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l l★K

Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas

February 14, 2001

DALLAS, TEXAS
75265-5906

Notice 01-17
TO: The Chief Executive Officer of each
financial institution and others concerned
in the Eleventh Federal Reserve District
SUBJECT
Final Rule Regarding
Merchant Banking Investments
DETAILS
The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and the Secretary of the
Treasury have jointly adopted a final rule governing merchant banking investments made by
financial holding companies. The rule implements provisions of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act
that permit financial holding companies to make investments as part of a bona fide securities
underwriting or merchant or investment banking activity.
The Board and the Secretary have incorporated a number of amendments to the final
rule to reduce potential regulatory burdens and to clarify the application of the rule. The final
rule is effective February 15, 2001.
ATTACHMENT
A copy of the Board’s notice as it appears on pages 8466–93, Vol. 66, No. 21 of the
Federal Register dated January 31, 2001, is attached.
MORE INFORMATION
For more information, please contact Rob Jolley, Banking Supervision Department,
at (214) 922-6071. 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.

Wednesday,
January 31, 2001

Part II

Federal Reserve
System
12 CFR Part 225

Department of the
Treasury
Office of the Under Secretary for
Domestic Finance
12 CFR Part 1500
Bank Holding Companies and Change in
Bank Control; Final Rule

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8466

Federal Register / Vol. 66, No. 21 / Wednesday, January 31, 2001 / Rules and Regulations

FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 225
[Regulation Y; Docket No. R–1065]

DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Under Secretary for
Domestic Finance
12 CFR Part 1500
RIN 1505–AA78

Bank Holding Companies and Change
in Bank Control
AGENCIES: Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System and the
Department of the Treasury.
ACTION: Final rule.
SUMMARY: The Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System and the
Secretary of the Treasury jointly adopt
this final rule governing merchant
banking investments made by financial
holding companies. The rule
implements provisions of the GrammLeach-Bliley Act that permit financial
holding companies to make investments
as part of a bona fide securities
underwriting or merchant or investment
banking activity. The Board and the
Secretary have incorporated a number of
amendments to the final rule to address
issues raised by public commenters, to
reduce potential regulatory burdens,
and to clarify the application of the rule.
These changes include expanding the
definition of ‘‘securities affiliate’’ to
include a department or division of a
bank registered as a municipal securities
dealer; modifying the provisions
defining prohibited routine management
and operation of portfolio companies;
adopting a sunset provision for the
investment thresholds under the interim
rule and eliminating the dollar-based
threshold for the review of a financial
holding company’s merchant banking
activities; streamlining the rule’s
reporting and recordkeeping
requirements; broadening the definition
of ‘‘private equity’’ funds and clarifying
the rule’s application to such funds; and
adopting several safe-harbors to the
presumptions in the rule governing the
definition of affiliate for purposes of
sections 23A and 23B of the Federal
Reserve Act.
DATES: The final rule is effective
February 15, 2001.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Board of Governors: Scott G. Alvarez,
Associate General Counsel (202/452–
3583), Kieran J. Fallon, Senior Counsel
(202/452–5270), or Camille M. Caesar,
Counsel (202/452–3513), Legal Division;

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Jean Nellie Liang, Chief, Capital Markets
(202/452–2918), Division of Research &
Statistics; Michael G. Martinson, Deputy
Associate Director (202/452–3640) or
James A. Embersit, Manager, Capital
Markets (202/452–5249), Division of
Banking Supervision and Regulation;
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, 20th Street and
Constitution Avenue, N.W.,
Washington, D.C. 20551. Users of
Telecommunications Device for the Deaf
(TDD) only contact Janice Simms at
(202) 872–4984.
Department of the Treasury: Roberta
K. McInerney, Assistant General
Counsel (Banking and Finance) (202/
622–0480), Gary Sutton, Senior Banking
Counsel (202/622–0480), or Gerry
Hughes, Senior Financial Economist
(202/622–2740), 1500 Pennsylvania
Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20220.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
A. Background
The Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLB
Act) 1 amended the Bank Holding
Company Act (BHC Act) to allow a bank
holding company that has made an
effective election to become a financial
holding company to make investments
in nonfinancial companies as part of a
bona fide securities underwriting or
merchant or investment banking
activity. These investments may be
made in any type of ownership interest
in any type of nonfinancial entity
(portfolio company), and may represent
any amount of the equity of a portfolio
company. Investments made under this
new authority, which is codified in
section 4(k)(4)(H) of the BHC Act (12
U.S.C. 1843(k)(4)(H)), are referred to as
‘‘merchant banking investments.’’ The
GLB Act imposed conditions on the
length of time that these investments
may be held, the ability of the financial
holding company to routinely manage
or operate the portfolio company, and
other aspects of the relationship
between the financial holding company
and its affiliates on the one hand and
the portfolio company on the other
hand. These restrictions further the
fundamental purposes of the BHC Act—
to help maintain the separation of
banking and commerce and promote
safety and soundness.
In March 2000, the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System (Board) and the Secretary of the
Treasury (Secretary) jointly adopted, on
an interim basis, and requested public
comment on a rule governing the
merchant banking investments of
financial holding companies.2 The
1 Pub.
2 65

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L. 106–102, 113 Stat. 1338 (1999).
FR 16460 (March 28, 2000).

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interim rule provided guidance
concerning the types of investments that
are permissible under section 4(k)(4)(H)
and defined the term ‘‘securities
affiliate’’ for purposes of determining
those financial holding companies
eligible to make merchant banking
investments. In addition, the interim
rule implemented the provisions of the
GLB Act that limit the holding period of
merchant banking investments and the
ability of financial holding companies to
routinely manage or operate a portfolio
company.
The interim rule also contained
provisions designed to ensure that the
merchant banking investment activities
of financial holding companies are
conducted in compliance with the GLB
Act and in a safe and sound manner that
does not endanger depository
institutions or the federal deposit
insurance funds. In this regard, the
interim rule established aggregate
investment thresholds for the review by
the Board of the merchant banking
investment activities of a financial
holding company. The Board and the
Secretary adopted these investment
thresholds to allow the agencies to
monitor the implementation of the
merchant banking investments under
the new authority and address
situations that could pose a material risk
to the safety and soundness of
depository institutions. The interim rule
also required financial holding
companies to establish policies and
procedures reasonably designed to
monitor and manage the risks associated
with merchant banking investments,
and to maintain records and file reports
necessary for the financial holding
company and the Board to monitor the
company’s merchant banking
investments and the company’s
compliance with the GLB Act and the
interim rule. Furthermore, the interim
rule implemented the cross-marketing
and affiliate transaction restrictions
applied by the GLB Act to merchant
banking investments.
At the time the Board and the
Secretary adopted the interim rule, the
Board also issued for public comment
proposed amendments to the Board’s
capital guidelines for bank holding
companies to address the appropriate
capital treatment for merchant banking
and similar investments made by bank
holding companies and their
subsidiaries. This capital proposal,
which was not adopted on an interim
basis, generally would have required
financial holding companies to deduct
50 percent of the carrying value of their

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Federal Register / Vol. 66, No. 21 / Wednesday, January 31, 2001 / Rules and Regulations
merchant banking investments from
Tier 1 capital.
Prior to issuing the interim rule and
capital proposal, staff of the Federal
Reserve and the Department of the
Treasury conducted interviews with a
number of securities firms that make
merchant banking investments to collect
information concerning how these firms
conduct their merchant banking
activities. Staff also conducted
interviews with several bank holding
companies that were engaged in equity
investment activities prior to the GLB
Act under the more limited statutory
authorities then in existence. The
information collected in these
interviews, which is described in greater
detail in the Supplementary Information
accompanying the interim rule and
capital proposal,3 was used in
developing the interim rule and this
final rule.
B. Overview of Comments
The Board and the Secretary together
received more than 140 comments on
the interim rule and the related capital
proposal. Commenters included
Members of Congress, other federal
agencies, state banking departments,
banking organizations, securities firms,
trade associations for the banking and
securities industries, law firms and
individuals. Most comments focused on
the capital charge proposed in
conjunction with the interim rule.
Many commenters also addressed one
or more specific parts of the interim
rule. Some commenters suggested that
the Board and the Secretary should
eliminate or significantly modify the
interim rule’s aggregate investment
thresholds, holding period limitations
or routine management and operation
restrictions and instead rely on the
examination and supervisory process to
address potential safety and soundness
concerns and administer and enforce
the GLB Act’s provisions that are
designed to help maintain the
separation of banking and commerce. A
number of commenters contended that
these provisions would frustrate
Congress’ desire to permit a ‘‘two-way’’
street between securities firms and
banking organizations or place financial
holding companies at a disadvantage in
competing with nonbank organizations
in making merchant banking
investments.
Some commenters also contended
that the Board and the Secretary lacked
the authority to establish aggregate
investment thresholds and maximum
holding periods for merchant banking
investments or to limit the period of
3 See

65 FR 16460, 16461–62 (March 28, 2000).

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time that a financial holding company
may routinely manage or operate a
portfolio company without Board
approval. Several commenters argued
that the Board and the Secretary lacked
the legal authority to determine that, in
every case without exception, certain
types of officer and employee interlocks
and investor covenants represent
routine management of the portfolio
company.
Many commenters suggested specific
amendments to the interim rule to
clarify its application, reduce potential
burden or provide financial holding
companies additional flexibility in
making merchant banking investments.
For example, some commenters
requested that the Board and the
Secretary extend the permissible
holding periods for merchant banking
investments or streamline the process
for seeking approval to hold a merchant
banking investment beyond the periods
specified in the rule. Some commenters
suggested that the agencies expand the
types of relationships that a financial
holding company may have with a
portfolio company without becoming
involved in the routine management or
operations of the company or expand
the circumstances under which a
financial holding company may
routinely manage or operate a portfolio
company. In addition, some
commenters requested that the agencies
streamline the rule’s recordkeeping and
reporting requirements, or clarify or
streamline application of the rule to
private equity funds.
C. Explanation of Final Rule
The Board and the Secretary have
carefully reviewed the comments
received on the interim rule in light of
the language and purposes of the GLB
Act and the BHC Act. After this review,
the Board and the Secretary have
modified the interim rule in a number
of respects. In particular, the Board and
the Secretary have—
• Expanded the definition of
‘‘securities affiliate’’ to include a
registered municipal securities dealer,
including a division or department of a
bank that is registered as a municipal
securities dealer under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934, thereby
broadening the eligibility of financial
holding companies to make merchant
banking investments under the rule;
• Modified the provisions defining
actions that represent routine
management or operation, clarified the
circumstances under which a financial
holding company may routinely manage
and operate a portfolio company, and
extended the period of time that a
financial holding company may

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8467

routinely manage or operate a portfolio
company without providing notice to
the Board;
• Broadened the definition of private
equity funds and created a new section
of the rule (section 225.173) that
explains how the holding period and
management and operations restrictions
of the rule apply to private equity funds;
• Adopted an automatic sunset
provision for the investment thresholds
contained in the interim rule and
eliminated the dollar-based threshold
for Board review of the merchant
banking investment activities of a
financial holding company during the
period before the sunset;
• Streamlined the recordkeeping and
reporting provisions of the rule to
reduce burden;
• Clarified the circumstances in
which the cross-marketing provisions
apply; and
• Adopted three safe harbors to the
rebuttable presumptions established
under sections 23A and B of the Federal
Reserve Act.
These changes as well as the agencies’
responses to the comments received are
discussed in greater detail below.
As an initial matter, the Board and the
Secretary believe that the rule is both
within the statutory authority of the
agencies and consistent with the
language and purposes of the GLB Act
and BHC Act. The GLB Act specifically
authorizes the Board and the Secretary
to issue such regulations implementing
section 4(k)(4)(H) as the Board and the
Secretary jointly deem appropriate to
assure compliance with the purposes
and prevent evasions of the BHC Act
and the GLB Act and to protect
depository institutions.4 This authority
supplements the authority granted the
Board by the BHC Act and other federal
law to supervise bank holding
companies and issue regulations and
orders, including reporting and record
keeping requirements, to administer and
carry out the purposes of the BHC Act
and prevent evasions thereof.5
4 12 U.S.C. 1843(k)(7)(A); see also 145 Cong.
Record at H11529 (daily ed. Nov. 4, 1999)
(statement by Chairman Leach) (‘‘Importantly, the
Act gives the Federal Reserve and the Treasury the
authority to jointly develop implementing
regulations on merchant banking activities that they
deem appropriate to further the purposes and
prevent evasions of the [GLB] Act and the Bank
Holding Company Act. Under the authority, the
Federal Reserve and Treasury may define relevant
terms and impose such limitations as they deem
appropriate to ensure that this new authority does
not foster conflicts of interest or undermine the
safety and soundness of depository institutions or
the Act’s general prohibitions on the mixing of
banking and commerce.’’); 145 Cong. Record
S13788 (daily ed. Nov. 3, 1999) (statement of Sen.
Sarbanes).
5 See, e.g., 12 U.S.C. 1844; 12 U.S.C. 1818(b)(3).

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Federal Register / Vol. 66, No. 21 / Wednesday, January 31, 2001 / Rules and Regulations

As discussed in detail below, the rule
defines the scope of activities permitted
by section 4(k)(4)(H) and implements
the provisions of section 4(k)(4)(H) that
are designed to limit the potential
mixing of banking and commerce. The
rule also contains provisions that are
designed to protect the safety and
soundness of depository institutions, as
well as recordkeeping and reporting
provisions that the agencies believe are
appropriate to monitor compliance
with, and prevent evasions of, the BHC
Act and the GLB Act.
The Board and the Secretary believe
that the rule permits a ‘‘two-way’’ street
between securities firms and banking
organizations while, at the same time,
giving effect to the statutory limitations
and framework adopted by Congress to
help maintain the separation of banking
and commerce and ensure the safety
and soundness of depository
institutions. Moreover, the Board and
the Secretary believe that adoption of a
rule, rather than reliance primarily on
the supervisory process, is the most
appropriate method for ensuring the fair
and effective administration of the GLB
Act’s merchant banking provisions and
preventing evasions of those provisions.
The rule provides financial holding
companies and members of the public
with notice of the limitations generally
applicable to merchant banking
investment activities. The rule also
allows the Board to grant exceptions to
the general investment thresholds,
holding period, and affiliate transaction
limits included in the rule if the facts of
a particular case demonstrate that the
exemption is consistent with the
purposes of the GLB and BHC Acts. The
Board intends also to continue to rely
on the supervisory process to monitor
compliance by financial holding
companies with the rule and to address
any safety and soundness issues that
may arise with respect to the merchant
banking investments of individual
financial holding companies.
Section 225.170—What Type of
Investments Are Permitted by This
Subpart, and Under What Conditions
May They Be Made?
Section 4(k)(4)(H) and the rule permit
a financial holding company to acquire
or control any amount of shares, assets,
or ownership interests of any company
or other entity that is engaged in an
activity not otherwise authorized for the
financial holding company under
section 4 of the BHC Act. Thus, section
4(k)(4)(H) and the rule permit a
financial holding company directly or
indirectly to acquire or control the
shares, assets, or ownership interests of
a company or other entity that is

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engaged in any activity that is not
financial in nature, incidental to a
financial activity or otherwise
permissible for the financial holding
company under section 4 of the BHC
Act. Shares, assets and ownership
interests acquired or controlled
pursuant to section 4(k)(4)(H) and the
rule are referred to as ‘‘merchant
banking investments.’’ A financial
holding company may acquire or
control merchant banking investments
only in accordance with the
requirements of the rule.
Section 4(k)(4)(H) and the rule allow
a financial holding company to acquire
the full range of ownership interests in
a company, including securities,
warrants, partnership interests, trust
certificates, and other instruments
representing an ownership interest in a
company, whether the interest is voting
or nonvoting. A financial holding
company also may acquire any
instrument convertible into a security or
other ownership interest under the rule.
In addition, a financial holding
company may acquire any amount of
ownership interests in a company or
other entity under the rule, whether or
not that amount results in control for
purposes of the BHC Act. Thus, this
merchant banking authority gives a
financial holding company the
flexibility to acquire or control a
nominal amount, a majority, or all of the
shares or other ownership interests of a
portfolio company.
Securities Affiliate
The GLB Act grants authority to make
merchant banking investments only to a
bank holding company that becomes a
financial holding company,6 and either
(1) controls or is a ‘‘securities affiliate’’
or (2) controls both an insurance
underwriter affiliate and an investment
adviser affiliate registered under the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 that
provides investment advice to an
insurance company. In addition, the
financial holding company must
provide notice to the Board within 30
days after commencing merchant
banking investment activities or
acquiring any company that makes
merchant banking investments.7
The interim rule defined a ‘‘securities
affiliate’’ to include any broker or dealer
registered with the Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC) under the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934
(Exchange Act). Commenters generally
6 Subpart I of the Board’s Regulation Y sets forth
the procedures and qualification criteria applicable
to bank holding companies that seek to elect to
become a financial holding company. See 12 CFR
225.81 et seq.; 66 FR 400 (Jan. 3, 2001).
7 See 12 U.S.C. 1843(k)(6)(A); 12 CFR 225.87(a).

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supported the rule’s broad definition of
‘‘securities affiliate.’’ Some commenters
also requested that the definition be
expanded to include a separately
identifiable division or department of a
bank that is registered as a municipal
securities dealer under section 15B of
the Exchange Act, a small business
investment company, or any affiliate
predominantly engaged in the purchase,
sale or underwriting of securities.
After considering the comments, the
Board and the Secretary have amended
the definition of securities affiliate to
include a registered municipal
securities dealer, including a separately
identifiable division or department of a
bank that is registered as a municipal
securities dealer under the Exchange
Act. A division or department that is
registered with the SEC as a municipal
securities dealer performs many of the
same functions as a separately
incorporated registered securities broker
or dealer and would be considered to be
a type of securities broker or dealer if
the division or department were
incorporated outside the bank. The
Board and Secretary also have amended
the rule to clarify that a financial
holding company may make merchant
banking investments if the holding
company is itself a registered securities
broker or dealer.
The agencies do not believe at this
time that an SBIC or a company that
purchases securities for investment or
other purposes without becoming a
registered securities broker or dealer are
securities affiliates for purposes of
section 4(k)(4)(H). Commenters making
these suggestions provided no evidence
that Congress intended the term
‘‘securities affiliate’’ to cover companies
that do not engage in significant levels
of securities activities.
Authority Limited to Making
Investments in Companies Engaged in
Nonfinancial Activities
As discussed above, the rule
authorizes a financial holding company
to acquire or control investments in a
company or other entity that is engaged
in any activity that is not otherwise
authorized for the financial holding
company under section 4 of the BHC
Act. Some commenters asserted that
section 4(k)(4)(H) should be construed
to permit financial holding companies
to make investments in financial
companies under their merchant
banking authority. These commenters
suggested that any investment made by
a financial holding company for
investment purposes, rather than for
strategic or operating purposes, should
be considered a merchant banking
investment regardless of the activities

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Federal Register / Vol. 66, No. 21 / Wednesday, January 31, 2001 / Rules and Regulations
conducted by the acquired company.
Other commenters requested that the
Board and Secretary clarify that the rule
does not apply to investments made by
financial holding companies or other
banking organizations under legal
authorities other than section 4(k)(4)(H).
The language of section 4(k)(4)(H)
authorizes a financial holding company
to acquire or control a company or
entity ‘‘engaged in any activity not
authorized pursuant to [section 4 of the
BHC Act].’’ Financial holding
companies have separate authority
under other provisions of the BHC Act
to make investments in companies
engaged in financial activities. Section
4(k)(4)(H) does not restrict the authority
of financial holding companies to
acquire or control ownership interests
in companies engaged in financial
activities. Rather, it authorizes financial
holding companies to make investments
in companies that would otherwise be
prohibited. Together, these sets of
authorities allow financial holding
companies, without prior approval in
most cases, to acquire ownership
interests in any type of company other
than a depository institution.8
The rule does not prohibit a financial
holding company from using a
combination of authorities to invest
through the same subsidiary or fund in
ownership interests of both nonfinancial
companies and financial companies. In
addition, a company held as a merchant
banking investment may be engaged in
both nonfinancial and financial
activities, so long as the investment
otherwise complies with the
requirements of the rule. Similarly, a
financial holding company may retain a
merchant banking investment in a
nonfinancial company even if the
company subsequently commences a
financial activity.
Because section 4(k)(4)(H) does not
authorize investments in financial
companies, the restrictions contained in
the rule, such as the restrictions on
holding periods and cross-marketing, do
not apply to investments by financial
holding companies in financial
companies that are made under other
provisions of the BHC Act and the
Board’s Regulation Y—whether such
investments are made for strategic
reasons or for purposes of reselling the
investment. A financial holding
company may not, however, use the
8 Nothing

in section 4(k)(4)(H) or the rule
overrides the prior approval requirements of section
3 of the BHC Act that govern the acquisition of
shares of a bank or bank holding company or the
provisions of section 4(k)(6) and 4(j) of the BHC Act
that govern the acquisition of shares of a savings
association or a company that controls a savings
association.

