View original document

The full text on this page is automatically extracted from the file linked above and may contain errors and inconsistencies.

FEDERAL RESERVE BANK
OF NEW YORK

Circular No. 8 6 2 7 ~[
August 20, 1979
J

C O U P O N C O L L E C T IO N S E R V IC E S

To All Member Banks in the Second Federal
Reserve District, and Others Concerned:
W e are p le a se d to a n n o u n ce an im p ro v ed c o llec tio n serv ice for p ro cessin g an d co lle c tin g
th e p ro ce ed s o f m atu red corp orate a n d m u n icip a l co u p o n s d e p o site d w ith F ed era l R eserve
Ranks for c o llec tio n , b e g in n in g O cto b er 9, 1979. U n d er th is S y stem w id e serv ice, cred it for
th e co u p o n s w ill b e m a d e a v a ila b le in a cco rd a n ce w ith a stan d ard cred it a v a ila b ility sch ed u le.
U n d er p rese n t p ro ced u res, so m e co u p o n s — p rin cip a lly th o se p a y a b le o u tsid e N e w York
C ity — are a c c e p te d for co lle c tio n o n ly , th a t is, cred it is g iv e n to d ep ositors w h e n p a y m en t has
b een r e c e iv e d b y a R eserv e office from a co u p o n p a y in g a g en t, an d p a y m en t is o ften re c e iv e d
w e ll after th e m a tu rity d ate. U n d er th e term s o f th e n e w p ro ced u res, d e p o sitin g banks w ill b e
in a p o sitio n to p red eterm in e th e d a te o f cred it for all co u p o n s. C o llectio n d ela y s, if any,
w ill n o t result in lo sses o f cred it a v a ila b ility to d e p o sitin g m em b er banks.
T h e se n e w p ro ced u res w ill requ ire m em b er b anks to d ep o sit cou p on s w ith stan d ard
C o u p o n C ash L etters (d e p o s it tic k e ts ) a tta ch ed to ea ch d ep o sit. In th is co n n ectio n , p le a se
c o m p le te th e e n c lo se d order form and return it to th e C o llectio n D iv isio n at our H ea d
O ffice n o later th an A u g u st 31, 1979, in d ic a tin g th e ap p roxim ate n u m b er o f form s y o u w ill n e e d
for o n e year. T h e C o u p o n C ash L etter form s w ill b e sen t to y o u w ith o u t charge.
T o ex p e d ite th e flo w o f fu n d s from co u p o n co llec tio n th rou gh th e b a n k in g n etw ork , th is
B ank w ill im p le m e n t an a u to m a tic ch arge program a lo n g w ith th e n e w co llec tio n program .
B oth program s are d e scr ib ed in th e e n c lo se d b ook let, e n title d “S y stem w id e C ash P ro c essin g o f
M atu red C orporate and M u n icip a l C o u p o n s,” an d in th e a cc o m p a n y in g a m en d m en ts to our
O p era tin g C ircular N o . 8, “C o llectio n o f N o n ca sh Item s.” A lso en clo sed are a g reem en t form s
th at m u st b e e x e c u te d a n d retu rn ed to our H e a d O ffice or B uffalo B ranch, as ap propriate, b y
S ep tem b e r 21, 1979, in order to p a rticip a te fu lly in th e n e w program s.
S h o u ld y o u h a v e a n y q u e stio n s c o n ce rn in g th e cash p ro cessin g or a u to m a tic ch a rg e p ro ­
gram s, p le a se call, at our H e a d O ffice, Josep h F. D o n n e lly , M an ager, C o llectio n D e p a r tm en t
(T e l. N o. 2 1 2 -7 9 1 -7 9 2 8 ) or T h om as F. Curry, C h ief o f th e C o llectio n D iv isio n (T e l. N o. 2127 9 1 -5 0 8 1 ); or, at our B uffalo B ranch, G ary S. W ein tra u b , O p eration s O fficer (T e l. N o . 7168 4 9 -5 0 2 0 ), or Josep h M. K irby, C h ie f o f th e C o llectio n , L oan s, and F isca l A g e n c y D iv isio n
(T e l. N o . 7 1 6 -8 4 9 -5 0 4 3 ).




T h o m a s M . T im l e n ,

First Vice President.

