SPST-Basel_III_(0153)(12_16_13)

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Regulatory Capital Rules

OMB: 3064-0153

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Supporting Statement

Regulatory Capital Rules

3064-0153


A. Justification


1. Circumstances and Need


This statement supports a request to change the title of an existing information collection, from Basel II Capital Requirements to Regulatory Capital Rules, and to revise the collection to incorporate reporting, recordkeeping, and disclosure requirements in the FDIC’s interim final rule, entitled Regulatory Capital Rules: Regulatory Capital, Implementation of Basel III, Capital Adequacy, Transition Provisions, Prompt Corrective Action, Standardized Approach for Risk-weighted Assets, Market Discipline and Disclosure Requirements, Advanced Approaches Risk-Based Capital Rule, and Market Risk Capital Rule. The FDIC’s interim final rule is identical to a final rule with the same title, jointly issued by the Federal Reserve Board (“Board”) and the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (“OCC”). The FDIC’s interim final rule and the FRB and OCC’s final rule revise and replace the agencies’ current capital rules and codify the regulatory capital rules, which currently reside in various appendices to the agencies’ respective regulations.


The agencies are revising their risk-based and leverage capital requirements consistent with agreements reached by the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision (BCBS) in “Basel III: A Global Regulatory Framework for More Resilient Banks and Banking Systems” (Basel III). The revisions include implementation of a new common equity tier 1 minimum capital requirement, a higher minimum tier 1 capital requirement, and, for banking organizations subject to the advanced approaches capital rules, a supplementary leverage ratio that incorporates a broader set of exposures in the denominator measure. Additionally, consistent with Basel III, the agencies are applying limits on a banking organization’s capital distributions and certain discretionary bonus payments if the banking organization does not hold a specified amount of common equity tier 1 capital in addition to the amount necessary to meet its minimum risk-based capital requirements. The FDIC’s interim final rule and the Board-OCC final rule also establish more conservative standards for including an instrument in regulatory capital. The revisions are consistent with section 171 of the Dodd-Frank Act, which requires the agencies to establish minimum risk-based and leverage capital requirements.


In addition, the agencies are revising their rules for calculating risk-weighted assets to enhance risk sensitivity and address weaknesses identified over recent years, including by incorporating aspects of the BCBS’s Basel II standardized framework in the “International Convergence of Capital Measurement and Capital Standards: A Revised Framework,” including subsequent amendments to that standard, and recent BCBS consultative papers. The revisions include alternatives to credit ratings, consistent with section 939A of the Dodd-Frank Act. The revisions also include methodologies for determining risk-weighted assets for residential mortgages, securitization exposures, and equity exposures. The rules introduce disclosure requirements that would apply to top-tier banking organizations domiciled in the United States with $50 billion or more in total assets, including disclosures related to regulatory capital instruments.


Finally, the agencies are revising the advanced approaches risk-based capital rules consistent with Basel III and other changes to the BCBS’s capital standards. The agencies are also revising the advanced approaches risk-based capital rules to be consistent with section 939A and section 171 of the Dodd-Frank Act. The FDIC, in its interim final rule, is making the market risk capital rules applicable to state savings associations. In their final rule, the OCC is making the market risk capital rules applicable to federal savings associations and the Board is applying the advanced approaches and market risk capital rules to top-tier savings and loan holding companies domiciled in the United States, in each case, if stated thresholds for trading activity are met.


The FDIC’s interim final rule and the Board’s and OCC’s joint final rule are in follow-up to three jointly issued notices of proposed rulemaking published on August 30, 2012: (1) Regulatory Capital Rules: Regulatory Capital, Implementation of Basel III, Minimum Regulatory Capital Ratios, Capital Adequacy, Transition Provisions, and Prompt Corrective Action (77 FR 52792); (2) Regulatory Capital Rules: Standardized Approach for Risk-weighted Assets; Market Discipline and Disclosure Requirements (77 FR 52888); and (3) Regulatory Capital Rules: Advanced Approaches Risk-based Capital Rules; Market Risk Capital Rule (77 FR 52978).