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merchant banking authority as a means
of evading restrictions, such as consent
or approval requirements or restrictions
that address conflicts of interest, that
govern the acquisition of financial
companies under the BHC Act or the
Board’s Regulation Y.9
The authority granted by section
4(k)(4)(H) of the BHC Act to financial
holding companies to make merchant
banking investments also is an
alternative to any other authority that a
financial holding company may have to
make investments in nonfinancial
companies under other provisions of the
BHC Act. For example, the rule does not
address or apply to investments
acquired as part of securities
underwriting, dealing or market making
activities conducted under section
4(k)(4)(E) of the BHC Act, investments
made by insurance underwriting
subsidiaries of a financial holding
company in accordance with section
4(k)(4)(I) of the BHC Act, investments
made under section 4(c)(6) or 4(c)(7) of
the BHC Act, or investments made
overseas under the Board’s Regulation
K.10
Merchant Banking Investments Must Be
Made as Part of a Bona Fide
Underwriting or Merchant or
Investment Banking Activity
The GLB Act and the rule provide that
a financial holding company may make
merchant banking investments only as
part of a bona fide underwriting or
merchant banking or investment
banking activity.11 When issuing the
interim rule, the Board and the
Secretary noted that this requirement
was intended to distinguish between
merchant banking investments that, by
their very nature, are made for purposes
of resale or other disposition, and
investments that are made for purposes
of allowing the financial holding
company to engage in the nonfinancial
activities conducted by the portfolio
company. The GLB Act and the rule do
not authorize a financial holding
company to make an investment in a
nonfinancial company for the purpose
of engaging in the activities of the
nonfinancial company and, in this way,
the ‘‘bona fide’’ requirement preserves
the financial nature of merchant
9 See,

e.g., 12 U.S.C. 1843(l)(2); 12 CFR 225.84.
the rule does not apply to
investments held under section 4(c)(6) or 4(c)(7) or
the Board’s Regulation K, those authorities are only
available if the financial holding company’s
aggregate investment in the relevant company
under a combination of authorities—including any
investment made under the merchant banking
authority—is within the applicable investment
limitations and restrictions set forth in section
4(c)(6), 4(c)(7) or Regulation K.
11 12 U.S.C. § 1843(k)(4)(H).
10 Although

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8469

banking investment activities and helps
further the GLB Act’s purpose of
maintaining the separation of banking
and commerce.
As the agencies stated in the
Supplementary Information
accompanying the interim rule, the
Board intends to monitor the merchant
banking investment activities of
financial holding companies through
the supervisory process to ensure that
all merchant banking investments are
made in compliance with the Act’s
‘‘bona fide’’ requirement and that
financial holding companies do not use
the merchant banking authority as a
means of becoming impermissibly
involved in nonfinancial activities, such
as real estate investment or
development. Some commenters
expressed concern that the Board and
the Secretary intended to discourage or
prohibit financial holding companies
from making merchant banking
investments in companies engaged in
real estate investment or development
activities.
In considering whether an investment
meets the rule’s ‘‘bona fide’’
requirement, the Board will consider all
the relevant facts and circumstances
surrounding the investment, including
the financial holding company’s
documented purpose for making the
investment and overall relationship
with the portfolio company. The ‘‘bona
fide’’ requirement does not prohibit a
financial holding company from
specializing in making merchant
banking investments in particular
industries or from making its first
merchant banking investment in a
company engaged in real estate
investment or development, provided
such investments are made for
investment purposes as part of an
ongoing underwriting or investment or
merchant banking activity and are
otherwise held in accordance with the
requirements of the rule.12
Investments May Be Made Directly or
Through Funds
A financial holding company may
acquire or control merchant banking
investments directly or through any
subsidiary other than a depository
institution or subsidiary of a depository
12 Concentration in particular industries or in
individual investments may present supervisory
concerns. The Board expects all financial holding
companies that engage in merchant banking
investment activities to establish policies governing
portfolio diversification and to maintain capital that
is adequate in light of the company’s investment
portfolio. See Federal Reserve SR Letter No. 00–9
(SPE) (June 22, 2000).

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institution.13 A financial holding
company also may not acquire or
control merchant banking investments
on behalf of a depository institution or
subsidiary of a depository institution. In
order to assure competitive equality
between U.S. and foreign banking
organizations conducting merchant
banking activities, the rule provides that
a U.S. branch or agency of a foreign
bank is considered a ‘‘depository
institution’’ for purpose of the rule.
Accordingly, a U.S. branch or agency of
a foreign bank may not acquire or
control merchant banking investments
under the rule, and merchant banking
investments may not be acquired or
controlled on behalf of a U.S. branch or
agency of a foreign bank.
As discussed more fully below, the
rule allows a financial holding company
to make merchant banking investments
through a private equity fund or other
investment fund that itself makes
investments in nonfinancial companies.
Where a financial holding company
makes an investment in a private equity
fund or other fund that in turn makes
merchant banking investments, the
investment by the holding company in
the fund is considered a ‘‘merchant
banking investment’’ and must comply
with the requirements of the rule. As
described further below, the rule
provides certain benefits for
investments in or held through a
qualifying private equity fund,
including an extended holding period
and certain relief from the rule’s crossmarketing restrictions. Investments in
funds that do not qualify as private
equity funds are treated as any other
type of merchant banking investment
held under the rule.
Definition of Portfolio Company and
Financial Holding Company
Certain of the rule’s requirements—
such as the restrictions on routine
management and operation—apply only
with respect to ‘‘portfolio companies.’’
The rule defines a ‘‘portfolio company’’
to mean any company or entity that is
directly or indirectly held, owned or
controlled by a financial holding
company using the merchant banking
authority and that is engaged in an
activity that is not authorized for the
financial holding company under
section 4 of the BHC Act. (See section
225.177).
13 A financial subsidiary may make merchant
banking investments only if, after five years of the
date of enactment of the GLB Act, the Board and
the Secretary jointly adopt rules in accordance with
section 122 of the GLB Act that permit financial
subsidiaries to make merchant banking
investments.

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As a general matter, a ‘‘financial
holding company’’ is defined for
purposes of the rule to mean the
financial holding company and any
direct or indirect subsidiary of the
holding company. The term does not
include (i) a portfolio company that is
controlled by the financial holding
company, or (ii) a depository institution
controlled by the financial holding
company or any subsidiary of such a
depository institution. As discussed
below, the definition of financial
holding company is modified to include
depository institutions and certain types
of affiliates of the financial holding
company for purposes of certain
provisions governing routine
management.
Requirement That Assets Be Acquired
by or Transferred to a Portfolio
Company
As noted above, the rule permits a
financial holding company to acquire
any type of ownership interest in a
portfolio company. The interim rule
also permits a financial holding
company to acquire and control ‘‘assets’’
other than debt or equity securities or
other ownership interests of a company.
These assets may, for example, be real
estate or the assets of a division of an
operating company. To be permissible
under the interim rule, the assets must
be acquired through, or promptly
transferred to, a portfolio company that
has and maintains separate corporate
existence, management, and operations
to the extent otherwise required by the
rule. (See § 225.170(e)(3).) Some
commenters asserted that the rule
should allow a financial holding
company directly to acquire and hold
all types of nonfinancial assets.
The final rule retains the requirement
of the interim rule that a financial
holding company hold any nonfinancial
assets acquired as a merchant banking
investment through a portfolio company
that is separate from the financial
holding company. The agencies believe
that this requirement is consistent with
the language of section 4(k)(4)(H), which
allows a financial holding company to
acquire only assets ‘‘of a company.’’ In
addition, this requirement facilitates
compliance with the routine
management and operation restrictions
of the Act by interposing separate
management between the financial
holding company and any nonfinancial
assets acquired, and enhances safety
and soundness by providing the benefits
of corporate separation.

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Section 225.171—What Are the
Limitations on Managing or Operating a
Portfolio Company Held as a Merchant
Banking Investment?
The GLB Act prohibits a financial
holding company from routinely
managing or operating a portfolio
company except as may be necessary or
required to obtain a reasonable return
on the resale or disposition of the
investment. The interim rule addressed
a number of arrangements that would
not be considered to represent routinely
managing or operating a company and
that would, therefore, be permissible at
any time as well as arrangements that
represent routinely managing or
operating a company. In particular, the
interim rule provided that a financial
holding company would generally not
be considered to routinely manage or
operate a portfolio company by having
one or more representatives on the
board of directors of the portfolio
company, or by requiring a portfolio
company (through written covenants or
otherwise) to obtain the financial
holding company’s approval to take
actions outside the ordinary course of
business, such as the acquisition of
another company; the sale,
recapitalization or liquidation of the
portfolio company; the issuance of
additional capital stock; or making
significant changes to the portfolio
company’s business plan. On the other
hand, the interim rule also provided
that a financial holding company would
be considered to be routinely managing
or operating a portfolio company if a
director, officer, employee or agent of
the financial holding company served as
an officer or employee of the portfolio
company, or if the financial holding
company (through written covenants or
otherwise) restricted the ability of the
portfolio company to make routine
business decisions.
The interim rule permitted a financial
holding company to routinely manage
or operate a portfolio company when
such action was necessary to address a
material risk to the value or operation of
the portfolio company. In these special
situations, a financial holding company
was required to obtain the Board’s
approval if the company routinely
managed or operated a portfolio
company for more than 6 months.
Commenters supported the agencies’
decision to allow financial holding
companies to have director interlocks
with portfolio companies. Commenters
also supported allowing an investing
company to participate in decisions by
the portfolio company that are outside
the ordinary course of business. These
commenters viewed these actions as

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necessary protections for investors that
did not involve the investor in the dayto-day management or operations of the
portfolio company.
Many commenters, however, also
requested that the Board and Secretary
expand the types of relationships that a
financial holding company may have
with a portfolio company without being
deemed to be routinely managing or
operating the portfolio company. For
example, commenters argued that the
agencies should permit a financial
holding company to have some officer
or employee interlocks with a portfolio
company on either a permanent or
temporary basis. Commenters
contended that an interlocking
employee or junior officer would not
necessarily involve the financial
holding company in routinely managing
or operating the company or in many
cases confer authority on the financial
holding company to make management
decisions at the portfolio company.
Commenters also requested that the
agencies strike the rule’s prohibition on
‘‘agents’’ of a financial holding company
serving as officers or employees of a
portfolio company in light of the
potential breadth and ambiguity of the
term. In addition, commenters requested
that the rule allow a financial holding
company to have any type of ‘‘negative’’
covenant or other type of covenant as
part of an investment in a portfolio
company, and to participate in
decisions regarding the hiring or firing
of the portfolio company’s independent
accountant and lower-level officers and
employees.
Commenters also asserted that the
interim rule improperly limited the
circumstances when a financial holding
company is permitted to routinely
manage or operate a portfolio company
and the length of time such involvement
may exist. In particular, commenters
argued that section 4(k)(4)(H) allows a
financial holding company to routinely
manage or operate a portfolio company
when ‘‘necessary or required to obtain a
reasonable return on [the] investment
upon resale or disposition.’’ Some
commenters asserted that this standard
would be met if the portfolio company
experienced a decline in profitability or
the loss of key customers or personnel.
Some commenters also asserted that the
rule should not place any time limit on
a financial holding company’s
involvement in the routine management
or operations of a portfolio company or,
alternatively, should allow a financial
holding company to routinely manage
or operate a portfolio company for a
period longer than 6 months without
Board approval.

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As discussed below, the final rule
contains modifications that address
these points.
Relationships That Involve Routine
Management or Operation
Section 225.171(a) of the rule
implements the GLB Act’s general
prohibition on a financial holding
company routinely managing or
operating any portfolio company. As
explained below, the final rule retains
the definition of certain types of
relationships as representing routinely
managing or operating a portfolio
company contained in the interim rule.
The rule has been modified in several
cases to construct presumptions that
certain types of relationships represent
routine management or operation, and
to allow financial holding companies to
have these relationships where they do
not result in routine management or
operation.
The agencies continue to believe that
in all circumstances an executive officer
of a company is involved in the day-today management or operations of the
company and participates in
management and operational decisions
that occur in the ordinary course of the
company’s business and, thus, is
involved in routinely managing or
operating the company. For this reason,
the final rule continues to provide that
a financial holding company routinely
manages or operates a portfolio
company if any director, officer or
employee of the financial holding
company serves as, or has the
responsibilities of, an executive officer
of the portfolio company. The final rule
defines the term ‘‘executive officer’’ in
the same manner as the Board’s
Regulation O. As a general matter, this
definition includes any person who
participates or has the authority to
participate (other than in the capacity as
a director) in major policymaking
functions of the portfolio company,
whether or not the officer has an official
title, the title designates the officer as an
assistant, or the officer serves without
salary or other compensation. (See
section 225.177(d); 12 CFR
215.2(e)(1).)14 The agencies believe
14 An ‘‘executive officer’’ does not include a
person who may exercise a certain measure of
discretion in the performance of their duties,
including the discretion to make decisions in the
ordinary course of business, but who does not
participate in the determination of major policies of
the company and whose decisions are limited by
policy standards fixed by senior management. In
addition, the term does not include any person who
is excluded from participating (other than in the
capacity of a director) in major policymaking
functions of the company by resolution of the board
of directors of by the bylaws of the company
provided the person does not in fact participate in
such policymaking functions.

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using this definition, which is familiar
to banking organizations, will facilitate
compliance with the rule.
The final rule also provides that a
financial holding company routinely
manages or operates a portfolio
company if an executive officer of the
parent financial holding company or of
certain of its major subsidiaries becomes
an officer or employee of the portfolio
company. These executive officers are
the highest officers of the financial
holding company and its major
subsidiaries and, by definition, exercise
management and operational control
over the financial holding company and
its subsidiaries. In the context of a
situation in which the financial holding
company is a direct or indirect investor
in a portfolio company, allowing these
executive officers to serve as an officer
or employee of the portfolio company
would permit the financial holding
company to routinely manage or operate
the portfolio company.
Finally, the final rule provides that
covenants or agreements that restrict the
portfolio company’s ability to make
routine business decisions represent
routinely managing or operating the
portfolio company. Covenants or
agreements affected by this provision
include restrictions on the portfolio
company entering into transactions in
the ordinary course of business or hiring
non-executive officers or employees. As
explained below, the rule permits
covenants and agreements that restrict
actions that are outside the ordinary
course of business. In response to
several comments, the final rule also
permits covenants or other
arrangements that govern the
employment of any or all of the
‘‘executive officers’’ of a portfolio
company (rather than just the 5 highest
ranking officials of the portfolio
company, as in the interim rule).
As noted above, the final rule
modifies several other restrictions
contained in the interim rule from
absolute prohibitions to rebuttable
presumptions. In particular, the
agencies believe that, in most
circumstances, a financial holding
company would become involved in the
day-to-day management or operations of
a portfolio company if a director, officer
or employee of the financial holding
company serves as a non-executive
officer or employee of the portfolio
company or if an officer or employee of
the portfolio company is supervised by
or reports to an officer or employee of
the financial holding company. The
agencies also recognize, however, that
there may be cases where the specific
facts demonstrate that such a
relationship with the portfolio company

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would not involve the investing
financial holding company in routinely
managing or operating the company.
Accordingly, the agencies have
modified the rule to establish a
rebuttable presumption that these
relationships represent routine
management or operation of a portfolio
company. In addition, in response to
commenters, the reference in these
presumptions to ‘‘agents’’ of the
financial holding company has been
deleted because the term is ambiguous.
The rule allows a financial holding
company to request a determination
from the Board that a presumption of
routine management or operations is
rebutted. (See section 225.171(c).) Any
request to rebut a presumption should
fully describe all the facts and
circumstances related to the financial
holding company’s investment in, and
relationships with, the portfolio
company.
Relationships That Do Not Constitute
Routine Management or Operation
Section 225.171(d) of the final rule
identifies relationships with a portfolio
company that would not involve a
financial holding company in routinely
managing or operating the portfolio
company. The list of relationships
included in section 225.171(d) is not
intended to be a complete list of the
types of contacts or relationships that a
financial holding company may have
with a portfolio company without being
deemed to routinely manage or operate
the portfolio company. Instead, the list
is intended to identify types of
relationships that commonly occur with
a portfolio company and that would not
involve the financial holding company
in routinely managing or operating the
portfolio company.
1. Director interlocks. The final rule
continues to permit a financial holding
company to have one or more
representatives on the board of directors
of a portfolio company. Consistent with
the Board’s existing interpretations, the
selection of the partners (including the
general partner) of a partnership is
considered to be the equivalent of
selecting the directors of a company. A
representative of a financial holding
company that serves as a director of a
portfolio company may participate fully
in those matters that are typically
presented to directors of a company,
whether the director participates in
these matters at a meeting of the board,
at meetings of committees of the board,
through written votes, through meetings
with officers or employees of the
portfolio company or otherwise.
The financial holding company’s
director representatives, however, may

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not participate in the day-to-day
operations of the portfolio company or
in management decisions that are made
in the ordinary course of business and
not customarily presented to the
directors of a company. In this manner,
the rule prevents a financial holding
company from using a person that is
nominally designated as a director to
routinely manage or operate a portfolio
company. In order for a financial
holding company to have a director
interlock and not be deemed to be
routinely managing or operating the
portfolio company, the portfolio
company also must have officers and
employees that routinely manage and
operate the company, and the financial
holding company must not have other
arrangements or relationships with the
portfolio company that would involve
the financial holding company in the
routine management or operation of the
portfolio company.
2. Covenants concerning actions
outside the ordinary course of business.
The final rule permits a financial
holding company to restrict, by
covenant or otherwise, the ability of a
portfolio company to take actions
outside the ordinary course of business.
In response to comments, the final rule
contains an expanded list of examples
of actions that are outside the ordinary
course of business and that may be
subject to these types of covenants or
agreements. These examples are—
• The acquisition of significant assets
or control of another company by the
portfolio company or any of its
subsidiaries;
• The removal or selection of the
portfolio company’s independent
accountant or investment banker;
• Significant changes to the portfolio
company’s business plan or accounting
methods or policies;
• The removal or replacement of any
or all of the executive officers of the
portfolio company;
• The redemption, authorization or
issuance of any equity or debt securities
of the portfolio company;
• Any borrowing by the portfolio
company that is outside the ordinary
course of business;
• The amendment of the portfolio
company’s articles of incorporation or
by-laws or similar governing
documents; and
• The sale, merger, consolidation,
spin-off, recapitalization, liquidation,
dissolution or sale of substantially all of
the assets of the portfolio company or
any of its significant subsidiaries.
The examples included in the rule are
not exclusive and are intended only to
illustrate the types of actions that a
financial holding company may restrict,

