96-19525. Modification of Definition of Deposits in Banks or Trust Companies  

  • [Federal Register Volume 61, Number 150 (Friday, August 2, 1996)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 40311-40313]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 96-19525]
    
    
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    FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE BOARD
    
    12 CFR Part 931
    
    [No. 96-48]
    
    
    Modification of Definition of Deposits in Banks or Trust 
    Companies
    
    AGENCY: Federal Housing Finance Board.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Board of Directors of the Federal Housing Finance Board 
    (Finance Board) has adopted a final rule to modify the definition of 
    ``deposits in banks or trust companies'' in the Finance Board's 
    regulations. The final rule will: Make clear that the term ``banks'' 
    includes savings associations; and expressly include federal funds 
    transactions as eligible to fulfill the liquidity requirement imposed 
    on the Federal Home Loan Banks (FHLBanks) by section 11(g) of the 
    Federal Home Loan Bank Act (Bank Act).
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: September 3, 1996.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Janice A. Kaye, Attorney-Advisor, 
    Office of General Counsel, (202) 408-2505, Federal Housing Finance 
    Board, 1777 F Street, NW., Washington, DC 20006.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Statutory and Regulatory Background
    
        Under section 11(e)(1) of the Bank Act, the FHLBanks have the power 
    to accept deposits from their members, other FHLBanks, or 
    instrumentalities of the United States. See 12 U.S.C. 1431(e)(1). To 
    ensure that each FHLBank has sufficient liquid assets to meet deposit 
    withdrawal demands, section 11(g) of the Bank Act imposes a liquidity 
    requirement. See id. section 1431(g). The liquidity requirement 
    provides that each FHLBank must invest, upon such terms and conditions 
    as the Board of Directors of the Finance Board may prescribe, an amount 
    equal to the current deposits the FHLBank holds in specified types of 
    assets. Id. Among the specified assets are ``deposits in banks or trust 
    companies.'' Id. section 1431(g)(2).
        The phrase ``deposits in banks or trust companies'' appeared in, 
    and has not been changed since enactment of, the Bank Act in 1932. See 
    ch. 522, sec. 11, 47 Stat. 733 (July 22, 1932). The legislative history 
    of section 11(g) of the Bank Act does not discuss use of the phrase, 
    but suggests only that the purpose of the liquidity requirement is to 
    ensure that the FHLBanks have sufficient liquid assets to meet their 
    advance and deposit withdrawal demands. See Bank Act: Hearings on S. 
    2959 Before a Subcomm. of the Senate Comm. on Banking and Currency, 72d 
    Cong., 1st Sess. 36 (Jan. 14, 1932) (statement of John O'Brien, 
    Assistant Legislative Counsel). Although the legislative history of 
    section 11(g) is limited, a legal opinion issued several years after 
    enactment of the Bank Act by the General Counsel of the Federal Home 
    Loan Bank Board (Bank Board), the Finance Board's predecessor agency, 
    stated that ``Congress, in using the phrase `deposits in banks or trust 
    companies' * * * intended to refer to those financial institutions 
    which accept deposits in their regular course of business.'' \1\ The 
    Bank Board General Counsel based his determination on the plain meaning 
    of the term ``banks'' at that time. Id. at 2-3. To decide if a 
    financial institution is a ``bank'' for purposes of section 11(g)(2), 
    ``the principal test or criterion * * * is whether the financial 
    institution accepts deposits as one of the primary purposes for which 
