12 C.F.R. § 327.16
Subject to the modifications described in § 327.17, the following pricing methods shall apply beginning in the first assessment period after June 30, 2016, where the reserve ratio of the DIF as of the end of the prior assessment period has reached or exceeded 1.15 percent, and for all subsequent assessment periods.
(a) Established small institutions. Beginning the first assessment period after June 30, 2016, where the reserve ratio of the DIF as of the end of the prior assessment period has reached or exceeded 1.15 percent, and for all subsequent assessment periods, an established small institution shall have its initial base assessment rate determined by using the financial ratios methods set forth in paragraph (a)(1) of this section.
(1) Under the financial ratios method, each of seven financial ratios and a weighted average of CAMELS component ratings will be multiplied by a corresponding pricing multiplier. The sum of these products will be added to a uniform amount. The resulting sum shall equal the institution's initial base assessment rate; provided, however, that no institution's initial base assessment rate shall be less than the minimum initial base assessment rate in effect for established small institutions with a particular CAMELS composite rating for that assessment period nor greater than the maximum initial base assessment rate in effect for established small institutions with a particular CAMELS composite rating for that assessment period. An institution's initial base assessment rate, subject to adjustment pursuant to paragraphs (e)(1) and (2) of this section, as appropriate (resulting in the institution's total base assessment rate, which in no case can be lower than 50 percent of the institution's initial base assessment rate), and adjusted for the actual assessment rates set by the Board under § 327.10(f), will equal an institution's assessment rate. The seven financial ratios are: Leverage Ratio (%); Net Income before Taxes/Total Assets (%); Nonperforming Loans and Leases/Gross Assets (%); Other Real Estate Owned/Gross Assets (%); Brokered Deposit Ratio (%); One Year Asset Growth (%); and Loan Mix Index. The ratios and the weighted average of CAMELS component ratings are defined in paragraph (a)(1)(ii) of this section. The ratios will be determined for an assessment period based upon information contained in an institution's report of condition filed as of the last day of the assessment period as set out in paragraph (a)(2) of this section. The weighted average of CAMELS component ratings is created by multiplying each component by the following percentages and adding the products: Capital adequacy—25%, Asset quality—20%, Management—25%, Earnings—10%, Liquidity—10%, and Sensitivity to market risk—10%. The following tables set forth the values of the pricing multipliers:
| Risk measures 1 | Pricingmultipliers 2 |
|---|---|
| Leverage ratio | −1.264 |
| Net Income before Taxes/Total Assets | −0.720 |
| Nonperforming Loans and Leases/Gross Assets | 0.942 |
| Other Real Estate Owned/Gross Assets | 0.533 |
| Brokered Deposit Ratio | 0.264 |
| One Year Asset Growth | 0.061 |
| Loan Mix Index | 0.081 |
| Weighted Average CAMELS Component Rating | 1.519 |
| 1 Ratios are expressed as percentages. | |
| 2 Multipliers are rounded to three decimal places. |
| Risk measures 1 | Pricingmultipliers 2 |
|---|---|
| Leverage Ratio | −1.217 |
| Net Income before Taxes/Total Assets | −0.694 |
| Nonperforming Loans and Leases/Gross Assets | 0.907 |
| Other Real Estate Owned/Gross Assets | 0.513 |
| Brokered Deposit Ratio | 0.254 |
| One Year Asset Growth | 0.059 |
| Loan Mix Index | 0.078 |
| Weighted Average CAMELS Component Rating | 1.463 |
| 1 Ratios are expressed as percentages. | |
| 2 Multipliers are rounded to three decimal places. |
| Risk measures 1 | Pricingmultipliers 2 |
|---|---|
| Leverage Ratio | −1.123 |
| Net Income before Taxes/Total Assets | −0.640 |
| Nonperforming Loans and Leases/Gross Assets | 0.837 |
| Other Real Estate Owned/Gross Assets | 0.474 |
| Brokered Deposit Ratio | 0.235 |
| One Year Asset Growth | 0.054 |
