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l l★K

Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas

DALLAS, TEXAS
75265-5906

December 26, 2000
Notice 00-81

TO: The Chief Executive Officer of each
financial institution and others concerned
in the Eleventh Federal Reserve District
SUBJECT
Final Consumer Protection Rules for the
Sale of Insurance Products
DETAILS
The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, the Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and the Office of Thrift Supervision
published final insurance consumer protection rules.
These rules have been published pursuant to section 47 of the Federal Deposit Insurance
Act, which was added by section 305 of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act. Section 47 directs the agencies jointly to prescribe and publish consumer protection regulations that apply to retail sales practices, solicitations, advertising, or offers of any insurance product by a depository institution or any
person that is engaged in such activities at an office of the institution or on behalf of the institution.
The rules become effective April 1, 2001.
ATTACHMENT
A copy of the agencies’ notice as it appears on pages 75822–48, Vol. 65, No. 233 of the
Federal Register dated December 4, 2000, is attached.
MORE INFORMATION
For more information, please contact Eugene Coy, (214) 922-6201, in the
Banking Supervision Department. For additional copies of this Bank’s notice, contact the
Public Affairs Department at (214) 922-5254 or access District Notices on our web site at
http://www.dallasfed.org/banking/notices/index.html.

For additional copies, bankers and others are encouraged to use one of the following toll-free numbers in contacting the Federal
Reserve Bank of Dallas: Dallas Office (800) 333-4460; El Paso Branch Intrastate (800) 592-1631, Interstate (800) 351-1012;
Houston Branch Intrastate (800) 392-4162, Interstate (800) 221-0363; San Antonio Branch Intrastate (800) 292-5810.

Monday,
December 4, 2000

Part II

Department of the
Treasury
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency
Office of Thrift Supervision

Federal Reserve
System
Federal Deposit
Insurance
Corporation
12 CFR Parts 14, 208, 343, and 536
Consumer Protections for Depository
Institution Sales of Insurance; Final Rule

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75822

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 233 / Monday, December 4, 2000 / Rules and Regulations

DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency
12 CFR Part 14
[Docket No. 00–26]
RIN 1557–AB81

FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 208
[Docket No. R–1079]

FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION
12 CFR Part 343
RIN 3064–AC37

DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of Thrift Supervision
12 CFR Part 536
[Docket No. 2000–97]
RIN 1550–AB34

Consumer Protections for Depository
Institution Sales of Insurance
AGENCIES: Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency, Treasury; Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System; Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation; and Office of Thrift
Supervision, Treasury.
ACTION: Final rule.
SUMMARY: The Office of the Comptroller
of the Currency, Board of Governors of
the Federal Reserve System, Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation, and the
Office of Thrift Supervision,
(collectively, the Agencies) are
publishing final insurance consumer
protection rules. These rules are
published pursuant to section 47 of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (FDIA),
which was added by section 305 of the
Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (the G–L–B
Act or Act). Section 47 directs the
Agencies jointly to prescribe and
publish consumer protection regulations
that apply to retail sales practices,
solicitations, advertising, or offers of
any insurance product by a depository
institution 1 or any person that is
1 ‘‘Depository institution’’ means national banks
in the case of institutions supervised by the Office
of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), state
member banks in the case of the Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System (Board), state
nonmember banks in the case of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC), and savings
associations in the case of the Office of Thrift
Supervision (OTS).

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engaged in such activities at an office of
the institution or on behalf of the
institution.
EFFECTIVE DATE: April 1, 2001.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
OCC: Stuart Feldstein, Assistant
Director, or Michele Meyer, Senior
Attorney, Legislative and Regulatory
Activities Division, (202) 874–5090; Asa
Chamberlayne, Senior Attorney,
Securities and Corporate Practices
Division, (202) 874–5210; Stephanie
Boccio, Asset Management, (202) 874–
4447; Barbara Washington, Core Policy
Development (202) 874–6037, Office of
the Comptroller of the Currency, 250 E
Street, SW., Washington, DC 20219.
Board: Richard M. Ashton, Associate
General Counsel, Legal Division, (202)
452–3750; Angela Desmond, Special
Counsel, Division of Banking
Supervision and Regulation, (202) 452–
3497; David A. Stein, Attorney, Division
of Consumer and Community Affairs,
(202) 452–3667, Board of Governors of
the Federal Reserve System, 20th and C
Streets, NW, Washington, DC 20551. For
the hearing impaired only,
Telecommunications Device for the Deaf
(TDD), contact Janice Simms, (202) 872–
4984.
FDIC: Keith A. Ligon, Chief, Policy
Unit, Division of Supervision, (202)
898–3618; Michael B. Phillips, Counsel,
Supervision and Legislation Branch,
Legal Division, (202) 898–3581; Jason C.
Cave, Senior Capital Markets Specialist,
(202) 898–3548, Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street,
NW, Washington, DC 20429.
OTS: Robyn Dennis, Manager,
Supervision Policy, (202) 906–5751;
Richard Bennett, Counsel (Banking and
Finance), (202) 906–7409; Sally Watts,
Counsel (Banking and Finance), (202)
906–7380; Mary Jane Cleary, Insurance
Risk Management Specialist, (202) 906–
7048, Office of Thrift Supervision, 1700
G Street, NW., Washington, DC 20552.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

the institution. Section 47 directs the
Agencies to include specific provisions
relating to sales practices, disclosures
and advertising, the physical separation
of banking and nonbanking activities,
and domestic violence discrimination.
Section 47 also requires the Agencies
to consult with the State insurance
regulators, as appropriate. The National
Association of Insurance Commissioners
(NAIC) has submitted a comment letter
in connection with the proposed rules.
In preparing the proposed rules and
these final rules, the Agencies also have
met and consulted with the NAIC.3
These final rules reflect these meetings
with, and comments from, the NAIC.
The texts of the Agencies’ final rules
are substantially identical. Any
differences in style or terms are not
intended to create substantive
differences in the requirements imposed
by the regulations.

On November 12, 1999, President
Clinton signed the G–L–B Act into law.
Section 305 of the Act 2 added new
section 47 to the FDIA, captioned
‘‘Insurance Customer Protections.’’ This
section requires the Agencies jointly to
prescribe and publish consumer
protection regulations that apply to
retail sales practices, solicitations,
advertising, or offers of insurance
products by depository institutions or
persons engaged in these activities at an
office of the institution or on behalf of

Overview of Comments Received
On August 21, 2000, the Agencies
published a joint notice of proposed
rulemaking (the proposed rules) in the
Federal Register (65 FR 50882). The
Agencies received approximately 75
comments in response to the proposed
rules.
The majority of comments were
received from depository institutions.
These commenters offered a large
number of suggested changes, with the
most commonly advanced suggestions
including: modifying the ‘‘covered
person’’ definition; excepting various
types of insurance from coverage by the
final rules; eliminating certain
disclosure requirements; and limiting
the physical separation requirements to
the teller area of an institution.
The NAIC submitted a comment on
behalf of the State insurance authorities
that generally supported the Agencies’
proposed rules. The NAIC advised the
Agencies to clarify in the final rules the
role of the States in regulating insurance
sales. The NAIC also requested more
detailed guidance in the Consumer
Grievance Appendix to the final rules.
Finally, the NAIC expressed its view
that the lending area of a depository
institution should be separated from the
area in which insurance is sold.
The Agencies have modified certain
provisions of the proposed rules in light
of the comments received. The most
significant comments, and the Agencies’
responses, are discussed in the
following section-by-section analysis.
As was done in the preamble discussion
of the proposed rules, the citations are
to sections only, leaving blank the

2 Pub. L. 106–102, sec. 305, 113 Stat. 1338, 1410–
15 (codified at 12 U.S.C. 1831x).

3 A summary of the Agencies’ consultations with
the NAIC is available in the rule-making file.

Background

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Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 233 / Monday, December 4, 2000 / Rules and Regulations
citations to the part numbers used by
each agency.4
The Agencies also received several
comments requesting the Agencies to
delay the effective date of these rules.
The commenters state that institutions
will need time to modify existing
disclosure forms, train personnel and
implement system changes. In
determining the effective date and
administrative compliance requirements
for new regulations, the Agencies are
required to consider any administrative
burden that the regulations would place
on depository institutions and to delay
the effective date until at least the first
day of a calendar quarter that begins on
or after the date on which the
regulations are published.5 The
Agencies recognize that ‘‘lead time’’ is
necessary for some institutions covered
by the final rules to adjust their systems
to comply, although others have systems
that already conform to some extent to
the requirements of the rules. The
Agencies therefore have made the
effective date April 1, 2001.
Section-by-Section Analysis
The discussion that follows applies to
each of the Agencies’ final rules.

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Section
.10 Purpose and Scope
Proposed §
.10 identified the
purposes and scope of the rules. As
stated in the proposal, the rules are
intended to establish consumer
protections in connection with retail
sales of insurance products and
annuities 6 to consumers by any
depository institution or by any person
that is engaged in these activities at an
office of the institution or on behalf of
the institution. These rules address
certain consumer protection concerns
that arise from the conduct of insurance
activities by a depository institution, at
an office of the institution, or on behalf
of the institution and are not intended
to authorize new activities. These rules
are not exclusive and, for example,
applicable State laws administered by
State insurance commissioners may
apply, as provided by sections 104 and
305 of the G–L–B Act.
The Agencies received several
comments on the proposed scope of
these rules. Some of these commenters

ll

4 The Board’s rule is a new subpart of the Board’s
existing Regulation H, and not a separate regulation.
Accordingly, the sections of the Board’s rule are
numbered consecutively.
5 12 U.S.C. 4802.
6 These rules are not intended to have any effect
on whether annuities are considered to be
insurance products for purposes of any other
section of the G–L–B Act or other laws. That
question depends on the terms and purposes of
those laws, as interpreted by the appropriate agency
and the courts.

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noted that the Interagency Statement on
Retail Sales of Nondeposit Investment
Products (February 15, 1994)
(Interagency Statement) also may apply
in certain circumstances to sales of
insurance or annuities by depository
institutions. These commenters
requested clarification on how the
Agencies will apply the Interagency
Statement to those products subject to
both these rules and the Interagency
Statement. The Agencies note that in the
event of a conflict between the
Interagency Statement and the final
rules, the rules will prevail.
Certain of the definitions contained in
the final rules also address the
circumstances under which the rules
will apply. Under the proposed rules,
only subsidiaries that are selling
insurance products or annuities at an
office of the institution or acting ‘‘on
behalf of’’ the depository institution as
defined in the rules 7 would be subject
to the requirements of the rules. Section
47 gives the Agencies discretion to
determine whether the Act’s consumer
protections should extend to a
depository institution’s subsidiary in
other circumstances. The Agencies
received only one comment supporting
broader application of the final rules to
depository institution subsidiaries. The
Agencies believe that extending the
rules to a depository institution’s
subsidiary in circumstances other than
when the subsidiary is selling insurance
products or annuities at an office of the
institution or acting ‘‘on behalf of’’ the
depository institution is unnecessary
and, therefore, the final rules retain the
approach taken in the proposed rules on
this issue. A more complete discussion
of when a person is engaged in
insurance activities ‘‘on behalf’’ of the
depository institution is set forth below
in the definition of ‘‘covered person.’’

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Section
.20 Definitions
The proposed rules contained several
definitions about which the Agencies
received little or no comment. The final
rules therefore retain the definitions of
‘‘affiliate,’’ ‘‘company,’’ ‘‘control,’’
‘‘domestic violence,’’ and ‘‘subsidiary’’
set forth in the proposed rules. The
definitions about which the Agencies
received more substantial comment are
discussed below.
Consumer (§
.20(d)). The
proposed rules defined ‘‘consumer’’ as
an individual who obtains, applies for,

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7 OTS does not intend the requirements of this
part to apply to other savings association operating
subsidiaries or service corporations by operation of
12 CFR 559.3(h). The OCC does not intend the
requirements of this part to apply to other national
bank operating subsidiaries by operation of 12 CFR
5.34(e)(3).

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75823

or is solicited to obtain insurance
products or annuities from a covered
person. The final rules make a clarifying
change by replacing the term ‘‘obtains’’
with ‘‘purchases’’ in the definition of
‘‘consumer.’’ A purchase includes any
transaction where there is a cost to the
consumer for the insurance either
directly or indirectly such as a higher
interest rate on a loan.
Several commenters asked the
Agencies to distinguish between the
terms ‘‘consumer’’ and ‘‘customer’’ in
the same way as the Final Rules on the
Privacy of Consumer Financial
Information (Privacy Rules).8 However,
unlike the Privacy Rules, section 47
uses the terms ‘‘consumer’’ and
‘‘customer’’ interchangeably without
distinguishing between the two terms.
For this reason, the Agencies believe
that Congress did not intend to
distinguish between consumers and
customers for purposes of section 47.
Thus, the Agencies have determined to
continue to use the single term
‘‘consumer’’ in the final rules.
The Agencies also requested comment
on whether the final rules should
expand the definition of ‘‘consumer’’ to
include small businesses. The majority
of those commenting on this issue
believed that the Agencies should not
expand the definition to include small
businesses because most Federal
consumer protection statutes apply only
to individuals. The Agencies agree with
these commenters and therefore have
not changed the definition of
‘‘consumer’’ to include small
businesses.
The Agencies also invited comment
on whether to limit the definition of
consumer to individuals who ‘‘obtain or
apply for insurance products or
annuities primarily for personal, family,
or household purposes.’’ One effect of
this change would be to exclude entities
such as sole proprietorships and
partnerships from the scope of the rules.
Several commenters preferred
limiting the definition in this manner to
be consistent with the Truth in Lending
regulation’s definition of ‘‘consumer
credit.’’ 9 The Agencies agree with the
commenters that depository institutions
are familiar with this approach because
it is used in other consumer protection
rules. Thus, the final rules apply to an
individual ‘‘who purchases or applies
for insurance products or annuities
primarily for personal, family, or
household purposes.’’
8 65

FR 35162 (June 1, 2000).
CFR 226.2(a)(12)(‘‘Consumer credit means
credit offered or extended to a consumer primarily
for personal, family, or household purposes.’’)
9 12

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Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 233 / Monday, December 4, 2000 / Rules and Regulations

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Covered person or you (§
.20(e)).
The proposal used the term ‘‘covered
person,’’ or ‘‘you,’’ to determine to
whom the requirements in these rules
apply. As defined in the proposed rules,
a covered person means any depository
institution or any other person selling,
soliciting, advertising, or offering
insurance products or annuities to a
consumer at an office of the institution
or on behalf of the institution. A
‘‘covered person’’ includes any person,
including a subsidiary or other affiliate,
if that person or one of its employees
sells, solicits, advertises, or offers
insurance products or annuities at an
office of an institution or on behalf of an
institution.
For purposes of this definition, the
proposed rules provided that a person’s
activities are ‘‘on behalf of’’ a depository
institution if:
(1) The person represents to a
consumer that the sale, solicitation,
advertisement, or offer of any insurance
product or annuity is by or on behalf of
the institution;
(2) The depository institution receives
commissions or fees, in whole or in
part, derived from the sale of an
insurance product or annuity as a result
of cross-marketing or referrals by the
institution or an affiliate;
(3) Documents evidencing the sale,
solicitation, advertising, or offer of an
insurance product or annuity identify or
refer to the institution or use its
corporate logo or corporate name; or
(4) The sale, solicitation, advertising,
or offer of an insurance product or
annuity takes place at an off-premises
site, such as a kiosk, that identifies or
refers to the institution or uses its
corporate logo or corporate name.
In the preamble to the proposed rules,
the Agencies noted that the second
prong of the ‘‘on behalf of’’ test—the
receipt of commissions or fees—did not
include situations in which the
institution receives a fee solely for
performing a separate service or
function that may relate to an insurance
sale (such as processing a credit card
charge for the insurance premium, or
performing recordkeeping or payment
functions on behalf of the affiliate)
where the fee is based on that service or
function and is not calculated as a share
of the commissions or fees derived from
the insurance product or annuity sale.
The Agencies sought comment on the
proposed definition of covered person
and specifically on those activities that
would cause a person to be considered
to be acting ‘‘on behalf of’’ an
institution. The Agencies also invited
comment on whether the following
should be considered an activity on
behalf of the institution:

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• The use of the name or corporate
logo of the holding company or other
affiliate, as opposed to the name or
corporate logo of the depository
institution in documents evidencing the
sale, solicitation, advertising, or offer of
an insurance product or annuity.
• The sale, solicitation, advertising,
or offer of an insurance product or
annuity at an off-premises site that
identifies or refers to the holding
company or other affiliate, as opposed
to the depository institution, or uses the
name or corporate logo of the holding
company or other affiliate.
The Agencies received several
comments on the proposed definition of
covered person. Many commenters did
not believe that the second prong of the
‘‘on behalf of’’ test should include a
depository institution’s receipt of
commissions or fees as a result of cross
marketing. Those commenters suggested
that the risk of customer confusion is
small because a consumer typically
would not know about the receipt of
these fees. These commenters believed
that requiring disclosures in these
situations might actually result in
increased customer confusion. The
Agencies agree and therefore delete the
reference to cross-marketing in the final
rules. Thus, for example, while the
sharing of customer lists with an
unaffiliated third party would trigger
certain requirements under the Privacy
Rules, it would not trigger the
requirements under any of the prongs in
these final rules. The Agencies also note
that the institution’s receipt of
dividends from a subsidiary, or a
holding company’s receipt of dividends
from an affiliate, does not constitute
receipt of ‘‘commissions or fees’’ within
the meaning of this paragraph.
Several commenters also contended
that the term ‘‘on behalf of’’ should not
include sales of insurance products or
annuities that result from a referral to an
unaffiliated insurance agency by an
employee of a depository institution.
Unlike cross-marketing, a depository
institution making a referral is in a
position to influence a consumer’s
choice of insurance providers.
Therefore, the final rules retain the
reference to ‘‘referrals’’ in the second
prong of the ‘‘on behalf of’’ test, but
with an important modification.
Rather than applying to any
commission or fee derived from a sale
resulting from a referral, the second
prong of the ‘‘on behalf of’’ test in the
final rules applies only when a
depository institution has a contractual
arrangement with an insurance provider
to receive those fees. This is meant to
distinguish referral fees and
commissions received by a depository

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institution under an arrangement based
on sales with an insurance provider
from those referral fees received by a
teller, which are limited by §
.50(b).
Under §
.50(b), any person who
accepts deposits from the public in an
area where such transactions are
routinely conducted may receive a
referral fee if it is a one-time, nominal
fee of a fixed dollar amount for each
referral that does not depend on
whether the referral results in a
transaction.
A number of commenters also
contended that the third prong of the
‘‘on behalf of’’ test should not cover
situations where documents or other
communications use the depository
institution’s corporate logo or corporate
name (a common logo or name used by
the corporate family and not just by the
depository institution). Those
commenters believe that these
circumstances alone are insufficient to
create a level of confusion that warrants
imposing the requirements under this
rule. Moreover, extending the rules in
this manner would cover transactions in
which a depository institution has no
involvement in the sale of insurance.
The Agencies agree with these
commenters, and therefore, the third
prong of the ‘‘on behalf of’’ test in the
final rules has been modified so that it
does not cover documents that use a
corporate logo or corporate name. It
does, however, cover documents
evidencing the sale, solicitation,
advertising, or offer of an insurance
product or annuity that identify or refer
to the depository institution. Under the
final rules, insurance activities are
conducted on behalf of a depository
institution if the documents evidencing
the activity identify or refer to the
institution. In the Agencies’ view, the
circumstances when the relevant
documents refer to the institution for
purposes of this test will depend on the
facts involved.
The final rules also delete the fourth
prong of the proposed ‘‘on behalf of’’
test because it is covered by the three
remaining revised prongs. As revised,
the Agencies believe that the remaining
three prongs capture the appropriate
circumstances under which a person
could be said to be acting ‘‘on behalf of’’
a depository institution for purposes of
these rules.
Several commenters also noted that
the definition of ‘‘covered person’’ or
‘‘you’’ could be read to mean that once
a person is a ‘‘covered person,’’ all
insurance sales, solicitations,
advertisements or offers by that person
would be subject to these rules, whether
or not these activities are conducted at
an office of, or on behalf of, a depository

