLA, the Dodd-Frank Act’s
                                                    regulatory burden associated with                           General Prohibition. Subject to the               stay-and-transfer provisions would
                                                    identifying and maintaining separate                     substantial exceptions to be discussed,              address both direct default rights and
                                                    versions of covered QFCs for U.S. and                    the proposed rule would prohibit a                   cross-default rights. But, as explained in
                                                    foreign counterparties?                                  covered bank from being a party to a                 the Background section, no similar
                                                                                                             covered QFC that allows for the exercise
                                                      41 As noted in the Board’s Proposal, this proposed     of any default right that is related,                   42 This prohibition would be subject to an

                                                    rule is consistent with efforts by regulators in other   directly or indirectly, to the entry into            exception that would allow supported parties to
                                                    jurisdictions to address similar risks by requiring                                                           exercise default rights with respect to a QFC if the
                                                    that financial firms within their jurisdictions ensure
                                                                                                             resolution of an affiliate of the covered            supported party would be prohibited from being the
                                                                                                             bank. The proposed rule also would
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                                                    that the effect of the similar provisions under these                                                         beneficiary of a credit enhancement provided by the
                                                    foreign jurisdictions’ respective special resolution     generally prohibit a covered bank from               transferee under any applicable law, including the
                                                    regimes would be enforced by courts in other             being party to a covered QFC that would              Employee Retirement Income Security Act of 1974
                                                    jurisdictions, including the United States. See e.g.,                                                         and the Investment Company Act of 1940. This
                                                    PRA Rulebook: CRR Firms and Non-Authorised               prohibit the transfer of any credit                  exception is substantially similar to an exception to
                                                    Persons: Stay in Resolution Instrument 2015,             enhancement applicable to the QFC                    the transfer restrictions in section 2(f) of the ISDA
                                                    available at http://www.bankofengland.co.uk/pra/         (such as another entity’s guarantee of               2014 Resolution Stay Protocol (2014 Protocol) and
                                                    Documents/publications/ps/2015/ps2515app1.pdf;                                                                the ISDA 2015 Universal Resolution Stay Protocol,
                                                    see also Bank of England, Prudential Regulation
                                                                                                             the covered bank’s obligations under the             which was added to address the concerns expressed
                                                    Authority, ‘‘Contractual stays in financial contracts    QFC), along with associated obligations              by asset managers during the drafting of the 2014
                                                    governed by third-country law’’ (PS25/15).               or collateral, upon the entry into                   Protocol.



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                                                                            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 161 / Friday, August 19, 2016 / Proposed Rules                                                         55391

                                                    statutory provisions would apply to a                   soundness of the Federal banking                         the contracts in effect between the same
                                                    resolution under the Bankruptcy Code.                   system and financial stability of the                    counterparties.
                                                    This proposed rule attempts to address                  United States.                                              The proposed exceptions for the
                                                    these obstacles to orderly resolution                      General creditor protections. While                   creditor protections described are
                                                    under the Bankruptcy Code by                            the proposed restrictions would                          intended to help ensure that the
                                                    extending the stay-and transfer-                        facilitate orderly resolution, they would                proposed rule permits a covered bank’s
                                                    provisions to any type of resolution.                   also have the effect of diminishing the                  QFC counterparties to protect
                                                    Similarly, the proposed rule would                      ability of the counterparties of the                     themselves from imminent financial
                                                    facilitate a transfer of the GSIB parent’s              covered banks to include protections for                 loss and does not create a risk of
                                                    interests in its subsidiaries, along with               themselves in covered QFCs. In order to                  delivery gridlocks or daisy-chain effects,
                                                    any credit enhancements it provides for                 reduce this effect, the proposed rule                    in which a covered bank’s failure to
                                                    those subsidiaries, to a solvent financial              includes several significant exceptions                  make a payment or delivery when due
                                                    company by prohibiting covered banks                    to the proposed restrictions. These                      leaves its counterparty unable to meet
                                                    from having QFCs that would allow the                   permitted creditor protections are                       its own payment and delivery
                                                    QFC counterparty to prevent such a                      intended to allow creditors to exercise                  obligations (the daisy-chain effect
                                                    transfer or to use it as a ground for                   cross-default rights outside of an orderly               would be prevented because the covered
                                                    exercising default rights. Accordingly,                 resolution of a GSIB (as described                       bank’s counterparty would be permitted
                                                    the proposed rule would broadly                         previously and in the Board’s Proposal)                  to exercise its default rights, such as by
                                                    prevent the unanticipated failure of any                and therefore would not be expected to                   liquidating collateral). These exceptions
                                                    one GSIB entity from bringing about the                 undermine such a resolution.                             are generally consistent with the
                                                    disorderly failures of its affiliates by                                                                         treatment of payment and delivery
                                                    preventing the affiliates’ QFC                             First, to ensure that the proposed                    obligations under the U.S. special
                                                    counterparties from using the first                     prohibitions would apply only to cross-                  resolution regimes.46
                                                    entity’s failure as a ground for                        default rights (and not direct default                      These exceptions also help to ensure
                                                    exercising default rights against those                 rights), the proposed rule would provide                 that a covered entity’s QFC counterparty
                                                    affiliates that continue meet to their                  that a covered QFC may permit the                        would not risk the delay and expense
                                                    obligations.43                                          exercise of default rights based on the                  associated with becoming involved in a
                                                       The proposed rule is intended to                     direct party’s entry into a resolution                   bankruptcy proceeding, since, unlike a
                                                    enhance the potential for orderly                       proceeding, other than a proceeding                      typical creditor of an entity that enters
                                                    resolution of a GSIB under the                          under a U.S. or foreign special                          bankruptcy, the QFC counterparty
                                                    Bankruptcy Code, the FDIA, or similar                   resolution regime.45 This provision                      would retain its ability under the
                                                    resolution proceedings. In doing so, the                would help ensure that, if the direct                    Bankruptcy Code’s safe harbors to
                                                    proposed rule would advance the Dodd-                   party to a QFC were to enter                             exercise direct default rights. This
                                                    Frank Act’s goal of making orderly                      bankruptcy, its QFC counterparties                       should further reduce the counterparty’s
                                                    resolution of a workable covered bank                   could exercise any relevant direct                       incentive to run. Reducing incentives to
                                                    under the Bankruptcy Code.44                            default rights. Thus, a covered bank’s                   run in the lead up to resolution
                                                       The proposed rule could also prevent                 direct QFC counterparties would not                      promotes orderly resolution because a
                                                    the disorderly failure of the national                  risk the delay and expense associated                    QFC creditor run (such as a mass
                                                    bank or FSA subsidiary and allow it to                  with becoming involved in a bankruptcy                   withdrawal of repo funding) could lead
                                                    continue normal operations. In addition,                proceeding, and would be able to take                    to a disorderly resolution and pose a
                                                    while it may be in the individual                       advantage of default rights that would                   threat to financial stability.
                                                    interest of any given counterparty to                   fall within the Bankruptcy Code’s safe                      Additional creditor protections for
                                                    exercise any available contractual rights               harbor provisions.                                       supported QFCs. The proposed rule
                                                    to run on the national bank or FSA                         The proposed rule would also allow                    would allow additional creditor
                                                    subsidiary, the mass exercise of such                   covered QFCs to permit the exercise of                   protections for a non-defaulting
                                                    rights could harm the collective interest               default rights based on the failure of (1)               counterparty that is the beneficiary of a
                                                    of all the counterparties by causing the                the direct party, (2) a covered affiliate                credit enhancement from an affiliate of
                                                    subsidiary to fail. Therefore, like the                 support provider, or (3) a transferee that               the covered bank that is also a covered
                                                    automatic stay in bankruptcy, which                     assumes a credit enhancement to satisfy                  bank under the proposed rule. The
                                                    also serves to maximize creditors’                      its payment or delivery obligations                      proposed rule would allow these
                                                    ultimate recoveries by preventing a                     under the direct QFC or credit                           creditor protections in recognition of the
                                                    disorderly liquidation of the debtor, the               enhancement. Moreover, the proposed                      supported party’s interest in receiving
                                                    proposed rule would mitigate this                       rule would allow covered QFCs to                         the benefit of its credit enhancement.
                                                    collective action problem to the benefit                permit the exercise of a default right in                The Board has concluded that these
                                                    of the creditors and counterparties of                  one QFC that is triggered by the direct                  creditor protections would not
                                                    covered banks by preventing a                           party’s failure to satisfy its payment or                undermine an SPOE resolution of a
                                                    disorderly resolution. And because                      delivery obligations under another                       GSIB.47
                                                    many of these counterparties and                        contract between the same parties. This                     Where a covered QFC is supported by
                                                    creditors are themselves covered banks,                 exception takes appropriate account of                   a covered affiliate credit
                                                    or other systemically important                         the interdependence that exists among                    enhancement,48 the covered QFC and
                                                    financial firms, improving outcomes for
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    these creditors and counterparties                         45 Special resolution regimes typically stay direct      46 See 12 U.S.C. 1821(e)(8)(G)(ii), 5390(c)(8)(F)(ii)
                                                    would further protect the safety and                    default rights, but may not stay cross-default rights.   (suspending payment and delivery obligations for
                                                                                                            For example, as discussed previously, the FDIA           one business day or less).
                                                      43 As noted in the Board’s Proposal, this proposed                                                                47 See 81 FR 29169 (May 11, 2016).
                                                                                                            stays direct default rights, see 12 U.S.C.
                                                    rule will also facilitate many approaches to GSIB       1821(e)(10)(B), but does not stay cross-default             48 Note that the proposed rule would not apply

                                                    resolution, including where the U.S. intermediate       rights, whereas the Dodd-Frank Act’s OLA stays           with respect to credit enhancements that are not
                                                    holding company of a foreign GSIB enters                direct default rights and cross-defaults arising from    covered affiliate credit enhancements. In particular,
                                                    proceedings as part of a broader MPOE resolution.       a parent’s receivership, see 12 U.S.C. 5390(c)(10)(B),   it would not apply with respect to a credit
                                                      44 See 12 U.S.C. 5365(d).                             5390(c)(16).                                                                                           Continued




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                                                    55392                    Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 161 / Friday, August 19, 2016 / Proposed Rules

