83_FR_32992 83 FR 32856 - Resolution Planning Guidance for Eight Large, Complex U.S. Banking Organizations

83 FR 32856 - Resolution Planning Guidance for Eight Large, Complex U.S. Banking Organizations

FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION

Federal Register Volume 83, Issue 136 (July 16, 2018)

Page Range32856-32871
FR Document2018-15066

The Board and the FDIC (together, the ``Agencies'') are inviting comments on proposed guidance for the 2019 and subsequent resolution plan submissions by the eight largest, complex U.S. banking organizations (``Covered Companies'' or ``firms''). The proposed guidance is meant to assist these firms in developing their resolution plans, which are required to be submitted pursuant to Section 165(d) of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. The proposed guidance, which is largely based on prior guidance issued to these Covered Companies, describes the Agencies' expectations regarding a number of key vulnerabilities in plans for an orderly resolution under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code (i.e., capital; liquidity; governance mechanisms; operational; legal entity rationalization and separability; and derivatives and trading activities). The proposed guidance also updates certain aspects of prior guidance based on the Agencies' review of these firms' recent resolution plan submissions. The Agencies invite public comment on all aspects of the proposed guidance.

Federal Register, Volume 83 Issue 136 (Monday, July 16, 2018)
[Federal Register Volume 83, Number 136 (Monday, July 16, 2018)]
[Notices]
[Pages 32856-32871]
From the Federal Register Online  [www.thefederalregister.org]
[FR Doc No: 2018-15066]


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FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM

[Docket No. OP-1614]

FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION


Resolution Planning Guidance for Eight Large, Complex U.S. 
Banking Organizations

AGENCY: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board) and 
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC).

ACTION: Proposed guidance; request for comments.

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SUMMARY: The Board and the FDIC (together, the ``Agencies'') are 
inviting comments on proposed guidance for the 2019 and subsequent 
resolution plan submissions by the eight largest, complex U.S. banking 
organizations (``Covered Companies'' or ``firms''). The proposed 
guidance is meant to assist these firms in developing their resolution 
plans, which are required to be submitted pursuant to Section 165(d) of 
the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. The 
proposed guidance, which is largely based on prior guidance issued to 
these Covered Companies, describes the Agencies' expectations regarding 
a number of key vulnerabilities in plans for an orderly resolution 
under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code (i.e., capital; liquidity; governance 
mechanisms; operational; legal entity rationalization and separability; 
and derivatives and trading activities). The proposed guidance also 
updates certain aspects of prior guidance based on the Agencies' review 
of these firms' recent resolution plan submissions. The Agencies invite 
public comment on all aspects of the proposed guidance.

DATES: Comments should be received September 14, 2018.

ADDRESSES: Interested parties are encouraged to submit written comments 
jointly to both Agencies. Comments should be directed to: Board: You 
may submit comments, identified by Docket No. OP-1614, by any of the 
following methods:
     Agency Website: http://www.federalreserve.gov. Follow the 
instructions for submitting comments at http://www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm.
     Email: regs.comments@federalreserve.gov. Include docket 
number in the subject line of the message.
     Fax: (202) 452-3819 or (202) 452-3102.
     Mail: Ann E. Misback, Secretary, Board of Governors of the 
Federal Reserve System, 20th Street and Constitution Avenue NW, 
Washington, DC 20551.
    All public comments will be made available on the Board's website 
at http://www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfms 
submitted, unless modified for technical reasons or to remove personal 
information at the commenter's request. Accordingly, comments will not 
be edited to remove any identifying or contact information. Public 
comments may also be viewed electronically or in paper in Room 3515, 
1801 K Street NW (between 18th and 19th Street NW), between 9:00 a.m. 
and 5:00 p.m. on weekdays.
    FDIC: You may submit comments by any of the following methods:
     Agency Website: https://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal. Follow the instructions for submitting comments on the Agency 
Website.
     Email: comments@fdic.gov. Include ``Proposed 165(d) 
Guidance for the Domestic Firms'' on the subject line of the message.
     Mail: Robert E. Feldman, Executive Secretary, Attention: 
Comments, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street NW, 
Washington, DC 20429.
     Hand Delivery/Courier: Guard station at the rear of the 
550 17th Street Building (located on F Street) on business days between 
7 a.m. and 5 p.m.
     Public Inspection: All comments received, including any 
personal information provided, will be posted generally without change 
to https://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: 
    Board: Michael Hsu, Associate Director, (202) 452-4330, Division of 
Supervision and Regulation, Jay Schwarz, Senior Counsel, (202) 452-
2970, Will Giles, Senior Counsel, (202) 452-3351, or Steve Bowne, 
Senior Attorney, (202) 452-3900, Legal Division. Users of 
Telecommunications Device for the Deaf (TDD) may call (202) 263-4869.
    FDIC: Mike J. Morgan, Corporate Expert, mimorgan@fdic.gov, CFI 
Oversight Branch, Division of Risk Management Supervision; Alexandra 
Steinberg Barrage, Associate Director, Resolution Strategy and Policy, 
Office of Complex Financial Institutions, abarrage@fdic.gov; David N. 
Wall, Assistant General Counsel, dwall@fdic.gov; Pauline E. Calande, 
Senior Counsel, pcalande@fdic.gov; or Celia Van Gorder, Supervisory 
Counsel, cvangorder@fdic.gov, Legal Division, Federal Deposit Insurance 
Corporation, 550 17th Street NW, Washington, DC 20429.

[[Page 32857]]


SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

I. Background

    Section 165(d) of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer 
Protection Act (12 U.S.C. 5365(d)) and the jointly issued implementing 
regulation, 12 CFR part 243 and 12 CFR part 381 (``the Rule''), 
requires certain financial companies to report periodically to the 
Board and the FDIC their plans for rapid and orderly resolution under 
the U.S. Bankruptcy Code in the event of material financial distress or 
failure.
    Among other requirements, the Rule requires each financial 
company's resolution plan to include a strategic analysis of the plan's 
components, a description of the range of specific actions the company 
proposes to take in resolution, and a description of the company's 
organizational structure, material entities and interconnections and 
interdependencies. The Rule also requires that resolution plans include 
a confidential section that contains confidential supervisory and 
proprietary information submitted to the Board and the FDIC (together, 
the ``Agencies''), and a section that the Agencies make available to 
the public. Public sections of resolution plans can be found on the 
Agencies' websites.\1\
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    \1\ See the public sections of resolution plans submitted to the 
Agencies at www.federalreserve.gov/bankinforeg/resolutionplans.htm 
and www.fdic.gov/regulations/reform/resplans/.
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Objectives of the Resolution Planning Process

    The goal of the Dodd-Frank Act resolution planning process is to 
help ensure that a firm's failure would not have serious adverse 
effects on financial stability in the United States. Specifically, the 
resolution planning process requires firms to demonstrate that they 
have adequately assessed the challenges that their structure and 
business activities pose to resolution and that they have taken action 
to address those issues. Management should also consider resolvability 
as part of day-to-day decision making, particularly those related to 
structure, business activities, capital and liquidity allocation, and 
governance. In addition, firms are expected to maintain a meaningful 
set of options for selling operations and business lines to generate 
resources and to allow for restructuring under stress, including 
through the sale or wind down of discrete businesses that could further 
minimize the direct impact of distress or failure on the broader 
financial system. While these measures cannot guarantee that a firm's 
resolution would be simple or smoothly executed, these preparations can 
help ensure that the firm could be resolved under bankruptcy without 
government support or imperiling the broader financial system.
    The Rule describes an iterative process aimed at strengthening the 
resolution planning capabilities of each financial institution. With 
respect to the eight largest, complex U.S. banking organizations 
(``Covered Companies'' or ``firms''),\2\ the Agencies have previously 
provided guidance and other feedback.\3\ In general, the feedback was 
intended to assist firms in their development of future resolution plan 
submissions and to provide additional clarity with respect to the 
expectations against which the Agencies will evaluate the resolution 
plan submissions. The Agencies are now proposing to update aspects of 
prior guidance based on the Agencies' review of the firms' recent 
resolution plan submissions.\4\ The Agencies reviewed the 2017 Plans 
and issued a letter to each firm indicating that it had taken important 
steps to enhance its resolvability and facilitate its orderly 
resolution in bankruptcy.\5\ As a result of those reviews and following 
the Agencies' joint decisions in December 2017, the Agencies identified 
four areas where more work may need to be done to improve the 
resolvability of the firms.\6\ As described below, the Agencies are 
proposing updates to two areas of the guidance regarding payment, 
clearing, and settlement services and derivatives and trading 
activities. The Agencies intend to provide additional information on 
the two other areas: Intra-group liquidity and internal loss absorbing 
capacity. The Agencies invite public comment on all aspects of the 
proposed guidance.
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    \2\ Bank of America Corporation, The Bank of New York Mellon 
Corporation, Citigroup Inc., the Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., JPMorgan 
Chase & Co., Morgan Stanley, State Street Corporation and Wells 
Fargo & Company.
    \3\ This includes Guidance for 2013 Sec.  165(d) Annual 
Resolution Plan Submissions by Domestic Covered Companies that 
Submitted Initial Resolution Plans in 2012; detailed guidance and 
firm-specific feedback in August 2014 and February 2015 for the 
development of firms' 2015 resolution plan submissions; and Guidance 
for 2017 Sec.  165(d) Annual Resolution Plan Submissions by Domestic 
Covered Companies that Submitted Resolution Plans in July 2015, 
including the frequently asked questions that were published in 
response to the Guidance for the 2017 Plan Submissions (taken 
together, ``prior guidance'').
    \4\ Each firm's resolution strategy is designed to have the 
parent company recapitalize and provide liquidity resources to its 
material entity subsidiaries prior to entering bankruptcy 
proceedings. This strategy calls for material entities to be 
provided with sufficient capital and liquidity resources to allow 
them to avoid multiple competing insolvencies and maintain 
continuity of operations throughout resolution.
    \5\ See Letters dated December 19, 2017, from the Board and FDIC 
to Bank of America Corporation, The Bank of New York Mellon 
Corporation, Citigroup Inc., the Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., JPMorgan 
Chase & Co., Morgan Stanley, State Street Corporation and Wells 
Fargo & Company, available at https://www.federalreserve.gov/supervisionreg/resolution-plans.htm.
    \6\ Id.
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II. Overview of the Proposed Guidance

    The proposed guidance is organized into six substantive areas, 
consistent with the guidance the Agencies provided to Covered Companies 
in April 2016 to assist in the development of their 2017 resolution 
plans, Guidance for 2017 Sec.  165(d) Annual Resolution Plan 
Submissions by Domestic Covered Companies that Submitted Resolution 
Plans in July 2015 (``2016 Guidance'').\7\ These areas are:
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    \7\ Available at: https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/files/bcreg20160413a1.pdf and at https://www.fdic.gov/news/news/press/2016/pr16031b.pdf.

1. Capital
2. Liquidity
3. Governance mechanisms
4. Operational
5. Legal entity rationalization and separability
6. Derivatives and trading activities

    Each area is important to firms in resolution as each plays a part 
in helping to ensure that the firm can be resolved in an orderly 
manner. The guidance would describe the Agencies' expectations for each 
of these areas.
    The proposed guidance is largely consistent with the 2016 Guidance, 
which the Covered Companies used to develop their 2017 resolution plan 
submissions. Accordingly, the firms have already incorporated 
significant aspects of the proposed guidance into their resolution 
planning. The proposal would update the derivatives and trading 
activities (DER), and payment, clearing, and settlement activities 
(PCS) areas of the 2016 Guidance based on the Agencies' review of the 
Covered Companies' 2017 plans. It would also make minor clarifications 
to certain areas of the 2016 Guidance. In general, the proposed 
revisions to the guidance are intended to streamline the firms' 
submissions and to provide additional clarity. The proposed guidance is 
not meant to limit firms' consideration of additional vulnerabilities 
or obstacles that might arise based on a firm's particular structure, 
operations, or resolution strategy and that should be factored into the 
firm's submission.
    Capital: The ability to provide sufficient capital to material 
entities without disruption from creditors is

[[Page 32858]]

important in order to ensure that material entities can continue to 
provide critical services and maintain critical operations as the firm 
is resolved. The proposal describes expectations concerning the 
appropriate positioning of capital and other loss-absorbing instruments 
(e.g., debt that the parent may forgive or convert to equity) among the 
material entities within the firm (resolution capital adequacy and 
positioning or RCAP). The proposal also describes expectations 
regarding a methodology for periodically estimating the amount of 
capital that may be needed to support each material entity after the 
bankruptcy filing (resolution capital execution need or RCEN).
    Liquidity: A firm's ability to reliably estimate and meet its 
liquidity needs prior to, and in, resolution is important to the 
execution of a Covered Company's resolution strategy in that it enables 
the firm to respond quickly to demands from stakeholders and 
counterparties, including regulatory authorities in other jurisdictions 
and financial market utilities. Maintaining sufficient and 
appropriately-positioned liquidity also allows the subsidiaries to 
continue to operate while the firm is being resolved in accordance with 
the firm's preferred resolution strategy.\8\
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    \8\ The Agencies are currently taking steps to better understand 
the purpose and treatment of the firms' inter-affiliate 
transactions. The Agencies do not expect the firms to make major 
changes to their RLAP and RLEN models until after the Agencies have 
completed this review and provided further feedback.
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    Governance Mechanisms: An adequate governance structure with 
triggers capable of identifying the onset of financial stress events is 
important to ensure that there is sufficient time to allow firms to 
prepare for resolution, and to ensure the timely execution of their 
preferred resolution strategies. The governance mechanism section 
proposes expectations that firms have playbooks that detail the board 
and senior management actions necessary to execute the firm's preferred 
strategy. In addition, the proposal describes expectations that firms 
have triggers that are linked to specific actions outlined in these 
playbooks to ensure the timely escalation of information to senior 
management and the board, to address the successful recapitalization of 
subsidiaries prior to the parent's bankruptcy to the extent called for 
by the firm's preferred resolution strategy, and to address how the 
firm would ensure the timely execution of a bankruptcy filing. The 
proposal also describes the expectations that firms identify and 
analyze potential legal challenges to the provision of capital and 
liquidity to subsidiaries that would precede the parent's bankruptcy 
filing, and any defenses and mitigants to such challenges. In addition, 
the proposal describes expectations that firms incorporate any 
developments from this analysis in their governance playbooks.
    Legal entity rationalization and separability: It is important that 
firms maintain a structure that facilitates orderly resolution. To 
achieve this, the proposal states that a firm should develop criteria 
supporting the preferred resolution strategy and integrate them into 
day-to-day decision making processes. The criteria would be expected to 
consider the best alignment of legal entities and business lines and 
facilitate resolvability as a firm's activities, technology, business 
models, or geographic footprint change over time. In addition, the 
proposed guidance provides that the firm should identify discrete and 
actionable operations that could be sold or transferred in resolution 
to provide meaningful optionality for the resolution strategy under a 
range of potential failure scenarios.
    Operational: The development and maintenance of operational 
capabilities is important to support and enable execution of a firm's 
preferred resolution strategy, including providing for the continuation 
of critical operations and preventing or mitigating adverse impacts on 
U.S. financial stability. The proposed operational capabilities 
include:
    Possessing fully developed capabilities related to managing, 
identifying, and valuing the collateral that is received from, and 
posted to, external parties and its affiliates;
    Having management information systems that readily produce key data 
on financial resources and positions on a legal entity basis, and that 
ensure data integrity and reliability;
    Developing a clear set of actions to be taken to maintain payment, 
clearing and settlement activities and to maintain access to financial 
market utilities, as further discussed below; and
    Maintaining an actionable plan to ensure the continuity of all of 
the shared and outsourced services that their critical operations rely 
on.
    In addition, the proposed guidance provides that a firm should 
analyze and address legal issues that may arise in connection with 
emergency motions the firm anticipates filing at the outset of its 
bankruptcy case seeking relief needed to pursue its preferred 
resolution strategy, including legal precedent and evidentiary support 
the firm expects to provide in support of such motions, key regulatory 
actions, and contingency arrangements.
    Derivatives and trading activities: It is important that a firm's 
derivatives and trading activities can be stabilized and de-risked 
during resolution without causing significant market disruption. As 
such, firms should have capabilities to identify and mitigate the risks 
associated with their derivatives and trading activities and with the 
implementation of their preferred strategies, as further discussed 
below.
    Question 1: Do the topics in the proposed guidance discussed above 
represent the key vulnerabilities of the Covered Companies in 
resolution? If not, what key vulnerabilities are not captured?

III. Proposed Changes to Prior Guidance

    In addition to making some clarifications, this proposal differs 
from prior guidance in that it reflects enhancements informed by the 
Agencies' review of the Covered Companies 2017 plans in the areas of 
DER and PCS.
    The following description summarizes the changes relative to the 
topics outlined in the 2016 Guidance to which the Agencies are seeking 
comment and, where relevant, provides additional detail:

Operational: Payment, Clearing, and Settlement Activities

    The provision of PCS by firms, financial market utilities (FMUs), 
and agent banks is an essential component of the U.S. financial system, 
and maintaining the continuity of PCS services is important for the 
orderly resolution of firms. Prior guidance from the Agencies indicated 
that a firm's resolution plan submissions should describe arrangements 
to facilitate continued access to PCS services through the firm's 
resolution.
    Based upon recent resolution plan submissions and the Agencies' 
engagement with the firms, the Agencies believe that the firms have 
developed capabilities to identify and consider the risks associated 
with continuity of access to PCS services in resolution. All of the 
firms described methodologies to identify key FMUs and agent banks 
based on quantitative and qualitative criteria and included playbooks 
for identified key FMUs or agent banks. These playbooks described 
potential adverse actions that could be taken by the FMU or agent bank, 
described possible contingency arrangements, and discussed the 
operational and financial impacts of such actions or arrangements, all 
of which were

[[Page 32859]]

enhanced by the firms' direct communications with these FMUs and agent 
banks. The proposed PCS guidance clarifies the expectations of the 
Agencies with respect to a firm's capabilities to maintain continued 
access to PCS services through a framework. Considering the firms' 
earlier resolution plan submissions, the firms have the methodologies 
and capabilities in place to address these expectations.
    Framework. The proposal states that firms should demonstrate 
capabilities for maintaining continued access to PCS services through a 
framework that incorporates the identification of key clients,\9\ FMUs, 
and agent banks, using both quantitative \10\ and qualitative criteria, 
and the development of a playbook for each key FMU and agent bank. The 
proposed guidance builds upon existing guidance by specifying that the 
framework should consider key clients (which may include affiliates of 
the firm) and agent banks. The Agencies note that, although the 
existing guidance did not expressly suggest the identification of key 
agent banks and playbooks for such agent banks, the firms considered 
agent bank relationships and each provided a playbook for at least one 
key agent bank in its most recent resolution plan submission. Because 
agent bank relationships may essentially replicate PCS services 
provided by FMUs, the Agencies propose to revise the PCS guidance to 
include the identification and development of playbooks for key agent 
banks.
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    \9\ A client is an individual or entity, including affiliates of 
the firm, that relies upon continued access to the firm's PCS 
services and any related credit or liquidity offered in connection 
with those services. As a result, key clients may not necessarily be 
limited to wholesale clients.
    \10\ Examples of quantitative criteria include not only the 
aggregate volumes and values of all transactions processed through 
an FMU but also assets under custody with an agent bank, the value 
of cash and securities settled through an agent bank, and extensions 
of intraday credit.
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    In applying the framework, the firm would be expected to consider 
its role as a user and/or a provider of PCS services. The proposal 
refers to a user of PCS services as a firm that accesses the services 
of an FMU through its own membership in that FMU or through the 
membership of another firm that provides PCS services on an agency 
basis. A firm is a provider of PCS services under the proposed guidance 
if it provides its clients with access to an FMU or agent bank through 
the firm's membership in or relationship with that service provider. A 
firm also would be a provider if it delivers PCS services critical to a 
client through the firm's own operations in a manner similar to an FMU.
    The proposal provides that a firm's framework should take into 
account the various relationships the firm and its key clients have 
with those key FMUs and agent banks by providing a mapping of material 
entities, critical operations, core business lines, and key clients to 
key FMUs and agent banks. This framework would be expected to consider 
both direct relationships (e.g., firm's direct membership in the FMU, 
firm provides key clients with critical PCS services through its own 
operations, firm's contractual relationship with an agent bank) and 
indirect relationships (e.g., firm provides its clients with access to 
the relevant FMU or agent bank through the firm's membership in or 
relationship with that FMU or agent bank).
    By developing and evaluating these activities and relationships 
through a framework that incorporates the elements above, a firm should 
be able to consider the issue of maintaining continuity of PCS services 
in a systematic manner.
    Question 2: Is the guidance sufficiently clear with respect to the 
following concepts: Scope of PCS services, user vs. provider, direct 
vs. indirect relationships? What additional clarifications or 
alternatives concerning the proposed framework or its elements, if any, 
should the Agencies consider? For instance, would further examples of 
ways that firms may act as provider of PCS services be useful? Should 
the Agencies consider further distinguishing between providers based on 
the type of PCS service they provide?
    Playbooks for Continued Access to PCS Services. Firms also would be 
expected to provide a playbook for each key FMU and agent bank that 
addresses financial considerations and includes operational detail that 
would assist the firm in maintaining continued access to PCS services 
for itself and its clients in stress and in resolution. Under the 
proposal, each key FMU and agent bank playbook would be expected to 
provide analysis of the financial and operational impact to the firm's 
material entities and key clients due to a loss of access to the FMU or 
agent bank. Each playbook also should discuss any possible alternative 
arrangements that would allow the firm and its key clients to maintain 
continued access to PCS services in resolution. However, the firm is 
not expected to incorporate a scenario in which it loses FMU or agent 
bank access into its preferred resolution strategy or its RLEN/RCEN 
estimates.
    Firms communicated with key FMUs and agent banks in preparing their 
most recent resolution plan submissions and indicated that such 
communication was helpful in refining their analysis concerning 
potential adverse actions and contingency arrangements. Firms would be 
expected to continue to engage with key FMUs, agent banks, and clients, 
and playbooks would be expected to reflect any feedback received during 
such ongoing outreach. Firms are encouraged to continue engaging with 
each other, key FMUs and agent banks, and other stakeholders to 
identify possible initiatives or additional ways to support continued 
access to PCS services.
    The proposed guidance differentiates the type of information to be 
included in a firm's key FMU and agent bank playbooks based on whether 
a firm is a user of PCS services with respect to that FMU or agent 
bank, a provider of PCS services with respect to that FMU or agent 
bank, or both. To the extent a firm is both a user and a provider of 
PCS services with respect to a particular FMU or agent bank, the firm 
would be expected to provide the described content for both users and 
providers of PCS services. A firm would be able to do so either in the 
same playbook or in separate playbooks included in its resolution plan 
submission.
    Content related to Users of PCS Services. Under the proposal, each 
playbook for an individual FMU or agent bank should include, at a 
minimum, a description of the firm's relationship as a user with the 
key FMU or agent bank and an identification and mapping of PCS services 
to the associated material entities, critical operations, and core 
business lines that use those PCS services, as well as a discussion of 
the potential range of adverse actions that could be taken by that key 
FMU or agent bank in a period of stress for the firm or upon the firm's 
resolution.\11\ Playbooks submitted as part of the firms' most recent 
resolution plan submissions mapped the PCS services provided to 
material entities, critical operations, and core business lines at a 
fairly granular level, which enhanced the utility of these playbooks.
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    \11\ Potential adverse actions may include increased collateral 
and margin requirements and enhanced reporting and monitoring.
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    In discussing the potential range of adverse actions that a key FMU 
or agent bank could take, each playbook would be expected to address 
the operational and financial impact of such actions on each material 
entity and discuss contingency arrangements that the firm may initiate 
in response to such actions by the key FMU or key agent bank. 
Operational impacts may include effects

[[Page 32860]]

on governance mechanisms or resource allocation (including human 
resources), as well as any expected enhanced communication with key 
stakeholders (e.g., regulators, FMUs and agent banks). Financial 
impacts may include those directly associated with liquidity or any 
additional costs incurred by the firm as a result of such adverse 
actions and contingency arrangements. The proposed PCS guidance 
specifies that each playbook should discuss PCS-related liquidity 
sources and uses in business-as-usual (BAU), in stress, and in the 
resolution period. Each firm would be expected to determine the 
relevant measurement points, and this information would be presented by 
currency type (with U.S. dollar equivalent) and by material entity. 
Each playbook also would be expected to describe any account features 
that might restrict the firm's ready access to its intraday liquidity 
sources, the firm's ability to control intraday liquidity outflows, and 
the firm's capabilities to identify and prioritize time-specific 
payments.
    Content related to Providers of PCS Services. Under the proposal, a 
firm that is a direct or indirect provider of PCS services would be 
expected to identify key clients that rely upon PCS services provided 
by the firm in its playbook for the relevant FMU or agent bank. 
Playbooks would be expected to describe the scale and manner in which 
the firm's material entities, critical operations, and core business 
lines provide PCS services and any related credit or liquidity offered 
by the firm in connection with such services. Similar to the playbook 
content expected of users of PCS services, each playbook would be 
expected to include a mapping of the PCS services provided to each 
material entity, critical operation, core business line, and key 
clients. In the case where a firm is a provider of PCS services through 
its own operations, the firm would expected to produce a playbook for 
the material entity that provides those services, and the playbook 
would focus on continuity of access for its key clients.
    The proposal states that playbooks should discuss the potential 
range of contingency arrangements available to the firm to minimize 
disruption to its provision of PCS services to its clients and the 
financial and operational impacts of such arrangements. Contingency 
arrangements may include viable transfer of client activity and any 
related assets or any alternative arrangements that would allow the 
firm's key clients to maintain continued access to critical PCS 
services. The playbook also would be expected to describe the range of 
contingency actions that the firm may take concerning its provision of 
intraday credit to key clients and to provide analysis quantifying the 
potential liquidity that the firm could generate by taking each such 
action in stress and in the resolution period. To the extent a firm 
would not take any such actions as part of its preferred resolution 
strategy, the firm would be expected to describe its reasons for not 
taking any contingency action.
    Under the proposal, a firm should communicate the potential impacts 
of implementation of any identified contingency arrangements or 
alternatives to its key clients, and playbooks should describe the 
firm's methodology for determining whether it should provide any 
additional communication to some or all key clients (e.g., due to the 
client's usage of that access and/or related extensions of credit), as 
well as the expected timing and form of such communication. The 
Agencies note that in their most recent submissions, all of the firms 
addressed the issue of client communications and provided descriptions 
of planned or existing client communications, with some firms 
submitting specific samples of such communication. Firms would be 
expected to consider any benefit of communicating this information in 
multiple forms (e.g., verbal, written) and at multiple time periods 
(e.g., BAU, stress, some point in time in advance of taking contingency 
actions) in order to provide adequate notice to key clients of the 
action and the potential impact on the client of that action. In making 
decisions concerning communications to its key clients, the proposal 
states that firms also should consider any benefit of tailoring 
communications to different subsets of clients (e.g., based on 
different levels of activity or credit usage) in form, timing, or both. 
Playbooks may include sample client contracts or agreements containing 
provisions related to the firm's provision of intraday credit or 
liquidity.\12\ Such sample contracts or agreements may be particularly 
important to the extent that the firm believes those documents 
sufficiently convey to clients the contingency arrangements available 
to the firm and the potential impacts of implementing such contingency 
arrangements.
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    \12\ If these sample client contracts or agreements are included 
separately as part of the firm's resolution plan submission, they 
may be incorporated into the playbook by reference.
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    Question 3: Are the Agencies' expectations with respect to playbook 
content for firms that are users or providers (or both) of PCS services 
sufficiently clear? What additional clarifications, alternatives, or 
additional information, if any, should the Agencies consider?
    Question 4: Should the guidance indicate that providers of PCS 
activities are expected to expressly consider particular contingency 
arrangements (e.g., methods to transfer client activity to other firms 
with whom the clients have relationships, alternate agent bank 
relationships)? Should the guidance also indicate that firms should 
expressly consider particular actions they may take concerning the 
provision of intraday credit to affiliate and third-party clients, such 
as requiring pre-funding? If so, what particular actions should these 
firms address?
    Question 5: Specifically for users of PCS activities, should the 
guidance indicate that firms are expected to expressly include 
particular PCS-related liquidity sources and uses such as client pre-
funding, or specific abilities to control intraday liquidity inflows 
and outflows (e.g., throttling or prioritizing of payments)? If so, 
what particular sources and uses should firms be expected to include?
    Question 6: Specifically for providers of PCS services are the 
Agencies' expectations concerning a firm's communication to its key 
clients (including affiliates as applicable) of the potential impacts 
of implementation of identified contingency arrangements sufficiently 
clear? What additional clarifications, if any, should the Agencies 
consider? Should the Agencies expect firms to communicate this 
information at specific times or in specific formats?

