94-16557. Supplemental Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation  

  • [Federal Register Volume 59, Number 132 (Tuesday, July 12, 1994)]
    [Unknown Section]
    [Page 0]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 94-16557]
    
    
    [[Page Unknown]]
    
    [Federal Register: July 12, 1994]
    
    
                                                       VOL. 59, NO. 132
    
                                                 Tuesday, July 12, 1994
    
    FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
    
    5 CFR Part 3201
    
    12 CFR Part 336
    
    RIN: 3064-AA08
    
     
    
    Supplemental Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the 
    Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
    
    AGENCY: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC or Corporation).
    
    ACTION: Proposed rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, with the 
    concurrence of the Office of Government Ethics (OGE), proposes to issue 
    regulations for the employees of the Corporation which would supplement 
    the Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Executive Branch 
    (Executive Branch-wide Standards) issued by OGE. The proposed rule is a 
    necessary supplement to the Executive Branch-wide Standards and has 
    been designed to address the specialized functions and operations of 
    the Corporation. The proposed rule would establish: prohibitions on 
    borrowing and extensions of credit; prohibitions on the ownership of 
    certain financial interests; prohibitions on the purchase of property 
    controlled by the Corporation or the Resolution Trust Corporation 
    (RTC); limitations on official dealings with former employers and 
    clients; disqualification requirements relating to employment of family 
    members outside the Corporation; and limitations on outside employment 
    activities.
    
    DATES: Comments must be received on or before September 12, 1994.
    
    ADDRESSES: Send comments to Robert E. Feldman, Acting Executive 
    Secretary, FDIC, 550 17th Street, NW, Washington, DC 20429. Comments 
    may be hand-delivered to room 400, 1776 F Street, NW, Washington, DC 
    20429 on business days between 8:30 a.m. and 5 p.m. [FAX number: (202) 
    898-3838].
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Katherine A. Corigliano, Assistant 
    Executive Secretary (Ethics), (202) 898-7272; Richard M. Handy, Ethics 
    Program Manager, (202) 898-7271; or Paul A. Jeddeloh, Senior Program 
    Attorney, (202) 898-7161, all at the FDIC.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Background
    
        On August 7, 1992, the Office of Government Ethics published the 
    Standards of Ethical Conduct For Employees of the Executive Branch. See 
    57 FR 35006-35067, as corrected at 57 FR 48557 and 57 FR 52583, with an 
    additional grace period extension at 59 FR 4779-4780. The Executive 
    Branch-wide Standards, now codified at 5 CFR part 2635 and effective 
    February 3, 1993, establish uniform standards of ethical conduct for 
    executive branch employees.
        With the concurrence of the OGE, 5 CFR 2635.105 and the Resolution 
    Trust Corporation Completion Act (P.L. 103-204) authorize the 
    Corporation to publish agency-specific supplemental regulations 
    necessary to implement its ethics programs. The Corporation and OGE 
    have determined that the following supplemental regulations contained 
    in the proposed rule are necessary to successfully continue the 
    Corporation's ethics program in light of the Corporation's unique 
    programs and operations. The proposed supplemental rule addresses 
    issues relevant to the Corporation's specialized roles as the insurer, 
    conservator, receiver, liquidator, organizer of bridge banks, and 
    regulator or back-up enforcement agency for FDIC-insured depository 
    institutions. Upon finalization of the supplemental regulation, the 
    Corporation will, as proposed, delete those portions of 12 CFR part 336 
    that are superseded by the Executive Branch-wide Standards and the 
    supplemental regulations.
    
    II. Analysis of Regulation
    
        The following regulations are proposed to appear in new part 3201 
    of 5 CFR chapter XXII.
    
    Section 3201.101  General
    
        (a) Purpose. Proposed Sec. 3201.101(a) explains that the 
    regulations would apply to all Corporation employees and would 
    supplement the Executive Branch-wide Standards. Because they are 
    covered under rules applicable to the Department of the Treasury, two 
    members of the Board of Directors, the Comptroller of the Currency and 
    the Director of the Office of Thrift Supervision, would be covered only 
    by those provisions of the supplemental regulation specifically made 
    applicable to them in connection with their activities as members of 
    the Corporation's Board of Directors.
        (b) Corporation ethics officials. Proposed Sec. 3201.101(b) 
    explains that the Designated Agency Ethics Official would be the 
    Executive Secretary and that the Alternate Agency Ethics Official would 
    be the Assistant Executive Secretary (Ethics) of the FDIC. This 
    provision would delegate authority to the Executive Secretary and the 
    Assistant Executive Secretary (Ethics) to act in such capacities as 
    contemplated under 5 CFR part 2638. The provision would continue the 
    designations currently found at 12 CFR part 336, as updated to 
    accommodate organizational changes.
        (c) Agency designees. Proposed Sec. 3201.101(c) specifies those 
    employees who would hold the authority to act as agency designees under 
    the Executive Branch-wide Standards and the supplemental regulation. It 
    also explains that only the Ethics Counselor or Alternate Ethics 
    Counselor would be able to delegate authority to act as agency 
    designees and that such delegation would have to be in writing and 
    could not be re-delegated.
        (d) Definitions. Proposed Sec. 3201.101(d) would include as an 
    affiliate those companies which control, are controlled by, or are 
    under common control with, an FDIC-insured depository institution. The 
    definition for affiliate was taken from the Bank Holding Company Act of 
    1956 and is intended to be broadly interpreted and include any holding 
    companies, subsidiaries, or other affiliated companies of an FDIC-
    insured depository institution.
        The term appropriate director would include the heads of offices 
    and divisions in the Washington office, the highest ranking officials 
    in each division in the regional offices, and the Ethics Counselor.
        The term covered employee would include all employees of the 
    Corporation required to file confidential or public financial 
    disclosure reports under 5 CFR part 2634 or 5 CFR part 3202.
        Under the proposed regulation, the term employee would include all 
    persons, other than special Government employees, employed by the 
    Corporation. Pursuant to the Resolution Trust Corporation Completion 
    Act (P.L. 103-204), the Corporation is also required to consider the 
    employees of contractors as employees of the Corporation for certain 
    purposes. Therefore, the term employee would include, for purposes of 5 
    CFR part 2635 and Secs. 3201.103 and 3201.104 of this part, any 
    individual who, pursuant to a contract or any other arrangement, 
    performs functions or activities of the Corporation, under the direct 
    supervision of an officer or employee of the Corporation. The term 
    employee would not include independent contractors who are not deemed 
    to be employees under 12 U.S.C. 1822(f)(1)(B). In the case of members 
    of the Board of Directors, it would include only the three members 
    appointed by the President under 12 U.S.C. 1812(a)(1)(C).
        The proposed regulation provides a broad definition of the term 
    security which includes an interest in debt or equity instruments such 
    as, for example, stocks, bonds, and commercial paper. However, the term 
    security would not include a deposit account.
        The term State nonmember bank is a statutory term taken from 12 
    U.S.C. 1813 and would include all State banks that are not members of 
    the Federal Reserve System.
        The definition of subsidiary was taken from section 3(w) of the 
    Federal Deposit Insurance Act, codified to 12 U.S.C. 1813(w), and would 
    include all companies owned or controlled directly or indirectly by 
    another company.
    