                                                    the credit enhancement would be                          support provider or transferee. Title II of            entered a resolution proceeding, (a) the
                                                    permitted to allow the exercise of                       the Dodd-Frank Act and the FDIA                        party seeking to exercise the default
                                                    default rights under the circumstances                   contain similar provisions to prevent                  right shall bear the burden of proof that
                                                    after the expiration of a stay period.                   cherry picking.                                        the exercise of that right is indeed
                                                    Under the proposed rule, the applicable                     Finally, if the covered affiliate credit            permitted by the covered QFC and (b)
                                                    stay period would begin when the credit                  enhancement is transferred to a                        the party seeking to exercise the default
                                                    support provider enters resolution and                   transferee, then the non-defaulting                    right must meet a ‘‘clear and convincing
                                                    would end at the later of 5:00 p.m.                      counterparty could exercise default                    evidence’’ standard,54 a similar
                                                    (eastern time) on the next business day                  rights at the end of the stay period                   standard, or a more demanding
                                                    and 48 hours after the entry into                        unless either (a) all of the support                   standard.
                                                    resolution. This portion of the proposed                 provider’s ownership interests in the                     The purpose of this proposed
                                                    rule is similar to the stay treatment                    direct party are also transferred to the               requirement is to prevent QFC
                                                    provided in a resolution under the OLA                   transferee or (b) reasonable assurance is              counterparties from circumventing the
                                                    or the FDIA.49                                           provided that substantially all of the                 limitations on resolution-related default
                                                       Under the proposed rule, default                      support provider’s assets (or the net                  rights in this proposal by exercising
                                                    rights could be exercised at the end of                  proceeds from the sale of those assets)                other contractual default rights in
                                                    the stay period if the covered affiliate                 will be transferred to the transferee in a             instances where such QFC counterparty
                                                    credit enhancement has not been                          timely manner. These conditions would                  cannot demonstrate that the exercise of
                                                    transferred away from the covered                        help to assure the supported party that                such other contractual default rights is
                                                    affiliate support provider and that                      the transferee would be at least roughly               unrelated to the affiliate’s entry into
                                                    support provider becomes subject to a                    as financially capable of providing the                resolution.
                                                    resolution proceeding other than a                       credit enhancement as the covered                         Agency transactions. In addition to
                                                    proceeding under Chapter 11 of the                       affiliate support provider.                            entering into QFCs as principal, GSIBs
                                                    Bankruptcy Code.50 Default rights could                     Creditor protections related to FDIA                may engage in QFCs as agent for other
                                                    also be exercised at the end of the stay                 proceedings. Moreover, in the case of a                principals. For example, a GSIB
                                                    period if the transferee (if any) of the                 covered QFC that is supported by a                     subsidiary may enter into a master
                                                    credit enhancement enters a resolution                   covered affiliate credit enhancement,                  securities lending arrangement with a
                                                    proceeding, protecting the supported                     both the covered QFC and the credit                    foreign bank as agent for a U.S.-based
                                                    party from a transfer of the credit                      enhancement would be permitted to                      pension fund. The GSIB would
                                                    enhancement to a transferee that is                      allow the exercise of default rights                   document its role as agent for the
                                                    unable to meet its financial obligations.                related to the credit support provider’s               pension fund, often through an annex to
                                                       Default rights could also be exercised                entry into resolution proceedings under                the master agreement, and would
                                                    at the end of the stay period if the                     the FDIA 51 under the following                        generally provide to its customer (the
                                                    original credit support provider does                    circumstances: (a) After the FDIA stay                 principal party) a securities replacement
                                                    not remain, and no transferee becomes,                   period,52 if the credit enhancement is                 guarantee or indemnification for any
                                                    obligated to the same (or substantially                  not transferred under the relevant                     shortfall in collateral in the event of the
                                                    similar) extent as the original credit                   provisions of the FDIA 53 and associated               default of the foreign bank.55 A covered
                                                    support provider was obligated                           regulations, and (b) during the FDIA                   bank may also enter into a QFC as
                                                    immediately prior to entering a                          stay period, to the extent that the default            principal where there is an agent acting
                                                    resolution proceeding (including a                       right permits the supported party to                   on its behalf or on behalf of its
                                                    Chapter 11 proceeding) with respect to                   suspend performance under the covered                  counterparty.
                                                                                                             QFC to the same extent as that party                      This proposed rule would apply to a
                                                    (a) the credit enhancement applicable to
                                                                                                             would be entitled to do if the covered                 covered QFC regardless of whether the
                                                    the covered QFC, (b) all other credit
                                                                                                             QFC were with the credit support                       covered bank or the covered bank’s
                                                    enhancements provided by the credit
                                                                                                             provider itself and were treated in the                direct counterparty is acting as a
                                                    support provider on any other QFCs
                                                                                                             same manner as the credit                              principal or as an agent. This proposed
                                                    between the same parties, and (c) all
                                                                                                             enhancement. This provision is                         rule does not distinguish between
                                                    credit enhancements provided by the
                                                                                                             intended to ensure that a QFC                          agents and principals with respect to
                                                    credit support provider between the
                                                                                                             counterparty of a subsidiary of a                      default rights or transfer restrictions
                                                    direct party and affiliates of the direct
                                                                                                             covered bank that goes into FDIA                       applicable to covered QFCs. The
                                                    party’s QFC counterparty. Such creditor
                                                                                                             receivership can receive the same level                proposed rule would limit default rights
                                                    protections would be permitted to
                                                                                                             of protection that the FDIA provides to                and transfer restrictions that the
                                                    prevent the support provider or the
                                                                                                             QFC counterparties of the covered bank                 principal and its agent may have against
                                                    transferee from ‘‘cherry picking’’ by
                                                                                                             itself.                                                a covered bank consistent with the U.S.
                                                    assuming only those QFCs of a given
                                                                                                                Prohibited terminations. In case of a               special resolution regimes. This
                                                    counterparty that are favorable to the
                                                                                                             legal dispute as to a party’s right to                 proposed rule would ensure that,
                                                    enhancement provided by a non-U.S. entity of a           exercise a default right under a covered               subject to the enumerated creditor
                                                    foreign GSIB, which would not be a covered bank          QFC, the proposed rule would require                   protections, neither the agent nor the
                                                    under the proposed rule.                                 that a covered QFC must provide that,
                                                       49 See U.S.C. 1821(e)(10)(B)(I), 5390(c)(10)(B)(i),                                                            54 The reference to a ‘‘similar’’ burden of proof is

                                                    5390(c)(16)(A). While the proposed stay period is
                                                                                                             after an affiliate of the direct party has             intended to allow covered QFCs to provide for the
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    similar to the stay periods that would be imposed                                                               application of a standard that is analogous to clear
                                                                                                                51 As discussed, the FDIA stays direct default
                                                    by the U.S. special resolution regimes, it could run                                                            and convincing evidence in jurisdictions that do
                                                    longer than those stay periods under some                rights against the failed depository institution but   not recognize that particular standard. A covered
                                                    circumstances.                                           does not stay the exercise of cross-default rights     QFC would not be permitted to provide for a lower
                                                       50 Chapter 11 (11 U.S.C. 1101–1174) is the portion    against its affiliates.                                standard.
                                                                                                                52 Under the FDIA, the relevant stay period runs
                                                    of the Bankruptcy Code that provides for the                                                                      55 The definition of QFC under Title II of the

                                                    reorganization of the failed company, as opposed to      until 5:00 p.m. (eastern time) on the business day     Dodd-Frank Act includes security agreements and
                                                    its liquidation, and, relative to special resolution     following the appointment of the FDIC as receiver.     other credit enhancements as well as master
                                                    regimes, is generally well-understood by market          12 U.S.C. 1821(e)(10)(B)(I).                           agreements (including supplements). 12 U.S.C.
                                                    participants.                                               53 12 U.S.C. 1821(e)(9)–(10).                       5390(c)(8)(D).



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                                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 161 / Friday, August 19, 2016 / Proposed Rules                                         55393

                                                    principal could exercise cross-default                      Question 17: With respect to the                  creditor protections on GSIB resilience
                                                    rights under the covered QFC against                     proposed provisions permitting specific              and resolvability. The next four concern
                                                    the covered bank based on the                            creditor protections in a covered QFC,               the potential scope of the covered
                                                    resolution of an affiliate of the covered                does the proposed rule draw an                       bank’s request: Adoption on an
                                                    bank.56                                                  appropriate balance between protecting               industry-wide basis, coverage of existing
                                                       Question 12: With respect to the                      financial stability from risks associated            and future transactions, coverage of one
                                                    proposed restrictions on cross-default                   with QFC unwinds and maintaining                     or multiple QFCs, and coverage of some
                                                    rights in covered banks’ QFCs, is the                    important creditor protections? Should               or all covered banks. Creditor
                                                    proposed rule sufficiently clear, such                   the proposed set of permitted creditor               protections that may be applied on an
                                                    that parties to a conforming QFC will                    protections be expanded to allow for                 industry-wide basis may help to ensure
                                                    understand what default rights are, and                  other creditor protections that would                that impediments to resolution are
                                                    are not exercisable, in the context of a                 fall within the proposed restrictions? Is            addressed on a uniform basis, which
                                                    GSIB resolution? How could the                           the proposed set of permitted creditor               could increase market certainty,
                                                    proposed restrictions be further                         protections sufficiently clear?                      transparency, and equitable treatment.
                                                    clarified?                                                  Question 18: With respect to the                  Creditor protections that apply broadly
                                                       Question 13: Section 47.5(e)(2) of the                proposed requirement for burden-of-                  to a range of QFCs and covered banks
                                                    proposed rule, addressing general                        proof provisions in a covered QFC, is                would increase the chance that all of a
                                                    creditor protections, would permit the                   the standard clear? Would the proposed               GSIB’s QFC counterparties would be
                                                    exercise of default rights based on the                  requirement advance the goals of this                treated the same way during a
                                                    failure of the direct party to satisfy its               proposed rule? Would those goals be                  resolution of that GSIB and may
                                                    payment or delivery obligations under                    better advanced by alternative or                    improve the prospects for an orderly
                                                    the covered QFC or ‘‘another contract                    complementary provisions?                            resolution of that GSIB. By contrast,
                                                    between the same parties’’ that give rise                   Question 19: Should the proposed                  covered bank requests that would
                                                    to a default right in the covered QFC.                   rule require periodic legal review of the            expand counterparties’ rights beyond
                                                    This exception is not limited to covered                 legal enforceability of the required                 those afforded under existing QFCs
                                                    QFCs but is intended to reflect the                      provisions in relevant jurisdictions? If             would conflict with the proposed rule’s
                                                    interdependence among all contracts                      periodic legal review is not required,               goal of reducing the risk of mass
                                                    between the same counterparties. Does                    should covered banks be required to                  unwinds of GSIB QFCs. The proposed
                                                    the scope of the terms ‘‘contract’’ and                  monitor the applicable law in the                    rule also includes three factors that
                                                    ‘‘same parties’’ need to be clarified?                   relevant jurisdiction for material                   focus on the creditor protections
                                                    Should the term ‘‘same parties’’ be                      changes in law?                                      specific to supported parties. The OCC
                                                    clarified to include affiliate credit                       Question 20: The OCC invites                      may weigh the appropriateness of
                                                    support providers as well as                             comment on all aspects of the proposed               additional protections for supported
                                                    counterparties?                                          treatment of agency transactions,                    QFCs against the potential impact of
                                                       Question 14: Are the proposed                         including whether credit protections                 such provisions on the orderly
                                                    restrictions on cross-default rights                     should apply to QFCs where the direct                resolution of a GSIB.
                                                    under-inclusive, such that the proposed                  party is acting as agent under the QFC.                 In addition to analyzing the request
                                                    terms would permit default rights that                   G. Process for Approval of Enhanced                  under the enumerated factors, a covered
                                                    would have the same or similar                           Creditor Protections (Section 47.6)                  bank requesting that the OCC approve
                                                    potential to undermine an orderly SPOE                                                                        enhanced creditor protections would be
                                                                                                                As discussed previously, the                      required to submit a legal opinion
                                                    resolution and should therefore be
                                                                                                             proposed restrictions would leave many               stating that the requested terms would
                                                    subjected to similar restrictions?
                                                       Question 15: Would it be appropriate                  creditor protections that are commonly               be valid and enforceable under the
                                                    for the prohibition to explicitly cover                  included in QFCs unaffected. The                     applicable law of the relevant
                                                    default rights that are based on or                      proposed rule would also allow any                   jurisdictions, along with any additional
                                                    related to the ‘‘financial condition’’ of                covered bank to submit to the OCC a                  relevant information requested by the
                                                    an affiliate of the direct party (for                    request to approve as compliant with                 OCC.
                                                    example, rights based on an affiliate’s                  the proposed rule one or more QFCs                      Under the proposed rule, the OCC
                                                    credit rating, stock price, or regulatory                that contain additional creditor                     could approve a request for an
                                                    capital levels)?                                         protections—that is, creditor protections            alternative set of creditor protections if
                                                       Question 16: Should the proposed                      that would be impermissible under the                the terms of that QFC, as compared to
                                                    restrictions be expanded to cover                        proposed restrictions set forth                      a covered QFC containing only the
                                                    contractual rights that a QFC                            previously. A covered bank making                    limited exceptions discussed
                                                    counterparty may have to exit the                        such a request would be required to                  previously, would promote the orderly
                                                    termination at will or without cause,                    explain how its request is consistent                resolution of federally chartered or
                                                    including rights that arise on a periodic                with the purposes of this proposed rule,             licensed institutions or their affiliates,
                                                    basis? Could such rights be used to                      including an analysis of the contractual             prevent or mitigate risks to the financial
                                                    circumvent the proposed restrictions on                  terms for which approval is requested in             stability of the United States or the
                                                    cross-default rights? If so, how, if at all,             light of a range of factors that are laid            Federal banking system that could arise
                                                    should the proposed rule regulate such                   out by the proposed rule and intended                from the failure of a global systemically
                                                                                                             to facilitate the OCC’s consideration of             important BHC or global systemically
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                                                    contractual rights?
                                                                                                             whether permitting the contractual                   important FBO, and protect the safety
                                                      56 If a covered bank (acting as agent) is a direct     terms would be consistent with the                   and soundness of covered banks to at
                                                    party to a covered QFC, then the general                 proposed restrictions. The OCC expects               least the same extent. The proposed
                                                    prohibitions of section 47.5(d) would only affect the    to consult with the FDIC and Board                   request-and-approval process would
                                                    substantive rights of the agent’s principal(s) to the    during its consideration of a request                improve flexibility by allowing for an
                                                    extent that the covered QFC provides default rights
                                                    based directly or indirectly on the entry into           under this section.                                  industry-proposed alternative to the set
                                                    resolution of an affiliate of the covered bank (acting      The first two factors concern the                 of creditor protections permitted by the
                                                    as agent).                                               potential impact of the requested                    proposed rule while ensuring that any


