95-16090. Proposed Schedule on Trust Income and Expense  

  • [Federal Register Volume 60, Number 126 (Friday, June 30, 1995)]
    [Notices]
    [Pages 34252-34257]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 95-16090]
    
    
    
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    FEDERAL FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS EXAMINATIONS COUNCIL
    
    
    Proposed Schedule on Trust Income and Expense
    
    AGENCY: Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council.
    
    ACTION: Request for comment.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council (FFIEC) 
    \1\ proposes to add Schedule E--Fiduciary Income Statement (Schedule) 
    to the Annual Report of Trust Assets (FFIEC 001). The agencies 
    currently have no other source which provides trust income and expense 
    data in a consistent and timely manner from those institutions engaged 
    in fiduciary activities that are supervised by the agencies. The 
    information requested would help the agencies monitor and evaluate the 
    performance of and risks associated with the fiduciary industry.
    
        \1\ The FFIEC consists of representatives from the Board of 
    Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board), the Federal Deposit 
    Insurance Corporation (FDIC), the Office of the Comptroller of the 
    Currency (OCC), the Office of Thrift Supervision (OTS) (referred to 
    as the ``agencies''), and the National Credit Union Administration. 
    However, this request for comment is not directed to credit unions. 
    Section 1006(c) of the Federal Financial Institutions Examination 
    Council Act requires the FFIEC to develop uniform reporting 
    standards for federally-supervised financial institutions.
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        The proposed Schedule would be required to be filed by all trust 
    institutions with $100 million or more in total trust assets as 
    reported on Schedule A, Annual Report of Trust Assets, on Form FFIEC 
    001. In addition, all non-deposit trust companies, whether or not they 
    report any assets on Schedule A, would be required to file this 
    Schedule. The proposed Schedule would be prepared on a calendar year 
    basis beginning with the year ending December 31, 1996.
    
    DATES; Comments must be received by August 29, 1995.
    
    ADDRESSES: Comments should be directed to Joe M. Cleaver, Executive 
    Secretary, Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council, 2100 
    Pennsylvania Avenue, NW, Suite 200, Washington, D.C. 20037. (Fax number 
    (202) 634-6556.)
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
        Board: Donald R. Vinnedge, Manager, Trust Activities Program, (202) 
    452-2717; William R. Stanley, Supervisory Trust Analyst, Trust 
    Activities Program, (202) 452-2744.
        FDIC: James D. Leitner, Examination Specialist, Division of 
    Supervision, 202 898-6790; Robert F. Storch, Chief, Accounting Section, 
    Division of Supervision, (202) 898-8906.
        OCC: William L. Granovsky, National Bank Examiner, Compliance 
    Management, (202) 874-4447.
        OTS: Larry A. Clark, Program Manager, Compliance and Trust, (202) 
    906-5628.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    Background
    
        The FFIEC is proposing to add a schedule to the Annual Report of 
    Trust Assets to annually collect limited trust income and expense 
    information. Since this information generally pertains to only a 
    portion of the reporting organization's total operations, the data 
    reported by individual institutions would be regarded as confidential 
    by the FFIEC and the agencies. Aggregate information, however, would be 
    
    
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    published annually in an FFIEC publication entitled ``Trust Assets of 
    Financial Institutions.''
        The off-balance sheet nature of fiduciary activities presents 
    certain impediments to the agencies in the development and 
    implementation of fiduciary and related supervision policy. The lack of 
    uniform, consistent and industry-wide information on fiduciary income 
    and expenses precludes effective analysis of fiduciary profitability 
    and risk management for an individual institution, a peer group, and 
    the entire industry. In addition, trust profitability is one of the 
    rating factors in the Uniform Interagency Trust Rating System and the 
    new schedule would enable the agencies to monitor trust income and 
    losses between trust examinations.
        Presently, the information collected on trust activities is limited 
    to an annual reporting requirement for banks, savings associations, and 
    trust companies showing discretionary and nondiscretionary trust assets 
    by various types of accounts. Without income-related information from 
    the same set of reporters, the agencies' ability to measure the risk 
    associated with particular lines of fiduciary business and to evaluate 
    the functional activities causing losses is hampered.
        There are approximately 3,000 banks, savings associations, and 
    trust companies that actively engage in trust activities. These 
    institutions administered $10.6 trillion of assets as of December 31, 
    1993, or more than three times the banking industry's on-balance sheet 
    assets. As proposed, less than one third of these institutions would be 
    required to report their income and expenses on the new schedule.\2\ 
    These reporting institutions would account for approximately 99 percent 
    of all trust assets. The size distribution of institutions engaging in 
    trust activities as of December 31, 1993, was as follows:
    
