97-26207. Supervisory Policy Statement on Investment Securities and End- User Derivatives Activities  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 192 (Friday, October 3, 1997)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 51862-51867]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-26207]
    
    
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    FEDERAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS EXAMINATION COUNCIL
    
    
    Supervisory Policy Statement on Investment Securities and End-
    User Derivatives Activities
    
    AGENCY: Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council.
    
    ACTION: Notice and request for comment.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (FRB), 
    the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), the Office of the 
    Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), the Office of Thrift Supervision 
    (OTS), and the National Credit Union Administration (NCUA) 
    (collectively referred to as the agencies), under the auspices of the 
    Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council (FFIEC), request 
    comment on a Supervisory Policy Statement on Investment Securities and 
    End-User Derivatives Activities (1997 Statement) to provide guidance on 
    sound practices for managing the risks of investment activities. The 
    agencies also are seeking comment on their intent to rescind the 
    Supervisory Policy Statement on Securities Activities published on 
    February 3, 1992 (1992 Statement). Many elements of that prior 
    statement are retained in the 1997 Statement, while other elements have 
    been revised or eliminated. Changes in generally accepted accounting 
    principles, various developments in both securities and derivatives 
    markets, and revisions to the regulators' approach to risk management 
    have contributed to the need to reassess the 1992 Statement. In 
    particular, the agencies are proposing to eliminate the specific 
    constraints on investing in ``high risk'' mortgage derivative products 
    that were stated in the 1992 Statement. The agencies believe that it is 
    a sound practice for institutions to understand the risks related to 
    their investment holdings. Accordingly, the 1997 Statement substitutes 
    broader guidance than the specific pass/fail requirements contained in 
    the 1992 Statement. Other than for the supervisory guidance contained 
    in the 1992 Statement, the 1997 Statement does not supersede any other 
    requirements of the respective agencies' statutory rules, regulations, 
    policies, or supervisory guidance.
    
    DATES: Comments must be received by November 17, 1997.
    
    ADDRESSES: Comments should be sent to Joe M. Cleaver, Executive 
    Secretary, Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council, 2100 
    Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Suite 200, Washington, D.C. 20037 or by 
    facsimile transmission to (202) 634-6556.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: FRB: James Embersit, Manager, 
    Financial Analysis, (202) 452-5249, Division of Banking Supervision and 
    Regulation; Gregory Baer, Managing Senior Counsel, (202) 452-3236, 
    Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. For the hearing 
    impaired only, Telecommunication Device for the Deaf (TDD), Dorothea 
    Thompson, (202) 452-3544, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve 
    System, 20th and C Streets, NW, Washington, DC 20551.
        FDIC: William A. Stark, Assistant Director, (202) 898-6972, Miguel 
    D. Browne, Manager, (202) 898-6789, John J. Feid, Chief, Risk 
    Management, (202) 898-8649, Division of Supervision; Michael B. 
    Phillips, Counsel, (202) 898-3581, Legal Division, Federal Deposit 
    Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20429.
        OCC: Kurt Wilhelm, National Bank Examiner, (202) 874-5670, J. Ray 
    Diggs, National Bank Examiner, (202) 874-5670, Treasury and Market 
    Risk; Mark J. Tenhundfeld, Assistant Director, (202) 874-5090, 
    Legislative and Regulatory Activities Division, Office of the 
    Comptroller of the Currency, 250 E Street, SW, Washington, DC 20219.
        OTS: Robert A. Kazdin, Senior Project Manager, (202) 906-5759, 
    Anthony G. Cornyn, Director, (202) 906-5727, Risk Management; Christine 
    Harrington, Counsel (Banking and Finance), (202) 906-7957, Regulations 
    and Legislation Division, Chief Counsel's Office, Office
    
