Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC).
Notice of proposed rulemaking and request for comment.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Reform Act of 2005 requires that the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (the FDIC) prescribe final regulations, after notice and opportunity for comment, to provide for deposit insurance assessments under section 7(b) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (the FDI Act). The FDIC is proposing to amend its regulations to create different risk differentiation frameworks for smaller and larger institutions that are well capitalized and well managed; establish a common risk differentiation framework for all other insured institutions; and establish a base assessment rate schedule.
Comments must be received on or before September 22, 2006.
You may submit comments, identified by RIN number, by any of the following methods:
• Agency Web site:
• E-mail:
• 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.
Instructions: All submissions received must include the agency name and RIN for this rulemaking. All comments received will be posted without change to
Munsell W. St. Clair, Senior Policy Analyst, Division of Insurance and Research, (202) 898–8967; and Christopher Bellotto, Counsel, Legal Division, (202) 898–3801.
On February 8, 2006, the President signed the Federal Deposit Insurance Reform Act of 2005 into law; on February 15, 2006, he signed the Federal Deposit Insurance Reform Conforming Amendments Act of 2005 (collectively, the Reform Act).
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Improvement Act of 1991 (FDICIA) required that the FDIC establish a risk-based assessment system. To implement this requirement, the FDIC adopted by regulation a system that places institutions into risk categories
The Federal Deposit Insurance Act, as amended by the Reform Act, continues to require that the assessment system be risk-based and allows the FDIC to define risk broadly. It defines a risk-based system as one based on an institution's probability of incurring loss to the deposit insurance fund due to the composition and concentration of the institution's assets and liabilities, the amount of loss given failure, and revenue needs of the Deposit Insurance Fund (the fund).
At the same time, the Reform Act also grants the FDIC's Board of Directors the discretion to price deposit insurance according to risk for all insured institutions regardless of the level of the fund reserve ratio.
The Reform Act leaves in place the existing statutory provision allowing the FDIC to “establish separate risk-based assessment systems for large and small members of the Deposit Insurance Fund.”
The Reform Act provides the FDIC with the authority to make substantive improvements to the risk-based assessment system. In this notice of proposed rulemaking, the FDIC proposes to improve risk differentiation and pricing by drawing upon established measures of risk and existing best practices of the industry and federal regulators for evaluating risk. The FDIC believes that the proposal will make the assessment system more sensitive to risk. The proposal should also make the risk-based assessment system fairer, by limiting the subsidization of riskier institutions by safer ones.
The FDIC's proposals are set out in detail in ensuing sections, but are briefly summarized here.
At present, an institution's assessment rate depends upon its risk category. Currently, there are nine of these risk categories. The FDIC proposes to consolidate the existing nine categories into four and name them Risk Categories I, II, III and IV. Risk Category I would replace the current 1A risk category.
Within Risk Category I, the FDIC proposes one method of risk differentiation for small institutions, and another for large institutions. Both methods share a common feature, namely, the use of CAMELS component ratings. However, each method combines these measures with different sources of information. For small institutions within Risk Category I, the FDIC proposes to combine CAMELS component ratings with current financial ratios to determine an institution's assessment rate. For large institutions within Risk Category I, the FDIC proposes to combine CAMELS component ratings with long-term debt issuer ratings, and, for some large institutions, financial ratios to assign institutions to initial assessment rate subcategories. These initial assignments, however, might be modified upon review of additional relevant information pertaining to an institution's risk.
The FDIC proposes to define a large institution as an institution that has $10 billion or more in assets. Also, the FDIC proposes to treat all new institutions (established within the last seven years) in Risk Category I the same, regardless of size, and assess them at the maximum rate applicable to Risk Category I institutions.
The FDIC proposes to adopt a base schedule of rates. The actual rates that the FDIC may put into effect next year and in subsequent years could vary from the base schedule. The proposed base schedule of rates is as follows:
The FDIC proposes that it continue to be allowed, as it is under the present system, to adjust rates uniformly up to a maximum of five basis points higher or lower than the base rates without the necessity of further notice-and-comment rulemaking, provided that any single adjustment from one quarter to the next could not move rates more than five basis points.
The FDIC proposes to consolidate the number of assessment risk categories from nine to four. The four new categories would continue to be defined based upon supervisory and capital evaluations, both established measures of risk.
The existing nine categories are not all necessary. Some of the categories contain few, if any, institutions at any given time. Table 1 shows the total number of institutions in each of the nine categories of the existing risk matrix as of December 31, 2005:
Five of the nine categories contain among them a total of only 10 institutions. Table 2 shows the average percentage of BIF-member institutions that were (or, for the period before the risk-based system began, that would have been) in each of the nine categories of the existing risk matrix from 1985 to 2005:
Several of the categories contain very small percentages of institutions. In fact, for any given year from 1985 to 2005, the number of BIF-member institutions rated 3A (or, for the period before the risk-based system began, that would have been rated 3A) never exceeded 10 and the number of BIF-member institutions rated 3B (or, for the period before the risk-based system began, that
In addition, the failure rates for many of the categories are similar. Table 3 shows the average five-year failure rate for BIF-member institutions for each of the nine categories of the existing risk matrix for the five-year periods beginning in 1985 to 2000:
The
The FDIC proposes consolidating the existing categories based primarily on similarity of failure rates. The proposal also would combine the sparsely populated 3A and 3B categories with the 1C and 2C categories.
The FDIC has analyzed failure rates for each of the proposed risk categories over the period 1985 to 2005. They are as follows:
The proposed new categories appear to be well aligned with insurance risk, since the risk of failure increases with each successive category.
For clarity, the FDIC proposes to use the phrase “Supervisory Group” to replace “Supervisory Subgroup.” The FDIC also proposes calling the capital categories “Well Capitalized,” “Adequately Capitalized” and “Undercapitalized,” rather than Capital Groups 1, 2 and 3. However, the definitions of the Supervisory Groups and Capital Groups will not change in substance.
Risk Category I would contain all well-capitalized institutions in Supervisory Group A (generally those with CAMELS composite ratings of 1 or 2);
As of December 31, 2005, the four new categories would have the numbers of institutions shown in Table 6:
The FDIC proposes that all institutions in any one risk category, other than Risk Category I, be charged the same assessment rate; there would be no further differentiation in assessment rates within each category. Over the past 11 years, only six to ten percent of institutions at any one time have been less than well capitalized or have exhibited supervisory weaknesses (that is, have been rated CAMELS 3, 4 or 5). CAMELS 3, 4 and 5-rated institutions are examined more frequently than other institutions; they must be examined at least annually and, in practice, are examined more frequently. Institutions are examined more frequently as their supervisory ratings deteriorate. As a result of these frequent, on-site examinations, supervisory evaluations (primarily CAMELS ratings) and capital levels provide a good measure of failure risk. In addition, there are few of these institutions, and the amount of differentiation that presently exists is unnecessary.
Risk Category I, at present, includes 95 percent of all insured institutions. The FDIC proposes to further differentiate for risk within this category. Within Risk Category I, the FDIC proposes one method for small institutions, and another for large institutions. Both methods share a common feature, namely, the use of CAMELS component ratings. However, each method combines these measures with different sources of information on risk.
For small institutions, the FDIC proposes to combine CAMELS component ratings with current
For large institutions, the FDIC proposes to combine CAMELS component ratings with long-term debt issuer ratings, and, for institutions with between $10 billion and $30 billion in assets, financial ratios, to develop an insurance score and an assessment rate. Assessment rates might be adjusted based on considerations of additional market, financial performance and condition, and stress considerations. This approach is consistent with best practices in the banking industry for rating and ranking direct credit and counterparty credit risk exposures to include consideration of all relevant risk information, the use of standardized risk assessment processes and methodologies, the incorporation of judgment, where necessary, and the use of quality controls to ensure consistency and reasonableness of the ratings and risk rankings.
The FDIC proposes to define a large institution as an institution that has $10 billion or more in assets and a small institution as an institution that has less than $10 billion in assets. Also, as described below in Section VIII, the FDIC proposes to treat all new institutions in Risk Category I the same, regardless of size, and assess them at the maximum rate applicable to Risk Category I institutions.