        \2\ Although data for 1994 show that assets grew by one trillion 
    dollars and the number of institutions engaged in fiduciary 
    activities decreased by about 100, no significant change was noted 
    in the number of institutions subject to the proposed reporting 
    requirement.
    
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                                     Number of      Trust   
                 Size of institution               institutions     assets  
    ------------------------------------------------------------------------
    $1 billion or more in trust assets...........           314      $10,400
    $100 million to less than $1 billion in trust                           
     assets......................................           545          165
    Less than $100 million in trust assets.......         1,960           33
                                                  --------------------------
        Totals...................................         2,819      $10,598
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        The fiduciary business has continued to grow substantially both in 
    terms of assets administered and the variety and sophistication of 
    investment services offered. Trust assets administered have grown by 61 
    percent over five years from $6.6 trillion in 1988 to $10.6 trillion in 
    1993. During this time, the proportion of these assets subject to the 
    investment discretion of trust management has increased from 17 percent 
    to 19 percent of trust assets.
        Similarly, based on bank holding company reports to the Board on 
    form FR Y-9C, it is estimated that gross fees from fiduciary activities 
    for the 50 largest bank holding companies (in asset size) during this 
    five year period has increased by 87 percent from $5.2 billion in 1988 
    to $9.7 billion in 1993. For these 50 organizations, these fees rose 
    from 16 percent of total non-interest income in 1988 to 18 percent in 
    1993. The five year growth in trust assets and gross fee income 
    supports the need for the agencies to collect and evaluate uniform 
    information on income and expenses for individual institutions as an 
    element of their supervisory oversight over these institutions and the 
    industry.
    Description of Proposed Schedule E--Fiduciary Income Statement
    
        The proposed Schedule would be prepared on a calendar year basis 
    beginning with the year ending December 31, 1996. Individual agencies, 
    at their own discretion, may request that institutions under their 
    supervision voluntarily file this Schedule for the year ending December 
    31, 1995.
        The proposal calls for institutions to provide a breakdown of 
    fiduciary income along six categories that correspond to the existing 
    account classifications on Schedule A, Annual Report of Trust Assets, 
    and Schedule C, Corporate Trusts, of the FFIEC 001. This would permit 
    the agencies to compare income data with information on assets managed 
    and to enhance their understanding of the operations of individual 
    institutions.
        Expense information is proposed to be broken out by three 
    categories: (1) Salaries and Employee Benefits; (2) Other Direct 
    Expense; and (3) Allocated Indirect Expense. This would permit the 
    development of efficiency or overhead ratios comparable to those 
    commonly used in the analysis of commercial bank operations.
        The proposed Schedule includes two types of breakdowns of losses 
    resulting from surcharges and settlements (e.g., replenishment of 
    losses incurred by fiduciary customers). For the first breakdown, these 
    losses would be separately reported for ten categories of fiduciary 
    activities: (1) Employee Benefit Trusts--Discretionary; (2) Employee 
    Benefit Trusts--Non-Discretionary; (3) Personal Trusts and Estates--
    Discretionary; (4) Personal Trusts and Estates--Non-Discretionary; (5) 
    Employee Benefit Agencies--Discretionary; (6) Employee Benefit 
    Agencies--Non-Discretionary; (7) Other Agency Accounts--Discretionary; 
    (8) Other Agency Accounts--Non-Discretionary; (9) Corporate Trusts and 
    Agencies; and (10) All Other Activities. The losses for the first eight 
    of the preceding categories can be measured against the dollar amount 
    of trust assets held by that type of account as reported on Schedule A 
    of the Annual Report of Trust Assets. Corporate trusts can be compared 
    against information collected on Schedule C of the Annual Report of 
    Trust Assets where the number of issues and principal amount of 
    outstanding securities are shown.
        In addition to collecting loss information by type of account, 
    these data would be reported by type of loss: (1) Investment; (2) 
    Administrative; and (3) Operational. This breakdown will provide the 
    agencies with information on the types of losses that can adversely 
    affect an institution's condition. Consequently, if an institution or a 
    group of institutions show data or trends in data for certain types of 
    losses, this form of reporting will help the agencies develop and 
    implement appropriate supervisory policies and examination emphasis. 
    Further, this information will help examiners determine ratings for the 
    Earnings, Volume Trends and Prospects components of the Uniform 
    Interagency Trust Rating System for an institution under examination.
    
