97-4795. Restrictions on Advances to Non-Qualified Thrift Lenders  

  • [Federal Register Volume 62, Number 39 (Thursday, February 27, 1997)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 8868-8871]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 97-4795]
    
    
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    FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE BOARD
    
    12 CFR Part 935
    
    [No. 97-12]
    
    
    Restrictions on Advances to Non-Qualified Thrift Lenders
    
    AGENCY: Federal Housing Finance Board.
    
    ACTION: Interim rule with request for comments.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Board of Directors of the Federal Housing Finance Board 
    (Finance Board) is amending its regulations on advances to members that 
    are not qualified thrift lenders to implement certain changes made by 
    the Economic Growth and Regulatory Paperwork Reduction Act of 1996 
    (EGRPRA). Among other things, the EGRPRA broadened the universe of 
    assets that a savings association may use in meeting its qualified 
    thrift lender (QTL) requirement. Non-savings association members are 
    not directly subject to the QTL requirement, although their ability to 
    obtain advances is restricted if they do not meet the QTL requirement. 
    The amendments should prove beneficial to many non-savings association 
    members by allowing them to report increases in their levels of 
    qualified thrift investments and, in some cases, satisfy the QTL 
    requirement. Because certain of the items authorized by EGRPRA to be 
    included in the QTL calculation are not separately identified on a non-
    savings association member's published financial reports, such as a 
    call report, the Federal Home Loan Banks (Banks) have no readily 
    available source from which to obtain or verify that information. To 
    allow the Banks to include the newly authorized items when conducting 
    their annual QTL calculation of their non-savings association members, 
    the Finance Board has determined that the Banks may rely on a 
    certification from their members of any relevant QTL financial 
    information that is not available from published financial reports. 
    Because the Banks must complete the annual QTL calculations for 
    calendar year 1996 no later than April 15, 1997, the Finance Board is 
    issuing this rule as an interim final rule. As the certification 
    process raises a number of questions about how best the Banks can 
    determine the QTL status of their non-savings association members, and 
    because the Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS) is in the process of a 
    rulemaking relating to the EGRPRA amendments, the Finance Board has 
    determined to solicit comments on the interim final rule for a period 
    of 30 days.
    
    DATES: The interim rule is effective on February 27, 1997. Comments 
    must be received by March 31, 1997.
    
    ADDRESSES: Mail comments to Elaine L. Baker, Executive Secretary, 
    Federal Housing Finance Board, 1777 F Street, NW., Washington, DC 
    20006. Comments will be available for public inspection at this 
    address.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Steven P. Wojtaszek, Financial 
    Analyst, Financial Research Division, Office of Policy, (202) 408-2863, 
    or Neil R. Crowley, Senior Attorney, Office of General Counsel, (202) 
    408-2990, Federal Housing Finance Board, 1777 F Street, NW., 
    Washington, DC 20006.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Background
    
        Historically, membership in the Federal Home Loan Bank System 
    (System) had been comprised predominantly of savings associations, 
    which tended to concentrate their investments in residential mortgage 
    loans. In 1987, Congress established the QTL test, which required 
    savings associations to maintain 60 percent of their assets in 
    instruments related to domestic residential real estate or manufactured 
    housing. Competitive Equality Banking Act of 1987, Public Law 100-86, 
    section 104(c), 101 Stat. 571-573 (August 10, 1987). Among other 
    things, a savings association that failed the QTL test was limited in 
    the amount of advances that it could receive from its Bank. Id. section 
    105. In 1989, Congress authorized commercial banks and credit unions, 
    institutions that historically had not been so concentrated in 
    residential mortgage lending, to become members of the System. 
    Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery , and Enforcement Act of 1989 
    (FIRREA), Public Law 101-73, section 704(a), 103 Stat. 415 (August 9, 
    1989),
    