2. Use of the Information


The FDIC uses the data collected under the rule to fulfill its statutory obligations to adopt a risk-based capital requirement, determine the qualification of an institution for application of the rule, and assess the adequacy of a qualifying bank’s risk-based capital. The specific information collection requirements are as follows:


Minimum Regulatory Capital Ratios


Section _.3(d) provides for termination and close-out netting across multiple types of transactions or agreements if the bank obtains a written legal opinion verifying the validity and enforceability of the agreement under certain circumstances and maintains sufficient written documentation of this legal review.


Section _.22(h)(2)(iii)(A) allows the use of a conservative estimate of the amount of a bank’s investment in the capital of unconsolidated financial institutions held through the index security with prior approval by the appropriate agency.



Standardized Approach


Section _.35(b)(3)(i)(A) requires, for a cleared transaction with a qualified central counterparty (QCCP), that a client bank apply a risk weight of 2 percent, provided that the collateral posted by the bank to the QCCP is subject to certain arrangements and the client bank has conducted a sufficient legal review (and maintains sufficient written documentation of the legal review) to conclude with a well-founded basis that the arrangements, in the event of a legal challenge, would be found to be legal, valid, binding and enforceable under the law of the relevant jurisdictions.


Section _.37(c)(4)(i)(E) requires that a bank have policies and procedures describing how it determines the period of significant financial stress used to calculate its own internal estimates for haircuts and be able to provide empirical support for the period used.


Section _.41(b)(3) allows for synthetic securitizations a bank’s recognition, for risk-based capital purposes, of a credit risk mitigant to hedge underlying exposures if certain conditions are met, including the bank’s having obtained a well-reasoned opinion from legal counsel that confirms the enforceability of the credit risk mitigant in all relevant jurisdictions. In addition, section _.41(c)(2)(i) requires that a bank support a demonstration of its comprehensive understanding of a securitization exposure by conducting and documenting an analysis of the risk characteristics of each securitization exposure prior to its acquisition, taking into account a number of specified considerations. On an on-going basis (no less frequently than quarterly), a bank must evaluate, review, and update as appropriate the analysis required under this section for each securitization exposure.


Section _.42(e)(2) addresses risk-weighted assets for securitization exposures and requires that a bank publicly disclose that is has provided implicit support to the securitization and the risk-based capital impact to the bank of providing such implicit support.


Section _.62(a) specifies a quarterly frequency for the disclosure of information in the applicable tables set out in section _.63 and, if a significant change occurs, such that the most recent reported amounts are no longer reflective of the bank’s capital adequacy and risk profile, it also would require the bank to disclose as soon as practicable thereafter, a brief discussion of the change and its likely impact. This section would allow for annual disclosure of qualitative information that typically does not change each quarter, provided that any significant changes are disclosed in the interim. Section _.62(b) would require that a bank have a formal disclosure policy approved by the board of directors that addresses its approach for determining the disclosures it makes. The policy would be required to address the associated internal controls and disclosure controls and procedures. Section .62(c) would require a bank with total consolidated assets of $50 billion or more that is not an advanced approaches bank, if it concludes that specific commercial or financial information required to be disclosed under section _.62 would be exempt from disclosure by the agency under the Freedom of Information Act (5 U.S.C. 552), to disclose more general information about the subject matter of the requirement and the reason the specific items of information have not been disclosed.