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Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 233 / Monday, December 4, 2000 / Rules and Regulations
institution. The Agencies do not intend
this result and have changed the
proposal to clarify that a covered person
is: (1) A depository institution; or (2)
any other person only when the person
sells, solicits, advertises or offers an
insurance product or annuity to a
consumer at an office of the institution
or on behalf of the institution.
Finally, in the preamble to the
proposed rules, the Agencies noted that
the use of electronic media may present
special issues in the application of the
‘‘on behalf of test’’ of the covered person
definition. The Agencies invited
comment on whether, and under what
circumstances, to require disclosures for
sales or solicitations by electronic
media.
Several commenters suggested that
the purposes of the statute and the
rules—to avoid customer confusion
about the nature of the products offered
that arises because of the identity of the
seller or marketer—is not implicated in
all cases where a depository institution
acts solely to bring together buyers and
sellers of insurance products. For
example, the Agencies believe that links
established from depository institution
web sites through the Internet or
wireless services generally do not come
within the scope of the covered person
definition. To the extent there is a risk
of possible consumer confusion when a
customer leaves an institution’s web
site, the nature or type of these
disclosures may differ and is better
addressed in subsequent guidance or
rulemaking.
Electronic media (§
.20(g)).
Section 47 permits the Agencies to make
adjustments to the Act’s requirements
for sales conducted in person, by
telephone, or by electronic media to
provide for the most appropriate and
complete form of disclosure and
consumer acknowledgment of the
receipt of such disclosures. The
proposed rules set forth special rules for
electronic disclosures and consumer
acknowledgments. A discussion of
changes made to these provisions in the
final rules is set forth below. See
proposed §
.40.
In addition, the proposed rules
recognized the need for flexibility to
accommodate rapid changes in
communications technologies and thus
defined ‘‘electronic media’’ broadly to
include any means for transmitting
messages electronically between a
covered person and a consumer in a
format that allows visual text to be
displayed on equipment, such as a
personal computer. The Agencies
invited comment on this proposed
definition and on whether a more
expansive definition would be

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consistent with the G–L–B Act’s
requirement for both written and oral
disclosures. The majority of commenters
supported the proposed definition of
‘‘electronic media’’ 10 because it
provided sufficient flexibility to address
future innovation. The final rule,
therefore, retains the proposed
definition of ‘‘electronic media.’’
Office (§
.20(h)). The proposed
rules defined ‘‘office’’ as the premises of
an institution where retail deposits are
accepted from the public. The Agencies
received several comments requesting
that this definition be limited to deposit
taking areas. The Agencies note that
specific provisions in these rules
relating to the physical separation of the
insurance activities and permissibility
of referral fees are limited to areas
where deposits are routinely taken.
However, the Agencies do not believe
that the overall protections afforded by
these rules should be limited in this
manner and, therefore, retain in the
final rules the definition of ‘‘office’’ set
forth in the proposed rules.
The proposed rules did not define the
term ‘‘insurance product.’’ As explained
in the preamble to the proposed rules,
the Agencies recognize that there is no
single standard for defining the term
‘‘insurance’’ and that its definition may
vary significantly depending on the
context in which it is used. For
example, section 302 of G–L–B Act lists
certain types of products that are first
offered after January 1, 1999 that may
constitute insurance for purposes of
determining when a national bank may
underwrite, rather than sell, insurance.
Thus, the Agencies indicated that they
will look to a variety of sources in
determining whether a given product is
covered by the proposed rules,
including section 302(c), common
usage, conventional definitions, judicial
interpretations, and other Federal laws.
The Agencies invited comment on these
and other sources for determining
whether a product comes within the
scope of the proposed rules, or,
alternatively, whether the rule should
include a specific definition of the term
‘‘insurance.’’
Few commenters requested a specific
definition of insurance. Many
commenters, however, asked that we
exclude certain products from coverage
or at least not require certain disclosures
for those products. For example, those
commenters believe that the rules
should not cover credit insurance and
property and casualty insurance because

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10 Most of the comments concerning electronic
media were raised in the context of disclosures and
acknowledgments and are, therefore, discussed in
the sections below concerning those requirements.

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these products do not have an
investment component and have been
sold by and on behalf of depository
institutions for years without consumer
confusion. Section 47 of the G–L–B Act,
however, does not distinguish between
types of insurance products nor are the
consumer protections under the statute
limited to instances where there is a risk
of investment loss or consumer
confusion. The final rules therefore do
not define the term ‘‘insurance’’ but, as
explained in the discussion of §
.40,
provide more guidance on when certain
disclosures are required.

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Section

ll.30 Prohibited Practices

Under section 47(b) of the FDIA, the
Agencies’ regulations must prohibit a
covered person from engaging in any
practice that would lead a consumer to
believe that an extension of credit, in
violation of the anti-tying provisions of
section 106(b) of the Bank Holding
Company Act Amendments of 1970, 11
is conditional upon either:
(1) The purchase of an insurance
product or annuity from the depository
institution or any of its affiliates; or
(2) An agreement by the consumer not
to obtain, or a prohibition on the
consumer from obtaining, an insurance
product or annuity from an unaffiliated
entity. These prohibitions on tying and
coercion were set forth in proposed
§
.30(a).
Section 47(c)(2) of the FDIA also
requires the Agencies’ regulations to
prohibit a covered person from engaging
in any practice at any office of, or on
behalf of, a depository institution or a
subsidiary of a depository institution
that could mislead any person or
otherwise cause a reasonable person to
reach an erroneous belief with respect
to:
(1) The uninsured nature of any
insurance product or annuity offered for
sale by the covered person or
subsidiary;
(2) In the case of an insurance product
or annuity that involves investment risk,
the investment risk associated with any
such product; or
(3) The fact that the approval of an
extension of credit to a consumer by the
institution or subsidiary may not be
conditioned on the purchase of an
insurance product or annuity from the
institution or subsidiary, and that the
consumer is free to purchase the

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11 12 U.S.C. 1972. Section 106(b) of the Bank
Holding Company Act Amendments of 1970 does
not apply to savings associations. Those institutions
are, however, subject to comparable prohibitions on
tying and coercion, under section 5(q) of the Home
Owners’ Loan Act (HOLA), 12 U.S.C. 1464(q).
Accordingly, OTS’s final rule cites the HOLA
provision.

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insurance product or annuity from
another source.
These prohibitions on
misrepresentations were set forth in
§
.30(b) of the proposed rules.
The Agencies received several
comments on these prohibitions. A few
commenters asserted that the
prohibitions on tying an extension of
credit to the purchase of insurance
should apply only to depository
institutions and not all covered persons
because section 106(b) of the Bank
Holding Company Amendments of 1970
applies only to depository institutions.
Therefore, the commenters requested
the Agencies to amend proposed
§
.30(a) to delete references to
parties other than depository
institutions.
The commenter’s proposed changes to
§
.30(a) are not supported by the
statutory language, however. Section
47(c)(2) is not limited to depository
institutions but also expressly applies to
persons selling at an office of a
depository institution or on behalf of the
institution. In addition, §
.30(a) is
not a restatement of the section 106(b)
prohibition on coercion by depository
institutions. Rather, it is a prohibition
on misleading a consumer into believing
that an extension of credit could be
conditioned in a manner that is
prohibited by section 106(b). Section
47(c) of the G–L–B Act recognizes that
either a depository institution, or
someone selling at an office of a
depository institution or on its behalf
could mislead a consumer in this way.
Therefore, the Agencies decline to limit
§
.30(a) to depository institutions. 12
One commenter also questioned
whether §§
.30 (a) and (b) would
apply to ‘‘force placed’’ insurance.
‘‘Force placed’’ is a term used to
describe a situation in which a
depository institution purchases
insurance, and bills the customer for it,
because the customer has failed to
obtain, or allowed to lapse, required
insurance coverage for an asset used as
collateral for a secured loan. The
Agencies do not intend these final rules
to apply to force placed insurance
purchases since they are made by
depository institutions to protect loan
collateral rather than by consumers.
Finally, proposed §
.30(c)
implemented section 47(e) of the FDIA,
which, as already noted, prohibits a
covered person from considering a
person’s status as a victim of domestic
violence or a provider of services to

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12 The Agencies note that other provisions, such
as the prohibitions on misrepresentations and
certain required disclosures, also generally address
situations relating to consumer coercion.

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domestic violence victims in making
decisions regarding certain types of
insurance products. One commenter
stated that this provision could be
difficult to comply with where a
covered person sells or offers for sale
insurance products for which a third
party makes the decisions regarding the
underwriting, pricing, renewal, scope of
coverage, or payment of claims.
However, the statute provides no
exception from the prohibition on
domestic violence discrimination in
these circumstances. Therefore, the final
rules as modified prohibit a covered
person from selling or offering for sale,
as principal, agent, or broker, any life or
health insurance product if the status of
the applicant or insured as a victim of
domestic violence or as a provider of
services to victims of domestic violence
is considered as a criterion in any
decision with regard to insurance
underwriting, pricing, renewal, or scope
of coverage of such product, or with
regard to the payment of insurance
claims on such product, except as
required or expressly permitted under
State law.

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Section
.40 What a Covered Person
Must Disclose
In addition to prohibiting the
misrepresentations outlined above,
section 47(c) of the FDIA requires the
Agencies’ regulations to mandate that a
covered person make affirmative
disclosures in connection with the
initial purchase of an insurance product
or annuity. The proposed rules required
the following disclosures:
(1) The insurance product or annuity
is not a deposit or other obligation of,
or guaranteed by, the depository
institution or (if applicable) an affiliate;
(2) The insurance product or annuity
is not insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC) or any
other agency of the United States, the
depository institution, or (if applicable)
an affiliate;
(3) In the case of an insurance product
or annuity that involves an investment
risk, there is investment risk associated
with the product, including the possible
loss of value; and
(4) The depository institution may not
condition an extension of credit on
either the consumer’s purchase of an
insurance product or annuity from the
depository institution or any of its
affiliates or the consumer’s agreement
not to obtain, or a prohibition on the
consumer from obtaining, an insurance
product or annuity from an unaffiliated
entity.
Several commenters believed that the
first disclosure—that the insurance
product or annuity is not a deposit or

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other obligation of, or guaranteed by, the
depository institution—is unnecessary
and not required by section 47. These
commenters asserted that there is
minimal risk that a customer will
confuse an insurance product or annuity
with a deposit. The Agencies disagree
with this contention, particularly where
the product has a savings component.
Although the first disclosure is not
expressly required by the statute,
section 47 requires the Agencies to issue
regulations that are consistent with the
requirements of the G–L–B Act and
provide ‘‘additional protections for
customers’’ as necessary. The Agencies
believe that requiring a covered person
to disclose that the insurance product or
annuity is not a deposit is necessary to
protect consumers from confusion about
the nature of the product offered.
There are, however, some instances
where the first and second disclosures
may not be accurate. Several
commenters noted that the second
disclosure—that a product is not
insured by the depository institution or
an agency of the United States—would
not be true for Federal Crop Insurance
and Federal Flood Insurance, both of
which are insured by United States
agencies. To address these concerns and
to ensure that the disclosures required
by §
.40(a) are only made where
accurate, the Agencies have modified
§
.40(a) to require a covered person
to make the disclosures except to the
extent the disclosures would not be
accurate.
Several commenters also suggested
removing certain types of insurance,
such as property and casualty insurance
and credit-related insurance, from the
requirement to disclose that the product
is not FDIC-insured. These commenters
contend that there is little risk of
confusion in these circumstances and
that such disclosures may serve to
increase customer confusion about the
nature of the product offered. The
Agencies disagree with this contention
and favor requiring this disclosure in
connection with the sale of any
insurance product to prevent possible
confusion about the nature of the
product offered. The Agencies, however,
will review this requirement on an ongoing basis and make future changes if
necessary.
Several commenters objected to the
requirement that a covered person give
the anti-coercion disclosures twice
(once before the insurance sale and
again if the consumer applies for credit).
These commenters argued that section
47(a)(1)(A) provides that the Agencies’
regulations only require the anticoercion disclosure be made at the time
of an application for credit. The

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Agencies agree that this is a permissible
interpretation of the statute and believe
that the anti-coercion disclosure is most
meaningful and relevant at the time a
consumer is applying for credit. For this
reason, the final rules only require that
the anti-coercion disclosure be given at
the time of application for credit. The
Agencies have redesignated this
provision as §
.40(b) in the final
rules.

ll

Timing and Method of Disclosures
Under proposed §
.40(b)(1), a
covered person must provide the
disclosures described in §
.40(a)
orally and in writing before the
completion of the sale of an insurance
product or annuity to a consumer. The
disclosures concerning the prohibition
on tying an extension of credit to an
insurance product or annuity purchase
(proposed §
.40(a)(4)) also must be
made orally and in writing at the time
the consumer applies for an extension of
credit in connection with which an
insurance product or annuity will be
solicited, offered, or sold. Section 47 of
the FDIA authorizes the Agencies to
make necessary adjustments to the G–L–
B Act’s requirements for sales
conducted in person, by telephone, or
by electronic media. Section 47(a)(1)
also requires the Agencies to publish
final rules in a form that the Agencies
jointly determine to be appropriate.
Proposed §§
.40(b)(2) set forth
special timing and method of disclosure
rules for electronic and telephone
disclosures. Because the Agencies
modified the anti-coercion disclosure
and redesignated it as §
.40(b), the
timing and method of disclosure rules
are contained in §
.40(c).
The Agencies received several
comments on the timing and method of
disclosures. A few commenters
contended that it would be difficult if
not impossible to provide the required
oral disclosures in connection with
direct mail solicitations. The Agencies
recognize that providing oral
disclosures in circumstances like
these—where there is no means of
communicating orally at the time of the
sales presentation—would be
impracticable. Therefore, the final rule
provides that if the sale of an insurance
product or annuity is conducted by
mail, a covered person that sells, solicits
or offers an insurance product or
annuity by mail is not required to make
the oral disclosures required by
§
.40(a). The final rule further
provides that if a covered person
receives an application for credit by
mail, the covered person is not required
to make the oral disclosure required by
§
.40(b). The Agencies also intend

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this exception from the oral disclosure
requirements to apply to a situation
such as a ‘‘take one’’ credit application,
where the consumer picks up a blank
application form, completes the
application at home, and mails it back
to the institution.
A similar situation arises with respect
to offers, solicitations or sales by
telephone. Under the proposed rules, a
covered person who takes an
application for credit by telephone may
provide the written anti-coercion
disclosure by mail, if the covered person
mails it to the consumer within three
days starting on the next business day,
excluding Sundays and the legal public
holidays specified in 5 U.S.C. 6103(a).
Several commenters requested the
Agencies extend this flexible approach
to all of the written disclosures, not just
the anti-coercion disclosure, when
transactions are conducted by
telephone. The Agencies agree with this
concern and have changed the final
rules relating to telephone transactions
to extend the option of providing any
written disclosures by mail within a
three-day time period.
Under proposed §
.40(b)(2)(i),
where the consumer affirmatively
consents, a covered person may provide
the written disclosures required by
§
.40(a) through electronic media
instead of on paper, if they are provided
in a format that the consumer may
retain or obtain later, for example, by
printing or storing electronically, such
as by downloading. Under proposed
§
.40(b)(2)(ii), if the sale of an
insurance product or annuity is
conducted entirely through the use of
electronic media and written
disclosures are provided electronically,
a covered person is not required to
provide disclosures orally. The proposal
also required a covered person to
comply with all other requirements
imposed by law or regulation for
providing disclosures electronically.
In the preamble to the proposed rules,
the Agencies also noted that new
legislation addressing the use of
electronic signatures and electronic
records may affect institutions that
provide disclosures and obtain
acknowledgments electronically. The
Electronic Signatures in Global and
National Commerce Act (the E-Sign
Act) 13 contains, among other things,
Federal rules governing the use of
electronic records for providing
required information to consumers. An
institution may satisfy a legal

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13 Pub. L. 106–229, 114 Stat. 464 (June 30, 2000)
(codified at 12 U.S.C. 7001 et seq.) The E-Sign Act
generally took effect on October 1, 2000, although
there are delayed effective dates for provisions
other than those discussed in the text.

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requirement that the institution provide
written disclosures by using an
electronic disclosure if the consumer
affirmatively consents and if certain
other requirements of the E-Sign Act are
met. For example, the E-Sign Act
requires that, before a consumer
consents to receive electronically
information that is otherwise legally
required to be provided in writing, the
consumer must receive a ‘‘clear and
conspicuous statement’’ containing
certain information prescribed by the
statute.14 The statute authorizes Federal
regulatory agencies to exempt specified
categories or types of records from the
E-Sign Act requirements relating to
consumer consent only if an exemption
is necessary to eliminate a substantial
burden on electronic commerce and will
not increase the material risk of harm to
consumers.15 The Agencies invited
comment on whether—and, if so, how—
they should address the requirements of
the E-Sign Act in the context of these
proposed rules.
Two commenters suggested that
providing disclosures consistent with
the E-Sign Act should suffice.
Commenters did not support other
modifications of the final rule to address
the E-Sign requirements. The Agencies
believe electronic disclosures in lieu of
written disclosures are appropriate if
they meet the requirements of the ESign Act. Thus, the final rules provide
that, subject to the requirements of
section 101(c) of the E-Sign Act, a
covered person may provide the written
disclosures required by section
.40(a) and (b) through electronic
media if the consumer affirmatively
consents to receiving disclosures
electronically and if the disclosures are
provided in a format that the consumer
may retain or obtain later. This option
is not limited to situations where the
sale is conducted entirely through the
use of electronic media, as in the
proposed rule. Moreover, under the
final rules, any disclosures required by
.40(a) and (b) that are provided by
electronic media are not required to be
provided orally.
The Agencies made one additional
clarifying change to the timing and
method of the disclosure provisions to
avoid an open-ended time frame for
disclosures. The proposed rules
required a covered person to make the
anti-coercion disclosure ‘‘at the time the
consumer applies for an extension of
credit in connection with which an
insurance product or annuity will be
solicited, offered, or sold.’’ Section
.40(c)(1) requires that this

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14 See
15 12

12 U.S.C. 7001(c)(1).
U.S.C. 7004(d)(1).

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disclosure be made ‘‘at the time the
consumer applies for an extension of
credit in connection with which an
insurance product or annuity is
solicited, offered, or sold.’’ In addition,
if a solicitation, offer, or sale occurs in
connection with an application for
credit that is pending with the
depository institution, a covered person
must make the disclosure when the
solicitation, offer, or sale occurs.
The Agencies note that, consistent
with section 47(c), the final rules
require a covered person to provide the
disclosures in connection with the
‘‘initial purchase’’ of an insurance
product or annuity. Accordingly, while
new disclosures are not required when
a consumer simply renews an insurance
policy or annuity, disclosures are
required if a consumer purchases a
different insurance product or annuity.
Disclosures Must Be Readily
Understandable, Designed To Call
Attention to the Information, and
Meaningful
Section 47 of the FDIA requires the
Agencies to promulgate regulations
encouraging the use of disclosures that
are conspicuous, simple, direct, and
readily understandable. Proposed
§
.40(b)(3) contained this
requirement and further required that
the disclosures also must be designed to
call attention to the nature and
significance of the information
provided. For example, the proposed
rules provided that a covered person
may use the following short-form
disclosures as may be appropriate:

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• NOT A DEPOSIT
• NOT FDIC-INSURED
• NOT INSURED BY ANY FEDERAL
GOVERNMENT AGENCY
• NOT GUARANTEED BY THE BANK [OR
SAVINGS ASSOCIATION]
• MAY GO DOWN IN VALUE.

