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l l5K

Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas

November 26, 2001

DALLAS, TEXAS
75265-5906

Notice 01-88

TO: The Chief Executive Officer of each
financial institution and others concerned
in the Eleventh Federal Reserve District
SUBJECT
Final Rule on Regulation K
(International Banking Operations); Amendments
to Rules Regarding Delegation of Authority
DETAILS
The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System has reviewed Regulation K,
which governs international banking operations, and is amending subparts A, B, and C, effective
November 26, 2001. A proposed rule to amend subpart D of Regulation K was issued in this
Bank’s Notice 01-82 dated November 2, 2001. There are also certain amendments to the Board’s
Rules Regarding Delegation of Authority.
Subpart A of Regulation K governs the foreign investments and activities of all
member banks (national banks as well as state member banks), Edge and agreement
corporations, and bank holding companies. Subpart B governs the U.S. activities of foreign
banking organizations. Subpart C deals with export trading companies.
A copy of the Board’s notice as it appears on pages 54346–98, Vol. 66, No. 208
of the Federal Register dated October 26, 2001, can be found on our web site at
http://www.dallasfed.org/banking/notices/2001/0188.pdf. Additionally, you may obtain a
hard copy of the document by contacting the Public Affairs Department at (214) 922-5254.
MORE INFORMATION
For more information, please contact Dick Burda, Banking Supervision Department,
(713) 652-1503. 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.

Friday,
October 26, 2001

Part II

Federal Reserve
System
12 CFR Parts 211 and 265
International Banking Operations; Rules
Regarding Delegation of Authority and
International Lending Supervision; Final
Rule and Proposed Rule

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54346

Federal Register / Vol. 66, No. 208 / Friday, October 26, 2001 / Rules and Regulations

FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Parts 211 and 265
[Regulation K; Docket No. R–0994]

International Banking Operations;
Rules Regarding Delegation of
Authority
AGENCY: Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System.
ACTION: Final rule.
SUMMARY: Consistent with section 303 of
the Riegle Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994
(the Regulatory Improvement Act), the
Federal Reserve Act, and the
International Banking Act of 1978 (the
IBA), the Board has reviewed Regulation
K, which governs international banking
operations, and is amending subparts A,
B, and C. A proposed rule to amend
subpart D of Regulation K is being
published in this same issue of the
Federal Register.
Subpart A of Regulation K governs the
foreign investments and activities of all
member banks (national banks as well
as state member banks), Edge and
agreement corporations, and bank
holding companies. The amendments
streamline foreign branching procedures
for U.S. banking organizations,
authorize expanded activities in foreign
branches of U.S. banks, and implement
recent statutory changes authorizing a
bank to invest up to 20 percent of
capital and surplus in Edge
corporations. Changes also have been
made to the provisions governing
permissible foreign activities of U.S.
banking organizations, including
securities activities, and investments by
U.S. banking organizations under the
general consent procedures.
Subpart B of Regulation K (Foreign
Banking Organizations) governs the U.S.
activities of foreign banking
organizations. The amendments include
revisions aimed at streamlining the
applications procedures applicable to
foreign banks seeking to expand
operations in the United States, changes
to provisions regarding the qualification
of foreign banking organizations for
exemption from the nonbanking
prohibitions of section 4 of the Bank
Holding Company Act (the BHC Act),
and implementation of provisions of the
Riegle-Neal Interstate Banking and
Branching Efficiency Act of 1994 (the
Interstate Act) that affect foreign banks.
In addition, there are a number of
technical and clarifying amendments to
subparts A and B, as well as subpart C,
which deals with export trading
companies. There are also certain

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amendments to the Board’s Rules
Regarding Delegation of Authority.
EFFECTIVE DATE: November 26, 2001.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Kathleen M. O’Day, Associate General
Counsel (202/452–3786), regarding all
subparts: Jon Stoloff, Senior Counsel
(202/452–3269), or Alison MacDonald,
Counsel (202/452–3236), regarding
Subpart A; Ann Misback, Assistant
General Counsel (202/452–3788), Janet
Crossen, Senior Counsel (202/452–
3281), or Melinda Milenkovich, Counsel
(202/452–3274), regarding Subparts B
and C; Legal Division; or Michael G.
Martinson, Associate Director (202/452–
2798), or Betsy Cross, Deputy Associate
Director (202/452–2574), regarding all
subparts; Division of Banking
Supervision and Regulation. For users
of Telecommunications Device for the
Deaf (TDD) only, please contact 202/
263–4869.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Subpart A: International Operations of
U.S. Banking Organizations
Statutory Framework
The Board is issuing amendments to
Regulation K that will eliminate
unnecessary regulatory burden, increase
transparency, and streamline the
approval process for U.S. banking
organizations seeking to expand their
operations abroad. The Federal Reserve
Act, as amended by the IBA, requires
the Board to review its regulations
issued under section 25A of the Federal
Reserve Act (the Edge Act) at least once
every five years and make any changes
necessary to ensure that the purposes of
the Edge Act are being served in light of
prevailing economic conditions and
banking practices.1 The Board has
reviewed the provisions of Subpart A,
which govern the operations of Edge
corporations, with this statutory
mandate in mind.
Edge corporations are international
banking and financial vehicles through
which U.S. banking organizations offer
international banking or other foreign
financial services and through which
they compete with similar foreignowned institutions in the United States
and abroad. The purposes of the Edge
Act, which amended the Federal
Reserve Act in 1919, include enabling
U.S. banking organizations to compete
effectively with foreign-owned
institutions; providing the means to
finance international trade, especially
U.S. exports; fostering the participation
1 The Board last issued final revisions to Subpart
A of Regulation K in December 1995, at which time
the investment authority for strongly capitalized
and well-managed U.S. banking organizations was
expanded significantly.

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of regional and smaller U.S. banks in
providing international banking and
financing services to U.S. business and
agriculture; and stimulating competition
in the provision of international banking
and financing services throughout the
United States.
Congress, in enacting this legislation,
recognized that U.S. banks needed
vehicles that could exercise wider
financial powers abroad than were
permitted domestically in order to be
competitive internationally and to serve
the international needs of U.S. firms. At
the same time, the Edge Act places
limits on U.S. banks’ exposure to these
broader foreign activities, by limiting
the amount that U.S. banks may invest
in Edge corporations, establishing a
number of statutory safety and
soundness constraints, and granting the
Board wide discretion in determining
what activities should be permissible for
such entities. In exercising its authority
in this area, the Board is required by the
IBA to implement the objectives of the
Edge Act consistent with supervisory
standards relating to the safety and
soundness of U.S. banking
organizations.
In December 1997, following a
comprehensive review of the regulation,
the Board requested public comment on
proposed revisions to Regulation K (62
FR 68423) (the ’97 Proposal). The Board
received 28 comments from outside the
Federal Reserve System on the proposed
Subpart A revisions. Comments were
received from twelve U.S. banks or bank
holding companies; one Edge
corporation; one bank-owned insurance
agency; and thirteen trade associations.
The Board also received comments from
one state bank supervisory agency.
Subsequent to the Board issuing the
’97 Proposal, financial modernization
legislation was enacted. The GrammLeach-Bliley Act (Pub. L. 106–102, 113
Stat. 1338 (1999) (GLB or the GLB Act)
was enacted on November 12, 1999.
Many of the activities the Board had
proposed to liberalize in the ’97
Proposal are covered under the
expanded authority available to
financial holding companies (FHCs)
under GLB. More specifically, under
GLB, a bank holding company (BHC)
that elects to become an FHC may
engage in a broad range of financial
activities, including securities
underwriting and dealing, insurance
sales and underwriting, and merchant
banking.
Final action on the ’97 Proposal was
deferred pending implementation of the
expanded authority available under
GLB. The Board has issued a number of
rules implementing GLB authority,
including, for example, those governing

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Federal Register / Vol. 66, No. 208 / Friday, October 26, 2001 / Rules and Regulations
FHC elections and activities (66 FR 400,
Jan. 3, 2001), real estate brokerage
activities by FHCs (66 FR 307, Jan. 3,
2001), merchant banking activities (66
FR 8466, Jan. 31, 2001), the capital
treatment of nonfinancial equity
investments (66 FR 10212, Feb. 14,
2001), transactions between banks and
their affiliates (66 FR 24186, May 11,
2001), and financial subsidiaries of state
member banks (66 FR 42929, Aug. 16,
2001).
The Board has now reviewed its ’97
Proposal in light of the significantly
changed landscape in relation to
provision of financial services post-GLB,
as well as all comments filed on the ’97
Proposal. The Board has concluded that
a few of the changes proposed in 1997
that would have allowed expansion of
activities now authorized under GLB no
longer are appropriate, primarily those
relating to equity dealing, portfolio
investment, and insurance activities.
However, consistent with the ’97
Proposal, the Board has concluded that
a number of provisions relating to
foreign activities of U.S. banking
organizations should be amended,
including changes that would: (1)
Expand permissible government bond
trading by foreign branches of member
banks; (2) streamline procedures for
establishment of foreign branches by
U.S. banking organizations; (3) expand
permissible equity underwriting
activities abroad for well-capitalized
and well-managed U.S. banking
organizations; (4) expand general
consent authority for well-capitalized
and well-managed U.S. banking
organizations; (5) amend the debt/equity
swaps authority to reflect changes in
circumstances of eligible countries; and
(6) implement the statutory provision
allowing member banks to invest, with
the Board’s approval, up to 20 percent
of capital and surplus in the stock of
Edge and agreement corporations.
Additional technical and clarifying
amendments were also made. These
changes to Regulation K, and the
comments received on the ’97 Proposal,
are discussed below.
The Board also indicated in the ’97
Proposal that it had not identified any
changes to the permissible U.S.
activities of Edge corporations that
appeared necessary or appropriate to
fulfill the purposes of the Edge Act, but
sought comment on whether there was
a need for any such changes. One
commenter urged the Board to permit
Edge corporations to provide incidental
services generating insignificant
revenues in the United States to U.S.
persons affiliated with a foreign person
or a foreign organization that is
principally engaged in foreign business.

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The Board does not believe this change
is necessary or appropriate or otherwise
consistent with the purposes of the Edge
Act.
Expansion of Government Bond Trading
by Foreign Branches
Section 25 of the Federal Reserve Act
permits the Board to authorize foreign
branches of member banks to conduct
abroad activities that are not permitted
domestically. However, the statute
states that the Board shall not ‘‘except
to such limited extent as the Board may
deem necessary with respect to
securities issued by any ‘foreign state’
* * * authorize a foreign branch to
engage or participate, directly or
indirectly, in the business of
underwriting, selling, or distributing
securities.’’
Given the statutory language, the
Board, to date, has only permitted
foreign branches to underwrite and sell
obligations of (i) the national
government of the country in which the
branch is located, (ii) an agency or
instrumentality of the national
government where supported by the
taxing authority, guarantee, or full faith
and credit of the national government,
and (iii) a political subdivision of the
country. This was determined to be
appropriate on the basis that it is often
necessary in the ordinary course of
banking business for a branch to
participate in the selling of the bonds of
the host country.
In recent years, U.S. banking
organizations have become more active
in trading and underwriting foreign
government securities. Increasingly,
such business, where possible, is being
conducted in the foreign branches of
U.S. banks. Centralizing trading for all
or for certain groups of countries in a
single branch can be desirable to
facilitate management and funding of
this business. For example, a banking
organization might wish to centralize
government securities trading for all
countries in the European Union in one
European branch.
For these reasons, the Board proposed
that banks be permitted to underwrite
and deal through their foreign branches
in obligations of governments other than
the host government, provided that the
obligations are of investment grade and
the business is otherwise subject to
sound banking practices and prudential
regulations. The Board considered the
requirement that the obligations must be
investment grade would limit crossborder transfer risk to the bank because
trading of government securities giving
rise to such risk would be required to
be conducted either directly through a
local branch that is funded locally or

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54347

through a subsidiary, instead of through
the bank. The Board also proposed to
retain the existing authority of foreign
branches of member banks to
underwrite and deal in host government
bonds regardless of whether they are
investment grade. The Board sought
comment on these proposals, as well as
on what ratings should be considered to
be investment grade for these purposes.
Commenters expressed general
support for the Board’s proposal. Some
commenters suggested that the Board
treat any government obligation,
investment grade or otherwise, of any
country or, alternatively, any country in
which a bank has a foreign branch, as
eligible to be underwritten and traded in
branches located outside of that
country. Other commenters argued that
safety and soundness is enhanced by
having centralized underwriting and
dealing of all government securities,
since the local branch which has
authority to engage in non-investment
grade underwriting and dealing may not
have the appropriate experience to
manage such operations.
The Board continues to believe the
investment grade requirement for
obligations of governments other than
the host government is appropriate for
the reason set out in the proposal,
namely, limitation of cross-border
transfer risk to the bank. Noninvestment grade government securities
issued by foreign governments other
than the host government are more
likely to give rise to such risks. For this
reason, the Board continues to be of the
view that trading of non-investment
grade securities should be conducted
either directly through a local branch
that is funded locally or through a
subsidiary, instead of through the bank.
Accordingly, in the final rule, the Board
has retained the investment grade
requirement for obligations of
governments other than the host
government.
A few commenters recommended that
the Board permit foreign branches of
U.S. banks to underwrite and deal in
investment grade obligations of all
political subdivisions, and of agencies
and instrumentalities whether or not
backed by the national government.
After further consideration, the Board
has determined that it is appropriate to
adopt this suggestion at least in part, so
long as all such obligations are
investment grade. As at present,
obligations of agencies and
instrumentalities will be required to be
supported by the taxing authority,
guarantee, or full faith and credit of the
national government.
Commenters also requested that
foreign branches be permitted to

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Federal Register / Vol. 66, No. 208 / Friday, October 26, 2001 / Rules and Regulations

underwrite and deal in all securities
guaranteed by a foreign government.
The Board notes that the authority
granted in section 25 of the Federal
Reserve Act in relation to this activity
is with respect to securities ‘‘issued by
‘foreign state’,’’ and declines to adopt
this change.
With respect to the Board’s request for
comment on which ratings should be
considered to be investment grade for
these purposes, commenters urged the
Board to adopt the definition of
‘‘investment grade’’ set out in the Office
of the Comptroller of the Currency’s
(OCC) investment securities regulation.
12 CFR 1.2(d). The OCC defines the
term to mean a security that is rated in
one of the four highest rating categories
by two or more ‘‘nationally recognized
statistical rating organizations’’
(NRSROs) as designated by the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC), or one such agency if the security
has been rated by only one NRSRO. The
Board considers this definition to be
appropriate for purposes of this activity
of foreign branches of U.S. banks;
accordingly, that definition is
incorporated into the final rule.
A few commenters also urged the
Board to adopt a procedure that would
permit the addition of agencies to the
list of permissible rating agencies
beyond those that have been approved
by the SEC because of concern that a
rating by a NRSRO may not be available
for some foreign government securities.
The Board is not inclined to adopt such
a procedure at this time in view of the
number of NRSROs that rate foreign
government securities. Board staff
should be consulted if any issues arise
in relation to application of the
‘‘investment grade’’ requirement. If it
appears that additional guidance is
warranted, the Board will consider the
matter further.
Comments also suggested that
securities that are not speculative in
nature and are deemed by the investor
to be the credit equivalent of a security
that is rated investment grade should be
considered ‘‘investment grade’’ under
this provision of Regulation K. The
Board believes that such an approach
would essentially mean that there
would be no requirement that the
obligations be investment grade and
rejects it for this reason. Finally,
commenters sought clarification as to
whether the limits applicable to
government obligations, whether as a
percentage of capital or of local
deposits, may be calculated on a net
basis rather than a gross basis. The
limits applicable to government
obligations under this section may be
calculated on a net basis, provided that

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the banking organization otherwise has
received no objection to its internal
models being employed for purposes of
compliance with these limits.
Foreign Branching
The Board’s responsibilities as home
country supervisor under the Minimum
Standards for the Supervision of
International Banking Groups and their
Cross-border Establishments issued by
the Basle Committee on Banking
Supervision (the Minimum Standards)
call for its specific authorization of a
U.S. banking organization’s outward
expansion. Outward expansion for these
purposes means the initial
establishment of a banking presence in
a country by the bank or any affiliate.
Regulation K currently requires the
specific consent of the Board for the
establishment of branches by a member
bank, an Edge or agreement corporation,
or a foreign bank subsidiary in its first
two foreign countries. The Board
proposed to amend Regulation K to
require only 30 days’ prior notice to the
Board before establishment of branches
in the first two countries, on the basis
that such a requirement also would
fulfill the Board’s responsibilities under
the Minimum Standards. The Board also
proposed that 30 days’ prior notice
would be required, consistent with the
Minimum Standards, if the initial
banking presence abroad would be in
the form of a subsidiary bank; such
notice would be required even if the
amount to be invested were below the
general consent limits.
Under Regulation K at present, no
prior Board approval is required for a
banking entity to establish additional
branches in any foreign country where
it already operates one or more
branches. However, a banking entity
must give the Board prior notice before
establishing a branch in a foreign
country where it has no branches even
though a banking affiliate operates a
branch in that country.
The Board proposed to liberalize
Regulation K such that if any of the
member banks, their Edge or agreement
corporation subsidiaries, or a foreign
bank subsidiary (whether a subsidiary of
the bank or of the bank holding
company) already has a branch in a
particular foreign country, a banking
affiliate would be authorized to branch
there without prior notice to the board.
After-the-fact notice, however, would
still be required.
The Board also proposed that the 45
days’ prior notice currently required in
order to branch into additional
countries where there is no affiliated
banking presence (after the organization
has branches engaged in banking in two

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foreign countries) should be reduced to
12 business days. In taking this
approach, the foreign branching
establishments of the entire banking
organization would be taken into
account in determining whether the
banking entity would be subject to the
30 day or 12 day prior notice procedure.
Where a U.S. banking organization as a
whole already operates foreign branches
of banking entities in two countries, any
banking affiliate would be able to open
a branch in a country where such
organization has no banking presence,
pursuant to the 12 days’ prior notice
procedure.
Finally, currently under Regulation K,
nonbanking subsidiaries may branch
into any country in which any affiliate
has a branch without prior notice, but
a 45-day prior notice must be submitted
to establish a branch in a country where
no affiliate has a presence. The Board
proposed permitting nonbanking
subsidiaries held pursuant to Regulation
K to establish foreign branches without
prior review, subject only to an afterthe-fact notice requirement.
The Board sought comment on these
proposed changes, including in
particular whether the proposed
modified notice periods would
sufficiently accommodate foreign
expansion plans. Commenters
supported the Board’s proposed
changes. Accordingly, the Board is
adopting the foreign branching
provisions as proposed. The Board
wishes to clarify that filing Form FR
2058 fulfills the after-the-fact notice
requirements of the foreign branching
provisions. Additionally, the Board
notes that the streamlined procedures
for establishment of foreign branches are
not limited to well-capitalized, wellmanaged institutions. However, the
Board retains the authority to suspend
general consent authority in whole or in
part should circumstances warrant.
Permissible Activities of Foreign
Subsidiaries of U.S. Banking
Organizations
One aspect of bank regulation to
which the Federal Reserve subscribes is
the fostering of a level competitive
playing field for financial
intermediaries. Thus, in the United
States, the Board has advocated that
expansion by banking organizations into
nonbanking activities should generally
occur through the bank holding
company and not the bank. Banks in the
United States benefit from the implicit
support of the national government and
its sovereign credit rating through
federal deposit insurance, Federal
Reserve discount window access, and
final riskless settlement of payment

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Federal Register / Vol. 66, No. 208 / Friday, October 26, 2001 / Rules and Regulations
system transactions. Extension of this
system would make the existing playing
field in the United States unlevel for
nonbank competitors and create
unnecessary distortions in competition.
The same principle applies to U.S.
banking organizations abroad. Other
nations have chosen to allow their
banks to engage in a broad array of
financial activities, especially
investment banking activities, thereby
extending to these activities the implicit
support of their governments. In those
markets, U.S. banking organizations
would be at a disadvantage if unable to
offer their customers an equivalent
range of key services with the
convenience and efficiency of their local
bank competitors. In many of these
markets, banks are the only significant
providers of capital markets services.
Independent securities firms are not
generally substantial competitors in
these markets, both for historical
reasons and because they may be unable
to compete effectively with banks that
have the explicit and implicit support of
their governments.
Congress has recognized the existence
of conflicting policy objectives and
competitive pressures faced by U.S.
banking organizations operating abroad
and through legislation has struck a
balance. In relation to the United States,
Congress in enacting GLB demonstrated
a strong preference that expanded
nonbanking financial activities be
conducted in a structure that does not
involve the federal bank subsidy.
Expanded activities authorized by GLB
are required to be conducted either in
nonbank subsidiaries of a financial
holding company or in a financial
subsidiary of a bank, which would be
subject to the restrictions on funding by
a parent bank set out in sections 23A
and 23B of the Federal Reserve Act. In
relation to competitive pressures arising
from abroad, Congress preserved the
Board’s authority under the Edge Act to
permit Edge corporations, which may be
owned by U.S. banks, to engage in a
wider range of activities outside the
United States than permitted to U.S.
banks domestically, where such powers
are considered necessary to enable them
to compete effectively with similar
foreign-owned institutions in the United
States and abroad and liberalization
otherwise is consistent with safety and
soundness considerations. Congress, in
enacting the Edge Act, recognized that
U.S. banks in some circumstances may
need vehicles that could exercise
broader financial powers abroad in
order to remain competitive
internationally and to serve the needs of
U.S. firms. Congress granted the Board
similar broad discretion to allow bank

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holding companies to engage in
activities outside the United States.
In exercising its statutory authority
under the Edge Act, the Board has
sought to balance the need for U.S.
banking organizations to be competitive
abroad with the public interest in
assuring the safety and soundness of the
banks, protecting the deposit insurance
fund, and limiting the extension of the
federal safety net. In adopting final
revisions to Regulation K, the Board has
sought to grant expanded authority only
in relation to those activities where: (i)
The existing restrictions of Regulation K
appear to result in a competitive harm
to the ability of an Edge corporation to
provide financial services necessary to
attract and retain customers; and (ii)
requiring the activities to be conducted
outside the bank chain of ownership
appears to compromise significantly the
competitive position of U.S. banking
organizations. The Board has concluded
that equity underwriting is one such
activity, and the expansion of authority
proposed in 1997 with regard to this
activity has been adopted, as discussed
further below. The Board has
concluded, however, that liberalization
set out in the ’97 Proposal in relation to
other activities, such as equity dealing,
venture capital investments and
insurance activities, should not be
adopted at this time in light of the
passage of GLB. These latter activities
appear to be able to be conducted
competitively outside the bank chain of
ownership under authority granted in
GLB.
Two-Tier Capital Test for Edge
Corporations
As the Board noted in the ’97
Proposal, tying applicable limits to the
capital of the parent bank is particularly
important for subsidiaries of Edge
corporations. Congress has limited a
member bank’s investment in Edge and
agreement corporations to 20 percent of
the bank’s capital.2 However, for various
reasons, Edge corporations historically
have tended to retain their earnings
rather than dividending them to the
parent bank. In some cases due to such
retained earnings, the capital of a bank’s
Edge and agreement corporations may
be in excess of 20 percent of the parent
bank’s consolidated capital, even
2 The Edge Act prohibited member banks from
investing more than 10 percent of their capital and
surplus in the capital stock of Edge and agreement
corporations. In September 1996, congress amended
this limit to permit investments in excess of 10
percent of capital and surplus with the specific
approval of the Board, provided the amount
invested shall not exceed 20 percent of capital and
surplus of the bank. See The Economic Growth and
Regulatory Paperwork Reduction Act (EGRPRA),
Pub. L. 104–208, sec. 2307 (12 U.S.C. 618).

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54349

though its investment in the Edge
subject to the above-referenced statutory
limit is below 20 percent.
In these circumstances, the Board
considered that the capital of an Edge
corporation that is in excess of 20
percent of the parent bank’s
consolidated capital, when retained
earnings are counted, generally should
be excluded for purposes of determining
applicable limits for activities of the
Edge and its subsidiaries. Accordingly,
the Board proposed that Edge and
agreement corporations, as well as
foreign bank subsidiaries of member
banks (which are treated as Edge
corporations for purposes of their
limits), would be subject to two limits,
one tied to a percentage of the Edge
corporation’s tier 1 capital and the other
tied to a percentage of the parent bank’s
tier 1 capital. Limits tied to the parent
bank’s capital would be 20 percent of
the limits otherwise applicable to Edge
corporations, and the lower limit would
be binding. For example, if a limit
proposed for a given activity of an Edge
corporation is 10 percent of the Edge
corporation’s capital but the Edge
corporation’s capital is in excess of 20
percent of the bank’s total capital, the
binding limit for the Edge corporation
would be two percent of the parent
bank’s tier 1 capital. For those U.S.
banks that do not have significant levels
of retained earnings at the Edge, the
binding limit more than likely would be
the separate limit tied to the Edge
corporation’s capital.
The Board considered that this
approach would be consistent with the
intent underlying the provisions of the
Edge Act limiting the total amount of
capital a bank may invest in Edge
corporations. This approach effectively
would place a cap on the percentage of
total bank capital that could be placed
at risk through activities or investments
not otherwise permitted to the bank
directly, regardless of the capital level of
the Edge corporation. This approach
also would reduce any regulatory
incentive to retain earnings at the Edge
because any regulatory benefit from
such retained earnings, in terms of
expanded limits on activities abroad,
would be denied.
The Board proposed that all limits
applicable to Edge corporations under
the ’97 Proposal would proceed on this
basis. Comment was requested on these
proposals and whether any other
approach might achieve similar
objectives.
One commenter opposed the Board’s
proposal to impose a two-tier capital
test on Edge corporations, arguing that
the proposal penalized organizations
that achieve strong earnings in a

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subsidiary of a bank rather than a
subsidiary of the holding company. It
further maintained that the limitation
on the amount a bank can invest in an
Edge corporation creates a practical
limit on the risk to the bank’s own
capital. Therefore, it argued the Board
should look only at the capital of the
Edge corporation in setting limits as a
percentage of capital. The Board
continues to believe this two-tier
approach is consistent with the intent
underlying provisions of the Edge Act
that limit the total amount of capital a
bank may invest in Edge corporations.
The Board notes that, due to the
accumulation of large amounts of
retained earnings in Edge corporations,
the limitation on the amount a bank can
invest in an Edge corporation may not
limit the overall risk to the bank’s
consolidated capital.
Two other commenters argued the
Board should look only at the capital of
the parent bank in setting limits under
the Edge corporation. The Board
believes, however, that activity limits
for Edge corporations should be tied to
the capital of both the Edge corporation
and the parent member bank, in order
to ensure that Edge corporations are not
a source of potential weakness to the
U.S. parent bank.
Securities Activities
Current Restrictions on Securities
Activities
Foreign subsidiaries of U.S. banking
organizations have been permitted
broad authority to underwrite and deal
in debt securities for over 25 years,
subject to the provision that the
securities must be included with loans
for purposes of compliance with the
parent bank’s lending limit. No separate
dollar limits have been placed on
underwriting and dealing in debt
securities.
Since 1979, Regulation K also has
specifically authorized foreign
subsidiaries of both U.S. banks and bank
holding companies to underwrite and
deal in equity securities outside the
United States, subject to certain
limitations and restrictions. These
activities were determined to be
permissible, within the applicable
limits, on two bases. First, it became
clear that it was necessary for U.S.
banking organizations to be able to
engage in these activities abroad, if they
were to compete successfully with
foreign banks in the provision of
services to foreign customers. Indeed,
for some time, virtually all the major
foreign competitors of U.S. banking
organizations have been foreign banks
that conduct equity securities activities

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either directly in the bank or in a
subsidiary of the bank. Thus, consistent
with the purposes underlying the Edge
Act and the BHC Act, there is clear
statutory authority for U.S. banking
organizations to engage in these
activities through subsidiaries abroad.
Second, in any event, the provisions of
the Glass-Steagall Act did not apply
extra-territorially to the operations of
foreign subsidiaries of U.S. banking
organizations.
While equity underwriting and
dealing have been permissible activities
for U.S. banking organizations’ foreign
subsidiaries for some time, as noted
above, the level of such activity is
subject to limits under Regulation K.
Restrictions currently applied to equity
securities underwriting and dealing
activities under Regulation K include
the following.
Underwriting limits—Through a
foreign subsidiary, an investor 3 may
underwrite equity securities in amounts
up to the lesser of $60 million or 25
percent of its tier 1 capital. These limits
do not include amounts covered by
binding commitments from subunderwriters or other purchasers. If the
underwriting is done in a subsidiary of
the member bank, the amount of the
uncovered underwriting must be
included in computing the bank’s single
borrower lending limit with respect to
the issuer.
Dealing limits—Through a foreign
subsidiary, an investor may hold a
dealing position in the equity securities
of any one issuer in amounts up to the
lesser of $30 million or 10 percent of its
tier 1 capital. An investor must include
any shares of a company held in an
affiliate’s dealing account in
determining compliance with any
percentage limits placed on ownership
of that company.
Aggregate limit—There is an aggregate
limit on the total amount of equity
securities that may be held in
investment and dealing accounts,
aggregating all shares held by
subsidiaries: for a bank holding
company, the limit is 25 percent of tier
1 capital; for an Edge corporation,4 the
limit is 100 percent of the Edge’s tier 1
capital.5
Prior review—Banking organizations
must submit to a review of their foreign
3 An investor for these purposes means an Edge
corporation, agreement corporation, bank holding
company, member bank and any foreign bank
owned directly by a member bank.
4 Any foreign bank directly owned by a U.S. bank
is treated as an Edge corporation for purposes of its
limits.
5 Investments in companies must be added to any
shares of such companies held in the dealing
account for purposes of this limit.

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securities operations prior to engaging
in foreign equity securities activities to
the extent of these limits. They may also
seek Board approval for higher
underwriting limits, subject to certain
conditions.
Revisions of Equity Securities Authority
Equity Underwriting
’97 Proposal
Although, as discussed above, the
existing limits on underwriting equity
securities in Regulation K are expressed
both in terms of percentages of tier 1
capital of the investor and absolute
dollar limits, as a practical matter it has
been the dollar limits that have
constrained the extent to which U.S.
banking organizations may engage in
these activities through their foreign
subsidiaries. In the ’97 Proposal, the
Board noted the $60 million limit on
underwriting equity securities
significantly impedes the ability of U.S.
banking organizations to compete for
this business in foreign markets, where
securities underwriting is a service
routinely offered by local banks. At the
same time, the risks associated with the
activity suggest that such a stringent
limit is not required for safety and
soundness purposes for well-capitalized
and well-managed banking
organizations. While initial
underwriting commitments may involve
large sums, in most cases by the time
the underwriting goes to market, large
portions of the exposure have been
passed on to sub-underwriters or
presold. Thus, in most cases, the initial
underwriting commitment substantially
overstates the risk being assumed.
In order to reduce further these
constraints, the Board proposed in 1997
to replace the dollar limits for
underwriting activity with limits based
solely on percentages of the investor’s
tier 1 capital for well-capitalized and
well-managed organizations. The Board
considered that, if a banking
organization is well-capitalized and
well-managed, tying the underwriting
limits solely to capital levels would
have the benefit of more closely linking
the limits to the ability of the company
to support the activity. It would also
provide U.S. banking organizations with
greater flexibility in responding to
changing market conditions, because the
amount of capital devoted to an activity
is, after meeting regulatory constraints,
determined by the firm.
Accordingly, the Board proposed to
amend Regulation K in relation to those
banking organizations that are wellcapitalized and well-managed by
removing the existing dollar limits
applicable to equity underwriting

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activities, and instead providing that
such activities would be limited to
percentages of the investor’s tier 1
capital. For well-capitalized and wellmanaged organizations, the Board
proposed applicable limits to be
determined as follows.6 In relation to
securities activities of subsidiaries of
bank holding companies, their limits
would be determined by reference to
percentages of the tier 1 capital of the
holding company. The Board proposed
that limits applicable to such activities
undertaken by subsidiaries of Edge and
agreement corporations, as well as
foreign banks that may be direct
subsidiaries of member banks, would be
determined by reference to the tier 1
capital of the parent bank as well as to
the tier 1 capital of the bank subsidiary.
More specifically, limits for
underwriting exposure to a single
company would be established at 15
percent of the bank holding company’s
tier 1 capital for its subsidiaries and, for
subsidiaries of Edge corporations, the
lesser of three percent of tier 1 capital
of the bank or 15 percent of the tier 1
capital of the Edge.
Under the ’97 Proposal, these limits
on underwriting exposure to a single
company would be applied on an
aggregate basis. A bank holding
company’s limit would include all
underwriting exposure to one issuer by
all of the holding company’s direct and
indirect subsidiaries, including
exposures held through its bank
subsidiaries. The bank’s and Edge’s
limits would include all exposures held
by their respective subsidiaries. The
Board proposed, however, that this
expanded underwriting authority would
be available to U.S. banking
organizations only if each of the bank
holding company, bank, and Edge or
agreement corporation qualify as wellcapitalized and well-managed.7
For organizations that fail to meet the
well-capitalized and well-managed
criteria, the Board proposed that the
existing dollar limits (i.e., $60 million)
on commitments by an investor and its
affiliates for the shares of an
organization would be retained.
The Board proposed that, in order to
engage in such activities, all banking
organizations would be required to
implement internal systems and
controls adequate to ensure proper risk
management. Controls would have to be
6 The Board proposed that existing dollar limits
would be retained for companies that are not wellcapitalized and well-managed.
7 The Board proposed that what, if any, action
should be taken in relation to banking
organizations’ limits if they ceased to be wellcapitalized and well-managed would be addressed
on a case-by-case basis through supervisory action.

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in place to assure that underwriting
positions do not result in violations of
limits on securities held in the trading
account or exceed the parent bank’s
lending limits when the underwriting
positions are combined with other
credit exposures. Sanctions (such as
temporary suspension of underwriting
authority) may be imposed for
violations of such limits.
Final Rule on Equity Underwriting
Limits.
The Board continues to believe that
there is a strong competitive need for
liberalization of the $60 million
Regulation K limit on equity
underwriting. Subsidiaries of Edge
corporations have been able to gain
some underwriting business through
obtaining commitments in advance from
subunderwriters in order to reduce their
own exposure to $60 million, but the
limit clearly is a material constraint.
Underwriting abroad continues to be a
business that is conducted by local
banking firms and does not lend itself
readily to cross-border activity, thus
requiring foreign subsidiaries of U.S.
banks to compete with much larger local
competitors.
Further, as noted above, the risks
associated with equity underwriting
activities suggest that stringent limits
are not required for safety and
soundness purposes for well-capitalized
and well-managed banking
organizations. Although the percentage
limits proposed in the ’97 Proposal
would significantly increase the amount
of underwriting authorized under
Regulation K, underwriting is a shorter
term activity than, e.g., dealing.
Moreover, under Regulation K, positions
undertaken in connection with an
underwriting and unplaced after 90
days must be moved to the dealing
account and counted against the dealing
limit. Consequently, the exposure of the
banking organization to the activity is
minimized.
Commenters strongly supported the
Board’s proposed liberalization of the
equity underwriting limits, and made a
few additional suggestions. One
commenter recommended that the
proposed underwriting limits be
doubled. Another expressed concern
that the proposed limits might result in
some Edge corporations having less
underwriting authority than the existing
$60 million limit. Some commenters
also objected to the disparity between
the limits proposed for BHC and bank
subsidiaries.
The Board does not believe further
expansion of the underwriting limits
beyond those proposed is warranted,
particularly given that portions of an

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54351

underwriting that are covered by
binding commitments obtained from
subunderwriters or other purchasers are
not counted in determining compliance
with the limits. U.S. banking
organizations wishing to engage in
underwriting equity securities in
amounts larger than those permitted
under Regulation K may do so by
qualifying for GLB authority. The Board
also continues to believe it is
appropriate to tie the expanded limits to
the investor’s capital. If the
underwriting limit resulting from an
Edge’s capital is considered to be too
low, it is of course open to the
organization to increase its capital and
thereby increase its limit.8
Commenters also suggested that the
existing additional Regulation K
underwriting authority, whereby an
organization may request the Board’s
approval to exceed the $60 million
underwriting limit so long as the excess
amount is deducted from capital and the
organization would remain strongly
capitalized after such deduction, also
should be extended to the expanded
limits. The Board does not believe it is
appropriate to retain this authority in
view of the significant increase in the
underwriting limits that would be
otherwise authorized under the
expanded limits. Moreover, because the
limits are determined by reference to
capital, banking organizations seeking
greater underwriting authority may
expand their limits by increasing their
capital.
For these reasons, the Board is
adopting the expanded underwriting
limits for well-capitalized and wellmanaged banking organizations set out
in the ’97 Proposal essentially without
change. As proposed, the limits would
apply to all underwriting exposures
held under authority of Regulation K by
the relevant entity and all of its
subsidiaries (e.g., a BHC’s limit would
include all underwriting exposures to
one issuer by all of the holding
company’s direct and indirect
subsidiaries, including exposures held
through its bank subsidiaries, and a
8 Commenters recommended that banking
organizations also should be able to net
underwriting exposures for purposes of determining
compliance with the limits. As a practical matter,
Regulation K presently essentially authorizes
netting for these purposes given that, where the
underwriter is covered by binding commitments
from subunderwriters or other purchasers, such
commitments are excluded in determining
compliance with the limits. Compliance with the
limits will continue to proceed on this basis. The
Board does not believe a persuasive case has been
made for any additional netting authority in
relation to equity underwriting at this time.