Section _.63(a) requires certain disclosures for each of the last three years beginning on the effective date of the rule for banks with total consolidated assets of $50 billion or more that are not advanced approaches banks, including qualitative and quantitative disclosures related to capital structure, capital adequacy, capital conservation buffer, general credit risk, counterparty credit risk-related exposures, credit risk mitigation, securitizations, certain equities, and interest rate risk for non-trading activities. In addition, section 63(b) requires quarterly disclosure of a bank’s common equity tier 1 capital, additional tier 1 capital, tier 2 capital, tier 1 and total capital ratios, including the regulatory capital elements and all the regulatory adjustments and deductions needed to calculate the numerator of such ratios; total risk-weighted assets, including the different regulatory adjustments and deductions needed to calculate total risk-weighted assets; regulatory capital ratios during any transition periods, including a description of all the regulatory capital elements and all regulatory adjustments and deductions needed to calculate the numerator and denominator of each capital ratio during any transition period; and a reconciliation of regulatory capital elements as they relate to its balance sheet in any audited consolidated financial statements.


Tables 1 through 10 to section _.63 set forth qualitative and quantitative disclosure requirements for scope of application, capital structure, capital adequacy, capital conservation buffer, credit risk, counterparty credit risk-related exposures, credit risk mitigation, securitizations, equities not subject to Subpart F of the rule, and interest rate risk for non-trading activities.


Advanced Approaches


Sections _.121 and _.122 require that a covered institution adopt a written implementation plan that addresses how it will comply with the framework’s qualification requirements, including incorporation of a comprehensive and sound planning and governance process to oversee the implementation efforts. The institution must also develop processes for assessing capital adequacy in relation to an organization’s risk profile. It must have in place internal risk rating and segmentation systems for wholesale and retail risk exposures, including comprehensive risk parameter quantification processes and processes for annual reviews and analyses of reference data to determine its relevance. It must document its process for identifying, measuring, monitoring, controlling, and internally reporting operational risk; verify the accurate and timely reporting of risk-based capital requirements; and monitor, validate, and refine its advanced systems.


Section _.123 requires an institution to notify its Federal supervisor of changes to advance systems and requires submission of a plan for returning to compliance with qualification requirements.


Section _.124 requires an institution to notify its primary Federal supervisor when it makes a material change to its advanced systems and to develop an implementation plan after any mergers.


Section _.132(b)(2)(iii)(A) addresses counterparty credit risk of repo-style transactions, eligible margin loans, and OTC derivative contracts and allows a bank, with the FDIC’s prior written approval, to calculate haircuts (Hs and Hfx) using its own internal estimates of the volatilities of market prices and foreign exchange rates. To receive FDIC approval to use its own internal estimates, a bank must satisfy the minimum quantitative standards outlined in the section. Section _.132(b)(3) provides that with the prior written approval of the agency, an institution may estimate EAD for a netting set using a VaR model that meets certain requirements. Section _.132(d)(1) allows the use of the internal models methodology to determine EAD for counterparty credit risk for derivative contracts with prior written approval. Section .132(d)(1)(iii) allows the use of the internal models methodology for derivative contracts, eligible margin loans, and repo-style transactions subject to a qualifying cross-product netting agreement with prior written approval. Section _.132(d)(2)(iv) provides that for risk-weighted assets using the internal models methodology (IMM), a bank uses an internal model to estimate the expected exposure (EE) for a netting set and then calculates EAD based on that EE. A bank must calculate two EEs and two EADs (one stressed and one unstressed) for each netting as outlined in this section. Section _.132(d)(3)(vi) requires that a bank, in order to obtain FDIC approval to calculate the distributions of exposures upon which the EAD calculation is based, must demonstrate to the satisfaction of the FDIC that it has been using for at least one year an internal model that broadly meets the minimum standards, with which the bank must maintain compliance. In addition, the bank must have procedures to identify, monitor, and control wrong-way risk throughout the life of an exposure. The procedures must include stress testing and scenario analysis. Section _.132(d)(3)(viii) requires that, when estimating model parameters based on a stress period, the bank must use at least three years of historical data that include a period of stress to the credit default spreads of the bank’s counterparties. The bank must review the data set and update the data as necessary, particularly for any material changes in its counterparties. The bank must demonstrate at least quarterly that the stress period coincides with increased CDS or other credit spreads of the institution’s counterparties. The bank must have procedures to evaluate the effectiveness of its stress calibration that include a process for using benchmark portfolios that are vulnerable to the same risk factors as the institution’s portfolio. The FDIC may require the institution to modify its stress calibration to better reflect actual historic losses of the portfolio. Section _.132(d)(3)(ix) requires that a bank subject its internal model to an initial validation and annual model review process. The model review should consider whether the inputs and risk factors, as well as the model outputs, are appropriate. As part of the model review process, the institution must have a backtesting program for its model that includes a process by which unacceptable model performance will be determined and remedied. Section _.132(d)(3)(x) requires that a bank must have policies for the measurement, management and control of collateral and margin amounts. Section _.132(d)(3)(xi) requires that a bank have a comprehensive stress testing program that captures all credit exposures to counterparties, and incorporates stress testing of principal market risk factors and creditworthiness of counterparties.