Derivatives and Trading Activities

    This section of the proposed guidance is intended to explain 
expectations for Bank of America Corporation, Citigroup Inc., The 
Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., JP Morgan Chase & Co., Morgan Stanley, and 
Wells Fargo & Company (each, a ``dealer firm'').\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \13\ Dealer firms share many quantitative and qualitative 
characteristics. For example, each dealer firm is a Covered Company 
that (as of December 31, 2017) (i) has total derivatives notional 
values greater than $5 trillion, (ii) has global gross market value 
of derivatives greater than $20 billion, (iii) has a sum of global 
trading assets and trading liabilities greater than $110 billion 
(each on the basis of a 3-year rolling average), (iv) is subject to 
the GSIB Surcharge and all components of the CCAR quantitative 
assessment (i.e., global market shock and counterparty default 
scenario components), and (v) is parent to a designated primary 
dealer.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The size, scope, complexity, and opacity of a firm's global 
derivatives and trading activities may present

[[Page 32861]]

significant risk to resolvability. To facilitate an orderly resolution, 
a dealer firm should be able to demonstrate the ability to stabilize 
and de-risk its derivatives and trading activities during resolution 
without posing a threat to U.S. financial stability. Therefore, dealer 
firms have developed capabilities to identify and mitigate the risks 
associated with their derivatives and trading activities and with the 
implementation of their preferred resolution strategies. These 
capabilities seek to facilitate a dealer firm's planning, preparedness, 
and execution of an orderly resolution. The proposed guidance would 
clarify the Agencies' expectations with respect to such capabilities 
and a firm's analysis of its preferred strategy. The proposed guidance 
also would eliminate the expectations of the 2016 Guidance that a 
dealer firm's resolution plan include separate passive and active wind-
down scenario analyses, the agency-specified data templates, and rating 
agency playbooks.
    Over the past several years, the Agencies have engaged 
significantly with dealer firms to assess their resolution capabilities 
and to provide feedback with respect to their resolution preparedness. 
As a group, dealer firms have made meaningful improvements over 
previous resolution plan submissions. These improvements include 
efforts by dealer firms to enhance their resolution capabilities 
related to derivatives and trading activities and to integrate those 
capabilities with their business-as-usual practices. The expectations 
set out in this section of the proposed guidance reflect many of those 
improvements. As described in more detail below, this section of the 
proposed guidance is organized in five subsections. The first four of 
the subsections describe expectations for resolution capabilities that 
are commensurate with the size, scope and complexity of a firm's 
derivatives portfolios and should help assure that dealer firms 
maintain the operational preparedness to implement an orderly 
resolution. The fifth subsection--derivatives stabilization and de-
risking strategy--describes expectations for a dealer firm's analysis 
of its approach to managing its derivatives portfolios in an orderly 
resolution.
    Booking practices. To minimize uncertainty and avoid excessive 
complexity and opacity that can frustrate a firm's resolution 
preparedness, a dealer firm's resolution capabilities should include 
booking practices commensurate with the size, scope and complexity of a 
firm's derivatives portfolios. Dealer firms are currently developing 
booking practices that provide timely and up-to-date information 
regarding the structure, risks and resource needs associated with the 
management of its derivatives activities under a broad range of 
potential stress and failure scenarios. Therefore, the proposed 
guidance would clarify the capabilities a dealer firm is expected to 
have related to its booking practices, including descriptions of its 
comprehensive booking model framework and demonstrations of its ability 
to identify, assess, and report on each entity with derivatives 
portfolios (a ``derivatives entity'').\14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \14\ Consistent with prior guidance, ``derivatives entities'' 
should include both material and non-material entities, in part 
because non-material entities, in the aggregate, may represent 
significant exposures.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Inter-affiliate risk monitoring and controls. Affiliates of a 
derivatives entity may be forced to discontinue a trading relationship 
with that derivatives entity during resolution, which poses risks to 
the orderly resolution of a firm. The proposal describes the Agencies' 
expectations that a dealer firm address this risk by being able to 
provide timely transparency into the current risk transfers between 
affiliates and the resolvability risks related to such transfers, 
including expectations regarding an inter-affiliate market risk 
framework that enables the firm to monitor and limit the exposures a 
derivatives entity that is a material entity could experience in an 
extreme resolution scenario.
    Portfolio segmentation and forecasting. The ability to quickly and 
reliably identify problematic derivatives positions and portfolios is 
critical to minimizing uncertainty and forecasting resource needs to 
enable an orderly resolution. Each dealer firm has developed various 
modeling approaches that are used to evidence the adequacy of the 
capabilities and resources needed to execute its preferred resolution 
strategy. The utility of these modeled results is often affected by the 
scope of readily available data on the underlying characteristics of a 
dealer firm's derivatives portfolios. Therefore, the proposal confirms 
that a dealer firm should have the capabilities to produce analysis 
that reflects granular portfolio segmentation and differentiation of 
assumptions taking into account trade-level characteristics. Similarly, 
the proposed guidance also provides additional detail regarding other 
segmentation and forecasting related capabilities that the dealer 
firm's resolution plan should describe and demonstrate. These 
capabilities include (i) a method and supporting systems capabilities 
for categorizing and ranking the ease of exit for its derivatives 
positions (``ease of exit'' position analysis), (ii) the systems 
capabilities to apply the firm's exit cost methodology to its firm-wide 
derivatives portfolio (application of exit cost methodology), (iii) 
capabilities to assess the operational resources and forecast the costs 
related to its current derivatives activities (analysis of operational 
capacity), and (iv) a method to apply sensitivity analyses to the key 
drivers of the derivatives-related costs and liquidity flows under its 
preferred resolution strategy (sensitivity analysis).
    Prime brokerage customer account transfers. The rapid withdrawal 
from a firm by prime brokerage clients can contribute to a disorderly 
resolution. Dealer firms' resolution plans should address the risk that 
during a resolution the firm's prime brokerage clients may seek to 
withdraw or transfer customer accounts balances in rates significantly 
higher than normal business conditions. The proposed guidance confirms 
that dealer firms should have the capabilities to facilitate the 
orderly transfer of prime brokerage account balances to peer prime 
brokers and describes the Agencies' related expectations in greater 
detail. In particular, the proposed guidance clarifies that a dealer 
firm's resolution plan should describe and demonstrate its ability to 
segment and analyze the quality and composition of such account 
balances and to rank account balances according to their potential 
transfer speed.
    Derivatives stabilization and de-risking strategy. A key risk to 
the orderly resolution of a dealer firm is a volatile and risky 
derivatives portfolio. In the event of material financial distress or 
failure, the resolvability risks related to a dealer firm's derivatives 
and trading activities would be a key obstacle to the firm's rapid and 
orderly resolution. Dealer firms' resolution plans should address this 
obstacle. The proposed guidance confirms that a dealer firm's plan 
should provide a detailed analysis of the strategy to stabilize and de-
risk its derivatives portfolios (``derivatives strategy'') and provides 
additional detail regarding the Agencies' expectations.\15\ In 
particular, the proposed guidance clarifies that a dealer firm should 
incorporate into its derivatives strategy

[[Page 32862]]

assumptions consistent with the lack of access to the bilateral OTC 
derivatives market at the start of its resolution period. The proposed 
guidance also confirms or clarifies expectations related to other 
elements that should be addressed in the firm's analysis of its 
derivatives strategy, including the incorporation of resource needs 
into RLEN and RCEN (forecast of resource needs), an analysis of any 
potential derivatives portfolio remaining after the resolution period 
(potential residual derivatives portfolio), and the impact (including 
on non-U.S. jurisdictions) from the assumed failure of a material 
derivatives entity (non-surviving material entity analysis).\16\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \15\ Subject to the certain constraints, a firm's derivatives 
strategy may take the form of a going-concern strategy, an 
accelerated de-risking strategy (e.g., active wind-down) or an 
alternative, third strategy so long as the firm's resolution plan 
adequately supports the executability of the chosen strategy.
    \16\ From the perspective of protecting U.S. financial 
stability, the risk of adverse regulatory actions that could impede 
an orderly resolution increases where a material entity's failure 
would have extraordinary impacts on local markets. Therefore, 
analysis of non-surviving material entities located in a non-U.S. 
jurisdiction should contemplate the impact on local markets.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Question 7: Do the proposed changes relative to the 2016 Guidance 
provide sufficient clarity or are additional clarifications required?

Consolidation of Existing Guidance

    In addition to the 2016 Guidance, the Agencies have also issued: 
the Guidance for 2013 Sec.  165(d) Annual Resolution Plan Submissions 
by Domestic Covered Companies that Submitted Initial Resolution Plans 
in 2012 (the ``2013 Guidance''); firm-specific feedback letters issued 
in 2014 and 2016; and the February 2015 staff communication regarding 
the 2016 plan submissions. The Agencies are considering consolidating 
all applicable guidance into a single document, which would provide the 
public with one source of applicable guidance to which to refer. The 
Agencies would also expect to incorporate aspects of the Resolution 
Plan Frequently Asked Questions issued May 2017 that may remain 
applicable.\17\ For example, the Agencies could add a section to the 
proposed guidance that includes the aspects of the 2013 Guidance that 
should remain applicable, such as the plan format description in the 
``Format of 2013 Plan'' and ``Additional Format and Content Guidance'' 
sections, some of the central assumptions and stress scenarios in the 
``Assumptions'' and ``Stress Scenarios'' sections, the process for 
addressing expected global cooperation described in the ``Global 
Cooperation'' section, and the considerations for identifying material 
entities in the ``Material Entities'' section.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \17\ https://www.fdic.gov/resauthority/2017faqsguidance.pdf; 
https://www.federalreserve.gov/publications/files/resolution-plan-faqs.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Question 8: Should the Agencies consolidate all applicable 
guidance? If so, which aspects of the other guidance warrant inclusion, 
additional clarification or modification?

IV. Paperwork Reduction Act

    Certain provisions of the Rule contain ``collection of 
information'' requirements within the meaning of the Paperwork 
Reduction Act (``PRA'') of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 through 3521). In 
accordance with the requirements of the PRA, a respondent is not 
required to respond to an information collection unless it displays a 
currently valid Office of Management and Budget (OMB) control number. 
The Agencies believe that the proposed changes to the 2016 Guidance 
would not result in an increase in information collection burden to the 
Covered Companies. The Agencies invite public comment on this 
assessment.

TEXT OF PROPOSED RESOLUTION PLANNING GUIDANCE FOR EIGHT LARGE, COMPLEX 
U.S. BANKING ORGANIZATIONS

Resolution Planning Guidance for Eight Large, Complex U.S. Banking 
Organizations

I. Introduction
II. Capital
    a. Resolution Capital Adequacy and Positioning (RCAP)
    b. Resolution Capital Execution Need (RCEN)
III. Liquidity
    a. Resolution Liquidity Adequacy and Positioning (RLAP)
    b. Resolution Liquidity Execution Need (RLEN)
IV. Governance Mechanisms
    a. Playbooks and Triggers
    b. Pre-Bankruptcy Parent Support
V. Operational
    a. Payment, Clearing, and Settlement Activities
    b. Managing, Identifying, and Valuing Collateral
    c. Management Information Systems
    d. Shared and Outsourced Services
    e. Legal Obstacles Associated with Emergency Motions
VI. Legal Entity Rationalization and Separability
    a. Legal Entity Rationalization Criteria (LER Criteria)
    b. Separability
VII. Derivatives and Trading Activities
    a. Booking Practices
    b. Inter-Affiliate Risk Monitoring and Controls
    c. Portfolio Segmentation and Forecasting
    d. Prime Brokerage Customer Account Transfers
    e. Derivatives Stabilization and De-risking Strategy
VIII. Public Section

I. Introduction

    Resolution Plan Requirement: Section 165(d) of the Dodd-Frank Wall 
Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (12 U.S.C. 5365(d)) requires 
certain financial companies (``Covered Companies'') to report 
periodically to the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System 
(the ``Federal Reserve'' or ``Board'') and the Federal Deposit 
Insurance Corporation (the ``FDIC'') (together ``the Agencies'') the 
Companies' \18\ Plans for Rapid and Orderly Resolution in the event of 
Material Financial Distress or failure. On November 1, 2011, the 
Agencies promulgated a joint rule (the ``Rule'') implementing the 
provisions of Section 165(d), 12 CFR parts 243 and 381.\19\ Certain 
Covered Companies meeting criteria set out in the Rule must file a 
resolution plan (``Plan'') annually or at a different time period 
specified by the Agencies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \18\ Capitalized terms not defined herein have the meaning set 
forth in the Rule.
    \19\ 76 Fed. Reg. 67323 (November 1, 2011)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Overview of Guidance Document: This document is intended to assist 
the eight current U.S. Global Systemically Important Banks (``GSIBs'' 
or ``firms'') \20\ in further developing their preferred resolution 
strategies. The document describes the expectations of the Agencies 
regarding these firms' resolution plans, and highlights specific areas 
where additional detail should be provided and where certain 
capabilities or optionality should be developed and maintained to 
demonstrate that each firm has considered fully, and is able to 
mitigate, obstacles to the successful implementation of the preferred 
strategy.\21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \20\ Bank of America Corporation, the Bank of New York Mellon 
Corporation, Citigroup Inc., the Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., JPMorgan 
Chase & Co., Morgan Stanley, State Street Corporation and Wells 
Fargo & Company.
    \21\ The 2013 Guidance, the 2014 Letter, and the 2015 
Communication, as described in the 2016 letters to the firms, 
continue to be applicable (relevant dates should be updated 
appropriately), except to the extent superseded or supplemented by 
the provisions of this document. See Letters dated April 12, 2016, 
from the Board and FDIC to Bank of America Corporation, The Bank of 
New York Mellon Corporation, Citigroup Inc., the Goldman Sachs 
Group, Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Co., Morgan Stanley, State Street 
Corporation, and Wells Fargo & Company, available at https://www.federalreserve.gov/supervisionreg/resolution-plans.htm.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    This document is organized around a number of key vulnerabilities 
in resolution (i.e., capital; liquidity; governance mechanisms; 
operational; legal entity rationalization and separability; and 
derivatives and trading activities) that apply across resolution plans. 
Additional vulnerabilities or

[[Page 32863]]

obstacles may arise based on a firm's particular structure, operations, 
or resolution strategy. Each firm is expected to satisfactorily address 
these vulnerabilities in its Plan--e.g., by developing sensitivity 
analysis for certain underlying assumptions, enhancing capabilities, 
providing detailed analysis, or increasing optionality development, as 
indicated below.
    The Agencies will review the Plan to determine if it satisfactorily 
addresses key potential vulnerabilities, including those detailed 
below. If the Agencies jointly decide that these matters are not 
satisfactorily addressed in the Plan, the Agencies may determine 
jointly that the Plan is not credible or would not facilitate an 
orderly resolution under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code.

II. CAPITAL

    Resolution Capital Adequacy and Positioning (RCAP): To help ensure 
that a firm's material entities \22\ could operate while the parent 
company is in bankruptcy, the firm should have an adequate amount of 
loss-absorbing capacity to recapitalize those material entities. Thus, 
a firm should have outstanding a minimum amount of total loss-absorbing 
capital, as well as a minimum amount of long-term debt, to help ensure 
that the firm has adequate capacity to meet that need at a consolidated 
level (external TLAC).\23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \22\ The terms ``material entities,'' ``critical operations,'' 
and ``core business lines'' have the same meaning as in the 
Agencies' Rule.
    \23\ 82 Fed. Reg. 8266 (January 24, 2017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    A firm's external TLAC should be complemented by appropriate 
positioning of additional loss-absorbing capacity within the firm 
(internal TLAC). The positioning of a firm's internal TLAC should 
balance the certainty associated with pre-positioning internal TLAC 
directly at material entities with the flexibility provided by holding 
recapitalization resources at the parent (contributable resources) to 
meet unanticipated losses at material entities. That balance should 
take account of both pre-positioning at material entities and holding 
resources at the parent, and the obstacles associated with each. 
Accordingly, the firm should not rely exclusively on either full pre-
positioning or parent contributable resources to recapitalize any 
material entity. The plan should describe the positioning of internal 
TLAC within the firm, along with analysis supporting such positioning.
    Finally, to the extent that pre-positioned internal TLAC at a 
material entity is in the form of intercompany debt and there are one 
or more entities between that material entity and the parent, the firm 
should mitigate uncertainty related to potential creditor challenge; 
for example, by ensuring that the seniority and tenor of the 
intercompany debt is the same between all entities in the chain.
    Resolution Capital Execution Need (RCEN): To support the execution 
of the firm's resolution strategy, material entities need to be 
recapitalized to a level that allows them to operate or be wound down 
in an orderly manner following the parent company's bankruptcy filing. 
The firm should have a methodology for periodically estimating the 
amount of capital that may be needed to support each material entity 
after the bankruptcy filing (RCEN). The firm's positioning of internal 
TLAC should be able to support the RCEN estimates. In addition, the 
RCEN estimates should be incorporated into the firm's governance 
framework to ensure that the parent company files for bankruptcy at a 
time that enables execution of the preferred strategy.
    The firm's RCEN methodology should use conservative forecasts for 
losses and risk-weighted assets and incorporate estimates of potential 
additional capital needs through the resolution period,\24\ consistent 
with the firm's resolution strategy. However, the methodology is not 
required to produce aggregate losses that are greater than the amount 
of external TLAC that would be required for the firm under the Board's 
rule.\25\ The RCEN methodology should be calibrated such that 
recapitalized material entities have sufficient capital to maintain 
market confidence as required under the preferred resolution strategy. 
Capital levels should meet or exceed all applicable regulatory capital 
requirements for ``well-capitalized'' status and meet estimated 
additional capital needs throughout resolution. Material entities that 
are not subject to capital requirements may be considered sufficiently 
recapitalized when they have achieved capital levels typically required 
to obtain an investment-grade credit rating or, if the entity is not 
rated, an equivalent level of financial soundness. Finally, the 
methodology should be independently reviewed, consistent with the 
firm's corporate governance processes and controls for the use of 
models and methodologies.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \24\ The resolution period begins immediately after the parent 
company bankruptcy filing and extends through the completion of the 
preferred resolution strategy.
    \25\ See 12 CFR 252.60-.65; 82 Fed. Reg. 8266 (January 24, 
2017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

III. LIQUIDITY

    The firm should have the liquidity capabilities necessary to 
execute its preferred resolution strategy, including those described in 
SR Letter 14-1.\26\ For resolution purposes, these capabilities should 
include having an appropriate model and process for estimating and 
maintaining sufficient liquidity at or readily available to material 
entities and a methodology for estimating the liquidity needed to 
successfully execute the resolution strategy, as described below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \26\ SR Letter 14-1, ``Heightened Supervisory Expectations for 
Recovery and Resolution Preparedness for Certain Large Bank Holding 
Companies--Supplemental Guidance on Consolidated Supervision 
Framework for Large Financial Institutions'' (Jan. 24, 2014), 
available at http://www.federalreserve.gov/bankinforeg/srletters/sr1401.pdf.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Resolution Liquidity Adequacy and Positioning (RLAP): With respect 
to RLAP, the firm should be able to measure the stand-alone liquidity 
position of each material entity (including material entities that are 
non-U.S. branches)--i.e., the high-quality liquid assets (HQLA) at the 
material entity less net outflows to third parties and affiliates--and 
ensure that liquidity is readily available to meet any deficits. The 
RLAP model should cover a period of at least 30 days and reflect the 
idiosyncratic liquidity profile and risk of the firm. The model should 
balance the reduction in frictions associated with holding liquidity 
directly at material entities with the flexibility provided by holding 
HQLA at the parent available to meet unanticipated outflows at material 
entities. Thus, the firm should not rely exclusively on either full 
pre-positioning or the parent. The model \27\ should ensure that the 
parent holding company holds sufficient HQLA (inclusive of its deposits 
at the U.S. branch of the lead bank subsidiary) to cover the sum of all 
stand-alone material entity net liquidity deficits. The stand-alone net 
liquidity position of each material entity (HQLA less net outflows) 
should be measured using the firm's internal liquidity stress test 
assumptions and should treat inter-affiliate exposures in the same 
manner as third-party exposures. For example, an overnight unsecured 
exposure to an affiliate should be assumed to mature. Finally, the firm 
should not assume that a net liquidity surplus at one material entity 
could be moved to meet net

[[Page 32864]]

liquidity deficits at other material entities or to augment parent 
resources.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \27\ ``Model'' refers to the set of calculations estimating the 
net liquidity surplus/deficit at each legal entity and for the firm 
in aggregate based on assumptions regarding available liquidity, 
e.g., HQLA, and third-party and interaffiliate net outflows.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Additionally, the RLAP methodology should take into account (A) the 
daily contractual mismatches between inflows and outflows; (B) the 
daily flows from movement of cash and collateral for all inter-
affiliate transactions; and (C) the daily stressed liquidity flows and 
trapped liquidity as a result of actions taken by clients, 
counterparties, key financial market utilities (FMUs), and foreign 
supervisors, among others.
    Resolution Liquidity Execution Need (RLEN): The firm should have a 
methodology for estimating the liquidity needed after the parent's 
bankruptcy filing to stabilize the surviving material entities and to 
allow those entities to operate post-filing. The RLEN estimate should 
be incorporated into the firm's governance framework to ensure that the 
firm files for bankruptcy in a timely way, i.e., prior to the firm's 
HQLA falling below the RLEN estimate.
    The firm's RLEN methodology should:
    (A) Estimate the minimum operating liquidity (MOL) needed at each 
material entity to ensure those entities could continue to operate 
post-parent's bankruptcy filing and/or to support a wind-down strategy;
    (B) Provide daily cash flow forecasts by material entity to support 
estimation of peak funding needs to stabilize each entity under 
resolution;
    (C) Provide a comprehensive breakout of all inter-affiliate 
transactions and arrangements that could impact the MOL or peak funding 
needs estimates; and
    (D) Estimate the minimum amount of liquidity required at each 
material entity to meet the MOL and peak needs noted above, which would 
inform the firm's board(s) of directors of when they need to take 
resolution-related actions.
    The MOL estimates should capture material entities' intraday 
liquidity requirements, operating expenses, working capital needs, and 
inter-affiliate funding frictions to ensure that material entities 
could operate without disruption during the resolution.
    The peak funding needs estimates should be projected for each 
material entity and cover the length of time the firm expects it would 
take to stabilize that material entity. Inter-affiliate funding 
frictions should be taken into account in the estimation process.
    The firm's forecasts of MOL and peak funding needs should ensure 
that material entities could operate post-filing consistent with 
regulatory requirements, market expectations, and the firm's post-
failure strategy. These forecasts should inform the RLEN estimate, 
i.e., the minimum amount of HQLA required to facilitate the execution 
of the firm's strategy. The RLEN estimate should be tied to the firm's 
governance mechanisms and be incorporated into the playbooks as 
discussed below to assist the board of directors in taking timely 
resolution-related actions.