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bank subsidiary’s limits would include
all exposures held by its subsidiaries).9
Equity Dealing
’97 Proposal
The Board also proposed for comment
liberalization of dealing activities for
well-capitalized and well-managed
banking organizations. As with
underwriting limits, the proposed
expansion of dealing limits would have
been based on percentages of capital of
the organization and, thus, on the ability
of the organization to accommodate risk.
The Board also noted its belief that
dealing activities presented somewhat
greater risk of loss than underwriting,
which resulted in somewhat more
restrictive limits being proposed for
dealing activities relative to
underwriting activities.
For well-capitalized and wellmanaged organizations, the Board
proposed to remove the current dollar
limits and revise the existing percentage
of capital limits as follows. First, in
order to provide diversification in the
trading account, the Board proposed a
limit on holdings of any one stock in the
trading account of 10 percent of the tier
1 capital of the bank holding company
for its subsidiaries and, for subsidiaries
of an Edge corporation, the lesser of two
percent of the bank’s tier 1 capital or 10
percent of the Edge corporation’s tier 1
capital.
Second, the Board proposed an
aggregate limit applicable to all holdings
of equities in the trading accounts of all
direct and indirect subsidiaries
authorized pursuant to Subpart A.10
Without such an aggregate ceiling, the
Board was concerned that a banking
organization could have excessive
exposure to movements in equity
markets. The Board proposed aggregate
limits of 50 percent of the bank holding
company’s tier 1 capital for its
subsidiaries and, in the case of an
Edge’s subsidiaries, the lesser of 10
percent of the tier 1 capital of the bank
or 50 percent of the Edge’s tier 1 capital.
The Board proposed that the limits on
equity dealing would apply to net
positions across legal vehicles held,
directly or indirectly, by the regulated
9 Additional comments relevant to the Board’s
final action on equity underwriting authority also
were submitted with regard to the Board’s proposed
criteria for determining whether banking
organizations would be considered to be wellcapitalized and well-managed for purposes of the
expanded authority, as well as with regard to the
two-tiered capital test for Edge corporations for
purposes of determining eligibility. Each of these
issues is discussed separately.
10 As at present, shares held as an investment
pursuant to Subpart A also would be included in
determining compliance with the applicable
aggregate limits.

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entity to which the limit applied (that
is, the bank holding company, the bank
or the Edge corporation). Long equity
positions in a single stock could be
netted against short positions in the
same stock and against derivatives
referenced to the same stock.11 For
purposes of the aggregate limits, all
physical and derivative long positions
could be netted against physical and
derivative short positions. It was further
proposed that, for purposes of
measuring compliance with these limits,
banks would be permitted to use
internal models to calculate the value of
derivative positions used to offset
exposures and net dealing positions in
individual stocks, as well as the value
of total net equity holdings in the
trading account.12 The Board
considered that the adequacy of such
models is subject to review during the
exam process, and proposed that no
special review would be required for
their use in connection with the
proposed limits on dealing activities.
For organizations that failed to satisfy
the well-capitalized and well-managed
criteria, the Board proposed to retain the
existing dollar limit on individual
shares held in the trading account (i.e.,
$30 million), which would be calculated
in the same manner as at present. As
noted, it is generally the dollar limits
that currently constrain organizations in
their ability to conduct these activities.
This is because, at present, only the
largest banking organizations are
engaged in these activities. The Board
noted, however, that in the future a
relatively small organization may seek
to enter these lines of business and, for
it, exposures of $30 or $60 million may
be large relative to its capital. The Board
therefore also sought comment on
whether, in addition to dollar limits,
limits based on percentage of capital
also should be adopted for organizations
that are not well-capitalized and wellmanaged in order to address the relative
exposure of such organizations to these
activities.
In addition, for organizations that are
not well-capitalized and well-managed,
the Board also proposed an aggregate
limit on shares held in the trading
account, including all dealing positions
and investments held pursuant to
Regulation K authority, of 25 percent of
11 The Board also proposed that a basket of stocks,
specifically segregated by the banking organization
as an offset to a position in a stock index derivative
product, as computed by the bank’s internal model,
may be netted as a whole against the stock index.
12 Currently, the use of internal models in
computing net positions in stocks is subject to prior
Board review and the limitation that no net long
position in a security shall be deemed to have been
reduced through netting by more than 75 percent.

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the holding company’s capital for its
subsidiaries and, for subsidiaries of
Edges and any foreign bank held
directly by a member bank, the lesser of
5 percent of the bank’s tier 1 capital or
25 percent of the Edge’s tier 1 capital.
These limits were proposed on the basis
that they would be half of those
applicable to organizations that were
well-capitalized and well-managed.
The Board also sought comment on
whether, instead of imposing the limits
discussed above in relation to equity
underwriting and dealing activities by
subsidiaries of well-capitalized and
well-managed bank holding companies,
it would be appropriate to lift all limits
on these activities for such entities
except for the limits on individual
stocks held in the trading account
discussed above (i.e., 10 percent of the
holding company’s tier 1 capital). The
Board considered that, at a minimum,
this limit should be imposed on holding
companies in order to assure
diversification in individual stock
holdings. Under this alternative,
banking organizations also would be
required to implement internal systems
and controls adequate to ensure proper
risk management and that underwriting
positions do not result in violations of
limits on investments in any one
company.
Developments Since the ’97 Proposal
Since the time the Board issued the
’97 Proposal for public comment, the
statutory and regulatory environment
governing the equity dealing activities
of U.S. banking organizations, as well as
the market demand for such services,
have changed significantly. One
significant change noted above was the
enactment and implementation of GLB.
Under GLB, FHCs may engage in
unlimited equity dealing activities.
While the GLB Act did not make any
revisions to the Edge Act, the Board
believes that it demonstrates a
Congressional intent that significant
equity dealing activities should be
conducted through FHC powers, absent
a competitive need for U.S. banking
organizations to engage in such
activities through bank subsidiaries.
A second important change since the
’97 Proposal has been the dramatic
growth in the equity markets over the
past few years. The growth in demand
in the U.S. market for equity securities
since the early 1990s, growing
acceptance of equity investments by
European investors since the
establishment of the Euro, and the
global equity market volatility of the
past several years have combined with
advances in financial engineering to
create significant customer demand for

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equity derivative instruments. In
particular, the wide variety of
sophisticated investment strategies
employed by institutional investors and
hedge funds, as well as the increasing
focus of financial institutions on
providing high net worth private
banking clients with sophisticated
portfolio diversification, hedging, and
stock option monetization services, have
translated into increasing volumes of
equity derivatives at global banking
organizations. For example, from
December 31, 1996 to December 31,
2000, the notional value of equity
derivatives held by U.S. banking
organizations has more than tripled to
roughly $940 billion. In meeting this
demand, institutions generally avoid
taking significant net open equity
positions and hedge their customer
equity derivative transactions either
with other equity derivatives or with
physical securities.
Finally, although, as noted above,
GLB did not expand the authority of
banks to acquire equity securities, the
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency (OCC) determined last year
that several national banks could take
positions in equity securities solely to
hedge bank permissible, customerdriven equity derivative transactions, as
an activity incidental to the business of
banking. The OCC imposed no
quantitative limit on such equity
positions, but rendered the banks’
authority to take such positions subject
to the following constraints:
(a) The banks committed that they
will use equities solely for hedging and
not for speculative purposes;
(b) The banks will not take
anticipatory or maintain residual
positions in equities except as necessary
to the orderly establishment or
unwinding of a hedging position;
(c) The banks may not acquire
equities for hedging purposes that
constitute more than 5 percent of a class
of stock of any issuer; and
(d) Banks must obtain OCC
supervisory approval prior to engaging
in this activity in order to demonstrate
that they have an appropriate risk
management process in place.
These developments, along with all
comments received on the ’97 Proposal,
have been taken into account by the
Board in taking action on the final rule.
Final Rule on Equity Dealing Limits
Equity Securities Acquired To Hedge
Equity Derivatives
Existing Regulation K and the ’97
Proposal both proceed generally on the
basis that acquisition of shares of a
company by a subsidiary of a U.S. bank

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must be authorized by and conform to
limits established for dealing in shares
of a single issuer and limits applicable
to portfolio investments. In other words,
both presume that all such acquisitions
of equity securities must conform to
Regulation K limits because, absent the
authority of the Federal Reserve Act and
Regulation K, such acquisitions of
shares of nonfinancial companies would
be impermissible for the bank and its
subsidiaries. The OCC’s recent
determinations, however, render the
Regulation K limits largely irrelevant for
national banks with respect to their
equity derivatives business.
Regulation K, however, also presently
authorizes for both subsidiaries of bank
holding companies and subsidiaries of
member banks abroad ‘‘commercial and
other banking activities’’, which
encompass all activities in which banks
are permitted to engage in the United
States. 12 CFR 211.5(d)(1). Accordingly,
the Board takes this opportunity to
clarify that the effect of the
determination that banks may take
positions in equity securities solely to
hedge bank permissible, customerdriven equity derivative transactions as
an activity incidental to the business of
banking is to render this activity
‘‘commercial or other banking activity’’
for purposes of Regulation K. The
consequence of this change is that, as an
otherwise permissible banking activity,
positions taken in equity securities for
this purpose may be excluded in
determining compliance with the
separate Regulation K dealing limits, so
long as taking such positions continues
to be bank permissible and all
constraints placed upon the conduct of
this activity in determining its
permissibility are observed, namely:
(a) The equities are used solely for
hedging and not for speculative
purposes;
(b) no anticipatory or residual
positions in equities will be acquired or
maintained, except as necessary to the
orderly establishment or unwinding of a
hedging position;
(c) no equities may be acquired for
hedging purposes that constitute more
than 5 percent of a class of stock of any
issuer; and
(d) the banking organization has
obtained approval from its primary
federal regulator prior to engaging in
such hedging practices in order to
demonstrate that they have appropriate
risk management processes in place.
The Board is concerned, however,
that the first two constraints imposed by
the OCC on the conduct of this activity
(specifically, requiring the equities to be
used solely for hedging and not for
speculative purposes, and limiting

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54353

residual positions to those necessary to
the orderly establishment or unwinding
of a hedging position) are ambiguous
and potentially difficult to apply,
particularly in light of the generally
integrated nature of equity derivatives
business. Indeed, the Board notes that it
is usually the case that, even where a
bank seeks to fully hedge equity
derivatives with physical securities,
residual positions will arise. It also is
not unusual for traders in this line of
business to seek to maximize returns by
taking a view on price movements of the
underlying security at the same time as
putting in place the hedges necessary to
cover the unwanted portion of
derivative exposures. For this reason,
the Board has concluded that, where
after full netting and offset of equity
securities against derivatives any
residual positions in a single issuer
remain, the value of all such residual
positions as calculated by the
organization’s internal models must be
included in determining the
organization’s compliance with the
dealing limit, as discussed further
below.
The Board notes that the effect of this
clarification is to place the constraints
of the Regulation K dealing limits on
those activities involving the acquisition
of equity securities that are not bank
permissible. Any subsequent regulatory
or legislative determination that
acquiring equity securities to hedge
bank permissible equity derivatives is
not a bank permissible activity would
have the effect of rendering all such
positions subject again to the dealing
limits.
Equity Dealing Limits
Comments on the ’97 Proposal
generally supported the Board’s
proposed expansion of the equity
dealing limits for well-capitalized, wellmanaged organizations.13 As noted
above, however, in light of the
enactment of the GLB Act expanding
authority to engage in this activity, the
13 Some commenters argued that banking
organizations should be able to exceed individual
and aggregate dealing limits, provided the amount
in excess of the limits was deducted from capital
and, after deduction, the organization remained
well-capitalized. Other commenters were concerned
that the proposed limits tied to capital might
actually result in a decrease in dealing authority,
and recommended higher limits. Another
commenter noted that the terms ‘‘shares’’ and
‘‘equity’’ are both used in the ’97 Proposal and
recommended using ‘‘shares’’ to ensure that
convertible debt and participating loans are not
included in the limits. In view of its conclusions
regarding the absence of justification for any
significant expansion of dealing authority under
Regulation K, the Board rejects these suggestions.
The Board does wish to clarify that convertible debt
prior to conversion and participating loans are not
encompassed within the dealing limit.

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Board no longer believes it is
appropriate to increase the equity
dealing limits under Regulation K.
Instead, the Board considers that GLB
authority should be the vehicle for any
significant increase in equity dealing
authority for subsidiaries of bank
holding companies and of banks, unless
concerns regarding the ability of U.S.
banking organizations to compete in the
provision of financial services abroad
otherwise support additional
liberalization under Regulation K. The
Board is of the view that no such
concerns appear to be raised in relation
to dealing activities such as marketmaking and proprietary trading.
To the contrary, with respect to
market-making, a limit of $30–40
million per single issuer appears
generally consistent with being able to
make a market in a stock, which is
necessary to being competitive in
foreign securities markets. With respect
to proprietary or speculative positions,
the Board considers that this is not an
area that should be the subject of
liberalization under Regulation K. Any
banking organization that wishes to take
larger speculative positions than
Regulation K allows can do so without
limit in an FHC subsidiary or a financial
subsidiary of the bank.
Accordingly, the Board does not
consider that there is sufficient
justification at this time for any
significant increase in the single issuer
dealing limit. However, the Board
believes it would be appropriate to
make a small incremental increase in
the equity dealing limit, raising it from
$30 million to $40 million, in
recognition of the increased experience
of organizations engaged in this activity
and the fact that the $30 million limit
was adopted 10 years ago. This
approach is consistent with the Board’s
action in the past.
As noted above, all residual positions
in equity securities of a single issuer
resulting from bank-permissible equity
derivatives business must be included
in calculating compliance with the $40
million limit. Additionally, while
underwriting commitments and shares
held for up to 90 days in connection
with an underwriting would be
excluded from these limits, positions
unplaced after 90 days must be moved
to the dealing account and counted
against the dealing limit.
Otherwise, the Board has determined
that the existing dealing authority
should remain essentially unchanged.14
This would include the existing 25
14 As discussed further below, however, the
Board has adopted the expanded netting authority
proposed in 1997 with a few minor changes.

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percent constraint on the availability of
derivative hedges as a means of
reducing net long positions in physical
securities for purposes of compliance
with the single issuer limit. More
specifically, under existing Regulation
K, even if an organization has full
netting authority and its net long
positions in physical securities of a
single company are fully hedged by
derivative instruments referenced to the
same security, $.25 of each $1 in net
long physical securities nevertheless
continues to count toward the $30
million single issuer limit. As at
present, this additional limit or
constraint will only apply to net long
positions in physical securities after
longs and shorts are netted, and
additional derivative hedges may reduce
net long positions in physical securities
by up to 75 percent. The increase in
dealing limit to $40 million will result
in an overall cap on net long positions
in physical securities of $160 million
even where the positions are fully
hedged. The Board has determined that,
going forward, this additional constraint
on dealing activity will only apply to
net long positions in physical securities
held under Regulation K dealing
authority, not to physical securities
acquired in connection with bank
permissible hedging transactions.
Netting and Otherwise Determining
Compliance With Dealing Limits
The Board has determined that it
should adopt one additional aspect of
the ’97 Proposal as it would apply to
equity securities activities, namely,
allowing netting based on internal
models for purposes of determining
compliance with the single issuer
dealing limit. Comments submitted
were overwhelmingly in support of the
use of internal models for this purpose.
Thus, consistent with the ’97
Proposal, the equity dealing limit will
apply to net positions across legal
vehicles held, directly or indirectly, by
the regulated entity to which the limit
is applicable (that is, the bank holding
company or the bank subsidiary). Long
equity positions in a single stock may be
netted against short positions in the
same stock and against derivatives
referenced to the same stock. Also
consistent with the ’97 Proposal, a
basket of stocks, specifically segregated
by the banking organization as an offset
to a position in a stock index derivative
product, as computed by the bank’s
internal model, may be netted as a
whole against the stock index. For
purposes of the aggregate equity limits,
all physical and derivative long
positions may be netted against physical
and derivative short positions.

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Organizations may use their internal
models to calculate the value of
derivative positions used to offset
exposures and net dealing positions in
individual stocks, as well as the value
of total net equity holdings in the
trading account.
For those banking organizations that
wish to rely on netting based on their
internal models for purposes of
determining compliance with the
dealing limits, the valuations generated
by those models based upon current
market values of the organization’s
residual positions in a single issuer will
count toward the single issuer dealing
limit. The Board considers it only
appropriate that, if a banking
organization uses its internal models for
purposes of netting and valuing residual
exposures in its equity derivatives line
of business, it must use current market
values (and not historical cost) for
calculating compliance with the dealing
limits under Regulation K for all of its
equities lines of business. The
organization may not ‘‘mix and match’’
the use of historical cost and mark-tomarket valuations where internal
models are used for these purposes.
However, the Board notes that netting
based on internal models is not the
mandatory method of compliance with
the dealing limit. In this regard,
Regulation K dealing limits presently
encompass only net long positions in
physical securities, after netting long
and short positions in the same security.
As is presently the case, organizations
not wishing to determine compliance
with the dealing limits by netting and
offsetting positions in physical
securities against positions in
derivatives referenced to the same
security may continue to determine
compliance with the $40 million
dealing limit solely by reference to the
historical cost of its net long physical
positions.
Commenters requested clarification of
one aspect of the ’97 Proposal regarding
netting, namely, whether positions in a
single stock would qualify for netting so
long as the hedge for the position is held
directly or indirectly by the entity to
which the limit applies (i.e., somewhere
within the investor chain, but not
necessarily in the same legal entity
holding the related investment.) The
Board confirms that netting of positions
on this basis will be permissible. This
approach reflects the market or
economic risk of positions held by the
entity on a consolidated basis.
Finally, the ’97 Proposal would have
allowed netting based on a banking
organization’s internal models without
prior Board approval. The Board
continues to believe that prior approval

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should not be required to engage in
netting through the use of internal
models for this purpose. After further
consideration, however, the Board
believes prior notice of an organization’s
intention to use its internal models for
this purpose is appropriate so that the
Board may object if it considers the
models inadequate for any reason.
Banking organizations that have
previously received approval under
Regulation K to engage in netting
through the use of their internal models
may continue to do so without
additional notice to the Board.15
Authority To Engage in Equity
Underwriting and Dealing Activities
In the ’97 Proposal, the Board noted
that its approval currently is required to
engage in underwriting and dealing in
equity securities pursuant to Regulation
K and sought comment on whether
banking organizations that are wellcapitalized and well-managed should be
allowed to engage in equity securities
activities at the proposed expanded
levels without seeking prior Board
approval. In response to this request,
commenters urged allowing U.S.
banking organizations meeting the wellcapitalized, well-managed criteria to
engage in the expanded activities
without Board approval, particularly if
the organization already has experience
in such activities under Regulation Y or
K.
As discussed above, the Board has
adopted the ’97 Proposal with regard to
expanded equity underwriting authority
for organizations that are wellcapitalized and well-managed, but has
only increased the equity dealing
authority from $30 to $40 million. The
latter increase in authority will be
available to all organizations regardless
of whether they meet the wellcapitalized, well-managed criteria. The
Board has concluded that, in view of the
significant liberalization in
underwriting authority under
Regulation K, all organizations that wish
to engage in the expanded underwriting
activities must first provide 30 days’
prior notice to the Board. With regard to
the increased dealing authority, all
organizations that wish to engage in
dealing activities under the $40 million
limit also must provide 30 days’ prior
notice to the Board, unless the
15 In response to comments, the Board notes that
organizations would not be required to create a new
model separate from existing internal models used
for purposes of market risk assessment in order to
engage in netting under Regulation K. Indeed, the
Board would expect that organizations would use
for this purpose the same internal models otherwise
currently employed for purposes of risk
management.

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organization already has received the
Board’s consent to engage in dealing
activities under the $30 million limit.
Organizations presently engaging in
dealing activities under the $30 million
limit may avail themselves of the
additional $10 million in dealing
authority without prior notice to the
Board.
Venture Capital Activities Through
Portfolio Investments
Current Restrictions
Regulation K currently allows U.S.
banking organizations to make portfolio
investments, that is, limited,
noncontrolling investments in foreign
commercial and industrial companies.
This authority was adopted to enhance
the competitiveness of U.S. banking
organizations by increasing the range of
financial services they may provide
abroad. Many foreign financial
institutions, including foreign banks,
engage in venture capital activities, at
times in connection with the provision
of other financial services to the
company.
’97 Proposal
The Board proposed in the ’97
Proposal that existing dollar limits on
portfolio investments made by wellcapitalized, well-managed bank holding
companies under the Board’s general
consent authority would be replaced by
limits tied solely to a percentage of the
holding company’s tier 1 capital. More
specifically, such bank holding
companies (and their nonbanking
subsidiaries) would be permitted to
invest up to 2 percent of the holding
company’s tier 1 capital in any
individual investment and would be
subject to an aggregate limit of 25
percent of the holding company’s tier 1
capital for all such investments. In
determining compliance with the
individual limit, shares in such
companies held in the trading account
by the investor and its affiliates under
Regulation K would be included.
For all other investors (i.e., Edge
corporations, foreign bank subsidiaries
of member banks, and bank holding
companies that are adequately
capitalized but fail to meet the wellcapitalized and well-managed
standards), the Board proposed
retaining limits of $25 million on
investments in any one organization
under general consent authority,
although larger investments would
continue to be eligible for prior notice
or specific approval treatment on a caseby-case basis. An aggregate limit on
such investments would be imposed.
For bank holding company investors,

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that limit would be 25 percent of tier 1
capital, and for Edge or foreign bank
investors, it would be the lesser of 5
percent of the parent bank’s tier 1
capital or 25 percent of the Edge’s tier
1 capital.
With respect to the limit on voting
shares in the target company, the Board
proposed that investors would be
permitted to make noncontrolling
investments in up to 24.9 percent of a
company’s voting shares. These
investments would only be permissible
if, as at present, the investor does not
control the company in which the
investment is made. Accordingly, the
Board noted an investor may not: (i)
Control a majority of the board of
directors or have disproportionate
representation on the board; (ii) have a
management contract with the company
or exercise veto power over its actions;
or (iii) use any other means to control
the operations of the company.
The Board requested comment on all
of the foregoing revisions to the
portfolio investment authority. It
specifically requested comment on the
relative risk of portfolio investments
and whether there is a competitive need
for foreign subsidiaries of banks also to
have expanded authority in relation to
such investments.
Final Rule on Portfolio Investment
Authority
Comments submitted on this aspect of
the Board’s ’97 Proposal strongly
supported the liberalization proposed in
relation to limits applicable to portfolio
investments made by bank holding
companies, as well as in relation to the
proposed increase in permissible
individual investments up to 24.9
percent of voting shares. Certain of the
comments argued that the proposed
liberalization for bank holding
companies also should be extended to
bank subsidiaries, and various
clarifications were requested on the
interaction between the proposed
changes and the existing rule.
Clarification of these matters is
provided below.
As discussed above, however, the
major development in this area since the
Board issued the ’97 Proposal was
enactment of the GLB Act, which
authorizes FHCs to make merchant
banking investments without regard to
dollar limits or geographic restrictions.
The Board notes that expanded
merchant banking authority under GLB
is only available to holding company
subsidiaries; such authority may not be
exercised in the bank chain.
The Board has therefore reconsidered
the ’97 Proposal in the light of passage
of GLB and has determined not to adopt

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the proposal to increase the general
consent limit and the permissible
percentage of shares for portfolio
investments. The Board considers that
the GLB Act established the framework
for engaging in merchant banking
activities generally, and Regulation K
should not establish an alternative
framework for expansion of this activity
absent a compelling competitive need.
The Board does not believe that any
such compelling competitive need has
been demonstrated. Bank holding
companies wishing to engage in
merchant banking activities other than
under the existing constraints of
Regulation K should seek FHC status.
Investment Limits
A number of additional comments
were submitted that are also relevant to
the operation of existing provisions of
Regulation K in relation to portfolio
investments. In particular, certain
commenters suggested that investors
should be permitted to make portfolio
investment under Regulation K in
excess of the $25 million general
consent limit, so long as the amount in
excess were deducted from capital.
Other commenters suggested that
organizations should be permitted to
use netting for purposes of calculating
compliance with portfolio investment
limits. The Board considers that neither
of these changes would be appropriate
in view of the nature of portfolio
investments and the availability of other
authority for making such investments.
A few commenters also requested
clarification regarding whether the
calculation of limits on portfolio
investments will continue to be on an
historical cost basis. One expressed the
concern that an increase in the aggregate
portfolio limit would be necessary if
these investments would be valued at
current market value, not historical cost.
The Board considers that limits on
portfolio investments should be
calculated consistent with their
treatment for capital purposes. More
specifically, the amount of the
investment subject to the Regulation K
limit will equal the carrying value of the
investment, or the value of the
investment on the balance sheet,
reduced by any unrealized gains on the
investment that are reflected in the
carrying value but are excluded from the
organizations’ tier 1 capital.
Commenters also opposed combining
portfolio investments with dealing
positions, either for purposes of a single
company limit or aggregate limit, noting
that these activities have important
differences and are managed through
separate lines of business. They argued
that portfolio investments generally are

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made with longer time horizons and
tend to involve privately held
companies, whereas dealing positions
generally are taken for short periods of
time and involve public companies. The
Board considers these points to be wellfounded. In view of these comments and
the Board’s determination not to adopt
any significant liberalization either in
relation to portfolio investments or
dealing authority, the Board believes it
is appropriate to amend the single
company limits for purposes of portfolio
investments and for equity dealing such
that the limits will apply to each
activity separately. However, the Board
notes that all equity shares held in a
single company, including those held in
connection with dealing activity (but
excluding underwriting commitments
and shares held for up to 90 days
pursuant to an underwriting), must be
combined for purposes of determining
compliance with the control limitations
of: (i) section 4(c)(6) of the BHC Act
(with respect to U.S. companies); and
(ii) the voting and total equity limits for
portfolio investments under Regulation
K (with respect to foreign companies).
Additionally, the Board is retaining
an overall aggregate equity limit that
will apply to all shares held under
Regulation K portfolio investment and
dealing authority, for the reasons
discussed in the section below entitled
‘‘Aggregate Equity Limits for Dealing
and Portfolio Investments.’’
Finally, commenters recommended
that the Board specifically grandfather
any investments that might be rendered
impermissible by revision to Regulation
K, or include a phase-in period for
divestiture of such investments. The
Board notes that, in view of the fact that
it is not diminishing in any way existing
authority in relation to these
investments, no issues relating to the
need for grandfathering arise.
Percentage of Permissible Voting Shares
Commenters expressed support for
the ‘97 Proposal which would have
increased the percentage of voting
shares permissible for portfolio
investments from 19.9 percent to 24.9
percent. A few commenters
recommended higher levels of
permissible voting shares, as well as
increasing the 40 percent nonvoting
equity limit, arguing that such increases
would better enable U.S. banking
organizations to compete with foreign
financial institutions.
As noted above, FHCs may now make
investments in nonfinancial companies
under merchant banking authority
without limitation as to the percentage
of voting or nonvoting shares held and
without restriction geographically.

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Consequently, the Board believes it is
no longer appropriate to alter in any
way the existing Regulation K limits on
voting and nonvoting shares of portfolio
investment companies. U.S. banking
organizations wishing to invest in
nonfinancial companies outside the
United States beyond the existing limits
of Regulation K should do so through
obtaining FHC status. In these
circumstances, the existing Regulation K
voting and nonvoting equity limits on
qualifying portfolio investments do not
appear to affect the ability of U.S.
banking organizations to compete
abroad.
As noted above, portfolio investments
are only permissible within these limits
if the investor otherwise also does not
control the company in which the
investment is made. In this regard,
several commenters urged the Board to
clarify that restrictive and negative
covenants, such as are commonly found
in senior debt, also are permissible in
connection with portfolio investments
on the basis that they would not give the
investor control over the company. The
Board believes that such covenants may
be permissible so long as their purpose
is to protect the minority rights of the
investor. However, such covenants may
not be used as a means to obtain control
over a portfolio investment by
preventing the company from making
normal business decisions. For example,
the Board considers that it would be
inconsistent with the mandatory
noncontrolling nature of portfolio
investments for investors to have the
right to veto a company’s choices for
senior management positions. Should
questions of this nature arise in
connection with a proposed portfolio
investment, banking organizations
should seek the views of Board staff as
to whether the proposed investment
would qualify as a portfolio investment.
In this regard, commenters suggested
that the Board should adopt for
Regulation K a process similar to that
adopted in Regulation Y in relation to
advisory opinions regarding the scope of
financial activities. The Board has
adopted this suggestion and will seek to
respond to requests for advisory
opinions under Regulation K within 45
days of receipt of a complete written
request, unless the request raises
significant policy issues.
Finally, another commenter sought
clarification as to whether the
proportionality test for directors should
be measured against the investor’s
voting interest or economic interest,
favoring the latter measure. The Board
believes that an investor in a portfolio
investment should have representation
on the board proportionate to its voting

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interest, and not economic interest, in
the company. More specifically, in view
of the restriction on voting shares held
to 19.9 percent, the Board would expect
that an investor would have no more
than one director for every five seats on
the board. In addition, an investor may
not have a disproportionate
participation on a board’s executive
committee.
‘‘Incidental’’ Activities in the United
States
’97 Proposal
In the ’97 Proposal, the Board
proposed one additional change related
to portfolio investments, primarily to
provide some relief to U.S. banking
organizations with regard to the U.S.
activities of their foreign portfolio
investments. As a result of limitations in
the Federal Reserve Act and the BHC
Act, U.S. banking organizations are
prohibited from investing in more than
5 percent of the voting shares of foreign
companies that engage in impermissible
activities in the United States other than
those activities that are an incident to
their international or foreign business.16
The Board previously has taken the
view that such permissible incidental
activities in the United States are
limited to those activities that the Board
has determined are permissible for Edge
corporations to conduct in the United
States.17
However, as discussed above,
companies in which portfolio
investments are made generally are
engaged in industrial or commercial
activities, which are not permissible
activities for Edge corporations.
Consequently, under Regulation K at
present, if a portfolio investment
company decides to engage in activities
in the United States, the U.S. banking
organization is forced to sell its interest
in the portfolio investment, even if
market considerations are inconsistent
with selling the shares at that time. This
divestiture would be required despite
the fact that the U.S. banking
organization, by reason of the
mandatory noncontrolling nature of
portfolio investments, is unlikely to be
in a position to influence the decision
to enter the U.S. market. In the ’97
Proposal, the Board expressed the
concern that, with the increasing
16 In particular, the Federal Reserve Act prohibits
investments in companies engaging in ‘‘the general
business of buying or selling goods, wares,
merchandise or commodities in the United States.’’
12 U.S.C. 615. Section 4(c)(13) investments under
the BHC Act are limited only by a requirement that
the company do ‘‘no business in the United States
except as incident to its international or foreign
business.’’
17 See 12 CFR 211.4(e).

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globalization of economies around the
world, this situation may become more
common in the future.
In order to address these changes in
circumstances and in view of the
minority nature of portfolio
investments, the Board proposed that,
consistent with the Federal Reserve Act
and the BHC Act, investors may retain
portfolio investment companies that
derive no more than 10 percent of their
total revenue from activities in the
United States that are not permissible
for Edge corporations to conduct in the
United States.
In proposing this change, the Board
noted the nature of portfolio
investments. In particular, most
portfolio investments are venture capital
investments that are not intended to be
permanent holdings of the banking
organization and instead are intended to
be sold after a period of time. In
addition, the preponderance of the
value of portfolio investments is derived
from their foreign business.
The Board invited comment on this
proposed change. It also sought
comment on what might be regarded as
an appropriate period for divestiture of
non-conforming investments, as well as
on whether a time limit should be
placed on the period for holding these
types of investments in view of their
supposedly medium-term nature.
Final Action
Commenters strongly endorsed the
Board’s proposed change in
interpretation of U.S. activities
considered ‘‘incidental’’ to international
or foreign activities for this purpose,
although some comments recommended
that Regulation K should allow portfolio
companies to derive a larger percentage
of their total revenues (e.g., 20 or 25
percent) from activities in the United
States. Some commenters recommended
that the Board employ a percentage of
total tangible assets test either in lieu of
or as an alternative to the revenues test,
suggesting that tangible assets are a
more stable indicator of the extent of a
company’s business in the United States
and are easier to measure.
The Board adopts the change as set
forth in the ’97 Proposal. Thus, for
purposes of determining whether a
portfolio investment may continue to be
held or must be divested, portfolio
investment companies that derive no
more than 10 percent of their total
revenue in the United States may be
considered to be engaged only in
business that is an incident to their
international or foreign business and
therefore may continue to be held under
portfolio investment authority. The
Board continues to believe that the 10

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54357

percent revenue limit is appropriate to
address globalization concerns and is
consistent with the provisions of the
Federal Reserve Act and the BHC Act.
The Board further considers that the
revenue test is a better indicator of the
level of U.S. activity, rather than the
amount of tangible assets in the United
States which may be more susceptible to
manipulation.
A few commenters requested
clarification of the operation of this
limit. In response to these requests, the
Board notes that revenue derived from
activities in the United States in its view
would include all revenue derived from
activities performed in U.S. offices, but
not business that may originate from the
United States but is performed offshore.
It is, of course, also the case that this
revenue test would only be applied to
U.S. activities of portfolio investments
that are not otherwise permissible for
Edge corporations to conduct in the
United States.
In response to the Board’s request for
comment on an appropriate divestiture
period for investments that exceed the
10 percent revenue limit, a number of
suggestions were made, including
allowing U.S. revenues of up to 40
percent for up to five years. Other
commenters variously suggested that the
Board should adopt existing debts
previously contracted (‘‘DPC’’) time
periods for divestiture; allow some other
specified period to divest (e.g., a six
month period, with an opportunity for
extensions of up to a total of two years);
or establish divestiture deadlines on a
case-by-case basis. The Board is
retaining the current Regulation K
requirement of a ‘‘prompt’’ divestiture
of all nonqualifying portfolio
investments, which allows for a case-bycase determination as to the appropriate
period of time within which an
impermissible investment must be
divested.
Aggregate Equity Limits for Dealing and
Portfolio Investments
In the ’97 Proposal, in view of the
significant liberalization in authority
proposed for bank holding companies in
relation to portfolio investments, an
aggregate limit on all portfolio
investments was proposed. The Board
also proposed an additional aggregate
equity limit that would apply to all
shares held as portfolio investments and
in connection with dealing activities.
The proposed aggregate limit for all
such investments for banking
organizations meeting the wellcapitalized and well-managed tests was:
BHC Subsidiaries: 50 percent of tier 1
capital.

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Bank Subsidiaries: The lesser of 10
percent of tier 1 capital of the bank, or
50 percent of the bank subsidiary’s tier
1 capital.
Underwriting commitments and
shares acquired pursuant to an
underwriting commitment and held for
less than 90 days were excluded from
the proposed aggregate equity limit.18
Commenters opposed the aggregation
of shares held as portfolio investments
with those held in connection with
dealing activity in determining
compliance with this limit, again
arguing that these are two separate lines
of business that should not be
aggregated. Commenters also opposed
the proposed reduction in the combined
aggregate limit for Edge corporation
investors, from the current 100 percent
of tier 1 capital to 50 percent of tier 1
capital, notwithstanding the ability to
net dealing positions and the exclusion
of underwriting commitments and
shares held for up to 90 days pursuant
to an underwriting.
In view of the fact that the Board has
determined that it will not adopt the
liberalization proposed in relation to
portfolio investments, it has also
decided not to adopt the separate limit
on total portfolio investments for any
given banking organization. In the
absence of expanded authority in this
area, no need arises for such a limit.
However, consistent with the
provisions of current Regulation K, the
Board continues to believe that an
aggregate equity limit is necessary with
respect to all shares held under
Regulation K (whether held under
portfolio investment authority or in
connection with dealing activity) in
companies engaged in activities that
would be impermissible for a subsidiary
or a joint venture under Regulation K.
Accordingly, the Board generally is
adopting the aggregate limits on equity
securities held under Regulation K
previously proposed. Consistent with
the ’97 Proposal, underwriting
commitments and shares held pursuant
to an underwriting commitment for up
to 90 days would be excluded from the
aggregate equity limit.
However, in light of comments
received, the Board is not adopting the
proposed reduction in the aggregate
limit for investors that are subsidiaries
of a member bank. Nevertheless, the
18 The Board also proposed aggregate limits for
investors that do not meet the well-capitalized and
well-managed standards of half that applicable to
well-capitalized and well-managed organizations
(i.e., 25 percent of tier 1 capital for bank holding
company subsidiaries, and, for bank subsidiaries,
the lesser of 5 percent of the parent bank’s tier 1
capital or 25 percent of the bank subsidiary’s tier
1 capital.

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Board continues to believe it is
important to tie the aggregate limit for
bank subsidiaries to the capital levels of
both the member bank and the bank
subsidiary investor. Accordingly, the
aggregate equity limit for subsidiaries of
banks will be the lesser of 20 percent of
the tier 1 capital of the member bank or
100 percent of the tier 1 capital of the
bank subsidiary.19
Commenters also requested
clarification on whether the aggregate
equity limits include: (i) only equity
securities held by the investor and its
downstream subsidiaries or securities
held by all its affiliates; and (ii) only
shares held under the authority of
Regulation K . The Board notes that,
with respect to a particular investor,
these limits will include all equity
securities held by the investor and its
downstream subsidiaries under
Regulation K authority, whether arising
in connection with portfolio
investments or dealing activity.20 Thus,
the aggregate equity limit will not
include investments in joint ventures or
subsidiaries under Regulation K, or
merchant banking or any other
investments made under authority other
than Regulation K.
One commenter recommended that
the Board permit aggregate dealing
positions to be calculated on a quarterly
average and suggested a ‘‘preclearance’’
program for additional authority beyond
the regulatory limits. The Board
considers that determining compliance
with these limits on the basis of a
quarterly average would be
inappropriate and potentially be subject
to considerable manipulation. As noted
above, should an organization wish to
engage in equity securities activities
without limit it should do so under FHC
status subject to the FHC qualifying
criteria. For these reasons, the Board
declines to adopt these proposals.
Insurance Activities
Reinsurance Proposal
Section 211.5(d)(16) of Regulation K
presently authorizes bank holding
companies to own foreign companies
that underwrite and reinsure life,
annuity, pension-fund related, and other
19 An additional comment recommended that the
aggregate equity limit should be expressed as a
percentage of assets, rather than as a percentage of
tier 1 capital. The Board believes that tying the
equity limit to tier 1 capital is a more appropriate
restriction on the level of aggregate equity activities
under Regulation K and therefore is not adopting
this recommendation.
20 The Board also notes that application of the
dealing limit on shares held in a single issuer will
also proceed on this same basis, except that shares
held as a portfolio investment will not be included
in determining compliance with the single
company dealing limit as discussed above.

