98-26620. Policy Statement on the Secure Base Amount and Allocated Insurance Reserve Accounts  

  • [Federal Register Volume 63, Number 192 (Monday, October 5, 1998)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 53423-53429]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 98-26620]
    
    
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    FARM CREDIT SYSTEM INSURANCE CORPORATION
    
    
    Policy Statement on the Secure Base Amount and Allocated 
    Insurance Reserve Accounts
    
    AGENCY: Farm Credit System Insurance Corporation.
    
    ACTION: Notice of policy statement; request for comments.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Farm Credit System Insurance Corporation (Corporation) is 
    publishing for comment a Policy Statement on the Secure Base Amount and 
    Allocated Insurance Reserve Accounts (AIRAs). This proposed Policy 
    Statement establishes a framework for the periodic determination of the 
    Farm Credit Insurance Fund's (Insurance Fund) secure base amount. It 
    also implements the Corporation's authority to allocate excess 
    Insurance Fund balances above the secure base amount into an account 
    for each insured Farm Credit System Bank and one for the Farm Credit 
    System Financial Assistance Corporation (FAC) stockholders.
    
    DATES: Written comments must be submitted on or before January 4, 1999.
    
    ADDRESSES: Comments should be mailed or delivered to Dorothy L. 
    Nichols, General Counsel, Farm Credit System Insurance Corporation, 
    1501 Farm Credit Drive, McLean, Virginia 22102. Copies of all comments 
    will be available for examination by interested parties in the offices 
    of the Farm Credit System Insurance Corporation.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Dorothy L. Nichols, General Counsel, 
    Farm Credit System Insurance Corporation, 1501 Farm Credit Drive, 
    McLean, Virginia 22102. (703) 883-4380, TDD (703) 883-4444.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: In 1987, Congress directed the Corporation 
    to build and manage the Insurance Fund to achieve and maintain the 
    secure base amount (SBA). For insurance premium purposes, the statute 
    defines the SBA as 2 percent of the aggregate outstanding insured 
    obligations of all insured banks (excluding a percentage of state and 
    Federally guaranteed loans) or such other percentage of the aggregate 
    amount as the Corporation in its sole discretion determines is 
    ``actuarially sound.'' (12 U.S.C. 2277a-4(c)).
        The statute specifies a limited form of risk-based premium 
    assessments: 25 basis points for nonaccrual loans; 15 basis points for 
    loans in accrual status (excluding certain state and Federally 
    guaranteed loans); and a very modest premium for government-guaranteed 
    loans. (12 U.S.C. 2277a-4(a)). This formula was designed as an 
    incentive for the Farm Credit System to make quality loans and at the 
    same time build the Insurance Fund to a level that Congress believed 
    would prevent a default on System debt obligations. In the Farm Credit 
    System Reform Act of 1996, Congress gave the Corporation the discretion 
    to reduce premium assessments before reaching the SBA. (12 U.S.C. 
    2277a-4(a)(2)). The Board has
    
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    reduced the premiums, most recently in January 1998.
        The Board reviews premium assessments at least semiannually to 
    determine whether to adjust premiums in response to changing 
    conditions. The Board will continue this review even though the 
    Insurance Fund reached the SBA at the end of the first quarter of 1998, 
    because the law requires the Corporation to maintain the SBA. During 
    the second quarter, growth in System insured debt outstanding caused 
    the Insurance Fund to drop slightly below the SBA.
    
    I. Secure Base Amount Determination
    
        The law sets out a formula for determining the SBA: ``2 percent of 
    the aggregate outstanding insured obligations of all insured System 
    banks.'' (12 U.S.C. 2277a-4). It also allows the Corporation to choose 
    another percentage, if the Corporation determines that the risks 
    warrant it. Thus far, the Corporation has used the statutory formula.
        In the statute, an insured obligation is defined as any note, bond, 
    debenture, or other obligation issued on behalf of an insured System 
    bank under the appropriate subsection of section 4.2 of the Farm Credit 
    Act (12 U.S.C. 2277a). The Policy Statement includes both principal and 
    accrued interest in the definition of ``insured obligation'' because 
    section 5.52 of the Act established the Corporation to ensure the 
    timely payment of principal and interest to investors. Also, it is 
    commonly understood that an issuer of bonds or notes has an obligation 
    to pay a debt, which includes interest, when due.
        After calculating the insured obligations, the Corporation will 
    apply the deductions specified in the statute for the government 
    guaranteed portion of the System loans to determine the SBA. This 
    calculation will be done at the end of each quarter. After the end of 
    the calendar year, using the December 31 balances, the Corporation will 
    decide whether the Insurance Fund exceeds the SBA. The Policy Statement 
    uses the December 31 balances for this calculation because the statute, 
    in the premium section, contemplates using a point in time method in 
    this context (12 U.S.C. 2277a4(c)). If the Insurance Fund exceeds the 
    SBA, the Corporation's Board will determine whether to segregate excess 
    insurance funds.
    