    [[Page 8869]]
    
    codified at 12 U.S.C. 1424(a). FIRREA also limited the amount of 
    advances that such non-savings association members could obtain from 
    their Bank, and imposed a 30 percent System-wide limit on the aggregate 
    amount of advances that could be outstanding to such non-QTL members. 
    12 U.S.C. 1430(e).
        As a general matter, the QTL test now requires a savings 
    association to maintain 65 percent or more of its portfolio assets in 
    certain designated instruments, which are characterized as ``qualified 
    thrift investments.'' The QTL test requires one to determine an 
    institution's ``actual thrift investment percentage'' (ATIP), which is 
    obtained by dividing the institution's ``qualified thrift investments'' 
    by its ``portfolio assets.'' The QTL test applies directly only to 
    savings associations, and OTS, as the principal federal regulator of 
    savings associations, determines their QTL compliance. The QTL test 
    does not apply to commercial banks, credit unions, or insurance 
    companies, although if such institutions become members of the System 
    their ability to obtain advances is restricted if they do not meet the 
    QTL test. 12 U.S.C. 1430(e). The Banks are required to determine the 
    ATIP for each non-savings association member at least annually, between 
    January 1 and April 15, based on financial information as of December 
    31 of the prior calendar year. 12 CFR 935.13(a)(3).
        In EGRPRA (Public Law 104-208, 110 Stat. 3009, September 30, 1996), 
    Congress made it easier for all members to achieve QTL compliance by 
    broadening the universe of ``qualified thrift investments'' that may be 
    included in calculating an institution's ATIP. Those changes could 
    benefit non-savings association members by allowing them to increase 
    their ATIP, possibly to the point of satisfying the QTL test. Even 
    those members that do not meet the QTL requirement should benefit from 
    the amendments because an increase in their ATIP should allow them to 
    obtain a greater amount of advances based on their existing level of 
    Bank stock. Under the amendments made by EGRPRA, a member now may 
    include without limit as ``qualified thrift investments'' the full 
    amount of its loans for educational purposes, loans to small 
    businesses, and loans made through credit cards or credit card 
    accounts. In addition, institutions may include an increased amount of 
    consumer loans, subject to certain aggregate limits. For purposes of 
    the EGRPRA amendments, the director of OTS is required to define the 
    terms ``small business,'' ``small business loans,'' and ``credit 
    card,'' which the OTS has done by means of an interim final rule. 61 FR 
    60179 (November 27, 1996), to be codified at, 12 CFR 560.3.
        Although EGRPRA clearly specifies the types of additional assets 
    that may be included as qualified thrift investments (and OTS has 
    defined small business loans), the Banks cannot readily incorporate 
    those items into their annual QTL calculations because the call reports 
    of the commercial bank and credit union members, and the comparable 
    reports of insurance company members, do not separately identify those 
    items. The absence of these QTL items from the available regulatory 
    financial reports of the non-savings association members complicates 
    the Banks' annual task of determining the ATIP for those members. As a 
    consequence of the additional items added by EGRPRA, the number of 
    elements within the QTL calculation for which the Banks lack accurate 
    and readily available data has increased, which introduces a greater 
    element of uncertainty into the accuracy of the Banks' QTL 
    determinations. This is not so much of a concern with respect to 
    savings association members because OTS routinely examines the 
    associations for QTL compliance, and the Finance Board and the Banks 
    can rely on those OTS determinations. With respect to the non-savings 
    association members, however, the principal federal regulators do not 
    conduct examinations for QTL compliance and the Banks cannot look to 
    those regulators as a source for the required QTL information.
        For example, a commercial bank's outstanding credit card loans are 
    separately stated on its Report of Condition and Income (Call Report), 
    but its education loans and small business loans (at least as defined 
    for QTL purposes) are not separately identified. Although the Call 
    Report includes information about small business loans, that 
    information does not correspond to the information that the Banks 
    require when making the annual QTL calculations for their non-savings 
    association members. The OTS regulation defines the term ``small 
    business loans'' by incorporating the definitions from the Small 
    Business Act and its implementing regulations promulgated by the Small 
    Business Administration (SBA). Thus, for QTL purposes, a small business 
    loan is one made to a ``small business.'' Under the SBA regulations, a 
    ``small business'' is an entity the gross receipts of which (or the 
    number of its employees) fall below certain thresholds specified by 
    SBA. By comparison, the Call Report defines a small business loan based 
    on the size of the loan, not the size of the borrowing entity. Thus, 
    the Banks' use of the ``small business loan'' information that is 
    available from the Call Report likely will overstate the amount of 
    ``small business loans'' that are eligible to be used in deter mining a 
    commercial bank member's QTL status. The same problem exists with 
    respect to the reports submitted by credit union and insurance company 
    members, neither of which separately identify the amount of loans 
    meeting the SBA definition of small business loans.
        This disparity between the statutory requirements of the QTL test 
    and the information that is readily available to the Banks is not 
    limited to the items added by EGRPRA. For example, the QTL test 
    includes within a member's ``portfolio assets'' certain government, 
    agency, and other debt securities with specified maturities (from two 
    to five years), none of which is separately identified by maturity on 
    the published financial statements. Similarly, the QTL test includes 
    within a member's ``qualified thrift investments'' certain construction 
    loans related to one-to four-family residential properties, 50 percent 
    of residential mortgage loans sold during a calendar quarter, 200 
    percent of affordable housing-related loans, and 200 percent of service 
    facility loans, none of which is separately identified on the available 
    reports.
        The Finance Board believes that non-savings association members can 
    benefit from the newly authorized qualified thrift investments, and 
    that it is appropriate to allow the Banks to incorporate the new 
    classes of investments into their ATIP calculations for the calendar 
    year ending December 31, 1996. Of supervisory concern to the Finance 
    Board, however, is how best to ensure that the Banks conduct their 
    annual QTL determinations consistently with Section 10(e) of the 
    Federal Home Loan Bank Act (Bank Act), 12 U.S.C. 1430(e). The Finance 
    Board believes that it would be imprudent for the Banks to confer QTL 
    status on non-savings association members that cannot demonstrate that 
    their qualified thrift investments actually include the claimed amount 
    of the newly authorized investments.
        One means of ensuring this result would be through an examination 
    process. The Finance Board believes that it has the authority, under 
    Sections 2A(a)(3), 2B(a), and 22, of the Bank Act, 12 U.S.C. 
    1422a(a)(3), 1422b(a), and 1442(a), to examine, or to require the Banks 
    to request an examination of, individual members if necessary to ensure 
    that the Banks operate in compliance with the law. The Finance
    
