96-26504. Assessments  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 201 (Wednesday, October 16, 1996)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 53834-53841]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-26504]
    
    
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    FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
    
    12 CFR Part 327
    
    RIN 3064-AB93
    
    
    Assessments
    
    AGENCY: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC).
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Deposit Insurance Funds Act of 1996 (Funds Act) requires 
    the FDIC to impose a special assessment on institutions holding 
    deposits subject to assessment by the Savings Association Insurance 
    Fund (SAIF). The Funds Act mandates that the special assessment 
    increase the SAIF's net worth as of October 1, 1996 to 1.25 percent of 
    SAIF-insured deposits.
        The Funds Act requires the FDIC to determine the amount of the 
    special assessment based on the most recently calculated SAIF balance 
    (August 31, 1996) and insured deposit data reported in the most recent 
    quarterly reports of condition filed not later than 70 days before 
    enactment (reports as of March 31, 1996, filed April 30, 1996). The 
    special assessment will be collected on November 27, 1996. This 
    assessment, which the FDIC estimates to be 65.7 basis points, is 
    required to be applied against SAIF-assessable deposits which generally 
    were held by institutions as of March 31, 1995.
        The final rule provides for certain discounts and exemptions 
    related to the special assessment. In addition, the FDIC is 
    establishing guidelines for identifying institutions classified as 
    ``weak'', and therefore exempt from the special assessment. The final 
    rule also adjusts the base for computing the regular semiannual 
    assessments paid by certain institutions, in accordance with the Funds 
    Act.
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: October 8, 1996.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Stephen Ledbetter, Chief, Assessments 
    Evaluation Section, Division of Insurance (202) 898-8658; Allan Long, 
    Assistant Director, Division of Finance, (202) 416-6991; Cary Hiner, 
    Associate Director, Division of Supervision, (202) 898-6814; James 
    McFadyen, Senior Financial Analyst, (202) 898-7027, Division of 
    Research and Statistics; Richard Osterman, Senior Counsel, (202) 898-
    3523, or Jules Bernard, Counsel, Legal Division, (202) 898-3731; 
    Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550-17th St., N.W., Washington, 
    D. C. 20429.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. The Final Rule
    
        The final rule imposes a special assessment on all institutions 
    that pay assessments to the SAIF, but allows discounts for certain 
    institutions, and exempts others. The final rule also reduces the 
    adjusted attributable deposit amounts (AADAs) of certain Oakar banks: 
    banks that belong to the Bank Insurance Fund (BIF), but hold deposits 
    that are treated as insured by the SAIF pursuant to the Oakar 
    Amendment, 12 U.S.C. 1815(d)(3).
    
    A. The Special Assessment
    
        The Funds Act, Pub. L. 104-208, 110 Stat. 3009 et seq., requires 
    the FDIC's Board of Directors (Board) to impose a special assessment on 
    all institutions that hold SAIF-assessable deposits--that is, on SAIF-
    member institutions, and on Oakar banks--in an amount sufficient to 
    increase the Savings Association Insurance Fund reserve ratio (SAIF 
    reserve ratio) 1 to the designated reserve ratio (DRR) of 1.25 
    percent 2 as of October 1, 1996. Funds Act section 2702(a); see 12 
    U.S.C. 1817(b)(2)(a)(4).
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        \1\ The Savings Association Insurance Fund reserve ratio is the 
    ratio of SAIF's net worth to aggregate SAIF-insured deposits. 12 
    U.S.C. 1817(l)(7).
        \2\ The DRR is a target ratio that has a fixed value for each 
    year. The value is either (i) 1.25 percent, or (ii) such higher 
    percentage as the Board determines to be justified for that year by 
    circumstances raising a significant risk of substantial future 
    losses to the fund. Id. 1817(b)(2)(A)(iv). The Board has not 
    increased the DRR for the SAIF.
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        The Funds Act requires the special assessment to be applied against 
    the SAIF-assessable deposits held by institutions as of March 31, 1995. 
    If an institution that held deposits on that date has transferred the 
    deposits to another institution after March 31, 1995, and is no longer 
    an insured institution on November 27, 1996 (the collection date for 
    the special assessment), the transferee institution is deemed to have 
    held the transferred deposits as of March 31, 1995, and must pay the 
    assessment due on them. See Funds Act section 2710(8)(B).
        The Board is also required to take the following exemptions and 
    adjustments into account in determining the amount of the special 
    assessment: (1) The Funds Act decreases by 20 percent the amount of 
    SAIF-assessable deposits against which the special assessment will be 
    applied for certain institutions; (2) the Funds Act grants exemptions 
    to certain specifically defined institutions; and (3) the Funds Act 
    also provides the Board with the authority to exempt weak institutions 
    from paying the special assessment if the Board determines that such an 
    exemption would reduce risk to the SAIF.
    1. 20 Percent Discounts
        When calculating the amount of special assessment for certain 
    institutions, those institutions' SAIF-assessable deposits, determined 
    as of March 31, 1995, are decreased by 20 percent.
        Section 2702(h) of the Funds Act provides the discount to the 
    following Oakar banks:
    
    --Any Oakar bank that, as of June 30, 1995, had an AADA that was 
    less than half of its total domestic (and therefore assessable) 
    deposits. Id. section 2702(h)(1)(A).
    --Any Oakar bank that met all the following conditions as of June 
    30, 1995: it had more than $5 billion in total assessable deposits; 
    it had an AADA that was less than 75 percent of that amount; and it 
    belonged to a bank holding company system that, in the aggregate, 
    had more BIF-insured deposits than SAIF-insured deposits. Id. 
    section 2702(h)(1)(B).
    
        Section 2702(j) of the Funds Act provides the same discount to the 
    following ``converted'' institutions:
    
    --A SAIF-member federal savings association that had no more than $4 
    billion of SAIF-assessable deposits as of March 31, 1995, and that 
    had been, or is a successor to, an institution that used to be a 
    state savings bank insured by the FDIC prior to August 9, 1989, and 
    that converted to a federal savings association pursuant to section 
    5(i) of the Home Owners' Loan Act before January 1, 1985. Id. 
    section 2702(j)(2)(A).
    --A state-chartered SAIF member that had been a state savings bank 
    prior to October 15, 1982, and that was a federal savings 
    association on August 9, 1989. Id. section 2702(j)(2)(B).
    --An insured bank that was established de novo in order to acquire 
    the deposits of a savings association in default or in danger of 
    default, that did not open for business before acquiring the 
    deposits of such savings association, and that was a SAIF member as 
    of the date of enactment of the Funds Act. Id. section 
    2702(j)(2)(C).
    --A ``Sasser bank''--that is, a bank that converted its charter from 
    a savings association to a bank, yet remained a SAIF member in 
    accordance with the Sasser Amendment, 12 U.S.C. 1815(d)(2)(G)--that 
    underwent the conversion before December 19, 1991, and that 
    increased its capital by more than 75 percent in conjunction with 
    the conversion. Funds Act section 2702(j)(2)(D).
    