| Loan Mix Index | 0.072 |
| Weighted Average CAMELS Component Rating | 1.350 |
| 1 Ratios are expressed as percentages. | |
| 2 Multipliers are rounded to three decimal places. |
(i) Uniform amount. Except as adjusted for the actual assessment rates set by the Board under § 327.10(f), the uniform amount shall be:
(ii) Definitions of measures used in the financial ratios method—(A) Definitions. The following table lists and defines the measures used in the financial ratios method:
| Variables | Description |
|---|---|
| Leverage Ratio (%) | Tier 1 capital divided by adjusted average assets. (Numerator and denominator are both based on the definition for prompt corrective action.) |
| Net Income before Taxes/Total Assets (%) | Income (before applicable income taxes and discontinued operations) for the most recent twelve months divided by total assets.1 |
| Nonperforming Loans and Leases/Gross Assets (%) | Sum of total loans and lease financing receivables past due 90 or more days and still accruing interest and total nonaccrual loans and lease financing receivables (excluding, in both cases, the maximum amount recoverable from the U.S. Government, its agencies or government-sponsored enterprises, under guarantee or insurance provisions) divided by gross assets.2 |
| Other Real Estate Owned/Gross Assets (%) | Other real estate owned divided by gross assets.2 |
| Brokered Deposit Ratio | The ratio of the difference between brokered deposits and 10 percent of total assets to total assets. For institutions that are well capitalized and have a CAMELS composite rating of 1 or 2, brokered reciprocal deposits as defined in § 327.8(q) are deducted from brokered deposits. If the ratio is less than zero, the value is set to zero. |
| Weighted Average of C, A, M, E, L, and S Component Ratings | The weighted sum of the “C,” “A,” “M,” “E”, “L”, and “S” CAMELS components, with weights of 25 percent each for the “C” and “M” components, 20 percent for the “A” component, and 10 percent each for the “E”, “L”, and “S” components. |
| Loan Mix Index | A measure of credit risk described paragraph (a)(1)(ii)(B) of this section. |
| One-Year Asset Growth (%) | Growth in assets (adjusted for mergers 3) over the previous year in excess of 10 percent.4 If growth is less than 10 percent, the value is set to zero. |
| 1 The ratio of Net Income before Taxes to Total Assets is bounded below by (and cannot be less than) −25 percent and is bounded above by (and cannot exceed) 3 percent. | |
| 2 Gross assets are total assets plus the allowance for loan and lease financing receivable losses (ALLL) or allowance for credit losses, as applicable. | |
| 3 Growth in assets is also adjusted for acquisitions of failed banks. | |
| 4 The maximum value of the Asset Growth measure is 230 percent; that is, asset growth (merger adjusted) over the previous year in excess of 240 percent (230 percentage points in excess of the 10 percent threshold) will not further increase a bank's assessment rate. |
(B) Definition of loan mix index. The Loan Mix Index assigns loans in an institution's loan portfolio to the categories of loans described in the following table. The Loan Mix Index is calculated by multiplying the ratio of an institution's amount of loans in a particular loan category to its total assets by the associated weighted average charge-off rate for that loan category, and summing the products for all loan categories. The table gives the weighted average charge-off rate for each category of loan. The Loan Mix Index excludes credit card loans.
| Weightedcharge-offrate(percent) | |
|---|---|
| Construction & Development | 4.4965840 |
| Commercial & Industrial | 1.5984506 |
| Leases | 1.4974551 |
| Other Consumer | 1.4559717 |
| Real Estate Loans Residual | 1.0169338 |
| Multifamily Residential | 0.8847597 |
| Nonfarm Nonresidential | 0.7286274 |
| 1-4 Family Residential | 0.6973778 |
| Loans to Depository Banks | 0.5760532 |
| Agricultural Real Estate | 0.2376712 |
| Agriculture | 0.2432737 |
(b) Large and highly complex institutions—(1) Assessment scorecard for large institutions (other than highly complex institutions).