    [[Page 8870]]
    
    Board believes, however, that the more reasonable and efficient 
    approach is to allow the Banks to obtain that information from their 
    members. As a matter of practice, some Banks already obtain from their 
    members information regarding certain QTL items that are not separately 
    identified on the published financial reports. For example, some Banks 
    obtain all QTL-related financial data from the member and use the 
    published financial reports, such as a Call Report, to confirm the 
    general accuracy of the information. Other Banks calculate a member's 
    ATIP as a service to their members using the most recently published 
    financial reports and either obtain any additional data from the member 
    or estimate it from other known sources.
        Accordingly, through this interim final rule the Finance Board will 
    allow the Banks to accept from their non-savings association members 
    supplemental QTL information that does not appear in the published 
    financial statements. The chief executive officer (CEO) of the member 
    must certify to the Bank that the information is accurate and complete 
    as of the date provided. The Finance Board believes that such an 
    arrangement strikes an appropriate balance between its need to ensure 
    that the Banks base their QTL calculations on accurate financial 
    information, and the practice of allowing the Banks to manage their own 
    business. To allow the Banks to make use of the newly authorized QTL 
    categories prior to the April 15, 1997, deadline for their QTL 
    calculations, the Finance Board has determined to issue this rule as an 
    interim final rule, but also is soliciting comments on the specific 
    provisions of the rule. The Finance Board appreciates that OTS may yet 
    revise the QTL definitions established through its recent interim rule, 
    and intends to monitor the OTS rulemaking proceeding. The Finance Board 
    anticipates that it will make corresponding changes to its advances 
    regulation should the OTS further amend the QTL regulation in any 
    material respect.
    