Several commenters requested that
the Agencies clarify the circumstances
in which a covered person may use the
short form disclosures. The Agencies
believe that provisions in the Joint
Interpretations of the Interagency
Statement on Retail Sales of Nondeposit
Investment Products (September 12,
1995) for use of short form disclosures
provide useful guidance on this issue.
Therefore, the final rules are changed to
provide that short form disclosures may
be used in visual media, such as
television broadcasts, ATM screens,
billboards, signs, posters, and in written
advertisements and promotional
materials, such as brochures. The
Agencies note that it may be appropriate
to use the short form disclosures in
other circumstances. The Agencies will

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monitor use of these disclosures and
issue further guidance if necessary.
In addition, several commenters
requested that the final rules provide a
short form of the anti-coercion
disclosures. However, the commenters’
suggested short form anti-coercion
disclosure did not adequately capture
all of the information contained in the
form set forth in §
.40(b) of the final
rules. Moreover, the Agencies believe
that requiring the full anti-coercion
disclosure is not particularly
burdensome because the final rules
require the disclosure to be made only
in circumstances involving a
consumer’s application for credit in
connection with which insurance is
solicited, offered, or sold. Therefore, the
final rules do not provide a short form
of the anti-coercion disclosure.
The Agencies also invited comment
on whether the final rule should
provide specific methods of calling
attention to the material contained in
the disclosures. For example, the
Agencies suggested that the final rule
could provide that the disclosures are
designed to call attention to the nature
and significance of the information
provided if they use:
• A plain-language heading to call
attention to the disclosures;
• A typeface and type size that are
easy to read;
• Wide margins and ample line
spacing;
• Boldface or italics for key words;
and
• Distinctive type size, style, and
graphic devices, such as shading or
sidebars, when the disclosures are
combined with other information.
Some commenters expressed concern
that including these examples in the
regulation would be viewed as adding
new requirements. These concerns,
however, are unfounded. The Agencies
believe that providing examples of
possible methods of calling attention to
the material contained in the
disclosures will provide useful guidance
to the industry. The Agencies therefore
have included these methods in the
final rules as examples of ways in which
a covered person could call a
consumer’s attention to the nature and
significance of the information provided
in the required disclosures. These
examples are not binding requirements.
Further, as provided in §
.40(c)(6)
of the final rules, a disclosure is not
‘‘meaningfully’’ provided if a covered
person merely tells the consumer that
the disclosures are available in printed
material without also providing the
material and orally disclosing the
information to the consumer. Similarly,
a disclosure made through electronic

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media is not meaningfully provided if
the consumer may bypass the visual text
of the disclosure before purchasing an
insurance product or annuity.
The Agencies invited comment on
whether these standards would
adequately address situations where
disclosures are made through electronic
media. For example, the Federal Trade
Commission (FTC) recently released
detailed guidance on online advertising
and sales reiterating that many of the
general principles of advertising law
apply to Internet advertisements, but
recognizing that developing technology
raises new issues.16 The Agencies
sought comment on whether the type of
detail provided in the FTC guidance is
necessary in these proposed rules.
The Agencies received several
comments on this issue, none of which
favored providing the type of detail
provided in the FTC guidance.
Accordingly, the final rule does not
include this level of detail.
Consumer Acknowledgment
Under the proposal, a covered person
must obtain from the consumer, at the
time the consumer receives the
disclosures set forth in proposed
§
.40(a), the consumer’s
acknowledgment of receipt. In keeping
with section 47’s express provision for
adjustments to the G–L–B Act’s
requirements for sales conducted by
electronic media and the E-Sign Act, the
proposal further provided that a
consumer who has received disclosures
through electronic media may
acknowledge receipt of the disclosures
electronically or in paper form.
Several commenters noted that it
would be difficult to comply with the
consumer acknowledgment requirement
in situations other than face-to-face
transactions. In mail or telephone
transactions, for example, a covered
person cannot control whether a
consumer completes and returns a
written acknowledgment. These
commenters requested that the Agencies
modify the proposed consumer
acknowledgment provision to waive the
written acknowledgment requirement in
transactions that are not face-to-face.
The Agencies appreciate the difficulties
with obtaining consumer
acknowledgments in non-face-to-face
transactions but note that section 47 of
the G-L-B Act contains no waiver for
consumer acknowledgments in those
situations. To address this problem, the
Agencies have modified the consumer

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16 The FTC’s guidance, Dot Com Disclosures:
Information about Online Advertising is available at
www.ftc.gov/bcp/conline/pubs/buspubs/dotcom/
index.html.

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acknowledgment provision to provide
that, if the disclosures required under
§
.40(a) or (b) are provided in
connection with a transaction that is
conducted by telephone, a covered
person must: (1) Obtain an oral
acknowledgment of receipt of the
disclosures and maintain sufficient
documentation to show that the
acknowledgment was given; and (2)
make reasonable efforts to obtain a
written acknowledgment from the
consumer. The final rules also clarify
that a covered person may in all
circumstances permit a consumer to
acknowledge receipt of the disclosure
electronically or in paper form. The
Agencies intend that the
implementation of this consumer
acknowledgment requirement will not
affect the substantive requirements of
the parties pursuant to contracts for the
sale of insurance products and annuities
under applicable State law.

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Advertisements and Other Promotional
Material for Insurance Products or
Annuities
In accordance with section 47(c)(1)(C)
of the FDIA, proposed §
.40(c)
clarified that the disclosures described
in proposed §
.40 are not required
in advertisements of a general nature
describing or listing the services or
products offered by the depository
institution. The final rules modify this
section slightly, and redesignate it as
§
.40(d), to clarify that the exclusion
of the disclosure requirements does not
apply to all advertisements and
promotional material for insurance
products or annuities but only to such
material that is of a general nature,
describing or listing the services or
products offered by the depository
institution. Further, §
.40(d) refers
only to the disclosures described in
§
.40(a). The Agencies believe that
because the anti-coercion disclosure set
forth in §
.40(b) is required to be
made only in the context of an
application for credit, it could be
confusing to the consumer if the
disclosures were required in all
advertisements and promotional
material for insurance products or
annuities.

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Section
.50 Where Insurance
Activities May Take Place
Section 47(d)(1) of the FDIA requires
that the Agencies’ regulations include
provisions to ensure that the routine
acceptance of deposits is kept, to the
extent practicable, physically segregated
from insurance product activity.
Proposed §
.50(a) set forth this
general rule. It further required that, to
the extent practicable, a depository

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institution identify areas where
insurance product or annuity sales
activities occur and clearly delineate
and distinguish them from the areas
where the institution’s retail deposittaking activities occur, in accordance
with section 47(d)(2)(A) of the FDIA.
The Agencies received several
comments on this provision, most of
which asked for clearer guidance on
what constitutes the area where deposits
are routinely accepted. Several asserted
that the physical segregation
requirement should not apply to an
institution’s ‘‘platform’’ areas and
should only apply to teller windows.
‘‘Platform’’ areas are typically areas of
an institution’s premises in which
employees other than tellers engage in
a variety of activities, including the
origination of loans, the sale of
insurance and annuity products, and
occasionally, the acceptance of deposits.
The Agencies wish to clarify for
purposes of these final rules that the
areas where retail deposits are routinely
accepted from the general public are
generally limited to traditional teller
windows and teller lines.
One commenter also recommended
physically segregating the area where
lending activities occur from the area
where insurance products or annuities
sales occur. The Agencies decline to
make this change because it would
extend significantly beyond the
restrictions set forth in the statute.
Proposed §
.50(b) implemented
section 47(d)(2)(B) of the FDIA,
concerning referrals to insurance
product and annuity sales personnel by
a person who accepts deposits from the
public. Under that proposed section,
any person who accepts deposits from
the public in an area where such
transactions are routinely conducted in
a depository institution may refer a
consumer who seeks to purchase an
insurance product or annuity to a
qualified person who sells that product.
The person making the referral may
only receive a one-time, nominal fee of
a fixed dollar amount for each referral.
The fee may not depend on whether the
referral results in a transaction. The
Agencies received several comments
requesting that the limits on referral fees
apply only to tellers. The Agencies
believe that the person described in the
regulation text—that is, a person ‘‘who
accepts deposits from the public in an
area where such transactions are
routinely conducted’’ will typically be a
teller. The Agencies also believe that a
description by function is preferable
because it is more precise. We have
therefore retained the language as
proposed.

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Section
.60 Qualification and
Licensing Requirements for Insurance
Sales Personnel
Section 47(d)(2)(C) of the FDIA
requires that the Agencies’ regulations
prohibit any depository institution from
permitting any person to sell or offer for
sale any insurance product in any part
of any office of the institution, or on
behalf of the institution, unless such
person is appropriately qualified and
licensed. Thus, proposed section
.60 provided that a depository
institution may not permit any person to
sell or offer for sale any insurance
product or annuity in any part of its
office or on its behalf, unless the person
is at all times appropriately qualified
and licensed under applicable State
insurance licensing standards with
regard to the specific products being
sold or recommended. One commenter
expressed the opinion that this
provision is unnecessary because each
state’s insurance licensing agency is
already policing its licensing and
qualification requirements. The
Agencies retain this provision because it
is required by the statute.

ll

Appendix—Consumer Grievance
Process
Section 47(f) of the FDIA requires that
the Agencies jointly establish a
consumer complaint mechanism for
addressing consumer complaints
alleging violations of these rules. Each
agency has procedures in place to
handle consumer complaints they
receive directly.17 The Agencies will
apply those procedures to complaints
involving these rules. The Appendix to
each agency’s final rule contains the
name and address of each agency’s
consumer complaint office. Any
consumer who believes that a
depository institution or any other
person selling, soliciting, advertising, or
offering insurance products or annuities
to the consumer at an office of the
institution or on behalf of the institution
has violated the requirements of these
rules may contact the consumer
complaint office listed in the Appendix.
Each agency already has entered into,
or is developing, agreements with State
insurance commissioners regarding the
sharing of consumer complaints. It is
expected that these agreements will
facilitate prompt resolution of consumer
complaints and ensure that incoming
complaints are directed to the
appropriate agency. Consumer
complaints alleging violations of these
rules that raise issues under State and
17 E.g., OTS Customer Service Plan at
www.ots.treas.gov/consass/html.

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local law will be shared with State
regulators pursuant to those agreements.
Effect on Other Authority
Section 47(g) sets forth a general
framework for determining the effect of
these final rules on State law. Under
that framework, the Agencies’ insurance
consumer protection rules will not
apply in a State where the State has in
effect statutes, regulations, orders, or
interpretations that are inconsistent
with or contrary to the provisions of the
Agencies’ rules. If the Board, FDIC and
OCC jointly determine, however, that
the protection afforded by a provision of
these final rules is greater than the
protection provided by comparable state
law or rulings, these final rules shall
preempt the contrary or inconsistent
State law or ruling. Prior to making this
determination, the Board, FDIC and
OCC must notify the appropriate State
regulatory authority in writing, and the
Board, FDIC and OCC will consider
comments submitted by the appropriate
State regulatory authorities. If the Board,
FDIC and OCC determine that a
provision of these final rules affords
greater protection than State provisions,
the Board, FDIC and OCC will send a
written preemption notice to the
appropriate State insurance authority
that the provision of these final rules
will be applicable unless the State
adopts legislation within three years to
override the preemption notice.
In the preamble to the proposed rules,
the Board, FDIC and OCC invited
comment on whether it would be
helpful to include a second appendix
restating these statutory requirements or
whether such a restatement would be
confusing absent a determination
regarding the applicability of specific
State laws. The comments generally did
not support the inclusion in the final
rules of a preemption appendix. The
Agencies do not believe it would be
useful to include such an appendix.
Regulatory Analysis
A. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Agencies may not conduct or
sponsor, and respondents are not
required to respond to, an information
collection unless it displays a currently
valid Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) control number. The OMB
control numbers and clearance
expiration dates are listed below:
OCC: 1557–0220; October 31, 2003.
Board: 7100–0295; November 30, 2003.
FDIC: 3064–0140; October 31, 2003.
OTS: 1550–0106; October 31, 2003.
The final rule contains requirements
to make disclosure at two different
times. The respondents must prepare

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and provide certain disclosures to
consumers: (1) Before the completion of
the initial sale of an insurance product
or annuity to a consumer; and (2) at the
time of application for the extension of
credit (if insurance products or
annuities are solicited, offered or sold in
connection with an extension of credit)
(§§
. 40(a) and (b)).
The Agencies received one comment
that addressed a perceived low burden
estimate stemming from these
disclosures. The commenter, however,
provided no suggestion as to an
appropriate higher estimate. Other
comments regarding the information
collection are discussed above in the
preamble discussion of §§
.20,
.40 (a) and (b).
OCC: The respondents are national
banks, District of Columbia banks, and
Federal branches and agencies of foreign
banks and any other persons selling,
soliciting, advertising, or offering
insurance products or annuities at an
office of a national bank or on behalf of
a national bank. OMB has reviewed and
approved the collections of information
contained in the rule under control
number 1557–0220, in accordance with
the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.). There are 1,949
respondents with a total annual burden
of 19,490 hours.
Board: The respondents are state
member banks and any other persons
selling, soliciting, advertising, or
offering insurance products or annuities
at an office of a state member bank or
on behalf of a state member bank. In
accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3506;
5 CFR 1320 Appendix A.1), the Board
approved the rule under the authority
delegated to the Board by OMB. The
OMB control number is 7100–0295.
There are 1,010 respondents with a total
annual burden of 46,090 hours.
FDIC: The respondents are insured
nonmember banks and any other
persons selling, soliciting, advertising,
or offering insurance products or
annuities at an office of an insured
nonmember bank or on behalf of an
insured nonmember bank. OMB has
reviewed and approved the collections
of information contained in the rule
under control number 3064–0140, in
accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501
et seq.). There are 5,800 respondents
with a total annual burden of 76,667
hours.
OTS: The respondents are savings
associations and any other persons
selling, soliciting, advertising, or
offering insurance products or annuities
at an office of a savings association or
on behalf of a savings association. OMB

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has reviewed and approved the
collections of information contained in
the rule under control number 1550–
0106, in accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501
et seq.). There are 1,097 respondents
with a total annual burden of 47,286
hours.
The Agencies have a continuing
interest in the public’s opinion
regarding collections of information.
Members of the public may submit
comments, at any time, regarding any
aspect of these collections of
information. Comments may be sent to:
OCC: Jessie Dunaway, Clearance
Officer, Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency, 250 E Street, SW, Mailstop 8–
4, Washington, DC 20219.
Board: Mary M. West, Federal Reserve
Board Clearance Officer, Mailstop 97,
Division of Research and Statistics,
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, Washington, DC 20551.
FDIC: Steven F. Hanft, Assistant
Executive Secretary (Regulatory
Analysis), Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, Room F–4080, 550 17th
Street, NW, Washington, DC 20429.
OTS: Dissemination Branch (1550–
0106), Office of Thrift Supervision, 1700
G Street, NW, Washington, DC 20552.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
OCC: The Regulatory Flexibility Act
(5 U.S.C. 601–612) requires federal
agencies either to provide a Final
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (FRFA)
with a final rule or certify that the final
rule ‘‘will not, if promulgated,’’ have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities. On
the basis of the information currently
available, the OCC is of the opinion that
this final rule is unlikely to have a
significant impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Because the
final rules implement new legislation,
however, the OCC lacks historical
information specific to the requirements
in the final rules on which to base
estimates of cost. For this reason, the
OCC has prepared the following FRFA.
Reasons, Objectives, and Legal Basis for
the Final Rule
The OCC is issuing this final rule to
implement section 47 of the FDIA. A
fuller discussion of the reasons for,
objectives of, and legal basis for, the
final rule appears elsewhere in the
Supplementary Information.
Description of the Small Entities to
Which the Final Rule Would Apply
The final rule would apply to a
national bank or any ‘‘other person’’
who, at an office of a national bank or
on behalf of a national bank, sells,

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solicits, advertises, or offers insurance
products or annuities to consumers. The
final rule would apply regardless of the
size of the bank or other organization for
which a person worked.
Small national banks are generally
defined, for Regulatory Flexibility Act
purposes, as those with assets of $100
million or less. 13 CFR 121.201,
Division H (2000). As of January, 1999,
1,949 national banks or national bank
subsidiaries were engaged in insurance
activities that would bring them within
the scope of coverage of the final rule.
We estimated in the preamble to the
proposed rule that 976 of the national
banks that sold insurance as of January,
1999, had $100 million or less in assets.
We received no comment on this
estimate and believe it to be accurate.
Reporting, Recordkeeping, and
Compliance Requirements of the Final
Rule
The final rule requires national banks
(and entities acting on behalf of national
banks) to amend the written materials
and Internet web sites they use in
connection with the retail sale,
solicitation, advertising, or offer of
insurance products to consumers. The
final rule also requires national banks
(and entities acting on their behalf) to
obtain from consumers acknowledgment
that the consumer has received certain
disclosures. The substance of these
requirements is described in detail
elsewhere in the Supplementary
Information.18
The OCC believes that most national
banks will be able to satisfy the
disclosure provisions by including the
information required to be disclosed in
their written materials with minimal
cost. We estimate that most banks
maintain a 3 to 4 month inventory of
those materials. This final rule will not
become effective until April 1, 2001,
which should allow ample time for most
banks to exhaust their inventory of
printed materials and prepare new
materials. Nevertheless, our analysis
assumes that some banks may need to
amend the written materials they have
in inventory during an interim period
between the effective date of the final
rule and the next regularly scheduled
printing of those materials because their
inventories will not be depleted during
that time. These banks—which are
18 The final rule also requires national banks to
keep the area where the bank conducts insurance
transactions physically separate from the areas
where retail deposits are routinely accepted from
the general public ‘‘to the extent practicable.’’ This
requirement, which is worded like the requirement
in the statute, leaves significant discretion to each
national bank to determine what costs, if any, the
bank must incur in order to avoid customer
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probably smaller banks that order
written materials infrequently and in
large quantities to obtain reduced rates
on printing—would therefore incur
costs as a result of this requirement.
There are approximately 25 national
banks that sell insurance products over
the Internet. Our experience has been
that Internet banks regularly upgrade
their web sites. Adding the required
disclosures could be done as part of a
regular upgrade and would therefore
present only minimal additional costs to
the bank.
The primary cost associated with the
requirement that a bank obtain from the
consumer a written acknowledgment of
the consumer’s receipt of the
disclosures is, in the OCC’s opinion,
likely to be the cost of developing the
written acknowledgment. Banks that
sell insurance products over the Internet
should, as part of a regularly scheduled
upgrade, be able to revise their web sites
to include a series of ‘‘click throughs’’
that will require affirmation from the
customer that he or she has received the
required disclosures.
Summary of Significant Issues Raised by
the Public Comments in Response to
Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
and Description of Steps the Agency
Has Taken To Minimize Burden
The issues raised by the commenters
are described more fully elsewhere in
the Supplementary Information. The
issues that were raised by commenters
about the proposal’s impact on small
businesses were the following:
• The requirement that a covered
person obtain a written
acknowledgment of receipt of
disclosures for a telephone transaction
could require significant effort and
additional correspondence if the
customer does not return the
acknowledgment with other paperwork
for the policy. This effort would be a
significant burden for small financial
institutions.
• The requirement that such
insurance as credit and mortgage
insurance be sold in an area of the office
separate from where deposits are
routinely taken poses a particular
hardship for small financial institutions
where deposits and loan applications
are taken at the same place.
The OCC considered how to tailor the
form of disclosures and
acknowledgments to the form of the
sales transaction and how to make the
record of acknowledgment functional,
within the statutory constraints. In the
case of telephone applications for credit,
the proposed rule permitted the anticoercion disclosure due at the time of
applications to be given orally and

