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D. C., BEFORE THE SCHOOL OF BANKING, UNIVERSITY OF
WISCONSIN. MADISON. WISCONSIN.____________________
MADISON, .WISCONSIN

AUGUST 28, 1951

STRENGTHENING THE BANKING SYSTEM
IN PROSPERITY
____
In times of peace, prepare for war.
of prosperity, prepare for adversity.

In times

These admonitions

might well serve as the keynote of my discussion.
Viewed as a whole, the banking system of our
Nation does not appear to be confronted with any
serious problems at this time.

Since 1933 banking

has cleared Its decks of the wreckage left by the
devastating depression-born storm of 1930-33 and Is
now In the soundest condition ever experienced.

Bank

assets and earnings have reached new all-time peaks
and there has not been a single receivership of an
Insured bank since May 1944.




From 1944 to-June 30,

extensive visits to the Division of Examination of
each of the three Federal banking agencies.
I mention this only for the purpose of emphasizing
the fact that we were the first to recognize the wisdom
and necessity for a system of bank examination and
supervision to aid and promote our system of banking.
In the early days of our Republic each bank was
chartered by special legislative enactment. Late in

t
1781 the Continental Congress of the 13 original States
chartered the Bank of North America the main purpose of
which was to furnish fiscal assistance for the conduct
of the Revolutionary War.

Subsequent to the adoption of

the Constitution the Federal government - in 1791 - by
a special Act of Congress, granted its first bank charter
to The First Bank of the United States. The life of the




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Charter was 20 years.

In 1816 the Congress granted a

20-year charter to the Second Bank of the United States.
During this same period, of course, the several
states were granting charters for the operation of banks.
Each charter required a special act of the legislature.
The advantage of a bank charter, naturally was the limit­
ed financial responsibility imposed upon each of the
individual stockholders as compared to the unlimited
liability involved in the operation of a private banking

firm.
All of these early charters carried some
provision for supervisory control by the chartering
authority.

The actual exercise of supervision, however,

was for the most part non-existent or very loose. At
the same time, the idea always prevailed that the charter­
ing authority should have the right to exercise certain




controls.
Finally, in 1837, the State of Michigan set
the pattern for our present day chartering practices
for hanks.

A general hank chartering statute was en­

acted whereby a group of individuals desiring to
establish a bank could do so by complying with the
statutory requirements and receiving administrative
approval.

In other words, it was no longer necessary

to lobby a bill through the legislature in order to
secure the privilege of operating a chartered bank.
The following year New York passed a similar law and
other states followed in rapid succession. All of these
laws provided for some form of supervisory control.
Following President Jackson's successful
campaign to prevent the extension of the charter of




The Second Bank of the United States, the Federal govern­
ment remained out of the picture in hank chartering until
1863 when the National Bank Act became law. This Act,
which was amended and improved in 1865, provided for the
"free" chartering of banks by the Federal government and
a definite program of supervision, including periodic
examinations of National banks.

This was the real be­

ginning of bank examination and supervision as we know it

1

•
today.

This brief review is intended to emphasize the
fact that some form of supervision by the bank chartering
authorities has been an integral part of our bank
chartering system from its very beginning. While the idea
has persisted throughout the years, the concepts of
supervision have undergone a gradual change from the

(



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original idea of a strictly policing Job to the generally
accepted concept of bank supervisors today that their
most effective contribution to banking lies in the field
of counsel and cooperation.
For several decades, however, the purposes of
bank examination were regarded as being fully served by
having an examiner visit each bank and determine from an
inspection of the records that the bank was operating

i
within the limitations imposed by law.

In most instances,

little or no attempt was made to appraise the quality of
individual assets.

In other words, if a loan came within

the legal limits it was usually not questioned unless it
was delinquent, perhaps to the extent of being subject
to a classification as a statutory bad debt.

There was very

little coordination between the work of the individual
Q

examiners, and little or no follow up by the department




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head between examinations
The original concept of bank supervision,
therefore, was that an Individual examiner should visit
an Individual bank for the purpose of policing it for
violations of law - and little else.
It is Interesting to observe the several steps
In the evolution frpm that very primitive concept of
bank supervision to the broader, more complicated, but
undoubtedly more constructive concept that exists today.
Generally speaking, seme broadening - or tightening up,
If you prefer to call It that - of the application of
supervisory controls followed each major financial or
general economic crisis.

The most notable legislative

examples of this, since the enactment of the National
Banking Act, are the Federal Reserve Act of 1913 and




the Banking Act of 1933 as amended by the Act of 1935.
The last mentioned legislation has, of course,
had the most profound effect on the present day thinking
of bank supervisors as to their duties and responsibilities
the sphere within which each supervisory agency must
operate, and the limitations imposed thereby.
The banking difficulties of the 1920's which
culminated in the debacle of 1929 to '33 presented a
challenge to bankers and bank supervisors alike. They had
to prove to the public that our own unique independent,
dual banking system could and should survive. State and
nationally chartered banks realized that they perforce
must dwell together in amity.

