Annual report pursuant to Section 13 and 15(d)

Regulatory Requirements and Restrictions

v2.4.0.6
Regulatory Requirements and Restrictions
12 Months Ended
Dec. 31, 2012
Regulatory Requirements and Restrictions [Abstract]  
Regulatory Capital Requirements under Banking Regulations
Regulatory Requirements and Restrictions
The Corporation manages regulatory capital to adhere to internal capital guidelines and regulatory standards of capital adequacy based on its current understanding of the rules and the application of such rules to its business as currently conducted.
The Federal Reserve, OCC (Office of the Comptroller of the Currency) and FDIC (collectively, joint agencies) have in place regulatory capital guidelines for U.S. banking organizations. The regulatory capital guidelines measure capital in relation to the credit and market risks of both on- and off-balance sheet items using various risk weights. Under the regulatory capital guidelines, Total capital consists of three tiers of capital. Tier 1 capital includes the sum of “core capital elements,” the principal components of which are qualifying common shareholders’ equity and qualifying non-cumulative perpetual preferred stock. Also included in Tier 1 capital are qualifying trust preferred securities (Trust Securities), hybrid securities and qualifying noncontrolling interests in subsidiaries which are subject to the rules governing “restricted core capital elements.” Goodwill, other disallowed intangible assets, disallowed deferred tax assets and the cumulative changes in fair value of all financial liabilities accounted for under the fair value option that are included in retained earnings and are attributable to changes in the company’s own creditworthiness are deducted from the sum of core capital elements. Tier 2 capital consists of qualifying subordinated debt, a limited portion of the allowance for loan and lease losses, a portion of net unrealized gains on AFS marketable equity securities and other adjustments. Tier 3 capital includes subordinated debt that is unsecured, fully paid, has an original maturity of at least two years, is not redeemable before maturity without prior approval by the Federal Reserve and includes a lock-in clause precluding payment of either interest or principal if the payment would cause the issuing bank’s risk-based capital ratio to fall or remain below the required minimum. Tier 3 capital can only be used to satisfy the Corporation’s market risk capital requirement and may not be used to support its credit risk requirement. At December 31, 2012 and 2011, the Corporation had no subordinated debt that qualified as Tier 3 capital. Total capital for the Corporation is Tier 1 capital plus supplementary Tier 2 capital.
To meet minimum, adequately capitalized regulatory requirements, an institution must maintain a Tier 1 capital ratio of four percent and a Total capital ratio of eight percent. A “well-capitalized” institution must generally maintain capital ratios 200 bps higher than the minimum guidelines. The risk-based capital rules have been further supplemented by a Tier 1 leverage ratio, defined as Tier 1 capital divided by quarterly average total assets, after certain adjustments. BHCs must have a minimum Tier 1 leverage ratio of at least four percent. National banks must maintain a Tier 1 leverage ratio of at least five percent to be classified as “well-capitalized.” Failure to meet the capital requirements established by the joint agencies can lead to certain mandatory and discretionary actions by regulators that could have a material adverse effect on the Corporation’s financial position. At December 31, 2012, the Corporation’s Tier 1 capital, Total capital and Tier 1 leverage ratios were 12.89 percent, 16.31 percent and 7.37 percent, respectively.
Current guidelines restrict certain core capital elements to 15 percent of total core capital elements for internationally active BHCs. Internationally active BHCs are those that have significant activities in non-U.S. markets with consolidated assets greater than $250 billion or on-balance sheet non-U.S. exposure greater than $10 billion, which includes the Corporation. In addition, the Federal Reserve revised the qualitative standards for capital instruments included in regulatory capital. At December 31, 2012, the Corporation’s restricted core capital elements comprised 3.6 percent of total core capital elements. The Corporation is and expects to remain in compliance with the revised guidelines.
Tier 1 common capital is not an official regulatory ratio, but was introduced by the Federal Reserve during the Supervisory Capital Assessment Program in 2009. Tier 1 common capital is Tier 1 capital less preferred stock, Trust Securities, hybrid securities and qualifying noncontrolling interests in subsidiaries. The Corporation’s Tier 1 common capital was $133.4 billion and $126.7 billion and the Tier 1 common capital ratio was 11.06 percent and 9.86 percent at December 31, 2012 and 2011.
The table below presents actual and minimum required regulatory capital amounts for 2012 and 2011.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Regulatory Capital
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
December 31
 