For smaller institutions, the FDIC proposes to link assessment rates to a combination of certain financial ratios and supervisory ratings based on a statistical analysis relating these measures to the probability that an institution will be downgraded to CAMELS 3, 4 or 5 within one year.
The FDIC used the financial ratios in its offsite monitoring system, SCOR, as the starting point for the financial information it would use to differentiate risk and selected six financial ratios. These financial ratios measure an institution's capital adequacy, asset quality, earnings and liquidity (the C, A, E and L of CAMELS). The financial ratios are:
• Tier 1 Leverage Ratio;
• Loans past due 30–89 days/gross assets;
• Nonperforming loans/gross assets;
• Net loan charge-offs/gross assets;
• Net income before taxes/risk-weighted assets; and
• Volatile liabilities/gross assets.
Because supervisory ratings capture important elements of risk that financial ratios cannot, the FDIC included in its analysis an additional measure of risk based upon an institution's component CAMELS ratings. CAMELS component ratings are supervisory evaluations of various risks. The component ratings provide a more detailed view of supervisory evaluations than composite ratings by themselves and are therefore useful for differentiating risk among institutions. Including all component ratings accounts for risk management practices, as well as for supervisory assessments of capital adequacy, asset quality, earnings, liquidity and sensitivity to market risk, that the financial ratios by themselves may not fully capture.
The FDIC created a weighted average of an institution's CAMELS components by combining the components as follows:
These weights reflect the view of the FDIC regarding the relative importance of each of the CAMELS components for differentiating risk among institutions in Risk Category I for deposit insurance purposes.
The FDIC determined how to combine the measures—the financial ratios and the weighted average CAMELS component rating—by statistically analyzing the relationship between the measures and the probability that an institution would be downgraded to CAMELS 3, 4 or 5 at its next examination.
To determine an institution's insurance assessment rate, the FDIC proposes multiplying each of these risk measures (that is, each institution's financial ratios and weighted average CAMELS component rating) by the corresponding pricing multipliers. The sum of these products would be added to (or subtracted from) a uniform amount (1.37 based on an analysis using financial ratios and supervisory component ratings from the period 1984 to 2004) to determine an institution's assessment rate.
The FDIC proposes that the rates resulting from this approach be subject to a minimum and maximum. A maximum rate would ensure that no institution in Risk Category I, all of which are well-capitalized and generally have supervisory ratings of 1 or 2, pays as much as an institution in a higher risk category. A minimum rate recognizes that the possibility of a supervisory rating downgrade to CAMELS 3, 4 or 5 is low for a significant portion of institutions in Risk Category I.
This approach would allow incremental pricing for Risk Category I institutions whose rates are between the minimum and maximum rates. Therefore, small changes in an institution's financial ratios or CAMELS component ratings should produce only small changes in assessment rates.
To compute the values of the uniform amount and pricing multipliers shown above, the FDIC chose cutoff values for the predicted probabilities of downgrade such that, as of December 31, 2005: (1) 45 percent of smaller institutions (other than new institutions) in Risk Category I would have been charged the minimum assessment rate; and (2) 5 percent of smaller institutions (other than new institutions) in Risk Category I would have been charged the maximum assessment rate.
Table 8 gives assessment rates for three institutions with varying characteristics, assuming the pricing multipliers given above, and that annual assessment rates for institutions in Risk Category I range from a minimum of 2 basis points to a maximum of 4 basis points.
The assessment rate for an institution in the table is calculated by multiplying the pricing multipliers (Column B) times the risk measure values (Column C, E or G) to derive each measure's contribution to the assessment rate. The sum of the products (Column D, F or H) plus the uniform amount (first item in Column D, F or H) yields the total assessment rate. For Institution 1 in the table, this sum actually equals 1.71, but the table reflects the assumed minimum assessment rate of 2 basis points. For Institution 3 in the table, the sum actually equals 4.41, but the table reflects the assumed maximum assessment rate of 4 basis points.
Chart 1 shows the cumulative distribution of assessment rates based on December 31, 2005 data, assuming that annual assessment rates for institutions in Risk Category I range from a minimum of 2 basis points to a maximum of 4 basis points. The chart excludes new institutions in Risk Category I.
A more detailed discussion of the analysis underlying this proposal is contained in Appendix 1.
For the final rule, the FDIC proposes to adopt updated cutoff values such that, based on data as of June 30, 2006: (1) 45 percent of smaller institutions (other than new institutions) in Risk Category I would have been charged the minimum assessment rate; and (2) 5 percent of smaller institutions (other than new institutions) in Risk Category I would have been charged the maximum assessment rate. These updated cutoff values could alter the
In addition, the FDIC proposes that it have the flexibility to update the pricing multipliers and the uniform amount annually, without notice-and-comment rulemaking. In particular, the FDIC intends to add data from each new year to its analysis and may, from time to time, drop some earlier years from its analysis. For example, some time during the next year the FDIC proposes to include data in the statistical analysis covering the period 1984 to 2005, rather than 1984 to 2004. Updating the pricing multipliers in this manner allows use of the most recent data, thereby improving the accuracy of the risk-differentiation method. Because the analysis will continue to use many earlier years' data as well, pricing multiplier changes from year to year should usually be relatively small.
On the other hand, as a result of the annual review and analysis, the FDIC may conclude that
The FDIC proposes that the financial ratios for any given quarter be calculated from the report of condition filed by each institution as of the last day of the quarter.
By combining both financial data and supervisory evaluations, this approach to risk differentiation provides a comprehensive and timely depiction of risk based on available data.
Tables 9 and 10 show the distribution of assessment rates by size (for institutions that have less than $10 billion in assets) and by CAMELS composite rating over the period 1997 to 2005, assuming the application of the proposal over this period and that annual assessment rates for institutions in Risk Category I ranged from a minimum of 2 basis points to a maximum of 4 basis points.
Variations on the FDIC's proposal are also possible.
• The ratio of net income before taxes to risk-weighted assets and the ratio of net loan charge-offs to gross assets could be excluded. While higher earnings are statistically associated with lower probabilities of downgrades, higher earnings also can be a sign of increased risk.
• Time deposits greater than $100,000 could be excluded from the definition of volatile liabilities, as some have suggested that these deposits can have the same characteristics as core deposits.
• Ratios might be averaged over some period to limit assessment rate changes.
• The weights assigned to each CAMELS component in determining the weighted average could be changed.
• A CAMELS composite rating could be used in place of a weighted average CAMELS component rating.
An alternative to the FDIC's proposal would be to use financial ratios alone to determine a small Risk Category I institution's assessment rate. The pricing multiplier to be assigned to each financial ratio would again be determined by statistically analyzing the relationship between these ratios and the probability that an institution would be downgraded to CAMELS 3, 4 or 5 at its next examination.
Each ratio, as reported by an institution, would be multiplied by its pricing multiplier.
To compute the values of the uniform amount and pricing multipliers shown above, the FDIC chose cutoff values for the predicted probabilities of downgrade such that, as of December 31, 2005: (1) 43 percent of smaller institutions (other than new institutions) in Risk Category I would have been charged the minimum assessment rate; and (2) 5 percent of smaller institutions (other than new institutions) in Risk Category I would have been charged the maximum assessment rate.
If the alternative were adopted in a final rule, the FDIC would adopt updated cutoff values such that, based on data as of June 30, 2006: (1) 43 percent of smaller institutions (other than new institutions) in Risk Category I would have been charged the minimum assessment rate; and (2) 5 percent of smaller institutions (other
Also, as under the proposal, the FDIC would propose to update the pricing multipliers assigned to the risk measures being used annually, without the necessity of notice-and-comment rulemaking. Again, however, if the FDIC's annual review and analysis conclude that additional or alternative financial measures, ratios or other risk measures should be used to determine risk-based assessments, changes would be made through notice-and-comment rulemaking.
While this approach to risk differentiation would not include supervisory evaluations, it would otherwise provide a comprehensive and timely depiction of risk based on available data.
