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Federal Reserve Bank
of Dallas

February 17, 2000

DALLAS, TEXAS
75265-5906

Notice 2000-10

TO: The Chief Executive Officer of each
financial institution and others concerned
in the Eleventh Federal Reserve District
SUBJECT
Request for Public Comment on
Revisions Regarding Tying Restrictions
DETAILS
The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System has requested public comment on a proposed exception to the anti-tying restrictions of section 106 of the Bank Holding
Company Act Amendments of 1970 and the Board’s Regulation Y. The proposed amendment
would establish a “safe harbor” permitting a bank to offer a credit card that can be used to make
purchases from a retailer affiliated with the bank.
The Board must receive comments by March 13, 2000. 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. All comments should refer to Docket
No. R-1060.
ATTACHMENT
A copy of the Board’s notice as it appears on pages 6924–25, Vol. 65, No. 29 of the
Federal Register dated February 11, 2000, is attached.
MORE INFORMATION
For more information, please contact Jane Anne Schmoker, Legal Department, at
(214) 922-5101. For additional copies of this Bank’s notice, contact the Public Affairs Department
at (214) 922-5254 or access 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.

6924

Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 29 / Friday, February 11, 2000 / Proposed Rules
public comment on a proposed
exception to the anti-tying restrictions
of section 106 of the Bank Holding
Company Act Amendments of 1970 and
the Board’s Regulation Y. The proposed
amendment would establish a ‘‘safe
harbor’’ permitting a bank to offer a
credit card that can be used to make
purchases from a retailer affiliated with
the bank.
DATES: Comments must be received by
March 13, 2000.
ADDRESSES: Comments should refer to
Docket No. R–1060, and may be mailed
to Ms. Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary,
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, 20th Street and
Constitution Avenue, NW, Washington,
DC 20551. Comments also may be
delivered to Room B–2222 of the Eccles
Building between 8:45 a.m. and 5:15
p.m. weekdays or delivered to the guard
station in the Eccles Building Courtyard
on 20th Street, NW (between
Constitution Avenue and C Street, NW)
at any time. All comments received at
the above address will be available for
inspection and copying by any member
of the public in the Freedom of
Information Office, Room MP–500 of the
Martin Building, between 9:00 a.m. and
5:00 p.m. weekdays, except as provided
in § 261.14 of the Board’s Rules
Regarding the Availability of
Information (12 CFR 261.14).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Scott G. Alvarez, Associate General
Counsel (202/452–3583), or Andrew S.
Baer, Attorney (202/452–2246), Legal
Division. Users of Telecommunication
Device for Deaf (TTD) only, contact
Diane Jenkins at (202) 452–3544.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Background

FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 225
[Regulation Y; Docket No. R–1060]

Revisions Regarding Tying
Restrictions
AGENCY: Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
SUMMARY: The Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System is seeking

VerDate 27<JAN>2000

16:06 Feb 10, 2000

Section 106(b) of the Bank Holding
Company Act Amendments of 1970 (12
U.S.C. 1972) generally prohibits a bank
from tying the availability or price of a
product or service to the purchase by a
customer of another product or service
offered by the bank or any of its
affiliates. A bank engages in a tie for
purposes of section 106 by conditioning
the availability of, or offering a discount
on, one product or service (the ‘‘tying
product’’) on the condition that the
customer obtain some additional
product or service (the ‘‘tied product’’)
from the bank or from any of its
affiliates. Violations of section 106 can
be addressed by the Board through an
enforcement action, by the Department
of Justice through a request for an
injunction, or by a customer or other
party through an action for damages. 12
U.S.C. 1972, 1973, and 1975.

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Section 106 contains an explicit
exception (the ‘‘statutory traditional
bank product exception’’) that permits a
bank to tie a product or service to a
loan, discount, deposit, or trust service
(‘‘a traditional bank product’’) offered by
that bank. The Board has extended this
exception by providing that a bank may
condition the availability of, or vary the
consideration for, any product or service
on the condition that the customer
obtain a traditional bank product from
an affiliate of the bank (the ‘‘regulatory
traditional bank product exception’’).1
The Board adopted the regulatory
traditional bank product exception in its
present form because inter-affiliate
transactions do not appear to pose any
greater risk of anti-competitive behavior
than intra-bank transactions, and
because Congress had extended the
statutory traditional bank product
exception to cover inter-affiliate
transactions for savings associations and
their affiliates.2
Section 106 authorizes the Board to
grant exceptions to its restrictions by
regulation or order. On December 7,
1999, the General Counsel of the Board
issued a legal interpretation indicating
the Board’s view that section 106 does
not prohibit a credit card bank from
issuing a credit card that may be used
to make purchases from a retailer
affiliated with the credit card bank
(‘‘private-label credit card’’).3 The
Interpretation did not address the
situation where a bank or its retailer
affiliate offer discounts on their
respective products in connection with
a private-label credit card arrangement,
as that situation was not presented by
the request for an interpretation. The
proposed exception also does not cover
that situation.
Proposed Rule
The Board is proposing to use its
statutory authority to grant a regulatory
exemption to section 106 for privatelabel credit cards that may be used at a
retailer affiliated with the issuing bank.
The Board is proposing the exception in
order to disseminate the Board’s view,
as reflected in the Interpretation, that
such arrangements are not as a general
matter anticompetitive, and to create a
rule of more general applicability not
limited to the facts on which the
Interpretation was based.