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by covenant or otherwise, without
becoming involved in the routine
management or operations of the
portfolio company.
3. Providing advisory and
underwriting services to, and consulting
with, a portfolio company. The final
rule also clarifies that a financial
holding company does not routinely
manage or operate a portfolio company
by providing financial, investment or
management consulting advisory
services to the portfolio company as
otherwise permitted by the Board’s
Regulation Y.15 Any management
consulting services provided to a
portfolio company must remain solely
advisory in nature, and the financial
holding company may not assume
responsibility for decision-making or for
the day-to-day management or
operations of the portfolio company.16
In addition, the final rule clarifies that
a financial holding company may
underwrite or act as placement agent for
the securities of a portfolio company
and provide assistance to the portfolio
company in connection with the
underwriting or placement of its
securities without being considered to
be involved in routinely managing or
operating the company. The rule also
clarifies that a financial holding
company may have regular or periodic
meetings with the officers or employees
of a portfolio company to monitor and
provide advice regarding the portfolio
company’s performance or activities so
long as the financial holding company,
through such meeting or otherwise, does
not routinely manage or operate the
portfolio company.
These provisions were added to the
final rule to address questions raised by
commenters. They are not intended to
identify all of the contacts that may be
permissible between a financial holding
company and a portfolio company.
When May a Financial Holding
Company Routinely Manage or Operate
a Portfolio Company?
Section 4(k)(4)(H) permits a financial
holding company to routinely manage
or operate a portfolio company when
such action is ‘‘necessary or required to
obtain a reasonable return on [the]
investment upon resale or
disposition.’’ 17 The Board and the
Secretary have amended the rule to
incorporate this statutory standard. The
final rule also provides examples of
situations where intervention by a
financial holding company might be
necessary or required to obtain a
15 See

12 CFR 225.28(b)(6) and 225.86(b)(1).
12 CFR 225.28(b)(9) and 225.86(b)(1).
17 12 U.S.C. 1843(k)(4)(H)(iv).
16 See

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reasonable return, such as when the
portfolio company experiences a
significant operating loss or the loss of
senior management. The situations
listed in the rule as examples are not
intended to represent an exclusive list
of situations when a financial holding
company may permissibly intervene in
the routine management or operation of
a portfolio company.
The agencies note, however, that once
the financial holding company has
taken appropriate actions to obtain a
reasonable return on the resale or
disposition of the investment, the GLB
Act requires the financial holding
company to cease routinely managing or
operating the portfolio company.
Accordingly, the rule provides that a
financial holding company may
routinely manage or operate a portfolio
company only for the period of time as
may be necessary to address the cause
of the holding company’s involvement
in the routine management or
operations of the portfolio company, to
obtain suitable management
arrangements, to dispose of the
investment or to otherwise obtain a
reasonable return upon the resale or
disposition of the investment.
The Board and the Secretary
recognize that the determination
whether and how long intervention by
the financial holding company is
necessary or required will depend on
the facts and circumstances associated
with the particular investment. The
final rule includes two requirements to
assist the Board in monitoring
interventions by financial holding
companies in the routine management
or operations of portfolio companies to
ensure that such actions are consistent
with the GLB Act’s limitations.
First, the rule requires financial
holding companies to maintain and
make available to the Board upon
request a written record describing the
company’s involvement in routinely
managing or operating a portfolio
company (see section 225.171(e)(4)).
Second, the rule requires that a financial
holding company provide the Board
written notice if the company routinely
manages or operates a portfolio
company for more than 9 months (see
section 225.171(e)(3)). This notice
procedure substitutes for the prior
approval process included in the
interim rule. The notice may be in letter
form and should identify the portfolio
company, the date on which the
financial holding company first became
involved in the routine management or
operations of the portfolio company, the
reasons for the involvement, the actions
that the financial holding company has
taken to address the circumstances

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giving rise to the intervention, and an
estimate of when the financial holding
company anticipates ceasing routinely
managing or operating the portfolio
company. These records and notice will
permit the Board to monitor the
company’s involvement in routinely
managing or operating a portfolio
company to assure that such actions
remain consistent with the GLB Act and
the rule.
Depository Institutions Prohibited From
Managing or Operating Portfolio
Companies
The final rule provides that a
depository institution and a subsidiary
of a depository institution may not
routinely manage or operate a portfolio
company held by a financial holding
company under the rule. Depository
institutions and their subsidiaries are
not authorized to make merchant
banking investments or to routinely
manage or operate portfolio companies
acquired by an affiliated financial
holding company. The rule is not
intended to prevent a depository
institution from having covenants or
from taking actions pursuant to
covenants that are typically found in
credit agreements to ensure repayment
of extensions of credit in the ordinary
course of business where the covenant
or action is not an attempt to evade the
restrictions of this subpart. To ensure
competitive equality, this limitation
would also apply to U.S. branches and
agencies of foreign banks.
The rule does not prohibit a director,
officer or employee of a depository
institution (or subsidiary of a depository
institution) or U.S. branch or agency
from serving as a director of a portfolio
company to the same extent as would be
permitted for a director, officer or
employee of a financial holding
company or to take other actions that
the rule does not define to be routine
management or operation. In order to
clarify these points, the rule includes a
depository institution and its
subsidiaries in the definition of
financial holding company for purposes
of the provisions defining routine
management and operation. In addition,
the rule does not apply the prohibition
on routinely managing or operating a
portfolio company to a financial
subsidiary held in accordance with
section 5136A of the Revised Statutes or
section 46 of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act, or to a subsidiary that is
a small business investment company
held in accordance with the Small
Business Investment Act of 1958, so
long as the subsidiary exercises routine
management or operation in accordance
with the limitations that apply to

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financial holding companies under this
subpart. As noted above, an affiliated
depository institution may not,
however, routinely manage or operate a
portfolio company under section
225.171(e).
Section 225.172—What Are the Holding
Periods Permitted for Merchant Banking
Investments?
The GLB Act requires that shares,
assets, and ownership interests be held
only for a period of time that enables the
sale or disposition of the interest on a
reasonable basis consistent with the
financial viability of the financial
holding company’s merchant banking
activities. The interim rule included this
statutory limitation and implemented it
by establishing holding periods
governing the retention of merchant
banking investments by financial
holding companies. Financial holding
companies could hold merchant
banking investments beyond the periods
established by the rule only with the
approval of the Board.
Permissible Holding Periods for
Merchant Banking Investments
The interim rule generally permitted
financial holding companies to hold any
merchant banking investment for a
period of up to 10 years. In addition, the
rule allowed financial holding
companies to hold an interest in a
private equity fund for the life of the
fund, up to 15 years. Financial holding
companies could hold any merchant
banking investment for a longer period
with the Board’s approval.
The holding periods included in the
rule reflect information collected by
Federal Reserve and Treasury staff from
a number of securities firms that
currently make merchant banking
investments and from several bank
holding companies that have relatively
large portfolios of similar equity
investments that were made under legal
authorities that pre-date the GLB Act. In
developing these holding periods, the
Board and the Secretary also considered
the System’s experience in supervising
the equity investment activities of bank
holding companies under these preexisting authorities.
These data indicate that merchant
banking and similar investments
typically are held only for relatively
short periods of time. Although the
holding period for individual
investments vary, these data indicate
that the average holding period for
investments under current market
conditions is approximately 5 years,
with a shorter average holding period
for investments held through private
equity funds and other pooled

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investment vehicles. These data also
indicate that investments are only rarely
held for a period in excess of 10 years.
Several commenters, including
banking organizations active in equity
investment activities and a securities
trade association, concurred that the
holding periods established by the
interim rule generally are consistent
with industry practice and that
merchant banking investments are only
occasionally held beyond the periods
permitted by the rule. Another banking
trade association also fully supported
the holding periods included in the
interim rule, noting that the periods
were consistent with Congress’ intent to
maintain the separation between
banking and commerce.
A number of commenters, on the
other hand, asserted that Congress
intended to leave the decision of when
to sell a merchant banking investment to
the discretion of the financial holding
company. These commenters argued
that establishing a regulatory holding
period for merchant banking
investments would place financial
holding companies at a competitive
disadvantage or require financial
holding companies to dispose of
investments prematurely. Some
commenters recommended that the
agencies eliminate or delay adoption of
any fixed holding periods and rely on
the supervisory process to enforce the
limitations in the GLB Act restricting
the period of time that merchant
banking investments may be held. In
addition, several commenters suggested
that the agencies allow all merchant
banking investments to be held for up
to 15 years without approval, or
establish a regulatory holding period
that is based on the average holding
period of the merchant banking
investment portfolio of the financial
holding company.
After carefully considering the
comments in light of the language and
purposes of the GLB Act and BHC Act,
the agencies have retained the holding
period provisions of the interim rule
with several modifications discussed
below. Under the final rule, a financial
holding company, without any prior
approval, may own or control a
merchant banking investment for up to
10 years, and may own or control an
investment in or held through a private
equity fund for the duration of the fund,
up to 15 years. The agencies have not
amended the rule to use the average
duration of a financial holding
company’s merchant banking portfolio
as the criteria for measuring compliance
with the rule’s holding periods. Because
merchant banking investments typically
are held for only short periods of time,

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adopting an average duration approach
could allow a financial holding
company to retain individual merchant
banking investments for an extended
and virtually indefinite period of time
in conflict with the purposes of the GLB
and BHC Acts.
The agencies believe that the holding
periods in the rule are appropriate to
implement the limitation in section
4(k)(4)(H) that allows financial holding
companies to own or control a merchant
banking investment only for ‘‘a period
of time to enable the sale or disposition
thereof on a reasonable basis consistent
with the financial viability’’ of the
financial holding company’s merchant
banking investment activities, and are
consistent with the purpose of the GLB
Act and BHC Act to maintain the
separation between banking and
commerce.
Nevertheless, the Board and the
Secretary recognize that there may be
circumstances where retention of a
merchant banking investment beyond
the periods established by the rule
would be appropriate and consistent
with the limitations in, and purposes of,
the GLB and BHC Acts. Accordingly, the
rule continues to allow a financial
holding company to retain any
merchant banking investment beyond
the periods set forth in the rule with the
Board’s approval. This process provides
financial holding companies with the
flexibility to retain merchant banking
investments beyond the holding periods
in the rule where the financial holding
company can demonstrate that such
retention is necessary to enable the sale
or other disposition of the investment
on a reasonable basis and is otherwise
consistent with the GLB and BHC Acts.
The rule lists the factors that the
Board will consider in reviewing a
request for an extension of the
applicable holding period. These factors
include the cost to the financial holding
company of disposing of the investment
within the applicable time period; the
total exposure of the financial holding
company to the portfolio company and
the risks that disposing of the
investment without an extension may
pose to the financial holding company;
market conditions; the nature of the
portfolio company’s business; the extent
and history of the financial holding
company’s involvement in the
management and operations of the
portfolio company; and the average
holding period of the financial holding
company’s merchant banking
investments. The Board may also
consider any other relevant information
related to the investment.
In response to comments, the agencies
also have streamlined the process for

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obtaining the Board’s approval to retain
a merchant banking investment beyond
the applicable holding period. The final
rule provides that an extension request
must be filed at least 90 days (rather
than 1 year, as in the interim rule) prior
to the expiration of the holding period.
Any request for an extension must
provide the reasons for the request
(including information that addresses
the factors discussed above) and explain
the financial holding company’s plan
for divesting the investment. A financial
holding company may request
confidential treatment of any
information included in a request in
accordance with the Freedom of
Information Act (5 U.S.C. 552 et seq.)
and the Board’s Rules Regarding the
Availability of Information (12 CFR Part
261).
The final rule provides that, in
connection with granting any extension,
the Board may impose restrictions that
the Board determines to be appropriate
in the circumstances. The agencies have
eliminated all but one of the restrictions
that will be applied by rule in all cases
to investments held beyond the
applicable holding period. In particular,
the final rule retains an automatic
capital charge for investments that are
held for an extended period. The capital
charge must be set by the Board at a rate
that is above the highest marginal
capital charge that would apply to
investments made by that financial
holding company under the final capital
rules governing merchant banking
investments, and may not be below 25
percent of the adjusted carrying value of
the investment as reflected on the
balance sheet of the financial holding
company.
The final rule does not include the
provisions from the interim rule
prohibiting a financial holding company
from entering into any additional
transactions with any company held
beyond the applicable holding period,
including making additional extensions
of credit to the company or acquiring
additional shares of the company.
Removal of these restrictions from the
rule recognizes that, in individual
circumstances, the acquisition of
additional shares of a portfolio company
or the addition of certain relationships
or transactions (such as participation in
underwriting the company’s initial
public offering) may facilitate the
prompt sale of the portfolio company.
The Board, in connection with granting
a request to hold an investment beyond
the applicable holding period, may
determine to impose these or other
restrictions if such restrictions are
appropriate in the individual case.

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Tacking Rules
A few commenters recommended that
the agencies eliminate the special
holding period ‘‘tacking’’ provisions
included in section 225.172(b)(2) and
(3) of the interim rule. These
commenters asserted that the tacking
provisions, which are designed to
prevent evasions of the rule’s holding
periods, might prevent a financial
holding company from receiving
securities as part of the liquidation of an
investment fund. Commenters also
argued that the agencies should rely on
the supervisory process to uncover
evasions of the holding periods.
The final rule retains the tacking
provisions included in the interim rule.
The Board and the Secretary believe
these provisions are appropriate to
prevent a financial holding company
from evading the holding periods
applicable to merchant banking and
certain other types of investments under
the banking laws.18 In particular, these
provisions prevent a financial holding
company from attempting to circumvent
the holding periods on merchant
banking investments by transferring a
merchant banking investment from one
company or fund to another. The rule
also provides that, for purposes of
calculating compliance with the
merchant banking holding periods, an
investment acquired by the financial
holding company under another
authority that imposes a restriction on
the amount of time that the financial
holding company may hold the
investment is considered to have been
acquired on the original acquisition
date.
Section 225.173—How Are Investments
in Private Equity Funds Treated Under
This Subpart?
Securities firms typically make a
significant percentage of their merchant
banking investments through funds that
are limited partnerships or other
investment vehicles that pool the firm’s
capital with capital provided by thirdparty investors. These investors
typically are institutional investors,
such as other investment companies,
pension funds, endowments, financial
institutions or corporations, and
sophisticated individual investors with
high net worth. In most instances, the
securities firm is the sponsor or adviser
to the fund and has a general
partnership or similar interest in the
fund. Securities firms also make noncontrolling investments in funds that
18 See, e.g., 12 U.S.C. 1843(c)(2) (maximum 10year holding period for shares or assets acquired in
satisfaction of a debt previously contracted).

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are sponsored and advised by
unaffiliated companies.
These pooled investment vehicles
frequently have characteristics, such as
limited terms, manager compensation
arrangements, and the presence of thirdparty investors that monitor
investments, that encourage the fund to
dispose of its investments in a relatively
short period of time. In light of these
factors, the interim rule contained a
number of features designed to
accommodate merchant banking
investment activities conducted through
a qualifying ‘‘private equity fund.’’
These features included a longer
holding period designed to reflect the
industry practice with private equity
funds, a higher aggregate investment
threshold for review of an organization
that makes investments in or through
private equity funds, and streamlined
reporting and recordkeeping provisions
for investments in, or held through,
private equity funds.
Commenters generally supported the
decision to provide regulatory benefits
to merchant banking investments that
are made in or through private equity
funds. A number of commenters argued
that private equity funds should be
completely exempted from all or some
of the rule’s requirements, including the
rule’s provisions related to holding
periods, routinely managing or
operating portfolio companies, crossmarketing activities and recordkeeping
and reporting requirements. Other
commenters urged the agencies to
clarify or reduce the requirements
applicable to private equity funds that
are not controlled by a financial holding
company.
Commenters also requested
modification of the interim rule’s
definition of a ‘‘private equity fund’’ in
several respects. For example, a number
of commenters asserted that a private
equity fund should be permitted to have
a term of more than 15 years or have
fewer than 10 investors that are not
affiliated with the financial holding
company. A few commenters stated that
the agencies should permit a financial
holding company to own or control
more than 25 percent of the total equity
of a fund without losing the benefits
that accrue to a private equity fund.
Some commenters urged elimination of
the requirement that a private equity
fund maintain policies on
diversification.
In light of the comments, the agencies
have retained the special treatment for
investments made in or through private
equity funds. The final rule contains a
number of modifications to the
definition of ‘‘private equity fund’’ to
address matters raised by commenters.

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8475

In addition, the final rule has been
reorganized to add a new section
225.173 that includes the definition of
a ‘‘private equity fund’’ and describes
how the rule’s holding periods and
routine management and operation
restrictions apply to private equity
funds. The agencies believe these
changes make it easier for users to
understand how the rule applies to
private equity funds.
Definition of Private Equity Fund
The agencies have modified and
expanded the definition of a ‘‘private
equity fund’’ in the final rule in
response to public comments. The
agencies believe the definition included
in the final rule is consistent with
prevalent industry practice and ensures
that a private equity fund retains the
characteristics that encourage it to be
operated in a manner consistent with
the requirements of the GLB Act.
Under the final rule, a private equity
fund qualifies for the special provisions
of the rule if the fund has a fixed
duration of not more than 15 years
including all potential extensions, and
the financial holding company
(including its officers, directors,
employees and principal shareholders)
does not own more than 25 percent of
the total equity of the fund. The rule
does not impose any limits on advisory
fees or on the various types of incentive
compensation that the financial holding
company may receive for services
rendered to the fund provided that such
fees do not increase the financial
holding company’s equity stake in the
fund above the rule’s 25 percent
threshold.
The final rule eliminates the
requirement that the fund have a
specific number of outside investors, the
requirement that the fund establish a
plan for the resale of each of its
investments and the requirement that
the fund maintain diversification
policies. The agencies believe that the
purposes of these restrictions are served
by the limitations noted above on the
amount of the fund that may be owned
or controlled by the financial holding
company and by the remaining
provisions. These provisions require
that the fund not be an operating
company, engage exclusively in the
business of investing in financial and
nonfinancial companies for resale or
other disposition, and not be established
or operated for the purpose of making
investments that are inconsistent with
section 4(k)(4)(H) of the BHC Act or
evading the limitations on merchant
banking activities contained in the GLB
Act or the rule. As described below, the
fund must have policies and systems for

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monitoring and addressing the various
risks associated with merchant banking
activities.
The final rule retains the provisions of
the interim rule that allow a private
equity fund to be organized in any form,
including as a partnership, corporation
or limited liability company. In
addition, the fund may, but need not be,
registered as an investment company
under the Federal securities laws.
Permissible Holding Period for Private
Equity Fund Investments
The final rule permits a financial
holding company, without Board
approval, to own or control an
investment in a private equity fund that
makes merchant banking investments
for the duration of the fund, which may
be up to 15 years. The rule contemplates
that a qualifying private equity fund
may hold investments in portfolio
companies for the duration of the fund.
Accordingly, a private equity fund that
conducts merchant banking investment
activities in accordance with the rule is
not required to dispose of its
investments within the 10 year period
applicable to other types of merchant
banking investments.
A financial holding company may
seek the Board’s approval to retain an
investment in a qualifying private
equity fund or to extend the duration of
a private equity fund for a period longer
than 15 years in special
circumstances.19 Any request must be
filed at least 90 days prior to the
expiration of the holding period and
include the information described in
section 225.172(b)(4) of the rule. If the
Board grants the extension request, the
financial holding company must apply
the capital charge described in section
225.172(b)(6) of the rule to the financial
holding company’s investment in the
fund and must comply with any other
restrictions imposed by the Board.
Application of Routine Management
and Operation Restrictions to Private
Equity Funds
The GLB Act and the rule prohibit a
financial holding company in most
circumstances from routinely managing
or operating any portfolio company—
that is, any company engaged in
nonfinancial activities. (See sections
225.177(c) and 225.171(a)). The final
rule also provides that a financial
holding company may not routinely
manage or operate a portfolio company
that is owned or controlled by a private
19 The holding period tacking rules set forth in
section 225.172(b)(2) and (3) and described above
must be applied in determining whether a private
equity fund investment has been held longer than
the period permitted by the rule.