Because this approach would also allow incremental pricing for Risk Category I institutions whose rates are between the minimum and maximum rates, small changes in an institution's financial ratios should produce only small changes in assessment rates.
Table 11 shows the percentage of institutions whose assessment rates would change by various amounts under the alternative method compared to the proposed method. The assessment rate for over 90 percent of institutions would change by one-quarter of a basis point or less.
Tables 12 and 13 show the distribution of assessment rates by size and by CAMELS composite rating over the period 1997 to 2005, again assuming that annual assessment rates for institutions in Risk Category I ranged from a minimum of 2 basis points to a maximum of 4 basis points.
As with the FDIC's proposal, variations on the alternative method are also possible, such as excluding the ratio of net income before taxes to risk-weighted assets and the ratio of loan charge-offs to gross assets. Again, any changes in the financial ratios used could result in changes to the pricing multipliers to be used.
To incorporate supervisory perspectives that are not captured by financial ratios, the alternative method could also be combined with CAMELS component ratings, but in a manner different from the proposal. Instead of combining a weighted average CAMELS component rating with financial ratios through a statistical analysis, part of the assessment rate could be determined using solely financial ratios, as in the alternative, and the remainder using the weighted average CAMELS component rating. For example, the FDIC could determine a rate using financial ratios only and a rate using the weighted-average CAMELS component rating only and average the two rates to determine the institution's actual assessment rate.
Another variation could supplement the alternative by incorporating CAMELS component ratings in a more limited manner. For example, a small Risk Category I institution that had an “M” component rating of 3 or higher (or any CAMELS component of 3 or higher) might be charged the maximum assessment rate.
The FDIC proposes to differentiate risk among large institutions using a combination of supervisory ratings, long-term debt issuer ratings, financial ratios for some institutions, and additional risk information. This approach shares two elements in common with the small institution approach: CAMELS component ratings, and financial ratios. The additional elements in the large institution approach are the explicit use of debt rating information and the consideration of additional risk information that is typically available for larger institutions. The debt rating information element would be gradually phased in, and the financial ratio element would be gradually phased out, as an institution's assets increased from $10 billion to $30 billion.
The FDIC proposes to assign each large Risk Category I institution to one of six assessment rate subcategories. This assignment would be determined in two steps. In the first step, an insurance score would be derived. Cutoff insurance scores would initially be set for the minimum and maximum assessment rate subcategories so that similar proportions of the number of large and small institutions (excluding new institutions) are charged the minimum and maximum rates within Risk Category I. At the same time, cutoff insurance scores would be set for the four intermediate assessment rate subcategories. Thereafter, an institution's insurance score would determine its initial assessment rate subcategory assignment. In the second step, the FDIC would determine whether to adjust the initial assessment rating subcategory assignment based on considerations of additional information.
The FDIC proposes to derive an insurance score from a combination of supervisory and debt rating agency information, and an estimated probability of downgrade to a CAMELS composite 3, 4 or 5 as derived in the alternative method of risk differentiation for small Risk Category I institutions described in Section V(B)(1) (referred to hereafter as the financial ratio factor). The financial ratio factor would be gradually phased out as institution assets increased and would be fully phased out for institutions with $30 billion or more in assets. Correspondingly, information from debt rating agencies would increase in importance as institution size increased from $10 billion to $30 billion. For institutions with $30 billion or more in assets, the proposed insurance score would be derived solely from supervisory ratings and debt rating information.
The insurance scores would be used to assign institutions to an initial assessment rate subcategory. Although these initial subcategory assignments should in most cases provide a reasonable rank ordering of risk among large Risk Category I institutions, the FDIC would consider additional information to determine when adjustments to an institution's assessment rate subcategory are appropriate. Consideration of this additional information will allow the FDIC to develop more reasonable and consistent rank orderings of risk as indicated by institutions' Risk Category I assessment rate subcategory assignments. Any modification would be limited to changing an institution's initial assessment rate subcategory assignment to the next higher or lower assessment rate. The risk factors that would be considered to determine if assessment rate subcategory adjustments were necessary are detailed further below.
The proposed approach is consistent with best practices in the banking industry for rating and ranking large direct credit and counterparty credit risk exposures. These practices include considering all relevant risk information, using standardized risk assessment processes and methodologies, incorporating judgment, where necessary, and using quality controls to ensure consistency and reasonableness of the ratings and risk rankings.
International groups, such as the Bank for International Settlements' Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, support these standards as applied to rating systems for large exposures:
Credit scoring models and other mechanical rating procedures generally use only a subset of available information. Although mechanical rating procedures may sometimes avoid some of the idiosyncratic errors made by rating systems in which judgment plays a large role, mechanical use of limited information also is a source of rating errors. Credit scoring models and other mechanical procedures are permissible as the primary or partial basis of rating assignments, and may play a role in the estimation of loss characteristics. Sufficient judgment and oversight is necessary to ensure that all relevant and material information, including that which is outside the scope of the model, is also taken into consideration, and that the model is used appropriately.
The insurance score would be a weighted average of three elements: (1) A weighted average CAMELS component rating with a value between 1.0 and 3.0; (2) long-term debt issuer ratings converted to a numerical value between 1.0 and 3.0; and (3) for institutions with between $10 billion and $30 billion in assets, the financial ratio factor converted to a value between 1.0 and a 3.0. The result would be an insurance score with values ranging from 1.0 to 3.0. The weights applied to the supervisory rating element of the proposed approach would be constant across all size categories. For institutions with $10 billion to $30 billion in assets, the weights assigned to the long-term debt issuer rating and financial ratio factor would vary. Each
As noted in the small Risk Category I institution risk differentiation proposal, CAMELS component ratings provide both a more detailed description of risk and finer differentiations of risk than do composite ratings alone. For large Risk Category I institutions, the FDIC proposes to use these component ratings to derive a weighted average CAMELS component rating. This weighted average CAMELS component rating would be determined by multiplying the component rating value by an associated weight and summing the six products. The weights applied to individual CAMELS component ratings would be the same as under the small Risk Category I institution proposal:
As noted above, these weights reflect the view of the FDIC regarding the relative importance of each CAMELS component for differentiating risk among Risk Category I institutions for insurance purposes.
The weights proposed above would be appropriate for most large Risk Category I institutions. However, alternative weights might be appropriate in certain instances. For example, one possible alternative would vary these weights depending upon an institution's primary business type. To illustrate, some institutions that are engaged in securities processing activities retain relatively little credit risk compared to other institutions. Risks in these institutions relate more to operational practices and controls. For these institutions, it might be appropriate to increase the weight for the “M” (Management) component (which includes operational risk considerations) relative to the “A” (Asset quality) component. The following table provides an example of CAMELS component weights that could be used for selected institution types.
Another possible weighting approach would be for the FDIC to vary component weights based on the relative importance of each significant business activity in which an institution is engaged. In such a system, each institution's unique combination of business activities (such as securities processing, fiduciary activities, consumer lending, real estate lending, wholesale lending) could lead to unique CAMELS component rating weights for each institution. The FDIC is seeking comment whether alternative CAMELS component weights should be considered.
The proposed approach would be based upon the long-term debt issuer ratings of insured institutions assigned by major rating agencies.
To obtain a numerical representation of these ratings, the FDIC proposes to convert long-term debt issuer ratings to values between 1 and 3 in accordance with the conversion table shown in Appendix B. In this conversion table, the relative change in converted values increases for lower rating grades. This pattern is consistent with historical bond default studies that show non-linear increases in default risk for lower-graded debt issues.
The proposed process for differentiating risk in large institutions would only use current agency long-term debt issuer ratings, those that have been confirmed or newly assigned within the last 12 months. When only one current long-term debt issuer rating exists, that rating would be converted directly into a debt issuer score in accordance with Appendix B. Where two or more current long-term debt issuer ratings exist, the numerical conversion would be calculated as the average of the converted value of each current long-term debt issuer rating.
The proposal would use the financial ratio factor as previously defined in cases where a large institution has assets of $10 billion to $30 billion.