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    2. Exemptions
        Section 2702(f)(3) of the Funds Act grants exemptions from the 
    special assessment to the following institutions:
    
    --A savings association that was in existence on October 1, 1995, 
    but held no SAIF-assessable deposits prior to January 1, 1993. An 
    institution is ``deemed to have held SAIF-assessable deposits prior 
    to January 1, 1993'' if the institution directly held such deposits 
    prior to that date, or if the institution succeeded to, acquired, 
    purchased, or otherwise held any SAIF-assessable deposits as of the 
    date of enactment of the Funds Act that were SAIF-assessable 
    deposits prior to January 1, 1993. Id. section 2702(f)(3)(A)(i); see 
    id. section 2702(f)(3)(B).
    --A federal savings bank that was established de novo in April 1994, 
    in order to acquire the deposits of a savings association that was 
    in default or in danger of default, if the acquiring federal savings 
    bank received minority interim capital assistance from the 
    Resolution Trust Corporation under section 21A(w) of the Federal 
    Home Loan Bank Act, 12 U.S.C. 1441a(w), in connection with the 
    acquisition. Funds Act section 2702(f)(3)(A)(ii).
    --A SAIF-insured savings association that, prior to January 1, 1987, 
    was chartered as a federal savings bank insured by the Federal 
    Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation for the purpose of acquiring 
    all or substantially all of the assets and assuming all or 
    substantially all of the deposit liabilities of a national bank in a 
    transaction consummated after July 1, 1986, and that, as of the date 
    of the transaction, had assets of less than $150,000,000. Id. 
    section 2702(f)(3)(A)(iii).
    3. Weak institutions
        Section 2702(f)(1) of the Funds Act gives the Board authority to 
    grant an exemption to any institution that the Board determines to be 
    ``weak'', if the Board determines that the exemption would reduce risk 
    to the SAIF. Section 2702(f)(2) of the Funds Act requires the Board to 
    prescribe guidelines that set forth the Board's criteria for 
    determining whether an institution is ``weak''. Accordingly, the FDIC 
    is adopting the following guidelines. The first two guidelines refer to 
    the assessment risk classifications set forth in part 327, which are 
    used to determine the regular semiannual assessments that insured 
    institutions pay under the FDIC's risk-based assessment system. The 
    third guideline refers to the supervisory ratings issued by the federal 
    supervisory agencies.
        Guideline #1. If a SAIF-member institution or an Oakar bank has so 
    little capital that it currently meets the standards for capital group 
    3 (``undercapitalized'') pursuant to section 327.4(a)(1)(iii) of the 
    FDIC's regulations, the institution generally presents a significant 
    risk of loss to the SAIF for the purpose of section 2(f) of the Funds 
    Act. The special assessment would deplete such an institution's 
    resources even further: it would diminish the institution's capital, 
    lower its earnings, and reduce its liquidity. Accordingly, the Board 
    has generally determined to exempt all such institutions from the 
    special assessment, on the ground that doing so would reduce the risk 
    to the SAIF.
        Guideline #2. The special assessment could itself cause some 
    institutions to meet the standards of capital group 3, and thereby 
    present a significant risk of loss to the SAIF for the purpose of 
    section 2(f) of the Funds Act. The Board has generally determined to 
    exempt these institutions as well, on the same ground.
        (3) Guideline #3: Institutions rated 4 or 5. If an institution's 
    composite rating by its primary supervisor is 4 or 5, the institution 
    may request the FDIC to consider whether it would be appropriate to 
    exempt the institution from the special assessment. Such an institution 
    is regarded as ``weak'' if the institution would, after having paid the 
    assessment, present a significant risk of loss to the SAIF for the 
    purpose of section 2(f) of the Funds Act. The Board has determined to 
    exempt such institutions for the reason given with respect to 
    Guidelines #1 and #2.
        The Board is delegating authority to administer these guidelines to 
    the Director of the FDIC's Division of Supervision (DOS Director). The 
    DOS Director will examine and evaluate the circumstances of each 
    institution that is initially regarded as ``weak'', taking into account 
    all relevant information currently available to the FDIC. The DOS 
    Director will begin by looking to the institution's current assessment 
    risk classification: that is, its risk classification for the second 
    semiannual period of 1996 (which has determined its assessment rate for 
    the regular semiannual assessment for that period). The DOS Director 
    will use later financial information, where available, for the limited 
    purpose of ascertaining whether an institution meets the criteria set 
    forth in the guidelines.3
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        \3\ The FIDC has a formal procedure pursuant to which an 
    institution may request a review of its current assessment risk 
    classification. See 12 CFR 327.4(d). An institution must invoke the 
    procedure within 30 days after receiving the invoice for the first 
    quarterly payment for the current semiannual period, however. No 
    institution in capital group 3 has done so, however, and the 
    deadline has passed. As a result, the procedure is not available in 
    connection with the special assessment.
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        This later information will have no bearing on an institution's 
    current assessment risk classification, or on the regular semiannual 
    assessment it has already paid for the second semiannual period of 
    1996. The information will only pertain to the question whether an 
    institution is obliged to pay--or is exempt from paying--the special 
    assessment, without regard for the institution's current 
    classification.
        The Board believes that it is possible to adopt this approach 
    because, as a practical matter, only a few institutions are likely to 
    present issues that require the use of such data. The Board is pledging 
    that the FDIC will work closely and intensively with each affected 
    institution to determine the institution's classification for purposes 
    of the special assessment.
        The Board recognizes that in a particular case an institution may 
    meet the standards for classification in capital group 3 as a formal 
    matter, but may nevertheless be capable of paying the special 
    assessment. If such an institution prefers to pay, and if the DOS 
    Director considers that doing so will not materially increase the risk 
    to the SAIF, the institution will be permitted to make the payment.
        The Funds Act specifies that the Board must exempt weak 
    institutions ``by order''. Id. section 2702(f)(1). The Board regards 
    the action of issuing exemption orders as a ministerial function, and 
    is delegating authority to take such action to the DOS Director under 
    these guidelines.
        Section 2702(f)(2) of the Funds Act requires the FDIC to publish 
    the guidelines in the Federal Register. The FDIC is fulfilling this 
    requirement by publishing the guidelines in connection with this 
    rulemaking proceeding. The FDIC is presenting the guidelines as an 
    appendix to subpart C of part 327 of its assessment regulation, as 
    added by this final rule.
    4. Payments by Exempt Institutions
        Certain exempt institutions--``weak'' institutions, and those 
    listed in section 2702(f)(3) of the Funds Act (see I.A.2 and 3, 
    supra)--must continue to pay regular semiannual assessments to the SAIF 
    according to the rate-schedule that was in effect for SAIF assessments 
    on June 30, 1995.4 Id. section 2702(f)(4)(A). Any such institution 
    must do so through the end of 1999, or until it makes a pro-
    
