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Proposed Amendments to the Stress Testing Rule

Publication Details
Type
Proposed Rulemaking
Federal Register Publish Date
08/21/2015
Comment Open Date
08/21/2015
Comment End Date
09/21/2015
Comment Status
Closed
Rulemaking Details
Rulemaking

Amendments to Stress Testing Rule

11/24/2015
Number
RIN-2590-AA74
Group
Fannie Mae
FHL Banks
Freddie Mac
CFR
12 CFR 1238
CFR Description
Stress Testing of Regulated Entities
Effective Date

Proposed Amendments to the Stress Testing Rule

Contact Information

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Naa Awaa Tagoe, Senior Associate Director, Office of Financial Analysis, Modeling and Simulations, (202) 649-3140, naaawaa.tagoe@fhfa.gov; Stefan Szilagyi, Examination Manager, FHLBank Modeling, FHLBank Risk Modeling Branch (202) 649-3515, stefan.szilagy@fhfa.gov; Karen Heidel, Senior Counsel, Office of General Counsel, (202) 649-3073, karen.heidel@fhfa.gov; or Mark D. Laponsky, Deputy General Counsel, Office of General Counsel, (202) 649-3054, mark.laponsky@fhfa.gov. If you are deaf, hard of hearing, or have a speech disability, please dial 7-1-1 to access telecommunications relay services. Additionally, the TDD 1-(800) number referenced in Rulemaking documents attached to this page is obsolete and the 7-1-1 number should be used.

Summary

SUMMARY: The Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) is proposing amendments to its stress testing rule adopted in 2013 to implement section 165(i) of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. The amendments would modify the start date of the stress test cycles from October 1 of a calendar year to January 1 of the following calendar year. The amendments would also modify the dates for FHFA to issue scenarios for the upcoming cycle, the dates for the regulated entities to report the results of their stress tests to FHFA, and the dates for the regulated entities to publicly disclose a summary of their stress test results for the severely adverse scenario. These amendments would align FHFA's rule with rules adopted by other financial institution regulators that implement the Dodd-Frank stress
testing requirements.