    Section 3201.102  Extensions of Credit From FDIC-Insured Depository 
    Institutions
    
        The proposed rules on extensions of credit from FDIC-insured 
    depository institutions provide the conditions under which certain 
    specified categories of Corporation employees can obtain credit from 
    depository institutions insured by the Corporation. Restrictions on the 
    availability of credit to Corporation employees are necessary for 
    several reasons. First, 5 CFR 2635.403(a) permits the Corporation to 
    prohibit or restrict the acquisition or holding of a financial interest 
    or class of financial interests by Corporation employees, and the 
    spouses and minor children of those employees, when the Corporation has 
    made the determination that the acquisition or holding of such 
    financial interests would cause a reasonable person to question the 
    impartiality and objectivity with which Corporation programs are 
    administered, and 5 CFR 2635.403(c) specifically provides that the term 
    financial interest may include an indebtedness relationship. For 
    purposes of the extensions of credit covered by Sec. 3201.102 (a) 
    through (d), the Corporation has made such a determination. These 
    prohibitions and restrictions on employees entering into financial 
    arrangements with institutions over which the Corporation has 
    regulatory and resolution authority are necessary to prevent loss of 
    public confidence in the integrity of the Corporation. In addition, the 
    borrowing prohibition would incorporate the substance of the statutory 
    prohibition at 18 U.S.C. 213 on bank examiners accepting certain loans. 
    Finally, limitations on borrowing from FDIC-insured depository 
    institutions would avoid a high number of employee disqualifications 
    that would have a detrimental effect on the Corporation's 
    administration of its multifaceted responsibilities.
        Under proposed Sec. 3201.102(a), a current or contingent financial 
    obligation of an employee is considered a financial obligation for 
    purposes of the prohibition, disqualification, and retention provisions 
    of proposed Sec. 3201.102. A current or contingent financial obligation 
    of a spouse or minor child is attributed to the employee for purposes 
    of this section since the Corporation has determined, pursuant to 5 CFR 
    2635.403(a), that there is a direct and appropriate nexus between the 
    efficiency of the service and the prohibitions and restrictions in 
    Sec. 3201.102 as applied to the spouses and minor children of 
    Corporation employees.
        Under proposed Sec. 3201.102(b), members of the Board of Directors 
    and other Corporation officials who are in top management positions 
    would be prohibited from incurring financial obligations with an 
    institution over which the Corporation has primary Federal supervisory 
    authority or a subsidiary of such an institution. A deputy or an 
    assistant to the Board of Directors or to an individual board member, a 
    covered employee who is an assistant to such deputy or assistant, the 
    director of a Washington office or division (other than the Division of 
    Supervision), and a covered employee immediately subordinate to such a 
    director would be included in the restricted class. The prohibition 
    would not apply to credit extended through an ordinary credit card 
    relationship due to the standardized handling and low credit amounts 
    customary in such relationship.
        Under Sec. 3201.102(c), depository institutions examination staff, 
    including all covered employees assigned to the Division of 
    Supervision, would be prohibited from obtaining credit from an FDIC-
    insured State nonmember bank, the class of FDIC-insured depository 
    institutions for which the FDIC has primary supervisory responsibility, 
    any subsidiary of such bank, or any person employed by such bank. An 
    exception would be carved out for an ordinary credit card relationship 
    but, for those employees assigned to regional or field offices, the 
    exception would be limited to credit cards offered by FDIC-insured 
    State nonmember banks located outside the employee's region of 
    assignment. The rule, which is substantially the same as 12 CFR 
    336.16(a), is consistent with 18 U.S.C. 213 which prohibits examiners 
    from accepting credit from institutions which they have examined. Under 
    the proposed rule, an employee would be required to file a report upon 
    obtaining a credit card from a State nonmember bank located outside the 
    employee's region of assignment.
        Proposed Sec. 3201.102(d) would impose a two-year prohibition on an 
    employee in the Division of Finance, the Division of Depositor and 
    Asset Services, the Division of Resolutions, or the Legal Division, or 
    who is a member of a standing committee of the Board of Directors 
    obtaining credit from an FDIC-insured depository institution or its 
    subsidiary when the employee has participated personally and 
    substantially in certain matters affecting the institution, its 
    predecessor or successor, or an affiliate of such institution. This 
    prohibition would be applicable to the universe of FDIC-insured 
    depository institutions and would be limited to those Corporation 
    employees who perform functions associated with the audit, resolution, 
    liquidation, supervision, or agency deliberation affecting a specific 
    FDIC-insured depository institution. The two-year prohibition has been 
    designed to eliminate concerns over potential benefits that an employee 
    holding a sensitive non-examiner position could derive through a 
    financial relationship with an institution that has close business ties 
    to the Corporation. An exception has been made for an ordinary credit 
    card relationship. The definition of personally and substantially can 
    be found at 5 CFR 2635.402(b)(4) of the Executive Branch-wide 
    Standards.
        Proposed Sec. 3201.102(e)(1) would prohibit a member of the 
    depository institution's examination staff, including senior level 
    staff, from participating in the supervisory review of any institution 
    with which they hold an extension of credit. No exceptions to this rule 
    have been provided due to the sensitive nature of the duties involved.
        Under proposed Sec. 3201.102(e)(2)-(4), a covered employee and the 
    Comptroller of the Currency and the Director of the Office of Thrift 
    Supervision would be prohibited from participating in matters affecting 
    persons with whom the employee has an outstanding extension of credit. 
    Exceptions have been provided for ordinary credit card relationships or 
    when the agency designee, with the concurrence of the appropriate 
    director, determines that participation by the employee would be 
    appropriate under the standard outlined under 5 CFR 2635.502(d).
        Proposed Sec. 3201.102(f) would clarify that an employee may retain 
    certain extensions of credit that he or she would be prohibited from 
    obtaining anew. For example, an employee who had obtained an extension 
    of credit prior to employment with the Corporation would not be 
    required to refinance the credit. Any extension of credit retained 
    under this section would be required to be reported to an agency 
    designee. An employee would not be allowed to renew or renegotiate the 
    credit without the consent of the agency designee and appropriate 
    director or, in the case of certain higher-level officials, without the 
    consent of the Ethics Counselor. This provision is substantially the 
    same as current 12 CFR 336.16(d), and extensions of credit which were 
    permissibly held under such provision could be retained under the new 
    provision.
    