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                                                    55394                    Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 161 / Friday, August 19, 2016 / Proposed Rules

                                                    approved alternative would serve the                    of the proposed rule.60 However, the                     covered banks adhere to the Protocol,
                                                    proposed rule’s policy goals to at least                Protocol does have a narrower scope                      any other entity that chooses to adhere
                                                    the same extent.                                        than the proposed rule,61 and it allows                  will simultaneously adhere with respect
                                                       Compliance with the International                    for somewhat stronger creditor                           to all covered entities and covered
                                                    Swaps and Derivatives Association                       protections than would otherwise be                      banks. By allowing for all covered QFCs
                                                    (ISDA) 2015 Universal Resolution Stay                   permitted under the proposed rule.62                     to be modified by the same contractual
                                                    Protocol. In lieu of the process for the                   The Protocol also includes a feature,                 terms, this ‘‘all-or-none’’ feature would
                                                    approval of enhanced creditor                           not included in the proposed rule, that                  promote transparency, predictability,
                                                    protections that are described                          compensates for the Protocol’s narrower                  and equal treatment with respect to
                                                    previously, a covered bank would be                     scope and allowance for stronger                         counterparties’ default rights during the
                                                    permitted to comply with the proposed                   creditor protections: When an entity                     resolution of a GSIB entity and thereby
                                                    rule by amending a covered QFC                          (whether or not it is a covered bank)                    advance the proposed rule’s objective of
                                                    through adherence to the ISDA 2015                      adheres to the Protocol, it necessarily                  increasing the likelihood that such a
                                                    Universal Resolution Stay Protocol                      adheres to the Protocol with respect to                  resolution could be carried out in an
                                                    (including immaterial amendments to                     all covered entities that have also                      orderly manner.
                                                    the Protocol).57 The Protocol ‘‘enables                 adhered to the Protocol.63 Thus, if all                     Like section 47.5 of the proposed rule,
                                                    parties to amend the terms of their                                                                              section 2 of the Protocol was developed
                                                    financial contracts to contractually                       60 For example, sections 2(a) and 2(b) of the         to increase GSIB resolvability under the
                                                    recognize the cross-border application                  Protocol impose general prohibitions on cross-           Bankruptcy Code and other U.S.
                                                                                                            default rights based on the entry of an affiliate of
                                                    of special resolution regimes applicable                the direct party into the most common U.S.
                                                                                                                                                                     insolvency regimes. The Protocol does
                                                    to certain financial companies and                      resolution proceedings, including resolution under       allow for somewhat broader creditor
                                                    support the resolution of certain                       the Bankruptcy Code. By allowing the exercise of         protections than would otherwise be
                                                    financial companies under the U.S.                      ‘‘Performance Default Rights’’ and ‘‘Unrelated           permitted under the proposed rule, but,
                                                                                                            Default Rights,’’ as those terms are defined in
                                                    Bankruptcy Code.’’ 58 The Protocol                      section 6 of the Protocol, sections 2(a) and 2(b) also   consistent with the Protocol’s purpose,
                                                    amends ISDA Master Agreements,                          generally permit the creditor protections that would     those additional creditor protections
                                                    which are used for derivatives                          be allowed under the proposed rule. Section 2(f) of      would not materially diminish the
                                                    transactions. Market participants also                  the Protocol overrides certain contractual               prospects for the orderly resolution of a
                                                                                                            provisions that would block the transfer of a credit
                                                    may amend their master agreements for                   enhancement to a transferee entity. Section 2(i),        GSIB. And the Protocol carries the
                                                    securities financing transactions by                    complemented by the Protocol’s definition of the         desirable all-or-none feature, which
                                                    adhering to the Securities Financing                    term ‘‘Unrelated Default Rights,’’ provides that a       would further increase a GSIB entity’s
                                                    Transaction Annex 59 to the Protocol                    party seeking to exercise permitted default rights       resolvability and which the proposed
                                                                                                            must bear the burden of establishing by clear and
                                                    and may amend all other QFCs by                         convincing evidence that those rights may indeed         rule otherwise lacks. For these reasons,
                                                    adhering to the Other Agreements                        be exercised.                                            and consistent with the broad policy
                                                    Annex. Thus, a covered bank would be                       61 The restrictions on default rights imposed by      objective of enhancing the stability of
                                                    able to comply with the proposed rule                   section 2 of the Protocol apply only when an             the U.S. financial system by increasing
                                                                                                            affiliate of the direct party enters ‘‘U.S. Insolvency
                                                    with respect to all of its covered QFCs                 Proceedings,’’ which is defined to include
                                                                                                                                                                     the resolvability of systemically
                                                    through adherence to the Protocol and                   proceedings under Chapters 7 and 11 of the               important financial companies in the
                                                    the annexes.                                            Bankruptcy Code, the FDIA, and the Securities            United States, the proposed rule would
                                                       The Protocol has the same general                    Investor Protection Act. By contrast, section 47.4 of    allow a covered bank to bring its
                                                    objective as the proposed rule, which is                the proposed rule would apply broadly to default         covered QFCs into compliance by
                                                                                                            rights related to affiliates of the direct party
                                                    to make GSIB entities more resolvable                   ‘‘becoming subject to a receivership, insolvency,        amending them through adherence to
                                                    by amending their contracts to, in effect,              liquidation, resolution, or similar proceeding,’’        the Protocol (and, as relevant, the
                                                    contractually recognize the applicability               which encompasses proceedings under State and            annexes to the Protocol).
                                                    of special resolution regimes (including                foreign law.                                                Question 21: Are the proposed
                                                                                                               62 For example, the Protocol allows a non-
                                                    the OLA and the FDIA) and to restrict                                                                            considerations for the approval of
                                                                                                            defaulting party to exercise cross-default rights
                                                    cross-default provisions to facilitate                  based on the entry of an affiliate of the direct party   enhanced credit protections the
                                                    orderly resolution under the U.S.                       into certain resolution proceedings if the direct        appropriate factors for the OCC to take
                                                    Bankruptcy Code. The provisions of the                  party’s U.S. parent has not gone into resolution. See    into account in deciding whether to
                                                                                                            paragraph (b) of the Protocol’s definition of            grant a request for approval? What other
                                                    Protocol largely track the requirements                 ‘‘Unrelated Default Rights’’; see also sections 1 and
                                                                                                            3(b) of the Protocol. As another example, if the         considerations are potentially relevant
                                                      57 International Swaps and Derivatives
                                                                                                            affiliate credit support provider that has entered       to such a decision?
                                                    Association, Inc., ‘‘ISDA 2015 Universal Resolution     bankruptcy remains obligated under the credit               Question 22: Should the OCC provide
                                                    Stay Protocol’’ (November 4, 2015), available at        enhancement, rather than transferring it to a            greater specificity for the process and
                                                    http://assets.isda.org/media/ac6b533f-3/5a7c32f8-       transferee, then the Protocol’s restrictions on the
                                                    pdf/. The Protocol was developed by a working           exercise of default rights continue to apply beyond
                                                                                                                                                                     procedures for the submission and
                                                    group of member institutions of the ISDA, in            the stay period only if the Bankruptcy Court issues      approval of requests for alternative
                                                    coordination with the FRB, the FDIC, the OCC, and       a ‘‘Creditor Protection Order.’’ Such an order           enhanced credit protections? If so, what
                                                    foreign financial supervisory agencies. ISDA is         would, among other things, grant administrative          processes and procedures could be
                                                    expected to supplement the Protocol with ISDA           expense status to the non-defaulting party’s claims
                                                    Resolution Stay Jurisdictional Modular Protocols        under the credit enhancement. See sections
                                                                                                                                                                     adopted without imposing undue
                                                    for the United States and other jurisdictions. A U.S.   2(b)(i)(B) and 2(b)(iii)(B) of the Protocol and the      regulatory burden?
                                                    module that is the same in all respects to the          Protocol’s definitions of ‘‘Creditor Protection             Question 23: The OCC invites
                                                    Protocol aside from exempting QFCs between              Order’’ and ‘‘DIP Stay Conditions.’’                     comment on its proposal to treat as
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                    adherents that are not covered banks would be              63 Under section 4(a) of the Protocol, the Protocol
                                                    consistent with the current proposed rule.
                                                                                                                                                                     compliant with section 47.6 of the
                                                                                                            is generally effective as between any two adhering
                                                      58 Protocol Press Release at http://www2.isda.org/
                                                                                                            parties, once the relevant effective date has arrived.
                                                                                                                                                                     proposal any covered QFC that has been
                                                    functional-areas/protocol-management/protocol/22.       Under section 4(b)(ii), an adhering party that is not    amended by the Protocol. Does
                                                      59 The Securities Financing Transaction Annex         a covered bank may choose to opt out of section 2        adherence to the Protocol suffice to
                                                    was developed by the International Capital Markets      of the Protocol with respect to its contracts with any   meet the goals of this proposed rule,
                                                    Association, the International Securities Lending       other adhering party that is also not a covered bank.
                                                    Association, and the Securities Industry and            However, the Protocol will apply to relationships
                                                                                                                                                                     appropriately protect the Federal
                                                    Financial Markets Association, in coordination with     between any covered bank that adheres and any            banking system and safeguard U.S.
                                                    the ISDA.                                               other adhering party.                                    financial stability? Should additional


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                                                                             Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 161 / Friday, August 19, 2016 / Proposed Rules                                                       55395