IV. GOVERNANCE MECHANISMS

    Playbooks and Triggers: A firm should identify the governance 
mechanisms that would ensure execution of required board actions at the 
appropriate time (as anticipated under the firm's preferred strategy) 
and include pre-action triggers and existing agreements for such 
actions. Governance playbooks should detail the board and senior 
management actions necessary to facilitate the firm's preferred 
strategy and to mitigate vulnerabilities, and should incorporate the 
triggers identified below. The governance playbooks should also include 
a discussion of (A) the firm's proposed communications strategy, both 
internal and external; (B) the boards of directors' fiduciary 
responsibilities and how planned actions would be consistent with such 
responsibilities applicable at the time actions are expected to be 
taken; (C) potential conflicts of interest, including interlocking 
boards of directors; and (D) any employee retention policy. All 
responsible parties and timeframes for action should be identified. 
Governance playbooks should be updated periodically for all entities 
whose boards of directors would need to act in advance of the 
commencement of resolution proceedings under the firm's preferred 
strategy.
    The firm should demonstrate that key actions will be taken at the 
appropriate time in order to mitigate financial, operational, legal, 
and regulatory vulnerabilities. To ensure that these actions will 
occur, the firm should establish clearly identified triggers linked to 
specific actions for:
    (A) The escalation of information to senior management and the 
board(s) to potentially take the corresponding actions at each stage of 
distress post-recovery leading eventually to the decision to file for 
bankruptcy;
    (B) Successful recapitalization of subsidiaries prior to the 
parent's filing for bankruptcy and funding of such entities during the 
parent company's bankruptcy to the extent the preferred strategy relies 
on such actions or support; and
    (C) The timely execution of a bankruptcy filing and related pre-
filing actions.\28\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \28\ Key pre-filing actions include the preparation of any 
emergency motion required to be decided on the first day of the 
firm's bankruptcy. See ``OPERATIONAL--Legal Obstacles Associated 
with Emergency Motions,'' below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    These triggers should be based, at a minimum, on capital, 
liquidity, and market metrics, and should incorporate the firm's 
methodologies for forecasting the liquidity and capital needed to 
operate as required by the preferred strategy following a parent 
company's bankruptcy filing. Additionally, the triggers and related 
actions should be specific.
    Triggers linked to firm actions as contemplated by the firm's 
preferred strategy should identify when and under what conditions the 
firm, including the parent company and its material entities, would 
transition from business-as-usual conditions to a stress period and 
from a stress period to the runway and recapitalization/resolution 
periods. Corresponding escalation procedures, actions, and timeframes 
should be constructed so that breach of the triggers will allow 
prerequisite actions to be completed. For example, breach of the 
triggers needs to occur early enough to ensure that resources are 
available and can be downstreamed, if anticipated by the firm's 
strategy, and with adequate time for the preparation of the bankruptcy 
petition and first-day motions, necessary stakeholder communications, 
and requisite board actions. Triggers identifying the onset of the 
runway and recapitalization/resolution periods, and the associated 
escalation procedures and actions, should be discussed directly in the 
governance playbooks.
    Pre-Bankruptcy Parent Support: The resolution plan should include a 
detailed legal analysis of the potential state law and bankruptcy law 
challenges and mitigants to planned provision of capital and liquidity 
to the subsidiaries prior to the parent's bankruptcy filing (Support). 
Specifically, the analysis should identify potential legal obstacles 
and explain how the firm would seek to ensure that Support would be 
provided as planned. Legal obstacles include claims of fraudulent 
transfer, preference, breach of fiduciary duty, and any other 
applicable legal theory identified by the firm. The analysis also 
should include related claims that may prevent or delay an effective 
recapitalization, such as equitable claims to enjoin the transfer 
(e.g., imposition of a constructive trust by the court). The analysis 
should apply the actions contemplated in the plan

[[Page 32865]]

regarding each element of the claim, the anticipated timing for 
commencement and resolution of the claims, and the extent to which 
adjudication of such claim could affect execution of the firm's 
preferred resolution strategy.
    As noted, the analysis should include mitigants to the potential 
challenges to the planned Support. The plan should include the 
mitigant(s) to such challenges that the firm considers most effective. 
In identifying appropriate mitigants, the firm should consider the 
effectiveness of a contractually binding mechanism (CBM), pre-
positioning of financial resources in material entities, and the 
creation of an intermediate holding company. Moreover, if the plan 
includes a CBM, the firm should consider whether it is appropriate that 
the CBM should have the following: (A) clearly defined triggers; (B) 
triggers that are synchronized to the firm's liquidity and capital 
methodologies; (C) perfected security interests in specified collateral 
sufficient to fully secure all Support obligations on a continuous 
basis (including mechanisms for adjusting the amount of collateral as 
the value of obligations under the agreement or collateral assets 
fluctuates); and (D) liquidated damages provisions or other features 
designed to make the CBM more enforceable. The firm also should 
consider related actions or agreements that may enhance the 
effectiveness of a CBM. A copy of any agreement and documents 
referenced therein (e.g., evidence of security interest perfection) 
should be included in the resolution plan.
    The governance playbooks included in the resolution plan should 
incorporate any developments from the firm's analysis of potential 
legal challenges regarding the Support, including any Support 
approach(es) the firm has implemented. If the firm analyzed and 
addressed an issue noted in this section in a prior plan submission, 
the plan may reproduce that analysis and arguments and should build 
upon it to at least the extent described above. In preparing the 
analysis of these issues, firms may consult with law firms and other 
experts on these matters. The Agencies do not object to appropriate 
collaboration between firms, including through trade organizations and 
with the academic community, to develop analysis of common legal 
challenges and available mitigants.

V. OPERATIONAL

Payment, Clearing, and Settlement Activities

    Framework. Maintaining continuity of payment, clearing, and 
settlement (PCS) services is critical for the orderly resolution of 
firms that are either users or providers,\29\ or both, of PCS services. 
A firm should demonstrate capabilities \30\ for continued access to PCS 
services essential to an orderly resolution through a framework to 
support such access by:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \29\ A firm is a user of PCS services if it uses the services of 
a financial market utility (FMU) through its membership in that FMU 
or an agent bank. A firm is a provider of PCS services if it 
provides its clients with access to an FMU or agent bank through the 
firm's membership to or relationship with that service provider 
(including providing PCS services to its client as an agent bank) or 
if it provides key clients with critical PCS services (e.g., the 
suspension or termination of such services would impact the key 
client's continued access to PCS services) through the firm's own 
operations.
    \30\ These capabilities may include those described in SR Letter 
14-1.
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     Identifying key clients,\31\ FMUs, and agent banks, using 
both quantitative (volume and value) \32\ and qualitative criteria;
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    \31\ For purposes of this section V, a client is an individual 
or entity, including affiliates of the firm, that relies upon 
continued access to the firm's PCS services and any related credit 
or liquidity offered in connection with those services.
    \32\ Examples of quantitative criteria include not only the 
aggregate volumes and values of all transactions processed through 
an FMU but also assets under custody with an agent bank, the value 
of cash and securities settled through an agent bank, and extensions 
of intraday credit.
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     Mapping material entities, critical operations, core 
business lines, and key clients to both key FMUs and agent banks; and
     Developing a playbook for each key FMU and agent bank 
reflecting the firm's role(s) as a user and/or provider of PCS 
services.
    The framework should address both direct relationships (e.g., 
firm's direct membership in the FMU, firm provides key clients with 
critical PCS services through its own operations, firm's contractual 
relationship with an agent bank) and indirect relationships (e.g., firm 
provides its clients with access to the relevant FMU or agent bank 
through the firm's membership to or relationship with that FMU or agent 
bank).
    Playbooks for Continued Access to PCS Services. The firm is 
expected to provide a playbook for each key FMU and agent bank that 
addresses considerations that would assist the firm and its clients in 
maintaining continued access to PCS services in the period leading up 
to and including the firm's resolution. While the firm is not expected 
to incorporate a scenario in which it loses FMU or agent bank access 
into its preferred resolution strategy or its RLEN/RCEN estimates, each 
playbook should provide analysis of the financial and operational 
impact to the firm's material entities and key clients due to loss of 
access to the FMU or agent bank. Each playbook also should discuss any 
possible alternative arrangements that would allow the firm and its key 
clients continued access to PCS services in resolution. The firm should 
continue to engage with key FMUs, agent banks and clients, and 
playbooks should reflect any feedback received during such ongoing 
outreach.
    Content Related to Users of PCS Services. Individual FMU and agent 
bank playbooks should include at a minimum:
     Description of the firm's relationship as a user with the 
key FMU or agent bank and the identification and mapping of PCS 
services to material entities, critical operations, and core business 
lines that use those PCS services;
     Discussion of the potential range of adverse actions that 
may be taken by that key FMU or agent bank when the firm is in 
resolution,\33\ the operational and financial impact of such actions on 
each material entity, and contingency arrangements that may be 
initiated by the firm in response to potential adverse actions by the 
key FMU or key agent bank; and
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    \33\ Potential adverse actions may include increased collateral 
and margin requirements and enhanced reporting and monitoring.
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     Discussion of PCS-related liquidity sources and uses in 
business-as-usual (BAU), in stress, and in the resolution period, 
presented by currency type (with U.S. dollar equivalent) and by 
material entity.
    [cir] PCS Liquidity Sources: These may include the amounts of 
intraday extensions of credit, liquidity buffer, inflows from FMU 
participants, and client prefunded amounts in BAU, in stress, and in 
the resolution period. The playbook should also describe intraday 
credit arrangements (e.g., facilities of the FMU, agent bank, or a 
central bank) and any similar custodial arrangements that allow ready 
access to a firm's funds for PCS-related FMU and agent bank obligations 
(including margin requirements) in various currencies, including 
placements of firm liquidity at central banks, FMUs, and agent banks.
    [cir] PCS Liquidity Uses: These may include firm and client margin, 
pre-funding and intraday extensions of credit, including incremental 
amounts required during resolution.

[[Page 32866]]

    [cir] Intraday Liquidity Inflows and Outflows: The playbook should 
describe the firm's ability to control intraday liquidity inflows and 
outflows and to identify and prioritize time-specific payments. The 
playbook should also describe any account features that might restrict 
the firm's ready access to its liquidity sources.
    Content Related to Providers of PCS Services. Individual FMU and 
agent bank playbooks \34\ should include at a minimum:
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    \34\ Where a firm is a provider of PCS services through the 
firm's own operations, the firm is expected to produce a playbook 
for the material entity that provides those services, including 
contingency arrangements to permit the firm's key clients to 
maintain continued access to PCS services.
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     Identification and mapping of PCS services to the material 
entities, critical operations, and core business lines that provide 
those PCS services, and a description of the scale and the way in which 
each provides PCS services;
     Identification and mapping of PCS services to key clients 
that rely upon the firm to provide those PCS services and any related 
credit or liquidity offered in connection with such services;
     Discussion of the potential range of firm contingency 
arrangements available to minimize disruption to the provision of PCS 
services to its clients, including the viability of transferring client 
activity and any related assets, as well as any alternative 
arrangements that would allow the firm's key clients continued access 
to critical PCS services if the firm could no longer provide such 
access (e.g., due to the firm's loss of FMU or agent bank access), and 
the financial and operational impacts of such arrangements;
     Description of the range of contingency actions that the 
firm may take concerning its provision of intraday credit to clients, 
including analysis quantifying the potential liquidity the firm could 
generate by taking such actions in stress and in the resolution period, 
such as (i) requiring clients to designate or appropriately pre-
position liquidity, including through pre-funding of settlement 
activity, for PCS-related FMU and agent bank obligations at specific 
material entities of the firm (e.g., direct members of FMUs) or any 
similar custodial arrangements that allow ready access to clients' 
funds for such obligations in various currencies; (ii) delaying or 
restricting client PCS activity; and (iii) restricting, imposing 
conditions upon (e.g., requiring collateral), or eliminating the 
provision of intraday credit or liquidity to clients; and
     Description of how the firm will communicate to its key 
clients the potential impacts of implementation of any identified 
contingency arrangements or alternatives, including a description of 
the firm's methodology for determining whether any additional 
communication should be provided to some or all key clients (e.g., due 
to the client's BAU usage of that access and/or related intraday credit 
or liquidity), and the expected timing and form of such communication.
    Managing, Identifying, and Valuing Collateral: The firm should have 
the capabilities described in SR Letter 14-1 related to managing, 
identifying, and valuing the collateral that it receives from and posts 
to external parties and its affiliates. Specifically, the firm should:
     Be able to query and provide aggregate statistics for all 
qualified financial contracts concerning cross-default clauses, 
downgrade triggers, and other key collateral-related contract terms -- 
not just those terms that may be impacted in an adverse economic 
environment -- across contract types, business lines, legal entities, 
and jurisdictions;
     Be able to track both firm collateral sources (i.e., 
counterparties that have pledged collateral) and uses (i.e., 
counterparties to whom collateral has been pledged) at the CUSIP level 
on at least a t+1 basis;
     Have robust risk measurements for cross-entity and cross-
contract netting, including consideration of where collateral is held 
and pledged;
     Be able to identify CUSIP and asset class level 
information on collateral pledged to specific central counterparties by 
legal entity on at least a t+1 basis;
     Be able to track and report on inter-branch collateral 
pledged and received on at least a t+1 basis and have clear policies 
explaining the rationale for such inter-branch pledges, including any 
regulatory considerations; and
     Have a comprehensive collateral management policy that 
outlines how the firm as a whole approaches collateral and serves as a 
single source for governance.\35\
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    \35\ The policy may reference subsidiary or related policies 
already in place, as implementation may differ based on business 
line or other factors.
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    Management Information Systems: The firm should have the management 
information systems (MIS) capabilities to readily produce data on a 
legal entity basis and have controls to ensure data integrity and 
reliability, as described in SR Letter 14-1. The firm also should 
perform a detailed analysis of the specific types of financial and risk 
data that would be required to execute the preferred resolution 
strategy and how frequently the firm would need to produce the 
information, with the appropriate level of granularity.
    Shared and Outsourced Services: The firm should maintain a fully 
actionable implementation plan to ensure the continuity of shared 
services that support critical operations and robust arrangements to 
support the continuity of shared and outsourced services. The firm 
should (A) maintain an identification of all shared services that 
support critical operations (critical services); (B) maintain a mapping 
of how/where these services support its core business lines and 
critical operations; (C) incorporate such mapping into legal entity 
rationalization criteria and implementation efforts; and (D) mitigate 
identified continuity risks through establishment of service-level 
agreements (SLAs) for all critical shared services. These SLAs should 
fully describe the services provided, reflect pricing considerations on 
an arm's-length basis where appropriate, and incorporate appropriate 
terms and conditions to (A) prevent automatic termination upon certain 
resolution-related events and (B) achieve continued provision of such 
services during resolution. The firm should also store SLAs in a 
central repository or repositories in a searchable format, develop and 
document contingency strategies and arrangements for replacement of 
critical shared services, and complete re-alignment or restructuring of 
activities within its corporate structure. In addition, the firm should 
ensure the financial resilience of internal shared service providers by 
maintaining working capital for six months (or through the period of 
stabilization as required in the firm's preferred strategy) in such 
entities sufficient to cover contract costs, consistent with the 
preferred resolution strategy.
    The firm should identify all critical outsourced services that 
support critical operations and could not be promptly substituted. The 
firm should (A) evaluate the agreements governing these services to 
determine whether there are any that could be terminated despite 
continued performance upon the parent's bankruptcy filing, and (B) 
update contracts to incorporate appropriate terms and conditions to 
prevent automatic termination and facilitate continued provision of 
such services during resolution. Relying on entities projected to 
survive during resolution to avoid contract termination is insufficient 
to ensure continuity. In

[[Page 32867]]

the plan, the firm should document the amendment of any such agreements 
governing these services.
    Legal Obstacles Associated with Emergency Motions: The Plan should 
address legal issues associated with the implementation of the stay on 
cross-default rights described in Section 2 of the International Swaps 
and Derivatives Association 2015 Universal Resolution Stay Protocol 
(Protocol), similar provisions of any U.S. protocol,\36\ or other 
contractual provisions that comply with the Agencies' rules regarding 
stays from the exercise of cross-default rights in qualified financial 
contracts, to the extent relevant.\37\ Generally, the Protocol provides 
two primary methods of satisfying the stay conditions for covered 
agreements for which the affiliate in Chapter 11 proceedings has 
provided a credit enhancement (A) transferring all such credit 
enhancements to a Bankruptcy Bridge Company (as defined in the 
Protocol) (bridge transfer); or (B) having such affiliate remain 
obligated with respect to such credit enhancements in the Chapter 11 
proceeding (elevation).\38\ A firm must file a motion for emergency 
relief (emergency motion) seeking approval of an order to effect either 
of these alternatives on the first day of its bankruptcy case.
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    \36\ U.S. protocol has the same meaning as it does at 12 CFR 
252.85(a). See also 12 CFR 382.5(a) (including a substantively 
identical definition).
    \37\ See 12 CFR part 47, 252.81-.88, and part 382 (together, the 
``QFC stay rules''). If the firm complies with the QFC stay rules 
other than through adherence to the Protocol, the plan also should 
explain how the alternative compliance method differs from Protocol, 
how those differences affect the analysis and other expectations of 
this ``Legal Obstacles Associated with Emergency Motions'' section, 
and how the firm plans to satisfy any different conditions or 
requirements of the alternative compliance method.
    \38\ Under its terms, the Protocol also provides for the 
transfer of credit enhancements to transferees other than a 
Bankruptcy Bridge Company.
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    First-day Issues--For each alternative the firm selects, the 
resolution plan should present the firm's analysis of issues that are 
likely to be raised at the hearing on the emergency motion and its best 
arguments in support of the emergency motion. A firm should include 
supporting legal precedent and describe the evidentiary support that 
the firm would anticipate presenting to the bankruptcy court -- e.g., 
declarations or other expert testimony evidencing the solvency of 
transferred subsidiaries and that recapitalized entities have 
sufficient liquidity to perform their ongoing obligations.
    For either alternative, the firm should address all potential 
significant legal obstacles identified by the firm. For example, the 
firm should address due process arguments likely to be made by 
creditors asserting that they have not had sufficient opportunity to 
respond to the emergency motion given the likelihood that a creditors' 
committee will not yet have been appointed. The firm also should 
consider, and discuss in its plan, whether it would enhance the 
successful implementation of its preferred strategy to conduct outreach 
to interested parties, such as potential creditors of the holding 
company and the bankruptcy bar, regarding the strategy.
    If the firm chooses the bridge transfer alternative, its analysis 
and arguments should address at a minimum the following potential 
issues: (A) the legal basis for transferring the parent holding 
company's equity interests in certain subsidiaries (transferred 
subsidiaries) to a Bankruptcy Bridge Company, including the basis upon 
which the Bankruptcy Bridge Company would remain obligated for credit 
enhancements; (B) the ability of the bankruptcy court to retain 
jurisdiction, issue injunctions, or take other actions to prevent third 
parties from interfering with, or making collateral attacks on (i) a 
Bankruptcy Bridge Company, (ii) its transferred subsidiaries, or (iii) 
a trust or other legal entity designed to hold all ownership interests 
in a Bankruptcy Bridge Company (new ownership entity); and (C) the role 
of the bankruptcy court in granting the emergency motion due to public 
policy concerns--e.g., to preserve financial stability. The firm should 
also provide a draft agreement (e.g., trust agreement) detailing the 
preferred post-transfer governance relationships between the bankruptcy 
estate, the new ownership entity, and the Bankruptcy Bridge Company, 
including the proposed role and powers of the bankruptcy court and 
creditors' committee. Alternative approaches to these proposed post-
transfer governance relationships should also be described, 
particularly given the strong interest that parties will have in the 
ongoing operations of the Bankruptcy Bridge Company and the likely 
absence of an appointed creditors' committee at the time of the 
hearing.
    If the firm chooses the elevation alternative, the analysis and 
arguments should address at a minimum the following potential issues: 
(A) The legal basis upon which the parent company would seek to remain 
obligated for credit enhancements; (B) the ability of the bankruptcy 
court to retain jurisdiction, issue injunctions, or take other actions 
to prevent third parties from interfering with, or making collateral 
attacks on, the parent in bankruptcy or its subsidiaries; and (C) the 
role of the bankruptcy court in granting the emergency motion due to 
public policy concerns--e.g., to preserve financial stability.
    Regulatory Implications--The plan should include a detailed 
explanation of the steps the firm would take to ensure that key 
domestic and foreign authorities would support, or not object to, the 
emergency motion (including specifying the expected approvals or 
forbearances and the requisite format--i.e., formal, affirmative 
statements of support or, alternatively, ``non-objections''). The 
potential impact on the firm's preferred resolution strategy if a 
specific approval or forbearance cannot be timely obtained should also 
be detailed.
    Contingencies if Preferred Structure Fails--The plan should 
consider contingency arrangements in the event the bankruptcy court 
does not grant the emergency motion--e.g., whether alternative relief 
could satisfy the Transfer Conditions and/or U.S. Parent debtor-in-
possession (DIP) Conditions of the Protocol; \39\ the extent to which 
action upon certain aspects of the emergency motion may be deferred by 
the bankruptcy court without interfering with the resolution; and 
whether, if the credit-enhancement-related protections are not 
satisfied, there are alternative strategies to prevent the closeout of 
qualified financial contracts with credit enhancements (or reduce such 
counterparties' incentives to closeout) and the feasibility of the 
alternative(s).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \39\ See Protocol sections 2(b)(ii) and (iii) and related 
definitions.
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    Format--If the firm analyzed and addressed an issue noted in this 
section in a prior plan submission, the plan may incorporate this 
analysis and arguments and should build upon it to at least the extent 
required above. A bankruptcy playbook, which includes a sample 
emergency motion and draft documents setting forth the post-transfer 
governance terms substantially in the form they would be presented to 
the bankruptcy court, is an appropriate vehicle for detailing the 
issues outlined in this section. In preparing analysis of these issues, 
the firm may consult with law firms and other experts on these matters. 
The Agencies do not object to appropriate collaboration among firms, 
including through trade organizations and with the academic community 
and bankruptcy bar, to develop analysis of common legal challenges and 
available mitigants.

[[Page 32868]]

VI. LEGAL ENTITY RATIONALIZATION AND SEPARABILITY

    Legal Entity Rationalization Criteria (LER Criteria): A firm should 
develop and implement legal entity rationalization criteria that 
support the firm's preferred resolution strategy and minimize risk to 
U.S. financial stability in the event of the firm's failure. LER 
Criteria should consider the best alignment of legal entities and 
business lines to improve the firm's resolvability under different 
market conditions. LER Criteria should govern the firm's corporate 
structure and arrangements between legal entities in a way that 
facilitates the firm's resolvability as its activities, technology, 
business models, or geographic footprint change over time.
    Specifically, application of the criteria should:
    (A) Facilitate the recapitalization and liquidity support of 
material entities, as required by the firm's resolution strategy. Such 
criteria should include clean lines of ownership, minimal use of 
multiple intermediate holding companies, and clean funding pathways 
between the parent and material operating entities;
    (B) Facilitate the sale, transfer, or wind-down of certain discrete 
operations within a timeframe that would meaningfully increase the 
likelihood of an orderly resolution of the firm, including provisions 
for the continuity of associated services and mitigation of financial, 
operational, and legal challenges to separation and disposition;
    (C) Adequately protect the subsidiary insured depository 
institutions from risks arising from the activities of any nonbank 
subsidiaries of the firm (other than those that are subsidiaries of an 
insured depository institution); and
    (D) Minimize complexity that could impede an orderly resolution and 
minimize redundant and dormant entities.
    These criteria should be built into the firm's ongoing process for 
creating, maintaining, and optimizing its structure and operations on a 
continuous basis.
    Separability: The firm should identify discrete operations that 
could be sold or transferred in resolution, which individually or in 
the aggregate would provide meaningful optionality in resolution under 
different market conditions. The actionability of those options should 
be supported by the firm's criteria and analysis required by SR Letter 
14-8.\40\ Additionally, this analysis should facilitate buyer due 
diligence and include carve-out financial statements, valuation 
analysis, and a legal risk assessment. Further, the firm should 
establish a data room to collect and refresh annually the analyses 
above, as well as other information pertinent to a potential 
divestiture of the business.
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    \40\ SR Letter 14-8, ``Consolidated Recovery Planning for 
Certain Large Domestic Bank Holding Companies'' (Sept. 25, 2014), 
available at http://www.federalreserve.gov/bankinforeg/srletters/sr1408.pdf.
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    Within the plan, the firm should demonstrate how the firm's LER 
Criteria and implementation efforts meet the guidance above. The plan 
should also provide the separability analysis noted above. Finally, the 
plan should include a description of the firm's legal entity 
rationalization governance process.

VII. DERIVATIVES AND TRADING ACTIVITIES

Applicability.

    This section of the proposed guidance applies to Bank of America 
Corporation, Citigroup Inc., Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., JP Morgan Chase 
& Co., Morgan Stanley, and Wells Fargo & Company (each, a ``dealer 
firm'').

Booking Practices.

    A dealer firm should have booking practices commensurate with the 
size, scope, and complexity of a firm's derivatives portfolios,\41\ 
including systems capabilities to track and monitor market, credit, and 
liquidity risk transfers between entities. The following booking 
practices-related capabilities should be addressed in a dealer firm's 
resolution plan:
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    \41\ A firm's derivatives portfolios include its derivatives 
positions and linked non-derivatives trading positions.
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    Derivatives booking framework. A dealer firm should have a 
comprehensive booking model framework that articulates the principles, 
rationales, and approach to implementing its firm-wide booking 
practices. The framework and its underlying components should be 
documented and adequately supported by internal controls (e.g., 
procedures, systems, and processes). Taken together, the derivatives 
booking framework and its components should provide transparency with 
respect to (i) what is being booked (e.g., product/counterparty), (ii) 
where it is being booked (e.g., legal entity/geography), (iii) by whom 
it is booked (e.g., business/trading desk); (iv) why it is booked that 
way (e.g., drivers/rationales); and (v) what controls are in place to 
monitor and manage those practices (e.g., governance/information 
systems) \42\. The dealer firm's resolution plan should include 
detailed descriptions of the framework and each of its material 
components. In particular, a dealer firm's resolution plan should 
include descriptions of the documented booking models covering its 
firm-wide derivatives portfolio.\43\ The descriptions should provide 
clarity with respect to the underlying trade flows (e.g., the mapping 
of trade flows based on multiple trade characteristics as decision 
points that determine on which entity a trade is booked, if risk is 
transferred, and at which entity that risk is subsequently managed). 
For example, a firm may choose to incorporate decision trees that 
depict the multiple trade flows within each documented booking 
model.\44\ Furthermore, a dealer firm's resolution plan should describe 
its end-to-end trade booking and reporting processes, including a 
description of the current scope of automation (e.g., automated trade 
flows and detective monitoring) for the systems controls applied to its 
documented booking models. The plan should also discuss why the firm 
believes its current (or planned) scope of automation is sufficient for 
managing its derivatives activities and executing its preferred 
resolution strategy.\45\
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    \42\ The description of controls should include any components 
of the firm-wide market, credit, and liquidity risk management 
framework that are material to the management of its derivatives 
practices.
    \43\ The firm should at least document booking models that, in 
the aggregate, represent the vast majority of the firm's derivatives 
transactions, e.g., booking models that represent no less than 95% 
of a dealer firm's derivatives transactions measured by firm-wide 
derivatives notional and by firm-wide gross market value of 
derivatives. Presumably, each asset class/product would have a 
booking model that is a function of the firm's regulatory and risk 
management requirements, client's preference, and regulatory 
requirements specifically for the underlying asset class, and other 
transaction related considerations.
    \44\ Some firms use trader mandates or similar controls to 
constrain the potential trading strategies that can be pursued by a 
business and to monitor the permissibility of booking activity. 
However, the mapping of trader mandates alone, especially those 
mandates that grant broad permissibility, may not provide sufficient 
distinction between booking model trade flows.
    \45\ Effective preventative (up-front) and detective (post-
booking) controls embedded in a dealer firm's derivatives booking 
processes can help avoid and/or timely remediate trades that do not 
align with a documented booking model or related risk limits. Firms 
typically use a combination of manual and automated control 
functions. Although automation may not be best suited for all 
control functions, as compared to manual methods it can improve 
consistency and traceability with respect to derivatives booking 
practices. Nonetheless, non-automated methods can also be effective 
when supported by other internal controls (e.g., robust detective 
monitoring and escalation protocols).

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[[Page 32869]]

    Derivatives entity analysis and reporting. A dealer firm should 
have the ability to identify, assess, and report on each of its 
entities (material and non-material) with derivatives portfolios (a 
``derivatives entity''). First, the firm's resolution plan should 
describe its method (that may include both qualitative and quantitative 
criteria) for evaluating the significance of each derivatives entity 
both with respect to the firm's current activities and to its preferred 
resolution strategy.\46\ Second, a dealer firm's resolution plan should 
demonstrate (including through illustrative samples) its ability to 
readily generate current derivatives entity profiles that (i) cover all 
derivatives entities, (ii) are reportable in a consistent manner, and 
(iii) include information regarding current legal ownership structure, 
business activities/volume, and risk profile (including applicable risk 
limits).
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    \46\ The firm should leverage any existing methods and criteria 
it uses for other entity assessments (e.g., legal entity 
rationalization and/or the pre-positioning of internal loss-
absorbing resources). The firm's method for determining the 
significance of derivatives entities is allowed to diverge from the 
parameters for material entity designation under the Resolution Plan 
Rule (i.e., entities significant to the activities of a critical 
operation or core business line) but should be adequately supported 
and any differences should be explained.
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Inter-Affiliate Risk Monitoring and Controls.

