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FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
OF NEW YORK

Circular No. 8572
May 17. 1979

IM PROVEM ENTS IN AUTOM ATED CLEARING HOUSE SERVICES

To A ll Banking Institutions, and Others Concerned,
in the Second Federal Reserve District:

Following is the text of a statement issued by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System:
The Federal Reserve Board today [May lb] announced actions to improve its automated clearing house
services, where electronic funds transfers are cleared and settled.
The improvements are intended to provide better services to consumers, financial institutions and
corporations using Federal Reserve automated clearing house (ACH) facilities.
The revisions in its ACH operations approved by the Board give users of ACH services more time to get
certain types of their payments instructions to Federal Reserve ACHs, and will result in earlier availability to
financial institutions of the funds being paid. Financial institutions can thus credit the accounts of their
customers at an earlier time.
These improvements in ACH services follow upon the linkage, approved by the Federal Reserve in April
1978, of 36 ACHs into a national network.
Automated clearing houses move money by electronically transmitted payment instructions that take
the place of movement of funds by paper checks. For example, an employer may transfer payroll payments
instructions through an ACH from the employer’s account in a financial institution to financial institutions
where the employees have accounts.
The improvements in ACH services adopted by the Board will be subjected to a pilot test and
subsequently phased in over a period of several months. In the pilot program, three to five ACHs will
exchange payments to test the feasibility of the new time schedules. The remaining ACHs will be phased into
the new procedures according to schedules to be determined by the local Federal Reserve Bank and the local
ACH association.
The Board believes that the electronic transfer of funds made possible by ACHs is superior to payment
by cash or check in many instances, due to enhanced security, convenience and reliability of payment. As
volume develops, electronic transfer can become substantially cheaper than other forms of payment.
The time schedule improvements announced today are of two kinds. The first will provide financial
institutions with five additional hours for initiating debit and credit payments, such as direct deposit of
payroll and preauthorized bill payment, and cash concentration. For example, if payday is Friday and the
employee is to have access to his wages on that day, the financial institution that is initiating the paymentson
behalf of the employer must deposit the payments instructions at the ACH by 5:00 a.m. Thursday. This
interval covers transmission between ACHs and time for the receiving bank to credit the employee’s account.




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The second improvement allows some types of payments, such as cash concentration transfers made in
the interests of improving cash management, to be handled even more expeditiously. For example, a financial
institution collecting funds on behalf of a corporate customer from another financial institution can initiate
debits to those accounts as late as 9:00 p.m. Thursday for Friday settlement. At present, cash concentration
transfers must be initiated at the same time as other ACH payments. This schedule change will allow
corporations to collect funds from any financial institution in the Nation on an overnight basis.
At present, some 6,000 corporations, governments and other entities are making use of ACH services.
The Federal Reserve, with the assistance of the National Automated Clearing House Association, has
consulted with corporate officials and others to identify the ways in which they can best make use of the more
economical and more secure movement of funds made possible by ACH services.
Larger corporations interviewed in the course of formulating the changes announced today indicated
they are making use of ACH services for the electronic transfer of one or more of the following types of
payment: direct deposit of managerial salaries and retirement benefits, the collection of preauthorized
insurance premiums and credit card bills and payments or collections made to improve cash management.
Such corporations include:
International Business Machines Corporation
Allied Chemical Corporation
Metropolitan Life Insurance Company
Aluminum Company of America
NCR Corporation
American Express Company
TRW, Inc.
American Motors Corporation
United States Postal Service
The Dow Chemical Company
United States Steel Corporation
Equitable Life Assurance Society
Westinghouse Electric Corporation
General Motors Corporation
Xerox Corporation
Allied Chemical, American Motors and General Motors are now using the ACH services for direct
deposits of management payroll and are planning to use it for direct deposit of retirement benefits. Alcoa,
Dow Chemical, and IBM are also using ACH services for their management payroll and are exploring its
application to hourly payroll. NCR and U.S. Steel also have their direct deposit payroll payments sent through
ACHs. NCR is considering ACH services for direct deposit of dividend payments while U.S. Steel is
considering electronic transfer payments through ACHs for cash management purposes.
Among other major firms, American Telephone and Telegraph Company, Southern Pacific Company,
and Standard Oil Company of California are actively studying the use of electronic payments.
Questions regarding these m atters may be directed to our Check Processing Function (Tel. No.
212-791-6838 or 6334).




P aul A. V olcker .
P r e s id e n t.