                                                    guidance be provided that would clarify                 banks with an incentive to seek the                   to the Federal banking system and to
                                                    the consultation process with the FRB or                modifications necessary to ensure that                U.S. financial stability.
                                                    any other relevant supervisory agency?                  their QFCs with the most significant                     Question 24: With respect to the
                                                                                                            counterparties are compliant.                         proposed transaction periods, would
                                                    H. Transition Periods (Sections 47.4 and
                                                    47.5)                                                      A covered bank would be required to                there be a reasonable basis for adopting
                                                                                                            bring a preexisting covered QFC entered               different compliance deadlines with
                                                       Under this proposed rule, the final                  into prior to the effective date into                 respect to different classes of QFCs? If
                                                    rule would take effect on the first day                 compliance with the rule no later than                so, how should those classes be
                                                    of the first calendar quarter that begins               the first date on or after the effective              distinguished, and what would be a
                                                    at least one year after the issuance of the             date on which the covered bank or an                  reasonable time frame for compliance?
                                                    final rule (effective date).64 National                 affiliate (that is also a covered entity or
                                                    banks, FSAs, and Federal branches and                                                                            Question 25: Is it necessary for a
                                                                                                            covered bank) enters into a new covered               covered bank to bring preexisting
                                                    agencies that are covered banks when                    QFC with the counterparty to the
                                                    the final rule is issued would be                                                                             covered QFCs entered into prior to the
                                                                                                            preexisting covered QFC or an affiliate               effective date into compliance with the
                                                    required to comply with the proposed                    of the counterparty. The OCC believes
                                                    requirements beginning on the effective                                                                       rule based on a covered bank’s
                                                                                                            such an approach is warranted to ensure               affiliate’s (that is also a covered entity
                                                    date. Thus, a covered bank would be                     that adoption of the contractual
                                                    required to ensure that covered QFCs                                                                          or covered bank) transaction with a
                                                                                                            provisions required by the proposed                   counterparty or its affiliates? Is it
                                                    entered into on or after the effective date             rule are consistent between a given
                                                    comply with the rule’s requirements.                                                                          appropriate to ensure consistent
                                                                                                            counterparty, any affiliate of the                    treatment across all affiliated covered
                                                    Moreover, a covered bank would be
                                                                                                            counterparty, and the covered bank and                banks, covered entities, and affiliated
                                                    required to bring preexisting covered
                                                                                                            all of the affiliates of the covered bank             counterparties?
                                                    QFCs entered into prior to the effective
                                                                                                            (which would essentially be all of the
                                                    date into compliance with the rule no                                                                         I. Amendments to Capital Rules
                                                                                                            entities under a global systemically
                                                    later than the first date on or after the
                                                                                                            important BHC or FBO). The OCC is
                                                    effective date on which the covered                                                                              The Basel III Capital Framework, as
                                                                                                            concerned that to allow counterparties
                                                    bank enters into a new covered QFC                                                                            implemented by the OCC and the other
                                                                                                            to adopt the required contractual
                                                    with the counterparty to the preexisting                                                                      banking agencies, permits a bank to
                                                                                                            provisions with affiliated covered
                                                    covered QFC or with an affiliate of that                                                                      measure exposure from certain types of
                                                    counterparty. Thus, a covered bank                      entities, but not the covered bank, poses
                                                                                                                                                                  financial contracts on a net basis and
                                                    would not be required to conform a                      a risk to the safety and soundness of the
                                                                                                                                                                  recognize the risk-mitigating effect of
                                                    preexisting QFC if that covered bank                    covered bank and would frustrate the
                                                                                                                                                                  financial collateral for other types of
                                                    does not enter into any new QFCs with                   goal of facilitating the orderly resolution
                                                                                                                                                                  exposures, provided that the contracts
                                                    the same counterparty or an affiliate of                of the covered bank (and its affiliate
                                                                                                                                                                  are subject to a ‘‘qualifying master
                                                    that counterparty on or after the                       covered entities). Furthermore, the OCC
                                                                                                                                                                  netting agreement,’’ a collateral
                                                    effective date. Finally, a national bank,               expects that, as a practical matter, the
                                                                                                                                                                  agreement, eligible margin loan, or repo-
                                                    FSA, or Federal branch or agency that                   decision of how to comply with this
                                                                                                                                                                  style transaction (collectively referred to
                                                    becomes a covered bank after the final                  proposed rule and the FRB Proposal
                                                                                                                                                                  as netting agreements) that provides for
                                                    rule is issued would be required to                     with respect to a given counterparty,
                                                                                                                                                                  certain rights upon a counterparty
                                                    comply by the first day of the first                    and its affiliates, will be made in close
                                                                                                                                                                  default. With limited exception, to
                                                    calendar quarter that begins at least one               coordination between the covered bank
                                                                                                                                                                  qualify for netting treatment, a
                                                    year after it becomes a covered bank.                   and its affiliated covered entities.
                                                                                                                                                                  qualifying netting agreement must
                                                       By permitting a covered bank to                         The OCC believes that adoption of the              permit a bank to terminate, apply close-
                                                    remain party to nonconforming QFCs                      modifications required by the proposed                out netting, and promptly liquidate or
                                                    entered into before the effective date                  rule should be consistent between a                   set-off collateral upon an event of
                                                    unless the covered bank enters into new                 given counterparty and all entities                   default of the counterparty (default
                                                    QFCs with the same counterparty or its                  under a global systemically important                 rights), thereby reducing its
                                                    affiliate, the proposed rule draws a                    BHC or FBO, which necessitates                        counterparty exposure and market
                                                    balance between ensuring QFC                            allowing a trade by either a covered                  risks.65 Measuring the amount of
                                                    continuity if a global systemically                     bank or a covered entity to trigger
                                                                                                                                                                  exposure of these contracts on a net
                                                    important BHC or FBO were to fail and                   adoption of the required provisions.
                                                                                                                                                                  basis, rather than a gross basis, results
                                                    ensuring that covered banks and their                   Moreover, the volume of nonconforming
                                                                                                                                                                  in a lower measure of exposure, and
                                                    existing counterparties can avoid any                   covered QFCs outstanding can be
                                                                                                                                                                  thus, a lower capital requirement.
                                                    compliance costs associated with                        expected to decrease over time and
                                                                                                            eventually to reach zero. In light of                    An exception to the immediate close-
                                                    conforming existing QFCs by refraining
                                                                                                            these considerations, and to avoid                    out requirement is made for the stay of
                                                    from entering into new QFCs and
                                                                                                            creating potentially inappropriate                    default rights if the financial company
                                                    avoiding unnecessary disruption to
                                                                                                            compliance costs with respect to                      is in receivership, conservatorship, or
                                                    existing QFCs. The requirement that a
                                                                                                            existing QFCs (which a covered bank                   resolution under Title II of the Dodd-
                                                    covered bank ensure that all existing
                                                                                                            would generally be unable to modify                   Frank Act,66 or the FDIA.67
                                                    QFCs are compliant before entering into
                                                                                                            without its counterparty’s consent), it               Accordingly, transactions conducted
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                                                    a new QFC with the same counterparty
                                                                                                            may be appropriate to permit a limited                under netting agreements where default
                                                    or its affiliate will provide covered
                                                                                                            number of nonconforming QFCs to                       rights may be stayed under Title II of the
                                                       64 Under section 302(b) of the Riegle Community      remain outstanding, in keeping with the
                                                                                                                                                                     65 See 12 CFR 3.2 definition of collateral
                                                    Development and Regulatory Improvement Act of           terms described previously. The OCC
                                                    1994, new regulations that impose requirements on                                                             agreement, eligible margin loan, repo-style
                                                                                                            will monitor covered banks’ levels of                 transaction, and qualifying master netting
                                                    insured depository institutions generally must ‘‘take
                                                    effect on the first day of a calendar quarter which
                                                                                                            nonconforming QFCs and evaluate the                   agreement.
                                                    begins on or after the date on which the regulations    risk, if any, that they pose to the safety               66 See 12 U.S.C. 5390(c)(8)–(16).

                                                    are published in final form.’’ 12 U.S.C. 4802(b).       and soundness of the covered banks or                    67 See 12 U.S.C. 1821(e)(8)–(13).




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                                                    55396                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 161 / Friday, August 19, 2016 / Proposed Rules

                                                    Dodd-Frank Act or the FDIA would not                    agreement, ‘‘eligible margin loan,’’ and              qualifying master netting agreements,
                                                    be disqualified from netting treatment.                 ‘‘repo-style transaction,’’ in the                    and repo-style transactions require
                                                       On December 30, 2014, the OCC and                    regulatory capital rules in part 3, and               national banks and FSAs to conduct
                                                    the FRB issued an interim final rule                    ‘‘qualifying master netting agreement’’               sufficient legal review to ensure that the
                                                    (effective January 1, 2015) that amended                in the LCR rules in part 50 to ensure that            provisions of these financial contracts
                                                    the definitions of ‘‘qualifying master                  the regulatory capital, liquidity, and                would be enforceable in all relevant
                                                    netting agreement,’’ ‘‘collateral                       lending limits treatment of OTC                       jurisdictions. Should the scope of the
                                                    agreement,’’ ‘‘eligible margin loan,’’ and              derivatives, repo-style transactions,                 legal review requirement be expanded to
                                                    ‘‘repo-style transaction,’’ in the OCC and              eligible margin loans, and other                      explicitly include the enforceability of
                                                    FRB regulatory capital rules, and                       collateralized transactions would be                  the direct default and cross-default
                                                    ‘‘qualifying master netting agreement’’                 unaffected by the adoption of proposed                provisions required by the proposed
                                                    in the OCC and FRB liquidity coverage                   section 47.5. Without these proposed                  rule?
                                                    ratio (LCR) rules to expand the                         amendments, covered banks that amend
                                                    exception to the immediate close-out                    their covered QFCs to comply with this                IV. Request for Comments
                                                    requirement to ensure that the current                  proposed rule would no longer be                        In addition to the specifically
                                                    netting treatment under the regulatory                  permitted to recognize covered QFCs as                enumerated questions in the preamble,
                                                    capital, liquidity, and lending limits                  subject to a qualifying master netting                the OCC requests comment on all
                                                    rules for over-the-counter (OTC)                        agreement or satisfying the criteria                  aspects of this proposed rule. The OCC
                                                    derivatives, repo-style transactions,                   necessary for the current regulatory                  requests that, for the specifically
                                                    eligible margin loans, and other                        capital, liquidity, and lending limits                enumerated questions, commenters
                                                    collateralized transactions would be                    treatment, and would be required to                   include the number of the question in
                                                    unaffected by the adoption of various                   measure exposure from these contracts                 their response to make review of the
                                                    foreign special resolution regimes                      on a gross, rather than net, basis. This              comments more efficient.
                                                    through the ISDA Protocol.68 In                         result would undermine the proposed
                                                    particular, the interim final rule                      requirements in section 47.5. The OCC                 V. Regulatory Analysis
                                                    amended these definitions to provide                    does not believe that the                             A. Paperwork Reduction Act
                                                    that a relevant netting agreement or                    disqualification of covered QFCs from
                                                                                                                                                                    In accordance with section 3512 of
                                                    collateral agreement may provide for a                  master netting agreements would
                                                                                                                                                                  the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) of
                                                    limited stay or avoidance of rights                     accurately reflect the risk posed by these
                                                                                                                                                                  1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501–3521) (as
                                                    where the agreement is subject by its                   OTC derivative transactions.
                                                                                                               Although the proposed rule reformats               amended), the OCC may not conduct or
                                                    terms to, or incorporates, certain                                                                            sponsor, and a respondent is not
                                                    resolution regimes applicable to                        some of the definitions in parts 3 and 50
                                                                                                            to include the text from the interim final            required to respond to, an information
                                                    financial companies, including Title II                                                                       collection unless it displays a currently
                                                    of the Dodd-Frank Act, the FDIA, or any                 rule, the proposed amendments do not
                                                                                                            alter the substance or effect of the prior            valid Office of Management and Budget
                                                    similar foreign resolution regime that                                                                        (OMB) control number.
                                                    provides for limited stays substantially                amendment adopted by the interim final
                                                                                                            rule.                                                   Certain provisions of the proposed
                                                    similar to the stay for qualified financial                                                                   rule contain ‘‘collection of information’’
                                                    contracts provided in Title II of the                      The rule establishing margin and
                                                                                                            capital requirements for covered swap                 requirements within the meaning of the
                                                    Dodd-Frank Act or the FDIA.                                                                                   PRA. In accordance with the
                                                       Section 47.4 of the proposed rule                    entities (swap margin rule) defines the
                                                                                                            term ‘‘eligible master netting                        requirements of the PRA, the OCC may
                                                    essentially limits the default rights
                                                                                                            agreement’’ in a manner similar to the                not conduct or sponsor, and the
                                                    exercisable against a covered bank to the
                                                                                                            definition of ‘‘qualifying master netting             respondent is not required to respond
                                                    same stay and transfer restrictions
                                                                                                            agreement.’’ 69 Thus, it may also be                  to, an information collection unless it
                                                    imposed under the U.S. special
                                                                                                            appropriate to amend the definition of                displays a currently-valid OMB control
                                                    resolution regime against a direct
                                                                                                            ‘‘eligible master netting agreement’’ to              number. The information collection
                                                    counterparty. Section 47.4 of the
                                                                                                            account for the proposed restrictions on              requirements contained in this proposed
                                                    proposed rule mirrors the contractual
                                                                                                            covered entities’ QFCs.                               rulemaking have been submitted to
                                                    stay and transfer restrictions reflected in
                                                                                                               Question 26: As noted, the                         OMB for review and approval under
                                                    the ISDA Protocol with one notable
                                                                                                            requirements of this proposed rule are                section 3507(d) of the PRA (44 U.S.C.
                                                    difference. While adoption of the ISDA
                                                                                                            mandatory for all covered banks with                  3507(d)) and section 1320.11 of the
                                                    Protocol is voluntary, covered banks
                                                                                                            respect to their covered QFCs. Under the              OMB’s implementing regulations (5 CFR
                                                    subject to the proposed rule must
                                                                                                            proposed rule failure by a covered bank               1320).
                                                    conform their covered QFCs to the stay
                                                                                                            to conform its covered QFCs to the                      Comments are invited on:
                                                    and transfer restrictions in section 47.4.
                                                       With respect to limitations on cross-                mandatory requirements would be a                       (a) Whether the collections of
                                                    default rights in proposed section 47.5,                violation of the rule. In light of the                information are necessary for the proper
                                                    the OCC is proposing amendments in                      important policy objectives of this                   performance of the OCC’s functions,
                                                    order to maintain the existing netting                  proposed rule, should the regulatory                  including whether the information has
                                                    treatment for covered QFCs for purposes                 capital and LCR rules require that                    practical utility;
                                                    of the regulatory capital, liquidity, and               nonconforming covered QFCs that                         (b) The accuracy of the estimates of
                                                                                                                                                                  the burden of the information
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                                                    lending limits rules. Specifically, the                 violate the requirements of the proposed
                                                    OCC is proposing to amend the                           rule be disqualified from netting                     collections, including the validity of the
                                                    definition of ‘‘qualifying master netting               treatment?                                            methodology and assumptions used;
                                                    agreement,’’ as well as to make                            Question 27. In order to qualify for                 (c) Ways to enhance the quality,
                                                    conforming amendments to ‘‘collateral                   netting treatment under the regulatory                utility, and clarity of the information to
                                                                                                            capital rules, eligible margin loans,                 be collected;
                                                      68 The FDIC issued a NPRM on January 30, 2015                                                                 (d) Ways to minimize the burden of
                                                    to propose these conforming amendments. See 80            69 80 FR 74840, 74861–74862 (November 30,           the information collections on
                                                    FR 5063 (January 30, 2015).                             2015).                                                respondents, including through the use