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    of Thrift Supervision, 1700 G Street, NW, Washington, DC 20552.
        NCUA: Daniel Gordon, Senior Investment Officer, (703) 518-6360, 
    Office of Investment Services; Lisa Henderson, Attorney, (703) 518-
    6540, National Credit Union Administration, 1775 Duke Street, 
    Alexandria, VA 22314-3428.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In 1992, the agencies implemented the 
    FFIEC's Supervisory Policy Statement on Securities Activities. The 1992 
    Statement addressed: (1) Selection of securities dealers, (2) portfolio 
    policy and strategies (including unsuitable investment practices), and 
    (3) residential mortgage derivative products (MDPs).
        The final section of the 1992 Statement directed institutions to 
    subject MDPs to supervisory tests to determine the degree of risk and 
    the investment portfolio eligibility of these instruments. At that 
    time, the agencies believed that many institutions had demonstrated an 
    insufficient understanding of the risks associated with investments in 
    MDPs. This occurred, in part, because most MDPs were issued or backed 
    by collateral guaranteed by government sponsored enterprises. 
    Therefore, most MDPs were not subject to legal investment limits. The 
    agencies were concerned that the absence of significant credit risk on 
    most MDPs had allowed institutions to overlook the significant interest 
    rate risk present in certain structures of these instruments. In an 
    effort to enhance the investment decision making process at financial 
    institutions, and to emphasize the interest rate risk of highly price 
    sensitive instruments, the agencies implemented supervisory tests 
    designed to identify those MDPs with price and average life risks 
    greater than a newly issued residential mortgage pass-through security.
        These supervisory tests provided a discipline that helped 
    institutions to better understand the risks of MDPs prior to purchase. 
    The 1992 Statement generally provided that institutions should not hold 
    a high risk MDP in their investment portfolios.1 A high risk 
    MDP was defined as a mortgage derivative security that failed any of 
    three supervisory tests. The three tests included: an average life 
    test, an average life sensitivity test, and a price sensitivity 
    test.2
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        \1\ The only exceptions granted were for those high risk 
    securities that either reduced interest rate risk or were placed in 
    a trading account. Federal credit unions were not permitted these 
    exceptions.
        \2\ Average Life: Weighted average life of no more than 10 
    years; Average Life Sensitivity: (a) Weighted average life extends 
    by not more than 4 years (300 basis point parallel shift in rates), 
    (b) weighted average life shortens by no more than 6 years (300 
    basis point parallel shift in rates); Price Sensitivity: price does 
    not change by more than 17 percent (increase or decrease) for a 300 
    basis point parallel shift in rates.
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        These supervisory tests, commonly referred to as the ``high risk 
    tests,'' successfully protected institutions from significant losses in 
    MDPs. By requiring a pre-purchase price sensitivity analysis that 
    helped institutions to better understand the interest rate risk of 
    MDPs, the high risk tests effectively precluded institutions from 
    investing in many types of MDPs that resulted in large losses for other 
    investors. However, the high risk tests may have created unintended 
    distortions of the investment decision making process. Many 
    institutions eliminated all MDPs from their investment choices, 
    regardless of the risk versus return merits of such instruments. These 
    reactions were due, in part, to concerns about regulatory burden, such 
    as higher than normal examiner review of MDPs. By focusing only on 
    MDPs, the test and its accompanying burden indirectly provided 
    incentives for institutions to acquire other types of securities with 
    complex cash flows, often with price sensitivities similar to high risk 
    MDPs. The emergence of the structured note market is just one example. 
    The test may have also created the impression that supervisors were 
    more concerned with the type of instrument involved (i.e., residential 
    mortgage products), rather than the risk characteristics of the 
    instrument, since only MDPs were subject to the high risk test. The 
    specification of tests applied to individual securities may have also 
    inhibited some institutions from applying more comprehensive analytical 
    techniques at the portfolio and institutional level.
        As a result, the agencies no longer believe that the pass/fail 
    criteria of the high risk tests as applied to specific instruments are 
    useful for the supervision of well-managed institutions. The agencies 
    believe that an effective risk management program, through which an 
    institution identifies, measures, monitors, and controls the risks of 
    investment activities, provides a better framework. Consequently, the 
    agencies are proposing to rescind the 1992 Policy Statement and 
    eliminate the high risk tests as binding constraints on MDP purchases.
        Effective risk management addresses risks across all types of 
    instruments on an investment portfolio basis and ideally, across the 
    entire institution. The complexity of many financial products, both on 
    and off the balance sheet, has increased the need for a more 
    comprehensive approach to the risk management of investment activities. 
    To advance such an initiative, the agencies are seeking industry 
    comment on the practices identified in the proposed policy statement.
        The proposal to rescind the high risk tests as a constraint on an 
    institution's investment activities does not signal that MDPs with high 
    levels of price risk are either appropriate or inappropriate 
    investments for an institution. Whether a security, MDP or otherwise, 
    is an appropriate investment depends upon a variety of factors, 
    including the institution's capital level, the security's impact on the 
    aggregate risk of the portfolio, and management's ability to measure 
    and manage risk. The agencies continue to believe that the stress 
    testing of MDP investments, as well as other investments, has 
    significant value for risk management purposes. Institutions should 
    employ valuation methodologies that take into account all of the risk 
    elements necessary to price these investments. The proposed policy 
    statement indicates that the agencies believe, as a matter of sound 
    practice, institutions should know the value and price sensitivity of 
    their investments prior to purchase and on an ongoing basis.
        The proposed text of the 1997 Statement follows.
    
