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FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 204
[Regulation D; Docket No. R-1046]
Reserve Requirements of Depository Institutions
AGENCY:

Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.

ACTION:

Final rule.

SUMMARY: The Board is amending Regulation D, Reserve
Requirements of Depository Institutions, to reflect the annual
indexing of the low reserve tranche and the reserve requirement
exemption for 2000, and announces the annual indexing of the
deposit reporting cutoff levels that will be effective beginning
in September 2000. The amendments decrease the amount of
transaction accounts subject to a reserve requirement ratio of
three percent in 2000, as required by section 19(b)(2)(C) of the
Federal Reserve Act, from $46.5 million to $44.3 million of net
transaction accounts. This adjustment is known as the low
reserve tranche adjustment. The Board is increasing from $4.9
million to $5.0 million the amount of reservable liabilities of
each depository institution that is subject to a reserve
requirement of zero percent in 2000. This action is required by
section 19(b)(11)(B) of the Federal Reserve Act, and the
adjustment is known as the reservable liabilities exemption
adjustment. The Board is also increasing the deposit cutoff
levels that are used in conjunction with the reservable
liabilities exemption to determine the frequency of deposit
reporting from $81.9 million to $84.5 million for nonexempt
depository institutions and from $52.6 million to $54.3 million
for exempt institutions. (Nonexempt institutions are those with
total reservable liabilities exceeding the amount exempted from
reserve requirements ($5.0 million) while exempt institutions are
those with total reservable liabilities not exceeding the amount
exempted from reserve requirements.) Thus, beginning in
September 2000, nonexempt institutions with total deposits of
$84.5 million or more will be required to report weekly while
nonexempt institutions with total deposits less than $84.5
million may report quarterly, in both cases on form FR 2900.
Similarly, exempt institutions with total deposits of $54.3
million or more will be required to report quarterly on form FR
2910q while exempt institutions with total deposits less than
$54.3 million may report annually on form FR 2910a.
DATES:

Effective date: November 30, 1999.

Compliance dates: For depository institutions that
report weekly, the low reserve tranche adjustment and the

reservable liabilities exemption adjustment will apply to the
reserve computation period that begins Tuesday, November 30,
1999, and the corresponding reserve maintenance period that
begins Thursday, December 30, 1999. For institutions that report
quarterly, the low reserve tranche adjustment and the reservable
liabilities exemption adjustment will apply to the reserve
computation period that begins Tuesday, December 21, 1999, and
the corresponding reserve maintenance period that begins
Thursday, January 20, 2000. For all depository institutions, the
deposit cutoff levels will be used to screen institutions in the
second quarter of 2000 to determine the reporting frequency for
the twelve month period that begins in September 2000.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Rick Heyke, Counsel
(202/452-3688), Legal Division, or June O'Brien, Economist
(202/452-3790), Division of Monetary Affairs; for the hearing
impaired only, contact Diane Jenkins, Telecommunications Device
for the Deaf (TDD)(202/452-3544); Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, 20th and C Streets, N.W., Washington, DC
20551.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Section 19(b)(2) of the Federal
Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 461(b)(2)) requires each depository
institution to maintain reserves against its transaction accounts
and nonpersonal time deposits, as prescribed by Board
regulations. The required reserve ratio applicable to
transaction account balances exceeding the low reserve tranche is
10 percent. Section 19(b)(2) also provides that, before
December 31 of each year, the Board shall issue a regulation
adjusting the low reserve tranche for the next calendar year.
The adjustment in the tranche is to be 80 percent of the
percentage increase or decrease in net transaction accounts at
all depository institutions over the one-year period that ends on
the June 30 prior to the adjustment.
Currently, the low reserve tranche on net transaction
accounts is $46.5 million. Net transaction accounts of all
depository institutions decreased by 6.0 percent (from $689.0
billion to $647.7 billion) from June 30, 1998, to June 30, 1999.
In accordance with section 19(b)(2), the Board is amending
Regulation D (12 CFR part 204) to decrease the low reserve
tranche for transaction accounts for 2000 by $2.2 million to
$44.3 million.
Section 19(b)(11)(A) of the Federal Reserve Act (12
U.S.C. 461 (b)(11)(B)) provides that $2 million of reservable