The following process would be used to convert the financial ratio factor into the same 1.0 to 3.0 scale as the other two insurance score elements: (1) Institutions with a financial ratio factor equal to or less than the minimum assessment rate cutoff value for small Risk Category I institutions under the alternative financial ratio-only risk differentiation approach would be assigned a value of 1.0; (2) institutions with a financial ratio factor equal to or greater than the maximum assessment rate cutoff value for small Risk Category I institutions under the alternative financial ratio-only risk differentiation approach would be assigned a value of 3.0; and (3) for all other institutions, the financial ratio factor would be converted by: (a) Calculating the difference between the institution's financial ratio factor and the minimum assessment rate cutoff value determined in (1) above; (b) dividing the result by the difference between the maximum and minimum assessment rate cutoff values determined in (1) and (2) above; (c) multiplying this ratio by the difference between the maximum and minimum insurance score values (
As noted in the discussion of the alternative risk differentiation method for small Risk Category I institutions, the cutoff values applied in the process above will be updated based on data as of June 30, 2006 by finding the cutoff values that would charge: (1) 43 percent of smaller institutions (other than new institutions) in Risk Category I the minimum assessment rate; and (2) 5 percent of smaller institutions (other than new institutions) in Risk Category I the maximum assessment rate.
Weights would be applied to each of the above elements—the weighted average CAMELS component rating, long-term debt issuer ratings that have been converted to a numerical value, and the financial ratio factor—to derive an insurance score. The weight applied to the weighted average CAMELS component rating would be 50 percent for all size categories. The weight applied to long-term debt issuer ratings would be 50 percent for all institutions with $30 billion or more in assets. For institutions with $10 billion to $30 billion in assets, the weight applied to long-term debt issuer ratings would increase (and correspondingly, the weight applied to the financial ratio factor would decrease), as the institution's size increased.
After applying weights to the weighted average CAMELS component rating, the numerical representation of the long-term debt issuer rating, and financial ratio factor as converted to a 1.0 to 3.0 scale, the proposed approach would produce a number between 1.0 and 3.0. (Non-integer values are possible.) This number would serve as the basis for initially assigning an institution to an assessment rate subcategory for that assessment period. The relationship between this insurance score and the insurance assessment rate subcategories is described below.
For illustrative purposes, consider an institution with the following characteristics:
• CAMELS component ratings as of the assessment date are “222121.”
• The institution has a current long-term debt issuer rating of “A−” by both Standard and Poor's and Fitch and an “A3” rating by Moody's.
• The institution's assets as of the assessment date are $18 billion.
Given these circumstances, the institution's insurance score would be calculated as illustrated in Table 15.
• The weighted average CAMELS component rating portion of the insurance score is calculated as follows: The CAMELS component ratings are as assigned through the supervisory process. Multiplying the component ratings by their associated weights produces values of 0.50, 0.40, 0.50, 0.10, 0.20, and 0.10, respectively. The sum of these values, the weighted average CAMELS component rating, equals 1.80. The overall weight applied to the weighted average CAMELS component rating is 50 percent. Multiplying the weighted average CAMELS component rating by 50 percent equals 0.90, which is the contribution of the supervisory rating element to the insurance score.
• The long-term debt issuer rating portion of the insurance score is calculated as follows: The average of three current long-term debt issuer ratings converted to numerical values according Appendix B is 1.50. With $18 billion in assets, the institution's long-term debt issuer rating weight is 20 percent, per Table 14. The product of its converted long-term debt issuer rating and weight is 0.30.
• The financial ratio factor of the insurance score is calculated as noted above: (a) The difference between the institution's estimated probability of downgrade of .0836 percent and the minimum assessment rate cutoff value of .03 percent equals .0536; (b) this result is divided by the difference between the maximum and minimum assessment rate cutoff values of .17 and .03 and equals .3829; (c) this ratio is multiplied by the difference between the maximum and minimum insurance score values of (3 minus 1) and equals .7657; and (d) this result is added to the minimum insurance score of 1 to obtain the converted value of 1.77 (rounded). The weight for the financial ratio factor, per Table 14, is 30 percent. The product of the converted financial ratio factor and its associated weight is 0.53 (rounded).
• The combined insurance score is calculated as follows: The sum of the individual elements—the weighted average CAMELS component rating, the long-term debt issuer ratings, and the financial ratio factor (0.90 + 0.30 + 0.53)—produces an insurance score of 1.73 (rounded). The relationship between the insurance score and an institution's assessment rate is described below.
As indicated earlier, the FDIC proposes using insurance scores to set cutoff scores for the minimum and maximum assessment rate subcategories. These cutoff scores would be set at levels that initially produce similar proportions of the number of large and small institutions (excluding new institutions) being charged the minimum and maximum rates within Risk Category I. The FDIC would set cutoff scores based on the distribution of insurance scores (for large institutions) and assessment rates (for small institutions) for the first quarter of 2007.
For large Risk Category I institutions whose insurance scores fall between the cutoff scores for the minimum and maximum assessment rates, the FDIC proposes to develop four additional assessment rate subcategories, bringing the total number of subcategories (including the minimum and maximum subcategories) to six. The cutoff score ranges for each of the four intermediate subcategories would be equal. Assuming cutoff scores for the minimum and maximum assessment rates of 1.45 and 2.05, respectively, cutoff scores for the intermediate subcategories would be 1.60, 1.75 and 1.90.
The FDIC proposes to set the base assessment rates for the four intermediate subcategories of Risk Category I (those being charged between the minimum and maximum base assessment rates) based on assessment rates applicable to small Risk Category I institutions (excluding insured branches of foreign banks and new institutions). To determine these rates, the FDIC would divide the institutions in small Risk Category I that are charged assessments between the minimum and maximum rates as of June 30, 2006 into four groups. Each of the four groups would contain the same proportion of institutions as the corresponding intermediate subcategory of large institutions as of June 30, 2006. Using year-end 2005 information as an estimate, the proportion of large institutions within these intermediate
The FDIC would apply the average assessment rate from a small institution group to the corresponding large institution intermediate subcategory. Again using year-end 2005 information and assuming a minimum assessment rate of 2 basis points and a maximum assessment rate of 4 basis points, Table 16 provides an estimate of insurance score cutoff points and associated assessment rates for each subcategory.
Chart 2 illustrates an estimate of the cumulative distribution of assessment rates for large Risk Category I institutions as of year-end 2005 using the proposed subcategory approach assuming that annual assessment rates for these institutions range from 2 basis points to 4 basis points.
The proposed subcategory approach has the advantage of allowing the use of a “watch list” whereby institutions could be notified in advance when changes in an insurance score input, or consideration of other risk information, would result in a change in the institution's assessment rate subcategory assignment. Such advance notice would allow an institution to take action to improve its risk profile, in the case of a potential lowering of a subcategory assignment, before its assessment rate increases. The FDIC seeks comment on the appropriateness of this possible “watch list” feature of the proposal.
Consistent with best practices in the banking industry for rating and ranking large direct credit and counterparty credit risk exposures, the FDIC proposes to consider additional information and analyses to determine whether to adjust an institution's initial assessment rate subcategory assignment. Having the ability to make such adjustments, combined with quality controls to ensure the adjustments are justified and well supported, should promote greater consistency in subcategory assignments in terms of the relative levels of risk represented within each assessment rate subcategory. Any adjustment to an institution's initial assessment rate subcategory assignment (as determined by its insurance score) would be limited to the next higher or next lower assessment rate subcategory.
There are three broad categories of information that the FDIC proposes to consider in determining whether to make adjustments to an institution's initial assessment rate subcategory assignment. The types of information included in these categories, as well as the way the FDIC proposes to use this information, are discussed below. Appendix D contains a more detailed listing of the types of additional risk information that would be used to determine whether or not to adjust the initial assessment rate subcategory assignment as determined by an institution's insurance score.