    Supervisory Policy Statement on Investment Securities and End-User 
    Derivatives Activities
    
    I. Purpose
    
        This policy statement (Statement) provides guidance to financial 
    institutions (institutions) on sound practices for managing the risks 
    of investment securities and end-user derivatives activities. The FFIEC 
    agencies--the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the 
    Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, the Office of the Comptroller of 
    the Currency, the Office of Thrift Supervision, and the National Credit 
    Union Administration--believe that effective management of the risks 
    associated with securities and derivative instruments represents an 
    essential component of safe and sound practices. This guidance 
    describes the practices that a prudent manager normally would follow 
    and is not intended to be a checklist. Management should establish 
    practices and maintain documentation appropriate to the institution's 
    individual circumstances, consistent with this Statement.
    
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    II. Scope
    
        This guidance applies to all securities in held-to-maturity and 
    available-for-sale accounts as defined in the Statement of Financial 
    Accounting Standards No. 115 (FAS 115), certificates of deposit held 
    for investment purposes, and end-user derivative contracts not held in 
    trading accounts. This guidance covers all securities used for 
    investment purposes, including: money market instruments, fixed-rate 
    and floating-rate notes and bonds, structured notes, mortgage pass-
    through and other asset-backed securities, and mortgage-derivative 
    products. Similarly, this guidance covers all end-user derivative 
    instruments used for nontrading purposes, such as swaps, futures, and 
    options.3 This Statement applies to all federally-insured 
    commercial banks, savings banks, savings associations, and federally 
    chartered credit unions.
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        \3\ Federal credit unions are not permitted to purchase asset-
    backed securities and may participate in derivative programs only if 
    authorized by the NCUA.
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        As a matter of sound practice, institutions should have programs to 
    manage the market, credit, liquidity, legal, operational and other 
    risks of investment securities and end-user derivatives activities 
    (investment activities). While risk management programs will differ 
    among institutions, there are certain elements that are fundamental to 
    all sound risk management programs. These elements include board and 
    senior management oversight and a comprehensive risk management process 
    that effectively identifies, measures, monitors, and controls risk. 
    This Statement describes sound principles and practices for managing 
    and controlling the risks associated with investment activities.
        Institutions should fully understand and effectively manage the 
    risks inherent in their investment activities. Failure to understand 
    and adequately manage the risks in these areas constitutes an unsafe 
    and unsound practice.
    
    III. Board and Senior Management Oversight
    
        Board of director and senior management oversight is an integral 
    part of an effective risk management program. The board of directors is 
    responsible for approving major policies for conducting investment 
    activities, including the establishment of risk limits. The board 
    should ensure that management has the requisite skills to manage the 
    risks associated with such activities. To properly discharge its 
    oversight responsibilities, the board should review portfolio activity 
    and risk levels, and require management to demonstrate compliance with 
    approved risk limits. Boards should have an adequate understanding of 
    investment activities. Boards that do not, should obtain professional 
    advice to enhance its understanding of investment activity oversight, 
    so as to enable it to meet its responsibilities under this Statement.
        Senior management is responsible for the daily management of an 
    institution's investments. Management should establish and enforce 
    policies and procedures for conducting investment activities on both a 
    long-range (strategic) and day-to-day (operational) basis. Senior 
    management should have an understanding of the nature and level of 
    various risks involved in the institution's investments and how such 
    risks fit within the institution's overall business strategies. 
    Management should ensure that the risk management process is 
    commensurate with the size, scope, and complexity of the institution's 
    holdings. Management should also ensure that the responsibilities for 
    managing investment activities are properly segregated to maintain 
    operational integrity. Institutions with significant investment 
    activities should ensure that back-office, settlement, and transaction 
    reconciliation responsibilities are conducted and managed by personnel 
    who are independent of those initiating risk taking positions.
    
