The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) has issued a rule that revises the FDIC’s requirements for stress testing by FDIC-supervised institutions, consistent with changes made by Section 401 of the Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer Protection Act (EGRRCPA). Specifically, the rule amends the FDIC’s existing stress testing regulations at 12 CFR Part 325 to change the minimum threshold for applicability from $10 billion to $250 billion, revises the frequency of required stress tests by FDIC-supervised institutions, and reduces the number of required stress testing scenarios from three to two. The rule also makes certain conforming and technical changes that were previously included in an April 2019 notice of proposed rulemaking that was superseded, in part, by the enactment of EGRRCPA. On May 17, 2012, the OCC, along with the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve (FRB), published guidance on the use of stress testing as a means to better understand the range of a banking organization’s potential risk exposures. The guidance provides an overview of how a banking organization should structure its stress testing activities to ensure they fit into the banking organization’s overall risk management program. The purpose of the guidance is to outline broad principles for a satisfactory stress testing framework and describe the manner in which stress testing should be used, that is as an integral component of risk management applicable at various levels of aggregation within a banking organization as well as a tool for capital and liquidity planning. While the guidance is not intended to provide detailed instructions for conducting stress testing for any particular risk or business area, it does include descriptions of several types of stress testing activities and how they may be most appropriately used by banking organizations. The guidance also does not explicitly address the stress testing requirements imposed upon certain companies by section 165(i) of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (the Dodd-Frank Act).
The latest form for Stress Testing Recordkeeping and Reporting expires 2022-11-30 and can be found here.
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Supplementary Document |
Supplementary Document |
Supporting Statement A |
Approved without change |
Extension without change of a currently approved collection | 2022-11-29 | |
Approved without change |
Revision of a currently approved collection | 2019-10-25 | |
Comment filed on proposed rule and continue |
Revision of a currently approved collection | 2019-01-16 | |
Approved without change |
Revision of a currently approved collection | 2017-03-29 | |
Approved without change |
Revision of a currently approved collection | 2016-03-08 | |
Approved without change |
Revision of a currently approved collection | 2015-02-19 | |
Approved without change |
Revision of a currently approved collection | 2014-12-18 | |
Approved without change |
Revision of a currently approved collection | 2013-10-24 | |
Approved with change |
New collection (Request for a new OMB Control Number) | 2012-12-12 |
Federal Enterprise Architecture: Economic Development - Financial Sector Oversight
Form DFAST 14A Scenario | FDIC DFAST 14A Scenario | Fillable Fileable | Form and instruction |
Form DFAST 14A Summary | FDIC DFAST 14A Summary | Fillable Fileable | Form and instruction |
Review document collections for all forms, instructions, and supporting documents - including paper/printable forms.