F e d e r a l Re s e r v e Ba n k
of N ew York

SYSTEMWIDE CASH PROCESSING
OF MATURED CORPORATE AND MUNICIPAL COUPONS

IN T R O D U C T IO N

As a service of membership, member banks
may send corporate and municipal coupons to
the Federal Reserve Banks for collection. The
Reserve Banks sort the coupon envelopes and
forward them to the appropriate paying agent
for payment. Most Federal Reserve offices
presently handle such coupon deposits on a
collection basis, i.e., credit is not passed to the
depositor until the Reserve Bank receives pay­
ment from the paying agent. This can take as
little as a few days or as long as several weeks.
The collection service is inherently labor
intensive and is characterized by paper domi­
nated operations and innumerable accounting
entries between Reserve Banks and their deposi­
tors. This results from the individual, customized
handling that each coupon deposit must receive.
For example, let us say a member bank depositor
sends to its local Federal Reserve office a collec­
tion letter containing ten coupon envelopes.
Handling the items on a collection basis, the
Reserve Bank would generate ten collection
letters and forward each envelope to the respec­
tive paying agent. Then, as each of the ten
paying agents paid the items, the Reserve Bank
would function a separate credit entry to the
depositor’s reserve account. To deal with the
inefficiencies inherent in the collection service
and to seek ways to expedite the flow of funds
from coupon collections through the banking
network, the Federal Reserve System established
the Task Force on Noncash Collection Activities.
I.

C A S H P R O C E S S IN G

The result of the Task Force’s work was
the recommendation that the collection of matur­
ed corporate and municipal coupons be handled
on a cash processing basis. The concept of
cash processing is not new; in fact, it allows
the banking network to clear millions of checks
each day in a highly efficient manner. The con­
cept is not entirely new to coupon processing
either; several Reserve offices handle coupons
payable in the Reserve city on a cash basis. In
recommending cash processing on a Systemwide
[Enc. Cir. N o. 8627]




basis for all coupon deposits the Task Force
sought to achieve the following objectives:
• Introduce uniformity of service throughout
the entire Federal Reserve System.
• Increase the efficiency in processing cou­
pons for all parties, i.e., depositors, Re­
serve Banks and payors.
• Decrease the number of accounting entries
involved with coupon processing and
thereby reduce reconcilement problems
for all parties.
• Expedite the flow of funds from coupon
collections through the banking network.
The key concept in cash processing for cou­
pons is bulk processing instead of individual
handling. Under this concept, credit for incom­
ing deposits is passed on a letter total basis
rather than on each individual item contained
in the deposit, even though the items may be
presented to different paying agents. Under the
present collection system credits to the depositor
are directly linked to payments for each enve­
lope in the deposit from each paying agent
involved. Under cash processing, credit to the
depositor is divorced from payments for the
items from the paying agents. This fact allows
credit to be passed to depositors on a fixed, pre­
set time schedule. It also allows envelopes from
all depositors to be consolidated and presented
to paying agents in bulk form. By divorcing
credits from payments, it is no longer necessary
to relate paid items to individual depositors;
rather, it is only necessary to monitor the receipt
of payment for total consolidated shipments to
individual paying agents. Paying agents will
make only one payment for the value of a total
collection letter, thereby reducing the clerical
effort on both ends of the collection process.
Depositors should clearly understand that,
as with checks, credit passed on an automatic,
preset time schedule is provisional credit, sub­
ject to payment in actually and finally collected
funds. Thus, should a paying agent return a
coupon envelope to us unpaid, we would function
a charge to the depositor’s reserve account for
the amount of the returned item.

II.