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followed with written disclosures
mailed within three days. To extend the
principle more broadly, the final rule
applies this form of providing written
disclosures for telephone sales to all the
required disclosures. The timing has
been clarified to be three business days,
starting with the first business day after
the telephone transaction. With respect
to telephone sales, the final rule permits
an oral acknowledgment of the
disclosures if the covered person
documents the acknowledgment. In that
case, the final rule requires the covered
person also to make reasonable efforts to
obtain a written acknowledgment.
We have made an additional change
affecting disclosures relevant to sales
initiated by telephone. The proposed
rule limited the use of electronic
disclosures to those transactions taking
place entirely electronically.
Commenters were concerned that the
proposed rule did not permit electronic
disclosures to be used in transactions
that may have started with a telephone
contact. To address this concern, the
final rule provides that, if a transaction
involves telephone contact, but the
consumer affirmatively consents to
transmission of disclosures through
electronic media instead of on paper,
the covered person may provide the
‘‘written’’ disclosures electronically. Of
course, these electronic disclosures
must satisfy the rule’s requirement that
the format of disclosure be one that
permits the consumer to retain or to
obtain later, such as by printing or
storing electronically. Where
disclosures are made electronically, the
rule already provided that the consumer
could acknowledge them electronically.
Electronic acknowledgment of
electronic disclosures applies under the
final rule to these mixed media
transactions, as well. The final rule also
provides that oral disclosures are not
required where disclosures are provided
electronically. This exception applies
not only to disclosures provided in the
sale of insurance and annuities as in the
proposed rule, but also to the anticoercion disclosure provided with
credit applications.
In response to the concern expressed
about the difficulty of separating
functions in a small office, we have
clarified in the preamble to this final
rule that generally the location where
deposits are routinely taken is the teller
window and teller line. This distinction
permits a savings association to sell
insurance products and annuities from
the ‘‘platform area,’’ where loan
transactions may routinely be
conducted, if the savings association
distinguishes that area from the teller
window area. The regulation also

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requires this segregation of functions
into separate areas ‘‘to the extent
practicable.’’ If it is not practicable for
a small institution to have separate
areas, it could make other efforts to
satisfy the separation of functions
between deposit taking and selling of
insurance.
We note that in addition to these
specific responses to concerns
expressed with reference to impact on
small entities, we have limited the
scope of the rule in other ways to
minimize compliance burdens. The
final rule:
• Only applies to retail sales,
solicitations, advertisements, or offers of
insurance products or annuities to
individuals purchasing for personal,
family, or household use. The Agencies
have determined, after requesting
comment on whether to also include
small business insurance purchases, not
to broaden the coverage.
• Does not apply to subsidiaries of
depository institutions, except where
the subsidiaries are selling, soliciting,
advertising, or offering insurance
products or annuities to consumers at
an office of a savings association or on
behalf of a savings association.
• Clarifies the scope of the rule and
the definition of ‘‘you’’ to apply only to
transactions conducted by the person
that are by, at an office of, or on behalf
of, the savings association.
• Defines ‘‘office’’ narrowly to
include only premises where retail
deposits are accepted from the public.
• Clarifies when certain disclosures
must be provided, including that a
disclosure such as ‘‘not insured by any
federal agency’’ is not to be given where
it would be inaccurate (as in the case of
federally-insured crop insurance or
flood insurance).
• Only requires the anti-coercion
disclosure to be made once, instead of
twice per transaction.
• Provides flexibility for covered
persons to use a variety of means to
provide disclosures that are readily
understandable and call attention to the
information.
• Provides that, in the case of
telephone sales, the duty to obtain a
consumer’s acknowledgment of
receiving the disclosures may be
satisfied by an oral acknowledgment of
disclosures combined with reasonable
efforts to obtain a written
acknowledgment.
• Does not require disclosures in
advertisements of a general nature
describing or listing the services or
products offered by the savings
association.
• Provides for a delayed effective
date, requiring compliance by April 1,

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2001, to permit adequate time to prepare
disclosures and acknowledgment
materials and train staff.
Significant Alternatives to the Final
Rule

Description of the Small Entities to
Which the Final Rule Would Apply

Duplicative, Overlapping, or Conflicting
Federal Rules
As used in the Interagency Statement,
the term ‘‘nondeposit investment
products,’’ includes some products,
such as annuities, that are covered by
section 47 of FDIA and these proposed
rules. The Interagency Statement
provides, among other things, that
institutions should disclose to
customers that such products are not
insured by the FDIC or the depository
institution and are subject to investment
risk including possible loss of principal.
It also provides that institutions should
obtain acknowledgments from
customers verifying that they have
received and understand the
disclosures. The Interagency Statement
further provides that retail sales or
recommendations of nondeposit
investment products should be
conducted in a location physically
distinct from where retail deposits are
taken, that nondeposit investment
product sales personnel should receive
adequate training, and that referral fees
should be limited. The final rules do not
appear to conflict materially with the
Interagency Statement.
Board: The Regulatory Flexibility Act
(5 U.S.C. 601–12) requires federal
agencies either to provide a Final
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis with a
final rule or to certify that the final rule
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. Based on available data, the
Board is unable to determine at this
time whether the final rule would have
a significant impact on a substantial
number of small entities. For this
reason, the Board has prepared the

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Reasons, Objectives, and Legal Basis for
the Final Rule
A description of the reasons why the
Board is adopting this final rule and a
statement of the need for, and the
objectives of, the final rule are
contained in the supplementary
materials provided above. The Board’s
final rule is virtually identical to the
final rules being adopted by the other
Federal banking agencies for the
depository institutions over which they
have primary supervisory authority.

Section 305 of the G-L-B Act
expressly prescribes the content of its
implementing regulations. The OCC’s
final rule does not depart materially
from the requirements of the statute.
The statute does not authorize the OCC
to provide exemptions or exceptions to
its requirements for small national
banks.
In preparing the final rule, the OCC
has considered the burden on small
national banks to the extent that it has
the discretion to do so. As set forth
above in the discussion of significant
issues raised in response to the Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, the
Agencies have modified the final rules
to minimize burden.

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following Final Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis.

The final rule applies to all state
member banks and any other person
when that person sells, solicits,
advertises, or offers an insurance
product or annuity to an individual for
personal, family, or household purposes
at an office of a state member bank or
on behalf of the bank. As of year-end
1999, there were approximately 1,010
state member banks. The Board
estimates that approximately 480 state
member banks have assets less than
$100 million. Based on available data,
the Board is unable to estimate the
number of other persons who engage in
retail insurance activities at an office of
a state member bank or on behalf of the
bank, or how many of these other
persons are small entities.
Summary of Significant Issues Raised by
the Public Comments in Response to
Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
and Description of Steps the Agency has
Taken to Minimize Burden
The issues raised by the commenters
generally are described more fully in the
supplementary material provided above.
The issues that were raised by
commenters in connection with impact
on small businesses, specifically, were
the following:
• The requirement that a covered
person obtain a written
acknowledgment of receipt of
disclosures for a telephone transaction
could require significant effort and
additional correspondence if the
customer does not return the
acknowledgment with other paperwork
for the policy. This effort would be a
significant burden for small financial
institutions.
• The requirement that such
insurance as credit and mortgage
insurance be sold in an area of the office
separate from where deposits are
routinely taken poses a particular
hardship for small financial institutions

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where deposits and loan applications
are taken at the same place.
The Board considered how to tailor
the form of disclosures and
acknowledgments to the form of the
sales transaction and how to make the
record of acknowledgment functional,
within the statutory constraints. In the
case of telephone applications for credit,
the proposed rule permitted the anticoercion disclosure due at the time of
applications to be given orally and
followed with written disclosures
mailed within three days. To extend the
principle more broadly, the final rule
applies this form of providing written
disclosures for telephone sales to all the
required disclosures. The timing has
been clarified to be three business days,
starting with the first business day after
the telephone transaction. With respect
to telephone sales, the final rule permits
an oral acknowledgment of the
disclosures if the acknowledgment is
documented. In that case, the final rule
requires also that reasonable efforts be
made to obtain a written
acknowledgment.
We have made an additional change
affecting disclosures relevant to sales
initiated by telephone. The proposed
rule limited the use of electronic
disclosures to those transactions taking
place entirely electronically.
Commenters were concerned that the
proposed rule did not permit electronic
disclosures to be used in transactions
that may have started with a telephone
contact. To address this concern, the
final rule provides that, if a transaction
involves telephone contact, but the
consumer affirmatively consents to
transmission of disclosures through
electronic media instead of on paper,
the covered person may provide the
‘‘written’’ disclosures electronically. Of
course, these electronic disclosures
must satisfy the rule’s requirement that
the format of disclosure be one that
permits the consumer to retain or to
obtain later, such as by printing or
storing electronically. Where
disclosures are made electronically, the
rule already provided that the consumer
could acknowledge them electronically.
Electronic acknowledgment of
electronic disclosures applies under the
final rule to these mixed media
transactions, as well.
In response to the concern expressed
about the difficulty of separating
functions in a small office, we have
clarified in the preamble to this final
rule that generally the location where
deposits are routinely taken is the teller
window and teller line. This distinction
permits a state member bank to sell
insurance products and annuities from
the ‘‘platform area,’’ where loan

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transactions may routinely be
conducted, if the state member bank
distinguishes that area from the teller
window area. The regulation also
requires this segregation of functions
into separate areas ‘‘to the extent
practicable.’’ If it is not practicable for
a small institution to have separate
areas, it could make other efforts to
satisfy the separation of functions
between deposit taking and selling of
insurance.
We note that in addition to these
specific responses to concerns
expressed with reference to impact on
small entities, we have limited the
scope of the rule in other ways to
minimize compliance burdens. The
final rule:
• Only applies to retail sales,
solicitations, advertisements, or offers of
insurance products or annuities to
individuals purchasing for personal,
family, or household use. The Agencies
have determined, after requesting
comment on whether to also include
small business insurance purchases, not
to broaden the coverage.
• Does not apply to subsidiaries of
depository institutions, except where
the subsidiaries are selling, soliciting,
advertising, or offering insurance
products or annuities to consumers at
an office of a state member bank or on
behalf of a state member bank.
• Clarifies the scope of the rule and
the definition of ‘‘you’’ to apply only to
transactions conducted by the person
that are by, at an office of, or on behalf
of, the state member bank.
• Defines ‘‘office’’ narrowly to
include only premises where retail
deposits are accepted from the public.
• Clarifies when certain disclosures
must be provided, including that a
disclosure such as ‘‘not insured by any
federal agency’’ is not to be given where
it would be inaccurate (as in the case of
federally-insured crop insurance or
flood insurance).
• Only requires the anti-coercion
disclosure to be made once, instead of
twice per transaction.
• Provides flexibility for covered
persons to use a variety of means to
provide disclosures that are readily
understandable and call attention to the
information.
• Provides that, in the case of
telephone sales, the duty to obtain a
consumer’s acknowledgment of
receiving the disclosures may be
satisfied by an oral acknowledgment of
disclosures combined with reasonable
efforts to obtain a written
acknowledgment.
• Does not require disclosures in
advertisements of a general nature
describing or listing the services or

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products offered by the state member
bank.
• Provides for a delayed effective
date, requiring compliance by April 1,
2001, to permit adequate time to prepare
disclosures and acknowledgment
materials and train staff.
Reporting, Recordingkeeping, and
Compliance Requirements of the Final
Rule
The final rule requires a depository
institution to make required disclosures
in connection with insurance activities
and applications for credit if insurance
is sold or solicited in connection with
the credit. Some insurance products or
annuities that are covered by the final
regulation may also be subject to the
Interagency Statement. The Interagency
Statement provides for consumer
disclosure, acknowledgment, separation
of activities, and personnel qualification
requirements that are similar to the
provisions of the final rule. The Board
does not believe that the final rule
would conflict materially with the
Interagency Statement.
The final rule also prohibits certain
practices in the sale of insurance, such
as the tying of credit and insurance,
making misrepresentations, and
discriminating against the victims of
domestic violence. These prohibitions
incorporate the existing statutory
prohibition on tying arrangements in
section 106(b) of the Bank Holding
Company Amendments of 1970 (12
U.S.C. 1972). Existing laws also ban
many types of discrimination. To some
extent, therefore, state member banks
may already have the professional skills
needed to comply with the requirements
of the final rule.
Significant Alternatives to the Final
Rule
As explained above, the substantive
provisions of the final rule are required
by section 47 of the FDIA. The final rule
does not impose any new substantive
requirements that are not mandated by
the statute. Section 47 applies to all
depository institutions, regardless of
size, and does not provide the Agencies
with the authority to exempt a small
institution from the requirements of the
statute. Thus, the Board has only
limited discretion to consider
alternatives to minimize the economic
impact on small entities. As explained
above, the Agencies have made some
modifications to the proposed rule to
accommodate existing methods of
soliciting and selling insurance
products and annuities and to reduce
regulatory burden.
FDIC: The Regulatory Flexibility Act
(‘‘RFA’’), 5 U.S.C. 601–612, requires

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federal agencies either to provide a
Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
(FRFA) with a final rule or certify that
the final rule ‘‘will not, if promulgated,’’
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
On the basis of the information
currently available, the FDIC believes
that this final rule is unlikely to have a
significant impact on a substantial
number of small entities. Because the
final rules implement new legislation,
however, the FDIC lacks historical
information specific to the requirements
in the final rules on which to base
estimates of cost. For this reason, the
FDIC has prepared the following FRFA.
Reasons, Objectives, and Legal Basis for
the Final Rule.
The FDIC is issuing this final rule to
implement section 47 of the FDIA. A
fuller discussion of the reasons for,
objectives of, and legal basis for, the
final rule appears elsewhere in the
Supplementary Information.
Description of the Small Entities to
Which the Final Rule Would Apply
The FDIC’s final rule applies to all
FDIC-insured, state-chartered banks that
are not members of the Federal Reserve
System (approximately 5800) and any
‘‘other person’’ who, at an office of the
bank or on behalf of the bank, sells,
solicits, advertises, or offers insurance
products or annuities to consumers. The
final rule applies regardless of the size
of the bank or other organization for
which a person worked. The FDIC
estimated in the preamble to the
proposed rule that approximately 3700
of this total are ‘‘small entities’’ as
defined by the RFA 19 We received no
comment on this estimate and believe it
to be accurate.
Reporting, Recordkeeping, and
Compliance Requirements of the Final
Rule
The final rule requires banks (and
entities acting on behalf of banks) to
amend the written materials and
Internet web sites they use in
connection with the retail sale,
solicitation, advertising, or offer of
insurance products and annuities to
consumers. The final rule also requires
banks (and entities acting on their
behalf) to obtain from consumers
acknowledgment that the consumer has
received certain disclosures. The
19 The RFA defines the term ‘‘small entity’’ in 5
U.S.C. 601 by reference to definitions published by
the Small Business Administration (SBA). The SBA
has defined a ‘‘small entity of banking purposes as
a national or commercial, savings institution or
credit union with less than $100 million in assets.’’
See 13 CFR 121.201.

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substance of these requirements is
described in detail elsewhere in the
Supplementary Information. 20
The FDIC believes that most banks
will be able to satisfy the disclosure
provisions by including the information
required to be disclosed in their written
materials with minimal cost. We
estimate that most banks maintain a 3 to
4 month inventory of those materials.
This final rule will not become effective
until April 1, 2001, which should allow
ample time for most banks to use up
their inventory of printed materials and
prepare new materials. Nevertheless,
our analysis assumes that some banks
may need to amend the written
materials they have in inventory during
an interim period between the effective
date of the final rule and the next
regularly scheduled printing of those
materials because their inventories will
not be depleted during that time. These
banks—which are probably smaller
banks that order written materials
infrequently and in large quantities to
obtain reduced rates on printing—
would therefore incur costs as a result
of this requirement.
The primary cost associated with the
requirement that a bank obtain from the
consumer a written acknowledgment of
the consumer’s receipt of the
disclosures is, in the FDIC’s opinion,
likely to be the cost of developing the
written acknowledgment. Banks that
sell insurance products over the Internet
should, as part of a regularly scheduled
upgrade, be able to revise their web sites
to include a series of ‘‘click throughs’’
that will require affirmation from the
customer that he or she has received the
required disclosures.
Summary of Significant Issues Raised by
the Public Comments in Response to
Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
and Description of Steps the Agency
Has Taken To Minimize Burden
The issues raised by the commenters
generally are described more fully in the
supplementary material provided above.
The issues that were raised by
commenters in connection with impact
on small businesses, specifically, were
the following:
• The requirement that a covered
person obtain a written
acknowledgment of receipt of
disclosures for a telephone transaction
20 The final rule also requires banks to keep the
area where the bank conducts insurance
transactions physically separate from the areas
where retail deposits are routinely accepted from
the general public ‘‘to the extent practicable.’’ This
requirement, which is worded like the requirement
in the statute, leaves significant discretion to each
bank to determine what costs, if any, the bank must
incur in order to avoid customer confusion.