The following considerations illustrate how information pertaining to the ability to withstand stress would be evaluated: (1) To what extent does the institution identify stress conditions that it may be vulnerable to, given its credit exposures and banking activities? (2) does the institution consider reasonably plausible stress scenarios beyond those normally expected? (3) does the institution have the technical capability to measure its vulnerability to varying degrees of financial stress? (4) what level of protection is provided by the institution's current capital, earnings, and liquidity positions against varying degrees of unanticipated stress conditions? If, based on these considerations, an institution's capital, earnings, and liquidity positions can be shown to be sufficient to withstand a considerable degree of financial stress, it would be viewed as less risky than an institution that can be shown to have only an adequate level of protection against moderate levels of financial stress. Such evaluations would help determine if there were meaningful differences in an institution's ability to withstand financial stress relative to other institutions in that assessment rate subcategory.
In the case of the loss severity considerations, the FDIC proposes to evaluate the nature of an institution's primary business activities, the expected costs that these activities would impose on the FDIC in the event the institution failed, the marketability and potential value of the institution's assets, and the implications of an institution's funding structure and priority of claims on potential insurance fund losses in the event of a failure. To analyze these factors, the FDIC would rely on the institution's description of its business lines, general balance sheet and funding information, and other analyses developed by or in consultation with the institution's primary federal regulator. Again, the level of risk indicated by such analyses would be compared to those of other institutions in the same assessment rate subcategory.
In conjunction with its evaluation of assessment rate subcategory assignments, the FDIC would establish a variety of controls to ensure consistent and well supported insurance pricing decisions. These controls would include the following:
• Adjustments to the assessment rate subcategory assignment would be fully supported and documented. The justification for the adjustment would be internally reviewed to ensure that the ultimate assessment rate subcategory assignment was consistent with the risk characteristics generally represented within that subcategory assignment.
• The overall distribution of large institution assessment rate subcategory assignments would be subject to an additional review that ensured the risk rankings suggested by these assignments were logical.
• The FDIC would consult with institutions' primary federal regulators before finalizing assessment rate subcategory assignments.
• As discussed above, if a “watch list” feature were included in the proposal, the FDIC would provide prior notice before changing an institution's assessment rate subcategory assignment.
As discussed earlier, in a separate notice of proposed rulemaking, the FDIC has proposed that, for deposit insurance purposes, changes to an institution's supervisory rating be reflected when the change occurs.
The FDIC proposes that this rule apply to a large institution when a supervisory rating change results in the institution being placed in a different Risk Category. However, if, during a quarter, a supervisory rating change occurs that results in an large institution moving from Risk Category I to Risk Category II, III or IV, the institution's assessment rate for the portion of the quarter that it was in Risk Category I would be based upon its insurance score for the prior quarter; no new insurance score would be developed for the quarter in which the institution moved to Risk Category II, III or IV.
When a large institution is moved to Risk Category I during a quarter as the result of a supervisory rating change, the FDIC proposes to assign an insurance score, associated subcategory (subject to adjustment as describe above) and assessment rate for the portion of the quarter that the institution was in Risk Category I as it would for other large institutions in Risk Category I, except that the assessment rate would only apply to the portion of the quarter that the institution was in Risk Category I.
When an institution remains in Risk Category I during a quarter, but a CAMELS component or a long-term debt issuer rating changes during the quarter that would affect its initial assignment to a subcategory, the FDIC proposes to assign separate insurance scores, associated subcategories (subject to adjustments as describe above) and associated assessment rates for the portion of the quarter before and after the change. A long-term debt issuer rating change would be effective as of the date the change was announced. If an examination (or targeted examination) led to the change in an institution's CAMELS component rating, the FDIC proposes that the change would be effective as of the date the examination or targeted examination began, if such a date existed. Otherwise, the change would be effective as of the date the institution was notified of its rating change by its primary federal regulator (or state authority).
However, the FDIC is also considering a different rule for large institutions that remain in Risk Category I during a quarter, but whose CAMELS components or long-term debt issuer ratings change during the quarter. Because the FDIC will review each large institution at least quarterly for deposit insurance purposes, it will usually be aware of changes in an institution's risk profile before they are reflected in changed CAMELS component ratings or long-term debt issuer ratings. Thus, the FDIC is considering an alternate rule whereby, when a large institution remains in Risk Category I during a quarter, the FDIC would assign an insurance score, associated subcategory (subject to adjustment as describe above) and assessment rate for the entire quarter using the supervisory ratings and agency ratings in place as of the end of the quarter. However, the FDIC proposes to also take into account information received after the end of the quarter if the information reflects upon an institution's condition as of the end of the quarter.
As discussed above, for risk differentiation purposes, the FDIC proposes to define a Risk Category I institution as small if it has less than $10 billion in assets and large if it has $10 billion or more in assets. The selection of the $10 billion asset size threshold stems from various considerations. First, institutions in this size category tend to have more information available relating to risk. Many of these institutions have developed and adopted sophisticated risk measurement models and systems. In addition, approximately 85 percent of institutions that have over $10 billion in assets have a long-term debt issuer rating by one of the three major U.S. rating agencies. Second, some types of complex activities engaged in by these larger institutions (
Initially, the FDIC proposes to determine whether an institution is small or large based upon its assets as of December 31, 2006. Thereafter, a small Risk Category I institution would be reclassified as a large institution when it reported assets of $10 billion or more for four consecutive quarters. This reclassification would become effective for subsequent quarters until it reported assets under $10 billion for four consecutive quarters. Similarly, a large Risk Category I institution would be reclassified as a small institution when it reported assets of less than $10 billion for four consecutive quarters. This reclassification would become effective for subsequent quarters until it reported assets over $10 billion for four consecutive quarters.
In addition, the FDIC proposes that any Risk Category I institution that has between $5 billion and $10 billion in assets could request treatment under the large institution risk differentiation approach.
In total, large institutions have approximately 200 affiliates that have less than $10 billion in assets. The FDIC has considered various options for these smaller affiliates of large Risk Category I institutions, including whether to consider the large affiliate's insurance assessment rate when assigning a rate to the smaller affiliate, given statutory cross-guarantees,
For a number of reasons, the FDIC proposes to treat these small affiliates separately, without regard to the insurance assessment rate assigned to the larger affiliate, and to use the small institution methodology for purposes of differentiating risk. First, the risk profiles of these institutions may be very different than the risk profiles of their larger affiliates. Second, the value of a cross-guarantee in the future is uncertain because the financial condition of affiliated institutions may, under certain circumstances, weigh against the FDIC's invoking cross-guarantees. Finally, less information is generally available for these smaller affiliates and some information, such as market information, may not be relevant.
The FDIC proposes to use the supervisory ratings of insured branches of foreign banks (referred to hereafter as insured branches) in Risk Category I to determine their deposit insurance assessment rates.
The International Banking Act of 1978 (the IBA)
The existing risk-based deposit insurance assessment system assigns insured branches an assessment risk classification in a manner similar to that used for all other insured depository institutions. Like other insured depository institutions, each insured branch is assigned an assessment risk classification. However, unlike other insured depository institutions, whose assessment risk classification is based, in part, on risk-based capital ratios, an insured branch's Capital category is determined by its asset pledge and asset maintenance ratios prescribed by Part 347 of the FDIC's Rules and Regulations. Like other insured depository institutions, insured branches are grouped into an appropriate supervisory subgroup based on the FDIC's consideration of supervisory evaluations provided by the institution's primary federal regulator. These supervisory evaluations result in the assignment of supervisory ratings referred to as ROCA ratings.
Insured branches that would fall in the revised Risk Category II through IV based on their asset pledge and asset maintenance ratios and supervisory ratings would be treated in the same manner as other insured institutions in these risk categories. For insured branches that fall within Risk Category I, the FDIC proposes an approach similar to that applied for large Risk Category I institutions.
