What is a Super Regional Bank

A super regional bank is similar to a large national or global bank in terms of assets, revenue and scale of activities, but they are much bigger than regional and community banks. Because of this, super regional banks can be thought of as occupying the middle tier of the banking sector. They generally offer a complete range of banking services from deposits and loans to securities brokerage, investment banking and fund management. Some super regional banks started out as regional banks, then expanded across state lines by acquisitions of deposits, branches and customers.

BREAKING DOWN Super Regional Bank

Though the super regional category typically refers to banks with more than $50 billion in assets, size alone is not enough of a criteria to determine whether a bank can be considered super regional. The largest super regional American banks include U.S. Bancorp, Bank of New York Mellon (BoNY), CapitalOne, KeyCorp, PNC Financial Services Group and BB&T Corp.

While super regionals are significantly smaller, and present less systemic risk than money center banks (i.e., Citibank, JPMorgan, Bank of America), they have been affected by tightened financial regulations following the financial crisis. Congress passed the Dodd-Frank Financial Reform And Consumer Protection Act in 2010. The legislation period increased minimum capital requirements and mandated regular liquidity assessments and stress testing by the U.S. Federal Reserve, for banks deemed to be "too big to fail."

Systemically Important Financial Institutions (SIFI)

The threshold to be included on the SIFI list was $50 billion in assets. As a result, many super regionals experienced more regulatory constraints and compliance requirements. More recently, Congress raised this threshold to $100 billion, with the ability for institutions with between $100 and $250 billion in assets to by 2018, to $250 billion. While the largest super regionals (e.g., PNC and BoNY) will still fall into the SIFI category, smaller banks such as KeyCorp and BB&T will no longer be considered to be SIFI.

Super regional banking institutions have expanded their service offerings in recent years to include and or broaden the number of capital markets, or investment banking and banking, activities they engage in. Some super regionals have grown significantly by taking over smaller rivals and taking market share from community and regional banks. Many have also expanded geographically and grown aggressively through deal-making. KeyCorp and BB&T in particular, have added hundreds of branches and significant additions to their asset base through mergers and acquisitions.