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Regulatory relief
Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs, U.S. Senate
June 21, 2005
Chairman Shelby, Senator Sarbanes, and members of the Committee, thank you for the
opportunity to testify on issues related to regulatory relief. The Board is aware of the current
and growing regulatory burden that is imposed on this nation’s banking organizations. Often
this burden falls particularly hard on small institutions, which have fewer resources than
their larger brethren. The Board strongly supports the efforts of Congress to review
periodically the federal banking laws to determine whether they can be streamlined without
compromising the safety and soundness of banking organizations, consumer protections, or
other important objectives that Congress has established for the financial system. In 2003, at
Chairman Shelby’s request, the Board provided the Committee with a number of legislative
proposals that we believe are consistent with this goal. Since then, the Board has continued
to work with the other federal banking agencies and your staffs on regulatory relief matters
and the Board recently agreed to support several additional regulatory relief proposals. A
summary of the proposals supported by the Board is included in the appendix to my
testimony.
In my remarks, I will highlight the Board’s three highest priority proposals. These three
proposals would allow the Federal Reserve to pay interest on balances held by depository
institutions at Reserve Banks, provide the Board greater flexibility in setting reserve
requirements, and permit depository institutions to pay interest on demand deposits. These
amendments would improve efficiency in the financial sector, assist small banks and small
businesses, and enhance the Federal Reserve’s toolkit for efficiently conducting monetary
policy. I also will mention a few additional proposals that the Board supports and that would
provide meaningful regulatory relief to banking organizations. The Board looks forward to
working with Congress, our fellow banking agencies and other interested parties in
developing and analyzing other potential regulatory relief proposals as the legislative process
moves forward.
For its part, the Board strives to review each of our regulations at least once every five years
to identify those provisions that are out of date or otherwise unnecessary. The Board also
has been an active participant in the ongoing regulatory review process being conducted by
the federal banking agencies pursuant to the Economic Growth and Regulatory Paperwork
Reduction Act (EGRPRA). EGRPRA requires the federal banking agencies, at least once
every ten years, to review and seek public comment on the burden associated with the full
range of the agencies’ regulations that affect insured depository institutions. The Board and
the other banking agencies are in the midst of the first ten-year review cycle, and I am
pleased to report that we are on track to complete this process by the 2006 deadline. The
agencies already have solicited comments on four broad categories of regulations--including
those governing applications, activities, money laundering, and consumer protection in
lending transactions--and have conducted outreach meetings throughout the country to
encourage public participation in the EGRPRA process. In response to these efforts, the

agencies have received comments from more than 1,000 entities and individuals on ways to
reduce the regulatory burden on banking organizations. The Board will consider and
incorporate the comments relevant to our regulations as we move forward with our own
regulation review efforts.
While the banking agencies can achieve some burden reductions through administrative
action, Congress plays a critical role in the regulatory relief process. Many proposals to
reduce regulatory burden require congressional action to implement. Moreover, the
Congress has ultimate responsibility for establishing the overall regulatory framework for
banking organizations, and through its actions Congress can ensure that regulatory relief is
consistent with the framework it has established to maintain the safety and soundness of
banking organizations and promote other important public policy goals.
Interest on Reserves and Reserve Requirement Flexibility
For the purpose of implementing monetary policy, the Board is obliged by law to establish
reserve requirements on certain deposits held at depository institutions. By law, the Board
currently must set the ratio of required reserves on transaction deposits above a certain
threshold at between 8 and 14 percent. Because the Federal Reserve does not pay interest
on the balances held at Reserve Banks to meet reserve requirements, depositories have an
incentive to reduce their reserve balances to a minimum. To do so, they engage in a variety
of reserve avoidance activities, including sweep arrangements that move funds from deposits
that are subject to reserve requirements to deposits and money market investments that are
not. These sweep programs and similar activities absorb real resources and therefore
diminish the efficiency of our banking system. The Board’s proposed amendment would
authorize the Federal Reserve to pay depository institutions interest on their required reserve
balances. Paying interest on these required reserve balances would remove a substantial
portion of the incentive for depositories to engage in reserve avoidance measures, and the
resulting improvements in efficiency should eventually be passed through to bank borrowers
and depositors.