    IV. Risk Management Process
    
        An effective risk management process for investment activities 
    includes: (1) Policies, procedures, and limits; (2) the identification, 
    measurement, and reporting of risk exposures; and (3) a system of 
    internal controls.
    Policies, Procedures, and Limits
        Investment policies, procedures, and limits provide the structure 
    to effectively manage investment activities. Policies should be 
    consistent with the organization's broader business strategies, capital 
    adequacy, technical expertise, and risk tolerance. Policies should 
    identify relevant investment objectives, constraints, and guidelines 
    for the acquisition and ongoing management of securities and derivative 
    instruments. Potential investment objectives include: generating 
    earnings, providing liquidity, hedging risk exposures, taking risk 
    positions, modifying and managing risk profiles, managing tax 
    liabilities, and meeting pledging requirements, if applicable. Policies 
    should also identify the risk characteristics of permissible 
    investments and should delineate clear lines of responsibility and 
    authority for investment activities.
        An institution's policies should ensure an understanding of the 
    risks and cashflow characteristics of its investments. This is 
    particularly important for products that have unusual, leveraged, or 
    highly variable cashflows. An institution should not acquire a material 
    position in an instrument until senior management and all relevant 
    personnel understand and can manage the risks associated with the 
    product.
        An institution's investment activities should be fully integrated 
    into any institution-wide risk limits. In so doing, some institutions 
    rely only on the institution-wide limits, while others may apply limits 
    at the investment portfolio, sub-portfolio, or individual instrument 
    level.
        The board and senior management should review, at least annually, 
    the appropriateness of its investment strategies, policies, procedures, 
    and limits.
    Risk Identification, Measurement and Reporting
        Institutions should ensure that they identify and measure the risks 
    associated with individual transactions prior to acquisition and 
    periodically after purchase. Depending upon the complexity and 
    sophistication of the risk measurement systems, this can be done at the 
    institutional, portfolio, or individual instrument level. Prudent 
    management of investment activities entails examination of the risk 
    profile of a particular investment in light of its impact on the risk 
    profile of the institution. To the extent practicable, institutions 
    should measure exposures to each type of risk and these measurements 
    should be aggregated and integrated with similar exposures arising from 
    other business activities to obtain the institution's overall risk 
    profile.
        In measuring risks, institutions should conduct their own in-house 
    pre-acquisition analyses, or to the extent possible, make use of 
    specific third party analyses that are independent of the seller or 
    counterparty. Irrespective of any responsibility, legal or otherwise, 
    assumed by a dealer, counterparty, or financial advisor regarding a 
    transaction, the acquiring institution is ultimately responsible for 
    the appropriate personnel understanding and managing the risks of the 
    transaction into which it enters.
        Reports to the board of directors and senior management should 
    summarize the risks related to the institution's
    