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                                                                            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 161 / Friday, August 19, 2016 / Proposed Rules                                             55397

                                                    of automated collection techniques or                   relevant to its approval that the OCC                 regulations that impose additional
                                                    other forms of information technology;                  requests.                                             reporting, disclosure, or other
                                                    and                                                       Burden Estimates:                                   requirements on insured depository
                                                       (e) Estimates of capital or start-up                   Estimated Number of Respondents:                    institutions, the OCC will consider,
                                                    costs and costs of operation,                           42.                                                   consistent with the principles of safety
                                                    maintenance, and purchase of services                     Estimated Burden per Respondent:                    and soundness and the public interest:
                                                    to provide information.                                   Reporting (§ 47.7): 40 hours.                       (1) Any administrative burdens that the
                                                       All comments will become a matter of                   Total Estimated Burden: 1,680 hours.                proposed rule would place on
                                                    public record. Comments on aspects of                                                                         depository institutions, including small
                                                    this notice that may affect reporting,                  B. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
                                                                                                                                                                  depository institutions and customers of
                                                    recordkeeping, or disclosure                              The Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5                   depository institutions, and (2) the
                                                    requirements and burden estimates                       U.S.C. 601 et seq. (‘‘RFA’’), generally               benefits of the proposed rule. The OCC
                                                    should be sent to the addresses listed in               requires that, in connection with a                   requests comment on any administrative
                                                    the ADDRESSES section of this document.                 NPRM, an agency prepare and make                      burdens that the proposed rule would
                                                    A copy of the comments may also be                      available for public comment an initial               place on depository institutions,
                                                    submitted to the OMB desk officer for                   regulatory flexibility analysis that                  including small depository institutions,
                                                    the agencies: by mail to U.S. Office of                 describes the impact of a proposed rule               and their customers, and the benefits of
                                                    Management and Budget, 725 17th                         on small entities.70 The Small Business               the proposed rule that the OCC should
                                                    Street NW., #10235, Washington, DC                      Administration has defined ‘‘small                    consider in determining the effective
                                                    20503; by facsimile to (202) 395–5806;                  entities’’ for banking purposes to                    date and administrative compliance
                                                    or by email to: oira_submission@                        include a bank or savings association                 requirements for a final rule.
                                                    omb.eop.gov, Attention, Federal                         with $175 million or less in assets.71
                                                    Banking Agency Desk Officer.                              The OCC currently supervises                        List of Subjects
                                                       Title of Information Collection:                     approximately 1,032 small entities. The               12 CFR Part 3
                                                    Mandatory Contractual Stay                              scope of the proposal is limited to large
                                                    Requirements for Qualified Financial                    banks and their affiliates. Therefore, the              Administrative practice and
                                                    Contracts.                                              proposed rule will not impact any OCC-                procedure; Capital; Federal savings
                                                       Affected Public: Businesses or other                 supervised small entities. Accordingly,               associations; National banks; Reporting
                                                    for-profit.                                             the proposal will not have a significant              and recordkeeping requirements; Risk.
                                                       Respondents: Banks or FSAs                           economic impact on a substantial
                                                    (including any subsidiary of a bank or                                                                        12 CFR Part 47
                                                                                                            number of small entities.
                                                    FSA) that are subsidiaries of a global                                                                          Administrative practice and
                                                    systemically important BHC that has                     C. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of                    procedure; Banks and banking; Bank
                                                    been designated pursuant to 252.82(a)(1)                1995                                                  resolution; Default rights; Federal
                                                    of the Federal Reserve Board’s                             The OCC has analyzed the proposed                  savings associations, National banks,
                                                    Regulation YY; Banks or FSAs                            rule under the factors in the Unfunded                Qualified financial contracts; Reporting
                                                    (including any subsidiary of a bank or                  Mandates Reform Act of 1995                           and recordkeeping requirements;
                                                    FSA) that are subsidiaries of a global                  (UMRA).72 Under this analysis, the OCC                Securities.
                                                    systemically important FBO designated                   considered whether the proposed rule
                                                    pursuant to section 252.87 of the                                                                             12 CFR Part 50
                                                                                                            includes a Federal mandate that may
                                                    Federal Reserve Board’s Regulation YY;                  result in the expenditure by State, local,              Administrative practice and
                                                    and Federal branches and agencies                       and tribal governments, in the aggregate,             procedure; Banks and banking;
                                                    (including any U.S. subsidiary of a                     or by the private sector, of $100 million             Liquidity; Reporting and recordkeeping
                                                    Federal branch or agency), of a global                  or more in any one year (adjusted                     requirements; Savings associations.
                                                    systemically important FBO that has                     annually for inflation). The UMRA does                Authority and Issuance
                                                    been designated pursuant to section                     not apply to regulations that incorporate
                                                    252.87 of the Federal Reserve Board’s                                                                           For the reasons stated in the
                                                                                                            requirements specifically set forth in
                                                    Regulation YY.                                                                                                Supplementary Information, the Office
                                                                                                            law.
                                                       Abstract: Section 47.6 provides that a                                                                     of the Comptroller of the Currency
                                                                                                               The OCC’s estimated UMRA cost is
                                                    covered bank may request that the OCC                                                                         proposes to amend part 3, add a new
                                                                                                            less than $2 million. Therefore, the OCC
                                                    approve as compliant with the                                                                                 part 47, and amend part 50 as follows:
                                                                                                            finds that the proposed rule does not
                                                    requirements of section 47.5, regarding
                                                                                                            trigger the UMRA cost threshold.                      PART 3—CAPITAL ADEQUACY
                                                    insolvency proceedings, provisions of
                                                                                                            Accordingly, the OCC has not prepared                 STANDARDS
                                                    one or more forms of covered QFCs, or
                                                                                                            the written statement described in
                                                    amendments to one or more forms of
                                                                                                            section 202 of the UMRA.                              ■ 1. The authority citation for part 3
                                                    covered QFCs, with enhanced creditor
                                                    protection conditions. The request must                 D. Riegle Community Development and                   continues to read as follows:
                                                    include: (1) an analysis of the proposal                Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994                      Authority: 12 U.S.C. 93a, 161, 1462, 1462a,
                                                    under each consideration of the                                                                               1463, 1464, 1818, 1828(n), 1828 note, 1831n
                                                                                                              Pursuant to section 302(a) of the                   note, 1835, 3907, 3909, and 5412(b)(2)(B).
                                                    relevance of creditor protection                        Riegle Community Development and
                                                    provisions; (2) a written legal opinion                                                                       ■  2. Section 3.2 is amended by:
jstallworth on DSK7TPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS




                                                                                                            Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994
                                                    verifying that proposed provisions or                   (RCDRI Act),73 in determining the                     ■  a. Revising the definition of
                                                    amendments would be valid and                           effective date and administrative                     ‘‘collateral agreement’’ by:
                                                    enforceable under applicable law of the                                                                       ■ i. Removing the word ‘‘or’’ at the end
                                                                                                            compliance requirements for new
                                                    relevant jurisdictions, including, in the                                                                     of paragraph (1);
                                                    case of proposed amendments, the                          70 See 5 U.S.C. 603(a).                             ■ ii. Removing the period at the end of
                                                    validity and enforceability of the                        71 See 13 CFR 121.201.                              paragraph (2) and adding in its place ‘‘;
                                                    proposal to amend the covered QFCs;                       72 2 U.S.C. 1531 et seq.                            or’’; and
                                                    and (3) any additional information                        73 12 U.S.C. 4802(a).                               ■ iii. Adding a new paragraph (3).



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                                                    55398                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 161 / Friday, August 19, 2016 / Proposed Rules

