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Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas

December 16, 2002

DALLAS, TEXAS
75265-5906

Notice 02-67
TO: The Chief Executive Officer of each
financial institution and others concerned
in the Eleventh Federal Reserve District
SUBJECT
Proposed Amendment to
Regulation W (Transactions Between Member Banks
and Their Affiliates)
DETAILS
The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System has announced a proposal to
amend an exemption in Regulation W (Transactions Between Member Banks and Their
Affiliates) that permits a member bank to exclude the purchase of an extension of credit from an
affiliate from the quantitative limits imposed by section 23A of the Federal Reserve Act if
certain criteria are met. The proposed amendment limits a member bank’s ability to buy an
extension of credit from an affiliate under the exemption to 100 percent of the capital stock and
surplus of the member bank.
The Board must receive comments by January 13, 2003. Please address comments to
Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 20th Street
and Constitution Avenue, N.W., Washington, DC 20551. Also, you may e-mail comments to
regs.comments@federalreserve.gov. All comments should refer to Docket No. R-1135.
ATTACHMENT
A copy of the Board’s notice as it appears on pages 76618–19, Vol. 67, No. 239 of the
Federal Register dated December 12, 2002, is attached.
MORE INFORMATION
For more information, please contact Jane Anne Schmoker, Legal Department, (214)
922-5101. Paper copies of this notice or previous Federal Reserve Bank notices can be printed
from 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.

76618

Federal Register / Vol. 67, No. 239 / Thursday, December 12, 2002 / Proposed Rules

FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 223
[Regulation W; Docket No. R–1135]

Transactions Between Member Banks
and Their Affiliates
AGENCY: Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
SUMMARY: The Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System proposes to
amend an exemption in Regulation W
that permits a member bank to exclude
the purchase of an extension of credit
from an affiliate from the quantitative
limits imposed by section 23A of the
Federal Reserve Act if certain criteria
are met. The proposed amendment
would limit a member bank’s ability to
buy an extension of credit from an
affiliate under the exemption to 100
percent of the capital stock and surplus
of the member bank.
DATES: Submit comments on or before
January 13, 2003.
ADDRESSES: Comments should refer to
docket number R–1135 and should be
sent to Ms. Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary, Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, 20th Street and
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington,
DC 20551 or mailed electronically to
regs.comments@federalreserve.gov.
Comments addressed to Ms. Johnson
also may be delivered between 8:45 a.m.
and 5:15 p.m. to the Board’s mail
facility in the west courtyard of the
Eccles Building, located on 21st Street
between Constitution Avenue and C
Street, NW. Members of the public may
inspect comments in accordance with
the Board’s Rules Regarding the
Availability of Information (12 CFR part
261) in Room MP–500 of the Martin
Building on weekdays between 9 a.m.
and 5 p.m.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Pamela G. Nardolilli, Senior Counsel
(202/452–3289), or Mark E. Van Der
Weide, Counsel (202/452–2263), Legal
Division; for users of
Telecommunications Device for the Deaf
(TDD) only, contact 202/263–4869.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:

Background
Section 23A is designed to protect
banks from misuse in financial
transactions with their affiliates. Section
23A attempts to accomplish this goal by
imposing safeguards on all ‘‘covered
transactions’’ between a bank and its
affiliates; this includes limiting all
covered transactions by a bank with any
single affiliate to no more than 10

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percent of the bank’s capital stock and
surplus, and limiting a bank’s covered
transactions with all affiliates to 20
percent of the bank’s capital stock and
surplus.
In 1974, the Board issued a formal
interpretation that exempted from
section 23A a bank’s purchase, on a
nonrecourse basis, of a mortgage note or
participation therein from a mortgage
banking affiliate, provided that the
bank’s commitment to purchase was (i)
obtained by the affiliate within the
context of each proposed loan, (ii)
obtained prior to the affiliate’s
commitment to make each loan, and (iii)
based upon the bank’s independent
evaluation of the creditworthiness of
each mortgagor (the ‘‘Purchase
Exemption’’).1 Although this
interpretation did not impose a strict
dollar limit on the amount of an
affiliate’s mortgage loans that a bank
could purchase under the exemption,
the interpretation cautioned that the
purpose of the exemption was to allow
a bank to take advantage of an
investment opportunity and not to
provide all the working capital needed
by an affiliate.
By 1995, some bank holding
companies were using the Purchase
Exemption extensively to fund their
nonbank lending affiliates. In those
cases, banks were providing all or
nearly all of such affiliates’ funding. In
response, staff indicated in an
interpretive letter that the Purchase
Exemption was not available if the
dollar amount of the bank’s loan
purchases from the affiliate represented
more than 50 percent of the total dollar
amount of loans originated by the
affiliate. Staff reasoned that, in these
circumstances, the asset purchases look
less like the bank taking advantage of an
investment opportunity brought to it by
the affiliate and more like the bank
providing an ongoing funding
mechanism for the affiliate. Staff
intended that this restriction would
require the affiliate to have alternative
funding sources and would reduce the
pressure on the bank to purchase the
affiliate’s extensions of credit.
In 2001, the Board reviewed a
proposal where a leasing company
proposed to charter a bank for the
primary purpose of purchasing loans or
leases from the leasing company.2 The
Board was concerned that, under the
proposal, the new bank’s credit
underwriting process could be
compromised as result of the complete
1 This exemption was codified at 12 CFR 250.250
(2002).
2 Amplicon Inc., 87 Federal Reserve Bulletin 421
(2001).