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equity fund in which the financial
holding company owns or controls any
ownership interest, except in the
limited circumstances permitted by
section 225.171(e) of the rule. The rule
does not prohibit a financial holding
company from routinely managing or
operating a private equity fund.
Some commenters urged the agencies
not to limit the ability of a private
equity fund to routinely manage or
operate a portfolio company under any
circumstances. The final rule has been
modified in two respects in response to
the comments on this matter. First, the
final rule applies the restriction on
routine management or operation of
portfolio companies only to private
equity funds that are controlled by a
financial holding company and to the
financial holding company. Second, the
final rule permits a financial holding
company to invest in a private equity
fund that routinely manages a portfolio
company so long as the financial
holding company does not control the
private equity fund and the financial
holding company does not routinely
manage or operate the portfolio
company, except as permitted in the
special circumstances explained above
in section 225.171(e).
These changes are based on the view
that a financial holding company is
considered to be acting through any
fund that it controls. On the other hand,
in cases in which the financial holding
company does not control the private
equity fund, the actions of the private
equity fund should not be attributed to
the financial holding company. These
changes are also consistent with other
provisions of the BHC Act, which
provide that a financial holding
company would generally not be
considered indirectly to control a
company that is owned by an
intermediate company unless the
financial holding company controls the
intermediate company.20
In the case of a private equity fund
that is controlled by a financial holding
company, the agencies do not believe
that it is consistent with the terms or
purposes of section 4(k)(4)(H) or the
BHC Act to allow the private equity
fund to routinely manage or operate
portfolio companies. Section 4(k)(4)(H)
prohibits a financial holding company
from routinely managing or operating a
portfolio company. This prohibition
applies whether the financial holding
company acts directly or acts indirectly,
including through a company, such as a
private equity fund, that is controlled by
the financial holding company. The
agencies also believe that allowing a
20 See

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fund that is controlled by a financial
holding company to routinely manage a
portfolio company would remove the
separation between banking and
commerce that the restriction on routine
management was intended to preserve.
Accordingly, the rule continues to
apply the routine management
restrictions to any private equity fund
controlled by a financial holding
company. The final rule defines
situations in which a financial holding
company is considered to control a
private equity fund. This definition is
based on the provisions of the BHC Act
and takes account of the special
relationship that advisers have to
investment funds.
Under the final rule, a financial
holding company is considered to
control a private equity fund if the
financial holding company, including
any director, officer, employee or
principal shareholder of the company,
(1) serves as a general partner, managing
member or trustee of the private equity
fund; (2) owns or controls in the
aggregate 25 percent or more of any
class of voting shares or similar interests
in the fund; or (3) selects, controls or
constitutes a majority of the directors,
trustees or management of the fund.
Interviews with securities firms and
banking organizations that advise and
operate private equity funds, as well as
the Board’s experience in supervising
the pooled investment vehicles advised
and operated by banking organizations
under pre-existing authorities, indicate
that the adviser of a fund typically
establishes the policies that govern the
fund’s investments and operations,
makes investment and disposition
decisions on behalf of the fund, and
otherwise controls the fund and its
operations. In light of this information
and experience, the rule also provides
that a financial holding company is
deemed to control a private equity fund
for purposes of the rule if the company
owns more than 5 percent of any class
of voting shares or similar ownership
interests in the fund and serves as the
fund’s investment adviser.
Other Matters Related to Private Equity
Funds
Commenters requested guidance
regarding how the other provisions of
the rule would apply to investments in
private equity funds that are not
controlled by a financial holding
company. As explained above, in
circumstances where a financial holding
company has a passive (i.e.,
noncontrolling) investment in a private
equity fund that is advised and
controlled by an unaffiliated entity, any
shares owned by the fund generally are

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Federal Register / Vol. 66, No. 21 / Wednesday, January 31, 2001 / Rules and Regulations
not considered to be owned or
controlled by the passive financial
holding company investor.21
Accordingly, the final rule clarifies that
the restrictions on cross-marketing the
products or services of a portfolio
company, the limitations of sections
23A and 23B of the Federal Reserve Act,
and the reporting and recordkeeping
requirements of the rule, do not apply
with respect to investments in portfolio
companies that are held by a private
equity fund in which the financial
holding company holds a
noncontrolling interest. These
restrictions and requirements (other
than the cross-marketing restrictions)
would, however, apply to the financial
holding company’s investment in the
private equity fund and govern the
relationship of the financial holding
company with the private equity fund.
Funds That Are Not Qualifying Private
Equity Funds
Although the rule permits certain
advantages to funds that meet the rule’s
definition of a private equity fund, the
rule also permits financial holding
companies to invest in and control a
fund that does not meet the rule’s
definition of a private equity fund. If the
financial holding company controls the
non-qualifying fund, then the provisions
of the rule, including the provisions
governing the holding periods for
portfolio companies, the routine
management restrictions, the riskmanagement and recordkeeping
requirements, the cross-marketing
provisions, and the section 23A
provisions, apply to investments made
by the non-qualifying fund in the same
manner as those provisions would apply
if the investment in the portfolio
company were held directly by the
financial holding company. If the
financial holding company owns a
noncontrolling interest in the fund, then
the fund is itself considered to be a
portfolio company and provisions of the
rule apply to that investment in the
same way as they apply to any other
investment in a portfolio company.
Thus, under the rule, a financial
holding company may own more than
25 percent of the equity of a fund that
has an unlimited life (and, consequently
is not a qualifying private equity fund),
so long as the fund does not hold
investments in portfolio companies for
more than the 10-year holding period
that would apply if the financial
holding company held the investment
in the portfolio company directly and
the fund complies with the routine
management and other restrictions in
21 See

12 U.S.C. 1841(g)(1); 12 CFR 225.2(e)(2)(i).

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the rule. Similarly, a financial holding
company may invest in a fund that, in
addition to making merchant banking
investments, engages in other
businesses (and, consequently is not a
qualifying private equity fund), so long
as the financial holding company does
not control the fund, divests its interest
in the fund within the 10-year holding
period, and complies with the other
provisions of the rule that apply to other
investments in a portfolio company.
This approach allows financial
holding companies flexibility to
conduct merchant banking investment
activities in a variety of ways that are
consistent with the restrictions and
purposes of the BHC Act and the GLB
Act. At the same time, the preferences
in the rule for qualifying private equity
funds recognize that funds meeting
those definitions more regularly include
structural incentives and features that
reinforce the requirements and purposes
of those Acts, and present fewer
opportunities to evade those
requirements.
Section 225.174—What Aggregate
Thresholds Apply to Merchant Banking
Investments?
The interim rule required that a
financial holding company receive the
Board’s prior approval to make
additional merchant banking
investments if the carrying value of the
company’s existing merchant banking
investments exceeded either of two
supervisory thresholds. These
thresholds were designed to allow the
Board to monitor the policies and risk
management practices of a financial
holding company that devotes
significant resources to merchant
banking activities. The Board and the
Secretary also indicated that the
supervisory limits included in the
interim rule were transitional in nature,
and would be reviewed once rules
governing the regulatory capital
treatment of merchant banking
investments were in place and the
agencies and industry gained experience
with managing and supervising
investments under the new merchant
banking authority.
Under the interim rule, a financial
holding company met the first threshold
if the aggregate carrying value of all of
its merchant banking investments
exceeded the lesser of 30 percent of the
company’s Tier 1 capital or $6 billion.
A financial holding company met the
second threshold if the aggregate
carrying value of its merchant banking
investments-excluding interests in
private equity funds-exceeded the lesser
of 20 percent of the company’s Tier 1
capital or $4 billion. These thresholds

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apply only to merchant banking
investments made under section
4(k)(4)(H) and the rule, and do not apply
to investments that are held under other
authorities, such as investments made
through SBICs under the Small Business
Investment Act, in less than 5 percent
of the voting shares of a company under
section 4(c)(6) or 4(c)(7) of the BHC Act,
or in companies overseas under
Regulation K.
Numerous commenters argued that
these supervisory thresholds were
unnecessary. Some commenters
contended that the Board and the
Secretary lacked the legal authority to
impose the thresholds, or that the
thresholds adopted were arbitrary and
not supported by sufficient evidence.
Commenters also asserted that the
thresholds—and particularly the dollarbased thresholds—would have an unfair
impact on larger organizations that have
significant investment portfolios and
organizations whose investment
portfolios have experienced significant
increases in value. Some commenters
also contended that the thresholds
would place financial holding
companies at a competitive
disadvantage to other firms making
merchant banking investments or would
discourage securities firms from seeking
to become a financial holding company.
Commenters also offered a number of
suggested revisions to the thresholds if
they were retained. For example,
commenters suggested that the agencies
should remove the dollar-based
thresholds from the rule; exempt
organizations with significant
investment experience from the review
provisions; provide higher thresholds
for organizations with diversified
portfolios; base the thresholds on the
historical cost (rather than the carrying
value) of merchant banking investments;
or establish a definitive sunset date for
the review process.
The Board and the Secretary believe
that the risk to a financial holding
company and its depository institution
subsidiaries from merchant banking
investments increases as the level of
equity investments increases as a
percentage of the financial holding
company’s capital. This is particularly
true if the financial holding company
has not established appropriate risk
management policies, procedures, and
controls (including capital reserves) to
manage and control the significant
potential risks that arise from having a
substantial portion of the company’s
capital exposed to fluctuations in equity
prices.
The Board and the Secretary also
believe that the financial risks from
merchant banking activities are best

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addressed by appropriate capital levels
and by strong risk management policies
and practices. The agencies note that the
Federal banking agencies are working
towards a new minimum regulatory
capital proposal for equity investment
activities.
While the appropriate regulatory
capital standards are being developed
and companies and the agencies are
gaining experience in developing and
implementing appropriate risk
management practices and policies, the
Board and the Secretary continue to
believe that it is appropriate to monitor
and review the practices of financial
holding companies that commit a
significant portion of their capital to
new merchant banking investments. For
these reasons, the agencies have
retained the process for reviewing the
policies and practices governing
merchant banking activities of a
financial holding company. However,
the final rule specifically provides that
this provision will remain in effect only
until a final rule addressing the
appropriate regulatory capital treatment
of merchant banking and other equity
investment activities is adopted and
becomes effective.
The agencies have modified in two
respects the review thresholds
contained in the interim rule. First, the
final rule eliminates the absolute dollar
thresholds contained in the interim rule.
Second, the final rule has been modified
to clarify that the rule’s review
thresholds apply to the investment
made by a financial holding company in
a private equity fund, but do not apply
to the fund itself or to investments in
the fund made by unaffiliated third
parties. The thresholds also do not
restrict the ability of a financial holding
company to make additional
investments in a fiduciary capacity on
behalf of its trust customers.
The Board and the Secretary believe
that the agencies have the authority
under the GLB Act, BHC Act and other
federal banking laws to adopt
supervisory thresholds governing
merchant banking investments. The
agencies also believe that the thresholds
and review process included in the
interim rule and the final rule are
consistent with the purposes of the GLB
Act, BHC Act and other Federal banking
laws and are appropriate to protect
depository institutions that are affiliated
with financial holding companies
engaged in merchant banking
investment activities

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Section 225.175—What Risk
Management, Record Keeping and
Reporting Policies Are Required To
Make Merchant Banking Investments?
The interim rule required a financial
holding company to adopt policies,
procedures and systems reasonably
designed to manage the risks associated
with making merchant banking
investments and to monitor compliance
with the statutory and regulatory
provisions governing such investments.
These policies, procedures and systems
must be reasonably designed to, among
other things, allow the financial holding
company to monitor and adequately
assess the value of the company’s
merchant banking investments (both
individually and in the aggregate) and
the diversification of the company’s
merchant banking investment portfolio;
identify and manage the market,
liquidity, credit and other risks
associated with merchant banking
investments; and monitor the terms,
amounts and types of transactions
between the financial holding company
and each company acquired under the
rule. The interim rule also required a
financial holding company to maintain
at a central location certain types of
records and supporting information
related to its merchant banking
investment activities, including records
that detailed the cost, carrying value,
market value, and performance of each
merchant banking investment.
Several commenters acknowledged
that companies engaged in making
merchant banking investments should
maintain strong internal controls and
recordkeeping policies. A number of
commenters also asked that the Board
and Secretary streamline the risk
management, recordkeeping or reporting
requirements in the interim rule. For
example, some commenters asserted
that the agencies should eliminate the
requirement that a financial holding
company maintain its merchant banking
records at a central location.
Commenters also urged that a financial
holding company be required to monitor
its relationships with a portfolio
company only where it has a substantial
interest in the portfolio company.
Several commenters requested that the
rule clarify the way the recordkeeping
requirements would apply to private
equity funds that are not controlled by
a financial holding company.
The Board recently issued supervisory
guidance that describes in detail the
internal controls and risk management
policies, procedures and systems that
the Federal Reserve expects bank
holding companies engaged in equity
investment activities to have and

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maintain to conduct equity investment
activities in a safe and sound manner.22
The SR Letter provides, among other
things, that a financial holding company
engaged in merchant banking activities
should establish appropriate policies,
procedures and systems to manage all
elements of the investment decisionmaking and risk management process.
These policies, procedures and systems
include limits on the types and amounts
of merchant banking investments that
may be made; parameters governing
portfolio diversification; sound policies
governing the valuation and accounting
of investments; periodic audits of
compliance with established limits and
policies; and policies designed to ensure
that all investments in, and
relationships with, portfolio companies
comply with applicable law.
The SR Letter also requires a financial
holding company to monitor its lending
and other business relationships with a
company held under the merchant
banking authority to ensure that the
financial holding company’s aggregate
exposure to the company is reasonably
limited and that all transactions are on
reasonable terms. In addition, the SR
Letter requires a financial holding
company to maintain records that
appropriately document these policies,
procedures and systems and make such
records available to examiners.
For these reasons, the Board and the
Secretary have streamlined section
225.175 of the rule to identify the major
areas that must be addressed by the
internal policies and controls of a
financial holding company engaged in
making merchant banking investments.
In particular, the final rule requires a
financial holding company that makes
merchant banking investments to
establish and maintain policies,
procedures, records and systems
reasonably designed to conduct,
monitor and manage investment
activities and the associated risks in a
safe and sound manner. These policies,
procedures, records and systems must
be reasonably designed to—
• Monitor and assess the carrying
value, market value and performance of
each merchant banking investment and
the company’s aggregate merchant
banking investment portfolio;
• Identify and manage the market,
credit, concentration and other risks
22 See Federal Reserve SR Letter No. 00–9 (SPE)
(June 22, 2000) (‘‘SR Letter’’). The SR Letter applies
to financial holding companies engaged in making
merchant banking investments under section
4(k)(4)(H) and the rule, as well as all bank holding
companies that make equity investments in
nonfinancial companies through SBICs or under
section 4(c)(6) or 4(c)(7) of the BHC Act.

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associated with merchant banking
investments;
• Identify, monitor and assess the
terms, amounts and risks arising from
transactions and relationships
(including contingent fees or contingent
interests) with each company in which
the financial holding company holds an
interest under the rule;
• Ensure the maintenance of
corporate separateness between the
financial holding company and each
company in which the financial holding
company holds an interest under the
rule and protect the financial holding
company and its depository institution
subsidiaries from legal liability for the
operations conducted and financial
obligations of any such company; and
• Ensure compliance with the rule,
including the rule’s holding period,
routine management and operation, and
cross-marketing restrictions, and any
other applicable provisions of law
governing transactions and relationships
with companies in which the financial
holding company holds an interest
under the rule, such as fiduciary
principles and sections 23A and 23B of
the Federal Reserve Act.
The list of policies, procedures,
records and systems included in the
rule is intended to identify only some of
the most important elements of a sound
approach to monitoring merchant
banking investment activities. The SR
Letter covers these elements and
identifies other elements that a financial
holding company should have in place
to conduct merchant banking
investment activities in a safe and
sound manner–such as adequate
regulatory capital and appropriate
policies governing the public disclosure
of the company’s merchant banking
investments. Additional elements may
be needed to address the particular
approach that a financial holding
company takes to making merchant
banking investments.
If the financial holding company
controls a private equity fund or other
fund that makes merchant banking
investments, the financial holding
company must ensure that the fund has
the types of policies, procedures and
systems described in the rule for making
and monitoring the fund’s merchant
banking investments. Alternatively, the
financial holding company may ensure
that the private equity fund or other
fund is subject to the financial holding
company’s merchant banking policies,
procedures and systems. These
requirements do not apply if the
financial holding company does not
control the fund. Nevertheless, a
financial holding company must apply
its merchant banking policies,

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procedures and systems to any
investment made by the company in any
fund that is controlled by an unaffiliated
entity.
The Board and the Secretary expect
that financial holding companies will be
able to satisfy the rule’s recordkeeping
requirements by using internal reports
and records that are prepared in the
ordinary course of making a merchant
banking investment or controlling a
private equity fund. Similarly, where a
financial holding company makes a
noncontrolling investment in a private
equity fund, it is anticipated that the
financial holding company would be
able to use information provided by the
fund’s adviser or sponsor to satisfy the
rule’s recordkeeping requirements.
The final rule does not require a
financial holding company to maintain
the records described in the rule at a
central location. Instead, a financial
holding company must be able to
identify and promptly make the
records—wherever located—available to
the Federal Reserve upon request.
In light of the potential risks
associated with making merchant
banking investments and the
importance of having in place
appropriate policies and systems to
monitor and manage such investment
activities, the Federal Reserve generally
will conduct a review of the investment
and risk management policies,
procedures and systems of a financial
holding company that makes merchant
banking investments within a short
period after the holding company
commences the activity. This review
may be conducted either off-site or onsite depending on the expected level
and complexity of the financial holding
company’s merchant banking
investments and the company’s
previous experience in making equity
investments under other legal
authorities. This review may be deferred
until the next regularly scheduled
inspection or examination if the
financial holding company has
significant experience in making equity
investments under pre-existing
authorities and the Federal Reserve has
recently reviewed the company’s
policies, procedures and systems for
managing and controlling the risks
associated with equity investment
activities.
Quarterly and Annual Reporting
Requirements
The interim rule established annual
and quarterly reporting requirements for
merchant banking investments. The
interim rule required financial holding
companies to annually provide
information concerning any merchant

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8479

banking investment held longer than
five years (or eight years in the case of
investments in or held through a private
equity fund) and aggregate data on the
cost, value, diversification and holding
periods of the company’s merchant
banking investments. The interim rule
also required financial holding
companies to provide certain other
aggregate data on merchant banking
investments on a quarterly basis. The
Board noted that it anticipated
developing forms that could be used to
comply with these annual and quarterly
reporting requirements.
Some commenters asserted that
requiring a financial holding company
to provide aggregate merchant banking
data on a quarterly basis would be too
burdensome and, because of the short
reporting period, might not reflect any
meaningful changes or trends in the
company’s merchant banking portfolio.
Other commenters argued that the
annual report should not require a
financial holding company to develop
or disclose its plans for divesting any
merchant banking investment held
longer than 8 years.
The Board and the Secretary continue
to believe that it is important to receive
at least annually information (including
anticipated exit strategies) concerning
merchant banking investments that have
been held for a significant period of
time and to receive at least quarterly
aggregate cost and valuation data on a
financial holding company’s merchant
banking investments. This information
is necessary and appropriate to allow
the Board to monitor a financial holding
company’s compliance with the holding
periods established by the GLB Act and
the rule and to monitor the potential
impact of merchant banking
investments on depository institution
subsidiaries of a financial holding
company.
The Board anticipates publishing
forms in the near future that may be
used by financial holding companies to
fulfill these annual and quarterly
reporting requirements. Accordingly,
the agencies have modified the rule to
require a financial holding company to
submit these reports to the appropriate
Federal Reserve Bank on such forms,
and at such times, as the may be
determined by the Board. The Board
will consider the public comments
received on the annual and quarterly
reporting requirements in connection
with issuing these forms.
Notice of Acquisitions
Section 4(k)(6) of the BHC Act
requires a financial holding company to
provide written notice to the Board
within 30 days after acquiring any

