Source: https://www.federalregister.gov/documents/2015/01/26/2015-01239/capital-planning-and-stress-testing-schedule-shift
Timestamp: 2018-03-19 03:26:07
Document Index: 747032266

Matched Legal Cases: ['§\u2009702', '§\u2009702', '§\u2009702', '§\u2009702', '§\u2009702', '§\u2009702', '§\u2009702', '§\u2009702', '§\u2009702', 'art 702', '§\u2009702', '§\u2009702']

A Proposed Rule by the National Credit Union Administration on 01/26/2015
Comments must be received on or before March 27, 2015.
3918-3921 (4 pages)
1. Section 702.502—Definitions
2. Section 702.504—Capital Planning
3. Section 702.505—NCUA Action on Capital Plans
4. Section 702.506—Annual Supervisory Stress Testing
5. Table Summarizing Proposed Date Changes
https://www.federalregister.gov/d/2015-01239 https://www.federalregister.gov/d/2015-01239
Start Preamble Start Printed Page 3918
Email: Address to regcomments@ncua.gov. Include “[Your name]—Comments on Proposed Rule—Capital Planning and Stress Testing—Schedule Shift” in the email subject line.
Jeremy Taylor or Dale Klein, Senior Capital Markets Specialists, Office of National Examinations and Supervision, at the above address or telephone (703) 518-6640.
In April 2014, the Board issued a final rule requiring capital planning and stress testing for federally insured credit unions (FICUs) with assets of $10 billion or more.[1] Capital planning requires covered credit unions to assess their financial condition and risks over the planning horizon under both expected and unfavorable conditions. Annual supervisory stress testing allows NCUA to obtain an independent test of these credit unions under stress scenarios. By setting a regulatory minimum capital ratio under stress, the final rule requires covered credit unions to take corrective action before they become undercapitalized to an extent that may cause loss to the National Credit Union Share Insurance Fund.
The final rule provides several timeframes for the formulation and submission of capital plans and for the stress testing of covered credit unions. One critical date in the stress testing process is the date NCUA releases the baseline, adverse, and severely adverse economic scenarios that serve as basis for the testing. As noted in the preamble to the proposed rule, NCUA plans to base the scenarios on those developed by the Federal Reserve, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (collectively, the banking agencies) for their regulated institutions.[2] At the time the Board issued NCUA's final rule, the banking agencies were scheduled to provide scenarios for their regulated institutions by November 15 each year.[3] The banking agencies subsequently moved their scenario release dates to February 15.[4]
The Board intends to ensure that scenarios used for credit union stress testing essentially conform to those used by the banking agencies, both in substance and timing. The new schedule on which the banking agencies' scenarios are published necessitates NCUA's modification of its own stress testing schedule.
Accordingly, this proposed rule would amend the capital planning and stress testing rule to change NCUA's scenario release date from December 1 to February 28. In addition, the Board proposes to apply a more uniform fixed annual timeline for both capital planning and stress testing required under the rule. It also proposes to reword several provisions in the rule to clarify their meaning. The Board seeks comment on all aspects of this proposal.
The proposed changes to the capital planning and stress testing rule are discussed in detail below.
Section 702.502 of the current rule defines certain terms used in the capital planning and stress testing rule. The proposed rule amends one current definition and adds one new definition. The current rule defines a “covered credit union” as a FICU whose assets were at least $10 billion on March 31 of “the current calendar year,” which the Board believes may be unclear. The proposal clarifies that a covered credit union is one whose assets are $10 billion or more and that a FICU that crosses the asset threshold as of March 31 is subject to the capital planning and stress testing requirements of the rule in the following calendar year. In addition, the proposal adds a new definition for the term “capital planning process” to clarify that the process integrates the development of a capital planning policy with the formulation of a capital plan.
Paragraph (a)(1) of current § 702.504 requires a covered credit union to submit a capital plan by February 28 of each year based on the credit union's financial data as of September 30 of the preceding year. The proposal changes the capital plan submission date to April 30 and the as-of date to December 31 of the preceding year. The Board believes that a year-end as-of date will coincide more closely with annual strategic planning cycles at the covered credit unions. With the as-of date shifted from September 30 to December 31, the proposal correspondingly shifts Start Printed Page 3919the capital plan submission date as well. The Board notes that the proposal provides a covered credit union four months from the as-of date to complete its capital plan, rather than the five months in the current rule. This reduces the time a covered credit union will have to complete its plan, but the Board believes the modification is necessary to enable other dates in the capital planning and stress testing cycles to be synchronized. The Board also believes it is sufficient time for covered credit unions to complete the capital planning process.
