By Victoria McGrane 

WASHINGTON--The Federal Reserve is set to finalize the amount of additional capital the nation's eight biggest banks must maintain, with J.P. Morgan Chase & Co. facing the highest capital increase of the group, a policy designed to encourage firms to reduce their size or risk profile.

J.P. Morgan would face a capital "surcharge" of 4.5% of its risk-weighted assets under the final rule. The other seven firms must maintain an additional capital buffer of between 1% and 3.5%.

J.P. Morgan has made some strides in raising the equity needed to meet the new requirement, Fed officials indicated, saying the bank is about $12.5 billion shy of the surcharge, which takes full effect in 2019. In December, Fed governor Stanley Fischer, in an apparent slip, disclosed that J.P. Morgan was about $21 billion short.

The other banks currently have enough capital to meet the requirement, the officials said.

The size of each bank's additional capital requirement is tailored to the firm's relative riskiness, as measured by a formula created by international regulators and the Fed. A bank's surcharge can grow or shrink depending on changes such as size, complexity and entanglements with other big firms.

The Fed Board of Governors is slated to formally adopt the final rule at an open meeting this afternoon.

The Fed unveiled the details of the final rule, first introduced last December, nearly five years to the day since President Barack Obama signed the Dodd-Frank financial overhaul into law. In keeping with the spirit of that legislation, Fed officials say the capital requirement is designed to encourage the biggest banks to shrink and take other steps to reduce the threat their potential failure poses to the financial system.

"A key purpose of the capital surcharge is to require the firms themselves to bear the costs that their failure would impose on others," Fed Chairwoman Janet Yellen said in a written statement prepared for this afternoon's open meeting. "They must either hold substantially more capital, reducing the likelihood that they will fail, or else they must shrink their systemic footprint, reducing the harm that their failure would do to our financial system."

Banks would have to meet this additional capital requirement with common equity, considered the highest form of regulatory capital because it can directly absorb losses. The new surcharge requirement comes on top of a base 7% common-equity capital requirement that most banks face.

The surcharge gives big banks a choice. They can fund their operations with less borrowed money and hold more common equity, which can crimp returns. Or, they can reduce the size of this new surcharge by shrinking or making other changes such as cutting their reliance on short-term funding sources that can be volatile.

Among the other banks, Citigroup Inc. faces a 3.5% surcharge; Bank of America Corp., Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Morgan Stanley face 3%; Wells Fargo & Co. 2%; State Street Corp. 1.5%; and Bank of New York Mellon Corp. 1%.

As with its other major rules, the Fed capital measure goes beyond what international regulators in Basel, Switzerland, negotiated for "systemically important" banks. The biggest difference is how much more the Fed's rule penalizes banks for relying on volatile forms of short-term funding such as overnight loans. The Fed's formula roughly doubles the surcharge amount for each U.S. bank compared with the international version of the rule, Fed officials said.

The final surcharge requirement, when it takes full effect, will result in the eight U.S. banks maintaining an equity cushion against losses that is more than $200 billion larger than it would otherwise have been, Fed officials said.

While the broad contours of the surcharge remained unchanged from the December draft, the Fed did adjust pieces of the rule in response to industry concerns.

Most significantly, the Fed gave banks more credit for reducing their "systemic footprint," as Fed officials call it. Big banks had complained that under the proposed rule, each bank's riskiness was determined relative to 75 other large global banks. That meant that even if one bank shed assets, it might not see a lower capital requirement if the broader industry shrunk as well.

Under the final rule, the Fed will determine each bank's riskiness by comparing it to a fixed baseline: Global statistics on the banking sector from 2012 and 2013.

The Fed's final rule also reduced how heavily banks would be penalized for relying on certain of types of short-term funding, including wholesale deposits.

In addition, the Fed sought to address a concern raised publicly by several big bank executives that a quirk in the formula could force them to maintain billions of dollars more capital than their foreign peers when the dollar is strong against the euro. The Fed tweaked its formula to use an average euro-dollar exchange rate over a three-year period, as opposed to a spot rate.

Comments from Fed governor Lael Brainard earlier this month raised anxiety among banks that the Fed is preparing to incorporate the new surcharge requirement into its annual "stress test" exam. While the rule itself is silent on whether that will happen, Fed governor Daniel Tarullo in prepared remarks said Fed officials are considering "whether and, if so, how to incorporate the surcharges" into the capital minimums banks must meet.

The Fed is undertaking a broader review of possible changes to the stress test, and Mr. Tarullo said expected Fed staff to develop recommendations--including on the issue of the new surcharge--by the end of the year.

Adding all or part of the surcharge to the minimum capital levels banks must meet in the stress test, designed to ensure a bank could survive a sharp crisis, would likely require the banks to boost their capital levels even higher.

The Wall Street Journal reported in late February that J.P. Morgan would begin charging large institutional customers fees for certain deposits, known as nonoperational, citing new rules that make holding money for clients too costly, including the pending capital surcharge. That move helped drive some of that business away from the bank, and J.P. Morgan Chief Financial Officer Marianne Lake said last week on an earnings call with analysts that the largest U.S. bank by assets had surpassed its goal of reducing $100 billion in so-called operational deposits by the end of 2015.

Ms. Lake as well as Chairman and Chief Executive James Dimon have said they are in the early stages of a long-term plan to reshape the balance sheet. The bank has also been exiting businesses that are too risky or don't bring in enough money. In 2014 it exited about a dozen businesses, including the physical-commodities business, student-lending origination and some correspondent-banking relationships.

"The effort to optimize the balance sheet...is not going to stop," Mr. Dimon said last week. "That is what we're going to continue to do."

Still, Mr. Dimon has been a staunch defender of the bank's scale, citing market-share gains across its businesses, good returns and high customer satisfaction levels. Mr. Dimon said in a January earnings call that a full-fledged breakup of the bank doesn't make sense, saying he believes the bank can "manage through" higher capital levels.

Write to Victoria McGrane at victoria.mcgrane@wsj.com

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