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could require significant effort and
additional correspondence if the
customer does not return the
acknowledgment with other paperwork
for the policy. This effort would be a
significant burden for small financial
institutions.
• The requirement that such
insurance as credit and mortgage
insurance be sold in an area of the office
separate from where deposits are
routinely taken poses a particular
hardship for small financial institutions
where deposits and loan applications
are taken at the same place.
The FDIC seriously considered how to
tailor the form of disclosures and
acknowledgments to the form of the
sales transaction and how to make the
record of acknowledgment functional,
within the statutory constraints. In the
case of telephone applications for credit,
the proposed rule permitted the anticoercion disclosure due at the time of
applications to be given orally and
followed with written disclosures
mailed within three days. To extend the
principle more broadly, the final rule
applies this form of providing written
disclosures for telephone sales to all the
required disclosures. The timing has
been clarified to be three business days,
starting with the first business day after
the telephone transaction. With respect
to telephone sales, the final rule permits
an oral acknowledgment of the
disclosures if the covered person
documents the acknowledgment. In that
case, the final rule requires the covered
person also to make reasonable efforts to
obtain a written acknowledgment.
We have made an additional change
affecting disclosures relevant to sales
initiated by telephone. The proposed
rule limited the use of electronic
disclosures to those transactions taking
place entirely electronically.
Commenters were concerned that the
proposed rule did not permit electronic
disclosures to be used in transactions
that may have started with a telephone
contact. To address this concern, the
final rule provides that, if a transaction
involves telephone contact, but the
consumer affirmatively consents to
transmission of disclosures through
electronic media instead of on paper,
the covered person may provide the
‘‘written’’ disclosures electronically. Of
course, these electronic disclosures
must satisfy the rule’s requirement that
the format of disclosure be one that
permits the consumer to retain or to
obtain later, such as by printing or
storing electronically. Where
disclosures are made electronically, the
rule already provided that the consumer
could acknowledge them electronically.
Electronic acknowledgment of

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Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 233 / Monday, December 4, 2000 / Rules and Regulations
electronic disclosures applies under the
final rule to these mixed media
transactions, as well. The final rule also
provides that oral disclosures are not
required where disclosures are provided
electronically. This exception applies
not only to disclosures provided in the
sale of insurance and annuities as in the
proposed rule, but also to the anticoercion disclosure provided with
credit applications.
In response to the concern expressed
about the difficulty of separating
functions in a small office, we have
clarified in the preamble to this final
rule that generally the location where
deposits are routinely taken is the teller
window and teller line. This distinction
permits a depository institution to sell
insurance products and annuities from
the ‘‘platform area,’’ where loan
transactions may routinely be
conducted, if the savings association
distinguishes that area from the teller
window area. The regulation also
requires this segregation of functions
into separate areas ‘‘to the extent
practicable.’’ If it is not practicable for
a small institution to have separate
areas, it could make other efforts to
satisfy the separation of functions
between deposit taking and selling of
insurance.
We note that in addition to these
specific responses to concerns
expressed with reference to impact on
small entities, we have limited the
scope of the rule in other ways to
minimize compliance burdens. The
final rule:
• Only applies to retail sales,
solicitations, advertisements, or offers of
insurance products or annuities to
individuals purchasing for personal,
family, or household use. The Agencies
have determined, after requesting
comment on whether to also include
small business purchase, not to broaden
the coverage.
• Does not apply to subsidiaries of
depository institutions, except where
the subsidiaries are selling, soliciting,
advertising, or offering insurance
products or annuities to consumers at
an office of a bank or on behalf of a
bank. The FDIC is adopting this
approach even though, under section
47(a)(2) of FDIA, the FDIC could apply
the requirements to subsidiaries if it
determined that doing so was necessary
to ensure the consumer protections
provided by the statute.
• Clarifies the scope of the rule and
the definition of ‘‘you’’ to apply only to
transactions conducted by the person
that are by, at an office of, or on behalf
of, the bank.

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• Defines ‘‘office’’ narrowly to
include only premises where retail
deposits are accepted from the public.
• Clarifies when certain disclosures
must be provided, including that a
disclosure such as ‘‘not insured by any
federal agency’’ is not to be given where
it would be inaccurate (as in the case of
federally-insured crop insurance or
flood insurance).
• Only requires the anti-coercion
disclosure to be made once, instead of
twice per transaction.
• Provides flexibility for covered
persons to use a variety of means to
provide disclosures that are readily
understandable and call attention to the
information.
• Provides that, in the case of
telephone sales, the duty to obtain a
consumer’s acknowledgment of
receiving the disclosures may be
satisfied by an oral acknowledgment of
disclosures combined with reasonable
efforts to obtain a written
acknowledgment.
• Does not require disclosures in
advertisements of a general nature
describing or listing the services or
products offered by the bank.
• Provides for a delayed effective
date, requiring compliance by April 1,
2001, to permit adequate time to prepare
disclosures and acknowledgment
materials and train staff.
Significant Alternatives to the Final
Rule
Section 305 of the G–L–B Act
expressly prescribes the content of its
implementing regulations. The FDIC’s
final rule does not depart materially
from the requirements of the statute.
The statute does not authorize the FDIC
to provide exemptions or exceptions to
its requirements for small banks.
In preparing the final rule, the FDIC
has considered the burden on small
banks to the extent that it has the
discretion to do so. As set forth above
in the discussion of significant issues
raised in response to the Initial
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis, the
Agencies have modified the final rules
to minimize burden.
Duplicative, Overlapping, or Conflicting
Federal Rules
As used in the Interagency Statement,
the term ‘‘nondeposit investment
products,’’ includes some products,
such as annuities, that are covered by
section 47 of FDIA and these proposed
rules. The Interagency Statement
provides, among other things, that
institutions should disclose to
customers that such products are not
insured by the FDIC or the depository
institution and are subject to investment

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75835

risk including possible loss of principal.
It also provides that institutions should
obtain acknowledgments from
customers verifying that they have
received and understand the
disclosures. The Interagency Statement
further provides that retail sales or
recommendations of nondeposit
investment products should be
conducted in a location physically
distinct from where retail deposits are
taken, that nondeposit investment
product sales personnel should receive
adequate training, and that referral fees
should be limited. The final rules do not
appear to conflict materially with the
Interagency Statement.
OTS: The Regulatory Flexibility Act
(5 U.S.C. 601–612) requires federal
agencies to prepare a final regulatory
flexibility analysis (RFA) with a final
rule, unless the agency certifies that the
rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. OTS believes
that this rule will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small thrifts or other small
entities because the burden imposed on
small entities stems in large part from
the G-L-B Act rather than from the final
rule. This final rule restates and clarifies
the statutory requirements. These
clarifications should reduce the burden
of complying with the G-L-B Act
provisions. OTS has revised the
proposed rule to reduce the regulatory
burden on financial institutions of all
sizes, as discussed below. However,
OTS has prepared the following final
RFA, because the G-L-B Act creates
requirements that, in part, are new to
the OTS, the thrift industry, and others,
and because OTS is uncertain of the
economic impact of compliance with
the new requirements.
1. Statement of Need and Objectives
A description of the reasons why OTS
is adopting this final rule and a
statement of the objectives of, and legal
basis for, the final rule, are contained in
the supplementary materials provided
above.
2. Small Entities to Which the Final
Rule Would Apply
The final rule would apply to a
savings association or any ‘‘other
person’’ who, at an office of a savings
association or on behalf of a savings
association, sells, solicits, advertises, or
offers insurance products or annuities to
consumers. The final rule would apply
regardless of the size of the savings
association or other organization for
which a person worked.
Small savings associations are
generally defined, for Regulatory

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Flexibility Act purposes, as those with
assets of $100 million or less. 13 CFR
121.201, Division H (2000). As of the
publication of the proposed rule, OTS
calculated that of the approximately
1,097 savings associations, a maximum
of 482 were small savings associations.
Currently, OTS calculates that of the
approximately 1,091 savings
associations, a maximum of 476 are
small savings associations. OTS
estimates that all of the small savings
associations sell, solicit, advertise, or
offer insurance products or annuities to
consumers.
OTS does not collect data on how
many ‘‘covered persons’’ that are not
savings associations sell, solicit,
advertise, or offer insurance products or
annuities to consumers at an office of a
savings association or on behalf of a
savings association, or on how many of
them are small entities. The initial RFA
published in the proposed rule sought
information about impact on entities
other than savings associations affected
by the rule to permit OTS to better
analyze the effect. Although OTS
received comments on the proposed
rule from insurance industry
representatives, who might have data
with respect to their members, none of
them provided information on the
number or size of entities other than
savings associations affected by the rule.
As a result, OTS is unable to determine
the number or size of entities other than
savings associations affected by this
final rule.
3. Significant Issues Raised in Response
to Initial Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
and Changes Made To Minimize Burden
The issues raised by the commenters
generally are described more fully in the
supplementary material provided above.
The issues that were raised by
commenters in connection with impact
on small businesses, specifically, were
the following:
• The requirement that a covered
person obtain a written
acknowledgment of receipt of
disclosures for a telephone transaction
could require significant effort and
additional correspondence if the
customer does not return the
acknowledgment with other paperwork
for the policy. This effort would be a
significant burden for small financial
institutions.
• The requirement that such
insurance as credit and mortgage
insurance be sold in an area of the office
separate from where deposits are
routinely taken poses a particular
hardship for small financial institutions
where deposits and loan applications
are taken at the same place.

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OTS seriously considered how to
tailor the form of disclosures and
acknowledgments to the form of the
sales transaction and how to make the
record of acknowledgment functional,
within the statutory constraints. In the
case of telephone applications for credit,
the proposed rule permitted the
disclosure on anti-tying due at the time
of applications to be given orally and
followed with written disclosures by
mail, provided that the written
disclosures were mailed within three
days. To extend the principle more
broadly, the final rule applies this form
of providing written disclosures for
telephone sales to all the required
disclosures. The timing has been
clarified to be three business days,
starting with the first business day after
the telephone transaction. With respect
to telephone sales, the final rule permits
an oral acknowledgment of the
disclosures if the covered person
documents the acknowledgment. In that
case, the final rule requires the covered
person to make reasonable efforts to
obtain a written acknowledgment, as
well.
We have made an additional change
affecting disclosures relevant to sales
initiated by telephone. In response to
concerns expressed about the proposed
rule’s limitation of using electronic
disclosures to those transactions taking
place entirely electronically, and not
permitting them to be used in
transactions that may have started with
a telephone contact, we have removed
that limitation. Thus, if a transaction
involves telephone contact, but the
consumer affirmatively consents to
transmission of disclosures through
electronic media instead of on paper,
the covered person may provide the
‘‘written’’ disclosures electronically. Of
course, these electronic disclosures
must satisfy the rule’s requirement that
the format of disclosure be one that
permits the consumer to retain or to
obtain later, such as by printing or
storing electronically. Where
disclosures are made electronically, the
rule already provided that the consumer
could acknowledge them electronically.
Electronic acknowledgment of
electronic disclosures applies under the
final rule to these mixed media
transactions, as well. The final rule also
provides that oral disclosures are not
required where disclosures are provided
electronically. This exception applies
not only to disclosures provided in the
sale of insurance and annuities as in the
proposed rule, but also to the anticoercion disclosure provided with
credit applications.
In response to the concern expressed
about the difficulty of separating

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functions in a small office, we have
clarified in the preamble to this final
rule that generally the location where
deposits are routinely taken is the teller
window and teller line. This distinction
permits a savings association to sell
insurance products and annuities from
the ‘‘platform area’’ where loan
transactions may routinely be
conducted, if the savings association
distinguishes that area from the teller
window area. The regulation also
requires this segregation of functions
into separate areas ‘‘to the extent
practicable.’’ If it is not practicable for
a small institution to have separate
areas, it could make other efforts to
satisfy the separation of functions
between deposit taking and selling of
insurance.
We note that in addition to these
specific responses to concerns
expressed with reference to impact on
small entities, we have limited the
scope of the rule in other ways to
minimize compliance burdens. The
final rule:
• Only applies to retail sales,
solicitations, advertisements, or offers of
insurance products or annuities to
individuals purchasing for personal,
family, or household use. The Agencies
have determined, after requesting
comment on whether to also include
small business purchase, not to broaden
the coverage.
• Does not apply to subsidiaries of
depository institutions, except where
the subsidiaries are selling, soliciting,
advertising, or offering insurance
products or annuities to consumers at
an office of a savings association or on
behalf of a savings association. OTS is
adopting this approach even though,
under section 47(a)(2) of FDIA, OTS
could apply the requirements to
subsidiaries if it determined that doing
so was necessary to ensure the
consumer protections provided by the
statute.
• Clarifies the scope of the rule and
the definition of ‘‘you’’ to apply only to
transactions conducted by the person
that are by, at an office of, or on behalf
of, the savings association.
• Defines ‘‘office’’ narrowly to
include only premises where retail
deposits are accepted from the public.
• Clarifies when certain disclosures
must be provided, including that a
disclosure such as ‘‘not insured by any
federal agency’’ is not to be given where
it would be inaccurate (as in the case of
federally-insured crop insurance or
flood insurance).
• Only requires the anti-coercion
disclosure to be made once, instead of
twice per transaction.

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• Provides flexibility for covered
persons to use a variety of means to
provide disclosures that are readily
understandable and call attention to the
information.
• Provides that, in the case of
telephone sales, the duty to obtain a
consumer’s acknowledgment of
receiving the disclosures may be
satisfied by an oral acknowledgment of
disclosures combined with reasonable
efforts to obtain a written
acknowledgment.
• Does not require disclosures in
advertisements of a general nature
describing or listing the services or
products offered by the savings
association.
• Provides for a delayed effective
date, requiring compliance by April 1,
2001, to permit adequate time to prepare
disclosures and acknowledgment
materials and train staff.
4. Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping
and Other Compliance Requirements
While the scope of the final rule
implementing section 47 of FDIA is
unique, there is some overlap with
certain prior guidance and Federal
statutes and rules. As used in the
Interagency Statement on Retail Sales of
Nondeposit Investment Products
(February 15, 1994) (‘‘Interagency
Statement’’), the term ‘‘nondeposit
investment products’’ includes some
products, such as annuities, that are
covered by section 47 of FDIA and this
final rule. The Interagency Statement
provides, among other things, that
institutions should disclose to
customers that such products are not
insured by the FDIC or the depository
institution and are subject to investment
risk including possible loss of principal.
It also provides that institutions should
obtain acknowledgments from
customers verifying that they have
received and understand the
disclosures. The Interagency Statement
further provides that retail sales or
recommendations of nondeposit
investment products should be
conducted in a location physically
distinct from where retail deposits are
taken, that nondeposit investment
product sales personnel should receive
adequate training, and that referral fees
should be limited.
Other federal authorities that overlap
with the final rule include the statutory
prohibition on tying arrangements in
section 5(q) of the Home Owners’ Loan
Act (12 U.S.C. 1464(q)), and OTS’s
regulation prohibiting advertising that is
inaccurate or makes misrepresentations
(12 CFR 563.27). State consumer
protection rules also may apply to sales,
solicitations, advertisements, and offers

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of insurance products or annuities. The
final rule does not appear to conflict
materially with the Interagency
Statement or these other authorities.
As a result of the overlap of the rule’s
requirements with the provisions of the
Interagency Statement and other federal
authorities discussed above, many
savings associations and other persons
may already be partly or fully prepared
to meet the requirements of the final
rule. Persons selling, soliciting,
advertising, or offering insurance
products or annuities may have to revise
printed materials and modify Internet
web sites. Compliance with other
requirements, such as the prohibition on
domestic violence discrimination, will
call for similar types of resources as are
used to comply with other existing
nondiscrimination statutes such as the
Equal Credit Opportunity Act, 15 U.S.C.
1691–1691f, and the Fair Housing Act,
42 U.S.C. 3601 et seq. Covered persons
may need to provide further training or
additional personnel, including
personnel skilled in clerical, computer,
compliance, and legal matters. The
delayed effective date of the final rule
should provide adequate time for the
affected parties to develop revised
materials and to modify web sites, as
necessary.
5. Significant Alternatives
The requirements in the final rule
parallel those in section 47 of FDIA. The
final rule clarifies the statutory
requirements in some areas and restates
the requirements in a more
understandable manner in other areas.
The final rule does not impose any
requirements that differ substantially
from the statute. Since the requirements
are set by statute, OTS has only limited
discretion to consider alternatives. To
the extent that OTS does have
discretion, it has exercised that
discretion to minimize the burden as
discussed in section 3 above.
Congress has decided that ‘‘any
depository institution’’ and ‘‘any
person’’ that is engaged in retail sales,
solicitations, advertising, or offers of
insurance products (or annuities), at the
office or on behalf of a depository
institution, must comply with these
disclosure requirements. The G-L-B Act
does not expressly authorize OTS to
exempt small savings associations,
affiliates, or persons from these
requirements. OTS does not interpret
the statute to permit such an exemption.
C. Executive Order 12866
OCC: The OCC has determined that
this final rule does not constitute a
‘‘significant regulatory action’’ for the
purposes of Executive Order 12866.