    Section 3201.103  Prohibitions on Ownership of Securities of FDIC-
    Insured Depository Institutions
    
        The Corporation has determined that, in light of its sensitive and 
    diverse mission involving the institutions that it insures, 
    restrictions on employee ownership of securities in such institutions 
    are necessary in order to maintain public confidence in the 
    impartiality and objectivity with which the Corporation executes its 
    various functions; eliminate concerns by private entities that 
    sensitive information provided to the Corporation might be used for 
    private gain; and avoid the widespread disqualification of employees 
    from their duties which could result in the Corporation having 
    difficulty in performing its mission. Under proposed Sec. 3201.103(a), 
    an employee would be prohibited from having a direct or indirect 
    ownership interest in a security of an FDIC-insured depository 
    institution or an affiliate of such institution.
        As proposed, the exceptions in Sec. 3201.103(b) would allow an 
    employee to acquire, own or control certain direct and indirect 
    ownership interests in an FDIC-insured depository institution. For 
    example, an employee would be permitted to retain an interest which had 
    been acquired prior to employment with the Corporation or involuntarily 
    acquired by the employee such as by gift, stock split, or through a 
    merger of a company. An employee could also acquire, own or control an 
    interest in an FDIC-insured depository institution through the 
    investment vehicle of a publicly traded or available diversified 
    investment fund when the fund does not have an objective or practice of 
    concentrating its investments in securities of the financial services 
    sector. An employee who owned securities of an FDIC-insured depository 
    institution under one of the exceptions in proposed Sec. 3201.103(b) 
    would be disqualified under 5 CFR 2635.402 from participating in any 
    particular matter that, by reason of his or her ownership of those 
    securities, affects his or her financial interests or those of his or 
    her spouse or minor child.
        Under proposed Sec. 3201.103(c), the Ethics Counselor could require 
    an employee, or the spouse or minor child of an employee, to divest an 
    ownership interest that would otherwise be allowed to be retained under 
    Sec. 3201.103(b) using the standard set forth in 5 CFR 2635.403(b).
    
    Section 3201.104  Restrictions Concerning the Purchase of Property Held 
    by the Corporation or the RTC as Conservator, Receiver, or Liquidator 
    of the Assets of an Insured Depository Institution, or by a Bridge Bank 
    Organized by the Corporation
    
        In order to avoid any self-dealing, appearance of self-dealing, 
    adversarial relationship with the Corporation, or diminution of public 
    confidence in the Corporation's ability to accomplish its mission, an 
    employee, or the spouse or minor child of an employee, would be 
    prohibited under Sec. 3201.104(a) from purchasing assets held by the 
    Corporation or the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC) as conservator, 
    receiver, or liquidator or held by a bridge bank organized by the 
    Corporation. In such roles, the Corporation and the RTC generally act 
    as a fiduciary to the creditors of failed depository institutions. 
    Property held by the RTC has been included in the proposed prohibition 
    because of the RTC's significant ties with the Corporation.
        As proposed, Sec. 3201.104(b) would disqualify an employee involved 
    in the disposition of the assets of a failed insured depository 
    institution from participation in the disposition of such assets when 
    the employee knows that a person with whom he or she holds a covered 
    relationship intends to purchase such assets. Written notification of 
    the disqualification would be required to be made by the employee to 
    his or her immediate supervisor and the agency designee.
    
    Section 3201.105  Prohibition on Dealings With Former Employers, 
    Associates, and Clients
    
        In order to avoid the appearance of favoritism and maintain the 
    integrity of the Corporation's regulatory oversight, insurance 
    assessments, and resolution and liquidation transactions, proposed 
    Sec. 3201.105(a) would prohibit an employee, for a period of one year 
    after entering on duty with the Corporation, from participating in 
    official Corporation matters involving an employer with whom the 
    employee worked during the year preceding the employee's entry on duty 
    with the Corporation. Proposed Sec. 3201.105(b) would include within 
    the definition of the term employer a broad range of persons, as 
    defined in 5 CFR 2635.502, with whom the employee has a covered 
    relationship. In an individual case, Sec. 3201.105(c) would give the 
    agency designee discretion to extend the prohibition beyond the one 
    year period that would automatically apply to all new Corporation 
    employees.
    