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types of insurance, where the associated
risks have been previously determined
by the Board to be actuarially
predictable. Prompted by the Board’s
consideration in 1997 of a bank holding
company’s request, the Board requested
comment on whether the reinsurance
(via a retrocession agreement with an
unaffiliated offshore reinsurer) by a
foreign subsidiary of U.S. bank holding
company of all or a portion of the risk
of policies or annuities sold in the
United States by U.S. affiliates of the
bank holding company or unrelated
parties could be considered to fall
within this authority. It queried whether
the fact that the risk to be reinsured is
in the United States could cause the
activity to be considered located in the
United States, particularly given the
potentially significant involvement of
the bank holding company’s U.S.
affiliates.
Several insurance trade associations
opposed any expansion of authority in
this area. They argued that the
reinsurance activity necessarily would
be domestic because of its complete
dependence on U.S. insurance sales. In
addition, they suggested the reinsurance
activity would expose U.S. banks to
unnecessary risk and conflicts of
interests, be contrary to Board
precedent, transfer regulatory scrutiny
of domestically-originated risks from the
state regulators to less rigorous and
untested international regimes, and set
the stage for U.S. banking organizations
to underwrite and reinsure all types of
insurance through foreign subsidiaries.
Ultimately, they argued, any
liberalization in this area should come
from Congress, not the Board.
Several U.S. banking trade
associations and banking organizations
expressed support for expanded
authority as described in the ’97
Proposal. They emphasized that the
proposal would only modestly extend
an activity (i.e., underwriting and
reinsuring life insurance abroad) long
regarded as permissible by the Board. In
addition, they maintained that the
permissible U.S. insurance sales would
be only an incidental, and not a
primary, feature of an activity—
reinsurance—having an essentially
foreign character. They noted that many
activities in which U.S. banking
organizations are permitted to engage
abroad are related to their U.S. activities
(e.g., securities activities) and asserted
that the relation in this instance
between the reinsurance activity and the
U.S. insurance sales similarly should
not result in rejection of the proposed
activity. These commenters also argued
that the proposal would further the Edge
Act’s stated purpose of enhancing U.S.

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banking organizations’ competitiveness
abroad.
As noted above, the GLB Act was
enacted subsequent to the issuance of
the Board’s reinsurance proposal. The
GLB Act allows FHCs to conduct
insurance activities on a worldwide
basis and demonstrates a Congressional
preference for conducting such
activities through subsidiaries of FHCs.
The Board does not believe, and the
comments on the Board’s proposal have
not shown, that competitive concerns
require U.S. banking organizations to
proceed under Regulation K in the
conduct of this activity rather than GLB
authority. Accordingly, the Board
declines to adopt the reinsurance
proposal. As at present, however, a
banking organization may seek the
Board’s specific consent to engage in
insurance activities more expansive
than those expressly authorized under
the regulation.
Other Comments
Supporters of the Board’s reinsurance
proposal urged the Board to liberalize
Regulation K’s insurance provisions
further in several respects. First, they
recommended that the Board eliminate
the requirement that U.S. banks obtain
Board approval before engaging in
insurance activity through foreign
subsidiaries, asserting that banking
organizations should be given maximum
flexibility to determine how to structure
these activities. One commenter
suggested that the Board replace the
proposed prior approval requirement
with a 30-day prior notice requirement.
On balance, the Board believes it is
appropriate to continue to require prior
Board approval for such activities.
Further, absent demonstration of a
compelling need for competitive
reasons, the Board expects insurance
underwriting (other than credit life
insurance and credit accident and
health insurance) to be conducted
through subsidiaries of the holding
company, or otherwise under the
expanded authority provided in GLB.
The commenters also argued that U.S.
banking organizations should not be
required to deconsolidate and deduct
investments in foreign insurance
companies from the holding company’s
capital for capital adequacy purposes,
arguing that such a requirement is
inappropriate and disproportionate to
the risks involved. The Board disagrees
and declines to eliminate this
requirement. The consolidation of
insurance activities may result in
overstated capital ratios because the
risk-based capital adequacy framework
does not take into account traditional
insurance risks. Although FHCs

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currently may consolidate their
insurance companies for purposes of
their capital ratios, for supervisory
purposes their capital ratios also are
analyzed after deconsolidation and
deduction of such companies. Retaining
the deconsolidation and deduction
requirement in Regulation K also would
be consistent with proposed revisions to
the Basel Capital Accord.
In addition, the commenters urged the
Board to expand the types of insurance
foreign subsidiaries of bank holding
companies may underwrite and
reinsure, to encompass all credit-related
insurance (including insurance
incidental to leasing activities or
mortgage transactions, and motor
vehicle comprehensive insurance in
connection with car loans). In the
Board’s view, in light of passage of GLB,
there should be no general expansion of
permissible types of insurance
underwriting under Regulation K. As at
present, however, application may be
made on a case-by-case basis for the
Board’s approval to engage in additional
types of insurance activities usual in
connection with the business of banking
abroad.
Debt/Equity Swaps
Regulation K currently permits
banking organizations to swap certain
developing country debt for equity
interests in companies of any type.
Established in 1987 to assist banking
organizations in managing large
amounts of nonperforming, illiquid
sovereign debt, these foreign investment
provisions are more liberal than
Regulation K’s other investment
provisions. Under certain conditions set
out in Regulation K, investors may
invest under general consent authority
up to one percent of their tier 1 capital
in up to 40 percent of the shares,
including voting shares, of private
sector companies in eligible countries.
Such an investment must be held
through the bank holding company,
unless the Board specifically permits it
to be held through the bank or a bank
subsidiary. Eligible countries are
defined as those that have rescheduled
their debt since 1980, or any country the
Board deems to be eligible.
Since the debt/equity swap provisions
were introduced, a well developed
secondary market in developing country
debt has emerged. The vast bulk of
developing country problem debt has
been repackaged in the form of longterm Brady bonds, mostly denominated
in U.S. dollars and fully collateralized
as to principal by U.S. government
bonds. Many banking organizations
actively trade these instruments in the
secondary market.

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54359

Due to the development of the
secondary markets for emerging market
debt, U.S. banks now have the same
options with regard to many of these
assets as they have with other bank
assets—namely, they can hold the asset
with a view toward collecting at
maturity or sell the asset for cash to
invest in other bank eligible assets.
Indeed, the sovereign debt of most of the
historically ‘‘eligible countries’’ is no
longer illiquid, and those eligible
countries that account for the vast share
of rescheduled debt have largely
regularized their relations with
commercial banks.
In light of these changed
circumstances and to redirect this
special authority to the asset quality
problem it was originally intended to
help resolve, in the ’97 Proposal the
Board proposed to redefine the term
‘‘eligible country.’’ Under the proposed
definition, only countries with currently
impaired sovereign debt (i.e., debt for
which an allocated transfer risk reserve
would be required under the
International Lending Supervision Act
and for which there is no liquid market)
would be eligible for investments
through debt/equity swaps under
Regulation K. Existing holdings of such
investments would be grandfathered,
subject to the existing divestiture
periods applicable to such investments
(i.e., generally, 10 years from the date of
acquisition).
The Board solicited comment on these
proposed changes. It also sought
comment on whether, alternatively, the
debt/equity swap authority should be
eliminated as obsolete.
Several commenters supported the
proposed changes. Only one comment
opposed the change to the definition of
an ‘‘eligible country’’. Another
commenter urged the Board to extend
the general consent authority for debt/
equity swaps to such investments made
by banks and bank subsidiaries. The
Board continues to believe the
additional authority granted under the
debt/equity swap provisions should be
limited to countries with currently
impaired debt, in light of the
developments described above and,
accordingly, adopts the proposed
change to the definition of an ‘‘eligible
country.’’ The Board also considers that
general consent authority for engaging
in debt/equity swaps under the bank
continues to be inappropriate. As at
present, a bank or bank subsidiary may
seek authority from the Board to hold
such an investment on a case-by-case
basis.

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Federal Register / Vol. 66, No. 208 / Friday, October 26, 2001 / Rules and Regulations

Streamlining Application Procedures
General Consent Limits
The Board noted in the ’97 Proposal
that, although existing Regulation K
procedures have proved effective in
maintaining the safety and soundness of
U.S. banks’ international operations,
they have become increasingly complex
over the years. For example, under prior
notice procedures, the Board has
reviewed all foreign investments made
by banking organizations above a de
minimis level as a principal mechanism
for overseeing the safety and soundness
of the investing organization. In view of
the shift in emphasis to supervision
based upon risk management
capabilities, the Board believes that
prior review of relatively small
investments is no longer useful as a
fundamental supervisory tool,
especially where the investor is wellcapitalized and well-managed.
Accordingly, the Board proposed that
only significant investments, as
determined solely on the basis of the
investor’s capital, would be subject to
prior review by the Board, provided that
the investors are well-capitalized and
well-managed.21 The proposed changes
to the general consent procedures
attempt to balance safety and soundness
considerations with the objective of
enhancing the ability of U.S. banking
organizations to compete with foreign
banks overseas.
Limits on Investments in One Company
Historically, all general consent
investments under Regulation K were
subject to absolute dollar limits.
Currently, the general consent limit for
most investments is $25 million.
However, as a result of amendments to
Regulation K implemented in December
1995, certain investments by strongly
capitalized and well-managed banks are
subject to Board review only to the
extent they exceed a percentage of the
investor’s capital.
In the ’97 Proposal, the Board
proposed expanding upon this approach
by eliminating the absolute dollar limits
on foreign investments permissible
under general consent authority for
well-capitalized and well-managed
investors (with the exception of those
applicable to portfolio investments
made under the bank). Under the
proposal, general consent limits for all
investors (bank holding companies,
banks, and Edge corporations) would be
21 The proposed definitions of well-managed and
well-capitalized for these purposes are discussed
infra under the heading ‘‘Well-capitalized/Wellmanaged Standards.’’

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based solely on a percentage of their tier
1 capital.22
The limits on individual investments
made under general consent authority
would vary according to the investor
(bank holding company, bank, or Edge
corporation) and the type of entity in
which the investment is made. For wellcapitalized and well-managed investors,
the Board proposed the following
percentage limits.
General consent limits on investment in
a subsidiary
Bank holding company: 10 percent of
tier 1 capital of the bank holding
company.
Bank: 2 percent of tier 1 capital of the
bank.
Bank subsidiaries: the lesser of 2
percent of tier 1 capital of the bank or
10 percent of tier 1 capital of the bank
subsidiary.
General consent limits on investment in
a joint venture
Bank holding company: 5 percent of
tier 1 capital of the bank holding
company.
Bank: 1 percent of tier 1 capital of the
bank.
Bank subsidiaries: the lesser of 1
percent of tier 1 capital of the bank or
5 percent of tier 1 capital of the bank
subsidiary.
These limits were proposed on the
basis that they reflected the risk
involved in the type of investment. A
higher percentage of capital would be
permitted in the case of an investment
in a subsidiary as opposed to an
investment in a joint venture because
the latter is considered to carry a greater
risk of loss. Thus, with joint ventures,
investors acquire less than full control,
and the record on such investments has
shown that they experience a higher rate
of loss. As a result, most U.S. banks do
not now make sizeable joint venture
investments. In light of these
considerations, the Board believed that
lower general consent limits may be
appropriate for joint venture
investments.
For investors that fail to meet the
well-capitalized or well-managed
standards, the Board proposed the
following limits. Individual investments
under general consent authority would
be limited to the lesser of $25 million
or 5 percent of tier 1 capital in the case
22 Under the proposal, if the Edge corporation
were making the investment, then the Edge
corporation, the member bank, and the bank
holding company would be required to meet the
well-capitalized and well-managed tests. If the
member bank were making the investment, then the
bank and the bank holding company would be
required to meet the tests.

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of an investor that is a bank holding
company, and the lesser of $25 million
or 1 percent of tier 1 capital if the
investor is a member bank. Limits on
individual investments for an Edge
corporation would be $25 million or the
lesser of 1 percent of the parent bank’s
tier 1 capital or 5 percent of the Edge’s
tier 1 capital. The Board also proposed,
however, that authority would be
delegated to the Director of Banking
Supervision and Regulation to approve
higher investment limits on a case-bycase basis or as part of an investment
program as described further below.
The Board sought comment on these
proposed limits, noting that these limits
would only cover investments made
under general consent authority; larger
investments may continue to be made
with 30 days’ prior notice. Noting that
an argument could be made that, in
cases involving investments by an Edge
corporation, the well-capitalized and
well-managed tests should be based on
a review of the parent bank, not the
Edge corporation, the Board also sought
comment on the Board’s proposal to
impose limits tied to the condition of
the Edge.
Commenters expressed general
support for the Board’s percentage-ofcapital limits approach and proposal to
reserve the greatest liberalization to
well-capitalized and well-managed
investors. Several, however, objected to
the proposed general consent limits for
bank subsidiaries, arguing that they will
have the effect of reducing the general
consent investment authority of some
investors. Comments advanced a
number of rationales for either retaining
the existing limits, at least for wellcapitalized and well-managed bank
subsidiaries, or for increasing the
proposed limits.
The Board believes the proposed
general consent limits for investments
by bank subsidiaries are sufficient. The
Board therefore is adopting the limits as
proposed. Should investors desire
increased general consent authority,
they may increase capital levels at the
bank and/or bank subsidiary level, as
warranted. Additionally, as noted
above, an investment in excess of the
general consent limits may still be made
following prior notice procedures or
with the specific consent of the Board.
In any event, the Board notes that, in
most instances, the binding constraint is
the member bank’s capital.
Two commenters, however, noted that
the proposed general consent limits
might be especially constraining for
organizations whose Edge corporations
are minimally capitalized. They
recommended that the Board allow a
well-capitalized, well-managed parent

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bank to make de minimis general
consent investments through its Edge
corporation, even if that investment
would be greater than otherwise would
be allowed under the limits applicable
to the Edge. The Board disagrees and
continues to be of the view that it is
important to retain the well-capitalized
and well-managed tests for the Edge
corporation itself as one of the bases for
determining limits applicable to general
consent investments. This approach will
help to ensure the safety and soundness
of Edge corporations in their own right
and is consistent with the statutory (and
supervisory) rationale underlying Edge
corporations. As discussed above,
Congress limited the amount of capital
that banks could invest in Edge
corporations, which in turn could invest
in activities otherwise prohibited to
banks that were perceived to be higher
risk. Congress also subjected Edge
corporations to regulation and
examination by the Federal Reserve. For
these reasons, the Board considers that
Edge corporations should themselves be
operating satisfactorily and not be a
source of potential weakness to its
parent bank. The Board therefore is
adopting in final the proposed general
consent limits that are tied to the
condition of the Edge.
In response to the Board’s request for
comment on the imposition of different
general consent limits on investments in
subsidiaries and joint ventures, two
commenters maintained that imposing
different limits on these investments is
unjustified, arguing that the activities
present similar risks. The Board
disagrees and continues to be of the
view stated in the ’97 Proposal that
investments in joint ventures involve
greater risks than investments in
subsidiaries. Consequently, the Board
adopts the limits on investments in
subsidiaries and joint ventures as
proposed.
Two commenters noted the lack of a
general consent mechanism for
incremental investments in a subsidiary
or joint venture once the individual
company investment limit is reached.
They recommended the inclusion of
such a provision to allow investors to
make additional small investments
quickly, without encumbering both the
investor and the Board with a case-bycase regulatory review. They further
suggested that such investments be
excluded from the 12-month rolling
aggregate general consent limits. The
Board does not believe that these
changes should be made to the proposal.
As noted above, an investor may
increase its investment limit by
increasing its capital. Moreover, an
investor that has reached its individual

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company investment limit may apply to
the Director of the Division of Banking
Supervision and Regulation for
appropriate relief or may submit a longrange investment plan for preclearance,
as discussed further below.
Accordingly, the Board is retaining the
requirement that investments beyond
those permissible under general consent
authority must be made under the prior
notice procedures unless relief is
otherwise granted.
One commenter proposed allowing
investors to carry forward and
accumulate for five years unused
investments of cash dividends, as is
presently authorized under Regulation
K. The Board believes that this
provision is no longer necessary in light
of the expansion of the general consent
limits and the ability of investors to seek
waivers or obtain preclearance of an
investment program.
Another commenter noted that the
Board’s proposal would render
investments in general partnerships and
unlimited liability companies in
amounts of less than $25 million
ineligible for the general consent
provisions and recommended that the
Board preserve the general consent
status quo for such investments by wellcapitalized, well-managed banking
institutions. The final rule adopts this
recommendation.
Commenters also urged the Board to
clarify that investments in singlepurpose subsidiaries formed solely for
the purpose of facilitating a specific
financing transaction (e.g., special
purpose corporations formed by Edge
corporations engaged in specific leasing
transactions with a single customer)
would not be subject to the individual
or aggregate general consent limits. The
Board will continue to exclude such
investments from the application or
prior notice procedures provided the
investment serves solely to finance a
leasing transaction.
Aggregate Limits
The limits on general consent
investments in any one company are
intended to address the fact that
individual foreign investments above a
certain size may be a source of potential
concern, and therefore prior review of
such investments should be required. In
addition, the Board is also concerned
with any rapid increase in an
organization’s foreign investments
overall, made without prior review.
Accordingly, in the ’97 Proposal, the
Board proposed that when the
cumulative investments made under
general consent reach a certain amount
over a given period, new or additional
investments would become subject to

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54361

prior review. Investments by all
affiliates of a bank holding company
would be taken into account in
determining compliance of the holding
company with the aggregate limits;
investments of subsidiaries of a bank or
of an Edge, respectively, would be
aggregated in determining compliance
with their limits. Under the proposed
liberalized general consent procedures,
the new aggregate limit for all
investments during any 12-month
period for investors meeting the wellcapitalized and well-managed tests
would be:
Bank holding companies: 20 percent
of tier 1 capital.
Bank: 10 percent of tier 1 capital of
the bank.
Bank subsidiaries: the lesser of 10
percent of tier 1 capital of the bank or
50 percent of the bank subsidiary’s tier
1 capital.
The Board considered that, because
the bank would have the exposure on a
consolidated basis for investments by
either the bank or the Edge, these
investments should have a combined
aggregate limit. However, the Board
proposed that this limit could be
waived, in whole or in part, by the
Director of the Division of Banking
Supervision and Regulation under
delegated authority, based upon a
review of the financial strength of the
investor and its investment strategy and
business plans.
For bank holding companies, banks or
Edge corporations that are adequately
capitalized but do not meet the wellcapitalized and well-managed
standards, the Board proposed that the
aggregate limits on all investments made
under authority of general consent in
any 12-month period would be half that
applicable to well-capitalized and wellmanaged organizations (i.e., 10 percent
of tier 1 capital for bank holding
companies, 5 percent of tier 1 capital for
banks, and, for Edge corporations, the
lesser of 5 percent of the parent bank’s
tier 1 capital or 10 percent of the Edge’s
tier 1 capital). In determining
compliance with the aggregate limits,
investments under Regulation K by all
subsidiaries of the investor would be
taken into account.
A number of comments were
submitted regarding these provisions.
Some argued that there should be
separate rolling 12-month aggregate
limits for portfolio investments and
investments in subsidiaries and joint
ventures. Other commenters objected to
the inclusion of dealing positions in the
rolling 12-month limits, and one argued
that the percentage limits should be
increased if portfolio investments and
dealing activities are both included in

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determining compliance with the limits.
A few commenters also requested
clarification of whether additional
investments in a company equal to cash
dividends from the company,
investments acquired from an affiliate,
and investments made under the prior
notice and specific consent provisions
would be included within the proposed
rolling 12-month aggregate limits. They
recommended that the final regulation
explicitly exclude these investments
from the aggregate limits.
As discussed above, the aggregate
limits are designed to address concerns
that a banking organization may use
expanded general consent investment
authority, including that available in
relation to portfolio investments, to
expand excessively within a short time
period. The Board notes that these
limits are set at fairly high levels as a
percentage of tier 1 capital. In order to
provide a meaningful constraint on
excessively rapid growth, in the Board’s
view all amounts invested during the
rolling 12-month period should be
included in the aggregate limit. The
Board does not consider that any action
should be taken to exclude portfolio
investments from other investments in
subsidiaries and joint ventures for
purposes of the aggregate general
consent limit. After further
consideration, however, the Board
considers that shares acquired in
connection with Regulation K dealing
activity should be excluded from the
rolling 12-month aggregate limit, in
view of the important differences in the
nature of dealing activity. Aside from
this change, in view of the ability of a
banking organization to increase its
general consent limits by increasing
capital, and the availability of other
procedures for securing authority to
make investments should the limits
prove constraining (such as seeking a
waiver of limits on a case-by-case basis
or obtaining preclearance for an
investment program), the Board adopts
the proposed aggregate general consent
limits.
Preclearance of Investment Program
In connection with the foregoing, the
Board also in 1997 proposed
establishing a procedure that would
allow U.S. banking organizations to
obtain preclearance of an investment
program, even though one or more of
the investments would be in excess of
the individual or aggregate general
consent investment limits and would be
made over a time period longer than one
year. Preclearance authority would be
delegated to the Director of Banking
Supervision and Regulation, with the
consent of the General Counsel. The

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Board solicited comment on whether
such a program would be useful to U.S.
banking organizations and whether it
should be available to all banking
organizations, including those
organizations that are not wellcapitalized and well-managed.
In response to the Board’s request for
comment, several commenters
recommended that the Board adopt the
proposed preclearance investment
program as enhancing U.S. banking
organizations’ international
competitiveness. Commenters believed
that the preclearance process should
focus on the merits of the applicant,
rather than the specifics of the
investment program. They argued that,
for the preclearance option to be
effective, the regulatory review process
must be rapid and must not impose
excessively narrow parameters on the
types of investments permitted.
The Board is adopting the proposed
preclearance program that would allow
investors to seek authority to exceed the
individual or rolling 12-month aggregate
general consent investment limits.
Because of the differing foreign
investment needs of U.S. banking
organizations, the Board is not at this
time placing specific limitations on the
scope of the preclearance process, but
rather will assess each proposal on a
case-by-case basis. The Board believes
this approach provides maximum
flexibility and will increase the utility of
the process to all investors. Any
preclearance request should be in
writing and should indicate: (i) The
amount of preclearance authority
sought; (ii) the period of time for which
such authority is sought; (iii) the
strategic plan detailing the reasons for
seeking preclearance authority; (iv)
whether the applicant satisfies the wellcapitalized and well-managed criteria;
and (v) capital projections based upon
anticipated investments made under the
preclearance authority.
Commenters also recommended that
investors be permitted to present their
investment programs as prior notices,
rather than as applications for specific
consent. One commenter recommended
that such authority be delegated to
individual Reserve Banks, rather than to
the Director of Banking Supervision and
Regulation. In light of the fact that the
preclearance process under Regulation
K is new, the Board believes that it is
important, at least initially, for these
requests to be processed at the Board
under specific consent. The procedures
for obtaining preclearance authority will
be reviewed after the Board gains
experience with the process.

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Authorization To Invest More Than Ten
Percent of a Bank’s Capital in Its Edge
and Agreement Corporation
Subsidiaries
Under a September 1996 amendment
to section 25A of the Federal Reserve
Act, member banks may invest more
than 10 percent and up to 20 percent of
capital and surplus in the stock of Edge
and agreement corporation subsidiaries
with the Board’s prior approval. The
Board may not approve such
investments unless it determines that
the investment of an additional amount
by the bank would not be unsafe or
unsound.
The Board proposed to implement
this provision by adding an application
requirement to Regulation K for banks to
obtain the Board’s approval to invest in
excess of 10 percent of a bank’s capital
in the stock of Edge and agreement
corporations. The Board noted that it
would take the following criteria into
account in reaching a decision on such
an application: (i) The composition of
the assets of the bank’s Edge and
agreement corporations; (ii) the total
capital invested by the bank in its Edge
and agreement corporations when
combined with retained earnings of the
Edge and agreement corporations
(including retained earnings of any
foreign bank subsidiaries) as a
percentage of the bank’s capital; (iii)
whether the bank, bank holding
company, and Edge and agreement
corporations are well-capitalized and
well-managed; and (iv) whether the
bank is adequately capitalized after
deconsolidating and deducting the
aggregate investment in and assets of all
Edge or agreement corporations and all
foreign bank subsidiaries.
The Board invited comment on
whether the enumerated criteria are
appropriate for determining whether
these investments are unsafe or
unsound. Additionally, the Board
sought comment on whether only the
well-capitalized and well-managed
criteria should apply in those instances
in which the total Edge and agreement
corporation capital (including retained
earnings) on a pro forma basis would
not exceed 20 percent of the bank’s
capital. As discussed above, due to the
accumulation of retained earnings in
Edge corporations, some member banks
now have over 20 percent of their
consolidated capital in Edge
corporations.
Comments submitted generally
supported this proposal. One
commenter urged the Board to state that
the evaluative criteria are not allinclusive, to permit the Board to
consider other issues as they may arise

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on a case-by-case basis. Another
commenter recommended that the
Board include among the criteria an
evaluation of the reasons for the
proposed capital increase. The Board
believes these suggestions are implicit
in the enumerated criteria. The Board
therefore adopts the regulation as
proposed, including applying only the
well-capitalized and well-managed
criteria in those instances in which the
total Edge and agreement corporation
capital (including retained earnings) on
a pro forma basis would not exceed 20
percent of the bank’s capital. While the
Board expects the enumerated criteria
will be sufficient in most circumstances,
the Board may take into account
additional criteria if necessary to fully
evaluate a proposal and ensure safety
and soundness of member banks.
Finally, commenters recommended
that a well-capitalized, well-managed
bank should not be required to obtain
prior approval for these investments
but, instead, should be subject only to
a prior notice requirement in order to
make such an investment. The Board
considers, however, that the prior
approval requirement should be
maintained even for well-capitalized,
well-managed banks in light of the
significant amounts of retained earnings
that may be held through Edge or
agreement corporations.
Well-Capitalized/Well-Managed
Standards
As discussed above, the Board’s ’97
Proposal generally allowed wellcapitalized and well-managed banking
organizations to engage in expanded
securities activities and to make larger
general consent investments. The Board
proposed criteria for determining
whether banking organizations would
be considered well-capitalized 23 and
well-managed.24 Whether an institution
23 Under the proposal, a bank holding company
would be considered well-capitalized if, on a
consolidated basis, it maintains total and tier 1 riskbased capital ratios of at least 10 percent and 6
percent, respectively. In the case of an insured
depository institution, well-capitalized means that
the institution maintains at least the capital levels
required to be well-capitalized under the capital
adequacy regulations or guidelines applicable to the
institution that have been adopted under section 38
of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, 12 U.S.C.
1831o. The Board proposed that an Edge or
agreement corporation would be considered wellcapitalized if it maintains total and tier 1 capital
ratios of 10 and 6 percent, respectively.
24 Under the proposal, a bank holding company
or insured depository institution would be
considered well-managed if, at its most recent
inspection or examination or subsequent review,
the holding company or institution received at least
a satisfactory composite rating. The Board noted
that, under standards adopted by the Board in
connection with the December 1995 expansion of
Regulation K’s general consent authority, an Edge

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is well-capitalized and well-managed
also was proposed as a factor in the
Board’s determination regarding
whether investments in Edge
corporations greater than 10 percent of
a member bank’s capital and surplus
should be permitted.
Commenters expressed widespread
support for additional flexibility for
well-capitalized, well-managed
investors. However, they noted that the
well-managed test under Regulation K
differs from that for expedited action
under Regulation Y by including a
requirement that an institution not be
subject to any supervisory enforcement
action. They expressed concern that this
provision would not provide the Board
with sufficient flexibility to determine
when an institution is not wellmanaged, as some enforcement actions
may involve matters that would not be
considered material. Commenters also
noted that the existence of supervisory
enforcement actions could be reflected
in either the management rating or the
composite rating of an institution, and
that such ratings may be changed at any
time during an examination cycle. In
response to these concerns, the Board is
amending the proposed definition of
well-managed to delete the reference to
supervisory enforcement actions and,
instead, to require that the
organization’s management rating must
be at least satisfactory. Accordingly, a
U.S. banking organization meets the
well-managed definition if its composite
and management ratings are at least
satisfactory.
Some commenters suggested that the
Board should provide transitional
periods and arrangements for
institutions disqualified from wellcapitalized and/or well-managed status
to conform to the lower limits. Since the
circumstances of disqualification may
vary, the Board believes transitional
periods and arrangements should be
addressed on a case-by-case basis. Other
commenters suggested that
grandfathering should be available for
institutions that no longer qualify as
well-capitalized or well-managed,
particularly where activities at issue are
being conducted prudently and
profitably and are not a factor in the
failure to meet the eligibility tests. The
Board does not believe grandfathering is
appropriate in this context, as the wellcapitalized, well-managed status of an
institution is designed to mitigate the
additional risks created by the expanded
authority granted to such institutions.
or agreement corporation would be considered to be
well-managed for these purposes if it received a
composite rating of 1 or 2 at its most recent
examination or review and it is not subject to any
supervisory enforcement action.

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Moreover, the ability to conduct
expanded activities should also be an
incentive for achieving and maintaining
well-capitalized, well-managed status.
Several commenters objected to
application of the well-capitalized test
to Edge corporations. They argued that,
since the capital of an Edge corporation
is consolidated with that of the parent
bank, an independent well-capitalized
test for Edge corporations would not
add to safety and soundness within the
bank chain. They also maintained that
an independent capital test for Edge
corporations may encourage
uneconomic booking decisions between
the bank and the Edge corporation. The
Board, however, continues to believe it
is important to retain these tests with
reference to both the Edge corporation
and the member bank in order to be
eligible for the expanded authority
granted to well-capitalized institutions.
As noted above, this approach would
help to ensure the safety and soundness
of the Edge corporation in its own right
and is consistent with the statutory (and
supervisory) rationale underlying Edge
corporations. The Board considers that
Edge corporations should themselves be
operating satisfactorily and not be a
source of potential weakness to the U.S.
parent bank.
Other Revisions to Subpart A
Harmonization of Regulation K With
Other Regulatory Changes
The ’97 Proposal noted that, as a
result of liberalizations of other Board
regulations, authority under Regulation
K is now more restrictive than the
authority available to engage in certain
activities domestically. The Board
proposed changes to address these
disparities and has determined to adopt
all such harmonizing changes.
Leasing Activities
The Board proposed to interpret
Regulation K’s leasing provision
consistent with a revision to Regulation
Y’s authority for BHCs, eliminating the
requirement that leasing activities
conducted under authority of
Regulation K serve as the functional
equivalent of an extension of credit to
the lessee with respect to high residual
value leasing. Commenters expressed
support for this proposal and
recommended that the change be made
explicit in the text of the final rule. The
Board is adopting this proposal, and a
conforming change has been made to
Regulation K. As required under
Regulation Y, however, the estimated
residual value of real property must be
limited to 25 percent of the value of the
property at the time of the initial lease,

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to distinguish real property leasing from
real estate development and investment
activities.
Commodities Swaps Activities
In light of changes to Regulation Y,
the Board proposed to eliminate the
requirement that commodity-related
swaps must provide an option for cash
settlement that must be exercised upon
settlement. Comments generally
supported this proposed revision, and
the Board has adopted the change in
final.
Other commenters recommended that
the commodities swaps provision be
expanded to include activities relating
to the trading, sale, or investment in
commodities and underlying physical
properties (and, hence, to make it fully
consistent with the corresponding
provision of Regulation Y). The Board
rejects these additional changes at this
time as inconsistent with section 25A of
the Federal Reserve Act, 12 U.S.C. 617,
which prohibits Edge corporations from
engaging in commerce or trade in
commodities except as specifically
provided therein.
Loans to Officers at Foreign Branches
In the ’97 Proposal, the Board noted
that existing Regulation K imposes
limits on mortgage loans to executive
officers of foreign branches of member
banks that are more restrictive than
limits imposed under analogous
provisions in Regulation O. The Board
proposed to eliminate the Regulation K
provision to address this disparity.
None of the public commenters
addressed this proposed change, and it
is adopted as proposed. Accordingly,
the limits in Regulation O apply with
respect to such loans.
Data Processing Activities
The Board expressly declined to alter
or expand Regulation K’s data
processing provision. It noted, however,
that this authority extends only to the
processing of information and does not
authorize the general manufacture of
hardware for such services. Some
commenters presumed that the activity
of data processing pursuant to
Regulation K is unrestricted rather than
limited to banking, financial, or
economic data to the extent such data
processing is limited in Regulation Y.25
Moreover, some commenters read the
language in the preamble to the
proposed revisions to Regulation K to
preclude the offering of hardware in
connection with software that is
25 Regulation Y allows up to 30 percent of data
processing revenues to be derived from data
processing that is not financial, banking, or
economic in nature.

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designed and marketed for the
processing of financial, banking, or
economic data where the general
purpose hardware does not constitute
more than 30 percent of the cost of any
packaged offering. The Board notes that
an interpretation issued in 1999
clarified that the scope of the data
processing authority of Regulation K is
coextensive with the data processing
authority of Regulation Y, absent Board
authorization for additional activities.
64 FR 58780, Nov. 1, 1999.
Additional Areas of Liberalization
Authorizing Foreign Branches of
Operating Subsidiaries of Member
Banks
The Board proposed to codify prior
Board determinations permitting
member banks to establish foreign
branches of domestic operating
subsidiaries with the Board’s approval
(under the prior notice or general
consent procedures, as appropriate),
provided that those branches would
engage only in activities directly
permissible for the member bank
parents. Commenters expressed support
for this proposal, and the Board is
adopting the revision as proposed.
FCM Activities
The Board proposed to eliminate the
requirement that an investor seek Board
approval before acting as a futures
commission merchant (FCM) for
financial instruments, and on
exchanges, not previously approved by
the Board. The Board also proposed to
eliminate the requirement that investors
obtain prior Board approval for FCM
activities conducted on any exchange or
clearing house that requires members to
guarantee or otherwise to contract to
cover losses suffered by other members
(i.e., a mutual exchange).26 The Board
sought comment on whether the prior
notice requirement should be
eliminated where: (i) the activity is
conducted through a separately
incorporated subsidiary; and (ii) the
parent bank does not provide a
guarantee or otherwise become liable to
the exchange or clearing house for an
amount in excess of the applicable
general consent limits. One commenter
agreed that a prior notice requirement
should not be imposed in these
circumstances. The Board is adopting
the revisions to the FCM authority
under Regulation K as proposed.
26 In this regard, Regulation Y has been revised
to allow subsidiaries of BHCs to act as FCMs for
futures contracts traded on an exchange provided
the parent BHC does not provide a guarantee or
otherwise become liable to the exchange or clearing
association other than for proprietary trades.

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Changes With Respect to Edge and
Agreement Corporations: Voluntary
Liquidation Procedures
The Board proposed changes relating
to the liquidation and receivership of
Edge and agreement corporations,
including adding provisions: (i)
Providing for 45 days’ prior notice to the
Board of an Edge or agreement
corporation’s intent to dissolve; (ii)
specifying the grounds for determining
that an Edge corporation is insolvent;
and (iii) specifying the powers of a
receiver of an Edge corporation. One
commenter expressed general support
for the voluntary liquidation proposal,
and this provision is adopted as
proposed. In light of the recent
amendment of the Edge Act’s
receivership provision, 12 U.S.C. 624,
the Board is not adopting the regulatory
proposal with respect to receivership.
Additional Commenter
Recommendations Under Subpart A
Commenters urged the Board to revise
Subpart A of Regulation K in the
following respects not addressed by the
Board’s proposals.
Advisory Opinions Under Regulation K
A commenter suggested that the
Board harmonize Regulations Y and K
further by establishing a procedure in
Regulation K whereby questions arising
under the regulation could be submitted
by any person and the Board would
issue an advisory opinion within 45
days. The Board agrees that this
procedure would enhance regulatory
transparency and facilitate regulatory
compliance. As noted above in the
section on portfolio investment
authority, the Board is adopting the
recommendation and including a
procedure in the final rule under which
advisory opinions may be requested on
the scope of activities permissible under
Regulation K. Board staff will endeavor
to respond to any such requests within
45 days of receipt of all relevant
information, provided the request does
not raise significant supervisory issues.
Divestiture Period for Debts Previously
Contracted (‘‘DPC’’) Assets
Commenters recommended that the
Board adopt the OCC’s DPC divestiture
rules, which provide for an initial
holding period of up to five years, with
an opportunity to extend for up to an
additional 5 years. Existing Regulation
K, which the Board did not propose to
amend, requires divestiture within two
years after acquisition, unless the Board
authorizes retention for a longer period.
The Board believes the existing DPC
divestiture period is adequate given that
investors may request extensions of time

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and therefore declines to adopt this
proposal.
Changes to Capitalization Requirements
for Edge Corporations
Commenters recommended that the
Board revise the provisions regarding
the capitalization of Edge corporations
to facilitate their clearing activities by
either exempting sales of Fed funds to
parent banks from the 10 percent capital
adequacy guideline applicable to Edge
corporations or eliminating the 10
percent capital limitation applicable to
Edges. The Board does not believe this
proposal is consistent with the safety
and soundness concerns the capital
adequacy guidelines for Edge
corporations are designed to address.
Accordingly, it declines to adopt this
proposal.
Subpart B: Foreign Banking
Organizations
Subpart B of Regulation K governs the
U.S. activities of foreign banking
organizations. It implements the IBA
and provisions of the BHC Act that
affect foreign banks.
This final rule for Subpart B seeks to
eliminate unnecessary regulatory
burden, increase transparency, and
streamline the application/notice
process for foreign banks operating in
the United States based on the Board’s
recent experience with foreign bank
applications. The final rule also would
liberalize the standards under which
certain foreign banking organizations
qualify for exemptions from the
nonbanking prohibitions of section 4 of
the BHC Act.
The rule also implements a number of
statutory changes including certain
application-related provisions of the
Economic Growth and Regulatory
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1996 (the
1996 Act) and several provisions of the
Riegle-Neal Interstate Banking and
Branching Efficiency Act of 1994 (the
Interstate Act) and the Gramm Leach
Bliley Act (the GLB Act) that affect
foreign banks. The Board is also
requesting comment on issues that arise
in connection with the change in the
definition of representative office made
in the GLB Act. Finally, several
technical changes to various other
provisions in Subpart B are being
adopted.
Streamlining the Regulatory Process
The Board is required to approve the
establishment by foreign banks of
branches, agencies, commercial lending
companies, and representative offices in
the United States. This authority is
contained in the Foreign Bank
Supervision Enhancement Act of 1991

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(FBSEA), which amended the IBA, and
was intended to close perceived gaps in
the supervision and regulation of
foreign banks. Prior to FBSEA, there was
no federal approval required for the
establishment of most types of direct
U.S. offices of foreign banks, nor were
uniform standards applicable to these
offices.
In the ten years since the enactment
of FBSEA, the Board has gained
substantial experience with the issues
presented by applications by foreign
banks to establish direct offices. The
revisions streamline the applications
process based on experience gained over
this period. In addition, the final rule
implements new discretionary authority
and time limits contained in the 1996
Act.
Adoption of a Single Standard for
Representative Offices
Under FBSEA, in order to approve an
application by a foreign bank to
establish a branch, agency or
commercial lending company, the Board
generally is required to determine,
among other things, that the applicant
bank, and any parent bank, are subject
to comprehensive supervision on a
consolidated basis by its home country
authorities (the CCS determination).27 A
lesser standard, however, applies under
FBSEA to representative office
applications. While the Board is
required to ‘‘take into account’’ home
country supervision in evaluating an
application by a foreign bank to
establish a representative office, a CCS
determination is not required to approve
such an application. The law simply
requires the Board to consider the extent
to which the applicant bank is subject
to CCS. A lesser standard applies
because representative offices do not
conduct a banking business, such as
taking deposits or making loans, and
therefore present less risk to U.S.
customers and markets than do
branches or agencies.
Regulation K currently restates the
statutory ‘‘take into account’’ standard
and does not define a minimum
supervision standard that a foreign bank
must meet in order to establish a
representative office. Instead, the Board
has developed standards in the context
of specific cases. To date, the Board has
used two different supervision
standards in approving applications by
foreign banks to establish representative
offices.28
27 As discussed later, the law was amended in
1996 to allow the Board to approve an application
if the bank is not subject to CCS under certain
conditions.
28 Wherever the record submitted by an applicant
in a representative office case is sufficient to

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Under one, the Board has permitted a
foreign bank to establish a
representative office able to exercise all
powers available under applicable law
and regulation on the basis of a finding
that the home country supervisors
exercise a significant degree of
supervision over the bank.29 Under the
second, the Board has approved the
establishment of the office on the basis
of a finding that the foreign bank is
subject to a supervisory framework that
is consistent with approval of the
application, taking into account any
limits placed on the activities of the
proposed office and the operating record
of the bank.30
Based on experience in dealing with
representative office applications, the
Board believes that the existence of two
standards can be confusing and is
unnecessary, particularly in light of the
generally minimal risk presented to U.S.
customers or markets by representative
offices. Consequently, the Board
proposed Regulation K be amended to
establish only one flexible standard.
Under the proposal, assuming all other
factors were consistent with approval,
the Board could approve an application
to establish a representative office if it
were able to make a finding that the
applicant bank was subject to a
supervisory framework that is consistent
with the activities of the proposed
office, taking into account the nature of
such activities and the operating record
of the applicant.
The record necessary to support the
required finding would depend on the
nature of the activities the applicant
proposed to conduct in the
representative office and the level of
home country supervision. The Board
expects that most applicants would be
able to conduct all permissible
activities. In those instances in which
the Board had particular concerns
regarding the consistency of the
applicant’s home country supervision
with the proposed activities of the
office, the applicant could commit to
restrict the activities. A less
comprehensive record on home country
supervision would be required where
the applicant committed to limit the
activities of the office to those posing
minimal risk to the U.S. customers.
support a CCS finding, the Board generally has
done so. See, e.g., Caisse Nationale de Credit
Agricole, 81 Fed. Res. Bull. 1055 (1995). The two
representative office standards have been applied in
those cases where the record is not sufficient to
support a CCS finding.
29 See, e.g., Citizens National Bank, 79 Fed. Res.
Bull. 805 (1993).
30 See. e.g., Promstroybank of Russia, 82 Fed. Res.
Bull. 599 (1966).