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company under any authority granted in
section 4(k), which is the section that
authorizes merchant banking
investments. The interim rule provided
that a financial holding company is not
required to provide the Board with
notice under section 4(k)(6) of any
merchant banking investment if the
financial holding company has
previously notified the Board under
section 4(k)(6) that it has commenced
merchant banking investment activities
generally. The rule required, however,
that a financial holding company file a
post-transaction notice with the Board
within 30 days of making a merchant
banking investment if (1) the investment
represents more than 5 percent of the
voting shares, assets or ownership
interests of the company and (2) the
total cost of the investment to the
financial holding company exceeds the
lesser of 5 percent of the Tier 1 capital
of the financial holding company or
$200 million.
The final rule retains these posttransaction notice procedures. In these
circumstances, the Board believes
supervisory notice of the acquisition is
appropriate to allow the Board to
monitor the impact of the investment on
the financial holding company and any
future impact the large exposure to a
single company may have on the
financial resources of the financial
holding company. The procedures
included in the rule parallel those
contained in section 225.87 of the
Board’s Regulation Y and are included
here solely for the convenience of users.
The Board separately has considered the
comments submitted on these notice
requirements in connection with its
adoption of section 225.87.23
The Board, in separate rulemakings,
has adopted forms to be used by
financial holding companies in
providing the Board with notice of a
merchant banking or other transaction
under section 4(k)(6).24 Accordingly, the
agencies have amended the final rule to
require that any notice of a large
merchant banking investment be
provided on the appropriate form.25

23 See

66 FR 400 (Jan. 3, 2001).
65 FR 56,910 (Sept. 20, 2000); 65 FR 20,821
(April 18, 2000).
25 For a domestic financial holding company, the
appropriate form is the FR Y–6A, which will soon
be replaced by the FR Y–10. For qualifying foreign
banking organizations, the appropriate form is the
FR Y–7A, which soon will be replaced by the FR
Y–10F.
24 See

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Section 225.176—How Do the Statutory
Cross-Marketing and Sections 23A and
B Limitations Apply to Merchant
Banking Investments?
Cross-Marketing Restrictions
The GLB Act prohibits any depository
institution controlled by a financial
holding company from marketing or
offering, directly or through any
arrangement, any product or service of
a company held under section 4(k)(4)(H)
or allowing any product or service of the
depository institution to be offered or
marketed, directly or through any
arrangement, by or through any
company held under that section.
Section 225.175(a) of the interim rule
implemented these restrictions and
applied them to any subsidiary (other
than a financial subsidiary) of a
depository institution controlled by a
financial holding company.
Several commenters requested that
the agencies clarify the scope of the
rule’s cross-marketing prohibitions,
either by including a definition of what
constitutes ‘‘cross-marketing’’ or by
stating that certain types of activities are
not prohibited. A few commenters also
asserted that the rule’s cross-marketing
restrictions should not be applied to
subsidiaries of depository institutions
generally or to any subsidiary that a
depository institution is specifically
authorized by statute to control, such as
SBICs or Edge Act subsidiaries. Others
stated that the rule should not prohibit
a depository institution from marketing
the shares or other ownership interests
in a private equity fund to its
customers.26
The Act’s cross-marketing restrictions
apply to any depository institution
controlled by a financial holding
company. As noted above, U.S.
branches and agencies of a foreign bank
are considered depository institutions
for purposes of the rule. Accordingly, a
U.S. branch or agency of a foreign bank
may not cross-market the products or
services of a company that is owned or
controlled by the foreign bank or an
affiliate of the foreign bank under
section 4(k)(4)(H).
Depository institutions have long
been permitted to own or control socalled ‘‘operating subsidiaries’’ that
engage in activities permissible for the
parent depository institution on the
26 One commenter asserted that the GLB Act
authorizes the Board to grant exceptions to the
cross-marketing restrictions for arrangements that
meet the requirements of section 4(k)(5)(B) of the
BHC Act. The exemption described in section
4(k)(5)(B) is available only with respect to
investments that are held by insurance company
subsidiaries of a financial holding company under
section 4(k)(4)(I) and not to merchant banking
investments. See 12 U.S.C. 1843(k)(5)(B).

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basis that the subsidiary is, in essence,
a department or division of the
institution. For this same reason, the
rule considers a depository institution
and a subsidiary of the depository
institution to be one and the same for
purposes of the cross-marketing
restrictions.
In certain instances, however,
Congress has specifically authorized
depository institutions to own or control
subsidiaries that may engage in
activities different than those
permissible for the parent institution.
The rule, therefore, does not apply the
cross-marketing restrictions to (1) a
financial subsidiary of a depository
institution held in accordance with
section 5136A of the Revised Statutes or
section 46 of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act, (2) any company held by
an Edge or Agreement subsidiary
controlled pursuant to section 25 or 25A
of the Federal Reserve Act, or (3) any
company held by a SBIC controlled in
accordance with the Small Business
Investment Act.
The cross-marketing restrictions of the
GLB Act and rule do not apply to
nondepository affiliates of financial
holding companies. In addition, the rule
does not apply the cross-marketing
restrictions to companies in which the
financial holding company, directly or
indirectly, owns less than 5 percent of
the voting shares or ownership interests
since the holding company could own
such interests under section 4(c)(6) or
4(c)(7) of the BHC Act without being
subject to the GLB Act’s cross-marketing
restrictions.
The agencies also have amended the
rule to clarify the application of the
cross-marketing restrictions to interests
in or held through private equity funds.
A purpose of the cross-marketing
restrictions is to assist in maintaining
the separation between banking and
commerce.27 Since private equity funds,
by definition, may engage only in
investment activities for resale or other
disposition in accordance with the rule
and may not be engaged in
impermissible commercial activities, the
Board and the Secretary believe that
depository institutions (and their
subsidiaries) may offer or market the
shares or other ownership interests in a
private equity fund in which the
financial holding company has an
interest under the rule. Accordingly, the
agencies have amended the rule to
provide that section 225.176(a) does not
prohibit the sale, offer or marketing of
any interest in a private equity fund,
27 See H.R. Rep. 106–74, 106th Cong., 1st Sess. at
122–23 (1999).

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whether or not the fund is controlled by
a financial holding company.
The final rule also provides that the
cross-marketing restrictions do not
prohibit a depository institution
subsidiary of a financial holding
company from engaging in crossmarketing activities with a portfolio
company held by a private equity fund
that is owned but not controlled by the
financial holding company. Where the
financial holding company does not
control a private equity fund, shares
held by the fund generally are not
attributed to the financial holding
company.
The Act and the rule also do not
prohibit a depository institution or
subsidiary of a depository institution
from marketing its own products or
services—such as deposit, lending, and
advisory products or services—to a
portfolio company so long as the
portfolio company does not then market
those products or services to its
customers or others. In addition, the Act
and the rule do not prohibit a
depository institution from purchasing
the products or services of a portfolio
company—such as data processing
hardware, software or services—to
support the depository institution’s own
operations provided that the institution
does not, directly or indirectly or
through any arrangement, market the
portfolio company’s products or
services to the institution’s customers or
others.28
The agencies recognize that
companies currently may use a wide
variety of methods or arrangements to
market or offer their products with those
of other companies, and new methods
or arrangements for cross-marketing
may develop with advances in
technology, changes in consumer
shopping or purchasing habits, or other
developments. In light of these facts, the
agencies have not attempted in the rule
or in this preamble to identify every
type of arrangement that would, and
would not, be subject to the crossmarketing restrictions of the rule. The
agencies believe that questions
concerning the application of the rule’s
cross-marketing restrictions to particular
types of activities or arrangements are
handled most appropriately on a caseby-case basis, which would allow full
consideration of the particular
28 Likewise, the cross-marketing restrictions
would not prohibit a depository institution
controlled by a financial holding company from
engaging in cross-marketing activities with a
company that is a co-investor with the financial
holding company in a portfolio company, so long
as those activities do not involve products or
services of the portfolio company.

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circumstances at issue in the context of
the purposes of the GLB Act.
Presumption of Control Under Sections
23A and 23B
Sections 23A and 23B of the Federal
Reserve Act impose specific
quantitative, qualitative and collateral
requirements on certain types of
transactions between an insured
depository institution and companies
that are under common control with the
insured depository institution. The GLB
Act includes a presumption that a
financial holding company or other
person controls a company for purposes
of sections 23A and 23B if the company
or other person, directly or indirectly, or
acting through one or more other
persons, owns or controls 15 percent or
more of the equity capital of the
company under section 4(k)(4)(H).
The interim rule included this
presumption and stated that a financial
holding company could rebut the
presumption by providing information
acceptable to the Board demonstrating
that the financial holding company did
not control the company.29 Several
commenters requested that the agencies
identify in the rule circumstances that
would be sufficient to rebut this
presumption of control. For example,
some commenters suggested that the
presumption should be rebutted if the
financial holding company had no more
than one director interlock with the
portfolio company, or if an unaffiliated
investor (or two or more unaffiliated
investors acting in concert) owned or
controlled a larger equity interest in the
portfolio company than the financial
holding company.
In light of these comments, the
agencies have amended the rule to
identify three situations in which the
GLB Act’s presumption of control will
be considered rebutted. In each
situation the financial holding company
is assumed to own more than 15 percent
of the total equity of the portfolio
company (thereby triggering the
statutory presumption) and less than 25
percent of any class of voting securities
of the portfolio company (thereby not
meeting the statutory definition of
control). In particular, the rule provides
that, absent evidence to the contrary, a
29 The final rule clarifies that the presumption
applies only where a financial holding company
owns or controls 15 percent or more of the total
equity of a portfolio company under section
4(k)(4)(H) and the rule. The Board notes, however,
that, under existing Board precedents, a financial
holding company may not own any shares of a
company in reliance on sections 4(c)(6) or 4(c)(7)
of the BHC Act where the company owns or
controls, in the aggregate under a combination of
authorities, more than 5 percent of any class of
voting securities of the company.

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8481

financial holding company will not be
presumed to control a portfolio
company in any of the following
situations—
• No officer, director or employee of
the financial holding company serves as
a director, trustee or general partner (or
individual exercising similar functions)
of the portfolio company;
• A person that is not affiliated or
associated with the financial holding
company owns or controls a greater
percentage of the equity capital of the
portfolio company than the financial
holding company and no more than one
officer or employee of the holding
company serves as a director or trustee
(or individuals exercising similar
functions) of the portfolio company; or
• A person that is not affiliated or
associated with the financial holding
company owns or controls more than 50
percent of the voting shares of the
portfolio company and officers and
employees of the financial holding
company do not constitute a majority of
the directors or trustees (or individuals
exercising similar functions) of the
portfolio company.
These safe harbors do not require
Board review or approval under the
provisions allowing rebuttal of the
presumptions. Moreover, the situations
identified in the rule are not intended
to be a complete list of circumstances in
which the presumption may be
rebutted, and the rule permits a
financial holding company to submit
evidence that would support rebuttal of
the presumption in other circumstances.
The agencies note that the
presumption of control in section
225.176(b) is independent from the
general definition of control in section
23A of the Federal Reserve Act.30
Accordingly, under the statute, a
portfolio company is per se an affiliate
of any insured depository institution
subsidiary of a financial holding
company if the financial holding
company owns more than 25 percent of
a class of voting securities of the
portfolio company, even if the financial
holding company owns or controls less
than 15 percent of the portfolio
company’s total equity or is within one
of the safe harbors contained in the final
rule.31
A financial holding company
generally is considered indirectly to
own or control only those shares or
other ownership interests that are
owned or controlled by a subsidiary of
the financial holding company.
Accordingly, the rule clarifies that, for
purposes of applying the presumption
30 See
31 See

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12 U.S.C. 371c(3)(A).
12 U.S.C. 371c(b)(3)(A)(i).

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of control described above, a financial
holding company that has an
investment in a private equity fund will
not be considered indirectly to own the
equity capital of a portfolio company
held by the fund unless the financial
holding company controls the private
equity fund. For example, if a financial
holding company has a noncontrolling
investment in a private equity fund that,
in turn, owns 20 percent of the total
equity of a portfolio company, the
portfolio company is not presumed to be
an affiliate of the insured depository
institution subsidiaries of the financial
holding company under section
225.176(b)(1). On the other hand, if a
financial holding company acts as
general partner of a private equity fund
and, thus, controls the fund, and the
private equity fund owns or controls
more than 15 percent of the total equity
of any portfolio company, the portfolio
company is presumed to be an affiliate
of the insured depository institution
subsidiaries of the financial holding
company under section 225.176(b)(1).
The rule also applies sections 23A
and 23B to covered transactions
between a U.S. branch or agency of a
foreign bank and (1) any portfolio
company controlled by the foreign bank
or an affiliate of the foreign bank, and
(2) any company controlled by the
foreign bank or an affiliate where the
company is engaged in making
merchant banking investments if the
proceeds of the covered transaction are
used for the purpose of funding the
company’s merchant banking activities
under this subpart. The presumption of
control and exceptions to this
presumption described above also apply
to a foreign bank or affiliate that makes
merchant banking investments in the
same manner the presumption and
exceptions apply to domestic financial
holding companies.
A few commenters contended that the
Board should not apply sections 23A
and 23B to covered transactions
involving a U.S. branch or agency of a
foreign bank. These commenters noted
that U.S. branches and agencies do not
hold federally insured deposits and
contended that application of sections
23A and 23B is not necessary to ensure
competitive equality and that any
potential safety and soundness concerns
may be addressed by the appropriate
home country supervisor of the foreign
bank.
The Board and the Secretary believe
application of sections 23A and 23B to
covered transactions between a U.S.
branch or agency of a foreign bank and
portfolio companies held by the foreign
bank or an affiliate under the merchant
banking authority, and companies

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engaged in making merchant banking
investments, is appropriate to ensure
competitive equity and safe and sound
banking. Furthermore, the rule only
restricts transactions by a foreign bank’s
branches and agencies with portfolio
companies and with affiliated
companies that are actually engaged in
making merchant banking
investments.32 It does not restrict
otherwise permissible lending to
affiliated companies where the proceeds
of such lending would not be used by
these companies to make, or fund the
making of, merchant banking
investments under this subpart.
Moreover, it does not restrict
transactions between the U.S. branch or
agency and its parent foreign bank.
D. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
In accordance with section 4(a) of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C.
604(a)), the Board must publish a final
regulatory flexibility analysis with this
rulemaking. The rule implements
provisions of section 103 of the GLB Act
that allow entities that have become
financial holding companies to make
merchant banking investments. Because
the rule establishes guidelines for a
newly authorized activity, the rule will
affect only merchant banking activities
that are newly authorized under the
GLB Act.
The statute’s limits apply to all
financial holding companies, regardless
of size, that are engaged in merchant
banking activities. Similarly, the final
rule directs each financial holding
company, regardless of size, that is
engaged in merchant banking activity to
establish necessary internal controls,
including recordkeeping procedures,
and provide reports to the appropriate
Reserve Bank as the Board may require.
The internal controls, reporting and
recordkeeping requirements that the
rule establishes are necessary to ensure
that the new activities are conducted in
a safe and sound manner that does not
adversely affect affiliated depository
institutions, to enable the Board to
execute properly its supervisory
function and to ensure compliance by
financial holding companies with the
limitations that the GLB Act imposes on
merchant banking activities. The Board
believes that the information that
financial holding companies are
required to submit, pursuant to the final
rule, will be similar to that appearing in
32 For purposes of applying the restrictions of
sections 23A and 23B to U.S. branches and agencies
of foreign banks, the ‘‘capital stock and surplus’’ of
the U.S. branch or agency is determined by
reference to the capital of the foreign bank as
calculated under its home country capital
standards.

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routine reports to senior management,
third-party investors, or other regulatory
agencies (including the Securities and
Exchange Commission), or that will be
part of materials that an organization
prepares and retains in the normal
conduct of its investment activities.
The ability of financial holding
companies to participate in the
merchant banking business will likely
enhance the overall efficiency and
competitiveness of these institutions in
the market for corporate financial
services. In promulgating the interim
rule, the Board specifically sought
comment on the likely burden that the
rule would impose on financial holding
companies that engage in merchant
banking activities. A few comments
argued that the recordkeeping and
reporting requirements of the rule were
burdensome and unnecessary given
other forms of regulatory supervision to
which financial holding companies
would remain subject. As explained
above, the final rule has been
streamlined in an attempt to reduce
unnecessary burden. Other comments
argued that financial holding companies
will require a transition period in order
to comply with the reporting and
recordkeeping requirements of the rule.
In this regard, the annual reports
proposed under the rule relate only to
investments held for a period of
approximately five years, which,
because the authority to make these
investments is new, has the effect of
phasing in the annual reporting
requirement. Moreover, none of the
comments addressed how the interim
rule’s requirements would substantially
increase the regulatory burden for
financial holding companies given that
most of the data that the interim rule
required is found in reports that
financial holding companies make to
their investors or to other regulatory
agencies, or maintain for their own
internal use.
E. Executive Order 12866
Determination
The Department of the Treasury has
determined that this final rule does not
constitute a ‘‘significant regulatory
action’’ for purposes of Executive Order
12866.
F. Administrative Procedure Act
The provisions of the rule are
effective on February 15, 2001 on a final
basis. In accordance with requirements
of 5 U.S.C. 553, the interim rule set forth
procedures to implement statutory
changes that had become effective on
March 11, 2000. The interim rule itself
became effective on March 17, 2000.
The Board and the Secretary sought

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Federal Register / Vol. 66, No. 21 / Wednesday, January 31, 2001 / Rules and Regulations
public comment on all aspects of the
interim rule and have amended the rule
as appropriate after reviewing the
comments.
Subject to certain exceptions, 12
U.S.C. 4802(b)(1) provides that new
regulations and amendments to
regulations prescribed by a federal
banking agency that impose additional
reporting, disclosure, or other new
requirements on an insured depository
institution must take effect on the first
day of a calendar quarter that begins on
or after the date on which the
regulations are published in final form.
The final rule imposes no additional
reporting, disclosure, or other new
requirements on an insured depository
institution because the new activities
that the rule governs cannot be
conducted by an insured depository
institution. For this reason, section
4802(b)(1) does not apply to this
rulemaking.
G. Paperwork Reduction Act
Board: In accordance with section
3506 of the Paperwork Reduction Act of
1995 (44 U.S.C. Ch. 35; 5 CFR 1320
Appendix A.1), the Board reviewed the
final rule under the authority delegated
to the Board by the Office of
Management and Budget.
Most of the collection of information
requirements in the final rule are found
in 12 CFR 225.171, 225.172, 225.173,
and 225.175. This information is
required to evidence compliance with
the requirements of Title I of the GLB
Act (Pub. L. 106–102, 113 Stat. 1338
(1999)), which amends section 4 of the
Bank Holding Company Act (12 U.S.C.
1843), and to allow the Board to
exercise properly its supervisory
responsibility for financial holding
companies. The respondents are
financial holding companies that choose
to engage in merchant banking
activities.
The final rule requires that financial
holding companies submit reports to the
Reserve Bank that the Board may
prescribe (12 CFR 225.175(b)). The
Board expects to publish a separate
notice to issue reporting forms that may
be used to comply with reporting
requirements. The burden associated
with these information collections will
be addressed at that time.
In addition, the final rule requires that
a financial holding company file a
notice with the Reserve Bank within 30
days of making a large merchant
banking investment (see 12 CFR
225.175(c)(2)). This requirement is
imposed by statute, and the agencies
have minimized the information that
must be filed to fulfill this statutory
requirement. This notice requirement is

