FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM, 31009-31014 [05-10778]
Download as PDF
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 103 / Tuesday, May 31, 2005 / Notices
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION
Agency Information Collection
Activities; Submission for OMB
Review; Comment Request
Office of the Comptroller of
the Currency (OCC), Treasury; Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System (Board); and Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC).
ACTION: Notice of information collection
to be submitted to OMB for review and
approval under the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995.
AGENCIES:
SUMMARY: In accordance with the
requirements of the Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C.
chapter 35), the OCC, the Board, and the
FDIC (the ‘‘agencies’’) may not conduct
or sponsor, and the respondent is not
required to respond to, an information
collection unless it displays a currently
valid Office of Management and Budget
(OMB) control number. On April 29,
2004, the agencies requested public
comment for 60 days on proposed
revisions to the instructions for the
Consolidated Reports of Condition and
Income (Call Report), which are
currently approved collections of
information. After considering the
comments received, the Federal
Financial Institutions Examination
Council (FFIEC), of which the agencies
are members, has adopted the proposed
instructional revisions and also will add
new items to the Call Report based on
suggestions by commenters. In addition,
on March 11, 2005, the agencies
requested public comment for 60 days
on other proposed revisions to the Call
Report. The FFIEC and the agencies
have considered the comments received
on these additional revisions, which the
FFIEC has adopted as proposed. The
agencies are submitting the revisions
adopted by the FFIEC to OMB for
review and approval.
DATES: Comments must be submitted on
or before June 30, 2005.
ADDRESSES: Interested parties are
invited to submit written comments to
any or all of the agencies. All comments,
which should refer to the OMB control
number(s), will be shared among the
agencies.
OCC: You may submit comments,
identified by [Attention: 1557–0081], by
any of the following methods:
VerDate jul<14>2003
16:14 May 27, 2005
Jkt 205001
• E-mail:
regs.comments@occ.treas.gov. Include
[Attention: 1557–0081] in the subject
line of the message.
• Fax: (202) 874–4448.
• Mail: Public Information Room,
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency, 250 E Street, SW., Mailstop
1–5, Washington, DC 20219; Attention:
1557–0081.
Public Inspection: You may inspect
and photocopy comments at the Public
Information Room. You can make an
appointment to inspect the comments
by calling (202) 874–5043.
Board: You may submit comments,
which should refer to ‘‘Consolidated
Reports of Condition and Income, 7100–
0036,’’ by any of the following methods:
• Agency Web Site: https://
www.federalreserve.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments
on the https://www.federalreserve.gov/
generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• E-mail:
regs.comments@federalreserve.gov.
Include docket number in the subject
line of the message.
• Fax: 202–452–3819 or 202–452–
3102.
• Mail: Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary,
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, 20th Street and
Constitution Avenue, NW., Washington,
DC 20551.
All public comments are available
from the Board’s Web site at https://
www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/
foia/ProposedRegs.cfm as submitted,
except as necessary for technical
reasons. Accordingly, your comments
will not be edited to remove any
identifying or contact information.
Public comments may also be viewed
electronically or on paper in Room MP–
500 of the Board’s Martin Building (20th
and C Streets, NW.) between 9 a.m. and
5 p.m. on weekdays.
FDIC: You may submit comments,
which should refer to ‘‘Consolidated
Reports of Condition and Income, 3064–
0052,’’ by any of the following methods:
• https://www.FDIC.gov/regulations/
laws/federal/propose.html.
• E-mail: comments@FDIC.gov.
Include ‘‘Consolidated Reports of
Condition and Income, 3064–0052’’ in
the subject line of the message.
• Mail: Steven F. Hanft (202–898–
3907), Paperwork Clearance Officer,
Room MB–3064, Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street,
NW., Washington, DC 20429.
• Hand Delivery: Comments may be
hand delivered to the guard station at
the rear of the 550 17th Street Building
PO 00000
Frm 00089
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
31009
(located on F Street) on business days
between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Public Inspection: You may inspect
comments at the FDIC Public
Information Center, Room 100, 801 17th
Street, NW., between 9 a.m. and 4:30
p.m. on business days.
A copy of the comments may also be
submitted to the OMB desk officer for
the agencies: Mark Menchik, Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs,
Office of Management and Budget, New
Executive Office Building, Room 10235,
Washington, DC 20503, or electronic
mail to mmenchik@omb.eop.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For
further information about the revisions
discussed in this notice, please contact
any of the agency clearance officers
whose names appear below. In addition,
copies of Call Report forms can be
obtained at the FFIEC’s Web site (http:/
/www.ffiec.gov/ffiec_report_forms.htm).