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Commenters generally supported this
proposal and the Board is adopting the
proposal as set forth above.
Reduced Filing Requirements for the
Establishment of U.S. Offices
A major thrust of the proposed
revisions was reduction of burden in the
application process by streamlining
existing application procedures for the
establishment of new U.S. offices of
foreign banks. Under the current
Subpart B, the establishment by a
foreign bank of a U.S. branch, agency,
commercial lending company
subsidiary, or representative office
generally requires the Board’s specific
approval. Once the Board has approved
the establishment of a foreign bank’s
first office under the standards set out
in FBSEA, additional offices with the
same or lesser powers may be approved
by the Reserve Banks under delegated
authority. Prior notice and general
consent procedures are currently
available for the establishment of certain
kinds of representative offices. The
Board’s proposed revisions would allow
additional types of applications to be
processed under prior notice and
general consent procedures. The Board
has determined to adopt the revisions as
proposed. The specific instances in
which additional prior notice and
general consent authority will be
available are discussed below.
Prior Notice Available for Additional
Offices After First CCS Determination
The Board proposed that any foreign
bank which the Board has determined to
be subject to CCS in a prior application
or determination under FBSEA or the
BHC Act may establish additional
branches (other than interstate
branches), agencies, commercial lending
company subsidiaries, and
representative offices pursuant to a 45
day prior notice procedure.31 This time
frame would allow for review of
whether any material changes had
occurred with respect to home country
supervision, a determination of whether
the bank continues to meet capital
requirements, and a review of any other
relevant factors. The current delegation
to the Reserve Banks for such
applications would be deleted as no
longer necessary.
Four commenters expressed support
for the Board’s proposal. In response to
the comments submitted, the Board is
31 An editing error in the draft regulatory
language unintentionally limited the types of offices
eligible for the prior notice procedure. Commenters
requested that the proposed 45-day prior notice
provision be extended to the establishment of
limited branches outside the foreign bank’s home
state. This was the intent of the proposal.

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adopting the proposal with language
clarifying that the prior notice
procedure ordinarily would be available
for foreign banks with a CCS
determination that seek to establish
additional branches (other than
interstate branches under section 5(a)(3)
of the IBA (12 U.S.C. 3103(a)(3))),
limited branches, agencies, commercial
lending company subsidiaries, and
representative offices.32
Prior Notice Available for Certain
Representative Offices
Many foreign banks have a U.S.
banking presence and therefore are
subject to the provisions of the BHC Act,
but have not received a CCS
determination. If a foreign bank is
subject to the provisions of the BHC Act
through ownership of a bank or
commercial lending company or
operation of a branch or agency, it is
also subject to supervision and oversight
through the Board’s Foreign Banking
Organization (FBO) program. Through
the FBO program, the Board gains
knowledge of the bank, its policies and
procedures, and forms a general view on
home country supervision. In these
instances, the Board believes that an
expedited procedure may be adopted for
the establishment of representative
offices by these banks, even where the
foreign bank had not previously been
reviewed under the standards of FBSEA.
The Board proposed that these foreign
banks be permitted to establish
representative offices using a 45-day
prior notice procedure. In addition, the
Board also proposed to permit the
establishment by prior notice of
additional representative offices by any
foreign bank not subject to the BHC Act
but previously approved by the Board to
establish a representative office,
regardless of the type of supervision
finding made by the Board in the prior
case. Such applications are currently
delegated to the Reserve Banks. The
Board sees no reason to continue to
require full applications from such
banks. The Board proposed that banks
in these two categories be permitted to
use the 45-day prior notice procedure
for opening a representative office,
32 As described further in the preamble, upgrades
of limited branches and agencies outside the foreign
bank’s home state would be eligible for prior notice
if other requirements were met. In response to a
comment, the Board considered whether it might be
possible to process under the 45-day notice
procedure proposals to establish full interstate
branches. Approval of full interstate branches
requires consideration of factors in addition to
those required to be considered in a normal FBSEA
application, as well as consultation with the
Department of the Treasury. For this reason, an
application requirement is being retained for the
establishment of full interstate branches under
section 5(a)(3) of the IBA.

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rather than requiring them to use the
application procedure.
Commenters generally supported this
proposal. One commenter additionally
requested that foreign banks that have
been approved to establish branches and
agencies under the limited exception to
the CCS standard—which permits the
Board to approve applications to
establish branches and agencies if it is
able to find, among other things, that the
home country supervisor of the
applicant bank is ‘‘actively working’’
toward achieving CCS—be permitted to
use a 45 day prior notice procedure for
additional offices with the same or
lesser powers.
The Board is adopting the proposed
revisions. In addition, the Board is
adopting the commenter’s proposal to
permit establishment by prior notice of
representative offices, but not additional
branches, agencies or commercial
lending companies, by foreign banks
previously approved under the ‘‘actively
working’’ standard. This would be
consistent with the Board’s proposal.
New General Consent Authority
The Board proposed to permit the
establishment by general consent of a
representative office by a foreign bank
that is both subject to the BHC Act and
has been previously determined by the
Board to be subject to CCS.
Establishment of a representative office
by such a foreign bank is currently
subject to the prior notice procedure.
The proposal was based on an
assessment that a foreign bank that is
subject to supervision under the FBO
program and has been judged subject to
CCS should generally qualify to
establish a representative office. The
Board also proposed that a foreign bank
that is subject to the BHC Act could
establish a regional administrative office
by general consent, whether or not the
Board had determined the bank to be
subject to CCS. Regional administrative
offices currently can be established
using the prior notice procedure.
Commenters generally supported this
proposal and the Board is adopting the
revisions as proposed.
One commenter requested that the
general consent procedure also be
available for additional offices with the
same or lesser powers in a state in
which the foreign bank already operates
an office where the foreign bank is
subject to the BHC Act and has a CCS
determination. The Board does not
believe it would be appropriate to adopt
the commenter’s proposal because the
proposal implicitly assumes that a CCS
determination would never need to be
reconsidered. In addition, in connection
with each branch and agency case, the

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Board also must confirm that the foreign
bank’s capital meets the statutory
requirements.
Suspension of Prior Notice and General
Consent Procedures
The proposed revisions also provided
that the Board, upon notice, may modify
or suspend the prior notice and general
consent procedures described above for
any foreign bank. For example,
modification or suspension of these
procedures might be appropriate if the
composite rating of the foreign bank’s
combined U.S. operations was less than
satisfactory,33 if the foreign bank were
subject to supervisory action, or if
questions were raised about the foreign
bank’s home country supervision or
anti-money laundering policy and
procedures. The proposal would ensure
that any streamlining of the applications
process would not compromise the
Board’s ability to make the
determinations necessary in connection
with the establishment of offices.
The proposed revision did not elicit
specific comment and it is adopted as
proposed.
After-the-Fact Approvals
In implementing FBSEA in 1993, the
Board recognized that it would be
impractical to require prior approval for
the establishment of foreign bank offices
acquired in certain types of overseas
transactions, such as a merger of two
foreign banks, and provided for an afterthe-fact approval in such cases. The
regulation currently requires the foreign
banks involved to commit to file an
application to retain acquired U.S.
offices as soon as possible after the
occurrence of such transactions.
Since the enactment of FBSEA, a
number of applicants using the afterthe-fact procedure have chosen to wind
down and close acquired offices or
consolidate them with existing offices,
in each case within a reasonable time
frame. In most instances, no regulatory
purpose was served by requiring the
filing of an application. The regulation
currently does not address this
possibility. The Board proposed to
amend the rule to address both after-thefact applications to retain, as well as
decisions to wind-down and close, U.S.
offices acquired in a transaction eligible
for the after-the-fact approval process.
Where the foreign bank chooses to close
the acquired U.S. office, the Board
generally would not require the filing of
an application but could impose
appropriate conditions on the U.S.
33 See

12 CFR 225.2(s) (definition of ‘‘wellmanaged’’ foreign banking of such transactions
organization).

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operations until the winding-down is
completed.
The proposed revision did not elicit
specific comment and it is adopted as
proposed.
Implementation of the 1996 Act
As noted above, FBSEA generally
requires the Board to determine that a
foreign bank applicant is subject to CCS
in order to approve the establishment of
a branch, agency, or commercial lending
company. The 1996 Act gave the Board
discretion to approve the establishment
of such offices by a foreign bank where
the application record is insufficient to
support a finding that the bank is
subject to CCS, provided the Board finds
that the home country supervisor is
actively working to establish
arrangements for the consolidated
supervision of the bank, and all other
factors are consistent with approval.
This discretion gives the Board
flexibility to approve applications on an
exceptional basis where the home
country authorities are making progress
in upgrading the bank supervisory
regime but the record may not yet be
sufficient to support a full CCS finding.
The Board has stated that this authority
should be viewed as a limited exception
to the general requirement relating to
CCS.34 The statutory standards are being
included in the final rule.
Two commenters expressed support
for the Board’s proposed revision.
The Board has proposed to
incorporate into Regulation K the
statutory time limits in the 1996 Act for
Board action on applications for
branches, agencies, and commercial
lending companies. The 1996 Act
provided that the Board must act on
such an application within 180 days of
its receipt. The time period may be
extended once for an additional 180
days, provided notice of the extension
and the reasons for it are provided to the
applicant and the licensing authority;
the applicant may also waive the time
periods. Although the regulation will
reflect these statutory time periods, the
Board will maintain existing internal
time schedules that would require faster
processing where possible.
New Standard
In light of the increasing attention
being paid to the problem of money
laundering, the Board currently requests
that a foreign bank applying to establish
U.S. offices provide information on the
measures taken to prevent the bank from
being used to launder money, the legal
34 See Housing & Commercial Bank, 83 Fed. Res.
Bull. 935 (1997); National Bank of Egypt, 86 Fed.
Res. Bull. 344 (2000); Banco de Bogota, 87 Fed. Res.
Bull. 552 (2001).

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54367

regime to prevent money laundering in
the home country, and the extent of the
home country’s participation in
multilateral efforts to combat money
laundering. The Board considers this
information in reaching its decision on
applications. In light of this practice, the
proposed revision included as a
standard for the establishment of U.S.
offices by foreign banks that the Board
may consider the adequacy of measures
for the prevention of money laundering.
One commenter expressed support for
this proposal and it is adopted as
proposed.
Qualifications of Foreign Banks for
Nonbank Exemptions
Changes to the QFBO Test
Regulation K implements statutory
exemptions from the BHC Act for
certain activities of foreign banks. These
exemptions are available to qualifying
foreign banking organizations (QFBOs)
and are found in sections 2(h) and
4(c)(9) of the BHC Act. Section 2(h)
allows a foreign company principally
engaged in banking business outside the
United States to own foreign affiliates
that engage in impermissible
nonfinancial activities in the United
States, subject to certain requirements.
These include that the foreign affiliate
must derive most of its business from
outside the United States and it may
engage in the United States only in the
same lines of business it conducts
outside the United States. Section
4(c)(9) allows the Board to grant foreign
companies an exemption from the
nonbank activity restrictions of the BHC
Act where the exemption would not be
substantially at variance with the BHC
Act and would be in the public interest.
Under this authority, the Board has
exempted, among other things, all
foreign activities of QFBOs from the
nonbanking prohibitions of the BHC
Act.
In order to qualify as a QFBO, a
foreign banking organization must
demonstrate that more than half of its
business is banking and more than half
of its banking business is outside the
United States. Banking business is
defined to include the activities
permissible for a U.S. banking
organization to conduct, directly or
indirectly, outside of the United
States.35 Under the current regulations
35 These activities include, in addition to
traditional banking activities, underwriting various
types of insurance (credit life, life, annuity, pension
fund-related, and other types of insurance where
the associated risks are actuarially predictable);
underwriting, distributing, and dealing in debt and
equity securities outside the United States;
providing data processing, investment advisory,

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such activities can be counted as
banking business for the purposes of the
QFBO test only if they are conducted in
the foreign bank ownership chain; that
is, by the foreign bank or a subsidiary
of the foreign bank. Activities
conducted by a parent holding company
or sister affiliate do not count toward
qualification.
Modification of Proposal To Remove the
Banking Chain Requirement from One
Prong of the QFBO Test
The Board proposed liberalizing the
QFBO test by removing the banking
chain requirement from the prong of the
QFBO test that measures whether more
than half of a foreign banking
organization’s business is banking. By
eliminating the banking chain
requirement from that prong of the test,
a foreign banking organization that has,
for example, substantial life insurance
activities outside of the banking chain
would be able to count such activities
toward meeting the QFBO test. The
commenters supported this
liberalization.
When this proposal was made in
1997, the Board was aware of relatively
few foreign banking organizations,
primarily those engaged in insurance,
that would have benefitted from such
liberalization. Significantly, at that time,
the BHC Act would have prevented
such a foreign insurance company from
conducting insurance activities in the
United States. Accordingly, the
proposed change was expected to have
limited application and not to provide
any significant competitive advantage
for foreign banking organizations.
The enactment of the Gramm-LeachBliley Act has changed the regulatory
landscape and the consequences of the
proposed QFBO test. The BHC Act is no
longer a legal bar to companies that
wish to engage in insurance and
merchant banking activities in the
United States, and a broader range of
foreign companies may acquire foreign
banks with U.S. activities than was
possible in 1997. If the proposed test
were adopted, a foreign insurance group
that qualified as a financial holding
company would be able to make
commercial and industrial investments
in the United States beyond those
permissible under insurance or
merchant banking authority even
though a domestic insurance company
with financial holding company status
could not. In light of these changes, the
Board has reconsidered its proposed
change to the QFBO test and determined
and management consulting services; and
organizing, sponsoring, and managing a mutual
fund.

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to adopt a modified form of the 1997
proposal.
The existing QFBO test has been
retained and foreign banking
organizations that are able to qualify
under that test will continue to be
eligible for all of the exemptions. A new
provision will permit those foreign
banking organizations that meet only
the test proposed by the Board in 1997
nevertheless to be eligible for all of the
exemptions other than the exemption
for limited commercial and industrial
activities provided under
§ 211.23(f)(5)(iii).36 Such a foreign
banking organization will, however, be
eligible for the limited exemptions only
if the foreign banking organization
includes a foreign bank that could itself
meet the current QFBO test.
Although the foreign banking
organization that is able to meet only
the modified test generally would be
limited in its ability to make
investments under the exemption in
section 2(h)(2) of the BHC Act, the
Board considers that a foreign bank
within the group should not be so
limited. In this regard, the Board notes
that, in enacting section 2(h)(2),
Congress recognized that banks in other
countries have traditionally been
permitted to make commercial and
industrial investments. Accordingly,
any foreign bank within such a group
that itself is able to meet the current
QFBO test by reference to its and its
subsidiaries’ assets, revenues and net
income, will be eligible for all of the
exemptions.
Limiting the eligibility for exemptions
in this way is consistent with the
statutory language in section 2(h)(2) of
the BHC Act, which provides that it
applies to shares held by a foreign
company that is ‘‘principally engaged in
the banking business outside the United
States.’’ At the same time, modifying the
test in this manner would limit the
extraterritorial effect of the BHC Act on
foreign firms, and would not penalize a
consolidated group that engages mostly
in activities permissible for a U.S.
banking organization.
Applications for Special Determination
of Eligibility for QFBO Treatment
The Board recognizes that there may
be types of ownership structures above
foreign banks that would not meet even
36 The exemption in § 211.23(f)(5)(iii) implements
section 3(h)(2) of the BHC Act. Any foreign banking
organization that qualifies as a financial holding
company would be able to make merchant banking
investments, and investments in connection with
its insurance business, in the United States to the
extent permitted for a financial holding company.
The lack of eligibility for the exemption provided
in § 211.23(f)(5)(iii) would not negate or otherwise
affect such authority.

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the modified QFBO test. It also is
possible that foreign banking
organizations that meet only the
modified test might need limited relief
for commercial and industrial activities
in the United States. In addition, there
may be foreign financial organizations
that do not include a foreign bank and
wish to acquire a U.S. bank. Such
financial organizations would fail the
QFBO test, and it is not possible to
know the extent to which requiring such
an organization to conform its
worldwide operations to those
permissible for a U.S. financial holding
company would interfere, in particular,
with its foreign business. The Board is
prepared to consider requests beyond
the current QFBO authority on a caseby-case basis. In considering such cases,
the Board will take into account the
principles of national treatment and
equality of competitive opportunity and
may grant exemptions that are not
substantially at variance with the
purposes of the BHC Act and are in the
public interest.
Regulation K currently permits a
foreign banking organization that ceases
to qualify as a QFBO to request a special
determination of eligibility. That
provision has been modified to give the
Board greater flexibility to grant special
determinations that will permit foreign
banking organizations and foreign
organizations that do not include
foreign banks to be eligible for some or
all of the exemptions in appropriate
cases.
The Board has also adopted the
proposal made in 1997 that would
permit a former QFBO that has applied
for a specific determination of eligibility
to continue to conduct its business as if
it were a QFBO, except with respect to
making investments in U.S. companies
under section 2(h)(2) of the BHC Act for
which Board consent would be
required. The proposal reflects the
approach taken in a prior case
considered by the Board, and no
comments were received on the
proposal.
Other Comments on the QFBO Test
The QFBO test in Regulation K
permits foreign banking organizations to
count in the measurement of ‘‘banking’’
only those assets, revenues, or net
income related to activities that are
permissible for a U.S. banking
organization to conduct outside of the
United States. The Board requested
comment with respect to a possible
expansion of the list of activities that
would be considered banking for
purposes of the QFBO test. Three
commenters suggested some expansion
in the list. Two proposed that the QFBO

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test be expanded to include all financial
activities which are usual in connection
with the banking business in those
countries in which the foreign banking
organization is active. One proposed
that the Board consider other activities
on a case-by-case basis to reflect
changes in foreign financial markets.
To date, there have been very few
cases in which a foreign banking
organization failed the QFBO test
because certain types of financial
activities were not included on the list.
In light of this, and in view of the
modified QFBO test and the ability of
the Board to make special
determinations of eligibility for some or
all of the QFBO exemptions, the Board
has determined not to make any changes
at this time to the list of activities that
would be considered banking for
purposes of the QFBO test.
Two commenters suggested that the
requirement that a QFBO conduct more
banking than nonbanking activities is
not required by the statute. These same
commenters also proposed that even if
that requirement is retained, the QFBO
test should be revised to allow U.S.
banking business to be included when
calculating the extent of an
organization’s banking business. The
Board has not adopted these proposals
because they would be inconsistent
with section 2(h)(2) of the BHC Act,
which provides exemptions for foreign
companies principally engaged in
banking business outside the United
States. Moreover, a U.S. nonfinancial
company is not permitted to own a U.S.
bank, and altering the test to permit a
predominantly nonfinancial foreign
group to engage in banking in the
United States would be inconsistent
with the principle of national treatment.
U.S. Activities of QFBOs
Securities Activities. Subpart B
currently provides that a foreign
banking organization may not own or
control shares of a foreign company that
directly underwrites, sells or distributes,
or that owns or controls more than 5
percent of the shares of a company that
underwrites, sells or distributes,
securities in the United States, except to
the extent permitted bank holding
companies. The Board proposed that the
5 percent limit be raised to 10 percent.
Two commenters suggested that the
limit be raised to 24.9 percent and one
proposed that no change be made. The
Board has determined to adopt the 10
percent limit as proposed. The Board
continues to hold the view expressed in
the 1997 proposal that a foreign bank
should not be able to exert a significant
influence over such a securities firm.
Investments above the 10 percent level

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would be permitted if the foreign bank
met the requirements to be treated as a
financial holding company under the
GLB Act.
Change in meaning of ‘‘incidental’’.
Two commenters requested that the
Board apply an expanded definition of
‘‘incidental’’ U.S. activities in Subpart
B. Under the current rule in Regulation
K, a QFBO is permitted to own up to
100 percent of a foreign company that
conducts activities in the United States
that are ‘‘incidental’’ to the foreign
company’s international or foreign
business. The Board’s longstanding
interpretation, for purposes of both
Subparts A and B of Regulation K, has
been that such incidental activities in
the United States are limited to those
activities that the Board has determined
are permissible for Edge corporations to
conduct in the United States. The Board
proposed changes to Subpart A
governing foreign portfolio investments
by U.S. banking organizations to expand
the interpretation of ‘‘incidental’’ for
such investments to permit U.S. banking
organizations to hold foreign portfolio
investments (maximum of 19.9 percent
of voting and 40 percent of total equity)
that derive no more than 10 percent of
their total consolidated revenue in the
United States. The commenters
proposed that the Board apply the same
expanded definition of ‘‘incidental’’
U.S. activities to permit a QFBO to hold
up to 100 percent of a foreign company
with U.S. activities so long as those
activities account for no more than 10
percent of the total consolidated
revenue of the company.37 The change
to Subpart A, which has been adopted,
is intended to deal with investments in
companies over which the U.S. banking
organization has no control. The
commenters are proposing liberalized
treatment for investments by foreign
banks where the foreign bank is in a
position to prevent the company from
entering the United States. There does
not appear to be any public interest
justification for the request and the
Board has not adopted the commenters’
proposal.
37 Foreign banking organizations already have
greater leeway than U.S. banking organizations with
respect to their noncontrolling investments in
foreign companies engaged in U.S. activities that
are not ‘‘incidental’’. The U.S. assets of such foreign
companies can account for up to 49.9 percent of
total consolidated assets, and the foreign companies
can derive up to 49.9 percent of their consolidated
revenues from the United States. Accordingly, the
commenters’ proposal would only affect the foreign
banking organization’s ability to make controlling
investments in foreign companies with U.S.
activities.

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54369

Determining Extent of Non-U.S.
operations
Under Regulation K, a foreign bank
may own or control voting shares of a
foreign company that is engaged in
business in the United States, subject to
a number of restrictions. The first of
these restrictions is that more than 50
percent of the foreign company’s
consolidated assets must be located, and
consolidated revenues derived from,
outside the United States. One
commenter proposed that this assets
plus revenues test be replaced with a
requirement that more than 50 percent
of the organization’s business be outside
the United States as measured by two
out of three indicia: location of assets,
derivation of revenues, and derivation
of net income. There have been very few
cases of an investment failing to comply
with the assets/revenue test as currently
applied, and the commenter gave no
indication that any foreign bank has
been harmed by it. The Board did not
propose such a revision and, in the
absence of an actual problem, has
determined not to adopt it.
Increasing Amount of Equity in
Noncontrolling Investments
One commenter suggested increasing
the equity interest limit on noncontrolling portfolio investments made
by QFBOs from 24.9 percent of voting
stock and total equity to 24.9 percent of
voting stock and 40 percent of total
equity to comport with limits applicable
to U.S. banking organizations. Foreign
banking organizations already are able
to conduct a greater range of activities
both in and outside the United States
than are U.S. banking organizations. The
analogy to portfolio investments of U.S.
banking organizations is not valid; the
new authority for U.S. organizations in
this area is more limited than the
existing authority for QFBOs. The Board
does not consider that the additional
authority proposed by this commenter
for investments by foreign banking
organizations is warranted.
Exception for Line-of-Business
Requirement
Section 2(h)(2) requires that the U.S.
commercial and industrial holdings of a
foreign banking organization be in the
same general line of business as the
foreign investor company, or in a
business related to the business
conducted outside the United States.
Consistent with the intent of Congress
when it adopted this provision,
Regulation K uses the Standard
Industrial Classification (SIC) system for
determining the comparability of U.S.
and foreign nonbanking activities. One

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commenter noted that the provision
does not permit any exceptions and
suggested that the Board establish a
procedure to permit a QFBO, when SIC
establishment categories are not
matching, to demonstrate on a case-bycase basis that the U.S. activities of a
foreign subsidiary are nonetheless the
same kind of activities, or related to the
activities, engaged in directly or
indirectly by the foreign subsidiary
outside the United States.
The Board is not aware of a significant
number of cases where U.S. and foreign
investments of QFBOs have not met the
requirements of this provision and sees
no reason to modify it at this time.
However, in view of the fact that the SIC
classification system is being replaced
by the North American Industry
Classification System, the Board will be
reviewing the provision and may
consider if a procedure to exempt
investments that do not comply with the
relevant classification system would be
appropriate.
This same commenter suggested that
the Board review its reporting
requirements to seek ways to address
the difficulty of monitoring compliance
with the requirements of section
211.23(f) of Regulation K within a
complex, multi-tiered global
organization. In the aftermath of the
Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, the Board is
undertaking a review of reporting
requirements for foreign banking
organizations and is seeking to reduce
burden where appropriate.
The Conduct of Unregulated Activities
Abroad through U.S. Companies
Pursuant to section 4(c)(9) of the BHC
Act, Regulation K currently exempts
from the BHC Act any activity
conducted by a QFBO outside the
United States. In 1997, the Board noted
the growing trend by foreign banks to
use this exemption to conduct
unregulated activities abroad through
foreign subsidiaries of U.S. companies
operating under section 4(c)(8) of the
BHC Act. U.S. bank holding companies,
in contrast, are not able to conduct
unrestricted activities abroad through
foreign subsidiaries of their section
4(c)(8) companies. Under the BHC Act,
a U.S. bank holding company may own
foreign subsidiaries only under the
authority of Subpart A of Regulation K
which set limits on the activities that
can be conducted in such subsidiaries.
The Board requested comment on
whether it is consistent with the policy
of national treatment to permit QFBOs
to continue to use the exemption to
conduct unrestricted activities abroad in
foreign subsidiaries of companies

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regulation by the Board under section
4(c)(8).
The commenters generally favored
permitting foreign banks to have
unrestricted 4(c)(9) foreign subsidiaries
of 4(c)(8) companies. A number of
commenters stated that a foreign
banking organization should be
permitted to organize its non-U.S.
activities in the manner that best suits
its business, and that the home country
supervisor and not the Federal Reserve
is regarded by the market as the
supervisor of the activities of such
foreign companies. None of the
commenters expressed any views as to
whether such practice may provide
foreign banks with a competitive
advantage over U.S. banking
organizations in using and marketing
the name and operations of the
regulated U.S. company, but they did
state that foreign banks could achieve
the same benefits by establishing a
foreign affiliate of the 4(c)(8) company
with a similar or identical name.
The Board has determined to take no
action at this time to prevent the
practice from continuing, but reserves
the right to review any of these
situations as the facts warrant and
require a change in the relationship if
the structure in fact results in
competitive inequality.38
Implementation of New Interstate Rules
In addition to application procedures
and rules on nonbanking activities,
Regulation K implements the
restrictions on interstate operations of
foreign banks provided in the IBA and
the BHC Act. The Interstate Act
amended the IBA and the BHC Act to
remove geographic restrictions on
interstate acquisitions of banks by
foreign banks, permitted foreign banks
to branch interstate by merger and de
novo on the same basis as domestic
banks with the same home state as the
foreign bank, and modified the
definition of a foreign bank’s home state
for purposes of interstate branching. The
Interstate Act became fully effective in
June 1997.
In May 1996, the Board published a
final rule to implement certain of the
changes made by the Interstate Act. The
rule required certain foreign banks to
select a home state for the first time, or
have a home state designated by the
Board, removed obsolete provisions of
Regulation K that restricted the ability
of a foreign bank to effect major bank
mergers through U.S. subsidiary banks
38 The Board notes that material alterations in
nonbanking activities carried on by a particular
section 4(c)(8) company may require notice to the
Board. 12 CFR 225.25(c)(3).

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located outside the foreign bank’s home
state, and deleted certain other obsolete
rules governing home state selection.
The Board’s 1997 proposal sought to
implement and interpret certain other
changes made by the Interstate Act. The
proposal would permit foreign banks to
make additional changes in home state
under certain circumstances and
clarified the extent to which a foreign
bank changing its home state would be
required to conform its existing network
of bank subsidiaries and banking offices.
In addition, the proposal set forth the
additional standards for approval of
applications by foreign banks to
establish interstate branches. It also
clarified that the ‘‘upgrade’’ of agencies
and limited branches to full branches
required Board approval and that the
Board would approve such upgrades
(absent a merger transaction) only if the
host state had enacted laws permitting
de novo interstate branching. Finally,
the proposal deleted the Board’s home
state attribution rule, which provides
that a foreign bank (or other company)
and all other foreign banks which it
controls must have the same home state.
The commenters were generally
supportive of the Board’s proposals in
the interstate area. With the exception of
the ‘‘upgrades’’ proposal which, as
described below, has been mooted by
subsequent legislation, the Board has
adopted the changes as proposed.
Changes of Home State
In 1980, the Board allowed foreign
banks a single change of home state as
a compromise between the need for
comparable treatment with domestic
banks and Congress’ intent, in adopting
the IBA, that foreign banks be allowed
some flexibility to change home state.
The basic framework for interstate
banking, however, has changed
substantially since 1980, when domestic
banks generally could not branch
interstate and rarely, if ever, could
change home states. Domestic and
foreign banks may now branch into
other states either de novo or by merger
in certain circumstances; interstate
branching by merger between banks is
now possible in all but one state (all
states will allow interstate branching by
merger as of year end 2001), and de
novo interstate branching is permitted
in 17 states. As a result, many domestic
banks with interstate branches now
have significant opportunities to change
home state, although these
opportunities are not available to all
banks under all circumstances.
In light of these changes, the Board
proposed giving foreign banks
additional opportunities to change
home state in a way that affords

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Federal Register / Vol. 66, No. 208 / Friday, October 26, 2001 / Rules and Regulations
comparable treatment to foreign and
domestic banks. The proposal retained
the ability of foreign banks under
current rules to change their home state
once by filing a notice with the Board.
Changes made by foreign banks prior to
the entry into effect of the final rule
would count toward this one-time limit.
The proposal also established a new
procedure for foreign banks to change
home state an unlimited number of
times, by applying for the prior approval
of the Board for each such change. A
foreign bank applying to change its
home state under the new procedure
would be required to show that a
domestic bank with the same home state
would be able to make the same change.
The Board has adopted the change in
home state provision as proposed. The
commenters supported the provision
but questioned the need for prior Board
approval; instead they recommended a
45 day notice requirement. The Board
has considered whether the issues
presented by a request for an additional
change of home state could be dealt
with adequately during a 45 day prior
notice period. The Board expects such
changes to be comparatively rare. In
addition, each such request presents
unique facts. For these reasons, the
Board has elected to retain the prior
approval requirement set forth in the
proposal. As the Board gains experience
processing such requests, it may
consider replacing the prior approval
with a prior notice requirement.
One of the commenters sought
assurance that the Board would be
flexible in interpreting the requirement
that a foreign bank seeking to make an
additional change of home state
demonstrate that a domestic bank with
the same home state would be able to
make the same change. The Board
believes the new procedure advances
the policies of national treatment and
equality of competitive opportunity
underlying the IBA by allowing foreign
banks to take advantage of changes in
laws concerning interstate branching in
order to change home state, when and
to the extent those laws make it possible
for similarly situated domestic banks to
change home state. Although the
Interstate Act made it possible for
domestic banks to change home state in
some cases, there are other cases where
such a change in home state may be
difficult or impossible. The new
procedure also seeks to prevent foreign
banks from gaining an unfair
competitive advantage over domestic
banks. Accordingly, the new procedure
would allow foreign banks to change
home state only in cases where a
domestic bank could effect a
comparable change.

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Changes in home state would
generally have no impact on which
Reserve Bank will supervise the
operations of a foreign bank nor on
which Reserve Bank will receive a
foreign bank’s reports and applications.
Conforming U.S. Operations Upon
Change in Home State
Regulation K currently requires a
foreign bank that changes its home state
to conform its banking operations
outside the new home state to what
would have been permissible at the time
of the bank’s original home state
selection. The requirement, adopted in
1980, implemented section 5 of the IBA
which sought to prevent foreign banks
from using a home state change to
acquire and maintain subsidiary banks
or branches in more than one state in
circumstances where a domestic bank or
bank holding company would be unable
to do so.
The Interstate Act liberalized the rules
on interstate branches and eliminated
the geographic restrictions on the
purchases of banks by domestic bank
holding companies and foreign banks
under the BHC Act and the IBA.
Consequently, the Board proposed that
the provisions on conforming operations
upon a foreign bank’s change of home
state be revised to reflect changes made
by the Interstate Act. For example, with
respect to subsidiary banks, a foreign
bank would no longer be required to
divest a subsidiary bank outside its new
home state; the Interstate Act authorizes
interstate acquisitions of bank
subsidiaries.
With respect to conforming branches
outside the foreign bank’s new home
state, the proposal reflected the
liberalized interstate branching rules
applicable to foreign and domestic
banks as a result of the Interstate Act.
A foreign bank changing its home state
would be permitted to retain all
branches which the foreign bank could
establish (under current law) if it
already had its new home state. This
relaxation is appropriate given that
domestic, as well as foreign banks, now
have significant opportunities to
establish and retain interstate branches.
The commenters supported this
proposal and the Board adopted it as
proposed. One commenter was
concerned, however, that a rigid
interpretation of the limitation on
retention of existing branch operations
outside the new home state to only
those branches that the foreign bank
could establish under current law if it
already had its new home state would
severely limit changes of home state by
banks with established,
nongrandfathered operations in the old

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54371

home state. The Board intends to apply
the rule consistent with the scope of the
changes to the interstate rules. The
Board also notes that the GLB Act
provides opportunities for banks to
upgrade existing operations outside the
home state. These opportunities should
reduce the need for foreign banks to
change home states.
Additional Standards for Interstate
Offices
The proposal also contained the
additional standards required by the
Interstate Act for approval by the Board
of the establishment by a foreign bank
of branches located outside of the bank’s
home state. These standards were
designed to insure that foreign banks
seeking to establish interstate branches
meet requirements comparable to those
imposed on domestic banks seeking to
operate interstate. The Board received
no comments on this aspect of the
interstate proposal and has adopted it as
proposed.
Upgrading of Agencies and Limited
Branches to Full Branches
Section 5 of the IBA, as amended by
the Interstate Act, generally allows a
foreign bank to establish full branches
outside its home state only if a domestic
bank with the same home state could
establish branches in the same host state
under the Interstate Act. The GLB Act
contained a new exception to this
general limitation. The new provision
allows a foreign bank, with the Board’s
approval, to upgrade an existing agency
or limited branch outside the bank’s
home state to a full service branch
provided the state would permit the
upgrade and the office has been is
existence the minimum amount of time
that the state requires for the acquisition
of an interstate bank.
In response to inquiries and requests
from trade groups, the Board, in its 1997
proposal, stated its view that upgrades
of existing agencies and limited
branches outside of a foreign bank’s
home state constituted a ‘‘change in
status’’ of an office requiring Board
approval under FBSEA. In addition, the
Board stated that such upgrades would
be approved only in situations where
the state in which the upgraded office
was located permitted de novo
branching.
The Board’s proposal elicited
responses from three commenters, each
of which urged liberalization and/or
flexibility to some degree. The proposal
and the comments received have been
superseded to a significant degree by the
GLB Act provision permitting upgrades.
The new statutory provision confirmed
that upgrades require Board approval

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but made such upgrades more widely
available than the Board had proposed.
Upgrades may now be approved
provided the state permits the upgrade
and the office to be upgraded has been
in existence in that state for the
minimum amount of time (no more than
5 years) required for the acquisition of
an interstate bank. The Board is
amending its interstate rules to
implement the GLB provision.
Upgrades, like other branch proposals
under FBSEA, generally require full
applications. Prior notice may be
available, as provided elsewhere in this
final rule, if the foreign bank has
previously received a CCS
determination from the Board.
Home State Attribution Rule Deleted
Regulation K currently provides that a
foreign banking organization and all its
affiliates are entitled to only one home
state. This would be true even if the
foreign banking organization owned
several different foreign banks with
operations in the United States.
At the time the rule was adopted,
domestic banks generally could not
branch into states other than the ones in
which they were located, nor could
bank holding companies generally
acquire banks outside their home state.
In that context, the Regulation K
provision was structured to prevent
affiliated groups of foreign banks from
gaining an unfair advantage over
domestic banks by having each of the
affiliated foreign banks select a different
home state. Having done so, the foreign
banks would be able to open and
operate branches in more than one state.
The rule sought to prevent this by
stating that a foreign banking
organization and any foreign bank that
it controls would be entitled to only one
home state.
The Interstate Act has substantially
changed the rules on interstate
expansion since this provision was
originally adopted. Under current law, a
bank holding company may own many
banks in different states; each of these
banks is entitled to its own home state
regardless of the home states of its
affiliates. Consequently, in 1997 the
Board proposed that Regulation K be
amended to eliminate the requirement
that a foreign bank and all its affiliates
are entitled to only one home state. The
proposal would preserve national
treatment for foreign banks and would
not put U.S. banking organizations at
any competitive disadvantage. The
commenters supported the proposal,
and the Board has adopted it.