    Request for Comment
    
        The FFIEC is requesting comment on all aspects of the proposed 
    Schedule. In particular, the FFIEC requests comment on the availability 
    of the information to be collected in the Schedule and the cost and 
    time required to implement any needed changes in the institution's 
    recordkeeping systems to provide the requested information. Comment is 
    also requested on the cost and time required to complete the proposed 
    Schedule each year thereafter. Institutions addressing availability, 
    cost, and time should 
    
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    indicate the total amount of their trust assets.
        The FFIEC also requests comment on the feasibility of providing 
    such data for the calendar year ending December 31, 1996. If the 
    proposed effective date for this reporting is not feasible, please 
    explain why it is not feasible and comment on how soon thereafter such 
    data would be available.
        In order to limit the reporting burden of the new schedule, banks 
    and savings associations with less than $100 million in total trust 
    assets (as reported on line 18, column F, of Schedule A of the FFIEC 
    001) would not be required, but would be encouraged, to complete the 
    schedule. The FFIEC requests comment on this reporting threshold for 
    filing the Schedule. Also, the FFIEC requests comment on the proposed 
    requirement that nondeposit trust companies with less than $100 million 
    in total trust assets on Schedule A of the Annual Report of Trust 
    Assets file this Schedule.
        Finally, the FFIEC requests comment on the adequacy and clarity of 
    the proposed instructions. Suggested improvements are welcome and are 
    encouraged.
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1980 (Pub. L. 96-
    511), the current Annual Report of Trust Assets required from those 
    institutions with trust powers and under the supervision of one of the 
    agencies has been submitted to, and approved by, the U.S. Office of 
    Management and Budget (OMB). (OMB Control Numbers: for the Board, 7100-
    0031; for the OCC, 1557-0127; for the FDIC, 3064-0024; and for the OTS, 
    1550-0026.) The final version of the proposed changes that are the 
    subject of this request for comment, which will be developed after 
    consideration of the comments received, will be submitted by each 
    agency to OMB for its review.
        The proposed Schedule E and its accompanying instructions are 
    illustrated as follows:
    
        Dated: June 26, 1995.
    Joe M. Cleaver,
    Executive Secretary, Federal Financial Institutions Examination 
    Council.
    
    BILLING CODE 6210-01-M
    
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    BILLING CODE 6210-01-C
    
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    Annual Report of Trust Assets--Form FFIEC 001
    
    Specific Instructions
    
    Schedule E--Fiduciary Income Statement
    
        Who Must Report: This Schedule must be completed by each financial 
    institution with more than $100 million in Total Trust Assets as 
    reported on Schedule A (Line 18, Column F). In addition, all non-
    deposit trust companies, whether or not they report any assets on 
    Schedule A, must also file Schedule E. Institutions which are not 
    required to file Schedule E are encouraged to file it on a voluntary 
    basis.
        Public Availability of Schedule E: The information on Schedule E is 
    confidential and will not be publicly available. The aggregate 
    information will be included in the annual FFIEC publication, Trust 
    Assets of Financial Institutions.
        Instructions: Institutions filing Schedule E must complete all 
    portions of the Schedule. Enter a zero on any line item that does not 
    apply to your institution.
    