    A dealer firm should be able to assess how the management of inter-
affiliate risks can be affected in resolution, including the potential 
disruption in the risk transfers of trades between affiliate entities. 
Therefore, a dealer firm should have capabilities to provide timely 
transparency into the management of risk transfers between affiliates 
by maintaining an inter-affiliate market risk framework, consisting of 
at least the following two components \47\:
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    \47\ The inter-affiliate market risk framework is a supplement 
to the firm's systems capabilities to track and monitor market, 
credit, and liquidity risk transfers between entities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    1. A method for measuring, monitoring, and reporting the market 
risk exposures for a given material derivatives entity resulting from 
the termination of a specific counterparty or a set of counterparties 
(e.g., all trades with a specific affiliate or with all affiliates in a 
specific jurisdiction) \48\; and
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    \48\ Firms may use industry market risk measures such as 
statistical risk measures (e.g., VaR or SVaR) or other risk measures 
(e.g., worst case scenario or stress test).
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    2. A method for identifying, estimating associated costs of, and 
evaluating the effectiveness of, a re-hedge strategy in resolution put 
on by the same material derivatives entity.\49\
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    \49\ A dealer firm's method may include an approach to 
identifying the risk factors and risk sensitivities, hedging 
instruments, and risk limits a derivatives entity would employ in 
its re-hedge strategy, and the quantification of any estimated basis 
risk that would result from hedging with only exchange-traded and 
centrally-cleared instruments in a severely adverse stress 
environment.
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    In determining the re-hedge strategy, the firm should consider 
whether the instruments used (and the risk factors and risk sensitives 
controlled for) are sufficiently tied to the material derivatives 
entity's trading and risk-management practices to demonstrate its 
ability to execute the strategy in resolution using existing resources 
(e.g., existing traders and systems).
    A dealer firm's resolution plan should describe and demonstrate its 
inter-affiliate market risk framework (discussed above). In addition, 
the firm's plan should provide detailed descriptions of its compression 
strategies used for executing its preferred strategy and how those 
strategies would differ from those used currently to manage its inter-
affiliate derivatives activities. The plan should also include detailed 
descriptions of the firm's compression capabilities, the associated 
risks, and obstacles in resolution.

Portfolio Segmentation and Forecasting.

    A dealer firm should have the capabilities to produce analysis that 
reflects derivatives portfolio segmentation and differentiation of 
assumptions taking into account trade-level characteristics. More 
specifically, a dealer firm should have the systems capabilities that 
would allow it to produce a spectrum of derivatives portfolio 
segmentation analysis using multiple segmentation dimensions, including 
(1) legal entity (and material entities that are branches), (2) trading 
desk and/or product, (3) cleared vs. clearable vs. non-clearable 
trades, (4) counterparty type, (5) currency, (6) maturity, (7) level of 
collateralization, and (8) netting set.\50\ A dealer firm should also 
have the capabilities to segment and analyze the full contractual 
maturity (run-off) profile of its external and inter-affiliate 
derivatives portfolios. The dealer firm's resolution plan should 
describe and demonstrate the firm's ability to segment and analyze its 
firm-wide derivatives portfolio using the relevant segmentation 
dimensions and to report the results of such segmentation and analysis. 
In addition, the dealer firm's resolution plan should address the 
following segmentation and forecasting related capabilities:
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    \50\ The enumerated segmentation dimensions represent a minimum 
set of characteristics for differentiation of derivatives portfolios 
but are not intended as an exhaustive list of relevant dimensions. 
With respect to any product/asset class, a firm may have reasons for 
not capturing data on (or not using) one or more of the enumerated 
segmentation dimensions, but those reasons should be explained.
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    ``Ease of exit'' position analysis. A dealer firm should have, and 
its resolution plan should describe and demonstrate, a method and 
supporting systems capabilities for categorizing and ranking the ease 
of exit for its derivatives positions based on a set of well-defined 
and consistently applied segmentation criteria. These capabilities 
should cover the firm-wide derivatives portfolio and the resulting 
categories should represent a range in degree of difficulty (e.g., from 
easiest to most difficult to exit). The segmentation criteria should, 
at a minimum, reflect characteristics \51\ that the firm believes could 
affect the level of financial incentive and operational effort required 
to facilitate the exit of derivatives portfolios (e.g., to motivate a 
potential step-in party to agree to the novation or an existing 
counterparty to bilaterally agree to a termination). Dealer firms 
should consider this methodology when separately identifying and 
analyzing the population of derivatives positions that it will include 
in the potential residual portfolio under the firm's preferred 
resolution strategy (discussed below).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \51\ Examples of characteristics that may affect the level of 
financial incentive and operational effort could include: product, 
size, clearability, currency, maturity, level of collateralization, 
and other risk characteristics.
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    Application of exit cost methodology. Each dealer firm should have 
a methodology for forecasting the cost and liquidity needed to exit 
positions (e.g., terminate/tear-up, sell, novate, and compress), and 
the operational resources related to those exits, under the specific 
scenario adopted in the firm's preferred resolution strategy. To help 
preserve sufficient optionality with respect to managing and de-risking 
its derivatives portfolios in a resolution, a dealer firm should have 
the systems capabilities to apply its exit cost methodology to its 
firm-wide derivatives portfolio, at the segmentation levels the firm 
would likely apply to exit the particular positions (e.g., valuation 
segment level). The dealer firm's plan should provide detailed 
descriptions of the forecasting methodology (inclusive of any challenge 
and validation processes) and data systems and reporting capabilities. 
The firm should also describe and demonstrate the application of the 
exit cost method and systems capabilities to the firm-wide derivatives 
portfolio.

[[Page 32870]]

    Analysis of operational capacity. In resolution, a dealer firm 
should have the capabilities to forecast the incremental operational 
needs and expenses related to executing specific aspects of its 
preferred resolution strategy (e.g., executing timely derivatives 
portfolio novations). Therefore, a dealer firm should have, and its 
resolution plan should describe and demonstrate, the capabilities to 
assess the operational resources and forecast the costs (e.g., monthly 
expense rate) related to its current derivatives activities at an 
appropriately granular level and the incremental impact from executing 
its preferred resolution strategy.\52\ In addition, a dealer firm 
should have the ability to manage the logistical and operational 
challenges related to novating (selling) derivatives portfolios during 
a resolution, including the design and adjustment of novation packages. 
A dealer firm's resolution plan should describe its methodology and 
demonstrate its supporting systems capabilities for timely segmenting, 
packaging, and novating derivatives positions. In developing its 
methodology, a dealer firm should consider the systems capabilities 
that may be needed to reliably generate preliminary novation packages 
tailored to the risk appetites of potential step-in counterparties 
(buyers), as well as the novation portfolio profile information that 
may be most relevant to such counterparties.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \52\ At a minimum, a dealer firm should have separate categories 
for fixed and variable expenses. For example, more granular 
operational expenses could roll-up into categories for (i) fixed-
compensation, (ii) fixed non-compensation, and (iii) variable cost.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Sensitivity analysis. A dealer firm should have a method to apply 
sensitivity analyses to the key drivers of the derivatives-related 
costs and liquidity flows under its preferred resolution strategy. A 
dealer firm's resolution plan should describe its method for (i) 
evaluating the materiality of assumptions and (ii) identifying those 
assumptions (or combinations of assumptions) that constitute the key 
drivers for its forecasts of operational and financial resource needs 
under the preferred resolution strategy. In addition, using its 
preferred resolution strategy as a baseline, the dealer firm's 
resolution plan should describe and demonstrate its approach to testing 
the sensitivities of the identified key drivers and the potential 
impact on its forecasts of resource needs.\53\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \53\ For example, key drivers of derivatives-related costs and 
liquidity flows might include the timing of derivatives unwind, cost 
of capital-related assumptions (target ROE, discount rate, WAL, 
capital constraints, tax rate), operational cost reduction rate, and 
operational capacity for novations. Other examples of key drivers 
likely also include CCP margin flow assumptions and risk-weighted 
assets forecast assumptions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Prime Brokerage Customer Account Transfers.

    A dealer firm should have the operational capacity to facilitate 
the orderly transfer of prime brokerage accounts to peer prime brokers 
in periods of material financial distress and in resolution. The firm's 
plan should include an assessment of how it would transfer such 
accounts. This assessment should be informed by clients' relationships 
with other prime brokers, the use of automated and manual transaction 
processes, clients' overall long and short positions facilitated by the 
firm, and the liquidity of clients' portfolios. The assessment should 
also analyze the risks of and mitigants to the loss of customer-to-
customer internalization (e.g., the inability to fund customer longs 
with customer shorts), operational challenges, and insufficient 
staffing to effectuate the scale and speed of prime brokerage account 
transfers envisioned under the firm's preferred resolution strategy.
    In addition, a dealer firm should describe and demonstrate its 
ability to segment and analyze the quality and composition of prime 
brokerage customer account balances based on a set of well-defined and 
consistently applied segmentation criteria (e.g., size, single-prime, 
platform, use of leverage, non-rehypothecatable securities, and 
liquidity of underlying assets). The capabilities should cover the 
firm's prime brokerage customer account balances, and the resulting 
segments should represent a range in potential transfer speed (e.g., 
from fastest to longest to transfer, from most liquid to least liquid). 
The selected segmentation criteria should, at a minimum, reflect 
characteristics \54\ that the firm believes could affect the speed at 
which the client account balance would be transferred to an alternate 
prime broker.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \54\ For example, relevant characteristics might include: 
product, size, clearability, currency, maturity, level of 
collateralization, and other risk characteristics.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

Derivatives Stabilization and De-risking Strategy.

    A dealer firm's plan should provide a detailed analysis of the 
strategy to stabilize and de-risk its derivatives portfolios 
(``derivatives strategy'') that has been incorporated into its 
preferred resolution strategy.\55\ In developing its derivatives 
strategy, a dealer firm should apply the following assumption 
constraints:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \55\ Subject to the relevant constraints, a firm's derivatives 
strategy may take the form of a going-concern strategy, an 
accelerated de-risking strategy (e.g., active wind-down) or an 
alternative, third strategy so long as the firm's resolution plan 
adequately supports the execution of the chosen strategy. For 
example, a firm may choose a going-concern scenario (e.g., 
derivatives entities reestablish investment grade status and do not 
enter a wind-down) as its derivatives strategy. Likewise, a firm may 
choose to adopt a combination of going-concern and accelerated de-
risking scenarios as its derivatives strategy. For example, the 
derivatives strategy could be a stabilization scenario for the lead 
bank entity and an accelerated de-risking scenario for the broker-
dealer entities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

     OTC derivatives market access: At or before the start of 
the resolution period, each derivatives entity should be assumed to 
lack an investment-grade credit rating (e.g., unrated or downgraded 
below investment grade). The derivatives entity should also be assumed 
to have failed to establish or reestablish investment-grade status for 
the duration of the resolution period, unless the plan provides well-
supported analysis to the contrary. As a result of the lack of 
investment grade status, it should be further assumed that the 
derivatives entity has no access to the bilateral OTC derivatives 
markets and must use exchange-traded and/or centrally-cleared 
instruments where any new hedging needs arise during the resolution 
period. Nevertheless, a dealer firm may assume the ability to engage in 
certain risk-reducing derivatives trades with bilateral OTC derivatives 
counterparties during the resolution period to facilitate novations 
with third parties and to close out inter-affiliate trades.\56\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \56\ A firm may engage in bilateral OTC derivatives trades with, 
for example, (i) external counterparties, to effect the novation of 
the firm's side of a derivatives contract to a new counterparty, 
bilateral OTC trades with the acquiring counterparty; and, (ii) 
inter-affiliate counterparties, where the trades with inter-
affiliate counterparties (a) reduce the credit exposure of each 
participating counterparty and (b) do not materially increase the 
market risk of any such counterparty on a standalone basis, after 
taking into account hedging with exchange-traded and centrally-
cleared instruments. The firm should demonstrate the risk-reducing 
nature of the trade on the basis of information that would be known 
to the firm at the time of the transaction.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

     Early exits (break clauses). A dealer firm should assume 
that counterparties (external or affiliates) will exercise any 
contractual termination right, consistent with any rights stayed by the 
ISDA 2015 Universal Resolution Stay protocol or other applicable 
protocols or amendments \57\, (i) that is available to the counterparty 
at or following the start

[[Page 32871]]

of the resolution period; and (ii) if exercising such right would 
economically benefit the counterparty (``counterparty-initiated 
termination'').
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \57\ For each of the derivatives entities that have adhered to 
the Protocol, the dealer firm may assume that the protocol is in 
effect for all counterparties of that derivatives entity (except for 
any affiliated counterparty of the derivatives entity that has not 
yet adhered to the Protocol).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

     Time horizon: The duration of the resolution period should 
be between 12 and 24 months. The resolution period begins immediately 
after the parent company bankruptcy filing and extends through the 
completion of the preferred resolution strategy.
    A dealer firm's analysis of its derivatives strategy should, at a 
minimum, take into account (i) the starting profile of its derivatives 
portfolios (e.g., nature, concentration, maturity, clearability, and 
liquidity of positions); (ii) the profile and function of the 
derivatives entities during the resolution period; (iii) the means, 
challenges, and capacity for managing and de-risking its derivatives 
portfolios (e.g., method for timely segmenting, packaging, and selling 
the derivatives positions; challenges with novating less liquid 
positions; re-hedging strategy); (iv) the financial and operational 
resources required to effect the derivatives strategy; and (v) any 
potential residual portfolio (further discussed below). In addition, 
the firm's resolution plan should address the following areas in the 
analysis of its derivatives strategy:
    Forecasts of resource needs. The forecasts of capital and liquidity 
resource needs required to adequately support the firm's derivatives 
strategy should be incorporated into the firm's RCEN and RLEN estimates 
for its overall preferred resolution strategy. These include, for 
example, the costs and/or liquidity flows resulting from (i) the close-
out of OTC derivatives, (ii) the hedging of derivatives portfolios, 
(iii) the quantified losses that could be incur due to basis and other 
risks that would result from hedging with only exchange-traded and 
centrally cleared instruments in a severely adverse stress environment, 
and (iv) the operational costs.
    Potential residual derivatives portfolio. A dealer firm's 
resolution plan should include a method for estimating the composition 
of any potential residual derivatives portfolio transactions remaining 
at the end of the resolution period under its preferred resolution 
strategy. The method may be a combination of approaches (e.g., 
probabilistic and deterministic) but should demonstrate the dealer 
firm's capabilities related to portfolio segmentation (discussed 
above). The dealer firm's plan should also provide detailed 
descriptions of the trade characteristics used to identify the 
potential residual portfolio and of the resulting trades (or categories 
of trades).\58\ A dealer firm should assess the risk profile of the 
potential residual portfolio (including its anticipated size, 
composition, complexity, counterparties) and the potential counterparty 
and market impacts of non-performance on the stability of U.S. 
financial markets (e.g., on funding markets and the underlying asset 
markets and on clients and counterparties).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \58\ If under the firm's preferred resolution strategy, any 
derivatives portfolios are transferred during the resolution period 
by way of a line of business sale (or similar transaction), then 
those portfolios should nonetheless be included within the firm's 
potential residual portfolio analysis.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Non-surviving entity analysis. To the extent the preferred 
resolution strategy assumes a material derivatives entity enters its 
own resolution proceeding after the entry of the parent company into a 
bankruptcy proceeding (a ``non-surviving material derivatives 
entity''), the dealer firm should provide a detailed analysis of how 
the non-surviving material derivatives entity's resolution can be 
accomplished within a reasonable period of time and in a manner that 
substantially mitigates the risk of serious adverse effects on U.S. 
financial stability and to the orderly execution of the firm's 
preferred resolution strategy. In particular, the firm should provide 
an analysis of the potential impacts on funding markets and the 
underlying asset markets, on clients and counterparties (including 
affiliates), and on the preferred resolution strategy. If the non-
surviving material derivatives entity is located in, or provides more 
than de minimis services to clients or counterparties located in, a 
non-U.S. jurisdiction, then the analysis should also specifically 
consider potential local market impacts.

VIII. PUBLIC SECTION

    The purpose of the public section is to inform the public's 
understanding of the firm's resolution strategy and how it works.
    The public section should discuss the steps that the firm is taking 
to improve resolvability under the U.S. Bankruptcy Code. The public 
section should provide background information on each material entity 
and should be enhanced by including the firm's rationale for 
designating material entities. The public section should also discuss, 
at a high level, the firm's intra-group financial and operational 
interconnectedness (including the types of guarantees or support 
obligations in place that could impact the execution of the firm's 
strategy). There should also be a high-level discussion of the 
liquidity resources and loss-absorbing capacity of the firm.
    The discussion of strategy in the public section should broadly 
explain how the firm has addressed any deficiencies, shortcomings, and 
other key vulnerabilities that the Agencies have identified in prior 
Plan submissions. For each material entity, it should be clear how the 
strategy provides for continuity, transfer, or orderly wind-down of the 
entity and its operations. There should also be a description of the 
resulting organization upon completion of the resolution process.
    The public section may note that the resolution plan is not binding 
on a bankruptcy court or other resolution authority and that the 
proposed failure scenario and associated assumptions are hypothetical 
and do not necessarily reflect an event or events to which the firm is 
or may become subject.

    By the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, June 
28, 2018.
Ann E. Misback,
Secretary of the Board.
    Dated at Washington, DC on June 28, 2018.

    By order of the Board of Directors.

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Valerie Jean Best,
Assistant Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2018-15066 Filed 7-13-18; 8:45 am]
 BILLING CODE P



                                                32856                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 136 / Monday, July 16, 2018 / Notices

                                                pursuant to the Bank Holding Company                     FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM                                Reserve System, 20th Street and
                                                Act of 1956 (12 U.S.C. 1841 et seq.)                                                                           Constitution Avenue NW, Washington,
                                                                                                         [Docket No. OP–1614]
                                                (BHC Act), Regulation Y (12 CFR part                                                                           DC 20551.
                                                225), and all other applicable statutes                  FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE                                All public comments will be made
                                                and regulations to become a bank                         CORPORATION                                           available on the Board’s website at
                                                holding company and/or to acquire the                                                                          http://www.federalreserve.gov/
                                                assets or the ownership of, control of, or               Resolution Planning Guidance for                      generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfms
                                                the power to vote shares of a bank or                    Eight Large, Complex U.S. Banking                     submitted, unless modified for technical
                                                bank holding company and all of the                      Organizations                                         reasons or to remove personal
                                                banks and nonbanking companies                                                                                 information at the commenter’s request.
                                                owned by the bank holding company,                       AGENCY:  Board of Governors of the                    Accordingly, comments will not be
                                                including the companies listed below.                    Federal Reserve System (Board) and                    edited to remove any identifying or
                                                                                                         Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation                 contact information. Public comments
                                                  The applications listed below, as well                 (FDIC).
                                                as other related filings required by the                                                                       may also be viewed electronically or in
                                                                                                         ACTION: Proposed guidance; request for                paper in Room 3515, 1801 K Street NW
                                                Board, are available for immediate                       comments.
                                                inspection at the Federal Reserve Bank                                                                         (between 18th and 19th Street NW),
                                                indicated. The applications will also be                 SUMMARY:    The Board and the FDIC                    between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. on
                                                available for inspection at the offices of               (together, the ‘‘Agencies’’) are inviting             weekdays.
                                                the Board of Governors. Interested                       comments on proposed guidance for the                    FDIC: You may submit comments by
                                                persons may express their views in                       2019 and subsequent resolution plan                   any of the following methods:
                                                writing on the standards enumerated in                   submissions by the eight largest,                        • Agency Website: https://
                                                the BHC Act (12 U.S.C. 1842(c)). If the                  complex U.S. banking organizations                    www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal.
                                                proposal also involves the acquisition of                (‘‘Covered Companies’’ or ‘‘firms’’). The             Follow the instructions for submitting
                                                a nonbanking company, the review also                    proposed guidance is meant to assist                  comments on the Agency Website.
                                                includes whether the acquisition of the                  these firms in developing their                          • Email: comments@fdic.gov. Include
                                                nonbanking company complies with the                     resolution plans, which are required to               ‘‘Proposed 165(d) Guidance for the
                                                standards in section 4 of the BHC Act                    be submitted pursuant to Section 165(d)               Domestic Firms’’ on the subject line of
                                                (12 U.S.C. 1843). Unless otherwise                       of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform                  the message.
                                                noted, nonbanking activities will be                     and Consumer Protection Act. The                         • Mail: Robert E. Feldman, Executive
                                                conducted throughout the United States.                  proposed guidance, which is largely                   Secretary, Attention: Comments, Federal
                                                                                                         based on prior guidance issued to these               Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th
                                                  Unless otherwise noted, comments                                                                             Street NW, Washington, DC 20429.
                                                regarding each of these applications                     Covered Companies, describes the
                                                                                                         Agencies’ expectations regarding a                       • Hand Delivery/Courier: Guard
                                                must be received at the Reserve Bank                                                                           station at the rear of the 550 17th Street
                                                indicated or the offices of the Board of                 number of key vulnerabilities in plans
                                                                                                         for an orderly resolution under the U.S.              Building (located on F Street) on
                                                Governors not later than August 8, 2018.                                                                       business days between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m.
                                                                                                         Bankruptcy Code (i.e., capital; liquidity;
                                                  A. Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago                     governance mechanisms; operational;                      • Public Inspection: All comments
                                                (Colette A. Fried, Assistant Vice                        legal entity rationalization and                      received, including any personal
                                                President) 230 South LaSalle Street,                     separability; and derivatives and trading             information provided, will be posted
                                                Chicago, Illinois 60690–1414:                            activities). The proposed guidance also               generally without change to https://
                                                  1. Hometown Bancorp, Ltd., Fond du                     updates certain aspects of prior                      www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal.
                                                Lac, Wisconsin; to acquire 100 percent                   guidance based on the Agencies’ review                FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                                of the voting shares of United                           of these firms’ recent resolution plan                   Board: Michael Hsu, Associate
                                                Community Bank, Poynette, Wisconsin.                     submissions. The Agencies invite public               Director, (202) 452–4330, Division of
                                                  B. Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis                   comment on all aspects of the proposed                Supervision and Regulation, Jay
                                                (David L. Hubbard, Senior Manager)                       guidance.                                             Schwarz, Senior Counsel, (202) 452–
                                                P.O. Box 442, St. Louis, Missouri                        DATES: Comments should be received                    2970, Will Giles, Senior Counsel, (202)
                                                63166–2034. Comments can also be sent                    September 14, 2018.                                   452–3351, or Steve Bowne, Senior
                                                electronically to Comments.applications                  ADDRESSES: Interested parties are                     Attorney, (202) 452–3900, Legal
                                                @stls.frb.org:                                           encouraged to submit written comments                 Division. Users of Telecommunications
                                                                                                         jointly to both Agencies. Comments                    Device for the Deaf (TDD) may call (202)
                                                  1. Cross County Bancshares, Wynne,                                                                           263–4869.
                                                Arkansas; to acquire up to 35 percent of                 should be directed to: Board: You may
                                                                                                         submit comments, identified by Docket                    FDIC: Mike J. Morgan, Corporate
                                                the voting shares of Central Bank, Little                                                                      Expert, mimorgan@fdic.gov, CFI
                                                Rock, Arkansas.                                          No. OP–1614, by any of the following
                                                                                                         methods:                                              Oversight Branch, Division of Risk
                                                  2. First Capital, Inc., Corydon,                          • Agency Website: http://                          Management Supervision; Alexandra
                                                Indiana; to acquire 5.15 percent of the                  www.federalreserve.gov. Follow the                    Steinberg Barrage, Associate Director,
                                                voting shares of First Bancorp of                        instructions for submitting comments at               Resolution Strategy and Policy, Office of
                                                Indiana, Inc., Evansville, Indiana; and                  http://www.federalreserve.gov/                        Complex Financial Institutions,
                                                thereby indirectly acquire First Federal                 generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm.                    abarrage@fdic.gov; David N. Wall,
                                                                                                            • Email: regs.comments@                            Assistant General Counsel, dwall@
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES




                                                Savings Bank, Evansville, Indiana.
                                                  Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve              federalreserve.gov. Include docket                    fdic.gov; Pauline E. Calande, Senior
                                                System, July 11, 2018.                                   number in the subject line of the                     Counsel, pcalande@fdic.gov; or Celia
                                                                                                         message.                                              Van Gorder, Supervisory Counsel,
                                                Ann Misback,
                                                                                                            • Fax: (202) 452–3819 or (202) 452–                cvangorder@fdic.gov, Legal Division,
                                                Secretary of the Board.                                  3102.                                                 Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation,
                                                [FR Doc. 2018–15108 Filed 7–13–18; 8:45 am]                 • Mail: Ann E. Misback, Secretary,                 550 17th Street NW, Washington, DC
                                                BILLING CODE P                                           Board of Governors of the Federal                     20429.