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    investment activities and should address compliance with the investment 
    policy's objectives, constraints, and legal requirements, including any 
    exceptions to established policies, procedures, and limits. Reports to 
    management should generally reflect more detail than reports to the 
    board of the institution. Reporting should be frequent enough to 
    provide timely and adequate information to judge the changing nature of 
    the institution's risk profile and to evaluate compliance with stated 
    policy objectives and constraints.
    Internal Controls
        An institution's internal control structure is critical to the safe 
    and sound functioning of the organization generally and the management 
    of investment activities in particular. A system of internal controls 
    promotes efficient operations, reliable financial and regulatory 
    reporting, and compliance with relevant laws, regulations, and 
    institutional policies. An effective system of internal controls 
    includes enforcing official lines of authority, maintaining appropriate 
    separation of duties, and conducting independent reviews of investment 
    activities.
        For institutions with significant investment activities, internal 
    and external audits are integral to the implementation of a risk 
    management process to control risks in investment activities. An 
    institution should conduct periodic independent reviews of its risk 
    management program to ensure its integrity, accuracy, and 
    reasonableness. Items that should be reviewed include:
        (1) Compliance with and the appropriateness of investment policies, 
    procedures, and limits;
        (2) The appropriateness of the institution's risk measurement 
    system given the nature, scope, and complexity of its activities;
        (3) The timeliness, integrity, and usefulness of reports to the 
    board of directors and senior management.
        The review should note exceptions to policies, procedures, and 
    limits and suggest corrective actions. The findings of such reviews 
    should be reported to the board and corrective actions taken on a 
    timely basis.
        The accounting systems and procedures used for public and 
    regulatory reporting purposes are critically important to the 
    evaluation of an organization's risk profile and the assessment of its 
    financial condition and capital adequacy. Accordingly, an institution's 
    policies should provide clear guidelines regarding the reporting 
    treatment for all securities and derivatives holdings. This treatment 
    should be consistent with the organization's business objectives, 
    generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP), and regulatory 
    reporting standards.
    
    V. The Risks of Investment Activities
    
        The following discussion identifies particular sound practices for 
    managing the specific risks involved in investment activities. In 
    addition to these sound practices, institutions should follow any 
    specific guidance or requirements from their primary supervisor related 
    to these activities.
    Market Risk
        Market risk is the risk to an institution's financial condition 
    resulting from adverse changes in the value of its holdings arising 
    from movements in interest rates, foreign exchange rates, equity 
    prices, or commodity prices. An institution's exposure to market risk 
    can be measured by assessing the effect of changing rates and prices on 
    either the earnings or economic value of an individual instrument, a 
    portfolio, or the entire institution. For most institutions, the most 
    significant market risk of investment activities is interest rate risk.
        Investment activities may represent a significant component of an 
    institution's overall interest rate risk profile. It is a sound 
    practice for institutions to manage interest rate risk on an 
    institution-wide basis. This sound practice includes monitoring the 
    price sensitivity of the institution's investment portfolio (changes in 
    the investment portfolio's value over different interest rate/yield 
    curve scenarios). Consistent with agency guidance, institutions should 
    specify institution-wide interest rate risk limits that appropriately 
    account for these activities and the strength of the institution's 
    capital position. These limits are generally established for economic 
    value or earnings exposures. Institutions may find it useful to 
    establish price sensitivity limits on their investment portfolio or on 
    individual securities. These sub-institution limits, if established, 
    should also be consistent with agency guidance.
        It is a sound practice for an institution's management to fully 
    understand the market risks associated with investment securities and 
    derivative instruments prior to acquisition and on an ongoing basis. 
    Accordingly, institutions should have appropriate policies to ensure 
    such understanding. In particular, institutions should have policies 
    that specify the types of market risk analyses that should be conducted 
    for various types or classes of instruments, including that conducted 
    prior to their acquisition (pre-purchase analysis) and on an ongoing 
    basis. Policies should also specify any required documentation needed 
    to verify the analysis.
        It is expected that the substance and form of such analyses will 
    vary with the type of instrument. Not all investment instruments may 
    need to be subjected to a pre-purchase analysis. Relatively simple or 
    standardized instruments, the risks of which are well known to the 
    institution, would likely require no or significantly less analysis 
    than would more volatile, complex instruments.4
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        \4\ Federal credit unions must comply with the investment 
    monitoring requirements of 12 CFR Sec. 703.90. See 62 FR 32989 (June 
    18, 1997).
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        For relatively more complex instruments, less familiar instruments, 
    and potentially volatile instruments, institutions should fully address 
    pre-purchase analyses in their policies. Price sensitivity analysis is 
    an effective way to perform the pre-purchase analysis of individual 
    instruments. For example, a pre-purchase analysis should show the 
    impact of an immediate parallel shift in the yield curve of plus and 
    minus 100, 200, and 300 basis points. Where appropriate, such analysis 
    should encompass a wider range of scenarios, including non-parallel 
    changes in the yield curve. A comprehensive analysis may also take into 
    account other relevant factors, such as changes in interest rate 
    volatility and changes in credit spreads.
        When the incremental effect of an investment position is likely to 
    have a significant effect on the risk profile of the institution, it is 
    a sound practice to analyze the effect of such a position on the 
    overall financial condition of the institution.
        Accurately measuring an institution's market risk requires timely 
    information about the current carrying and market values of its 
    investments. Accordingly, institutions should have market risk 
    measurement systems commensurate with the size and nature of these 
    investments. Institutions with significant holdings of highly complex 
    instruments should ensure that they have the means to value their 
    positions. Institutions employing internal models should have adequate 
    procedures to validate the models and to periodically review all 
    elements of the modeling process, including its assumptions and risk 
    measurement techniques. Managements relying on third parties for market 
    risk measurement systems and analyses should ensure that they
    