    II. Allocated Insurance Reserve Accounts
    
    1. Determining Whether There Are Excess Funds To Deposit in the AIRAs 
    or Whether a Withdrawal Is Required
    
        The Farm Credit System Reform Act of 1996 established a process for 
    making partial distributions of the Insurance Fund's balance above the 
    SBA. It established in the Insurance Fund an AIRA for the benefit of 
    each insured System bank and one for the FAC stockholders. The AIRAs 
    remain a part of the Insurance Fund and are available to the 
    Corporation.
        AIRA allocations would be made only at the end of any year in which 
    the Insurance Fund, plus the accumulated excess balance after deducting 
    expenses and insurance obligations for the next year, is greater than 2 
    percent. This is because the AIRAs are designed to absorb losses first, 
    if necessary, or to capitalize growth to avoid the need to charge 
    supplemental premiums.
        If the Insurance Fund exceeds the SBA at the end of any calendar 
    year (using December 31 balances), the statute requires the Corporation 
    to determine whether any excess funds exist for allocation to the 
    AIRAs. In determining whether excess funds exist, the statute calls for 
    the Corporation to first calculate ``the average secure base amount for 
    the calendar year (using average daily balances).''
    a. Authorized Deductions
        If the Insurance Fund exceeds the SBA, the statute requires that 
    the Insurance Fund balance be adjusted downward by an estimate for the 
    next calendar year of the:
        1. Corporation's operating costs; and
        2. Insurance obligations.
        The Corporation will deduct the operating expenses it expects to 
    incur for the next calendar year. Estimated insurance obligations are 
    defined in the Policy Statement to include all anticipated allowances 
    for insurance losses, claims, and other potential statutory uses of the 
    Insurance Fund. They are also defined to include an estimate of the 
    expected growth of insured System debt for the next 12 months and the 
    money needed to maintain the SBA with that level of growth.
        The Corporation prepares its financial statements on an accrual 
    basis using generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP). GAAP 
    requires the Corporation to recognize in its financial statements any 
    probable loss that can be reasonably estimated. In the event of 
    unanticipated bank failures, however, the Insurance Fund could drop 
    below the SBA. Were the Insurance Fund to drop below the SBA, the 
    Corporation would be required to collect insurance premiums to restore 
    the Insurance Fund to the SBA. Because of the strong health of the Farm 
    Credit System, the Insurance Fund is currently close to the SBA. 
    However, there is no guarantee that the System or the economy will 
    remain this healthy, particularly given the recent pressures on 
    agriculture resulting from severe drought and the crisis in Asia. Thus, 
    the Board has concluded that the Corporation should deduct probable 
    losses estimated for the next year, recognizing that such a deduction 
    could mean that no excess funds would be available for deposit in the 
    AIRAs in a given year.
        Because the statutory requirement for the Insurance Fund includes 
    not only achieving but also maintaining the SBA, the Policy Statement 
    defines insurance obligations to include an estimate of expected growth 
    in insured debt for the prospective 12 months, using a 3-year average 
    to determine the estimate. This will minimize the effect of any short-
    term periods of rapid growth, which might lead to an excessive 
    prospective growth estimate.
        In the event of faster than expected growth in insured obligations, 
    the Insurance Fund could drop below the SBA. If it did, the Corporation 
    would be required to collect insurance premiums to restore the 
    Insurance Fund to the SBA.
    b. Allocation Formula When Excess Funds Are Available
        The Policy Statement includes the statutory formula for allocation 
    of any excess Insurance Fund balances to FAC stockholders (10 percent) 
    and to the insured System banks (90 percent). It also includes the 3-
    year average loan balance formula the statute mandates when the 
    Corporation adds balances to each AIRA. The amount of funds in the 
    accounts each year may fluctuate, depending upon the annual calculation 
    of the SBA and any excess Insurance Fund balance. Exhibit 1 is a 
    hypothetical example of how the AIRA program will operate, including 
    determining the amount of excess Insurance Fund balances and allocating 
    the balances to individual AIRA holders.
    c. Use of Allocated Amounts When Reductions Are Required
        The Policy Statement also interprets the statutory language 
    governing use of the AIRAs when insurance obligations exceed estimated 
    amounts. When actual expenses and insurance obligations exceed 
    estimates from the previous
    