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liabilities1/ of each depository institution shall be subject to
a zero percent reserve requirement. Each depository institution
may, in accordance with the rules and regulations of the Board,
designate the reservable liabilities to which this reserve
requirement exemption is to apply. However, if net transaction
accounts are designated, only those that would otherwise be
subject to a three percent reserve requirement (i.e., net
transaction accounts within the low reserve requirement tranche)
may be so designated.
Section 19(b)(11)(B) of the Federal Reserve Act
provides that, before December 31 of each year, the Board shall
issue a regulation adjusting for the next calendar year the
dollar amount of reservable liabilities exempt from reserve
requirements. Unlike the adjustment for the low reserve tranche
on net transaction accounts, which adjustment can result in a
decrease as well as an increase, the change in the exemption
amount is to be made only if the total reservable liabilities
held at all depository institutions increase from one year to the
next. The percentage increase in the exemption is to be 80
percent of the increase in total reservable liabilities of all
depository institutions as of the year ending June 30. Total
reservable liabilities of all depository institutions increased
by 3.0 percent (from $1,905.9 billion to $1,962.3 billion) from
June 30, 1998, to June 30, 1999. Consequently, the reservable
liabilities exemption amount for 2000 under section 19(b)(11)(B)
will be increased by $0.1 million from $4.9 million to $5.0
million.2/
The effect of the application of section 19(b) of the
Federal Reserve Act to the change in the total net transaction
accounts and the change in the total reservable liabilities from
June 30, 1998, to June 30, 1999, is to decrease the low reserve
tranche to $44.3 million, to apply a zero percent reserve
requirement on the first $5.0 million of transaction accounts,
and to apply a three percent reserve requirement on the remainder
of the low reserve tranche.
For institutions that report weekly, the tranche
adjustment and the reservable liabilities exemption adjustment
1/

Reservable liabilities include transaction accounts,
nonpersonal time deposits, and Eurocurrency liabilities as
defined in section 19(b)(5) of the Federal Reserve Act. The
reserve ratio on nonpersonal time deposits and Eurocurrency
liabilities is zero percent.
2/