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                                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 136 / Monday, July 16, 2018 / Notices                                                       32857

                                                SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:                               that a firm’s resolution would be simple                  areas of the guidance regarding
                                                                                                         or smoothly executed, these                               payment, clearing, and settlement
                                                I. Background
                                                                                                         preparations can help ensure that the                     services and derivatives and trading
                                                   Section 165(d) of the Dodd-Frank                      firm could be resolved under                              activities. The Agencies intend to
                                                Wall Street Reform and Consumer                          bankruptcy without government support                     provide additional information on the
                                                Protection Act (12 U.S.C. 5365(d)) and                   or imperiling the broader financial                       two other areas: Intra-group liquidity
                                                the jointly issued implementing                          system.                                                   and internal loss absorbing capacity.
                                                regulation, 12 CFR part 243 and 12 CFR                      The Rule describes an iterative                        The Agencies invite public comment on
                                                part 381 (‘‘the Rule’’), requires certain                process aimed at strengthening the                        all aspects of the proposed guidance.
                                                financial companies to report                            resolution planning capabilities of each
                                                periodically to the Board and the FDIC                   financial institution. With respect to the                II. Overview of the Proposed Guidance
                                                their plans for rapid and orderly                        eight largest, complex U.S. banking                          The proposed guidance is organized
                                                resolution under the U.S. Bankruptcy                     organizations (‘‘Covered Companies’’ or                   into six substantive areas, consistent
                                                Code in the event of material financial                  ‘‘firms’’),2 the Agencies have previously                 with the guidance the Agencies
                                                distress or failure.                                     provided guidance and other feedback.3                    provided to Covered Companies in
                                                   Among other requirements, the Rule                    In general, the feedback was intended to                  April 2016 to assist in the development
                                                requires each financial company’s                        assist firms in their development of                      of their 2017 resolution plans, Guidance
                                                resolution plan to include a strategic                   future resolution plan submissions and                    for 2017 § 165(d) Annual Resolution
                                                analysis of the plan’s components, a                     to provide additional clarity with                        Plan Submissions by Domestic Covered
                                                description of the range of specific                     respect to the expectations against                       Companies that Submitted Resolution
                                                actions the company proposes to take in                  which the Agencies will evaluate the                      Plans in July 2015 (‘‘2016 Guidance’’).7
                                                resolution, and a description of the                     resolution plan submissions. The                          These areas are:
                                                company’s organizational structure,                      Agencies are now proposing to update                      1. Capital
                                                material entities and interconnections                   aspects of prior guidance based on the                    2. Liquidity
                                                and interdependencies. The Rule also                     Agencies’ review of the firms’ recent                     3. Governance mechanisms
                                                requires that resolution plans include a                 resolution plan submissions.4 The                         4. Operational
                                                confidential section that contains                       Agencies reviewed the 2017 Plans and                      5. Legal entity rationalization and
                                                confidential supervisory and proprietary                 issued a letter to each firm indicating                        separability
                                                information submitted to the Board and                   that it had taken important steps to                      6. Derivatives and trading activities
                                                the FDIC (together, the ‘‘Agencies’’), and               enhance its resolvability and facilitate                     Each area is important to firms in
                                                a section that the Agencies make                         its orderly resolution in bankruptcy.5 As                 resolution as each plays a part in
                                                available to the public. Public sections                 a result of those reviews and following                   helping to ensure that the firm can be
                                                of resolution plans can be found on the                  the Agencies’ joint decisions in                          resolved in an orderly manner. The
                                                Agencies’ websites.1                                     December 2017, the Agencies identified                    guidance would describe the Agencies’
                                                Objectives of the Resolution Planning                    four areas where more work may need                       expectations for each of these areas.
                                                Process                                                  to be done to improve the resolvability                      The proposed guidance is largely
                                                   The goal of the Dodd-Frank Act                        of the firms.6 As described below, the                    consistent with the 2016 Guidance,
                                                resolution planning process is to help                   Agencies are proposing updates to two                     which the Covered Companies used to
                                                ensure that a firm’s failure would not                                                                             develop their 2017 resolution plan
                                                have serious adverse effects on financial
                                                                                                            2 Bank of America Corporation, The Bank of New
                                                                                                                                                                   submissions. Accordingly, the firms
                                                                                                         York Mellon Corporation, Citigroup Inc., the              have already incorporated significant
                                                stability in the United States.                          Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Co.,
                                                Specifically, the resolution planning                    Morgan Stanley, State Street Corporation and Wells        aspects of the proposed guidance into
                                                process requires firms to demonstrate                    Fargo & Company.                                          their resolution planning. The proposal
                                                that they have adequately assessed the                      3 This includes Guidance for 2013 § 165(d)             would update the derivatives and
                                                                                                         Annual Resolution Plan Submissions by Domestic            trading activities (DER), and payment,
                                                challenges that their structure and                      Covered Companies that Submitted Initial
                                                business activities pose to resolution                   Resolution Plans in 2012; detailed guidance and
                                                                                                                                                                   clearing, and settlement activities (PCS)
                                                and that they have taken action to                       firm-specific feedback in August 2014 and February        areas of the 2016 Guidance based on the
                                                address those issues. Management                         2015 for the development of firms’ 2015 resolution        Agencies’ review of the Covered
                                                                                                         plan submissions; and Guidance for 2017 § 165(d)          Companies’ 2017 plans. It would also
                                                should also consider resolvability as                    Annual Resolution Plan Submissions by Domestic
                                                part of day-to-day decision making,                      Covered Companies that Submitted Resolution
                                                                                                                                                                   make minor clarifications to certain
                                                particularly those related to structure,                 Plans in July 2015, including the frequently asked        areas of the 2016 Guidance. In general,
                                                business activities, capital and liquidity               questions that were published in response to the          the proposed revisions to the guidance
                                                                                                         Guidance for the 2017 Plan Submissions (taken             are intended to streamline the firms’
                                                allocation, and governance. In addition,                 together, ‘‘prior guidance’’).
                                                firms are expected to maintain a                            4 Each firm’s resolution strategy is designed to
                                                                                                                                                                   submissions and to provide additional
                                                meaningful set of options for selling                    have the parent company recapitalize and provide          clarity. The proposed guidance is not
                                                operations and business lines to                         liquidity resources to its material entity subsidiaries   meant to limit firms’ consideration of
                                                generate resources and to allow for                      prior to entering bankruptcy proceedings. This            additional vulnerabilities or obstacles
                                                                                                         strategy calls for material entities to be provided       that might arise based on a firm’s
                                                restructuring under stress, including                    with sufficient capital and liquidity resources to
                                                through the sale or wind down of                         allow them to avoid multiple competing                    particular structure, operations, or
                                                discrete businesses that could further                   insolvencies and maintain continuity of operations        resolution strategy and that should be
                                                minimize the direct impact of distress or                throughout resolution.                                    factored into the firm’s submission.
sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES




                                                                                                            5 See Letters dated December 19, 2017, from the
                                                failure on the broader financial system.                                                                              Capital: The ability to provide
                                                                                                         Board and FDIC to Bank of America Corporation,
                                                While these measures cannot guarantee                    The Bank of New York Mellon Corporation,
                                                                                                                                                                   sufficient capital to material entities
                                                                                                         Citigroup Inc., the Goldman Sachs Group, Inc.,            without disruption from creditors is
                                                  1 See the public sections of resolution plans          JPMorgan Chase & Co., Morgan Stanley, State Street
                                                submitted to the Agencies at                             Corporation and Wells Fargo & Company, available            7 Available at: https://www.federalreserve.gov/

                                                www.federalreserve.gov/bankinforeg/                      at https://www.federalreserve.gov/supervisionreg/         newsevents/pressreleases/files/
                                                resolutionplans.htm and www.fdic.gov/regulations/        resolution-plans.htm.                                     bcreg20160413a1.pdf and at https://www.fdic.gov/
                                                reform/resplans/.                                           6 Id.                                                  news/news/press/2016/pr16031b.pdf.



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                                                32858                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 136 / Monday, July 16, 2018 / Notices

                                                important in order to ensure that                        and liquidity to subsidiaries that would              regulatory actions, and contingency
                                                material entities can continue to provide                precede the parent’s bankruptcy filing,               arrangements.
                                                critical services and maintain critical                  and any defenses and mitigants to such                   Derivatives and trading activities: It is
                                                operations as the firm is resolved. The                  challenges. In addition, the proposal                 important that a firm’s derivatives and
                                                proposal describes expectations                          describes expectations that firms                     trading activities can be stabilized and
                                                concerning the appropriate positioning                   incorporate any developments from this                de-risked during resolution without
                                                of capital and other loss-absorbing                      analysis in their governance playbooks.               causing significant market disruption.
                                                instruments (e.g., debt that the parent                     Legal entity rationalization and                   As such, firms should have capabilities
                                                may forgive or convert to equity) among                  separability: It is important that firms              to identify and mitigate the risks
                                                the material entities within the firm                    maintain a structure that facilitates                 associated with their derivatives and
                                                (resolution capital adequacy and                         orderly resolution. To achieve this, the              trading activities and with the
                                                positioning or RCAP). The proposal also                  proposal states that a firm should                    implementation of their preferred
                                                describes expectations regarding a                       develop criteria supporting the                       strategies, as further discussed below.
                                                methodology for periodically estimating                  preferred resolution strategy and                        Question 1: Do the topics in the
                                                the amount of capital that may be                        integrate them into day-to-day decision               proposed guidance discussed above
                                                needed to support each material entity                   making processes. The criteria would be               represent the key vulnerabilities of the
                                                after the bankruptcy filing (resolution                  expected to consider the best alignment               Covered Companies in resolution? If
                                                capital execution need or RCEN).                         of legal entities and business lines and              not, what key vulnerabilities are not
                                                   Liquidity: A firm’s ability to reliably               facilitate resolvability as a firm’s                  captured?
                                                estimate and meet its liquidity needs                    activities, technology, business models,              III. Proposed Changes to Prior
                                                prior to, and in, resolution is important                or geographic footprint change over                   Guidance
                                                to the execution of a Covered                            time. In addition, the proposed
                                                Company’s resolution strategy in that it                                                                          In addition to making some
                                                                                                         guidance provides that the firm should
                                                enables the firm to respond quickly to                                                                         clarifications, this proposal differs from
                                                                                                         identify discrete and actionable
                                                demands from stakeholders and                                                                                  prior guidance in that it reflects
                                                                                                         operations that could be sold or
                                                counterparties, including regulatory                                                                           enhancements informed by the
                                                                                                         transferred in resolution to provide
                                                authorities in other jurisdictions and                                                                         Agencies’ review of the Covered
                                                                                                         meaningful optionality for the
                                                financial market utilities. Maintaining                                                                        Companies 2017 plans in the areas of
                                                                                                         resolution strategy under a range of
                                                sufficient and appropriately-positioned                                                                        DER and PCS.
                                                                                                         potential failure scenarios.                             The following description
                                                liquidity also allows the subsidiaries to                   Operational: The development and
                                                continue to operate while the firm is                                                                          summarizes the changes relative to the
                                                                                                         maintenance of operational capabilities               topics outlined in the 2016 Guidance to
                                                being resolved in accordance with the                    is important to support and enable
                                                firm’s preferred resolution strategy.8                                                                         which the Agencies are seeking
                                                                                                         execution of a firm’s preferred                       comment and, where relevant, provides
                                                   Governance Mechanisms: An
                                                                                                         resolution strategy, including providing              additional detail:
                                                adequate governance structure with
                                                                                                         for the continuation of critical
                                                triggers capable of identifying the onset                                                                      Operational: Payment, Clearing, and
                                                of financial stress events is important to               operations and preventing or mitigating
                                                                                                         adverse impacts on U.S. financial                     Settlement Activities
                                                ensure that there is sufficient time to
                                                allow firms to prepare for resolution,                   stability. The proposed operational                      The provision of PCS by firms,
                                                and to ensure the timely execution of                    capabilities include:                                 financial market utilities (FMUs), and
                                                their preferred resolution strategies. The                  Possessing fully developed                         agent banks is an essential component
                                                governance mechanism section                             capabilities related to managing,                     of the U.S. financial system, and
                                                proposes expectations that firms have                    identifying, and valuing the collateral               maintaining the continuity of PCS
                                                playbooks that detail the board and                      that is received from, and posted to,                 services is important for the orderly
                                                senior management actions necessary to                   external parties and its affiliates;                  resolution of firms. Prior guidance from
                                                execute the firm’s preferred strategy. In                   Having management information                      the Agencies indicated that a firm’s
                                                addition, the proposal describes                         systems that readily produce key data                 resolution plan submissions should
                                                expectations that firms have triggers that               on financial resources and positions on               describe arrangements to facilitate
                                                are linked to specific actions outlined in               a legal entity basis, and that ensure data            continued access to PCS services
                                                these playbooks to ensure the timely                     integrity and reliability;                            through the firm’s resolution.
                                                escalation of information to senior                         Developing a clear set of actions to be               Based upon recent resolution plan
                                                management and the board, to address                     taken to maintain payment, clearing and               submissions and the Agencies’
                                                the successful recapitalization of                       settlement activities and to maintain                 engagement with the firms, the Agencies
                                                subsidiaries prior to the parent’s                       access to financial market utilities, as              believe that the firms have developed
                                                bankruptcy to the extent called for by                   further discussed below; and                          capabilities to identify and consider the
                                                the firm’s preferred resolution strategy,                   Maintaining an actionable plan to                  risks associated with continuity of
                                                and to address how the firm would                        ensure the continuity of all of the shared            access to PCS services in resolution. All
                                                ensure the timely execution of a                         and outsourced services that their                    of the firms described methodologies to
                                                bankruptcy filing. The proposal also                     critical operations rely on.                          identify key FMUs and agent banks
                                                describes the expectations that firms                       In addition, the proposed guidance                 based on quantitative and qualitative
                                                identify and analyze potential legal                     provides that a firm should analyze and               criteria and included playbooks for
                                                                                                         address legal issues that may arise in                identified key FMUs or agent banks.
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                                                challenges to the provision of capital
                                                                                                         connection with emergency motions the                 These playbooks described potential
                                                  8 The Agencies are currently taking steps to better    firm anticipates filing at the outset of its          adverse actions that could be taken by
                                                understand the purpose and treatment of the firms’       bankruptcy case seeking relief needed to              the FMU or agent bank, described
                                                inter-affiliate transactions. The Agencies do not        pursue its preferred resolution strategy,             possible contingency arrangements, and
                                                expect the firms to make major changes to their
                                                RLAP and RLEN models until after the Agencies
                                                                                                         including legal precedent and                         discussed the operational and financial
                                                have completed this review and provided further          evidentiary support the firm expects to               impacts of such actions or
                                                feedback.                                                provide in support of such motions, key               arrangements, all of which were


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                                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 136 / Monday, July 16, 2018 / Notices                                                   32859

                                                enhanced by the firms’ direct                            own operations in a manner similar to                 recent resolution plan submissions and
                                                communications with these FMUs and                       an FMU.                                               indicated that such communication was
                                                agent banks. The proposed PCS                               The proposal provides that a firm’s                helpful in refining their analysis
                                                guidance clarifies the expectations of                   framework should take into account the                concerning potential adverse actions
                                                the Agencies with respect to a firm’s                    various relationships the firm and its                and contingency arrangements. Firms
                                                capabilities to maintain continued                       key clients have with those key FMUs                  would be expected to continue to
                                                access to PCS services through a                         and agent banks by providing a mapping                engage with key FMUs, agent banks, and
                                                framework. Considering the firms’                        of material entities, critical operations,            clients, and playbooks would be
                                                earlier resolution plan submissions, the                 core business lines, and key clients to               expected to reflect any feedback
                                                firms have the methodologies and                         key FMUs and agent banks. This                        received during such ongoing outreach.
                                                capabilities in place to address these                   framework would be expected to                        Firms are encouraged to continue
                                                expectations.                                            consider both direct relationships (e.g.,             engaging with each other, key FMUs
                                                   Framework. The proposal states that                   firm’s direct membership in the FMU,                  and agent banks, and other stakeholders
                                                firms should demonstrate capabilities                    firm provides key clients with critical               to identify possible initiatives or
                                                for maintaining continued access to PCS                  PCS services through its own                          additional ways to support continued
                                                services through a framework that                        operations, firm’s contractual                        access to PCS services.
                                                incorporates the identification of key                   relationship with an agent bank) and                     The proposed guidance differentiates
                                                clients,9 FMUs, and agent banks, using                   indirect relationships (e.g., firm                    the type of information to be included
                                                both quantitative 10 and qualitative                     provides its clients with access to the               in a firm’s key FMU and agent bank
                                                criteria, and the development of a                       relevant FMU or agent bank through the                playbooks based on whether a firm is a
                                                playbook for each key FMU and agent                      firm’s membership in or relationship                  user of PCS services with respect to that
                                                bank. The proposed guidance builds                       with that FMU or agent bank).                         FMU or agent bank, a provider of PCS
                                                upon existing guidance by specifying                        By developing and evaluating these                 services with respect to that FMU or
                                                that the framework should consider key                   activities and relationships through a                agent bank, or both. To the extent a firm
                                                clients (which may include affiliates of                 framework that incorporates the                       is both a user and a provider of PCS
                                                the firm) and agent banks. The Agencies                  elements above, a firm should be able to              services with respect to a particular
                                                note that, although the existing                         consider the issue of maintaining                     FMU or agent bank, the firm would be
                                                guidance did not expressly suggest the                   continuity of PCS services in a                       expected to provide the described
                                                identification of key agent banks and                    systematic manner.                                    content for both users and providers of
                                                playbooks for such agent banks, the                         Question 2: Is the guidance                        PCS services. A firm would be able to
                                                firms considered agent bank                              sufficiently clear with respect to the                do so either in the same playbook or in
                                                relationships and each provided a                        following concepts: Scope of PCS                      separate playbooks included in its
                                                playbook for at least one key agent bank                 services, user vs. provider, direct vs.               resolution plan submission.
                                                in its most recent resolution plan                       indirect relationships? What additional                  Content related to Users of PCS
                                                submission. Because agent bank                           clarifications or alternatives concerning             Services. Under the proposal, each
                                                relationships may essentially replicate                  the proposed framework or its elements,               playbook for an individual FMU or
                                                PCS services provided by FMUs, the                       if any, should the Agencies consider?                 agent bank should include, at a
                                                Agencies propose to revise the PCS                       For instance, would further examples of               minimum, a description of the firm’s
                                                guidance to include the identification                   ways that firms may act as provider of                relationship as a user with the key FMU
                                                and development of playbooks for key                     PCS services be useful? Should the                    or agent bank and an identification and
                                                agent banks.                                             Agencies consider further distinguishing              mapping of PCS services to the
                                                   In applying the framework, the firm                   between providers based on the type of                associated material entities, critical
                                                would be expected to consider its role                   PCS service they provide?                             operations, and core business lines that
                                                as a user and/or a provider of PCS                          Playbooks for Continued Access to                  use those PCS services, as well as a
                                                services. The proposal refers to a user of               PCS Services. Firms also would be                     discussion of the potential range of
                                                PCS services as a firm that accesses the                 expected to provide a playbook for each               adverse actions that could be taken by
                                                services of an FMU through its own                       key FMU and agent bank that addresses                 that key FMU or agent bank in a period
                                                membership in that FMU or through the                    financial considerations and includes                 of stress for the firm or upon the firm’s
                                                membership of another firm that                          operational detail that would assist the              resolution.11 Playbooks submitted as
                                                provides PCS services on an agency                       firm in maintaining continued access to
                                                                                                                                                               part of the firms’ most recent resolution
                                                basis. A firm is a provider of PCS                       PCS services for itself and its clients in
                                                                                                                                                               plan submissions mapped the PCS
                                                services under the proposed guidance if                  stress and in resolution. Under the
                                                                                                                                                               services provided to material entities,
                                                it provides its clients with access to an                proposal, each key FMU and agent bank
                                                                                                                                                               critical operations, and core business
                                                FMU or agent bank through the firm’s                     playbook would be expected to provide
                                                                                                                                                               lines at a fairly granular level, which
                                                membership in or relationship with that                  analysis of the financial and operational
                                                                                                                                                               enhanced the utility of these playbooks.
                                                service provider. A firm also would be                   impact to the firm’s material entities                   In discussing the potential range of
                                                a provider if it delivers PCS services                   and key clients due to a loss of access               adverse actions that a key FMU or agent
                                                critical to a client through the firm’s                  to the FMU or agent bank. Each                        bank could take, each playbook would
                                                                                                         playbook also should discuss any                      be expected to address the operational
                                                   9 A client is an individual or entity, including      possible alternative arrangements that                and financial impact of such actions on
                                                affiliates of the firm, that relies upon continued       would allow the firm and its key clients
                                                access to the firm’s PCS services and any related                                                              each material entity and discuss
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                                                credit or liquidity offered in connection with those
                                                                                                         to maintain continued access to PCS                   contingency arrangements that the firm
                                                services. As a result, key clients may not necessarily   services in resolution. However, the                  may initiate in response to such actions
                                                be limited to wholesale clients.                         firm is not expected to incorporate a                 by the key FMU or key agent bank.
                                                   10 Examples of quantitative criteria include not
                                                                                                         scenario in which it loses FMU or agent               Operational impacts may include effects
                                                only the aggregate volumes and values of all             bank access into its preferred resolution
                                                transactions processed through an FMU but also
                                                assets under custody with an agent bank, the value       strategy or its RLEN/RCEN estimates.                    11 Potential adverse actions may include

                                                of cash and securities settled through an agent bank,       Firms communicated with key FMUs                   increased collateral and margin requirements and
                                                and extensions of intraday credit.                       and agent banks in preparing their most               enhanced reporting and monitoring.



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                                                32860                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 136 / Monday, July 16, 2018 / Notices

                                                on governance mechanisms or resource                     describe the range of contingency                     providers (or both) of PCS services
                                                allocation (including human resources),                  actions that the firm may take                        sufficiently clear? What additional
                                                as well as any expected enhanced                         concerning its provision of intraday                  clarifications, alternatives, or additional
                                                communication with key stakeholders                      credit to key clients and to provide                  information, if any, should the Agencies
                                                (e.g., regulators, FMUs and agent banks).                analysis quantifying the potential                    consider?
                                                Financial impacts may include those                      liquidity that the firm could generate by                Question 4: Should the guidance
                                                directly associated with liquidity or any                taking each such action in stress and in              indicate that providers of PCS activities
                                                additional costs incurred by the firm as                 the resolution period. To the extent a                are expected to expressly consider
                                                a result of such adverse actions and                     firm would not take any such actions as               particular contingency arrangements
                                                contingency arrangements. The                            part of its preferred resolution strategy,            (e.g., methods to transfer client activity
                                                proposed PCS guidance specifies that                     the firm would be expected to describe                to other firms with whom the clients
                                                each playbook should discuss PCS-                        its reasons for not taking any                        have relationships, alternate agent bank
                                                related liquidity sources and uses in                    contingency action.                                   relationships)? Should the guidance
                                                business-as-usual (BAU), in stress, and                     Under the proposal, a firm should                  also indicate that firms should expressly
                                                in the resolution period. Each firm                      communicate the potential impacts of                  consider particular actions they may
                                                would be expected to determine the                       implementation of any identified                      take concerning the provision of
                                                relevant measurement points, and this                    contingency arrangements or                           intraday credit to affiliate and third-
                                                information would be presented by                        alternatives to its key clients, and                  party clients, such as requiring pre-
                                                currency type (with U.S. dollar                          playbooks should describe the firm’s                  funding? If so, what particular actions
                                                equivalent) and by material entity. Each                 methodology for determining whether it                should these firms address?
                                                playbook also would be expected to                       should provide any additional                            Question 5: Specifically for users of
                                                describe any account features that might                 communication to some or all key                      PCS activities, should the guidance
                                                restrict the firm’s ready access to its                  clients (e.g., due to the client’s usage of           indicate that firms are expected to
                                                intraday liquidity sources, the firm’s                   that access and/or related extensions of              expressly include particular PCS-related
                                                ability to control intraday liquidity                    credit), as well as the expected timing               liquidity sources and uses such as client
                                                outflows, and the firm’s capabilities to                 and form of such communication. The                   pre-funding, or specific abilities to
                                                identify and prioritize time-specific                    Agencies note that in their most recent               control intraday liquidity inflows and
                                                payments.                                                submissions, all of the firms addressed               outflows (e.g., throttling or prioritizing
                                                   Content related to Providers of PCS                   the issue of client communications and                of payments)? If so, what particular
                                                Services. Under the proposal, a firm that                provided descriptions of planned or                   sources and uses should firms be
                                                is a direct or indirect provider of PCS                  existing client communications, with                  expected to include?
                                                services would be expected to identify                   some firms submitting specific samples                   Question 6: Specifically for providers
                                                key clients that rely upon PCS services                  of such communication. Firms would be                 of PCS services are the Agencies’
                                                provided by the firm in its playbook for                 expected to consider any benefit of                   expectations concerning a firm’s
                                                the relevant FMU or agent bank.                          communicating this information in                     communication to its key clients
                                                Playbooks would be expected to                           multiple forms (e.g., verbal, written) and            (including affiliates as applicable) of the
                                                describe the scale and manner in which                   at multiple time periods (e.g., BAU,                  potential impacts of implementation of
                                                the firm’s material entities, critical                   stress, some point in time in advance of              identified contingency arrangements
                                                operations, and core business lines                      taking contingency actions) in order to               sufficiently clear? What additional
                                                provide PCS services and any related                     provide adequate notice to key clients of             clarifications, if any, should the
                                                credit or liquidity offered by the firm in               the action and the potential impact on                Agencies consider? Should the Agencies
                                                connection with such services. Similar                   the client of that action. In making                  expect firms to communicate this
                                                to the playbook content expected of                      decisions concerning communications                   information at specific times or in
                                                users of PCS services, each playbook                     to its key clients, the proposal states that          specific formats?
                                                would be expected to include a                           firms also should consider any benefit
                                                mapping of the PCS services provided to                  of tailoring communications to different              Derivatives and Trading Activities
                                                each material entity, critical operation,                subsets of clients (e.g., based on                       This section of the proposed guidance
                                                core business line, and key clients. In                                                                        is intended to explain expectations for
                                                                                                         different levels of activity or credit
                                                the case where a firm is a provider of                                                                         Bank of America Corporation, Citigroup
                                                                                                         usage) in form, timing, or both.
                                                PCS services through its own
                                                                                                         Playbooks may include sample client                   Inc., The Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., JP
                                                operations, the firm would expected to
                                                                                                         contracts or agreements containing                    Morgan Chase & Co., Morgan Stanley,
                                                produce a playbook for the material
                                                                                                         provisions related to the firm’s                      and Wells Fargo & Company (each, a
                                                entity that provides those services, and
                                                                                                         provision of intraday credit or                       ‘‘dealer firm’’).13
                                                the playbook would focus on continuity
                                                                                                         liquidity.12 Such sample contracts or                    The size, scope, complexity, and
                                                of access for its key clients.
                                                   The proposal states that playbooks                    agreements may be particularly                        opacity of a firm’s global derivatives and
                                                should discuss the potential range of                    important to the extent that the firm                 trading activities may present
                                                contingency arrangements available to                    believes those documents sufficiently
                                                the firm to minimize disruption to its                   convey to clients the contingency                        13 Dealer firms share many quantitative and

                                                                                                         arrangements available to the firm and                qualitative characteristics. For example, each dealer
                                                provision of PCS services to its clients                                                                       firm is a Covered Company that (as of December 31,
                                                and the financial and operational                        the potential impacts of implementing                 2017) (i) has total derivatives notional values
                                                                                                         such contingency arrangements.                        greater than $5 trillion, (ii) has global gross market
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                                                impacts of such arrangements.
                                                Contingency arrangements may include                        Question 3: Are the Agencies’                      value of derivatives greater than $20 billion, (iii)
                                                                                                         expectations with respect to playbook                 has a sum of global trading assets and trading
                                                viable transfer of client activity and any                                                                     liabilities greater than $110 billion (each on the
                                                related assets or any alternative                        content for firms that are users or                   basis of a 3-year rolling average), (iv) is subject to
                                                arrangements that would allow the                                                                              the GSIB Surcharge and all components of the
                                                                                                           12 If these sample client contracts or agreements   CCAR quantitative assessment (i.e., global market
                                                firm’s key clients to maintain continued                 are included separately as part of the firm’s         shock and counterparty default scenario
                                                access to critical PCS services. The                     resolution plan submission, they may be               components), and (v) is parent to a designated
                                                playbook also would be expected to                       incorporated into the playbook by reference.          primary dealer.



