← Independent regulator rules (SEC/Fed/FDIC/SBA/FTC/NCUA/CPSC/FHFA/EEOC/NLRB)

Net Stable Funding Ratio: Liquidity Risk Measurement Standards and Disclosure Requirements

Fed · final-rule · Published 2021-02-11 · Effective 2021-07-01 · 86 FR 9120

Document

Document number
2020-26546
Federal Register citation
86 FR 9120
CFR reference
12 CFR 50
Type
Rule
Action
Final rule.
Category
final-rule
Agency
US Federal Reserve System
Publication date
2021-02-11
Effective date
2021-07-01
Docket
Docket ID OCC-2014-0029

Abstract

The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board), and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) (collectively, the agencies) are adopting a final rule that implements a stable funding requirement, known as the net stable funding ratio (NSFR), for certain large banking organizations. The final rule establishes a quantitative metric, the NSFR, to measure the stability of the funding profile of certain large banking organizations and requires these banking organizations to maintain minimum amounts of stable funding to support their assets, commitments, and derivatives exposures over a one-year time horizon. The NSFR is designed to reduce the likelihood that disruptions to a banking organization's regular sources of funding will compromise its liquidity position, promote effective liquidity risk management, and support the ability of banking organizations to provide financial intermediation to businesses and households across a range of market conditions. The NSFR supports financial stability by requiring banking organizations to fund their activities with stable sources of funding on an ongoing basis, reducing the possibility that funding shocks would substantially increase distress at individual banking organizations. The final rule applies to certain large U.S. depository institution holding companies, depository institutions, and U.S. intermediate holding companies of foreign banking organizations, each with total consolidated assets of $100 billion or more, together with certain depository institution subsidiaries (together, covered companies). Under the final rule, the NSFR requirement increases in stringency based on risk-based measures of the top-tier covered company. U.S. depository institution holding companies and U.S. intermediate holding companies subject to the final rule are required to publicly disclose their NSFR and certain components of their NSFR every second and fourth calendar

Source

Authoritative
Federal Register document
Machine
JSON-LD · Markdown