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Representative Offices
Definition of Representative Office
The GLB Act amended the definition
of representative office such that a
subsidiary of a foreign bank may now be
considered a representative office. The
definition of representative office in
Regulation K has been modified to
conform with the change in law. The
statutory amendment closed a potential
‘‘loophole’’ that made it possible for
foreign banks to set up subsidiaries to
engage in representative activities, thus
avoiding both the FBSEA application
process and ongoing supervision of such
subsidiary as a representative office.
However, the fact that subsidiaries can
now be deemed to be representative
offices raises new issues.
The Board is aware of only a few
cases in which banks sought to make
use of this loophole and does not
believe that there are significant current
issues with respect to representative
functions being conducted out of
subsidiaries. It is possible that a foreign
bank could attempt to evade the IBA’s
requirements by using a nonbank
subsidiary; it would be difficult,
however, to anticipate and try to
prohibit all potential schemes. The
Board thus is not proposing to amend
Regulation K to clarify all situations in
which a nonbank subsidiary or affiliate
would be considered a representative
office. Rather the Board is providing
general guidance and seeks views on
whether more explicit guidance is
warranted.
As a general matter, any subsidiary
established for the purpose of acting as
a representative office clearly would be
a representative office. Similarly, a
subsidiary would be considered to be a
representative office when it holds itself
out to the public as a representative of
the foreign bank, acting on behalf of the
foreign bank, even if the subsidiary
engages in other nonbank business. In
addition, an individual or a unit of a
subsidiary that acts as a representative
of a foreign bank from the location of
the nonbank subsidiary would be
treated as a representative office. An
important limitation on this general
approach is that a subsidiary generally
would not be considered a
representative office if it makes
customer referrals or cross-markets the
foreign bank’s services in a manner that
would be permissible for a nonbank
affiliate of a U.S. bank.
The Board is also interested in
receiving views on whether a money
transmitter subsidiary of a foreign bank
should be prohibited from also engaging
in representative functions or
employing individuals who act as bank

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representatives. A money transmitter is
a nonbank company that for a fee will
send funds to persons outside the
United States. Often, the funds are first
transmitted to the affiliated foreign bank
for the benefit of the ultimate recipient.
A foreign bank is not entitled to use the
money transmitter to engage in deposittaking. If a representative office were
combined with a money transmitter, it
would be extremely difficult if not
impossible to monitor or enforce
compliance with this restriction.
Customers could also be confused about
the status of funds given to the money
transmitter.
Registration of Existing Incorporated
Representative Offices
There may be some subsidiaries of
foreign banks that will fall within the
definition of ‘‘representative office’’ for
the first time, and these subsidiaries
will need to be identified. The Board
has determined to impose a registration
requirement similar to that imposed
following the enactment of FBSEA,
which subjected representative offices
of foreign banks to Board approval
requirements and supervision for the
first time. All subsidiaries that are
acting as representative offices will be
required to complete a brief
informational report. The form will be
issued separately. Subsidiaries and
affiliates of foreign banks that have been
conducting representative functions on
behalf of the foreign bank will be
‘‘grandfathered’’ and not required to
apply to ‘‘re-establish’’ a representative
office.39
Approval of Loans at a Representative
Office
Regulation K currently includes as
permissible activities for a
representative office those in which a
‘‘loan production office’’ of a state
member bank may engage as set forth in
a 1978 Board interpretation. The portion
of the interpretation restricting loan
approvals at such offices has been
superceded, and loan origination
facilities of state member banks may
approve loans in certain circumstances.
The Board considers that representative
offices of foreign banks that are subject
to the BHC Act, and thus subject to
supervision in the United States, should
be permitted to engage in the same
activities as such facilities. The Board is
39 The grandfathering would be effective as of the
date of the proposal but only for those affiliates
engaged in activities clearly permissible to conduct
in combination with representative office functions.
Thus, should the Board determine that
representative functions may not be conducted in
a money transmitter subsidiary, such activities
would have to be discontinued.

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therefore amending Regulation K to
remove the reference to the
interpretation and clarify that
representative offices may make credit
decisions if (i) the foreign bank also
operates one or more branches or
agencies in the United States, (ii) the
loans approved at the representative
office are made by a U.S. branch or
agency of the bank, and (iii) the loan
proceeds are not disbursed in the
representative office.
Additional Matters
Temporary Additional Office Location
From time to time, the Board has
received requests from foreign banks
that desire to have an additional
temporary location, usually as an
interim measure before moving into new
office space that can accommodate the
entire staff of the branch or agency. The
earliest inquiries were prompted by
space constraints at the existing office
and the need to relocate some
employees until renovations could be
completed at a new larger location. To
accommodate such situations, the Board
proposed a new provision in Regulation
K permitting the Board, in its discretion,
to determine that a well-managed
foreign bank would not be considered to
have established an office if certain
conditions were met. Since the proposal
was made, staff has received additional
inquiries where the proposed relocation
of employees would not fit within the
provision as proposed. These more
recent requests have involved mergers
or consolidations of bank and nonbank
entities within a banking group. The
Board therefore, has adopted a
broadened form of the provision to
cover these additional types of
temporary relocation situations. Any
foreign bank taking advantage of this
authority would be required to advise
the Board prior to the relocation, make
certain commitments,40 and provide
periodic information, as requested. The
Board generally would not make such
determinations if the reason for the
request is the bank’s failure to file on a
timely basis a notice or application for
the additional office, and the bank could
not maintain the temporary location for
more than twelve months.
Changes to Definition Section
The revision makes certain technical
changes in the definition section of
Subpart B, including in the definitions
of ‘‘appropriate Federal Reserve Bank,’’
‘‘change in status,’’ ‘‘foreign banking
40 As a general rule, the Board would require that
there be no signs at any temporary location
identifying it as an office of the bank, and that no
client meetings take place at a temporary location.

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organization,’’ ‘‘regional administrative
office,’’ and ‘‘representative office.’’
Conforming Changes To Termination
Provisions
The Board proposed to amend the
provisions of Subpart B dealing with
termination of a U.S. office of a foreign
bank to add as a grounds for termination
a finding that the home country
supervisor of a foreign bank is not
making demonstrable progress in
establishing arrangements for the
comprehensive supervision or
regulation of such foreign bank on a
consolidated basis. This change has
been adopted.
Reduction of Reporting Requirements
The Board proposed reducing the
periodicity of reporting of all
acquisitions of shares in companies
engaged in business in the United States
from quarterly to annually. Since the
issuance of the proposal, the Board has
reconsidered this issue in connection
with the development and issuance of a
new Form FR Y–10F. On this form,
foreign banking organizations are
required to report some of the
investments covered by the old
quarterly report on an event-generated
basis. Remaining U.S. investments will
be reportable only annually in
connection with the FR Y–7. The final
rule reflects the decisions on reporting
made in connection with the issuance of
the FR Y–10F.
Subpart C: Export Trading Companies
Subpart C of Regulation K sets out the
rules governing investments and
participation in export trading
companies (ETCs) by bank holding
companies and other eligible investors.
ETCs are companies in which bank
holding companies and certain other
eligible investors may invest for the
purpose of promoting U.S. exports.
Currently, an eligible investor must
give the Board 60 days prior written
notice of an investment of any amount
in an ETC. The Board proposed adding
a general consent provision under
which an eligible investor that is wellcapitalized and well-managed may
invest in an ETC without prior notice.
Such an investor would have to provide
certain information to the Board in a
post-investment notice. The terms wellcapitalized and well-managed, as used
for this purpose, would have the same
meanings as in the Board’s Regulation
Y.
The Board further proposed allowing
an eligible investor, also under general
consent authority, to reinvest an amount
equal to dividends received from the
ETC in the prior year and to acquire an

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54373

ETC from an affiliate at net asset value.
Other proposed revisions included
moving all defined terms into a new
definitions section; removing an
obsolete provision relating to the
calculation of an ETC’s revenues; and
making certain minor, technical
amendments.
One commenter expressed general
support for the Board’s proposal. The
Board is adopting the revisions as
proposed.
Delegations of Authority
The Board proposed additional and
modified delegations of authority with
respect to certain matters arising under
Regulation K. Foremost, the Board
proposed to delegate additional
authority to the Director of the Division
of Banking Supervision and Regulation
with respect to foreign branching by
member banks, general consent
investments under Subpart A, and the
general consent procedures of Subpart
C. The Board also proposed to delegate
to the Director and to the Reserve Banks
additional authority with respect to
prior notice investments and the
establishment of prior notice U.S.
offices by foreign banks. In addition, the
Board proposed to delete as no longer
necessary the delegation to the Reserve
Banks to approve an application by a
foreign bank to establish an additional
U.S. office or a commercial lending
company under certain circumstances.
These proposals did not elicit negative
comment, and they are adopted as
proposed.
The Board also is authorizing several
additional delegations of authority,
relating generally to the processing and
approval of applications under all
Subparts of Regulation K; investments
in Edge and agreement corporation
subsidiaries; amendments to Edge
corporation charters; the establishment
of agreement corporations; ‘‘specialpurpose foreign government-owned
bank’’ determinations under section
211.24(d)(3); the approval of requests
arising under section 4(c)(9) of the BHC
Act; and FHC elections by foreign
banks. The delegations of authority and
modifications to existing delegations
authorized by this final rulemaking will
be variously codified in Regulation K
and the Board’s Rules Regarding
Delegation of Authority (12 CFR part
265).
Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Board has reviewed the final rule
in accordance with the Regulatory
Flexibility Act. This final rule makes
amendments to subparts A, B and C of
Regulation K based upon a review of the
regulation consistent with section 303 of

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the Riegle Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994
(the Regulatory Improvement Act) and
the International Banking Act of 1978
(the IBA). The rule streamlines
procedures for U.S. and foreign banking
organizations, implements portions of
the Interstate Act, EGRPRA and GLB,
and authorizes expanded activities for
U.S. banking organizations abroad. The
overall effect of the final rule will be to
reduce regulatory burden. Pursuant to
the Regulatory Flexibility Act, the Board
hereby certifies that the final rule will
not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small
business entities.
Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3506;
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. The
Federal Reserve may not conduct or
sponsor, and an organization is not
required to respond to, an information
collection unless the Board displays a
currently valid OMB control number.
The Board’s OMB control numbers for
the collections revised by this rule are
7100–0107 (the International
Applications and Prior Notifications
under Subparts A and C of Regulation
K; FR K–1), 7100–0110 (the Notification
Required Pursuant to Section 211.23(h)
of Regulation K on Acquisitions by
Foreign Banking Organizations; FR
4002), and 7100–0284 (the International
Applications and Prior Notifications
under Subpart B of Regulation K; FR K–
2).
The collections of information that are
revised by this rulemaking are found in
12 CFR 211.3, 211.5, 211.7, 211.9
through 211.11, 211.13, 211.22 through
211.24, and 211.34. These information
collections are required to evidence
compliance with the requirements of
Regulation K. The respondents are forprofit financial institutions, including
small businesses.
No comments specifically addressing
the burden estimate were received. The
current estimated annual burden for the
7100–0107 is 636 hours. The final rule
would result in an estimated 25 percent
reduction in the number of applications
filed. The final rule would permit
strongly capitalized and well-managed
U.S. banking organizations making
investments pursuant to general consent
authority to file an abbreviated postinvestment notice with the Board. This
notice would take the place of certain
requirements for prior notices or
applications to the Board before any
such investment could be made. The

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current estimated annual burden for the
7100–0284 is 600 hours. It is estimated
that the final rule would reduce the
burden by 10 percent due to a decrease
in the average number of hours required
to complete an application. The Board
expects to publish a separate notice to
revise these two applications to comply
with the final rule’s reporting
requirements. In the interim,
institutions may submit any new
information requested in this rule in a
letter format. The current estimated
annual burden for the 7100–0110 is 80
hours. The final rule eliminates the
need for this separate information
collection. Similar information is
collected on the Annual Report of
Foreign Banking Organizations (FR Y–7;
OMB No. 7100–0125) and the Report of
Changes in FBO Organizational
Structure (FR Y–10F; OMB No. 7100–
0297). The Board estimates there would
be no cost burden in addition to the
annual hour burden.
For the 7100–0107 and the 7100–
0284, the applying organization has the
opportunity to request confidentiality
for information that it believes will
qualify for an FOIA exemption.
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–
0107 or 7100–0284), Washington, DC
20503.
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 211
Exports, Federal Reserve System,
Foreign banking, Holding companies,
Investments, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements.
12 CFR Part 265
Authority delegations (Government
agencies), Banks, banking, Federal
Reserve System.
For the reasons set out in the
preamble, the Board of Governors
amends 12 CFR parts 211 and 265 as set
forth below:
PART 211—INTERNATIONAL
BANKING OPERATIONS
(REGULATION K)
1. The authority citation for part 211
continues to read as follows:

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Authority: 12 U.S.C. 221 et seq., 1818,
1835a, 1841 et seq., 3101 et seq., 3109 et seq.

2. Subparts A, B, and C (consisting of
§§ 211.1 through 211.34) are revised to
read as follows:
Subpart A—International Operations of
U.S. Banking Organizations
Sec.
211.1 Authority, purpose, and scope.
211.2 Definitions.
211.3 Foreign branches of U.S. banking
organizations.
211.4 Permissible investments and
activities of foreign branches of member
banks.
211.5 Edge and agreement corporations.
211.6 Permissible activities of Edge and
agreement corporations in the United
States.
211.7 Voluntary liquidation of Edge and
agreement corporations.
211.8 Investments and activities abroad.
211.9 Investment procedures.
211.10 Permissible activities abroad.
211.11 Advisory opinions under Regulation
K.
211.12 Lending limits and capital
requirements.
211.13 Supervision and reporting.

Subpart B—Foreign Banking
Organizations
211.20 Authority, purpose, and scope.
211.21 Definitions.
211.22 Interstate banking operations of
foreign banking organizations.
211.23 Nonbanking activities of foreign
banking organizations.
211.24 Approval of offices of foreign banks;
procedures for applications; standards
for approval; representative office
activities and standards for approval;
preservation of existing authority.
211.25 Termination of offices of foreign
banks.
211.26 Examination of offices and affiliates
of foreign banks.
211.27 Disclosure of supervisory
information to foreign supervisors.
211.28 Provisions applicable to branches
and agencies: limitation on loans to one
borrower.
211.29 Applications by state branches and
state agencies to conduct activities not
permissible for federal branches.
211.30 Criteria for evaluating U.S.
operations of foreign banks not subject to
consolidated supervision.

Subpart C—Export Trading Companies
211.31 Authority, purpose, and scope.
211.32 Definitions.
211.33 Investments and extensions of
credit.
211.34 Procedures for filing and processing
notices.

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Federal Register / Vol. 66, No. 208 / Friday, October 26, 2001 / Rules and Regulations
Subpart A—International Operations of
U.S. Banking Organizations
§ 211.1

Authority, purpose, and scope.

(a) Authority. This subpart is issued
by the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System (Board) under the
authority of the Federal Reserve Act
(FRA) (12 U.S.C. 221 et seq.); the Bank
Holding Company Act of 1956 (BHC
Act) (12 U.S.C. 1841 et seq.); and the
International Banking Act of 1978 (IBA)
(12 U.S.C. 3101 et seq.).
(b) Purpose. This subpart sets out
rules governing the international and
foreign activities of U.S. banking
organizations, including procedures for
establishing foreign branches and Edge
and agreement corporations to engage in
international banking, and for
investments in foreign organizations.
(c) Scope. This subpart applies to:
(1) Member banks with respect to
their foreign branches and investments
in foreign banks under section 25 of the
FRA (12 U.S.C. 601–604a);1 and
(2) Corporations organized under
section 25A of the FRA (12 U.S.C. 611–
631) (Edge corporations);
(3) Corporations having an agreement
or undertaking with the Board under
section 25 of the FRA (12 U.S.C. 601–
604a) (agreement corporations); and
(4) Bank holding companies with
respect to the exemption from the
nonbanking prohibitions of the BHC Act
afforded by section 4(c)(13) of that act
(12 U.S.C. 1843(c)(13)).
§ 211.2

Definitions.

Unless otherwise specified, for
purposes of this subpart:
(a) An affiliate of an organization
means:
(1) Any entity of which the
organization is a direct or indirect
subsidiary; or
(2) Any direct or indirect subsidiary
of the organization or such entity.
(b) Capital Adequacy Guidelines
means the ‘‘Capital Adequacy
Guidelines for State Member Banks:
Risk-Based Measure’’ (12 CFR part 208,
app. A) or the ‘‘Capital Adequacy
Guidelines for Bank Holding
Companies: Risk-Based Measure’’ (12
CFR part 225, app. A).
(c) Capital and surplus means, unless
otherwise provided in this part:
(1) For organizations subject to the
Capital Adequacy Guidelines:
(i) Tier 1 and tier 2 capital included
in an organization’s risk-based capital
(under the Capital Adequacy
Guidelines); and
1 Section 25 of the FRA (12 U.S.C. 601–604a),
which refers to national banking associations, also
applies to state member banks of the Federal
Reserve System by virtue of section 9 of the FRA
(12 U.S.C. 321)

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(ii) The balance of allowance for loan
and lease losses not included in an
organization’s tier 2 capital for
calculation of risk-based capital, based
on the organization’s most recent
consolidated Report of Condition and
Income.
(2) For all other organizations, paid-in
and unimpaired capital and surplus,
and includes undivided profits but does
not include the proceeds of capital notes
or debentures.
(d) Directly or indirectly, when used
in reference to activities or investments
of an organization, means activities or
investments of the organization or of
any subsidiary of the organization.
(e) Eligible country means any
country:
(1) For which an allocated transfer
risk reserve is required pursuant to
§ 211.43 of this part and that has
restructured its sovereign debt held by
foreign creditors; and
(2) Any other country that the Board
deems to be eligible.
(f) An Edge corporation is engaged in
banking if it is ordinarily engaged in the
business of accepting deposits in the
United States from nonaffiliated
persons.
(g) Engaged in business or engaged in
activities in the United States means
maintaining and operating an office
(other than a representative office) or
subsidiary in the United States.
(h) Equity means an ownership
interest in an organization, whether
through:
(1) Voting or nonvoting shares;
(2) General or limited partnership
interests;
(3) Any other form of interest
conferring ownership rights, including
warrants, debt, or any other interests
that are convertible into shares or other
ownership rights in the organization; or
(4) Loans that provide rights to
participate in the profits of an
organization, unless the investor
receives a determination that such loans
should not be considered equity in the
circumstances of the particular
investment.
(i) Foreign or foreign country refers to
one or more foreign nations, and
includes the overseas territories,
dependencies, and insular possessions
of those nations and of the United
States, and the Commonwealth of
Puerto Rico.
(j) Foreign bank means an
organization that:
(1) Is organized under the laws of a
foreign country;
(2) Engages in the business of
banking;
(3) Is recognized as a bank by the bank
supervisory or monetary authority of the

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country of its organization or principal
banking operations;
(4) Receives deposits to a substantial
extent in the regular course of its
business; and
(5) Has the power to accept demand
deposits.
(k) Foreign branch means an office of
an organization (other than a
representative office) that is located
outside the country in which the
organization is legally established and at
which a banking or financing business
is conducted.
(l) Foreign person means an office or
establishment located outside the
United States, or an individual residing
outside the United States.
(m) Investment means:
(1) The ownership or control of
equity;
(2) Binding commitments to acquire
equity;
(3) Contributions to the capital and
surplus of an organization; or
(4) The holding of an organization’s
subordinated debt when the investor
and the investor’s affiliates hold more
than 5 percent of the equity of the
organization.
(n) Investment grade means a security
that is rated in one of the four highest
rating categories by:
(1) Two or more NRSROs; or
(2) One NRSRO if the security has
been rated by only one NRSRO.
(o) Investor means an Edge
corporation, agreement corporation,
bank holding company, or member
bank.
(p) Joint venture means an
organization that has 20 percent or more
of its voting shares held directly or
indirectly by the investor or by an
affiliate of the investor under any
authority, but which is not a subsidiary
of the investor or of an affiliate of the
investor.
(q) Loans and extensions of credit
means all direct and indirect advances
of funds to a person made on the basis
of any obligation of that person to repay
the funds.
(r) NRSRO means a nationally
recognized statistical rating organization
as designated by the Securities and
Exchange Commission.
(s) Organization means a corporation,
government, partnership, association, or
any other entity.
(t) Person means an individual or an
organization.
(u) Portfolio investment means an
investment in an organization other
than a subsidiary or joint venture.
(v) Representative office means an
office that:
(1) Engages solely in representational
and administrative functions (such as

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soliciting new business or acting as
liaison between the organization’s head
office and customers in the United
States); and
(2) Does not have authority to make
any business decision (other than
decisions relating to its premises or
personnel) for the account of the
organization it represents, including
contracting for any deposit or depositlike liability on behalf of the
organization.
(w) Subsidiary means an organization
that has more than 50 percent of its
voting shares held directly or indirectly,
or that otherwise is controlled or
capable of being controlled, by the
investor or an affiliate of the investor
under any authority. Among other
circumstances, an investor is considered
to control an organization if:
(1) The investor or an affiliate is a
general partner of the organization; or
(2) The investor and its affiliates
directly or indirectly own or control
more than 50 percent of the equity of
the organization.
(x) Tier 1 capital has the same
meaning as provided under the Capital
Adequacy Guidelines.
(y) Well capitalized means:
(1) In relation to a parent member or
insured bank, that the standards set out
in § 208.43(b)(1) of Regulation H (12
CFR 208.43(b)(1)) are satisfied;
(2) In relation to a bank holding
company, that the standards set out in
§ 225.2(r)(1) of Regulation Y (12 CFR
225.2(r)(1)) are satisfied; and
(3) In relation to an Edge or agreement
corporation, that it has tier 1 and total
risk-based capital ratios of 6.0 and 10.0
percent, respectively, or greater.
(z) Well managed means that the Edge
or agreement corporation, any parent
insured bank, and the bank holding
company received a composite rating of
1 or 2, and at least a satisfactory rating
for management if such a rating is given,
at their most recent examination or
review.
§ 211.3 Foreign branches of U.S. banking
organizations.

(a) General—(1) Definition of banking
organization. For purposes of this
section, a banking organization is
defined as a member bank and its
affiliates.
(2) A banking organization is
considered to be operating a branch in
a foreign country if it has an affiliate
that is a member bank, Edge or
agreement corporation, or foreign bank
that operates an office (other than a
representative office) in that country.
(3) For purposes of this subpart, a
foreign office of an operating subsidiary
of a member bank shall be treated as a

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foreign branch of the member bank and
may engage only in activities
permissible for a branch of a member
bank.
(4) At any time upon notice, the Board
may modify or suspend branching
authority conferred by this section with
respect to any banking organization.
(b) (1) Establishment of foreign
branches. (i) Foreign branches may be
established by any member bank having
capital and surplus of $1,000,000 or
more, an Edge corporation, an
agreement corporation, any subsidiary
the shares of which are held directly by
the member bank, or any other
subsidiary held pursuant to this subpart.
(ii) The Board grants its general
consent under section 25 of the FRA (12
U.S.C. 601–604a) for a member bank to
establish a branch in the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico and the
overseas territories, dependencies, and
insular possessions of the United States.
(2) Prior notice. Unless otherwise
provided in this section, the
establishment of a foreign branch
requires 30 days’ prior written notice to
the Board.
(3) Branching into additional foreign
countries. After giving the Board 12
business days prior written notice, a
banking organization that operates
branches in two or more foreign
countries may establish a branch in an
additional foreign country.
(4) Additional branches within a
foreign country. No prior notice is
required to establish additional
branches in any foreign country where
the banking organization operates one or
more branches.
(5) Branching by nonbanking
affiliates. No prior notice is required for
a nonbanking affiliate of a banking
organization (i.e., an organization that is
not a member bank, an Edge or
agreement corporation, or foreign bank)
to establish branches within a foreign
country or in additional foreign
countries.
(6) Expiration of branching authority.
Authority to establish branches, when
granted following prior written notice to
the Board, shall expire one year from
the earliest date on which the authority
could have been exercised, unless
extended by the Board.
(c) Reporting. Any banking
organization that opens, closes, or
relocates a branch shall report such
change in a manner prescribed by the
Board.
(d) Reserves of foreign branches of
member banks. Member banks shall
maintain reserves against foreign branch
deposits when required by Regulation D
(12 CFR part 204).

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(e) Conditional approval; access to
information. The Board may impose
such conditions on authority granted by
it under this section as it deems
necessary, and may require termination
of any activities conducted under
authority of this section if a member
bank is unable to provide information
on its activities or those of its affiliates
that the Board deems necessary to
determine and enforce compliance with
U.S. banking laws.
§ 211.4 Permissible activities and
investments of foreign branches of member
banks.

(a) Permissible activities and
investments. In addition to its general
banking powers, and to the extent
consistent with its charter, a foreign
branch of a member bank may engage in
the following activities and make the
following investments, so far as is usual
in connection with the business of
banking in the country where it
transacts business:
(1) Guarantees. Guarantee debts, or
otherwise agree to make payments on
the occurrence of readily ascertainable
events (including, but not limited to,
nonpayment of taxes, rentals, customs
duties, or costs of transport, and loss or
nonconformance of shipping
documents) if the guarantee or
agreement specifies a maximum
monetary liability; however, except to
the extent that the member bank is fully
secured, it may not have liabilities
outstanding for any person on account
of such guarantees or agreements which,
when aggregated with other unsecured
obligations of the same person, exceed
the limit contained in section 5200(a)(1)
of the Revised Statutes (12 U.S.C. 84) for
loans and extensions of credit;
(2) Government obligations. (i)
Underwrite, distribute, buy, sell, and
hold obligations of:
(A) The national government of the
country where the branch is located and
any political subdivision of that
country;
(B) An agency or instrumentality of
the national government of the country
where the branch is located where such
obligations are supported by the taxing
authority, guarantee, or full faith and
credit of that government;
(C) The national government or
political subdivision of any country,
where such obligations are rated
investment grade; and
(D) An agency or instrumentality of
any national government where such
obligations are rated investment grade
and are supported by the taxing
authority, guarantee or full faith and
credit of that government.

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Federal Register / Vol. 66, No. 208 / Friday, October 26, 2001 / Rules and Regulations
(ii) No member bank, under authority
of this paragraph (a)(2), may hold, or be
under commitment with respect to, such
obligations for its own account in
relation to any one country in an
amount exceeding the greater of:
(A) 10 percent of its tier 1 capital; or
(B) 10 percent of the total deposits of
the bank’s branches in that country on
the preceding year-end call report date
(or the date of acquisition of the branch,
in the case of a branch that has not been
so reported);
(3) Other investments. (i) Invest in:
(A) The securities of the central bank,
clearinghouses, governmental entities
other than those authorized under
paragraph (a)(2) of this section, and
government-sponsored development
banks of the country where the foreign
branch is located;
(B) Other debt securities eligible to
meet local reserve or similar
requirements; and
(C) Shares of automated electronicpayments networks, professional
societies, schools, and the like necessary
to the business of the branch;
(ii) The total investments of a bank’s
branches in a country under this
paragraph (a)(3) (exclusive of securities
held as required by the law of that
country or as authorized under section
5136 of the Revised Statutes (12 U.S.C.
24, Seventh)) may not exceed 1 percent
of the total deposits of the bank’s
branches in that country on the
preceding year-end call report date (or
on the date of acquisition of the branch,
in the case of a branch that has not been
so reported);
(4) Real estate loans. Take liens or
other encumbrances on foreign real
estate in connection with its extensions
of credit, whether or not of first priority
and whether or not the real estate has
been improved;
(5) Insurance. Act as insurance agent
or broker;
(6) Employee benefits program. Pay to
an employee of the branch, as part of an
employee benefits program, a greater
rate of interest than that paid to other
depositors of the branch;
(7) Repurchase agreements. Engage in
repurchase agreements involving
securities and commodities that are the
functional equivalents of extensions of
credit;
(8) Investment in subsidiaries. With
the Board’s prior approval, acquire all of
the shares of a company (except where
local law requires other investors to
hold directors’ qualifying shares or
similar types of instruments) that
engages solely in activities:
(i) In which the member bank is
permitted to engage; or

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(ii) That are incidental to the activities
of the foreign branch.
(b) Other activities. With the Board’s
prior approval, engage in other activities
that the Board determines are usual in
connection with the transaction of the
business of banking in the places where
the member bank’s branches transact
business.
§ 211.5

Edge and agreement corporations.

(a) Board Authority. The Board shall
have the authority to approve:
(1) The establishment of Edge
corporations;
(2) Investments in agreement
corporations; and
(3) A member bank’s proposal to
invest more than 10 percent of its
capital and surplus in the aggregate
amount of stock held in all Edge and
agreement corporations.
(b) Organization of an Edge
corporation—(1) Permit. A proposed
Edge corporation shall become a body
corporate when the Board issues a
permit approving its proposed name,
articles of association, and organization
certificate.
(2) Name. The name of the Edge
corporation shall include international,
foreign, overseas, or a similar word, but
may not resemble the name of another
organization to an extent that might
mislead or deceive the public.
(3) Federal Register notice. The Board
shall publish in the Federal Register
notice of any proposal to organize an
Edge corporation and shall give
interested persons an opportunity to
express their views on the proposal.
(4) Factors considered by Board. The
factors considered by the Board in
acting on a proposal to organize an Edge
corporation include:
(i) The financial condition and history
of the applicant;
(ii) The general character of its
management;
(iii) The convenience and needs of the
community to be served with respect to
international banking and financing
services; and
(iv) The effects of the proposal on
competition.
(5) Authority to commence business.
After the Board issues a permit, the
Edge corporation may elect officers and
otherwise complete its organization,
invest in obligations of the U.S.
government, and maintain deposits with
depository institutions, but it may not
exercise any other powers until at least
25 percent of the authorized capital
stock specified in the articles of
association has been paid in cash, and
each shareholder has paid in cash at
least 25 percent of that shareholder’s
stock subscription.

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(6) Expiration of unexercised
authority. Unexercised authority to
commence business as an Edge
corporation shall expire one year after
issuance of the permit, unless the Board
extends the period.
(c) Other provisions regarding Edge
corporations—(1) Amendments to
articles of association. No amendment
to the articles of association shall
become effective until approved by the
Board.
(2) Shareholders’ meeting. An Edge
corporation shall provide in its bylaws
that:
(i) A shareholders’ meeting shall be
convened at the request of the Board
within five business days after the
Board gives notice of the request to the
Edge corporation;
(ii) Any shareholder or group of
shareholders that owns or controls 25
percent or more of the shares of the
Edge corporation shall attend such a
meeting in person or by proxy; and
(iii) Failure by a shareholder or
authorized representative to attend such
meeting in person or by proxy may
result in removal or barring of the
shareholder or representative from
further participation in the management
or affairs of the Edge corporation.
(3) Nature and ownership of shares—
(i) Shares. Shares of stock in an Edge
corporation may not include no-parvalue shares and shall be issued and
transferred only on its books and in
compliance with section 25A of the FRA
(12 U.S.C. 611 et seq.) and this subpart.
(ii) Contents of share certificates. The
share certificates of an Edge corporation
shall:
(A) Name and describe each class of
shares, indicating its character and any
unusual attributes, such as preferred
status or lack of voting rights; and
(B) Conspicuously set forth the
substance of:
(1) Any limitations on the rights of
ownership and transfer of shares
imposed by section 25A of the FRA (12
U.S.C. 611 et seq.); and
(2) Any rules that the Edge
corporation prescribes in its bylaws to
ensure compliance with this paragraph
(c).
(4) Change in status of shareholder.
Any change in status of a shareholder
that causes a violation of section 25A of
the FRA (12 U.S.C. 611 et seq.) shall be
reported to the Board as soon as
possible, and the Edge corporation shall
take such action as the Board may
direct.
(d) Ownership of Edge corporations by
foreign institutions—(1) Prior Board
approval. One or more foreign or
foreign-controlled domestic institutions
referred to in section 25A(11) of the

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FRA (12 U.S.C. 619) may apply for the
Board’s prior approval to acquire,
directly or indirectly, a majority of the
shares of the capital stock of an Edge
corporation.
(2) Conditions and requirements.
Such an institution shall:
(i) Provide the Board with information
related to its financial condition and
activities and such other information as
the Board may require;
(ii) Ensure that any transaction by an
Edge corporation with an affiliate2 is on
substantially the same terms, including
interest rates and collateral, as those
prevailing at the same time for
comparable transactions by the Edge
corporation with nonaffiliated persons,
and does not involve more than the
normal risk of repayment or present
other unfavorable features;
(iii) Ensure that the Edge corporation
will not provide funding on a continual
or substantial basis to any affiliate or
office of the foreign institution through
transactions that would be inconsistent
with the international and foreign
business purposes for which Edge
corporations are organized; and
(iv) Comply with the limitation on
aggregate investments in all Edge and
agreement corporations set forth in
paragraph (h) of this section.
(3) Foreign institutions not subject to
the BHC Act. In the case of a foreign
institution not subject to section 4 of the
BHC Act (12 U.S.C. 1843), that
institution shall:
(i) Comply with any conditions that
the Board may impose that are
necessary to prevent undue
concentration of resources, decreased or
unfair competition, conflicts of interest,
or unsound banking practices in the
United States; and
(ii) Give the Board 30 days’ prior
written notice before engaging in any
nonbanking activity in the United
States, or making any initial or
additional investments in another
organization, that would require prior
Board approval or notice by an
organization subject to section 4 of the
BHC Act (12 U.S.C. 1843); in connection
with such notice, the Board may impose
conditions necessary to prevent adverse
effects that may result from such
activity or investment.
(e) Change in control of an Edge
corporation—(1) Prior notice. (i) Any
person shall give the Board 60 days’
prior written notice before acquiring,
directly or indirectly, 25 percent or
more of the voting shares, or otherwise
2 For purposes of this paragraph (d)(2), affiliate
means any organization that would be an affiliate
under section 23A of the FRA (12 U.S.C. 371c) if
the Edge corporation were a member bank.

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acquiring control, of an Edge
corporation.
(ii) The Board may extend the 60-day
period for an additional 30 days by
notifying the acquiring party.
(iii) A notice under this paragraph (e)
need not be filed where a change in
control is effected through a transaction
requiring the Board’s approval under
section 3 of the BHC Act (12 U.S.C.
1842).
(2) Board review. In reviewing a
notice filed under this paragraph (e), the
Board shall consider the factors set forth
in paragraph (b)(4) of this section, and
may disapprove a notice or impose any
conditions that it finds necessary to
assure the safe and sound operation of
the Edge corporation, to assure the
international character of its operation,
and to prevent adverse effects, such as
decreased or unfair competition,
conflicts of interest, or undue
concentration of resources.
(f) Domestic branching by Edge
corporations—(1) Prior notice. (i) An
Edge corporation may establish
branches in the United States 30 days
after the Edge corporation has given
written notice of its intention to do so
to its Reserve Bank, unless the Edge
corporation is notified to the contrary
within that time.
(ii) The notice to the Reserve Bank
shall include a copy of the notice of the
proposal published in a newspaper of
general circulation in the communities
to be served by the branch.
(iii) The newspaper notice may
appear no earlier than 90 calendar days
prior to submission of notice of the
proposal to the Reserve Bank. The
newspaper notice shall provide an
opportunity for the public to give
written comment on the proposal to the
appropriate Federal Reserve Bank for at
least 30 days after the date of
publication.
(2) Factors considered. The factors
considered in acting upon a proposal to
establish a branch are enumerated in
paragraph (b)(4) of this section.
(3) Expiration of authority. Authority
to establish a branch under prior notice
shall expire one year from the earliest
date on which that authority could have
been exercised, unless the Board
extends the period.
(g) Agreement corporations—(1)
General. With the prior approval of the
Board, a member bank or bank holding
company may invest in a federally or
state-chartered corporation that has
entered into an agreement or
undertaking with the Board that it will
not exercise any power that is
impermissible for an Edge corporation
under this subpart.

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(2) Factors considered by Board. The
factors considered in acting upon a
proposal to establish an agreement
corporation are enumerated in
paragraph (b)(4) of this section.
(h) (1) Limitation on investment in
Edge and agreement corporations. A
member bank may invest up to 10
percent of its capital and surplus in the
capital stock of Edge and agreement
corporations or, with the prior approval
of the Board, up to 20 percent of its
capital and surplus in such stock.
(2) Factors considered by Board. The
factors considered by the Board in
acting on a proposal under paragraph
(h)(1) of this section shall include:
(i) The composition of the assets of
the bank’s Edge and agreement
corporations;
(ii) The total capital invested by the
bank in its Edge and agreement
corporations when combined with
retained earnings of the Edge and
agreement corporations (including
retained earnings of any foreign bank
subsidiaries) as a percentage of the
bank’s capital;
(iii) Whether the bank, bank holding
company, and Edge and agreement
corporations are well-capitalized and
well-managed;
(iv) Whether the bank is adequately
capitalized after deconsolidating and
deducting the aggregate investment in
and assets of all Edge or agreement
corporations and all foreign bank
subsidiaries; and
(v) Any other factor the Board deems
relevant to the safety and soundness of
the member bank.
(i) Reserve requirements and interest
rate limitations. The deposits of an Edge
or agreement corporation are subject to
Regulations D and Q (12 CFR parts 204
and 217) in the same manner and to the
same extent as if the Edge or agreement
corporation were a member bank.
(j) Liquid funds. Funds of an Edge or
agreement corporation that are not
currently employed in its international
or foreign business, if held or invested
in the United States, shall be in the form
of:
(1) Cash;
(2) Deposits with depository
institutions, as described in Regulation
D (12 CFR part 204), and other Edge and
agreement corporations;
(3) Money-market instruments
(including repurchase agreements with
respect to such instruments), such as
bankers’ acceptances, federal funds
sold, and commercial paper; and
(4) Short- or long-term obligations of,
or fully guaranteed by, federal, state,
and local governments and their
instrumentalities.