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    rata payment of the special assessment. The pro-rata payment must be 
    equal to the following product: 16.7 percent of the amount the 
    institution would have owed for the special assessment, multiplied by 
    the number of full semiannual periods remaining between the date of the 
    payment and December 31, 1999. Id. section 2702(f)(4)(B).
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        \4\ Section 2703 of the Funds Act provides that, for semiannual 
    periods beginning after December 31, 1996, amounts authorized to be 
    assessed by the SAIF will not be reduced by amounts assessed by the 
    FICO. Accordingly, the SAIF assessment for the first semiannual 
    period of 1997 will be separate from, and in addition to, the 
    assessment imposed by the FICO. The alternative reading would have 
    the anomalous result that exempt institutions in the highest risk 
    category would pay lower overall semiannual assessments than 
    comparable non-exempt institutions.
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        An exempt institution must pay the regular assessment (at the June 
    30, 1995, rates) for the first semiannual period of 1997. An exempt 
    institution may make a pro-rata payment in any calendar year from 1997 
    through 1999, and thereby become subject to the rate-schedule 
    applicable to non-exempt institutions. The Funds Act specifies that any 
    such payment is to be made ``upon such terms as the FDIC may 
    announce''. Id. section 2702(f)(4)(B). The FDIC expects to specify 
    appropriate terms in the invoice for the special assessment.
    5. Computing the Assessment Rate
        The Funds Act requires the FDIC to impose the special assessment in 
    accordance with the FDIC's regulations governing assessments. The FDIC 
    will accordingly determine the aggregate amount of the special 
    assessment, and will compute the particular amount that each 
    institution must pay, just as if the assessment were a regular 
    semiannual assessment (except insofar as the Funds Act specifically 
    prescribes another methodology).
        Amount needed. For the purpose of computing the special assessment, 
    the FDIC is required to use the SAIF's most recent monthly balance as 
    the numerator for the reserve ratio. Id. section 2702(b)(1). On August 
    31, 1996 (the date for the most recent monthly balance) the SAIF had a 
    balance of $4.1 billion.
        The Funds Act requires the FDIC to use the amount of SAIF-insured 
    deposits as reported in the most recent reports of condition filed not 
    later than 70 days before the date of enactment of the Funds Act as the 
    denominator for calculating the reserve ratio. Id. section 2702(b)(2). 
    The relevant filing date is April 30, 1996, which is the filing date 
    for the reports of condition for the first calendar quarter of 1996. 
    After adjusting for the 20 percent decrease in the SAIF-assessable 
    deposits of certain Oakar banks, which the FDIC estimates to be $28.2 
    billion, the amount of SAIF-insured deposits as of March 31, 1996 was 
    $688.1 billion. Id. section 2702(h)(1).5
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        \5\ Section 2702(i)(2) of the Funds Act reduces the AADAs of 
    certain Oakar banks permanently by 20 percent for the purpose of 
    computing the institutions' regular assessments for the first 
    semiannual period of 1997 and thereafter. See 12 U.S.C. 
    1815(d)(3)(K).
        The assessments for that first period are based on the 
    institutions' reports of condition for the second semiannual period 
    of 1996, however: the deposits in these reports therefore reflect 
    the lower AADAs that the institutions have with respect to the prior 
    semiannual period (that is, the second semiannual period of 1996).
        The FDIC considers that it is appropriate to regard the AADAs of 
    these institutions as having been likewise reduced for insurance 
    purposes on the effective date of the Funds Act. In this respect, 
    the final rule maintains the relationship between the AADA for a 
    semiannual period (which determines the assessment for that period) 
    and the AADA with respect to the prior semiannual period (which 
    determines the allocation of loss between the BIF and the SAIF if an 
    Oakar institution fails in that prior semiannual period, and which 
    can be affected immediately by certain changes such as acquisitions 
    of secondary-fund deposits).
        The Funds Act directs the FDIC to determine the denominator of 
    the reserve ratio for October 1, 1996, by using the aggregate volume 
    of deposits reported in the quarterly reports of condition for the 
    first quarter of 1996. In accordance with section 2702(b)(3) of the 
    Funds Act, which authorizes the Board to consider ``any other 
    factors that the Board of Directors deems appropriate'', the FDIC 
    has determined to reduce the aggregate volume so reported by 20 
    percent, in order to reflect the lower insurance liability 
    experienced by the SAIF as of October 1, 1996. The reduction is 
    $28.2 billion.
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        The resulting reserve ratio is .60 percent. In order to raise the 
    ratio to 1.25 percent, the special assessment must collect an 
    additional $4.5 billion.
        Assessable base. The FDIC must raise this amount by assessing the 
    SAIF-assessable deposits that institutions held (or, in the case of 
    certain transferees, are deemed to have held) as of March 31, 1995 
    ($726.2 billion). Id. section 2702(c). After adjusting for the 
    estimated $36.8 billion decrease in the SAIF-assessable deposits of 
    institutions receiving the 20 percent discount,6 and the $4.0 
    billion in SAIF-assessable deposits of exempted institutions,7 the 
    amount of SAIF-assessable deposits as of March 31, 1995, subject to the 
    special assessment is estimated to be $685.4 billion.
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        \6\ The Funds Act discounts SAIF-insured deposits of certain 
    BIF-member Oakar banks by 20 percent, or $34.4 billion. Id. section 
    2702(h)(1). It also discounts the deposits of certain ``converted 
    associations'' by 20 percent, or $2.4 billion. Id. section 2702(j).
        \7\ The Funds Act exempts certain institutions from the special 
    assessment, removing an estimated $400 million from the SAIF 
    assessment base. Id. section 2702(f)(3). It also authorizes the 
    Board to exempt institutions that the Board classifies as ``weak''. 
    The Board has established criteria for making that determination; 
    several institutions satisfy those criteria, and have been exempted. 
    As a result, an estimated $3.6 billion is removed from the SAIF 
    assessment base. Id. section 2702(f)(1) and (2).
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        Resulting rate. The special assessment rate is determined by 
    dividing the amount needed ($4.5 billion) by the adjusted SAIF- 
    assessable deposits as of March 31, 1995. The resulting rate is 65.7 
    basis points (0.657 percent).
        The FDIC recognizes that--in principle--there could be revisions in 
    the deposits of individual institutions, and re-evaluations of 
    individual institutions' eligibility for exemption from the special 
    assessment, and that such revisions or re-evaluations could cause 
    adjustments to be made in the data used to compute the aggregate amount 
    of the special assessment. The FDIC does not anticipate that any such 
    adjustments will be so large as to affect materially the aggregate 
    amount needed or the resulting rate, however. If an adjustment is 
    needed, the FDIC will announce the adjustment and the resulting rate on 
    November 13, 1996, when the FDIC mails out the invoices for the special 
    assessment.
    6. Collection Procedures
        The FDIC expects to send, immediately after adoption of this final 
    rule, a letter to all SAIF members and all Oakar banks. The letter will 
    describe the procedures that the FDIC will follow in determining and 
    collecting the special assessment from the institutions.
        The FDIC expects to contact immediately any institution that 
    initially appears to meet the standards for classification in capital 
    group 3; any institution that might, in the FDIC's judgment, do so if 
    the institution were to pay the special assessment; and any institution 
    rated composite 4 or 5 by its primary supervisor.
        Together with the letter, the FDIC expects to mail to each 
    institution a statement showing the estimated amount of the special 
    assessment that the institution must pay, together with an explanation 
    of the way the FDIC calculated the amount. In the case of institutions 
    that initially appear to be ``weak'', the FDIC expects to transmit the 
    statement in a more expeditious manner.
        Institutions will have until November 1, 1996, to review the 
    statement. If an institution believes the assessed amount is incorrect, 
    the institution may provide whatever information may be necessary to 
    correct it. For example, if the FDIC has improperly failed to identify 
    an institution that is exempt from the special assessment, or one that 
    is eligible for a reduction in the base on which its special assessment 
    is to be computed, the institution will have until the start of 
    November to bring the matter to the FDIC's attention. If the matter 
    cannot be resolved before the final invoice for the special assessment 
    is sent out, the institution will be required to pay the invoiced 
    amount, which will be subject to adjustment (if necessary) after a 
    final determination is made.
        In addition, during this interval each institution that the FDIC 
    has initially
    