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    year end, the law requires the Corporation to reduce the balances in 
    the AIRAs by proportional amounts. The statute, however, doesn't 
    prescribe how the proportional amounts are to be determined.
        The Board has concluded that the Corporation should use the same 
    technique to calculate reductions to the AIRAs as the statute uses to 
    calculate additions, i.e., the 3-year average loan balance formula. 
    This weighted average allocation formula ensures that any reductions to 
    AIRA balances are accomplished in the same manner as the allocations. 
    The Corporation considered other approaches for making required 
    reductions, including using equal proportions for each AIRA account. 
    Using equal proportions, however, results in the holder of smaller AIRA 
    balances receiving the same amount of any required AIRA reduction as 
    the largest account holder.
    
    2. AIRA Accumulation Cycle
    
        The law authorizes payments of a portion of AIRA balances to the 
    System banks and FAC stockholders ``as soon as practicable during each 
    calendar year beginning more than 8 years after the date on which the 
    aggregate of the amounts' in the Insurance Fund exceeds the SBA. (12 
    U.S.C. 2277a-4). While this language could be subject to varying 
    interpretations, the Insurance Fund first attained the SBA in the first 
    quarter of 1998, and thus payments could begin 8 years later. The Board 
    has concluded that it is reasonable to consider making the first 
    payment as soon as practicable after the first quarter in 2006. The 
    proposed Policy Statement adopts the earliest possible payout date: 8 
    calendar years after the quarter-end when the SBA was initially 
    attained.
        An important corollary issue is how to address an interruption in 
    the 8-year period. For example, if after establishing the AIRAs, the 
    Corporation has to use them for an insurance action, or if the System 
    experiences extraordinary growth in debt outstanding causing the AIRA 
    balances to be depleted, does the accumulation cycle begin anew? If the 
    Insurance Fund falls below the SBA for a brief time or dips below the 
    SBA late in the 8-year cycle, should the accumulation cycle begin 
    again?
        The Corporation believes that Congress designed the accumulation 
    period to serve as a minimum time horizon for the accumulation of 
    excess Insurance Fund balances to allow for the creation of a secondary 
    Insurance Reserve. The AIRA provision was included in lieu of providing 
    the Corporation with the authority to collect supplemental insurance 
    premiums. Congress decided that when supplemental insurance premiums 
    were needed to strengthen the Insurance Fund during periods of stress 
    in agriculture, the System might be unable to pay significant 
    additional amounts and that might adversely affect System institutions' 
    viability. The 1996 Act as proposed in the House included a 5-year 
    accumulation period, which was subsequently increased to 8 years to 
    reconcile with the Senate's budget scoring procedures.
        The Policy Statement leaves the issue of selecting an alternative 
    accumulation period open to decision on a case-by-case basis. This 
    approach preserves maximum flexibility to tailor any alternative 
    accumulation period to best fit the causes of a future shortfall in the 
    Insurance Fund. For example, the circumstances where a period of rapid 
    growth causes a temporary (or small) decline in the Insurance Fund 
    below the SBA for one or more quarters are far less serious than a 
    decline in the Insurance Fund caused by losses as a result of increased 
    risk at System banks and associations.
    