Besides required reserve balances, depository institutions also voluntarily hold two other
types of balances in their Reserve Bank accounts--contractual clearing balances and excess
reserve balances. A depository institution holds contractual clearing balances when it needs
a higher level of balances than its required reserve balances in order to pay checks or make
wire transfers out of its account at the Federal Reserve without incurring overnight
overdrafts. Currently, such clearing balances do not earn explicit interest, but they do earn
implicit interest in the form of credits that may be used to pay for Federal Reserve services,
such as check clearing. Excess reserve balances are funds held by depository institutions in
their accounts at Reserve Banks in excess of their required reserve and contractual clearing
balances. Excess reserve balances currently do not earn explicit or implicit interest.
The Board’s proposed amendment would authorize the Federal Reserve to pay explicit
interest on contractual clearing balances and excess reserve balances, as well as required
reserve balances. This authority would enhance the Federal Reserve’s ability to efficiently
conduct monetary policy, and would complement another of the Board’s proposed
amendments, which would give the Board greater flexibility in setting reserve requirements
for depository institutions.
In order for the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) to conduct monetary policy
effectively, it is important that a sufficient and predictable demand for balances at the
Reserve Banks exist so that the System knows the volume of reserves to supply (or remove)

through open market operations to achieve the FOMC’s target federal funds rate.
Authorizing the Federal Reserve to pay explicit interest on contractual clearing balances and
excess reserve balances, in addition to required reserve balances, could potentially provide a
demand for voluntary balances that would be stable enough for monetary policy to be
implemented effectively through existing procedures without the need for required reserve
balances. In these circumstances, the Board, if authorized, could consider reducing--or even
eliminating--reserve requirements, thereby reducing a regulatory burden for all depository
institutions, without adversely affecting the Federal Reserve’s ability to conduct monetary
policy.
Having the authority to pay interest on excess reserves also could help mitigate potential
volatility in overnight interest rates. If the Federal Reserve was authorized to pay interest on
excess reserves, and did so, the rate paid would act as a minimum for overnight interest
rates, because banks would not generally lend to other banks at a lower rate than they could
earn by keeping their excess funds at a Reserve Bank. Although the Board sees no need to
pay interest on excess reserves in the near future, and any movement in this direction would
need further study, the ability to do so would be a potentially useful addition to the monetary
toolkit of the Federal Reserve.
The payment of interest on required reserve balances, or reductions in reserve requirements,
would lower the revenues received by the Treasury from the Federal Reserve. The extent of
the potential revenue loss, however, has fallen over the last decade as banks have
increasingly implemented reserve-avoidance techniques. Paying interest on contractual
clearing balances would primarily involve a switch to explicit interest from the implicit
interest currently paid in the form of credits, and therefore would have essentially no net
cost to the Treasury.
Interest on Demand Deposits
The Board also strongly supports repealing the statutory restrictions that currently prohibit
depository institutions from paying interest on demand deposits. The Board’s proposed
amendment would allow all depository institutions that have the legal authority to offer
demand deposits to pay interest on those deposits. As I will explain a little later, however,
the Board opposes amendments that would separately authorize industrial loan companies
that operate outside the supervisory and regulatory framework established for other insured
banks to offer, for the first time, interest bearing transaction accounts to business customers.
Repealing the prohibition of interest on demand deposits would improve the overall
efficiency of our financial sector and, in particular, should assist small banks in attracting
and retaining business deposits. To compete for the liquid assets of businesses, banks have
been compelled to set up complicated procedures to pay implicit interest on compensating
balance accounts and they spend resources--and charge fees--for sweeping the excess
demand deposits of businesses into money market investments on a nightly basis. Small
banks, however, often do not have the resources to develop the sweep or other programs
that are needed to compete for the deposits of business customers. Moreover, from the
standpoint of the overall economy, the expenses incurred by institutions of all sizes to
implement these programs are a waste of resources and would be unnecessary if institutions
were permitted to pay interest on demand deposits directly.