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                                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 136 / Monday, July 16, 2018 / Notices                                                       32861

                                                significant risk to resolvability. To                    derivatives portfolios. Dealer firms are                demonstrate. These capabilities include
                                                facilitate an orderly resolution, a dealer               currently developing booking practices                  (i) a method and supporting systems
                                                firm should be able to demonstrate the                   that provide timely and up-to-date                      capabilities for categorizing and ranking
                                                ability to stabilize and de-risk its                     information regarding the structure,                    the ease of exit for its derivatives
                                                derivatives and trading activities during                risks and resource needs associated with                positions (‘‘ease of exit’’ position
                                                resolution without posing a threat to                    the management of its derivatives                       analysis), (ii) the systems capabilities to
                                                U.S. financial stability. Therefore, dealer              activities under a broad range of                       apply the firm’s exit cost methodology
                                                firms have developed capabilities to                     potential stress and failure scenarios.                 to its firm-wide derivatives portfolio
                                                identify and mitigate the risks                          Therefore, the proposed guidance would                  (application of exit cost methodology),
                                                associated with their derivatives and                    clarify the capabilities a dealer firm is               (iii) capabilities to assess the operational
                                                trading activities and with the                          expected to have related to its booking                 resources and forecast the costs related
                                                implementation of their preferred                        practices, including descriptions of its                to its current derivatives activities
                                                resolution strategies. These capabilities                comprehensive booking model                             (analysis of operational capacity), and
                                                seek to facilitate a dealer firm’s                       framework and demonstrations of its                     (iv) a method to apply sensitivity
                                                planning, preparedness, and execution                    ability to identify, assess, and report on              analyses to the key drivers of the
                                                of an orderly resolution. The proposed                   each entity with derivatives portfolios (a              derivatives-related costs and liquidity
                                                guidance would clarify the Agencies’                     ‘‘derivatives entity’’).14                              flows under its preferred resolution
                                                expectations with respect to such                           Inter-affiliate risk monitoring and                  strategy (sensitivity analysis).
                                                capabilities and a firm’s analysis of its                controls. Affiliates of a derivatives                      Prime brokerage customer account
                                                preferred strategy. The proposed                         entity may be forced to discontinue a                   transfers. The rapid withdrawal from a
                                                guidance also would eliminate the                        trading relationship with that                          firm by prime brokerage clients can
                                                expectations of the 2016 Guidance that                   derivatives entity during resolution,                   contribute to a disorderly resolution.
                                                a dealer firm’s resolution plan include                  which poses risks to the orderly                        Dealer firms’ resolution plans should
                                                separate passive and active wind-down                    resolution of a firm. The proposal                      address the risk that during a resolution
                                                scenario analyses, the agency-specified                  describes the Agencies’ expectations                    the firm’s prime brokerage clients may
                                                data templates, and rating agency                        that a dealer firm address this risk by                 seek to withdraw or transfer customer
                                                playbooks.                                               being able to provide timely                            accounts balances in rates significantly
                                                   Over the past several years, the                      transparency into the current risk                      higher than normal business conditions.
                                                Agencies have engaged significantly                      transfers between affiliates and the                    The proposed guidance confirms that
                                                with dealer firms to assess their                        resolvability risks related to such                     dealer firms should have the capabilities
                                                resolution capabilities and to provide                   transfers, including expectations                       to facilitate the orderly transfer of prime
                                                feedback with respect to their resolution                regarding an inter-affiliate market risk                brokerage account balances to peer
                                                preparedness. As a group, dealer firms                   framework that enables the firm to                      prime brokers and describes the
                                                have made meaningful improvements                        monitor and limit the exposures a                       Agencies’ related expectations in greater
                                                over previous resolution plan                            derivatives entity that is a material                   detail. In particular, the proposed
                                                submissions. These improvements                          entity could experience in an extreme                   guidance clarifies that a dealer firm’s
                                                include efforts by dealer firms to                       resolution scenario.                                    resolution plan should describe and
                                                enhance their resolution capabilities                       Portfolio segmentation and                           demonstrate its ability to segment and
                                                related to derivatives and trading                       forecasting. The ability to quickly and                 analyze the quality and composition of
                                                activities and to integrate those                        reliably identify problematic derivatives               such account balances and to rank
                                                capabilities with their business-as-usual                positions and portfolios is critical to                 account balances according to their
                                                practices. The expectations set out in                   minimizing uncertainty and forecasting                  potential transfer speed.
                                                this section of the proposed guidance                    resource needs to enable an orderly                        Derivatives stabilization and de-
                                                reflect many of those improvements. As                   resolution. Each dealer firm has                        risking strategy. A key risk to the orderly
                                                described in more detail below, this                     developed various modeling approaches                   resolution of a dealer firm is a volatile
                                                section of the proposed guidance is                      that are used to evidence the adequacy                  and risky derivatives portfolio. In the
                                                organized in five subsections. The first                 of the capabilities and resources needed                event of material financial distress or
                                                four of the subsections describe                         to execute its preferred resolution                     failure, the resolvability risks related to
                                                expectations for resolution capabilities                 strategy. The utility of these modeled                  a dealer firm’s derivatives and trading
                                                that are commensurate with the size,                     results is often affected by the scope of               activities would be a key obstacle to the
                                                scope and complexity of a firm’s                         readily available data on the underlying                firm’s rapid and orderly resolution.
                                                derivatives portfolios and should help                   characteristics of a dealer firm’s                      Dealer firms’ resolution plans should
                                                assure that dealer firms maintain the                    derivatives portfolios. Therefore, the                  address this obstacle. The proposed
                                                operational preparedness to implement                    proposal confirms that a dealer firm                    guidance confirms that a dealer firm’s
                                                an orderly resolution. The fifth                         should have the capabilities to produce                 plan should provide a detailed analysis
                                                subsection—derivatives stabilization                     analysis that reflects granular portfolio               of the strategy to stabilize and de-risk its
                                                and de-risking strategy—describes                        segmentation and differentiation of                     derivatives portfolios (‘‘derivatives
                                                expectations for a dealer firm’s analysis                assumptions taking into account trade-                  strategy’’) and provides additional detail
                                                of its approach to managing its                          level characteristics. Similarly, the                   regarding the Agencies’ expectations.15
                                                derivatives portfolios in an orderly                     proposed guidance also provides                         In particular, the proposed guidance
                                                resolution.                                              additional detail regarding other                       clarifies that a dealer firm should
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                                                   Booking practices. To minimize                        segmentation and forecasting related                    incorporate into its derivatives strategy
                                                uncertainty and avoid excessive                          capabilities that the dealer firm’s
                                                complexity and opacity that can                          resolution plan should describe and                        15 Subject to the certain constraints, a firm’s

                                                frustrate a firm’s resolution                                                                                    derivatives strategy may take the form of a going-
                                                preparedness, a dealer firm’s resolution                   14 Consistent with prior guidance, ‘‘derivatives      concern strategy, an accelerated de-risking strategy
                                                                                                         entities’’ should include both material and non-        (e.g., active wind-down) or an alternative, third
                                                capabilities should include booking                      material entities, in part because non-material         strategy so long as the firm’s resolution plan
                                                practices commensurate with the size,                    entities, in the aggregate, may represent significant   adequately supports the executability of the chosen
                                                scope and complexity of a firm’s                         exposures.                                              strategy.



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                                                32862                            Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 136 / Monday, July 16, 2018 / Notices

                                                assumptions consistent with the lack of                   identifying material entities in the                  I. Introduction
                                                access to the bilateral OTC derivatives                   ‘‘Material Entities’’ section.                           Resolution Plan Requirement: Section
                                                market at the start of its resolution                       Question 8: Should the Agencies                     165(d) of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
                                                period. The proposed guidance also                        consolidate all applicable guidance? If               Reform and Consumer Protection Act
                                                confirms or clarifies expectations                        so, which aspects of the other guidance               (12 U.S.C. 5365(d)) requires certain
                                                related to other elements that should be                  warrant inclusion, additional                         financial companies (‘‘Covered
                                                addressed in the firm’s analysis of its                   clarification or modification?                        Companies’’) to report periodically to
                                                derivatives strategy, including the                       IV. Paperwork Reduction Act                           the Board of Governors of the Federal
                                                incorporation of resource needs into                                                                            Reserve System (the ‘‘Federal Reserve’’
                                                RLEN and RCEN (forecast of resource                          Certain provisions of the Rule contain
                                                                                                          ‘‘collection of information’’                         or ‘‘Board’’) and the Federal Deposit
                                                needs), an analysis of any potential                                                                            Insurance Corporation (the ‘‘FDIC’’)
                                                derivatives portfolio remaining after the                 requirements within the meaning of the
                                                                                                          Paperwork Reduction Act (‘‘PRA’’) of                  (together ‘‘the Agencies’’) the
                                                resolution period (potential residual                                                                           Companies’ 18 Plans for Rapid and
                                                derivatives portfolio), and the impact                    1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 through 3521). In
                                                                                                          accordance with the requirements of the               Orderly Resolution in the event of
                                                (including on non-U.S. jurisdictions)                                                                           Material Financial Distress or failure.
                                                from the assumed failure of a material                    PRA, a respondent is not required to
                                                                                                          respond to an information collection                  On November 1, 2011, the Agencies
                                                derivatives entity (non-surviving                                                                               promulgated a joint rule (the ‘‘Rule’’)
                                                material entity analysis).16                              unless it displays a currently valid
                                                                                                          Office of Management and Budget                       implementing the provisions of Section
                                                   Question 7: Do the proposed changes                                                                          165(d), 12 CFR parts 243 and 381.19
                                                relative to the 2016 Guidance provide                     (OMB) control number. The Agencies
                                                                                                          believe that the proposed changes to the              Certain Covered Companies meeting
                                                sufficient clarity or are additional                                                                            criteria set out in the Rule must file a
                                                clarifications required?                                  2016 Guidance would not result in an
                                                                                                          increase in information collection                    resolution plan (‘‘Plan’’) annually or at
                                                Consolidation of Existing Guidance                        burden to the Covered Companies. The                  a different time period specified by the
                                                                                                          Agencies invite public comment on this                Agencies.
                                                   In addition to the 2016 Guidance, the                                                                           Overview of Guidance Document:
                                                                                                          assessment.
                                                Agencies have also issued: the Guidance                                                                         This document is intended to assist the
                                                for 2013 § 165(d) Annual Resolution                       TEXT OF PROPOSED RESOLUTION                           eight current U.S. Global Systemically
                                                Plan Submissions by Domestic Covered                      PLANNING GUIDANCE FOR EIGHT                           Important Banks (‘‘GSIBs’’ or ‘‘firms’’) 20
                                                Companies that Submitted Initial                          LARGE, COMPLEX U.S. BANKING                           in further developing their preferred
                                                Resolution Plans in 2012 (the ‘‘2013                      ORGANIZATIONS                                         resolution strategies. The document
                                                Guidance’’); firm-specific feedback                       Resolution Planning Guidance for Eight                describes the expectations of the
                                                letters issued in 2014 and 2016; and the                  Large, Complex U.S. Banking                           Agencies regarding these firms’
                                                February 2015 staff communication                         Organizations                                         resolution plans, and highlights specific
                                                regarding the 2016 plan submissions.                                                                            areas where additional detail should be
                                                The Agencies are considering                              I. Introduction                                       provided and where certain capabilities
                                                consolidating all applicable guidance                     II. Capital                                           or optionality should be developed and
                                                                                                             a. Resolution Capital Adequacy and
                                                into a single document, which would                                                                             maintained to demonstrate that each
                                                                                                                Positioning (RCAP)
                                                provide the public with one source of                        b. Resolution Capital Execution Need               firm has considered fully, and is able to
                                                applicable guidance to which to refer.                          (RCEN)                                          mitigate, obstacles to the successful
                                                The Agencies would also expect to                         III. Liquidity                                        implementation of the preferred
                                                incorporate aspects of the Resolution                        a. Resolution Liquidity Adequacy and               strategy.21
                                                Plan Frequently Asked Questions issued                          Positioning (RLAP)                                 This document is organized around a
                                                May 2017 that may remain applicable.17                       b. Resolution Liquidity Execution Need             number of key vulnerabilities in
                                                For example, the Agencies could add a                           (RLEN)                                          resolution (i.e., capital; liquidity;
                                                                                                          IV. Governance Mechanisms                             governance mechanisms; operational;
                                                section to the proposed guidance that
                                                                                                             a. Playbooks and Triggers
                                                includes the aspects of the 2013                             b. Pre-Bankruptcy Parent Support
                                                                                                                                                                legal entity rationalization and
                                                Guidance that should remain                               V. Operational                                        separability; and derivatives and trading
                                                applicable, such as the plan format                          a. Payment, Clearing, and Settlement               activities) that apply across resolution
                                                description in the ‘‘Format of 2013                             Activities                                      plans. Additional vulnerabilities or
                                                Plan’’ and ‘‘Additional Format and                           b. Managing, Identifying, and Valuing
                                                Content Guidance’’ sections, some of the                        Collateral                                         18 Capitalized terms not defined herein have the

                                                central assumptions and stress scenarios                     c. Management Information Systems                  meaning set forth in the Rule.
                                                                                                                                                                   19 76 Fed. Reg. 67323 (November 1, 2011)
                                                in the ‘‘Assumptions’’ and ‘‘Stress                          d. Shared and Outsourced Services
                                                                                                                                                                   20 Bank of America Corporation, the Bank of New
                                                                                                             e. Legal Obstacles Associated with
                                                Scenarios’’ sections, the process for                                                                           York Mellon Corporation, Citigroup Inc., the
                                                                                                                Emergency Motions
                                                addressing expected global cooperation                    VI. Legal Entity Rationalization and                  Goldman Sachs Group, Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Co.,
                                                described in the ‘‘Global Cooperation’’                         Separability
                                                                                                                                                                Morgan Stanley, State Street Corporation and Wells
                                                section, and the considerations for                                                                             Fargo & Company.
                                                                                                             a. Legal Entity Rationalization Criteria              21 The 2013 Guidance, the 2014 Letter, and the
                                                                                                                (LER Criteria)                                  2015 Communication, as described in the 2016
                                                   16 From the perspective of protecting U.S.                b. Separability                                    letters to the firms, continue to be applicable
                                                financial stability, the risk of adverse regulatory       VII. Derivatives and Trading Activities               (relevant dates should be updated appropriately),
                                                actions that could impede an orderly resolution              a. Booking Practices                               except to the extent superseded or supplemented by
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                                                increases where a material entity’s failure would            b. Inter-Affiliate Risk Monitoring and             the provisions of this document. See Letters dated
                                                have extraordinary impacts on local markets.                    Controls                                        April 12, 2016, from the Board and FDIC to Bank
                                                Therefore, analysis of non-surviving material                                                                   of America Corporation, The Bank of New York
                                                entities located in a non-U.S. jurisdiction should
                                                                                                             c. Portfolio Segmentation and Forecasting
                                                                                                                                                                Mellon Corporation, Citigroup Inc., the Goldman
                                                contemplate the impact on local markets.                     d. Prime Brokerage Customer Account                Sachs Group, Inc., JPMorgan Chase & Co., Morgan
                                                   17 https://www.fdic.gov/resauthority/                        Transfers                                       Stanley, State Street Corporation, and Wells Fargo
                                                2017faqsguidance.pdf; https://                               e. Derivatives Stabilization and De-risking        & Company, available at https://
                                                www.federalreserve.gov/publications/files/                      Strategy                                        www.federalreserve.gov/supervisionreg/resolution-
                                                resolution-plan-faqs.pdf.                                 VIII. Public Section                                  plans.htm.



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                                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 136 / Monday, July 16, 2018 / Notices                                                          32863

                                                obstacles may arise based on a firm’s                      debt and there are one or more entities                III. LIQUIDITY
                                                particular structure, operations, or                       between that material entity and the
                                                                                                                                                                     The firm should have the liquidity
                                                resolution strategy. Each firm is                          parent, the firm should mitigate
                                                                                                                                                                  capabilities necessary to execute its
                                                expected to satisfactorily address these                   uncertainty related to potential creditor
                                                                                                                                                                  preferred resolution strategy, including
                                                vulnerabilities in its Plan—e.g., by                       challenge; for example, by ensuring that
                                                                                                                                                                  those described in SR Letter 14–1.26 For
                                                developing sensitivity analysis for                        the seniority and tenor of the
                                                                                                                                                                  resolution purposes, these capabilities
                                                certain underlying assumptions,                            intercompany debt is the same between                  should include having an appropriate
                                                enhancing capabilities, providing                          all entities in the chain.                             model and process for estimating and
                                                detailed analysis, or increasing                              Resolution Capital Execution Need                   maintaining sufficient liquidity at or
                                                optionality development, as indicated                      (RCEN): To support the execution of the                readily available to material entities and
                                                below.                                                     firm’s resolution strategy, material                   a methodology for estimating the
                                                  The Agencies will review the Plan to
                                                                                                           entities need to be recapitalized to a                 liquidity needed to successfully execute
                                                determine if it satisfactorily addresses
                                                                                                           level that allows them to operate or be                the resolution strategy, as described
                                                key potential vulnerabilities, including
                                                                                                           wound down in an orderly manner                        below.
                                                those detailed below. If the Agencies
                                                                                                           following the parent company’s                            Resolution Liquidity Adequacy and
                                                jointly decide that these matters are not
                                                                                                           bankruptcy filing. The firm should have                Positioning (RLAP): With respect to
                                                satisfactorily addressed in the Plan, the
                                                                                                           a methodology for periodically                         RLAP, the firm should be able to
                                                Agencies may determine jointly that the
                                                                                                           estimating the amount of capital that                  measure the stand-alone liquidity
                                                Plan is not credible or would not
                                                                                                           may be needed to support each material                 position of each material entity
                                                facilitate an orderly resolution under the
                                                                                                           entity after the bankruptcy filing                     (including material entities that are non-
                                                U.S. Bankruptcy Code.
                                                                                                           (RCEN). The firm’s positioning of                      U.S. branches)—i.e., the high-quality
                                                II. CAPITAL                                                internal TLAC should be able to support                liquid assets (HQLA) at the material
                                                   Resolution Capital Adequacy and                         the RCEN estimates. In addition, the                   entity less net outflows to third parties
                                                Positioning (RCAP): To help ensure that                    RCEN estimates should be incorporated                  and affiliates—and ensure that liquidity
                                                a firm’s material entities 22 could                        into the firm’s governance framework to                is readily available to meet any deficits.
                                                operate while the parent company is in                     ensure that the parent company files for               The RLAP model should cover a period
                                                bankruptcy, the firm should have an                        bankruptcy at a time that enables                      of at least 30 days and reflect the
                                                adequate amount of loss-absorbing                          execution of the preferred strategy.                   idiosyncratic liquidity profile and risk
                                                capacity to recapitalize those material                       The firm’s RCEN methodology should                  of the firm. The model should balance
                                                entities. Thus, a firm should have                         use conservative forecasts for losses and              the reduction in frictions associated
                                                outstanding a minimum amount of total                      risk-weighted assets and incorporate                   with holding liquidity directly at
                                                loss-absorbing capital, as well as a                       estimates of potential additional capital              material entities with the flexibility
                                                minimum amount of long-term debt, to                       needs through the resolution period,24                 provided by holding HQLA at the parent
                                                help ensure that the firm has adequate                     consistent with the firm’s resolution                  available to meet unanticipated
                                                capacity to meet that need at a                            strategy. However, the methodology is                  outflows at material entities. Thus, the
                                                consolidated level (external TLAC).23                      not required to produce aggregate losses               firm should not rely exclusively on
                                                   A firm’s external TLAC should be                        that are greater than the amount of                    either full pre-positioning or the parent.
                                                complemented by appropriate                                external TLAC that would be required                   The model 27 should ensure that the
                                                positioning of additional loss-absorbing                   for the firm under the Board’s rule.25                 parent holding company holds
                                                capacity within the firm (internal                         The RCEN methodology should be                         sufficient HQLA (inclusive of its
                                                TLAC). The positioning of a firm’s                         calibrated such that recapitalized                     deposits at the U.S. branch of the lead
                                                internal TLAC should balance the                           material entities have sufficient capital              bank subsidiary) to cover the sum of all
                                                certainty associated with pre-                             to maintain market confidence as                       stand-alone material entity net liquidity
                                                positioning internal TLAC directly at                      required under the preferred resolution                deficits. The stand-alone net liquidity
                                                material entities with the flexibility                     strategy. Capital levels should meet or                position of each material entity (HQLA
                                                provided by holding recapitalization                       exceed all applicable regulatory capital               less net outflows) should be measured
                                                resources at the parent (contributable                     requirements for ‘‘well-capitalized’’                  using the firm’s internal liquidity stress
                                                resources) to meet unanticipated losses                    status and meet estimated additional                   test assumptions and should treat inter-
                                                at material entities. That balance should                  capital needs throughout resolution.                   affiliate exposures in the same manner
                                                take account of both pre-positioning at                    Material entities that are not subject to              as third-party exposures. For example,
                                                material entities and holding resources                    capital requirements may be considered                 an overnight unsecured exposure to an
                                                at the parent, and the obstacles                           sufficiently recapitalized when they                   affiliate should be assumed to mature.
                                                associated with each. Accordingly, the                     have achieved capital levels typically                 Finally, the firm should not assume that
                                                firm should not rely exclusively on                        required to obtain an investment-grade                 a net liquidity surplus at one material
                                                either full pre-positioning or parent                      credit rating or, if the entity is not rated,          entity could be moved to meet net
                                                contributable resources to recapitalize                    an equivalent level of financial
                                                any material entity. The plan should                       soundness. Finally, the methodology
                                                                                                                                                                     26 SR Letter 14–1, ‘‘Heightened Supervisory

                                                describe the positioning of internal                                                                              Expectations for Recovery and Resolution
                                                                                                           should be independently reviewed,                      Preparedness for Certain Large Bank Holding
                                                TLAC within the firm, along with                           consistent with the firm’s corporate                   Companies—Supplemental Guidance on
                                                analysis supporting such positioning.                      governance processes and controls for                  Consolidated Supervision Framework for Large
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                                                   Finally, to the extent that pre-                        the use of models and methodologies.                   Financial Institutions’’ (Jan. 24, 2014), available at
                                                positioned internal TLAC at a material                                                                            http://www.federalreserve.gov/bankinforeg/
                                                                                                                                                                  srletters/sr1401.pdf.
                                                entity is in the form of intercompany                         24 The resolution period begins immediately after      27 ‘‘Model’’ refers to the set of calculations
                                                                                                           the parent company bankruptcy filing and extends       estimating the net liquidity surplus/deficit at each
                                                  22 The terms ‘‘material entities,’’ ‘‘critical           through the completion of the preferred resolution     legal entity and for the firm in aggregate based on
                                                operations,’’ and ‘‘core business lines’’ have the         strategy.                                              assumptions regarding available liquidity, e.g.,
                                                same meaning as in the Agencies’ Rule.                        25 See 12 CFR 252.60–.65; 82 Fed. Reg. 8266         HQLA, and third-party and interaffiliate net
                                                  23 82 Fed. Reg. 8266 (January 24, 2017).                 (January 24, 2017).                                    outflows.



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                                                32864                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 136 / Monday, July 16, 2018 / Notices

                                                liquidity deficits at other material                     estimate, i.e., the minimum amount of                    (C) The timely execution of a
                                                entities or to augment parent resources.                 HQLA required to facilitate the                       bankruptcy filing and related pre-filing
                                                   Additionally, the RLAP methodology                    execution of the firm’s strategy. The                 actions.28
                                                should take into account (A) the daily                   RLEN estimate should be tied to the                      These triggers should be based, at a
                                                contractual mismatches between                           firm’s governance mechanisms and be                   minimum, on capital, liquidity, and
                                                inflows and outflows; (B) the daily                      incorporated into the playbooks as                    market metrics, and should incorporate
                                                flows from movement of cash and                          discussed below to assist the board of                the firm’s methodologies for forecasting
                                                collateral for all inter-affiliate                       directors in taking timely resolution-                the liquidity and capital needed to
                                                transactions; and (C) the daily stressed                 related actions.                                      operate as required by the preferred
                                                liquidity flows and trapped liquidity as                                                                       strategy following a parent company’s
                                                a result of actions taken by clients,                    IV. GOVERNANCE MECHANISMS                             bankruptcy filing. Additionally, the
                                                counterparties, key financial market                                                                           triggers and related actions should be
                                                                                                            Playbooks and Triggers: A firm                     specific.
                                                utilities (FMUs), and foreign
                                                supervisors, among others.                               should identify the governance                           Triggers linked to firm actions as
                                                   Resolution Liquidity Execution Need                   mechanisms that would ensure                          contemplated by the firm’s preferred
                                                (RLEN): The firm should have a                           execution of required board actions at                strategy should identify when and
                                                methodology for estimating the liquidity                 the appropriate time (as anticipated                  under what conditions the firm,
                                                needed after the parent’s bankruptcy                     under the firm’s preferred strategy) and              including the parent company and its
                                                filing to stabilize the surviving material               include pre-action triggers and existing              material entities, would transition from
                                                entities and to allow those entities to                  agreements for such actions.                          business-as-usual conditions to a stress
                                                operate post-filing. The RLEN estimate                   Governance playbooks should detail the                period and from a stress period to the
                                                should be incorporated into the firm’s                   board and senior management actions                   runway and recapitalization/resolution
                                                governance framework to ensure that                      necessary to facilitate the firm’s                    periods. Corresponding escalation
                                                the firm files for bankruptcy in a timely                preferred strategy and to mitigate                    procedures, actions, and timeframes
                                                way, i.e., prior to the firm’s HQLA                      vulnerabilities, and should incorporate               should be constructed so that breach of
                                                falling below the RLEN estimate.                         the triggers identified below. The                    the triggers will allow prerequisite
                                                   The firm’s RLEN methodology should:                   governance playbooks should also                      actions to be completed. For example,
                                                   (A) Estimate the minimum operating                    include a discussion of (A) the firm’s                breach of the triggers needs to occur
                                                liquidity (MOL) needed at each material                  proposed communications strategy, both                early enough to ensure that resources
                                                entity to ensure those entities could                    internal and external; (B) the boards of              are available and can be downstreamed,
                                                continue to operate post-parent’s                        directors’ fiduciary responsibilities and             if anticipated by the firm’s strategy, and
                                                bankruptcy filing and/or to support a                    how planned actions would be                          with adequate time for the preparation
                                                wind-down strategy;                                      consistent with such responsibilities                 of the bankruptcy petition and first-day
                                                   (B) Provide daily cash flow forecasts                 applicable at the time actions are                    motions, necessary stakeholder
                                                by material entity to support estimation                 expected to be taken; (C) potential                   communications, and requisite board
                                                of peak funding needs to stabilize each                  conflicts of interest, including                      actions. Triggers identifying the onset of
                                                entity under resolution;                                 interlocking boards of directors; and (D)             the runway and recapitalization/
                                                   (C) Provide a comprehensive breakout                  any employee retention policy. All                    resolution periods, and the associated
                                                of all inter-affiliate transactions and                  responsible parties and timeframes for                escalation procedures and actions,
                                                arrangements that could impact the                       action should be identified. Governance               should be discussed directly in the
                                                MOL or peak funding needs estimates;                     playbooks should be updated                           governance playbooks.
                                                and                                                      periodically for all entities whose                      Pre-Bankruptcy Parent Support: The
                                                   (D) Estimate the minimum amount of                    boards of directors would need to act in              resolution plan should include a
                                                liquidity required at each material entity                                                                     detailed legal analysis of the potential
                                                                                                         advance of the commencement of
                                                to meet the MOL and peak needs noted                                                                           state law and bankruptcy law challenges
                                                                                                         resolution proceedings under the firm’s
                                                above, which would inform the firm’s                                                                           and mitigants to planned provision of
                                                                                                         preferred strategy.
                                                board(s) of directors of when they need                                                                        capital and liquidity to the subsidiaries
                                                to take resolution-related actions.                         The firm should demonstrate that key               prior to the parent’s bankruptcy filing
                                                   The MOL estimates should capture                      actions will be taken at the appropriate              (Support). Specifically, the analysis
                                                material entities’ intraday liquidity                    time in order to mitigate financial,                  should identify potential legal obstacles
                                                requirements, operating expenses,                        operational, legal, and regulatory                    and explain how the firm would seek to
                                                working capital needs, and inter-affiliate               vulnerabilities. To ensure that these                 ensure that Support would be provided
                                                funding frictions to ensure that material                actions will occur, the firm should                   as planned. Legal obstacles include
                                                entities could operate without                           establish clearly identified triggers                 claims of fraudulent transfer,
                                                disruption during the resolution.                        linked to specific actions for:                       preference, breach of fiduciary duty,
                                                   The peak funding needs estimates                         (A) The escalation of information to               and any other applicable legal theory
                                                should be projected for each material                    senior management and the board(s) to                 identified by the firm. The analysis also
                                                entity and cover the length of time the                  potentially take the corresponding                    should include related claims that may
                                                firm expects it would take to stabilize                  actions at each stage of distress post-               prevent or delay an effective
                                                that material entity. Inter-affiliate                    recovery leading eventually to the                    recapitalization, such as equitable
                                                funding frictions should be taken into                   decision to file for bankruptcy;                      claims to enjoin the transfer (e.g.,
                                                                                                                                                               imposition of a constructive trust by the
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                                                account in the estimation process.
                                                   The firm’s forecasts of MOL and peak                     (B) Successful recapitalization of                 court). The analysis should apply the
                                                funding needs should ensure that                         subsidiaries prior to the parent’s filing             actions contemplated in the plan
                                                material entities could operate post-                    for bankruptcy and funding of such
                                                filing consistent with regulatory                        entities during the parent company’s                     28 Key pre-filing actions include the preparation

                                                requirements, market expectations, and                   bankruptcy to the extent the preferred                of any emergency motion required to be decided on
                                                                                                         strategy relies on such actions or                    the first day of the firm’s bankruptcy. See
                                                the firm’s post-failure strategy. These                                                                        ‘‘OPERATIONAL—Legal Obstacles Associated with
                                                forecasts should inform the RLEN                         support; and                                          Emergency Motions,’’ below.