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    identified as ``weak'' may ask for a review of that status, and may 
    provide additional documentation to the FDIC to support its request for 
    reclassification. The FDIC expects to inform any such institution 
    promptly of the FDIC's final determination.
        The FDIC expects to send out invoices to all affected institutions 
    on November 13, 1996.
        Institutions will pay the special assessment by the same means as 
    they pay their regular semiannual assessments--that is, through the 
    accounts they have designated for that purpose. Each institution must 
    fund its designated account with enough money to pay the amount 
    specified in its invoice. The FDIC will debit each institution's 
    designated account on November 27, 1996.
    7. Institutions Facing Hardship
        Section 2702(g) of the Funds Act allows certain institutions to 
    elect to pay the special assessment in two installments. The FDIC must 
    consent to the election.
        In order to be eligible to make the election, either the 
    institution itself or the depository institution holding company that 
    controls the institution must be subject to terms or covenants in debt 
    obligations or preferred stock outstanding on September 13, 1995. The 
    FDIC must then determine whether payment of the entire special 
    assessment on November 27 would pose a significant risk of causing the 
    depository institution or its depository institution holding company to 
    default on or to violate any of these terms or covenants.
        If the institution meets these criteria, the FDIC must decide 
    whether to grant its approval. The FDIC will base its decision on the 
    entire circumstances of the proposed election, including but not 
    limited to the election's effects on the institution, on the SAIF, and 
    on the public interest.
        If an institution receives approval to make the election, the 
    institution must pay the first installment on November 27. The first 
    installment is equal to half the special assessment the electing 
    institution would otherwise have to pay.
        The second installment is 51 percent of the amount computed by 
    applying the rate for the special assessment to the electing 
    institution's SAIF-assessable deposits either as of March 31, 1996, or 
    as of such other date as the Board may determine. The Board has 
    determined to apply the rate to the institution's SAIF-assessable 
    deposits as of December 31, 1996, on the ground that it is preferable 
    to use current data for the second installment. The Funds Act evidently 
    contemplates the use of current data for this purpose.
        The Board has chosen March 31, 1997, as the appropriate date for 
    the second installment. This date is ``practicable'' because 
    institutions make a regular quarterly payment on that date. The FDIC 
    will be able to adapt its regular assessment procedures to the 
    collection of the second installment, thereby minimizing inconvenience 
    both to the FDIC and to the institution. Moreover, it is the first such 
    date that is more than 15 days after the December 31, 1996, assessment-
    base determination day.
        An electing institution must also pay a supplemental special 
    assessment at the same time as it pays the second installment. The 
    supplemental amount is computed as follows: the FDIC must determine 
    whether the institution's SAIF-assessable deposits have decreased from 
    March 31, 1995, to the December 31, 1996, assessment-base determination 
    day, and if so, by how much; multiply the amount of the decrease by 95 
    percent; and then multiply the result by one-half the rate for the 
    special assessment.
    
    B. Permanent Reduction in AADAs for Certain Oakar Banks
    
        Section 2702(i) of the Funds Act makes a permanent change in the 
    computation of the AADAs of certain Oakar banks. The general rule is 
    that the initial component of an Oakar bank's AADA is equal in value to 
    the amount of SAIF-insured deposits that the Oakar bank acquires from 
    another institution pursuant to the Oakar Amendment. Section 2702(i) of 
    the Funds Act specifies that, for certain Oakar banks, the amount of 
    such deposits used to fix that initial component is to be reduced by 20 
    percent in the case of transactions occurring on or before March 31, 
    1995.
        The effect of the change is to reduce the AADAs of the affected 
    Oakar banks prospectively and permanently. The change applies for the 
    purpose of computing regular semiannual assessments for the first 
    semiannual period of 1997 and thereafter.
        The change affects any Oakar bank that, as of June 30, 1995, 
    either:
    
    --had an AADA that was less than 50 percent of the institution's 
    deposits of that institution as of June 30, 1995, see FDI Act 
    section 5(d)(3)(K)(i), 12 U.S.C. 1815(d)(3)(K)(i); or
    --had more than $5 billion in total assessable deposits, had an AADA 
    that was less than 75 percent of its total assessable deposits, and 
    belonged to a bank holding company system that, in the aggregate, 
    had more BIF-insured deposits than SAIF-insured deposits, see FDI 
    Act section 5(d)(3)(K)(ii), 12 U.S.C. 1815(d)(3)(K)(ii).
    
        The final rule amends part 327 to incorporate this statutory 
    change.
    
    II. Effective Date
    
        The final rule is effective upon enactment by the Board. The FDIC 
    is choosing to make the rule effective immediately, and not upon 
    publication in the Federal Register, because the Funds Act directs the 
    Board to impose the special assessment, and further specifies that the 
    special assessment is to be ``due'' on October 1. The FDIC wishes to 
    issue invoices to institutions promptly; the rule provides the 
    foundation for the invoices.
        For the reasons given below, the FDIC has determined that it is 
    impracticable and unnecessary, and contrary both to public interest and 
    to the intent of the Funds Act, to incur the delay that the ordinary 
    process of notice and public comment would entail. In addition, the 
    FDIC has further determined for the reasons given below that there is 
    good cause for the rule to be made immediately effective, and not after 
    a 30-day delay following publication of the final rule. The FDIC is 
    therefore issuing this rule without notice and public comment (see 5 
    U.S.C. 553(b)(3)(B)) or a delayed effective date (see id. 
    553(d)(3)(C)).
        The FDIC considers that it is impracticable--and contrary to the 
    public interest and to the intent of Congress--to incur either one of 
    the delays because the short deadlines prescribed by the Funds Act. The 
    Funds Act requires the Board to impose a special assessment which is to 
    be due on October 1, 1996, and which is payable not later than November 
    29, 1996 (sixty days after the date of enactment of the Funds Act); 
    requires the FDIC to allow certain discounts and exemptions from the 
    special assessment; and permits the FDIC to exempt ``weak'' 
    institutions from the special assessment. In order to comply with these 
    directives, the FDIC must undertake a number of administrative tasks 
    that are mechanical in nature: computing each institution's assessment; 
    notifying the institution of the amount to be paid, and date of 
    payment; allowing institutions time to consider and perhaps question 
    the amount; resolving questions not involving material disagreements; 
    and arranging for the collection of the assessments through the 
    payments system. These tasks require careful preparation and time for 
    proper execution. It would not be possible for the FDIC to carry out 
    this mandate within the prescribed deadline if the final rule were 
    subjected either to the notice-and-comment process or to a delayed 
    effective date.
    
    [[Page 53838]]
    
        The FDIC further considers that it is unnecessary to seek prior 
    notice and comment on the rule--and to incur the delay thereof--because 
    the FDIC is already in full possession of the information needed to 
    determine the amount of the assessment and the rate that is needed to 
    raise that amount.8 The Funds Act further gives the Board ``sole 
    discretion'' to exempt institutions that the Board classifies as 
    ``weak''. Id. section 2702(f)(1). Accordingly, the notice-and-comment 
    procedure would not serve any useful purpose.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \8\ In addition, the Funds Act gives the Board ``sole 
    discretion'' to determine the rate at which the special assessment 
    will be imposed. Funds Act section 2702(a).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The delayed effective date is also unnecessary, and, therefore, 
    good cause exists for dispensing with the requirement. The purpose of 
    the delay is to give affected parties time to prepare for the rule's 
    coming into effect and take whatever action they deem necessary. In 
    this case, the only requirement imposed by the rule on affected parties 
    is the payment of money. The final rule is being issued more than 30 
    days before the payment is due, and provides the equivalent of a 30-day 
    delayed effective date. Although the rate is subject to adjustment 
    before final invoices are sent out, any such adjustment is expected to 
    be limited and will be announced 14 days before the special assessment 
    is collected. Moreover, specific provision is made in the rule for 
    institutions for which payment might present a problem. Finally, 
    delaying the effective date would be counterproductive since it would 
    preclude the FDIC from sending out the invoices at the earliest 
    possible date and giving affected parties the maximum amount of time to 
    arrange for payment.
        The Funds Act also makes a permanent change in the method for 
    determining the initial component of the AADAs of certain Oakar banks. 
    Id. section 2702(i); see 12 U.S.C. 1815(d)(3)(K). The final rule 
    incorporates the change into the FDIC's assessment regulation. This 
    aspect of the final rule is purely ministerial, however; notice and 
    comment would serve no useful purpose. In addition, this aspect of the 
    final rule is exempt from the notice-and-comment requirement on another 
    ground: incorporating the statutory language into the regulation is 
    purely interpretative, being necessary to conform the regulation to the 
    statute.
    
    III. Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        The FDIC expects to contact all institutions that initially appear 
    to qualify as weak institutions under the guidelines, and also all 
    other institutions that would initially appear to so qualify upon 
    payment of the special assessment. The FDIC will not present identical 
    questions to the subject institutions, however, but will rather conduct 
    an informal inquiry regarding the condition of the particular 
    institution. Accordingly, the FDIC is not engaging in a ``collection of 
    information'' within the meaning of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 
    1995. See 44 U.S.C. 3502(3).
    
    IV. Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        The Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq., does 
    not apply to the final rule. The RFA only applies to rulemaking for 
    which notice and comment are required. See id. section 603 and 604. For 
    the reasons given above, the Administrative Procedure Act (id. 553) 
    does not require notice of proposed rulemaking; no other provision of 
    law does so either.
        Furthermore, the RFA's definition for the term ``rule'' excludes 
    ``a rule of particular applicability relating to rates''. Id. 601(2). 
    The FDIC considers that the exclusion governs the final rule, because 
    the final rule implements Congress' command to impose a one-time 
    special assessment on SAIF-assessable institutions. The RFA's 
    requirements regarding an initial and final regulatory flexibility 
    analysis (id. sectio603 and 604) do not apply on this ground as well.
        Finally, the RFA's legislative history indicates that its 
    requirements are inappropriate to this proceeding. The RFA focuses on 
    the ``impact'' that a rule will have on small entities. The legislative 
    history shows that the ``impact'' at issue is a differential impact--
    that is, an impact that places a disproportionate burden on small 
    businesses:
    
        Uniform regulations applicable to all entities without regard to 
    size or capability of compliance have often had a disproportionate 
    adverse effect on small concerns. The bill, therefore, is designed 
    to encourage agencies to tailor their rules to the size and nature 
    of those to be regulated whenever this is consistent with the 
    underlying statute authorizing the rule.
    
    126 Cong. Rec. 21453 (1980) (``Description of Major Issues and Section-
    by-Section Analysis of Substitute for S. 299'').
    
        The final rule does not impose a uniform cost or requirement on all 
    institutions regardless of size. Rather, it imposes an assessment that 
    is directly proportional to each institution's size. Nor does the final 
    rule cause an affected institution to incur any ancillary costs of 
    compliance--such as the need to develop new recordkeeping or reporting 
    systems, to seek out the expertise of specialized accountants, lawyers, 
    or managers--that might cause disproportionate harm to small entities. 
    As a result, the purposes and objectives of the RFA are not affected, 
    and neither an initial nor a final regulatory flexibility analysis is 
    required.
    
    V. Riegle Community Development and Regulatory Improvement Act of 
    1994
    
        Section 302(b) of the Riegle Community Development and Regulatory 
    Improvement Act of 1994 requires that, as a general rule, new and 
    amended regulations that impose additional reporting, disclosure, or 
    other new requirements on insured depository institutions shall take 
    effect on the first day of a calendar quarter. See 12 U.S.C. 4802(b). 
    This restriction is inapplicable to the final rule, which does not 
    impose such additional or new requirements.
    
    VI. Congressional Review
    
        The FDIC is submitting a report to each House of the Congress and 
    to the Comptroller General with respect to the final rule in conformity 
    with the procedures specified in 5 U.S.C. 801. The FDIC is submitting 
    the report voluntarily and not under compulsion of the statute, 
    however. The term ``rule''--as that term is used in section 801--
    excludes ``any rule of particular applicability, including a rule that 
    proves or prescribes for the future rates * * * .'' Id. 804(3). The 
    FDIC considers that the final rule is governed by this exclusion, 
    because the final rule implements Congress' command to impose a one-
    time special assessment on SAIF-assessable institutions. Accordingly, 
    the requirements of id. sections 801-808 do not apply.
        In any case, for the reasons given above regarding the need for 
    notice and comment, the FDIC has for good cause found that notice and 
    public procedure thereon are impracticable, unnecessary, and contrary 
    to the public interest. The final rule will therefore take effect on 
    the date specified herein. See id. section 808.
    
    List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 327
    
        Bank deposit insurance, Banks, banking, Savings associations.
    
        For the reasons set out in the preamble, 12 CFR part 327 is amended 
    as follows:
    
    PART 327--ASSESSMENTS
    
        1. The authority citation for part 327 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    [[Page 53839]]
    
    
        Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1441, 1441b, 1813, 1815, 1817-1819; Deposit 
    Insurance Funds Act of 1996, Pub. L. 104-208, 110 Stat. 3009 et seq.
    
        2. Section 327.32 is amended by revising paragraphs (a)(2)(i)(A) 
    and (a)(3)(i) and by adding a new paragraph (c) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 327.32  Computation and payment of assessment.
    
        (a) * * *
        (2) * * *
        (i) * * *
        (A) Except as provided in Sec. 327.43(c)(1), be subject to 
    assessment according to the schedule of assessment rates applicable to 
    SAIF members pursuant to subpart A of this part; and
    * * * * *
        (3) * * *
        (i) The amount of any deposits acquired by the institution in 
    connection with the transaction (as determined at the time of such 
    transaction) described in Sec. 327.31(a), but subject to the adjustment 
    specified in paragraph (c) of this section;
    * * * * *
        (c) Reduction of deposits acquired by certain institutions. In the 
    case of a transaction occurring on or before March 31, 1995, the amount 
    determined under paragraph (a)(3)(i) of this section shall be reduced 
    by 20 percent for the purpose of computing the adjusted attributable 
    deposit amount for any semiannual period beginning after December 31, 
    1996, of a BIF member bank that, as of June 30, 1995:
        (1) Had an adjusted attributable deposit amount the value of which 
    was less than 50 percent of the amount of its total deposits; or
        (2)(i) Had an adjusted attributable deposit amount the value of 
    which was less than 75 percent of the value of its total deposits;
        (ii) Had total deposits greater than $5,000,000,000; and
        (iii) Was owned or controlled by a bank holding company that owned 
    or controlled insured depository institutions having an aggregate 
    amount of deposits insured or treated as insured by the BIF greater 
    than the aggregate amount of deposits insured or treated as insured by 
    the SAIF.
        3. A new subpart C, consisting of Secs. 327.41 through 327.45, is 
    added to part 327 to read as follows:
    
    Subpart C--Special Assessment
    
    Sec.
    327.41  Special assessment imposed.
    327.42  Assessment base.
    327.43  Exemptions from the special assessment.
    327.44  Hardship exception.
    327.45  Definitions.
    Appendix A to Subpart C of Part 327--Guidelines for Exemption of 
    Weak Institutions
    
    Subpart C--Special Assessment
    
    
    Sec. 327.41  Special assessment imposed.
    
        (a) Payment required. Except as provided in Secs. 327.43 and 
    327.44, each insured depository institution shall pay a special 
    assessment on the SAIF-assessable deposits that the institution held on 
    March 31, 1995, in accordance with the provisions of this subpart C.
        (b) Rate. Except as provided in Sec. 327.44, the rate for the 
    special assessment shall be 0.657 percentum, subject to such 
    adjustments as the Corporation may deem necessary to cause the Savings 
    Association Fund reserve ratio to achieve the designated reserve ratio 
    for the SAIF on October 1, 1996.
        (c) Due date. The special assessment shall be due on October 1, 
    1996.
        (d) Payment date. Except as provided in Sec. 327.44, each 
    institution shall pay the special assessment to the Corporation on 
    November 27, 1996. Each institution shall make the payment in the 
    manner and according to the procedures set forth in paragraph (e) of 
    this section.
        (e) Procedures--(1) Preliminary and final invoices; requests for 
    correction of amount due. The Corporation will issue a preliminary 
    invoice to each institution showing the amount expected to be due from 
    the institution and the computation of that amount. An institution may 
    request the Corporation to revise the amount due; any such request must 
    be made in writing on or before November 1, 1996. The Corporation will 
    issue a final invoice to each insured depository institution no later 
    than 14 days prior to the date specified in paragraph (d) of this 
    section, showing the amount due from the institution and the 
    computation of that amount.
        (2) Funding of designated accounts. Each insured depository 
    institution shall take all actions necessary to allow the Corporation 
    to debit the invoiced amount from the deposit account designated by the 
    institution pursuant to Sec. 327.3(a)(2). Each insured depository 
    institution shall, prior to the date specified in paragraph (d) of this 
    section, ensure that funds in an amount at least equal to the invoiced 
    amount are available in the designated account on that date for direct 
    debit by the Corporation. Failure to take any such action or to provide 
    such funding of the account shall be deemed to constitute nonpayment of 
    the amount due.
        (3) Manner of payment. The Corporation will cause the invoiced 
    amount to be directly debited on the date specified in paragraph (d) of 
    this section from the deposit account designated by the insured 
    depository institution pursuant to Sec. 327.3(a)(2).
        (f) Deposit of proceeds. The proceeds of the special assessment, 
    and of the assessments paid pursuant to Sec. 327.44, shall be deposited 
    in the SAIF.
    