    Section 3201.106  Employment of Family Members Outside the Corporation
    
        As proposed, Sec. 3201.106 would continue the Corporation's 
    requirement at 12 CFR 336.21 that an employee be disqualified from 
    participation in particular matters involving employers of family 
    members or members of the employee's household. It would also require 
    the employee to report the employment of family members or members of 
    the employee's household by FDIC-insured depository institutions or 
    companies that have business, or are seeking to do business, with the 
    Corporation. This requirement eliminates the potential for any 
    appearance of preferential treatment in those instances where 
    employment of a family member or a member of the employee's household 
    would be likely to raise questions regarding the appropriateness of 
    actions taken by the employee or the Corporation.
    
    Section 3201.107  Outside Employment and Other Activities
    
        Proposed Sec. 3201.107(a) would prohibit an employee from providing 
    services, for compensation, to an FDIC-insured depository institution 
    or to a person employed by such institution. The prohibition is based, 
    in part, on 18 U.S.C. 1909, which prohibits an examiner from performing 
    any service for compensation for any FDIC-insured depository 
    institution or for any person connected therewith.
        Similarly, proposed Sec. 3201.107(b) would restrict an employee 
    from using certain professional licenses in compensated outside 
    activities when the employee's duties to the Corporation involve those 
    activities. The areas involved in the prohibition have been limited to 
    areas identified as especially sensitive and critical to corporate 
    operations.
        Proposed Sec. 3201.107(c) would make it the responsibility of the 
    employee to consult with an agency designee concerning outside 
    employment or activities that could result in disqualification of the 
    employee from his or her official duties.
    
    Section 3201.108  Related Statutory and Regulatory Authorities
    
        This section sets forth additional statutory and regulatory 
    authorities with which an employee should be familiar.
    
    Section 3201.109  Provisions of 5 CFR Part 2635 Not Applicable to 
    Corporation Employees
    
        Certain provisions of the Standards of Ethical Conduct have been 
    determined by the Corporation to be inapplicable to its employees based 
    on the Corporation's status as a mixed-ownership Corporation. To avoid 
    confusion, the authorities which are not applicable to the Corporation 
    and its employees would be listed in Sec. 3201.109 (b) through (e). 
    Proposed Sec. 3201.109(a) would caution examiners that they may not use 
    the gift exceptions in 5 CFR 2635.204 to accept a gift that would 
    violate the criminal prohibitions in 18 U.S.C. 213 against examiners 
    accepting gifts or gratuities from the institutions they examine.
    
    III. Removal of FDIC Employees Responsibilities and Conduct 
    Regulations and Related Modifications
    
        On the effective date of the final rule, the Employee 
    Responsibilities and Conduct regulation, 12 CFR part 336, will be 
    amended to remove and reserve subparts A, B, C, E, and F, Secs. 336.1-
    336.23 and 336.29-336.37, and remove the appendix to part 336. As 
    proposed, a new Sec. 336.1 will be added to provide a cross-reference 
    to the Corporation's supplemental ethical conduct regulation, to be 
    codified at 5 CFR part 3201, the Corporation's supplemental financial 
    disclosure regulation at 5 CFR part 3202, and to the Executive Branch-
    wide financial disclosure and standards of ethical conduct regulations 
    at 5 CFR parts 2634 and 2635. 12 CFR part 336, subpart D, Secs. 336.24 
    through 336.28, was removed and reserved by action of the Board of 
    Directors of the Corporation dated November 24, 1992, 57 FR 39628.
    
    IV. Matters of Regulatory Procedure
    
    Administrative Procedure Act
    
        This proposed rulemaking is in compliance with the Administrative 
    Procedure Act (5 U.S.C. 553) and allows for a 60-day comment period.
    
    Regulatory Flexibility Act
    
        The Board of Directors has concluded that the proposed rule will 
    not impose a significant economic hardship on small institutions. 
    Therefore, the Board of Directors hereby certifies pursuant to section 
    605 of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 605) that the proposed 
    rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial 
    number of small business entities within the meaning of the Regulatory 
    Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.).
    
    Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        The Board of Directors has determined that this proposed regulation 
    does not contain any information collection requirements that require 
    the approval of the Office of Management and Budget pursuant to the 
    Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
    
    List of Subjects
    
    5 CFR Part 3201
    
        Administrative practice and procedure, Conflict of interests, 
    Government employees, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
    
    12 CFR Part 336
    
        Conflict of interests, Government employees.
    
        Dated at Washington, D.C. this 14th day of June, 1994.
    
        By Order of the Board of Directors.
    Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
    
    Robert E. Feldman,
    Acting Executive Secretary.
    
        Concurred in this 1st day of July, 1994.
    
    Stephen D. Potts,
    Director, Office of Government Ethics.
    
        For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Federal Deposit 
    Insurance Corporation, with the concurrence of the Office of Government 
    Ethics, is proposing to amend title 5, Chapter XXII, of the Code of 
    Federal Regulations and title 12, Chapter III, of the Code of Federal 
    Regulations as follows:
    
    5 CFR CHAPTER XXII--FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
    
        1. A new part 3201 is added to 5 CFR Chapter XXII to read as 
    follows:
    
    PART 3201--SUPPLEMENTAL STANDARDS OF ETHICAL CONDUCT FOR EMPLOYEES 
    OF THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
    
    Sec.
    3201.101  General.
    3201.102  Extensions of credit from FDIC-insured depository 
    institutions.
    3201.103  Prohibitions on ownership of securities of FDIC-insured 
    depository institutions.
    3201.104  Restrictions concerning the purchase of property held by 
    the Corporation or the RTC as conservator, receiver, or liquidator 
    of the assets of an insured depository institution, or by a bridge 
    bank organized by the Corporation.
    3201.105 Prohibition on dealings with former employers, associates, 
    and clients.
    3201.106 Employment of family members outside the Corporation.
    3201.107  Outside employment and other activities.
    3201.108  Related statutory and regulatory authorities.
    3201.109 Provisions of 5 CFR part 2635 not applicable to Corporation 
    employees.
    
        Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301; 5 U.S.C. App. (Ethics in Government 
    Act of 1978); 12 U.S.C. 1819(a), 1822; 26 U.S.C. 1043; E.O. 12674, 
    54 FR 15159, 3 CFR, 1989 Comp., p. 215, as modified by E.O. 12731, 
    55 FR 42547, 3 CFR, 1990 Comp., p. 306; 5 CFR 2635.105, 2635.403, 
    2635.502, and 2635.803.
    
    
    Sec. 3201.101  General.
    
        (a) Purpose. The regulations in this part apply to employees of the 
    Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (Corporation) and supplement the 
    Standards of Ethical Conduct for Employees of the Executive Branch 
    contained in 5 CFR part 2635. Where specified, these regulations also 
    apply to the Comptroller of the Currency and the Director of the Office 
    of Thrift Supervision in connection with their activities as members of 
    the Corporation's Board of Directors.
        (b) Corporation ethics officials. The Executive Secretary of the 
    Corporation shall act as the Corporation's Ethics Counselor and as its 
    Designated Agency Ethics Official under 5 CFR part 2638. The Assistant 
    Executive Secretary (Ethics) shall act as the Corporation's Alternate 
    Ethics Counselor and as the Alternate Agency Ethics Official.
        (1) The Ethics Counselor or Alternate Ethics Counselor may delegate 
    authority to one or more employees to serve as Deputy Ethics 
    Counselors.
        (2) The delegation to a Deputy Ethics Counselor shall be in writing 
    and cannot be redelegated.
        (c) Agency designees. The Ethics Counselor and Alternate Ethics 
    Counselor shall serve as the agency designee for purposes of making the 
    determinations, granting the approvals, and taking other actions 
    required by an agency designee under part 2635 and this part. The 
    Ethics Counselor or Alternate Ethics Counselor may delegate authority 
    to Deputy Ethics Counselors or to other employees to serve as agency 
    designees for specified purposes. The delegation to any agency designee 
    shall be in writing and cannot be redelegated.
        (d) Definitions. For purposes of this part:
        (1) Affiliate, as defined in 12 U.S.C. 1841(k), means any company 
    that controls, is controlled by, or is under common control with 
    another company.
        (2) Appropriate director means the head of a Washington office or 
    division or the highest ranking official assigned to a regional office 
    in each division or the Ethics Counselor.
        (3) Covered employee means an employee of the Corporation required 
    to file a public or confidential financial disclosure report under 5 
    CFR part 2634 or 5 CFR part 3202.
        (4) Employee means an officer or employee, other than a special 
    Government employee, of the Corporation including a member of the Board 
    of Directors appointed under the authority of 12 U.S.C. 1812(a)(1)(C), 
    and a liquidation graded employee. For purposes of 5 CFR part 2635 and 
    Secs. 3201.103 and 3201.104, employee includes any individual who, 
    pursuant to a contract or any other arrangement, performs functions or 
    activities of the Corporation, under the direct supervision of an 
    officer or employee of the Corporation.
        (5) Security includes an interest in debt or equity instruments. 
    The term includes, without limitation, a secured or unsecured bond, 
    debenture, note, securitized assets, commercial paper, and all types of 
    preferred and common stock. The term includes an interest or right in a 
    security, whether current or contingent, a beneficial or legal interest 
    derived from a trust, the right to acquire or dispose of any long or 
    short position, an interest convertible into a security, and an option, 
    right, warrant, put, or call with respect to a security. The term 
    security does not include a deposit account.
        (6) State nonmember bank means any State bank as defined in 12 
    U.S.C. 1813(e) which is not a member of the Federal Reserve System.
        (7) Subsidiary, as defined in 12 U.S.C. 1813(w), means any company 
    which is owned or controlled directly or indirectly by another company.
    
    
    Sec. 3201.102  Extensions of credit from FDIC-Insured depository 
    institutions.
    