In developing this credit availability sched­
ule the Task Force had three goals in mind. The
first was to minimize coupon float. Anytime
credit is passed before the offsetting charge is
made, float is created; i.e., money has been added
to the system that was not previously there. This
credit availability schedule seeks to place the
time at which credit is passed as close as possible
to the time at which the offsetting charge is
made.
The second goal of the credit availability
schedule is to encourage the sending of securities
well in advance of maturity. By sending well in
advance of maturity, depositors will receive the
earliest credit possible under the schedule, that
is, the day after maturity for city items and two
days after maturity for country items. In addi­
tion, advance sending will allow items to be
presented to paying agents sufficiently in ad­
vance of maturity so that the payors can examine
and, if necessary, return the items before the
maturity date. In many cases this will allow
the item to be rerouted prior to maturity or
shortly thereafter, thereby minimizing delays in
credit being passed.
The third goal of the credit availability
schedule is to encourage direct sendings of secu­
rities by providing faster credit for direct sent
items. Items payable in a Federal Reserve city
should be sent directly to that Reserve office
instead of to the depositor’s local Reserve office.
This allows the items to be treated as city items
rather than country items, thereby receiving the
faster credit, i.e., one or three days versus two
or eight days. An example should help illustrate
this concept: a Second District depositor having
coupons payable in the city of Detroit should
send the items directly to the Federal Reserve
Branch at Detroit rather than to the Fed in Chi­
cago or the Fed in New York. By sending the
items directly to Detroit no intermediate Fed is
involved; the fastest possible collection of the
items results because only the sending depositor
in the Second District and the collecting Fed in
Detroit are involved. The Fed in Detroit handles
the items as city items whereas the Fed in Chi­
cago or New York would have handled them
as country items. Therefore, depositors should
send all cash letters directly to the Federal Re­
serve office that will ultimately collect pay­
ment for the items from the paying agents.
Towards this end, the Task Force has developed
a Routing Guide for use by depositors. It lists
the paying agents located in each Federal Re­
serve city and the location of country paying
agents and the proper Federal Reserve office
serving that location.

C R E D IT A V A I L A B I L I T Y

In submitting coupons for collection, de­
positors will be required to send separate cash
letters for each of the following categories:
• Matured city items
• Matured country items
• Future-due city items
• Future-due country items
City items are defined as those payable in the
Federal Reserve city to which the items are sent
by the depositor. For example, items sent to the
Fed in New York by a bank located in Newark,
New Jersey that were payable in New York
City would be city items. However, if the same
items were payable anywhere outside of New
York City, including other Federal Reserve cities,
they would be considered country items.
Deposits correctly broken down into the
four categories listed above will receive credit
according to the following time schedule:
A.

Matured City Items
For letters containing coupons which are
payable in the Reserve city of the receiv­
ing Federal Reserve Bank and which are
matured (due or past due), credit will be
passed three business days after receipt.

B.

Matured Country Items
For letters containing coupons which are
payable outside the Reserve city of the
receiving Federal Reserve Bank and
which are matured, credit will be passed
in eight business days.

C. Future-Due City Items
For letters containing coupons which are
payable in the Reserve city of the receiv­
ing Federal Reserve Bank and which are
due on some future date, credit will be
passed one business day after maturity
provided the letter is received at least
two business days (but not more than
thirty days) prior to maturity.
D. Future-Due Country Items
For letters containing coupons which are
payable outside the Reserve city of the
receiving Federal Reserve Bank and
which are due on some future date, credit
will be passed two business days after
maturity provided the letter is received
at least six business days (but not more
than thirty days) prior to maturity.

■

N o t e : Future-due item s not received at least tw o
business days prior to maturity in the case
of city item s, or six business days prior in
the case of country item s, w ill be given
credit based on the schedu le for past due
item s, i.e., three and eigh t business days
after receipt, respectively.




III.

ST A N D A R D FO RM S

As stated earlier, one of the goals of Systemwide cash processing is to establish uniformity
within the coupon collection service throughout
2

