On October 30, the OCC and FDIC proposed substantively the same liquidity rule as the proposal approved by the Fed on October 24. That proposal developed by the three agencies applies to: (i) banking organizations with $250 billion consolidated assets; (ii) banking organizations with $10 billion in on-balance sheet foreign exposure; (iii) systemically important, non-bank financial institutions that do not have substantial insurance subsidiaries or substantial insurance operations; and (iv) bank and savings association subsidiaries thereof that have total consolidated assets of $10 billion (covered institutions). The proposed rule does not apply to community banks.
Covered institutions would be required to maintain a specified level of high-quality liquid assets such as central bank reserves, government and Government Sponsored Enterprise securities and corporate debt securities that can be converted easily into cash. Under the proposal, a covered institution would be required to hold such high-quality liquid assets on each business day in an amount equal to or greater than its projected cash outflows less its projected cash inflows over a 30-day period. The proposed rule is consistent with the Basel Committee’s LCR standard, but is more stringent in terms of the range of assets that will qualify and the assumed rate of outflows of certain types of funding. Release. Proposed Rule.