    1. Gross Fees, Commissions and Other Fiduciary Income
    
    1(a through e) Trust and Agency Accounts
        Gross fees, commissions and other fiduciary income data is to be 
    reported by line of business. Please refer to the instructions for 
    Schedules A and C for guidance in defining these lines of business. For 
    employee benefit trust accounts, see Schedule A, column A; for personal 
    trust & estate accounts, see Schedule A, columns B and C; for other 
    agency accounts, see Schedule A, column E; and for corporate trust and 
    agency accounts, see Schedule C.
        Fees received for IRA, Keogh Plan or other accounts that are not 
    administered by the trust department should be excluded from this 
    Schedule. If these accounts require the bank to have trust powers, then 
    their fees should be reported on this Schedule.
    1(f) All Other Fiduciary Income
        Report all other direct income derived from other fiduciary sources 
    not included in any of the above categories (e.g. 12b-1 fees and income 
    from providing fiduciary services under agreement with another 
    institution). Include all internal allocations of income to the trust 
    function (such as transfer agent or pension plan administration 
    credits), except for credits for deposits held in own or affiliated 
    institutions, which are to be reported on line 5.
    1(g) Total Fiduciary Income
        The total of lines 1(a) through 1(f). (It should be noted that 
    banks with more than $100 million in commercial bank assets are 
    required to itemize ``Income from fiduciary activities'' in the 
    quarterly FFIEC Report of Condition and Income (``Call Report'') on 
    line 5(a) of Schedule RI. Instructions for fiduciary income to be 
    reported on line 5(a) of Call Report Schedule RI differ from those for 
    line 1(g) of this Schedule with respect to allocated income. 
    Consequently, banks should be aware that the amounts reported in these 
    two items will differ by the amount of such allocated income.)
    
    2. Expenses
    
    2(a) Salaries and Employee Benefits
        Include salaries, bonuses, hourly wages, overtime pay, and 
    incentive pay for officers and employees of the trust department. If 
    officers or employees spend only a portion of their time in the trust 
    department, allocate that proportional share of their salaries and 
    employee benefits. Expenses associated with employee benefit plans 
    (pension, profit-sharing, 401(k), ESOP, etc.), health and life 
    insurance, Social Security and unemployment taxes, tuition 
    reimbursement, and all other so-called fringe benefits, should be 
    included on this line.
    2(b) Other Direct Expense
        In general, direct expenses are immediately identifiable as costs 
    expended for and under the control of the trust function. These include 
    expenses related to the use of trust premises, furniture, fixtures, and 
    equipment, as well as depreciation/amortization, ordinary repairs and 
    maintenance, service or maintenance contracts, utilities, lease or 
    rental payments, insurance coverage, and real estate and other property 
    taxes if they are directly chargeable to the trust function.
    2(c) Allocated Indirect Expense
        Allocated indirect expenses are those charged to the trust function 
    from other departments of the institution. These include any allocation 
    for the trust functions' proportionate share of corporate expenses that 
    cannot be directly charged to particular departments or functions. If 
    the institution's accounting system is not able to provide this 
    information, the institution may use a reasonable alternate method.
        Indirect expenses include audit and examination fees, marketing, 
    charitable contributions, customer parking, holding company overhead, 
    and, in many cases, functions such as personnel, corporate planning, 
    and corporate financial staff. Other indirect expenses include the 
    trust function's proportionate share of building rent or depreciation, 
    utilities, real estate taxes, and insurance.
        If no direct expense is shown for occupancy on line 2(b), an 
    allocated occupancy expense based on proportionate floor space used by 
    the trust function should be shown on line 2(c).
    2(d) Total Expense
        The total of lines 2(a) through 2(c).
    3. Settlements, Surcharges and Other Losses
    
        See the instructions for line 7 for information about the reporting 
    of settlements, surcharges and other losses.
    3(a) Gross Settlements, Surcharges & Other Losses
        Report the total losses prior to any adjustments for recoveries. 
    The amount shown on this line should agree to the total of the details 
    shown in the box on line 7.
    3(b) Recoveries to Reported Losses
        Show all recoveries received on reported losses.
    3(c) Net Settlements, Surcharges & Losses
        Line 3(a) less 3(b).
    