2012
 
2011
 
Actual
 
 
 
Actual
 
 
(Dollars in millions)
Ratio
 
Amount
 
Minimum
Required (1)
 
Ratio
 
Amount
 
Minimum
Required (1)
Risk-based capital
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

Tier 1 common
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

Bank of America Corporation
11.06
%
 
$
133,403

 
n/a

 
9.86
%
 
$
126,690

 
n/a

Tier 1
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

Bank of America Corporation
12.89

 
155,461

 
$
72,359

 
12.40

 
159,232

 
$
77,068

Bank of America, N.A.
12.44

 
118,431

 
57,099

 
11.74

 
119,881

 
61,245

FIA Card Services, N.A.
17.34

 
22,061

 
7,632

 
17.63

 
24,660

 
8,393

Total
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

Bank of America Corporation
16.31

 
196,680

 
120,598

 
16.75

 
215,101

 
128,447

Bank of America, N.A.
14.76

 
140,434

 
95,165

 
15.17

 
154,885

 
102,076

FIA Card Services, N.A.
18.64

 
23,707

 
12,719

 
19.01

 
26,594

 
13,989

Tier 1 leverage
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

 
 

Bank of America Corporation
7.37

 
155,461

 
84,429

 
7.53

 
159,232

 
84,557

Bank of America, N.A.
8.59

 
118,431

 
68,957

 
8.65

 
119,881

 
69,318

FIA Card Services, N.A.
13.67

 
22,061

 
8,067

 
14.22

 
24,660

 
8,669

(1) 
Dollar amount required to meet guidelines for well-capitalized institutions.
n/a = not applicable
The Federal Reserve requires BHCs to submit a capital plan and requests for capital actions on an annual basis, consistent with the rules governing the Comprehensive Capital Analysis and Review (CCAR). The CCAR is the central element of the Federal Reserve’s approach to ensuring large BHCs have adequate capital and robust processes for managing their capital. Requests for capital actions by a BHC must be reviewed on an annual basis by the Federal Reserve. In January 2012, the Corporation submitted its 2012 capital plan and the Federal Reserve did not object to the Corporation’s 2012 capital plan. On January 7, 2013, the Corporation submitted its 2013 capital plan and related supervisory stress tests. The Federal Reserve has announced its intention to notify the 2013 CCAR participants of the supervisory stress test results on March 7, 2013 and the capital plan on March 14, 2013.