        (a) Credit subject to this section. The prohibition, 
    disqualification, and retention provisions of this section apply to a 
    current or contingent financial obligation of the employee. For 
    purposes of this section, a current or contingent financial obligation 
    of an employee's spouse or minor child is considered to be an 
    obligation of the employee.
        (b) Prohibition on acceptance of credit from FDIC-insured State 
    nonmember banks applicable to certain high-level officials. (1) An 
    employee described in paragraph (b)(2) of this section shall not, 
    directly or indirectly, accept or become obligated on an extension of 
    credit from an FDIC-insured State nonmember bank or its subsidiary, 
    except credit extended through the use of a credit card under the same 
    terms and conditions as are offered to the general public.
        (2) The prohibition in paragraph (b)(1) of this section applies to:
        (i) An employee who is a member of the Board of Directors, an 
    assistant or deputy to the Board of Directors or to an appointed Board 
    member, and a covered employee who is an assistant to such person; and
        (ii) The director of a Washington office or of a division, other 
    than the Division of Supervision, and a covered employee who holds a 
    position immediately subordinate to such director.
        (c) Prohibition on acceptance of credit from FDIC-insured State 
    nonmember banks for employees assigned to the Division of Supervision. 
    (1) An employee described in paragraph (c)(2) of this section shall 
    not, directly or indirectly, accept or become obligated on an extension 
    of credit from an FDIC-insured State nonmember bank or from an officer, 
    director, employee, or subsidiary of such bank, except:
        (i) For an employee assigned to the Washington office, credit 
    extended through the use of a credit card on the same terms and 
    conditions as are offered to the general public; and
        (ii) For an employee assigned to other than the Washington office, 
    credit extended by an FDIC-insured State nonmember bank headquartered 
    outside the employee's region of official assignment through the use of 
    a credit card on the same terms and conditions as are offered to the 
    general public.
        (2) The prohibition in paragraph (c)(1) of this section applies to 
    the Executive Director for Supervision and Resolutions, the Director of 
    the Division of Supervision, a covered employee immediately subordinate 
    to the Director of the Division of Supervision and the following 
    employees assigned to the Division of Supervision: an Assistant 
    Director, Regional Director, Deputy Regional Director, Assistant 
    Regional Director, examiner, assistant examiner, review examiner, 
    compliance examiner, assistant compliance examiner, and a covered 
    employee.
        (3) Upon accepting credit extended by a credit card in accordance 
    with paragraphs (c)(1)(i) or (c)(1)(ii) of this section, the employee 
    shall be disqualified in accordance with paragraph (e)(1) of this 
    section, and, within 30 days of accepting such credit, shall file with 
    the appropriate director a Statement of Credit Card Obligation in 
    Insured State Nonmember Bank and Acknowledgement of Conditions for 
    Retention--Notice of Disqualification.
        (d) Two-year prohibition on acceptance of credit from FDIC-insured 
    depository institutions. (1) An employee described in paragraph (d)(2) 
    of this section shall not, directly or indirectly, accept or become 
    obligated on an extension of credit from an FDIC-insured depository 
    institution or its subsidiary for a period of two years from the date 
    of the employee's last personal and substantial participation in an 
    audit, resolution, liquidation, supervisory proceeding, or internal 
    agency deliberation affecting that particular institution, its 
    predecessor or successor, or any subsidiary of such institution. This 
    prohibition does not apply to credit obtained through the use of a 
    credit card under the same terms and conditions as are offered to the 
    general public.
        (2) The prohibition in paragraph (d)(1) of this section applies to 
    an employee in the Division of Finance, Division of Depositor and Asset 
    Services, Division of Resolutions, Legal Division, or who is a member 
    of a standing committee of the Board of Directors whose official duties 
    include:
        (i) Audit of insured depository institutions for deposit insurance 
    assessment purposes;
        (ii) Resolution or liquidation of failed or failing insured 
    depository institutions;
        (iii) Participation in the supervision of insured depository 
    institutions or enforcement proceedings under the Federal Deposit 
    Insurance Act; or
        (iv) Internal agency deliberations affecting a particular insured 
    depository institution, its predecessor or successor, or a subsidiary 
    of such institution.
        (e) Employee disqualification. (1) An employee described in 
    paragraph (c)(2) of this section shall not participate in an 
    examination, audit, visitation, review, or investigation, or other 
    particular matter involving an FDIC-insured depository institution or 
    other person with whom the employee has an outstanding extension of 
    credit.
        (2) A covered employee, other than an employee who is described in 
    paragraph (c)(2) of this section, shall not participate in any 
    particular matter involving an FDIC-insured depository institution or 
    other person with whom the employee has an outstanding extension of 
    credit.
        (3) Disqualification is not required under paragraph (e)(2) of this 
    section:
        (i) If the credit was extended through the use of a credit card on 
    the same terms and conditions as are offered to the general public; or
        (ii) When the agency designee, with the concurrence of the 
    appropriate director, has authorized the employee to participate in the 
    matter using the standard set forth in 5 CFR 2635.502(d).
        (4) The Comptroller of the Currency and the Director of the Office 
    of Thrift Supervision shall be disqualified from matters pending before 
    the Board of Directors to the same extent as a covered employee subject 
    to paragraph (e)(2) of this section.
        (f) Retention and renegotiation of pre-existing extensions of 
    credit. (1) Nothing in this section prohibits the retention of a pre-
    existing extension of credit that an employee would be prohibited from 
    accepting by Sec. 3201.102 (b) or (c) if the extension of credit was 
    permitted to be retained under 12 CFR part 336 prior to the adoption of 
    this regulation or if the employee's acceptance of the extension of 
    credit was proper at the time the obligation was incurred, as in the 
    case of an extension of credit incurred prior to commencement of 
    employment or reassignment to another division or location. Subsequent 
    action affecting the status of the creditor, such as merger, 
    acquisition, or transaction under 12 U.S.C. 1823, does not change the 
    character of an extension of credit that was proper when incurred. An 
    employee who retains a pre-existing extension that he or she would be 
    prohibited from accepting by Sec. 3201.102 (b) or (c) shall report the 
    pre-existing extension of credit to the appropriate director or agency 
    designee within 30 days from the following event, as appropriate:
        (i) Adoption of this part;
        (ii) Commencement of employment;
        (iii) Assignment to another division or location; or
        (iv) Action affecting the status of the creditor.
        (2) Any renegotiation of a pre-existing extension of credit shall 
    be treated as a new extension of credit that is subject to the 
    prohibitions contained in Sec. 3201.102 (b) through (d). An employee 
    may request that an exception be made to the prohibitions to permit 
    renegotiation of a pre-existing extension of credit. Any such request 
    shall be made in writing to the appropriate director and agency 
    designee, or in the case of an employee described in paragraph (b)(2) 
    (i) and (ii) of this section, to the Ethics Counselor, stating:
        (i) The purpose of the renegotiation;
        (ii) The terms and conditions of the original extension of credit;
        (iii) The terms and conditions now available to the general public;
        (iv) The terms and conditions now offered to the employee;
        (v) The action the employee has taken to move the loan to an 
    institution from which an employee would not be prohibited from 
    accepting an extension of credit; and
        (vi) The financial hardship, if any, denial of the request will 
    cause.
        (3) After submission of the request, the appropriate director and 
    agency designee, or the Ethics Counselor, may grant the employee's 
    request based upon a written determination that the request is not 
    inconsistent with 5 CFR part 2635 or otherwise prohibited by law and 
    that, under the particular circumstances, application of the 
    prohibition is not necessary to avoid the appearance of the misuse of 
    position or loss of impartiality, or otherwise to ensure confidence in 
    the impartiality and objectivity with which agency programs are 
    administered.
    