Likewise, the various

state and federal supervisory authorities recognized that
without in any way surrendering their independent preroga-




tives, they must work closely together, if they were
to make any constructive contribution to the future
soundness of our banking system.
So out of all of this has come what I believe
to be the consensus today of bank supervisors as to their
duties and responsibilities both to the public and to
the bankers.

Perhaps I can summarize this in a few punch

paragraphs, as follows:
(1)

While it Is universally recognized by the

statutes, both state and federal, that the supervisor's
primary responsibility is the protection of the interests
of the depositors, he must necessarily be interested in
the welfare of the bank and in its entirety because of
(a)

The economic disruption to the

community as the result of a bank failure;




(b)

The loss to minority stockholders

who have no real voice in the management and
therefore are the innocent victims of mis­
feasance or malfeasance on the part of active
management;
(c)

The reflection on the banking

system as a Mi ole and resulting loss of
public confidence which is the aftermath
of any bank failure*
(2)

Bank supervision falls short of the mark Mien

it limits its activities to the periodic examination
of banks with no interim follow-up to obtain corrections
of recognized unsatisfactory situations.
(3)

Bank supervision oversteps its authority as

well as the bounds of propriety when it attempts to




usurp normal managerial functions.
(4)

In seeking to obtain necessary or desirable

corrections the supervisor should employ the techniques
of reason ani salesmanship and avoid wherever possible
the exercise of police powers.
(5)

The supervisor should strive to the utmost

to discharge the responsibilities of his office in a
fair and impartial manner, never lacking in courage
to maintain ths integrity of his office while at the
same time studiously avoiding the imposition of
arbitrary requirements not contemplated by law.
I believe this summarizes fairly the accept­
ed concept of present day supervision.

Being mere

humans, and therefore subject to all of the accompany­
ing frailties, we may frequently fall short of the




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Ideals to which we subscribe, but I can assure you
that all of the supervisors who come within my
purview are genuinely trying to abide by these
principles.
The second phase of my subject, namely,
practical application of these supervisory concepts,
very readily divides itself into two parts (1)

The development of uniform examination

procedures and supervisory policies since 1933; and
(2)

The present day application of those

procedures and policies.
In discussing present day standards of bank
supervision, I take 1933 as the beginning point because
prior to that date there was very little coordination
in supervisory practices as between the various




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supervisory authorities.

As a matter of fact, to

could very well take 1935 as the beginning date
because no real progress was made until after the
enactment of the legislation popularly referred to
as the Banking Act of 1935, which became effective
on August 16 of that year.
It is true that in 1934 the Secretary of
the Treasury attempted to get the three Federal banking
agencies together in their thinking on the appraisal
of bank assets but very little immediate progress was
made in the direction of uniformity. The Banking Act
of 1935, therefore, was the actual jump-off point
from which we have progressed to our present state
of cooperation and high degree of uniformity in the
field of bank supervision




The Banking Act of 1935 prescribed the
first statutory conditions to be met by banks desiring
to participate in any Federal banking program - other
than capital requirements based upon population as
prescribed by the National Bank Act.

The Federal Reserve

Act of 1913 imposed on State banks desiring to Join
the Federal Reserve System capital requirements similar
to those of the National Bank Act.
Notwithstanding the lack of specific
statutory authority on any factor except capital,
the Comptroller of the Currency had for a good many
years exercised his general discretionary authority
to grant or refuse a National bank charter by
requiring a proper showing as to

(1)

the needs of

the community for the banking facilities being




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sought, (2) the acceptable character of the people
who were promoting the organization and (3) the
adequacy of the proposed capital in relation to
the expected volume of business - the latter without
regard to the basic population requirements#

Many

of the states had similar requirements written into
their banking statutes prior to 1935.
The Congress, in recognition of the evils
that had beset the banking system as the result of
the free competitive chartering of banks as between
the several states and the National bank department,
followed the lead of the Comptroller of the Currency
and laid down certain specific requirements which
must be considered by the FDIC in admitting a State
nonmember to the benefits of deposit insurance.




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It

required both the Comptroller of the Currency and
the Federal Reserve System to observe the same re­
quirements in granting a charter to a proposed new
national bank, or in admitting a State bank into member­
ship in the System.
Another provision of the Banking Act of 1935
of equal or perhaps greater importance than the
admission standards, is that which gives the FDIC the
right to cite any insured bank, State or National, for
continued unsafe or unsound practices or continued
violations of law and to require their correction
within 120 days.