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(k) Reports by Edge and agreement
corporations of crimes and suspected
crimes. An Edge or agreement
corporation, or any branch or subsidiary
thereof, shall file a suspicious-activity
report in accordance with the provisions
of § 208.62 of Regulation H (12 CFR
208.62).
§ 211.6 Permissible activities of Edge and
agreement corporations in the United
States.

(a) Activities incidental to
international or foreign business. An
Edge or agreement corporation may
engage, directly or indirectly, in
activities in the United States that are
permitted by section 25A(6) of the FRA
(12 U.S.C. 615) and are incidental to
international or foreign business, and in
such other activities as the Board
determines are incidental to
international or foreign business. The
following activities will ordinarily be
considered incidental to an Edge or
agreement corporation’s international or
foreign business:
(1) Deposit-taking activities—(i)
Deposits from foreign governments and
foreign persons. An Edge or agreement
corporation may receive in the United
States transaction accounts, savings, and
time deposits (including issuing
negotiable certificates of deposits) from
foreign governments and their agencies
and instrumentalities, and from foreign
persons.
(ii) Deposits from other persons. An
Edge or agreement corporation may
receive from any other person in the
United States transaction accounts,
savings, and time deposits (including
issuing negotiable certificates of
deposit) if such deposits:
(A) Are to be transmitted abroad;
(B) Consist of funds to be used for
payment of obligations to the Edge or
agreement corporation or collateral
securing such obligations;
(C) Consist of the proceeds of
collections abroad that are to be used to
pay for exported or imported goods or
for other costs of exporting or importing
or that are to be periodically transferred
to the depositor’s account at another
financial institution;
(D) Consist of the proceeds of
extensions of credit by the Edge or
agreement corporation;
(E) Represent compensation to the
Edge or agreement corporation for
extensions of credit or services to the
customer;
(F) Are received from Edge or
agreement corporations, foreign banks,
and other depository institutions (as
described in Regulation D (12 CFR part
204)); or

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(G) Are received from an organization
that by its charter, license, or enabling
law is limited to business that is of an
international character, including
foreign sales corporations, as defined in
26 U.S.C. 922; transportation
organizations engaged exclusively in the
international transportation of
passengers or in the movement of goods,
wares, commodities, or merchandise in
international or foreign commerce; and
export trading companies established
under subpart C of this part.
(2) Borrowings. An Edge or agreement
corporation may:
(i) Borrow from offices of other Edge
and agreement corporations, foreign
banks, and depository institutions (as
described in Regulation D (12 CFR part
204));
(ii) Issue obligations to the United
States or any of its agencies or
instrumentalities;
(iii) Incur indebtedness from a
transfer of direct obligations of, or
obligations that are fully guaranteed as
to principal and interest by, the United
States or any agency or instrumentality
thereof that the Edge or agreement
corporation is obligated to repurchase;
and
(iv) Issue long-term subordinated debt
that does not qualify as a deposit under
Regulation D (12 CFR part 204).
(3) Credit activities. An Edge or
agreement corporation may:
(i) Finance the following:
(A) Contracts, projects, or activities
performed substantially abroad;
(B) The importation into or
exportation from the United States of
goods, whether direct or through
brokers or other intermediaries;
(C) The domestic shipment or
temporary storage of goods being
imported or exported (or accumulated
for export); and
(D) The assembly or repackaging of
goods imported or to be exported;
(ii) Finance the costs of production of
goods and services for which export
orders have been received or which are
identifiable as being directly for export;
(iii) Assume or acquire participations
in extensions of credit, or acquire
obligations arising from transactions the
Edge or agreement corporation could
have financed, including acquisition of
obligations of foreign governments;
(iv) Guarantee debts, or otherwise
agree to make payments on the
occurrence of readily ascertainable
events (including, but not limited to,
nonpayment of taxes, rentals, customs
duties, or cost of transport, and loss or
nonconformance of shipping
documents), so long as the guarantee or
agreement specifies the maximum
monetary liability thereunder and is

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related to a type of transaction described
in paragraphs (a)(3)(i) and (ii) of this
section; and
(v) Provide credit and other banking
services for domestic and foreign
purposes to foreign governments and
their agencies and instrumentalities,
foreign persons, and organizations of the
type described in paragraph (a)(1)(ii)(G)
of this section.
(4) Payments and collections. An Edge
or agreement corporation may receive
checks, bills, drafts, acceptances, notes,
bonds, coupons, and other instruments
for collection abroad, and collect such
instruments in the United States for a
customer abroad; and may transmit and
receive wire transfers of funds and
securities for depositors.
(5) Foreign exchange. An Edge or
agreement corporation may engage in
foreign exchange activities.
(6) Fiduciary and investment advisory
activities. An Edge or agreement
corporation may:
(i) Hold securities in safekeeping for,
or buy and sell securities upon the order
and for the account and risk of, a
person, provided such services for U.S.
persons are with respect to foreign
securities only;
(ii) Act as paying agent for securities
issued by foreign governments or other
entities organized under foreign law;
(iii) Act as trustee, registrar,
conversion agent, or paying agent with
respect to any class of securities issued
to finance foreign activities and
distributed solely outside the United
States;
(iv) Make private placements of
participations in its investments and
extensions of credit; however, except to
the extent permissible for member banks
under section 5136 of the Revised
Statutes (12 U.S.C. 24(Seventh)), no
Edge or agreement corporation
otherwise may engage in the business of
underwriting, distributing, or buying or
selling securities in the United States;
(v) Act as investment or financial
adviser by providing portfolio
investment advice and portfolio
management with respect to securities,
other financial instruments, realproperty interests, and other investment
assets,3 and by providing advice on
mergers and acquisitions, provided such
services for U.S. persons are with
respect to foreign assets only; and
(vi) Provide general economic
information and advice, general
economic statistical forecasting services,
and industry studies, provided such
1 For purposes of this section, management of an
investment portfolio does not include operational
management of real property, or industrial or
commercial assets.

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services for U.S. persons shall be with
respect to foreign economies and
industries only.
(7) Banking services for employees.
Provide banking services, including
deposit services, to the officers and
employees of the Edge or agreement
corporation and its affiliates; however,
extensions of credit to such persons
shall be subject to the restrictions of
Regulation O (12 CFR part 215) as if the
Edge or agreement corporation were a
member bank.
(b) Other activities. With the Board’s
prior approval, an Edge or agreement
corporation may engage, directly or
indirectly, in other activities in the
United States that the Board determines
are incidental to their international or
foreign business.
§ 211.7 Voluntary liquidation of Edge and
agreement corporations.

(a) Prior notice. An Edge or agreement
corporation desiring voluntarily to
discontinue normal business and
dissolve, shall provide the Board with
45 days’ prior written notice of its intent
to do so.
(b) Waiver of notice period. The Board
may waive the 45-day period if it finds
that immediate action is required by the
circumstances presented.
§ 211.8

Investments and activities abroad.

(a) General policy. Activities abroad,
whether conducted directly or
indirectly, shall be confined to activities
of a banking or financial nature and
those that are necessary to carry on such
activities. In doing so, investors 4 shall
at all times act in accordance with high
standards of banking or financial
prudence, having due regard for
diversification of risks, suitable
liquidity, and adequacy of capital.
Subject to these considerations and the
other provisions of this section, it is the
Board’s policy to allow activities abroad
to be organized and operated as best
meets corporate policies.
(b) Direct investments by member
banks. A member bank’s direct
investments under section 25 of the
FRA (12 U.S.C. 601 et seq.) shall be
limited to:
(1) Foreign banks;
(2) Domestic or foreign organizations
formed for the sole purpose of holding
shares of a foreign bank;
(3) Foreign organizations formed for
the sole purpose of performing nominee,
fiduciary, or other banking services
incidental to the activities of a foreign
branch or foreign bank affiliate of the
member bank; and
4 For purposes of this section and §§ 211.9 and
211.10 of this part, a direct subsidiary of a member
bank is deemed to be an investor.

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(4) Subsidiaries established pursuant
to § 211.4(a)(8) of this part.
(c) Eligible investments. Subject to the
limitations set out in paragraphs (b) and
(d) of this section, an investor may,
directly or indirectly:
(1) Investment in subsidiary. Invest in
a subsidiary that engages solely in
activities listed in § 211.10 of this part,
or in such other activities as the Board
has determined in the circumstances of
a particular case are permissible;
provided that, in the case of an
acquisition of a going concern, existing
activities that are not otherwise
permissible for a subsidiary may
account for not more than 5 percent of
either the consolidated assets or
consolidated revenues of the acquired
organization;
(2) Investment in joint venture. Invest
in a joint venture; provided that, unless
otherwise permitted by the Board, not
more than 10 percent of the joint
venture’s consolidated assets or
consolidated revenues are attributable to
activities not listed in § 211.10 of this
part; and
(3) Portfolio investments. Make
portfolio investments in an
organization, provided that:
(i) Individual investment limits. The
total direct and indirect portfolio
investments by the investor and its
affiliates in an organization engaged in
activities that are not permissible for
joint ventures, when combined with all
other shares in the organization held
under any other authority, do not
exceed:
(A) 40 percent of the total equity of
the organization; or
(B) 19.9 percent of the organization’s
voting shares.
(ii) Loans and extensions of credit.
Any loans and extensions of credit
made by an investor or its affiliates to
the organization are on substantially the
same terms, including interest rates and
collateral, as those prevailing at the
same time for comparable transactions
between the investor or its affiliates and
nonaffiliated persons; and
(iii) Protecting shareholder rights.
Nothing in this paragraph (c)(3) shall
prohibit an investor from otherwise
exercising rights it may have as
shareholder to protect the value of its
investment, so long as the exercise of
such rights does not result in the
investor’s direct or indirect control of
the organization.
(d) Investment limit. In calculating the
amount that may be invested in any
organization under this section and
§§ 211.9 and 211.10 of this part, there
shall be included any unpaid amount
for which the investor is liable and any

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investments in the same organization
held by affiliates under any authority.
(e) Divestiture. An investor shall
dispose of an investment promptly
(unless the Board authorizes retention)
if:
(1) The organization invested in:
(i) Engages in impermissible activities
to an extent not permitted under
paragraph (c) of this section; or
(ii) Engages directly or indirectly in
other business in the United States that
is not permitted to an Edge corporation
in the United States; provided that an
investor may:
(A) Retain portfolio investments in
companies that derive no more than 10
percent of their total revenue from
activities in the United States; and
(B) Hold up to 5 percent of the shares
of a foreign company that engages
directly or indirectly in business in the
United States that is not permitted to an
Edge corporation; or
(2) After notice and opportunity for
hearing, the investor is advised by the
Board that such investment is
inappropriate under the FRA, the BHC
Act, or this subpart.
(f) Debts previously contracted. Shares
or other ownership interests acquired to
prevent a loss upon a debt previously
contracted in good faith are not subject
to the limitations or procedures of this
section; provided that such interests
shall be disposed of promptly but in no
event later than two years after their
acquisition, unless the Board authorizes
retention for a longer period.
(g) Investments made through debtfor-equity conversions.
(1) Permissible investments. A bank
holding company may make
investments through the conversion of
sovereign-or private-debt obligations of
an eligible country, either through direct
exchange of the debt obligations for the
investment, or by a payment for the debt
in local currency, the proceeds of
which, including an additional cash
investment not exceeding in the
aggregate more than 10 percent of the
fair value of the debt obligations being
converted as part of such investment,
are used to purchase the following
investments:
(i) Public-sector companies. A bank
holding company may acquire up to and
including 100 percent of the shares of
(or other ownership interests in) any
foreign company located in an eligible
country, if the shares are acquired from
the government of the eligible country
or from its agencies or instrumentalities.
(ii) Private-sector companies. A bank
holding company may acquire up to and
including 40 percent of the shares,
including voting shares, of (or other
ownership interests in) any other

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foreign company located in an eligible
country subject to the following
conditions:
(A) A bank holding company may
acquire more than 25 percent of the
voting shares of the foreign company
only if another shareholder or group of
shareholders unaffiliated with the bank
holding company holds a larger block of
voting shares of the company;
(B) The bank holding company and its
affiliates may not lend or otherwise
extend credit to the foreign company in
amounts greater than 50 percent of the
total loans and extensions of credit to
the foreign company; and
(C) The bank holding company’s
representation on the board of directors
or on management committees of the
foreign company may be no more than
proportional to its shareholding in the
foreign company.
(2) Investments by bank subsidiary of
bank holding company. Upon
application, the Board may permit an
indirect investment to be made pursuant
to this paragraph (g) through an insured
bank subsidiary of the bank holding
company, where the bank holding
company demonstrates that such
ownership is consistent with the
purposes of the FRA. In granting its
consent, the Board may impose such
conditions as it deems necessary or
appropriate to prevent adverse effects,
including prohibiting loans from the
bank to the company in which the
investment is made.
(3) Divestiture—(i) Time limits for
divestiture. A bank holding company
shall divest the shares of, or other
ownership interests in, any company
acquired pursuant to this paragraph (g)
within the longer of:
(A) Ten years from the date of
acquisition of the investment, except
that the Board may extend such period
if, in the Board’s judgment, such an
extension would not be detrimental to
the public interest; or
(B) Two years from the date on which
the bank holding company is permitted
to repatriate in full the investment in
the foreign company.
(ii) Maximum retention period.
Notwithstanding the provisions of
paragraph (g)(3)(i) of this section:
(A) Divestiture shall occur within 15
years of the date of acquisition of the
shares of, or other ownership interests
in, any company acquired pursuant to
this paragraph (g); and
(B) A bank holding company may
retain such shares or ownership
interests if such retention is otherwise
permissible at the time required for
divestiture.
(iii) Report to Board. The bank
holding company shall report to the

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Board on its plans for divesting an
investment made under this paragraph
(g) two years prior to the final date for
divestiture, in a manner to be prescribed
by the Board.
(iv) Other conditions requiring
divestiture. All investments made
pursuant to this paragraph (g) are
subject to paragraph (e) of this section
requiring prompt divestiture (unless the
Board upon application authorizes
retention), if the company invested in
engages in impermissible business in
the United States that exceeds in the
aggregate 10 percent of the company’s
consolidated assets or revenues
calculated on an annual basis; provided
that such company may not engage in
activities in the United States that
consist of banking or financial
operations (as defined in
§ 211.23(f)(5)(iii)(B)) of this part, or
types of activities permitted by
regulation or order under section 4(c)(8)
of the BHC Act (12 U.S.C. 1843(c)(8)),
except under regulations of the Board or
with the prior approval of the Board.
(4) Investment procedures—(i)
General consent. Subject to the other
limitations of this paragraph (g), the
Board grants its general consent for
investments made under this paragraph
(g) if the total amount invested does not
exceed the greater of $25 million or 1
percent of the tier 1 capital of the
investor.
(ii) All other investments shall be
made in accordance with the procedures
of § 211.9(f) and (g) of this part,
requiring prior notice or specific
consent.
(5) Conditions—(i) Name. Any
company acquired pursuant to this
paragraph (g) shall not bear a name
similar to the name of the acquiring
bank holding company or any of its
affiliates.
(ii) Confidentiality. Neither the bank
holding company nor its affiliates shall
provide to any company acquired
pursuant to this paragraph (g) any
confidential business information or
other information concerning customers
that are engaged in the same or related
lines of business as the company.
§ 211.9

Investment procedures.

(a) General provisions.5 Direct and
indirect investments shall be made in
accordance with the general consent,
limited general consent, prior notice, or
5 When necessary, the provisions of this section
relating to general consent and prior notice
constitute the Board’s approval under section
25A(8) of the FRA (12 U.S.C. 616) for investments
in excess of the limitations therein based on capital
and surplus.

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specific consent procedures contained
in this section.
(1) Minimum capital adequacy
standards. Except as the Board may
otherwise determine, in order for an
investor to make investments pursuant
to the procedures set out in this section,
the investor, the bank holding company,
and the member bank shall be in
compliance with applicable minimum
standards for capital adequacy set out in
the Capital Adequacy Guidelines;
provided that, if the investor is an Edge
or agreement corporation, the minimum
capital required is total and tier 1
capital ratios of 8 percent and 4 percent,
respectively.
(2) Composite rating. Except as the
Board may otherwise determine, in
order for an investor to make
investments under the general consent
or limited general consent procedures of
paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section,
the investor and any parent insured
bank must have received a composite
rating of at least 2 at the most recent
examination.
(3) Board’s authority to modify or
suspend procedures. The Board, at any
time upon notice, may modify or
suspend the procedures contained in
this section with respect to any investor
or with respect to the acquisition of
shares of organizations engaged in
particular kinds of activities.
(4) Long-range investment plan. Any
investor may submit to the Board for its
specific consent a long-range investment
plan. Any plan so approved shall be
subject to the other procedures of this
section only to the extent determined
necessary by the Board to assure safety
and soundness of the operations of the
investor and its affiliates.
(5) Prior specific consent for initial
investment. An investor shall apply for
and receive the prior specific consent of
the Board for its initial investment
under this subpart in its first subsidiary
or joint venture, unless an affiliate
previously has received approval to
make such an investment.
(6) Expiration of investment authority.
Authority to make investments granted
under prior notice or specific consent
procedures shall expire one year from
the earliest date on which the authority
could have been exercised, unless the
Board determines a longer period shall
apply.
(7) Conditional approval; Access to
information. The Board may impose
such conditions on authority granted by
it under this section as it deems
necessary, and may require termination
of any activities conducted under
authority of this subpart if an investor
is unable to provide information on its
activities or those of its affiliates that the

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Board deems necessary to determine
and enforce compliance with U.S.
banking laws.
(b) General consent. The Board grants
its general consent for a well capitalized
and well managed investor to make
investments, subject to the following:
(1) Well capitalized and well managed
investor. In order to qualify for making
investments under authority of this
paragraph (b), both before and
immediately after the proposed
investment, the investor, any parent
insured bank, and any parent bank
holding company shall be well
capitalized and well managed.
(2) Individual limit for investment in
subsidiary. In the case of an investment
in a subsidiary, the total amount
invested directly or indirectly in such
subsidiary (in one transaction or a series
of transactions) does not exceed:
(i) 10 percent of the investor’s tier 1
capital, where the investor is a bank
holding company; or
(ii) 2 percent of the investor’s tier 1
capital, where the investor is a member
bank; or
(iii) The lesser of 2 percent of the tier
1 capital of any parent insured bank or
10 percent of the investor’s tier 1
capital, for any other investor.
(3) Individual limit for investment in
joint venture. In the case of an
investment in a joint venture, the total
amount invested directly or indirectly
in such joint venture (in one transaction
or a series of transactions) does not
exceed:
(i) 5 percent of the investor’s tier 1
capital, where the investor is a bank
holding company; or
(ii) 1 percent of the investor’s tier 1
capital, where the investor is a member
bank; or
(iii) The lesser of 1 percent of the tier
1 capital of any parent insured bank or
5 percent of the investor’s tier 1 capital,
for any other investor.
(4) Individual limit for portfolio
investment. In the case of a portfolio
investment, the total amount invested
directly or indirectly in such company
(in one transaction or a series of
transactions) does not exceed the lesser
of $25 million, or
(i) 5 percent of the investor’s tier 1
capital in the case of a bank holding
company or its subsidiary, or Edge
corporation engaged in banking; or
(ii) 25 percent of the investor’s tier 1
capital in the case of an Edge
corporation not engaged in banking.
(5) Investment in a general
partnership or unlimited liability
company. An investment in a general
partnership or unlimited liability
company may be made under authority
of paragraph (b) of this section, subject

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to the limits set out in paragraph (c) of
this section.
(6) Aggregate investment limits—(i)
Investment limits. All investments
made, directly or indirectly, during the
previous 12-month period under
authority of this section, when
aggregated with the proposed
investment, shall not exceed:
(A) 20 percent of the investor’s tier 1
capital, where the investor is a bank
holding company;
(B) 10 percent of the investor’s tier 1
capital, where the investor is a member
bank; or
(C) The lesser of 10 percent of the tier
1 capital of any parent insured bank or
50 percent of the tier 1 capital of the
investor, for any other investor.
(ii) Downstream investments. In
determining compliance with the
aggregate limits set out in this paragraph
(b), an investment by an investor in a
subsidiary shall be counted only once,
notwithstanding that such subsidiary
may, within 12 months of the date of
making the investment, downstream all
or any part of such investment to
another subsidiary.
(7) Application of limits. In
determining compliance with the limits
set out in this paragraph (b), an investor
is not required to combine the value of
all shares of an organization held in
trading or dealing accounts under
§ 211.10(a)(15) of this part with
investments in the same organization.
(c) Limited general consent—(1)
Individual limit. The Board grants its
general consent for an investor that is
not well capitalized and well managed
to make an investment in a subsidiary
or joint venture, or to make a portfolio
investment, if the total amount invested
directly or indirectly (in one transaction
or in a series of transactions) does not
exceed the lesser of $25 million or:
(i) 5 percent of the investor’s tier 1
capital, where the investor is a bank
holding company;
(ii) 1 percent of the investor’s tier 1
capital, where the investor is a member
bank; or
(iii) The lesser of 1 percent of any
parent insured bank’s tier 1 capital or 5
percent of the investor’s tier 1 capital,
for any other investor.
(2) Aggregate limit. The amount of
general consent investments made by
any investor directly or indirectly under
authority of this paragraph (c) during
the previous 12-month period, when
aggregated with the proposed
investment, shall not exceed:
(i) 10 percent of the investor’s tier 1
capital, where the investor is a bank
holding company;

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(ii) 5 percent of the investor’s tier 1
capital, where the investor is a member
bank; and
(iii) The lesser of 5 percent of any
parent insured bank’s tier 1 capital or 25
percent of the investor’s tier 1 capital,
for any other investor.
(3) Application of limits. In
calculating compliance with the limits
of this paragraph (c), the rules set forth
in paragraphs (b)(6)(ii) and (b)(7) of this
section shall apply.
(d) Other eligible investments under
general consent. In addition to the
authority granted under paragraphs (b)
and (c) of this section, the Board grants
its general consent for any investor to
make the following investments:
(1) Investment in organization equal
to cash dividends. Any investment in an
organization in an amount equal to cash
dividends received from that
organization during the preceding 12
calendar months; and
(2) Investment acquired from affiliate.
Any investment that is acquired from an
affiliate at net asset value or through a
contribution of shares.
(e) Investments ineligible for general
consent. An investment in a foreign
bank may not be made under authority
of paragraphs (b) or (c) of this section if:
(1) After the investment, the foreign
bank would be an affiliate of a member
bank; and
(2) The foreign bank is located in a
country in which the member bank and
its affiliates have no existing banking
presence.
(f) Prior notice. An investment that
does not qualify for general consent
under paragraph (b), (c), or (d) of this
section may be made after the investor
has given the Board 30 days’ prior
written notice, such notice period to
commence at the time the notice is
received, provided that:
(1) The Board may waive the 30-day
period if it finds the full period is not
required for consideration of the
proposed investment, or that immediate
action is required by the circumstances
presented; and
(2) The Board may suspend the 30day period or act on the investment
under the Board’s specific consent
procedures.
(g) Specific consent. Any investment
that does not qualify for either the
general consent or the prior notice
procedure may not be consummated
without the specific consent of the
Board.
§ 211.10

Permissible activities abroad.

(a) Activities usual in connection with
banking. The Board has determined that
the following activities are usual in
connection with the transaction of

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banking or other financial operations
abroad:
(1) Commercial and other banking
activities;
(2) Financing, including commercial
financing, consumer financing,
mortgage banking, and factoring;
(3) Leasing real or personal property,
or acting as agent, broker, or advisor in
leasing real or personal property
consistent with the provisions of
Regulation Y (12 CFR part 225);
(4) Acting as fiduciary;
(5) Underwriting credit life insurance
and credit accident and health
insurance;
(6) Performing services for other
direct or indirect operations of a U.S.
banking organization, including
representative functions, sale of longterm debt, name-saving, holding assets
acquired to prevent loss on a debt
previously contracted in good faith, and
other activities that are permissible
domestically for a bank holding
company under sections 4(a)(2)(A) and
4(c)(1)(C) of the BHC Act (12 U.S.C.
1843(a)(2)(A), (c)(1)(C));
(7) Holding the premises of a branch
of an Edge or agreement corporation or
member bank or the premises of a direct
or indirect subsidiary, or holding or
leasing the residence of an officer or
employee of a branch or subsidiary;
(8) Providing investment, financial, or
economic advisory services;
(9) General insurance agency and
brokerage;
(10) Data processing;
(11) Organizing, sponsoring, and
managing a mutual fund, if the fund’s
shares are not sold or distributed in the
United States or to U.S. residents and
the fund does not exercise managerial
control over the firms in which it
invests;
(12) Performing management
consulting services, if such services,
when rendered with respect to the U.S.
market, shall be restricted to the initial
entry;
(13) Underwriting, distributing, and
dealing in debt securities outside the
United States;
(14) Underwriting and distributing
equity securities outside the United
States as follows:
(i) Limits for well-capitalized and
well-managed investor—(A) General.
After providing 30 days’ prior written
notice to the Board, an investor that is
well capitalized and well managed may
underwrite equity securities, provided
that commitments by an investor and its
subsidiaries for the shares of a single
organization do not, in the aggregate,
exceed:
(1) 15 percent of the bank holding
company’s tier 1 capital, where the
investor is a bank holding company;

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(2) 3 percent of the investor’s tier 1
capital, where the investor is a member
bank; or
(3) The lesser of 3 percent of any
parent insured bank’s tier 1 capital or 15
percent of the investor’s tier 1 capital,
for any other investor;
(B) Qualifying criteria. An investor
will be considered well-capitalized and
well-managed for purposes of paragraph
(a)(14)(i) of this section only if each of
the bank holding company, member
bank, and Edge or agreement
corporation qualify as well-capitalized
and well-managed.
(ii) Limits for investor that is not well
capitalized and well managed. After
providing 30 days’ prior written notice
to the Board, an investor that is not well
capitalized and well managed may
underwrite equity securities, provided
that commitments by the investor and
its subsidiaries for the shares of an
organization do not, in the aggregate,
exceed $60 million; and
(iii) Application of limits. For
purposes of determining compliance
with the limitations of this paragraph
(a)(14), the investor may subtract
portions of an underwriting that are
covered by binding commitments
obtained by the investor or its affiliates
from sub-underwriters or other
purchasers;
(15) Dealing in equity securities
outside the United States as follows:
(i) Grandfathered authority. By an
investor, or an affiliate, that had
commenced such activities prior to
March 27, 1991, and subject to the
limitations in effect at that time (See 12
CFR part 211, revised January 1, 1991);
or
(ii) Limit on shares of a single issuer.
After providing 30 days’ prior written
notice to the Board, an investor may
deal in the shares of an organization
where the shares held in the trading or
dealing accounts of an investor and its
affiliates under authority of this
paragraph (a)(15) do not in the aggregate
exceed the lesser of:
(A) $40 million; or
(B) 10 percent of the investor’s tier 1
capital;
(iii) Aggregate equity limit. The total
shares held directly and indirectly by
the investor and its affiliates under
authority of this paragraph (a)(15) and
§ 211.8(c)(3) of this part in organizations
engaged in activities that are not
permissible for joint ventures do not
exceed:
(A) 25 percent of the bank holding
company’s tier 1 capital, where the
investor is a bank holding company;

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(B) 20 percent of the investor’s tier 1
capital, where the investor is a member
bank; 6 and
(C) The lesser of 20 percent of any
parent insured bank’s tier 1 capital or
100 percent of the investor’s tier 1
capital, for any other investor;
(iv) Determining compliance with
limits—(A) General. For purposes of
determining compliance with all limits
set out in this paragraph (a)(15):
(1) Long and short positions in the
same security may be netted; and
(2) Except as provided in paragraph
(a)(15)(iv)(B)(4) of this section, equity
securities held in order to hedge bank
permissible equity derivatives contracts
shall not be included.
(B) Use of internal hedging models.
After providing 30 days’ prior written
notice to the Board the investor may use
an internal hedging model that:
(1) Nets long and short positions in
the same security and offsets positions
in a security by futures, forwards,
options, and other similar instruments
referenced to the same security, for
purposes of determining compliance
with the single issuer limits of
paragraph (a)(15)(ii) of this section;7 and
(2) Offsets its long positions in equity
securities by futures, forwards, options,
and similar instruments, on a portfolio
basis, and for purposes of determining
compliance with the aggregate equity
limits of paragraph (a)(15)(iii) of this
section.
(3) With respect to all equity
securities held under authority of
paragraph (a)(15) of this section, no net
long position in a security shall be
deemed to have been reduced by more
than 75 percent through use of internal
hedging models under this paragraph
(a)(15)(iv)(B); and
(4) With respect to equity securities
acquired to hedge bank permissible
equity derivatives contracts under
authority of paragraph (a)(1) of this
section, any residual position that
remains in the securities of a single
issuer after netting and offsetting of
positions relating to the security under
the investor’s internal hedging models
shall be included in calculating
compliance with the limits of this
paragraph (a)(15)(ii) and (iii).
(C) Underwriting commitments. Any
shares acquired pursuant to an
underwriting commitment that are held
for longer than 90 days after the
payment date for such underwriting
shall be subject to the limits set out in
6 For this purpose, a direct subsidiary of a
member bank is deemed to be an investor.
7 A basket of stocks, specifically segregated as an
offset to a position in a stock index derivative
product, as computed by the investor’s internal
model, may be offset against the stock index.

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paragraph (a)(15) of this section and the
investment provisions of §§ 211.8 and
211.9 of this part.
(v) Authority to deal in shares of U.S.
organization. The authority to deal in
shares under paragraph (a)(15) of this
section includes the authority to deal in
the shares of a U.S. organization:
(A) With respect to foreign persons
only; and
(B) Subject to the limitations on
owning or controlling shares of a
company in section 4(c)(6) of the BHC
Act (12 U.S.C. 1843(c)(6)) and
Regulation Y (12 CFR part 225).
(vi) Report to senior management.
Any shares held in trading or dealing
accounts for longer than 90 days shall
be reported to the senior management of
the investor;
(16) Operating a travel agency, but
only in connection with financial
services offered abroad by the investor
or others;
(17) Underwriting life, annuity,
pension fund-related, and other types of
insurance, where the associated risks
have been previously determined by the
Board to be actuarially predictable;
provided that:
(i) Investments in, and loans and
extensions of credit (other than loans
and extensions of credit fully secured in
accordance with the requirements of
section 23A of the FRA (12 U.S.C. 371c),
or with such other standards as the
Board may require) to, the company by
the investor or its affiliates are deducted
from the capital of the investor (with 50
percent of such capital deduction to be
taken from tier 1 capital); and
(ii) Activities conducted directly or
indirectly by a subsidiary of a U.S.
insured bank are excluded from the
authority of this paragraph (a)(17),
unless authorized by the Board;
(18) Providing futures commission
merchant services (including clearing
without executing and executing
without clearing) for nonaffiliated
persons with respect to futures and
options on futures contracts for
financial and nonfinancial commodities;
provided that prior notice under
§ 211.9(f) of this part shall be provided
to the Board before any subsidiaries of
a member bank operating pursuant to
this subpart may join a mutual exchange
or clearinghouse, unless the potential
liability of the investor to the exchange,
clearinghouse, or other members of the
exchange, as the case may be, is legally
limited by the rules of the exchange or
clearinghouse to an amount that does
not exceed applicable general consent
limits under § 211.9 of this part;
(19) Acting as principal or agent in
commodity-swap transactions in
relation to:

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(i) Swaps on a cash-settled basis for
any commodity, provided that the
investor’s portfolio of swaps contracts is
hedged in a manner consistent with safe
and sound banking practices; and
(ii) Contracts that require physical
delivery of a commodity, provided that:
(A) Such contracts are entered into
solely for the purpose of hedging the
investor’s positions in the underlying
commodity or derivative contracts based
on the commodity;
(B) The contract allows for
assignment, termination or offset prior
to expiration; and
(C) Reasonable efforts are made to
avoid delivery.
(b) Regulation Y activities. An
investor may engage in activities that
the Board has determined in § 225.28(b)
of Regulation Y (12 CFR 225.28(b)) are
closely related to banking under section
4(c)(8) of the BHC Act (12 U.S.C.
1843(c)(8)).
(c) Specific approval. With the
Board’s specific approval, an investor
may engage in other activities that the
Board determines are usual in
connection with the transaction of the
business of banking or other financial
operations abroad and are consistent
with the FRA or the BHC Act.
§ 211.11 Advisory opinions under
Regulation K.

(a) Request for advisory opinion. Any
person may submit a request to the
Board for an advisory opinion regarding
the scope of activities permissible under
any subpart of this part.
(b) Form and content of the request.
Any request for an advisory opinion
under this section shall be:
(1) Submitted in writing to the Board;
(2) Contain a clear description of the
proposed parameters of the activity, or
the service or product, at issue; and
(3) Contain a concise explanation of
the grounds on which the submitter
contends the activity is or should be
considered by the Board to be
permissible under this part.
(c) Response to request. In response to
a request received under this section,
the Board shall:
(1) Direct the submitter to provide
such additional information as the
Board may deem necessary to complete
the record for a full consideration of the
issue presented; and
(2) Provide an advisory opinion
within 45 days after the record on the
request has been determined to be
complete.
§ 211.12 Lending limits and capital
requirements.

(a) Acceptances of Edge corporations.
(1) Limitations. An Edge corporation

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shall be and remain fully secured for
acceptances of the types described in
section 13(7) of the FRA (12 U.S.C. 372),
as follows:
(i) All acceptances outstanding in
excess of 200 percent of its tier 1 capital;
and
(ii) All acceptances outstanding for
any one person in excess of 10 percent
of its tier 1 capital.
(2) Exceptions. These limitations do
not apply if the excess represents the
international shipment of goods, and the
Edge corporation is:
(i) Fully covered by primary
obligations to reimburse it that are
guaranteed by banks or bankers; or
(ii) Covered by participation
agreements from other banks, as
described in 12 CFR 250.165.
(b) Loans and extensions of credit to
one person—(1) Loans and extensions of
credit defined. Loans and extensions of
credit has the meaning set forth in
§ 211.2(q) of this part 8 and, for purposes
of this paragraph (b), also include:
(i) Acceptances outstanding that are
not of the types described in section
13(7) of the FRA (12 U.S.C. 372);
(ii) Any liability of the lender to
advance funds to or on behalf of a
person pursuant to a guarantee, standby
letter of credit, or similar agreements;
(iii) Investments in the securities of
another organization other than a
subsidiary; and
(iv) Any underwriting commitments
to an issuer of securities, where no
binding commitments have been
secured from subunderwriters or other
purchasers.
(2) Limitations. Except as the Board
may otherwise specify:
(i) The total loans and extensions of
credit outstanding to any person by an
Edge corporation engaged in banking,
and its direct or indirect subsidiaries,
may not exceed 15 percent of the Edge
corporation’s tier 1 capital;9 and
(ii) The total loans and extensions of
credit to any person by a foreign bank
or Edge corporation subsidiary of a
member bank, and by majority-owned
subsidiaries of a foreign bank or Edge
corporation, when combined with the
8 In the case of a foreign government, these
includes loans and extensions of credit to the
foreign government’s departments or agencies
deriving their current funds principally from
general tax revenues. In the case of a partnership
or firm, these include loans and extensions of credit
to its members and, in the case of a corporation,
these include loans and extensions of credit to the
corporation’s affiliates, where the affiliate incurs
the liability for the benefit of the corporation.
9 For purposes of this pargraph (b), subsidiaries
includes subsidiaries controlled by the Edge
corporation, but does not include companies
otherwise controlled by affiliates of the Edge
corporation.

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total loans and extensions of credit to
the same person by the member bank
and its majority-owned subsidiaries,
may not exceed the member bank’s
limitation on loans and extensions of
credit to one person.
(3) Exceptions. The limitations of
paragraph (b)(2) of this section do not
apply to:
(i) Deposits with banks and federal
funds sold;
(ii) Bills or drafts drawn in good faith
against actual goods and on which two
or more unrelated parties are liable;
(iii) Any banker’s acceptance, of the
kind described in section 13(7) of the
FRA (12 U.S.C. 372), that is issued and
outstanding;
(iv) Obligations to the extent secured
by cash collateral or by bonds, notes,
certificates of indebtedness, or Treasury
bills of the United States;
(v) Loans and extensions of credit that
are covered by bona fide participation
agreements; and
(vi) Obligations to the extent
supported by the full faith and credit of
the following:
(A) The United States or any of its
departments, agencies, establishments,
or wholly owned corporations
(including obligations, to the extent
insured against foreign political and
credit risks by the Export-Import Bank
of the United States or the Foreign
Credit Insurance Association), the
International Bank for Reconstruction
and Development, the International
Finance Corporation, the International
Development Association, the InterAmerican Development Bank, the
African Development Bank, the Asian
Development Bank, or the European
Bank for Reconstruction and
Development;
(B) Any organization, if at least 25
percent of such an obligation or of the
total credit is also supported by the full
faith and credit of, or participated in by,
any institution designated in paragraph
(b)(3)(vi)(A) of this section in such
manner that default to the lender would
necessarily include default to that
entity. The total loans and extensions of
credit under this paragraph (b)(3)(vi)(B)
to any person shall at no time exceed
100 percent of the tier 1 capital of the
Edge corporation.
(c) Capitalization. (1) An Edge
corporation shall at all times be
capitalized in an amount that is
adequate in relation to the scope and
character of its activities.
(2) In the case of an Edge corporation
engaged in banking, the minimum ratio
of qualifying total capital to riskweighted assets, as determined under
the Capital Adequacy Guidelines, shall
not be less than 10 percent, of which at

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least 50 percent shall consist of tier 1
capital.
(3) For purposes of this paragraph (c),
no limitation shall apply on the
inclusion of subordinated debt that
qualifies as tier 2 capital under the
Capital Adequacy Guidelines.
§ 211.13

Supervision and reporting.