• Reference number of sender ( same as on
the transmittal letter).
• Total dollar amount of the enclosed enve­
lopes (same as the total value shown on
the transmittal letter).
• Description of coupons ( check the appro­
priate box; if future-due, the due date
should be indicated; only one future-due
date is permissable per cash letter).
c Type of cash letter (check the appropriate
box).
• FROM: besides the bank’s name and ad­
dress you must also show your ABA
number.
• TO: show the name and address and
ABA number of the Federal Reserve office
to which the items are being sent.
At this point the Coupon Cash Letter and
associated transmittal letter and coupon enve­
lopes are ready to be shipped to the Federal
Reserve office shown on the Coupon Cash Letter.
In instances where more than one cash letter
(i.e., past-due city, future-due city, etc.) is
being sent to the same Federal Reserve office,
each Coupon Cash Letter and associated trans­
mittal letter and coupon envelopes should be
placed and sealed in a separate envelope with
the total cash letter amount and the category
of the letter (i.e., city or country) indicated on
the outside. These envelopes should then be
grouped together and sent in one or more large
envelopes or bags on which no dollar value is
shown.
Coupon Collection Letter
The Coupon Collection Letter is a multi­
part, continuous-feed form that will be used by
Federal Reserve Banks in sending coupon enve­
lopes to paying agents for payment. Copy A will
accompany the coupon envelopes being sent to
the paying agent along with a transmittal listing
that will show our collection identification
number and the amount for each coupon enve­
lope enclosed. Copy A indicates the date on
which the payor’s reserve account, or that of
its designated member correspondent, will be
automaticaly charged for the amount of the
collection letter. (See Section IV below and
Appendix C to Operating Circular No. 8 for
a detailed discussion of automatic charge). On
the charge date an advice of charge showing
essentially the same information as that shown
on Copy A of the Coupon Collection Letter will
be sent to the member bank whose reserve ac­
count is being charged. Thus, member bank
payors will receive both Copy A and an advice
of charge, whereas nonmember bank payors and
nonbank payors will only receive Copy A. The
amount of the charge will always be for the full
amount of the cash letter. In cases where the
paying agent has returned future-due items
unpaid prior to the charge date, a credit for the

the Federal Reserve System. In keeping with
this goal, the Task Force has developed two
standard forms for use throughout the System.
Coupon Cash Letter
The Coupon Cash Letter will be used by
member banks in depositing coupons for collec­
tion with Federal Reserve offices, and by Federal
Reserve Banks in sending coupons to each other
for final presentment to paying agents. This
multi-part, continuous-feed form must accompany
all coupon deposits. One form should be pre­
pared for each cash letter and all cash letters
must be sorted into one of the four categories
previously listed. Only one letter for each cate­
gory should be prepared for any one shipment.
The last copy of the Coupon Cash Letter should
be detached as the sender’s file copy. All remain­
ing copies should accompany the cash letter and
associated coupon envelopes being sent to the
Federal Reserve Bank. Any cash letter that is
received without a corresponding Coupon Cash
Letter form will be subject to return. Any cash
letter not properly sorted into one of the four
allowable categories will be subject to return or,
if processed, all items will be given country avail­
ability (two or eight days).
In accepting coupons from customers,
member banks should be certain that they keep
a record of the customer and the coupons de­
posited should it be necessary at a later date
to identify the items. All coupons must be placed
in sealed, standard coupon window envelopes.
A separate envelope is required for each issue
and maturity date. Mixed issues and/or matur­
ity dates will be subject to return by the paying
agent. The following information should be
supplied in the appropriate spaces on the enve­
lope:
• The name of the sender.
• The name of its depositor.
• The sender’s collection number.
• A brief description of the coupons enclos­
ed including the number of coupons,
denomination value of each coupon and
total dollar value of the coupons enclosed.
Properly prepared coupon envelopes must
be sorted into one of the four permissable cate­
gories: city matured, country matured, city
future-due or country future-due. The envelopes
in each category should then be separately listed,
described ( either by issue or collection number),
and totaled on a transmittal letter. A separate
transmittal letter must be prepared for each of
the four categories. Each transmittal letter
should then be covered with a Coupon Cash
Letter form. The following information must be
provided in the appropriate spaces on the Cou­
pon Cash Letter:
• Date (the same as on the transmittal
letter).




3

sis of costs and charges currently in use through­
out the System, the Task Force has chosen a
starting rate of $1.00 per thousand dollars of
coupon deposit value. Deposits of less than
$1,000 will be charged the minimum flat rate
($1.00), while the maximum P & I charge on
any deposit will be $100.00. This rate will be
monitored on an ongoing basis and will be
adjusted upward or downward semiannually as
experience dictates.

amount of the returned items will be functioned.
As with checks, any discrepancies between the
transmittal listing and the coupon envelopes
(amount listed incorrectly, envelope enclosedamount not listed, etc.) should be brought to
our attention. The appropriate adjusting entry
(debit or credit) will be functioned upon re­
ceipt of written notification that a discrepancy
exists.
IV .

Two other changes concerning P & I charges
have been adopted by the Task Force. First, all
Federal Reserve offices will absorb the cost of
delivering coupons held in safekeeping for
member banks, regardless of the location of the
paying agent. This policy is based on the belief
that the collection of coupons held in safekeep­
ing is part of the safekeeping service offered to
member banks. Second, all Reserve offices will
absorb the cost of delivering coupons to their
Reserve city paying agents. This is based on
the rationale that the expenses incurred in such
deliveries are relatively small due to the use of
clearing house facilities in many Reserve cities
and the use of bank messengers in others.