    III. Issues for Later Consideration
    
        The statute authorizes initial payment of any balances in the AIRAs 
    beginning more than 8 years after attainment of the SBA, which could be 
    as early as 2006. As this date approaches, the Corporation's Board will 
    have to consider the Corporation's authority to reduce or eliminate 
    AIRA payments, and calculation of the initial AIRA payment components.
        The Board believes that these issues can be better addressed after 
    the Corporation obtains experience in administering the AIRA program 
    over several years. Also, the likelihood of payment beginning in 2006 
    must be considered somewhat uncertain at this time. The uncertainty 
    stems from factors that will determine whether and how much of any AIRA 
    accumulations will occur. These factors are:
        1. Future growth in the level of insured debt outstanding;
        2. Possible insurance claims or losses; and
        3. Level of investment earnings.
    
    Because the Corporation can not predict any of these factors with 
    certainty now, it seems prudent to gain more experience with excess 
    Insurance Fund balances before making these decisions about future 
    payments.
    
    IV. Comments
    
        The Corporation's Board is seeking public comment on the issues 
    discussed in the proposed Policy Statement. After consideration of the 
    comments, the Board will make its final determination and issue a 
    Policy Statement setting out its decision.
    
    BILLING CODE 6710-01-P
    
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    BILLING CODE 6710-01-C
    
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    Farm Credit System Insurance Corporation Policy Statement on the 
    Secure Base Amount and Allocated Insurance Reserve Account Program, 
    NV 98-03
    
        Adoption Date: September 23, 1998.
        Effect on Previous Action: None.
        Source of Authority: Section 5.55 of the Farm Credit Act of 1971, 
    as amended (the Act); 12 U.S.C. 2277a-4.
        Whereas, section 5.52 of the Act established the Farm Credit System 
    Insurance Corporation (Corporation) to, among other things, insure the 
    timely payment of principal and interest on Farm Credit System 
    obligations (12 U.S.C. 2277a-1); and
        Whereas, section 5.55 of the Act mandates that the Corporation will 
    build and manage the Farm Credit Insurance Fund (Insurance Fund) to 
    attain and maintain a secure base amount (SBA), defined as 2 percent of 
    the aggregate outstanding insured obligations of all insured System 
    banks (excluding a percentage of State and Federally guaranteed loans) 
    or such other percentage of the aggregate amount as the Corporation 
    determines is actuarially sound; and
        Whereas, the Farm Credit System Reform Act of 1996, Pub. L. 104-
    105, 110 Stat. 162 (Feb. 10, 1996), amended section 5.55 of the Act to: 
    (1) Establish in the Insurance Fund an Allocated Insurance Reserve 
    Account (AIRA) for the benefit of each insured System bank and one for 
    the Farm Credit System Financial Assistance Corporation (FAC) 
    stockholders; (2) Allocate any excess balances to these AIRAs; and (3) 
    Eventually make partial distributions of the excess funds in the AIRAs.
        Now, therefore, the Corporation's Board of Directors (Board) adopts 
    the following Policy Statement to govern the calculation of the secure 
    base amount, the determination of any excess insurance reserves, the 
    establishment of the AIRAs, and the method for allocating any excess 
    insurance reserves to the AIRAs.
    
    I. Secure Base Amount Determination
    
        As stated in the Corporation's Policy Statement Concerning 
    Adjustments to the Insurance Premiums (BM-11-JUL-96-02), the Board will 
    review the premium assessments at least semiannually to determine 
    whether to adjust premiums in response to changing conditions. The 
    Board will continue this review even after the Insurance Fund achieves 
    the SBA because the law requires the Corporation to maintain the SBA. 
    Thus, the Corporation must ensure that as the Farm Credit System's 
    insured debt grows, or if the Insurance Fund suffers a significant 
    loss, the Insurance Fund remains at the SBA.
        The Farm Credit Reform Act of 1996 established a process for making 
    partial distributions of the Insurance Fund's balance above the SBA. If 
    excess reserves accumulate, these distributions can begin at a point 8 
    years after the Insurance Fund reaches the SBA, but no sooner than 
    2006. To begin the process the Corporation must define ``the aggregate 
    outstanding insured obligations'' of all the System banks. Then it must 
    follow the steps in the statute to determine the SBA. Finally, at the 
    end of any calendar year in which the Insurance Fund attains the secure 
    base amount, the Corporation must determine whether any excess funds 
    exist for allocation to the AIRAs.
        The principal calculation for determining whether the Insurance 
    Fund is at the SBA amount will be 2 percent of the aggregate adjusted 
    insured obligations defined as follows:
        1. ``Insured obligation'' means any note, bond, debenture, or other 
    obligation issued under subsection (c) or (d) of section 4.2 of the 
    Farm Credit Act on or before January 5, 1989, on behalf of any System 
    bank; and after such date, which, when issued, is issued on behalf of 
    any insured System bank and is outstanding at the quarter-end. The 
    balance outstanding at the quarter-end shall include principal and 
    accrued interest payable as reported by the banks in the call reports 
    submitted to the Farm Credit Administration.
        2. The balance of insured obligations determined in Number 1 shall 
    be reduced by an amount equal to the sum of:
        (a) 90 percent of the guaranteed portions of principal outstanding 
    on Federal Government-guaranteed loans in accrual status at all System 
    institutions; and
        (b) 80 percent of the guaranteed portions of principal outstanding 
    on State Government-guaranteed loans in accrual status at all System 
    institutions.
        At the end of any calendar year when the Insurance Fund balance 
    exceeds the SBA, calculated using December 31, balances (point-in-time 
    method), the Corporation will determine whether any excess insurance 
    reserves exist for allocation to the AIRAs.
    