                                                    ■ b. Revising paragraph (1)(iii) of the                 facilitate the orderly resolution of the              substantially similar 8 to the U.S. laws
                                                    definition of ‘‘eligible margin loan’’; and             defaulting counterparty; or                           referenced in this paragraph (3)(ii)(a) in
                                                    ■ c. Revising the definition of                            (B) Where the right to accelerate,                 order to facilitate the orderly resolution
                                                    ‘‘qualifying master netting agreement’’                 terminate, and close-out on a net basis               of the defaulting counterparty; or
                                                    by:                                                     all transactions under the agreement                     (2) Where the right to accelerate,
                                                    ■ i. Removing the word ‘‘or’’ at the end                and to liquidate or set-off collateral                terminate, and close-out on a net basis
                                                    of paragraph (2)(i);                                    promptly upon an event of default of the              all transactions under the agreement
                                                    ■ ii. Removing the ’’;’’ at the end of                  counterparty is limited only to the                   and to liquidate or set-off collateral
                                                    paragraph (2)(ii) and adding in its place               extent necessary to comply with the                   promptly upon an event of default of the
                                                    ‘‘; or’’; and                                           requirements of part 47 of this title 12              counterparty is limited only to the
                                                    ■ iii. Adding a new paragraph (2)(iii).                 or any similar requirements of another                extent necessary to comply with the
                                                    ■ d. Revising paragraph (3)(ii)(A) of the               U.S. Federal banking agency, as                       requirements of part 47 of this title 12
                                                    definition of ‘‘repo-style transaction’’.               applicable;                                           or any similar requirements of another
                                                        The revisions are set forth below:                                                                        U.S. Federal banking agency, as
                                                                                                               or                                                 applicable; or
                                                    § 3.2   Definitions.                                    *       *    *     *    *                             *      *    *     *     *
                                                    *       *    *    *     *                                  Qualifying master netting agreement
                                                       Collateral agreement means * * *                     means a written, legally enforceable                  PART 47—MANDATORY
                                                    *       *    *    *     *                               agreement provided that:                              CONTRACTUAL STAY
                                                       (3) Where the right to accelerate,                   *       *    *     *    *                             REQUIREMENTS FOR QUALIFIED
                                                    terminate, and close-out on a net basis                                                                       FINANCIAL CONTRACTS
                                                                                                               (2) * * *
                                                    all transactions under the agreement                    *       *    *     *    *                             ■ 3. The authority citation for Part 47
                                                    and to liquidate or set-off collateral                                                                        shall read as follows:
                                                    promptly upon an event of default of the                   (iii) Where the right to accelerate,
                                                    counterparty is limited only to the                     terminate, and close-out on a net basis                 Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1, 93a, 481, 1462a,
                                                                                                            all transactions under the agreement                  1463, 1464, 1467a, 1818, 1828, 1831n, 1831o,
                                                    extent necessary to comply with the                                                                           1831p–1, 1831w, 1835, 3102(b), 3108(a),
                                                    requirements of part 47 of this title 12                and to liquidate or set-off collateral
                                                                                                                                                                  5412(b)(2)(B), (D)–(F).
                                                    or any similar requirements of another                  promptly upon an event of default of the
                                                                                                                                                                  ■   4. Add new Part 47 to read as follows:
                                                    U.S. Federal banking agency, as                         counterparty is limited only to the
                                                    applicable.                                             extent necessary to comply with the                   PART 47—MANDATORY
                                                                                                            requirements of part 47 of this title 12              CONTRACTUAL STAY
                                                    *       *    *    *     *                               or any similar requirements of another
                                                       Eligible margin loan means: (1) * * *                                                                      REQUIREMENTS FOR QUALIFIED
                                                                                                            U.S. Federal banking agency, as                       FINANCIAL CONTRACTS
                                                    *       *    *    *     *                               applicable.
                                                       (iii) The extension of credit is                     *       *    *     *    *                             Sec.
                                                    conducted under an agreement that                                                                             47.1  Authority and Purpose.
                                                    provides the national bank or Federal                      Repo-style transaction means a                     47.2  Definitions.
                                                    savings association the right to                        repurchase or reverse repurchase                      47.3  Applicability.
                                                    accelerate and terminate the extension                  transaction, or a securities borrowing or             47.4  U.S. Special Resolution Regimes.
                                                                                                            securities lending transaction, including             47.5  Insolvency Proceedings.
                                                    of credit and to liquidate or set-off                                                                         47.6  Approval of Enhanced Creditor
                                                    collateral promptly upon an event of                    a transaction in which the national bank
                                                                                                            or Federal savings association acts as                    Protection Conditions.
                                                    default, including upon an event of                                                                           47.7 Exclusion of Certain QFCs.
                                                    receivership, insolvency, liquidation,                  agent for a customer and indemnifies                  47.8 Foreign Bank Multi-Branch Master
                                                    conservatorship, or similar proceeding,                 the customer against loss, provided that:                 Agreements.
                                                    of the counterparty, provided that, in                  *       *    *     *    *
                                                    any such case, any exercise of rights                      (3) * * *                                          PART 47—MANDATORY
                                                    under the agreement will not be stayed                                                                        CONTRACTUAL STAY
                                                                                                               (ii) * * *                                         REQUIREMENTS FOR QUALIFIED
                                                    or avoided under applicable law in the                     (A) The transaction is executed under
                                                    relevant jurisdictions, other than:                                                                           FINANCIAL CONTRACTS
                                                                                                            an agreement that provides the national
                                                       (A) In receivership, conservatorship,                bank or Federal savings association the               § 47.1   Authority and Purpose.
                                                    or resolution under the Federal Deposit                 right to accelerate, terminate, and close-               (a) Authority. 12 U.S.C. 1, 93a, 1462a,
                                                    Insurance Act, Title II of the Dodd-                    out the transaction on a net basis and to             1463, 1464, 1467a, 1818, 1828, 1831n,
                                                    Frank Act, or under any similar                         liquidate or set-off collateral promptly              1831p-1, 1831w, 1835, 3102(b), 3108(a),
                                                    insolvency law applicable to GSEs,5 or                  upon an event of default, including                   5412(b)(2)(B), (D)–(F).
                                                    laws of foreign jurisdictions that are                  upon an event of receivership,                           (b) Purpose. The purpose of this part
                                                    substantially similar 6 to the U.S. laws                insolvency, liquidation, or similar                   is to promote the safety and soundness
                                                    referenced in this paragraph in order to                proceeding, of the counterparty,                      of federally chartered or licensed
                                                                                                            provided that, in any such case, any                  institutions by mitigating the potential
                                                      5 This requirement is met where all transactions
                                                                                                            exercise of rights under the agreement                destabilizing effects of the resolution of
                                                    under the agreement are (i) executed under U.S. law
                                                    and (ii) constitute ‘‘securities contracts’’ under      will not be stayed or avoided under                   a global significantly important banking
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                                                    section 555 of the Bankruptcy Code (11 U.S.C. 555),     applicable law in the relevant                        entity on an affiliate that is a covered
                                                    qualified financial contracts under section 11(e)(8)    jurisdictions, other than:                            bank (as defined by this part) by
                                                    of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, or netting                                                              requiring covered banks to include in
                                                    contracts between or among financial institutions          (1) In receivership, conservatorship,
                                                    under sections 401–407 of the Federal Deposit           or resolution under the Federal Deposit               financial contracts covered by this part
                                                    Insurance Corporation Improvement Act or the            Insurance Act, Title II of the Dodd-                  certain mandatory contractual
                                                    FRB’s Regulation EE (12 CFR part 231).                  Frank Act, or under any similar
                                                      6 The OCC expects to evaluate jointly with the                                                                8 The OCC expects to evaluate jointly with the

                                                    FRB and FDIC whether foreign special resolution
                                                                                                            insolvency law applicable to GSEs, or                 FRB and FDIC whether foreign special resolution
                                                    regimes meet the requirements of this paragraph.        laws of foreign jurisdictions that are                regimes meet the requirements of this paragraph.



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                                                                            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 161 / Friday, August 19, 2016 / Proposed Rules                                          55399

                                                    provisions relating to stays on                         entitles a party to demand the return of              5394, and regulations promulgated
                                                    acceleration and close out rights and                   any collateral or margin transferred by               thereunder.
                                                    transfer rights.                                        it to the other party or a custodian or
                                                                                                            that modifies a transferee’s right to reuse           § 47.3   Applicability.
                                                    § 47.2   Definitions.                                   collateral or margin (if such right                      (a) Scope of applicability. This part
                                                       Central counterparty or CCP has the                  previously existed), or any similar                   applies to a ‘‘covered bank,’’ which
                                                    same meaning as in section 252.81 of                    rights, in each case, other than a right              includes:
                                                    the Federal Reserve Board’s Regulation                  or operation of a contractual provision                  (i) A national bank or Federal savings
                                                    YY (12 CFR 252.81).                                     arising solely from a change in the value             association (including any subsidiary of
                                                       Chapter 11 proceeding means a                        of collateral or margin or a change in the            a national bank or a Federal savings
                                                    proceeding under the provisions of                      amount of an economic exposure;                       association) that is a subsidiary of a
                                                    Chapter 11 of the bankruptcy laws of the                   (2) With respect to section 47.5 of this           global systemically important bank
                                                    United States at 11 U.S.C. 1101–74                      part, does not include any right under                holding company that has been
                                                    (Chapter 11 of Title 11, United States                  a contract that allows a party to                     designated pursuant to section
                                                    Code).                                                  terminate the contract on demand, or at               252.82(a)(1) of the Federal Reserve
                                                       Covered entity has the same meaning                  its option at a specified time, or from               Board’s Regulation YY (12 CFR
                                                    as in section 252.82(a) of the Federal                  time to time, without the need to show                252.82(a)(1)); or
                                                    Reserve Board’s Regulation YY (12 CFR                   cause.                                                   (ii) A national bank or Federal savings
                                                    252.82).                                                   Dodd-Frank Act means the Dodd-                     association (including any subsidiary of
                                                       Covered QFC means a QFC as defined                   Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer                 a national bank or a Federal savings
                                                    in sections 47.4(a) and 47.5(a) of this                 Protection Act, Pub. L. 111–203, 124                  association) that is a subsidiary of a
                                                    part.                                                   Stat. 1376 (July 21, 2010).                           global systemically important foreign
                                                       Credit enhancement means a QFC of                       FDIA proceeding means a proceeding                 banking organization that has been
                                                    the type set forth in Title II of the Dodd-             in which the Federal Deposit Insurance                designated pursuant to section 252.87 of
                                                    Frank Act at section 210(c)(8)(D)(ii)(XII),             Corporation is appointed as conservator               the Federal Reserve Board’s Regulation
                                                    (iii)(X), (iv)(V), (v)(VI), or (vi)(VI), 12             or receiver under section 11 of the                   YY (12 CFR 252.87); or
                                                    U.S.C. 5390(c)(8)(D)(ii)(XII), (iii)(X),                Federal Deposit Insurance Act, 12
                                                    (iv)(V), (v)(VI), or (vi)(VI); or a credit                                                                       (iii) A Federal branch or agency, as
                                                                                                            U.S.C. 1821.                                          defined in the Subpart B of Part 28 of
                                                    enhancement that the Federal Deposit                       FDIA stay period means, in
                                                    Insurance Corporation determines by                                                                           this Chapter (governing Federal
                                                                                                            connection with an FDIA proceeding,
                                                    regulation is a QFC pursuant to section                                                                       branches and agencies), and any U.S.
                                                                                                            the period of time during which a party
                                                    210(c)(8)(D)(i), 12 U.S.C.                                                                                    subsidiary of the Federal branch or
                                                                                                            to a QFC whose counterparty is subject
                                                    5390(c)(8)(D)(i), of the Dodd-Frank Act.                                                                      agency, of a global systemically
                                                                                                            to an FDIA proceeding may not exercise
                                                       Default right (1) Means, with respect                                                                      important foreign banking organization
                                                                                                            any right that the counterparty has to
                                                    to a QFC, any:                                                                                                that has been designated pursuant to
                                                                                                            terminate, liquidate, or net such QFC, in
                                                       (i) Right of a party, whether                                                                              section 252.87 of the Federal Reserve
                                                                                                            accordance with section 11(e) of the
                                                    contractual or otherwise (including,                                                                          Board’s Regulation YY (12 CFR 252.87).
                                                                                                            Federal Deposit Insurance Act, 12
                                                    without limitation, rights incorporated                                                                          (b) Subsidiary of a covered bank. This
                                                                                                            U.S.C. 1821(e), and any implementing
                                                    by reference to any other contract,                                                                           part generally applies to the subsidiary
                                                                                                            regulations.
                                                    agreement, or document, and rights                         Master agreement means a QFC of the                of any national bank, Federal savings
                                                    afforded by statute, civil code,                        type set forth in Title II of the Dodd-               association, or Federal branch or agency
                                                    regulation, and common law), to                         Frank Act at section 210(c)(8)(D)(ii)(XI),            that is a covered bank under paragraph
                                                    liquidate, terminate, cancel, rescind, or               (iii)(IX), (iv)(IV), (v)(V), or (vi)(V), 12           (a)(1) of this section. Specifically, the
                                                    accelerate such agreement or                            U.S.C. 5390(c)(8)(D)(ii)(XI), (iii)(IX),              covered bank is required to ensure that
                                                    transactions thereunder, set off or net                 (iv)(IV), (v)(V), or (vi)(V); or a master             a covered QFC to which the subsidiary
                                                    amounts owing in respect thereto                        agreement that the Federal Deposit                    is a party (as a direct counterparty or a
                                                    (except rights related to same-day                      Insurance Corporation determines by                   support provider) satisfies the
                                                    payment netting), exercise remedies in                  regulation is a QFC pursuant to section               requirements of sections 47.4 and 47.5
                                                    respect of collateral or other credit                   210(c)(8)(D)(i) of the Dodd-Frank Act, 12             of this part in the same manner and to
                                                    support or property related thereto                     U.S.C. 5390(c)(8)(D)(i).                              the same extent applicable to the
                                                    (including the purchase and sale of                        QFC or qualified financial contract                covered bank.
                                                    property), demand payment or delivery                   has the same meaning as in section                       (c) Initial applicability of
                                                    thereunder or in respect thereof (other                 210(c)(8)(D) of Title II of the Dodd-Frank            requirements for covered QFCs. A
                                                    than a right or operation of a contractual              Act, 12 U.S.C. 5390(c)(8)(D).                         covered bank must comply with the
                                                    provision arising solely from a change                     Subsidiary of covered bank means any               requirements of sections 47.4 and 47.5
                                                    in the value of collateral or margin or a               operating subsidiary of a national bank,              beginning on the later of
                                                    change in the amount of an economic                     Federal savings association, or Federal                  (1) The first day of the calendar
                                                    exposure), suspend, delay, or defer                     branch or agency as defined in 12 CFR                 quarter immediately following 365 days
                                                    payment or performance thereunder, or                   5.34 (national banks) or 12 CFR 5.38                  (1 year) after becoming a covered bank;
                                                    modify the obligations of a party                       (FSAs), or any other subsidiary of a                  or
                                                    thereunder, or any similar rights; and                  covered bank as defined in section                       (2) The date this subpart first becomes
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                                                       (ii) Right or contractual provision that             252.82(a)(2) and (3) of the Federal                   effective.
                                                    alters the amount of collateral or margin               Reserve Board’s Regulation YY (12 CFR                    (d) Rule of construction. For purposes
                                                    that must be provided with respect to an                252.82(a)(2) and (3)).                                of this subpart, the exercise of a default
                                                    exposure thereunder, including by                          U.S. special resolution regimes means              right with respect to a covered QFC
                                                    altering any initial amount, threshold                  the Federal Deposit Insurance Act at 12               includes the automatic or deemed
                                                    amount, variation margin, minimum                       U.S.C. 1811–1835a and regulations                     exercise of the default right pursuant to
                                                    transfer amount, the margin value of                    promulgated thereunder and Title II of                the terms of the QFC or other
                                                    collateral, or any similar amount, that                 the Dodd-Frank Act, 12 U.S.C. 5381–                   arrangement.


