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Code · CFR · Title 12 — Banks and Banking · Part 206 — Limitations on Interbank Liabilities (Regulation F) · § 206.4

§ 206.4. Credit exposure.

784 words·~4 min read·/us/cfr/t12/s§ 206.4·

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(a)Limits on credit exposure.
(1)The policies and procedures on exposure established by a bank under § 206.3(c) of this part shall limit a bank's interday credit exposure to an individual correspondent to not more than 25 percent of the bank's total capital, unless the bank can demonstrate that its correspondent is at least adequately capitalized, as defined in § 206.5(a) of this part.
(2)Where a bank is no longer able to demonstrate that a correspondent is at least adequately capitalized for the purposes of § 206.4(a) of this part, including where the bank cannot obtain adequate information concerning the capital ratios of the correspondent, the bank shall reduce its credit exposure to comply with the requirements of § 206.4(a)(1) of this part within 120 days after the date when the current Report of Condition and Income or other relevant report normally would be available.
(b)Calculation of credit exposure. Except as provided in §§ 206.4
(c)and
(d)of this part, the credit exposure of a bank to a correspondent shall consist of the bank's assets and off-balance sheet items that are subject to capital requirements under the capital adequacy guidelines of the bank's primary federal supervisor, and that involve claims on the correspondent or capital instruments issued by the correspondent. For this purpose, off-balance sheet items shall be valued on the basis of current exposure. The term “credit exposure” does not include exposure related to the settlement of transactions, intraday exposure, transactions in an agency or similar capacity where losses will be passed back to the principal or other party, or other sources of exposure that are not covered by the capital adequacy guidelines.
(c)Netting. Transactions covered by netting agreements that are valid and enforceable under all applicable laws may be netted in calculating credit exposure.
(d)Exclusions. A bank may exclude the following from the calculation of credit exposure to a correspondent:
(1)Transactions, including reverse repurchase agreements, to the extent that the transactions are secured by government securities or readily marketable collateral, as defined in paragraph
(f)of this section, based on the current market value of the collateral;
(2)The proceeds of checks and other cash items deposited in an account at a correspondent that are not yet available for withdrawal;
(3)Quality assets, as defined in paragraph
(f)of this section, on which the correspondent is secondarily liable, or obligations of the correspondent on which a creditworthy obligor in addition to the correspondent is available, including but not limited to:
(i)Loans to third parties secured by stock or debt obligations of the correspondent;
(ii)Loans to third parties purchased from the correspondent with recourse;
(iii)Loans or obligations of third parties backed by stand-by letters of credit issued by the correspondent; or
(iv)Obligations of the correspondent backed by stand-by letters of credit issued by a creditworthy third party;
(4)exposure that results from the merger with or acquisition of another bank for one year after that merger or acquisition is consummated; and
(5)The portion of the bank's exposure to the correspondent that is covered by federal deposit insurance.
(e)Credit exposure of subsidiaries. In calculating credit exposure to a correspondent under this part, a bank shall include credit exposure to the correspondent of any entity that the bank is required to consolidate on its Report of Condition and Income or Thrift Financial Report.
(f)Definitions. As used in this section:
(1)Government securities means obligations of, or obligations fully guaranteed as to principal and interest by, the United States government or any department, agency, bureau, board, commission, or establishment of the United States, or any corporation wholly owned, directly or indirectly, by the United States.
(2)Readily marketable collateral means financial instruments or bullion that may be sold in ordinary circumstances with reasonable promptness at a fair market value determined by quotations based on actual transactions on an auction or a similarly available daily bid- ask-price market. (3)(i) Quality asset means an asset:
(A)That is not in a nonaccrual status;
(B)On which principal or interest is not more than thirty days past due; and
(C)Whose terms have not been renegotiated or compromised due to the deteriorating financial conditions of the additional obligor.
(ii)An asset is not considered a “quality asset” if any other loans to the primary obligor on the asset have been classified as “substandard,” “doubtful,” or “loss,” or treated as “other loans specially mentioned” in the most recent report of examination or inspection of the bank or an affiliate prepared by either a federal or a state supervisory agency. [Reg. F, 57 FR 60106, Dec. 18, 1992, as amended at 68 FR 53283, Sept. 10, 2003]
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