    
    Sec. 3201.103  Prohibitions on ownership of securities of FDIC-insured 
    depository institutions.
    
        (a) Prohibition on ownership. Except as permitted by this section, 
    an employee or the spouse or minor child of an employee, shall not 
    acquire, own, or control, directly or indirectly, a security of an 
    FDIC-insured depository institution, or an affiliate of an FDIC-insured 
    depository institution.
        (b) Exception to prohibition for certain interests. Nothing in this 
    section prohibits an employee, or the spouse or minor child of an 
    employee, from:
        (1) Acquiring, owning or controlling the securities of certain 
    publicly traded bank holding companies or their nonbank subsidiaries 
    where the bank holding company is not primarily engaged in banking and 
    either the bank holding company or the bank it holds is exempt under 
    the provisions of the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956 and which are 
    identified as such by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve 
    System (a list of exempt institutions can be obtained from the 
    Corporation's Ethics Section);
        (2) Acquiring, owning, or controlling the securities of certain 
    nonfinancial savings association holding companies whose principal 
    business is unrelated to the financial services industry and which are 
    identified as such by the Office of Thrift Supervision pursuant to 5 
    CFR 3101.109(b)(3)(ii) (a list of such institutions can be obtained 
    from the Corporation's Ethics Section);
        (3) Retaining a security of an FDIC-insured depository institution 
    or an affiliate of an FDIC-insured depository institution if the 
    security was permitted to be retained by the employee under 12 CFR part 
    336 prior to the adoption of this regulation, was obtained prior to 
    commencement of employment with the Corporation, or was acquired by a 
    spouse prior to marriage to the employee;
        (4) Acquiring, owning, or controlling a security of an FDIC-insured 
    depository institution or the affiliate of an FDIC-insured depository 
    institution where the security was acquired by inheritance, gift, stock 
    split, involuntary stock dividend, merger, acquisition, or other change 
    in corporate ownership, exercise of preemptive right, or otherwise 
    without specific intent to acquire the security. This provision permits 
    the retention of any such interest only where:
        (i) The employee makes full, written disclosure on FDIC form 2410/
    07 to the Ethics Counselor within 30 days of commencing employment or 
    acquiring the interest; and
        (ii) The employee is disqualified in accordance with 5 CFR part 
    2635, subpart D, from participating in any particular matter that 
    affects his or her financial interests, or that of his or her spouse or 
    minor child;
        (5) Acquiring, owning, or controlling an interest in a publicly 
    traded or publicly available investment fund which, in its prospectus, 
    does not indicate the objective or practice of concentrating its 
    investments in the financial services sector and the employee neither 
    exercises control nor has the ability to exercise control over the 
    financial interests held in the fund; or
        (6) Using an FDIC-insured depository institution or an affiliate of 
    an FDIC-insured depository institution as custodian or trustee of 
    accounts containing tax-deferred retirement funds.
        (c) Divestiture. Based upon a determination of substantial conflict 
    under 5 CFR 2635.403(b), the Ethics Counselor may require an employee, 
    or the spouse or minor child of an employee, to divest a security he or 
    she is otherwise authorized to retain under paragraph (b) of this 
    section.
    
    
    Sec. 3201.104  Restrictions concerning the purchase of property held by 
    the Corporation or the RTC as conservator, receiver, or liquidator of 
    the assets of an insured depository institution, or by a bridge bank 
    organized by the Corporation.
    
        (a) Prohibition on purchase of property. An employee, and an 
    employee's spouse or minor child shall not, directly or indirectly, 
    purchase or acquire any property held or managed by the Corporation or 
    the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC) as conservator, receiver, or 
    liquidator of the assets of an insured depository institution, or by a 
    bridge bank organized by the Corporation, regardless of the method of 
    disposition of the property.
        (b) Disqualification. An employee who is involved in the 
    disposition of assets held by the Corporation or the RTC as 
    conservator, receiver, or liquidator of the assets of an insured 
    depository institution, or by a bridge bank organized by the 
    Corporation shall not participate in the disposition of assets held in 
    such capacities when the employee knows that any party with whom the 
    employee has a covered relationship, as defined in 5 CFR 
    2635.502(b)(1), is or will be attempting to acquire such assets. The 
    employee shall provide written notification of the disqualification to 
    his or her immediate supervisor and the agency designee.
    
    
    Sec. 3201.105  Prohibition on dealings with former employers, 
    associates, and clients.
    
        (a) An employee is prohibited for one year from the date of entry 
    on duty with the Corporation from participating in a particular matter 
    when an employer, or the successor to the employer, for whom the 
    employee worked at any time during the one year preceding the 
    employee's entrance on duty is a party or represents a party to the 
    matter.
        (b) For purposes of this section, the term employer means a person 
    with whom the employee served as officer, director, trustee, general 
    partner, agent, attorney, accountant, consultant, contractor, or 
    employee.
        (c) The one-year period of disqualification imposed by paragraph 
    (a) of this section may be extended in an individual case based on a 
    written determination by the agency designee that, under the particular 
    circumstances, the employee's participation in the particular matter 
    would cause a reasonable person with knowledge of the facts to question 
    his or her impartiality.
    
    
    Sec. 3201.106  Employment of family members outside the Corporation.
    