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Federal Register / Vol. 65, No. 29 / Friday, February 11, 2000 / Proposed Rules
Applicability of Section 106
Because section 106 prohibits a bank
from offering or discounting a product
or service on the condition that the
customer obtain some additional
product or service from the bank or from
any of its affiliates, the question arose as
to whether a private-label credit card
arrangement violates that restriction
when credit is extended only when a
customer makes a purchase from a
retailer affiliated with the issuing bank.
Although the extension of credit
through the private-label credit card is
not conditioned on any particular
product being purchased, or on
purchases being made from any
particular retailer, the lack of a network
with other retailers limits the ability of
the customer to access that credit other
than by purchasing a product or service
from the affiliated retailer. In the
private-label credit card arrangement
described in the Interpretation, there is
no contractual limitation on where the
card can be used to make purchases.
The reason why the private-label credit
card can only be used at the affiliated
retailer is that the retailer is the only
merchant able to communicate with the
issuing bank regarding whether credit
should be extended on the card.
Exception
The Interpretation reflects the Board’s
belief that private-label credit cards
issued by a bank affiliated with the
relevant retailer do not generally
involve the type of anticompetitive
activity that section 106 was intended to
address. Section 106 was intended to
prevent banks from using their market
power in banking products to gain an
unfair competitive advantage in markets
for non-banking products and services.
The type of private-label credit card
arrangements described in the
Interpretation do not raise such
concerns, however, because they do not
involve a banking organization’s attempt
to expand into retailing, but rather a
retailer’s attempt to provide an
additional convenience for its
customers. Additionally, because the
same products and services can be
purchased from the retailer for the same
price using payment methods other than
the private-label credit card, customers
wishing to purchase those products and
services are not coerced into using the
private-label credit card. The
Interpretation also noted that such
transactions are driven by the
customer’s desire to purchase the
product or service, not by the
availability or nonavailability of credit
from the affiliated bank.

For these reasons, the Board is
proposing to establish, through a
regulatory exception, a safe harbor for
private-label credit card arrangements
where such cards may only be used to
make purchases from a retailer affiliate
of the issuing bank. The proposed safe
harbor is consistent with the concerns of
section 106 about anticompetitive
behavior. The proposal requires that the
products or services be available for
purchase at the same price by means
other than the private-label credit card,
such as cash or credit cards issued by
a third party. Furthermore, the issuing
bank may not discount the credit it
offers through the private-label credit
card to customers who use the card to
make purchases at the bank’s retailer
affiliate. Because a customer could
purchase any product or service from
the retailer for the same price, regardless
of the payment method, the only
incentive for the customer to use the
private-label credit card is the
convenience it offers as an alternative
source of credit for use in making
purchases from the retailer affiliate. For
this reason, the Board does not believe
that the proposed rule would allow
coercive or anticompetitive practices, or
otherwise contravene the purposes of
section 106.
Finally, the Board believes that the
proposed rule would benefit the public
by providing consumers with alternative
sources of consumer credit.
Paperwork Reduction Act
No collections of information
pursuant to section 3504(h) of the
Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C.
3501 et seq.) are contained in the
proposed rule.
Regulatory Flexibility Act
This proposal is not expected to have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small business
entities within the meaning of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601
et seq.). It is intended to allow affected
businesses to expand the services they
may offer to customers.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 225
Administrative practice and
procedure, Banks, Banking, Federal
Reserve System, Holding companies,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Securities.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Board amends 12 CFR
Part 225 as follows:

6925

PART 225—BANK HOLDING
COMPANIES AND CHANGE IN BANK
CONTROL (REGULATION Y)
1. The authority citation for part 225
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1817(j)(13), 1818,
1828(o), 1831i, 1831p–1, 1843(c)(8), 1844(b),
1972(1), 3106, 3108, 3310, 3331–3351, 3907,
and 3909.

2. In § 225.7, a new paragraph (b)(4)
is added to read as follows:
§ 225.7

Exceptions to tying restrictions.

(b) * * *
(4) Safe harbor for retailer-affiliated
credit card banks. Issue credit cards that
may be used to purchase products or
services from a retailer affiliated with
the bank, if:
(i) The products or services may be
purchased from the retailer affiliate
using other payment methods, including
credit cards issued by other banks;
(ii) The bank does not discount the
credit it offers through the credit card to
customers of its retailer affiliate; and
(iii) The retailer affiliate of the bank
does not discount its products or
services when purchased using credit
cards issued by the bank.
*
*
*
*
*
By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, February 7, 2000.
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 00–3162 Filed 2–10–00; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6210–01–P