    II. Description of the Interim Final Rule
    
        The interim rule amends the definitions of ``actual thrift 
    investment percentage,'' ``Qualified Thrift Lender,'' and ``Qualified 
    Thrift Lender test,'' in the Finance Board's advances regulation, 12 
    CFR 935.1, to delete references to OTS regulations that no longer 
    exist. The interim rule also amends the Finance Board's advances 
    regulations, 12 CFR 935.13(a)(3), to direct the Banks to use the 
    financial information from the call report (which term is defined to 
    include the published financial reports submitted by credit union and 
    insurance company members) as the primary source for QTL 
    determinations. In those cases in which not all of the information 
    needed to perform an accurate QTL calculation is included in the call 
    report, the Bank may accept other information submitted by the member, 
    provided that the CEO of the member certifies in writing that the 
    information is accurate and complete as of the relevant date. As it 
    appears to have been the practice of some Banks to obtain the required 
    financial information for the QTL calculation from their members and 
    then compare that information to the call report, the rule allows the 
    Banks to continue to obtain information from their members as the first 
    step in the process, provided that any information not in the call 
    report must be subject to the same certification requirement. By 
    requiring the formality of a certification from the CEO the Finance 
    Board believes that the Banks will have sufficient assurance that the 
    information on which they conduct their determinations is accurate, 
    which is the minimum effort required to ensure compliance with the Bank 
    Act.
        The Finance Board does not intend to require the Banks to obtain a 
    CEO certification from every non-savings association member as a matter 
    of course. Such a certification is necessary only when a member wishes 
    the Bank to include in its annual ATIP calculation qualified thrift 
    investments or portfolio assets that do not appear in its published 
    financial reports. If a member has no such investments or assets, then 
    the Bank need not require a certification from the member. Similarly, 
    if a member has a portfolio of small business loans or education loans, 
    but the inclusion of those items in the calculation would not 
    materially change the member's ATIP, then a member could elect not to 
    provide a certification. If a member were to have a substantial 
    portfolio of education loans, for example, but only minor investment in 
    small business loans, the member could opt to certify the number of 
    education loans and omit, or indicate a zero balance, for the category 
    of small business loans. The Finance Board specifically requests public 
    comment on the certification process, as well as the content and format 
    for the certification.
    
    III. Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601, et seq., 
    the Banks are not ``small entities.'' Id. 601(6). As the interim final 
    rule would apply only to the Banks, it does not impose any additional 
    regulatory requirements on small entities of the type contemplated by 
    the RFA. Thus, in accordance with the provisions of the RFA, the Board 
    of Directors of the Finance Board hereby certifies that this interim 
    final rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial 
    number of small entities. Id. 605(b).
    
    IV. Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        The Finance Board has submitted to the Office of Management and 
    Budget (OMB) an analysis of the collection of information contained in 
    Sec. 935.13 of the interim rule, described more fully in the 
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION. The Banks will use the information 
    collection to determine whether a non-savings association member 
    satisfies the statutory QTL requirement. Only Bank members that meet 
    the QTL standards may maintain unrestricted access to long-term Bank 
    advances. See 12 U.S.C. 1430(e). Responses are required to obtain or 
    retain a benefit. See id. The Finance Board will maintain the 
    confidentiality of information obtained from respondents pursuant to 
    the collection of information as required by applicable statute, 
    regulation, and agency policy.
        Likely respondents and/or recordkeepers will be non-savings 
    association members of a Bank. Potential respondents are not required 
    to respond to the collection of information unless the regulation 
    collecting the information displays a currently valid control number 
    assigned by OMB. See 44 U.S.C. 3512(a).
    