        (a) Disqualification of employees. An employee shall not 
    participate in an examination, audit, investigation, application, 
    contract, or other particular matter if the employer of the employee's 
    spouse, child, parent, brother, sister, or a member of the employee's 
    household is a party or represents a party to the matter, unless an 
    agency designee authorizes the employee to participate using the 
    standard in 5 CFR 2635.502(d).
        (b) Reporting certain relationships. A covered employee shall make 
    a written report to an agency designee within 30 days of the employment 
    of the employee's spouse, child, parent, brother, sister, or a member 
    of the employee's household by:
        (1) An FDIC-insured depository institution or its affiliate;
        (2) A firm or business with which, to the employee's knowledge, the 
    Corporation has a contractual or other business or financial 
    relationship; or
        (3) A firm or business which, to the employee's knowledge, is 
    seeking a business or contractual relationship with the Corporation.
    
    
    Sec. 3201.107  Outside employment and other activities.
    
        (a) Prohibition on employment with FDIC-insured depository 
    institutions. An employee shall not provide service for compensation, 
    in any capacity, to an FDIC-insured depository institution or an 
    employee or person employed by or connected with such institution.
        (b) Use of professional licenses. A covered employee who holds a 
    license related to real estate, appraisals, securities, or insurance 
    and whose official duties with the Corporation require personal and 
    substantial involvement in matters related to, respectively, real 
    estate, appraisal, securities, or insurance is prohibited from using 
    such license, other than in the performance of his or her official 
    duties, for the production of income. The appropriate director, in 
    consultation with an agency designee, may grant exceptions to this 
    prohibition based on a finding that the specific transactions which 
    require use of the license will not create an appearance of loss of 
    impartiality or use of public office for private gain.
        (c) Responsibility to consult with agency designee. An employee who 
    engages in, or intends to engage in, any outside employment or other 
    activity that may require disqualification from the employee's official 
    duties shall consult with an agency designee prior to engaging in or 
    continuing to engage in the activity.
    
    
    Sec. 3201.108  Related statutory and regulatory authorities.
    
        (a) 18 U.S.C. 213, which prohibits an examiner from accepting a 
    loan or gratuity from an FDIC-insured depository institution examined 
    by him or her or from any person connected with such institution.
        (b) 18 U.S.C. 1906, which prohibits disclosure of information from 
    a bank examination report except as authorized by law.
        (c) 17 CFR 240.10b-5 which prohibits the use of manipulative or 
    deceptive devices in connection with the purchase or sale of any 
    security.
        (d) 18 U.S.C. 1909, which prohibits examiners from providing any 
    service for compensation for any bank or person connected therewith.
    
    
    Sec. 3201.109  Provisions of 5 CFR part 2635 not applicable to 
    Corporation employees.
    
        The following provisions of 5 CFR part 2635 are not applicable to 
    employees of the Corporation:
        (a) Because of the restrictions imposed by 18 U.S.C. 213 on 
    examiners accepting loans or gratuities, an examiner in the Division of 
    Supervision may not use any of the gift exceptions at 5 CFR 2635.204 to 
    accept a gift from an FDIC-insured depository institution examined by 
    him or her or from any person connected with such institution.
        (b) Provisions of 41 U.S.C. 423 (Procurement integrity) and the 
    implementing regulations at 48 CFR 3.104 (of the Federal Acquisition 
    Regulation) applicable to procurement officials referred to in:
        (1) 5 CFR 2635.202(c)(4)(iii);
        (2) The note following 5 CFR 2635.203(b)(7);
        (3) Example 5 following 5 CFR 2635.204(a);
        (4) Examples 2 and 3 following 5 CFR 2635.703(b)(3);
        (5) 5 CFR 2635.902(f), (h), (l), and (bb);
        (c) Provisions of 31 U.S.C. 1353 (Acceptance of travel and related 
    expenses from non-Federal sources) and the implementing regulations at 
    41 CFR part 304-1 (Acceptance of payment from a non-Federal source for 
    travel expenses) referred to in 5 CFR 2635.203(b)(8)(i).
        (d) Provisions of 41 CFR Chapter 101 (Federal Property Management 
    Regulations) referred to in 5 CFR 2635.205(a)(4).
        (e) Provisions of 41 CFR Chapter 201 (Federal Information Resources 
    Management Regulation) referred to in Example 1 following 5 CFR 
    2635.704(b)(2).
    
    12 CFR CHAPTER III--FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
    
    PART 336--EMPLOYEE RESPONSIBILITIES AND CONDUCT
    
        2. The authority citation for part 336 is revised to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 5 U.S.C. 7301; 12 U.S.C. 1819(a).
    
        3. Section 336.1 is revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 336.1  Cross-reference to employee ethical conduct standards and 
    financial disclosure regulations.
    
        Employees of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation 
    (Corporation) are subject to the Executive Branch-wide Standards of 
    Ethical Conduct at 5 CFR part 2635, the Corporation regulation at 5 CFR 
    part 3201 which supplements the Executive Branch-wide Standards, the 
    Executive Branch-wide financial disclosure regulations at 5 CFR part 
    2634, and the Corporation regulation at 5 CFR part 3202 which 
    supplements the Executive Branch-wide financial disclosure regulations.
    
    
    Secs. 336.2-336.23, 336.29-336.37  [Removed]
    
    Appendix to Part 336--[Removed]
    
        4. Sections 336.2 through 336.23 and 336.29 through 336.37 and all 
    subpart headings are removed and the appendix to part 336 is removed.
    [FR Doc. 94-16557 Filed 7-11-94; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 6714-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
07/12/1994
Department:
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Entry Type:
Uncategorized Document
Action:
Proposed rule.
Document Number:
94-16557
Dates:
Comments must be received on or before September 12, 1994.
Pages:
0-0 (1 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Federal Register: July 12, 1994
CFR: (15)
12 CFR 3201.105(a)
12 CFR 3201.103(b)
5 CFR 2635.502(b)(1)
5 CFR 2635.502
5 CFR 3201.101
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