    it was created.'' Id. at 2. Since savings associations did not accept 
    deposits at that time,\2\ the Bank Board General Counsel concluded that 
    ``savings associations did not fall within the strict meaning of 
    `banks.' '' Bank Board General Counsel opinion at 3.
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        \1\ See Bank Board General Counsel opinion 015 (Dec. 7, 1936) at 
    1-2. The Bank Board General Counsel concluded that ``Congress * * * 
    intended to limit the trust companies authorized to receive 
    [FHLBank] deposits to those which actually receive deposits as part 
    of their regular course of business.'' Id. at 4.
        \2\ See e.g., Home Owners' Loan Act of 1933 (HOLA), ch. 64, sec. 
    5(b), 48 Stat. 132 (June 13, 1993) (savings and loan associations 
    ``shall raise their capital only in the form of payments on such 
    shares as are authorized in their charger * * * no deposits shall be 
    accepted''); Horace Russell, Savings and Loan Associations 166-67, 
    n.21 (1956) (``savings and loan associations * * * issue savings 
    accounts, sometimes called share accounts and sometimes share 
    savings accounts * * * by federal law, the use of the word `deposit' 
    by savings and loan associations is prohibited''); Indep Bankers 
    Ass'n of Am. v. Clarke, 917 F.2d 1126, 1128 (8th Cir. 1990) 
    (``traditionally, of course, and originally, savings and loan 
    associations * * * did not accept demand deposits'').
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        In 1978, the Bank Board defined by regulation the phrase ``deposits 
    in banks or trust companies'' to include a deposit in another FHLBank, 
    a demand account with a Federal Reserve Bank, or a deposit in a 
    depository designated by a FHLBank's board of directors that is a 
    member of the Federal Reserve System (FRS) or the Federal Deposit 
    Insurance Corporation (FDIC). See 43 FR 46835, 46836 (Oct. 11, 1978), 
    codified at 12 CFR 521.5 (superseded). When the Bank Board adopted this 
    definition, deposits in federal and some state savings associations 
    were insured by the former Federal Savings and Loan Insurance 
    Corporation (FSLIC), and deposits in banks (and some savings banks) 
    were insured by the FDIC. The Bank Board's regulation provided that 
    only deposits in FDIC-insured institutions were eligible investments 
    for purposes of the ``deposits in banks or trust companies'' provision 
    of section 11(g) of the Bank Act. Since, generally speaking, only banks 
    were members of (or, more precisely, insured by) the FDIC, deposits in 
    FSLIC-insured savings associations could not be counted toward the 
    liquidity requirement under the regulation. When Congress abolished the 
    Bank Board and FSLIC in 1989, see Financial Institutions Reform, 
    Recovery and Enforcement Act of 1989 (FIRREA), Pub. L. 101-73, sec. 
    401, 103 Stat. 183 (Aug. 9, 1989), the Finance Board transferred the 
    definition of ``deposits in banks or trust companies,'' without any 
    change in substantive or technical matters, to Sec. 931.5 of its 
    regulations. See 54 FR 36757 (Aug. 28, 1989), codified at 12 CFR 931.5.
        On September 22, 1993, the Board of Directors of the Finance Board 
    approved for publication a proposed rule to modify the definition of 
    ``deposits in banks or trust companies'' in Sec. 931.5 of its 
    regulations. The notice of proposed rulemaking (Notice) was published 
    in the Federal Register on September 29, 1993, with a 60-day public 
    comment period that closed on November 29, 1993. See 58 FR 50867 (Sept. 
    29, 1993). The Notice proposed to make two changes to the definition of 
    ``deposits in banks or trust companies.'' First, it
    
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    proposed to replace the reference to depositories that are FRS or FDIC 
    members with a reference to banks, as defined in section 3 of the 
    Federal Deposit Insurance Act (FDI Act), see 12 U.S.C. 1813(a), and 
    trust companies that are members of the FRS or insured by the FDIC. The 
    intent of this modification was to make clear that deposits in savings 
    associations would continue to be ineligible investments for purposes 
    of section 11(g) of the Bank Act. Second, the Notice proposed to expand 
    the definition to specifically include as deposits the sale of federal 
    funds.
    
    II. Analysis of the Final Rule
    
    A. Meaning of the Term ``Banks''
    
        In the Notice, the Board of Directors of the Finance Board proposed 
    to limit the meaning of ``banks'' to those institutions included in the 
    technical definition of the term ``banks'' under the FDI Act. Under 
    that definition, the term ``banks'' does not include savings 
    associations. See id. section 1813 (a), (b). As a result of reviewing 
    the comments received by the Finance Board, one from a FHLBank and the 
    other from an industry trade association, and the factors discussed 
    below, the Board of Directors of the Finance Board has determined that 
    deposits in savings associations should be eligible investments for 
    purposes of the liquidity requirement in section 11(g) of the Bank Act. 
    The Board of Directors of the Finance Board has modified the proposed 
    rule to make clear that the term ``banks'' will include savings 
    associations for purposes of section 11(g)(2) of the Bank Act. The 
    public comments support this interpretation.
        Neither the legislative history of the Bank Act nor the Bank Board 
    in adopting its regulatory definition, articulated any policy reasons 
    to support the exclusion of deposits in FSLIC-insured savings 
    associations. See supra section I. One commenter suggested that the 
    rationale for the exclusion of savings associations might have been to 
    avoid any conflict of interest that might arise as a result of placing 
    deposits in FHLBank member institutions. If this was the concern when 
    Congress enacted the Bank Act in 1932, or when the Bank Board 
    promulgated its regulatory definition in 1978, it was obviated in 1989, 
    when banks for the first time became eligible as FHLBank members. See 
    FIRREA, sec. 704(a), codified at 12 U.S.C. 1424(a)(1). The commenter 
    urged the Finance Board to treat bank and savings association FHLBank 
    members equally.
        The other commenter offered that the reason for disparate treatment 
    of banks and savings associations might have been to ensure that 
    FHLBank liquidity deposits be transacted only with ``low-risk'' 
    counterparties, implying that FDIC-insured deposits were less risky 
    than FSLIC-insured savings accounts. Because Congress dissolved FSLIC 
    in 1989 and transferred responsibility for administering the insurance 
    funds for both savings associations and banks to the FDIC, see FIRREA, 
    sections 401(a)(1), 205, the commenter argued that, if there ever were 
    such differences, there are now no material differences in overall 
    credit risk between deposits in FDIC-insured banks and deposits in 
    FDIC-insured savings associations. The commenter pointed out also that 
    sound financial management and the dictates of the Finance Board's 
    Financial Management Policy, see Board of Directors Res. 93-133 (Dec. 
    15, 1993), Board of Directors Dec. Mem. 94-DM-48 (Nov. 10, 1994), 
    require the FHLBanks to select only the most creditworthy 
    counterparties.
        -Permitting the FHLBanks to count deposits in savings associations 
    towards the statutory liquidity requirement also is sound as a matter 
    of statutory construction. Congress enacted the Bank Act a year before 
    it created the FDIC. See ch. 89, sec. 8, 48 Stat. 168 (June 16, 1933). 
    Thus, the technical definition of the term ``bank'' provided for 
    purposes of deposit insurance coverage could not have been the 
    contemplated meaning of the word as used in section 11(g)(2) of the 
    Bank Act. See supra section I. It appears that Congress' intent in 
    using the phrase ``deposits in banks or trust companies'' was to permit 
    the FHLBanks to make deposits only in financial institutions that 
    accepted deposits in the ordinary course of their business. Id. 
    Clearly, the plain meaning of the term ``bank'' at the time Congress 
    enacted the Bank Act was a financial institution that accepts deposits. 
    Id. This also is the ordinary dictionary definition of the term 
    ``bank'' today.\3\
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        \3\ ``A bank is an institution * * * whose business it is to 
    receive money on deposit * * *.'' 131 Black's Law Dictionary (5th 
    ed. 1979). The word ``bank'' means ``an institution for receiving, 
    lending, exchanging, and safeguarding money.'' 106 The Random House 
    College Dictionary (rev. ed. 1980) (emphasis added).
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        -Although there continue to be differences between banks and 
    savings associations, even the courts have acknowledged that ``the 
    clear, bright-line distinctions between commercial banks and savings 
    and loans have, over the years, gradually become blurred.'' Indep. 
    Bankers, 917 F.2d at 1128. Indeed, for purposes of other statutes, the 
    term ``banks'' has been defined to include savings associations, and 
    vice versa. For example, under HOLA, the Office of Thrift Supervision 
    considers certain types of banks to be savings associations for 
    purposes of the qualified thrift lender test. See 12 U.S.C. 
    1467a(1)(A), (l); 12 CFR 583.21. Further, under the Internal Revenue 
    Code, the meaning of the term ``bank'' includes savings associations 
    for purposes of assessing taxes on certain situations common to both 
    types of financial institutions. See 26 U.S.C. 581; Horace Russell, 
    Savings and Loan Associations 307 (2d ed. 1960) (`` `black,' therefore, 
    is `white' ''). And, for purposes of the McFadden Act, 12 U.S.C. 36, 
    which authorizes national banks to establish branches only to the 
    extent that state banks within the same state may branch under state 
    law, the Comptroller of the Currency has determined that savings 
    associations are state banks. Several courts have upheld as reasonable 
    the Comptroller of the Currency's determination.
        -For all of the above reasons, including the fact that savings 
    associations now have statutory authority to accept deposits,\4\ it is 
    reasonable for the Board of Directors of the Finance Board to conclude 
    that deposits in savings associations should be eligible investments 
    for purposes of section 11(g) of the Bank Act.
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        \4\ In 1968, Congress amended section 5(b) of HOLA. See Pub. L. 
    90-448, Title XVII, sec. 1716(a), 82 Stat. 608 (Aug. 1, 1968); supra 
    n.2. The amendment eliminated provisions that permitted savings 
    associations to raise their capital only in the form of payments on 
    shares and prohibited acceptance of deposits, and inserted 
    provisions permitting savings associations to raise capital in the 
    form of savings deposits, shares, or other accounts. Id., codified 
    at 12 U.S.C. 1464.
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    B. Federal Funds Transactions
    