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also codified in section 225.87(b)(4) of
the Board’s Regulation Y and is
included in this rule solely for
convenience. The regulatory burden
associated with this notice was
addressed in the final rule
implementing provisions of the GrammLeach-Bliley Act that establish certain
eligibility requirements for financial
holding companies (see 66 FR 400).
In addition, the rule allows a financial
holding company to seek relief from the
holding period limits imposed by the
rule by filing a request and supporting
documentation with the Board (12 CFR
225.172(b) and 225.173(c)). The agency
form number for these requests will be
FR 4019. Information may also be
submitted in letter form. The Board
expects to receive very few of these
notices and requests. The Board
estimates that approximately 450
financial holding companies will be
engaged in merchant banking activities
within the first year of promulgation of
the final rule. Of these financial holding
companies, the Board believes that a
high estimate of the potential number of
notices and requests that would be filed
under these various requirements
during a single year is 100. The Board
estimates that these companies will
spend approximately 1 hour to prepare
these filings, resulting in an estimated
annual burden of 100 hours. Based on
a rate of $50 per hour, the annual cost
to the public will have been $5,000.
The rule also requires a financial
holding company to provide notice to
the Board prior to routinely managing or
operating a portfolio company for more
than 9 months (12 CFR 225.171(e)(3)).
These notices, which may be in letter
form, should contain the information
described above under section 225.171.
The agency form number for these
notices also will be FR 4019. The Board
estimates receiving 25 notices during a
single year and that financial holding
companies will spend approximately 1
hour to prepare these notices, resulting
in an estimated annual burden of 25
hours. Based on a rate of $50 per hour,
the annual cost to the public would be
$1,250.
The final rule also requires that a
financial holding company engaged in
merchant banking activities establish
and maintain certain policies,
procedures, and systems to
appropriately monitor and manage its
merchant banking activities and
maintain certain records relating to the
company’s merchant banking activities
(12 CFR 225.175(a), 225.171(a)(4)). The
Federal Reserve believes that most of
these internal control and recordkeeping
requirements are consistent with those
established and maintained by

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8483

organizations in the normal course of
conducting a merchant banking
business. The Board estimates that the
450 financial holding companies will
spend approximately 50 hours in
complying with these internal control
and recordkeeping requirements,
resulting in an estimated annual burden
of 22,500 hours. Based on a rate of $50
per hour, the annual cost to the public
would be $1.13 million.
In issuing the interim rule, the
Federal Reserve specifically requested
comment on the accuracy of its original
burden estimates. No comments
challenged the accuracy of those
estimates beyond asserting that the
recordkeeping requirements of the
interim rule would prove burdensome
to financial holding companies. The
Board has streamlined many of the
recordkeeping and reporting provisions
of the interim rule and made them part
of the Board’s supervisory process.
The Federal Reserve may not conduct
or sponsor, and an organization is not
required to respond to, an information
collection unless the Board has
displayed a currently valid OMB control
number. The OMB control number for
these information collections is 7100–
0292. A financial holding company may
request confidentiality for the
information contained in these
information collections pursuant to
sections 522(b)(4) and 522(b)(6) of the
Freedom of Information Act (5 U.S.C.
552(b)(4) and (b)(6)).
The Federal Reserve has a continuing
interest in the public’s opinions of our
collections of information. At any time,
comments regarding the burden
estimate, or any other aspect of this
collection of information, including
suggestions for reducing the burden,
may be sent to: Secretary, Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, 20th and C Streets, NW.,
Washington, DC 20551; and to the
Office of Management and Budget,
Paperwork Reduction Project (7100–
0292), Washington, DC 20503.
Treasury: The collection of
information contained in this regulation
has been reviewed under the
requirements of the Paperwork
Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3507(j)) and,
pending receipt and evaluation of
public comments, approved by the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) under control number 1505–
0182. An agency may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information
unless it displays a valid control
number assigned by OMB.
Comments concerning the collection
of information should be directed to
OMB, Attention: Desk Officer for the

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Department of the Treasury, Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Washington, DC., 20503, with copies to
Gary Sutton, Senior Banking Counsel,
Office of General Counsel, 1500
Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Room 2014,
Washington, DC. 20220. Any such
comments should be submitted not later
than April 2, 2001. Comments are
specifically requested concerning:
whether the proposed collection of
information is necessary for the proper
performance of the functions of the
Secretary, including whether the
information will have practical utility;
the accuracy of the estimated burden
associated with the proposed collection
of information (see below); how to
enhance the quality, utility, and clarity
of the information to be collected; how
to minimize the burden of complying
with the proposed collection of
information, including the application
of automated collection techniques or
other forms of information technology;
and estimates of capital or start-up costs
and costs of operation, maintenance,
and purchase of services to provide
information.
The collection of information in this
regulation is in 12 CFR 1500.6. This
information is required in order that
financial holding companies that
conduct merchant banking activities do
so in a safe and sound manner
consistent with the requirements of the
regulation.
Estimated total annual recordkeeping
burden: 22,500 hours.
Estimated average annual burden
hours per recordkeeper: 50 hours
Estimated number of respondents:
450.

(5) Would increasing the number of
sections (and making each section
shorter) clarify the rule? If so, which
portions of the rule should be changed
in this respect?
(6) What additional changes would
make the rule easier to understand?
The Board also solicited comment
about whether including factual
examples in the rule, in order to
illustrate its terms, is appropriate. The
Board noted that creating safe harbors in
the rule may generate certain problems
over time due to changes in technology
or business practices and asked whether
alternatives exist that the Board should
consider to illustrate the terms in the
rule.
One comment questioned the use of
an interrogatory format for the headings
accompanying each section of the rule
but stated that the rule generally
complied with the requirements and
purpose of the statute.
The Board has streamlined and
reorganized parts of the rule in an effort
to make the rule more understandable
and believes that the final rule is written
plainly and clearly.

H. Use of ‘‘Plain Language’’

12 CFR Chapter II

Section 722 of the GLB Act requires
the Board to use ‘‘plain language’’ in all
proposed and final rules published after
January 1, 2000. The Board invited
comments about how to make the rule
easier to understand and, in doing so,
posed the following questions:
(1) Has the Board organized the
material in an effective manner? If not,
how could the material be better
organized?
(2) Are the terms of the rule clearly
stated? If not, how could the terms be
more clearly stated?
(3) Does the rule contain technical
language or jargon that is unclear? If so,
which language requires clarification?
(4) Would a different format (with
respect to the grouping and order of
sections and use of headings) make the
rule easier to understand? If so, what
changes to the format would make the
rule easier to understand?

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List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 225
Administrative practice and
procedure, Banks, Banking, Federal
Reserve System, Holding companies,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Securities.
12 CFR Part 1500
Administrative practice and
procedure, Banks, Banking, Holding
companies.
Federal Reserve System

Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System amends part
225 of Chapter II, Title 12 of the Code
of Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 225—BANK HOLDING
COMPANIES AND CHANGE IN BANK
CONTROL (REGULATION Y)
1. The authority citation for part 225
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1817(j)(13), 1818,
1828(o), 1831i, 1831p–1, 1843(c)(8), 1843(k),
1844(b), 1972(l), 2903, 2905, 3106, 3108,
3310, 3331–3351, 3907, and 3909.

2. Section 225.1(c)(10) is revised to
read as follows:
§ 225.1

*

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Authority, purpose, and scope.

*

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*

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*

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(c) * * *
(10) Subpart J governs the conduct of
merchant banking investment activities
by financial holding companies as
permitted under section 4(k)(4)(H) of the
Bank Holding Company Act (12 U.S.C.
1843(k)(4)(H)).
*
*
*
*
*
3. Subpart J, is revised to read as
follows:
Subpart J—Merchant Banking Investments
Sec.
225.170 What type of investments are
permitted by this subpart, and under
what conditions may they be made?
225.171 What are the limitations on
managing or operating a portfolio
company held as a merchant banking
investment?
225.172 What are the holding periods
permitted for merchant banking
investments?
225.173 How are investments in private
equity funds treated under this subpart?
225.174 What aggregate thresholds apply to
merchant banking investments?
225.175 What risk management, record
keeping and reporting policies are
required to make merchant banking
investments?
225.176 How do the statutory cross
marketing and sections 23A and B
limitations apply to merchant banking
investments?
225.177 Definitions.

Subpart J—Merchant Banking
Investments
§ 225.170 What type of investments are
permitted by this subpart, and under what
conditions may they be made?

(a) What types of investments are
permitted by this subpart? Section
4(k)(4)(H) of the Bank Holding Company
Act (12 U.S.C. 1843(k)(4)(H)) and this
subpart authorize a financial holding
company, directly or indirectly and as
principal or on behalf of one or more
persons, to acquire or control any
amount of shares, assets or ownership
interests of a company or other entity
that is engaged in any activity not
otherwise authorized for the financial
holding company under section 4 of the
Bank Holding Company Act. For
purposes of this subpart, shares, assets
or ownership interests acquired or
controlled under section 4(k)(4)(H) and
this subpart are referred to as ‘‘merchant
banking investments.’’ A financial
holding company may not directly or
indirectly acquire or control any
merchant banking investment except in
compliance with the requirements of
this subpart.
(b) Must the investment be a bona fide
merchant banking investment? The
acquisition or control of shares, assets or

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Federal Register / Vol. 66, No. 21 / Wednesday, January 31, 2001 / Rules and Regulations
ownership interests under this subpart
is not permitted unless it is part of a
bona fide underwriting or merchant or
investment banking activity.
(c) What types of ownership interests
may be acquired? Shares, assets or
ownership interests of a company or
other entity include any debt or equity
security, warrant, option, partnership
interest, trust certificate or other
instrument representing an ownership
interest in the company or entity,
whether voting or nonvoting.
(d) Where in a financial holding
company may merchant banking
investments be made? A financial
holding company and any subsidiary
(other than a depository institution or
subsidiary of a depository institution)
may acquire or control merchant
banking investments. A financial
holding company and its subsidiaries
may not acquire or control merchant
banking investments on behalf of a
depository institution or subsidiary of a
depository institution.
(e) May assets other than shares be
held directly? A financial holding
company may not under this subpart
acquire or control assets, other than debt
or equity securities or other ownership
interests in a company, unless:
(1) The assets are held by or promptly
transferred to a portfolio company;
(2) The portfolio company maintains
policies, books and records, accounts,
and other indicia of corporate,
partnership or limited liability
organization and operation that are
separate from the financial holding
company and limit the legal liability of
the financial holding company for
obligations of the portfolio company;
and
(3) The portfolio company has
management that is separate from the
financial holding company to the extent
required by § 225.171.
(f) What type of affiliate is required for
a financial holding company to make
merchant banking investments? A
financial holding company may not
acquire or control merchant banking
investments under this subpart unless
the financial holding company qualifies
under at least one of the following
paragraphs:
(1) Securities affiliate. The financial
holding company is or has an affiliate
that is registered under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78c,
78o, 78o–4) as:
(i) A broker or dealer; or
(ii) A municipal securities dealer,
including a separately identifiable
department or division of a bank that is
registered as a municipal securities
dealer.

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(2) Insurance affiliate with an
investment adviser affiliate. The
financial holding company controls:
(i) An insurance company that is
predominantly engaged in underwriting
life, accident and health, or property
and casualty insurance (other than
credit-related insurance), or providing
and issuing annuities; and
(ii) A company that:
(A) Is registered with the Securities
and Exchange Commission as an
investment adviser under the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (15
U.S.C. 80b–1 et seq.); and
(B) Provides investment advice to an
insurance company.
§ 225.171 What are the limitations on
managing or operating a portfolio company
held as a merchant banking investment?

(a) May a financial holding company
routinely manage or operate a portfolio
company? Except as permitted in
paragraph (e) of this section, a financial
holding company may not routinely
manage or operate any portfolio
company.
(b) When does a financial holding
company routinely manage or operate a
company?
(1) Examples of routine management
or operation.—(i) Executive officer
interlocks at the portfolio company. A
financial holding company routinely
manages or operates a portfolio
company if any director, officer or
employee of the financial holding
company serves as or has the
responsibilities of an executive officer of
the portfolio company.
(ii) Interlocks by executive officers of
the financial holding company.—
(A) Prohibition. A financial holding
company routinely manages or operates
a portfolio company if any executive
officer of the financial holding company
serves as or has the responsibilities of
an officer or employee of the portfolio
company.
(B) Definition. For purposes of
paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(A) of this section,
the term ‘‘financial holding company’’
includes the financial holding company
and only the following subsidiaries of
the financial holding company:
(1) A securities broker or dealer
registered under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934;
(2) A depository institution;
(3) An affiliate that engages in
merchant banking activities under this
subpart or insurance company
investment activities under section
4(k)(4)(I) of the Bank Holding Company
Act (12 U.S.C. 1843(k)(4)(I));
(4) A small business investment
company (as defined in section 302(b) of
the Small Business Investment Act of

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8485

1958 (15 U.S.C. 682(b)) controlled by
the financial holding company or by any
depository institution controlled by the
financial holding company; and
(5) Any other affiliate that engages in
significant equity investment activities
that are subject to a special capital
charge under the capital adequacy rules
or guidelines of the Board.
(iii) Covenants regarding ordinary
course of business. A financial holding
company routinely manages or operates
a portfolio company if any covenant or
other contractual arrangement exists
between the financial holding company
and the portfolio company that would
restrict the portfolio company’s ability
to make routine business decisions,
such as entering into transactions in the
ordinary course of business or hiring
officers or employees other than
executive officers.
(2) Presumptions of routine
management or operation. A financial
holding company is presumed to
routinely manage or operate a portfolio
company if:
(i) Any director, officer, or employee
of the financial holding company serves
as or has the responsibilities of an
officer (other than an executive officer)
or employee of the portfolio company;
or
(ii) Any officer or employee of the
portfolio company is supervised by any
director, officer, or employee of the
financial holding company (other than
in that individual’s capacity as a
director of the portfolio company).
(c) How may a financial holding
company rebut a presumption that it is
routinely managing or operating a
portfolio company? A financial holding
company may rebut a presumption that
it is routinely managing or operating a
portfolio company under paragraph
(b)(2) of this section by presenting
information to the Board demonstrating
to the Board’s satisfaction that the
financial holding company is not
routinely managing or operating the
portfolio company.
(d) What arrangements do not involve
routinely managing or operating a
portfolio company?—(1) Director
representation at portfolio companies. A
financial holding company may select
any or all of the directors of a portfolio
company or have one or more of its
directors, officers, or employees serve as
directors of a portfolio company if:
(i) The portfolio company employs
officers and employees responsible for
routinely managing and operating the
company; and
(ii) The financial holding company
does not routinely manage or operate
the portfolio company, except as

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permitted in paragraph (e) of this
section.
(2) Covenants or other provisions
regarding extraordinary events. A
financial holding company may, by
virtue of covenants or other written
agreements with a portfolio company,
restrict the ability of the portfolio
company, or require the portfolio
company to consult with or obtain the
approval of the financial holding
company, to take actions outside of the
ordinary course of the business of the
portfolio company. Examples of the
types of actions that may be subject to
these types of covenants or agreements
include, but are not limited to, the
following:
(i) The acquisition of significant assets
or control of another company by the
portfolio company or any of its
subsidiaries;
(ii) Removal or selection of an
independent accountant or auditor or
investment banker by the portfolio
company;
(iii) Significant changes to the
business plan or accounting methods or
policies of the portfolio company;
(iv) Removal or replacement of any or
all of the executive officers of the
portfolio company;
(v) The redemption, authorization or
issuance of any equity or debt securities
(including options, warrants or
convertible shares) of the portfolio
company or any borrowing by the
portfolio company outside of the
ordinary course of business;
(vi) The amendment of the articles of
incorporation or by-laws (or similar
governing documents) of the portfolio
company; and
(vii) The sale, merger, consolidation,
spin-off, recapitalization, liquidation,
dissolution or sale of substantially all of
the assets of the portfolio company or
any of its significant subsidiaries.
(3) Providing advisory and
underwriting services to, and having
consultations with, a portfolio company.
A financial holding company may:
(i) Provide financial, investment and
management consulting advice to a
portfolio company in a manner
consistent with and subject to any
restrictions on such activities contained
in §§ 225.28(b)(6) or 225.86(b)(1) of this
part (12 CFR 225.28(b)(6) and
225.86(b)(1));
(ii) Provide assistance to a portfolio
company in connection with the
underwriting or private placement of its
securities, including acting as the
underwriter or placement agent for such
securities; and
(iii) Meet with the officers or
employees of a portfolio company to
monitor or provide advice with respect

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to the portfolio company’s performance
or activities.
(e) When may a financial holding
company routinely manage or operate a
portfolio company?—(1) Special
circumstances required. A financial
holding company may routinely manage
or operate a portfolio company only
when intervention by the financial
holding company is necessary or
required to obtain a reasonable return
on the financial holding company’s
investment in the portfolio company
upon resale or other disposition of the
investment, such as to avoid or address
a significant operating loss or in
connection with a loss of senior
management at the portfolio company.
(2) Duration Limited. A financial
holding company may routinely manage
or operate a portfolio company only for
the period of time as may be necessary
to address the cause of the financial
holding company’s involvement, to
obtain suitable alternative management
arrangements, to dispose of the
investment, or to otherwise obtain a
reasonable return upon the resale or
disposition of the investment.
(3) Notice required for extended
involvement. A financial holding
company may not routinely manage or
operate a portfolio company for a period
greater than nine months without prior
written notice to the Board.
(4) Documentation required. A
financial holding company must
maintain and make available to the
Board upon request a written record
describing its involvement in routinely
managing or operating a portfolio
company.
(f) May a depository institution or its
subsidiary routinely manage or operate
a portfolio company?—(1) In general. A
depository institution and a subsidiary
of a depository institution may not
routinely manage or operate a portfolio
company in which an affiliated
company owns or controls an interest
under this subpart.
(2) Definition applying provisions
governing routine management or
operation. For purposes of this section
other than paragraph (e) and for
purposes of § 225.173(d), a financial
holding company includes a depository
institution controlled by the financial
holding company and a subsidiary of
such a depository institution.
(3) Exception for certain subsidiaries
of depository institutions. For purposes
of paragraph (e) of this section, a
financial holding company includes a
financial subsidiary held in accordance
with section 5136A of the Revised
Statutes (12 U.S.C. 24a) or section 46 of
the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12
U.S.C. 1831w), and a subsidiary that is

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a small business investment company
and that is held in accordance with the
Small Business Investment Act (15
U.S.C. 661 et seq.), and such a
subsidiary may, in accordance with the
limitations set forth in this section,
routinely manage or operate a portfolio
company in which an affiliated
company owns or controls an interest
under this subpart.
§ 225.172 What are the holding periods
permitted for merchant banking
investments?