    II. Allocated Insurance Reserve Accounts
    
    1. Determination of Excess Insurance Fund Balances
    
        An allocated insurance reserve account (AIRA) shall be established 
    in the Insurance Fund for each insured System bank and for FAC 
    stockholders. Amounts representing excess Insurance Fund balances may 
    be allocated to the AIRAs. The AIRAs remain a part of the Insurance 
    Fund and are available to the Corporation.
    (a) Authorized Deductions
        In determining whether there are any excess insurance reserves, the 
    December 31, Insurance Fund balance will first be adjusted downward by:
        (1) The Corporation's estimated operating expenses for the next 12 
    months; and
        (2) The Corporation's estimated insurance obligations for the next 
    12 months.
        The Corporation will budget for the next calendar year operating 
    expenses and it will deduct the operating expenses it expects to incur. 
    When determining estimated insurance obligations, the Corporation will 
    include all anticipated allowances for insurance losses, claims, and 
    other potential statutory uses of the Insurance Fund. Estimated 
    insurance obligations shall also include an estimate of the expected 
    growth of insured System debt for the next 12 months. This percentage 
    will be the average annual growth in insured debt for the past three 
    calendar years, using average daily balances. Using this growth 
    estimate will result in retaining the amount of money necessary in the 
    general Insurance Fund to capitalize growth in the SBA for the next 
    year.
        The adjusted aggregate yearend Insurance Fund balance will then be 
    compared with the SBA calculated using an average daily balance method 
    for the previous calendar year. The statute requires use of an average 
    daily balance method for calculating the SBA only for purposes of 
    determining the amount of any excess Insurance Fund balances.
        When the aggregate adjusted Insurance Fund balance exceeds the SBA 
    amount calculated using the average daily balance method, the excess 
    Fund balance shall be allocated to the accounts of each insured System 
    bank and to the FAC stockholders.
        (b) Allocation Formula When Excess Funds Are Available
        (1) Ten percent of the excess Insurance Fund balance shall be 
    credited to the AIRA for all holders, in the aggregate, of Financial 
    Assistance Corporation stock. The total amount that may be allocated to 
    this AIRA is limited to $56 million.
        (2) The remaining amount of the excess Insurance Fund balance shall 
    be credited to the AIRAs for each insured System bank. The basis for 
    crediting the
    