(i) A large institution other than a highly complex institution shall have its initial base assessment rate determined using the scorecard for large institutions.
| Scorecard measures and components | Measure weights(percent) | Component weights(percent) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| P | Performance Score | ||
| P.1 | Weighted Average CAMELS Rating | 100 | 30 |
| P.2 | Ability to Withstand Asset-Related Stress | 50 | |
| Leverage ratio | 10 | ||
| Concentration Measure | 35 | ||
| Core Earnings/Average Quarter-End Total Assets 1 | 20 | ||
| Credit Quality Measure | 35 | ||
| P.3 | Ability to Withstand Funding-Related Stress | 20 | |
| Core Deposits/Total Liabilities | 60 | ||
| Balance Sheet Liquidity Ratio | 40 | ||
| L | Loss Severity Score | ||
| L.1 | Loss Severity Measure | 100 | |
| 1 Average of five quarter-end total assets (most recent and four prior quarters). |
(ii) The scorecard for large institutions produces two scores: Performance score and loss severity score.
(A) Performance score for large institutions. The performance score for large institutions is a weighted average of the scores for three measures: The weighted average CAMELS rating score, weighted at 30 percent; the ability to withstand asset-related stress score, weighted at 50 percent; and the ability to withstand funding-related stress score, weighted at 20 percent.
(1) Weighted average CAMELS rating score. (i) To compute the weighted average CAMELS rating score, a weighted average of an institution's CAMELS component ratings is calculated using the following weights:
| CAMELS component | Weight(%) |
|---|---|
| C | 25 |
| A | 20 |
| M | 25 |
| E | 10 |
| L | 10 |
| S | 10 |
(ii) A weighted average CAMELS rating converts to a score that ranges from 25 to 100. A weighted average rating of 1 equals a score of 25 and a weighted average of 3.5 or greater equals a score of 100. Weighted average CAMELS ratings between 1 and 3.5 are assigned a score between 25 and 100. The score increases at an increasing rate as the weighted average CAMELS rating increases. Appendix B of this subpart describes the conversion of a weighted average CAMELS rating to a score.
(2) Ability to withstand asset-related stress score. (i) The ability to withstand asset-related stress score is a weighted average of the scores for four measures: Leverage ratio; concentration measure; the ratio of core earnings to average quarter-end total assets; and the credit quality measure. Appendices A and C of this subpart define these measures.
(ii) The Leverage ratio and the ratio of core earnings to average quarter-end total assets are described in appendix A and the method of calculating the scores is described in appendix C of this subpart.
(iii) The score for the concentration measure is the greater of the higher-risk assets to Tier 1 capital and reserves score or the growth-adjusted portfolio concentrations score. Both ratios are described in appendix C of this subpart.
(iv) The score for the credit quality measure is the greater of the criticized and classified items to Tier 1 capital and reserves score or the underperforming assets to Tier 1 capital and reserves score.
(v) The following table shows the cutoff values and weights for the measures used to calculate the ability to withstand asset-related stress score. Appendix B of this subpart describes how each measure is converted to a score between 0 and 100 based upon the minimum and maximum cutoff values, where a score of 0 reflects the lowest risk and a score of 100 reflects the highest risk.
| Measures of the ability to withstand asset-related stress | Cutoff values | Weights(percent) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Minimum(percent) | Maximum(percent) | ||
| Leverage ratio | 6 | 13 | 10 |
| Concentration Measure | 35 | ||
| Higher-Risk Assets to Tier 1 Capital and Reserves; or | 0 | 135 | |
| Growth-Adjusted Portfolio Concentrations | 4 | 56 | |
| Core Earnings/Average Quarter-End Total Assets 1 | 0 | 2 | 20 |
| Credit Quality Measure | 35 | ||
| Criticized and Classified Items/Tier 1 Capital and Reserves; or | 7 | 100 | |
| Underperforming Assets/Tier 1 Capital and Reserves | 2 | 35 | |
| 1 Average of five quarter-end total assets (most recent and four prior quarters). |
(vi) The score for each measure in the table in paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(A)(2)(v) of this section is multiplied by its respective weight and the resulting weighted score is summed to arrive at the score for an ability to withstand asset-related stress, which can range from 0 to 100, where a score of 0 reflects the lowest risk and a score of 100 reflects the highest risk.