    The estimated annual reporting and recordkeeping hour                   
     burden is:                                                             
      a. Number of respondents.................................        4,272
      b. Total annual responses................................        4,272
    Percentage of these responses collected electronically.....            0
      c. Total annual hours requested..........................        3,930
      d. Current OMB inventory.................................            0
      e. Difference............................................        3,930
    The estimated annual reporting and recordkeeping cost                   
     burden is:                                                             
      a. Total annualized capital/startup costs................            0
      b. Total annual costs (O&M)..............................            0
      c. Total annualized cost requested.......................     $126,660
      d. Current OMB inventory.................................            0
      e. Difference............................................     $126,000
                                                                            
    
        The Finance Board has submitted the collection of information to 
    OMB for review in accordance with section 3507 of the Paperwork 
    Reduction Act of 1995. See 44 U.S.C. 3507. Comments regarding the 
    collection of information may be submitted in writing to the
    
    [[Page 8871]]
    
    Finance Board at the address above, and to the Office of Information 
    and Regulatory Affairs of OMB, Attention: Desk Officer for Federal 
    Housing Finance Board, Washington, DC 20503 by March 31, 1997.
    
    V. Other Procedural Requirements
    
        The interim final rule does not meet the criteria for a 
    ``significant regulatory action'' under Executive Order 12866.
        The Finance Board has determined that the notice and comment 
    procedure ordinarily required by the Administrative Procedure Act (APA) 
    is not required in this instance. The APA authorizes agencies to waive 
    the notice and comment procedures when the agency ``for good cause 
    finds . . . that notice and public procedure thereon are impracticable, 
    unnecessary, or contrary to the public interest.'' 5 U.S.C. 
    553(b)(3)(B). The Finance Board has determined that compliance with the 
    APA procedure in this instance would be impracticable, unnecessary, and 
    contrary to the public interest because it effectively would deny the 
    Banks the opportunity to incorporate the newly authorized QTL 
    investments into their annual QTL calculations for the current year. As 
    described in the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION, the Banks must calculate 
    the QTL ratio of each non-savings association member between January 1 
    and April 15 of each year. If the Finance Board were to observe the 
    notice and comment procedures, it is unlikely that the Finance Board 
    could promulgate a final rule sufficiently in advance of the April 15 
    deadline for the Banks to incorporate its provisions into their current 
    QTL calculations. Nonetheless, because the Finance Board believes that 
    public comments aid in effective rulemaking, it will accept written 
    comments on the interim rule until March 31, 1997.
        The Finance Board also has determined that the 30-day delay of the 
    effectiveness provisions of the APA may be waived in these 
    circumstances. Section 553(d) of the APA permits waiver of the 30-day 
    delayed effective date requirement, among other things, where a 
    substantive rule relieves a restriction, or otherwise for good cause 
    found by the agency. As with the APA notice and comment procedures, 
    described above, the Finance Board finds that there is good cause for 
    making the interim rule effective on February 27, 1997, because it will 
    allow the Banks to take advantage of the EGRPRA's amendments in 
    calculating the QTL ratios for the current year. Moreover, the absence 
    of accurate call report information about the categories of newly 
    authorized QTL assets impairs the ability of the Banks to implement the 
    EGRPRA's amendments, which problem is remedied by the interim rule. By 
    eliminating a practical impediment to the implementation of the QTL 
    amendments the interim rule relieves a restriction that might otherwise 
    prevent the Banks from realizing the benefits intended by Congress.
    
    List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 935
    
        Credit, Federal home loan banks.
    
        Accordingly, the Board of Directors of the Federal Housing Finance 
    Board hereby amends title 12, chapter IX, part 935 of the Code of 
    Federal Regulations, as follows:
    
    PART 935--ADVANCES
    
        1. The authority citation for part 935 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1422b(a)(1), 1426, 1429, 1430, 1430b, and 
    1431.
    