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While the OCC’s cost estimates are
necessarily imprecise because the
requirements included in the final rule
result from new legislation, under the
most conservative cost scenarios that
the OCC can develop on the basis of
available information, the impact of the
final rule falls well short of the
thresholds established by the Executive
Order.
OTS: OTS has determined that this
final rule does not constitute a
‘‘significant regulatory action’’ for the
purposes of Executive Order 12866. The
rule follows closely the requirements of
section 305 of the G–L–B Act. Since the
G–L–B Act establishes the minimum
requirements for this activity, OTS has
little discretion to propose regulatory
options that might significantly reduce
costs or other burdens. OTS believes
that the impact of the rule would not
meet the thresholds of the Executive
Order, and consequently OMB review is
not necessary.
D. Unfunded Mandates Act of 1995
Section 202 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995, 2 U.S.C.
1532 (Unfunded Mandates Act),
requires that an agency prepare a
budgetary impact statement before
promulgating any rule likely to result in
a Federal mandate that may result in the
expenditure by State, local, and tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the
private sector, of $100 million or more
in any one year. If a budgetary impact
statement is required, section 205 of the
Unfunded Mandates Act also requires
the agency to identify and consider a
reasonable number of regulatory
alternatives before promulgating the
rule. However, an agency is not required
to assess the effects of its regulatory
actions on the private sector to the
extent that such regulations incorporate
requirements specifically set forth in
law. 2 U.S.C. 1531. Section 305(e) of the
G–L–B Act imposes the requirements
contained in the final rules concerning
domestic violence even without the
issuance of regulations. Sections 305(a)–
(d) of the G–L–B Act direct the Agencies
to issue regulations implementing
disclosure requirements and
requirements to segregate the areas in
which insurance activities are
conducted from the areas where
deposits are routinely accepted. The
burden the rules place on the private
sector is almost entirely attributable to
the G–L–B Act. Therefore, the OCC and
OTS have determined that the final
rules will not result in expenditures by
State, local, and tribal governments, in
the aggregate, or by the private sector, of
$100 million or more in any one year.
Accordingly, the OCC and OTS have not

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prepared a budgetary impact statement
or specifically addressed the regulatory
alternatives considered.
E. Executive Order 13132—Federalism
OCC: Executive Order 13132 imposes
certain requirements when an agency
issues a regulation that has federalism
implications or that preempts State law.
Under the Executive Order, a regulation
has federalism implications if it has
substantial direct effects on the States,
on the relationship between the national
government and the States, or on the
distribution of power and
responsibilities among the various
levels of government. In general, the
Executive Order requires the agency to
adhere strictly to federal constitutional
principles in developing rules that have
federalism implications; provides
guidance about an agency’s
interpretation of statutes that authorize
regulations that preempt State law; and
requires consultation with State officials
before the agency issues a final rule that
has federalism implications or that
preempts State law.
This final rule satisfies the
requirements of the Executive Order. If
an agency promulgates a regulation that
has federalism implications and
preempts State law, the Executive Order
imposes upon the agency requirements
to consult with State and local officials;
to publish a ‘‘federalism summary
impact statement,’’ and to make written
comments from State and local officials
available to the Director of the Office of
Management and Budget (OMB).
In the OCC’s opinion, it is not clear
that Executive Order 13132 applies to
the OCC’s rules implementing section
305 of the G–L–B Act because the
statute itself directs most of the
significant policy choices that the
Agencies have made—that is, the statute
expressly prescribes both the
substantive content and the preemptive
effect of the rules. Moreover, the impact
of the language of the express
preemption provision in section 305 is
to preserve State laws, subject to certain
exceptions, rather than to preempt
them. Under that provision, the
insurance customer protections in the
Agencies’ rules generally will not have
preemptive effect in a State where the
State has in effect statutes, rules,
regulations, orders, or interpretations
that are inconsistent with or contrary to
the regulations prescribed by the
Agencies unless a provision in the
Agencies’ rules affords greater
protection to customers than is afforded
by a comparable State law. Section 305
prescribes a process for the Agencies to
use in order to determine jointly
whether a provision in the Agencies’

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regulations satisfies this ‘‘greater
protection’’ standard. If the Agencies
make that joint determination, and
provide written notice to the affected
State that its law is preempted, then that
provision of State law will be
preempted unless, within 3 years after
the date that the Agencies issue the
written notice, the State adopts
legislation that overrides the
preemption.
As we indicated in the
Supplementary Information that
accompanied the proposal, the
federalism implications and the
preemptive effect of the OCC’s rules
implementing section 305 depend, in
the first instance, on how the Agencies’
final rules compare with a particular
State’s laws and, ultimately, on whether
a State adopts the ‘‘opt-out’’ legislation
that section 305 permits.
Separately, section 305 of the G–L–B
Act requires the Agencies to consult
with State insurance regulators before
issuing final implementing regulations.
As described elsewhere in the
Supplementary Information, the OCC
and the other Agencies have consulted
with the NAIC in preparing this final
rule. The Agencies have provided the
OMB a copy of the NAIC’s written
comments on the proposed rule.
OTS: Executive Order 13132 imposes
certain requirements on an agency when
formulating and implementing policies
that will have substantial direct effects
on the States, on the relationship
between the national government and
the States, or on the distribution of
power and responsibilities among the
various levels of government, or taking
actions that preempt state law. Section
47(g) of FDIA, 12 U.S.C. 1831x, as added
by section 305 of the G–L–B Act,
provides that the insurance consumer
protections in the Agencies’ rules
generally will not apply to retail sales
practices, solicitations, advertising, or
offers of any insurance product or
annuity to a consumer by any savings
association or any person that is
engaged in such activities at an office of
the savings association or on behalf of
the savings association in a State where
the State has in effect statutes,
regulations, orders, or interpretations
that are inconsistent with or contrary to
the provisions of the federal regulations.
However, if the federal regulations
afford greater protection for insurance
consumers than a comparable State law,
rule, regulation, order, or interpretation,
the State provision may be preempted
by the Board, the OCC, and the FDIC in
accordance with certain specified
procedures described in greater detail in
the OCC’s statement on Executive Order
13132 above.

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OTS has determined that application
of these statutorily-mandated provisions
will have federalism implications and
may result in the preemption of state
law. Section 47(a) of FDIA obligates
OTS to issue this regulation to
implement section 305 of the G–L–B
Act, which includes section 47(g) of
FDIA. Consistent with section 47(a)(3)
of FDIA and section 6(c) of Executive
Order 13132, OTS and the other
Agencies have consulted with the
National Association of Insurance
Commissioners (NAIC), as indicated in
the Supplementary Information above.
As noted above, the Agencies
considered and responded to the NAIC’s
comments. The Agencies also provided
an advance copy of the final rule to the
NAIC and OTS has provided an advance
copy of the final rule to the Conference
of State Bank Supervisors. The Agencies
expect to consult with the NAIC and
State insurance regulators as decisions
are made concerning preemption in
particular states.
Solicitation of Comments on Use of
‘‘Plain Language’’
Section 722 of the G–L–B Act requires
that the Federal banking Agencies use
‘‘plain language’’ in all proposed and
final rules published after January 1,
2000. We invited your comments on
how to make the proposed rules easier
to understand. We received no
comments on this general topic, only on
ways to clarify the meaning of such
terms as ‘‘covered person.’’ We did
make revisions in response to those
specific types of comments, as
discussed above.
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 14
Banks, banking, Insurance consumer
protection, National banks.
12 CFR Part 208
Accounting, Agriculture, Banks,
banking, Confidential business
information, Crime, Currency, Federal
Reserve System, Insurance consumer
protection, Mortgages, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Securities.
12 CFR Part 343
Banks, banking, consumer protection,
Insurance, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
12 CFR Part 536
Consumer protection, Insurance,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Savings associations.

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Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency
12 CFR Chapter I

Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set out in the joint
preamble, the OCC amends chapter I of
title 12 of the Code of Federal
Regulations by adding a new part 14 to
read as follows:
PART 14—CONSUMER PROTECTION
IN SALES OF INSURANCE
Sec.
14.10 Purpose and scope.
14.20 Definitions.
14.30 Prohibited practices.
14.40 What a covered person must disclose.
14.50 Where insurance activities may take
place.
14.60 Qualification and licensing
requirements for insurance sales
personnel.
Appendix A to Part 14—Consumer Grievance
Process
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1 et seq., 24(Seventh),
92, 93a, 1818, and 1831x.
§ 14.10

Purpose and scope.

(a) General rule. This part establishes
consumer protections in connection
with retail sales practices, solicitations,
advertising, or offers of any insurance
product or annuity to a consumer by:
(1) Any national bank; or
(2) Any other person that is engaged
in such activities at an office of the bank
or on behalf of the bank.
(b) Application to operating
subsidiaries. For purposes of § 5.34(e)(3)
of this chapter, an operating subsidiary
is subject to this part only to the extent
that it sells, solicits, advertises, or offers
insurance products or annuities at an
office of a bank or on behalf of a bank.
§ 14.20

Definitions.

As used in this part:
(a) Affiliate means a company that
controls, is controlled by, or is under
common control with another company.
(b) Bank means a national bank or a
Federal branch, or agency of a foreign
bank as defined in section 1 of the
International Banking Act of 1978 (12
U.S.C. 3101, et seq.)
(c) Company means any corporation,
partnership, business trust, association
or similar organization, or any other
trust (unless by its terms the trust must
terminate within twenty-five years or
not later than twenty-one years and ten
months after the death of individuals
living on the effective date of the trust).
It does not include any corporation the
majority of the shares of which are
owned by the United States or by any
State, or a qualified family partnership,
as defined in section 2(o)(10) of the

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Bank Holding Company Act of 1956, as
amended (12 U.S.C. 1841(o)(10)).
(d) Consumer means an individual
who purchases, applies to purchase, or
is solicited to purchase from a covered
person insurance products or annuities
primarily for personal, family, or
household purposes.
(e) Control of a company has the same
meaning as in section 3(w)(5) of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12
U.S.C. 1813(w)(5)).
(f)(1) Covered person means:
(i) A bank; or
(ii) Any other person only when the
person sells, solicits, advertises, or
offers an insurance product or annuity
to a consumer at an office of the bank
or on behalf of a bank.
(2) For purposes of this definition,
activities on behalf of a bank include
activities where a person, whether at an
office of the bank or at another location
sells, solicits, advertises, or offers an
insurance product or annuity and at
least one of the following applies:
(i) The person represents to a
consumer that the sale, solicitation,
advertisement, or offer of any insurance
product or annuity is by or on behalf of
the bank;
(ii) The bank refers a consumer to a
seller of insurance products or annuities
and the bank has a contractual
arrangement to receive commissions or
fees derived from a sale of an insurance
product or annuity resulting from that
referral; or
(iii) Documents evidencing the sale,
solicitation, advertising, or offer of an
insurance product or annuity identify or
refer to the bank.
(g) Domestic violence means the
occurrence of one or more of the
following acts by a current or former
family member, household member,
intimate partner, or caretaker:
(1) Attempting to cause or causing or
threatening another person physical
harm, severe emotional distress,
psychological trauma, rape, or sexual
assault;
(2) Engaging in a course of conduct or
repeatedly committing acts toward
another person, including following the
person without proper authority, under
circumstances that place the person in
reasonable fear of bodily injury or
physical harm;
(3) Subjecting another person to false
imprisonment; or
(4) Attempting to cause or causing
damage to property so as to intimidate
or attempt to control the behavior of
another person.
(h) Electronic media includes any
means for transmitting messages
electronically between a covered person
and a consumer in a format that allows

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visual text to be displayed on
equipment, for example, a personal
computer monitor.
(i) Office means the premises of a
bank where retail deposits are accepted
from the public.
(j) Subsidiary has the same meaning
as in section 3(w)(4) of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C.
1813(w)(4)).
§ 14.30

Prohibited practices.

(a) Anticoercion and antitying rules. A
covered person may not engage in any
practice that would lead a consumer to
believe that an extension of credit, in
violation of section 106(b) of the Bank
Holding Company Act Amendments of
1970 (12 U.S.C. 1972), is conditional
upon either:
(1) The purchase of an insurance
product or annuity from the bank or any
of its affiliates; or
(2) An agreement by the consumer not
to obtain, or a prohibition on the
consumer from obtaining, an insurance
product or annuity from an unaffiliated
entity.
(b) Prohibition on misrepresentations
generally. A covered person may not
engage in any practice or use any
advertisement at any office of, or on
behalf of, the bank or a subsidiary of the
bank that could mislead any person or
otherwise cause a reasonable person to
reach an erroneous belief with respect
to:
(1) The fact that an insurance product
or annuity sold or offered for sale by a
covered person or any subsidiary of the
bank is not backed by the Federal
government or the bank, or the fact that
the insurance product or annuity is not
insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation;
(2) In the case of an insurance product
or annuity that involves investment risk,
the fact that there is an investment risk,
including the potential that principal
may be lost and that the product may
decline in value; or
(3) In the case of a bank or subsidiary
of the bank at which insurance products
or annuities are sold or offered for sale,
the fact that:
(i) The approval of an extension of
credit to a consumer by the bank or
subsidiary may not be conditioned on
the purchase of an insurance product or
annuity by the consumer from the bank
or a subsidiary of the bank; and
(ii) The consumer is free to purchase
the insurance product or annuity from
another source.
(c) Prohibition on domestic violence
discrimination. A covered person may
not sell or offer for sale, as principal,
agent, or broker, any life or health
insurance product if the status of the

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applicant or insured as a victim of
domestic violence or as a provider of
services to victims of domestic violence
is considered as a criterion in any
decision with regard to insurance
underwriting, pricing, renewal, or scope
of coverage of such product, or with
regard to the payment of insurance
claims on such product, except as
required or expressly permitted under
State law.
§ 14.40 What a covered person must
disclose.

(a) Insurance disclosures. In
connection with the initial purchase of
an insurance product or annuity by a
consumer from a covered person, a
covered person must disclose to the
consumer, except to the extent the
disclosure would not be accurate, that:
(1) The insurance product or annuity
is not a deposit or other obligation of,
or guaranteed by, the bank or an affiliate
of the bank;
(2) The insurance product or annuity
is not insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC) or any
other agency of the United States, the
bank, or (if applicable) an affiliate of the
bank; and
(3) In the case of an insurance product
or annuity that involves an investment
risk, there is investment risk associated
with the product, including the possible
loss of value.
(b) Credit disclosure. In the case of an
application for credit in connection
with which an insurance product or
annuity is solicited, offered, or sold, a
covered person must disclose that the
bank may not condition an extension of
credit on either:
(1) The consumer’s purchase of an
insurance product or annuity from the
bank or any of its affiliates; or
(2) The consumer’s agreement not to
obtain, or a prohibition on the consumer
from obtaining, an insurance product or
annuity from an unaffiliated entity.
(c) Timing and method of disclosures.
(1) In general. The disclosures required
by paragraph (a) of this section must be
provided orally and in writing before
the completion of the initial sale of an
insurance product or annuity to a
consumer. The disclosure required by
paragraph (b) of this section must be
made orally and in writing at the time
the consumer applies for an extension of
credit in connection with which an
insurance product or annuity is
solicited, offered, or sold.
(2) Exception for transactions by mail.
If a sale of an insurance product or
annuity is conducted by mail, a covered
person is not required to make the oral
disclosures required by paragraph (a) of
this section. If a covered person takes an

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application for credit by mail, the
covered person is not required to make
the oral disclosure required by
paragraph (b).
(3) Exception for transactions by
telephone. If a sale of an insurance
product or annuity is conducted by
telephone, a covered person may
provide the written disclosures required
by paragraph (a) of this section by mail
within 3 business days beginning on the
first business day after the sale,
excluding Sundays and the legal public
holidays specified in 5 U.S.C. 6103(a). If
a covered person takes an application
for credit by telephone, the covered
person may provide the written
disclosure required by paragraph (b) of
this section by mail, provided the
covered person mails it to the consumer
within three days beginning the first
business day after the application is
taken, excluding Sundays and the legal
public holidays specified in 5 U.S.C.
6103(a).
(4) Electronic form of disclosures. (i)
Subject to the requirements of section
101(c) of the Electronic Signatures in
Global and National Commerce Act (12
U.S.C. 7001(c)), a covered person may
provide the written disclosures required
by paragraph (a) and (b) of this section
through electronic media instead of on
paper, if the consumer affirmatively
consents to receiving the disclosures
electronically and if the disclosures are
provided in a format that the consumer
may retain or obtain later, for example,
by printing or storing electronically
(such as by downloading).
(ii) Any disclosures required by
paragraphs (a) or (b) of this section that
are provided by electronic media are not
required to be provided orally.
(5) Disclosures must be readily
understandable. The disclosures
provided shall be conspicuous, simple,
direct, readily understandable, and
designed to call attention to the nature
and significance of the information
provided. For instance, a covered
person may use the following
disclosures in visual media, such as
television broadcasting, ATM screens,
billboards, signs, posters and written
advertisements and promotional
materials, as appropriate and consistent
with paragraphs (a) and (b) of this
section:
• NOT A DEPOSIT
• NOT FDIC-INSURED
• NOT INSURED BY ANY FEDERAL
GOVERNMENT AGENCY
• NOT GUARANTEED BY THE BANK [OR
SAVINGS ASSOCIATION]
• MAY GO DOWN IN VALUE

(6) Disclosures must be meaningful.
(i) A covered person must provide the
disclosures required by paragraphs (a)

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and (b) of this section in a meaningful
form. Examples of the types of methods
that could call attention to the nature
and significance of the information
provided include:
(A) A plain-language heading to call
attention to the disclosures;
(B) A typeface and type size that are
easy to read;
(C) Wide margins and ample line
spacing;
(D) Boldface or italics for key words;
and
(E) Distinctive type style, and graphic
devices, such as shading or sidebars,
when the disclosures are combined with
other information.
(ii) A covered person has not
provided the disclosures in a
meaningful form if the covered person
merely states to the consumer that the
required disclosures are available in
printed material, but does not provide
the printed material when required and
does not orally disclose the information
to the consumer when required.
(iii) With respect to those disclosures
made through electronic media for
which paper or oral disclosures are not
required, the disclosures are not
meaningfully provided if the consumer
may bypass the visual text of the
disclosures before purchasing an
insurance product or annuity.
(7) Consumer acknowledgment. A
covered person must obtain from the
consumer, at the time a consumer
receives the disclosures required under
paragraphs (a) or (b) of this section, or
at the time of the initial purchase by the
consumer of an insurance product or
annuity, a written acknowledgment by
the consumer that the consumer
received the disclosures. A covered
person may permit a consumer to
acknowledge receipt of the disclosures
electronically or in paper form. If the
disclosures required under paragraphs
(a) or (b) of this section are provided in
connection with a transaction that is
conducted by telephone, a covered
person must:
(i) Obtain an oral acknowledgment of
receipt of the disclosures and maintain
sufficient documentation to show that
the acknowledgment was given; and
(ii) Make reasonable efforts to obtain
a written acknowledgment from the
consumer.
(d) Advertisements and other
promotional material for insurance
products or annuities. The disclosures
described in paragraph (a) of this
section are required in advertisements
and promotional material for insurance
products or annuities unless the
advertisements and promotional
materials are of a general nature

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describing or listing the services or
products offered by the bank.

PART 208—MEMBERSHIP OF STATE
BANKING INSTITUTIONS IN THE
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
(REGULATION H)

§ 14.50 Where insurance activities may
take place.

(a) General rule. A bank must, to the
extent practicable, keep the area where
the bank conducts transactions
involving insurance products or
annuities physically segregated from
areas where retail deposits are routinely
accepted from the general public,
identify the areas where insurance
product or annuity sales activities
occur, and clearly delineate and
distinguish those areas from the areas
where the bank’s retail deposit-taking
activities occur.
(b) Referrals. Any person who accepts
deposits from the public in an area
where such transactions are routinely
conducted in the bank may refer a
consumer who seeks to purchase an
insurance product or annuity to a
qualified person who sells that product
only if the person making the referral
receives no more than a one-time,
nominal fee of a fixed dollar amount for
each referral that does not depend on
whether the referral results in a
transaction.
§ 14.60 Qualification and licensing
requirements for insurance sales
personnel.

A bank may not permit any person to
sell or offer for sale any insurance
product or annuity in any part of its
office or on its behalf, unless the person
is at all times appropriately qualified
and licensed under applicable State
insurance licensing standards with
regard to the specific products being
sold or recommended.
Appendix A to Part 14—Consumer
Grievance Process
Any consumer who believes that any bank
or any other person selling, soliciting,
advertising, or offering insurance products or
annuities to the consumer at an office of the
bank or on behalf of the bank has violated the
requirements of this part should contact the
Customer Assistance Group, Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency, (800) 613–6743,
1301 McKinney Street, Suite 3710, Houston,
Texas 77010–3031.
Dated: November 17, 2000.
John D. Hawke, Jr.,
Comptroller of the Currency.

Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System
12 CFR Chapter II

Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set out in the joint
preamble, the Board amends part 208,
chapter II, title 12 of the Code of Federal
Regulations as follows:

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1. The authority citation for part 208
is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 24, 36, 92a, 93a,
248(a), 248(c), 321–338a, 371d, 461, 481–486,
601, 611, 1814, 1816, 1818, 1820(d)(9),
1823(j), 1828(o), 1831, 1831o, 1831p–1,
1831r–1, 1831w, 1831x, 1835a, 1882, 2901–
2907, 3105, 3310, 3331–3351, and 3906–
3909; 15 U.S.C. 78b, 78l(b), 78l(g), 78l(i),
78o–4(c)(5), 78q, 78q–1, and 78w; 31 U.S.C.
5318, 42 U.S.C. 4012a, 4104a, 4104b, 4106,
and 4128.