(3) Ability to withstand funding-related stress score. Two measures are used to compute the ability to withstand funding-related stress score: A core deposits to total liabilities ratio, and a balance sheet liquidity ratio. Appendix A of this subpart describes these measures. Appendix B of this subpart describes how these measures are converted to a score between 0 and 100, where a score of 0 reflects the lowest risk and a score of 100 reflects the highest risk. The ability to withstand funding-related stress score is the weighted average of the scores for the two measures. In the following table, cutoff values and weights are used to derive an institution's ability to withstand funding-related stress score:
| Measures of the ability to withstand funding-related stress | Cutoff values | Weights(percent) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Minimum(percent) | Maximum(percent) | ||
| Core Deposits/Total Liabilities | 5 | 87 | 60 |
| Balance Sheet Liquidity Ratio | 7 | 243 | 40 |
(4) Calculation of performance score. In paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(A)(3) of this section, the scores for the weighted average CAMELS rating, the ability to withstand asset-related stress, and the ability to withstand funding-related stress are multiplied by their respective weights (30 percent, 50 percent and 20 percent, respectively) and the results are summed to arrive at the performance score. The performance score cannot be less than 0 or more than 100, where a score of 0 reflects the lowest risk and a score of 100 reflects the highest risk.
(B) Loss severity score. The loss severity score is based on a loss severity measure that is described in appendix D of this subpart. Appendix B of this subpart also describes how the loss severity measure is converted to a score between 0 and 100. The loss severity score cannot be less than 0 or more than 100, where a score of 0 reflects the lowest risk and a score of 100 reflects the highest risk. Cutoff values for the loss severity measure are:
| Measure of loss severity | Cutoff values | |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum(percent) | Maximum(percent) | |
| Loss Severity | 0 | 28 |
(C) Total score. (1) The performance and loss severity scores are combined to produce a total score. The loss severity score is converted into a loss severity factor that ranges from 0.8 (score of 5 or lower) to 1.2 (score of 85 or higher). Scores at or below the minimum cutoff of 5 receive a loss severity factor of 0.8, and scores at or above the maximum cutoff of 85 receive a loss severity factor of 1.2. The following linear interpolation converts loss severity scores between the cutoffs into a loss severity factor:
(Loss Severity Factor = 0.8 + [0.005 * (Loss Severity Score − 5)]
(2) The performance score is multiplied by the loss severity factor to produce a total score (total score = performance score * loss severity factor). The total score can be up to 20 percent higher or lower than the performance score but cannot be less than 30 or more than 90. The total score is subject to adjustment, up or down, by a maximum of 15 points, as set forth in paragraph (b)(3) of this section. The resulting total score after adjustment cannot be less than 30 or more than 90.
(D) Initial base assessment rate. A large institution with a total score of 30 pays the minimum initial base assessment rate and an institution with a total score of 90 pays the maximum initial base assessment rate. For total scores between 30 and 90, initial base assessment rates rise at an increasing rate as the total score increases, calculated according to the following formula:

Where: Rate is the initial base assessment rate (expressed in basis points); Maximum Rate is the maximum initial base assessment rate then in effect (expressed in basis points); and Minimum Rate is the minimum initial base assessment rate then in effect (expressed in basis points). Initial base assessment rates are subject to adjustment pursuant to paragraphs (b)(3) and (e)(1) and (2) of this section; large institutions that are not well capitalized or have a CAMELS composite rating of 3, 4 or 5 shall be subject to the adjustment at paragraph (e)(3) of this section; these adjustments shall result in the institution's total base assessment rate, which in no case can be lower than 50 percent of the institution's initial base assessment rate.
(2) Assessment scorecard for highly complex institutions.