(a) Supervision. (1) Foreign branches
and subsidiaries. U.S. banking
organizations conducting international
operations under this subpart shall
supervise and administer their foreign
branches and subsidiaries in such a
manner as to ensure that their
operations conform to high standards of
banking and financial prudence.
(i) Effective systems of records,
controls, and reports shall be
maintained to keep management
informed of their activities and
condition.
(ii) Such systems shall provide, in
particular, information on risk assets,
exposure to market risk, liquidity
management, operations, internal
controls, legal and operational risk, and
conformance to management policies.
(iii) Reports on risk assets shall be
sufficient to permit an appraisal of
credit quality and assessment of
exposure to loss, and, for this purpose,
provide full information on the
condition of material borrowers.
(iv) Reports on operations and
controls shall include internal and
external audits of the branch or
subsidiary.
(2) Joint ventures. Investors shall
maintain sufficient information with
respect to joint ventures to keep
informed of their activities and
condition.
(i) Such information shall include
audits and other reports on financial
performance, risk exposure,
management policies, operations, and
controls.
(ii) Complete information shall be
maintained on all transactions with the
joint venture by the investor and its
affiliates.
(3) Availability of reports and
information to examiners. The reports
specified in paragraphs (a)(1) and (2) of
this section and any other information
deemed necessary to determine
compliance with U.S. banking law shall
be made available to examiners of the
appropriate bank supervisory agencies.
(b) Examinations. Examiners
appointed by the Board shall examine
each Edge corporation once a year. An
Edge or agreement corporation shall
make available to examiners
information sufficient to assess its
condition and operations and the

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54385

condition and activities of any
organization whose shares it holds.
(c) Reports—(1) Reports of condition.
Each Edge or agreement corporation
shall make reports of condition to the
Board at such times and in such form as
the Board may prescribe. The Board
may require that statements of condition
or other reports be published or made
available for public inspection.
(2) Foreign operations. Edge and
agreement corporations, member banks,
and bank holding companies shall file
such reports on their foreign operations
as the Board may require.
(3) Acquisition or disposition of
shares. Member banks, Edge and
agreement corporations, and bank
holding companies shall report, in a
manner prescribed by the Board, any
acquisition or disposition of shares.
(d) Filing and processing
procedures—(1) Place of filing. Unless
otherwise directed by the Board,
applications, notices, and reports
required by this part shall be filed with
the Federal Reserve Bank of the District
in which the parent bank or bank
holding company is located or, if none,
the Reserve Bank of the District in
which the applying or reporting
institution is located. Instructions and
forms for applications, notices, and
reports are available from the Reserve
Banks.
(2) Timing. The Board shall act on an
application under this subpart within 60
calendar days after the Reserve Bank has
received the application, unless the
Board notifies the investor that the 60day period is being extended and states
the reasons for the extension.
Subpart B—Foreign Banking
Organizations
§ 211.20

Authority, purpose, and scope.

(a) Authority. This subpart is issued
by the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System (Board) under the
authority of the Bank Holding Company
Act of 1956 (BHC Act) (12 U.S.C. 1841
et seq.) and the International Banking
Act of 1978 (IBA) (12 U.S.C. 3101 et
seq.).
(b) Purpose and scope. This subpart is
in furtherance of the purposes of the
BHC Act and the IBA. It applies to
foreign banks and foreign banking
organizations with respect to:
(1) The limitations on interstate
banking under section 5 of the IBA (12
U.S.C. 3103);
(2) The exemptions from the
nonbanking prohibitions of the BHC Act
and the IBA afforded by sections 2(h)
and 4(c)(9) of the BHC Act (12 U.S.C.
1841(h), 1843(c)(9));

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(3) Board approval of the
establishment of an office of a foreign
bank in the United States under sections
7(d) and 10(a) of the IBA (12 U.S.C.
3105(d), 3107(a));
(4) The termination by the Board of a
foreign bank’s representative office,
state branch, state agency, or
commercial lending company
subsidiary under sections 7(e) and 10(b)
of the IBA (12 U.S.C. 3105(e), 3107(b)),
and the transmission of a
recommendation to the Comptroller to
terminate a federal branch or federal
agency under section 7(e)(5) of the IBA
(12 U.S.C. 3105(e)(5));
(5) The examination of an office or
affiliate of a foreign bank in the United
States as provided in sections 7(c) and
10(c) of the IBA (12 U.S.C. 3105(c),
3107(c));
(6) The disclosure of supervisory
information to a foreign supervisor
under section 15 of the IBA (12 U.S.C.
3109);
(7) The limitations on loans to one
borrower by state branches and state
agencies of a foreign bank under section
7(h)(2) of the IBA (12 U.S.C. 3105(h)(2));
(8) The limitation of a state branch
and a state agency to conducting only
activities that are permissible for a
federal branch under section (7)(h)(1) of
the IBA (12 U.S.C. 3105(h)(1)); and
(9) The deposit insurance requirement
for retail deposit taking by a foreign
bank under section 6 of the IBA (12
U.S.C. 3104).
(10) The management of shell
branches (12 U.S.C. 3105(k)).
(c) Additional requirements.
Compliance by a foreign bank with the
requirements of this subpart and the
laws administered and enforced by the
Board does not relieve the foreign bank
of responsibility to comply with the
laws and regulations administered by
the licensing authority.
§ 211.21

Definitions.

The definitions contained in §§ 211.1
and 211.2 apply to this subpart, except
as a term is otherwise defined in this
section:
(a) Affiliate of a foreign bank or of a
parent of a foreign bank means any
company that controls, is controlled by,
or is under common control with, the
foreign bank or the parent of the foreign
bank.
(b) Agency means any place of
business of a foreign bank, located in
any state, at which credit balances are
maintained, checks are paid, money is
lent, or, to the extent not prohibited by
state or federal law, deposits are
accepted from a person or entity that is
not a citizen or resident of the United
States. Obligations shall not be

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considered credit balances unless they
are:
(1) Incidental to, or arise out of the
exercise of, other lawful banking
powers;
(2) To serve a specific purpose;
(3) Not solicited from the general
public;
(4) Not used to pay routine operating
expenses in the United States such as
salaries, rent, or taxes;
(5) Withdrawn within a reasonable
period of time after the specific purpose
for which they were placed has been
accomplished; and
(6) Drawn upon in a manner
reasonable in relation to the size and
nature of the account.
(c)(1) Appropriate Federal Reserve
Bank means, unless the Board
designates a different Federal Reserve
Bank:
(i) For a foreign banking organization,
the Reserve Bank assigned to the foreign
banking organization in § 225.3(b)(2) of
Regulation Y (12 CFR 225.3(b)(2));
(ii) For a foreign bank that is not a
foreign banking organization and
proposes to establish an office, an Edge
corporation, or an agreement
corporation, the Reserve Bank of the
Federal Reserve District in which the
foreign bank proposes to establish such
office or corporation; and
(iii) In all other cases, the Reserve
Bank designated by the Board.
(2) The appropriate Federal Reserve
Bank need not be the Reserve Bank of
the Federal Reserve District in which
the foreign bank’s home state is located.
(d) Banking subsidiary, with respect
to a specified foreign bank, means a
bank that is a subsidiary as the terms
bank and subsidiary are defined in
section 2 of the BHC Act (12 U.S.C.
1841).
(e) Branch means any place of
business of a foreign bank, located in
any state, at which deposits are
received, and that is not an agency, as
that term is defined in paragraph (b) of
this section.
(f) Change the status of an office
means to convert a representative office
into a branch or agency, or an agency or
limited branch into a branch, but does
not include renewal of the license of an
existing office.
(g) Commercial lending company
means any organization, other than a
bank or an organization operating under
section 25 of the Federal Reserve Act
(FRA) (12 U.S.C. 601–604a), organized
under the laws of any state, that
maintains credit balances permissible
for an agency, and engages in the
business of making commercial loans.
Commercial lending company includes
any company chartered under article XII

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of the banking law of the State of New
York.
(h) Comptroller means the Office of
the Comptroller of the Currency.
(i) Control has the same meaning as in
section 2(a) of the BHC Act (12 U.S.C.
1841(a)), and the terms controlled and
controlling shall be construed
consistently with the term control.
(j) Domestic branch means any place
of business of a foreign bank, located in
any state, that may accept domestic
deposits and deposits that are incidental
to or for the purpose of carrying out
transactions in foreign countries.
(k) A foreign bank engages directly in
the business of banking outside the
United States if the foreign bank engages
directly in banking activities usual in
connection with the business of banking
in the countries where it is organized or
operating.
(l) To establish means:
(1) To open and conduct business
through an office;
(2) To acquire directly, through
merger, consolidation, or similar
transaction with another foreign bank,
the operations of an office that is open
and conducting business;
(3) To acquire an office through the
acquisition of a foreign bank subsidiary
that will cease to operate in the same
corporate form following the
acquisition;
(4) To change the status of an office;
or
(5) To relocate an office from one state
to another.
(m) Federal agency, federal branch,
state agency, and state branch have the
same meanings as in section 1 of the
IBA (12 U.S.C. 3101).
(n) Foreign bank means an
organization that is organized under the
laws of a foreign country and that
engages directly in the business of
banking outside the United States. The
term foreign bank does not include a
central bank of a foreign country that
does not engage or seek to engage in a
commercial banking business in the
United States through an office.
(o) Foreign banking organization
means:
(1) A foreign bank, as defined in
section 1(b)(7) of the IBA (12 U.S.C.
3101(7)), that:
(i) Operates a branch, agency, or
commercial lending company
subsidiary in the United States;
(ii) Controls a bank in the United
States; or
(iii) Controls an Edge corporation
acquired after March 5, 1987; and
(2) Any company of which the foreign
bank is a subsidiary.
(p) Home country, with respect to a
foreign bank, means the country in

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which the foreign bank is chartered or
incorporated.
(q) Home country supervisor, with
respect to a foreign bank, means the
governmental entity or entities in the
foreign bank’s home country with
responsibility for the supervision and
regulation of the foreign bank.
(r) Licensing authority means:
(1) The relevant state supervisor, with
respect to an application to establish a
state branch, state agency, commercial
lending company, or representative
office of a foreign bank; or
(2) The Comptroller, with respect to
an application to establish a federal
branch or federal agency.
(s) Limited branch means a branch of
a foreign bank that receives only such
deposits as would be permitted for a
corporation organized under section
25A of the Federal Reserve Act (12
U.S.C. 611–631).
(t) Office or office of a foreign bank
means any branch, agency,
representative office, or commercial
lending company subsidiary of a foreign
bank in the United States.
(u) A parent of a foreign bank means
a company of which the foreign bank is
a subsidiary. An immediate parent of a
foreign bank is a company of which the
foreign bank is a direct subsidiary. An
ultimate parent of a foreign bank is a
parent of the foreign bank that is not the
subsidiary of any other company.
(v) Regional administrative office
means a representative office that:
(1) Is established by a foreign bank
that operates two or more branches,
agencies, commercial lending
companies, or banks in the United
States;
(2) Is located in the same city as one
or more of the foreign bank’s branches,
agencies, commercial lending
companies, or banks in the United
States;
(3) Manages, supervises, or
coordinates the operations of the foreign
bank or its affiliates, if any, in a
particular geographic area that includes
the United States or a region thereof,
including by exercising credit approval
authority in that area pursuant to
written standards, credit policies, and
procedures established by the foreign
bank; and
(4) Does not solicit business from
actual or potential customers of the
foreign bank or its affiliates.
(w) Relevant state supervisor means
the state entity that is authorized to
supervise and regulate a state branch,
state agency, commercial lending
company, or representative office.
(x) Representative office means any
office of a foreign bank which is located
in any state and is not a Federal branch,

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Federal agency, State branch, State
agency, or commercial lending company
subsidiary.
(y) State means any state of the
United States or the District of
Columbia.
(z) Subsidiary means any organization
that:
(1) Has 25 percent or more of its
voting shares directly or indirectly
owned, controlled, or held with the
power to vote by a company, including
a foreign bank or foreign banking
organization; or
(2) Is otherwise controlled, or capable
of being controlled, by a foreign bank or
foreign banking organization.
§ 211.22 Interstate banking operations of
foreign banking organizations.

(a) Determination of home state. (1) A
foreign bank that, as of December 10,
1997, had declared a home state or had
a home state determined pursuant to the
law and regulations in effect prior to
that date shall have that state as its
home state.
(2) A foreign bank that has any
branches, agencies, commercial lending
company subsidiaries, or subsidiary
banks in one state, and has no such
offices or subsidiaries in any other
states, shall have as its home state the
state in which such offices or
subsidiaries are located.
(b) Change of home state—(1) Prior
notice. A foreign bank may change its
home state once, if it files 30 days’ prior
notice of the proposed change with the
Board.
(2) Application to change home state.
(i) A foreign bank, in addition to
changing its home state by filing prior
notice under paragraph (b)(1) of this
section, may apply to the Board to
change its home state, upon showing
that a national bank or state-chartered
bank with the same home state as the
foreign bank would be permitted to
change its home state to the new home
state proposed by the foreign bank.
(ii) A foreign bank may apply to the
Board for such permission one or more
times.
(iii) In determining whether to grant
the request of a foreign bank to change
its home state, the Board shall consider
whether the proposed change is
consistent with competitive equity
between foreign and domestic banks.
(3) Effect of change in home state. The
home state of a foreign bank and any
change in its home state by a foreign
bank shall not affect which Federal
Reserve Bank or Reserve Banks
supervise the operations of the foreign
bank, and shall not affect the obligation
of the foreign bank to file required

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54387

reports and applications with the
appropriate Federal Reserve Bank.
(4) Conforming branches to new home
state. Upon any change in home state by
a foreign bank under paragraph (b)(1) or
(b)(2) of this section, the domestic
branches of the foreign bank established
in reliance on any previous home state
of the foreign bank shall be conformed
to those which a foreign bank with the
new home state could permissibly
establish or operate as of the date of
such change.
(c) Prohibition against interstate
deposit production offices. A covered
interstate branch of a foreign bank may
not be used as a deposit production
office in accordance with the provisions
in § 208.7 of Regulation H (12 CFR
208.7).
§ 211.23 Nonbanking activities of foreign
banking organizations.

(a) Qualifying foreign banking
organizations. Unless specifically made
eligible for the exemptions by the Board,
a foreign banking organization shall
qualify for the exemptions afforded by
this section only if, disregarding its
United States banking, more than half of
its worldwide business is banking; and
more than half of its banking business
is outside the United States.10 In order
to qualify, a foreign banking
organization shall:
(1) Meet at least two of the following
requirements:
(i) Banking assets held outside the
United States exceed total worldwide
nonbanking assets;
(ii) Revenues derived from the
business of banking outside the United
States exceed total revenues derived
from its worldwide nonbanking
business; or
(iii) Net income derived from the
business of banking outside the United
States exceeds total net income derived
from its worldwide nonbanking
business; and
(2) Meet at least two of the following
requirements:
(i) Banking assets held outside the
United States exceed banking assets
held in the United States;
(ii) Revenues derived from the
business of banking outside the United
States exceed revenues derived from the
business of banking in the United
States; or
10 None of the assets, revenues, or net income,
whether held or derived directly or indirectly, of a
subsidiary bank, branch, agency, commercial
lending company, or other company engaged in the
business of banking in the United States (including
any territory of the United States, Puerto Rico,
Guam, American Samoa, or the Virgin Islands) shall
be considered held or derived from the business of
banking ‘‘outside the United States’’.

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(iii) Net income derived from the
business of banking outside the United
States exceeds net income derived from
the business of banking in the United
States.
(b) Determining assets, revenues, and
net income. (1)(i) For purposes of
paragraph (a) of this section, the total
assets, revenues, and net income of an
organization may be determined on a
consolidated or combined basis.
(ii) The foreign banking organization
shall include assets, revenues, and net
income of companies in which it owns
50 percent or more of the voting shares
when determining total assets, revenues,
and net income.
(iii) The foreign banking organization
may include assets, revenues, and net
income of companies in which it owns
25 percent or more of the voting shares,
if all such companies within the
organization are included.
(2) Assets devoted to, or revenues or
net income derived from, activities
listed in § 211.10(a) shall be considered
banking assets, or revenues or net
income derived from the banking
business, when conducted within the
foreign banking organization by a
foreign bank or its subsidiaries.
(c) Limited exemptions available to
foreign banking organizations in certain
circumstances. The following shall
apply where a foreign bank meets the
requirements of paragraph (a) of this
section but its ultimate parent does not:
(1) Such foreign bank shall be entitled
to the exemptions available to a
qualifying foreign banking organization
if its ultimate parent meets the
requirements set forth in paragraph
(a)(2) of this section and could meet the
requirements in paragraph (a)(1) of this
section but for the requirement in
paragraph (b)(2) of this section that
activities must be conducted by the
foreign bank or its subsidiaries in order
to be considered derived from the
banking business;
(2) An ultimate parent as described in
paragraph (c)(1) of this section shall be
eligible for the exemptions available to
a qualifying foreign banking
organization except for those provided
in § 211.23(f)(5)(iii).
(d) Loss of eligibility for exemptions—
(1) Failure to meet qualifying test. A
foreign banking organization that
qualified under paragraph (a) or (c) of
this section shall cease to be eligible for
the exemptions of this section if it fails
to meet the requirements of paragraphs
(a) or (c) of this section for two
consecutive years, as reflected in its
annual reports (FR Y–7) filed with the
Board.
(2) Continuing activities and
investments. (i) A foreign banking

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organization that ceases to be eligible for
the exemptions of this section may
continue to engage in activities or retain
investments commenced or acquired
prior to the end of the first fiscal year
for which its annual report reflects
nonconformance with paragraph (a) or
(c) of this section.
(ii) Termination or divestiture.
Activities commenced or investments
made after that date shall be terminated
or divested within three months of the
filing of the second annual report, or at
such time as the Board may determine
upon request by the foreign banking
organization to extend the period,
unless the Board grants consent to
continue the activity or retain the
investment under paragraph (e) of this
section.
(3) Request for specific determination
of eligibility. (i) A foreign banking
organization that ceases to qualify under
paragraph (a) or (c) of this section, or an
affiliate of such foreign banking
organization, that requests a specific
determination of eligibility under
paragraph (e) of this section may, prior
to the Board’s determination on
eligibility, continue to engage in
activities and make investments under
the provisions of paragraphs (f)(1), (2),
(3), and (4) of this section.
(ii) The Board may grant consent for
the foreign banking organization or its
affiliate to make investments under
paragraph (f)(5) of this section.
(e) Specific determination of eligibility
for organizations that do not qualify for
the exemptions—(1) Application. (i) A
foreign organization that is not a foreign
banking organization or a foreign
banking organization that does not
qualify under paragraph (a) or (c) of this
section for some or all of the exemptions
afforded by this section, or that has lost
its eligibility for the exemptions under
paragraph (d) of this section, may apply
to the Board for a specific determination
of eligibility for some or all of the
exemptions.
(ii) A foreign banking organization
may apply for a specific determination
prior to the time it ceases to be eligible
for the exemptions afforded by this
section.
(2) Factors considered by Board. In
determining whether eligibility for the
exemptions would be consistent with
the purposes of the BHC Act and in the
public interest, the Board shall consider:
(i) The history and the financial and
managerial resources of the foreign
organization or foreign banking
organization;
(ii) The amount of its business in the
United States;
(iii) The amount, type, and location of
its nonbanking activities, including

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whether such activities may be
conducted by U.S. banks or bank
holding companies;
(iv) Whether eligibility of the foreign
organization or foreign banking
organization would result in undue
concentration of resources, decreased or
unfair competition, conflicts of
interests, or unsound banking practices;
and
(v) The extent to which the foreign
banking organization is subject to
comprehensive supervision or
regulation on a consolidated basis or the
foreign organization is subject to
oversight by regulatory authorities in its
home country.
(3) Conditions and limitations. The
Board may impose any conditions and
limitations on a determination of
eligibility, including requirements to
cease activities or dispose of
investments.
(4) Eligibility not granted.
Determinations of eligibility generally
would not be granted where a majority
of the business of the foreign
organization or foreign banking
organization derives from commercial or
industrial activities.
(f) Permissible activities and
investments. A foreign banking
organization that qualifies under
paragraph (a) of this section may:
(1) Engage in activities of any kind
outside the United States;
(2) Engage directly in activities in the
United States that are incidental to its
activities outside the United States;
(3) Own or control voting shares of
any company that is not engaged,
directly or indirectly, in any activities in
the United States, other than those that
are incidental to the international or
foreign business of such company;
(4) Own or control voting shares of
any company in a fiduciary capacity
under circumstances that would entitle
such shareholding to an exemption
under section 4(c)(4) of the BHC Act (12
U.S.C. 1843(c)(4)) if the shares were
held or acquired by a bank;
(5) Own or control voting shares of a
foreign company that is engaged directly
or indirectly in business in the United
States other than that which is
incidental to its international or foreign
business, subject to the following
limitations:
(i) More than 50 percent of the foreign
company’s consolidated assets shall be
located, and consolidated revenues
derived from, outside the United States;
provided that, if the foreign company
fails to meet the requirements of this
paragraph (f)(5)(i) for two consecutive
years (as reflected in annual reports (FR
Y–7) filed with the Board by the foreign
banking organization), the foreign

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company shall be divested or its
activities terminated within one year of
the filing of the second consecutive
annual report that reflects
nonconformance with the requirements
of this paragraph (f)(5)(i), unless the
Board grants consent to retain the
investment under paragraph (g) of this
section;
(ii) The foreign company shall not
directly underwrite, sell, or distribute,
nor own or control more than 10 percent
of the voting shares of a company that
underwrites, sells, or distributes
securities in the United States, except to
the extent permitted bank holding
companies;
(iii) If the foreign company is a
subsidiary of the foreign banking
organization, the foreign company must
be, or must control, an operating
company, and its direct or indirect
activities in the United States shall be
subject to the following limitations:
(A) The foreign company’s activities
in the United States shall be the same
kind of activities, or related to the
activities, engaged in directly or
indirectly by the foreign company
abroad, as measured by the
‘‘establishment’’ categories of the
Standard Industrial Classification (SIC).
An activity in the United States shall be
considered related to an activity outside
the United States if it consists of supply,
distribution, or sales in furtherance of
the activity;
(B) The foreign company may engage
in activities in the United States that
consist of banking, securities, insurance,
or other financial operations, or types of
activities permitted by regulation or
order under section 4(c)(8) of the BHC
Act (12 U.S.C. 1843(c)(8)), only under
regulations of the Board or with the
prior approval of the Board, subject to
the following;
(1) Activities within Division H
(Finance, Insurance, and Real Estate) of
the SIC shall be considered banking or
financial operations for this purpose,
with the exception of acting as operators
of nonresidential buildings (SIC 6512),
operators of apartment buildings (SIC
6513), operators of dwellings other than
apartment buildings (SIC 6514), and
operators of residential mobile home
sites (SIC 6515); and operating title
abstract offices (SIC 6541); and
(2) The following activities shall be
considered financial activities and may
be engaged in only with the approval of
the Board under paragraph (g) of this
section: credit reporting services (SIC
7323); computer and data processing
services (SIC 7371, 7372, 7373, 7374,
7375, 7376, 7377, 7378, and 7379);
armored car services (SIC 7381);
management consulting (SIC 8732,

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8741, 8742, and 8748); certain rental
and leasing activities (SIC 4741, 7352,
7353, 7359, 7513, 7514, 7515, and
7519); accounting, auditing, and
bookkeeping services (SIC 8721); courier
services (SIC 4215 and 4513); and
arrangement of passenger transportation
(SIC 4724, 4725, and 4729).
(g) Exemptions under section 4(c)(9)
of the BHC Act. A foreign banking
organization that is of the opinion that
other activities or investments may, in
particular circumstances, meet the
conditions for an exemption under
section 4(c)(9) of the BHC Act (12 U.S.C.
1843(c)(9)) may apply to the Board for
such a determination by submitting to
the appropriate Federal Reserve Bank a
letter setting forth the basis for that
opinion.
(h) Reports. The foreign banking
organization shall report in a manner
prescribed by the Board any direct
activities in the United States by a
foreign subsidiary of the foreign banking
organization and the acquisition of all
shares of companies engaged, directly or
indirectly, in activities in the United
States that were acquired under the
authority of this section.
(i) Availability of information. If any
information required under this section
is unknown and not reasonably
available to the foreign banking
organization (either because obtaining it
would involve unreasonable effort or
expense, or because it rests exclusively
within the knowledge of a company that
is not controlled by the organization)
the organization shall:
(1) Give such information on the
subject as it possesses or can reasonably
acquire, together with the sources
thereof; and
(2) Include a statement showing that
unreasonable effort or expense would be
involved, or indicating that the
company whose shares were acquired is
not controlled by the organization, and
stating the result of a request for
information.
§ 211.24 Approval of offices of foreign
banks; procedures for applications;
standards for approval; representative
office activities and standards for approval;
preservation of existing authority.

(a) Board approval of offices of foreign
banks—(1) Prior Board approval of
branches, agencies, commercial lending
companies, or representative offices of
foreign banks. (i) Except as otherwise
provided in paragraphs (a)(2) and (a)(3)
of this section, a foreign bank shall
obtain the approval of the Board before
it:
(A) Establishes a branch, agency,
commercial lending company

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54389

subsidiary, or representative office in
the United States; or
(B) Acquires ownership or control of
a commercial lending company
subsidiary.
(2) Prior notice for certain offices. (i)
After providing 45 days’ prior written
notice to the Board, a foreign bank may
establish:
(A) An additional office (other than a
domestic branch outside the home state
of the foreign bank established pursuant
to section 5(a)(3) of the IBA (12 U.S.C.
3103(a)(3))), provided that the Board has
previously determined the foreign bank
to be subject to comprehensive
supervision or regulation on a
consolidated basis by its home country
supervisor (comprehensive consolidated
supervision or CCS); or
(B) A representative office, if:
(1) The Board has not yet determined
the foreign bank to be subject to
consolidated comprehensive
supervision, but the foreign bank is
subject to the BHC Act, either directly
or through section 8(a) of the IBA (12
U.S.C. 3106(a)); or
(2) The Board previously has
approved an application by the foreign
bank to establish a branch or agency
pursuant to the standard set forth in
paragraph (c)(1)(iii) of this section; or
(3) The Board previously has
approved an application by the foreign
bank to establish a representative office.
(ii) The Board may waive the 45-day
notice period if it finds that immediate
action is required by the circumstances
presented. The notice period shall
commence at the time the notice is
received by the appropriate Federal
Reserve Bank. The Board may suspend
the period or require Board approval
prior to the establishment of such office
if the notification raises significant
policy or supervisory concerns.
(3) General consent for certain
representative offices. (i) The Board
grants its general consent for a foreign
bank that is subject to the BHC Act,
either directly or through section 8(a) of
the IBA (12 U.S.C. 3106(a)), to establish:
(A) A representative office, but only if
the Board has previously determined
that the foreign bank proposing to
establish a representative office is
subject to consolidated comprehensive
supervision;
(B) A regional administrative office; or
(C) An office that solely engages in
limited administrative functions (such
as separately maintaining back-office
support systems) that:
(1) Are clearly defined;
(2) Are performed in connection with
the U.S. banking activities of the foreign
bank; and

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(3) Do not involve contact or liaison
with customers or potential customers,
beyond incidental contact with existing
customers relating to administrative
matters (such as verification or
correction of account information).
(4) Suspension of general consent or
prior notice procedures. The Board may,
at any time, upon notice, modify or
suspend the prior notice and general
consent procedures in paragraphs (a)(2)
and (3) of this section for any foreign
bank with respect to the establishment
by such foreign bank of any U.S. office
of such foreign bank.
(5) Temporary offices. The Board may,
in its discretion, determine that a
foreign bank has not established an
office if the foreign bank temporarily
operates at one or more additional
locations in the same city of an existing
branch or agency due to renovations, an
expansion of activities, a merger or
consolidation of the operations of
affiliated foreign banks or companies, or
other similar circumstances. The foreign
bank must provide reasonable advance
notice of its intent temporarily to utilize
additional locations, and the Board may
impose such conditions in connection
with its determination as it deems
necessary.
(6) After-the-fact Board approval.
Where a foreign bank proposes to
establish an office in the United States
through the acquisition of, or merger or
consolidation with, another foreign
bank with an office in the United States,
the Board may, in its discretion, allow
the acquisition, merger, or consolidation
to proceed before an application to
establish the office has been filed or
acted upon under this section if:
(i) The foreign bank or banks resulting
from the acquisition, merger, or
consolidation, will not directly or
indirectly own or control more than 5
percent of any class of the voting
securities of, or control, a U.S. bank;
(ii) The Board is given reasonable
advance notice of the proposed
acquisition, merger, or consolidation;
and
(iii) Prior to consummation of the
acquisition, merger, or consolidation,
each foreign bank, as appropriate,
commits in writing either:
(A) To comply with the procedures
for an application under this section
within a reasonable period of time; to
engage in no new lines of business, or
otherwise to expand its U.S. activities
until the disposition of the application;
and to abide by the Board’s decision on
the application, including, if necessary,
a decision to terminate the activities of
any such U.S. office, as the Board or the
Comptroller may require; or

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(B) Promptly to wind-down and close
any office, the establishment of which
would have required an application
under this section; and to engage in no
new lines of business or otherwise to
expand its U.S. activities prior to the
closure of such office.
(7) Notice of change in ownership or
control or conversion of existing office
or establishment of representative office
under general-consent authority. A
foreign bank with a U.S. office shall
notify the Board in writing within 10
days of the occurrence of any of the
following events:
(i) A change in the foreign bank’s
ownership or control, where the foreign
bank is acquired or controlled by
another foreign bank or company and
the acquired foreign bank with a U.S.
office continues to operate in the same
corporate form as prior to the change in
ownership or control;
(ii) The conversion of a branch to an
agency or representative office; an
agency to a representative office; or a
branch or agency from a federal to a
state license, or a state to a federal
license; or
(iii) The establishment of a
representative office under generalconsent authority.
(8) Transactions subject to approval
under Regulation Y. Subpart B of
Regulation Y (12 CFR 225.11–225.17)
governs the acquisition by a foreign
banking organization of direct or
indirect ownership or control of any
voting securities of a bank or bank
holding company in the United States if
the acquisition results in the foreign
banking organization’s ownership or
control of more than 5 percent of any
class of voting securities of a U.S. bank
or bank holding company, including
through acquisition of a foreign bank or
foreign banking organization that owns
or controls more than 5 percent of any
class of the voting securities of a U.S.
bank or bank holding company.
(b) Procedures for application—(1)
Filing application. An application for
the Board’s approval pursuant to this
section shall be filed in the manner
prescribed by the Board.
(2) Publication requirement—(i)
Newspaper notice. Except with respect
to a proposed transaction where more
extensive notice is required by statute or
as otherwise provided in paragraphs
(b)(2)(ii) and (iii) of this section, an
applicant under this section shall
publish a notice in a newspaper of
general circulation in the community in
which the applicant proposes to engage
in business.
(ii) Contents of notice. The newspaper
notice shall:

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(A) State that an application is being
filed as of the date of the newspaper
notice; and
(B) Provide the name of the applicant,
the subject matter of the application, the
place where comments should be sent,
and the date by which comments are
due, pursuant to paragraph (b)(3) of this
section.
(iii) Copy of notice with application.
The applicant shall furnish with its
application to the Board a copy of the
newspaper notice, the date of its
publication, and the name and address
of the newspaper in which it was
published.
(iv) Exception. The Board may modify
the publication requirement of
paragraphs (b)(2)(i) and (ii) of this
section in appropriate circumstances.
(v) Federal branch or federal agency.
In the case of an application to establish
a federal branch or federal agency,
compliance with the publication
procedures of the Comptroller shall
satisfy the publication requirement of
this section. Comments regarding the
application should be sent to the Board
and the Comptroller.
(3) Written comments. (i) Within 30
days after publication, as required in
paragraph (b)(2) of this section, any
person may submit to the Board written
comments and data on an application.
(ii) The Board may extend the 30-day
comment period if the Board determines
that additional relevant information is
likely to be provided by interested
persons, or if other extenuating
circumstances exist.
(4) Board action on application. (i)
Time limits. (A) The Board shall act on
an application from a foreign bank to
establish a branch, agency, or
commercial lending company
subsidiary within 180 calendar days
after the receipt of the application.
(B) The Board may extend for an
additional 180 calendar days the period
within which to take final action, after
providing notice of and reasons for the
extension to the applicant and the
licensing authority.
(C) The time periods set forth in this
paragraph (b)(4)(i) may be waived by the
applicant.
(ii) Additional information. The Board
may request any information in addition
to that supplied in the application when
the Board believes that the information
is necessary for its decision, and may
deny an application if it does not
receive the information requested from
the applicant or its home country
supervisor in sufficient time to permit
adequate evaluation of the information
within the time periods set forth in
paragraph (b)(4)(i) of this section.

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(5) Coordination with other regulators.
Upon receipt of an application by a
foreign bank under this section, the
Board shall promptly notify, consult
with, and consider the views of the
licensing authority.
(c) Standards for approval of U.S.
offices of foreign banks— (1) Mandatory
standards—(i) General. As specified in
section 7(d) of the IBA (12 U.S.C.
3105(d)), the Board may not approve an
application to establish a branch or an
agency, or to establish or acquire
ownership or control of a commercial
lending company, unless it determines
that:
(A) Each of the foreign bank and any
parent foreign bank engages directly in
the business of banking outside the
United States and, except as provided in
paragraph (c)(1)(iii) of this section, is
subject to comprehensive supervision or
regulation on a consolidated basis by its
home country supervisor; and
(B) The foreign bank has furnished to
the Board the information that the Board
requires in order to assess the
application adequately.
(ii) Basis for determining
comprehensive consolidated
supervision. In determining whether a
foreign bank and any parent foreign
bank is subject to comprehensive
consolidated supervision, the Board
shall determine whether the foreign
bank is supervised or regulated in such
a manner that its home country
supervisor receives sufficient
information on the worldwide
operations of the foreign bank
(including the relationships of the bank
to any affiliate) to assess the foreign
bank’s overall financial condition and
compliance with law and regulation. In
making such a determination, the Board
shall assess, among other factors, the
extent to which the home country
supervisor:
(A) Ensures that the foreign bank has
adequate procedures for monitoring and
controlling its activities worldwide;
(B) Obtains information on the
condition of the foreign bank and its
subsidiaries and offices outside the
home country through regular reports of
examination, audit reports, or
otherwise;
(C) Obtains information on the
dealings and relationship between the
foreign bank and its affiliates, both
foreign and domestic;
(D) Receives from the foreign bank
financial reports that are consolidated
on a worldwide basis, or comparable
information that permits analysis of the
foreign bank’s financial condition on a
worldwide, consolidated basis;

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(E) Evaluates prudential standards,
such as capital adequacy and risk asset
exposure, on a worldwide basis.
(iii) Determination of comprehensive
consolidated supervision not required in
certain circumstances. (A) If the Board
is unable to find, under paragraph
(c)(1)(i) of this section, that a foreign
bank is subject to comprehensive
consolidated supervision, the Board
may, nevertheless, approve an
application by the foreign bank if:
(1) The home country supervisor is
actively working to establish
arrangements for the consolidated
supervision of such bank; and
(2) All other factors are consistent
with approval.
(B) In deciding whether to use its
discretion under this paragraph
(c)(1)(iii), the Board also shall consider
whether the foreign bank has adopted
and implemented procedures to combat
money laundering. The Board also may
take into account whether the home
country supervisor is developing a legal
regime to address money laundering or
is participating in multilateral efforts to
combat money laundering. In approving
an application under this paragraph
(c)(1)(iii), the Board, after requesting
and taking into consideration the views
of the licensing authority, may impose
any conditions or restrictions relating to
the activities or business operations of
the proposed branch, agency, or
commercial lending company
subsidiary, including restrictions on
sources of funding. The Board shall
coordinate with the licensing authority
in the implementation of such
conditions or restrictions.
(2) Additional standards. In acting on
any application under this subpart, the
Board may take into account:
(i) Consent of home country
supervisor. Whether the home country
supervisor of the foreign bank has
consented to the proposed
establishment of the branch, agency, or
commercial lending company
subsidiary;
(ii) Financial resources. The financial
resources of the foreign bank (including
the foreign bank’s capital position,
projected capital position, profitability,
level of indebtedness, and future
prospects) and the condition of any U.S.
office of the foreign bank;
(iii) Managerial resources. The
managerial resources of the foreign
bank, including the competence,
experience, and integrity of the officers
and directors; the integrity of its
principal shareholders; management’s
experience and capacity to engage in
international banking; and the record of
the foreign bank and its management of
complying with laws and regulations,

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54391

and of fulfilling any commitments to,
and any conditions imposed by, the
Board in connection with any prior
application;
(iv) Sharing information with
supervisors. Whether the foreign bank’s
home country supervisor and the home
country supervisor of any parent of the
foreign bank share material information
regarding the operations of the foreign
bank with other supervisory authorities;
(v) Assurances to Board. (A) Whether
the foreign bank has provided the Board
with adequate assurances that
information will be made available to
the Board on the operations or activities
of the foreign bank and any of its
affiliates that the Board deems necessary
to determine and enforce compliance
with the IBA, the BHC Act, and other
applicable federal banking statutes.
(B) These assurances shall include a
statement from the foreign bank
describing the laws that would restrict
the foreign bank or any of its parents
from providing information to the
Board;
(vi) Measures for prevention of money
laundering. Whether the foreign bank
has adopted and implemented
procedures to combat money
laundering, whether there is a legal
regime in place in the home country to
address money laundering, and whether
the home country is participating in
multilateral efforts to combat money
laundering;
(vii) Compliance with U.S. law.
Whether the foreign bank and its U.S.
affiliates are in compliance with
applicable U.S. law, and whether the
applicant has established adequate
controls and procedures in each of its
offices to ensure continuing compliance
with U.S. law, including controls
directed to detection of money
laundering and other unsafe or unsound
banking practices; and (viii) The needs
of the community and the history of
operation of the foreign bank and its
relative size in its home country,
provided that the size of the foreign
bank is not the sole factor in
determining whether an office of a
foreign bank should be approved.
(3) Additional standards for certain
interstate applications. (i) As specified
in section 5(a)(3) of the IBA (12 U.S.C.
3103(a)(3)), the Board may not approve
an application by a foreign bank to
establish a branch, other than a limited
branch, outside the home state of the
foreign bank under section 5(a)(1) or (2)
of the IBA (12 U.S.C. 3103(a)(1), (2))
unless the Board:
(A) Determines that the foreign bank’s
financial resources, including the
capital level of the bank, are equivalent
to those required for a domestic bank to

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be approved for branching under section
5155 of the Revised Statutes (12 U.S.C.
36) and section 44 of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act (FDIA) (12 U.S.C.
1831u);
(B) Consults with the Department of
the Treasury regarding capital
equivalency;
(C) Applies the standards specified in
section 7(d) of the IBA (12 U.S.C.
3105(d)) and this paragraph (c); and
(D) Applies the same requirements
and conditions to which an application
by a domestic bank for an interstate
merger is subject under section 44(b)(1),
(3), and (4) of the FDIA (12 U.S.C.
1831u(b)(1), (3), (4)); and
(ii) As specified in section 5(a)(7) of
the IBA (12 U.S.C. 3103(a)(7)), the Board
may not approve an application to
establish a branch through a change in
status of an agency or limited branch
outside the foreign bank’s home state
unless:
(A) The establishment and operation
of such branch is permitted by such
state; and
(B) Such agency or branch has been in
operation in such state for a period of
time that meets the state’s minimum age
requirement permitted under section
44(a)(5) of the Federal Deposit Insurance
Act (12 U.S.C. 183u(a)(5)).
(4) Board conditions on approval. The
Board may impose any conditions on its
approval as it deems necessary,
including a condition which may permit
future termination by the Board of any
activities or, in the case of a federal
branch or a federal agency, by the
Comptroller, based on the inability of
the foreign bank to provide information
on its activities or those of its affiliates
that the Board deems necessary to
determine and enforce compliance with
U.S. banking laws.
(d) Representative offices—(1)
Permissible activities. A representative
office may engage in:
(i) Representational and
administrative functions.
Representational and administrative
functions in connection with the
banking activities of the foreign bank,
which may include soliciting new
business for the foreign bank;
conducting research; acting as liaison
between the foreign bank’s head office
and customers in the United States;
performing preliminary and servicing
steps in connection with lending; 11 or
performing back-office functions; but
shall not include contracting for any
deposit or deposit-like liability, lending
11 See 12 CFR 250.141(h) for activities that
constitute preliminary and servicing steps.