The costs incurred by banks in operating these programs are passed on, directly or indirectly,
to their large and small business customers. Authorizing banks to pay interest on demand
deposits would eliminate the need for these customers to pay for more costly sweep and

compensating balance arrangements to earn a return on their demand deposits. The payment
of interest on demand deposits would have no direct effect on federal revenues, as interest
payments would be deductible for banks but taxable for the firms that received them.
Some proposals, such as H.R. 1224--the Business Checking Freedom Act of 2005--which
recently passed the House, would delay the effectiveness of the authorization of interest on
demand deposits for two years. The Board believes that a short implementation delay of one
year, or even less, would be in the best interest of the public and the efficiency of our
financial sector. A separate provision of H.R. 1224 would, in effect, allow implicit interest to
be paid on demand deposits without any delay through a new type of sweep arrangement,
but this provision would not promote efficiency. It would allow banks to offer a reservable
money market deposit account (MMDA) from which twenty-four transfers a month could be
made to other accounts of the same depositor. Banks would be able to sweep balances from
demand deposits into these MMDAs each night, pay interest on them, and then sweep them
back into demand deposits the next day. This type of account would likely permit banks to
pay interest on demand deposits more selectively than with direct interest payments. The
twenty-four-transfer MMDA, which would be useful only during the transition period before
direct interest payments were allowed, could be implemented at lower cost by banks already
having sweep programs. However, other banks would face a competitive disadvantage and
pressures to incur the cost of setting up this new program during the transition for the
one-year interim period. Moreover, some businesses would not benefit from this MMDA.
Hence, the Board does not advocate this twenty-four-transfer account.
Small Bank Examination Flexibility
The Board also supports an amendment that would expand the number of small institutions
that qualify for an extended examination cycle. Federal law currently mandates that the
appropriate federal banking agency conduct an on-site examination of each insured
depository institution at least once every twelve months. The statute, however, permits
institutions that have $250 million or less in assets and that meet certain capital, managerial,
and other criteria to be examined on an eighteen-month cycle. As the primary federal
supervisors for state-chartered banks, the Board and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(FDIC) may alternate responsibility for conducting these examinations with the appropriate
state supervisory authority if the Board or FDIC determines that the state examination
carries out the purposes of the statute.
The $250 million asset cutoff for an eighteen-month examination cycle has not been raised
since 1994. The Board’s proposed amendment would raise this asset cap from $250 million
to $500 million, thus potentially allowing approximately an additional 1,100 insured
depository institutions to qualify for an eighteen-month examination cycle.
The proposed amendment would provide meaningful relief to small institutions without
jeopardizing the safety and soundness of insured depository institutions. Under the proposed
amendment, an institution with less than $500 million in assets would qualify for the
eighteen-month examination cycle only if the institution was well capitalized, well managed,
and met the other criteria established by Congress in the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation Improvement Act of 1991. The amendment also would continue to require that
all insured depository institutions undergo a full-scope, on-site examination at least once
every twelve or eighteen months. Importantly, the agencies would continue to have the
ability to examine any institution more frequently and at any time if the agency determines
an examination is necessary or appropriate.

Despite advances in off-site monitoring, the Board continues to believe that regular on-site
examinations play a critical role in helping bank supervisors detect and correct asset,
risk-management, or internal control problems at an institution before these problems result
in claims on the deposit insurance funds. The mandatory twelve- or eighteen-month on-site
examination cycle imposes important discipline on the federal banking agencies, ensures that
insured depository institutions do not go unexamined for extended periods, and has
contributed significantly to the safety and soundness of insured depository institutions. For
these reasons, the Board opposes alternative amendments that would allow an agency to
indefinitely lengthen the exam cycle for any institution in order to allocate and conserve the
agency’s examination resources.
Permit the Board to Grant Exceptions to Attribution Rule
The Board has proposed another amendment that we believe will help banking organizations
maintain attractive benefits programs for their employees. The Bank Holding Company Act
(BHC Act) generally prohibits a bank holding company from owning, in the aggregate, more
than 5 percent of the voting shares of any company without the Board’s approval. The BHC
Act also provides that any shares held by a trust for the benefit of a bank holding company’s
shareholders or employees are deemed to be controlled by the bank holding company itself.
This attribution rule was intended to prevent a bank holding company from using a trust
established for the benefit of its management, shareholders, or employees to evade the BHC
Act's restrictions on the acquisition of shares of banks and nonbanking companies.
While this attribution rule has proved to be a useful tool in preventing evasions of the BHC
Act, it does not always provide an appropriate result. For example, it may not be appropriate
to apply the attribution rule when the shares in question are acquired by a 401(k) plan that is
widely held by, and operated for the benefit of, the employees of the bank holding company.
In these situations, the bank holding company may not have the ability to influence the
purchase or sale decisions of the employees or otherwise control the shares that are held by
the plan in trust for its employees. The suggested amendment would allow the Board to
address these situations by authorizing the Board to grant exceptions from the attribution
rule where appropriate.
Reduce Cross-Marketing Restrictions
Another amendment proposed by the Board would modify the cross-marketing restrictions
imposed by the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLB Act) on the merchant banking and
insurance company investments of financial holding companies. The GLB Act generally
prohibits a depository institution controlled by a financial holding company from engaging in
cross-marketing activities with a nonfinancial company that is owned by the same financial
holding company under the GLB Act’s merchant banking or insurance company investment
authorities. However, the GLB Act currently permits a depository institution subsidiary of a
financial holding company, with Board approval, to engage in limited cross-marketing
activities through statement stuffers and Internet websites with nonfinancial companies that
are held under the act’s insurance company investment authority (but not the act’s merchant
banking authority).
The Board’s proposed amendment would allow depository institutions controlled by a
financial holding company to engage in cross-marketing activities with companies held under
the merchant banking authority to the same extent, and subject to the same restrictions, as
companies held under the insurance company investment authority. We believe that this
parity of treatment is appropriate, and see no reason to treat the merchant banking and

insurance investments of financial holding companies differently for purposes of the crossmarketing restrictions of the GLB Act.
A second aspect of the amendment would liberalize the cross-marketing restrictions that
apply to both merchant banking and insurance company investments. This aspect of the
amendment would permit a depository institution subsidiary of a financial holding company
to engage in cross-marketing activities with a nonfinancial company held under either the
merchant banking or insurance company investment authority if the nonfinancial company is
not controlled by the financial holding company. When a financial holding company does
not control a portfolio company, cross-marketing activities are unlikely to materially
undermine the separation between the nonfinancial portfolio company and the financial
holding company’s depository institution subsidiaries.
Industrial Loan Companies
As I noted earlier, the Board strongly supports allowing depository institutions to pay
interest on demand deposits. The Board, however, opposes proposals that would allow
industrial loan companies (ILCs) to offer interest-bearing, negotiable order of withdrawal
(NOW) accounts to business customers if the corporate owner of the ILC takes advantage of
the special exemption in current law that allows the owner to operate outside the prudential
framework that Congress has established for the corporate owners of other types of insured
banks.
ILCs are state-chartered FDIC-insured banks that were first established early in the
twentieth century to make small loans to industrial workers. As insured banks, ILCs are
supervised by the FDIC as well as by the chartering state. However, under a special
exemption in current law, any type of company, including a commercial or retail firm, may
acquire an ILC in a handful of states--principally Utah, California, and Nevada--and avoid
the activity restrictions and supervisory requirements imposed on bank holding companies
under the federal BHC Act.
When the special exemption for ILCs was initially granted in 1987, ILCs were mostly small,
local institutions that did not offer demand deposits or other types of checking accounts. In
light of these facts, Congress conditioned the exemption on a requirement that any ILCs
chartered after 1987 remain small (below $100 million in assets) or refrain from offering
demand deposits that are withdrawable by check or similar means.
This special exemption has been aggressively exploited since 1987. Some grandfathered
states have allowed their ILCs to exercise many of the same powers as commercial banks
and have begun to charter new ILCs. Today, several ILCs are owned by large,
internationally active financial or commercial firms. In addition, a number of ILCs
themselves have grown large, with one holding more than $50 billion in deposits and an
additional six holding more than $1 billion in deposits.
Affirmatively granting ILCs the ability to offer business NOW accounts would permit ILCs
to become the functional equivalent of full-service insured banks. This result would be
inconsistent with both the historical functions of ILCs and the terms of their special
exemption in current law.
Because the parent companies of exempt ILCs are not subject to the BHC Act, authorizing
ILCs to operate essentially as full-service banks would create an unlevel competitive playing
field among banking organizations and undermine the framework Congress has established
for the corporate owners of full-service banks. It would allow firms that are not subject to

the consolidated supervisory framework of the BHC Act--including consolidated capital,
examination, and reporting requirements--to own and control the functional equivalent of a
full-service bank. It also would allow a foreign bank to acquire control of the equivalent of a
full-service insured bank without meeting the requirement under the BHC Act that the
foreign bank be subject to comprehensive supervision on a consolidated basis in its home
country. In addition, it would allow financial firms to acquire the equivalent of a full-service
bank without complying with the capital, managerial, and Community Reinvestment Act
(CRA) requirements established by Congress in the GLB Act.
Congress has established consolidated supervision as a fundamental component of bank
supervision in the United States because consolidated supervision provides important
protection to the insured banks that are part of a larger organization and to the federal safety
net that supports those banks. Financial trouble in one part of an organization can spread
rapidly to other parts. To protect an insured bank that is part of a larger organization, a
supervisor needs to have the authority and tools to understand the risks that exist within the
parent organization and its affiliates and, if necessary, address any significant capital,
managerial, or other deficiencies before they pose a danger to the bank. This is particularly
true today, as holding companies increasingly manage their operations--and the risks that
arise from these operations--in a centralized manner that cuts across legal entities. Risks that
cross legal entities and that are managed on a consolidated basis simply cannot be monitored
properly through supervision directed at one, or even several, of the legal entities within the
overall organization. For these reasons, Congress since 1956 has required that the parent
companies of full-service insured banks be subject to consolidated supervision under the
BHC Act. In addition, following the collapse of Bank of Commerce and Credit International
(BCCI), Congress has required that foreign banks seeking to acquire control of a U.S. bank
under the BHC Act be subject to comprehensive supervision on a consolidated basis in the
foreign bank’s home country.
Authorizing exempt ILCs to operate as essentially full-service banks also would undermine
the framework that Congress has established--and recently reaffirmed in the GLB Act--to
limit the affiliation of banks and commercial entities. This is because any type of company,
including a commercial firm, may own an exempt ILC without regard to the activity
restrictions in the BHC Act that are designed to maintain the separation of banking and
commerce.
H.R. 1224 attempts to address the banking and commerce concerns raised by allowing ILCs
to offer business NOW accounts by placing certain limits on the types of ILCs that may
engage in these new activities. However, as Governor Kohn recently testified in the House
on behalf of the Board, the limits contained in H.R. 1224 do not adequately address these
concerns. Moreover, H.R. 1224 fails to address the supervisory issues associated with
allowing domestic firms and foreign banks that are not subject to consolidated supervision to
control the functional equivalent of a full-service insured bank.