As noted above, these insured branches (all of which currently have less than $10 billion in assets) do not report the information needed to use the proposed small Risk Category I institution risk differentiation and pricing method. Moreover, because insured branches operate as extensions of a foreign bank's global banking operations, they pose unique risks. These branches operate without capital of their own, as distinct from capital of their non-U.S. parent, their business strategies are typically directed by the foreign bank parent, they rely extensively on the foreign bank parent for liquidity and funding, and they often have considerable country and transfer risk exposures not typically found in other insured institutions of similar size. Insured branches also present potentially challenging concerns in the event of failure. Consequently, the FDIC proposes to use ROCA component ratings for purposes of differentiating risk among Risk Category I insured branches, combined with considerations of other relevant risk information.
The ROCA rating system for insured branches of foreign banks is analogous to the UFIRS used for commercial banks. Like the UFIRS, the ROCA components convey information about the supervisory assessments of an insured branch's condition in certain key risk areas. The ROCA rating system takes into consideration certain risk management, operational, compliance, and asset quality risk factors that are common to all branches.
The FDIC proposes to use ROCA component ratings as the basis for determining an insurance score for insured branches. This insurance score would be the weighted average of the ROCA component ratings. The weights applied to individual ROCA component ratings would be 35 percent, 25 percent, 25 percent, and 15 percent, respectively. These weights reflect the view of the FDIC regarding the relative importance
The insurance score would determine the insured branch's initial assignment to one of six assessment rate subcategories, as these categories are defined in the large institution risk differentiation proposal. As noted in that section, the cutoff values for the minimum, maximum, and interim assessment rate subcategories will be determined based on the distribution of insurance scores (for large institutions) and assessment rates (for small institutions) for the first quarter of 2007. Similar to the large institution risk differentiation proposal, the FDIC would be allowed to adjust an insured branch's initial assessment rate subcategory assignment to the subcategory being charged the next higher or lower assessment rate after consideration of additional risk information. The types of additional information the FDIC would consider in making these determinations are shown in Appendix D (where applicable to an insured branch).
The FDIC proposes to exclude an institution in Risk Category I that is less than seven years old from evaluation under either the smaller or larger institution method of risk differentiation. On average, new institutions have a higher failure rate than established institutions. Financial information for newer institutions also tends to be harder to interpret and less meaningful. A new institution undergoes rapid changes in the scale and scope of operations, often causing its financial ratios to be fairly volatile. In addition, a new institution's loan portfolio is often unseasoned, and therefore it is difficult to assess credit risk based solely on current financial ratios.
The FDIC proposes charging all new institutions in Risk Category I the same rate, which would be the highest rate charged any other institution in this Risk Category. For this purpose, the FDIC proposes defining a new institution as one that is not an established institution. With two possible exceptions, an established institution would be one that has been chartered as a bank or thrift for at least seven years as of the last day of any quarter for which it is being assessed.
Where an established institution merges into a new institution, the resulting institution would continue to be new. Where an established institution consolidates with a new institution, the resulting institution would be new. However, under either of these circumstances, the FDIC proposes to allow the resulting institution to request that the FDIC determine that the institution is an established institution. The FDIC proposes to make this determination based upon the following factors:
1. Whether the acquired, established institution was larger than the acquiring, new institution, and, if so, how much larger;
2. Whether management of the acquired, established institution continued as management of the resulting institution;
3. Whether the business lines of the resulting institution were the same as the business lines of the acquired, established institution;
4. To what extent the assets and liabilities of the resulting institution were the assets and liabilities of the acquired, established institution; and
5. Any other factors bearing on whether the resulting institution remained substantially an established institution.
Where a new institution merges into an established institution or where an established institution acquires a substantial portion of a new institution's assets or liabilities, and the merger or acquisition agreement is entered into after the date that this notice of proposed rulemaking is adopted, the FDIC proposes to conduct a review to determine whether the resulting or acquiring institution remains an established institution. The FDIC proposes to use the factors described above (necessary changes having been made) to make this determination.
However, where a new institution merges into an established institution or where an established institution acquires a substantial portion of a new institution's assets or liabilities, and the merger or acquisition agreement was entered into before the date that this notice of proposed rulemaking is adopted, the FDIC proposes a grandfather rule under which the resulting or acquiring institution would be deemed to be an established institution.
In setting assessment rates, the FDIC's Board of Directors is required by statute to consider the following factors:
(i) The estimated operating expenses of the Deposit Insurance Fund.
(ii) The estimated case resolution expenses and income of the Deposit Insurance Fund.
(iii) The projected effects of the payment of assessments on the capital and earnings of insured depository institutions.
(iv) The risk factors and other factors taken into account pursuant to [12 U.S.C Section 1817(b)(1)] under the risk-based assessment system, including the requirement under [12 U.S.C Section 1817(b)(1)(A)] to maintain a risk-based system.
(v) Any other factors the Board of Directors may determine to be appropriate.
(i) The probability that the Deposit Insurance Fund will incur a loss with respect to the institution, taking into consideration the risks attributable to—
(I) Different categories and concentrations of assets;
(II) Different categories and concentrations of liabilities, both insured and uninsured, contingent and noncontingent; and
(III) Any other factors the Corporation determines are relevant to assessing such probability;
(ii) The likely amount of any such loss; and
(iii) The revenue needs of the Deposit Insurance Fund.
12 U.S.C. 1817(b)(1)(C).
The FDIC proposes to adopt the following base schedule of rates:
All institutions in any one risk category, other than Risk Category I, would be charged the same assessment rate. For all institutions in Risk Category I (other than new institutions), the FDIC proposes base annual assessment rates between 2 and 4 basis points.
Under the present assessment system, the Board has adopted a base assessment schedule where it can uniformly adjust rates up to a maximum of five basis points higher or lower than the base rate schedule without the necessity of further notice-and-comment rulemaking, provided that any single adjustment cannot move rates more than five basis points.
Absent any action by the Board, the FDIC proposes that the base rates would be the actual rates once a final rule becomes effective.
As discussed earlier, the FDIC proposes charging all new institutions in Risk Category I, regardless of size, the maximum rate for that quarter.
The base schedule of rates, combined with the ability to adjust the rates up or down within prescribed limits, provides the Board with flexibility to set rates that the FDIC believes are likely under most circumstances to keep the reserve ratio between 1.15 percent, the lower bound of the range for the designated reserve ratio, and 1.35 percent, the reserve ratio at which the FDIC must generally begin paying dividends from the fund. However, if insured deposits continue to grow at a fast pace, as they have for the past several quarters, the reserve ratio is likely to fall from its level of 1.23 percent as of March 31, 2006, all else being equal.
Thus, absent a significant slowdown in insured deposit growth and depending on the Board's decision as to how long it is willing to tolerate lower reserve ratios, there is a possibility that the Board may adopt rates for 2007 that are higher than the base schedule.
1. At the same time or shortly after the Board adopts the proposed base rate schedule, the Board also adopts an actual rate schedule for 2007 that sets rates uniformly 5 basis points above the base rate schedule without the need for notice-and-comment rulemaking.
2. As credits are drawn down, the Board reduces rates for 2008 and 2009 so that they are uniformly 2 basis points higher than the base rate schedule.
3. In 2010 and 2011, the Board reduces rates to the base rate schedule.
Table 17 illustrates how these rates could affect the insurance fund reserve ratio. The projections indicate that, as assessment credits are drawn down, these assessment rates would cause the reserve ratio to rise in 2008 and again in 2009 from a low point reached either in 2006 or 2007. Whether (and how high) the reserve ratio would continue to rise would depend upon the rate of insured deposit growth.
This example assumes that the Board adopts rates that do not require further notice-and-comment rulemaking. On the other hand, through additional notice-and-comment rulemaking, the Board could choose to adopt actual rates for 2007 where the lowest rate was higher than 7 basis points (on an annualized basis) or where rates were not uniformly adjusted from the base schedule. The Board may also change assessment rates during the course of 2007.
Appendix 4 contains an analysis of the projected effects of the payment of assessments on the capital and earnings of insured depository institutions. In sum, the base schedule of rates or even a rate schedule that is uniformly 5 basis points higher than the base schedule is not expected to impair the capital or earnings of insured institutions materially.
The proposed base rate for Risk Category IV is substantially lower than the historical analysis discussed in Appendix 1 would suggest is needed to recover costs from failures. The lower rate is intended to decrease the chance of assessments being so large that they cause these institutions to fail.
