12 CFR §324.209
Verified against eCFR.gov as of June 20, 2026View official text on eCFR.gov ↗
- (a)General requirement.
- (1)Subject to the prior approval of the FDIC, an FDIC-supervised institution may use the method in this section to measure comprehensive risk, that is, all price risk, for one or more portfolios of correlation trading positions.
- (2)An FDIC-supervised institution that measures the price risk of a portfolio of correlation trading positions using internal models must calculate at least weekly a comprehensive risk measure that captures all price risk according to the requirements of this section. The comprehensive risk measure is either:
- (i)The sum of:
- (A)The FDIC-supervised institution's modeled measure of all price risk determined according to the requirements in paragraph (b) of this section; and
- (B)A surcharge for the FDIC-supervised institution's modeled correlation trading positions equal to the total specific risk add-on for such positions as calculated under § 324.210 multiplied by 8.0 percent; or
- (ii)With approval of the FDIC and provided the FDIC-supervised institution has met the requirements of this section for a period of at least one year and can demonstrate the effectiveness of the model through the results of ongoing model validation efforts including robust benchmarking, the greater of:
- (A)The FDIC-supervised institution's modeled measure of all price risk determined according to the requirements in paragraph (b) of this section; or
- (B)The total specific risk add-on that would apply to the bank's modeled correlation trading positions as calculated under § 324.210 multiplied by 8.0 percent.
- (i)The sum of:
- (b)Requirements for modeling all price risk. If an FDIC-supervised institution uses an internal model to measure the price risk of a portfolio of correlation trading positions:
- (1)The internal model must measure comprehensive risk over a one-year time horizon at a one-tail, 99.9 percent confidence level, either under the assumption of a constant level of risk, or under the assumption of constant positions.
- (2)The model must capture all material price risk, including but not limited to the following:
- (i)The risks associated with the contractual structure of cash flows of the position, its issuer, and its underlying exposures;
- (ii)Credit spread risk, including nonlinear price risks;
- (iii)The volatility of implied correlations, including nonlinear price risks such as the cross-effect between spreads and correlations;
- (iv)Basis risk;
- (v)Recovery rate volatility as it relates to the propensity for recovery rates to affect tranche prices; and
- (vi)To the extent the comprehensive risk measure incorporates the benefits of dynamic hedging, the static nature of the hedge over the liquidity horizon must be recognized. In such cases, an FDIC-supervised institution must:
- (A)Choose to model the rebalancing of the hedge consistently over the relevant set of trading positions;
- (B)Demonstrate that the inclusion of rebalancing results in a more appropriate risk measurement;
- (C)Demonstrate that the market for the hedge is sufficiently liquid to permit rebalancing during periods of stress; and
- (D)Capture in the comprehensive risk model any residual risks arising from such hedging strategies;
- (3)The FDIC-supervised institution must use market data that are relevant in representing the risk profile of the FDIC-supervised institution's correlation trading positions in order to ensure that the FDIC-supervised institution fully captures the material risks of the correlation trading positions in its comprehensive risk measure in accordance with this section; and
- (4)The FDIC-supervised institution must be able to demonstrate that its model is an appropriate representation of comprehensive risk in light of the historical price variation of its correlation trading positions.
- (c)Requirements for stress testing.
- (1)An FDIC-supervised institution must at least weekly apply specific, supervisory stress scenarios to its portfolio of correlation trading positions that capture changes in:
- (2)Other requirements.
- (i)An FDIC-supervised institution must retain and make available to the FDIC the results of the supervisory stress testing, including comparisons with the capital requirements generated by the FDIC-supervised institution's comprehensive risk model.
- (ii)An FDIC-supervised institution must report to the FDIC promptly any instances where the stress tests indicate any material deficiencies in the comprehensive risk model.
- (d)Calculation of comprehensive risk capital requirement. The comprehensive risk capital requirement is the greater of: