98-18274. Membership of State Banking Institutions in the Federal Reserve System; Miscellaneous Interpretations  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 133 (Monday, July 13, 1998)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 37630-37659]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-18274]
    
    
    
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    Part II
    
    
    
    
    
    Federal Reserve System
    
    
    
    
    
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    12 CFR Part 208, et al.
    
    
    
    Membership of State Banking Institutions in the Federal Reserve System; 
    Miscellaneous Interpretations; Issue and Cancellation of Federal 
    Reserve Bank Capital Stock; Security Procedures; Final Rules
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 63, No. 133 / Monday, July 13, 1998 / Rules 
    and Regulations
    
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    FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
    
    12 CFR Parts 208 and 250
    
    [Regulation H; Docket No. R-0964]
    
    
    Membership of State Banking Institutions in the Federal Reserve 
    System; Miscellaneous Interpretations
    
    AGENCY: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System is 
    amending Subpart A of Regulation H, regarding the general provisions 
    for membership in the Federal Reserve System, and Subpart E of 
    Regulation H, regarding Interpretations, in order to reduce regulatory 
    burden, simplify and update requirements, and eliminate several 
    obsolete interpretations. As part of the final rule the Board is 
    reissuing prior Subparts B and C. Prior Subparts B and C have not been 
    significantly amended but have been relettered (as Subparts D and E, 
    respectively) to reflect the fact that prior Subpart A was broken into 
    four new Subparts (Subparts A, B, C and F). Prior Subpart D, regarding 
    safety and soundness standards, has been incorporated into new Subpart 
    A. The final rule does not amend in any way Appendices A through E to 
    Part 208. This final rule to modernize Subpart A of Regulation H is in 
    accordance with the Board's policy of reviewing its regulations as well 
    as the Board's review of regulations under section 303 of the Riegle 
    Community Development and Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: October 1, 1998.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Rick Heyke, Staff Attorney, Legal 
    Division (202/452-3688), or Jean Anderson, Staff Attorney, Legal 
    Division (202/452-3707). For the hearing impaired only, 
    Telecommunications Device for the Deaf (TDD), Diane Jenkins (202/452-
    3544).
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Background
    
        The Board is adopting amendments to its Regulation H (12 CFR part 
    208), regarding the general provisions for state bank membership in the 
    Federal Reserve System, as part of its policy of reviewing its 
    regulations, and consistent with section 303 of the Riegle Community 
    Development and Regulatory Improvement Act of 1994 (Riegle Act), Pub. 
    L. 103-328. Section 303 of the Riegle Act requires each Federal banking 
    agency to review and streamline its regulations and written policies to 
    improve efficiency, reduce unnecessary costs, and remove 
    inconsistencies and outmoded and duplicative requirements. The 
    amendments are designed to reduce regulatory burden and simplify and 
    update the regulation.
        The principal amendments are described below. In general, the 
    amendments serve to reorganize, clarify, and reduce the burden of 
    compliance with Subpart A of Regulation H. The amendments modify the 
    procedures for membership and branch applications, incorporate a new 
    section designed to provide guidance to banks regarding permissible 
    investments in securities, expand the circumstances under which the 
    Board will consider waivers of conditions of membership, eliminate 
    existing requirements regarding disclosure of financial condition, 
    eliminate the requirement that banks obtain deposit insurance in order 
    to become State member banks, and generally provide a definition of 
    branch that is consistent with OCC regulations and decisions. The 
    amendments also serve to eliminate a number of interpretations 
    elsewhere; specifically, interpretations: 12 CFR 250.120, 250.121, 
    250.122, 250.123, 250.140, 250.161, 250.162, 250.300, 250.301 and 
    250.302. The amended Regulation H replaces the existing Regulation H in 
    its entirety, except for the Appendices to Regulation H, which remain 
    unchanged.
        A red-lined version of the amendments to the regulation and 
    commentary is available from the Board's Freedom of Information Office 
    or by calling 202-452-3684.
        The Board published Regulation H for comment in the Federal 
    Register on March 31, 1997 (62 FR 15272). The Board received 14 
    comments to the proposed amendments from the following types of 
    institutions:
    
    Banks/thrifts--1
    Community groups--1
    Trade associations--4
    Federal Reserve Banks--7
    Clearinghouses--1
    
        Twelve of the 14 comments generally supported the proposed 
    amendments as serving to reduce regulatory burden on banks and as 
    clarifying membership requirements. In addition, the comments addressed 
    specific issues raised by the proposed amendments. These comments and 
    issues are discussed below in the section-by-section analysis. Any 
    sections of the regulation which are not discussed in the section-by-
    section analysis were adopted as originally proposed by the Board.
    
    Section-by-Section Analysis
    
    Subpart A--General Membership and Branching Requirements
    
    Section 208.2  Definitions
        Definition of Branch. The Board proposed to define a branch as any 
    branch bank, branch office, branch agency, additional office, or any 
    branch place of business that receives deposits, pays checks, or lends 
    money. The proposed rule also stated that a branch may include a 
    temporary, seasonal, or mobile facility. In addition to defining what 
    constitutes a branch, the proposed rule specified certain arrangements 
    that do not constitute a branch. The Board proposed that a branch not 
    include a loan origination facility where the proceeds of loans are not 
    disbursed, automated teller machines, remote service units, offices of 
    an affiliated depository institution that provide services to customers 
    of a State member bank on behalf of the State member bank, or a 
    facility that would otherwise qualify as a branch because it engages in 
    one or more branching functions (receipt of deposits, payment of 
    withdrawals, or making loans) but which prohibits access to members of 
    the public for purposes of conducting one or more branching functions.
        In this regard the proposed rule requested comment on whether a 
    branch should include offices of an unaffiliated depository institution 
    that provide services to customers of a State member bank on behalf of 
    the State member bank. Six commenters, the Federal Reserve Banks of 
    Minneapolis, Atlanta, Philadelphia and San Francisco, the America's 
    Community Bankers, and the American Bankers Association, supported 
    excluding unaffiliated depository institutions that provide services to 
    a State member bank from the definition of a branch. In light of these 
    comments, and in light of current case law and consistent with Office 
    of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) decisions,1 the 
    Board is excluding from the definition of branch arrangements where 
    either affiliated or unaffiliated institutions provide services to 
    customers of a State member bank. The final rule provides that a branch 
    does not include an office of an affiliated or unaffiliated institution 
    that provides services to customers of the member bank on behalf of the 
    member
    
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    bank so long as the bank does not ``establish or operate'' the office 
    providing the services. For example, a bank could contract with an 
    unaffiliated or affiliated institution to receive deposits, cash and 
    issue checks, drafts, and money orders, change money and receive 
    payments of existing indebtedness without becoming a branch of that 
    bank so long as that bank: (a) has no ownership or leasehold interest 
    in the institution's offices; (b) has no employees who work for the 
    institution; and (c) exercises no authority or control over the 
    institution's employees or methods of operation.2
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        \1\ See Cades versus H & R Block, Inc., 43 F.3d 869, 874 (4th 
    Cir. 1994) and OCC letter of October 5, 1993 from William P. Bowden, 
    Jr., Chief Counsel at page 4, which state that institutions that are 
    not affiliated with a bank, but provide services to customers of the 
    bank, do not constitute branches so long as the bank does not 
    ``establish or operate'' the institution providing the services.
        \2\ See, e.g., Cades, 43 F.3d at 874. Although the bank would be 
    permitted, in contracting with the institution, to control the terms 
    of the services provided by the institution. For example, the bank's 
    contractual relationship with the institution could include such 
    issues as which institution would bear the risk of loss for items in 
    transit or when accounts would be credited with deposits or charged 
    with withdrawals.
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        With respect to the statement in the proposed rule that a branch 
    does not include a ``remote service unit,'' one commenter requested 
    that the Board define the term ``remote service unit.'' The Board is 
    adopting the term ``remote service unit'' as proposed and without 
    further definition. The Board believes that ``remote service units'' 
    may take a variety of forms, and that defining the term at this time 
    would be premature. The Board notes that the OCC has determined that a 
    ``remote service unit'' includes an automated loan machine and believes 
    that ``remote service units'' may include automated loan machines as 
    well as other arrangements.
        Definition of Capital Stock and Surplus. The Board proposed to 
    define capital stock and surplus in Regulation H to mean Tier 1 and 
    Tier 2 capital, as calculated under the risk-based capital guidelines, 
    plus any allowance for loan and lease losses not already included in 
    Tier 2 capital. The Board proposed applying this definition to all 
    references to capital stock and surplus in the Federal Reserve Act and 
    Regulation H, unless otherwise noted. The Board received one comment 
    that Regulation H should incorporate the term ``capital'' rather than 
    capital stock and surplus because it would help to reduce the 
    historical reference to the more narrow meaning of capital stock and 
    surplus, which related only to part of shareholders' equity accounts. 
    Use of the term capital stock and surplus is appropriate and consistent 
    with the terms of the Federal Reserve Act. Use of the term capital 
    stock and surplus should make it easier for banks to comply with the 
    Board's regulations since the term capital stock and surplus, as 
    defined in the proposal, has been adopted for purposes of section 23A 
    of the Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 371c) which governs transactions 
    between insured depository institutions) and Regulation O (12 CFR 215) 
    (which governs insider lending). All other commenters supported the 
    proposed definition of capital stock and surplus, as well as the use of 
    the term itself, and the Board is adopting the definition and term as 
    proposed.
        Definition of Eligible Bank. The Board proposed a new definition, 
    eligible bank, to serve as the qualification for expedited treatment of 
    membership and branch applications. The Board proposed that eligible 
    bank be defined as a bank that: (a) is well capitalized; (b) has a 
    Uniform Financial Institutions Rating System (CAMELS) rating of 1 or 2 
    (copies are available at the address specified in Sec. 216.6 of this 
    chapter); (c) has a Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) rating of 
    ``Outstanding'' or ``Satisfactory;'' (d) has a compliance rating of 1 
    or 2; and (e) has no major unresolved supervisory issues outstanding as 
    determined by the Board or the appropriate Federal Reserve Bank.
        The Board received one comment that the definition should require a 
    CRA rating of ``Outstanding'' rather than a rating of ``Outstanding'' 
    or ``Satisfactory.'' The commenter opposed allowing banks with 
    ``Satisfactory'' ratings to receive eligible bank status because the 
    commenter stated most banks receive ``Satisfactory'' ratings and 
    because CRA ratings are not a reliable indicator of the bank's CRA 
    performance. The remainder of the commenters supported the definition 
    of eligible bank with one commenter requesting clarification as to 
    whether the Board intended to preclude banks with a compliance rating 
    of three from qualifying as an eligible bank.
        The Board is adopting the definition of eligible bank as proposed. 
    Allowing membership or branch applications from banks with 
    ``Satisfactory'' CRA ratings to qualify for expedited treatment 
    continues prior Board policies and provides for consistency with the 
    OCC's standards for determining whether membership or branch 
    applications should receive expedited treatment. The Board has modified 
    its previous standard for receiving expedited treatment by requiring a 
    compliance rating of 1 or 2 rather than 1, 2, or 3. This change 
    provides consistency with the OCC's definition of eligible bank and is 
    being adopted as proposed.
        If a bank has not yet received compliance or CRA ratings from a 
    bank regulatory authority, which would be necessary for determining 
    whether it is an eligible bank, the Board will look to the bank's 
    holding company for purposes of determining whether the bank's 
    application should receive expedited processing. If the bank's holding 
    company meets the criteria for expedited processing under 
    Sec. 225.14(c) of Regulation Y (12 CFR 225.14(c)), the bank's 
    membership or branch application will be eligible for expedited 
    processing.
        Banks that have not yet received compliance or CRA ratings and that 
    either are not owned by a bank holding company or are owned by a bank 
    holding company that does not meet the criteria for expedited 
    processing under Sec. 225.14(c) of Regulation Y, are not eligible for 
    expedited treatment.
        Definition of Mutual Savings Bank. The Board proposed deleting the 
    definition of mutual savings bank as unnecessary. One commenter opposed 
    deletion of the definition on the basis that deletion ``indirectly 
    suggest[s] that companies should abandon the traditional mutual 
    charter.'' The Board does not believe that removal of the definition 
    carries this implication and is adopting the proposal. The status of 
    mutual savings banks continues to be addressed in Sec. 208.3(a) of 
    Regulation H, concerning applications for membership and stock, as well 
    as in the Board's Regulation I (12 CFR 209), published elsewhere in 
    today's Federal Register, for purposes of determining the amount of 
    Reserve Bank stock mutual savings banks are required to purchase (or in 
    certain special cases the amount of money they must deposit with a 
    Reserve Bank). See 12 CFR 209.4(c).
    Section 208.3  Application and Conditions for Membership
        Publication of Membership Applications. The proposal stated that 
    public comment on membership applications (including conversions) is 
    not expressly required by statute but that publication might allow the 
    Board to obtain additional information or views relevant to a 
    membership application. The Board requested comment as to whether it 
    should require publication for membership applications.
        The Board received comments both supporting and opposing 
    eliminating the publication requirement for membership applications. 
    The majority of commenters favored eliminating the requirement. These 
    commenters stated that no significant information is gained through 
    publication that would
    
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    outweigh the burden it places on banks. Those opposing eliminating the 
    requirement stated that comments may provide useful information in the 
    context of de novo membership applications or that the burden it places 
    on banks is minimal in light of the fact that many banks seek FDIC 
    insurance, which requires a public comment period. The Board is 
    eliminating the requirement that banks seeking to become members of the 
    Federal Reserve System publish notice of membership applications.
        Because membership applications no longer confer deposit insurance, 
    the requirement currently contained in the Board's Rules of Procedure 
    (12 CFR 262.3), which states that banks must publish notice of their 
    membership applications, no longer applies. The Board's Rules of 
    Procedure (12 CFR 262.3) will be amended in the future to reflect the 
    fact that membership no longer automatically confers deposit insurance 
    and to reflect the change that banks no longer need to publish notice 
    of membership applications.
        Processing Time Frames for Expedited Membership Applications. The 
    proposed rule provided that if public comment on membership 
    applications were eliminated, expedited membership applications would 
    be acted on 30 days after receipt of the application. One commenter 
    requested that the Board act on expedited membership applications 
    within 15 days because, under existing guidelines, non-expedited 
    membership applications are acted on within 30 days and expedited 
    membership applications should be acted on sooner than non-expedited 
    membership applications. The Board is adopting a rule under which 
    expedited membership applications will be acted on within 15 days of 
    receipt of the application. Non-expedited membership applications will 
    be acted on promptly, however, in limited situations processing times 
    may be longer if the application involves unusual facts or raises novel 
    policy issues.
        Membership Exams. The proposed rule did not include information 
    concerning the time frame or conditions under which the Federal Reserve 
    will examine banks seeking membership in the Federal Reserve System. 
    One commenter requested that guidance be provided in Regulation H 
    regarding the time frames for, and necessity of, pre-membership 
    examinations of banks. Another commenter requested that the exam 
    guidelines in SR 95-30 be updated. The Board has decided not to 
    incorporate pre-membership examination guidelines into Regulation H 
    because the necessity for, and duration of, examinations depends on the 
    individual circumstances of each bank.
        Conditions of Membership. The proposed rule incorporated a new 
    Sec. 208.3(d) which combined and condensed former Secs. 208.6 and 208.7 
    concerning the general conditions and requirements of membership. The 
    former requirement that the capital and surplus of a State member bank 
    be adequate in relation to its existing and prospective deposit 
    liabilities was modified and placed in proposed Sec. 208.4. Proposed 
    Sec. 208.3(d) also incorporated the provisions of existing Subpart D, 
    ``Standards for Safety and Soundness.''
        In addition, the Board proposed to eliminate existing 
    Sec. 208.6(a), which points out that State member banks retain all 
    charter and statutory rights under state law not preempted by Federal 
    law, and Sec. 208.6(b), which states that State member banks are 
    entitled to all the privileges of membership afforded them under the 
    Federal Reserve Act and other acts of Congress, and must observe all 
    requirements of Federal law. One commenter stated that eliminating 
    existing Sec. 208.6(a) and (b) would create confusion because the 
    sections state important concepts. The Board continues to believe, 
    however, that these propositions are self-evident and do not need to be 
    explicitly stated. Therefore, existing Sec. 208.6(a) and (b) are not 
    included in the final Regulation H.
        Another commenter requested that the term ``general character of a 
    bank's business'' (Sec. 208.3(d)(2)) be defined. The Board believes 
    that providing a definition of the term could result in an unduly 
    restrictive or inflexible definition and, therefore, has not 
    incorporated such a definition in Regulation H.
    Section 208.5  Dividends and Other Distributions
        Proposed Sec. 208.5 revised the existing provisions concerning 
    payment of dividends and withdrawal of capital, previously located at 
    Sec. 208.19. Proposed Sec. 208.5 also incorporated interpretations 
    previously located at Sec. 208.125 through Sec. 208.127. The final rule 
    retains Sec. 208.5 as proposed, however, in the case of dividends in 
    excess of net income for the year, the final rule clarifies that banks 
    generally are not required to carry forward negative amounts resulting 
    from such excess.3 The final rule also contains a cross 
    reference to Sec. 208.45 of Subpart D for purposes of determining 
    restrictions on the payment of capital distributions.
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        \3\ This clarification addresses only earnings deficits that 
    result from dividends declared in excess of net income for the year 
    and does not apply to other types of current earnings deficits. It 
    is consistent with the OCC's letter dated December 22, 1997, and 
    published as Interpretive Letter #816.
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    Section 208.6  Establishment and Maintenance of Branches
        Duration of Comment Period. The Board's proposal requested comment 
    on whether it should shorten the public comment period applicable to 
    branch applications from the 30 days that is currently required to 15 
    days. Those commenters favoring shortening the comment period stated 
    that comments on branch applications rarely raise substantive issues 
    and that shortening the period would serve to reduce regulatory burden 
    on banks. Commenters opposing shortening the comment period stated that 
    shortening the comment period to 15 days would make it difficult for 
    commenters to provide substantive comments to the Board on branch 
    applications. The Board is reducing the public comment period on branch 
    applications from 30 to 15 days but will allow, in its discretion, an 
    extension of the comment period for an additional 15 days.\4\ Sections 
    208.6(a)(3) and (a)(4) describe the new procedural rules for public 
    comment on branch applications, including the new 15 day comment period 
    and the potential 15 day extension. The Board's Rules of Procedure (12 
    CFR 262.3) will continue to describe the form and location for public 
    notices and will be amended in the future to reflect the 15 day comment 
    period applicable to branch applications.
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        \4\ The OCC, in revising its branch application procedures, 
    retained a 30 day comment period for all branch applications other 
    than those involving ``short-distance'' relocations (which 
    relocations, if within the same neighborhood, would not require a 
    branch application under the Board's final rule).
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        Processing Time Frames for Expedited Branch Applications. The 
    proposed rule provided procedures for processing expedited branch 
    applications that were modified slightly from the Board's existing 
    procedures, located in Administrative Letter 92-82 (November 5, 1992). 
    The proposed rule provided that a branch application by an eligible 
    bank would be deemed approved by the Board or the appropriate Reserve 
    Bank five business days after the close of the public comment period, 
    unless the Board or the appropriate Reserve Bank notifies the bank that 
    the application is approved prior to that date or that the bank is not 
    eligible for expedited processing because: (a) it is not an eligible 
    bank; (b) the application contains a material error or is otherwise 
    deficient; or (c) the application or notice
    
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    required under the Board's Rules of Procedure (12 CFR 262.3), raises 
    significant supervisory, Community Reinvestment Act, compliance, policy 
    or legal issues that have not been resolved, or a timely substantive 
    adverse comment is submitted. In addition, the preamble to the proposed 
    rule stated that in no case would an expedited branch application be 
    approved prior to the third day after the close of the public comment 
    period.
        In the final rule, the Board is including in the text of the 
    regulation an express statement that expedited branch applications will 
    not be approved prior to the third day after the close of the public 
    comment period. Waiting until the third day enables the Board, or 
    appropriate Reserve Bank, to determine whether it has received any 
    public comments on the application. In all other respects the 
    processing time frames for expedited branch applications remain the 
    same as proposed. The Board will be amending its Rules of Procedure to 
    incorporate the changes adopted in the final rule.
        Non-expedited branch applications will be processed in accordance 
    with the Board's Applications Procedures Manual.
        Processing Procedures. The proposed rule required branch 
    applications to be filed in accordance with the Board's Rules of 
    Procedure (12 CFR 262.3). One commenter raised a question as to whether 
    eligible banks must file a ``full'' branch application. Both eligible 
    and non-eligible banks must comply with the Board's Rules of Procedure. 
    More in-depth review is expected in non-eligible bank branch 
    applications. Accordingly, the Board may require more extensive 
    information regarding non-eligible bank branch applications than 
    eligible bank branch applications. In particular, the Board pays close 
    attention to areas that have caused the bank to become non-eligible.
        Notification of Branch Opening. Section 208.6(d) of the proposed 
    rule explicitly authorized a single consolidated application for 
    branches that a State member bank plans to establish in a one-year 
    period, provided the bank meets the existing requirement that it notify 
    the appropriate Reserve Bank one week prior to opening any branch 
    covered by the approval. One commenter raised a question as to whether 
    it was necessary for banks to provide prior notification of opening a 
    branch. The Board has reviewed this policy further and concurs with the 
    commenter that prior approval is unnecessary, therefore, Sec. 208.6(d) 
    of the final rule provides for a more flexible time for notification, 
    merely requiring notice within 30 days after opening the branch.
        Branch Closings. The proposed rule established a new Sec. 208.6(e) 
    regarding branch closings, which requires branch closings to comply 
    with section 42 of the FDI Act (12 U.S.C. 1831r-1). Section 42(e) 
    requires notice to both customers and, in the case of insured State 
    member banks, the Board, of proposed branch closings. The proposed rule 
    also clarified that a branch relocation is not a closing for purposes 
    of section 42(e) of the FDI Act. Under section 42(e) of the FDI Act, a 
    branch relocation is a movement that occurs within the immediate 
    neighborhood and that does not substantially affect the nature of the 
    business or customers served.
        One commenter requested that Sec. 208.6(e) refer to the Interagency 
    Policy Statement on Branch Closings. The Board believes that referring 
    to the policy statement in Sec. 208.6(e) would reduce the flexibility 
    inherent in policy statements and, therefore, is not referring to it in 
    Regulation H.
    Section 208.7  Prohibition Against Use of Interstate Branches Primarily 
    for Deposit Production
        The final rule includes the text of existing Sec. 208.28, as issued 
    in final by the Board on September 10, 1997 (62 FR 47727) with an 
    effective date of October 10, 1997. Existing Sec. 208.28 remains 
    unchanged except that it is being renumbered from Sec. 208.28 to 
    Sec. 208.7.
    
