By Saabira Chaudhuri 
 

State Street Corp. (STT) on Tuesday released new data projecting that it would have higher capital levels under a hypothetical economic downturn, than it projected earlier this year.

Under the results of its mid-year stress test, the trust bank said its minimum threshold for the measure of financial health--known as a Tier 1 common ratio--would fall to 12.3%, up from its March projection of 11.9%.

The latest projection is for the nine quarters up to June 30, 2015, while the bank's March figure was for the end of 2014.

Also on Tuesday, State Street projected it would log a $2.3 billion profit on $2.8 billion in pre-provision net revenue in case of a severely adverse scenario. This compares with the $100 million profit on revenue of $1.3 billion it projected in March.

In March, the Fed had said it expected State Street's Tier 1 common ratio under a stressed scenario would be 12.8%.

Like Citigroup Inc. (C), Goldman Sachs Group (GS), KeyCorp (KEY) and others, State Street released the updated figure as part of a requirement of the Dodd-Frank Act, which calls on large bank-holding companies to conduct their own so-called stress tests to help gauge their financial strength.

Eighteen banks released results under an initial round of Dodd-Frank stress tests in March and were required to conduct a mid-year version of the tests, the results of which they are required to release between Sept. 15 and Sept. 30.

The tests are separate from the Federal Reserve's Comprehensive Capital Analysis and Review, or CCAR, stress tests, the results of which were also released in March.

The CCAR exams help determine whether large banks will be able to increase capital payouts to investors in the form of share repurchases and dividends.

State Street, one of the country's largest trust banks, has taken a hard line on expenses despite improving business trends. The company's cost-control measures have included withdrawing from its fixed-income-trading initiative and staff cuts, actions it has said will better align expenses with its 2013 business outlook.

In July, State Street reported that its second-quarter earnings rose 19% as the trust bank collected more servicing and management fees.

Shares of State Street were up by 20 cents in recent trading to $69.03. The stock has risen 47% so far this year.

Write to Saabira Chaudhuri at saabira.chaudhuri@wsj.com

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