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                                                    55400                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 161 / Friday, August 19, 2016 / Proposed Rules

                                                    § 47.4   U.S. Special Resolution Regimes.                  (3) To the extent that the covered                 of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
                                                       (a) QFCs required to be conformed. (1)               bank is acting as agent with respect to               and Consumer Protection Act, or laws of
                                                    A covered bank must ensure that each                    a QFC, the requirements of this section               foreign jurisdictions that are
                                                    of its covered QFCs conforms to the                     apply to the extent the transfer of the               substantially similar to the U.S. laws
                                                    requirements of this section 47.4.                      QFC relates to the covered bank or the                referenced in this paragraph (e)(1) in
                                                       (2) For purposes of this section 47.4,               default rights relate to an affiliate of the          order to facilitate the orderly resolution
                                                    a covered QFC means a QFC that the                      covered bank.                                         of the direct party;
                                                    covered bank:                                              (b) General Prohibitions. (1) A                       (2) The direct party not satisfying a
                                                       (i) Enters, executes, or otherwise                   covered QFC may not permit the                        payment or delivery obligation pursuant
                                                    becomes a party to; or                                  exercise of any default right with                    to the covered QFC or another contract
                                                       (ii) Entered, executed, or otherwise                 respect to the covered QFC that is                    between the same parties that gives rise
                                                    became a party to before the date this                  related, directly or indirectly, to an                to a default right in the covered QFC; or
                                                    subpart first becomes effective, if the                 affiliate of the direct party becoming                   (3) The covered affiliate support
                                                    covered bank or any affiliate that is a                 subject to a receivership, insolvency,                provider or transferee not satisfying a
                                                    covered bank or covered entity also                     liquidation, resolution, or similar                   payment or delivery obligation pursuant
                                                    enters, executes, or otherwise becomes a                proceeding.                                           to a covered affiliate credit
                                                                                                               (2) A covered QFC may not prohibit                 enhancement that supports the covered
                                                    party to a QFC with the same person or
                                                                                                            the transfer of a covered affiliate credit            direct QFC.
                                                    affiliate of the same person on or after
                                                                                                            enhancement, any interest or obligation                  (f) Definitions relevant to the general
                                                    the date this subpart first becomes
                                                                                                            in or under the covered affiliate credit              creditor protections and this part. (1)
                                                    effective.
                                                                                                            enhancement, or any property securing                 Covered direct QFC. Covered direct QFC
                                                       (3) To the extent that the covered                   the covered affiliate credit enhancement
                                                    bank is acting as agent with respect to                                                                       means a direct QFC to which a covered
                                                                                                            to a transferee upon an affiliate of the              bank, or a covered entity referenced in
                                                    a QFC, the requirements of this section                 direct party becoming subject to a
                                                    apply to the extent the transfer of the                                                                       section 47.2, is a party.
                                                                                                            receivership, insolvency, liquidation,                   (2) Covered affiliate credit
                                                    QFC relates to the covered bank or the                  resolution, or similar proceeding unless
                                                    default rights relate to the covered bank                                                                     enhancement. Covered affiliate credit
                                                                                                            the transfer would result in the                      enhancement means an affiliate credit
                                                    or an affiliate of the covered bank.                    supported party being the beneficiary of
                                                       (b) Provisions required. A covered                                                                         enhancement in which a covered bank,
                                                                                                            the credit enhancement in violation of                or a covered entity referenced in section
                                                    QFC must explicitly provide that:                       any law applicable to the supported
                                                       (1) The transfer of the covered QFC                                                                        47.2, is the obligor of the credit
                                                                                                            party.                                                enhancement.
                                                    (and any interest and obligation in or                     (c) Definitions relevant to the general
                                                    under, and any property securing, the                                                                            (3) Covered affiliate support provider.
                                                                                                            prohibitions and this part. (1) Direct
                                                    covered QFC) from the covered bank                                                                            Covered affiliate support provider
                                                                                                            party. Direct party means covered bank,
                                                    will be effective to the same extent as                                                                       means, with respect to a covered
                                                                                                            or covered entity referenced in section
                                                    the transfer would be effective under the                                                                     affiliate credit enhancement, the affiliate
                                                                                                            47.2, that is a party to the direct QFC.
                                                    U.S. special resolution regimes if the                     (2) Direct QFC. Direct QFC means a                 of the direct party that is obligated
                                                    covered QFC (and any interest and                       QFC that is not a credit enhancement,                 under the covered affiliate credit
                                                    obligation in or under, and any property                provided that, for a QFC that is a master             enhancement and is not a transferee.
                                                    securing, the covered QFC) were                         agreement that includes an affiliate                     (4) Supported party. Supported party
                                                    governed by the laws of the United                      credit enhancement as a supplement to                 means, with respect to a covered
                                                    States or a state of the United States and              the master agreement, the direct QFC                  affiliate credit enhancement and the
                                                    the covered bank were under the U.S.                    does not include the affiliate credit                 direct QFC that the covered affiliate
                                                    special resolution regime; and                          enhancement.                                          credit enhancement supports, a party
                                                       (2) Default rights with respect to the                  (3) Affiliate credit enhancement.                  that is a beneficiary of the covered
                                                    covered QFC that may be exercised                       Affiliate credit enhancement means a                  affiliate support provider’s obligation
                                                    against the covered bank are permitted                  credit enhancement that is provided by                under the covered affiliate credit
                                                    to be exercised to no greater extent than               an affiliate of a party to the direct QFC             enhancement.
                                                    the default rights could be exercised                   that the credit enhancement supports.                    (g) Additional creditor protections for
                                                    under the U.S. special resolution                          (d) Treatment of agent transactions.               supported QFCs. Notwithstanding
                                                    regimes if the covered QFC was                          With respect to a QFC that is a covered               paragraph (b) of this section, with
                                                    governed by the laws of the United                      QFC for a covered bank solely because                 respect to a covered direct QFC that is
                                                    States or a state of the United States and              the covered bank is acting as agent                   supported by a covered affiliate credit
                                                    the covered bank were under the U.S.                    under the QFC, the covered bank is the                enhancement, the covered direct QFC
                                                    special resolution regime.                              direct party.                                         and the covered affiliate credit
                                                       (c) Relevance of creditor protection                    (e) General creditor protections.                  enhancement may permit the exercise of
                                                    provisions. The requirements of this                    Notwithstanding paragraph (b) of this                 a default right that is related, directly or
                                                    section apply notwithstanding                           section, a covered direct QFC and                     indirectly, to the covered affiliate
                                                    paragraphs (e), (g), and (i) of section                 covered affiliate credit enhancement                  support provider after the stay period if:
                                                    47.5.                                                   that supports the covered direct QFC                     (1) The covered affiliate support
                                                                                                            may permit the exercise of a default                  provider that remains obligated under
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                                                    § 47.5   Insolvency Proceedings.                        right with respect to the covered QFC                 the covered affiliate credit enhancement
                                                      (a) QFCs required to be conformed. (1)                that arises as a result of:                           becomes subject to a receivership,
                                                    A covered bank must ensure that each                       (1) The direct party becoming subject              insolvency, liquidation, resolution, or
                                                    covered QFC conforms to the                             to a receivership, insolvency,                        similar proceeding other than a Chapter
                                                    requirements of this section 47.5.                      liquidation, resolution, or similar                   11 proceeding;
                                                      (2) For purposes of this section 47.5,                proceeding other than a receivership,                    (2) Subject to paragraph (i) of this
                                                    a covered QFC has the same definition                   conservatorship, or resolution under the              section, the transferee, if any, becomes
                                                    as in paragraph (a)(2) of section 47.4.                 Federal Deposit Insurance Act, Title II               subject to a receivership, insolvency,


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                                                                            Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 161 / Friday, August 19, 2016 / Proposed Rules                                           55401