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money, or engaging in any other
banking activity for the foreign bank;
(ii) Credit approvals under certain
circumstances. Making credit decisions
if the foreign bank also operates one or
more branches or agencies in the United
States, the loans approved at the
representative office are made by a U.S.
office of the bank, and the loan proceeds
are not disbursed in the representative
office; and
(iii) Other functions. Other functions
for or on behalf of the foreign bank or
its affiliates, such as operating as a
regional administrative office of the
foreign bank, but only to the extent that
these other functions are not banking
activities and are not prohibited by
applicable federal or state law, or by
ruling or order of the Board.
(2) Standards for approval of
representative offices. As specified in
section 10(a)(2) of the IBA (12 U.S.C.
3107(a)(2)), in acting on the application
of a foreign bank to establish a
representative office, the Board shall
take into account, to the extent it deems
appropriate, the standards for approval
set out in paragraph (c) of this section.
The standard regarding supervision by
the foreign bank’s home country
supervisor (as set out in paragraph
(c)(1)(i)(A) of this section) will be met,
in the case of a representative office
application, if the Board makes a
finding that the applicant bank is
subject to a supervisory framework that
is consistent with the activities of the
proposed representative office, taking
into account the nature of such
activities and the operating record of the
applicant.
(3) Special-purpose foreign
government-owned banks. A foreign
government-owned organization
engaged in banking activities in its
home country that are not commercial
in nature may apply to the Board for a
determination that the organization is
not a foreign bank for purposes of this
section. A written request setting forth
the basis for such a determination may
be submitted to the Reserve Bank of the
District in which the foreign
organization’s representative office is
located in the United States, or to the
Board, in the case of a proposed
establishment of a representative office.
The Board shall review and act upon
each request on a case-by-case basis.
(4) Additional requirements. The
Board may impose any additional
requirements that it determines to be
necessary to carry out the purposes of
the IBA.
(e) Preservation of existing authority.
Nothing in this subpart shall be
construed to relieve any foreign bank or
foreign banking organization from any

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otherwise applicable requirement of
federal or state law, including any
applicable licensing requirement.
(f) Reports of crimes and suspected
crimes. Except for a federal branch or a
federal agency or a state branch that is
insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC), a branch,
agency, or representative office of a
foreign bank operating in the United
States shall file a suspicious activity
report in accordance with the provisions
of § 208.62 of Regulation H (12 CFR
208.62).
(g) Management of shell branches. (1)
A state-licensed branch or agency shall
not manage, through an office of the
foreign bank which is located outside
the United States and is managed or
controlled by such state-licensed branch
or agency, any type of activity that a
bank organized under the laws of the
United States or any state is not
permitted to manage at any branch or
subsidiary of such bank which is
located outside the United States.
(2) For purposes of this paragraph (g),
an office of a foreign bank located
outside the United States is ‘‘managed
or controlled’’ by a state-licensed branch
or agency if a majority of the
responsibility for business decisions,
including but not limited to decisions
with regard to lending or asset
management or funding or liability
management, or the responsibility for
recordkeeping in respect of assets or
liabilities for that non-U.S. office,
resides at the state-licensed branch or
agency.
(3) The types of activities that a statelicensed branch or agency may manage
through an office located outside the
United States that it manage or controls
include the types of activities
authorized to a U.S. bank by state or
federal charters, regulations issued by
chartering or regulatory authorities, and
other U.S. banking laws, including the
Federal Reserve Act, and the
implementing regulations, but U.S.
procedural or quantitative requirements
that may be applicable to the conduct of
such activities by U.S. banks shall not
apply.
(h) Government securities sales
practices. An uninsured state-licensed
branch or agency of a foreign bank that
is required to give notice to the Board
under section 15C of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78o–5)
and the Department of the Treasury
rules under section 15C (17 CFR
400.1(d) and part 401) shall be subject
to the provisions of 12 CFR 208.37 to
the same extent as a state member bank
that is required to give such notice.
(i) Protection of customer information.
An uninsured state-licensed branch or

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agency of a foreign bank shall comply
with the Interagency Guidelines
Establishing Standards for Safeguarding
Customer Information prescribed
pursuant to sections 501 and 505 of the
Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (15 U.S.C.
6801 and 6805), set forth in appendix
D–2 to part 208 of this chapter.
§ 211.25
banks.

Termination of offices of foreign

(a) Grounds for termination—(1)
General. Under sections 7(e) and 10(b)
of the IBA (12 U.S.C. 3105(d), 3107(b)),
the Board may order a foreign bank to
terminate the activities of its
representative office, state branch, state
agency, or commercial lending company
subsidiary if the Board finds that:
(i) The foreign bank is not subject to
comprehensive consolidated
supervision in accordance with
§ 211.24(c)(1), and the home country
supervisor is not making demonstrable
progress in establishing arrangements
for the consolidated supervision of the
foreign bank; or
(ii) Both of the following criteria are
met:
(A) There is reasonable cause to
believe that the foreign bank, or any of
its affiliates, has committed a violation
of law or engaged in an unsafe or
unsound banking practice in the United
States; and
(B) As a result of such violation or
practice, the continued operation of the
foreign bank’s representative office,
state branch, state agency, or
commercial lending company
subsidiary would not be consistent with
the public interest, or with the purposes
of the IBA, the BHC Act, or the FDIA.
(2) Additional ground. The Board also
may enforce any condition imposed in
connection with an order issued under
§ 211.24.
(b) Factor. In making its findings
under this section, the Board may take
into account the needs of the
community, the history of operation of
the foreign bank, and its relative size in
its home country, provided that the size
of the foreign bank shall not be the sole
determining factor in a decision to
terminate an office.
(c) Consultation with relevant state
supervisor. Except in the case of
termination pursuant to the expedited
procedure in paragraph (d)(3) of this
section, the Board shall request and
consider the views of the relevant state
supervisor before issuing an order
terminating the activities of a state
branch, state agency, representative
office, or commercial lending company
subsidiary under this section.
(d) Termination procedures—(1)
Notice and hearing. Except as otherwise

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provided in paragraph (d)(3) of this
section, an order issued under
paragraph (a)(1) of this section shall be
issued only after notice to the relevant
state supervisor and the foreign bank
and after an opportunity for a hearing.
(2) Procedures for hearing. Hearings
under this section shall be conducted
pursuant to the Board’s Rules of Practice
for Hearings (12 CFR part 263).
(3) Expedited procedure. The Board
may act without providing an
opportunity for a hearing, if it
determines that expeditious action is
necessary in order to protect the public
interest. When the Board finds that it is
necessary to act without providing an
opportunity for a hearing, the Board,
solely in its discretion, may:
(i) Provide the foreign bank that is the
subject of the termination order with
notice of the intended termination
order;
(ii) Grant the foreign bank an
opportunity to present a written
submission opposing issuance of the
order; or
(iii) Take any other action designed to
provide the foreign bank with notice
and an opportunity to present its views
concerning the order.
(e) Termination of federal branch or
federal agency. The Board may transmit
to the Comptroller a recommendation
that the license of a federal branch or
federal agency be terminated if the
Board has reasonable cause to believe
that the foreign bank or any affiliate of
the foreign bank has engaged in conduct
for which the activities of a state branch
or state agency may be terminated
pursuant to this section.
(f) Voluntary termination. A foreign
bank shall notify the Board at least 30
days prior to terminating the activities
of any office. Notice pursuant to this
paragraph (f) is in addition to, and does
not satisfy, any other federal or state
requirements relating to the termination
of an office or the requirement for prior
notice of the closing of a branch,
pursuant to section 39 of the FDIA (12
U.S.C. 1831p).
§ 211.26 Examination of offices and
affiliates of foreign banks.

(a) Conduct of examinations—(1)
Examination of branches, agencies,
commercial lending companies, and
affiliates. The Board may examine:
(i) Any branch or agency of a foreign
bank;
(ii) Any commercial lending company
or bank controlled by one or more
foreign banks, or one or more foreign
companies that control a foreign bank;
and

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54393

(iii) Any other office or affiliate of a
foreign bank conducting business in any
state.
(2) Examination of representative
offices. The Board may examine any
representative office in the manner and
with the frequency it deems
appropriate.
(b) Coordination of examinations. To
the extent possible, the Board shall
coordinate its examinations of the U.S.
offices and U.S. affiliates of a foreign
bank with the licensing authority and,
in the case of an insured branch, the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(FDIC), including through simultaneous
examinations of the U.S. offices and
U.S. affiliates of a foreign bank.
(c) Frequency of on-site
examination—(1) General. Each branch
or agency of a foreign bank shall be
examined on-site at least once during
each 12-month period (beginning on the
date the most recent examination of the
office ended) by—
(i) The Board;
(ii) The FDIC, if the branch of the
foreign bank accepts or maintains
insured deposits;
(iii) The Comptroller, if the branch or
agency of the foreign bank is licensed by
the Comptroller; or
(iv) The state supervisor, if the office
of the foreign bank is licensed or
chartered by the state.
(2) 18-month cycle for certain small
institutions—(i) Mandatory standards.
The Board may conduct a full-scope, onsite examination at least once during
each 18-month period, rather than each
12-month period as required in
paragraph (c)(1) of this section, if the
branch or agency—
(A) Has total assets of $250 million or
less;
(B) Has received a composite ROCA
supervisory rating (which rates risk
management, operational controls,
compliance, and asset quality) of 1 or 2
at its most recent examination;
(C) Satisfies the requirement of either
the following paragraph (c)(2)(i)(C)(1) or
(2):
(1) The foreign bank’s most recently
reported capital adequacy position
consists of, or is equivalent to, tier 1 and
total risk-based capital ratios of at least
6 percent and 10 percent, respectively,
on a consolidated basis; or
(2) The branch or agency has
maintained on a daily basis, over the
past three quarters, eligible assets in an
amount not less than 108 percent of the
preceding quarter’s average third-party
liabilities (determined consistent with
applicable federal and state law) and
sufficient liquidity is currently available
to meet its obligations to third parties;

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(D) Is not subject to a formal
enforcement action or order by the
Board, FDIC, or OCC; and
(E) Has not experienced a change in
control during the preceding 12-month
period in which a full-scope, on-site
examination would have been required
but for this section.
(ii) Discretionary standards. In
determining whether a branch or agency
of a foreign bank that meets the
standards of paragraph (c)(2)(i) of this
section should not be eligible for an 18month examination cycle pursuant to
this paragraph (c)(2), the Board may
consider additional factors, including
whether—
(A) Any of the individual components
of the ROCA supervisory rating of a
branch or agency of a foreign bank is
rated ‘‘3’’ or worse;
(B) The results of any off-site
surveillance indicate a deterioration in
the condition of the office;
(C) The size, relative importance, and
role of a particular office when reviewed
in the context of the foreign bank’s
entire U.S. operations otherwise
necessitate an annual examination; and
(D) The condition of the foreign bank
gives rise to such a need.
(3) Authority to conduct more
frequent examinations. Nothing in
paragraphs (c)(1) and (2) of this section
limits the authority of the Board to
examine any U.S. branch or agency of a
foreign bank as frequently as it deems
necessary.
§ 211.27 Disclosure of supervisory
information to foreign supervisors.

(a) Disclosure by Board. The Board
may disclose information obtained in
the course of exercising its supervisory
or examination authority to a foreign
bank regulatory or supervisory
authority, if the Board determines that
disclosure is appropriate for bank
supervisory or regulatory purposes and
will not prejudice the interests of the
United States.
(b) Confidentiality. Before making any
disclosure of information pursuant to
paragraph (a) of this section, the Board
shall obtain, to the extent necessary, the
agreement of the foreign bank regulatory
or supervisory authority to maintain the
confidentiality of such information to
the extent possible under applicable
law.
§ 211.28 Provisions applicable to branches
and agencies: limitation on loans to one
borrower.

(a) Limitation on loans to one
borrower. Except as provided in
paragraph (b) of this section, the total
loans and extensions of credit by all the
state branches and state agencies of a

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foreign bank outstanding to a single
borrower at one time shall be aggregated
with the total loans and extensions of
credit by all federal branches and
federal agencies of the same foreign
bank outstanding to such borrower at
the time; and shall be subject to the
limitations and other provisions of
section 5200 of the Revised Statutes (12
U.S.C. 84), and the regulations
promulgated thereunder, in the same
manner that extensions of credit by a
federal branch or federal agency are
subject to section 4(b) of the IBA (12
U.S.C. 3102(b)) as if such state branches
and state agencies were federal branches
and federal agencies.
(b) Preexisting loans and extensions
of credit. Any loans or extensions of
credit to a single borrower that were
originated prior to December 19, 1991,
by a state branch or state agency of the
same foreign bank and that, when
aggregated with loans and extensions of
credit by all other branches and
agencies of the foreign bank, exceed the
limits set forth in paragraph (a) of this
section, may be brought into compliance
with such limitations through routine
repayment, provided that any new loans
or extensions of credit (including
renewals of existing unfunded credit
lines, or extensions of the maturities of
existing loans) to the same borrower
shall comply with the limits set forth in
paragraph (a) of this section.
§ 211.29 Applications by state branches
and state agencies to conduct activities not
permissible for federal branches.

(a) Scope. A state branch or state
agency shall file with the Board a prior
written application for permission to
engage in or continue to engage in any
type of activity that:
(1) Is not permissible for a federal
branch, pursuant to statute, regulation,
official bulletin or circular, or order or
interpretation issued in writing by the
Comptroller; or
(2) Is rendered impermissible due to
a subsequent change in statute,
regulation, official bulletin or circular,
written order or interpretation, or
decision of a court of competent
jurisdiction.
(b) Exceptions. No application shall
be required by a state branch or state
agency to conduct any activity that is
otherwise permissible under applicable
state and federal law or regulation and
that:
(1) Has been determined by the FDIC,
pursuant to 12 CFR 362.4(c)(3)(i)
through (c)(3)(ii)(A), not to present a
significant risk to the affected deposit
insurance fund;
(2) Is permissible for a federal branch,
but the Comptroller imposes a

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quantitative limitation on the conduct of
such activity by the federal branch;
(3) Is conducted as agent rather than
as principal, provided that the activity
is one that could be conducted by a
state-chartered bank headquartered in
the same state in which the branch or
agency is licensed; or
(4) Any other activity that the Board
has determined may be conducted by
any state branch or state agency of a
foreign bank without further application
to the Board.
(c) Contents of application. An
application submitted pursuant to
paragraph (a) of this section shall be in
letter form and shall contain the
following information:
(1) A brief description of the activity,
including the manner in which it will
be conducted, and an estimate of the
expected dollar volume associated with
the activity;
(2) An analysis of the impact of the
proposed activity on the condition of
the U.S. operations of the foreign bank
in general, and of the branch or agency
in particular, including a copy, if
available, of any feasibility study,
management plan, financial projections,
business plan, or similar document
concerning the conduct of the activity;
(3) A resolution by the applicant’s
board of directors or, if a resolution is
not required pursuant to the applicant’s
organizational documents, evidence of
approval by senior management,
authorizing the conduct of such activity
and the filing of this application;
(4) If the activity is to be conducted
by a state branch insured by the FDIC,
statements by the applicant:
(i) Of whether or not it is in
compliance with 12 CFR 346.19 (Pledge
of Assets) and 12 CFR 346.20 (Asset
Maintenance);
(ii) That it has complied with all
requirements of the FDIC concerning an
application to conduct the activity and
the status of the application, including
a copy of the FDIC’s disposition of such
application, if available; and
(iii) Explaining why the activity will
pose no significant risk to the deposit
insurance fund; and
(5) Any other information that the
Reserve Bank deems appropriate.
(d) Factors considered in
determination. (1) The Board shall
consider the following factors in
determining whether a proposed
activity is consistent with sound
banking practice:
(i) The types of risks, if any, the
activity poses to the U.S. operations of
the foreign banking organization in
general, and the branch or agency in
particular;

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Federal Register / Vol. 66, No. 208 / Friday, October 26, 2001 / Rules and Regulations
(ii) If the activity poses any such risks,
the magnitude of each risk; and
(iii) If a risk is not de minimis, the
actual or proposed procedures to control
and minimize the risk.
(2) Each of the factors set forth in
paragraph (d)(1) of this section shall be
evaluated in light of the financial
condition of the foreign bank in general
and the branch or agency in particular
and the volume of the activity.
(e) Application procedures.
Applications pursuant to this section
shall be filed with the appropriate
Federal Reserve Bank. An application
shall not be deemed complete until it
contains all the information requested
by the Reserve Bank and has been
accepted. Approval of such an
application may be conditioned on the
applicant’s agreement to conduct the
activity subject to specific conditions or
limitations.
(f) Divestiture or cessation. (1) If an
application for permission to continue
to conduct an activity is not approved
by the Board or, if applicable, the FDIC,
the applicant shall submit a detailed
written plan of divestiture or cessation
of the activity to the appropriate Federal
Reserve Bank within 60 days of the
disapproval.
(i) The divestiture or cessation plan
shall describe in detail the manner in
which the applicant will divest itself of
or cease the activity, and shall include
a projected timetable describing how
long the divestiture or cessation is
expected to take.
(ii) Divestiture or cessation shall be
complete within one year from the date
of the disapproval, or within such
shorter period of time as the Board shall
direct.
(2) If a foreign bank operating a state
branch or state agency chooses not to
apply to the Board for permission to
continue to conduct an activity that is
not permissible for a federal branch, or
which is rendered impermissible due to
a subsequent change in statute,
regulation, official bulletin or circular,
written order or interpretation, or
decision of a court of competent
jurisdiction, the foreign bank shall
submit a written plan of divestiture or
cessation, in conformance with
paragraph (f)(1) of this section within 60
days of the effective date of this part or
of such change or decision.
§ 211.30 Criteria for evaluating U.S.
operations of foreign banks not subject to
consolidated supervision.

(a) Development and publication of
criteria. Pursuant to the Foreign Bank
Supervision Enhancement Act, Pub. L.
102–242, 105 Stat. 2286 (1991), the
Board shall develop and publish criteria

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to be used in evaluating the operations
of any foreign bank in the United States
that the Board has determined is not
subject to comprehensive consolidated
supervision.
(b) Criteria considered by Board.
Following a determination by the Board
that, having taken into account the
standards set forth in § 211.24(c)(1), a
foreign bank is not subject to CCS, the
Board shall consider the following
criteria in determining whether the
foreign bank’s U.S. operations should be
permitted to continue and, if so,
whether any supervisory constraints
should be placed upon the bank in
connection with those operations:
(1) The proportion of the foreign
bank’s total assets and total liabilities
that are located or booked in its home
country, as well as the distribution and
location of its assets and liabilities that
are located or booked elsewhere;
(2) The extent to which the operations
and assets of the foreign bank and any
affiliates are subject to supervision by
its home country supervisor;
(3) Whether the home country
supervisor of such foreign bank is
actively working to establish
arrangements for comprehensive
consolidated supervision of the bank,
and whether demonstrable progress is
being made;
(4) Whether the foreign bank has
effective and reliable systems of internal
controls and management information
and reporting, which enable its
management properly to oversee its
worldwide operations;
(5) Whether the foreign bank’s home
country supervisor has any objection to
the bank continuing to operate in the
United States;
(6) Whether the foreign bank’s home
country supervisor and the home
country supervisor of any parent of the
foreign bank share material information
regarding the operations of the foreign
bank with other supervisory authorities;
(7) The relationship of the U.S.
operations to the other operations of the
foreign bank, including whether the
foreign bank maintains funds in its U.S.
offices that are in excess of amounts due
to its U.S. offices from the foreign bank’s
non-U.S. offices;
(8) The soundness of the foreign
bank’s overall financial condition;
(9) The managerial resources of the
foreign bank, including the competence,
experience, and integrity of the officers
and directors, and the integrity of its
principal shareholders;
(10) The scope and frequency of
external audits of the foreign bank;
(11) The operating record of the
foreign bank generally and its role in the
banking system in its home country;

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(12) The foreign bank’s record of
compliance with relevant laws, as well
as the adequacy of its anti-moneylaundering controls and procedures, in
respect of its worldwide operations;
(13) The operating record of the U.S.
offices of the foreign bank;
(14) The views and recommendations
of the Comptroller or the relevant state
supervisors in those states in which the
foreign bank has operations, as
appropriate;
(15) Whether the foreign bank, if
requested, has provided the Board with
adequate assurances that such
information will be made available on
the operations or activities of the foreign
bank and any of its affiliates as the
Board deems necessary to determine
and enforce compliance with the IBA,
the BHC Act, and other U.S. banking
statutes; and
(16) Any other information relevant to
the safety and soundness of the U.S.
operations of the foreign bank.
(c) Restrictions on U.S. operations—
(1) Terms of agreement. Any foreign
bank that the Board determines is not
subject to CCS may be required to enter
into an agreement to conduct its U.S.
operations subject to such restrictions as
the Board, having considered the
criteria set forth in paragraph (b) of this
section, determines to be appropriate in
order to ensure the safety and
soundness of its U.S. operations.
(2) Failure to enter into or comply
with agreement. A foreign bank that is
required by the Board to enter into an
agreement pursuant to paragraph (c)(1)
of this section and either fails to do so,
or fails to comply with the terms of such
agreement, may be subject to:
(i) Enforcement action, in order to
ensure safe and sound banking
operations, under 12 U.S.C. 1818; or
(ii) Termination or a recommendation
for termination of its U.S. operations,
under § 211.25(a) and (e) and section
(7)(e) of the IBA (12 U.S.C. 3105(e)).
Subpart C—Export Trading Companies
§ 211.31

Authority, purpose, and scope.

(a) Authority. This subpart is issued
by the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System (Board) under the
authority of the Bank Holding Company
Act of 1956 (BHC Act) (12 U.S.C. 1841
et seq.), the Bank Export Services Act
(title II, Pub. L. 97–290, 96 Stat. 1235
(1982)) (BESA), and the Export Trading
Company Act Amendments of 1988
(title III, Pub. L. 100–418, 102 Stat. 1384
(1988)) (ETC Act Amendments).
(b) Purpose and scope. This subpart is
in furtherance of the purposes of the
BHC Act, the BESA, and the ETC Act
Amendments, the latter two statutes

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being designed to increase U.S. exports
by encouraging investments and
participation in export trading
companies by bank holding companies
and the specified investors. The
provisions of this subpart apply to
eligible investors as defined in this
subpart.
§ 211.32

Definitions.

The definitions in §§ 211.1 and 211.2
of subpart A apply to this subpart,
subject to the following:
(a) Appropriate Federal Reserve Bank
has the same meaning as in § 211.21(c).
(b) Bank has the same meaning as in
section 2(c) of the BHC Act (12 U.S.C.
1841(c)).
(c) Company has the same meaning as
in section 2(b) of the BHC Act (12 U.S.C.
1841(b)).
(d) Eligible investors means:
(1) Bank holding companies, as
defined in section 2(a) of the BHC Act
(12 U.S.C. 1841(a));
(2) Edge and agreement corporations
that are subsidiaries of bank holding
companies but are not subsidiaries of
banks;
(3) Banker’s banks, as described in
section 4(c)(14)(F)(iii) of the BHC Act
(12 U.S.C. 1843(c)(14)(F)(iii)); and
(4) Foreign banking organizations, as
defined in § 211.21(o).
(e) Export trading company means a
company that is exclusively engaged in
activities related to international trade
and, by engaging in one or more export
trade services, derives:
(1) At least one-third of its revenues
in each consecutive four-year period
from the export of, or from facilitating
the export of, goods and services
produced in the United States by
persons other than the export trading
company or its subsidiaries; and
(2) More revenues in each four-year
period from export activities as
described in paragraph (e)(1) of this
section than it derives from the import,
or facilitating the import, into the
United States of goods or services
produced outside the United States. The
four-year period within which to
calculate revenues derived from its
activities under this section shall be
deemed to have commenced with the
first fiscal year after the respective
export trading company has been in
operation for two years.
(f) Revenues shall include net sales
revenues from exporting, importing, or
third-party trade in goods by the export
trading company for its own account
and gross revenues derived from all
other activities of the export trading
company.
(g) Subsidiary has the same meaning
as in section 2(d) of the BHC Act (12
U.S.C. 1841(d)).

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(h) Well capitalized has the same
meaning as in § 225.2(r) of Regulation Y
(12 CFR 225.2(r)).
(i) Well managed has the same
meaning as in § 225.2(s) of Regulation Y
(12 CFR 225.2(s)).
§ 211.33
credit.

Investments and extensions of

(a) Amount of investments. In
accordance with the procedures of
§ 211.34, an eligible investor may invest
no more than 5 percent of its
consolidated capital and surplus in one
or more export trading companies,
except that an Edge or agreement
corporation not engaged in banking may
invest as much as 25 percent of its
consolidated capital and surplus but no
more than 5 percent of the consolidated
capital and surplus of its parent bank
holding company.
(b) Extensions of credit—(1) Amount.
An eligible investor in an export trading
company or companies may extend
credit directly or indirectly to the export
trading company or companies in a total
amount that at no time exceeds 10
percent of the investor’s consolidated
capital and surplus.
(2) Terms. (i) An eligible investor in
an export trading company may not
extend credit directly or indirectly to
the export trading company or any of its
customers or to any other investor
holding 10 percent or more of the shares
of the export trading company on terms
more favorable than those afforded
similar borrowers in similar
circumstances, and such extensions of
credit shall not involve more than the
normal risk of repayment or present
other unfavorable features.
(ii) For the purposes of this section,
an investor in an export trading
company includes any affiliate of the
investor.
(3) Collateral requirements. Covered
transactions between a bank and an
affiliated export trading company in
which a bank holding company has
invested pursuant to this subpart are
subject to the collateral requirements of
section 23A of the Federal Reserve Act
(12 U.S.C. 371c), except where a bank
issues a letter of credit or advances
funds to an affiliated export trading
company solely to finance the purchase
of goods for which:
(i) The export trading company has a
bona fide contract for the subsequent
sale of the goods; and
(ii) The bank has a security interest in
the goods or in the proceeds from their
sale at least equal in value to the letter
of credit or the advance.

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§ 211.34 Procedures for filing and
processing notices.

(a) General policy. Direct and indirect
investments by eligible investors in
export trading companies shall be made
in accordance with the general consent
or prior notice procedures contained in
this section. The Board may at any time,
upon notice, modify or suspend the
general-consent procedures with respect
to any eligible investor.
(b) General consent—(1) Eligibility for
general consent. Subject to the other
limitations of this subpart, the Board
grants its general consent for any
investment an export trading company:
(i) If the eligible investor is well
capitalized and well managed;
(ii) In an amount equal to cash
dividends received from that export
trading company during the preceding
12 calendar months; or
(iii) That is acquired from an affiliate
at net asset value or through a
contribution of shares.
(2) Post-investment notice. By the end
of the month following the month in
which the investment is made, the
investor shall provide the Board with
the following information:
(i) The amount of the investment and
the source of the funds with which the
investment was made; and
(ii) In the case of an initial
investment, a description of the
activities in which the export trading
company proposes to engage and
projections for the export trading
company for the first year following the
investment.
(c) Filing notice—(1) Prior notice. An
eligible investor shall give the Board 60
days’ prior written notice of any
investment in an export trading
company that does not qualify under the
general consent procedure.
(2) Notice of change of activities. (i)
An eligible investor shall give the Board
60 days’ prior written notice of changes
in the activities of an export trading
company that is a subsidiary of the
investor if the export trading company
expands its activities beyond those
described in the initial notice to
include:
(A) Taking title to goods where the
export trading company does not have
a firm order for the sale of those goods;
(B) Product research and design;
(C) Product modification; or
(D) Activities not specifically covered
by the list of activities contained in
section 4(c)(14)(F)(ii) of the BHC Act (12
U.S.C. 1843(c)(14)(F)(ii)).
(ii) Such an expansion of activities
shall be regarded as a proposed
investment under this subpart.
(d) Time period for Board action. (1)
A proposed investment that has not

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been disapproved by the Board may be
made 60 days after the appropriate
Federal Reserve Bank accepts the notice
for processing. A proposed investment
may be made before the expiration of
the 60-day period if the Board notifies
the investor in writing of its intention
not to disapprove the investment.
(2) The Board may extend the 60-day
period for an additional 30 days if the
Board determines that the investor has
not furnished all necessary information
or that any material information
furnished is substantially inaccurate.
The Board may disapprove an
investment if the necessary information
is provided within a time insufficient to
allow the Board reasonably to consider
the information received.
(3) Within three days of a decision to
disapprove an investment, the Board
shall notify the investor in writing and
state the reasons for the disapproval.
(e) Time period for investment. An
investment in an export trading
company that has not been disapproved
shall be made within one year from the
date of the notice not to disapprove,
unless the time period is extended by
the Board or by the appropriate Federal
Reserve Bank.
PART 265—RULES REGARDING
DELEGATION OF AUTHORITY
1. The authority citation for part 265
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 248(i) and (k).

2. Section 265.5 is amended by
adding a new paragraph (d)(3) to read as
follows:
§ 265.5 Functions delegated to Secretary
of the Board.

*

*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(3) Investments in Edge and
Agreement Corporations. To approve an
application by a member bank to invest
more than 10 percent of capital and
surplus in Edge and agreement
corporation subsidiaries.
*
*
*
*
*
3. Section 265.6 is amended by
revising paragraph (f) to read as follows:
§ 265.6 Functions delegated to General
Counsel.

*

*
*
*
*
(f) International banking—(1) Afterthe-fact applications. With the
concurrence of the Board’s Director of
the Division of Banking Supervision and
Regulation, to grant a request by a
foreign bank to establish a branch,
agency, commercial lending company,
or representative office through certain
acquisitions, mergers, consolidations, or

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similar transactions, in conjunction
with which:
(i) The foreign bank would be
required to file an after-the-fact
application for the Board’s approval
under § 211.24(a)(6) of Regulation K (12
CFR 211.24(a)(6)); or
(ii) The General Counsel may waive
the requirement for an after-the-fact
application if:
(A) The surviving foreign bank
commits to wind down the U.S.
operations of the acquired foreign bank;
and
(B) The merger or consolidation raises
no significant policy or supervisory
issues.
(2) To modify the requirement that a
foreign bank that has submitted an
application or notice to establish a
branch, agency, commercial lending
company, or representative office
pursuant to § 211.24(a)(6) of Regulation
K (12 CFR 211.24(a)(6)) shall publish
notice of the application or notice in a
newspaper of general circulation in the
community in which the applicant or
notificant proposes to engage in
business, as provided in § 211.24(b)(2)
of Regulation K (12 CFR 211.24(b)(2)).
(3) With the concurrence of the
Board’s Director of the Division of
Banking Supervision and Regulation, to
grant a request for an exemption under
section 4(c)(9) of the Bank Holding
Company Act (12 U.S.C. 1843(c)(9)),
provided that the request raises no
significant policy or supervisory issues
that the Board has not already
considered.
(4) To return applications and notices
filed under the International Banking
Act for informational deficits.
(5) To determine that an entity
qualifies as a ‘‘special-purpose foreign
government-owned bank’’ for purposes
of § 211.24(d)(3) (12 CFR 211.24(d)(3)).
*
*
*
*
*
4. Section 265.7 is amended by:
a. Revising paragraph (d)(4); and
b. Adding new paragraphs (d)(9),
(d)(10), (d)(11), (d)(12), (d)(13), and
(d)(14).
The revision and additions read as
follows:
§ 265.7 Functions delegated to Director of
Division of Banking Supervision and
Regulation.

*

*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(4) Authority under general-consent
and prior-notice procedures. (i) With
regard to a prior notice to establish a
branch in a foreign country under
§ 211.3 of Regulation K (12 CFR 211.3):
(A) To waive the notice period;
(B) To suspend the notice period;
(C) To determine not to object to the
notice; or

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54397

(D) To require the notificant to file an
application for the Board’s specific
consent.
(ii) With regard to a prior notice to
make an investment under § 211.9(f) of
Regulation K (12 CFR 211.9(f)):
(A) To waive the notice period;
(B) To suspend the notice period; or
(C) To require the notificant to file an
application for the Board’s specific
consent.
(iii) With regard to a prior notice of
a foreign bank to establish certain U.S.
offices under § 211.24(a)(2)(i) of
Regulation K (12 CFR 211.24(a)(2)(i)):
(A) To waive the notice period;
(B) To suspend the notice period; or
(C) To require the notificant to file an
application for the Board’s specific
consent.
(iv) To suspend the ability:
(A) Of a foreign banking organization
to establish an office under the priornotice procedures in § 211.24(a)(2)(i) of
Regulation K (12 CFR 211.24(a)(2)(i)) or
the general-consent procedures in
§ 211.24(a)(3) of Regulation K (12 CFR
211.24(a)(3));
(B) Of a U.S. banking organization to
establish a foreign branch under the
prior-notice or general-consent
procedures in § 211.3(b) of Regulation K
(12 CFR 211.3(b));
(C) Of an investor to make
investments under the general-consent
or prior-notice procedures in § 211.9 of
Regulation K (12 CFR 211.9); and
(D) Of an eligible investor to make an
investment in an export trading
company under the general-consent
procedures in § 211.34(b) of Regulation
K (12 CFR 211.34(b)).
*
*
*
*
*
(9) Allowing use of general-consent
procedures. To allow an investor that is
not well-capitalized and well-managed
to make investments under the generalconsent procedures in § 211.9 or
211.34(b) of Regulation K (12 CFR 211.9
or 211.34(b)), provided that:
(i) The investor has implemented
measures to become well-capitalized
and well-managed;
(ii) Granting such authority raises no
significant policy or supervisory
concerns; and
(iii) Authority granted by the Director
under this paragraph (d)(9) expires after
one year, but may be renewed.
(10) Exceeding general-consent
investment limits. To allow an investor
to exceed the general-consent
investment limits under § 211.9 of
Regulation K (12 CFR 211.9), provided
that:
(i) The investor demonstrates
adequate financial and managerial
strength;

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(ii) The investor’s investment strategy
is not unsafe or unsound;
(iii) Granting such authority raises no
significant policy or supervisory
concerns; and
(iv) Authority granted by the Director
under this paragraph (d)(10) expires
after one year, but may be renewed.
(11) Approval of temporary U.S.
offices. To allow a foreign bank to
operate a temporary office in the United
States, pursuant to § 211.24 of
Regulation K (12 CFR 211.24), provided
that:
(i) There is no direct public access to
such office, with respect to any branch
or agency function; and
(ii) The proposal raises no significant
policy or supervisory issues.
(12) With the concurrence of the
General Counsel, to approve
applications, notices, exemption
requests, waivers and suspensions, and
other related matters under Regulation
K (12 CFR part 211), where such matters
do not raise any significant policy or
supervisory issues.
(13) With the concurrence of the
General Counsel, to approve:
(i) The establishment by a bank
holding company or member bank of an

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agreement corporation under section 25
of the Federal Reserve Act; and
(ii) Any initial investment associated
with the establishment of such
agreement corporation.
(14) With the concurrence of the
General Counsel, to determine that an
election by a foreign bank to become or
to be treated as a financial holding
company is effective, provided that:
(i) The foreign bank meets the criteria
for becoming or being treated as a
financial holding company; and
(ii) The election raised no significant
policy or supervisory issues.
*
*
*
*
*
5. Section 265.11 is amended by:
a. Revising paragraphs (d)(8) and
(d)(11); and
b. Adding a new paragraph (d)(12).
The revisions and addition read as
follows:
§ 265.11 Functions delegated to Federal
Reserve Banks.

*

*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(8) Authority under prior-notice
procedures. (i) With regard to a prior
notice to make an investment under

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§ 211.9(f) of Regulation K (12 CFR
211.9(f)):
(A) To suspend the notice period; or
(B) To require the notificant to file an
application for the Board’s specific
consent.
(ii) With regard to a prior notice of a
foreign bank to establish certain U.S.
offices under § 211.24(a)(2)(i) of
Regulation K (12 CFR 211.24(a)(2)(i)):
(A) To suspend the notice period; or
(B) To require that the foreign bank
file an application for the Board’s
specific consent.
*
*
*
*
*
(11) Investments in Edge and
agreement Corporation subsidiaries. To
approve an application by a member
bank to invest more than 10 percent of
capital and surplus in Edge and
agreement corporation subsidiaries.
(12) Amendments to Edge corporation
charters. To approve amendments to
Edge corporation charters.
By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, October 16, 2001.
Robert deV. Frierson,
Deputy Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 01–26513 Filed 10–25–01; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P

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