    
    Sec. 327.42  Assessment base.
    
        (a) In general. Except as provided in paragraphs (b) and (c) of 
    this section, an institution's special assessment shall be computed 
    with reference to the institution's SAIF assessment base on March 31, 
    1995.
        (b) ``Converted'' institutions. In the case of each of the 
    following SAIF members, the volume of SAIF-insured deposits used to 
    determine the institution's SAIF assessment base on March 31, 1995, 
    shall be reduced by 20 percent:
        (1) A federal savings association:
        (i) That had deposits subject to assessment by the SAIF which did 
    not exceed $4,000,000,000, as of March 31, 1995; and
        (ii) That had been, or is a successor by merger, acquisition, or 
    otherwise to an institution that had been, a state savings bank, the 
    deposits of which were insured by the Corporation prior to August 9, 
    1989, which institution converted to a federal savings association 
    pursuant to section 5(i) of the Home Owners' Loan Act, 12 USC 1464(i), 
    prior to January 1, 1985;
        (2) A SAIF-member state depository institution that had been a 
    state savings bank prior to October 15, 1982, and was a federal savings 
    association on August 9, 1989;
        (3) An insured bank that:
        (i) Was established de novo in order to acquire the deposits of a 
    savings association in default or in danger of default;
        (ii) Did not open for business before acquiring the deposits of 
    such savings association; and
        (iii) Was a SAIF member as of the date of enactment of the Deposit 
    Insurance Funds Act of 1996; and
        (4) An insured bank that:
        (i) Resulted from a savings association before December 19, 1991, 
    in accordance with section 5(d)(2)(G) of the FDI Act; and
        (ii) Had an increase in its capital in conjunction with the 
    conversion in an amount equal to more than 75 percent of the capital of 
    the institution on the day before the date of the conversion.
        (c) Oakar banks. The special assessment shall be computed with
    
    [[Page 53840]]
    
    reference to that portion of an institution's SAIF assessment base for 
    March 31, 1995, which is equal to 80 percent of the institution's 
    adjusted attributable deposit amount for that date, if the institution 
    is a BIF member that, as of June 30, 1995:
        (1) Had an adjusted attributable deposit amount that was less than 
    50 percent of its total domestic deposits; or
        (2)(i) Had an adjusted attributable deposit amount equal to less 
    than 75 percent of its total assessable deposits;
        (ii) Had total assessable deposits greater than $5,000,000,000; and
        (iii) Was owned or controlled by a bank holding company that owned 
    or controlled insured depository institutions having an aggregate 
    amount of deposits insured or treated as insured by the BIF greater 
    than the aggregate amount of deposits insured or treated as insured by 
    the SAIF.
    
    
    Sec. 327.43  Exemptions from the special assessment.
    
        (a) Mandatory exemptions. The following institutions are exempt 
    from the special assessment:
        (1) An institution that was in existence on October 1, 1995, and 
    held no SAIF-assessable deposits prior to January 1, 1993. For this 
    purpose, an institution shall be deemed to have held SAIF-assessable 
    deposits prior to January 1, 1993, if:
        (i) The institution directly held SAIF-assessable insured deposits 
    prior to that date; or
        (ii) The institution succeeded to, acquired, purchased, or 
    otherwise held any SAIF-assessable deposits as of September 30, 1996, 
    that were SAIF-assessable deposits prior to January 1, 1993;
        (2) A federal savings bank that:
        (i) Was established de novo in April 1994 in order to acquire the 
    deposits of a savings association which was in default or in danger of 
    default; and
        (ii) Received minority interim capital assistance from the 
    Resolution Trust Corporation under section 21A(w) of the Federal Home 
    Loan Bank Act in connection with the acquisition of any such savings 
    association; and
        (3) A savings association, the deposits of which are insured by the 
    SAIF, that:
        (i) Prior to January 1, 1987, was chartered as a federal savings 
    bank insured by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation for 
    the purpose of acquiring all or substantially all of the assets and 
    assuming all or substantially all of the deposit liabilities of a 
    national bank in a transaction consummated after July 1, 1986; and
        (ii) As of the date of that transaction, had assets of less than 
    $150,000,000.
        (b) Weak institutions. If an institution meets any criterion for 
    designation as ``weak'' under the guidelines set forth in appendix A of 
    this subpart, the institution shall generally be exempt from the 
    special assessment, unless the exemption would not materially reduce 
    risk to the SAIF. Authority to determine whether an institution meets 
    any such criterion, authority to issue orders exempting ``weak'' 
    institutions, authority to determine whether the risk to the SAIF would 
    not be materially reduced if an institution qualifying for exemption as 
    a ``weak'' institution were nevertheless allowed to pay the special 
    assessment, and authority to determine whether an institution rated 4 
    or 5 by its appropriate federal banking agency would present a 
    substantial risk of loss to the SAIF unless the institution were exempt 
    from the special assessment, are delegated to the Director of the 
    Division of Supervision.
        (c) Semiannual assessments payable to the SAIF--(1) Special rate 
    schedule. Except as provided in paragraph (c)(2) of this section, an 
    institution that is exempt from the special assessment pursuant to 
    paragraph (a) or (b) of this section shall pay regular semiannual 
    assessments to the SAIF from the first semiannual period of 1996 
    through the second semiannual period of 1999 according to the schedule 
    of rates specified in Sec. 327.9(d)(1) as in effect for SAIF members on 
    June 30, 1995.
        (2) Termination of special rate schedule. An institution that makes 
    a pro-rata payment of the special assessment shall cease to be subject 
    to paragraph (c)(1) of this section. The pro-rata payment must be equal 
    to the following product: 16.7 percent of the amount the institution 
    would have owed for the special assessment, multiplied by the number of 
    full semiannual periods remaining between the date of the payment and 
    December 31, 1999.
    
    
    Sec. 327.44  Hardship exception.
    
        (a) Applicability. This section applies to an insured depository 
    institution if:
        (1) The institution, or a depository institution holding company 
    that controls the institution, is subject to terms or covenants in any 
    debt obligation or preferred stock outstanding on September 13, 1995; 
    and
        (2) The Corporation has determined that payment of the special 
    assessment in accordance with the provisions of Sec. 327.41 would pose 
    a significant risk of causing the depository institution or its 
    depository institution holding company to default on or to violate any 
    term or covenant specified in paragraph (a)(1) of this section.
        (b) Election. An insured depository institution may elect, with the 
    prior approval of the Corporation, to pay the special assessment 
    prescribed by the Deposit Insurance Funds Act of 1996 in two 
    installments in accordance with the provisions of this section. In 
    deciding whether to grant or withhold approval, the Corporation will 
    consider the entire circumstances of the proposed election, including 
    but not limited to the election's effects on the institution, on the 
    SAIF, and on the public interest.
        (c) Procedures--(1) Initial assessment--(i) Date. An institution 
    that makes the election specified in paragraph (b) of this section 
    shall pay the initial installment of the special assessment to the 
    Corporation on November 27, 1996.
        (ii) Amount. The initial installment shall be equal to 50 percent 
    of the amount that the institution would otherwise be required to pay 
    on November 27, 1996, in accordance with Sec. 327.41.
        (iii) Payment procedures. The procedures set forth in 
    Sec. 327.41(e) shall apply to the payment of the initial installment.
        (2) Second installment--(i) Date. An institution that makes the 
    election specified in paragraph (b) of this section shall pay a second 
    installment to the Corporation on the regular payment date for the 
    second quarterly payment for the first semiannual period of 1997.
        (ii) Amount. The second installment shall be an amount computed as 
    follows: the SAIF assessment base of the institution on December 31, 
    1996, multiplied by the rate specified in Sec. 327.41(b), multiplied by 
    51 percent.
        (iii) Payment procedures. The procedures set forth in 
    Sec. 327.41(e) shall apply to the payment of the second installment, 
    except that any reference to the date specified in Sec. 327.41(d) shall 
    be deemed to be a reference to the date specified in paragraph 
    (c)(2)(i) of this section, and that any reference to November 1, 1996, 
    shall be deemed to be a reference to February 1, 1997.
        (3) Supplemental assessment--(i) Date. An institution that makes 
    the election specified in paragraph (b) of this section shall pay a 
    supplemental assessment to the Corporation at the same time as the 
    second installment.
        (ii) Amount. The supplemental assessment shall be an amount 
    computed as follows: the institution's SAIF assessment base for 
    December 31, 1996, shall be subtracted from the institution's SAIF 
    assessment base for March 31, 1995; if the result is greater than zero, 
    the result shall be multiplied by 95 percent; and the product thereof
    
    [[Page 53841]]
    
    shall be multiplied by one-half the rate for the special assessment.
        (iii) Payment procedures. The procedures set forth in 
    Sec. 327.41(e) shall apply to the payment of the supplemental 
    assessment, except that any reference to the date specified in 
    Sec. 327.41(d) shall be deemed to be a reference to the date specified 
    in paragraph (c)(2)(i) of this section, and that any reference to 
    November 1, 1996, shall be deemed to be a reference to February 1, 
    1997.
    
    
    Sec. 327.45  Definitions.
    
        For the purpose of this subpart C:
        (a) BIF; SAIF--(1) BIF. The term BIF refers to the Bank Insurance 
    Fund.
        (2) SAIF. The term SAIF refers to the Savings Association Insurance 
    Fund.
        (b) SAIF-assessable deposits. The term SAIF-assessable deposits 
    means all deposits that are subject to assessment by the Corporation 
    for deposit in the SAIF, and, in the case of a BIF member, includes 
    that portion of the deposits of the BIF member that is equal to the BIF 
    member's adjusted attributable deposit amount.
        (c) Deposits held on March 31, 1995. A deposit is deemed to have 
    been held on March 31, 1995, by an institution if either:
        (1) The institution held the deposit on that date; or
        (2)(i) The deposit was held by another institution (``transferring 
    institution'') on that date;
        (ii) The institution assumed the deposit from the transferring 
    institution after that date, either directly or indirectly; and
        (iii) The transferring institution is not an insured depository 
    institution on the payment date specified in Sec. 327.41(d).
        (d) SAIF assessment base. The term SAIF assessment base for any 
    date means that portion of an institution's assessment base for that 
    date that is subject to assessment by the Corporation for deposit in 
    the SAIF.
    
    Appendix A to Subpart C of Part 327--Guidelines for Exemption of 
    Weak Institutions
    
        (a) The Board of Directors of the Corporation has adopted 
    criteria for identifying institutions that are regarded as ``weak'' 
    within the meaning of section 2702(f) of the Deposit Insurance Funds 
    Act of 1996. The Board has determined that granting exemptions to 
    institutions that meet the criteria would generally reduce the risk 
    to the SAIF.
        (b) The criteria apply only to institutions that are members of 
    the Savings Association Insurance Fund (SAIF) or that hold deposits 
    that are treated as insured by the SAIF pursuant to section 5(d)(3) 
    of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, 12 U.S.C. 1815(d)(3).
        (c) The criteria are as follows:
        (1) Guideline #1: Capital group 3 institutions. An institution 
    is regarded as ``weak'' if, in the judgment of the Corporation, the 
    institution meets the standards for assignment to capital group 3 
    (``undercapitalized'') pursuant to Sec. 327.4(a)(1)(iii).
        (2) Guideline #2: Potential capital group 3 institutions. An 
    institution is regarded as ``weak'' if, in the judgment of the 
    Corporation, the institution would satisfy the criteria set forth in 
    Guideline #1 if the institution were to pay the special assessment 
    imposed under Sec. 327.41(a).
        (3) Guideline #3: Institutions rated 4 or 5. If an institution 
    has a composite rating of 4 or 5 by its primary supervisor, the 
    institution may request the Corporation to consider whether it would 
    be appropriate to exempt the institution from the special 
    assessment. Such an institution is regarded as ``weak'' if the 
    institution would, after having paid the assessment, present a 
    significant risk of loss to the SAIF for the purpose of section 2(f) 
    of the Funds Act.
    
        By order of the Board of Directors.
    
        Dated at Washington, D.C., this 8th day of October 1996.
    
    Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
    Jerry L. Langley,
    Executive Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 96-26504 Filed 10-11-96; 10:23 am]
    BILLING CODE 6714-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
10/8/1996
Published:
10/16/1996
Department:
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
96-26504
Dates:
October 8, 1996.
Pages:
53834-53841 (8 pages)
RINs:
3064-AB93
PDF File:
96-26504.pdf
CFR: (8)
12 CFR 327.41(d)
12 CFR 327.41(e)
12 CFR 327.32
12 CFR 327.41
12 CFR 327.42
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