Let me be clear. The Board does not oppose granting ILCs the ability to offer business NOW
accounts if the corporate owners of ILCs engaged in these expanded activities are covered
by the same supervisory and regulatory framework that applies to the owners of other
full-service insured banks. Stated simply, if ILCs want to benefit from expanded powers and
become functionally indistinguishable from other insured banks, then they and their
corporate parents should be subject to the same rules that apply to the owners of other
full-service insured banks. For the same reasons discussed above, the Board opposes
amendments that would allow exempt ILCs to open de novo branches throughout the United

States.
Affirmatively granting exempt ILCs the authority to offer business NOW accounts also is
not necessary to ensure or provide parity among insured banks. The Board’s proposed
amendment would allow all depository institutions that have the authority to offer demand
deposits the ability to pay interest on those deposits. Thus, the Board’s proposed amendment
would treat all depository institutions equally. Separately granting exempt ILCs the ability to
offer the functional equivalent of a corporate demand deposit, on the other hand, would
grant new and expanded powers to institutions that already benefit from a special exemption
in current law. Far from promoting competitive equity, these proposals would promote
competitive inequality in the financial marketplace.
The Board believes that important principles governing the structure of the nation’s banking
system--such as consolidated supervision, the separation of banking and commerce, and the
maintenance of a level playing field for all competitors in the financial services
marketplace--should not be abandoned without careful consideration by the Congress. In the
Board’s view, legislation concerning the payment of interest on demand deposits is unlikely
to provide an appropriate vehicle for the thorough consideration of the consequences of
altering these key principles.
Conclusion
I appreciate the opportunity to discuss the Board’s legislative suggestions and priorities
concerning regulatory relief. The Board would be pleased to work with the Committee and
your staffs as you seek to develop and advance meaningful regulatory relief legislation that
is consistent with the nation’s public policy objectives.
Appendix
Regulatory Relief Proposals Supported by the
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
1. Authorize the Federal Reserve to pay interest on balances held at Reserve Banks
Amendment gives the Federal Reserve explicit authority to pay interest on balances
held by depository institutions at the Federal Reserve Banks.
2. Grant the Board additional flexibility in establishing reserve requirements
Amendment provides the Federal Reserve with greater flexibility to set the ratio of
reserves that a depository institution must maintain against its transaction accounts
below the current ranges established by the Monetary Control Act of 1980.
3. Authorize depository institutions to pay interest on demand deposits
Amendment repeals the provisions in current law that prohibit depository institutions
from paying interest on demand deposits. If adopted, the amendment would allow all
depository institutions that have the authority to offer demand deposits to pay interest
on those deposits.
4. Ease restrictions on interstate branching and mergers in a competitively equitable
manner

Amendment affirmatively authorizes national and state banks to open de novo
branches on an interstate basis. Currently, banks may establish de novo branches in a
new state only if the state has affirmatively authorized de novo branching. This
existing limitation places banks at a disadvantage to federal savings associations,
which currently have the ability to branch de novo on an interstate basis. The
amendment also would remove a parallel provision that allows states to impose a
minimum requirement on the age of banks that are acquired by an out-of-state
banking organization.
The amendment would not allow industrial loan companies (ILCs) that operate under
a special exemption in federal law from opening de novo branches on a nationwide
basis. The corporate owners of these ILCs are not subject to the type of consolidated
supervision and activities restrictions that generally apply to the corporate owners of
other banks insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). Granting
exempt ILCs nationwide branching rights also would be inconsistent with the terms of
their special exemption in federal law.
5. Small Bank Examination Flexibility
Amendment would expand the number of small institutions that may qualify for an
eighteen-month (rather than a twelve-month) examination cycle. Under current law,
an insured depository institution must have $250 million or less in total assets to
qualify for an eighteen-month examination cycle. See 12 U.S.C. § 1820(d). The
amendment would raise this asset cap to $500 million, thereby potentially allowing
approximately an additional 1,100 institutions to qualify for an extended examination
cycle.