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    excess balance to each bank's AIRA shall be the ratio of its average 
    daily accrual loan principal outstanding for the three prior years 
    divided by the total average daily accrual loan principal outstanding 
    for all System banks. System bank loan volume for making these 
    allocations is defined in section 5.55(d) to include all retail loans 
    made by direct lending associations, their insured System banks and 
    other financing institutions (OFIs) being financed by insured System 
    banks (12 U.S.C. 2277a-4(d)). The statute also requires that a 
    reduction be made from each bank's ratio (numerator and denominator) 
    for the guaranteed portions of government-guaranteed loans similarly on 
    an average daily balance basis for the three-year period. An example of 
    the allocation formula is shown in Exhibit 1.
    (c) Use of Allocated Amounts When Reductions Are Required
        When the Corporation's actual operating expenses and insurance 
    obligations exceed the estimated amounts used to determine any year's 
    AIRA balances, section 5.55(e)(5) requires AIRA balances to absorb such 
    excess expenses before using other amounts in the Insurance Fund (12 
    U.S.C. 2277a-4(e)(5)). To the extent reductions are made in AIRA 
    balances to absorb Corporation expenses and actual insurance 
    obligations, each AIRA will be reduced by its proportional amount in 
    accordance with the statute. The same formula used to make allocations 
    of excess Insurance Fund balances shall be used to reduce AIRA balances 
    when necessary. Ten percent of any necessary AIRA reduction will be 
    applied to the FAC stockholder AIRA. The remaining 90 percent will be 
    applied to the System insured banks' AIRAs on the basis of the ratio of 
    each bank's average daily accrual loan principal outstanding for the 
    three prior years divided by the total average daily accrual loan 
    principal outstanding for all System banks.
    
    2. AIRA Accumulation Cycle
    
        Section 5.55(e)(6) permits the Insurance Corporation's Board at its 
    discretion to make payments of AIRA balances to the account-holders 
    after a minimum time period (12 U.S.C. 2277a-4(e)(6)). The minimum time 
    period specified is more than 8 years after the date on which the 
    aggregate amount in the Insurance Fund exceeds the secure base amount 
    calculated using quarter-end balances.
        The initial starting point for the 8-year period shall be the first 
    calendar quarter-end when the Insurance Fund has attained or exceeded 
    its SBA. The initial attainment occurred during the first quarter of 
    1998. The first payment would be in the second quarter of 2006.
        Should the Insurance Fund drop below the secure base amount at any 
    subsequent quarter-end during the 8-year period, the Corporation's 
    Board may restart the accumulation period. For example, the Insurance 
    Fund might drop below the SBA as a result of rapid growth in insured 
    System debt outstanding, or incurring insurance claims or losses. The 
    Board in its discretion may select an accumulation period, to begin at 
    the next quarter-end when the aggregate in the Insurance Fund again 
    attains the secure base amount. Any alternative accumulation period 
    however, cannot result in any payment before April 2006. The Board will 
    consider the following factors in determining selection of an 
    alternative accumulation period:
        (a) The reason that the Insurance Fund dropped below the SBA (i.e. 
    as a result of growth in insured debt vs. an insurance expense at a 
    troubled institution). The current level of the Insurance Fund and the 
    amount of money and time needed to attain the SBA;
        (b) The likelihood and probable amount of any losses to the 
    Insurance Fund;
        (c) The overall condition of the Farm Credit System, including the 
    level and quality of capital, earnings, asset growth, asset quality, 
    loss allowance levels, asset liability management, as well as the 
    collateral ratios of the insured banks;
        (d) The health and prospects for the agricultural economy, 
    including the potential impact of governmental farm policy and the 
    effect of the globalization of agriculture on opportunities and 
    competition for U.S. producers; and
        (e) The risks in the financial environment that may cause a 
    problem, even when there is no imminent threat, such as volatility in 
    the level of interest rates, the use of sophisticated investment 
    securities and derivative instruments, and increasing competition from 
    non-System financial institutions.
    
    III. Issues for Later Consideration
    
        Because of multiple factors (including rapid growth and the amount 
    of any insurance obligations) which could affect future AIRA balances 
    and the uncertainty of future payments, the Corporation has deferred 
    consideration of several issues to a date closer to the year 2006. The 
    Board anticipates gaining experience in the administration of the AIRA 
    program over the next few years and expects to have a better basis for 
    determining these issues, which include:
        Board discretionary authority to limit or restrict AIRA payments; 
    and
        2. Calculation of the initial AIRA payment components.
    
        Dated: September 30, 1998.
    Floyd Fithian,
    Secretary to the Board, Farm Credit System Insurance Corporation.
    [FR Doc. 98-26620 Filed 10-2-98; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6710-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
10/05/1998
Department:
Farm Credit System Insurance Corporation
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Notice of policy statement; request for comments.
Document Number:
98-26620
Dates:
Written comments must be submitted on or before January 4, 1999.
Pages:
53423-53429 (7 pages)
PDF File:
98-26620.pdf