        The Board of Directors of the Finance Board has adopted the 
    provisions of the Notice that concern federal funds transactions as 
    proposed. The Board of Directors of the Finance Board has decided that 
    federal funds transactions, which are highly liquid investments 
    essentially equivalent to deposits, constitute investments that are 
    ``deposits'' within the meaning of section 11(g)(2) of the Bank Act. 
    Therefore, the final rule amends Sec. 931.5 to include expressly the 
    sale of federal funds to banks and trust companies as a deposit the 
    FHLBanks may use to fulfill the liquidity requirement in section 11(g) 
    of the Bank Act. Since the Board of Directors of the Finance Board has 
    concluded that the term ``banks'' includes savings associations, 
    savings associations, as well as banks and trust companies, are 
    eligible counterparties
    
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    for federal funds transactions. The public comments received by the 
    Finance Board support this interpretation.
        For purposes of the final rule, a sale of federal funds means 
    either a conventional federal funds transaction or a correspondent-
    respondent federal funds transaction. A conventional sale of federal 
    funds involves the unsecured sale of funds held by a FHLBank in an 
    account maintained at its district Federal Reserve Bank to a bank in 
    need of additional funds to meet its statutory reserve requirement.\5\ 
    A correspondent-respondent federal funds sale involves the sale of 
    unsecured funds directly from a FHLBank (the respondent) to a 
    correspondent bank in need of funds to meet its statutory reserve 
    requirement.
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        \5\ Section 19(b)(2)(A) of the Federal Reserve Act requires each 
    depository institution to maintain reserves against its transaction 
    accounts, as the FRS Board of Governors may prescribe, for the 
    purpose of implementing monetary policy. See 12 U.S.C. 461(b)(2)(A). 
    These reserves are commonly referred to as ``federal funds.'' A 
    depository institution meets the reserve requirement by maintaining 
    accounts at its direct Federal Reserve Bank or by holding cash in 
    its vaults. A depository institution may sell excess reserves to 
    another depository institution in need of additional funds to meet 
    its reserve requirement.
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    III. Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        Under the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), 5 U.S.C. 601, et seq., 
    the FHLBanks are not ``small entities.'' Id. section 601(6). Since this 
    final rule applies only to the FHLBanks, it does not impose any 
    additional regulatory requirements on small entities. Thus, in 
    accordance with section 605(b) of the RFA, Id. section 605(b), the 
    Board of Directors of the Finance Board hereby certifies that this 
    final rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial 
    number of small entities.
    
    List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 931
    
        Banks, banking, Federal home loan banks.
        Accordingly, the Board of Directors of the Federal Housing Finance 
    Board hereby amends chapter IX, title 12, part 931, Code of Federal 
    Regulations, as follows:
    
    PART 931--DEFINITIONS
    
        1. The authority citation for part 931 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1422a, 1422b, 1427, and 1431(g).
    
        2. Section 931.5 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 931.5   Deposits in banks or trust companies.
    
        Include:
        (a) A deposit in another Bank;
        (b) A demand account in a Federal Reserve Bank; and
        (c) A deposit in, or a sale of federal funds to:
        (1) An insured depository institution, as defined in section 
    2(12)(A) of the Act (12 U.S.C. 1422(12)(A)), that is designated by the 
    Bank's board of directors; or
        (2) A trust company that is a member of the Federal Reserve System 
    or insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, and is 
    designated by the Bank's board of directors.
    
        Dated: July 3, 1996.
    
        By the Board of Directors of the Federal Housing Finance Board.
    Bruce A. Morrison,
    Chairperson.
    [FR Doc. 96-19525 Filed 8-1-96; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6725-01-U
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
9/3/1996
Published:
08/02/1996
Department:
Federal Housing Finance Board
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
96-19525
Dates:
September 3, 1996.
Pages:
40311-40313 (3 pages)
Docket Numbers:
No. 96-48
PDF File:
96-19525.pdf
CFR: (1)
12 CFR 931.5