Subpart H [Redesignated as Subpart I]
2. The existing subpart H—
Interpretations is redesignated as
subpart I.
3. A new subpart H is added to read
as follows:
Subpart H—Consumer Protection in
Sales of Insurance
Sec.
208.81 Purpose and scope.
208.82 Definitions for purposes of this
subpart.
208.83 Prohibited practices.
208.84 What you must disclose.
208.85 Where insurance activities may take
place.
208.86 Qualification and licensing
requirements for insurance sales
personnel.
Appendix A to Subpart H—Consumer
Grievance Process
§ 208.81

Purpose and scope.

This subpart establishes consumer
protections in connection with retail
sales practices, solicitations,
advertising, or offers of any insurance
product or annuity to a consumer by:
(a) Any state member bank; or
(b) Any other person that is engaged
in such activities at an office of the bank
or on behalf of the bank.
§ 208.82 Definitions for purposes of this
subpart.

As used in this subpart:
(a) Affiliate means a company that
controls, is controlled by, or is under
common control with another company.
(b) Bank means a state member bank.
(c) Company means any corporation,
partnership, business trust, association
or similar organization, or any other
trust (unless by its terms the trust must
terminate within twenty-five years or
not later than twenty-one years and ten
months after the death of individuals
living on the effective date of the trust).
It does not include any corporation the
majority of the shares of which are
owned by the United States or by any

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75841

State, or a qualified family partnership,
as defined in section 2(o)(10) of the
Bank Holding Company Act of 1956, as
amended (12 U.S.C. 1841(o)(10)).
(d) Consumer means an individual
who purchases, applies to purchase, or
is solicited to purchase from you
insurance products or annuities
primarily for personal, family, or
household purposes.
(e) Control of a company has the same
meaning as in section 3(w)(5) of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12
U.S.C. 1813(w)(5)).
(f) Domestic violence means the
occurrence of one or more of the
following acts by a current or former
family member, household member,
intimate partner, or caretaker:
(1) Attempting to cause or causing or
threatening another person physical
harm, severe emotional distress,
psychological trauma, rape, or sexual
assault;
(2) Engaging in a course of conduct or
repeatedly committing acts toward
another person, including following the
person without proper authority, under
circumstances that place the person in
reasonable fear of bodily injury or
physical harm;
(3) Subjecting another person to false
imprisonment; or
(4) Attempting to cause or causing
damage to property so as to intimidate
or attempt to control the behavior of
another person.
(g) Electronic media includes any
means for transmitting messages
electronically between you and a
consumer in a format that allows visual
text to be displayed on equipment, for
example, a personal computer monitor.
(h) Office means the premises of a
bank where retail deposits are accepted
from the public.
(i) Subsidiary has the same meaning
as in section 3(w)(4) of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C.
1813(w)(4)).
(j)(1) You means:
(i) A bank; or
(ii) Any other person only when the
person sells, solicits, advertises, or
offers an insurance product or annuity
to a consumer at an office of the bank
or on behalf of a bank.
(2) For purposes of this definition,
activities on behalf of a bank include
activities where a person, whether at an
office of the bank or at another location
sells, solicits, advertises, or offers an
insurance product or annuity and at
least one of the following applies:
(i) The person represents to a
consumer that the sale, solicitation,
advertisement, or offer of any insurance
product or annuity is by or on behalf of
the bank;

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Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 233 / Monday, December 4, 2000 / Rules and Regulations

(ii) If the bank refers a consumer to a
seller of insurance products or annuities
and the bank has a contractual
arrangement to receive commissions or
fees derived from the sale of an
insurance product or annuity resulting
from that referral; or
(iii) Documents evidencing the sale,
solicitation, advertising, or offer of an
insurance product or annuity identify or
refer to the bank.
§ 208.83

Prohibited practices.

(a) Anticoercion and antitying rules.
You may not engage in any practice that
would lead a consumer to believe that
an extension of credit, in violation of
section 106(b) of the Bank Holding
Company Act Amendments of 1970 (12
U.S.C. 1972), is conditional upon either:
(1) The purchase of an insurance
product or annuity from the bank or any
of its affiliates; or
(2) An agreement by the consumer not
to obtain, or a prohibition on the
consumer from obtaining, an insurance
product or annuity from an unaffiliated
entity.
(b) Prohibition on misrepresentations
generally. You may not engage in any
practice or use any advertisement at any
office of, or on behalf of, the bank or a
subsidiary of the bank that could
mislead any person or otherwise cause
a reasonable person to reach an
erroneous belief with respect to:
(1) The fact that an insurance product
or annuity sold or offered for sale by
you or any subsidiary of the bank is not
backed by the Federal government or
the bank or the fact that the insurance
product or annuity is not insured by the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation;
(2) In the case of an insurance product
or annuity that involves investment risk,
the fact that there is an investment risk,
including the potential that principal
may be lost and that the product may
decline in value; or
(3) In the case of a bank or subsidiary
of the bank at which insurance products
or annuities are sold or offered for sale,
the fact that:
(i) The approval of an extension of
credit to a consumer by the bank or
subsidiary may not be conditioned on
the purchase of an insurance product or
annuity by the consumer from the bank
or a subsidiary of the bank; and
(ii) The consumer is free to purchase
the insurance product or annuity from
another source.
(c) Prohibition on domestic violence
discrimination. You may not sell or
offer for sale, as principal, agent, or
broker, any life or health insurance
product if the status of the applicant or
insured as a victim of domestic violence
or as a provider of services to victims of

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domestic violence is considered as a
criterion in any decision with regard to
insurance underwriting, pricing,
renewal, or scope of coverage of such
product, or with regard to the payment
of insurance claims on such product,
except as required or expressly
permitted under State law.
§ 208.84

What you must disclose.

(a) Insurance disclosures. In
connection with the initial purchase of
an insurance product or annuity by a
consumer from you, you must disclose
to the consumer, except to the extent the
disclosure would not be accurate, that:
(1) The insurance product or annuity
is not a deposit or other obligation of,
or guaranteed by, the bank or an affiliate
of the bank;
(2) The insurance product or annuity
is not insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC) or any
other agency of the United States, the
bank, or (if applicable) an affiliate of the
bank; and
(3) In the case of an insurance product
or annuity that involves an investment
risk, there is investment risk associated
with the product, including the possible
loss of value.
(b) Credit disclosure. In the case of an
application for credit in connection
with which an insurance product or
annuity is solicited, offered, or sold, you
must disclose that the bank may not
condition an extension of credit on
either:
(1) The consumer’s purchase of an
insurance product or annuity from the
bank or any of its affiliates; or
(2) The consumer’s agreement not to
obtain, or a prohibition on the consumer
from obtaining, an insurance product or
annuity from an unaffiliated entity.
(c) Timing and method of disclosures.
(1) In general. The disclosures required
by paragraph (a) of this section must be
provided orally and in writing before
the completion of the initial sale of an
insurance product or annuity to a
consumer. The disclosure required by
paragraph (b) of this section must be
made orally and in writing at the time
the consumer applies for an extension of
credit in connection with which
insurance is solicited, offered, or sold.
(2) Exceptions for transactions by
mail. If a sale of an insurance product
or annuity is conducted by mail, you are
not required to make the oral
disclosures required by paragraph (a) of
this section. If you take an application
for credit by mail, you are not required
to make the oral disclosure required by
paragraph (b) of this section.
(3) Exception for transactions by
telephone. If a sale of an insurance
product or annuity is conducted by

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telephone, you may provide the written
disclosures required by paragraph (a) of
this section by mail within 3 business
days beginning on the first business day
after the sale, excluding Sundays and
the legal public holidays specified in 5
U.S.C 6103(a). If you take an application
for such credit by telephone, you may
provide the written disclosure required
by paragraph (b) of this section by mail,
provided you mail it to the consumer
within three days beginning the first
business day after the application is
taken, excluding Sundays and the legal
public holidays specified in 5 U.S.C.
6103(a).
(4) Electronic form of disclosures. (i)
Subject to the requirements of section
101(c) of the Electronic Signatures in
Global and National Commerce Act (12
U.S.C. 7001(c)), you may provide the
written disclosures required by
paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section
through electronic media instead of on
paper, if the consumer affirmatively
consents to receiving the disclosures
electronically and if the disclosures are
provided in a format that the consumer
may retain or obtain later, for example,
by printing or storing electronically
(such as by downloading).
(ii) Any disclosures required by
paragraphs (a) or (b) of this section that
are provided by electronic media are not
required to be provided orally.
(5) Disclosures must be readily
understandable. The disclosures
provided shall be conspicuous, simple,
direct, readily understandable, and
designed to call attention to the nature
and significance of the information
provided. For instance, you may use the
following disclosures, in visual media,
such as television broadcasting, ATM
screens, billboards, signs, posters and
written advertisements and promotional
materials, as appropriate and consistent
with paragraphs (a) and (b) of this
section:
• NOT A DEPOSIT
• NOT FDIC-INSURED
• NOT INSURED BY ANY FEDERAL
GOVERNMENT AGENCY
• NOT GUARANTEED BY THE BANK
• MAY GO DOWN IN VALUE

(6) Disclosures must be meaningful.
(i) You must provide the disclosures
required by paragraphs (a) and (b) of
this section in a meaningful form.
Examples of the types of methods that
could call attention to the nature and
significance of the information provided
include:
(A) A plain-language heading to call
attention to the disclosures;
(B) A typeface and type size that are
easy to read;
(C) Wide margins and ample line
spacing;

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Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 233 / Monday, December 4, 2000 / Rules and Regulations
(D) Boldface or italics for key words;
and
(E) Distinctive type size, style, and
graphic devices, such as shading or
sidebars, when the disclosures are
combined with other information.
(ii) You have not provided the
disclosures in a meaningful form if you
merely state to the consumer that the
required disclosures are available in
printed material, but you do not provide
the printed material when required and
do not orally disclose the information to
the consumer when required.
(iii) With respect to those disclosures
made through electronic media for
which paper or oral disclosures are not
required, the disclosures are not
meaningfully provided if the consumer
may bypass the visual text of the
disclosures before purchasing an
insurance product or annuity.
(7) Consumer acknowledgment. You
must obtain from the consumer, at the
time a consumer receives the
disclosures required under paragraphs
(a) or (b) of this section, or at the time
of the initial purchase by the consumer
of an insurance product or annuity, a
written acknowledgment by the
consumer that the consumer received
the disclosures. You may permit a
consumer to acknowledge receipt of the
disclosures electronically or in paper
form. If the disclosures required under
paragraphs (a) or (b) of this section are
provided in connection with a
transaction that is conducted by
telephone, you must:
(i) Obtain an oral acknowledgment of
receipt of the disclosures and maintain
sufficient documentation to show that
the acknowledgment was given; and
(ii) Make reasonable efforts to obtain
a written acknowledgment from the
consumer.
(d) Advertisements and other
promotional material for insurance
products or annuities. The disclosures
described in paragraph (a) of this
section are required in advertisements
and promotional material for insurance
products or annuities unless the
advertisements and promotional
materials are of a general nature
describing or listing the services or
products offered by the bank.
§ 208.85 Where insurance activities may
take place.

(a) General rule. A bank must, to the
extent practicable, keep the area where
the bank conducts transactions
involving insurance products or
annuities physically segregated from
areas where retail deposits are routinely
accepted from the general public,
identify the areas where insurance
product or annuity sales activities

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occur, and clearly delineate and
distinguish those areas from the areas
where the bank’s retail deposit-taking
activities occur.
(b) Referrals. Any person who accepts
deposits from the public in an area
where such transactions are routinely
conducted in the bank may refer a
consumer who seeks to purchase an
insurance product or annuity to a
qualified person who sells that product
only if the person making the referral
receives no more than a one-time,
nominal fee of a fixed dollar amount for
each referral that does not depend on
whether the referral results in a
transaction.

343.60 Qualification and licensing
requirements for insurance sales
personnel.
Appendix A to Part 343—Consumer
Grievance Process

§ 208.86 Qualification and licensing
requirements for insurance sales
personnel.

§ 343.20

A bank may not permit any person to
sell or offer for sale any insurance
product or annuity in any part of its
office or on its behalf, unless the person
is at all times appropriately qualified
and licensed under applicable State
insurance licensing standards with
regard to the specific products being
sold or recommended.
Appendix A to Subpart H—Consumer
Grievance Process
Any consumer who believes that any bank
or any other person selling, soliciting,
advertising, or offering insurance products or
annuities to the consumer at an office of the
bank or on behalf of the bank has violated the
requirements of this subpart should contact
the Consumer Complaints Section, Division
of Consumer and Community Affairs, Board
of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
at the following address: 20th & C Streets,
NW, Washington, D.C. 20551.
By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, November, 21, 2000.
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
12 CFR Chapter III

Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set out in the joint
preamble, the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation amends chapter III of title
12 of the Code of Federal Regulations by
adding a new part 343 to read as
follows:
PART 343—CONSUMER PROTECTION
IN SALES OF INSURANCE
Sec.
343.10 Purpose and scope.
343.20 Definitions.
343.30 Prohibited practices.
343.40 What you must disclose.
343.50 Where insurance activities may take
place.

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75843

Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1819 (Seventh and
Tenth); 12 U.S.C. 1831x.
§ 343.10

Purpose and scope.

This part establishes consumer
protections in connection with retail
sales practices, solicitations,
advertising, or offers of any insurance
product or annuity to a consumer by:
(a) Any bank; or
(b) Any other person that is engaged
in such activities at an office of the bank
or on behalf of the bank.
Definitions.

As used in this part:
(a) Affiliate means a company that
controls, is controlled by, or is under
common control with another company.
(b) Bank means an FDIC-insured,
state-chartered commercial or savings
bank that is not a member of the Federal
Reserve System and for which the FDIC
is the appropriate federal banking
agency pursuant to section 3(q) of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12
U.S.C. 1813(q)).
(c) Company means any corporation,
partnership, business trust, association
or similar organization, or any other
trust (unless by its terms the trust must
terminate within twenty-five years or
not later than twenty-one years and ten
months after the death of individuals
living on the effective date of the trust).
It does not include any corporation the
majority of the shares of which are
owned by the United States or by any
State, or a qualified family partnership,
as defined in section 2(o)(10) of the
Bank Holding Company Act of 1956, as
amended (12 U.S.C. 1841(o)(10)).
(d) Consumer means an individual
who purchases, applies to purchase, or
is solicited to purchase from you
insurance products or annuities
primarily for personal, family, or
household purposes.
(e) Control of a company has the same
meaning as in section 3(w)(5) of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12
U.S.C. 1813(w)(5)).
(f) Domestic violence means the
occurrence of one or more of the
following acts by a current or former
family member, household member,
intimate partner, or caretaker:
(1) Attempting to cause or causing or
threatening another person physical
harm, severe emotional distress,
psychological trauma, rape, or sexual
assault;
(2) Engaging in a course of conduct or
repeatedly committing acts toward

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another person, including following the
person without proper authority, under
circumstances that place the person in
reasonable fear of bodily injury or
physical harm;
(3) Subjecting another person to false
imprisonment; or
(4) Attempting to cause or causing
damage to property so as to intimidate
or attempt to control the behavior of
another person.
(g) Electronic media includes any
means for transmitting messages
electronically between you and a
consumer in a format that allows visual
text to be displayed on equipment, for
example, a personal computer monitor.
(h) Office means the premises of a
bank where retail deposits are accepted
from the public.
(i) Subsidiary has the same meaning
as in section 3(w)(4) of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C.
1813(w)(4)).
(j) (1) You means:
(i) A bank; or
(ii) Any other person only when the
person sells, solicits, advertises, or
offers an insurance product or annuity
to a consumer at an office of the bank
or on behalf of a bank.
(2) For purposes of this definition,
activities on behalf of a bank include
activities where a person, whether at an
office of the bank or at another location
sells, solicits, advertises, or offers an
insurance product or annuity and at
least one of the following applies:
(i) The person represents to a
consumer that the sale, solicitation,
advertisement, or offer of any insurance
product or annuity is by or on behalf of
the bank;
(ii) The bank refers a consumer to a
seller of insurance products or annuities
and the bank has a contractual
arrangement to receive commissions or
fees derived from a sale of an insurance
product or annuity resulting from that
referral; or
(iii) Documents evidencing the sale,
solicitation, advertising, or offer of an
insurance product or annuity identify or
refer to the bank.
§ 343.30

Prohibited practices.

(a) Anticoercion and antitying rules.
You may not engage in any practice that
would lead a consumer to believe that
an extension of credit, in violation of
section 106(b) of the Bank Holding
Company Act Amendments of 1970 (12
U.S.C. 1972), is conditional upon either:
(1) The purchase of an insurance
product or annuity from the bank or any
of its affiliates; or
(2) An agreement by the consumer not
to obtain, or a prohibition on the
consumer from obtaining, an insurance

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16:27 Dec 01, 2000

product or annuity from an unaffiliated
entity.
(b) Prohibition on misrepresentations
generally. You may not engage in any
practice or use any advertisement at any
office of, or on behalf of, the bank or a
subsidiary of the bank that could
mislead any person or otherwise cause
a reasonable person to reach an
erroneous belief with respect to:
(1) The fact that an insurance product
or annuity sold or offered for sale by
you or any subsidiary of the bank is not
backed by the Federal government or
the bank, or the fact that the insurance
product or annuity is not insured by the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation;
(2) In the case of an insurance product
or annuity that involves investment risk,
the fact that there is an investment risk,
including the potential that principal
may be lost and that the product may
decline in value; or
(3) In the case of a bank or subsidiary
of the bank at which insurance products
or annuities are sold or offered for sale,
the fact that:
(i) The approval of an extension of
credit to a consumer by the bank or
subsidiary may not be conditioned on
the purchase of an insurance product or
annuity by the consumer from the bank
or a subsidiary of the bank; and
(ii) The consumer is free to purchase
the insurance product or annuity from
another source.
(c) Prohibition on domestic violence
discrimination. You may not sell or
offer for sale, as principal, agent, or
broker, any life or health insurance
product if the status of the applicant or
insured as a victim of domestic violence
or as a provider of services to victims of
domestic violence is considered as a
criterion in any decision with regard to
insurance underwriting, pricing,
renewal, or scope of coverage of such
product, or with regard to the payment
of insurance claims on such product,
except as required or expressly
permitted under State law.
§ 343.40

What you must disclose.