A U T O M A T IC C H A R G E

In developing the credit availability sched­
ule for depositors, one of the Task Force’s
primary concerns was float. As stated earlier,
anytime credit is passed before the offsetting
charge is made, float is created. The most effec­
tive way to deal with the float problem is with
an automatic charge program similar to that
associated with check processing. Under such
a program charges for coupon cash letters are
made to the paying agent’s reserve account, or
that of a designated member correspondent,
automatically on a fixed time schedule by the
collecting Reserve Bank.

In summary, postage and insurance charges
for coupon deposits will be based on flat rate of
$1.00 per thousand dollars of coupon deposit
value and will only be assessed against country
cash letters. This will also be true for directsent coupons, i.e., there will be no charges for
direct-sent coupons payable in Reserve cities.
This is another advantage to direct sendings of
coupons payable in Reserve cities; not only will
such items receive faster credit but they will
also be free of any Fed-assessed postage and
insurance charges. These simplified postage and
insurance procedures will greatly reduce the
number of P & I entries between Feds and
member banks that must be processed and re­
conciled. It will also allow depositors to deter­
mine the exact P & I charge on a coupon deposit
before it is sent to the Fed.

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York
is implementing the automatic charge program
simultaneouly with the start of the cash proces­
sing program. Paying agents will be charged
for coupon cash letters one business day after
receipt for past-due items and one business day
after maturity for future-due items. Charges will
always be for the full amount of the cash letter
as shown on Copy A of the Coupon Collection
Letter, which will accompany the coupon en­
velopes. Separate credits will be passed for any
items returned to us unpaid.

V.

P O S T A G E A N D IN S U R A N C E

In keeping with the objective of standardiz­
ing the coupon collection system throughout the
Federal Reserve System, the Task Force has
developed a uniform policy for administering
postage and insurance charges. At the present
time, procedures for handling P & I charges vary
from district to district. Some districts base
their P & I charges on a fixed rate per thousanddollar value of each coupon deposit; others
base their charges on actual costs. Some dis­
tricts pass along P & I charges for delivering
coupons held in safekeeping for member banks;
others absorb this cost.

V I.

The changes resulting from the move to
Systemwide cash processing will initially apply
only to corporate and municipal coupons. The
collection of bonds will not be affected at this
time. It is anticipated that at some time in the
future the collection of bonds will also be
handled on a cash basis. The collection of other
noncash items such as maturing acceptances,
drafts, checks that cannot be handled as cash
items will also not be affected by the System­
wide cash processing of coupons.

To simplify this varying array of procedures,
the Task Force has adopted a fixed-rate concept
for assessing postage and insurance charges on
coupon deposits. Based upon a detailed analy­




BONDS AND OTHER
N O N C A S H IT E M S

4

Payor’s Agreement Form
( D ate)
F ederal Reserve B ank of N ew York

B uffalo B ranch
F ederal R eserve B ank of N ew York

33 Liberty Street
New York, New York 10045

160 Delaware Avenue
Buffalo, New York 14240

Attention: Collection Division — Head Office
(Collection, Loans, and Fiscal Agency Div. — Buffalo Branch)
In order to expedite the payment of coupons we agree to the terms and conditions set forth
in Appendix C of your Operating Circular No. 8, regarding, the payment of coupons. We designate
............................................................... as correspondent against whose account on your books credit
[N am e of m em ber bank]

and debit may be entered for the payment or return of coupons payable to us.
This agreement shall be effective when you receive a duly executed letter of authorization from
our correspondent.

[N am e of nonm em ber bank or nonbank payor]

By:
( Authorized signature)

(T itle )

Correspondent’s Agreement Form
( D ate)
F ederal R eserve B ank of N ew York

33 Liberty Street
New York, New York 10045

Buffalo B ranch
F ederal R eserve B ank of N ew York

160 Delaware Avenue
Buffalo, New York 14240

Attention: Collection Division — Head Office
(Collection, Loans, and Fiscal Agency Div. — Buffalo Branch)
We agree to act as correspondent for coupons payable b y ...................................................................
[N am e of nonm em ber bank or nonbank payor]

We authorize you to charge or credit our account on your books and to make other appropriate
adjustments in connection with the presentment or return of coupons payable b y ..................................
[Nam e of nonm em ber bank or nonbank payor]

in accordance with Appendix C of your Operating Circular No. 8 . You will provide advices of any
such entries to this Bank and the payor. If on any business day we cannot accept any such charge,
we will first give notice to the payor and then notify you by telephone and immediately thereafter
in writing on or before 2 p.m. of the payment date.




