Company: KEY-PI
Filing Date: 2025-02-21
Form Type: 10-K
Source: 0000091576-25-000038
Chunk: 176

Company: KEYCORP /NEW/
Filing Date: 2025-02-21
Form: 10-K
Item: Item 1A
Chunk 176
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 portion of our liquid asset portfolio to meet any funding needs.

Capital and liquidity requirements imposed by banking regulations require banks and BHCs to maintain more and higher quality capital and more and higher quality liquid assets.

Evolving capital standards resulting from the Dodd-Frank Act and the Regulatory Capital Rules adopted by our regulators have had and will continue to have a significant impact on banks and BHCs, including Key. For a detailed explanation of the capital and liquidity rules that apply to us, see the section titled “Regulatory capital requirements” under the heading “Supervision and Regulation” in Item 1 of this report. 

Regulatory capital standards require Key to maintain significant amounts of high-quality capital (e.g., common equity) and could limit our business activities (including lending) and our ability to expand organically or through acquisitions. They could also result in our taking steps to increase our capital that may be dilutive to shareholders or limit our ability to pay dividends or otherwise return capital to shareholders.

In addition, regulatory liquidity standards require us to hold high-quality liquid assets, which has caused us to change, and may in the future cause us to change,  our  mix of investments, and may impact future business relationships with certain customers. Additionally, support of liquidity standards may be satisfied through the use of long-term wholesale borrowings, which tend to have a higher cost than that of traditional core deposits.

Further, the Federal Reserve has detailed the processes that BHCs should maintain to ensure they hold adequate capital under severely adverse conditions and have ready access to funding before engaging in any capital activities. The severity and other features of these processes, which take the form of stress tests and other measures, may evolve from year to year and are used by the Federal Reserve to, among other things, evaluate our management of capital and the adequacy of our regulatory capital and to determine the stress capital buffer that we must maintain above our minimum regulatory capital requirements. Despite recent announcements by the Federal Reserve declaring intent to increase transparency into capital stress tests and models, the results of these processes are difficult to predict due to, among other things, the Federal Reserve’s use of proprietary stress models that differ from our internal models. Consequently, the Federal Reserve may impose capital requirements in excess of our expectations which could require us, as applicable, to revise our stress-testing or capital management approaches, resubmit our capital plan or postpone, cancel, or alter our planned capital actions. The results may also lead to limits on Key’s ability to make distributions, including paying out dividends or