OCC: Mary Gottlieb, OCC Clearance
Officer, or Camille Dixon, (202) 874–
5090, Legislative and Regulatory
Activities Division, Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency, 250 E
Street, SW., Washington, DC 20219.
Board: Michelle E. Long, Clearance
Officer, (202) 452–3829, Division of
Research and Statistics, Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, 20th and C Streets, NW.,
Washington, DC 20551.
Telecommunications Device for the Deaf
(TDD) users may call (202) 263–4869.
FDIC: Steven F. Hanft, Paperwork
Clearance Officer, (202) 898–3907, Legal
Division, Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, 550 17th Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20429.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Request
for OMB approval to revise the currently
approved collections of information
identified below.
The effect of the proposed revisions to
the reporting requirements for the Call
Report will vary from institution to
institution depending on the
institution’s involvement with the types
of activities or transactions to which the
proposed changes apply. More
specifically, the agencies expect that the
reporting changes that relate to certain
securitized U.S. government-guaranteed
or -insured residential mortgage loans
will primarily affect the small
percentage of institutions that originate
or purchase and then securitize these
loans. The revisions to the Call Report
dealing with acquired loans with
evidence of deterioration of credit
quality since origination, including
acquisitions of such loans in business
combinations accounted for using the
purchase method, will generally apply
only to the limited number of
E:\FR\FM\31MYN1.SGM
31MYN1
31010
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 103 / Tuesday, May 31, 2005 / Notices
institutions that are involved in
purchase business combinations or that
engage in purchases of loans with credit
quality problems as a business activity.
The agencies estimate that
implementation of these reporting
changes will result in a small increase
in the current reporting burden imposed
by the Call Report for those institutions
involved with these activities and
transactions. The following burden
estimates include the effect of the
proposed revisions.
Report Title: Consolidated Reports of
Condition and Income (Call Report).
Form Number: Call Report: FFIEC 031
(for banks with domestic and foreign
offices) and FFIEC 041 (for banks with
domestic offices only).
Frequency of Response: Quarterly.
Affected Public: Business or other forprofit.
OCC
OMB Number: 1557–0081.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
2,000 national banks.
Estimated Time per Response: 46.45
burden hours.
Estimated Total Annual Burden:
371,633 burden hours.
Board:
OMB Number: 7100–0036.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
922 state member banks.
Estimated Time per Response: 52.38
burden hours.
Estimated Total Annual Burden:
193,177 burden hours.
FDIC
OMB Number: 3064–0052.
Estimated Number of Respondents:
5,263 insured state nonmember banks.
Estimated Time per Response: 37.10
burden hours.
Estimated Total Annual Burden:
781,029 burden hours.
The estimated time per response for
the Call Report is an average that varies
by agency because of differences in the
composition of the institutions under
each agency’s supervision (e.g., size
distribution of institutions, types of
activities in which they are engaged,
and existence of foreign offices). The
average reporting burden for the Call
Report includes the effect on burden of
the new Central Data Repository (CDR)
system that the agencies are developing
for processing Call Reports. The time
per response for the Call Report is
estimated to range from 15 to 600 hours,
depending on an individual institution’s
circumstances, before considering the
effect of voluntary testing and global
enrollment activities related to the CDR.
The reporting burden for testing and
enrollment activities for an individual
VerDate jul<14>2003
16:14 May 27, 2005
Jkt 205001
institution is estimated to range from 16
to 69 hours, depending on the
institution’s level of participation.
General Description of Reports
These information collections are
mandatory: 12 U.S.C. 161 (for national
banks), 12 U.S.C. 324 (for state member
banks), and 12 U.S.C. 1817 (for insured
state nonmember commercial and
savings banks). Except for selected
items, these information collections are
not given confidential treatment.
Abstract
Institutions file Call Reports with the
agencies each quarter for the agencies’
use in monitoring the condition,
performance, and risk profile of
individual institutions and the industry
as a whole. In addition, Call Reports
provide the most current statistical data
available for evaluating institutions’
corporate applications such as mergers,
for identifying areas of focus for both
on-site and off-site examinations, and
for monetary and other public policy
purposes. Call Reports are also used to
calculate all institutions’ deposit
insurance and Financing Corporation
assessments and national banks’
semiannual assessment fees.