6. Permit the Board to grant exceptions to the attribution rule concerning shares held
by a trust for the benefit of a bank holding company or its shareholders or employees
The amendment would allow the Board, in appropriate circumstances, to waive the
attribution rule in section 2(g)(2) of the Bank Holding Company Act (BHC Act). This
attribution rule currently provides that, for purposes of the BHC Act, a company is
deemed in all circumstances to own or control any shares that are held by a trust (such
as an employee benefit plan) for the benefit of the company or its shareholders or
employees. The amendment would allow the Board to waive the rule when, for
example, the shares in question are held by a 401(k) plan that is widely held by the
bank holding company’s employees and the bank holding company does not have the
ability to control the shares held by the plan.
7. Modification of the cross-marketing restrictions applicable to merchant banking and
insurance company investments
Amendment allows the depository institution subsidiaries of a financial holding
company to engage in cross-marketing activities with portfolio companies that are
held under the merchant banking authority in the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (GLB
Act) to the same extent as such activities are currently permissible for portfolio
companies held under the GLB Act’s insurance company investment authority. The
amendment also would allow the depository institution subsidiaries of a financial
holding company to engage in cross-marketing activities with a portfolio company
held under either the merchant banking or insurance company investment authority if

the financial holding company does not control the portfolio company.
8. Allow insured banks to engage in interstate merger transactions with savings
associations and trust companies
The amendment would allow an insured bank to directly acquire, by merger, an
insured savings association or uninsured trust company in a different home state
without first converting the target savings association or trust company into an insured
bank. As under current law, the insured bank would have to be the survivor of the
merger.
9. Authorize member banks to use pass-through reserve accounts
Amendment permits banks that are members of the Federal Reserve System to count
as reserves the deposits in other banks that are “passed through” by those banks to the
Federal Reserve as required reserve balances. Nonmember banks already are able to
use such pass-through reserve accounts.
10. Shorten the post-approval waiting period for bank mergers and acquisitions where
the relevant banking agency and the Attorney General agree the transaction will not
have adverse competitive effects
Amendment allows the responsible federal banking agency, with the concurrence of
the Attorney General, to reduce the post-approval waiting periods under the Bank
Merger Act and BHC Act from fifteen days to as few as five days. The amendment
would not alter the time period that a private party has to challenge a banking
agency’s approval of a transaction for reasons related to the Community Reinvestment
Act.
11. Eliminate requirement that the reviewing agency request a competitive factors
report from the other banking agencies in Bank Merger Act transactions
Amendment would eliminate the requirement that the reviewing agency request a
competitive factors report from the other banking agencies on Bank Merger Act
transactions. The reviewing agency would, however, continue to be required to (i)
conduct a competitive analysis of the proposed merger, and (ii) request a competitive
factors report from the Attorney General and provide a copy of this request to the
FDIC (when the FDIC is not the reviewing agency).
12. Streamline Bank Merger Act procedural requirements for transactions involving
entities that are already under common control
The amendment eliminates the need for the reviewing agency for a bank merger
involving affiliated entities to request a report on the competitive factors associated
with the transaction from the other banking agencies and the Attorney General. The
amendment also would eliminate the post-approval waiting period for Bank Merger
Act transactions involving affiliated entities. The merger of depository institutions that
already are under common control typically does not have any impact on competition.
13. a. Restore Board’s authority to determine that new activities are "closely related to
banking" and permissible for all bank holding companies
Amendment would restore the Board’s ability to determine that nonbanking activities

are "closely related to banking" under section 4(c)(8) of the BHC Act and, thus,
permissible for all bank holding companies, including those that have not elected to
become financial holding companies. Bank holding companies would still have to
become a financial holding company to engage in the types of expanded activities
authorized by the GLB Act--including full-scope securities underwriting, insurance
underwriting, and merchant banking activities--as well as any new activities that the
Board determines are financial in nature or incidental or complementary to financial
activities under the GLB Act.
b. Allow bank holding companies to engage in insurance agency activities (Alternative
to Item 13.a.)