The FDIC seeks comment on every aspect of this proposed rulemaking. In particular, the FDIC seeks comment on:
• With respect to the general assessment framework:
1. Whether the existing 2B category, which has a five-year failure rate of 5.51 percent, should be:
a. Consolidated with the existing 1B and 2A categories, which have five-year failure rates of 2.67 percent and 2.03 percent, respectively, into new Risk Category II (as proposed);
b. Placed in its own separate new Risk Category; or
c. Placed into new Risk Category III, rather than Risk Category II; and
2. Whether the existing 3A category, which has a five-year failure rate of 2.3 percent, should be:
a. Consolidated with the existing 3B, 1C and 2C categories, which have five-year failure rates of 7.10 percent, 6.78 percent and 14.43 percent, respectively, into new Risk Category III (as proposed); or
b. Consolidated with the existing 1B, 2B and 2A categories, which have five-year failure rates of 2.67 percent, 5.51 percent and 2.03 percent, respectively, into new Risk Category II.
• With respect to risk differentiation among smaller institutions in Risk Category I:
3. Whether the FDIC's proposal or the alternative would be preferable or whether there are other approaches that would be more appropriate for differentiating risk among small Risk Category I institutions.
4. Whether any variation on its proposal or on the alternative would be preferable, such as:
a. Using a different statistical approach or model;
b. Excluding any of the proposed risk measures, in particular the ratio of net income before taxes to risk-weighted assets and the ratio of net loan charge-offs to gross assets;
c. Adding the ratio of liquid assets to gross assets as a risk measure if the ratio of net income before taxes to risk-weighted assets is excluded;
d. Excluding time deposits greater than $100,000 from the definition of volatile liabilities, and, therefore, excluding volatile liabilities as a risk measure;
e. Including Federal Home Loan Bank advances in the definition of volatile liabilities or, alternatively, charging higher assessment rates to institutions that have significant amounts of secured liabilities;
f. Averaging ratios over some period;
g. Changing the pricing multipliers proposed for the measures judgmentally;
h. Changing the weights proposed for the CAMELS component ratings used to calculate the weighted average CAMELS component rating, for example, weighting each component equally;
i. Using CAMELS composite ratings instead of weighted average CAMELS component ratings; and
j. Determining a portion of an institution's assessment rate using financial ratios and a portion using a weighted average CAMELS component rating, but combine financial ratios with CAMELS component ratings in a manner different from the proposal in order to have an approach that is more integrated with the large institution method.
5. Whether the FDIC should evaluate institutions with unusual business profiles or risk characteristics in a different manner, and, if so, which institutions should be so evaluated and on what basis.
6. Whether the FDIC should use additional relevant information to determine whether adjustments to assessment rates are appropriate.
• With respect to risk differentiation among large institutions and insured branches of foreign banks in Risk Category I:
7. Whether there are other approaches that would be more appropriate for differentiating risk among large Risk Category I institutions.
8. Whether the weights proposed for the CAMELS component ratings used to calculate the weighted average CAMELS are appropriate or whether alternative weights should be used, such as:
a. Weighting each CAMELS component equally;
b. Varying CAMELS component weightings by the primary business type of an institution;
c. Determining CAMELS component weightings for various business activities and then determining the relative importance of these activities within each institution (this process would result in potentially unique CAMELS weights for each large institution).
9. Whether it is appropriate to use long-term debt issuer ratings to differentiate risk among large Risk Category I institutions.
10. Whether the proposed numerical conversions of long-term debt issuer ratings are reasonable.
11. Whether using the estimated probability of downgrade to a CAMELS composite 3, 4 or 5 as derived in the alternative method of risk differentiation for small Risk Category I institutions is appropriate for institutions with between $10 billion and $30 billion in assets.
12. Whether other risk factors or risk measurement approaches should be considered in developing deposit insurance pricing alternatives.
13. Whether the proposed weights for the weighted average CAMELS component rating, long-term debt issuer ratings, and the financial ratio factor used to determine an insurance score are appropriate for all size categories or should be modified.
14. Whether the proposal to assign institutions initially to one of six assessment rate subcategories based on an insurance score, and use other relevant information to determine whether adjustments to these initial assignments are needed, is reasonable.
15. Whether an alternative to assessment rate subcategories is appropriate, such as tying assessment rates directly to the insurance score, and to what extent adjustments to the insurance score would be appropriate.
16. Whether the proposed number of six assessment rate subcategories (including minimum and maximum assessment rate subcategories) is appropriate, and if more or less subcategories are appropriate, to what extent should the FDIC have the ability to adjust assessment rate subcategory assignments (as determined by the insurance score) based on consideration of additional information.
17. Whether the proposed approach for converting insurance scores to assessment rate subcategories is reasonable. Considerations include: the appropriateness of defining insurance score cutoff points for the minimum and maximum assessment rates to ensure that initially similar proportions of small and large institutions are charged the minimum and maximum assessment rates; and the appropriateness of using increments of the insurance score between the minimum and maximum assessment rate cutoff scores to determine cutoff points for the four intermediate assessment rate subcategories.
18. Whether it would be appropriate to implement a “watch list” feature to provide advanced notice to large Risk Category I institutions when there is a pending change in an institution's assessment rate subcategory assignment.
19. Whether the proposal to develop and assign separate assessment rates for Risk Category I institutions whose subcategory assignments change during a quarter is appropriate, or whether in these circumstances assessment rates for the entire quarter should be based on quarter-end supervisory and agency ratings.
• With respect to the definitions of small and large Risk Category I institutions:
20. Whether the proposed definition of a large institution as one with at least $10 billion in assets is appropriate.
21. Whether the FDIC's proposed method for determining whether an institution has changed its size class is appropriate.
22. Whether the proposal to use the small institution approach to differentiate risk for small institutions that are affiliates of large institutions, independently of the insurance score or assessment rate of the large affiliate, is appropriate.
23. Whether institutions with between $5 and $10 billion in assets should be allowed to request to be subject to the risk differentiation approach applied to large institutions.
24. Whether it is appropriate for the FDIC to determine when institutions under $10 billion should be treated under the large institution risk differentiation approach for Risk Category I institutions. Any such determination would be made infrequently and would entail considerations of the types of business activities engaged in by the institution, the materiality of these activities, and whether the financial ratios used in the small institution proposed risk differentiation approach are sufficient to accurately reflect the risk within these activities.
25. Whether the proposed approach for differentiating risk in insured branches of foreign banks is appropriate.
• With respect to the definitions of a new institution and an established institution:
26. Whether less than seven years old is the appropriate age to consider an institution new.
27. Whether, when an established institution merges into or consolidates with a new institution:
a. The resulting institution should be considered new;
b. The resulting institution should be allowed to request that the FDIC determine that it is established; and
c. The factors that the FDIC proposes to use to determine whether the resulting institution in such a merger or consolidation should be considered established are the appropriate factors.
28. Whether, when a new institution merges into an established institution or when an established institution acquires a substantial portion of a new institution's assets or liabilities, and:
a. The merger or acquisition agreement is entered into after the date that this notice of proposed rulemaking is adopted, the FDIC should conduct a review to determine whether the resulting or acquiring institution remains an established institution; and
b. The merger or acquisition agreement is entered into before the date that this notice of proposed rulemaking is adopted, the resulting or acquiring institution should be deemed to be an established institution.
• With respect to assessment rates:
29. Whether the FDIC should adopt a permanent base schedule of rates and, if so, whether the proposed rates are appropriate.
30. Whether the difference between the proposed minimum and maximum assessment rates for institutions in Risk Category I should be wider (e.g., 3 basis points) or narrower (e.g., 1 basis point) than proposed in the base schedule.
31. Whether the FDIC should retain the authority to make changes within prescribed limits to assessment rates, as proposed, without the necessity of additional notice-and-comment rulemaking.