(a) Insurance disclosures. In
connection with the initial purchase of
an insurance product or annuity by a
consumer from you, you must disclose
to the consumer, except to the extent the
disclosure would not be accurate, that:
(1) The insurance product or annuity
is not a deposit or other obligation of,
or guaranteed by, the bank or an affiliate
of the bank;
(2) The insurance product or annuity
is not insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC) or any
other agency of the United States, the
bank, or (if applicable) an affiliate of the
bank; and

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(3) In the case of an insurance product
or annuity that involves an investment
risk, there is investment risk associated
with the product, including the possible
loss of value.
(b) Credit disclosure. In the case of an
application for credit in connection
with which an insurance product or
annuity is solicited, offered, or sold, you
must disclose that the bank may not
condition an extension of credit on
either:
(1) The consumer’s purchase of an
insurance product or annuity from the
bank or any of its affiliates; or
(2) The consumer’s agreement not to
obtain, or a prohibition on the consumer
from obtaining, an insurance product or
annuity from an unaffiliated entity.
(c) Timing and method of disclosures.
(1) In general. The disclosures required
by paragraph (a) of this section must be
provided orally and in writing before
the completion of the initial sale of an
insurance product or annuity to a
consumer. The disclosure required by
paragraph (b) of this section must be
made orally and in writing at the time
the consumer applies for an extension of
credit in connection with which an
insurance product or annuity is
solicited, offered, or sold.
(2) Exception for transactions by mail.
If a sale of an insurance product or
annuity is conducted by mail, you are
not required to make the oral
disclosures required by paragraph (a) of
this section. If you take an application
for credit by mail, you are not required
to make the oral disclosure required by
paragraph (b).
(3) Exception for transactions by
telephone. If a sale of an insurance
product or annuity is conducted by
telephone, you may provide the written
disclosures required by paragraph (a) of
this section by mail within 3 business
days beginning on the first business day
after the sale, excluding Sundays and
the legal public holidays specified in 5
U.S.C. 6103(a). If you take an
application for credit by telephone, you
may provide the written disclosure
required by paragraph (b) of this section
by mail, provided you mail it to the
consumer within three days beginning
the first business day after the
application is taken, excluding Sundays
and the legal public holidays specified
in 5 U.S.C. 6103(a).
(4) Electronic form of disclosures. (i)
Subject to the requirements of section
101(c) of the Electronic Signatures in
Global and National Commerce Act (12
U.S.C. 7001(c)), you may provide the
written disclosures required by
paragraph (a) and (b) of this section
through electronic media instead of on
paper, if the consumer affirmatively

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consents to receiving the disclosures
electronically and if the disclosures are
provided in a format that the consumer
may retain or obtain later, for example,
by printing or storing electronically
(such as by downloading).
(ii) Any disclosure required by
paragraphs (a) or (b) of this section that
is provided by electronic media is not
required to be provided orally.
(5) Disclosures must be readily
understandable. The disclosures
provided shall be conspicuous, simple,
direct, readily understandable, and
designed to call attention to the nature
and significance of the information
provided. For instance, you may use the
following disclosures in visual media,
such as television broadcasting, ATM
screens, billboards, signs, posters and
written advertisements and promotional
materials, as appropriate and consistent
with paragraphs (a) and (b) of this
section:
• NOT A DEPOSIT
• NOT FDIC-INSURED
• NOT INSURED BY ANY FEDERAL
GOVERNMENT AGENCY
• NOT GUARANTEED BY THE BANK
• MAY GO DOWN IN VALUE

(6) Disclosures must be meaningful.
(i) You must provide the disclosures
required by paragraphs (a) and (b) of
this section in a meaningful form.
Examples of the types of methods that
could call attention to the nature and
significance of the information provided
include:
(A) A plain-language heading to call
attention to the disclosures;
(B) A typeface and type size that are
easy to read;
(C) Wide margins and ample line
spacing;
(D) Boldface or italics for key words;
and
(E) Distinctive type size, style, and
graphic devices, such as shading or
sidebars, when the disclosures are
combined with other information.
(ii) You have not provided the
disclosures in a meaningful form if you
merely state to the consumer that the
required disclosures are available in
printed material, but do not provide the
printed material when required and do
not orally disclose the information to
the consumer when required.
(iii) With respect to those disclosures
made through electronic media for
which paper or oral disclosures are not
required, the disclosures are not
meaningfully provided if the consumer
may bypass the visual text of the
disclosures before purchasing an
insurance product or annuity.
(7) Consumer acknowledgment. You
must obtain from the consumer, at the

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16:27 Dec 01, 2000

time a consumer receives the
disclosures required under paragraphs
(a) or (b) of this section, or at the time
of the initial purchase by the consumer
of an insurance product or annuity, a
written acknowledgment by the
consumer that the consumer received
the disclosures. You may permit a
consumer to acknowledge receipt of the
disclosures electronically or in paper
form. If the disclosures required under
paragraphs (a) or (b) of this section are
provided in connection with a
transaction that is conducted by
telephone, you must:
(i) Obtain an oral acknowledgment of
receipt of the disclosures and maintain
sufficient documentation to show that
the acknowledgment was given; and
(ii) Make reasonable efforts to obtain
a written acknowledgment from the
consumer.
(d) Advertisements and other
promotional material for insurance
products or annuities. The disclosures
described in paragraph (a) of this
section are required in advertisements
and promotional material for insurance
products or annuities unless the
advertisements and promotional
materials are of a general nature
describing or listing the services or
products offered by the bank.
§ 343.50 Where insurance activities may
take place.

(a) General rule. A bank must, to the
extent practicable, keep the area where
the bank conducts transactions
involving insurance products or
annuities physically segregated from
areas where retail deposits are routinely
accepted from the general public,
identify the areas where insurance
product or annuity sales activities
occur, and clearly delineate and
distinguish those areas from the areas
where the bank’s retail deposit-taking
activities occur.
(b) Referrals. Any person who accepts
deposits from the public in an area
where such transactions are routinely
conducted in the bank may refer a
consumer who seeks to purchase an
insurance product or annuity to a
qualified person who sells that product
only if the person making the referral
receives no more than a one-time,
nominal fee of a fixed dollar amount for
each referral that does not depend on
whether the referral results in a
transaction.
§ 343.60 Qualification and licensing
requirements for insurance sales
personnel.

A bank may not permit any person to
sell or offer for sale any insurance
product or annuity in any part of its

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75845

office or on its behalf, unless the person
is at all times appropriately qualified
and licensed under applicable State
insurance licensing standards with
regard to the specific products being
sold or recommended.
Appendix A to Part 343—Consumer
Grievance Process
Any consumer who believes that any bank
or any other person selling, soliciting,
advertising, or offering insurance products or
annuities to the consumer at an office of the
bank or on behalf of the bank has violated the
requirements of this part should contact the
Division of Compliance and Consumer
Affairs, Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, at the following address: 550
17th Street, NW., Washington, DC 20429, or
telephone 202–942–3100 or 800–934–3342,
or e-mail dcainternet@fdic.gov.
By order of the Board of Directors.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Dated at Washington, DC, this 21st day of
November, 2000.
Robert E. Feldman,
Executive Secretary.

Office of Thrift Supervision
12 CFR Chapter V

Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set out in the joint
preamble, OTS amends chapter V of
title 12 of the Code of Federal
Regulations by adding a new part 536 to
read as follows:
PART 536—CONSUMER PROTECTION
IN SALES OF INSURANCE
Sec.
536.10 Purpose and scope.
536.20 Definitions.
536.30 Prohibited practices.
536.40 What you must disclose.
536.50 Where insurance activities may take
place.
536.60 Qualification and licensing
requirements for insurance sales
personnel.
Appendix A to Part 536—Consumer
Grievance Process.
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1462a, 1463, 1464,
1467a, and 1831x.
§ 536.10

Purpose and scope.

(a) General rule. This part establishes
consumer protections in connection
with retail sales practices, solicitations,
advertising, or offers of any insurance
product or annuity to a consumer by:
(1) Any savings association; or
(2) Any other person that is engaged
in such activities at an office of a
savings association or on behalf of a
savings association.
(b) Application to operating
subsidiaries. For purposes of § 559.3(h)
of this chapter, an operating subsidiary
is subject to this part only to the extent

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that it sells, solicits, advertises, or offers
insurance products or annuities at an
office of a savings association or on
behalf of a savings association.
§ 536.20

Definitions.

As used in this part:
Affiliate means a company that
controls, is controlled by, or is under
common control with another company.
Company means any corporation,
partnership, business trust, association
or similar organization, or any other
trust (unless by its terms the trust must
terminate within twenty-five years or
not later than twenty-one years and ten
months after the death of individuals
living on the effective date of the trust).
It does not include any corporation the
majority of the shares of which are
owned by the United States or by any
State, or a qualified family partnership,
as defined in section 2(o)(10) of the
Bank Holding Company Act of 1956, as
amended (12 U.S.C. 1841(o)(10)).
Consumer means an individual who
purchases, applies to purchase, or is
solicited to purchase from a covered
person insurance products or annuities
primarily for personal, family, or
household purposes.
Control of a company has the same
meaning as in section 3(w)(5) of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12
U.S.C. 1813(w)(5)).
Domestic violence means the
occurrence of one or more of the
following acts by a current or former
family member, household member,
intimate partner, or caretaker:
(1) Attempting to cause or causing or
threatening another person physical
harm, severe emotional distress,
psychological trauma, rape, or sexual
assault;
(2) Engaging in a course of conduct or
repeatedly committing acts toward
another person, including following the
person without proper authority, under
circumstances that place the person in
reasonable fear of bodily injury or
physical harm;
(3) Subjecting another person to false
imprisonment; or
(4) Attempting to cause or causing
damage to property so as to intimidate
or attempt to control the behavior of
another person.
Electronic media includes any means
for transmitting messages electronically
between a covered person and a
consumer in a format that allows visual
text to be displayed on equipment, for
example, a personal computer monitor.
Office means the premises of a savings
association where retail deposits are
accepted from the public.
Subsidiary has the same meaning as
in section 3(w)(4) of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(w)(4)).

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You means:
(1) A savings association, as defined
in § 561.43 of this chapter; or
(2) Any other person only when the
person sells, solicits, advertises, or
offers an insurance product or annuity
to a consumer at an office of a savings
association, or on behalf of a savings
association. For purposes of this
definition, activities on behalf of a
savings association include activities
where a person, whether at an office of
the savings association or at another
location, sells, solicits, advertises, or
offers an insurance product or annuity
and at least one of the following applies:
(i) The person represents to a
consumer that the sale, solicitation,
advertisement, or offer of any insurance
product or annuity is by or on behalf of
the savings association;
(ii) The savings association refers a
consumer to a seller of insurance
products and annuities and the savings
association has a contractual
arrangement to receive commissions or
fees derived from a sale of an insurance
product or annuity resulting from that
referral; or
(iii) Documents evidencing the sale,
solicitation, advertising, or offer of an
insurance product or annuity identify or
refer to the savings association.
§ 536.30

Prohibited practices.

(a) Anticoercion and antitying rules.
You may not engage in any practice that
would lead a consumer to believe that
an extension of credit, in violation of
section 5(q) of the Home Owners’ Loan
Act (12 U.S.C. 1464(q)), is conditional
upon either:
(1) The purchase of an insurance
product or annuity from a savings
association or any of its affiliates; or
(2) An agreement by the consumer not
to obtain, or a prohibition on the
consumer from obtaining, an insurance
product or annuity from an unaffiliated
entity.
(b) Prohibition on misrepresentations
generally. You may not engage in any
practice or use any advertisement at any
office of, or on behalf of, a savings
association or a subsidiary of a savings
association that could mislead any
person or otherwise cause a reasonable
person to reach an erroneous belief with
respect to:
(1) The fact that an insurance product
or annuity you or any subsidiary of a
savings association sell or offer for sale
is not backed by the Federal government
or a savings association, or the fact that
the insurance product or annuity is not
insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation;
(2) In the case of an insurance product
or annuity that involves investment risk,

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the fact that there is an investment risk,
including the potential that principal
may be lost and that the product may
decline in value; or
(3) In the case of a savings association
or subsidiary of a savings association at
which insurance products or annuities
are sold or offered for sale, the fact that:
(i) The approval of an extension of
credit to a consumer by the savings
association or subsidiary may not be
conditioned on the purchase of an
insurance product or annuity by the
consumer from the savings association
or a subsidiary of a savings association;
and
(ii) The consumer is free to purchase
the insurance product or annuity from
another source.
(c) Prohibition on domestic violence
discrimination. You may not sell or
offer for sale, as principal, agent, or
broker, any life or health insurance
product if the status of the applicant or
insured as a victim of domestic violence
or as a provider of services to victims of
domestic violence is considered as a
criterion in any decision with regard to
insurance underwriting, pricing,
renewal, or scope of coverage of such
product, or with regard to the payment
of insurance claims on such product,
except as required or expressly
permitted under State law.
§ 536.40

What you must disclose.

(a) Insurance disclosures. In
connection with the initial purchase of
an insurance product or annuity by a
consumer from you, you must disclose
to the consumer, except to the extent the
disclosure would not be accurate, that:
(1) The insurance product or annuity
is not a deposit or other obligation of,
or guaranteed by, a savings association
or an affiliate of a savings association;
(2) The insurance product or annuity
is not insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC) or any
other agency of the United States, a
savings association, or (if applicable) an
affiliate of a savings association; and
(3) In the case of an insurance product
or annuity that involves an investment
risk, there is investment risk associated
with the product, including the possible
loss of value.
(b) Credit disclosures. In the case of
an application for credit in connection
with which an insurance product or
annuity is solicited, offered, or sold, you
must disclose that a savings association
may not condition an extension of credit
on either:
(1) The consumer’s purchase of an
insurance product or annuity from the
savings association or any of its
affiliates; or

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(2) The consumer’s agreement not to
obtain, or a prohibition on the consumer
from obtaining, an insurance product or
annuity from an unaffiliated entity.
(c) Timing and method of disclosures.
(1) In general. The disclosures required
by paragraph (a) of this section must be
provided orally and in writing before
the completion of the initial sale of an
insurance product or annuity to a
consumer. The disclosure required by
paragraph (b) of this section must be
made orally and in writing at the time
the consumer applies for an extension of
credit in connection with which an
insurance product or annuity is
solicited, offered, or sold.
(2) Exception for transactions by mail.
If you conduct an insurance product or
annuity sale by mail, you are not
required to make the oral disclosures
required by paragraph (a) of this section.
If you take an application for credit by
mail, you are not required to make the
oral disclosure required by paragraph
(b) of this section.
(3) Exception for transactions by
telephone. If a sale of an insurance
product or annuity is conducted by
telephone, you may provide the written
disclosures required by paragraph (a) of
this section by mail within 3 business
days beginning on the first business day
after the sale, solicitation, or offer,
excluding Sundays and the legal public
holidays specified in 5 U.S.C. 6103(a). If
you take an application for credit by
telephone, you may provide the written
disclosure required by paragraph (b) of
this section by mail, provided you mail
it to the consumer within three days
beginning the first business day after the
application is taken, excluding Sundays
and the legal public holidays specified
in 5 U.S.C. 6103(a).
(4) Electronic form of disclosures. (i)
Subject to the requirements of section
101(c) of the Electronic Signatures in
Global and National Commerce Act (12
U.S.C. 7001(c)), you may provide the
written disclosures required by
paragraph (a) and (b) of this section
through electronic media instead of on
paper, if the consumer affirmatively
consents to receiving the disclosures
electronically and if the disclosures are
provided in a format that the consumer
may retain or obtain later, for example,
by printing or storing electronically
(such as by downloading).
(ii) You are not required to provide
orally any disclosures required by
paragraphs (a) or (b) of this section that
you provide by electronic media.
(5) Disclosures must be readily
understandable. The disclosures
provided shall be conspicuous, simple,
direct, readily understandable, and
designed to call attention to the nature

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and significance of the information
provided. For instance, you may use the
following disclosures in visual media,
such as television broadcasting, ATM
screens, billboards, signs, posters and
written advertisements and promotional
materials, as appropriate and consistent
with paragraphs (a) and (b) of this
section:
• NOT A DEPOSIT
• NOT FDIC-INSURED
• NOT INSURED BY ANY FEDERAL
GOVERNMENT AGENCY
• NOT GUARANTEED BY THE SAVINGS
ASSOCIATION
• MAY GO DOWN IN VALUE

(6) Disclosures must be meaningful.
(i) You must provide the disclosures
required by paragraphs (a) and (b) of
this section in a meaningful form.
Examples of the types of methods that
could call attention to the nature and
significance of the information provided
include:
(A) A plain-language heading to call
attention to the disclosures;
(B) A typeface and type size that are
easy to read;
(C) Wide margins and ample line
spacing;
(D) Boldface or italics for key words;
and
(E) Distinctive type size, style, and
graphic devices, such as shading or
sidebars, when the disclosures are
combined with other information.
(ii) You have not provided the
disclosures in a meaningful form if you
merely state to the consumer that the
required disclosures are available in
printed material, but do not provide the
printed material when required and do
not orally disclose the information to
the consumer when required.
(iii) With respect to those disclosures
made through electronic media for
which paper or oral disclosures are not
required, the disclosures are not
meaningfully provided if the consumer
may bypass the visual text of the
disclosures before purchasing an
insurance product or annuity.
(7) Consumer acknowledgment. You
must obtain from the consumer, at the
time a consumer receives the
disclosures required under paragraphs
(a) or (b) of this section, or at the time
of the initial purchase by the consumer
of an insurance product or annuity, a
written acknowledgment by the
consumer that the consumer received
the disclosures. You may permit a
consumer to acknowledge receipt of the
disclosures electronically or in paper
form. If the disclosures required under
paragraphs (a) or (b) of this section are
provided in connection with a
transaction that is conducted by
telephone, you must:

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75847

(i) Obtain an oral acknowledgment of
receipt of the disclosures and maintain
sufficient documentation to show that
the acknowledgment was given; and
(ii) Make reasonable efforts to obtain
a written acknowledgment from the
consumer.
(d) Advertisements and other
promotional material for insurance
products or annuities. The disclosures
described in paragraph (a) of this
section are required in advertisements
and promotional material for insurance
products or annuities unless the
advertisements and promotional
material are of a general nature
describing or listing the services or
products offered by a savings
association.
§ 536.50 Where insurance activities may
take place.

(a) General rule. A savings association
must, to the extent practicable:
(1) Keep the area where the savings
association conducts transactions
involving insurance products or
annuities physically segregated from
areas where retail deposits are routinely
accepted from the general public;
(2) Identify the areas where insurance
product or annuity sales activities
occur; and
(3) Clearly delineate and distinguish
those areas from the areas where the
savings association’s retail deposittaking activities occur.
(b) Referrals. Any person who accepts
deposits from the public in an area
where such transactions are routinely
conducted in a savings association may
refer a consumer who seeks to purchase
an insurance product or annuity to a
qualified person who sells that product
only if the person making the referral
receives no more than a one-time,
nominal fee of a fixed dollar amount for
each referral that does not depend on
whether the referral results in a
transaction.
§ 536.60 Qualification and licensing
requirements for insurance sales
personnel.

A savings association may not permit
any person to sell or offer for sale any
insurance product or annuity in any
part of the savings association’s office or
on its behalf, unless the person is at all
times appropriately qualified and
licensed under applicable State
insurance licensing standards with
regard to the specific products being
sold or recommended.

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Appendix A to Part 536—Consumer
Grievance Process
Any consumer who believes that any
savings association or any other person
selling, soliciting, advertising, or offering
insurance products or annuities to the
consumer at an office of the savings

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association or on behalf of the savings
association has violated the requirements of
this part should contact the Director,
Consumer Programs, Office of Thrift
Supervision, at the following address: 1700 G
Street, NW, Washington, DC 20552, or
telephone 202–906–6237 or 800–842–6929,
or e-mail consumer.complaint@ots.treas.gov.

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Dated: November 21, 2000.
By the Office of Thrift Supervision.
Ellen Seidman,
Director.
[FR Doc. 00–30404 Filed 12–1–00; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–33–P; 6210–01–P; 6714–01–P;
6720–01–P

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