Section _.141 addresses operational criteria for recognizing the transfer of risk. Section _.141(b)(3) requires a well-reasoned legal opinion confirming the enforceability of the credit risk mitigant in all relevant jurisdictions. Section _.141(c)(1) requires an advanced approaches bank to demonstrate its comprehensive understanding of a securitization exposure for each securitization exposure by conducting an analysis of the risk characteristics of a securitization exposure prior to acquiring the exposure and document such analysis within three business days after acquiring the exposure. Section _.141(c)(2)(i) and (ii) require that, on an ongoing basis (no less frequently than quarterly), a bank must evaluate, review, and update as appropriate the analysis required under this section for each securitization exposure.

Section _.142, which outlines the capital treatment for securitization exposures, requires that a bank publicly disclose that it has provided implicit support to the securitization and the regulatory capital impact to the bank of providing such implicit support.


Section _.153 provides that a bank must receive prior written approval from its primary Federal supervisor before it can use the Internal Models Approach.


Section 171 specifies that each consolidated bank must publicly disclose its total and tier 1 risk-based capital ratios and their components. Section 142 also requires an institution to publicly disclose that it has provided implicit support to a securitization and the regulatory capital impact to the bank of providing such implicit support.


Section 173 requires a bank that is an advanced approaches bank to make the qualitative and quantitative disclosures described in Tables 1 to 12. The bank must make these disclosures publicly available for each of the last three years (that is, twelve quarters) or such shorter period beginning on the effective date of this subpart E. Table 4 to section _.173 addresses disclosures related to capital conservation and countercyclical buffers; Table 5 to section _.173 addresses general disclosures related to credit risk; Table 9 to section _.173 addresses disclosures related to securitizations; and Table 12 to section _.173 addresses disclosures related interest rate risk for non-trading activities.


3. Use of Technology to Reduce Burden


The agencies use information technology to reduce burden on institutions and decrease costs to insured depository institutions and the agencies. Insured depository institutions are required to store data in an electronic format allowing timely retrieval for analysis, reporting and disclosure purposes. Institutions are also encouraged to provide information for public disclosure on their websites.


4. Efforts to Identify Duplication


The information collected is institution-specific. The information is used to determine the qualification of a bank for application of the rule, and assess the adequacy of a qualifying bank’s risk-based capital. Substantially all of the information collected is not otherwise available.


5. Minimizing the Burden on Small Entities


The collection will have a significant impact on a substantial number of small entities. To minimize the burden on these entities, the Basel III NPR includes a transitional framework that would phase in many of the requirements between January 1, 2013, and January 1, 2018.  Additionally, the Standardized Approach NPR includes an effective date of January 1, 2015, to assist in minimizing potential burden.



6. Consequence of Less Frequent Collections


The FDIC would not be able to adequately monitor capital levels and ensure safety and soundness in covered institutions if the information were collected less frequently.



7. Special Circumstances


The interim final rule requires banks to maintain data used to estimate risk parameters. For wholesale exposures, default data must be maintained for at least 5 years, loss severity data must be maintained for at least 7 years, and exposure amount data must be maintained for at least 7 years. Retail segment exposure default, loss severity and exposure amount data must be maintained for at least five years.