(i) A highly complex institution shall have its initial base assessment rate determined using the scorecard for highly complex institutions.
| Measures and components | Measureweights(percent) | Componentweights(percent) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| P | Performance Score | ||
| P.1 | Weighted Average CAMELS Rating | 100 | 30 |
| P.2 | Ability To Withstand Asset-Related Stress | 50 | |
| Leverage ratio | 10 | ||
| Concentration Measure | 35 | ||
| Core Earnings/Average Quarter-End Total Assets | 20 | ||
| Credit Quality Measure and Market Risk Measure | 35 | ||
| P.3 | Ability To Withstand Funding-Related Stress | 20 | |
| Core Deposits/Total Liabilities | 50 | ||
| Balance Sheet Liquidity Ratio | 30 | ||
| Average Short-Term Funding/Average Total Assets | 20 | ||
| L | Loss Severity Score | ||
| L.1 | Loss Severity | 100 |
(ii) The scorecard for highly complex institutions produces two scores: Performance and loss severity.
(A) Performance score for highly complex institutions. The performance score for highly complex institutions is the weighted average of the scores for three components: Weighted average CAMELS rating, weighted at 30 percent; ability to withstand asset-related stress score, weighted at 50 percent; and ability to withstand funding-related stress score, weighted at 20 percent.
(1) Weighted average CAMELS rating score. (i) To compute the score for the weighted average CAMELS rating, a weighted average of an institution's CAMELS component ratings is calculated using the following weights:
| CAMELS component | Weight(%) |
|---|---|
| C | 25 |
| A | 20 |
| M | 25 |
| E | 10 |
| L | 10 |
| S | 10 |
(ii) A weighted average CAMELS rating converts to a score that ranges from 25 to 100. A weighted average rating of 1 equals a score of 25 and a weighted average of 3.5 or greater equals a score of 100. Weighted average CAMELS ratings between 1 and 3.5 are assigned a score between 25 and 100. The score increases at an increasing rate as the weighted average CAMELS rating increases. Appendix B of this subpart describes the conversion of a weighted average CAMELS rating to a score.
(2) Ability to withstand asset-related stress score. (i) The ability to withstand asset-related stress score is a weighted average of the scores for four measures: Leverage ratio; concentration measure; ratio of core earnings to average quarter-end total assets; credit quality measure and market risk measure. Appendix A of this subpart describes these measures.
(ii) The Leverage ratio and the ratio of core earnings to average quarter-end total assets are described in appendix A of this subpart and the method of calculating the scores is described in appendix B of this subpart.
(iii) The score for the concentration measure for highly complex institutions is the greatest of the higher-risk assets to the sum of Tier 1 capital and reserves score, the top 20 counterparty exposure to the sum of Tier 1 capital and reserves score, or the largest counterparty exposure to the sum of Tier 1 capital and reserves score. Each ratio is described in appendix A of this subpart. The method used to convert the concentration measure into a score is described in appendix C of this subpart.
(iv) The credit quality score is the greater of the criticized and classified items to Tier 1 capital and reserves score or the underperforming assets to Tier 1 capital and reserves score. The market risk score is the weighted average of three scores—the trading revenue volatility to Tier 1 capital score, the market risk capital to Tier 1 capital score, and the level 3 trading assets to Tier 1 capital score. All of these ratios are described in appendix A of this subpart and the method of calculating the scores is described in appendix B of this subpart. Each score is multiplied by its respective weight, and the resulting weighted score is summed to compute the score for the market risk measure. An overall weight of 35 percent is allocated between the scores for the credit quality measure and market risk measure. The allocation depends on the ratio of average trading assets to the sum of average securities, loans and trading assets (trading asset ratio) as follows:
(v) Weight for credit quality score = 35 percent * (1−trading asset ratio); and,
(vi) Weight for market risk score = 35 percent * trading asset ratio.