[N am e of m em ber bank]

By : ............................
(A uthorized signature)

(T itle )

O RDER F O R M
COU P O N CAS H LETTER
To:

Chief
Collection Division
Fede r a l Reserve Bank of N e w York
33 Libe r t y Street
Ne w York, N e w York 10045

From:
(Name of Bank)

(Address)

(Name & P hone No. of
Person to be contacted)
We w i l l n e e d ______________ C ash Letters annually.

The

above estimate was a r r i v e d at in the following manner:

1.
2

.

N u m b e r of shi p m e n t s — ^ sent to your office
during Jan u a r y - J u n e 1979

x3=

(1)

N u m b e r of shipments sent to other Reserve
Banks du r i n g January-June 1979

x3»

(2)

3.

Su m of line 1 and line 2

4.

Line

5.

Line 4 a d j u s t e d to reflect any antici p a t e d
changes in volume of shipments (Please e x p l a i n ) .

3 m u l t i p l i e d by 2

(3)
x2

(4)

(5)

It is our u n d e r s t a n d i n g that the forms w i l l be sent to us
free of charge and that the first shipment will consist of a p p r o x i ­
mately a six m o n t h supply.

They are to be sent to the attention

of:_________________________________________ .
(Name)

1/ The n u m b e r of shipments represents the number of packages shipped to
various Federal Rese r v e Banks via the mail, armored carrier, etc.
It's not to be c o n f u s e d w i t h the number of coupon envelopes in­
clu d e d in each shipment.
For example:
a package c o n t a i n i n g past
due city coupon envelopes, past due country envelopes, future
due city coupon envelopes and future due country coupon envelopes
shipped to the Federal Reserve Bank in one package should be counted
as one not four, regardless of how many coupon envelopes were en­
cl o s e d in that package.







FEDERAL RESERVE BANK ABA NUMBERS

Atlanta
Baltimore
Birmingham
Boston
Buffalo
Charlotte
Chicago
Cincinnati
Cleveland
Dallas
Denver
Detroit
El Paso
Houston
Jacksonville
Kansas City
Little Rock
Los Angeles
Louisville
Memphis
Miami
Minneapolis
Nashville
New Orleans
New York
Oklahoma City
Omaha
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
Portland
Richmond
Salt Lake City
San Antonio
San Francisco
Seattle
St. Louis

0610-0014-6
0520-0027-8
0620-0019-0
0110-0001-5
0220-0026-6
0530-0020-6
0710-0030-1
0420-0043-7
0410-0001-4
1110-0003-8
1020-0019-9
0720-0029-0
1120-0001-1
1130-0004-9
0630-0019-9
1010-0004-8
0820-0013-8
1220-0016-6
0830-0059-3
0840-0003-9
0660-0010-9
0910-0008-0
0640-0010-1
0650-0021-0
0210-0120-8
1030-0024-0
1040-0012-6
0310-0004-0
0430-0030-0
1230-0001-3
0510-0003-3
1240-0031-3
1140-0072-1
1210-0037-4
1250-0001-1
0810-0004-5

Member Bank Agreement Form
(D a te )

F ederal R eserve B ank

of

N ew York

33 Liberty Street
New York, New York 10045

Attention:

or

Buffalo B ranch
F ederal Reserve B ank
N e w York

of

160 Delaware Avenue
Buffalo, New York 14240

Collection Division — Head Office

(Collection, Loans, and Fiscal Agency Div. — Buffalo Branch)
In order to expedite the payment of corporate and municipal coupons we
agree to the terms and conditions set forth in Appendix C of your Operating
Circular No. 8, regarding the payment of coupons. We authorize you to charge
or credit our account on your books and to make other appropriate adjustments
in connection with the presentment or return of coupons payable by us.




[Name of member bank]

By:
(Authorized signature)

(Title)