In addition to the requirements for a minimum number of years that data must be maintained, the default, loss severity, and exposure amount data must include periods of economic downturn conditions, or the bank must adjust its estimates of risk parameters to compensate for the lack of data from such periods.


Maintenance of data for these periods is necessary for banks to conduct adequate statistical analysis to support the associated risk parameters used to calculate the risk-based capital requirement.


8. Consultation with Persons Outside the FDIC


The FDIC coordinated closely with the FRB and the OCC in drafting the three notices of proposed rulemakings. In addition, the FDIC and OCC submitted information collection requests to OMB for the recordkeeping and disclosure requirements contained in the proposed rules. In response, OMB filed a comment requesting that the FDIC and OCC examine and respond to public comments on the proposed rules and resubmit their requests at the final rule stage.


Comment on the rules was solicited for a period of 90 days to ensure an opportunity for full public participation. Each agency received over 2,500 public comments on the proposals from banking organizations, trade associations, supervisory authorities, consumer advocacy groups, public officials (including members of the U.S. Congress), private individuals, and other interested parties. A total of nine comments were received concerning paperwork. Seven expressed concern regarding the increase in paperwork resulting from the rule. They addressed the concept of paperwork generally and not within the context of the PRA.


One comment addressed cost, competitiveness, and qualitative impact statements, and noted the lack of cost estimates. It was unclear whether the commenter was referring to cost estimates for regulatory burden, which are included in the preamble to the rule, or cost estimates regarding the PRA burden, which are included in the agencies’ submissions to OMB.


One commenter seemed to indicate that the agencies’ burden estimates are overstated. The commenter stated that, for their institution, the PRA burden will parallel that of interest rate risk (240 hours per year). The agencies’ estimates far exceed that figure, so no change to the estimates was considered necessary. The agencies’ continue to believe that their estimates are reasonable averages that are not overstated.


Nevertheless, the FDIC, by issuing an interim final rule, is providing yet another opportunity for public input.


9. Payment to Respondents


None.


10. Confidentiality


Information deemed confidential is exempt from public disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act (5 U.S.C. 552).


11. Information of a Sensitive Nature


None.


12. Burden Estimates


Summary of Existing Advanced Approaches Burden Estimates:


Frequency of response: Occasional.

Number of respondents: 19.

Average Response Time: Recordkeeping (7,691 hours); disclosures (110 hours).

Total Burden: 7,801 hours.


Cost per response: $100 per hour.

Estimated annual cost: $780,100.


A chart showing a breakdown of the FDIC’s existing burden for this collection is as follows:



Current Advanced Approaches Burden Estimates


BASEL II Advanced Approaches

Estimated

number

of

respondents

Estimated

annual

frequency

Estimated

average time

per response

Estimated

annual burden

hours

Recordkeeping:





Implementation plan

Section _.121(b)

19

1

330 hours

6270

Documentation of operational risk process -- Section _.122(h)

19

1

19 hours

361

Systems maintenance

Sections _.122(a) and _123(a)

19

1

27.9 hours

530

Supervisory approvals

Sections_.122(d)-(h), _.144 & _.153

19

1

16.82 hours

320

Control, oversight and verification of systems – Section _.122 and _.123

19

1

11.05 hours

210

Disclosures

Sections _.142 and 171

19

1

5.78 hours

110






Subtotal -- Recordkeeping




7691

Subtotal --Disclosures




110

Total




7801




Summary of Revised Advanced Approaches Burden Estimates:


Frequency of response: Occasional.

Number of respondents: 8.

Average Response Time: Recordkeeping – 8,326 (3680 one-time burden hours; 4646 ongoing burden hours); disclosures – 3406 (2240 one-time burden hours; 1166 ongoing burden hours).

Total Burden: 11,732 hours.