(a) Must investments be made for
resale? A financial holding company
may own or control shares, assets and
ownership interests pursuant to this
subpart only for a period of time to
enable the sale or disposition thereof on
a reasonable basis consistent with the
financial viability of the financial
holding company’s merchant banking
investment activities.
(b) What period of time is generally
permitted for holding merchant banking
investments?—(1) In general. Except as
provided in this section or § 225.173, a
financial holding company may not,
directly or indirectly, own, control or
hold any share, asset or ownership
interest pursuant to this subpart for a
period that exceeds 10 years.
(2) Ownership interests acquired from
or transferred to companies held under
this subpart. For purposes of paragraph
(b)(1) of this section, shares, assets or
ownership interests—
(i) Acquired by a financial holding
company from a company in which the
financial holding company held an
interest under this subpart will be
considered to have been acquired by the
financial holding company on the date
that the share, asset or ownership
interest was acquired by the company;
and
(ii) Acquired by a company from a
financial holding company will be
considered to have been acquired by the
company on the date that the share,
asset or ownership interest was acquired
by the financial holding company if—
(A) The financial holding company
held the share, asset, or ownership
interest under this subpart; and
(B) The financial holding company
holds an interest in the acquiring
company under this subpart.
(3) Interests previously held by a
financial holding company under
limited authority. For purposes of
paragraph (b)(1) of this section, any
shares, assets, or ownership interests
previously owned or controlled, directly
or indirectly, by a financial holding
company under any other provision of
the Federal banking laws that imposes
a limited holding period will if acquired

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under this subpart be considered to
have been acquired by the financial
holding company under this subpart on
the date the financial holding company
first acquired ownership or control of
the shares, assets or ownership interests
under such other provision of law. For
purposes of this paragraph (b)(3), a
financial holding company includes a
depository institution controlled by the
financial holding company and any
subsidiary of such a depository
institution.
(4) Approval required to hold interests
held in excess of time limit. A financial
holding company may seek Board
approval to own, control or hold shares,
assets or ownership interests of a
company under this subpart for a period
that exceeds the period specified in
paragraph (b)(1) of this section. A
request for approval must:
(i) Be submitted to the Board at least
90 days prior to the expiration of the
applicable time period;
(ii) Provide the reasons for the
request, including information that
addresses the factors in paragraph (b)(5)
of this section; and
(iii) Explain the financial holding
company’s plan for divesting the shares,
assets or ownership interests.
(5) Factors governing Board
determinations. In reviewing any
proposal under paragraph (b)(4) of this
section, the Board may consider all the
facts and circumstances related to the
investment, including:
(i) The cost to the financial holding
company of disposing of the investment
within the applicable period;
(ii) The total exposure of the financial
holding company to the company and
the risks that disposing of the
investment may pose to the financial
holding company;
(iii) Market conditions;
(iv) The nature of the portfolio
company’s business;
(v) The extent and history of
involvement by the financial holding
company in the management and
operations of the company; and
(vi) The average holding period of the
financial holding company’s merchant
banking investments.
(6) Restrictions applicable to
investments held beyond time period. A
financial holding company that directly
or indirectly owns, controls or holds
any share, asset or ownership interest of
a company under this subpart for a total
period that exceeds the period specified
in paragraph (b)(1) of this section
must—
(i) For purposes of determining the
financial holding company’s regulatory
capital, apply to the financial holding
company’s adjusted carrying value of

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such shares, assets, or ownership
interests a capital charge determined by
the Board that must be:
(A) Higher than the maximum
marginal Tier 1 capital charge
applicable under the Board’s capital
adequacy rules or guidelines (see 12
CFR 225 Appendix A) to merchant
banking investments held by that
financial holding company; and
(B) In no event less than 25 percent
of the adjusted carrying value of the
investment; and
(ii) Abide by any other restrictions
that the Board may impose in
connection with granting approval
under paragraph (b)(4) of this section.
§ 225.173 How are investments in private
equity funds treated under this subpart?

(a) What is a private equity fund? For
purposes of this subpart, a ‘‘private
equity fund’’ is any company that:
(1) Is formed for the purpose of and
is engaged exclusively in the business of
investing in shares, assets, and
ownership interests of financial and
nonfinancial companies for resale or
other disposition;
(2) Is not an operating company;
(3) No more than 25 percent of the
total equity of which is held, owned or
controlled, directly or indirectly, by the
financial holding company and its
directors, officers, employees and
principal shareholders;
(4) Has a maximum term of not more
than 15 years; and
(5) Is not formed or operated for the
purpose of making investments
inconsistent with the authority granted
under section 4(k)(4)(H) of the Bank
Holding Company Act (12 U.S.C.
1843(k)(4)(H)) or evading the limitations
governing merchant banking
investments contained in this subpart.
(b) What form may a private equity
fund take? A private equity fund may be
a corporation, partnership, limited
liability company or other type of
company that issues ownership interests
in any form.
(c) What is the holding period
permitted for interests in private equity
funds?
(1) In general. A financial holding
company may own, control or hold any
interest in a private equity fund under
this subpart and any interest in a
portfolio company that is owned or
controlled by a private equity fund in
which the financial holding company
owns or controls any interest under this
subpart for the duration of the fund, up
to a maximum of 15 years.
(2) Request to hold interest for longer
period. A financial holding company
may seek Board approval to own,
control or hold an interest in or held

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through a private equity fund for a
period longer than the duration of the
fund in accordance with § 225.172(b) of
this subpart.
(3) Application of rules. The rules
described in § 225.172(b)(2) and (3)
governing holding periods of interests
acquired, transferred or previously held
by a financial holding company apply to
interests in, held through, or acquired
from a private equity fund.
(d) How do the restrictions on routine
management and operation apply to
private equity funds and investments
held through a private equity fund?—(1)
Portfolio companies held through a
private equity fund. A financial holding
company may not routinely manage or
operate a portfolio company that is
owned or controlled by a private equity
fund in which the financial holding
company owns or controls any interest
under this subpart, except as permitted
under § 225.171(e).
(2) Private equity funds controlled by
a financial holding company. A private
equity fund that is controlled by a
financial holding company may not
routinely manage or operate a portfolio
company, except as permitted under
§ 225.171(e).
(3) Private equity funds that are not
controlled by a financial holding
company. A private equity fund may
routinely manage or operate a portfolio
company so long as no financial holding
company controls the private equity
fund or as permitted under § 225.171(e).
(4) When does a financial holding
company control a private equity fund?
A financial holding company controls a
private equity fund for purposes of this
subpart if the financial holding
company, including any director,
officer, employee or principal
shareholder of the financial holding
company:
(i) Serves as a general partner,
managing member, or trustee of the
private equity fund (or serves in a
similar role with respect to the private
equity fund);
(ii) Owns or controls 25 percent or
more of any class of voting shares or
similar interests in the private equity
fund;
(iii) In any manner selects, controls or
constitutes a majority of the directors,
trustees or management of the private
equity fund; or
(iv) Owns or controls more than 5
percent of any class of voting shares or
similar interests in the private equity
fund and is the investment adviser to
the fund.

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§ 225.174 What aggregate thresholds
apply to merchant banking investments?

(a) In general. A financial holding
company may not, without Board
approval, directly or indirectly acquire
any additional shares, assets or
ownership interests under this subpart
or make any additional capital
contribution to any company the shares,
assets or ownership interests of which
are held by the financial holding
company under this subpart if the
aggregate carrying value of all merchant
banking investments held by the
financial holding company under this
subpart exceeds:
(1) 30 percent of the Tier 1 capital of
the financial holding company; or
(2) After excluding interests in private
equity funds, 20 percent of the Tier 1
capital of the financial holding
company.
(b) How do these thresholds apply to
a private equity fund? Paragraph (a) of
this section applies to the interest
acquired or controlled by the financial
holding company under this subpart in
a private equity fund. Paragraph (a) of
this section does not apply to any
interest in a company held by a private
equity fund or to any interest held by a
person that is not affiliated with the
financial holding company.
(c) How long do these thresholds
remain in effect? This § 225.174 shall
cease to be effective on the date that a
final rule issued by the Board that
specifically addresses the appropriate
regulatory capital treatment of merchant
banking investments becomes effective.
§ 225.175 What risk management, record
keeping and reporting policies are required
to make merchant banking investments?

(a) What internal controls and records
are necessary?—(1) General. A financial
holding company, including a private
equity fund controlled by a financial
holding company, that makes
investments under this subpart must
establish and maintain policies,
procedures, records and systems
reasonably designed to conduct,
monitor and manage such investment
activities and the risks associated with
such investment activities in a safe and
sound manner, including policies,
procedures, records and systems
reasonably designed to:
(i) Monitor and assess the carrying
value, market value and performance of
each investment and the aggregate
portfolio;
(ii) Identify and manage the market,
credit, concentration and other risks
associated with such investments;
(iii) Identify, monitor and assess the
terms, amounts and risks arising from
transactions and relationships

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(including contingent fees or contingent
interests) with each company in which
the financial holding company holds an
interest under this subpart;
(iv) Ensure the maintenance of
corporate separateness between the
financial holding company and each
company in which the financial holding
company holds an interest under this
subpart and protect the financial
holding company and its depository
institution subsidiaries from legal
liability for the operations conducted
and financial obligations of each such
company; and
(v) Ensure compliance with this part
and any other provisions of law
governing transactions and relationships
with companies in which the financial
holding company holds an interest
under this subpart (e.g., fiduciary
principles or sections 23A and 23B of
the Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 371c,
371c–1), if applicable).
(2) Availability of records. A financial
holding company must make the
policies, procedures and records
required by paragraph (a)(1) of this
section available to the Board or the
appropriate Reserve Bank upon request.
(b) What periodic reports must be
filed? A financial holding company
must provide reports to the appropriate
Reserve Bank in such format and at such
times as the Board may prescribe.
(c) Is notice required for the
acquisition of companies?—(1)
Fulfillment of statutory notice
requirement. Except as required in
paragraph (c)(2) of this section, no postacquisition notice under section 4(k)(6)
of the Bank Holding Company Act (12
U.S.C. 1843(k)(6)) is required by a
financial holding company in
connection with an investment made
under this subpart if the financial
holding company has previously filed a
notice under § 225.87 indicating that it
had commenced merchant banking
investment activities under this subpart.
(2) Notice of large individual
investments. A financial holding
company must provide written notice to
the Board on the appropriate form
within 30 days after acquiring more
than 5 percent of the voting shares,
assets or ownership interests of any
company under this subpart, including
an interest in a private equity fund, at
a total cost to the financial holding
company that exceeds the lesser of 5
percent of the Tier 1 capital of the
financial holding company or $200
million.

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§ 225.176 How do the statutory cross
marketing and sections 23A and B
limitations apply to merchant banking
investments?

(a) Are cross marketing activities
prohibited?—(1) In general. A
depository institution, including a
subsidiary of a depository institution,
controlled by a financial holding
company may not:
(i) Offer or market, directly or through
any arrangement, any product or service
of any company if more than 5 percent
of the company’s voting shares, assets or
ownership interests are owned or
controlled by the financial holding
company pursuant to this subpart; or
(ii) Allow any product or service of
the depository institution, including any
product or service of a subsidiary of the
depository institution, to be offered or
marketed, directly or through any
arrangement, by or through any
company described in paragraph
(a)(1)(i) of this section.
(2) How are certain subsidiaries
treated? For purposes of paragraph (a)(1)
of this section, a subsidiary of a
depository institution does not include
a financial subsidiary held in
accordance with section 5136A of the
Revised Statutes (12 U.S.C. 24a) or
section 46 of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act. (12 U.S.C. 1831w), any
company held by a company owned in
accordance with section 25 or 25A of
the Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 601
et seq.; 12 U.S.C. 611 et seq.), or any
company held by a small business
investment company owned in
accordance with the Small Business
Investment Act of 1958 (15 U.S.C. 661
et seq.).
(3) How do the cross marketing
restrictions apply to private equity
funds? The restriction contained in
paragraph (a)(1) of this section does not
apply to:
(i) Portfolio companies held by a
private equity fund that the financial
holding company does not control; or
(ii) The sale, offer or marketing of any
interest in a private equity fund,
whether or not controlled by the
financial holding company.
(b) When are companies held under
section 4(k)(4)(H) affiliates under
sections 23A and B?—(1) Rebuttable
presumption of control. The following
rebuttable presumption of control shall
apply for purposes of sections 23A and
23B of the Federal Reserve Act (12
U.S.C. 371c, 371c-1): if a financial
holding company directly or indirectly
owns or controls more than 15 percent
of the total equity of a company
pursuant to this subpart, the company
shall be presumed to be an affiliate of

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any member bank that is affiliated with
the financial holding company.
(2) Request to rebut presumption. A
financial holding company may rebut
this presumption by providing
information acceptable to the Board
demonstrating that the financial holding
company does not control the company.
(3) Presumptions that control does not
exist. Absent evidence to the contrary,
the presumption in paragraph (b)(1) of
this section will be considered to have
been rebutted without Board approval
under paragraph (b)(2) of this section if
any one of the following requirements
are met:
(i) No officer, director or employee of
the financial holding company serves as
a director, trustee, or general partner (or
individual exercising similar functions)
of the company;
(ii) A person that is not affiliated or
associated with the financial holding
company owns or controls a greater
percentage of the equity capital of the
portfolio company than the amount
owned or controlled by the financial
holding company, and no more than one
officer or employee of the holding
company serves as a director or trustee
(or individual exercising similar
functions) of the company; or
(iii) A person that is not affiliated or
associated with the financial holding
company owns or controls more than 50
percent of the voting shares of the
portfolio company, and officers and
employees of the holding company do
not constitute a majority of the directors
or trustees (or individuals exercising
similar functions) of the company.
(4) Convertible instruments. For
purposes of paragraph (b)(1) of this
section, equity capital includes options,
warrants and any other instrument
convertible into equity capital.
(5) Application of presumption to
private equity funds. A financial
holding company will not be presumed
to own or control the equity capital of
a company for purposes of paragraph
(b)(1) of this section solely by virtue of
an investment made by the financial
holding company in a private equity
fund that owns or controls the equity
capital of the company unless the
financial holding company controls the
private equity fund as described in
§ 225.173(d)(4).
(6) Application of sections 23A and B
to U.S. branches and agencies of foreign
banks. Sections 23A and 23B of the
Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 371c,
371c–1) shall apply to all covered
transactions between each U.S. branch
and agency of a foreign bank that
acquires or controls, or that is affiliated
with a company that acquires or

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controls, merchant banking investments
and—
(i) Any portfolio company that the
foreign bank or affiliated company
controls or is presumed to control under
paragraph (b)(1) of this section; and
(ii) Any company that the foreign
bank or affiliated company controls or is
presumed to control under paragraph
(b)(1) of this section if the company is
engaged in acquiring or controlling
merchant banking investments and the
proceeds of the covered transaction are
used for the purpose of funding the
company’s merchant banking
investment activities.
§ 225.177

Definitions.

(a) What do references to a financial
holding company include?—(1) Except
as otherwise expressly provided, the
term ‘‘financial holding company’’ as
used in this subpart means the financial
holding company and all of its
subsidiaries, including a private equity
fund or other fund controlled by the
financial holding company.
(2) Except as otherwise expressly
provided, the term ‘‘financial holding
company’’ does not include a depository
institution or subsidiary of a depository
institution or any portfolio company
controlled directly or indirectly by the
financial holding company.
(b) What do references to a depository
institution include? For purposes of this
subpart, the term ‘‘depository
institution’’ includes a U.S. branch or
agency of a foreign bank.
(c) What is a portfolio company? A
portfolio company is any company or
entity:
(1) That is engaged in any activity not
authorized for the financial holding
company under section 4 of the Bank
Holding Company Act (12 U.S.C. 1843);
and
(2) Any shares, assets or ownership
interests of which are held, owned or
controlled directly or indirectly by the
financial holding company pursuant to
this subpart, including through a private
equity fund that the financial holding
company controls.
(d) Who are the executive officers of
a company?—(1) An executive officer of
a company is any person who
participates or has the authority to
participate (other than in the capacity as
a director) in major policymaking
functions of the company, whether or
not the officer has an official title, the
title designates the officer as an
assistant, or the officer serves without
salary or other compensation.
(2) The term ‘‘executive officer’’ does
not include—
(i) Any person, including a person
with an official title, who may exercise

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a certain measure of discretion in the
performance of his duties, including the
discretion to make decisions in the
ordinary course of the company’s
business, but who does not participate
in the determination of major policies of
the company and whose decisions are
limited by policy standards fixed by
senior management of the company; or
(ii) Any person who is excluded from
participating (other than in the capacity
of a director) in major policymaking
functions of the company by resolution
of the board of directors or by the
bylaws of the company and who does
not in fact participate in such
policymaking functions.
By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, January 10, 2001.
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.

Department of the Treasury
12 CFR Chapter XV
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Department of the
Treasury revises part 1500 of subchapter
A of Chapter XV, Title 12 of the Code
of Federal Regulations to read as
follows:
PART 1500—MERCHANT BANKING
INVESTMENTS
Sec.
1500.1 What type of investments are
permitted by this part, and under what
conditions may they be made?
1500.2 What are the limitations on
managing or operating a portfolio
company held as a merchant banking
investment?
1500.3 What are the holding periods
permitted for merchant banking
investments?
1500.4 How are investments in private
equity funds treated under this part?
1500.5 What aggregate thresholds apply to
merchant banking investments?
1500.6 What risk management, record
keeping and reporting policies are
required to make merchant banking
investments?
1500.7 How do the statutory cross
marketing and sections 23A and B
limitations apply to merchant banking
investments?
1500.8 Definitions.
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1843(k).
§ 1500.1 What type of investments are
permitted by this part, and under what
conditions may they be made?

(a) What types of investments are
permitted by this part? Section
4(k)(4)(H) of the Bank Holding Company
Act (12 U.S.C. 1843(k)(4)(H)) and this
part authorize a financial holding
company, directly or indirectly and as

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principal or on behalf of one or more
persons, to acquire or control any
amount of shares, assets or ownership
interests of a company or other entity
that is engaged in any activity not
otherwise authorized for the financial
holding company under section 4 of the
Bank Holding Company Act. For
purposes of this part, shares, assets or
ownership interests acquired or
controlled under section 4(k)(4)(H) and
this part are referred to as ‘‘merchant
banking investments.’’ A financial
holding company may not directly or
indirectly acquire or control any
merchant banking investment except in
compliance with the requirements of
this part.
(b) Must the investment be a bona fide
merchant banking investment? The
acquisition or control of shares, assets or
ownership interests under this part is
not permitted unless it is part of a bona
fide underwriting or merchant or
investment banking activity.
(c) What types of ownership interests
may be acquired? Shares, assets or
ownership interests of a company or
other entity include any debt or equity
security, warrant, option, partnership
interest, trust certificate or other
instrument representing an ownership
interest in the company or entity,
whether voting or nonvoting.
(d) Where in a financial holding
company may merchant banking
investments be made? A financial
holding company and any subsidiary
(other than a depository institution or
subsidiary of a depository institution)
may acquire or control merchant
banking investments. A financial
holding company and its subsidiaries
may not acquire or control merchant
banking investments on behalf of a
depository institution or subsidiary of a
depository institution.
(e) May assets other than shares be
held directly? A financial holding
company may not under this part
acquire or control assets, other than debt
or equity securities or other ownership
interests in a company, unless:
(1) The assets are held by or promptly
transferred to a portfolio company;
(2) The portfolio company maintains
policies, books and records, accounts,
and other indicia of corporate,
partnership or limited liability
organization and operation that are
separate from the financial holding
company and limit the legal liability of
the financial holding company for
obligations of the portfolio company;
and
(3) The portfolio company has
management that is separate from the
financial holding company to the extent
required by § 1500.2.

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(f) What type of affiliate is required for
a financial holding company to make
merchant banking investments? A
financial holding company may not
acquire or control merchant banking
investments under this part unless the
financial holding company qualifies
under at least one of the following
paragraphs:
(1) Securities affiliate. The financial
holding company is or has an affiliate
that is registered under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78c,
78o, 78o–4) as:
(i) A broker or dealer; or
(ii) A municipal securities dealer,
including a separately identifiable
department or division of a bank that is
registered as a municipal securities
dealer.
(2) Insurance affiliate with an
investment adviser affiliate. The
financial holding company controls:
(i) An insurance company that is
predominantly engaged in underwriting
life, accident and health, or property
and casualty insurance (other than
credit-related insurance), or providing
and issuing annuities; and
(ii) A company that:
(A) Is registered with the Securities
and Exchange Commission as an
investment adviser under the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (15
U.S.C. 80b–1 et seq.); and
(B) Provides investment advice to an
insurance company.
§ 1500.2 What are the limitations on
managing or operating a portfolio company
held as a merchant banking investment?