                                                    liquidation, resolution, or similar                        (3) Transferee. Transferee means a                 bank may request that the OCC approve
                                                    proceeding;                                             person to whom a covered affiliate                    as compliant with the requirements of
                                                       (3) The covered affiliate support                    credit enhancement is transferred upon                section 47.5 of this part provisions of
                                                    provider does not remain, and a                         the covered affiliate support provider                one or more forms of covered QFCs, or
                                                    transferee does not become, obligated to                entering a receivership, insolvency,                  amendments to one or more forms of
                                                    the same, or substantially similar, extent              liquidation, resolution, or similar                   covered QFCs, with enhanced creditor
                                                    as the covered affiliate support provider               proceeding or thereafter as part of the               protection conditions.
                                                    was obligated immediately prior to                      restructuring or reorganization                          (2) Enhanced creditor protection
                                                    entering the receivership, insolvency,                  involving the covered affiliate support               conditions means a set of limited
                                                    liquidation, resolution, or similar                     provider.                                             exemptions to the requirements of
                                                    proceeding with respect to:                                (i) Creditor protections related to                section 47.5(b) of this part that are
                                                       (i) The covered affiliate credit                     FDIA proceedings. Notwithstanding                     different than that of paragraphs (e), (g),
                                                    enhancement,                                            paragraph (b) of this section, with                   and (i) of section 46.5 of this part.
                                                       (ii) All other covered affiliate credit              respect to a covered direct QFC that is                  (3) A covered bank making a request
                                                    enhancements provided by the covered                    supported by a covered affiliate credit               under paragraph (b)(1) of this section
                                                    affiliate support provider in support of                enhancement, the covered direct QFC                   must provide:
                                                    other covered direct QFCs between the                   and the covered affiliate credit                         (i) An analysis of the proposal that
                                                    direct party and the supported party                    enhancement may permit the exercise of                addresses each consideration in
                                                    under the covered affiliate credit                      a default right that is related, directly or          paragraph (d) of this section;
                                                    enhancement referenced in paragraph                     indirectly, to the covered affiliate                     (ii) A written legal opinion verifying
                                                    47(g)(3)(i), and                                        support provider becoming subject to                  that proposed provisions or
                                                       (iii) All covered affiliate credit                   FDIA proceedings:                                     amendments would be valid and
                                                    enhancements provided by the covered                       (1) After the FDIA stay period, if the             enforceable under applicable law of the
                                                    affiliate support provider in support of                covered affiliate credit enhancement is               relevant jurisdictions, including, in the
                                                    covered direct QFCs between the direct                  not transferred pursuant to 12 U.S.C.                 case of proposed amendments, the
                                                    party and affiliates of the supported                   1821(e)(9)–(e)(10) and any regulations                validity and enforceability of the
                                                    party referenced in paragraph                           promulgated thereunder; or                            proposal to amend the covered QFCs;
                                                    47.5(g)(3)(ii); or                                         (2) During the FDIA stay period, if the            and
                                                       (4) In the case of a transfer of the                 default right may only be exercised so                   (iii) Any other relevant information
                                                    covered affiliate credit enhancement to                 as to permit the supported party under                that the OCC requests.
                                                    a transferee:                                           the covered affiliate credit enhancement                 (c) OCC approval. The OCC may
                                                       (i) All of the ownership interests of                to suspend performance with respect to                approve, subject to any conditions or
                                                    the direct party directly or indirectly                 the supported party’s obligations under               commitments the OCC may impose, a
                                                    held by the covered affiliate support                   the covered direct QFC to the same                    proposal by a covered bank under
                                                    provider are not transferred to the                     extent as the supported party would be                paragraph (b) of this section if the
                                                    transferee; or                                          entitled to do if the covered direct QFC              proposal, as compared to a covered QFC
                                                       (ii) Reasonable assurance has not been               were with the covered affiliate support               that contains only the limited
                                                    provided that all or substantially all of               provider and were treated in the same                 exemptions in paragraphs of (e), (g), and
                                                    the assets of the covered affiliate                     manner as the covered affiliate credit                (i) of section 47.5 of this part, would
                                                    support provider (or net proceeds                       enhancement.                                          promote the safety and soundness of
                                                    therefrom), excluding any assets                           (j) Prohibited terminations. A covered             federally chartered or licensed
                                                    reserved for the payment of costs and                   QFC must require, after an affiliate of               institutions by mitigating the potential
                                                    expenses of administration in the                       the direct party has become subject to a              destabilizing effects of the resolution of
                                                    receivership, insolvency, liquidation,                  receivership, insolvency, liquidation,                a global significantly important banking
                                                    resolution, or similar proceeding, will                 resolution, or similar proceeding:                    entity that is an affiliate of the covered
                                                                                                               (1) The party seeking to exercise a
                                                    be transferred or sold to the transferee                                                                      bank, at least to the same extent.
                                                                                                            default right to bear the burden of proof
                                                    in a timely manner.                                                                                              (d) Considerations. In reviewing a
                                                                                                            that the exercise is permitted under the
                                                       (h) Definitions relevant to the                                                                            proposal under this section, the OCC
                                                                                                            covered QFC; and
                                                    additional creditor protections for                                                                           may consider all facts and
                                                                                                               (2) Clear and convincing evidence or
                                                    supported QFCs and this part. (1) Stay                                                                        circumstances related to the proposal,
                                                                                                            a similar or higher burden of proof to
                                                    period. Stay period means, with respect                                                                       including:
                                                                                                            exercise a default right.
                                                    to a receivership, insolvency,                                                                                   (1) Whether, and the extent to which,
                                                    liquidation, resolution, or similar                     § 47.6 Approval of Enhanced Creditor                  the proposal would reduce the
                                                    proceeding, the period of time                          Protection Conditions.                                resiliency of such covered banks during
                                                    beginning on the commencement of the                       (a) Protocol compliance. A covered                 distress or increase the impact of the
                                                    proceeding and ending at the later of                   QFC may permit the exercise of a                      failure of one or more of the covered
                                                    5:00 p.m. (eastern time) on the business                default right with respect to the covered             banks;
                                                    day following the date of the                           QFC if the covered QFC has been                          (2) Whether, and the extent to which,
                                                    commencement of the proceeding and                      amended by the ISDA 2015 Universal                    the proposal would materially decrease
                                                    48 hours after the commencement of the                  Resolution Stay Protocol, including the               the ability of a covered bank, or an
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                                                    proceeding.                                             Securities Financing Transaction Annex                affiliate of a covered bank, to be
                                                       (2) Business day. Business day means                 and Other Agreements Annex published                  resolved in a rapid and orderly manner
                                                    a day on which commercial banks in the                  by the International Swaps and                        in the event of the financial distress or
                                                    jurisdiction the proceeding is                          Derivatives Association, Inc., as of May              failure of the entity that is required to
                                                    commenced are open for general                          3, 2016, and minor or technical                       submit a resolution plan pursuant to
                                                    business (including dealings in foreign                 amendments thereto.                                   Section 165(d) of the Dodd-Frank Act,
                                                    exchange and foreign currency                              (b) Proposal of enhanced creditor                  12 U.S.C. 5635(d), and the
                                                    deposits).                                              protection conditions. (1) A covered                  implementing regulations in 12 CFR


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                                                    55402                   Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 161 / Friday, August 19, 2016 / Proposed Rules

                                                    part 243 (FRB) and 12 CFR part 381                      a direct party or an affiliate credit                 U.S. Federal banking agency, as
                                                    (FDIC);                                                 enhancement to which a covered entity                 applicable.
                                                       (3) Whether, and the extent to which,                is the obligor.                                       *     *     *   *     *
                                                    the set of conditions or the mechanism
                                                                                                            § 47.8 Foreign Bank Multi-branch Master                 Dated: August 10, 2016.
                                                    in which they are applied facilitates, on
                                                                                                            Agreements.                                           Thomas J. Curry,
                                                    an industry-wide basis, contractual
                                                    modifications to remove impediments to                     (a) Treatment of foreign bank multi-               Comptroller of the Currency.
                                                    resolution and increase market                          branch master agreements. With respect                [FR Doc. 2016–19671 Filed 8–18–16; 8:45 am]
                                                    certainty, transparency, and equitable                  to a Federal branch or agency of a                    BILLING CODE 4810–33–P
                                                    treatment with respect to the default                   globally significant foreign banking
                                                    rights of non-defaulting parties to a                   organization, a foreign bank multi-
                                                    covered QFC;                                            branch master agreement that is a                     ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION
                                                       (4) Whether, and the extent to which,                covered QFC solely because the master                 AGENCY
                                                    the proposal applies to existing and                    agreement permits agreements or
                                                    future transactions;                                    transactions that are QFCs to be entered              40 CFR Part 52
                                                       (5) Whether, and the extent to which,                into at one or more Federal branches or               [EPA–R09–OAR–2016–0322; FRL–9950–95–
                                                    the proposal would apply to multiple                    agencies of the globally significant                  Region 9]
                                                    forms of QFCs or multiple covered                       foreign banking organization will be
                                                    banks;                                                  considered a covered QFC for purposes                 Approval and Limited Approval and
                                                       (6) Whether the proposal would                       of this subpart only with respect to such             Limited Disapproval of California State
                                                    permit a party to a covered QFC that is                 agreements or transactions booked at                  Implementation Plan Revisions; Butte
                                                    within the scope of the proposal to                     such Federal branches or agencies or for              County Air Quality Management
                                                    adhere to the proposal with respect to                  which a payment or delivery may be                    District; Stationary Source Permits
                                                    only one or a subset of covered banks;                  made at such Federal branches or
                                                                                                            agencies.                                             AGENCY:  Environmental Protection
                                                       (7) With respect to a supported party,
                                                                                                               (b) Definition of foreign bank multi-              Agency (EPA).
                                                    the degree of assurance the proposal
                                                    provides to the supported party that the                branch master agreements. A foreign                   ACTION: Proposed rule.
                                                    material payment and delivery                           bank multi-branch master agreement                    SUMMARY:   The Environmental Protection
                                                    obligations of the covered affiliate credit             means a master agreement that permits                 Agency (EPA) is proposing a limited
                                                    enhancement and the covered direct                      a Federal branch or agency and another                approval and limited disapproval of
                                                    QFC it supports will continue to be                     place of business of a foreign bank that              revisions to the Butte County Air
                                                    performed after the covered affiliate                   is outside the United States to enter                 Quality Management District
                                                    support provider enters a receivership,                 transactions under the agreement.                     (BCAQMD) portion of the California
                                                    insolvency, liquidation, resolution, or                                                                       State Implementation Plan (SIP). These
                                                    similar proceeding;                                     PART 50—LIQUIDITY RISK
                                                                                                            MEASUREMENT STANDARDS                                 revisions concern the District’s New
                                                       (8) The presence, nature, and extent of                                                                    Source Review (NSR) permitting
                                                    any provisions that require a covered                   ■ 5. The authority citation for part 50               program for new and modified sources
                                                    affiliate support provider or transferee                continues to read as follows:                         of air pollution. We are proposing action
                                                    to meet conditions other than material                                                                        on these local rules under the Clean Air
                                                                                                              Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1 et seq., 93a, 481,
                                                    payment or delivery obligations to its                                                                        Act as amended in 1990 (CAA or the
                                                                                                            1818, and 1462 et seq.
                                                    creditors;                                                                                                    Act). We are taking comments on this
                                                       (9) The extent to which the supported                ■  6. Section 50.3 is amended by revising
                                                                                                                                                                  proposal and plan to follow with a final
                                                    party’s overall credit risk to the direct               the definition of ‘‘qualifying master
                                                                                                                                                                  action.
                                                    party may increase if the enhanced                      netting agreement’’ by:
                                                                                                            ■ i. Removing the word ‘‘or’’ at the end              DATES: Any comments must arrive by
                                                    creditor protection conditions are not
                                                                                                            of paragraph (2)(i);                                  September 19, 2016.
                                                    met and the likelihood that the
                                                                                                            ■ ii. Removing the ’’;’’ at the end of                ADDRESSES: Submit your comments,
                                                    supported party’s credit risk to the
                                                    direct party would decrease or remain                   paragraph (2)(ii) and adding in its place             identified by Docket ID No. [EPA–R09–
                                                    the same if the enhanced creditor                       ‘‘; or’’; and                                         OAR–2016–0332] at http://
                                                    protection conditions are met; and                      ■ iii. Adding a new paragraph (2)(iii).               www.regulations.gov, or via email to
                                                       (10) Whether the proposal provides                       The revisions are set forth below:                R9AirPermits@epa.gov. For comments
                                                    the counterparty with additional default                                                                      submitted at Regulations.gov, follow the
                                                                                                            § 50.3   Definitions.
                                                    rights or other rights.                                                                                       online instructions for submitting
                                                                                                            *       *   *     *     *                             comments. Once submitted, comments
                                                    § 47.7   Exclusion of Certain QFCs.                        Qualifying master netting agreement                cannot be removed or edited from
                                                      (a) Exclusion of CCP-cleared QFCs. A                  means a written, legally enforceable                  Regulations.gov. For either manner of
                                                    covered bank is not required to conform                 agreement provided that:                              submission, the EPA may publish any
                                                    a covered QFC to which a CCP is a party                 *       *   *     *     *                             comment received to its public docket.
                                                    to the requirements of sections 47.4 and                   (2) * * *                                          Do not submit electronically any
                                                    47.5.                                                   *       *   *     *     *                             information you consider to be
                                                      (b) Exclusion of covered entity QFCs.                    (iii) Where the right to accelerate,               Confidential Business Information (CBI)
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                                                    A covered bank is not required to                       terminate, and close-out on a net basis               or other information whose disclosure is
                                                    conform a covered QFC to the                            all transactions under the agreement                  restricted by statute. Multimedia
                                                    requirements of sections 47.4 and 47.5                  and to liquidate or set-off collateral                submissions (audio, video, etc.) must be
                                                    to the extent that a covered entity is                  promptly upon an event of default of the              accompanied by a written comment.
                                                    required to conform the covered QFC to                  counterparty is limited only to the                   The written comment is considered the
                                                    similar requirements of the Federal                     extent necessary to comply with the                   official comment and should include
                                                    Reserve Board if the QFC is either a                    requirements of part 47 of this title 12              discussion of all points you wish to
                                                    direct QFC to which a covered entity is                 or any similar requirements of another                make. The EPA will generally not


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Document Created: 2016-08-19 01:35:29
Document Modified: 2016-08-19 01:35:29
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionProposed Rules
ActionNotice of proposed rulemaking.
DatesComments must be received by October 18, 2016.
ContactValerie Song, Assistant Director, or Scott Burnett, Attorney, Bank Activities and Structure Division, (202) 649-5500; Rima Kundnani, Attorney, or Ron Shimabukuro, Senior Counsel, Legislative and Regulatory Activities Division, (202) 649-6282, 400 7th Street SW., Washington, DC 20219.
FR Citation81 FR 55381 
RIN Number1557-AE05
CFR Citation12 CFR 3
12 CFR 47
12 CFR 50
CFR AssociatedAdministrative Practice and Procedure; Capital; Federal Savings Associations; National Banks; Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements; Risk; Administrative Practice and Procedure; Banks and Banking; Bank Resolution; Default Rights; Federal Savings Associations; National Banks; Qualified Financial Contracts; Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements; Securities and Administrative Practice and Procedure; Banks and Banking; Liquidity; Reporting and Recordkeeping Requirements; Savings Associations

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