Alternative amendment would allow all bank holding companies, including those that
have not elected to become financial holding companies, to act as agent in the sale of
insurance. Currently, bank holding companies that do not become a financial holding
company may engage only in very limited insurance sales activities (primarily
involving credit-related insurance). However, most banks are permitted to sell any
type of insurance, either directly or through a subsidiary. The amendment would
rectify this imbalance by permitting all bank holding companies to act as agent in the
sale of insurance. Insurance agency activities involve less risk than insurance
underwriting and other principal activities. Bank holding companies would continue to
be required to become a financial holding company to engage in insurance
underwriting activities.
14. Repeal certain reporting requirements imposed on the insiders of insured
depository institutions
Amendment repeals the provisions of current law that require: (i) an executive officer
of a bank to file a report with the bank’s board of directors concerning the officer’s
indebtedness to other banks; (ii) a member bank to file a separate report each quarter
concerning any loans made to its executive officers during the quarter; and (iii)
executive officers and principal shareholders of a bank to report to the bank’s board
of directors any loans received from a correspondent bank. The Board has found that
these reporting requirements do not contribute significantly to the monitoring of
insider lending. These amendments would not alter the statutory limits or conditions
imposed on loans by bank to their insiders.
15. Provide an adjustment for the small depository institutions exception under the
Depository Institution Management Interlocks Act (DIMIA)
Currently, the DIMIA generally prohibits a management official of one institution
from serving as a management official of any other non-affiliated depository
institution or depository institution holding company if the institutions or an affiliate of
such institutions have offices that are located in the same metropolitan statistical area.
The statute provides an exception from this restriction for institutions that have less
than $20 million in assets, but this dollar figure has not been updated since 1978. The
amendment would increase this amount to $100 million.
16. Flood insurance amendments
These amendments would:

(a) Allow lenders to rely on information from licensed surveyors to determine
whether a property is in a flood zone, if the flood map is more than ten years
old;
(b) Increase the "small loan" exception to the flood insurance requirements
from $5,000 to $20,000 and adjust this amount periodically based on changes in
the Consumer Price Index;
(c) Reduce the forty-five-day waiting period required after policy expiration
before a lender can "force place" flood insurance by fifteen days to coincide
with the thirty-day grace period during which flood insurance coverage
continues after policy expiration, which would better enable lenders to avoid
gaps in coverage on the relevant collateral; and
(d) Give the federal banking agencies discretion to impose civil money penalties
on institutions found to have engaged in a pattern or practice of violating the
flood insurance requirements.
17. Periodic interagency review of Call Reports
Amendment requires that the federal banking agencies jointly review the Call Report
forms at least once every five years to determine if some of the information required
by the reports may be eliminated. The federal banking agencies would retain their
current authority to determine what information must be included in the Call Reports
filed by the institutions under their primary supervision.
18. Ensure protection of confidential information received from foreign supervisory
authorities
Amendment ensures that a federal banking agency may keep confidential information
received from a foreign regulatory or supervisory authority if public disclosure of the
information would violate the laws of the foreign country, and the banking agency
obtained the information in connection with the administration and enforcement of
federal banking laws or under a memorandum of understanding between the authority
and the agency. The amendment would not authorize an agency to withhold
information from Congress or in response to a court order in an action brought by the
United States or the agency.
19. Restricting the ability of convicted individuals to participate in the affairs of a bank
holding company or Edge Act or agreement corporation
Amendment would prohibit a person convicted of a criminal offense involving
dishonesty, breach of trust, or money laundering from participating in the affairs of a
bank holding company (other than a foreign bank) or an Edge Act or agreement
corporation without the consent of the Board. The amendment also would provide the
Board with greater discretion to prevent convicted individuals from participating in
the affairs of a nonbank subsidiary of a bank holding company.
20. Clarify application of section 8(i) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act
Amendment clarifies that a federal banking agency may take enforcement action
against a person for conduct that occurred during his or her affiliation with a banking

organization even if the person resigns from the organization, regardless of whether
the enforcement action is initiated through a notice or an order.
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2005 Testimony
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Last update: June 21, 2005, 10:00 AM