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                                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 136 / Monday, July 16, 2018 / Notices                                                       32865

                                                regarding each element of the claim, the                 V. OPERATIONAL                                            which it loses FMU or agent bank access
                                                anticipated timing for commencement                                                                                into its preferred resolution strategy or
                                                                                                         Payment, Clearing, and Settlement
                                                and resolution of the claims, and the                                                                              its RLEN/RCEN estimates, each
                                                                                                         Activities
                                                extent to which adjudication of such                                                                               playbook should provide analysis of the
                                                claim could affect execution of the                         Framework. Maintaining continuity of                   financial and operational impact to the
                                                firm’s preferred resolution strategy.                    payment, clearing, and settlement (PCS)                   firm’s material entities and key clients
                                                                                                         services is critical for the orderly                      due to loss of access to the FMU or
                                                   As noted, the analysis should include                 resolution of firms that are either users                 agent bank. Each playbook also should
                                                mitigants to the potential challenges to                 or providers,29 or both, of PCS services.                 discuss any possible alternative
                                                the planned Support. The plan should                     A firm should demonstrate                                 arrangements that would allow the firm
                                                include the mitigant(s) to such                          capabilities 30 for continued access to                   and its key clients continued access to
                                                challenges that the firm considers most                  PCS services essential to an orderly                      PCS services in resolution. The firm
                                                effective. In identifying appropriate                    resolution through a framework to                         should continue to engage with key
                                                mitigants, the firm should consider the                  support such access by:                                   FMUs, agent banks and clients, and
                                                effectiveness of a contractually binding                    • Identifying key clients,31 FMUs,                     playbooks should reflect any feedback
                                                mechanism (CBM), pre-positioning of                      and agent banks, using both quantitative                  received during such ongoing outreach.
                                                financial resources in material entities,                (volume and value) 32 and qualitative                        Content Related to Users of PCS
                                                and the creation of an intermediate                      criteria;                                                 Services. Individual FMU and agent
                                                holding company. Moreover, if the plan                      • Mapping material entities, critical                  bank playbooks should include at a
                                                includes a CBM, the firm should                          operations, core business lines, and key                  minimum:
                                                consider whether it is appropriate that                  clients to both key FMUs and agent                           • Description of the firm’s
                                                the CBM should have the following: (A)                   banks; and                                                relationship as a user with the key FMU
                                                clearly defined triggers; (B) triggers that                 • Developing a playbook for each key                   or agent bank and the identification and
                                                are synchronized to the firm’s liquidity                 FMU and agent bank reflecting the                         mapping of PCS services to material
                                                and capital methodologies; (C) perfected                 firm’s role(s) as a user and/or provider                  entities, critical operations, and core
                                                security interests in specified collateral               of PCS services.                                          business lines that use those PCS
                                                                                                            The framework should address both                      services;
                                                sufficient to fully secure all Support
                                                                                                         direct relationships (e.g., firm’s direct                    • Discussion of the potential range of
                                                obligations on a continuous basis
                                                                                                         membership in the FMU, firm provides                      adverse actions that may be taken by
                                                (including mechanisms for adjusting the                  key clients with critical PCS services                    that key FMU or agent bank when the
                                                amount of collateral as the value of                     through its own operations, firm’s                        firm is in resolution,33 the operational
                                                obligations under the agreement or                       contractual relationship with an agent                    and financial impact of such actions on
                                                collateral assets fluctuates); and (D)                   bank) and indirect relationships (e.g.,                   each material entity, and contingency
                                                liquidated damages provisions or other                   firm provides its clients with access to                  arrangements that may be initiated by
                                                features designed to make the CBM                        the relevant FMU or agent bank through                    the firm in response to potential adverse
                                                more enforceable. The firm also should                   the firm’s membership to or relationship                  actions by the key FMU or key agent
                                                consider related actions or agreements                   with that FMU or agent bank).                             bank; and
                                                that may enhance the effectiveness of a                     Playbooks for Continued Access to                         • Discussion of PCS-related liquidity
                                                CBM. A copy of any agreement and                         PCS Services. The firm is expected to                     sources and uses in business-as-usual
                                                documents referenced therein (e.g.,                      provide a playbook for each key FMU                       (BAU), in stress, and in the resolution
                                                evidence of security interest perfection)                and agent bank that addresses                             period, presented by currency type
                                                should be included in the resolution                     considerations that would assist the                      (with U.S. dollar equivalent) and by
                                                plan.                                                    firm and its clients in maintaining                       material entity.
                                                                                                         continued access to PCS services in the                      Æ PCS Liquidity Sources: These may
                                                   The governance playbooks included
                                                                                                         period leading up to and including the                    include the amounts of intraday
                                                in the resolution plan should
                                                                                                         firm’s resolution. While the firm is not                  extensions of credit, liquidity buffer,
                                                incorporate any developments from the                                                                              inflows from FMU participants, and
                                                                                                         expected to incorporate a scenario in
                                                firm’s analysis of potential legal                                                                                 client prefunded amounts in BAU, in
                                                challenges regarding the Support,                           29 A firm is a user of PCS services if it uses the     stress, and in the resolution period. The
                                                including any Support approach(es) the                   services of a financial market utility (FMU) through      playbook should also describe intraday
                                                firm has implemented. If the firm                        its membership in that FMU or an agent bank. A
                                                                                                                                                                   credit arrangements (e.g., facilities of the
                                                                                                         firm is a provider of PCS services if it provides its
                                                analyzed and addressed an issue noted                    clients with access to an FMU or agent bank               FMU, agent bank, or a central bank) and
                                                in this section in a prior plan                          through the firm’s membership to or relationship          any similar custodial arrangements that
                                                submission, the plan may reproduce                       with that service provider (including providing PCS       allow ready access to a firm’s funds for
                                                that analysis and arguments and should                   services to its client as an agent bank) or if it
                                                                                                         provides key clients with critical PCS services (e.g.,
                                                                                                                                                                   PCS-related FMU and agent bank
                                                build upon it to at least the extent                     the suspension or termination of such services            obligations (including margin
                                                described above. In preparing the                        would impact the key client’s continued access to         requirements) in various currencies,
                                                analysis of these issues, firms may                      PCS services) through the firm’s own operations.          including placements of firm liquidity
                                                                                                            30 These capabilities may include those described
                                                consult with law firms and other experts                                                                           at central banks, FMUs, and agent
                                                                                                         in SR Letter 14–1.
                                                on these matters. The Agencies do not                       31 For purposes of this section V, a client is an      banks.
                                                object to appropriate collaboration                      individual or entity, including affiliates of the firm,      Æ PCS Liquidity Uses: These may
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                                                between firms, including through trade                   that relies upon continued access to the firm’s PCS       include firm and client margin, pre-
                                                                                                         services and any related credit or liquidity offered      funding and intraday extensions of
                                                organizations and with the academic                      in connection with those services.
                                                community, to develop analysis of                           32 Examples of quantitative criteria include not
                                                                                                                                                                   credit, including incremental amounts
                                                common legal challenges and available                    only the aggregate volumes and values of all              required during resolution.
                                                mitigants.                                               transactions processed through an FMU but also
                                                                                                         assets under custody with an agent bank, the value          33 Potential adverse actions may include

                                                                                                         of cash and securities settled through an agent bank,     increased collateral and margin requirements and
                                                                                                         and extensions of intraday credit.                        enhanced reporting and monitoring.



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                                                32866                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 136 / Monday, July 16, 2018 / Notices

                                                   Æ Intraday Liquidity Inflows and                         • Description of how the firm will                 specific types of financial and risk data
                                                Outflows: The playbook should describe                   communicate to its key clients the                    that would be required to execute the
                                                the firm’s ability to control intraday                   potential impacts of implementation of                preferred resolution strategy and how
                                                liquidity inflows and outflows and to                    any identified contingency                            frequently the firm would need to
                                                identify and prioritize time-specific                    arrangements or alternatives, including               produce the information, with the
                                                payments. The playbook should also                       a description of the firm’s methodology               appropriate level of granularity.
                                                describe any account features that might                 for determining whether any additional                   Shared and Outsourced Services: The
                                                restrict the firm’s ready access to its                  communication should be provided to                   firm should maintain a fully actionable
                                                liquidity sources.                                       some or all key clients (e.g., due to the             implementation plan to ensure the
                                                   Content Related to Providers of PCS                   client’s BAU usage of that access and/                continuity of shared services that
                                                Services. Individual FMU and agent                       or related intraday credit or liquidity),             support critical operations and robust
                                                bank playbooks 34 should include at a                    and the expected timing and form of                   arrangements to support the continuity
                                                minimum:                                                 such communication.                                   of shared and outsourced services. The
                                                   • Identification and mapping of PCS                      Managing, Identifying, and Valuing                 firm should (A) maintain an
                                                services to the material entities, critical              Collateral: The firm should have the                  identification of all shared services that
                                                operations, and core business lines that                 capabilities described in SR Letter 14–               support critical operations (critical
                                                provide those PCS services, and a                        1 related to managing, identifying, and               services); (B) maintain a mapping of
                                                description of the scale and the way in                  valuing the collateral that it receives               how/where these services support its
                                                which each provides PCS services;                        from and posts to external parties and                core business lines and critical
                                                   • Identification and mapping of PCS                   its affiliates. Specifically, the firm                operations; (C) incorporate such
                                                                                                         should:                                               mapping into legal entity rationalization
                                                services to key clients that rely upon the
                                                firm to provide those PCS services and                      • Be able to query and provide                     criteria and implementation efforts; and
                                                                                                         aggregate statistics for all qualified                (D) mitigate identified continuity risks
                                                any related credit or liquidity offered in
                                                                                                         financial contracts concerning cross-                 through establishment of service-level
                                                connection with such services;
                                                                                                         default clauses, downgrade triggers, and              agreements (SLAs) for all critical shared
                                                   • Discussion of the potential range of                                                                      services. These SLAs should fully
                                                firm contingency arrangements available                  other key collateral-related contract
                                                                                                         terms — not just those terms that may                 describe the services provided, reflect
                                                to minimize disruption to the provision                                                                        pricing considerations on an arm’s-
                                                of PCS services to its clients, including                be impacted in an adverse economic
                                                                                                         environment — across contract types,                  length basis where appropriate, and
                                                the viability of transferring client                                                                           incorporate appropriate terms and
                                                activity and any related assets, as well                 business lines, legal entities, and
                                                                                                         jurisdictions;                                        conditions to (A) prevent automatic
                                                as any alternative arrangements that
                                                would allow the firm’s key clients                          • Be able to track both firm collateral            termination upon certain resolution-
                                                                                                         sources (i.e., counterparties that have               related events and (B) achieve
                                                continued access to critical PCS services                                                                      continued provision of such services
                                                if the firm could no longer provide such                 pledged collateral) and uses (i.e.,
                                                                                                         counterparties to whom collateral has                 during resolution. The firm should also
                                                access (e.g., due to the firm’s loss of                                                                        store SLAs in a central repository or
                                                FMU or agent bank access), and the                       been pledged) at the CUSIP level on at
                                                                                                         least a t+1 basis;                                    repositories in a searchable format,
                                                financial and operational impacts of                                                                           develop and document contingency
                                                such arrangements;                                          • Have robust risk measurements for
                                                                                                         cross-entity and cross-contract netting,              strategies and arrangements for
                                                   • Description of the range of                                                                               replacement of critical shared services,
                                                                                                         including consideration of where
                                                contingency actions that the firm may                                                                          and complete re-alignment or
                                                                                                         collateral is held and pledged;
                                                take concerning its provision of intraday                                                                      restructuring of activities within its
                                                                                                            • Be able to identify CUSIP and asset
                                                credit to clients, including analysis                                                                          corporate structure. In addition, the firm
                                                                                                         class level information on collateral
                                                quantifying the potential liquidity the                                                                        should ensure the financial resilience of
                                                                                                         pledged to specific central
                                                firm could generate by taking such                                                                             internal shared service providers by
                                                                                                         counterparties by legal entity on at least
                                                actions in stress and in the resolution                                                                        maintaining working capital for six
                                                                                                         a t+1 basis;
                                                period, such as (i) requiring clients to                    • Be able to track and report on inter-            months (or through the period of
                                                designate or appropriately pre-position                  branch collateral pledged and received                stabilization as required in the firm’s
                                                liquidity, including through pre-funding                 on at least a t+1 basis and have clear                preferred strategy) in such entities
                                                of settlement activity, for PCS-related                  policies explaining the rationale for                 sufficient to cover contract costs,
                                                FMU and agent bank obligations at                        such inter-branch pledges, including                  consistent with the preferred resolution
                                                specific material entities of the firm                   any regulatory considerations; and                    strategy.
                                                (e.g., direct members of FMUs) or any                       • Have a comprehensive collateral                     The firm should identify all critical
                                                similar custodial arrangements that                      management policy that outlines how                   outsourced services that support critical
                                                allow ready access to clients’ funds for                 the firm as a whole approaches                        operations and could not be promptly
                                                such obligations in various currencies;                  collateral and serves as a single source              substituted. The firm should (A)
                                                (ii) delaying or restricting client PCS                  for governance.35                                     evaluate the agreements governing these
                                                activity; and (iii) restricting, imposing                   Management Information Systems:                    services to determine whether there are
                                                conditions upon (e.g., requiring                         The firm should have the management                   any that could be terminated despite
                                                collateral), or eliminating the provision                information systems (MIS) capabilities                continued performance upon the
                                                of intraday credit or liquidity to clients;              to readily produce data on a legal entity             parent’s bankruptcy filing, and (B)
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                                                and                                                      basis and have controls to ensure data                update contracts to incorporate
                                                                                                         integrity and reliability, as described in            appropriate terms and conditions to
                                                   34 Where a firm is a provider of PCS services
                                                                                                         SR Letter 14–1. The firm also should                  prevent automatic termination and
                                                through the firm’s own operations, the firm is
                                                                                                         perform a detailed analysis of the                    facilitate continued provision of such
                                                expected to produce a playbook for the material                                                                services during resolution. Relying on
                                                entity that provides those services, including
                                                contingency arrangements to permit the firm’s key          35 The policy may reference subsidiary or related   entities projected to survive during
                                                clients to maintain continued access to PCS              policies already in place, as implementation may      resolution to avoid contract termination
                                                services.                                                differ based on business line or other factors.       is insufficient to ensure continuity. In


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                                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 136 / Monday, July 16, 2018 / Notices                                                       32867

                                                the plan, the firm should document the                   example, the firm should address due                  bankruptcy or its subsidiaries; and (C)
                                                amendment of any such agreements                         process arguments likely to be made by                the role of the bankruptcy court in
                                                governing these services.                                creditors asserting that they have not                granting the emergency motion due to
                                                   Legal Obstacles Associated with                       had sufficient opportunity to respond to              public policy concerns—e.g., to preserve
                                                Emergency Motions: The Plan should                       the emergency motion given the                        financial stability.
                                                address legal issues associated with the                 likelihood that a creditors’ committee
                                                implementation of the stay on cross-                                                                              Regulatory Implications—The plan
                                                                                                         will not yet have been appointed. The
                                                default rights described in Section 2 of                                                                       should include a detailed explanation of
                                                                                                         firm also should consider, and discuss
                                                the International Swaps and Derivatives                  in its plan, whether it would enhance                 the steps the firm would take to ensure
                                                Association 2015 Universal Resolution                    the successful implementation of its                  that key domestic and foreign
                                                Stay Protocol (Protocol), similar                        preferred strategy to conduct outreach to             authorities would support, or not object
                                                provisions of any U.S. protocol,36 or                    interested parties, such as potential                 to, the emergency motion (including
                                                other contractual provisions that                        creditors of the holding company and                  specifying the expected approvals or
                                                comply with the Agencies’ rules                          the bankruptcy bar, regarding the                     forbearances and the requisite format—
                                                regarding stays from the exercise of                     strategy.                                             i.e., formal, affirmative statements of
                                                cross-default rights in qualified                           If the firm chooses the bridge transfer            support or, alternatively, ‘‘non-
                                                financial contracts, to the extent                       alternative, its analysis and arguments               objections’’). The potential impact on
                                                relevant.37 Generally, the Protocol                      should address at a minimum the                       the firm’s preferred resolution strategy if
                                                provides two primary methods of                          following potential issues: (A) the legal             a specific approval or forbearance
                                                satisfying the stay conditions for                       basis for transferring the parent holding             cannot be timely obtained should also
                                                covered agreements for which the                         company’s equity interests in certain                 be detailed.
                                                affiliate in Chapter 11 proceedings has                  subsidiaries (transferred subsidiaries) to               Contingencies if Preferred Structure
                                                provided a credit enhancement (A)                        a Bankruptcy Bridge Company,
                                                                                                                                                               Fails—The plan should consider
                                                transferring all such credit                             including the basis upon which the
                                                                                                                                                               contingency arrangements in the event
                                                enhancements to a Bankruptcy Bridge                      Bankruptcy Bridge Company would
                                                                                                                                                               the bankruptcy court does not grant the
                                                Company (as defined in the Protocol)                     remain obligated for credit
                                                (bridge transfer); or (B) having such                    enhancements; (B) the ability of the                  emergency motion—e.g., whether
                                                affiliate remain obligated with respect to               bankruptcy court to retain jurisdiction,              alternative relief could satisfy the
                                                such credit enhancements in the                          issue injunctions, or take other actions              Transfer Conditions and/or U.S. Parent
                                                Chapter 11 proceeding (elevation).38 A                   to prevent third parties from interfering             debtor-in-possession (DIP) Conditions of
                                                firm must file a motion for emergency                    with, or making collateral attacks on (i)             the Protocol; 39 the extent to which
                                                relief (emergency motion) seeking                        a Bankruptcy Bridge Company, (ii) its                 action upon certain aspects of the
                                                approval of an order to effect either of                 transferred subsidiaries, or (iii) a trust or         emergency motion may be deferred by
                                                these alternatives on the first day of its               other legal entity designed to hold all               the bankruptcy court without interfering
                                                bankruptcy case.                                         ownership interests in a Bankruptcy                   with the resolution; and whether, if the
                                                   First-day Issues—For each alternative                 Bridge Company (new ownership                         credit-enhancement-related protections
                                                the firm selects, the resolution plan                    entity); and (C) the role of the                      are not satisfied, there are alternative
                                                should present the firm’s analysis of                    bankruptcy court in granting the                      strategies to prevent the closeout of
                                                issues that are likely to be raised at the               emergency motion due to public policy                 qualified financial contracts with credit
                                                hearing on the emergency motion and                      concerns—e.g., to preserve financial                  enhancements (or reduce such
                                                its best arguments in support of the                     stability. The firm should also provide               counterparties’ incentives to closeout)
                                                emergency motion. A firm should                          a draft agreement (e.g., trust agreement)             and the feasibility of the alternative(s).
                                                include supporting legal precedent and                   detailing the preferred post-transfer                    Format—If the firm analyzed and
                                                describe the evidentiary support that the                governance relationships between the                  addressed an issue noted in this section
                                                firm would anticipate presenting to the                  bankruptcy estate, the new ownership                  in a prior plan submission, the plan may
                                                bankruptcy court — e.g., declarations or                 entity, and the Bankruptcy Bridge                     incorporate this analysis and arguments
                                                other expert testimony evidencing the                    Company, including the proposed role
                                                                                                                                                               and should build upon it to at least the
                                                solvency of transferred subsidiaries and                 and powers of the bankruptcy court and
                                                that recapitalized entities have                                                                               extent required above. A bankruptcy
                                                                                                         creditors’ committee. Alternative
                                                sufficient liquidity to perform their                                                                          playbook, which includes a sample
                                                                                                         approaches to these proposed post-
                                                ongoing obligations.                                     transfer governance relationships                     emergency motion and draft documents
                                                   For either alternative, the firm should               should also be described, particularly                setting forth the post-transfer
                                                address all potential significant legal                  given the strong interest that parties will           governance terms substantially in the
                                                obstacles identified by the firm. For                    have in the ongoing operations of the                 form they would be presented to the
                                                                                                         Bankruptcy Bridge Company and the                     bankruptcy court, is an appropriate
                                                   36 U.S. protocol has the same meaning as it does
                                                                                                         likely absence of an appointed creditors’             vehicle for detailing the issues outlined
                                                at 12 CFR 252.85(a). See also 12 CFR 382.5(a)
                                                                                                         committee at the time of the hearing.                 in this section. In preparing analysis of
                                                (including a substantively identical definition).                                                              these issues, the firm may consult with
                                                   37 See 12 CFR part 47, 252.81-.88, and part 382          If the firm chooses the elevation
                                                (together, the ‘‘QFC stay rules’’). If the firm          alternative, the analysis and arguments               law firms and other experts on these
                                                complies with the QFC stay rules other than              should address at a minimum the                       matters. The Agencies do not object to
                                                through adherence to the Protocol, the plan also         following potential issues: (A) The legal             appropriate collaboration among firms,
                                                should explain how the alternative compliance                                                                  including through trade organizations
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                                                method differs from Protocol, how those differences
                                                                                                         basis upon which the parent company
                                                affect the analysis and other expectations of this       would seek to remain obligated for                    and with the academic community and
                                                ‘‘Legal Obstacles Associated with Emergency              credit enhancements; (B) the ability of               bankruptcy bar, to develop analysis of
                                                Motions’’ section, and how the firm plans to satisfy     the bankruptcy court to retain                        common legal challenges and available
                                                any different conditions or requirements of the          jurisdiction, issue injunctions, or take
                                                alternative compliance method.
                                                                                                                                                               mitigants.
                                                   38 Under its terms, the Protocol also provides for    other actions to prevent third parties
                                                the transfer of credit enhancements to transferees       from interfering with, or making                        39 See Protocol sections 2(b)(ii) and (iii) and

                                                other than a Bankruptcy Bridge Company.                  collateral attacks on, the parent in                  related definitions.