Current Actions
I. Overview
On April 29, 2004, the agencies
(together with the Office of Thrift
Supervision (OTS)) jointly published a
notice soliciting comments for 60 days
on proposed revisions to the Call Report
(69 FR 23502). This joint notice
requested comment on two proposed
instructional changes that would affect
how institutions report certain
information in the Call Report, but the
notice did not propose to change the
report forms themselves. First, the
agencies proposed to change and clarify
the reporting requirements related to
certain U.S. Government-guaranteed or
-insured residential mortgage loans
backing Government National Mortgage
Association (GNMA) securities that
meet certain delinquency criteria and
are subject to seller buy-back provisions,
i.e., ‘‘GNMA loans.’’ These clarifications
involved the reporting of GNMA loans
as delinquent and the balance sheet
classification of property backing a
delinquent GNMA loan on which an
institution has foreclosed. Second, the
agencies proposed to change the
reporting requirements for ‘‘whenissued’’ securities from settlement date
accounting to trade date accounting.
The agencies received 13 comments
on their April 2004 proposal, ten from
banks and banking organizations, two
from bankers’ associations, and one
PO 00000
Frm 00090
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
from a trade group whose members
include banking organizations. Only
two of the commenters addressed both
of the subjects in the agencies’ April
2004 proposal. The FFIEC and the
agencies have considered these
comments and have decided to proceed
with the instructional revisions
pertaining to mortgage loans subject to
buy-back provisions, but with the
addition of new items to the Call Report
schedules in which banks report
information on past due loans and on
other real estate owned.1 The FFIEC and
the agencies also have decided against
requiring trade date accounting for all
‘‘when-issued’’ securities. These
decisions are discussed below.
In addition, on March 11, 2005, the
agencies jointly published a notice
requesting comment on proposed
revisions to the Call Report in response
to Statement of Position 03–3,
Accounting for Certain Loans or Debt
Securities Acquired in a Transfer (SOP
03–3), which was issued by the
American Institute of Certified Public
Accountants (70 FR 12269). SOP 03–3
applies to loans acquired in fiscal years
beginning after December 15, 2004. The
agencies proposed to add three items to
the Call Report relating to loans within
the scope of SOP 03–3. The agencies
also proposed a revision to the Call
Report instructions to explain how the
delinquency status of loans within the
scope of SOP 03–3 should be
determined for purposes of disclosing
past due loans in the Call Report.
The agencies received three
comments in response to their March
2005 proposal, one from a community
bank trade association, one from a large
banking organization, and another from
a trade group outside the banking
industry. The FFIEC and the agencies
have considered these comments and, as
discussed below, have decided to
proceed with the SOP 03–3 changes as
proposed.
The revisions to the Call Report have
been approved for publication by the
FFIEC. The agencies will implement the
proposed Call Report changes as of the
June 30, 2005, report date, except for the
revisions pertaining to foreclosed
properties backing delinquent GNMA
loans. Nonetheless, as is customary for
Call Report changes, if the information
to be reported in accordance with the
revised reporting requirements is not
readily available, institutions are
advised that they may report reasonable
1 The OTS joined with the agencies in the April
2004 proposal. The OTS intends to follow a course
of action similar to the agencies with respect to
mortgage loans subject to buy-back provisions in
the future when updating the reporting
requirements for the Thrift Financial Report.
E:\FR\FM\31MYN1.SGM
31MYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 103 / Tuesday, May 31, 2005 / Notices
estimates of this information for the
report date as of which the proposed
changes first take effect, i.e., June 30,
2005. With respect to the reporting of
foreclosed properties backing GNMA
loans, institutions should report these
properties in their Call Reports in
accordance with their existing reporting
policies for such properties through the
December 31, 2005, report date.
Effective with the March 31, 2006,
report date, all institutions should
report these properties as other real
estate owned on the balance sheet and
disclose the amount in a new subitem
that will be added to the Call Report
schedule in which information on the
composition of other real estate owned
is reported.
Type of Review: Revision of currently
approved collections.
II. Revisions to the Call Report
A. GNMA Buy-Back Option
Under the GNMA Mortgage-Backed
Securities Guide, the issuer of GNMA
securities has the option to repurchase
individual Federal Housing
Administration (FHA), Department of
Veterans Affairs/Veterans
Administration (VA), and Farmers
Home Administration (FmHA) mortgage
loans backing the securities when these
GNMA loans meet certain delinquency
criteria. Because of this option, if and
when individual loans that have been
accounted for as sold in accordance
with Statement of Financial Accounting
Standards No. 140, Accounting for
Transfers and Servicing of Financial
Assets and Extinguishments of
Liabilities (FAS 140), later meet
GNMA’s specified delinquency criteria
and are eligible for repurchase, FAS 140
requires these individual delinquent
GNMA loans to be brought back onto
the issuer’s books as assets, along with
an offsetting liability. This rebooking of
the GNMA loans is required regardless
of whether the issuer intends to exercise
the buy-back option.