If the bank fails to make the required

corrections within the specified period, further action
may be taken by the Corporation leading to the termina­
tion of the bank's insured status.




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As I said before,

this action may be taken against any insured bank,
whether it be a National, State Federal Reserve member,
or non-member insured bank.
The primary purpose of this provision of
the law, is to bring about the correction of unsafe or
unsound practices and/or violations of law and thereby
restore the bank to a normal state of healthy operation.
In only a few of the most stubborn and recalcitrant
cases has it been found necessary to carry the termina­
tion proceedings through to a conclusion. Furthermore,
the FDIC and the appropriate State or Federal supervi­
sory authority, through their joint efforts will have
exhausted all corrective alternatives before recourse to
this action.

This is as it should be, because the very

essence of the Federal Deposit Insurance Law is to keep banki




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open and the banking system healthy.
While there are several other provisions of
the Banking Act of 1935 that are calculated to bring
about higher supervisory standards and a higher degree
of uniformity in the application of those standards, the
three provisions I have Just described are, in my opinion,
the most important.

This Act is my second Bible, and

the more I read and study it, the more aware I am that,
in its enactment, the Congress intended that bankers aid
bank supervisors should work together to prevent a re­
currence of "the dismal history of bank failures prior
to the Banking Holiday of 1933.
The law, however, can only lay down general
standards of behavior.

No matter how well conceived a

particular piece of legislation may have been, or how




well it may have been drafted, in the final analysis,
its effectiveness is dependent upon the degree of
competence and honesty with which it is administered
and the manner in mhich the bankers observe its spirit.
So I shall turn now to the administrative and policy
actions which have been taken since 1935 to implement
the law.
The Corporation examines, in collaboration
with the State banking departments, the 6,700 odd
insured State banks which are not members of the
Federal Reserve System.

Taking advantage of that

provision of the law which gives the Corporation right
of access to the reports of examinations made by the
Federal Reserve and National bank examiners, the
Corporation has consistently reviewed the condition




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of all insured banks as reflected by their examination
reports almost since the beginning of deposit insurance.
Incidentally, but very importantly, we have also had
the benefit of reviewing the reports of the State
examiners, and in turn, have made copies of our reports
available to the respective State authorities.
There is no point in reviewing an examination
report just to see how well or how poorly the banker
is conducting himself as of any one given date. Except
in those situations where a single review discloses
the bank to be in serious difficulty, no real value
accrues from such reviews except by comparison with
past performance.

You bankers have long recognized

that fact through the use of your comparative analysis




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21

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cards on your principal borrowing clients.

The FDIC

decided in 1934 that what was good for the banker could
be of equal or more benefit to the Corporation in keeping
up with its insurance hazard in some 14,000 banks. Our
first comparative analysis card was hastily conceived
and therefore somewhat crude.

By 1937, we had developed

our present card, Form 96, which has required little
change since then.
In attempting to set up comparative
analysis cards in the early days we encountered consider­
able difficulty because of the divergent methods of
reporting by the Federal Reserve, National bank and our
own examiners.

The divergence between the several States

and the three Federal agencies was even greater.

In

order to correct this situation, the Corporation, in 1936,




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undertook a plan to get the three Federal agencies
together on a uniform examination report. After a
number of conferences covering a period of several
weeks the three Federal agencies agreed on a form
of report that was uniform and mutually acceptable
to the three agencies.
The next step was to solicit the cooperation
of the State bank supervisors to adopt examination
report forms similar to ours.

We had a very ready

response from the Executive Committee of the
National Association of Supervisors of State Banks.
Practically all of the State supervisors recognized,
as we in the Federal banking agencies had, that there
was need for change in the manner of reporting the
findings made in examinations of banks.




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They welcomed

our suggestions, and contributed many of their own
which have proven to be of value.

As a result,

slightly more than half of the states are now using
examination report forms identical in all practical
aspects with those used by the Federal banking
agencies.

The report in its present form has been

changed from time to time, but no change has been
made without first consulting and receiving the
approval of the State bank supervisors.
After adopting uniform examination report
forms it followed logically that there should be an
agreement on uniform standards for bank examiners
to use in their appraisal of bank assets. A number
of Joint meetings looking to the attainment of this
objective were held by the bank supervisory agencies
during 1937 and 1938 and finally an agreement was




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adopted by the Federal agencies and the Executive
Committee of the National Association of Supervisors
of State Banks which came to be known as "the
uniform valuation method of appraisal of assets”.
Those of you who are interested in the details of
the agreement will find it fully set forth in the
FDIC Annual Report of 1938 as well as in the
Federal Reserve Bulletin.
This agreement embodied two major
changes in the then existing classification proce­
dures. Both were designed to bring about the appraisal
of bank assets on "continuing business” value,
rather than on estimated liquidating values as of
the date of a given examination. The economic set­
back in 1937 had left many banks with substantial




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depreciation in their bond portfolios, both in
investment grade and substandard issues.