(vii) Each of the measures used to calculate the ability to withstand asset-related stress score is assigned the following cutoff values and weights:
| Measures of the ability to withstand asset-related stress | Cutoff values | Market riskmeasure(percent) | Weights(percent) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Minimum(percent) | Maximum(percent) | |||
| Leverage ratio | 6 | 13 | 10. | |
| Concentration Measure | 35. | |||
| Higher Risk Assets/Tier 1 Capital and Reserves; | 0 | 135 | ||
| Top 20 Counterparty Exposure/Tier 1 Capital and Reserves; or | 0 | 125 | ||
| Largest Counterparty Exposure/Tier 1 Capital and Reserves | 0 | 20 | ||
| Core Earnings/Average Quarter-end Total Assets | 0 | 2 | 20. | |
| Credit Quality Measure 1 | 35* (1−Trading Asset Ratio). | |||
| Criticized and Classified Items to Tier 1 Capital and Reserves; or | 7 | 100 | ||
| Underperforming Assets/Tier 1 Capital and Reserves | 2 | 35 | ||
| Market Risk Measure 1 | 35* Trading Asset Ratio. | |||
| Trading Revenue Volatility/Tier 1 Capital | 0 | 2 | 60 | |
| Market Risk Capital/Tier 1 Capital | 0 | 10 | 20 | |
| Level 3 Trading Assets/Tier 1 Capital | 0 | 35 | 20 | |
| 1 Combined, the credit quality measure and the market risk measure are assigned a 35 percent weight. The relative weight of each of the two scores depends on the ratio of average trading assets to the sum of average securities, loans and trading assets (trading asset ratio). |
(viii) [Reserved]
(ix) The score of each measure is multiplied by its respective weight and the resulting weighted score is summed to compute the ability to withstand asset-related stress score, which can range from 0 to 100, where a score of 0 reflects the lowest risk and a score of 100 reflects the highest risk.
(3) Ability to withstand funding related stress score. Three measures are used to calculate the score for the ability to withstand funding-related stress: A core deposits to total liabilities ratio, a balance sheet liquidity ratio, and average short-term funding to average total assets ratio. Appendix A of this subpart describes these ratios. Appendix B of this subpart describes how each measure is converted to a score. The ability to withstand funding-related stress score is the weighted average of the scores for the three measures. In the following table, cutoff values and weights are used to derive an institution's ability to withstand funding-related stress score:
| Measures of the ability to withstand funding-related stress | Cutoff values | Weights(percent) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Minimum(percent) | Maximum(percent) | ||
| Core Deposits/Total Liabilities | 5 | 87 | 50 |
| Balance Sheet Liquidity Ratio | 7 | 243 | 30 |
| Average Short-term Funding/Average Total Assets | 2 | 19 | 20 |
(4) Calculation of performance score. The weighted average CAMELS score, the ability to withstand asset-related stress score, and the ability to withstand funding-related stress score are multiplied by their respective weights (30 percent, 50 percent and 20 percent, respectively) and the results are summed to arrive at the performance score, which cannot be less than 0 or more than 100.
(B) Loss severity score. The loss severity score is based on a loss severity measure described in appendix D of this subpart. Appendix B of this subpart also describes how the loss severity measure is converted to a score between 0 and 100. Cutoff values for the loss severity measure are:
| Measure of loss severity | Cutoff values | |
|---|---|---|
| Minimum(percent) | Maximum(percent) | |
| Loss Severity | 0 | 28 |
(D) Initial base assessment rate. A highly complex institution with a total score of 30 pays the minimum initial base assessment rate and an institution with a total score of 90 pays the maximum initial base assessment rate. For total scores between 30 and 90, initial base assessment rates rise at an increasing rate as the total score increases, calculated according to the following formula:

Where: Rate is the initial base assessment rate (expressed in basis points); Maximum Rate is the maximum initial base assessment rate then in effect (expressed in basis points); and Minimum Rate is the minimum initial base assessment rate then in effect (expressed in basis points). Initial base assessment rates are subject to adjustment pursuant to paragraphs (b)(3) and (e)(1) and (2) of this section; highly complex institutions that are not well capitalized or have a CAMELS composite rating of 3, 4 or 5 shall be subject to the adjustment at paragraph (e)(3) of this section; these adjustments shall result in the institution's total base assessment rate, which in no case can be lower than 50 percent of the institution's initial base assessment rate.
(3) Adjustment to total score for large institutions and highly complex institutions. The total score for large institutions and highly complex institutions is subject to adjustment, up or down, by a maximum of 15 points, based upon significant risk factors that are not adequately captured in the appropriate scorecard. In making such adjustments, the FDIC may consider such information as financial performance and condition information and other market or supervisory information. The FDIC will also consult with an institution's primary federal regulator and, for state chartered institutions, state banking supervisor.