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    fully understand the assumptions and techniques used.
        Institutions should provide reports to their boards on the market 
    risk exposures of their investments on a regular basis. To do so, the 
    institution may report the market risk exposure of the whole 
    institution. Otherwise, these reports should contain evaluations that 
    assess trends in aggregate market risk exposure and the performance of 
    portfolios in terms of established objectives and risk constraints. 
    They also should identify compliance with board approved limits and 
    identify any exceptions to established standards. Institutions should 
    have mechanisms to detect and adequately address exceptions to limits 
    and guidelines. Management reports on market risk should appropriately 
    address potential exposures to yield curve changes and other factors 
    pertinent to the institution's holdings.
    Credit Risk
        Broadly defined, credit risk is the risk that an issuer or 
    counterparty will fail to perform on an obligation to the institution. 
    For many financial institutions, credit risk in the investment 
    portfolio may be low relative to other areas, such as lending. However, 
    this risk, as with any other risk, should be effectively identified, 
    measured, monitored, and controlled.
        An institution should not acquire investments or enter into 
    derivative contracts without assessing the creditworthiness of the 
    issuer or counterparty. The credit risk arising from these positions 
    should be incorporated into the overall credit risk profile of the 
    institution as comprehensively as practicable. Institutions are legally 
    required to meet certain quality standards (i.e., investment grade) for 
    security purchases. Many institutions maintain and update ratings 
    reports from one of the major rating services. For non-rated 
    securities, institutions should establish guidelines to ensure that the 
    securities meet legal requirements and that the institution fully 
    understands the risk involved. Institutions should establish limits on 
    individual counterparty exposures. Policies should also provide credit 
    risk and concentration limits. Such limits may define concentrations 
    relating to a single or related issuer or counterparty, a geographical 
    area, or obligations with similar characteristics.
        In managing credit risk, institutions should consider settlement 
    and pre-settlement credit risk. These risks are the possibility that a 
    counterparty will fail to honor its obligation at or before the time of 
    settlement. The selection of dealers, investment bankers, and brokers 
    is particularly important in effectively managing these risks. An 
    institution's policies should identify criteria for selecting these 
    organizations and should list all approved firms. The approval process 
    should include a review of each firm's financial statements and an 
    evaluation of its ability to honor its commitments. An inquiry into the 
    general reputation of the dealer is also appropriate. This includes 
    review of information from state or federal securities regulators and 
    industry self-regulatory organizations such as the National Association 
    of Securities Dealers concerning any formal enforcement actions against 
    the dealer, its affiliates, or associated personnel.
        The board of directors, or a committee thereof, should set limits 
    on the amounts and types of transactions authorized for each securities 
    firm with whom the institution deals. At least annually, the board of 
    directors should review and reconfirm the list of authorized dealers, 
    investment bankers, and brokers.
        Sound credit risk management requires that credit limits be 
    developed by personnel who are as independent as practicable of the 
    acquisition function. In authorizing issuer and counterparty credit 
    lines, these personnel should use standards that are consistent with 
    those used for other activities conducted within the institution and 
    with the organization's over-all policies and consolidated exposures.
    Liquidity Risk
        Liquidity risk is the risk that an institution cannot easily sell, 
    unwind, or offset a particular position at a fair price because of 
    inadequate market depth. In specifying permissible instruments for 
    accomplishing established objectives, institutions should ensure that 
    they take into account the liquidity of the market for those 
    instruments and the effect that such characteristics have on achieving 
    their objectives. The liquidity of certain types of instruments may 
    make them inappropriate for certain objectives. Institutions should 
    ensure that they consider the effects that market risk can have on the 
    liquidity of different types of instruments under various scenarios. 
    Accordingly, institutions should articulate clearly the liquidity 
    characteristics of instruments to be used in accomplishing 
    institutional objectives.
        Complex and illiquid instruments can often involve greater risk 
    than actively traded, more liquid securities. Oftentimes, this higher 
    potential risk arising from illiquidity is not captured by standardized 
    financial modeling techniques. Such risk is particularly acute for 
    instruments that are highly leveraged or that are designed to benefit 
    from specific, narrowly defined market shifts. If market prices or 
    rates do not move as expected, the demand for such instruments can 
    evaporate, decreasing the market value of the instrument below the 
    modeled value.
    Operational (Transaction) Risk
        Operational (transaction) risk is the risk that deficiencies in 
    information systems or internal controls will result in unexpected 
    loss. Sources of operating risk include inadequate procedures, human 
    error, system failure, or fraud. Inaccurately assessing or controlling 
    operating risks is one of the more likely sources of problems facing 
    institutions involved in investment activities.
        Effective internal controls are the first line of defense in 
    controlling the operating risks involved in an institution's investment 
    activities. Of particular importance are internal controls that ensure 
    the separation of duties and supervision of persons executing 
    transactions from those responsible for processing contracts, 
    confirming transactions, controlling various clearing accounts, 
    preparing or posting the accounting entries, approving the accounting 
    methodology or entries, and performing revaluations.
        Consistent with the operational support of other activities within 
    the financial institution, securities operations should be as 
    independent as practicable from business units. Adequate resources 
    should be devoted, such that systems and capacity are commensurate with 
    the size and complexity of the institution's investment activities. 
    Effective risk management should also include, at least, the following:
         Valuation. Procedures should ensure independent portfolio 
    pricing. For thinly traded or illiquid securities, completely 
    independent pricing may be difficult. In such cases, operational units 
    may need to use portfolio manager prices. For unique instruments where 
    the pricing is being provided by a single source (e.g., the dealer 
    providing the instrument), the institution should review and understand 
    the assumptions used to price the instrument.
         Personnel. The increasingly complex nature of securities 
    available in the marketplace makes it important that operational 
    personnel have strong technical skills. This will enable them to better 
    understand the complex financial structures of some investment 
    instruments.
    