Consistent with Board practice, the tranche and
exemption amounts have been rounded to the nearest $0.1 million.
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will be effective for the reserve computation period beginning
Tuesday, November 30, 1999, and for the corresponding reserve
maintenance period beginning Thursday, December 30, 1999. For
institutions that report quarterly, the tranche adjustment and
the reservable liabilities exemption adjustment will be effective
for the computation period beginning Tuesday, December 21, 1999,
and for the corresponding reserve maintenance period beginning
Thursday, January 20, 2000. In addition, all institutions
currently submitting form FR 2900 must continue to submit reports
to the Federal Reserve under current reporting procedures.
In order to reduce the reporting burden for small
institutions, the Board has established deposit reporting cutoff
levels to determine deposit reporting frequency. Institutions
are screened during the second quarter of each year to determine
reporting frequency beginning the following September. The
cutoff level for nonexempt institutions determines whether they
report (on form FR 2900) quarterly or weekly, and the deposit
cutoff level for exempt institutions determines whether they
report annually (on form FR 2910a) or quarterly (on form FR
2910q).
In September 1999, the cutoff level for nonexempt
institutions was raised to $81.9 million, and the cutoff level
for exempt institutions was raised to $52.6 million. However, in
order to help reduce the number and extent of modifications
needed in the data processing systems of depository institutions
close to the time of the century date change, the Board adjusted
its usual category shift procedures for September 1999 (64 FR
39142, July 21, 1999.) The Board determined that any nonexempt
institution that would otherwise be required to begin filing on a
weekly basis (including an institution that became nonexempt with
the September 1999 panel shifts) would instead be allowed to file
on a quarterly basis, and any exempt institution that would
otherwise be required to begin filing quarterly would instead be
allowed to file annually, with normal category shift procedures
resuming in September 2000.
From June 30, 1998, to June 30, 1999, total deposits
increased 3.9 percent, from $4,654.3 billion to $4,837.9 billion.
Accordingly, the nonexempt deposit cutoff level will increase by
$2.6 million from $81.9 million to $84.5 million and the exempt
deposit cutoff level will increase by $1.7 million from 52.6
million to $54.3 million. Based on the indexation of the
reservable liabilities exemption, the cutoff level for total
deposits above which reports of deposits must be filed will rise
from $4.9 million to $5.0 million. Institutions with total
deposits below $5.0 million will be excused from reporting if
their deposits can be estimated from other data sources. The
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$84.5 million cutoff level for weekly versus quarterly form
FR 2900 reporting for nonexempt institutions, the $54.3 million
cutoff level for quarterly FR 2910q versus annual form FR 2910a
reporting for exempt institutions, and the $5.0 million level
threshold for reporting will be used in the second quarter 2000
deposits report screening process, and the adjustments will be
made when the new deposit reporting panels are implemented in
September 2000.
All U.S. branches and agencies of foreign banks and all
Edge and agreement corporations, regardless of size, are required
to file weekly the Report of Transaction Accounts, Other Deposits
and Vault Cash (form FR 2900). After the indexations become
effective in 2000, all other institutions that have reservable
liabilities in excess of the exemption level of $5.0 million
prescribed by section 19(b)(11) of the Federal Reserve Act (known
as "nonexempt institutions") and total deposits at least equal to
the nonexempt deposit cutoff level ($84.5 million) will be
required to file weekly the Report of Transaction Accounts, Other
Deposits and Vault Cash (form FR 2900) for the twelve month
period starting September 2000. However, nonexempt institutions
with total deposits less than the nonexempt deposit cutoff level
($84.5 million), will be able to file the form FR 2900 quarterly.
Institutions that obtain funds from non-U.S. sources or that have
foreign branches or international banking facilities are required
to file the Report of Certain Eurocurrency Transactions (form
FR 2950/2951) at the same frequency as they file the form
FR 2900.
Institutions with reservable liabilities at or below
the exemption level ($5.0 million) (known as exempt
institutions) will be required to file the Quarterly Report of
Selected Deposits, Vault Cash, and Reservable Liabilities (form
FR 2910q) if their total deposits equal or exceed the exempt
deposit cutoff level ($54.3 million). Exempt institutions with
total deposits less than the exempt deposit cutoff level ($54.3
million) but at least equal to the exemption amount ($5.0
million) will be able to file the Annual Report of Total Deposits
and Reservable Liabilities (form FR 2910a). Institutions that
have total deposits less than the exemption amount ($5.0 million)
are not required to file deposit reports if their deposits can be
estimated from other data sources.
Finally, the Board may require a depository institution
to report on a weekly basis, regardless of the cutoff level, if
the institution manipulates its total deposits and other
reservable liabilities in order to qualify for quarterly
reporting. Similarly, any depository institution that reports
quarterly may be required to report weekly and to maintain
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appropriate reserve balances with its Reserve Bank if, during its
computation period, it understates its usual reservable
liabilities or overstates the deductions allowed in computing
required reserve balances.
Notice and public participation. The provisions of
5 U.S.C. 553(b) relating to notice and public participation have
not been followed in connection with the adoption of these
amendments because the amendments involve expected, ministerial
adjustments prescribed by statute and by an interpretative
statement reaffirming the Board's policy concerning reporting
practices. In addition, the reservable liabilities exemption
adjustment and the increases for reporting purposes in the
deposit cutoff levels reduce regulatory burdens on depository
institutions, and the low reserve tranche adjustment will have a
de minimis effect on depository institutions with net transaction
accounts exceeding $44.3 million. Accordingly, the Board finds
good cause for determining, and so determines, that notice and
public participation is unnecessary, impracticable, or contrary
to the public interest.
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
The Board certifies that these amendments will not have
a substantial economic impact on small depository institutions.
See "Notice and Public Participation" above.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 204
Banks, banking, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Board is
amending 12 CFR part 204 as follows:
PART 204 -- RESERVE REQUIREMENTS OF DEPOSITORY INSTITUTIONS
(REGULATION D)
1. The authority citation for part 204 continues to
read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 248(a), 248(c), 371a, 461, 601,
611, and 3105.
2.
§ 204.9

Section 204.9 is revised to read as follows:

Reserve requirement ratios.

(a) Reserve percentages. The following reserve ratios
are prescribed for all depository institutions, Edge and
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Agreement corporations, and United States branches and agencies
of foreign banks:

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Reserve requirement1/

Category
Net transaction accounts:
$0 to $44.3 million

3 percent of amount.

over

$1,329,000 plus 10
percent of amount over $44.3
million.

$44.3 million

Nonpersonal time deposits

0 percent.

Eurocurrency liabilities

0 percent.

1/

Before deducting the adjustment to be made by the paragraph
(b) of this section.
(b) Exemption from reserve requirements. Each
depository institution, Edge or agreement corporation, and U.S.
branch or agency of a foreign bank is subject to a zero percent
reserve requirement on an amount of its transaction accounts
subject to the low reserve tranche in paragraph (a) of this
section not in excess of $5.0 million determined in accordance
with § 204.3(a)(3).
By order of the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, September 28, 1999.
(Signed) Jennifer J. Johnson
Jennifer J. Johnson,
Secretary of the Board

1/

Before deducting the adjustment to be made by the
paragraph (b) of this section.
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