It m s

therefore agreed that investment grade issues should
be appraised at amortized cost or book value, "which­
ever m s

the lower aid that the current market value

yard stick would not be applied to such issues. Sub­
standard bonds (below investment grade and above
defaults) would be appraised at the average monthly
market quotations for the past eighteen months, and
one-half of any depreciation on that basis would be
set up as doubtful - or 111.

Defaulted securities

and stocks would be appraised at current market and
any resulting depreciation would be treated as loss

and charged off.




The'second change resulted from a feeling

in certain quarters that bank examiners were in­
clined to overclassify loans to intrinsically sol­
vent borrowers When times became a little tough,
either locally or nationally, and thereby accentuate
the difficulties of both the bank and the borrowers.
The old fashioned classifications of slow, doubtful
and loss took it on the chin as being primarily
responsible for these alleged aberrations of judg­
ment on the part of the examiners and were therefore
replaced by the Roman numeral captions of 11, 111 and
IV, the purpose being to base the classification more
on the intrinsic worth of the asset than on its
liquidity.
There is no doubt that much good came from
these discussions and the adoption of this agreement.




First, it made all of us in the bank supervisory
field conscious of the fact that each of us could
not proceed blithely in his own Jolly direction, but
that we must pool our thinking and attempt to chart
a common course.

Second, it emphasized in our minds

the fact that we must not necessarily regard the
assets of a properly run bank as doubtful just be­
cause they had taken on a slightly jaundiced appear­
ance as the result of a more or less temporary economic

disturbance.
Many of us in the supervisory field were
never enthusiastic about the Roman numeral captions.
Classification 11 was particularly difficult for the
banker to understand, but more importantly to us,
definition of the caption was difficult for our




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examiners to interpret. Captions 111 and IV meant
Doubtful and Loss, so why not just call names
names ?

At the same time there was a reluctance to

go back to the adjective caption of Slow.

After a

considerable period of negotiations, the Roman
numeral captions were replaced in 1949 by the ad­
jective captions - Substandard, Doubtful and Loss.
Another recent but minor change in the
1938 uniform agreement was the discontinuance of the
practice of appraising group 2 securities on the
basis of the 18-months average of market value. Such
securities are now appraised at current market value.
There has been no change with respect to evaluation
of U. S. Government and other group 1 (investment
quality) securities at the lower of book value or




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amortized cost.
These revisions represent no fundamental
change in the procedure followed since 1938 nor do
they signify any intention on the part of the super­
visory authorities to become more or less severe in
the classification of bank assets.

Their purpose is

clarification and simplification of procedure in the
interest of more uniform application.

The use of the

18-months average price for group 2 securities is no
longer of practical significance since the banks of
the country have only a nominal investment in such
securities.

As to classifications I am sure you bankers

now have a much clearer idea of what the examiner is
driving at when he talks in the language of

doubtful and loss.”




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substandard,

The Corporation, like other supervisory
agencies, is fully aware that its examinations are only
as informative and effective as its personnel and is
striving constantly to develop its manpower material.
It is conducting a rather comprehensive educational pro­
gram for examiners and assistants.

This program, which

began in 1946, is designed to fit the particular needs
of each participant and to supplement the training he
receives on the job.

Usually the program consists of

correspondence study in courses given by the American
Institute of Banking.

In other cases, examiners or

assistants are enrolled in residence courses offered
through a college or university or by a local chapter
of the AIB.

In the latter group are included enrollees

in the Graduate School of Banking at Rutgers University,




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and in Central States School of Banking at the
University of Wisconsin.

Approximately 75 percent

of the examining staff were either enrolled in or had
completed courses under the program by the end of
1949.

The entire cost of the program is paid by the

Corporation, but all participants take the courses
on their owi time, frequently devoting their vacations
to weeks of hard work.
In conclusion I am sure you will agree
that The Concept and Standards of Bank Supervision
have developed materially since the Banking Holiday
and the Banking Act of 1933.

Bank supervisors have

grown greatly in stature; they have moved definitely
away from the old idea of coercive police powers. Now




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it is universally recognized that the superior super­
vision is exemplified by the best salesmanship*
Permit me to emphasize that the wellrun bank has nothing to fear from the bank examiner or
his superior*

We may have friendly and open dis­

cussions of controversial matters but never acrimonious
differences of opinion*

The banker who is at continual

odds with the bank examiner should have a moving picture
made of himself*

Perhaps he will see that he is the

only man in his company who is out of step !