A chart showing a breakdown of the FDIC’s Advanced Approaches Burden Estimates as revised by the NPR is as follows:


Revised Advanced Approaches Burden Estimates


BASEL III Advanced Approaches

Estimated

number

of

respondents

Estimated

annual

frequency

Estimated

average time

per response

Estimated

annual burden

hours

Recordkeeping:





Implementation plan

Section _.121(b)

8

1

330 hours

2640

Documentation of operational risk process -- Section _.122(h)

8

1

19 hours

152

Systems maintenance

Sections _.122(a), _123(a), _.124(a)

8

1

27.9 hours

223

Supervisory approvals

Sections_.122(d)-(h), _.132(b)(3), _.132(d)(1), _.132(d)(1)(iii)

8

1

16.82 hours

135

Control, oversight and verification of systems – Sections _.122 to _.124

8

1

11.05 hours

88

(CCR)

Section _.132(b)(2)(iii)(A): One-time

8

1

80 hours

640

(CCR)

Section _.132(b)(2)(iii)(A): Ongoing

8

1

16 hours

128

(CCR)

Section _.132(d)(2)(iv): One-time

8

1

80 hours

640

(CCR)

Section _.132(d)(2)(iv): Ongoing

8

1

40 hours

320

(CCR)

Section _.132(d)(3)(vi): One-time

8

1

80 hours

640

(CCR)

Section _.132(d)(3)(viii): One-time

8

1

80 hours

640

(CCR)

Section _.132(d)(3)(viii) Ongoing

8

4

10 hours

320

(CCR)

Section _.132(d)(3)(ix): One-time

8

1

40 hours

320

(CCR)

Section _.132(d)(3)(ix): Ongoing

8

1

40 hours

320

(CCR)

Section _.132(d)(3)(x): One-time

8

1

20 hours

160

(CCR)

Section _.132(d)(3)(xi): One-time

8

1

40 hours

320

(CCR)

Section _.132(d)(3)(xi): Ongoing

8

1

40 hours

320

(OC)

Section _.141(b)(3), _.141(c)(1), _.141(c)(2)(i)-(ii), _.153:: One-time

8

1

40 hours

320

(OC)

Section _.141(c)(2)(i)-(ii): Ongoing

8

4

10 hours

320

Subtotal – One-time Recordkeeping




3680

Subtotal -- OngoingRecordkeeping




4966

Total Recordkeeping




8646






Disclosures:





Sections _.142 and _.171

8

1

5.78

46

Ongoing

(CCCB) _.173, Table 4

(CR) _.173, Table 5

(Securitization) _.173, Table 9

(IRR) _.173, Table 12

8

4

35 hours

1120

One-time

(CCCB) Section _.173, Table 4

(CR) Section _.173, Table 5

(Sec.) Section _.173, Table 9

(IRR) Section _.173, Table 12

8

1

280 hours

2240

Subtotal one-time disclosures




2240

Subtotal ongoing disclosures




1166

Total disclosures




3406






Total Recordkeeping & Disclosures




12,052




In addition, the FDIC is revising the collection to include burden associated with Minimum Capital Ratios and the Standardized Approach for Risk-Weighted Assets. Summaries of the burden for each are provided below:


Summary of New Minimum Regulatory Capital Ratios Burden Estimates:


Frequency of response: Occasional.

Number of respondents: 4,571.

Average Response Time: Recordkeeping – 16 hours.

Total Burden: 73,136 hours.


A chart showing the Minimum Regulatory Capital Ratios burden is provided below:


Minimum Regulatory Capital


Estimated

number

of

respondents

Estimated

annual

frequency

Estimated

average time

per response

Estimated

annual burden

hours

Recordkeeping:





(CCR Operational Requirements)

Sections _.3(c) and_.22(h)(2)(iii)(A): Ongoing

4571

1

16 hours

73,136








Summary of New Standardized Approach Burden Estimates:


Frequency of response: Occasional.