Paragraph (a) of current § 702.505 provides that NCUA will notify a covered credit union of the acceptance or rejection of its capital plan within 90 calendar days of the plan's submission. The proposal modifies this provision to establish a fixed date of July 31, which is 90 days after April 30, the revised date the covered credit union is required to submit its capital plan to NCUA under proposed § 702.504(a)(1). The Board has determined that agency resources will be more efficiently allocated with a fixed date. In addition, the fixed date will ensure uniform timing of NCUA acceptance or rejection of credit union capital plans.
Paragraph (b) of current § 702.505 enumerates the reasons NCUA may reject a covered credit union's capital plan including, in paragraph (b)(5), that NCUA finds unacceptable weakness in the plan, the planning analysis, or any system or process supporting the analysis. The proposal adds “or policy” to this provision, clarifying the Board's intention that a covered credit union's capital policy and plan must intersect.
Paragraph (d) of current § 702.505 provides that if NCUA rejects a covered credit union's capital plan, the credit union must update and resubmit a plan within 90 days of the rejection. For consistency with the other deadlines mandated by the rule, the proposal changes this to a fixed date of October 31. The Board notes that this modification will not affect the amount of time a covered credit union will have to update and resubmit a capital plan. The proposal still provides a credit union 90 days to submit a revised plan.
Paragraph (a) of current § 702.506 provides that NCUA will release the baseline, adverse, and severely adverse stress test scenarios by December 1 of each year. In light of the banking agencies' new scenario release date of February 15, as discussed above, the proposal likewise shifts NCUA's release date to February 28. The proposal also shifts the as-of date for financial data from September 30 to December 31, for consistency with the changes affecting the capital planning process. In addition, the proposal deletes a redundant reference in paragraph (a) that requires a credit union to include the stress test results in the following year's capital plan, as the requirement is contained in paragraph (g).
Paragraph (c) of current § 702.506 provides that after NCUA has conducted three consecutive stress tests, a covered credit union may, with NCUA approval, conduct its own stress tests. It states that a credit union must submit its request to conduct the tests by July 31 and that NCUA will approve or disapprove the request by August 31. Consistent with the other proposed date shifts described above, the proposal moves the request date to October 31 and the response date to November 30. The proposal also adds language to paragraph (c) to clarify that a covered credit union must be subject to three NCUA-run stress tests before it seeks self-testing authority. This clarifying language makes paragraph (d) redundant, so the proposal deletes it. The proposal also redesignates paragraphs (e) through (i) as paragraphs (d) through (g), respectively.
Paragraph (g) of current § 702.506 states that NCUA will provide each covered credit union with its stress test results by May 31. Redesignated paragraph (f) of the proposal shifts that date to July 31.
Paragraph (h) of current § 702.506 states that if the NCUA-run stress tests show a covered credit union cannot maintain a stress test capital ratio of at least 5 percent, the credit union must provide NCUA, within 90 days of receipt of the stress test results, a stress test capital enhancement plan showing how it will meet the target. For consistency with the other deadlines in the rule, redesignated paragraph (g) of the proposal changes this to a fixed date of October 31, which is still 90 days from the time NCUA provides stress test results to the covered credit union.
The following table summarizes the proposed changes to the annual timelines provided in the capital and stress testing rule.
Covered credit union submits capital plan to NCUA (incorporating credit union-run stress tests, if authorized) February 28 April 30.
NCUA provides NCUA-run stress test results to covered credit union May 31 July 31.
NCUA accepts or rejects covered credit union's capital plan Within 90 days of plan's submission July 31.
Covered credit union submits stress test capital enhancement plan, if required Within 90 days of receipt of test results October 31.
Covered credit union submits revised capital plan, if required Within 90 days of NCUA rejection October 31.
Covered credit union requests authority to conduct stress tests July 31 October 31.
NCUA approves or declines covered credit union's request to conduct stress tests August 31 November 30.