(c) New small institutions—(1) Risk categories. Each new small institution shall be assigned to one of the following four Risk Categories based upon the institution's capital evaluation and supervisory evaluation as defined in this section.
(3) Supervisory evaluations. Each new small institution will be assigned to one of three Supervisory Groups based on the Corporation's consideration of supervisory evaluations provided by the institution's primary federal regulator. The supervisory evaluations include the results of examination findings by the primary federal regulator, as well as other information that the primary federal regulator determines to be relevant. In addition, the Corporation will take into consideration such other information (such as state examination findings, as appropriate) as it determines to be relevant to the institution's financial condition and the risk posed to the Deposit Insurance Fund. The three Supervisory Groups are:
(2) Capital evaluations for insured branches of foreign banks. Each insured branch of a foreign bank will receive one of the following three capital evaluations on the basis of data reported in the institution's Report of Assets and Liabilities of U.S. Branches and Agencies of Foreign Banks dated as of March 31 for the assessment period beginning the preceding January 1; dated as of June 30 for the assessment period beginning the preceding April 1; dated as of September 30 for the assessment period beginning the preceding July 1; and dated as of December 31 for the assessment period beginning the preceding October 1.
(i) Well Capitalized. An insured branch of a foreign bank is Well Capitalized if the insured branch:
(ii) Adequately Capitalized. An insured branch of a foreign bank is Adequately Capitalized if the insured branch:
(4) Assessment method for insured branches of foreign banks in risk category I. Insured branches of foreign banks in Risk Category I shall be assessed using the weighted average ROCA component rating.
(ii) Uniform amount. Except as adjusted for the actual assessment rates set by the Board under § 327.10(f), the uniform amount for all insured branches of foreign banks shall be:
(e) Adjustments—(1) Unsecured debt adjustment to initial base assessment rate for all institutions. All institutions, except new institutions as provided under paragraphs (g)(1) and (2) of this section and insured branches of foreign banks as provided under paragraph (d)(4)(iii) of this section, shall be subject to an adjustment of assessment rates for unsecured debt. Any unsecured debt adjustment shall be made after any adjustment under paragraph (b)(3) of this section.
(2) Depository institution debt adjustment to initial base assessment rate for all institutions. All institutions shall be subject to an adjustment of assessment rates for unsecured debt held that is issued by another depository institution. Any such depository institution debt adjustment shall be made after any adjustment under paragraphs (b)(3) and (e)(1) of this section.
(3) Brokered deposit adjustment. All new small institutions in Risk Categories II, III, and IV, all large institutions and all highly complex institutions, except large and highly complex institutions (including new large and new highly complex institutions) that are well capitalized and have a CAMELS composite rating of 1 or 2, shall be subject to an assessment rate adjustment for brokered deposits. Any such brokered deposit adjustment shall be made after any adjustment under paragraphs (b)(3) and (e)(1) and (2) of this section. The brokered deposit adjustment includes all brokered deposits as defined in Section 29 of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1831f), and 12 CFR 337.6, including brokered reciprocal deposits as defined in § 327.8(q), and brokered deposits that consist of balances swept into an insured institution from another institution. The adjustment under this paragraph is limited to those institutions whose ratio of brokered deposits to domestic deposits is greater than 10 percent; asset growth rates do not affect the adjustment. Insured branches of foreign banks are not subject to the brokered deposit adjustment as provided in paragraph (d)(4)(iii) of this section.
(4) Rate applicable to institutions subject to subsidiary or credit union exception—(i) Established small institutions. A small institution that is established under § 327.8(k)(4) or (5) shall be assessed as follows:
[81 FR 32207, May 20, 2016, as amended at 83 FR 14568, Apr. 5, 2018; 84 FR 1353, Feb. 4, 2019; 84 FR 4249, Feb. 14, 2019; 85 FR 38292, June 26, 2020; 85 FR 71228, Nov. 9, 2020; 87 FR 64339, Oct. 24, 2022]