        2. Section 935.1 is amended by republishing the introductory text 
    and revising the definitions for ``Actual thrift investment 
    percentage'', ``Qualified Thrift Lender'', and ``Qualified Thrift 
    Lender test'' to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 935.1  Definitions
    
        As used in this part:
    * * * * *
        Actual thrift investment percentage or ATIP has the same meaning as 
    used in section 10(m)(4) of the Home Owners' Loan Act (12 U.S.C. 
    1467a(m)(4)), except that the ATIP will be calculated and applied for 
    purposes of this part to all members of the Banks, whether or not they 
    are savings associations.
    * * * * *
        Qualified Thrift Lender or QTL means the term as defined in section 
    10(m)(1) of the Home Owners' Loan Act (12 U.S.C. 1467a(m)(1)). A non-
    savings association member which meets the QTL test as applied by the 
    Banks will be treated as a QTL for purposes of this part.
        Qualified Thrift Lender test or QTL test means the asset test 
    described in section 10(m) of the Home Owners' Loan Act (12 U.S.C. 
    1467a(m)), except that the QTL test will be applied for purposes of 
    this part to all members of the Banks, whether or not they are savings 
    associations.
    * * * * *
        3. In Sec. 935.13, paragraph (a)(3) is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 935.13  Restrictions on advances to members that are not qualified 
    thrift lenders
    
        (a) Restrictions on advances to non-QTL members. * * *
        (3)(i) A Bank shall calculate each non-savings association member's 
    ATIP at least annually, between January 1 and April 15, based upon 
    financial data as of December 31 of the prior calendar year. The Bank 
    may, in its discretion, calculate a member's ATIP more frequently than 
    annually.
        (ii) In determining a non-savings association member's annual ATIP, 
    a Bank shall use the financial information from the member's December 
    31 call report as the primary source of information. A Bank making ATIP 
    determinations more frequently than annually shall use the member's 
    most recent call report. If any information necessary for determining 
    the member's ATIP is not separately identified on a member's call 
    report, the Bank may rely on a written certification provided by the 
    member as to the dollar amount and composition of those other assets 
    that meet the definitions of ``qualified thrift investments'' or 
    ``portfolio assets.'' Notwithstanding the preceding two sentences, a 
    Bank may, at its option, accept a certification from a non-savings 
    association member as to the dollar amount and composition of all 
    assets that meet the definitions of ``qualified thrift investments'' or 
    ``portfolio assets.'' In any case in which a Bank relies on a 
    certification from a non-savings association member as to its level of 
    ``qualified thrift investments'' or ``portfolio assets,'' the 
    certification must be in writing and signed by the chief executive 
    officer of the member.
        (iii) As used in this section, the term ``call report'' shall 
    include:
        (A) With respect to a commercial bank, the annual or quarterly 
    ``Report of Condition and Income'' submitted to its appropriate Federal 
    banking agency;
        (B) With respect to a credit union, the quarterly or semi-annual 
    call report submitted to the National Credit Union Administration; and
        (C) With respect to an insurance company, its National Association 
    of Insurance Commissioners annual regulatory filing.
    * * * * *
        Dated: February 6, 1997.
    
        By the Board of Directors of the Federal Housing Finance Board.
    Bruce A. Morrison,
    Chairperson.
    [FR Doc. 97-4795 Filed 2-26-97; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6725-01-U
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
2/27/1997
Published:
02/27/1997
Department:
Federal Housing Finance Board
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Interim rule with request for comments.
Document Number:
97-4795
Dates:
The interim rule is effective on February 27, 1997. Comments must be received by March 31, 1997.
Pages:
8868-8871 (4 pages)
Docket Numbers:
No. 97-12
PDF File:
97-4795.pdf
CFR: (2)
12 CFR 935.1
12 CFR 935.13