Regulatory Capital Developments
At December 31, 2012, the Corporation measured and reported its capital ratios and related information in accordance with Basel 1 and the regulatory capital rules continue to expand and evolve. In June 2012, U.S. banking regulators issued the Market Risk Final Rule that amends the Basel 1 Market Risk rules (Market Risk Final Rule) which were effective January 1, 2013. The Market Risk Final Rule introduces new measures of market risk, a stressed Value-at-Risk charge, an incremental risk charge and a comprehensive risk measure, as well as other technical modifications.
In December 2007, U.S. banking regulators published final Basel 2 rules (Basel 2). Basel 2 provides detailed requirements for a new regulatory capital framework related to credit and operational risk, supervisory requirements and disclosure requirements. Under Basel 2, market risk is measured consistent with Basel 1 guidelines, in accordance with the Market Risk Final Rule. The Corporation measures and reports its capital ratios and related information under Basel 2 on a confidential basis to U.S. banking regulators during the required parallel period which will continue until the Corporation receives regulatory approval to exit parallel reporting and subsequently begin publicly reporting Basel 2 regulatory capital results and related disclosures.
In June 2012, U.S. banking regulators issued three notices of proposed rulemaking (collectively, the Basel 3 NPRs), which, if adopted as proposed, would materially change Tier 1 common, Tier 1 and Total capital calculations, introduce new minimum capital ratios and buffer requirements, expand and modify the calculation of risk-weighted assets for credit and market risk (the Advanced Approach) and introduce a Standardized Approach for the calculation of risk-weighted assets, which would replace Basel 1 and provide a floor for minimum, adequately capitalized regulatory capital requirements under the Prompt Corrective Action framework. The Prompt Corrective Action framework establishes categories of capitalization, including “well-capitalized,” based on regulatory ratio requirements. U.S. banking regulators are required to take certain mandatory actions depending on the category of capitalization. No mandatory actions are required under the Prompt Corrective Action framework for “well-capitalized” banking entities.
Under the Basel 3 NPRs, Trust Securities will be phased out of Tier 1 capital in equal annual installments over a three-year transition period. Many of the changes to the composition of regulatory capital are subject to a transition period where the impact is recognized in 20 percent increments, phased in incrementally each year over a five-year period. The majority of the other aspects of the Advanced Approach were proposed to become effective on January 1, 2013. The phase-in period for the new minimum capital requirements and related buffers is proposed to occur from the effective date of the Basel 3 NPRs through 2019. U.S. banking regulators announced that they did not expect any of the Basel 3 NPRs to become effective January 1, 2013. Final rules for Basel 3 have not yet been issued by U.S. banking regulators.
Under the Basel 3 NPRs the Corporation will be subject to the Advanced Approach for measuring risk-weighted assets (Basel 3 Advanced Approach) when finalized and implemented. The Basel 3 Advanced Approach also requires approval by the U.S. regulatory agencies of analytical models used as part of capital measurement. If these models are not approved, it would likely lead to an increase in the Corporation’s risk-weighted assets, which in some cases could be significant. The Basel 3 Advanced Approach, if adopted as proposed, is expected to substantially increase the Corporation’s capital requirements.
In 2011, the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision issued guidance on capital requirements for global, systemically important financial institutions, including the methodology for measuring systemic importance (the SIFI buffer), and the arrangements by which the guidance will be phased in. As proposed, the SIFI buffer would increase minimum capital requirements for Tier 1 common capital from one percent to 2.5 percent, and in certain circumstances, 3.5 percent. U.S. banking regulators have not yet issued proposed or final rules related to the SIFI buffer.
On December 20, 2011, the Federal Reserve issued proposed rules to implement enhanced supervisory and prudential requirements and the early remediation requirements established under the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act. The enhanced standards include risk-based capital and leverage requirements, liquidity standards, requirements for overall risk management, single-counterparty credit limits, stress test requirements and a debt-to-equity limit for certain companies determined to pose a threat to financial stability. The final rules are likely to influence regulatory capital and liquidity planning processes, and may impose additional operational and compliance costs on the Corporation.
Other Regulatory Requirements
The Federal Reserve requires the Corporation’s banking subsidiaries to maintain reserve balances based on a percentage of certain deposits. Average daily reserve balances required by the Federal Reserve were $16.3 billion and $14.6 billion for 2012 and 2011. Currency and coin residing in branches and cash vaults (vault cash) are used to partially satisfy the reserve requirement. The average daily reserve balances, in excess of vault cash, held with the Federal Reserve amounted to $7.9 billion and $6.5 billion for 2012 and 2011. As of December 31, 2012, the Corporation had cash in the amount of $8.5 billion and securities with a fair value of $5.9 billion that were segregated in compliance with securities regulations or deposited with clearing organizations.
The primary sources of funds for cash distributions by the Corporation to its shareholders are capital distributions received from its banking subsidiaries, BANA and FIA. In 2012, the Corporation received $14.1 billion in dividends from BANA and FIA, and returned capital of $6.6 billion to the Corporation. In 2013, BANA can declare and pay dividends to the Corporation equal to their retained net profits for 2013 up to the date of any dividend declaration. The other subsidiary national banks paid $1.6 billion in dividends to the Corporation in 2012 and can pay dividends in aggregate of $203 million in 2013 plus an additional amount equal to their retained net profits for 2013 up to the date of any such dividend declaration. The amount of dividends that each subsidiary bank may declare in a calendar year is the subsidiary bank’s net profits for that year combined with its retained net profits for the preceding two years. Retained net profits, as defined by the OCC, consist of net income less dividends declared during the period.