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                                                32868                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 136 / Monday, July 16, 2018 / Notices

                                                VI. LEGAL ENTITY                                         SR Letter 14–8.40 Additionally, this                  place to monitor and manage those
                                                RATIONALIZATION AND                                      analysis should facilitate buyer due                  practices (e.g., governance/information
                                                SEPARABILITY                                             diligence and include carve-out                       systems) 42. The dealer firm’s resolution
                                                                                                         financial statements, valuation analysis,             plan should include detailed
                                                   Legal Entity Rationalization Criteria                 and a legal risk assessment. Further, the             descriptions of the framework and each
                                                (LER Criteria): A firm should develop                    firm should establish a data room to                  of its material components. In
                                                and implement legal entity                               collect and refresh annually the                      particular, a dealer firm’s resolution
                                                rationalization criteria that support the                analyses above, as well as other                      plan should include descriptions of the
                                                firm’s preferred resolution strategy and                 information pertinent to a potential                  documented booking models covering
                                                minimize risk to U.S. financial stability                divestiture of the business.                          its firm-wide derivatives portfolio.43
                                                in the event of the firm’s failure. LER                     Within the plan, the firm should                   The descriptions should provide clarity
                                                Criteria should consider the best                        demonstrate how the firm’s LER Criteria               with respect to the underlying trade
                                                alignment of legal entities and business                 and implementation efforts meet the                   flows (e.g., the mapping of trade flows
                                                lines to improve the firm’s resolvability                guidance above. The plan should also                  based on multiple trade characteristics
                                                under different market conditions. LER                   provide the separability analysis noted               as decision points that determine on
                                                Criteria should govern the firm’s                        above. Finally, the plan should include               which entity a trade is booked, if risk is
                                                corporate structure and arrangements                     a description of the firm’s legal entity              transferred, and at which entity that risk
                                                between legal entities in a way that                     rationalization governance process.                   is subsequently managed). For example,
                                                facilitates the firm’s resolvability as its                                                                    a firm may choose to incorporate
                                                activities, technology, business models,                 VII. DERIVATIVES AND TRADING
                                                                                                         ACTIVITIES                                            decision trees that depict the multiple
                                                or geographic footprint change over                                                                            trade flows within each documented
                                                time.                                                    Applicability.                                        booking model.44 Furthermore, a dealer
                                                   Specifically, application of the criteria               This section of the proposed guidance               firm’s resolution plan should describe
                                                should:                                                  applies to Bank of America Corporation,               its end-to-end trade booking and
                                                   (A) Facilitate the recapitalization and               Citigroup Inc., Goldman Sachs Group,                  reporting processes, including a
                                                liquidity support of material entities, as               Inc., JP Morgan Chase & Co., Morgan                   description of the current scope of
                                                required by the firm’s resolution                        Stanley, and Wells Fargo & Company                    automation (e.g., automated trade flows
                                                strategy. Such criteria should include                   (each, a ‘‘dealer firm’’).                            and detective monitoring) for the
                                                clean lines of ownership, minimal use                                                                          systems controls applied to its
                                                                                                         Booking Practices.                                    documented booking models. The plan
                                                of multiple intermediate holding
                                                companies, and clean funding pathways                       A dealer firm should have booking                  should also discuss why the firm
                                                between the parent and material                          practices commensurate with the size,                 believes its current (or planned) scope
                                                operating entities;                                      scope, and complexity of a firm’s                     of automation is sufficient for managing
                                                   (B) Facilitate the sale, transfer, or                 derivatives portfolios,41 including                   its derivatives activities and executing
                                                                                                         systems capabilities to track and                     its preferred resolution strategy.45
                                                wind-down of certain discrete
                                                                                                         monitor market, credit, and liquidity
                                                operations within a timeframe that
                                                                                                         risk transfers between entities. The                     42 The description of controls should include any
                                                would meaningfully increase the                                                                                components of the firm-wide market, credit, and
                                                                                                         following booking practices-related
                                                likelihood of an orderly resolution of                                                                         liquidity risk management framework that are
                                                                                                         capabilities should be addressed in a
                                                the firm, including provisions for the                                                                         material to the management of its derivatives
                                                                                                         dealer firm’s resolution plan:                        practices.
                                                continuity of associated services and                       Derivatives booking framework. A                      43 The firm should at least document booking
                                                mitigation of financial, operational, and                dealer firm should have a                             models that, in the aggregate, represent the vast
                                                legal challenges to separation and                       comprehensive booking model                           majority of the firm’s derivatives transactions, e.g.,
                                                disposition;                                             framework that articulates the                        booking models that represent no less than 95% of
                                                                                                                                                               a dealer firm’s derivatives transactions measured by
                                                   (C) Adequately protect the subsidiary                 principles, rationales, and approach to               firm-wide derivatives notional and by firm-wide
                                                insured depository institutions from                     implementing its firm-wide booking                    gross market value of derivatives. Presumably, each
                                                risks arising from the activities of any                 practices. The framework and its                      asset class/product would have a booking model
                                                nonbank subsidiaries of the firm (other                                                                        that is a function of the firm’s regulatory and risk
                                                                                                         underlying components should be                       management requirements, client’s preference, and
                                                than those that are subsidiaries of an                   documented and adequately supported                   regulatory requirements specifically for the
                                                insured depository institution); and                     by internal controls (e.g., procedures,               underlying asset class, and other transaction related
                                                   (D) Minimize complexity that could                    systems, and processes). Taken together,              considerations.
                                                                                                                                                                  44 Some firms use trader mandates or similar
                                                impede an orderly resolution and                         the derivatives booking framework and
                                                                                                                                                               controls to constrain the potential trading strategies
                                                minimize redundant and dormant                           its components should provide                         that can be pursued by a business and to monitor
                                                entities.                                                transparency with respect to (i) what is              the permissibility of booking activity. However, the
                                                   These criteria should be built into the               being booked (e.g., product/                          mapping of trader mandates alone, especially those
                                                                                                         counterparty), (ii) where it is being                 mandates that grant broad permissibility, may not
                                                firm’s ongoing process for creating,                                                                           provide sufficient distinction between booking
                                                maintaining, and optimizing its                          booked (e.g., legal entity/geography),                model trade flows.
                                                structure and operations on a                            (iii) by whom it is booked (e.g.,                        45 Effective preventative (up-front) and detective

                                                continuous basis.                                        business/trading desk); (iv) why it is                (post-booking) controls embedded in a dealer firm’s
                                                                                                         booked that way (e.g., drivers/                       derivatives booking processes can help avoid and/
                                                   Separability: The firm should identify                                                                      or timely remediate trades that do not align with a
                                                discrete operations that could be sold or                rationales); and (v) what controls are in             documented booking model or related risk limits.
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                                                transferred in resolution, which                                                                               Firms typically use a combination of manual and
                                                                                                            40 SR Letter 14–8, ‘‘Consolidated Recovery
                                                                                                                                                               automated control functions. Although automation
                                                individually or in the aggregate would                   Planning for Certain Large Domestic Bank Holding      may not be best suited for all control functions, as
                                                provide meaningful optionality in                        Companies’’ (Sept. 25, 2014), available at http://    compared to manual methods it can improve
                                                resolution under different market                        www.federalreserve.gov/bankinforeg/srletters/         consistency and traceability with respect to
                                                conditions. The actionability of those                   sr1408.pdf.                                           derivatives booking practices. Nonetheless, non-
                                                                                                            41 A firm’s derivatives portfolios include its     automated methods can also be effective when
                                                options should be supported by the                       derivatives positions and linked non-derivatives      supported by other internal controls (e.g., robust
                                                firm’s criteria and analysis required by                 trading positions.                                    detective monitoring and escalation protocols).



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                                                                                 Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 136 / Monday, July 16, 2018 / Notices                                                         32869

                                                   Derivatives entity analysis and                         hedge strategy in resolution put on by                  wide derivatives portfolio using the
                                                reporting. A dealer firm should have the                   the same material derivatives entity.49                 relevant segmentation dimensions and
                                                ability to identify, assess, and report on                    In determining the re-hedge strategy,                to report the results of such
                                                each of its entities (material and non-                    the firm should consider whether the                    segmentation and analysis. In addition,
                                                material) with derivatives portfolios (a                   instruments used (and the risk factors                  the dealer firm’s resolution plan should
                                                ‘‘derivatives entity’’). First, the firm’s                 and risk sensitives controlled for) are                 address the following segmentation and
                                                resolution plan should describe its                        sufficiently tied to the material                       forecasting related capabilities:
                                                method (that may include both                              derivatives entity’s trading and risk-                     ‘‘Ease of exit’’ position analysis. A
                                                qualitative and quantitative criteria) for                 management practices to demonstrate                     dealer firm should have, and its
                                                evaluating the significance of each                        its ability to execute the strategy in                  resolution plan should describe and
                                                derivatives entity both with respect to                    resolution using existing resources (e.g.,              demonstrate, a method and supporting
                                                the firm’s current activities and to its                   existing traders and systems).                          systems capabilities for categorizing and
                                                preferred resolution strategy.46 Second,                      A dealer firm’s resolution plan should               ranking the ease of exit for its
                                                a dealer firm’s resolution plan should                     describe and demonstrate its inter-                     derivatives positions based on a set of
                                                demonstrate (including through                             affiliate market risk framework                         well-defined and consistently applied
                                                illustrative samples) its ability to readily               (discussed above). In addition, the                     segmentation criteria. These capabilities
                                                generate current derivatives entity                        firm’s plan should provide detailed                     should cover the firm-wide derivatives
                                                profiles that (i) cover all derivatives                    descriptions of its compression                         portfolio and the resulting categories
                                                entities, (ii) are reportable in a                         strategies used for executing its                       should represent a range in degree of
                                                consistent manner, and (iii) include                       preferred strategy and how those                        difficulty (e.g., from easiest to most
                                                information regarding current legal                        strategies would differ from those used                 difficult to exit). The segmentation
                                                ownership structure, business activities/                  currently to manage its inter-affiliate                 criteria should, at a minimum, reflect
                                                volume, and risk profile (including                        derivatives activities. The plan should                 characteristics 51 that the firm believes
                                                applicable risk limits).                                   also include detailed descriptions of the               could affect the level of financial
                                                                                                           firm’s compression capabilities, the                    incentive and operational effort required
                                                Inter-Affiliate Risk Monitoring and                        associated risks, and obstacles in                      to facilitate the exit of derivatives
                                                Controls.                                                  resolution.                                             portfolios (e.g., to motivate a potential
                                                   A dealer firm should be able to assess                  Portfolio Segmentation and Forecasting.                 step-in party to agree to the novation or
                                                how the management of inter-affiliate                                                                              an existing counterparty to bilaterally
                                                                                                             A dealer firm should have the                         agree to a termination). Dealer firms
                                                risks can be affected in resolution,                       capabilities to produce analysis that                   should consider this methodology when
                                                including the potential disruption in the                  reflects derivatives portfolio                          separately identifying and analyzing the
                                                risk transfers of trades between affiliate                 segmentation and differentiation of                     population of derivatives positions that
                                                entities. Therefore, a dealer firm should                  assumptions taking into account trade-                  it will include in the potential residual
                                                have capabilities to provide timely                        level characteristics. More specifically, a             portfolio under the firm’s preferred
                                                transparency into the management of                        dealer firm should have the systems                     resolution strategy (discussed below).
                                                risk transfers between affiliates by                       capabilities that would allow it to                        Application of exit cost methodology.
                                                maintaining an inter-affiliate market risk                 produce a spectrum of derivatives                       Each dealer firm should have a
                                                framework, consisting of at least the                      portfolio segmentation analysis using                   methodology for forecasting the cost and
                                                following two components 47:                               multiple segmentation dimensions,                       liquidity needed to exit positions (e.g.,
                                                   1. A method for measuring,                              including (1) legal entity (and material                terminate/tear-up, sell, novate, and
                                                monitoring, and reporting the market                       entities that are branches), (2) trading                compress), and the operational
                                                risk exposures for a given material                        desk and/or product, (3) cleared vs.                    resources related to those exits, under
                                                derivatives entity resulting from the                      clearable vs. non-clearable trades, (4)                 the specific scenario adopted in the
                                                termination of a specific counterparty or                  counterparty type, (5) currency, (6)                    firm’s preferred resolution strategy. To
                                                a set of counterparties (e.g., all trades                  maturity, (7) level of collateralization,               help preserve sufficient optionality with
                                                with a specific affiliate or with all                      and (8) netting set.50 A dealer firm                    respect to managing and de-risking its
                                                affiliates in a specific jurisdiction) 48;                 should also have the capabilities to                    derivatives portfolios in a resolution, a
                                                and                                                        segment and analyze the full contractual                dealer firm should have the systems
                                                   2. A method for identifying,                            maturity (run-off) profile of its external              capabilities to apply its exit cost
                                                estimating associated costs of, and                        and inter-affiliate derivatives portfolios.             methodology to its firm-wide
                                                evaluating the effectiveness of, a re-                     The dealer firm’s resolution plan should                derivatives portfolio, at the
                                                                                                           describe and demonstrate the firm’s                     segmentation levels the firm would
                                                   46 The firm should leverage any existing methods        ability to segment and analyze its firm-                likely apply to exit the particular
                                                and criteria it uses for other entity assessments (e.g.,                                                           positions (e.g., valuation segment level).
                                                legal entity rationalization and/or the pre-                  49 A dealer firm’s method may include an             The dealer firm’s plan should provide
                                                positioning of internal loss-absorbing resources).         approach to identifying the risk factors and risk       detailed descriptions of the forecasting
                                                The firm’s method for determining the significance         sensitivities, hedging instruments, and risk limits a
                                                of derivatives entities is allowed to diverge from the     derivatives entity would employ in its re-hedge
                                                                                                                                                                   methodology (inclusive of any challenge
                                                parameters for material entity designation under the       strategy, and the quantification of any estimated       and validation processes) and data
                                                Resolution Plan Rule (i.e., entities significant to the    basis risk that would result from hedging with only     systems and reporting capabilities. The
                                                activities of a critical operation or core business        exchange-traded and centrally-cleared instruments       firm should also describe and
                                                line) but should be adequately supported and any           in a severely adverse stress environment.
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                                                differences should be explained.                              50 The enumerated segmentation dimensions
                                                                                                                                                                   demonstrate the application of the exit
                                                   47 The inter-affiliate market risk framework is a
                                                                                                           represent a minimum set of characteristics for
                                                                                                                                                                   cost method and systems capabilities to
                                                supplement to the firm’s systems capabilities to           differentiation of derivatives portfolios but are not   the firm-wide derivatives portfolio.
                                                track and monitor market, credit, and liquidity risk       intended as an exhaustive list of relevant
                                                transfers between entities.                                dimensions. With respect to any product/asset             51 Examples of characteristics that may affect the
                                                   48 Firms may use industry market risk measures          class, a firm may have reasons for not capturing        level of financial incentive and operational effort
                                                such as statistical risk measures (e.g., VaR or SVaR)      data on (or not using) one or more of the               could include: product, size, clearability, currency,
                                                or other risk measures (e.g., worst case scenario or       enumerated segmentation dimensions, but those           maturity, level of collateralization, and other risk
                                                stress test).                                              reasons should be explained.                            characteristics.



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                                                32870                           Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 136 / Monday, July 16, 2018 / Notices

                                                   Analysis of operational capacity. In                  Prime Brokerage Customer Account                       derivatives strategy, a dealer firm
                                                resolution, a dealer firm should have the                Transfers.                                             should apply the following assumption
                                                capabilities to forecast the incremental                    A dealer firm should have the                       constraints:
                                                operational needs and expenses related                   operational capacity to facilitate the                    • OTC derivatives market access: At
                                                to executing specific aspects of its                     orderly transfer of prime brokerage                    or before the start of the resolution
                                                preferred resolution strategy (e.g.,                     accounts to peer prime brokers in                      period, each derivatives entity should
                                                executing timely derivatives portfolio                   periods of material financial distress                 be assumed to lack an investment-grade
                                                novations). Therefore, a dealer firm                     and in resolution. The firm’s plan                     credit rating (e.g., unrated or
                                                should have, and its resolution plan                     should include an assessment of how it                 downgraded below investment grade).
                                                should describe and demonstrate, the                     would transfer such accounts. This                     The derivatives entity should also be
                                                capabilities to assess the operational                   assessment should be informed by                       assumed to have failed to establish or
                                                resources and forecast the costs (e.g.,                  clients’ relationships with other prime                reestablish investment-grade status for
                                                monthly expense rate) related to its                     brokers, the use of automated and                      the duration of the resolution period,
                                                current derivatives activities at an                     manual transaction processes, clients’                 unless the plan provides well-supported
                                                appropriately granular level and the                     overall long and short positions                       analysis to the contrary. As a result of
                                                incremental impact from executing its                    facilitated by the firm, and the liquidity             the lack of investment grade status, it
                                                preferred resolution strategy.52 In                      of clients’ portfolios. The assessment                 should be further assumed that the
                                                addition, a dealer firm should have the                  should also analyze the risks of and                   derivatives entity has no access to the
                                                ability to manage the logistical and                     mitigants to the loss of customer-to-                  bilateral OTC derivatives markets and
                                                operational challenges related to                        customer internalization (e.g., the                    must use exchange-traded and/or
                                                novating (selling) derivatives portfolios                inability to fund customer longs with                  centrally-cleared instruments where any
                                                during a resolution, including the                       customer shorts), operational                          new hedging needs arise during the
                                                design and adjustment of novation                        challenges, and insufficient staffing to               resolution period. Nevertheless, a dealer
                                                packages. A dealer firm’s resolution                     effectuate the scale and speed of prime                firm may assume the ability to engage in
                                                plan should describe its methodology                     brokerage account transfers envisioned                 certain risk-reducing derivatives trades
                                                and demonstrate its supporting systems                   under the firm’s preferred resolution                  with bilateral OTC derivatives
                                                capabilities for timely segmenting,                      strategy.                                              counterparties during the resolution
                                                packaging, and novating derivatives                         In addition, a dealer firm should                   period to facilitate novations with third
                                                positions. In developing its                             describe and demonstrate its ability to                parties and to close out inter-affiliate
                                                methodology, a dealer firm should                        segment and analyze the quality and                    trades.56
                                                consider the systems capabilities that                   composition of prime brokerage                            • Early exits (break clauses). A dealer
                                                may be needed to reliably generate                       customer account balances based on a                   firm should assume that counterparties
                                                preliminary novation packages tailored                   set of well-defined and consistently                   (external or affiliates) will exercise any
                                                to the risk appetites of potential step-in               applied segmentation criteria (e.g., size,             contractual termination right, consistent
                                                counterparties (buyers), as well as the                  single-prime, platform, use of leverage,               with any rights stayed by the ISDA 2015
                                                novation portfolio profile information                   non-rehypothecatable securities, and                   Universal Resolution Stay protocol or
                                                that may be most relevant to such                        liquidity of underlying assets). The                   other applicable protocols or
                                                counterparties.                                          capabilities should cover the firm’s                   amendments 57, (i) that is available to
                                                   Sensitivity analysis. A dealer firm                   prime brokerage customer account                       the counterparty at or following the start
                                                should have a method to apply                            balances, and the resulting segments
                                                sensitivity analyses to the key drivers of                                                                      concern strategy, an accelerated de-risking strategy
                                                                                                         should represent a range in potential                  (e.g., active wind-down) or an alternative, third
                                                the derivatives-related costs and                        transfer speed (e.g., from fastest to                  strategy so long as the firm’s resolution plan
                                                liquidity flows under its preferred                      longest to transfer, from most liquid to               adequately supports the execution of the chosen
                                                resolution strategy. A dealer firm’s                     least liquid). The selected segmentation               strategy. For example, a firm may choose a going-
                                                resolution plan should describe its                                                                             concern scenario (e.g., derivatives entities
                                                                                                         criteria should, at a minimum, reflect                 reestablish investment grade status and do not enter
                                                method for (i) evaluating the materiality                characteristics 54 that the firm believes              a wind-down) as its derivatives strategy. Likewise,
                                                of assumptions and (ii) identifying those                could affect the speed at which the                    a firm may choose to adopt a combination of going-
                                                assumptions (or combinations of                          client account balance would be                        concern and accelerated de-risking scenarios as its
                                                assumptions) that constitute the key                                                                            derivatives strategy. For example, the derivatives
                                                                                                         transferred to an alternate prime broker.              strategy could be a stabilization scenario for the
                                                drivers for its forecasts of operational                                                                        lead bank entity and an accelerated de-risking
                                                and financial resource needs under the                   Derivatives Stabilization and De-risking               scenario for the broker-dealer entities.
                                                preferred resolution strategy. In                        Strategy.                                                 56 A firm may engage in bilateral OTC derivatives

                                                addition, using its preferred resolution                   A dealer firm’s plan should provide a                trades with, for example, (i) external counterparties,
                                                strategy as a baseline, the dealer firm’s                                                                       to effect the novation of the firm’s side of a
                                                                                                         detailed analysis of the strategy to                   derivatives contract to a new counterparty, bilateral
                                                resolution plan should describe and                      stabilize and de-risk its derivatives                  OTC trades with the acquiring counterparty; and,
                                                demonstrate its approach to testing the                  portfolios (‘‘derivatives strategy’’) that             (ii) inter-affiliate counterparties, where the trades
                                                sensitivities of the identified key drivers              has been incorporated into its preferred               with inter-affiliate counterparties (a) reduce the
                                                and the potential impact on its forecasts                                                                       credit exposure of each participating counterparty
                                                                                                         resolution strategy.55 In developing its               and (b) do not materially increase the market risk
                                                of resource needs.53                                                                                            of any such counterparty on a standalone basis,
                                                                                                         capital constraints, tax rate), operational cost       after taking into account hedging with exchange-
                                                  52 At a minimum, a dealer firm should have             reduction rate, and operational capacity for           traded and centrally-cleared instruments. The firm
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                                                separate categories for fixed and variable expenses.     novations. Other examples of key drivers likely also   should demonstrate the risk-reducing nature of the
                                                For example, more granular operational expenses          include CCP margin flow assumptions and risk-          trade on the basis of information that would be
                                                could roll-up into categories for (i) fixed-             weighted assets forecast assumptions.                  known to the firm at the time of the transaction.
                                                compensation, (ii) fixed non-compensation, and (iii)       54 For example, relevant characteristics might          57 For each of the derivatives entities that have
                                                variable cost.                                           include: product, size, clearability, currency,        adhered to the Protocol, the dealer firm may assume
                                                  53 For example, key drivers of derivatives-related     maturity, level of collateralization, and other risk   that the protocol is in effect for all counterparties
                                                costs and liquidity flows might include the timing       characteristics.                                       of that derivatives entity (except for any affiliated
                                                of derivatives unwind, cost of capital-related             55 Subject to the relevant constraints, a firm’s     counterparty of the derivatives entity that has not
                                                assumptions (target ROE, discount rate, WAL,             derivatives strategy may take the form of a going-     yet adhered to the Protocol).



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                                                                                Federal Register / Vol. 83, No. 136 / Monday, July 16, 2018 / Notices                                                      32871

                                                of the resolution period; and (ii) if                    resulting trades (or categories of                        resources and loss-absorbing capacity of
                                                exercising such right would                              trades).58 A dealer firm should assess                    the firm.
                                                economically benefit the counterparty                    the risk profile of the potential residual                   The discussion of strategy in the
                                                (‘‘counterparty-initiated termination’’).                portfolio (including its anticipated size,                public section should broadly explain
                                                   • Time horizon: The duration of the                   composition, complexity,                                  how the firm has addressed any
                                                resolution period should be between 12                   counterparties) and the potential                         deficiencies, shortcomings, and other
                                                and 24 months. The resolution period                     counterparty and market impacts of                        key vulnerabilities that the Agencies
                                                begins immediately after the parent                      non-performance on the stability of U.S.                  have identified in prior Plan
                                                company bankruptcy filing and extends                    financial markets (e.g., on funding                       submissions. For each material entity, it
                                                through the completion of the preferred                  markets and the underlying asset                          should be clear how the strategy
                                                resolution strategy.                                     markets and on clients and                                provides for continuity, transfer, or
                                                   A dealer firm’s analysis of its                       counterparties).                                          orderly wind-down of the entity and its
                                                derivatives strategy should, at a                           Non-surviving entity analysis. To the                  operations. There should also be a
                                                minimum, take into account (i) the                       extent the preferred resolution strategy                  description of the resulting organization
                                                starting profile of its derivatives                      assumes a material derivatives entity                     upon completion of the resolution
                                                portfolios (e.g., nature, concentration,                 enters its own resolution proceeding                      process.
                                                maturity, clearability, and liquidity of                 after the entry of the parent company                        The public section may note that the
                                                positions); (ii) the profile and function                into a bankruptcy proceeding (a ‘‘non-                    resolution plan is not binding on a
                                                of the derivatives entities during the                   surviving material derivatives entity’’),                 bankruptcy court or other resolution
                                                resolution period; (iii) the means,                      the dealer firm should provide a                          authority and that the proposed failure
                                                challenges, and capacity for managing                    detailed analysis of how the non-                         scenario and associated assumptions are
                                                and de-risking its derivatives portfolios                surviving material derivatives entity’s                   hypothetical and do not necessarily
                                                (e.g., method for timely segmenting,                     resolution can be accomplished within                     reflect an event or events to which the
                                                packaging, and selling the derivatives                   a reasonable period of time and in a                      firm is or may become subject.
                                                positions; challenges with novating less                 manner that substantially mitigates the                     By the Board of Governors of the Federal
                                                liquid positions; re-hedging strategy);                  risk of serious adverse effects on U.S.                   Reserve System, June 28, 2018.
                                                (iv) the financial and operational                       financial stability and to the orderly                    Ann E. Misback,
                                                resources required to effect the                         execution of the firm’s preferred
                                                derivatives strategy; and (v) any                                                                                  Secretary of the Board.
                                                                                                         resolution strategy. In particular, the
                                                potential residual portfolio (further                    firm should provide an analysis of the                      Dated at Washington, DC on June 28, 2018.
                                                discussed below). In addition, the firm’s                potential impacts on funding markets                        By order of the Board of Directors.
                                                resolution plan should address the                       and the underlying asset markets, on                      Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
                                                following areas in the analysis of its                   clients and counterparties (including                     Valerie Jean Best,
                                                derivatives strategy:                                    affiliates), and on the preferred                         Assistant Executive Secretary.
                                                   Forecasts of resource needs. The                      resolution strategy. If the non-surviving                 [FR Doc. 2018–15066 Filed 7–13–18; 8:45 am]
                                                forecasts of capital and liquidity                       material derivatives entity is located in,                BILLING CODE P
                                                resource needs required to adequately                    or provides more than de minimis
                                                support the firm’s derivatives strategy                  services to clients or counterparties
                                                should be incorporated into the firm’s                   located in, a non-U.S. jurisdiction, then
                                                RCEN and RLEN estimates for its overall                                                                            DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
                                                                                                         the analysis should also specifically                     HUMAN SERVICES
                                                preferred resolution strategy. These                     consider potential local market impacts.
                                                include, for example, the costs and/or                                                                             Agency for Healthcare Research and
                                                liquidity flows resulting from (i) the                   VIII. PUBLIC SECTION
                                                                                                                                                                   Quality
                                                close-out of OTC derivatives, (ii) the                     The purpose of the public section is
                                                hedging of derivatives portfolios, (iii)                 to inform the public’s understanding of                   Meeting of the National Advisory
                                                the quantified losses that could be incur                the firm’s resolution strategy and how it                 Council for Healthcare Research and
                                                due to basis and other risks that would                  works.                                                    Quality
                                                result from hedging with only exchange-                    The public section should discuss the
                                                traded and centrally cleared instruments                 steps that the firm is taking to improve                  AGENCY: Agency for Healthcare Research
                                                in a severely adverse stress                             resolvability under the U.S. Bankruptcy                   and Quality (AHRQ), HHS.
                                                environment, and (iv) the operational                    Code. The public section should                           ACTION: Notice of public meeting.
                                                costs.                                                   provide background information on
                                                   Potential residual derivatives                        each material entity and should be                        SUMMARY:   In accordance with the
                                                portfolio. A dealer firm’s resolution plan               enhanced by including the firm’s                          Federal Advisory Committee Act, this
                                                should include a method for estimating                   rationale for designating material                        notice announces a meeting of the
                                                the composition of any potential                         entities. The public section should also                  National Advisory Council for
                                                residual derivatives portfolio                           discuss, at a high level, the firm’s intra-               Healthcare Research and Quality.
                                                transactions remaining at the end of the                 group financial and operational                           DATES: The meeting will be held on
                                                resolution period under its preferred                    interconnectedness (including the types                   Wednesday, July 18, 2018, from 8:30
                                                resolution strategy. The method may be                   of guarantees or support obligations in                   a.m. to 2:45 p.m.
                                                a combination of approaches (e.g.,                       place that could impact the execution of                  ADDRESSES: The meeting will be held at
                                                probabilistic and deterministic) but                                                                               AHRQ, 5600 Fishers Lane, Rockville,
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                                                                                                         the firm’s strategy). There should also be
                                                should demonstrate the dealer firm’s                     a high-level discussion of the liquidity                  Maryland, 20857.
                                                capabilities related to portfolio                                                                                  FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
                                                segmentation (discussed above). The                        58 If under the firm’s preferred resolution strategy,   Jaime Zimmerman, Designated
                                                dealer firm’s plan should also provide                   any derivatives portfolios are transferred during the     Management Official, at the Agency for
                                                                                                         resolution period by way of a line of business sale
                                                detailed descriptions of the trade                       (or similar transaction), then those portfolios should
                                                                                                                                                                   Healthcare Research and Quality, 5600
                                                characteristics used to identify the                     nonetheless be included within the firm’s potential       Fishers Lane, Mail Stop 06E37A,
                                                potential residual portfolio and of the                  residual portfolio analysis.                              Rockville, Maryland 20857, (301) 427–


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Document Created: 2018-07-14 00:54:06
Document Modified: 2018-07-14 00:54:06
CategoryRegulatory Information
CollectionFederal Register
sudoc ClassAE 2.7:
GS 4.107:
AE 2.106:
PublisherOffice of the Federal Register, National Archives and Records Administration
SectionNotices
ActionProposed guidance; request for comments.
DatesComments should be received September 14, 2018.
ContactBoard: Michael Hsu, Associate Director, (202) 452-4330, Division of Supervision and Regulation, Jay Schwarz, Senior Counsel, (202) 452- 2970, Will Giles, Senior Counsel, (202) 452-3351, or Steve Bowne, Senior Attorney, (202) 452-3900, Legal Division. Users of Telecommunications Device for the Deaf (TDD) may call (202) 263-4869.
FR Citation83 FR 32856 

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