32. Whether all new institutions in Risk Category I should be charged the maximum rate.
Section 722 of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, Public Law 106–102, 113 Stat. 1338, 1471 (Nov. 12, 1999), requires the Federal banking agencies to use plain language in all proposed and final rules published after January 1, 2000. The FDIC invites your comments on how to make this proposal easier to understand. For example:
• Has the FDIC organized the material to suit your needs? If not, how could this material be better organized?
• Are the requirements in the proposed regulation clearly stated? If not, how could the regulation be more clearly stated?
• Does the proposed regulation contain language or jargon that is not clear? If so, which language requires clarification?
• Would a different format (grouping and order of sections, use of headings, paragraphing) make the regulation easier to understand? If so, what changes to the format would make the regulation easier to understand?
• What else could the FDIC do to make the regulation easier to understand?
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA) requires that each federal agency either certify that a proposed rule would not, if adopted in final form, have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities or prepare an initial regulatory flexibility analysis of the proposal and publish the analysis for comment. See 5 U.S.C. 603, 604, 605. Certain types of rules, such as rules of particular applicability relating to rates or corporate or financial structures, or practices relating to such rates or structures, are expressly excluded from the definition of “rule” for purposes of the RFA. 5 U.S.C. 601. The proposed rule governs assessments and sets the rates imposed on insured depository institutions for deposit insurance. Consequently, no regulatory flexibility analysis is required.
No collections of information pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.) are contained in the proposed rule.
The FDIC has determined that the proposed rule will not affect family well-being within the meaning of section 654 of the Treasury and General Government Appropriations Act, enacted as part of the Omnibus Consolidated and Emergency
Bank deposit insurance, Banks, banking, Savings associations
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the FDIC proposes to amend chapter III of title 12 of the Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
1. The authority citation for part 327 is revised to read as follows:
12 U.S.C. 1441, 1813, 1815, 1817–1819, 1821; Sec. 2101–2109, Pub. L. 109–171, 120 Stat. 9–21, and Sec. 3, Pub. L. 109–173, 119 Stat. 3605.
2. Revise section 327.9 of subpart A to read as follows:
(a)
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(b)
(1)
(ii) For purposes of this section, an insured branch of a foreign bank will be deemed to be Well Capitalized if the insured branch:
(A) Maintains the pledge of assets required under § 347.209 of this chapter; and
(B) Maintains the eligible assets prescribed under § 347.210 of this chapter at 108 percent or more of the average book value of the insured branch's third-party liabilities for the quarter ending on the report date specified in paragraph (b) of this section.
(2)
(ii) For purposes of this section, an insured branch of a foreign bank will be deemed to be Adequately Capitalized if the insured branch:
(A) Maintains the pledge of assets required under § 347.209 of this chapter; and
(B) Maintains the eligible assets prescribed under § 347.210 of this chapter at 106 percent or more of the average book value of the insured branch's third-party liabilities for the quarter ending on the report date specified in paragraph (b) of this section; and
(C) Does not meet the definition of a Well Capitalized insured branch of a foreign bank.
(3)
(c)
(1)
(2)
(3)
(d)
(1)
(2)
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv)
(A) If an examination (or targeted examination) leads to the change in an institution's CAMELS component rating, the change will be effective as of the date the examination or targeted examination begins, if such a date exists.
(B) If an examination (or targeted examination) leads to the change in CAMELS component rating and no examination (or targeted examination) start date exists, the change will be effective as of the date the change to the institution's CAMELS component rating is transmitted to the institution.
(C) Otherwise, the change will be effective as of the date that the FDIC determines that the change to the institution's CAMELS component rating occurred.
(3)
(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv)
(v)
(vi)
(vii)
(B) For institutions that have assets of at least $30 billion in assets as of the end of a quarter, that are not insured branches of foreign banks, the following weights will be applied to the weighted average CAMELS component rating and the long-term debt issuer ratings converted to a numerical value to derive the insurance score under paragraph (d)(3)(ii) of this section.
(viii)
(ix)
(x)
(A) The number of large institutions (excluding new institutions and insured branches of foreign banks) in each of the four intermediate subcategories labeled 1, 2, 3 and 4 will be divided by the total number of all large institutions (excluding new institutions and insured branches of foreign banks) in the four intermediate subcategories to produce individual percentages to correspond to each subcategory.
(B) Small institutions in Risk Category I (excluding new institutions and insured branches of foreign banks) that are charged base assessment rates between the minimum and maximum base assessments rates will be grouped into four groups. Each group will contain institutions being charged increasingly higher base assessment rates and will be numbered 1, 2, 3 and 4. Each group will contain a percentage of small institutions in Risk Category I (excluding new institutions and insured branches of foreign banks) of those charged between the minimum and maximum assessment rates equal to the corresponding percentage from the intermediate subcategory, as determined in paragraph (3)(x)(A) of this section.
(C) The base assessment rate applicable to each intermediate subcategory of large Risk Category I institutions under paragraph (d)(3)(viii) of this section will equal the average base assessment rate applicable to the corresponding group of small Risk Category I institutions defined in paragraph (d)(3)(x)(B) of this section.
(xi)
(xii)
(A) If an examination (or targeted examination) leads to the change in an institution's CAMELS component rating, the change will be effective as of the date the examination or targeted examination begins, if such a date exists.
(B) If an examination (or targeted examination) leads to the change in CAMELS component rating and no examination (or targeted examination) start date exists, the change will be effective as of the date the change to the institution's CAMELS component rating is transmitted to the institution.
(C) Otherwise, the change will be effective as of the date that the FDIC determines that the change to the institution's CAMELS component rating occurred.
(xiii)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(ii) An established institution is a bank or thrift that has been chartered for at least seven years as of the last day of any quarter for which it is being assessed.
(iii) When an established institution merges into or consolidates with a new institution, the resulting institution is a new institution. The FDIC may determine, upon request by the resulting institution to the Director of the Division of Insurance and Research, that the institution should be treated as an established institution for deposit insurance assessment purposes, based on analysis of the following:
(A) Whether the acquired, established institution was larger than the acquiring, new institution, and, if so, how much larger;
(B) Whether management of the acquired, established institution continued as management of the resulting institution;
(C) Whether the business lines of the resulting institution were the same as the business lines of the acquired, established institution;
(D) To what extent the assets and liabilities of the resulting institution were the assets and liabilities of the acquired, established institution; and
(E) Any other factors the FDIC considers relevant in determining whether the resulting institution remains substantially an established institution.
(iv) If a new institution merges into an established institution or an established institution acquires a substantial portion of a new institution's assets or liabilities, and the merger or acquisition agreement is entered into after the effective date of this rule, the FDIC will conduct the analysis set out in paragraph (d)(7)(iii) of this section to determine whether the resulting or acquiring institution remains an established institution.
(v) If a new institution merges into an established institution or an established institution acquires a substantial portion of a new institution's assets or liabilities, and the merger or acquisition agreement was entered into before the effective date of this rule, the resulting or acquiring institution shall be deemed to be an established institution for purposes of this section.
(vi) A new institution that has $10 billion or more in assets as of the end of the quarter prior to the quarter in which it becomes an established institution shall be considered a large institution for the quarter in which it becomes an established institution and thereafter, provided that it remains in Risk Category I and subject to paragraphs (d)(4) through (6) of this section. A new institution that has less than $10 billion in assets as of the end of the quarter prior to the quarter in which it becomes an established institution shall be considered a small institution for the quarter in which it becomes an established institution and thereafter, provided that it remains in Risk Category I and subject to paragraphs (d)(4) through (6) of this section.
(8)
(e)
(2)
(i) Estimated operating expenses of the Deposit Insurance Fund;
(ii) Case resolution expenditures and income of the Deposit Insurance Fund;
(iii) The projected effects of assessments on the capital and earnings of the institutions paying assessments to the Deposit Insurance Fund;
(iv) The risk factors and other factors taken into account pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1817(b)(1); and
(v) Any other factors the Board may deem appropriate.
(3)
(4)
3. Remove § 327.10 of Subpart A.
4. Add Appendices A through D to subpart A to read as follows:
By order of the Board of Directors.