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Agencies Seek Comment on Modernizing Banking Capital Framework

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Published March 19th, 2026
Detected March 19th, 2026
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Summary

The FDIC, Federal Reserve, and OCC are seeking public comment on three proposals to modernize the regulatory capital framework for banks. The proposals aim to streamline capital requirements, enhance risk sensitivity, and maintain banking system stability, with potential modest reductions in overall capital requirements.

What changed

The federal banking agencies (FDIC, Federal Reserve, OCC) have issued three proposals to modernize the regulatory capital framework, seeking public comment by June 18, 2026. The first proposal targets large, internationally active banks, aiming to enhance risk sensitivity, reduce burden, and align with final Basel III components by using a single set of calculations for risk-based capital requirements. The second proposal, for most other banks, focuses on aligning capital requirements for traditional lending with risk and modifying mortgage lending requirements. The third proposal from the Federal Reserve aims to improve systemic risk measurement for the largest banks.

These proposals are expected to result in a modest decrease in overall capital levels, though still substantially higher than pre-financial crisis levels. Banks, particularly large and smaller institutions, will need to review the specific impacts on their capital calculations. The comment period deadline of June 18, 2026, is critical for regulated entities to provide input on these significant changes to the banking capital framework.

What to do next

  1. Review the three proposed rulemakings on modernizing the regulatory capital framework.
  2. Prepare and submit comments to the agencies by the June 18, 2026 deadline.
  3. Assess potential impacts of the proposed changes on the institution's capital requirements and risk management.

Source document (simplified)

Agencies Request Comment on Proposals to Modernize the Regulatory Capital Framework And Maintain the Strength of the Banking System

Joint Release

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Federal Reserve Board

Office of the Comptroller of the Currency

March 19, 2026 WASHINGTON – The federal bank regulatory agencies today requested comment on three proposals to modernize the regulatory capital framework for banks of all sizes. The proposals would streamline capital requirements and better align regulatory capital with risk while maintaining the safety and soundness of the banking system.

The federal bank regulatory agencies today requested comment on three proposals to modernize the regulatory capital framework for banks of all sizes. The proposals would streamline capital requirements and better align regulatory capital with risk while maintaining the safety and soundness of the banking system.

Following the global financial crisis, the agencies substantially increased the resiliency of the banking system by increasing the quantity and quality of required loss-absorbing capital and introducing stress testing requirements for large banks.  Experience over the past decade has demonstrated that certain elements of the framework could be improved without reducing safety and soundness.

The first proposal, which would primarily apply to the largest, most internationally active banks, would improve the capital framework by enhancing risk sensitivity, reducing burden, and improving consistency across banks, as well as implementing the final components of the Basel III agreement. The framework would be streamlined by having these banks use one rather than two sets of calculations to determine compliance with risk-based capital requirements. Additionally, the proposal would improve the calibration of the framework to better capture credit, market, and operational risks. All other banks could choose to adopt this proposed approach. The market risk aspect of the framework would apply only to banks with significant trading activity.

The second proposal, which would generally apply to all but the largest banks, would better align capital requirements for traditional lending activities with risk, while maintaining the framework’s simplicity. Consistent with the first proposal, the second proposal would reduce disincentives for mortgage lending by modifying capital requirements for servicing and originating mortgages. Proposed modifications for mortgage servicing would also apply to banks that apply the community bank leverage ratio framework. This proposal would also require certain large banks, subject to a transition period, to reflect unrealized gains and losses on certain securities in their regulatory capital levels.

The third proposal, from the Federal Reserve Board, would improve how systemic risk is measured in the framework for determining the additional capital requirement for the largest and most complex banks.

While the agencies anticipate that the amount of overall capital in the banking system would modestly decrease as a result of these proposals, capital levels would still be substantially higher than they were before the financial crisis. In aggregate, the proposals would modestly reduce capital requirements for large banks and moderately reduce requirements for smaller banks, reflecting their more traditional lending activities.

The Federal Reserve is also publishing aggregated data used by the agencies to inform the proposals.

Comments on all three proposals must be received by June 18, 2026.

Attachment(s)

Notice of Proposed Rulemaking: Regulatory Capital Rule: Category I and II Banking Organizations, Banking Organizations with Significant Trading Activity, and Optional Adoption for Other Banking Organizations Notice of Proposed Rulemaking: Regulatory Capital Rules: Regulatory Capital and Standardized Approach for Risk-weighted Assets

Contact(s)

FDIC: Julianne Fisher Breitbeil, (202) 898-6895 FRB: Meg Badenhorst, (202) 452-2955 OCC: Stephanie Collins, (202) 649-6870
Last Updated: March 19, 2026

Named provisions

Regulatory Capital Framework Market Risk Mortgage Lending Systemic Risk

Source

Analysis generated by AI. Source diff and links are from the original.

Classification

Agency
FDIC
Published
March 19th, 2026
Compliance deadline
June 18th, 2026 (91 days)
Instrument
Consultation
Legal weight
Non-binding
Stage
Consultation
Change scope
Substantive
Document ID
FDIC Press Release dated March 19, 2026

Who this affects

Applies to
Banks
Industry sector
5221 Commercial Banking
Activity scope
Capital Requirements Risk Management Lending
Threshold
Primarily largest, most internationally active banks; all but the largest banks; banks with significant trading activity; certain large banks subject to transition period.
Geographic scope
United States US

Taxonomy

Primary area
Banking
Operational domain
Compliance
Topics
Risk Management Financial Stability

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