The Regulatory Flexibility Act requires NCUA to prepare an analysis of any significant economic impact any proposed regulation may have on a substantial number of small entities (primarily those under $50 million in assets).[5] Because the proposed rule only applies to FICUs with $10 billion or more in assets, it will not have any economic impact on small credit unions.
The Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (PRA) applies to rulemakings in which an agency by rule creates a new paperwork burden on regulated entities Start Printed Page 3920or increases an existing burden.[6] For purposes of the PRA, a paperwork burden may take the form of a reporting or recordkeeping requirement, both referred to as information collections. The proposed changes to part 702 do not impose any new information collection requirements, and there is no new burden.
By the National Credit Union Administration Board, on January 15, 2015.
2. Amend § 702.502 by adding a definition of “Capital planning process” in alphabetical order and revising the definition of “Covered credit union” to read as follows:
Capital planning process means development of a capital policy and formulation of a capital plan that conforms to this policy.
Covered credit union means a federally insured credit union whose assets are $10 billion or more. A credit union that crosses the asset threshold as of March 31 is subject to the capital planning and stress testing requirements of this subpart in the following calendar year.
3. Amend § 702.504 by revising paragraph (a)(1) to read as follows:
(1) A covered credit union must develop and maintain a capital plan. It must submit this plan and its capital policy to NCUA by April 30 each year, or such later date as directed by NCUA. The plan must be based on the credit union's financial data as of December 31 of the preceding calendar year, or such other date as directed by NCUA. NCUA will assess whether the capital planning and analysis process is sufficiently robust in determining whether to accept a credit union's capital plan.
(a) Timing. NCUA will notify the covered credit union of the acceptance or rejection of its capital plan by July 31 of the year in which the credit union submitted its plan.
(5) NCUA finds unacceptable weakness in the capital plan or policy, the capital planning analysis, or any critical system or process supporting capital analysis;
(d) Resubmission of a capital plan. If NCUA rejects a credit union's capital plan, the credit union must update and resubmit an acceptable capital plan to NCUA by October 31 of the year in which the credit union submitted its plan. The resubmitted capital plan must, at a minimum, address:
c. Redesignating paragraphs (e) through (i) as (d) through (h), respectively; and
d. Revising newly redesignated paragraphs (d) through (g).
(a) General requirements. The supervisory stress tests consist of baseline, adverse, and severely adverse scenarios, which NCUA will provide by February 28 of each year. The tests will be based on the credit union's financial data as of December 31 of the preceding calendar year, or such other date as directed by NCUA. * * *
(c) Credit union-run tests under NCUA supervision. After NCUA has completed three consecutive supervisory stress tests of a covered credit union, the covered credit union may, with NCUA approval, conduct the tests described in this section. A covered credit union must submit its request to NCUA to conduct its own stress test by October 31 for the following annual cycle. NCUA will approve or decline the credit union's request by November 30 of the year in which the credit union submitted its request. NCUA reserves the right to conduct the tests described in this section on any covered credit union at any time. Where both NCUA and a covered credit union have conducted the tests, the results of NCUA's tests will determine whether the covered credit union has met the requirements of this section.
(e) Information collection. Upon request, the covered credit union must Start Printed Page 3921provide NCUA with any relevant qualitative or quantitative information requested by NCUA pertinent to the stress tests under this section.
(f) Stress test results. NCUA will provide each covered credit union with the results of the stress tests by July 31 of the year in which it conducted the tests. A credit union conducting its own stress tests must incorporate the test results in its capital plan.
(g) Supervisory actions. If NCUA-run stress tests show that a covered credit union does not have the ability to maintain a stress test capital ratio of 5 percent or more under expected and stressed conditions in each quarter of the 9-quarter horizon, the credit union must provide NCUA, by October 31 of the calendar year in which NCUA conducted the tests, a stress test capital enhancement plan showing how it will meet that target. If credit union-run stress tests show that a covered credit union does not have the ability to maintain a stress test capital ratio of 5 percent or more under expected and stressed conditions in each quarter of the 9-quarter horizon, the credit union must incorporate a stress test capital enhancement plan into its capital plan. Any affected credit union operating without a stress test capital enhancement plan accepted by NCUA may be subject to supervisory actions on the part of NCUA.
[FR Doc. 2015-01239 Filed 1-23-15; 8:45 am]