Number of respondents: 4571.

Average Response Time: Recordkeeping – 649,082 (557,662 one-time burden hours; 91,420 ongoing burden hours); disclosures – 3005 (905 one-time burden hours; 2100 ongoing burden hours).

Total Burden: 652,087 hours (558,567 one-time burden hours; 93,520 ongoing burden hours.


A chart showing a breakdown of the FDIC’s Standardized Approach Burden Estimates is as follows:


Standardized Approach

Estimated

number

of

respondents

Estimated

annual

frequency

Estimated

average time

per response

Estimated

annual burden

hours

Recordkeeping:





(QCCP)

Section _.35(b)(3)(i)(A): One-time

4,571

1

2 hours

9,142

(QCCP)

Section _.35(b)(3)(i)(A): Ongoing

4,571

1

2 hours

9,142

(CT)

Section _.37(c)(4)(i)(E): One-time

4,571

1

80 hours

365,680

(CT)

Section _.37(c)(4)(i)(E): Ongoing

4,571

1

16 hours

73,136

(SE)

Section _.41(b)(3) and _.41(c)(2)(i): One-time

4,571

1

40 hours

182,840

(SE)

Section _.41(c)(2)(i): Ongoing

4,571

1

2 hours

9,142

Disclosures:1





One-time

(S.E.) Section _.42(e)(2),

(C.R.) Sections_.62(a),(b),& (c),

(Q&Q) Sections_.63(a) & (b)

4

1

226.25 hours

905

Ongoing

(S.E.) Section _.42(e)(2),

(C.R.) Sections_.62(a),(b),& (c),

(Q&Q) Sections_.63(a) & (b) and _.63 Tables

4

4

131.25 hours

2,100

Total one-time




558,567

Total ongoing




93,520

Total




652,087



Summary of Total Revised Burden:


Minimum Capital Ratios – 73,136 hours

Standardized Approach – 652,087 hours

Advanced Approaches – 12,052 hours


Total burden hours – 737,275 hours


Estimated Ongoing Cost to Respondents:


To estimate compensation costs associated with the final rule, we used $85 per hour, which is based on the average of the 90th percentile for seven occupations (i.e., accountants and auditors, compliance officers, financial analysts, lawyers, management occupations, software developers, and statisticians) plus an additional 33 percent to cover adjustments and private sector benefits.2 (One-time start-up costs are included in #13 below.)


172,788 hours x $85 = $14,686,980

$14,686,980 x 0.33 = $4,846,703

$14,686,980 + $4,846,703 = $19,533,683

13. Capital, Start-Up and Maintenance Costs


Estimated capital and start-up costs are as follows:


NPR 1                                            $      6,581 x 4,571 entities = $  30,081,751

NPR 2 (Standardized Approach)   $  120,258 x 4,571 entities = $ 549,699,318

NPR 3 (Advanced Approaches)     $ 1,040,000 x 8 entities =  $   8,320,000

Total                                                                                          $ 588,101,069


14. Estimated Annual Cost to the Federal Government


The FDIC assumes that annually the 8 qualifying banks will each make 4 requests for approval under various sections of the interim final rule. At 10 hours per approval and at a cost of $80 per hour, the total cost to the FDIC is $25,600.


15. Reason for Change in Burden


The increase in burden of 729,474 hours reflects an adjustment of -4517 hours resulting from a decrease in the number of respondents for the Advanced Approaches requirements and a program change of +733,991 hours arising from new Minimum Regulatory Capital Ratio, Standardized Approach, and Advanced Approaches requirements.


16. Publication


No publication is made of the information.


17. Display of Expiration Dates


Not applicable.


18. Exceptions to Certification


None.


B. Statistical Methods


Not applicable.


1 Banks with total consolidated assets of $50 billion or more that is not an advanced approaches bank

2 According to BLS’ employer costs of employee benefits data, thirty percent represents the average private sector costs of employee benefits.

14


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