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dependence of the bank on the affiliate
for asset growth. The Board conditioned
its approval of the proposal on the bank
limiting its purchases of leases or loans
from an affiliate to no more than 50
percent of the bank’s credit portfolio.
Concurrently with the issuance of this
proposed rule, the Board is adopting
final Regulation W, which incorporates
the Purchase Exemption at 12 CFR
223.42(k) and formally expands the
exemption to cover the purchase of any
of type of extension of credit from an
affiliate.
The Purchase Exemption in
Regulation W also retains the limitation
previously imposed by staff that
prevents a bank from using the Purchase
Exemption to purchase more than 50
percent of the loans originated by any
affiliate. When the Board proposed
Regulation W, the preamble of the
regulation asked for comment on
whether the rule should include a
quantitative condition to the Purchase
Exemption based on the size of the
purchasing bank.3 The Board, however,
did not propose a specific bank-based
limit at that time. Eleven commenters
objected to such a condition and argued
that case-by-case review is a better
approach to handling situations where
loans purchased from an affiliate
represent a large portion of a bank’s
assets. These commenters believed that
the remaining conditions of the
Purchase Exemption should suffice to
prevent abuse of the bank. One
commenter, on the other hand,
recommended that the rule include a 50
percent limit based on the assets of the
bank.
In light of the comments and the fact
that the Board did not set forth a
specific limit based on the bank’s size
in proposed Regulation W, the Board
now proposes to amend Regulation W to
impose a limitation on the Purchase
Exemption based on the capital stock
and surplus of the bank. Specifically,
the Board is requesting comment on a
condition that would limit the amount
of extensions of credit that a bank could
purchase from an affiliate under the
Purchase Exemption to 100 percent of
the bank’s capital stock and surplus. All
other restrictions imposed by the
Purchase Exemption would still apply.
Although those restrictions include a
requirement that the bank conduct an
independent credit review prior to
purchasing assets under the Purchase
Exemption, sections 23A and 23B were
enacted in recognition that the bank
might relax its independent judgment
when making credit decisions involving
an affiliate. The Board believes that the
3 66

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Federal Register / Vol. 67, No. 239 / Thursday, December 12, 2002 / Proposed Rules
100 percent limit will guard against a
bank acquiring an excessive
concentration of assets under the
Purchase Exemption, but still will
provide the bank with the flexibility to
purchase assets from an affiliate, within
prudential limitations, in an amount
well in excess of the statute’s 10 and 20
percent quantitative limits.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
In accordance with section 3(a) of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C.
603(a)) the Board must publish an initial
regulatory flexibility analysis with this
proposed regulation. As discussed
above, the purpose of the rule is to limit
the concentration of assets held by a
bank that are originated by an affiliate
and to reduce pressure on the bank to
make inappropriate credit decisions.
The Board does not collect data on the
number of institutions that take
advantage of the current exemption.
There are approximately 3,300 banks
below $100 million in assets, but the
Board does not believe that a significant
number of these institutions engage in
Purchase Exemption transactions
because most banks of that size do not
have affiliates engaged in creditextending activities. The requirements
of the proposed rule would be the same
for all depository institutions regardless
of their size. The Board knows of no

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other regulations that overlap, conflict
with, or duplicate the proposed rule.
The Board solicits comment on the
likely impact the proposed rule would
have on depository institutions,
including small depository institutions.
The proposed rule contains no reporting
requirement.
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
has reviewed the proposed rule under
the authority delegated to the Board by
the Office of Management and Budget.
The proposed rule contains no new
collections of information and proposes
no substantive changes to existing
collections of information pursuant to
the Paperwork Reduction Act.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 223
Banks, Banking, Affiliates, Federal
Reserve System.
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, the Board proposes to amend
12 CFR part 223 as set forth below:
PART 223—TRANSACTIONS
BETWEEN MEMBER BANKS AND
THEIR AFFILIATES (REGULATION W)
1. The authority citation for part 223
continues to read as follows:

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76619

Authority: 12 U.S.C. 371c(b)(1)(E),
(b)(2)(A), and (f), 371c–1(e), 1828(j), and
1468(a).

2. Section 223.42 would be amended
by adding a new paragraph (k)(6) to read
as follows:
§ 223.42 What covered transactions are
exempt from the quantitative limits,
collateral requirements, and low-quality
asset prohibition?

*

*
*
*
*
(k) Purchasing an extension of credit
from an affiliate. * * *
(6) The dollar amount of the extension
of credit, when aggregated with the
dollar amount of all other extensions of
credit purchased by the member bank
from affiliates under this exemption and
currently owned by the member bank,
does not represent more than 100
percent (or such lower percent as is
imposed by the member bank’s
appropriate Federal banking agency) of
the capital stock and surplus of the
member bank.
By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, November 27, 2002.
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 02–30635 Filed 12–11–02; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P

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