(a) May a financial holding company
routinely manage or operate a portfolio
company? Except as permitted in
paragraph (e) of this section, a financial
holding company may not routinely
manage or operate any portfolio
company.
(b) When does a financial holding
company routinely manage or operate a
company?
(1) Examples of routine management
or operation.—(i) Executive officer
interlocks at the portfolio company. A
financial holding company routinely
manages or operates a portfolio
company if any director, officer or
employee of the financial holding
company serves as or has the
responsibilities of an executive officer of
the portfolio company.
(ii) Interlocks by executive officers of
the financial holding company.—(A)
Prohibition. A financial holding
company routinely manages or operates
a portfolio company if any executive
officer of the financial holding company
serves as or has the responsibilities of
an officer or employee of the portfolio
company.

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(B) Definition. For purposes of
paragraph (b)(1)(ii)(A) of this section,
the term ‘‘financial holding company’’
includes the financial holding company
and only the following subsidiaries of
the financial holding company:
(1) A securities broker or dealer
registered under the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934;
(2) A depository institution;
(3) An affiliate that engages in
merchant banking activities under this
part or insurance company investment
activities under section 4(k)(4)(I) of the
Bank Holding Company Act (12 U.S.C.
1843(k)(4)(I));
(4) A small business investment
company (as defined in section 302(b) of
the Small Business Investment Act of
1958 (15 U.S.C. 682(b)) controlled by
the financial holding company or by any
depository institution controlled by the
financial holding company; and
(5) Any other affiliate that engages in
significant equity investment activities
that are subject to a special capital
charge under the capital adequacy rules
or guidelines of the Board.
(iii) Covenants regarding ordinary
course of business. A financial holding
company routinely manages or operates
a portfolio company if any covenant or
other contractual arrangement exists
between the financial holding company
and the portfolio company that would
restrict the portfolio company’s ability
to make routine business decisions,
such as entering into transactions in the
ordinary course of business or hiring
officers or employees other than
executive officers.
(2) Presumptions of routine
management or operation. A financial
holding company is presumed to
routinely manage or operate a portfolio
company if:
(i) Any director, officer, or employee
of the financial holding company serves
as or has the responsibilities of an
officer (other than an executive officer)
or employee of the portfolio company;
or
(ii) Any officer or employee of the
portfolio company is supervised by any
director, officer, or employee of the
financial holding company (other than
in that individual’s capacity as a
director of the portfolio company).
(c) How may a financial holding
company rebut a presumption that it is
routinely managing or operating a
portfolio company? A financial holding
company may rebut a presumption that
it is routinely managing or operating a
portfolio company under paragraph
(b)(2) of this section by presenting
information to the Board demonstrating
to the Board’s satisfaction that the
financial holding company is not

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routinely managing or operating the
portfolio company.
(d) What arrangements do not involve
routinely managing or operating a
portfolio company?—(1) Director
representation at portfolio companies. A
financial holding company may select
any or all of the directors of a portfolio
company or have one or more of its
directors, officers, or employees serve as
directors of a portfolio company if:
(i) The portfolio company employs
officers and employees responsible for
routinely managing and operating the
company; and
(ii) The financial holding company
does not routinely manage or operate
the portfolio company, except as
permitted in paragraph (e) of this
section.
(2) Covenants or other provisions
regarding extraordinary events. A
financial holding company may, by
virtue of covenants or other written
agreements with a portfolio company,
restrict the ability of the portfolio
company, or require the portfolio
company to consult with or obtain the
approval of the financial holding
company, to take actions outside of the
ordinary course of the business of the
portfolio company. Examples of the
types of actions that may be subject to
these types of covenants or agreements
include, but are not limited to, the
following:
(i) The acquisition of significant assets
or control of another company by the
portfolio company or any of its
subsidiaries;
(ii) Removal or selection of an
independent accountant or auditor or
investment banker by the portfolio
company;
(iii) Significant changes to the
business plan or accounting methods or
policies of the portfolio company;
(iv) Removal or replacement of any or
all of the executive officers of the
portfolio company;
(v) The redemption, authorization or
issuance of any equity or debt securities
(including options, warrants or
convertible shares) of the portfolio
company or any borrowing by the
portfolio company outside of the
ordinary course of business;
(vi) The amendment of the articles of
incorporation or by-laws (or similar
governing documents) of the portfolio
company; and
(vii) The sale, merger, consolidation,
spin-off, recapitalization, liquidation,
dissolution or sale of substantially all of
the assets of the portfolio company or
any of its significant subsidiaries.
(3) Providing advisory and
underwriting services to, and having

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consultations with, a portfolio company.
A financial holding company may:
(i) Provide financial, investment and
management consulting advice to a
portfolio company in a manner
consistent with and subject to any
restrictions on such activities contained
in §§ 225.28(b)(6) or 225.86(b)(1) of the
Board’s Regulation Y (12 CFR
225.28(b)(6) and 225.86(b)(1));
(ii) Provide assistance to a portfolio
company in connection with the
underwriting or private placement of its
securities, including acting as the
underwriter or placement agent for such
securities; and
(iii) Meet with the officers or
employees of a portfolio company to
monitor or provide advice with respect
to the portfolio company’s performance
or activities.
(e) When may a financial holding
company routinely manage or operate a
portfolio company?—(1) Special
circumstances required. A financial
holding company may routinely manage
or operate a portfolio company only
when intervention by the financial
holding company is necessary or
required to obtain a reasonable return
on the financial holding company’s
investment in the portfolio company
upon resale or other disposition of the
investment, such as to avoid or address
a significant operating loss or in
connection with a loss of senior
management at the portfolio company.
(2) Duration Limited. A financial
holding company may routinely manage
or operate a portfolio company only for
the period of time as may be necessary
to address the cause of the financial
holding company’s involvement, to
obtain suitable alternative management
arrangements, to dispose of the
investment, or to otherwise obtain a
reasonable return upon the resale or
disposition of the investment.
(3) Notice required for extended
involvement. A financial holding
company may not routinely manage or
operate a portfolio company for a period
greater than nine months without prior
written notice to the Board.
(4) Documentation required. A
financial holding company must
maintain and make available to the
Board upon request a written record
describing its involvement in routinely
managing or operating a portfolio
company.
(f) May a depository institution or its
subsidiary routinely manage or operate
a portfolio company?—
(1) In general. A depository
institution and a subsidiary of a
depository institution may not routinely
manage or operate a portfolio company

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8491

in which an affiliated company owns or
controls an interest under this part.
(2) Definition applying provisions
governing routine management or
operation. For purposes of this section
other than paragraph (e) and for
purposes of § 1500.4(d), a financial
holding company includes a depository
institution controlled by the financial
holding company and a subsidiary of
such a depository institution.
(3) Exception for certain subsidiaries
of depository institutions. For purposes
of paragraph (e) of this section, a
financial holding company includes a
financial subsidiary held in accordance
with section 5136A of the Revised
Statutes (12 U.S.C. 24a) or section 46 of
the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12
U.S.C. 1831w), and a subsidiary that is
a small business investment company
and that is held in accordance with the
Small Business Investment Act (15
U.S.C. 661 et seq.), and such a
subsidiary may, in accordance with the
limitations set forth in this section,
routinely manage or operate a portfolio
company in which an affiliated
company owns or controls an interest
under this part.
§ 1500.3 What are the holding periods
permitted for merchant banking
investments?

(a) Must investments be made for
resale? A financial holding company
may own or control shares, assets and
ownership interests pursuant to this
part only for a period of time to enable
the sale or disposition thereof on a
reasonable basis consistent with the
financial viability of the financial
holding company’s merchant banking
investment activities.
(b) What period of time is generally
permitted for holding merchant banking
investments?—(1) In general. Except as
provided in this section or § 1500.4, a
financial holding company may not,
directly or indirectly, own, control or
hold any share, asset or ownership
interest pursuant to this part for a
period that exceeds 10 years.
(2) Ownership interests acquired from
or transferred to companies held under
this part. For purposes of paragraph
(b)(1) of this section, shares, assets or
ownership interests—
(i) Acquired by a financial holding
company from a company in which the
financial holding company held an
interest under this part will be
considered to have been acquired by the
financial holding company on the date
that the share, asset or ownership
interest was acquired by the company;
and
(ii) Acquired by a company from a
financial holding company will be

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considered to have been acquired by the
company on the date that the share,
asset or ownership interest was acquired
by the financial holding company if—
(A) The financial holding company
held the share, asset, or ownership
interest under this part; and
(B) The financial holding company
holds an interest in the acquiring
company under this part.
(3) Interests previously held by a
financial holding company under
limited authority. For purposes of
paragraph (b)(1) of this section, any
shares, assets, or ownership interests
previously owned or controlled, directly
or indirectly, by a financial holding
company under any other provision of
the Federal banking laws that imposes
a limited holding period will if acquired
under this part be considered to have
been acquired by the financial holding
company under this part on the date the
financial holding company first
acquired ownership or control of the
shares, assets or ownership interests
under such other provision of law. For
purposes of this paragraph (b)(3), a
financial holding company includes a
depository institution controlled by the
financial holding company and any
subsidiary of such a depository
institution.
(4) Approval required to hold interests
held in excess of time limit. A financial
holding company may seek Board
approval to own, control or hold shares,
assets or ownership interests of a
company under this part for a period
that exceeds the period specified in
paragraph (b)(1) of this section. A
request for approval must:
(i) Be submitted to the Board at least
90 days prior to the expiration of the
applicable time period;
(ii) Provide the reasons for the
request, including information that
addresses the factors in paragraph (b)(5)
of this section; and
(iii) Explain the financial holding
company’s plan for divesting the shares,
assets or ownership interests.
(5) Factors governing Board
determinations. In reviewing any
proposal under paragraph (b)(4) of this
section, the Board may consider all the
facts and circumstances related to the
investment, including:
(i) The cost to the financial holding
company of disposing of the investment
within the applicable period;
(ii) The total exposure of the financial
holding company to the company and
the risks that disposing of the
investment may pose to the financial
holding company;
(iii) Market conditions;
(iv) The nature of the portfolio
company’s business;

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(v) The extent and history of
involvement by the financial holding
company in the management and
operations of the company; and
(vi) The average holding period of the
financial holding company’s merchant
banking investments.
(6) Restrictions applicable to
investments held beyond time period. A
financial holding company that directly
or indirectly owns, controls or holds
any share, asset or ownership interest of
a company under this part for a total
period that exceeds the period specified
in paragraph (b)(1) of this section
must—
(i) For purposes of determining the
financial holding company’s regulatory
capital, apply to the financial holding
company’s adjusted carrying value of
such shares, assets, or ownership
interests a capital charge determined by
the Board that must be:
(A) Higher than the maximum
marginal Tier 1 capital charge
applicable under the Board’s capital
adequacy rules or guidelines (see 12
CFR 225 Appendix A) to merchant
banking investments held by that
financial holding company; and
(B) In no event less than 25 percent
of the adjusted carrying value of the
investment; and
(ii) Abide by any other restrictions
that the Board may impose in
connection with granting approval
under paragraph (b)(4) of this section.
§ 1500.4 How are investments in private
equity funds treated under this part?

(a) What is a private equity fund? For
purposes of this part, a ‘‘private equity
fund’’ is any company that:
(1) Is formed for the purpose of and
is engaged exclusively in the business of
investing in shares, assets, and
ownership interests of financial and
nonfinancial companies for resale or
other disposition;
(2) Is not an operating company;
(3) No more than 25 percent of the
total equity of which is held, owned or
controlled, directly or indirectly, by the
financial holding company and its
directors, officers, employees and
principal shareholders;
(4) Has a maximum term of not more
than 15 years; and
(5) Is not formed or operated for the
purpose of making investments
inconsistent with the authority granted
under section 4(k)(4)(H) of the Bank
Holding Company Act (12 U.S.C.
1843(k)(4)(H)) or evading the limitations
governing merchant banking
investments contained in this part.
(b) What form may a private equity
fund take? A private equity fund may be
a corporation, partnership, limited

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liability company or other type of
company that issues ownership interests
in any form.
(c) What is the holding period
permitted for interests in private equity
funds?
(1) In general. A financial holding
company may own, control or hold any
interest in a private equity fund under
this part and any interest in a portfolio
company that is owned or controlled by
a private equity fund in which the
financial holding company owns or
controls any interest under this part for
the duration of the fund, up to a
maximum of 15 years.
(2) Request to hold interest for longer
period. A financial holding company
may seek Board approval to own,
control or hold an interest in or held
through a private equity fund for a
period longer than the duration of the
fund in accordance with § 1500.3(b) of
this part.
(3) Application of rules. The rules
described in § 1500.3(b)(2) and (3)
governing holding periods of interests
acquired, transferred or previously held
by a financial holding company apply to
interests in, held through, or acquired
from a private equity fund.
(d) How do the restrictions on routine
management and operation apply to
private equity funds and investments
held through a private equity fund?—(1)
Portfolio companies held through a
private equity fund. A financial holding
company may not routinely manage or
operate a portfolio company that is
owned or controlled by a private equity
fund in which the financial holding
company owns or controls any interest
under this part, except as permitted
under § 1500.2(e).
(2) Private equity funds controlled by
a financial holding company. A private
equity fund that is controlled by a
financial holding company may not
routinely manage or operate a portfolio
company, except as permitted under
§ 1500.2(e).
(3) Private equity funds that are not
controlled by a financial holding
company. A private equity fund may
routinely manage or operate a portfolio
company so long as no financial holding
company controls the private equity
fund or as permitted under § 1500.2(e).
(4) When does a financial holding
company control a private equity fund?
A financial holding company controls a
private equity fund for purposes of this
part if the financial holding company,
including any director, officer,
employee or principal shareholder of
the financial holding company:
(i) Serves as a general partner,
managing member, or trustee of the
private equity fund (or serves in a

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similar role with respect to the private
equity fund);
(ii) Owns or controls 25 percent or
more of any class of voting shares or
similar interests in the private equity
fund;
(iii) In any manner selects, controls or
constitutes a majority of the directors,
trustees or management of the private
equity fund; or
(iv) Owns or controls more than 5
percent of any class of voting shares or
similar interests in the private equity
fund and is the investment adviser to
the fund.
§ 1500.5 What aggregate thresholds apply
to merchant banking investments?

(a) In general. A financial holding
company may not, without Board
approval, directly or indirectly acquire
any additional shares, assets or
ownership interests under this part or
make any additional capital
contribution to any company the shares,
assets or ownership interests of which
are held by the financial holding
company under this part if the aggregate
carrying value of all merchant banking
investments held by the financial
holding company under this part
exceeds:
(1) 30 percent of the Tier 1 capital of
the financial holding company; or
(2) After excluding interests in private
equity funds, 20 percent of the Tier 1
capital of the financial holding company
(b) How do these thresholds apply to
a private equity fund? Paragraph (a) of
this section applies to the interest
acquired or controlled by the financial
holding company under this part in a
private equity fund. Paragraph (a) of this
section does not apply to any interest in
a company held by a private equity fund
or to any interest held by a person that
is not affiliated with the financial
holding company.
(c) How long do these thresholds
remain in effect? This § 1500.5 shall
cease to be effective on the date that a
final rule issued by the Board that
specifically addresses the appropriate
regulatory capital treatment of merchant
banking investments becomes effective.
§ 1500.6 What risk management, record
keeping and reporting policies are required
to make merchant banking investments?

(a) What internal controls and records
are necessary?—(1) General. A financial
holding company, including a private
equity fund controlled by a financial
holding company, that makes
investments under this part must
establish and maintain policies,
procedures, records and systems
reasonably designed to conduct,
monitor and manage such investment

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activities and the risks associated with
such investment activities in a safe and
sound manner, including policies,
procedures, records and systems
reasonably designed to:
(i) Monitor and assess the carrying
value, market value and performance of
each investment and the aggregate
portfolio;
(ii) Identify and manage the market,
credit, concentration and other risks
associated with such investments;
(iii) Identify, monitor and assess the
terms, amounts and risks arising from
transactions and relationships
(including contingent fees or contingent
interests) with each company in which
the financial holding company holds an
interest under this part;
(iv) Ensure the maintenance of
corporate separateness between the
financial holding company and each
company in which the financial holding
company holds an interest under this
part and protect the financial holding
company and its depository institution
subsidiaries from legal liability for the
operations conducted and financial
obligations of each such company; and
(v) Ensure compliance with this part.
(2) Availability of records. A financial
holding company must make the
policies, procedures and records
required by paragraph (a)(1) of this
section available to the Board or the
appropriate Reserve Bank upon request.
(b) Certain additional recordkeeping
and reporting requirements for
merchant banking investments are set
forth in the Board’s Regulation Y, 12
CFR 225.175.
§ 1500.7 How do the statutory cross
marketing and sections 23A and B
limitations apply to merchant banking
investments?

Certain cross-marketing limitations
and limitations under sections 23A and
23B of the Federal Reserve Act (12
U.S.C. 371c, 371c-1) applicable to
merchant banking investments are set
forth in the Board’s Regulation Y, 12
CFR 225.176.
§ 1500.8

Definitions.

(a) What do references to a financial
holding company include?—(1) Except
as otherwise expressly provided, the
term ‘‘financial holding company’’ as
used in this part means the financial
holding company and all of its
subsidiaries, including a private equity
fund or other fund controlled by the
financial holding company.
(2) Except as otherwise expressly
provided, the term ‘‘financial holding
company’’ does not include a depository
institution or subsidiary of a depository
institution or any portfolio company

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controlled directly or indirectly by the
financial holding company.
(b) What do references to a depository
institution include? For purposes of this
part, the term ‘‘depository institution’’
includes a U.S. branch or agency of a
foreign bank.
(c) What is a portfolio company? A
portfolio company is any company or
entity:
(1) That is engaged in any activity not
authorized for the financial holding
company under section 4 of the Bank
Holding Company Act (12 U.S.C. 1843);
and
(2) Any shares, assets or ownership
interests of which are held, owned or
controlled directly or indirectly by the
financial holding company pursuant to
this part, including through a private
equity fund that the financial holding
company controls.
(d) Who are the executive officers of
a company?—(1) An executive officer of
a company is any person who
participates or has the authority to
participate (other than in the capacity as
a director) in major policymaking
functions of the company, whether or
not the officer has an official title, the
title designates the officer as an
assistant, or the officer serves without
salary or other compensation.
(2) The term ‘‘executive officer’’ does
not include—
(i) Any person, including a person
with an official title, who may exercise
a certain measure of discretion in the
performance of his duties, including the
discretion to make decisions in the
ordinary course of the company’s
business, but who does not participate
in the determination of major policies of
the company and whose decisions are
limited by policy standards fixed by
senior management of the company; or
(ii) Any person who is excluded from
participating (other than in the capacity
of a director) in major policymaking
functions of the company by resolution
of the board of directors or by the
bylaws of the company and who does
not in fact participate in such
policymaking functions.
(e) What is the Board? The Board
means the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System.
(f) How are other terms that are used
in this part defined? Unless otherwise
defined in this part, all terms used have
the meanings given such terms in the
Board’s Regulation Y (12 CFR Part 225).
Dated: January 10, 2001.
Gregory A. Baer,
Assistant Secretary for Financial Institutions,
Department of the Treasury.
[FR Doc. 01–1305 Filed 1–30–01; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODES 6210–01–P; 4810–25–P

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