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         Documentation. Institutions should clearly define 
    documentation requirements for securities transactions, saving and 
    safeguarding important documents, as well as maintaining possession and 
    control of instruments purchased.
        An institution's policies should also provide guidelines for 
    conflicts of interest for employees who are directly involved in 
    purchasing and selling securities for the institution from securities 
    dealers. These guidelines should ensure that all directors, officers, 
    and employees act in the best interest of the institution. The board 
    may wish to adopt policies prohibiting these employees from engaging in 
    personal securities transactions with these same securities firms 
    without specific prior board approval. The board may also wish to adopt 
    a policy applicable to directors, officers, and employees restricting 
    or prohibiting the receipt of gifts, gratuities, or travel expenses 
    from approved securities dealer firms and their representatives.
    Legal Risk
        Legal risk is the risk that contracts are not legally enforceable 
    or documented correctly. Institutions should adequately evaluate the 
    enforceability of its agreements before individual transactions are 
    consummated. Institutions should also ensure that the counterparty has 
    authority to enter into the transaction and that the terms of the 
    agreement are legally enforceable. Institutions should further 
    ascertain that netting agreements are adequately documented, executed 
    properly, and are enforceable in all relevant jurisdictions. 
    Institutions should have knowledge of relevant tax laws and 
    interpretations governing the use of these instruments.
    
        Dated: September 29, 1997.
    Joe M. Cleaver,
    Executive Secretary, Federal Financial Institutions Examination 
    Council.
    [FR Doc. 97-26207 Filed 10-2-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6210-01-P, 6720-01-P, 6714-01-P, 4810-01-P, 7535-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
10/03/1997
Department:
Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice and request for comment.
Document Number:
97-26207
Dates:
Comments must be received by November 17, 1997.
Pages:
51862-51867 (6 pages)
PDF File:
97-26207.pdf