    Subpart B--Investments and Loans
    
    Section 208.21  Investments in Premises and Securities
        Investments in Premises. Section 208.21(a) of the proposed rule 
    provided new investment limitations on banks' investments in premises. 
    These new limitations were incorporated into Regulation H as a result 
    of amendments to section 24A of the Federal Reserve Act made by the 
    Economic Growth and Regulatory Paperwork Reduction Act of 1996, Pub. L. 
    104-208, 110 Stat. 3009, (Economic Growth Act). The Economic Growth Act 
    provides that banks may make investments in bank premises if they 
    either: (a) obtain prior approval from the Board; (b) invest less than 
    or equal to the bank's capital stock; or (c) invest less than or equal 
    to 150 percent of the bank's capital and surplus so long as the bank is 
    well-rated and well capitalized and provides the Board with notice no 
    later than 30 days after making the investment. The Economic Growth Act 
    creates investment in premises limits based on banks' ``capital stock'' 
    or ``capital and surplus.'' The proposed rule based the investment 
    limits on the basis of banks' capital stock and surplus, as defined by 
    Sec. 208.2(d) of Regulation H. One commenter stated that limitations on 
    investments in premises for non-well rated and non-well capitalized 
    banks should be based on banks' ``capital stock'' rather than the 
    banks' capital stock and surplus as defined by Regulation H. The 
    commenter stated that liberalizing the investment limit for non-well 
    rated and non-well capitalized banks could result in supervisory 
    concerns, particularly with respect to problem banks.
        The Board believes that basing investment in premises limits on 
    capital stock and surplus could present supervisory problems, 
    therefore, the Board is basing the investment in premises limits on a 
    bank's perpetual preferred stock and related surplus plus common stock 
    plus surplus, as those terms are defined in the FFIEC Consolidated 
    Reports of Condition and Income. If a well rated and well capitalized 
    bank chooses to invest an amount above 150% of its perpetual preferred 
    stock and related surplus plus common stock plus surplus (or, for a 
    non-well-rated and well-capitalized bank, 100% of its perpetual 
    preferred stock and related surplus plus common stock plus surplus) the 
    bank may do so as long as it provides the appropriate Reserve Bank at 
    least 15 days notice prior to making such investments and has not 
    received notice that the investment is subject to further review by the 
    end of the fifteen day notice period.
        Another commenter raised a question as to whether it was necessary 
    for the Board to receive after-the-fact notice of investments in 
    premises that are less than or equal to 150% of banks' perpetual 
    preferred stock and related surplus plus common stock plus surplus as 
    required by Sec. 208.21(a)(3)(ii)(C). The commenter questioned the 
    usefulness of after-the-fact notice of such investments. The Board has 
    concluded that such after-the-fact notice is unnecessary. The Economic 
    Growth Act provides that banks with a CAMELS rating of 1 or 2, as of 
    the most recent examination of the bank, and that are, and continue to 
    be, well capitalized, may make investments in bank premises of less 
    than or equal to 150 percent of the bank's capital and surplus so long 
    as they provide the Board with after-the-fact notice of such 
    investments. Under section 24A the Board also has the authority to 
    grant banks prior approval to make investments in premises. Pursuant to 
    this authority the Board is granting prior approval for state member 
    banks with a CAMELS rating of 1 or 2, as of the most
    
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    recent examination of the bank, and that are, and continue to be, well 
    capitalized, to make investments in bank premises of less than or equal 
    to 150 percent of the bank's perpetual preferred stock and related 
    surplus plus common stock plus surplus without providing the Board with 
    after-the-fact notice of such investments.
        Investments in Securities. The proposal incorporated a new 
    Sec. 208.21(b) which provided guidance to banks regarding permissible 
    investments in securities. For the reasons outlined below under the 
    discussion of the Board's interpretation on Investments in Shares of an 
    Investment Company, the Board is amending Sec. 208.21(b) to clarify 
    generally that, with respect to certain investment company shares and 
    investment securities, a State member bank may look to the OCC's Part 1 
    rules and interpretations to determine whether a security qualifies as 
    an investment security for the purpose of section 24, paragraph 7th, 
    and for the calculations of the limitations applicable to such 
    investments. Section 208.21(b) is also being amended to clarify that a 
    State member bank should consult the Board for determinations with 
    respect to issues concerning investment securities that have not been 
    addressed by the OCC rules and interpretations.
        Voting Stock in a Fiduciary Capacity. The proposed rule contained a 
    footnote, footnote four, which several commenters stated would prevent 
    banks from voting shares of stock in a fiduciary capacity. Footnote 
    four was derived from, and was intended to update, a Board 
    interpretation located at 12 CFR 250.220, which was to be removed. The 
    Board is not including footnote four in the final rule and is retaining 
    the Board interpretation found at 12 CFR 250.220 which states that 
    banks may vote shares of stock if they are acting in a fiduciary 
    capacity.
    
    Subpart C--Bank Securities and Securities-Related Activities
    
    Section 208.34  Recordkeeping and Confirmation of Certain Securities 
    Transactions
        Effected by State Member Banks. The final rule includes the text of 
    existing Sec. 208.24, as issued in final by the Board on March 5, 1997 
    (62 FR 9909), with an effective date of April 1, 1997. Existing 
    Sec. 208.24 remains unchanged except that it is being renumbered from 
    Sec. 208.24 to Sec. 208.34.
    Section 208.35  Qualification Requirements for the Recommendation or 
    Sale of Certain Securities
        The final rule includes a place holder for proposed new 
    Sec. 208.35. The Board is seeking public comment on proposed 
    Sec. 208.35 separately.
    Section 208.37  Government Securities Sales Practices
        The final rule includes the text of existing Sec. 208.25, as issued 
    in final by the Board on March 19, 1997 (62 FR 13275) with an effective 
    date of July 1, 1997. Existing Sec. 208.25 remains unchanged except 
    that it is being renumbered from Sec. 208.25 to Sec. 208.37.
    
    Subpart D--Prompt Corrective Action
    
        The proposed rule did not significantly amend the terms of prior 
    Subpart B other than to redesignate it as Subpart D and to amend 
    Sec. 208.41 to provide the Federal Reserve with the option of using 
    period-end total assets rather than average total assets for purposes 
    of defining total assets. The Board received two comments regarding 
    Subpart D. The first commenter inquired as to whether other 
    governmental agencies allow the option of using period-end total assets 
    rather than average total assets for purposes of defining total assets. 
    In this regard the Board notes that the OCC's definition of total 
    assets, for purposes of its prompt corrective action rule, is the same 
    as the Board's.5
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \5\ 12 CFR 6.2(j).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The second commenter stated that Sec. 208.43(c)(2) should be 
    updated to reflect all applicable CAMELS components. The Board has 
    added ``sensitivity to market risk'' as the final CAMELS component.
    
    Subpart F--Miscellaneous Requirements
    
    Section 208.61  Bank Security Procedures
        Regulation P (12 CFR part 216), as amended by the Board on May 1, 
    1991, is being incorporated into Regulation H at Sec. 208.61. A final 
    rule removing 12 CFR part 216 is found elsewhere in today's Federal 
    Register.
    Section 208.64  Frequency of Examination
        The final rule includes the text of existing Sec. 208.26, as issued 
    in final by the Board on April 2, 1998 (63 FR 16378), also effective on 
    April 2, 1998). Existing Sec. 208.26 remains unchanged except that it 
    is being renumbered from Sec. 208.26 to Sec. 208.64.
    
    Subpart G--Interpretations
    
    Proposed Sec. 208.101  Investments in Federal Agricultural Mortgage 
    Corporation (Farmer Mac) Stock
        This proposed interpretation restated an existing staff opinion 
    6 regarding the permissibility of banks investing in the 
    stock of the Federal Agricultural Mortgage Corporation (Farmer Mac), 
    which is a government agency. One commenter stated that the Board 
    should either provide a complete list of permissible investments in 
    stocks of governmental agencies or provide no list.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \6\ F.R.R.S. 3-447.13 (July 26, 1988).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        In general, banks are prohibited from owning stock pursuant to 
    paragraph seventh of section 5136 of the Revised Statutes (12 U.S.C. 24 
    para. 7th), which was made applicable to State member banks under 
    paragraph 20 of Sec. 9 of the Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 335). 
    Although State member banks are generally prohibited from owning stock, 
    the Board has, in the past, allowed banks to own the stock of certain 
    governmental agencies where Congress has evidenced a clear intention 
    that banks be allowed to hold such stock in order to achieve a 
    legislative purpose. Since decisions regarding permissible stock 
    investments in governmental agencies must be made on a case-by-case 
    basis, the Board has decided not to include proposed Sec. 208.101 in 
    the final rule. However, the Board will retain the existing staff 
    opinion regarding investments in Farmer Mac stock in the Federal 
    Reserve Regulatory Service.
    Proposed Section 208.102  Investments in Shares of an Investment 
    Company
        The Board proposed to retain its existing interpretation, entitled 
    ``Purchase of investment company stock by a State member bank,'' and 
    rename it ``Investments in Shares of an Investment Company,'' and 
    renumber it from Sec. 208.124 to Sec. 208.102. In addition, the Board 
    requested comment as to whether the existing interpretation should be 
    amended to provide an alternative limit for certain diversified 
    investment companies. Under the alternative limit, a bank could elect 
    not to combine its pro rata interest in a particular security held by 
    an investment company with the bank's direct holdings of the security 
    where: (a) the investment company's holdings of the securities of any 
    one issuer do not exceed 5 percent of its total portfolio; and (b) the 
    bank's total holdings of the investment company's shares do not exceed 
    the most stringent limit applicable to any of the securities in the
    
    [[Page 37635]]
    
    company's portfolio if those securities were purchased directly by the 
    bank. This alternative limit is currently available to national banks 
    under OCC rules.
        Several commenters pointed to conflicts between the Board's 
    interpretation and the provisions of the OCC's Part 1 concerning 
    investment company shares and recommended that the Board withdraw its 
    interpretation in order to avoid a conflict with the OCC rules. 
    Alternatively, these commenters supported efforts to conform the 
    Board's interpretation to the OCC's current provisions concerning 
    investment companies, including adoption of the alternative limit and 
    other conforming amendments.
        In addition to differences concerning calculation of limits, the 
    commenters pointed out that the Board's interpretation generally 
    permits investment only in investment companies that are registered 
    with the Securities and Exchange Commission under the Investment 
    Company Act of 1940 and the Securities Act of 1933, while the OCC rule 
    provides for case-by-case consideration of investment companies that 
    are exempt from registration where the portfolio of the investment 
    companies consist entirely of assets that a national bank may purchase 
    and sell for its own account. Commenters also pointed out that the 
    OCC's rule requires only that the portfolio of the investment company 
    consist exclusively of assets that a national bank could purchase 
    directly. The Board's interpretation, on the other hand, requires that 
    limits on the investment company's authority be included in the 
    investment company's prospectus, which one commenter argued prevented 
    State member banks from being able to ``seed'' start-up investment 
    companies where funds were initially invested only in bank eligible 
    securities. The Board's interpretation also differs from the OCC rule 
    in other technical respects and includes requirements that relate to 
    safety and soundness, rather than investment authority.
        The Board believes that State member banks should be permitted to 
    use the alternative method of calculating investment limits available 
    under the OCC's rules for diversified investment companies. 
    Additionally, although the circumstances under which a State member 
    bank may provide funds to ``seed'' an investment company are limited, 
    the Board believes that State member banks should be permitted to do so 
    where the activity is consistent with the Glass-Steagall Act. The Board 
    also notes that its interpretation was not intended to preclude the 
    consideration on a case-by-case basis of investments not covered by its 
    interpretation, including unregistered investment companies.
        With respect to the provisions of the interpretation concerning 
    internal procedures for approval and management of investments in 
    investment companies, guidance issued by Board staff concerning risk 
    management practices related to investment and end-user activities 
    provides more thorough guidance concerning appropriate risk management 
    practices than was available at the time the interpretation was 
    adopted.7 Further, internal procedures and practices 
    discussed in current guidance cover the bank's investment activities 
    generally and are not limited to a particular area. The Board therefore 
    believes that the specific internal procedures required under the 
    Board's interpretation are no longer necessary.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \7\ See SR 95-17 (SUP), March 28, 1995.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Based on the above considerations, the Board has concluded that its 
    existing interpretation, Sec. 208.124 (proposed Sec. 208.102), no 
    longer serves a useful purpose and is rescinding it. The Board is 
    adding language to the Sec. 208.21(b) on investments in securities to 
    clarify generally that, with respect to certain investment company 
    shares and investment securities, a State member bank may look to the 
    OCC's Part 1 rules and interpretations to determine whether a security 
    qualifies as an investment security for the purpose of section 24, 
    paragraph 7th, and for the calculations of the limitations applicable 
    to such investments. Regulation H also is being amended to clarify that 
    a State member bank should consult the Board for determinations with 
    respect to issues concerning investment securities that have not been 
    addressed by the OCC rules and interpretations.
    Section 208.101  Obligations Concerning Institutional Customers
        The final rule includes the text of existing Sec. 208.129, as 
    issued in final by the Board on March 19, 1997 (62 FR 13275). Existing 
    Sec. 208.129 remains unchanged except that it is being renumbered from 
    Sec. 208.129 to Sec. 208.101.
        Investments in operating subsidiaries. Several commenters 
    recommended that the Board rescind its 1968 interpretation concerning 
    ``operations subsidiaries,'' published at 12 CFR 250.141, noting that 
    this interpretation was obsolete. The interpretation states that a 
    State member bank may invest in the shares of a wholly owned 
    ``operations subsidiary'' without violating the provisions of the 
    Glass-Steagall Act concerning the purchase of stock by member banks. At 
    the present time the Board is retaining the existing interpretation 
    regarding ``operations subsidiaries.''
        Miscellaneous. Financial Condition. The Board proposed eliminating 
    existing Sec. 208.17, entitled Disclosure of Financial Information by 
    State member banks, from the proposed Regulation H on the basis that 
    call report information for banks is now available through the 
    internet. In response to this proposal the Board received three 
    comments from Federal Reserve Banks which stated that it was premature 
    to eliminate Sec. 208.17 because a large segment of the public does not 
    have access to the internet. The Board has decided to rescind 
    Sec. 208.17 despite these objections. The Board believes that 
    Sec. 208.17 places a burden on banks by requiring them to make 
    available a potentially unlimited number of copies of statements 
    regarding their financial condition to the public. This burden has been 
    justified in the past because it was the only effective means for the 
    public to obtain information concerning a bank's financial condition. 
    However, now that many private institutions, as well as many public 
    institutions, such as public libraries, offer access to the internet, 
    where such financial information concerning banks can be obtained, the 
    Board does not believe the burden on banks of providing such 
    information continues to be justified, and therefore, is removing 
    existing Sec. 208.17 from the final rule.
    
    Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
    
        Two of the three requirements of a final regulatory flexibility 
    analysis (5 U.S.C. 604), (1) a succinct statement of the need for and 
    the objectives of the rule and (2) a summary of the issues raised by 
    the public comments, the agency's assessment of the issues, and a 
    statement of the changes made in the final rule in response to the 
    comments, are discussed above. The third requirement of a final 
    regulatory flexibility analysis is a description of significant 
    alternatives to the rule that would minimize the rule's economic impact 
    on small entities and reasons why the alternatives were rejected.
        The final amendments will apply to all State member banks, which 
    numbered approximately 997 as of February 1998, regardless of size, and 
    represent changes to the existing rules that should reduce burden for 
    those institutions by reducing regulatory filings, reducing the 
    paperwork burden
    
    [[Page 37636]]
    
    and processing time associated with regulatory filings, reducing the 
    costs associated with complying with regulation, and improving the 
    ability of banks to conduct business on a more cost-efficient basis. 
    For example, the rule is generally designed to reduce burden by 
    removing out-dated material and by re-organizing the remaining material 
    so it is easier to locate and to read.
        The rule also seeks to reduce burden by incorporating expedited 
    procedures for membership and branch applications for certain banks and 
    by reducing the processing period for expedited applications from 5 to 
    3 days after the close of the public comment period. In addition, the 
    rule expands the circumstances under which the Board will consider 
    waivers of conditions of membership, eliminates existing requirements 
    regarding disclosure of financial condition, and eliminates the 
    requirement that banks obtain deposit insurance in order to become 
    State member banks. The rule also provides for an alternate definition 
    of total assets for institutions with rapidly declining asset bases.
        The amendments should not have a negative economic effect on small 
    institutions, and, therefore, there were no significant alternatives 
    that would have minimized the economic impact on those institutions.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 
    3506; 5 CFR Part 1320 Appendix A.1), the Board reviewed the final rule 
    under the authority delegated to the Board by the Office of Management 
    and Budget. The Federal Reserve may not conduct or sponsor, and an 
    organization is not required to respond to, these information 
    collections unless they display a currently valid OMB control number. 
    The OMB control numbers for the affected information collections are 
    7100-0097, 7100-0278, 7100-0046, and 7100-0139.
        The sections of the regulation pertaining to the revised 
    information collections are found in 12 CFR 208.2, 208.3, 208.6, 
    208.21, and 208.22. This information is needed in order for the Federal 
    Reserve System to conduct its supervisory responsibility for state 
    member banks. The respondents and recordkeepers are state member banks. 
    Individual respondent data generally are not regarded as confidential.
        No comments specifically addressing the burden estimate were 
    received. Four existing information collections covered by Regulation H 
    are affected by the changes to the regulation. Fewer Domestic Branch 
    Notifications (FR 4001; OMB No. 7100-0097), which are mandatory, will 
    be submitted resulting from the elimination of the notification 
    requirement for ATMs and certain other offices and from the broadening 
    of the interpretation of ``location.'' The proposed rule also had 
    provided that depository institutions be permitted to file a single 
    notification for prior approval of multiple branches to be established 
    within a year following the notification. The requirement for prior 
    approval was eliminated in the final rule, which only requires 
    notification within thirty days after each branch is opened. Further 
    study, based on an analysis of the types of notifications received in 
    the past, has led the Federal Reserve to increase its initial estimate 
    of the effect of these changes on the annual burden from a decrease of 
    20 percent to more than 50 percent, from 415 to 201 hours.
        The revisions to Regulation H are expected to affect the relative 
    distribution of two of the types of Reports Related to Public Welfare 
    Investments of State Member Banks (OMB No. 7100-0278) that are 
    submitted to the Federal Reserve. The Board is eliminating the 
    requirement that, to avoid applying for Board approval, the investment 
    must be smaller than 2 percent of capital and surplus. This should 
    result in fewer applications and more notices of investments not 
    requiring Board approval. A requirement has been added to the 
    applications for Board approval: if the bank is not permitted to make 
    the investment without Board approval, the institution must explain the 
    reason or reasons why the investment is ineligible. This is expected to 
    increase the burden per response from two and one-half hours to two and 
    three-quarters hours. The estimated burden per response for a notice of 
    investment not requiring Board approval is two hours. There were twenty 
    notices and fourteen applications received during 1997. It is estimated 
    that following the revision there will be twenty-seven notices and 
    seven applications submitted annually. There is estimated to be no 
    effect on the divestiture notice requirements, one of which is expected 
    to be submitted annually. The burden per response for the divestiture 
    notice is estimated to be five hours. Altogether the total amount of 
    annual burden is estimated to be reduced 3 percent from eighty hours to 
    seventy-eight. There is estimated to be no annual cost burden over the 
    annual hour burden and no capital or start-up costs associated with the 
    changes.
        The burden for the Membership Application (FR 2083; OMB No. 7100-
    0046) will experience a minimal reduction in the current annual burden 
    of 3,450 hours, resulting from the elimination of the publication 
    requirement, the broadened authority of the Board to waive the 
    application, and the reduction in the processing time for expedited 
    applications from thirty to fifteen days.
        The final rule contains changes that affect another existing 
    information collection. The proposed rule provided that the Investment 
    in Bank Premises Notification (FR 4014; OMB No. 7100-0139) must be 
    filed by a state member bank whenever it proposes to make an investment 
    in bank premises that results in its total bank premises investment 
    exceeding its capital stock and surplus, or if the bank is well 
    capitalized and in good condition, exceeding 150 percent of its capital 
    stock and surplus. In the final rule, the Board decided to base its 
    analysis on the bank's perpetual preferred stock and related surplus 
    plus common stock plus surplus, which is a more conservative measure 
    than the capital stock and surplus proposed initially. In addition, 
    after-the-fact notification is no longer required from banks for 
    investments within the limits. The net effect of these changes is 
    expected to have a minimal effect on the annual respondent burden for 
    this information collection of eight hours.
        The Federal Reserve has a continuing interest in the public's 
    opinions of our collections of information. At any time, comments 
    regarding the burden estimate, or any other aspect of these collections 
    of information, including suggestions for reducing the burden, may be 
    sent to: Secretary, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 
    20th and C Streets, N.W., Washington, DC 20551; and to the Office of 
    Management and Budget, Paperwork Reduction Project (7100-0097, 7100-
    0278, 7100-0046, or 7100-0139), Washington, DC 20503.
    
    Derivation Table
    
        This table directs readers to the provision(s) of existing 
    Regulation H, if any, upon which the proposed provision is based.
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
              Revised provision                   Original provision        
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    208.1...............................  None                              
    208.2...............................  208.1                             
    208.3(a)............................  208.2                             
    208.3(b)............................  208.4, 208.5                      
    208.3(c)............................  208.5                             
    208.3(d)............................  added                             
    208.3(e)............................  208.7                             
    208.3(f)............................  208.10                            
    208.3(g)............................  208.11                            
    208.4...............................  208.13                            
    208.5...............................  208.19                            
    
    [[Page 37637]]
    
                                                                            
    208.6(a)............................  208.9                             
    208.6(b)............................  None                              
    208.6(c)............................  None                              
    208.6(d)............................  None                              
    208.6(e)............................  208.9(b)(7)                       
    208.6(f)............................  None                              
    208.7...............................  208.28                            
    208.20..............................  None                              
    208.21..............................  None                              
    208.22..............................  208.21                            
    208.23..............................  208.15                            
    208.24..............................  208.8(d)                          
    208.25..............................  208.23                            
    208.30..............................  None                              
    208.31..............................  208.8(f)                          
    208.32..............................  208.8(h), 208.8(i)                
    208.33..............................  208.8(g)                          
    208.34..............................  208.24                            
    208.35..............................  None                              
    208.36..............................  208.16                            
    208.37..............................  208.25                            
    208.40..............................  208.30                            
    208.41..............................  208.31                            
    208.42..............................  208.32                            
    208.43..............................  208.33                            
    208.44..............................  208.34                            
    208.45..............................  208.35                            
    208.50..............................  208.51                            
    208.51..............................  208.52                            
    208.60..............................  None                              
    208.61..............................  None                              
    208.62..............................  208.20                            
    208.63..............................  208.14                            
    208.64..............................  208.26                            
    208.100.............................  208.116                           
    208.101.............................  208.129                           
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    List of Subjects
    
    12 CFR Part 208
    
        Accounting, Agriculture, Banks, Banking, Confidential business 
    information, Crime, Currency, Federal Reserve System, Mortgages, 
    Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Securities.
    
    12 CFR Part 250
    
        Federal Reserve System.
    
        For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Board is amending 
    chapter II of title 12 of the Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
    
    PART 208--MEMBERSHIP OF STATE BANKING INSTITUTIONS IN THE FEDERAL 
    RESERVE SYSTEM (REGULATION H)
    
        1. The authority citation for part 208 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 12 U.S.C. 24, 36, 92a, 93a, 248(a), 248(c), 321-338a, 
    371d, 461, 481-486, 601, 611, 1814, 1816, 1818, 1823(j), 1828(o), 
    1831o, 1831p-1, 1831r-1, 1835a, 1882, 2901-2907, 3105, 3310, 3331-
    3351, and 3906-3909; 15 U.S.C. 78b, 78l(b), 78l(g), 78l(i), 78o-
    4(c)(5), 78q, 78q-1, and 78w; 31 U.S.C. 5318; 42 U.S.C. 4012a, 
    4104a, 4104b, 4106 and 4128.
    
        2. The table of contents to part 208 is revised to read as follows:
    
    Subpart A--General Membership and Branching Requirements
    
    Sec.
    208.1  Authority, purpose, and scope.
    208.2  Definitions.
    208.3  Application and conditions for membership in the Federal 
    Reserve System.
    208.4  Capital adequacy.
    208.5  Dividends and other distributions.
    208.6  Establishment and maintenance of branches.
    208.7  Prohibition against use of interstate branches primarily for 
    deposit production.
    
    Subpart B--Investments and Loans
    
    208.20  Authority, purpose, and scope.
    208.21  Investments in premises and securities.
    208.22  Community development and public welfare investments.
    208.23  Agricultural loan loss amortization.
    208.24  Letters of credit and acceptances.
    208.25  Loans in areas having special flood hazards.
    
    Subpart C--Bank Securities and Securities-Related Activities
    
    208.30  Authority, purpose, and scope.
    208.31  State member banks as transfer agents.
    208.32  Notice of disciplinary sanctions imposed by registered 
    clearing agency.
    208.33  Application for stay or review of disciplinary sanctions 
    imposed by registered clearing agency.
    208.34  Recordkeeping and confirmation of certain securities 
    transactions effected by State member banks.
    208.35  Qualification requirements for transactions in certain 
    securities. [Reserved]
    208.36  Reporting requirements for State member banks subject to the 
    Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
    208.37  Government securities sales practices.
    
    Subpart D--Prompt Corrective Action
    
    208.40  Authority, purpose, scope, other supervisory authority, and 
    disclosure of capital categories.
    208.41  Definitions for purposes of this subpart.
    208.42  Notice of capital category.
    208.43  Capital measures and capital category definitions.
    208.44  Capital restoration plans.
    208.45  Mandatory and discretionary supervisory actions under 
    section 38.
    
    Subpart E--Real Estate Lending and Appraisal Standards
    
    208.50  Authority, purpose, and scope.
    208.51  Real estate lending standards.
    
    Subpart F--Miscellaneous Requirements
    
    208.60  Authority, purpose, and scope.
    208.61  Bank security procedures.
    208.62  Suspicious activity reports.
    208.63  Procedures for monitoring Bank Secrecy Act compliance.
    208.64  Frequency of examination.
    
    Subpart G--Interpretations
    
    208.100  Sale of bank's money orders off premises as establishment 
    of branch office.
    208.101  Obligations concerning institutional customers.
    
    Appendix A to Part 208--Capital Adequacy Guidelines for State Member 
    Banks: Risk-Based Measure
    
    Appendix B to Part 208--Capital Adequacy Guidelines for State Member 
    Banks: Tier 1 Leverage Measure
    
    Appendix C to Part 208--Interagency Guidelines for Real Estate Lending 
    Policies
    
    Appendix D to Part 208--Interagency Guidelines Establishing Standards 
    for Safety and Soundness
    
    Appendix E to Part 208--Capital Adequacy Guidelines for State Member 
    Banks: Market Risk Measure
    
        3. Subparts A through E are revised and Subparts F and G are added 
    to read as follows:
    
    Subpart A--General Membership and Branching Requirements
    
    
    Sec. 208.1  Authority, purpose, and scope.
    
        (a) Authority. Subpart A of Regulation H (12 CFR part 208, Subpart 
    A) is issued by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System 
    (Board) under 12 U.S.C. 24, 36; sections 9, 11, 21, 25 and 25A of the 
    Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 321-338a, 248(a), 248(c), 481-486, 601 
    and 611); sections 1814, 1816, 1818, 1831o, 1831p-1, 1831r-1 and 1835a 
    of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (FDI Act) (12 U.S.C. 1814, 1816, 
    1818, 1831o, 1831p-1, 1831r-1, and 1835); and 12 U.S.C. 3906-3909.
        (b) Purpose and scope of Part 208. The requirements of this part 
    208 govern State member banks and state banks applying for admission to 
    membership in the Federal Reserve System (System) under section 9 of 
    the Federal Reserve Act (Act), except for Sec. 208.7, which also 
    applies to certain foreign banks licensed by a State. This part 208 
    does not govern banks eligible for membership under section 2 or 19 of 
    the Act.1 Any bank desiring to be admitted to the System 
    under the provisions of section 2 or 19 should communicate with the 
    Federal Reserve
    
    [[Page 37638]]
    
    Bank with which it would like to become a member.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \1\ Under section 2 of the Federal Reserve Act, every national 
    bank in any state shall, upon commencing business, or within 90 days 
    after admission into the Union of the State in which it is located, 
    become a member of the System. Under section 19 of the Federal 
    Reserve Act, national banks and banks organized under local laws, 
    located in a dependency or insular possession or any part of the 
    United States outside of the States of the United States and the 
    District of Columbia, are not required to become members of the 
    System but may, with the consent of the board, become members of the 
    System.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (c) Purpose and scope of Subpart A. This Subpart A describes the 
    eligibility requirements for membership of state-chartered banking 
    institutions in the System, the general conditions imposed upon 
    members, including capital and dividend requirements, as well as the 
    requirements for establishing and maintaining branches.
    
    
    Sec. 208.2  Definitions.
    
        For the purposes of this part:
        (a) Board of Directors means the governing board of any institution 
    performing the usual functions of a board of directors.
        (b) Board means the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve 
    System.
        (c) Branch. (1) Branch means any branch bank, branch office, branch 
    agency, additional office, or any branch place of business that 
    receives deposits, pays checks, or lends money. A branch may include a 
    temporary, seasonal, or mobile facility that meets these criteria.
        (2) Branch does not include:
        (i) A loan origination facility where the proceeds of loans are not 
    disbursed;
        (ii) An office of an affiliated or unaffiliated institution that 
    provides services to customers of the member bank on behalf of the 
    member bank so long as the institution is not established or operated 
    by the bank;
        (iii) An automated teller machine;
        (iv) A remote service unit;
        (v) A facility to which the bank does not permit members of the 
    public to have physical access for purposes of making deposits, paying 
    checks, or borrowing money (such as an office established by the bank 
    that receives deposits only through the mail); or
        (vi) A facility that is located at the site of, or is an extension 
    of, an approved main office or branch. The Board determines whether a 
    facility is an extension of an existing main or branch office on a 
    case-by-case basis.
        (d) Capital stock and surplus means, unless otherwise provided in 
    this part, or by statute, Tier 1 and Tier 2 capital included in a 
    member bank's risk-based capital (under the guidelines in appendix A of 
    this part) and the balance of a member bank's allowance for loan and 
    lease losses not included in its Tier 2 capital for calculation of 
    risk-based capital, based on the bank's most recent consolidated Report 
    of Condition and Income filed under 12 U.S.C. 324.
        (e) Eligible bank means a member bank that:
        (1) Is well capitalized as defined in subpart D of this part;
        (2) Has a composite Uniform Financial Institutions Rating System 
    (CAMELS) rating of 1 or 2;
        (3) Has a Community Reinvestment Act (CRA) (12 U.S.C. 2906) rating 
    of ``Outstanding'' or ``Satisfactory;''
        (4) Has a compliance rating of 1 or 2; and
        (5) Has no major unresolved supervisory issues outstanding (as 
    determined by the Board or appropriate Federal Reserve Bank in its 
    discretion).
        (f) State bank means any bank incorporated by special law of any 
    State, or organized under the general laws of any State, or of the 
    United States, including a Morris Plan bank, or other incorporated 
    banking institution engaged in a similar business.
        (g) State member bank or member bank means a state bank that is a 
    member of the Federal Reserve System.
    
    
    Sec. 208.3  Application and conditions for membership in the Federal 
    Reserve System.
    
        (a) Applications for membership and stock. (1) State banks applying 
    for membership in the Federal Reserve System shall file with the 
    appropriate Federal Reserve Bank an application for membership in the 
    Federal Reserve System and for stock in the Reserve Bank,2 
    in accordance with this part and Sec. 262.3 of the Rules of Procedure, 
    located at 12 CFR 262.3.
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        \2\ A mutual savings bank not authorized to purchase Federal 
    Reserve Bank stock may apply for membership evidenced initially by a 
    deposit, but if the laws under which the bank is organized are not 
    amended at the first session of the legislature after its admission 
    to authorize the purchase, or if the bank fails to purchase the 
    stock within six months of the amendment, its membership shall be 
    terminated.
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        (2) Board approval. If an applying bank conforms to all the 
    requirements of the Federal Reserve Act and this section, and is 
    otherwise qualified for membership, the Board may approve its 
    application subject to such conditions as the Board may prescribe.
        (3) Effective date of membership. A State bank becomes a member of 
    the Federal Reserve System on the date its Federal Reserve Bank stock 
    is credited to its account (or its deposit is accepted, if it is a 
    mutual savings bank not authorized to purchase Reserve Bank stock) in 
    accordance with the Board's Regulation I (12 CFR part 209).
        (b) Factors considered in approving applications for membership. 
    Factors given special consideration by the Board in passing upon an 
    application are:
        (1) Financial condition and management. The financial history and 
    condition of the applying bank and the general character of its 
    management.
        (2) Capital. The adequacy of the bank's capital in accordance with 
    Sec. 208.4, and its future earnings prospects.
        (3) Convenience and needs. The convenience and needs of the 
    community.
        (4) Corporate powers. Whether the bank's corporate powers are 
    consistent with the purposes of the Federal Reserve Act.
        (c) Expedited approval for eligible banks and bank holding 
    companies. (1) Availability of expedited treatment. The expedited 
    membership procedures described in paragraph (c)(2) of this section are 
    available to:
        (i) An eligible bank; and
        (ii) A bank that cannot be determined to be an eligible bank 
    because it has not received compliance or CRA ratings from a bank 
    regulatory authority, if it is controlled by a bank holding company 
    that meets the criteria for expedited processing under Sec. 225.14(c) 
    of Regulation Y (12 CFR 225.14(c)).
        (2) Expedited procedures. A completed membership application filed 
    with the appropriate Reserve Bank will be deemed approved on the 
    fifteenth day after receipt of the complete application by the Board or 
    appropriate Reserve Bank, unless the Board or the appropriate Reserve 
    Bank notifies the bank that the application is approved prior to that 
    date or the Board or the appropriate Federal Reserve Bank notifies the 
    bank that the application is not eligible for expedited review for any 
    reason, including, without limitation, that:
        (i) The bank will offer banking services that are materially 
    different from those currently offered by the bank, or by the 
    affiliates of the proposed bank;
        (ii) The bank or bank holding company does not meet the criteria 
    under Sec. 208.3(c)(1);
        (iii) The application contains a material error or is otherwise 
    deficient; or
        (iv) The application raises significant supervisory, compliance, 
    policy or legal issues that have not been resolved, or a timely 
    substantive adverse comment is submitted. A comment will be considered 
    substantive unless it involves individual complaints, or raises 
    frivolous, previously considered, or wholly unsubstantiated claims or 
    irrelevant issues.
        (d) Conditions of membership. (1) Safety and soundness. Each member 
    bank shall at all times conduct its business and exercise its powers 
    with due regard to safety and soundness. (The Interagency Guidelines 
    Establishing Standards for Safety and Soundness prescribed pursuant to 
    section 39 of the FDI Act (12 U.S.C.
    
    [[Page 37639]]
    
    1831p-1), as set forth as appendix D to this part apply to all member 
    banks.)
        (2) General character of bank's business. A member bank may not, 
    without the permission of the Board, cause or permit any change in the 
    general character of its business or in the scope of the corporate 
    powers it exercises at the time of admission to membership.
        (3) Compliance with conditions of membership. Each member bank 
    shall comply at all times with this Regulation H (12 CFR part 208) and 
    any other conditions of membership prescribed by the Board.
        (e) Waivers. (1) Conditions of membership. A member bank may 
    petition the Board to waive a condition of membership. The Board may 
    grant a waiver of a condition of membership upon a showing of good 
    cause and, in its discretion, may limit, among other items, the scope, 
    duration, and timing of the waiver.
        (2) Reports of affiliates. Pursuant to section 21 of the Federal 
    Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 486), the Board waives the requirement for the 
    submission of reports of affiliates of member banks, unless such 
    reports are specifically requested by the Board.
        (f) Voluntary withdrawal from membership. Voluntary withdrawal from 
    membership becomes effective upon cancellation of the Federal Reserve 
    Bank stock held by the member bank, and after the bank has made due 
    provision to pay any indebtedness due or to become due to the Federal 
    Reserve Bank in accordance with the Board's Regulation I (12 CFR part 
    209).
    
    
    Sec. 208.4  Capital adequacy.
    
        (a) Adequacy. A member bank's capital, as defined in appendix A to 
    this part, shall be at all times adequate in relation to the character 
    and condition of its assets and to its existing and prospective 
    liabilities and other corporate responsibilities. If at any time, in 
    light of all the circumstances, the bank's capital appears inadequate 
    in relation to its assets, liabilities, and responsibilities, the bank 
    shall increase the amount of its capital, within such period as the 
    Board deems reasonable, to an amount which, in the judgment of the 
    Board, shall be adequate.
        (b) Standards for evaluating capital adequacy. Standards and 
    guidelines by which the Board evaluates the capital adequacy of member 
    banks include those in appendices A and E to this part for risk-based 
    capital purposes and appendix B to this part for leverage measurement 
    purposes.
    
    
    Sec. 208.5  Dividends and other distributions.
    
        (a) Definitions. For the purposes of this section:
        (1) Capital surplus means the total of surplus as reportable in the 
    bank's Reports of Condition and Income and surplus on perpetual 
    preferred stock.
        (2) Permanent capital means the total of the bank's perpetual 
    preferred stock and related surplus, common stock and surplus, and 
    minority interest in consolidated subsidiaries, as reportable in the 
    Reports of Condition and Income.
        (b) Limitations. The limitations in this section on the payment of 
    dividends and withdrawal of capital apply to all cash and property 
    dividends or distributions on common or preferred stock. The 
    limitations do not apply to dividends paid in the form of common stock.
        (c) Earnings limitations on payment of dividends. (1) A member bank 
    may not declare or pay a dividend if the total of all dividends 
    declared during the calendar year, including the proposed dividend, 
    exceeds the sum of the bank's net income (as reportable in its Reports 
    of Condition and Income) during the current calendar year and the 
    retained net income of the prior two calendar years, unless the 
    dividend has been approved by the Board.
        (2) ``Retained net income'' in a calendar year is equal to the 
    bank's net income (as reported in its Report of Condition and Income 
    for such year), less any dividends declared during such 
    year.3 The bank's net income during the current year and its 
    retained net income from the prior two calendar years is reduced by any 
    net losses incurred in the current or prior two years and any required 
    transfers to surplus or to a fund for the retirement of preferred 
    stock.4
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        \3\ In the case of dividends in excess of net income for the 
    year, a bank generally is not required to carry forward negative 
    amounts resulting from such excess. Instead, the bank may attribute 
    the excess to the prior two years, attributing the excess first to 
    the earlier year and then to the immediately preceding year. If the 
    excess is greater than the bank's previously undistributed net 
    income for the preceding two years, prior Board approval of the 
    dividend is required and a negative amount would be carried forward 
    in future dividend calculations. However, in determining any such 
    request for approval, the Board could consider any request for 
    different treatment of such negative amount, including advance 
    waivers for future periods. This applies only to earnings deficits 
    that result from dividends declared in excess of net income for the 
    year and does not apply to other types of current earnings deficits.
        \4\ State member banks are required to comply with state law 
    provisions concerning the maintenance of surplus funds in addition 
    to common capital. Where the surplus of a State member bank is less 
    than what applicable state law requires the bank to maintain 
    relative to its capital stock account, the bank may be required to 
    transfer amounts from its undivided profits account to surplus.
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        (d) Limitation on withdrawal of capital by dividend or otherwise. 
    (1) A member bank may not declare or pay a dividend if the dividend 
    would exceed the bank's undivided profits as reportable on its Reports 
    of Condition and Income, unless the bank has received the prior 
    approval of the Board and of at least two-thirds of the shareholders of 
    each class of stock outstanding.
        (2) A member bank may not permit any portion of its permanent 
    capital to be withdrawn unless the withdrawal has been approved by the 
    Board and by at least two-thirds of the shareholders of each class of 
    stock outstanding.
        (3) If a member bank has capital surplus in excess of that required 
    by law, the excess amount may be transferred to the bank's undivided 
    profits account and be available for the payment of dividends if:
        (i) The amount transferred came from the earnings of prior periods, 
    excluding earnings transferred as a result of stock dividends;
        (ii) The bank's board of directors approves the transfer of funds; 
    and
        (iii) The transfer has been approved by the Board.
        (e) Payment of capital distributions. All member banks also are 
    subject to the restrictions on payment of capital distributions 
    contained in Sec. 208.45 of subpart D of this part implementing section 
    38 of the FDI Act (12 U.S.C. 1831o).
        (f) Compliance. A member bank shall use the date a dividend is 
    declared to determine compliance with this section.
    
    
    Sec. 208.6  Establishment and maintenance of branches.
    
        (a) Branching. (1) To the extent authorized by state law, a member 
    bank may establish and maintain branches (including interstate 
    branches) subject to the same limitations and restrictions that apply 
    to the establishment and maintenance of national bank branches (12 
    U.S.C. 36 and 1831u), except that approval of such branches shall be 
    obtained from the Board rather than from the Comptroller of the 
    Currency.
        (2) Branch applications. A State member bank wishing to establish a 
    branch in the United States or its territories must file an application 
    in accordance with the Board's Rules of Procedure, located at 12 CFR 
    262.3, and must comply with the public notice and comment rules 
    contained in paragraphs (a)(3) and (a)(4) of this section. Branches of 
    member banks located in foreign nations, in the overseas territories, 
    dependencies, and insular possessions of those nations and of the 
    United States, and in the Commonwealth of
    
    [[Page 37640]]
    
    Puerto Rico, are subject to the Board's Regulation K (12 CFR part 211).
        (3) Public notice of branch applications. (i) Location of 
    publication. A State member bank wishing to establish a branch in the 
    United States or its territories must publish notice in a newspaper of 
    general circulation in the form and at the locations specified in 
    Sec. 262.3 of the Rules of Procedure (12 CFR 262.3).
        (ii) Contents of notice. The newspaper notice referred to in 
    paragraph (a)(3) of this section shall provide an opportunity for 
    interested persons to comment on the application for a period of at 
    least 15 days.
        (iii) Timing of publication. Each newspaper notice shall be 
    published no more than 7 calendar days before and no later than the 
    calendar day on which an application is filed with the appropriate 
    Reserve Bank.
        (4) Public comment. (i) Timely comments. Interested persons may 
    submit information and comments regarding a branch application under 
    Sec. 208.6. A comment shall be considered timely for purposes of this 
    subpart if the comment, together with all supplemental information, is 
    submitted in writing in accordance with the Board's Rules of Procedure 
    (12 CFR 262.3) and received by the Board or the appropriate Reserve 
    Bank prior to the expiration of the public comment period provided in 
    paragraph (a)(3)(ii) of this section.
        (ii) Extension of comment period. The Board may, in its discretion, 
    extend the public comment period regarding any application under 
    Sec. 208.6. In the event that an interested person requests a copy of 
    an application submitted under Sec. 208.6, the Board may, in its 
    discretion and based on the facts and circumstances, grant such person 
    an extension of the comment period for up to 15 calendar days.
        (b) Factors considered in approving domestic branch applications. 
    Factors given special consideration by the Board in passing upon a 
    branch application are:
        (1) Financial condition and management. The financial history and 
    condition of the applying bank and the general character of its 
    management;
        (2) Capital. The adequacy of the bank's capital in accordance with 
    Sec. 208.4, and its future earnings prospects;
        (3) Convenience and needs. The convenience and needs of the 
    community to be served by the branch;
        (4) CRA performance. In the case of branches with deposit-taking 
    capability, the bank's performance under the Community Reinvestment Act 
    (12 U.S.C. 2901 et seq.) and Regulation BB (12 CFR part 228); and
        (5) Investment in bank premises. Whether the bank's investment in 
    bank premises in establishing the branch is consistent with 
    Sec. 208.21.
        (c) Expedited approval for eligible banks and bank holding 
    companies. (1) Availability of expedited treatment. The expedited 
    branch application procedures described in paragraph (c)(2) of this 
    section are available to:
        (i) An eligible bank; and
        (ii) A bank that cannot be determined to be an eligible bank 
    because it has not received compliance or CRA ratings from a bank 
    regulatory authority, if it is controlled by a bank holding company 
    that meets the criteria for expedited processing under Sec. 225.14(c) 
    of Regulation Y (12 CFR 225.14(c)).
        (2) Expedited procedures. A completed domestic branch application 
    filed with the appropriate Reserve Bank will be deemed approved on the 
    fifth day after the close of the comment period, unless the Board or 
    the appropriate Reserve Bank notifies the bank that the application is 
    approved prior to that date (but in no case will an application be 
    approved before the third day after the close of the public comment 
    period) or the Board or the appropriate Federal Reserve Bank notifies 
    the bank that the application is not eligible for expedited review for 
    any reason, including, without limitation, that:
        (i) The bank or bank holding company does not meet the criteria 
    under Sec. 208.6(c)(1);
        (ii) The application contains a material error or is otherwise 
    deficient; or
        (iii) The application or the notice required under paragraph (a)(3) 
    of this section, raises significant supervisory, Community Reinvestment 
    Act, compliance, policy or legal issues that have not been resolved, or 
    a timely substantive adverse comment is submitted. A comment will be 
    considered substantive unless it involves individual complaints, or 
    raises frivolous, previously considered, or wholly unsubstantiated 
    claims or irrelevant issues.
        (d) Consolidated Applications. (1) Proposed branches; notice of 
    branch opening. A member bank may seek approval in a single application 
    or notice for any branches that it proposes to establish within one 
    year after the approval date. The bank shall, unless notification is 
    waived, notify the appropriate Reserve Bank not later than 30 days 
    after opening any branch approved under a consolidated application. A 
    bank is not required to open a branch approved under either a 
    consolidated or single branch application.
        (2) Duration of branch approval. Branch approvals remain valid for 
    one year unless the Board or the appropriate Reserve Bank notifies the 
    bank that in its judgment, based on reports of condition, examinations, 
    or other information, there has been a change in the bank's condition, 
    financial or otherwise, that warrants reconsideration of the approval.
        (e) Branch closings. A member bank shall comply with section 42 of 
    the FDI Act (FDI Act), 12 U.S.C. 1831r-1, with regard to branch 
    closings.
        (f) Branch relocations. A relocation of an existing branch does not 
    require filing a branch application. A relocation of an existing 
    branch, for purposes of determining whether to file a branch 
    application, is a movement that does not substantially affect the 
    nature of the branch's business or customers served.
    
    
    Sec. 208.7  Prohibition against use of interstate branches primarily 
    for deposit production.
    
        (a) Purpose and scope--(1) Purpose. The purpose of this section is 
    to implement section 109 (12 U.S.C. 1835a) of the Riegle-Neal 
    Interstate Banking and Branching Efficiency Act of 1994 (Interstate 
    Act).
        (2) Scope. (i) This section applies to any State member bank that 
    has operated a covered interstate branch for a period of at least one 
    year, and any foreign bank that has operated a covered interstate 
    branch licensed by a State for a period of at least one year.
        (ii) This section describes the requirements imposed under 12 
    U.S.C. 1835a, which requires the appropriate Federal banking agencies 
    (the Board, the Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, and the 
    Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation) to prescribe uniform rules that 
    prohibit a bank from using any authority to engage in interstate 
    branching pursuant to the Interstate Act, or any amendment made by the 
    Interstate Act to any other provision of law, primarily for the purpose 
    of deposit production.
        (b) Definitions. For purposes of this section, the following 
    definitions apply:
        (1) Bank means, unless the context indicates otherwise:
        (i) A State member bank as that term is defined in 12 U.S.C. 
    1813(d)(2); and
        (ii) A foreign bank as that term is defined in 12 U.S.C. 3101(7) 
    and 12 CFR 211.21.
        (2) Covered interstate branch means any branch of a State member 
    bank, and any uninsured branch of a foreign bank licensed by a State, 
    that:
    
    [[Page 37641]]
    
        (i) Is established or acquired outside the bank's home state 
    pursuant to the interstate branching authority granted by the 
    Interstate Act or by any amendment made by the Interstate Act to any 
    other provision of law; or
        (ii) Could not have been established or acquired outside of the 
    bank's home state but for the establishment or acquisition of a branch 
    described in paragraph (b)(2)(i) of this section.
        (3) Home state means:
        (i) With respect to a state bank, the state that chartered the 
    bank;
        (ii) With respect to a national bank, the state in which the main 
    office of the bank is located; and
        (iii) With respect to a foreign bank, the home state of the foreign 
    bank as determined in accordance with 12 U.S.C. 3103(c) and 12 CFR 
    211.22.
        (4) Host state means a state in which a bank establishes or 
    acquires a covered interstate branch.
        (5) Host state loan-to-deposit ratio generally means, with respect 
    to a particular host state, the ratio of total loans in the host state 
    relative to total deposits from the host state for all banks (including 
    institutions covered under the definition of ``bank'' in 12 U.S.C. 
    1813(a)(1)) that have that state as their home state, as determined and 
    updated periodically by the appropriate Federal banking agencies and 
    made available to the public.
        (6) State means state as that term is defined in 12 U.S.C. 
    1813(a)(3).
        (7) Statewide loan-to-deposit ratio means, with respect to a bank, 
    the ratio of the bank's loans to its deposits in a state in which the 
    bank has one or more covered interstate branches, as determined by the 
    Board.
        (c) Loan-to-deposit ratio screen--(1) Application of screen. 
    Beginning no earlier than one year after a bank establishes or acquires 
    a covered interstate branch, the Board will consider whether the bank's 
    statewide loan-to-deposit ratio is less than 50 percent of the relevant 
    host state loan-to-deposit ratio.
        (2) Results of screen. (i) If the Board determines that the bank's 
    statewide loan-to-deposit ratio is 50 percent or more of the host state 
    loan-to-deposit ratio, no further consideration under this section is 
    required.
        (ii) If the Board determines that the bank's statewide loan-to-
    deposit ratio is less than 50 percent of the host state loan-to-deposit 
    ratio, or if reasonably available data are insufficient to calculate 
    the bank's statewide loan-to-deposit ratio, the Board will make a 
    credit needs determination for the bank as provided in paragraph (d) of 
    this section.
        (d) Credit needs determination--(1) In general. The Board will 
    review the loan portfolio of the bank and determine whether the bank is 
    reasonably helping to meet the credit needs of the communities in the 
    host state that are served by the bank.
        (2) Guidelines. The Board will use the following considerations as 
    guidelines when making the determination pursuant to paragraph (d)(1) 
    of this section:
        (i) Whether covered interstate branches were formerly part of a 
    failed or failing depository institution;
        (ii) Whether covered interstate branches were acquired under 
    circumstances where there was a low loan-to-deposit ratio because of 
    the nature of the acquired institution's business or loan portfolio;
        (iii) Whether covered interstate branches have a high concentration 
    of commercial or credit card lending, trust services, or other 
    specialized activities, including the extent to which the covered 
    interstate branches accept deposits in the host state;
        (iv) The Community Reinvestment Act ratings received by the bank, 
    if any, under 12 U.S.C. 2901 et seq.;
        (v) Economic conditions, including the level of loan demand, within 
    the communities served by the covered interstate branches;
        (vi) The safe and sound operation and condition of the bank; and
        (vii) The Board's Regulation BB--Community Reinvestment (12 CFR 
    part 228) and interpretations of that regulation.
        (e) Sanctions--(1) In general. If the Board determines that a bank 
    is not reasonably helping to meet the credit needs of the communities 
    served by the bank in the host state, and that the bank's statewide 
    loan-to-deposit ratio is less than 50 percent of the host state loan-
    to-deposit ratio, the Board:
        (i) May order that a bank's covered interstate branch or branches 
    be closed unless the bank provides reasonable assurances to the 
    satisfaction of the Board, after an opportunity for public comment, 
    that the bank has an acceptable plan under which the bank will 
    reasonably help to meet the credit needs of the communities served by 
    the bank in the host state; and
        (ii) Will not permit the bank to open a new branch in the host 
    state that would be considered to be a covered interstate branch unless 
    the bank provides reasonable assurances to the satisfaction of the 
    Board, after an opportunity for public comment, that the bank will 
    reasonably help to meet the credit needs of the community that the new 
    branch will serve.
        (2) Notice prior to closure of a covered interstate branch. Before 
    exercising the Board's authority to order the bank to close a covered 
    interstate branch, the Board will issue to the bank a notice of the 
    Board's intent to order the closure and will schedule a hearing within 
    60 days of issuing the notice.
        (3) Hearing. The Board will conduct a hearing scheduled under 
    paragraph (e)(2) of this section in accordance with the provisions of 
    12 U.S.C. 1818(h) and 12 CFR part 263.
    
    Subpart B--Investments and Loans
    
    
    Sec. 208.20  Authority, purpose, and scope.
    
        (a) Authority. Subpart B of Regulation H (12 CFR part 208, subpart 
    B) is issued by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System 
    under 12 U.S.C. 24; sections 9, 11 and 21 of the Federal Reserve Act 
    (12 U.S.C. 321-338a, 248(a), 248(c), and 481-486); sections 1814, 1816, 
    1818, 1823(j), 1831o, 1831p-1 and 1831r-1 of the FDI Act (12 U.S.C. 
    1814, 1816, 1818, 1823(j), 1831o, 1831p-1 and 1831r-1); and the 
    National Flood Insurance Act of 1968 and the Flood Disaster Protection 
    Act of 1973, as amended (42 U.S.C. 4001-4129).
        (b) Purpose and scope. This subpart B describes certain investment 
    limitations on member banks, statutory requirements for amortizing 
    losses on agricultural loans and extending credit in areas having 
    special flood hazards, as well as the requirements for issuing letters 
    of credit and acceptances.
    
    
    Sec. 208.21  Investments in premises and securities.
    
        (a) Investment in bank premises. No state member bank shall invest 
    in bank premises, or in the stock, bonds, debentures, or other such 
    obligations of any corporation holding the premises of such bank, or 
    make loans to or upon the security of any such corporation unless:
        (1) The bank notifies the appropriate Reserve Bank at least fifteen 
    days prior to such investment and has not received notice that the 
    investment is subject to further review by the end of the fifteen day 
    notice period;
        (2) The aggregate of all such investments and loans, together with 
    the amount of any indebtedness incurred by any such corporation that is 
    an affiliate of the bank (as defined in section 2 of the Banking Act of 
    1933, as amended, 12 U.S.C. 221a), is less than or equal to the bank's 
    perpetual preferred stock and related surplus plus common stock plus 
    surplus, as those terms are defined in the FFIEC Consolidated Reports 
    of Condition and Income; or
        (3)(i) The aggregate of all such investments and loans, together 
    with the
    
    [[Page 37642]]
    
    amount of any indebtedness incurred by any such corporation that is an 
    affiliate of the bank, is less than or equal to 150 percent of the 
    bank's perpetual preferred stock and related surplus plus common stock 
    plus surplus, as those terms are defined in the FFIEC Consolidated 
    Reports of Condition and Income; and
        (ii) The bank:
        (A) Has a CAMELS composite rating of 1 or 2 under the Uniform 
    Interagency Bank Rating System 5 (or an equivalent rating 
    under a comparable rating system) as of the most recent examination of 
    the bank; and
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        \5\ See FRRS 3-1575 for an explanation of the Uniform 
    Interagency Bank Rating System. (For availability, see 12 CFR 
    261.10(f).)
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (B) Is well capitalized and will continue to be well capitalized, 
    in accordance with subpart D of this part, after the investment or 
    loan.
        (b) Investments in securities. Member banks are subject to the same 
    limitations and conditions with respect to purchasing, selling, 
    underwriting, and holding investment securities and stocks as are 
    national banks under 12 U.S.C. 24, para. 7th. To determine whether an 
    obligation qualifies as an investment security for the purposes of 12 
    U.S.C. 24, para. 7th, and to calculate the limits with respect to the 
    purchase of such obligations, a state member bank may look to part 1 of 
    the rules of the Comptroller of the Currency (12 CFR part 1) and 
    interpretations thereunder. A state member bank may consult the Board 
    for a determination with respect to the application of 12 U.S.C. 24, 
    para. 7th, with respect to issues not addressed in 12 CFR part 1. The 
    provisions of 12 CFR part 1 do not provide authority for a state member 
    bank to purchase securities of a type or amount that the bank is not 
    authorized to purchase under applicable state law.
    
    
    Sec. 208.22  Community development and public welfare investments.
    
        (a) Definitions. For purposes of this section:
        (1) Low- or moderate-income area means:
        (i) One or more census tracts in a Metropolitan Statistical Area 
    where the median family income adjusted for family size in each census 
    tract is less than 80 percent of the median family income adjusted for 
    family size of the Metropolitan Statistical Area; or
        (ii) If not in a Metropolitan Statistical Area, one or more census 
    tracts or block-numbered areas where the median family income adjusted 
    for family size in each census tract or block-numbered area is less 
    than 80 percent of the median family income adjusted for family size of 
    the State.
        (2) Low- and moderate-income persons has the same meaning as low- 
    and moderate-income persons as defined in 42 U.S.C. 5302(a)(20)(A).
        (3) Small business means a business that meets the size-eligibility 
    standards of 13 CFR 121.802(a)(2).
        (b) Investments not requiring prior Board approval. Notwithstanding 
    the provisions of section 5136 of the Revised Statutes (12 U.S.C. 24, 
    para. 7th) made applicable to member banks by paragraph 20 of section 9 
    of the Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 335), a member bank may make an 
    investment, without prior Board approval, if the following conditions 
    are met:
        (1) The investment is in a corporation, limited partnership, or 
    other entity, and:
        (i) The Board has determined that an investment in that entity or 
    class of entities is a public welfare investment under paragraph 23 of 
    section 9 of the Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 338a), or a community 
    development investment under Regulation Y (12 CFR 225.25(b)(6)); or
        (ii) The Comptroller of the Currency has determined, by order or 
    regulation, that an investment in that entity by a national bank is a 
    public welfare investment under section 5136 of the Revised Statutes 
    (12 U.S.C. 24 (Eleventh)); or
        (iii) The entity is a community development financial institution 
    as defined in section 103(5) of the Community Development Banking and 
    Financial Institutions Act of 1994 (12 U.S.C. 4702(5)); or
        (iv) The entity, directly or indirectly, engages solely in or makes 
    loans solely for the purposes of one or more of the following community 
    development activities:
        (A) Investing in, developing, rehabilitating, managing, selling, or 
    renting residential property if a majority of the units will be 
    occupied by low- and moderate-income persons, or if the property is a 
    ``qualified low-income building'' as defined in section 42(c)(2) of the 
    Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C. 42(c)(2));
        (B) Investing in, developing, rehabilitating, managing, selling, or 
    renting nonresidential real property or other assets located in a low- 
    or moderate-income area and targeted towards low- and moderate-income 
    persons;
        (C) Investing in one or more small businesses located in a low- or 
    moderate-income area to stimulate economic development;
        (D) Investing in, developing, or otherwise assisting job training 
    or placement facilities or programs that will be targeted towards low- 
    and moderate-income persons;
        (E) Investing in an entity located in a low- or moderate-income 
    area if the entity creates long-term employment opportunities, a 
    majority of which (based on full-time equivalent positions) will be 
    held by low- and moderate-income persons; and
        (F) Providing technical assistance, credit counseling, research, 
    and program development assistance to low- and moderate-income persons, 
    small businesses, or nonprofit corporations to help achieve community 
    development;
        (2) The investment is permitted by state law;
        (3) The investment will not expose the member bank to liability 
    beyond the amount of the investment;
        (4) The aggregate of all such investments of the member bank does 
    not exceed the sum of five percent of its capital stock and surplus;
        (5) The member bank is well capitalized or adequately capitalized 
    under Secs. 208.43(b) (1) and (2);
        (6) The member bank received a composite CAMELS rating of ``1'' or 
    ``2'' under the Uniform Financial Institutions Rating System as of its 
    most recent examination and an overall rating of ``1'' or ``2'' as of 
    its most recent consumer compliance examination; and
        (7) The member bank is not subject to any written agreement, cease-
    and-desist order, capital directive, prompt-corrective-action 
    directive, or memorandum of understanding issued by the Board or a 
    Federal Reserve Bank.
        (c) Notice to Federal Reserve Bank. Not more than 30 days after 
    making an investment under paragraph (b) of this section, the member 
    bank shall advise its Federal Reserve Bank of the investment, including 
    the amount of the investment and the identity of the entity in which 
    the investment is made.
        (d) Investments requiring Board approval. (1) With prior Board 
    approval, a member bank may make public welfare investments under 
    paragraph 23 of section 9 of the Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 338a), 
    other than those specified in paragraph (b) of this section.
        (2) Requests for Board approval under this paragraph (d) shall 
    include, at a minimum:
        (i) The amount of the proposed investment;
        (ii) A description of the entity in which the investment is to be 
    made;
        (iii) An explanation of why the investment is a public welfare 
    investment under paragraph 23 of section 9 of the Federal Reserve Act 
    (12 U.S.C. 338a);
    
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        (iv) A description of the member bank's potential liability under 
    the proposed investment;
        (v) The amount of the member bank's aggregate outstanding public 
    welfare investments under paragraph 23 of section 9 of the Federal 
    Reserve Act;
        (vi) The amount of the member bank's capital stock and surplus; and
        (vii) If the bank investment is not eligible under paragraph (b) of 
    this section, explain the reason or reasons why it is ineligible.
        (3) The Board shall act on a request under this paragraph (d) 
    within 60 calendar days of receipt of a request that meets the 
    requirements of paragraph (d)(2) of this section, unless the Board 
    notifies the requesting member bank that a longer time period will be 
    required.
        (e) Divestiture of investments. A member bank shall divest itself 
    of an investment made under paragraph (b) or (d) of this section to the 
    extent that the investment exceeds the scope of, or ceases to meet, the 
    requirements of paragraphs (b)(1) through (b)(4) or paragraph (d) of 
    this section. The divestiture shall be made in the manner specified in 
    12 CFR 225.140, Regulation Y, for interests acquired by a lending 
    subsidiary of a bank holding company or the bank holding company itself 
    in satisfaction of a debt previously contracted.
    
    
    Sec. 208.23  Agricultural loan loss amortization.
    
        (a) Definitions. For purposes of this section:
        (1) Accepting official means:
        (i) The Reserve Bank in whose district the bank is located; or
        (ii) The Director of the Division of Banking Supervision and 
    Regulation in cases in which the Reserve Bank cannot determine that the 
    bank qualifies.
        (2) Agriculturally related other property means any property, real 
    or personal, that the bank owned on January 1, 1983, and any additional 
    property that it acquired prior to January 1, 1992, in connection with 
    a qualified agricultural loan. For the purposes of paragraph (d) of 
    this section, the value of such property shall include the amount 
    previously charged off as a loss.
        (3) Participating bank means an agricultural bank (as defined in 12 
    U.S.C. 1823(j)(4)(A)) that, as of January 1, 1992, had a proposal for a 
    capital restoration plan accepted by an accepting official and received 
    permission from the accepting official, subject to paragraphs (d) and 
    (e) of this section, to amortize losses in accordance with paragraphs 
    (b) and (c) of this section.
        (4) Qualified agricultural loan means:
        (i) Loans that finance agricultural production or are secured by 
    farm land for purposes of Schedule RC-C of the FFIEC Consolidated 
    Report of Condition or such other comparable schedule;
        (ii) Loans secured by farm machinery;
        (iii) Other loans that a bank proves to be sufficiently related to 
    agriculture for classification as an agricultural loan by the Board; 
    and
        (iv) The remaining unpaid balance of any loans described in 
    paragraphs (a)(4) (i), (ii) and (iii) of this section that have been 
    charged off since January 1, 1984, and that qualify for deferral under 
    this section.
        (b)(1) Provided there is no evidence that the loss resulted from 
    fraud or criminal abuse on the part of the bank, the officers, 
    directors, or principal shareholders, a participating bank may amortize 
    in its Reports of Condition and Income:
        (i) Any loss on a qualified agricultural loan that the bank would 
    be required to reflect in its financial statements for any period 
    between and including 1984 and 1991; or
        (ii) Any loss that the bank would be required to reflect in its 
    financial statements for any period between and including 1983 and 1991 
    resulting from a reappraisal or sale of agriculturally-related other 
    property.
        (2) Amortization under this section shall be computed over a period 
    not to exceed seven years on a quarterly straight-line basis commencing 
    in the first quarter after the loan was or is charged off so as to be 
    fully amortized not later than December 31, 1998.
        (c) Accounting for amortization. Any bank that is permitted to 
    amortize losses in accordance with paragraph (b) of this section may 
    restate its capital and other relevant accounts and account for future 
    authorized deferrals and authorizations in accordance with the 
    instructions to the FFIEC Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income. 
    Any resulting increase in the capital account shall be included in 
    qualifying capital pursuant to appendix A of this part.
        (d) Conditions of participation. In order for a bank to maintain 
    its status as a participating bank, it shall:
        (1) Adhere to the approved capital plan and obtain the prior 
    approval of the accepting official before making any modifications to 
    the plan;
        (2) Maintain accounting records for each asset subject to loss 
    deferral under the program that document the amount and timing of the 
    deferrals, repayments, and authorizations;
        (3) Maintain the financial condition of the bank so that it does 
    not deteriorate to the point where it is no longer a viable, 
    fundamentally sound institution;
        (4) Make a reasonable effort, consistent with safe and sound 
    banking practices, to maintain in its loan portfolio a percentage of 
    agricultural loans, including agriculturally-related other property, 
    not less than the percentage of such loans in its loan portfolio on 
    January 1, 1986; and
        (5) Provide the accepting official, upon request, with any 
    information the accepting official deems necessary to monitor the 
    bank's amortization, its compliance with the conditions of 
    participation, and its continued eligibility.
        (e) Revocation of eligibility for loss amortization. The failure to 
    comply with any condition in an acceptance, with the capital 
    restoration plan, or with the conditions stated in paragraph (d) of 
    this section, is grounds for revocation of acceptance for loss 
    amortization and for an administrative action against the bank under 12 
    U.S.C. 1818(b). In addition, acceptance of a bank for loss amortization 
    shall not foreclose any administrative action against the bank that the 
    Board may deem appropriate.
        (f) Expiration date. The terms of this section will no longer be in 
    effect as of January 1, 1999.
    
    
    Sec. 208.24  Letters of credit and acceptances.
    
        (a) Standby letters of credit. For the purpose of this section, 
    standby letters of credit include every letter of credit (or similar 
    arrangement however named or designated) that represents an obligation 
    to the beneficiary on the part of the issuer:
        (1) To repay money borrowed by or advanced to or for the account of 
    the account party; or
        (2) To make payment on account of any evidence of indebtedness 
    undertaken by the account party; or
        (3) To make payment on account of any default by the party 
    procuring the issuance of the letter of credit in the performance of an 
    obligation.6
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \6\ A standby letter of credit does not include: (1) Commercial 
    letters of credit and similar instruments, where the issuing bank 
    expects the beneficiary to draw upon the issuer, and which do not 
    guaranty payment of a money obligation; or (2) a guaranty or similar 
    obligation issued by a foreign branch in accordance with and subject 
    to the limitations of 12 CFR part 211 (Regulation K).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (b) Ineligible acceptance. An ineligible acceptance is a time draft 
    accepted by a bank, which does not meet the requirements for discount 
    with a Federal Reserve Bank.
        (c) Bank's lending limits. Standby letters of credit and ineligible
    
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    acceptances count toward member banks' lending limits imposed by state 
    law.
        (d) Exceptions. A standby letter of credit or ineligible acceptance 
    is not subject to the restrictions set forth in paragraph (c) of this 
    section if prior to or at the time of issuance of the credit:
        (1) The issuing bank is paid an amount equal to the bank's maximum 
    liability under the standby letter of credit; or
        (2) The party procuring the issuance of a letter of credit or 
    ineligible acceptance has set aside sufficient funds in a segregated, 
    clearly earmarked deposit account to cover the bank's maximum liability 
    under the standby letter of credit or ineligible acceptance.
    
    
    Sec. 208.25  Loans in areas having special flood hazards.
    
        (a) Purpose and scope. (1) Purpose. The purpose of this section is 
    to implement the requirements of the National Flood Insurance Act of 
    1968 and the Flood Disaster Protection Act of 1973, as amended (42 
    U.S.C. 4001-4129).
        (2) Scope. This section, except for paragraphs (f) and (h) of this 
    section, applies to loans secured by buildings or mobile homes located 
    or to be located in areas determined by the Director of the Federal 
    Emergency Management Agency to have special flood hazards. Paragraphs 
    (f) and (h) of this section apply to loans secured by buildings or 
    mobile homes, regardless of location.
        (b) Definitions. For purposes of this section:
        (1) Act means the National Flood Insurance Act of 1968, as amended 
    (42 U.S.C. 4001-4129).
        (2) Building means a walled and roofed structure, other than a gas 
    or liquid storage tank, that is principally above ground and affixed to 
    a permanent site, and a walled and roofed structure while in the course 
    of construction, alteration, or repair.
        (3) Community means a State or a political subdivision of a State 
    that has zoning and building code jurisdiction over a particular area 
    having special flood hazards.
        (4) Designated loan means a loan secured by a building or mobile 
    home that is located or to be located in a special flood hazard area in 
    which flood insurance is available under the Act.
        (5) Director of FEMA means the Director of the Federal Emergency 
    Management Agency.
        (6) Mobile home means a structure, transportable in one or more 
    sections, that is built on a permanent chassis and designed for use 
    with or without a permanent foundation when attached to the required 
    utilities. The term mobile home does not include a recreational 
    vehicle. For purposes of this section, the term mobile home means a 
    mobile home on a permanent foundation. The term mobile home includes a 
    manufactured home as that term is used in the National Flood Insurance 
    Program.
        (7) NFIP means the National Flood Insurance Program authorized 
    under the Act.
        (8) Residential improved real estate means real estate upon which a 
    home or other residential building is located or to be located.
        (9) Servicer means the person responsible for:
        (i) Receiving any scheduled, periodic payments from a borrower 
    under the terms of a loan, including amounts for taxes, insurance 
    premiums, and other charges with respect to the property securing the 
    loan; and
        (ii) Making payments of principal and interest and any other 
    payments from the amounts received from the borrower as may be required 
    under the terms of the loan.
        (10) Special flood hazard area means the land in the flood plain 
    within a community having at least a one percent chance of flooding in 
    any given year, as designated by the Director of FEMA.
        (11) Table funding means a settlement at which a loan is funded by 
    a contemporaneous advance of loan funds and an assignment of the loan 
    to the person advancing the funds.
        (c) Requirement to purchase flood insurance where available. (1) In 
    general. A member bank shall not make, increase, extend, or renew any 
    designated loan unless the building or mobile home and any personal 
    property securing the loan is covered by flood insurance for the term 
    of the loan. The amount of insurance must be at least equal to the 
    lesser of the outstanding principal balance of the designated loan or 
    the maximum limit of coverage available for the particular type of 
    property under the Act. Flood insurance coverage under the Act is 
    limited to the overall value of the property securing the designated 
    loan minus the value of the land on which the property is located.
        (2) Table funded loans. A member bank that acquires a loan from a 
    mortgage broker or other entity through table funding shall be 
    considered to be making a loan for the purposes of this section.
        (d) Exemptions. The flood insurance requirement prescribed by 
    paragraph (c) of this section does not apply with respect to:
        (1) Any State-owned property covered under a policy of self-
    insurance satisfactory to the Director of FEMA, who publishes and 
    periodically revises the list of States falling within this exemption; 
    or
        (2) Property securing any loan with an original principal balance 
    of $5,000 or less and a repayment term of one year or less.
        (e) Escrow requirement. If a member bank requires the escrow of 
    taxes, insurance premiums, fees, or any other charges for a loan 
    secured by residential improved real estate or a mobile home that is 
    made, increased, extended, or renewed after October 1, 1996, the member 
    bank shall also require the escrow of all premiums and fees for any 
    flood insurance required under paragraph (c) of this section. The 
    member bank, or a servicer acting on its behalf, shall deposit the 
    flood insurance premiums on behalf of the borrower in an escrow 
    account. This escrow account will be subject to escrow requirements 
    adopted pursuant to section 10 of the Real Estate Settlement Procedures 
    Act of 1974 (12 U.S.C. 2609) (RESPA), which generally limits the amount 
    that may be maintained in escrow accounts for certain types of loans 
    and requires escrow account statements for those accounts, only if the 
    loan is otherwise subject to RESPA. Following receipt of a notice from 
    the Director of FEMA or other provider of flood insurance that premiums 
    are due, the member bank, or a servicer acting on its behalf, shall pay 
    the amount owed to the insurance provider from the escrow account by 
    the date when such premiums are due.
        (f) Required use of standard flood hazard determination form. (1) 
    Use of form. A member bank shall use the standard flood hazard 
    determination form developed by the Director of FEMA (as set forth in 
    appendix A of 44 CFR part 65) when determining whether the building or 
    mobile home offered as collateral security for a loan is or will be 
    located in a special flood hazard area in which flood insurance is 
    available under the Act. The standard flood hazard determination form 
    may be used in a printed, computerized, or electronic manner.
        (2) Retention of form. A member bank shall retain a copy of the 
    completed standard flood hazard determination form, in either hard copy 
    or electronic form, for the period of time the bank owns the loan.
        (g) Forced placement of flood insurance. If a member bank, or a 
    servicer acting on behalf of the bank, determines at any time during 
    the term of a designated loan that the building or mobile home and any 
    personal property securing the designated loan is not covered by flood 
    insurance or is covered
    
    [[Page 37645]]
    
    by flood insurance in an amount less than the amount required under 
    paragraph (c) of this section, then the bank or its servicer shall 
    notify the borrower that the borrower should obtain flood insurance, at 
    the borrower's expense, in an amount at least equal to the amount 
    required under paragraph (c) of this section, for the remaining term of 
    the loan. If the borrower fails to obtain flood insurance within 45 
    days after notification, then the member bank or its servicer shall 
    purchase insurance on the borrower's behalf. The member bank or its 
    servicer may charge the borrower for the cost of premiums and fees 
    incurred in purchasing the insurance.
        (h) Determination fees. (1) General. Notwithstanding any Federal or 
    State law other than the Flood Disaster Protection Act of 1973, as 
    amended (42 U.S.C. 4001-4129), any member bank, or a servicer acting on 
    behalf of the bank, may charge a reasonable fee for determining whether 
    the building or mobile home securing the loan is located or will be 
    located in a special flood hazard area. A determination fee may also 
    include, but is not limited to, a fee for life-of-loan monitoring.
        (2) Borrower fee. The determination fee authorized by paragraph 
    (h)(1) of this section may be charged to the borrower if the 
    determination:
        (i) Is made in connection with a making, increasing, extending, or 
    renewing of the loan that is initiated by the borrower;
        (ii) Reflects the Director of FEMA's revision or updating of flood 
    plain areas or flood-risk zones;
        (iii) Reflects the Director of FEMA's publication of a notice or 
    compendium that:
        (A) Affects the area in which the building or mobile home securing 
    the loan is located; or
        (B) By determination of the Director of FEMA, may reasonably 
    require a determination whether the building or mobile home securing 
    the loan is located in a special flood hazard area;
        (iv) Results in the purchase of flood insurance coverage by the 
    lender or its servicer on behalf of the borrower under paragraph (g) of 
    this section.
        (3) Purchaser or transferee fee. The determination fee authorized 
    by paragraph (h)(1) of this section may be charged to the purchaser or 
    transferee of a loan in the case of the sale or transfer of the loan.
        (i) Notice of special flood hazards and availability of Federal 
    disaster relief assistance. When a member bank makes, increases, 
    extends, or renews a loan secured by a building or a mobile home 
    located or to be located in a special flood hazard area, the bank shall 
    mail or deliver a written notice to the borrower and to the servicer in 
    all cases whether or not flood insurance is available under the Act for 
    the collateral securing the loan.
        (1) Contents of notice. The written notice must include the 
    following information:
        (i) A warning, in a form approved by the Director of FEMA, that the 
    building or the mobile home is or will be located in a special flood 
    hazard area;
        (ii) A description of the flood insurance purchase requirements set 
    forth in section 102(b) of the Flood Disaster Protection Act of 1973, 
    as amended (42 U.S.C. 4012a(b));
        (iii) A statement, where applicable, that flood insurance coverage 
    is available under the NFIP and may also be available from private 
    insurers; and
        (iv) A statement whether Federal disaster relief assistance may be 
    available in the event of damage to the building or mobile home caused 
    by flooding in a Federally declared disaster.
        (2) Timing of notice. The member bank shall provide the notice 
    required by paragraph (i)(1) of this section to the borrower within a 
    reasonable time before the completion of the transaction, and to the 
    servicer as promptly as practicable after the bank provides notice to 
    the borrower and in any event no later than the time the bank provides 
    other similar notices to the servicer concerning hazard insurance and 
    taxes. Notice to the servicer may be made electronically or may take 
    the form of a copy of the notice to the borrower.
        (3) Record of receipt. The member bank shall retain a record of the 
    receipt of the notices by the borrower and the servicer for the period 
    of time the bank owns the loan.
        (4) Alternate method of notice. Instead of providing the notice to 
    the borrower required by paragraph (i)(1) of this section, a member 
    bank may obtain satisfactory written assurance from a seller or lessor 
    that, within a reasonable time before the completion of the sale or 
    lease transaction, the seller or lessor has provided such notice to the 
    purchaser or lessee. The member bank shall retain a record of the 
    written assurance from the seller or lessor for the period of time the 
    bank owns the loan.
        (5) Use of prescribed form of notice. A member bank will be 
    considered to be in compliance with the requirement for notice to the 
    borrower of this paragraph (i) by providing written notice to the 
    borrower containing the language presented in appendix A of this 
    section within a reasonable time before the completion of the 
    transaction. The notice presented in appendix A of this section 
    satisfies the borrower notice requirements of the Act.
        (j) Notice of servicer's identity. (1) Notice requirement. When a 
    member bank makes, increases, extends, renews, sells, or transfers a 
    loan secured by a building or mobile home located or to be located in a 
    special flood hazard area, the bank shall notify the Director of FEMA 
    (or the Director's designee) in writing of the identity of the servicer 
    of the loan. The Director of FEMA has designated the insurance provider 
    to receive the member bank's notice of the servicer's identity. This 
    notice may be provided electronically if electronic transmission is 
    satisfactory to the Director of FEMA's designee.
        (2) Transfer of servicing rights. The member bank shall notify the 
    Director of FEMA (or the Director's designee) of any change in the 
    servicer of a loan described in paragraph (j)(1) of this section within 
    60 days after the effective date of the change. This notice may be 
    provided electronically if electronic transmission is satisfactory to 
    the Director of FEMA's designee. Upon any change in the servicing of a 
    loan described in paragraph (j)(1) of this section, the duty to provide 
    notice under this paragraph (j)(2) shall transfer to the transferee 
    servicer.
    
    Appendix A to Sec. 208.25 Sample Form of Notice
    
    Notice of Special Flood Hazards and Availability of Federal Disaster 
    Relief Assistance
    
        We are giving you this notice to inform you that:
        The building or mobile home securing the loan for which you have 
    applied is or will be located in an area with special flood hazards.
        The area has been identified by the Director of the Federal 
    Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) as a special flood hazard area 
    using FEMA's Flood Insurance Rate Map or the Flood Hazard Boundary 
    Map for the following community: ____________________. This area has 
    a one percent (1%) chance of a flood equal to or exceeding the base 
    flood elevation (a 100-year flood) in any given year. During the 
    life of a 30-year mortgage loan, the risk of a 100-year flood in a 
    special flood hazard area is 26 percent (26%).
        Federal law allows a lender and borrower jointly to request the 
    Director of FEMA to review the determination of whether the property 
    securing the loan is located in a special flood hazard area. If you 
    would like to make such a request, please contact us for further 
    information.
        ______ The community in which the property securing the loan is 
    located participates in the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP). 
    Federal law will not allow us to make you the loan that you have 
    applied for if you do not purchase flood
    
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    insurance. The flood insurance must be maintained for the life of 
    the loan. If you fail to purchase or renew flood insurance on the 
    property, Federal law authorizes and requires us to purchase the 
    flood insurance for you at your expense.
         Flood insurance coverage under the NFIP may be 
    purchased through an insurance agent who will obtain the policy 
    either directly through the NFIP or through an insurance company 
    that participates in the NFIP. Flood insurance also may be available 
    from private insurers that do not participate in the NFIP.
         At a minimum, flood insurance purchased must cover the 
    lesser of:
        (1) the outstanding principal balance of the loan; or
        (2) the maximum amount of coverage allowed for the type of 
    property under the NFIP.
        Flood insurance coverage under the NFIP is limited to the 
    overall value of the property securing the loan minus the value of 
    the land on which the property is located.
         Federal disaster relief assistance (usually in the form 
    of a low-interest loan) may be available for damages incurred in 
    excess of your flood insurance if your community's participation in 
    the NFIP is in accordance with NFIP requirements.
        ______Flood insurance coverage under the NFIP is not available 
    for the property securing the loan because the community in which 
    the property is located does not participate in the NFIP. In 
    addition, if the non-participating community has been identified for 
    at least one year as containing a special flood hazard area, 
    properties located in the community will not be eligible for Federal 
    disaster relief assistance in the event of a Federally declared 
    flood disaster.
    
    Subpart C--Bank Securities and Securities-Related Activities
    
    
    Sec. 208.30  Authority, purpose, and scope.
    
        (a) Authority. Subpart C of Regulation H (12 CFR part 208, subpart 
    C) is issued by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System 
    under 12 U.S.C. 24, 92a, 93a; sections 1818 and 1831p-1(a)(2) of the 
    FDI Act (12 U.S.C. 1818, 1831p-1(a)(2)); and sections 78b, 78l(b), 
    78l(g), 78l(i), 78o-4(c)(5), 78o-5, 78q, 78q-1, and 78w of the 
    Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78b, 78l(b), 78l(g), 78l(i), 
    78o-4(c)(5), 78o-5, 78q, 78q-1, 78w).
        (b) Purpose and scope. This subpart C describes the requirements 
    imposed upon member banks acting as transfer agents, registered 
    clearing agencies, or sellers of securities under the Securities 
    Exchange Act of 1934. This subpart C also describes the reporting 
    requirements imposed on member banks whose securities are subject to 
    registration under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
    
    
    Sec. 208.31  State member banks as transfer agents.
    
        (a) The rules adopted by the Securities and Exchange Commission 
    (SEC) pursuant to section 17A of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 
    (15 U.S.C. 78q-l) prescribing procedures for registration of transfer 
    agents for which the SEC is the appropriate regulatory agency (17 CFR 
    240.17Ac2-1) apply to member bank transfer agents. References to the 
    ``Commission'' are deemed to refer to the Board.
        (b) The rules adopted by the SEC pursuant to section 17A 
    prescribing operational and reporting requirements for transfer agents 
    (17 CFR 240.17Ac2-2 and 240.17Ad-1 through 240.17Ad-16) apply to member 
    bank transfer agents.
    
    
    Sec. 208.32  Notice of disciplinary sanctions imposed by registered 
    clearing agency.
    
        (a) Notice requirement. Any member bank or any of its subsidiaries 
    that is a registered clearing agency pursuant to section 17A(b) of the 
    Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (the Act), and that:
        (1) Imposes any final disciplinary sanction on any participant 
    therein;
        (2) Denies participation to any applicant; or
        (3) Prohibits or limits any person in respect to access to services 
    offered by the clearing agency, shall file with the Board (and the 
    appropriate regulatory agency, if other than the Board, for a 
    participant or applicant) notice thereof in the manner prescribed in 
    this section.
        (b) Notice of final disciplinary actions. (1) Any registered 
    clearing agency for which the Board is the appropriate regulatory 
    agency that takes any final disciplinary action with respect to any 
    participant shall promptly file a notice thereof with the Board in 
    accordance with paragraph (c) of this section. For the purposes of this 
    paragraph (b), final disciplinary action means the imposition of any 
    disciplinary sanction pursuant to section 17A(b)(3)(G) of the Act, or 
    other action of a registered clearing agency which, after notice and 
    opportunity for hearing, results in final disposition of charges of:
        (i) One or more violations of the rules of the registered clearing 
    agency; or
        (ii) Acts or practices constituting a statutory disqualification of 
    a type defined in paragraph (iv) or (v) (except prior convictions) of 
    section 3(a)(39) of the Act.
        (2) However, if a registered clearing agency fee schedule specifies 
    certain charges for errors made by its participants in giving 
    instructions to the registered clearing agency which are de minimis on 
    a per error basis, and whose purpose is, in part, to provide revenues 
    to the clearing agency to compensate it for effort expended in 
    beginning to process an erroneous instruction, such error charges shall 
    not be considered a final disciplinary action for purposes of this 
    paragraph (b).
        (c) Contents of final disciplinary action notice. Any notice filed 
    pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section shall consist of the 
    following, as appropriate:
        (1) The name of the respondent and the respondent's last known 
    address, as reflected on the records of the clearing agency, and the 
    name of the person, committee, or other organizational unit that 
    brought the charges. However, identifying information as to any 
    respondent found not to have violated a provision covered by a charge 
    may be deleted insofar as the notice reports the disposition of that 
    charge and, prior to the filing of the notice, the respondent does not 
    request that identifying information be included in the notice;
        (2) A statement describing the investigative or other origin of the 
    action;
        (3) As charged in the proceeding, the specific provision or 
    provisions of the rules of the clearing agency violated by the 
    respondent, or the statutory disqualification referred to in paragraph 
    (b)(2) of this section, and a statement describing the answer of the 
    respondent to the charges;
        (4) A statement setting forth findings of fact with respect to any 
    act or practice in which the respondent was charged with having engaged 
    in or omitted; the conclusion of the clearing agency as to whether the 
    respondent violated any rule or was subject to a statutory 
    disqualification as charged; and a statement of the clearing agency in 
    support of its resolution of the principal issues raised in the 
    proceedings;
        (5) A statement describing any sanction imposed, the reasons 
    therefor, and the date upon which the sanction became or will become 
    effective; and
        (6) Such other matters as the clearing agency may deem relevant.
        (d) Notice of final denial, prohibition, termination or limitation 
    based on qualification or administrative rules. (1) Any registered 
    clearing agency, for which the Board is the appropriate regulatory 
    agency, that takes any final action that denies or conditions the 
    participation of any person, or prohibits or limits access, to services 
    offered by the clearing agency, shall promptly file notice thereof with 
    the Board (and the appropriate regulatory agency, if other than the 
    Board, for the affected person) in accordance with paragraph (e) of 
    this section; but such action shall not be
    
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    considered a final disciplinary action for purposes of paragraph (b) of 
    this section where the action is based on an alleged failure of such 
    person to:
        (i) Comply with the qualification standards prescribed by the rules 
    of the registered clearing agency pursuant to section 17A(b)(4)(B) of 
    the Act; or
        (ii) Comply with any administrative requirements of the registered 
    clearing agency (including failure to pay entry or other dues or fees, 
    or to file prescribed forms or reports) not involving charges of 
    violations that may lead to a disciplinary sanction.
        (2) However, no such action shall be considered final pursuant to 
    this paragraph (d) that results merely from a notice of such failure to 
    comply to the person affected, if such person has not sought an 
    adjudication of the matter, including a hearing, or otherwise exhausted 
    the administrative remedies within the registered clearing agency with 
    respect to such a matter.
        (e) Contents of notice required by paragraph (d) of this section. 
    Any notice filed pursuant to paragraph (d) of this section shall 
    consist of the following, as appropriate:
        (1) The name of each person concerned and each person's last known 
    address, as reflected in the records of the clearing agency;
        (2) The specific grounds upon which the action of the clearing 
    agency was based, and a statement describing the answer of the person 
    concerned;
        (3) A statement setting forth findings of fact and conclusions as 
    to each alleged failure of the person to comply with qualification 
    standards or administrative obligations, and a statement of the 
    clearing agency in support of its resolution of the principal issues 
    raised in the proceeding;
        (4) The date upon which such action became or will become 
    effective; and
        (5) Such other matters as the clearing agency deems relevant.
        (f) Notice of final action based on prior adjudicated statutory 
    disqualifications. Any registered clearing agency for which the Board 
    is the appropriate regulatory agency that takes any final action shall 
    promptly file notice thereof with the Board (and the appropriate 
    regulatory agency, if other than the Board, for the affected person) in 
    accordance with paragraph (g) of this section, where the final action:
        (1) Denies or conditions participation to any person, or prohibits 
    or limits access to services offered by the clearing agency; and
        (2) Is based upon a statutory disqualification of a type defined in 
    paragraph (A), (B) or (C) of section 3(a)(39) of the Act, consisting of 
    a prior conviction, as described in subparagraph (E) of section 
    3(a)(39) of the Act. However, no such action shall be considered final 
    pursuant to this paragraph (f) that results merely from a notice of 
    such disqualification to the person affected, if such person has not 
    sought an adjudication of the matter, including a hearing, or otherwise 
    exhausted the administrative remedies within the clearing agency with 
    respect to such a matter.
        (g) Contents of notice required by paragraph (f) of this section. 
    Any notice filed pursuant to paragraph (f) of this section shall 
    consist of the following, as appropriate:
        (1) The name of each person concerned and each person's last known 
    address, as reflected in the records of the clearing agency;
        (2) A statement setting forth the principal issues raised, the 
    answer of any person concerned, and a statement of the clearing agency 
    in support of its resolution of the principal issues raised in the 
    proceeding;
        (3) Any description furnished by or on behalf of the person 
    concerned of the activities engaged in by the person since the 
    adjudication upon which the disqualification is based;
        (4) A copy of the order or decision of the court, appropriate 
    regulatory agency, or self-regulatory organization that adjudicated the 
    matter giving rise to the statutory disqualification;
        (5) The nature of the action taken and the date upon which such 
    action is to be made effective; and
        (6) Such other matters as the clearing agency deems relevant.
        (h) Notice of summary suspension of participation. Any registered 
    clearing agency for which the Board is the appropriate regulatory 
    agency that summarily suspends or closes the accounts of a participant 
    pursuant to the provisions of section 17A(b)(5)(C) of the Act shall, 
    within one business day after such action becomes effective, file 
    notice thereof with the Board and the appropriate regulatory agency for 
    the participant, if other than the Board, of such action in accordance 
    with paragraph (i) of this section.
        (i) Contents of notice of summary suspension. Any notice pursuant 
    to paragraph (h) of this section shall contain at least the following 
    information, as appropriate:
        (1) The name of the participant concerned and the participant's 
    last known address, as reflected in the records of the clearing agency;
        (2) The date upon which the summary action became or will become 
    effective;
        (3) If the summary action is based upon the provisions of section 
    17A(b)(5)(C)(i) of the Act, a copy of the relevant order or decision of 
    the self-regulatory organization, if available to the clearing agency;
        (4) If the summary action is based upon the provisions of section 
    17A(b)(5)(C)(ii) of the Act, a statement describing the default of any 
    delivery of funds or securities to the clearing agency;
        (5) If the summary action is based upon the provisions of section 
    17A(b)(5)(C)(iii) of the Act, a statement describing the financial or 
    operating difficulty of the participant based upon which the clearing 
    agency determined that the suspension and closing of accounts was 
    necessary for the protection of the clearing agency, its participants, 
    creditors, or investors;
        (6) The nature and effective date of the suspension; and
        (7) Such other matters as the clearing agency deems relevant.
    
    
    Sec. 208.33  Application for stay or review of disciplinary sanctions 
    imposed by registered clearing agency.
    
        (a) Stays. The rules adopted by the Securities and Exchange 
    Commission (SEC) pursuant to section 19 of the Securities Exchange Act 
    of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78s) regarding applications by persons for whom the 
    SEC is the appropriate regulatory agency for stays of disciplinary 
    sanctions or summary suspensions imposed by registered clearing 
    agencies (17 CFR 240.19d-2) apply to applications by member banks. 
    References to the ``Commission'' are deemed to refer to the Board.
        (b) Reviews. The regulations adopted by the Securities and Exchange 
    Commission pursuant to section 19 of the Securities and Exchange Act of 
    1934 (15 U.S.C. 78s) regarding applications by persons for whom the SEC 
    is the appropriate regulatory agency for reviews of final disciplinary 
    sanctions, denials of participation, or prohibitions or limitations of 
    access to services imposed by registered clearing agencies (17 CFR 
    240.19d-3(a)-(f)) apply to applications by member banks. References to 
    the ``Commission'' are deemed to refer to the Board. The Board's 
    Uniform Rules of Practice and Procedure (12 CFR part 263) apply to 
    review proceedings under this Sec. 208.33 to the extent not 
    inconsistent with this Sec. 208.33.
    
    
    Sec. 208.34  Recordkeeping and confirmation of certain securities 
    transactions effected by State member banks.
    
        (a) Exceptions and safe and sound operations. (1) A State member 
    bank may be excepted from one or more of the requirements of this 
    section if it
    
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    meets one of the following conditions of paragraphs (a)(1)(i) through 
    (a)(1)(iv) of this section:
        (i) De minimis transactions. The requirements of paragraphs (c)(2) 
    through (c)(4) and paragraphs (e)(1) through (e)(3) of this section 
    shall not apply to banks having an average of less than 200 securities 
    transactions per year for customers over the prior three calendar year 
    period, exclusive of transactions in government securities;
        (ii) Government securities. The recordkeeping requirements of 
    paragraph (c) of this section shall not apply to banks effecting fewer 
    than 500 government securities brokerage transactions per year; 
    provided that this exception shall not apply to government securities 
    transactions by a State member bank that has filed a written notice, or 
    is required to file notice, with the Federal Reserve Board that it acts 
    as a government securities broker or a government securities dealer;
        (iii) Municipal securities. The municipal securities activities of 
    a State member bank that are subject to regulations promulgated by the 
    Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board shall not be subject to the 
    requirements of this section; and
        (iv) Foreign branches. The requirements of this section shall not 
    apply to the activities of foreign branches of a State member bank.
        (2) Every State member bank qualifying for an exemption under 
    paragraph (a)(1) of this section that conducts securities transactions 
    for customers shall, to ensure safe and sound operations, maintain 
    effective systems of records and controls regarding its customer 
    securities transactions that clearly and accurately reflect appropriate 
    information and provide an adequate basis for an audit of the 
    information.
        (b) Definitions. For purposes of this section:
        (1) Asset-backed security shall mean a security that is serviced 
    primarily by the cash flows of a discrete pool of receivables or other 
    financial assets, either fixed or revolving, that by their terms 
    convert into cash within a finite time period plus any rights or other 
    assets designed to assure the servicing or timely distribution of 
    proceeds to the security holders.
        (2) Collective investment fund shall mean funds held by a State 
    member bank as fiduciary and, consistent with local law, invested 
    collectively as follows:
        (i) In a common trust fund maintained by such bank exclusively for 
    the collective investment and reinvestment of monies contributed 
    thereto by the bank in its capacity as trustee, executor, 
    administrator, guardian, or custodian under the Uniform Gifts to Minors 
    Act; or
        (ii) In a fund consisting solely of assets of retirement, pension, 
    profit sharing, stock bonus or similar trusts which are exempt from 
    Federal income taxation under the Internal Revenue Code (26 U.S.C.).
        (3) Completion of the transaction effected by or through a state 
    member bank shall mean:
        (i) For purchase transactions, the time when the customer pays the 
    bank any part of the purchase price (or the time when the bank makes 
    the book-entry for any part of the purchase price if applicable); 
    however, if the customer pays for the security prior to the time 
    payment is requested or becomes due, then the transaction shall be 
    completed when the bank transfers the security into the account of the 
    customer; and
        (ii) For sale transactions, the time when the bank transfers the 
    security out of the account of the customer or, if the security is not 
    in the bank's custody, then the time when the security is delivered to 
    the bank; however, if the customer delivers the security to the bank 
    prior to the time delivery is requested or becomes due then the 
    transaction shall be completed when the banks makes payment into the 
    account of the customer.
        (4) Crossing of buy and sell orders shall mean a security 
    transaction in which the same bank acts as agent for both the buyer and 
    the seller.
        (5) Customer shall mean any person or account, including any 
    agency, trust, estate, guardianship, or other fiduciary account, for 
    which a State member bank effects or participates in effecting the 
    purchase or sale of securities, but shall not include a broker, dealer, 
    bank acting as a broker or dealer, municipal securities broker or 
    dealer, or issuer of the securities which are the subject of the 
    transactions.
        (6) Debt security as used in paragraph (c) of this section shall 
    mean any security, such as a bond, debenture, note or any other similar 
    instrument which evidences a liability of the issuer (including any 
    security of this type that is convertible into stock or similar 
    security) and fractional or participation interests in one or more of 
    any of the foregoing; provided, however, that securities issued by an 
    investment company registered under the Investment Company Act of 1940, 
    15 U.S.C. 80a-1 et seq., shall not be included in this definition.
        (7) Government security shall mean:
        (i) A security that is a direct obligation of, or obligation 
    guaranteed as to principal and interest by, the United States;
        (ii) A security that is issued or guaranteed by a corporation in 
    which the United States has a direct or indirect interest and which is 
    designated by the Secretary of the Treasury for exemption as necessary 
    or appropriate in the public interest or for the protection of 
    investors;
        (iii) A security issued or guaranteed as to principal and interest 
    by any corporation whose securities are designated, by statute 
    specifically naming the corporation, to constitute exempt securities 
    within the meaning of the laws administered by the Securities and 
    Exchange Commission; or
        (iv) Any put, call, straddle, option, or privilege on a security as 
    described in paragraphs (b)(7) (i), (ii), or (iii) of this section 
    other than a put, call, straddle, option, or privilege that is traded 
    on one or more national securities exchanges, or for which quotations 
    are disseminated though an automated quotation system operated by a 
    registered securities association.
        (8) Investment discretion with respect to an account shall mean if 
    the State member bank, directly or indirectly, is authorized to 
    determine what securities or other property shall be purchased or sold 
    by or for the account, or makes decisions as to what securities or 
    other property shall be purchased or sold by or for the account even 
    though some other person may have responsibility for such investment 
    decisions.
        (9) Municipal security shall mean a security which is a direct 
    obligation of, or obligation guaranteed as to principal or interest by, 
    a State or any political subdivision thereof, or any agency or 
    instrumentality of a State or any political subdivision thereof, or any 
    municipal corporate instrumentality of one or more States, or any 
    security which is an industrial development bond (as defined in 26 
    U.S.C. 103(c)(2) the interest on which is excludable from gross income 
    under 26 U.S.C. 103(a)(1), by reason of the application of paragraph 
    (4) or (6) of 26 U.S.C. 103(c) (determined as if paragraphs (4)(A), (5) 
    and (7) were not included in 26 U.S.C. 103(c)), paragraph (1) of 26 
    U.S.C. 103(c) does not apply to such security.
        (10) Periodic plan shall mean:
        (i) A written authorization for a State member bank to act as agent 
    to purchase or sell for a customer a specific security or securities, 
    in a specific amount (calculated in security units or dollars) or to 
    the extent of dividends and funds available, at specific time 
    intervals, and setting forth the commission or charges to be paid by 
    the customer or the manner of calculating them (including
    
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    dividend reinvestment plans, automatic investment plans, and employee 
    stock purchase plans); or
        (ii) Any prearranged, automatic transfer or sweep of funds from a 
    deposit account to purchase a security, or any prearranged, automatic 
    redemption or sale of a security with the funds being transferred into 
    a deposit account (including cash management sweep services).
        (11) Security shall mean:
        (i) Any note, stock, treasury stock, bond, debenture, certificate 
    of interest or participation in any profit-sharing agreement or in any 
    oil, gas, or other mineral royalty or lease, any collateral-trust 
    certificate, preorganization certificate or subscription, transferable 
    share, investment contract, voting-trust certificate, for a security, 
    any put, call, straddle, option, or privilege on any security, or group 
    or index of securities (including any interest therein or based on the 
    value thereof), any instrument commonly known as a ``security''; or any 
    certificate of interest or participation in, temporary or interim 
    certificate for, receipt for, or warrant or right to subscribe to or 
    purchase, any of the foregoing.
        (ii) But does not include a deposit or share account in a federally 
    or state insured depository institution, a loan participation, a letter 
    of credit or other form of bank indebtedness incurred in the ordinary 
    course of business, currency, any note, draft, bill of exchange, or 
    bankers acceptance which has a maturity at the time of issuance of not 
    exceeding nine months, exclusive of days of grace, or any renewal 
    thereof the maturity of which is likewise limited, units of a 
    collective investment fund, interests in a variable amount (master) 
    note of a borrower of prime credit, or U.S. Savings Bonds.
        (c) Recordkeeping. Except as provided in paragraph (a) of this 
    section, every State member bank effecting securities transactions for 
    customers, including transactions in government securities, and 
    municipal securities transactions by banks not subject to registration 
    as municipal securities dealers, shall maintain the following records 
    with respect to such transactions for at least three years. Nothing 
    contained in this section shall require a bank to maintain the records 
    required by this paragraph in any given manner, provided that the 
    information required to be shown is clearly and accurately reflected 
    and provides an adequate basis for the audit of such information. 
    Records may be maintained in hard copy, automated, or electronic form 
    provided the records are easily retrievable, readily available for 
    inspection, and capable of being reproduced in a hard copy. A bank may 
    contract with third party service providers, including broker/dealers, 
    to maintain records required under this part.
        (1) Chronological records of original entry containing an itemized 
    daily record of all purchases and sales of securities. The records of 
    original entry shall show the account or customer for which each such 
    transaction was effected, the description of the securities, the unit 
    and aggregate purchase or sale price (if any), the trade date and the 
    name or other designation of the broker/dealer or other person from 
    whom purchased or to whom sold;
        (2) Account records for each customer which shall reflect all 
    purchases and sales of securities, all receipts and deliveries of 
    securities, and all receipts and disbursements of cash with respect to 
    transactions in securities for such account and all other debits and 
    credits pertaining to transactions in securities;
        (3) A separate memorandum (order ticket) of each order to purchase 
    or sell securities (whether executed or canceled), which shall include:
        (i) The account(s) for which the transaction was effected;
        (ii) Whether the transaction was a market order, limit order, or 
    subject to special instructions;
        (iii) The time the order was received by the trader or other bank 
    employee responsible for effecting the transaction;
        (iv) The time the order was placed with the broker/dealer, or if 
    there was no broker/dealer, the time the order was executed or 
    canceled;
        (v) The price at which the order was executed; and
        (vi) The broker/dealer utilized;
        (4) A record of all broker/dealers selected by the bank to effect 
    securities transactions and the amount of commissions paid or allocated 
    to each such broker during the calendar year; and
        (5) A copy of the written notification required by paragraphs (d) 
    and (e) of this section.
        (d) Content and time of notification. Every State member bank 
    effecting a securities transaction for a customer shall give or send to 
    such customer either of the following types of notifications at or 
    before completion of the transaction or; if the bank uses a broker/
    dealer's confirmation, within one business day from the bank's receipt 
    of the broker/dealer's confirmation:
        (1) A copy of the confirmation of a broker/dealer relating to the 
    securities transaction; and if the bank is to receive remuneration from 
    the customer or any other source in connection with the transaction, 
    and the remuneration is not determined pursuant to a prior written 
    agreement between the bank and the customer, a statement of the source 
    and the amount of any remuneration to be received; or
        (2) A written notification disclosing:
        (i) The name of the bank;
        (ii) The name of the customer;
        (iii) Whether the bank is acting as agent for such customer, as 
    agent for both such customer and some other person, as principal for 
    its own account, or in any other capacity;
        (iv) The date of execution and a statement that the time of 
    execution will be furnished within a reasonable time upon written 
    request of such customer specifying the identity, price and number of 
    shares or units (or principal amount in the case of debt securities) of 
    such security purchased or sold by such customer;
        (v) The amount of any remuneration received or to be received, 
    directly or indirectly, by any broker/dealer from such customer in 
    connection with the transaction;
        (vi) The amount of any remuneration received or to be received by 
    the bank from the customer and the source and amount of any other 
    remuneration to be received by the bank in connection with the 
    transaction, unless remuneration is determined pursuant to a written 
    agreement between the bank and the customer, provided, however, in the 
    case of Government securities and municipal securities, this paragraph 
    (d)(2)(vi) shall apply only with respect to remuneration received by 
    the bank in an agency transaction. If the bank elects not to disclose 
    the source and amount of remuneration it has or will receive from a 
    party other than the customer pursuant to this paragraph (d)(2)(vi), 
    the written notification must disclose whether the bank has received or 
    will receive remuneration from a party other than the customer, and 
    that the bank will furnish within a reasonable time the source and 
    amount of this remuneration upon written request of the customer. This 
    election is not available, however, if, with respect to a purchase, the 
    bank was participating in a distribution of that security; or with 
    respect to a sale, the bank was participating in a tender offer for 
    that security;
        (vii) The name of the broker/dealer utilized; or, where there is no 
    broker/dealer, the name of the person from whom the security was 
    purchased or to whom it was sold, or the fact that such information 
    will be furnished within a reasonable time upon written request;
        (viii) In the case of a transaction in a debt security subject to 
    redemption before maturity, a statement to the effect
    
    [[Page 37650]]
    
    that the debt security may be redeemed in whole or in part before 
    maturity, that the redemption could affect the yield represented and 
    that additional information is available on request;
        (ix) In the case of a transaction in a debt security effected 
    exclusively on the basis of a dollar price:
        (A) The dollar price at which the transaction was effected;
        (B) The yield to maturity calculated from the dollar price; 
    provided, however, that this paragraph (c)(2)(ix)(B) shall not apply to 
    a transaction in a debt security that either has a maturity date that 
    may be extended by the issuer with a variable interest payable thereon, 
    or is an asset-backed security that represents an interest in or is 
    secured by a pool of receivables or other financial assets that are 
    subject to continuous prepayment;
        (x) In the case of a transaction in a debt security effected on the 
    basis of yield:
        (A) The yield at which the transaction was effected, including the 
    percentage amount and its characterization (e.g., current yield, yield 
    to maturity, or yield to call) and if effected at yield to call, the 
    type of call, the call date, and the call price; and
        (B) The dollar price calculated from the yield at which the 
    transaction was effected; and
        (C) If effected on a basis other than yield to maturity and the 
    yield to maturity is lower than the represented yield, the yield to 
    maturity as well as the represented yield; provided, however, that this 
    paragraph (c)(2)(x)(C) shall not apply to a transaction in a debt 
    security that either has a maturity date that may be extended by the 
    issuer with a variable interest rate payable thereon, or is an asset-
    backed security that represents an interest in or is secured by a pool 
    of receivables or other financial assets that are subject to continuous 
    prepayment;
        (xi) In the case of a transaction in a debt security that is an 
    asset-backed security which represents an interest in or is secured by 
    a pool of receivables or other financial assets that are subject 
    continuously to prepayment, a statement indicating that the actual 
    yield of such asset-backed security may vary according to the rate at 
    which the underlying receivables or other financial assets are prepaid 
    and a statement of the fact that information concerning the factors 
    that affect yield (including at a minimum, the estimated yield, 
    weighted average life, and the prepayment assumptions underlying yield) 
    will be furnished upon written request of such customer; and
        (xii) In the case of a transaction in a debt security, other than a 
    government security, that the security is unrated by a nationally 
    recognized statistical rating organization, if that is the case.
        (e) Notification by agreement; alternative forms and times of 
    notification. A State member bank may elect to use the following 
    alternative procedures if a transaction is effected for:
        (1) Accounts (except periodic plans) where the bank does not 
    exercise investment discretion and the bank and the customer agree in 
    writing to a different arrangement as to the time and content of the 
    notification; provided, however, that such agreement makes clear the 
    customer's right to receive the written notification pursuant to 
    paragraph (c) of this section at no additional cost to the customer;
        (2) Accounts (except collective investment funds) where the bank 
    exercises investment discretion in other than an agency capacity, in 
    which instance the bank shall, upon request of the person having the 
    power to terminate the account or, if there is no such person, upon the 
    request of any person holding a vested beneficial interest in such 
    account, give or send to such person the written notification within a 
    reasonable time. The bank may charge such person a reasonable fee for 
    providing this information;
        (3) Accounts, where the bank exercises investment discretion in an 
    agency capacity, in which instance:
        (i) The bank shall give or send to each customer not less 
    frequently than once every three months an itemized statement which 
    shall specify the funds and securities in the custody or possession of 
    the bank at the end of such period and all debits, credits and 
    transactions in the customer's accounts during such period; and
        (ii) If requested by the customer, the bank shall give or send to 
    each customer within a reasonable time the written notification 
    described in paragraph (c) of this section. The bank may charge a 
    reasonable fee for providing the information described in paragraph (c) 
    of this section;
        (4) A collective investment fund, in which instance the bank shall 
    at least annually furnish a copy of a financial report of the fund, or 
    provide notice that a copy of such report is available and will be 
    furnished upon request, to each person to whom a regular periodic 
    accounting would ordinarily be rendered with respect to each 
    participating account. This report shall be based upon an audit made by 
    independent public accountants or internal auditors responsible only to 
    the board of directors of the bank;
        (5) A periodic plan, in which instance the bank:
        (i) Shall (except for a cash management sweep service) give or send 
    to the customer a written statement not less than every three months if 
    there are no securities transactions in the account, showing the 
    customer's funds and securities in the custody or possession of the 
    bank; all service charges and commissions paid by the customer in 
    connection with the transaction; and all other debits and credits of 
    the customer's account involved in the transaction; or
        (ii) Shall for a cash management sweep service or similar periodic 
    plan as defined in Sec. 208.34(b)(10)(ii) give or send its customer a 
    written statement in the same form as prescribed in paragraph (e)(3) 
    above for each month in which a purchase or sale of a security takes 
    place in a deposit account and not less than once every three months if 
    there are no securities transactions in the account subject to any 
    other applicable laws or regulations;
        (6) Upon the written request of the customer the bank shall furnish 
    the information described in paragraph (d) of this section, except that 
    any such information relating to remuneration paid in connection with 
    the transaction need not be provided to the customer when paid by a 
    source other than the customer. The bank may charge a reasonable fee 
    for providing the information described in paragraph (d) of this 
    section.
        (f) Settlement of securities transactions. All contracts for the 
    purchase or sale of a security shall provide for completion of the 
    transaction within the number of business days in the standard 
    settlement cycle for the security followed by registered broker dealers 
    in the United States unless otherwise agreed to by the parties at the 
    time of the transaction.
        (g) Securities trading policies and procedures. Every State member 
    bank effecting securities transactions for customers shall establish 
    written policies and procedures providing:
        (1) Assignment of responsibility for supervision of all officers or 
    employees who:
        (i) Transmit orders to or place orders with broker/dealers;
        (ii) Execute transactions in securities for customers; or
        (iii) Process orders for notification and/or settlement purposes, 
    or perform other back office functions with respect to securities 
    transactions effected for customers; provided that procedures 
    established under this paragraph
    
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    (g)(1)(iii) should provide for supervision and reporting lines that are 
    separate from supervision of personnel under paragraphs (g)(1)(i) and 
    (g)(1)(ii) of this section;
        (2) For the fair and equitable allocation of securities and prices 
    to accounts when orders for the same security are received at 
    approximately the same time and are placed for execution either 
    individually or in combination;
        (3) Where applicable and where permissible under local law, for the 
    crossing of buy and sell orders on a fair and equitable basis to the 
    parties to the transaction; and
        (4) That bank officers and employees who make investment 
    recommendations or decisions for the accounts of customers, who 
    participate in the determination of such recommendations or decisions, 
    or who, in connection with their duties, obtain information concerning 
    which securities are being purchased or sold or recommended for such 
    action, must report to the bank, within ten days after the end of the 
    calendar quarter, all transactions in securities made by them or on 
    their behalf, either at the bank or elsewhere in which they have a 
    beneficial interest. The report shall identify the securities purchased 
    or sold and indicate the dates of the transactions and whether the 
    transactions were purchases or sales. Excluded from this requirement 
    are transactions for the benefit of the officer or employee over which 
    the officer or employee has no direct or indirect influence or control, 
    transactions in mutual fund shares, and all transactions involving in 
    the aggregate $10,000 or less during the calendar quarter. For purposes 
    of this paragraph (g)(4), the term securities does not include 
    government securities.
    
    
    Sec. 208.35  Qualification requirements for transactions in certain 
    securities. [Reserved]
    
    
    Sec. 208.36  Reporting requirements for State member banks subject to 
    the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
    
        (a) Filing requirements. Except as otherwise provided in this 
    section, a member bank whose securities are subject to registration 
    pursuant to section 12(b) or section 12(g) of the Securities Exchange 
    Act of 1934 (the 1934 Act) (15 U.S.C. 78l (b) and (g)) shall comply 
    with the rules, regulations, and forms adopted by the Securities and 
    Exchange Commission (Commission) pursuant to sections 12, 13, 14(a), 
    14(c), 14(d), 14(f) and 16 of the 1934 Act (15 U.S.C. 78l, 78m, 78n(a), 
    (c), (d), (f) and 78p). The term ``Commission'' as used in those rules 
    and regulations shall with respect to securities issued by member banks 
    be deemed to refer to the Board unless the context otherwise requires.
        (b) Elections permitted for member banks with total assets of $150 
    million or less. (1) Notwithstanding paragraph (a) of this section or 
    the rules and regulations promulgated by the Commission pursuant to the 
    1934 Act a member bank that has total assets of $150 million or less as 
    of the end of its most recent fiscal year, and no foreign offices, may 
    elect to substitute for the financial statements required by the 
    Commission's Form 10-Q, the balance sheet and income statement from the 
    quarterly report of condition required to be filed by the bank with the 
    Board under section 9 of the Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C. 324) 
    (Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council Form 033 or 034).
        (2) A member bank qualifying for and electing to file financial 
    statements from its quarterly report of condition pursuant to paragraph 
    (b)(1) of this section in its form 10-Q shall include earnings per 
    share or net loss per share data prepared in accordance with GAAP and 
    disclose any material contingencies, as required by Article 10 of the 
    Commission's Regulation S-X (17 CFR 210.10-01), in the Management's 
    Discussion and Analysis of Financial Condition and Results of 
    Operations section of Form 10-Q.
        (c) Required filings. (1) Place and timing of filing. All papers 
    required to be filed with the Board, pursuant to the 1934 Act or 
    regulations thereunder, shall be submitted to the Division of Banking 
    Supervision and Regulation, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve 
    System, 20th Street and Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20551. 
    Material may be filed by delivery to the Board, through the mails, or 
    otherwise. The date on which papers are actually received by the Board 
    shall be the date of filing thereof if all of the requirements with 
    respect to the filing have been complied with.
        (2) Filing fees. No filing fees specified by the Commission's rules 
    shall be paid to the Board.
        (3) Public inspection. Copies of the registration statement, 
    definitive proxy solicitation materials, reports, and annual reports to 
    shareholders required by this section (exclusive of exhibits) shall be 
    available for public inspection at the Board's offices in Washington, 
    DC, as well as at the Federal Reserve Banks of New York, Chicago, and 
    San Francisco and at the Reserve Bank in the district in which the 
    reporting bank is located.
        (d) Confidentiality of filing. Any person filing any statement, 
    report, or document under the 1934 Act may make written objection to 
    the public disclosure of any information contained therein in 
    accordance with the following procedure:
        (1) The person shall omit from the statement, report, or document, 
    when it is filed, the portion thereof that the person desires to keep 
    undisclosed (hereinafter called the confidential portion). The person 
    shall indicate at the appropriate place in the statement, report, or 
    document that the confidential portion has been omitted and filed 
    separately with the Board.
        (2) The person shall file the following with the copies of the 
    statement, report, or document filed with the Board:
        (i) As many copies of the confidential portion, each clearly marked 
    ``CONFIDENTIAL TREATMENT,'' as there are copies of the statement, 
    report, or document filed with the Board. Each copy of the confidential 
    portion shall contain the complete text of the item and, 
    notwithstanding that the confidential portion does not constitute the 
    whole of the answer, the entire answer thereto; except that in case the 
    confidential portion is part of a financial statement or schedule, only 
    the particular financial statement or schedule need be included. All 
    copies of the confidential portion shall be in the same form as the 
    remainder of the statement, report, or document; and
        (ii) An application making objection to the disclosure of the 
    confidential portion. The application shall be on a sheet or sheets 
    separate from the confidential portion, and shall:
        (A) Identify the portion of the statement, report, or document that 
    has been omitted;
        (B) Include a statement of the grounds of objection; and
        (C) Include the name of each exchange, if any, with which the 
    statement, report, or document is filed.
        (3) The copies of the confidential portion and the application 
    filed in accordance with this paragraph shall be enclosed in a separate 
    envelope marked ``CONFIDENTIAL TREATMENT,'' and addressed to Secretary, 
    Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, Washington, DC 20551.
        (4) Pending determination by the Board on the objection filed in 
    accordance with this paragraph, the confidential portion shall not be 
    disclosed by the Board.
        (5) If the Board determines to sustain the objection, a notation to 
    that effect shall be made at the appropriate place in the statement, 
    report, or document.
        (6) If the Board determines not to sustain the objection because 
    disclosure of the confidential portion is in the
    
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    public interest, a finding and determination to that effect shall be 
    entered and notice of the finding and determination sent by registered 
    or certified mail to the person.
        (7) If the Board determines not to sustain the objection, pursuant 
    to paragraph (d)(6) of this section, the confidential portion shall be 
    made available to the public:
        (i) 15 days after notice of the Board's determination not to 
    sustain the objection has been given, as required by paragraph (d)(6) 
    of this section, provided that the person filing the objection has not 
    previously filed with the Board a written statement that he intends, in 
    good faith, to seek judicial review of the finding and determination; 
    or
        (ii) 60 days after notice of the Board's determination not to 
    sustain the objection has been given as required by paragraph (d)(6) of 
    this section and the person filing the objection has filed with the 
    Board a written statement of intent to seek judicial review of the 
    finding and determination, but has failed to file a petition for 
    judicial review of the Board's determination; or
        (iii) Upon final judicial determination, if adverse to the party 
    filing the objection.
        (8) If the confidential portion is made available to the public, a 
    copy thereof shall be attached to each copy of the statement, report, 
    or document filed with the Board.
    
    
    Sec. 208.37  Government securities sales practices.
    
        (a) Scope. This subpart is applicable to state member banks that 
    have filed notice as, or are required to file notice as, government 
    securities brokers or dealers pursuant to section 15C of the Securities 
    Exchange Act (15 U.S.C. 78o-5) and Department of the Treasury rules 
    under section 15C (17 CFR 400.1(d) and part 401).
        (b) Definitions. For purposes of this section:
        (1) Bank that is a government securities broker or dealer means a 
    state member bank that has filed notice, or is required to file notice, 
    as a government securities broker or dealer pursuant to section 15C of 
    the Securities Exchange Act (15 U.S.C. 78o-5) and Department of the 
    Treasury rules under section 15C (17 CFR 400.1(d) and Part 401).
        (2) Customer does not include a broker or dealer or a government 
    securities broker or dealer.
        (3) Government security has the same meaning as this term has in 
    section 3(a)(42) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 
    78c(a)(42)).
        (4) Non-institutional customer means any customer other than:
        (i) A bank, savings association, insurance company, or registered 
    investment company;
        (ii) An investment adviser registered under section 203 of the 
    Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C. 80b-3); or
        (iii) Any entity (whether a natural person, corporation, 
    partnership, trust, or otherwise) with total assets of at least $50 
    million.
        (c) Business conduct. A bank that is a government securities broker 
    or dealer shall observe high standards of commercial honor and just and 
    equitable principles of trade in the conduct of its business as a 
    government securities broker or dealer.
        (d) Recommendations to customers. In recommending to a customer the 
    purchase, sale or exchange of a government security, a bank that is a 
    government securities broker or dealer shall have reasonable grounds 
    for believing that the recommendation is suitable for the customer upon 
    the basis of the facts, if any, disclosed by the customer as to the 
    customer's other security holdings and as to the customer's financial 
    situation and needs.
        (e) Customer information. Prior to the execution of a transaction 
    recommended to a non-institutional customer, a bank that is a 
    government securities broker or dealer shall make reasonable efforts to 
    obtain information concerning:
        (1) The customer's financial status;
        (2) The customer's tax status;
        (3) The customer's investment objectives; and
        (4) Such other information used or considered to be reasonable by 
    the bank in making recommendations to the customer.
    
    Subpart D--Prompt Corrective Action
    
    
    Sec. 208.40  Authority, purpose, scope, other supervisory authority, 
    and disclosure of capital categories.
    
        (a) Authority. Subpart D of Regulation H (12 CFR part 208, Subpart 
    D) is issued by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System 
    (Board) under section 38 (section 38) of the FDI Act as added by 
    section 131 of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Improvement 
    Act of 1991 (Pub. L. 102-242, 105 Stat. 2236 (1991)) (12 U.S.C. 1831o).
        (b) Purpose and scope. This subpart D defines the capital measures 
    and capital levels that are used for determining the supervisory 
    actions authorized under section 38 of the FDI Act. (Section 38 of the 
    FDI Act establishes a framework of supervisory actions for insured 
    depository institutions that are not adequately capitalized.) This 
    subpart also establishes procedures for submission and review of 
    capital restoration plans and for issuance and review of directives and 
    orders pursuant to section 38. Certain of the provisions of this 
    subpart apply to officers, directors, and employees of state member 
    banks. Other provisions apply to any company that controls a member 
    bank and to the affiliates of the member bank.
        (c) Other supervisory authority. Neither section 38 nor this 
    subpart in any way limits the authority of the Board under any other 
    provision of law to take supervisory actions to address unsafe or 
    unsound practices or conditions, deficient capital levels, violations 
    of law, or other practices. Action under section 38 of the FDI Act and 
    this subpart may be taken independently of, in conjunction with, or in 
    addition to any other enforcement action available to the Board, 
    including issuance of cease and desist orders, capital directives, 
    approval or denial of applications or notices, assessment of civil 
    money penalties, or any other actions authorized by law.
        (d) Disclosure of capital categories. The assignment of a bank 
    under this subpart within a particular capital category is for purposes 
    of implementing and applying the provisions of section 38. Unless 
    permitted by the Board or otherwise required by law, no bank may state 
    in any advertisement or promotional material its capital category under 
    this subpart or that the Board or any other Federal banking agency has 
    assigned the bank to a particular capital category.
    
    
    Sec. 208.41  Definitions for purposes of this subpart.
    
        For purposes of this subpart, except as modified in this section or 
    unless the context otherwise requires, the terms used have the same 
    meanings as set forth in section 38 and section 3 of the FDI Act.
        (a) Control--(1) Control has the same meaning assigned to it in 
    section 2 of the Bank Holding Company Act (12 U.S.C. 1841), and the 
    term controlled shall be construed consistently with the term control.
        (2) Exclusion for fiduciary ownership. No insured depository 
    institution or company controls another insured depository institution 
    or company by virtue of its ownership or control of shares in a 
    fiduciary capacity. Shares shall not be deemed to have been acquired in 
    a fiduciary capacity if the acquiring insured depository institution or 
    company has sole discretionary
    
    [[Page 37653]]
    
    authority to exercise voting rights with respect to the shares.
        (3) Exclusion for debts previously contracted. No insured 
    depository institution or company controls another insured depository 
    institution or company by virtue of its ownership or control of shares 
    acquired in securing or collecting a debt previously contracted in good 
    faith, until two years after the date of acquisition. The two-year 
    period may be extended at the discretion of the appropriate Federal 
    banking agency for up to three one-year periods.
        (b) Controlling person means any person having control of an 
    insured depository institution and any company controlled by that 
    person.
        (c) Leverage ratio means the ratio of Tier 1 capital to average 
    total consolidated assets, as calculated in accordance with the Board's 
    Capital Adequacy Guidelines for State Member Banks: Tier 1 Leverage 
    Measure (Appendix B to this part).
        (d) Management fee means any payment of money or provision of any 
    other thing of value to a company or individual for the provision of 
    management services or advice to the bank, or related overhead 
    expenses, including payments related to supervisory, executive, 
    managerial, or policy making functions, other than compensation to an 
    individual in the individual's capacity as an officer or employee of 
    the bank.
        (e) Risk-weighted assets means total weighted risk assets, as 
    calculated in accordance with the Board's Capital Adequacy Guidelines 
    for State Member Banks: Risk-Based Measure (Appendix A to this part).
        (f) Tangible equity means the amount of core capital elements in 
    the Board's Capital Adequacy Guidelines for State Member Banks: Risk-
    Based Measure (Appendix A to this part), plus the amount of outstanding 
    cumulative perpetual preferred stock (including related surplus), minus 
    all intangible assets except mortgage servicing rights to the extent 
    that the Board determines that mortgage servicing rights may be 
    included in calculating the bank's Tier 1 capital.
        (g) Tier 1 capital means the amount of Tier 1 capital as defined in 
    the Board's Capital Adequacy Guidelines for State Member Banks: Risk-
    Based Measure (Appendix A to this part).
        (h) Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio means the ratio of Tier 1 
    capital to weighted risk assets, as calculated in accordance with the 
    Board's Capital Adequacy Guidelines for State Member Banks: Risk-Based 
    Measure (Appendix A to this part).
        (i) Total assets means quarterly average total assets as reported 
    in a bank's Report of Condition and Income (Call Report), minus 
    intangible assets as provided in the definition of tangible equity. At 
    its discretion the Federal Reserve may calculate total assets using a 
    bank's period-end assets rather than quarterly average assets.
        (j) Total risk-based capital ratio means the ratio of qualifying 
    total capital to weighted risk assets, as calculated in accordance with 
    the Board's Capital Adequacy Guidelines for State Member Banks: Risk-
    Based Measure (Appendix A to this part).
    
    
    Sec. 208.42  Notice of capital category.
    
        (a) Effective date of determination of capital category. A member 
    bank shall be deemed to be within a given capital category for purposes 
    of section 38 of the FDI Act and this subpart as of the date the bank 
    is notified of, or is deemed to have notice of, its capital category, 
    pursuant to paragraph (b) of this section.
        (b) Notice of capital category. A member bank shall be deemed to 
    have been notified of its capital levels and its capital category as of 
    the most recent date:
        (1) A Report of Condition and Income (Call Report) is required to 
    be filed with the Board;
        (2) A final report of examination is delivered to the bank; or
        (3) Written notice is provided by the Board to the bank of its 
    capital category for purposes of section 38 of the FDI Act and this 
    subpart or that the bank's capital category has changed as provided in 
    paragraph (c) of this section or Sec. 208.43(c).
        (c) Adjustments to reported capital levels and capital category--
    (1) Notice of adjustment by bank. A member bank shall provide the Board 
    with written notice that an adjustment to the bank's capital category 
    may have occurred no later than 15 calendar days following the date 
    that any material event occurred that would cause the bank to be placed 
    in a lower capital category from the category assigned to the bank for 
    purposes of section 38 and this subpart on the basis of the bank's most 
    recent Call Report or report of examination.
        (2) Determination by Board to change capital category. After 
    receiving notice pursuant to paragraph (c)(1) of this section, the 
    Board shall determine whether to change the capital category of the 
    bank and shall notify the bank of the Board's determination.
    
    
    Sec. 208.43  Capital measures and capital category definitions.
    
        (a) Capital measures. For purposes of section 38 and this subpart, 
    the relevant capital measures are:
        (1) The total risk-based capital ratio;
        (2) The Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio; and
        (3) The leverage ratio.
        (b) Capital categories. For purposes of section 38 and this 
    subpart, a member bank is deemed to be:
        (1) ``Well capitalized'' if the bank:
        (i) Has a total risk-based capital ratio of 10.0 percent or 
    greater; and
        (ii) Has a Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio of 6.0 percent or 
    greater; and
        (iii) Has a leverage ratio of 5.0 percent or greater; and
        (iv) Is not subject to any written agreement, order, capital 
    directive, or prompt corrective action directive issued by the Board 
    pursuant to section 8 of the FDI Act, the International Lending 
    Supervision Act of 1983 (12 U.S.C. 3907), or section 38 of the FDI Act, 
    or any regulation thereunder, to meet and maintain a specific capital 
    level for any capital measure.
        (2) ``Adequately capitalized'' if the bank:
        (i) Has a total risk-based capital ratio of 8.0 percent or greater; 
    and
        (ii) Has a Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio of 4.0 percent or 
    greater; and
        (iii) Has:
        (A) A leverage ratio of 4.0 percent or greater; or
        (B) A leverage ratio of 3.0 percent or greater if the bank is rated 
    composite 1 under the CAMELS rating system in the most recent 
    examination of the bank and is not experiencing or anticipating 
    significant growth; and
        (iv) Does not meet the definition of a ``well capitalized'' bank.
        (3) ``Undercapitalized'' if the bank has:
        (i) A total risk-based capital ratio that is less than 8.0 percent; 
    or
        (ii) A Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio that is less than 4.0 
    percent; or
        (iii) Except as provided in paragraph (b)(2)(iii)(B) of this 
    section, has a leverage ratio that is less than 4.0 percent; or
        (iv) A leverage ratio that is less than 3.0 percent, if the bank is 
    rated composite 1 under the CAMELS rating system in the most recent 
    examination of the bank and is not experiencing or anticipating 
    significant growth.
        (4) ``Significantly undercapitalized'' if the bank has:
        (i) A total risk-based capital ratio that is less than 6.0 percent; 
    or
        (ii) A Tier 1 risk-based capital ratio that is less than 3.0 
    percent; or
        (iii) A leverage ratio that is less than 3.0 percent.
    
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        (5) ``Critically undercapitalized'' if the bank has a ratio of 
    tangible equity to total assets that is equal to or less than 2.0 
    percent.
        (c) Reclassification based on supervisory criteria other than 
    capital. The Board may reclassify a well capitalized member bank as 
    adequately capitalized and may require an adequately-capitalized or an 
    undercapitalized member bank to comply with certain mandatory or 
    discretionary supervisory actions as if the bank were in the next lower 
    capital category (except that the Board may not reclassify a 
    significantly undercapitalized bank as critically undercapitalized) 
    (each of these actions are hereinafter referred to generally as 
    ``reclassifications'') in the following circumstances:
        (1) Unsafe or unsound condition. The Board has determined, after 
    notice and opportunity for hearing pursuant to 12 CFR 263.203, that the 
    bank is in unsafe or unsound condition; or
        (2) Unsafe or unsound practice. The Board has determined, after 
    notice and opportunity for hearing pursuant to 12 CFR 263.203, that, in 
    the most recent examination of the bank, the bank received and has not 
    corrected, a less-than-satisfactory rating for any of the categories of 
    asset quality, management, earnings, liquidity, or sensitivity to 
    market risk.
    
    
    Sec. 208.44  Capital restoration plans.
    
        (a) Schedule for filing plan. (1) In general. A member bank shall 
    file a written capital restoration plan with the appropriate Reserve 
    Bank within 45 days of the date that the bank receives notice or is 
    deemed to have notice that the bank is undercapitalized, significantly 
    undercapitalized, or critically undercapitalized, unless the Board 
    notifies the bank in writing that the plan is to be filed within a 
    different period. An adequately capitalized bank that has been 
    required, pursuant to Sec. 208.43(c), to comply with supervisory 
    actions as if the bank were undercapitalized is not required to submit 
    a capital restoration plan solely by virtue of the reclassification.
        (2) Additional capital restoration plans. Notwithstanding paragraph 
    (a)(1) of this section, a bank that has already submitted and is 
    operating under a capital restoration plan approved under section 38 
    and this subpart is not required to submit an additional capital 
    restoration plan based on a revised calculation of its capital measures 
    or a reclassification of the institution under Sec. 208.43(c), unless 
    the Board notifies the bank that it must submit a new or revised 
    capital plan. A bank that is notified that it must submit a new or 
    revised capital restoration plan shall file the plan in writing with 
    the appropriate Reserve Bank within 45 days of receiving such notice, 
    unless the Board notifies the bank in writing that the plan is to be 
    filed within a different period.
        (b) Contents of plan. All financial data submitted in connection 
    with a capital restoration plan shall be prepared in accordance with 
    the instructions provided on the Call Report, unless the Board 
    instructs otherwise. The capital restoration plan shall include all of 
    the information required to be filed under section 38(e)(2) of the FDI 
    Act. A bank that is required to submit a capital restoration plan as 
    the result of a reclassification of the bank pursuant to Sec. 208.43(c) 
    shall include a description of the steps the bank will take to correct 
    the unsafe or unsound condition or practice. No plan shall be accepted 
    unless it includes any performance guarantee described in section 
    38(e)(2)(C) of that Act by each company that controls the bank.
        (c) Review of capital restoration plans. Within 60 days after 
    receiving a capital restoration plan under this subpart, the Board 
    shall provide written notice to the bank of whether the plan has been 
    approved. The Board may extend the time within which notice regarding 
    approval of a plan shall be provided.
        (d) Disapproval of capital plan. If the Board does not approve a 
    capital restoration plan, the bank shall submit a revised capital 
    restoration plan within the time specified by the Board. Upon receiving 
    notice that its capital restoration plan has not been approved, any 
    undercapitalized member bank (as defined in Sec. 208.43(b)(3)) shall be 
    subject to all of the provisions of section 38 and this subpart 
    applicable to significantly undercapitalized institutions. These 
    provisions shall be applicable until such time as the Board approves a 
    new or revised capital restoration plan submitted by the bank.
        (e) Failure to submit capital restoration plan. A member bank that 
    is undercapitalized (as defined in Sec. 208.43(b)(3)) and that fails to 
    submit a written capital restoration plan within the period provided in 
    this section shall, upon the expiration of that period, be subject to 
    all of the provisions of section 38 and this subpart applicable to 
    significantly undercapitalized institutions.
        (f) Failure to implement capital restoration plan. Any 
    undercapitalized member bank that fails in any material respect to 
    implement a capital restoration plan shall be subject to all of the 
    provisions of section 38 and this subpart applicable to significantly 
    undercapitalized institutions.
        (g) Amendment of capital plan. A bank that has filed an approved 
    capital restoration plan may, after prior written notice to and 
    approval by the Board, amend the plan to reflect a change in 
    circumstance. Until such time as a proposed amendment has been 
    approved, the bank shall implement the capital restoration plan as 
    approved prior to the proposed amendment.
        (h) Notice to FDIC. Within 45 days of the effective date of Board 
    approval of a capital restoration plan, or any amendment to a capital 
    restoration plan, the Board shall provide a copy of the plan or 
    amendment to the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
        (i) Performance guarantee by companies that control a bank. (1) 
    Limitation on Liability. (i) Amount limitation. The aggregate liability 
    under the guarantee provided under section 38 and this subpart for all 
    companies that control a specific member bank that is required to 
    submit a capital restoration plan under this subpart shall be limited 
    to the lesser of:
        (A) An amount equal to 5.0 percent of the bank's total assets at 
    the time the bank was notified or deemed to have notice that the bank 
    was undercapitalized; or
        (B) The amount necessary to restore the relevant capital measures 
    of the bank to the levels required for the bank to be classified as 
    adequately capitalized, as those capital measures and levels are 
    defined at the time that the bank initially fails to comply with a 
    capital restoration plan under this subpart.
        (ii) Limit on duration. The guarantee and limit of liability under 
    section 38 and this subpart shall expire after the Board notifies the 
    bank that it has remained adequately capitalized for each of four 
    consecutive calendar quarters. The expiration or fulfillment by a 
    company of a guarantee of a capital restoration plan shall not limit 
    the liability of the company under any guarantee required or provided 
    in connection with any capital restoration plan filed by the same bank 
    after expiration of the first guarantee.
        (iii) Collection on guarantee. Each company that controls a bank 
    shall be jointly and severally liable for the guarantee for such bank 
    as required under section 38 and this subpart, and the Board may 
    require and collect payment of the full amount of that guarantee from 
    any or all of the companies issuing the guarantee.
        (2) Failure to provide guarantee. In the event that a bank that is 
    controlled by a company submits a capital
    
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    restoration plan that does not contain the guarantee required under 
    section 38(e)(2) of the FDI Act, the bank shall, upon submission of the 
    plan, be subject to the provisions of section 38 and this subpart that 
    are applicable to banks that have not submitted an acceptable capital 
    restoration plan.
        (3) Failure to perform guarantee. Failure by any company that 
    controls a bank to perform fully its guarantee of any capital plan 
    shall constitute a material failure to implement the plan for purposes 
    of section 38(f) of the FDI Act. Upon such failure, the bank shall be 
    subject to the provisions of section 38 and this subpart that are 
    applicable to banks that have failed in a material respect to implement 
    a capital restoration plan.
    
    
    Sec. 208.45  Mandatory and discretionary supervisory actions under 
    section 38.
    
        (a) Mandatory supervisory actions. (1) Provisions applicable to all 
    banks. All member banks are subject to the restrictions contained in 
    section 38(d) of the FDI Act on payment of capital distributions and 
    management fees.
        (2) Provisions applicable to undercapitalized, significantly 
    undercapitalized, and critically undercapitalized banks. Immediately 
    upon receiving notice or being deemed to have notice, as provided in 
    Sec. 208.42 or Sec. 208.44, that the bank is undercapitalized, 
    significantly undercapitalized, or critically undercapitalized, the 
    bank shall become subject to the provisions of section 38 of the FDI 
    Act:
        (i) Restricting payment of capital distributions and management 
    fees (section 38(d));
        (ii) Requiring that the Board monitor the condition of the bank 
    (section 38(e)(1));
        (iii) Requiring submission of a capital restoration plan within the 
    schedule established in this subpart (section 38(e)(2));
        (iv) Restricting the growth of the bank's assets (section 
    38(e)(3)); and
        (v) Requiring prior approval of certain expansion proposals 
    (section 3(e)(4)).
        (3) Additional provisions applicable to significantly 
    undercapitalized, and critically undercapitalized banks. In addition to 
    the provisions of section 38 of the FDI Act described in paragraph 
    (a)(2) of this section, immediately upon receiving notice or being 
    deemed to have notice, as provided in Sec. 208.42 or Sec. 208.44, that 
    the bank is significantly undercapitalized, or critically 
    undercapitalized, or that the bank is subject to the provisions 
    applicable to institutions that are significantly undercapitalized 
    because the bank failed to submit or implement in any material respect 
    an acceptable capital restoration plan, the bank shall become subject 
    to the provisions of section 38 of the FDI Act that restrict 
    compensation paid to senior executive officers of the institution 
    (section 38(f)(4)).
        (4) Additional provisions applicable to critically undercapitalized 
    banks. In addition to the provisions of section 38 of the FDI Act 
    described in paragraphs (a)(2) and (a)(3) of this section, immediately 
    upon receiving notice or being deemed to have notice, as provided in 
    Sec. 208.32, that the bank is critically undercapitalized, the bank 
    shall become subject to the provisions of section 38 of the FDI Act:
        (i) Restricting the activities of the bank (section 38(h)(1)); and
        (ii) Restricting payments on subordinated debt of the bank (section 
    38(h)(2)).
        (b) Discretionary supervisory actions. In taking any action under 
    section 38 that is within the Board's discretion to take in connection 
    with: A member bank that is deemed to be undercapitalized, 
    significantly undercapitalized, or critically undercapitalized, or has 
    been reclassified as undercapitalized, or significantly 
    undercapitalized; an officer or director of such bank; or a company 
    that controls such bank, the Board shall follow the procedures for 
    issuing directives under 12 CFR 263.202 and 263.204, unless otherwise 
    provided in section 38 or this subpart.
    
    Subpart E--Real Estate Lending and Appraisal Standards
    
    
    Sec. 208.50  Authority, purpose, and scope.
    
        (a) Authority. Subpart E of Regulation H (12 CFR part 208, subpart 
    E) is issued by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System 
    under section 304 of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 
    Improvement Act of 1991, 12 U.S.C. 1828(o) and Title 11 of the 
    Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act (12 U.S.C. 
    3331-3351).
        (b) Purpose and scope. This subpart E prescribes standards for real 
    estate lending to be used by member banks in adopting internal real 
    estate lending policies. The standards applicable to appraisals 
    rendered in connection with federally related transactions entered into 
    by member banks are set forth in 12 CFR part 225, subpart G (Regulation 
    Y).
    
    
    Sec. 208.51  Real estate lending standards.
    
        (a) Adoption of written policies. Each state bank that is a member 
    of the Federal Reserve System shall adopt and maintain written policies 
    that establish appropriate limits and standards for extensions of 
    credit that are secured by liens on or interests in real estate, or 
    that are made for the purpose of financing permanent improvements to 
    real estate.
        (b) Requirements of lending policies. (1) Real estate lending 
    policies adopted pursuant to this section shall be:
        (i) Consistent with safe and sound banking practices;
        (ii) Appropriate to the size of the institution and the nature and 
    scope of its operations; and
        (iii) Reviewed and approved by the bank's board of directors at 
    least annually.
        (2) The lending policies shall establish:
        (i) Loan portfolio diversification standards;
        (ii) Prudent underwriting standards, including loan-to-value 
    limits, that are clear and measurable;
        (iii) Loan administration procedures for the bank's real estate 
    portfolio; and
        (iv) Documentation, approval, and reporting requirements to monitor 
    compliance with the bank's real estate lending policies.
        (c) Monitoring conditions. Each member bank shall monitor 
    conditions in the real estate market in its lending area to ensure that 
    its real estate lending policies continue to be appropriate for current 
    market conditions.
        (d) Interagency guidelines. The real estate lending policies 
    adopted pursuant to this section should reflect consideration of the 
    Interagency Guidelines for Real Estate Lending Policies (contained in 
    appendix C of this part) established by the Federal bank and thrift 
    supervisory agencies.
    
    Subpart F--Miscellaneous Requirements
    
    
    Sec. 208.60  Authority, purpose, and scope.
    
        (a) Authority. Subpart F of Regulation H (12 CFR part 208, subpart 
    F) is issued by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System 
    under sections 9, 11, 21, 25 and 25A of the Federal Reserve Act (12 
    U.S.C. 321-338a, 248(a), 248(c), 481-486, 601 and 611), section 7 of 
    the International Banking Act (12 U.S.C. 3105), section 3 of the Bank 
    Protection Act of 1968 (12 U.S.C. 1882), sections 1814, 1816, 1818, 
    1831o, 1831p-1 and 1831r-1 of the FDI Act (12 U.S.C. 1814, 1816, 1818, 
    1831o, 1831p-1 and 1831r-1), and the Bank Secrecy Act (31 U.S.C. 5318).
        (b) Purpose and scope. This subpart F describes a member bank's 
    obligation to implement security procedures to discourage certain 
    crimes, to file suspicious activity reports, and to comply with the 
    Bank Secrecy Act's
    
    [[Page 37656]]
    
    requirements for reporting and recordkeeping of currency and foreign 
    transactions. It also describes the examination schedule for certain 
    small insured member banks.
    
    
    Sec. 208.61  Bank security procedures.
    
        (a) Authority, purpose, and scope. Pursuant to section 3 of the 
    Bank Protection Act of 1968 (12 U.S.C. 1882), member banks are required 
    to adopt appropriate security procedures to discourage robberies, 
    burglaries, and larcenies, and to assist in the identification and 
    prosecution of persons who commit such acts. It is the responsibility 
    of the member bank's board of directors to comply with the provisions 
    of this section and ensure that a written security program for the 
    bank's main office and branches is developed and implemented.
        (b) Designation of security officer. Upon becoming a member of the 
    Federal Reserve System, a member bank's board of directors shall 
    designate a security officer who shall have the authority, subject to 
    the approval of the board of directors, to develop, within a reasonable 
    time, but no later than 180 days, and to administer a written security 
    program for each banking office.
        (c) Security program. (1) The security program shall:
        (i) Establish procedures for opening and closing for business and 
    for the safekeeping of all currency, negotiable securities, and similar 
    valuables at all times;
        (ii) Establish procedures that will assist in identifying persons 
    committing crimes against the institution and that will preserve 
    evidence that may aid in their identification and prosecution. Such 
    procedures may include, but are not limited to: maintaining a camera 
    that records activity in the banking office; using identification 
    devices, such as prerecorded serial-numbered bills, or chemical and 
    electronic devices; and retaining a record of any robbery, burglary, or 
    larceny committed against the bank;
        (iii) Provide for initial and periodic training of officers and 
    employees in their responsibilities under the security program and in 
    proper employee conduct during and after a burglary, robbery, or 
    larceny; and
        (iv) Provide for selecting, testing, operating, and maintaining 
    appropriate security devices, as specified in paragraph (c)(2) of this 
    section.
        (2) Security devices. Each member bank shall have, at a minimum, 
    the following security devices:
        (i) A means of protecting cash and other liquid assets, such as a 
    vault, safe, or other secure space;
        (ii) A lighting system for illuminating, during the hours of 
    darkness, the area around the vault, if the vault is visible from 
    outside the banking office;
        (iii) Tamper-resistant locks on exterior doors and exterior windows 
    that may be opened;
        (iv) An alarm system or other appropriate device for promptly 
    notifying the nearest responsible law enforcement officers of an 
    attempted or perpetrated robbery or burglary; and
        (v) Such other devices as the security officer determines to be 
    appropriate, taking into consideration: the incidence of crimes against 
    financial institutions in the area; the amount of currency and other 
    valuables exposed to robbery, burglary, or larceny; the distance of the 
    banking office from the nearest responsible law enforcement officers; 
    the cost of the security devices; other security measures in effect at 
    the banking office; and the physical characteristics of the structure 
    of the banking office and its surroundings.
        (d) Annual reports. The security officer for each member bank shall 
    report at least annually to the bank's board of directors on the 
    implementation, administration, and effectiveness of the security 
    program.
        (e) Reserve Banks. Each Reserve Bank shall develop and maintain a 
    written security program for its main office and branches subject to 
    review and approval of the Board.
    
    
    Sec. 208.62  Suspicious activity reports.
    
        (a) Purpose. This section ensures that a member bank files a 
    Suspicious Activity Report when it detects a known or suspected 
    violation of Federal law, or a suspicious transaction related to a 
    money laundering activity or a violation of the Bank Secrecy Act. This 
    section applies to all member banks.
        (b) Definitions. For the purposes of this section:
        (1) FinCEN means the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network of the 
    Department of the Treasury.
        (2) Institution-affiliated party means any institution-affiliated 
    party as that term is defined in 12 U.S.C. 1786(r), or 1813(u) and 
    1818(b) (3), (4) or (5).
        (3) SAR means a Suspicious Activity Report on the form prescribed 
    by the Board.
        (c) SARs required. A member bank shall file a SAR with the 
    appropriate Federal law enforcement agencies and the Department of the 
    Treasury in accordance with the form's instructions by sending a 
    completed SAR to FinCEN in the following circumstances:
        (1) Insider abuse involving any amount. Whenever the member bank 
    detects any known or suspected Federal criminal violation, or pattern 
    of criminal violations, committed or attempted against the bank or 
    involving a transaction or transactions conducted through the bank, 
    where the bank believes that it was either an actual or potential 
    victim of a criminal violation, or series of criminal violations, or 
    that the bank was used to facilitate a criminal transaction, and the 
    bank has a substantial basis for identifying one of its directors, 
    officers, employees, agents or other institution-affiliated parties as 
    having committed or aided in the commission of a criminal act 
    regardless of the amount involved in the violation.
        (2) Violations aggregating $5,000 or more where a suspect can be 
    identified. Whenever the member bank detects any known or suspected 
    Federal criminal violation, or pattern of criminal violations, 
    committed or attempted against the bank or involving a transaction or 
    transactions conducted through the bank and involving or aggregating 
    $5,000 or more in funds or other assets, where the bank believes that 
    it was either an actual or potential victim of a criminal violation, or 
    series of criminal violations, or that the bank was used to facilitate 
    a criminal transaction, and the bank has a substantial basis for 
    identifying a possible suspect or group of suspects. If it is 
    determined prior to filing this report that the identified suspect or 
    group of suspects has used an ``alias,'' then information regarding the 
    true identity of the suspect or group of suspects, as well as alias 
    identifiers, such as drivers' licenses or social security numbers, 
    addresses and telephone numbers, must be reported.
        (3) Violations aggregating $25,000 or more regardless of a 
    potential suspect. Whenever the member bank detects any known or 
    suspected Federal criminal violation, or pattern of criminal 
    violations, committed or attempted against the bank or involving a 
    transaction or transactions conducted through the bank and involving or 
    aggregating $25,000 or more in funds or other assets, where the bank 
    believes that it was either an actual or potential victim of a criminal 
    violation, or series of criminal violations, or that the bank was used 
    to facilitate a criminal transaction, even though there is no 
    substantial basis for identifying a possible suspect or group of 
    suspects.
        (4) Transactions aggregating $5,000 or more that involve potential 
    money laundering or violations of the Bank Secrecy Act. Any transaction 
    (which for purposes of this paragraph (c)(4) means
    
    [[Page 37657]]
    
    a deposit, withdrawal, transfer between accounts, exchange of currency, 
    loan, extension of credit, purchase or sale of any stock, bond, 
    certificate of deposit, or other monetary instrument or investment 
    security, or any other payment, transfer, or delivery by, through, or 
    to a financial institution, by whatever means effected) conducted or 
    attempted by, at or through the member bank and involving or 
    aggregating $5,000 or more in funds or other assets, if the bank knows, 
    suspects, or has reason to suspect that:
        (i) The transaction involves funds derived from illegal activities 
    or is intended or conducted in order to hide or disguise funds or 
    assets derived from illegal activities (including, without limitation, 
    the ownership, nature, source, location, or control of such funds or 
    assets) as part of a plan to violate or evade any law or regulation or 
    to avoid any transaction reporting requirement under federal law;
        (ii) The transaction is designed to evade any regulations 
    promulgated under the Bank Secrecy Act; or
        (iii) The transaction has no business or apparent lawful purpose or 
    is not the sort in which the particular customer would normally be 
    expected to engage, and the bank knows of no reasonable explanation for 
    the transaction after examining the available facts, including the 
    background and possible purpose of the transaction.
        (d) Time for reporting. A member bank is required to file a SAR no 
    later than 30 calendar days after the date of initial detection of 
    facts that may constitute a basis for filing a SAR. If no suspect was 
    identified on the date of detection of the incident requiring the 
    filing, a member bank may delay filing a SAR for an additional 30 
    calendar days to identify a suspect. In no case shall reporting be 
    delayed more than 60 calendar days after the date of initial detection 
    of a reportable transaction. In situations involving violations 
    requiring immediate attention, such as when a reportable violation is 
    on-going, the financial institution shall immediately notify, by 
    telephone, an appropriate law enforcement authority and the Board in 
    addition to filing a timely SAR.
        (e) Reports to state and local authorities. Member banks are 
    encouraged to file a copy of the SAR with state and local law 
    enforcement agencies where appropriate.
        (f) Exceptions. (1) A member bank need not file a SAR for a robbery 
    or burglary committed or attempted that is reported to appropriate law 
    enforcement authorities.
        (2) A member bank need not file a SAR for lost, missing, 
    counterfeit, or stolen securities if it files a report pursuant to the 
    reporting requirements of 17 CFR 240.17f-1.
        (g) Retention of records. A member bank shall maintain a copy of 
    any SAR filed and the original or business record equivalent of any 
    supporting documentation for a period of five years from the date of 
    the filing of the SAR. Supporting documentation shall be identified and 
    maintained by the bank as such, and shall be deemed to have been filed 
    with the SAR. A member bank must make all supporting documentation 
    available to appropriate law enforcement agencies upon request.
        (h) Notification to board of directors. The management of a member 
    bank shall promptly notify its board of directors, or a committee 
    thereof, of any report filed pursuant to this section.
        (i) Compliance. Failure to file a SAR in accordance with this 
    section and the instructions may subject the member bank, its 
    directors, officers, employees, agents, or other institution affiliated 
    parties to supervisory action.
        (j) Confidentiality of SARs. SARs are confidential. Any member bank 
    subpoenaed or otherwise requested to disclose a SAR or the information 
    contained in a SAR shall decline to produce the SAR or to provide any 
    information that would disclose that a SAR has been prepared or filed 
    citing this section, applicable law (e.g., 31 U.S.C. 5318(g)), or both, 
    and notify the Board.
        (k) Safe harbor. The safe harbor provisions of 31 U.S.C. 5318(g), 
    which exempts any member bank that makes a disclosure of any possible 
    violation of law or regulation from liability under any law or 
    regulation of the United States, or any constitution, law or regulation 
    of any state or political subdivision, covers all reports of suspected 
    or known criminal violations and suspicious activities to law 
    enforcement and financial institution supervisory authorities, 
    including supporting documentation, regardless of whether such reports 
    are filed pursuant to this section or are filed on a voluntary basis.
    
    
    Sec. 208.63  Procedures for monitoring Bank Secrecy Act compliance.
    
        (a) Purpose. This section is issued to assure that all state member 
    banks establish and maintain procedures reasonably designed to assure 
    and monitor their compliance with the provisions of the Bank Secrecy 
    Act (31 U.S.C. 5311, et seq.) and the implementing regulations 
    promulgated thereunder by the Department of Treasury at 31 CFR part 
    103, requiring recordkeeping and reporting of currency transactions.
        (b) Establishment of compliance program. On or before April 27, 
    1987, each bank shall develop and provide for the continued 
    administration of a program reasonably designed to assure and monitor 
    compliance with the recordkeeping and reporting requirements set forth 
    in the Bank Secrecy Act (31 U.S.C. 5311, et seq.) and the implementing 
    regulations promulgated thereunder by the Department of Treasury at 31 
    CFR part 103. The compliance program shall be reduced to writing, 
    approved by the board of directors, and noted in the minutes.
        (c) Contents of compliance program. The compliance program shall, 
    at a minimum:
        (1) Provide for a system of internal controls to assure ongoing 
    compliance;
        (2) Provide for independent testing for compliance to be conducted 
    by bank personnel or by an outside party;
        (3) Designate an individual or individuals responsible for 
    coordinating and monitoring day-to-day compliance; and
        (4) Provide training for appropriate personnel.
    
    
    Sec. 208.64  Frequency of examination.
    
        (a) General. The Federal Reserve examines insured member banks 
    pursuant to authority conferred by 12 U.S.C. 325 and the requirements 
    of 12 U.S.C. 1820(d). The Federal Reserve is required to conduct a 
    full-scope, on-site examination of every insured member bank at least 
    once during each 12-month period.
        (b) 18-month rule for certain small institutions. The Federal 
    Reserve may conduct a full-scope, on-site examination of an insured 
    member bank at least once during each 18-month period, rather than each 
    12-month period as provided in paragraph (a) of this section, if the 
    following conditions are satisfied:
        (1) The bank has total assets of $250 million or less;
        (2) The bank is well capitalized as defined in subpart D of this 
    part (Sec. 208.43);
        (3) At the most recent examination conducted by either the Federal 
    Reserve or applicable State banking agency, the Federal Reserve found 
    the bank to be well managed;
        (4) At the most recent examination conducted by either the Federal 
    Reserve or applicable State banking agency, the Federal Reserve 
    assigned the bank a CAMELS rating of 1 or 2;
        (5) The bank currently is not subject to a formal enforcement 
    proceeding or
    
    [[Page 37658]]
    
    order by the FDIC, OCC, or Federal Reserve System; and
        (6) No person acquired control of the bank during the preceding 12-
    month period in which a full-scope, on-site examination would have been 
    required but for this section.
        (c) Authority to conduct more frequent examinations. This section 
    does not limit the authority of the Federal Reserve to examine any 
    member bank as frequently as the agency deems necessary.
    
    Subpart G--Interpretations
    
    
    Sec. 208.100  Sale of bank's money orders off premises as establishment 
    of branch office.
    
        (a) The Board of Governors has been asked to consider whether the 
    appointment by a member bank of an agent to sell the bank's money 
    orders, at a location other than the premises of the bank, constitutes 
    the establishment of a branch office.
        (b) Section 5155 of the Revised Statutes (12 U.S.C. 36), which is 
    also applicable to member banks, defines the term branch as including 
    ``any branch bank, branch office, branch agency, additional office, or 
    any branch place of business * * * at which deposits are received, or 
    checks paid, or money lent.'' The basic question is whether the sale of 
    a bank's money orders by an agent amounts to the receipt of deposits at 
    a branch place of business within the meaning of this statute.
        (c) Money orders are classified as deposits for certain purposes. 
    However, they bear a strong resemblance to traveler's checks that are 
    issued by banks and sold off premises. In both cases, the purchaser 
    does not intend to establish a deposit account in the bank, although a 
    liability on the bank's part is created. Even though they result in a 
    deposit liability, the Board is of the opinion that the issuance of a 
    bank's money orders by an authorized agent does not involve the receipt 
    of deposits at a ``branch place of business'' and accordingly does not 
    require the Board's permission to establish a branch.
    
    
    Sec. 208.101  Obligations concerning institutional customers.
    
        (a) As a result of broadened authority provided by the Government 
    Securities Act Amendments of 1993 (15 U.S.C. 78o-3 and 78o-5), the 
    Board is adopting sales practice rules for the government securities 
    market, a market with a particularly broad institutional component. 
    Accordingly, the Board believes it is appropriate to provide further 
    guidance to banks on their suitability obligations when making 
    recommendations to institutional customers.
        (b) The Board's Suitability Rule, Sec. 208.37(d), is fundamental to 
    fair dealing and is intended to promote ethical sales practices and 
    high standards of professional conduct. Banks' responsibilities include 
    having a reasonable basis for recommending a particular security or 
    strategy, as well as having reasonable grounds for believing the 
    recommendation is suitable for the customer to whom it is made. Banks 
    are expected to meet the same high standards of competence, 
    professionalism, and good faith regardless of the financial 
    circumstances of the customer.
        (c) In recommending to a customer the purchase, sale, or exchange 
    of any government security, the bank shall have reasonable grounds for 
    believing that the recommendation is suitable for the customer upon the 
    basis of the facts, if any, disclosed by the customer as to the 
    customer's other security holdings and financial situation and needs.
        (d) The interpretation in this section concerns only the manner in 
    which a bank determines that a recommendation is suitable for a 
    particular institutional customer. The manner in which a bank fulfills 
    this suitability obligation will vary, depending on the nature of the 
    customer and the specific transaction. Accordingly, the interpretation 
    in this section deals only with guidance regarding how a bank may 
    fulfill customer-specific suitability obligations under 
    Sec. 208.37(d).7
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \7\ The interpretation in this section does not address the 
    obligation related to suitability that requires that a bank have''* 
    * * a `reasonable basis' to believe that the recommendation could be 
    suitable for at least some customers.'' In the Matter of the 
    Application of F.J. Kaufman and Company of Virginia and Frederick J. 
    Kaufman, Jr., 50 SEC 164 (1989).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (e) While it is difficult to define in advance the scope of a 
    bank's suitability obligation with respect to a specific institutional 
    customer transaction recommended by a bank, the Board has identified 
    certain factors that may be relevant when considering compliance with 
    Sec. 208.37(d). These factors are not intended to be requirements or 
    the only factors to be considered but are offered merely as guidance in 
    determining the scope of a bank's suitability obligations.
        (f) The two most important considerations in determining the scope 
    of a bank's suitability obligations in making recommendations to an 
    institutional customer are the customer's capability to evaluate 
    investment risk independently and the extent to which the customer is 
    exercising independent judgement in evaluating a bank's recommendation. 
    A bank must determine, based on the information available to it, the 
    customer's capability to evaluate investment risk. In some cases, the 
    bank may conclude that the customer is not capable of making 
    independent investment decisions in general. In other cases, the 
    institutional customer may have general capability, but may not be able 
    to understand a particular type of instrument or its risk. This is more 
    likely to arise with relatively new types of instruments, or those with 
    significantly different risk or volatility characteristics than other 
    investments generally made by the institution. If a customer is either 
    generally not capable of evaluating investment risk or lacks sufficient 
    capability to evaluate the particular product, the scope of a bank's 
    customer-specific obligations under Sec. 208.37(d) would not be 
    diminished by the fact that the bank was dealing with an institutional 
    customer. On the other hand, the fact that a customer initially needed 
    help understanding a potential investment need not necessarily imply 
    that the customer did not ultimately develop an understanding and make 
    an independent investment decision.
        (g) A bank may conclude that a customer is exercising independent 
    judgement if the customer's investment decision will be based on its 
    own independent assessment of the opportunities and risks presented by 
    a potential investment, market factors and other investment 
    considerations. Where the bank has reasonable grounds for concluding 
    that the institutional customer is making independent investment 
    decisions and is capable of independently evaluating investment risk, 
    then a bank's obligations under Sec. 208.25(d) for a particular 
    customer are fulfilled.8 Where a customer has delegated 
    decision-making authority to an agent, such as an investment advisor or 
    a bank trust department, the interpretation in this section shall be 
    applied to the agent.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \8\ See footnote 7 in paragraph (d) of this section.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        (h) A determination of capability to evaluate investment risk 
    independently will depend on an examination of the customer's 
    capability to make its own investment decisions, including the 
    resources available to the customer to make informed decisions. 
    Relevant considerations could include:
        (1) The use of one or more consultants, investment advisers, or 
    bank trust departments;
        (2) The general level of experience of the institutional customer 
    in financial markets and specific experience with the type of 
    instruments under consideration;
    
    [[Page 37659]]
    
        (3) The customer's ability to understand the economic features of 
    the security involved;
        (4) The customer's ability to independently evaluate how market 
    developments would affect the security; and
        (5) The complexity of the security or securities involved.
        (i) A determination that a customer is making independent 
    investment decisions will depend on the nature of the relationship that 
    exists between the bank and the customer. Relevant considerations could 
    include:
        (1) Any written or oral understanding that exists between the bank 
    and the customer regarding the nature of the relationship between the 
    bank and the customer and the services to be rendered by the bank;
        (2) The presence or absence of a pattern of acceptance of the 
    bank's recommendations;
        (3) The use by the customer of ideas, suggestions, market views and 
    information obtained from other government securities brokers or 
    dealers or market professionals, particularly those relating to the 
    same type of securities; and
        (4) The extent to which the bank has received from the customer 
    current comprehensive portfolio information in connection with 
    discussing recommended transactions or has not been provided important 
    information regarding its portfolio or investment objectives.
        (j) Banks are reminded that these factors are merely guidelines 
    that will be utilized to determine whether a bank has fulfilled its 
    suitability obligation with respect to a specific institutional 
    customer transaction and that the inclusion or absence of any of these 
    factors is not dispositive of the determination of suitability. Such a 
    determination can only be made on a case-by-case basis taking into 
    consideration all the facts and circumstances of a particular bank/
    customer relationship, assessed in the context of a particular 
    transaction.
        (k) For purposes of the interpretation in this section, an 
    institutional customer shall be any entity other than a natural person. 
    In determining the applicability of the interpretation in this section 
    to an institutional customer, the Board will consider the dollar value 
    of the securities that the institutional customer has in its portfolio 
    and/or under management. While the interpretation in this section is 
    potentially applicable to any institutional customer, the guidance 
    contained in this section is more appropriately applied to an 
    institutional customer with at least $10 million invested in securities 
    in the aggregate in its portfolio and/or under management.
    
    PART 250--MISCELLANEOUS INTERPRETATIONS
    
        1. The authority citation for part 250 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 12 U.S.C. 78, 248(i) and 371c(e).
    
    
    Secs. 250.120 through 250.123, 250.140, 250.161, 250.162  [Removed]
    
        2. Sections 250.120, 250.121, 250.122, 250.123, 250.140, 250.161, 
    250.162 are removed.
    
    
    Secs. 250.300 through 250.302  [Removed]
    
        3. The undesignated center heading preceding Sec. 250.300 and 
    Secs. 250.300 through 250.302 are removed.
    
        By order of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve 
    System, July 6, 1998
    Jennifer J. Johnson,
    Secretary of the Board.
    [FR Doc. 98-18274 Filed 7-10-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6210-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
10/1/1998
Published:
07/13/1998
Department:
Federal Reserve System
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
98-18274
Dates:
October 1, 1998.
Pages:
37630-37659 (30 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Regulation H, Docket No. R-0964
PDF File:
98-18274.pdf
CFR: (49)
12 CFR 208.6(a)
12 CFR 208.21(b)
12 CFR 225.14(c)
12 CFR 208.3(d)
12 CFR 208.2(d)
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