    4. Net Operating Income (Loss)
    
        Line 1 (g) minus line 2(d) and 3. If the result is less than zero, 
    the figure should be shown in parentheses.
    
    5. Credit For Own-Institution Deposits
    
        Uninvested cash belonging to fiduciary accounts is available to the 
    commercial banking side of the institution for investment, trust 
    functions are often given credit for the use of these monies. When this 
    credit is given to the trust department or trust company as part of the 
    bank's profit tracking system, it should be reported on line 5. Do not 
    include actual interest earned on fiduciary funds on deposit, as this 
    income would normally belong to the fiduciary account.
    
    6. Net Trust Income (Loss)
    
        Report the total amount of trust income or loss, prior to any 
    income taxes, experienced by the trust function for the full year. The 
    number for this line is the result of adding line 5 to the 
    
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    sub-total shown on line 4. If the total on line 6 is less than zero, 
    the resulting figure should be shown in parentheses.
    
    7. Settlements, Surcharges & Other Losses
    
        Report gross losses resulting from charge-offs, settlements, 
    judgments, or other claims which are included in the total shown on 
    line 3. These amounts should not be shown net of any recoveries or 
    insurance payments. Legal expenses should be included on line 2(b) or 
    2(c). Do not include contingent liabilities related to outstanding 
    litigation.
    Account Definitions--Lines 7(a) through 7(j)
        Report settlements, surcharges, and other losses arising from 
    errors, misfeasance or malfeasance according to the type of account and 
    capacity. The sum of lines 7(a) through 7(j) should equal the total 
    shown on line 3(a) above.
    Risk Definitions--Lines 7(k) through 7(m)
        Settlements, surcharges, and other losses should also be reported 
    by the functional activity which gave rise to the payment. The sum of 
    the amounts reported by such functional activity on lines 7(k) through 
    7(m) should equal the total shown on line 3(a), ``Settlements, 
    Surcharges and Other Losses.''
        Investment Losses: The amount paid or credited to accounts or 
    account holders for losses arising from the investment management of 
    account assets in situations where the bank exercises discretion in the 
    selection, purchase, retention, or sale of an account's assets.
        Administration Losses: The amount paid or credited to accounts or 
    account holders as reimbursement for losses arising from the management 
    of the accounts. Such losses generally arise from the failure to 
    fulfill responsibilities established by the agreement under which the 
    bank is acting or failure to fulfill the duties inherent in the 
    fiduciary capacity under which the bank is authorized to act.
        Operational Losses: The amount paid or credited to accounts or 
    account holders as restitution for losses arising from accounting and 
    other support activities, such as securities trade processing. 
    Operational losses include all activities which support investment and 
    account administration functions.
    Memo Item to Be Completed by Non-Deposit Trust Companies Only
    
    8. Non-Fiduciary Income
    
        Stand alone or non-deposit trust companies, whose activities area 
    limited to providing fiduciary services, may have income not directly 
    attributable to the furnishing of fiduciary services. This income 
    should be reported on this line 8 as a memo figure and should not be 
    included in the data shown on lines 1 through 6.
    [FR Doc. 95-16090 Filed 6-29-95; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6210-01-M
    
    

Document Information

Published:
06/30/1995
Department:
Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council
Entry Type:
Notice
Action:
Request for comment.
Document Number:
95-16090
Pages:
34252-34257 (6 pages)
PDF File:
95-16090.pdf