The agencies proposed that all
delinquent rebooked GNMA loans
(including those for which the
institution is taking steps to foreclose on
the real estate collateral at the time of
repurchase, but for which the sheriff’s
sale has not yet taken place) should be
reported as past due on Call Report
Schedule RC–N—Past Due and
Nonaccrual Loans, Leases, and Other
Assets, in accordance with their
contractual terms. As part of this
change, the agencies proposed to
eliminate an existing provision in the
Call Report instructions that permits
institutions not to report delinquent
GNMA loans that are repurchased when
VerDate jul<14>2003
16:14 May 27, 2005
Jkt 205001
they are ‘‘in foreclosure status’’ at the
time of repurchase as past due loans in
Schedule RC–N, provided the
government reimbursement process is
proceeding normally. In proposing this
reporting change, the agencies noted
that delinquent rebooked GNMA loans
would also be reported in supplemental
items 10 and 10.a of Schedule RC–N,
which disclose amounts for past due
loans wholly or partially guaranteed or
insured by the U.S. Government. These
items supplement the main body of the
past due loans schedule by providing
information that enables users of the
Call Report to determine the amount of
an institution’s total delinquent loans
that are not protected by a U.S.
Government guarantee or insurance.
In addition, the agencies proposed
that, when an institution forecloses on
real estate backing a delinquent GNMA
loan that it has rebooked as an asset, it
should report the property as ‘‘other real
estate owned’’ and not as an ‘‘other
asset’’ on the Call Report balance sheet.
The foreclosed property should be
reported in this manner beginning at the
time of foreclosure until it has been
sold, transferred to HUD, or otherwise
disposed of.
The agencies received ten comments
addressing the portion of the April 2004
proposal on GNMA loan reporting
issues. With one exception, commenters
disagreed with the agencies’ proposed
reporting treatment for past due GNMA
loans and foreclosed property.2 One
commenter did ‘‘not object to the
proposal that all delinquent rebooked
GNMA loans should be treated
consistently and reported as past due’’
in the schedule for past due loans,
observing that users of this schedule
‘‘will have a method to identify the
amount of loans that are not guaranteed
by the U.S. Government.’’ However, this
commenter did not favor the proposed
treatment of foreclosed property.
31011
insurance. These commenters stated
that reporting these delinquent
rebooked GNMA loans with the other
past due loans will skew analytical
ratios used to evaluate credit risk, which
will lead to misinterpretation of the past
due data and cause banks to have to
respond to questions regarding these
data. One commenter specifically
suggested that if the agencies decided to
proceed with the proposed inclusion of
delinquent rebooked GNMA loans in the
body of the past due schedule, ‘‘a
separate line should be added for past
due GNMA loans.’’ Nevertheless, this
commenter also expressed concern that
the agencies’ proposed past due
reporting treatment in Schedule RC–N
would produce disparities between the
Call Report past due schedule and the
past due reporting by public banking
organizations in their filings with the
Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC).
The agencies do not believe that their
proposal to include delinquent
rebooked GNMA loans in the body of
the past due schedule should lead to
inconsistencies in the disclosure of
these loans in the Call Report and in
SEC filings. Accounting staff members
in the SEC’s Division of Corporation
Finance prepared guidance on ‘‘Current
Accounting and Disclosure Issues in the
Division of Corporation Finance’’ dated
November 30, 2004, and updated on
March 4, 2005. Both versions of this
guidance discuss ‘‘Accounting for Loans
or Other Receivables Covered by
Buyback Provisions,’’ including, but not
limited to, loans securitized through
GNMA.3 (See Section II.K.1. of the SEC
staff’s November 2004 guidance, which
was carried forward without revision to
Section II.N.1. of the March 2005
guidance.) The SEC staff’s discussion of
this topic states the following
concerning loans, including GNMA
loans, that have been ‘‘re-recognized,’’
i.e., rebooked as assets in accordance
with FAS 140:
Delinquency Reporting
With respect to delinquency
reporting, nine commenters did not
support reporting rebooked past due
GNMA loans in the main body of Call
Report Schedule RC–N. These
commenters recommended that if these
delinquent loans must be reported in
this schedule, they should be reported
only in a Memorandum section of the
schedule and should not be aggregated
with other past due loans. They favored
segregated reporting for the GNMA
loans because these loans have a
different risk profile than other past due
loans due to their guarantees or
In the event that loans re-recognized by the
transferor have the risk elements
contemplated by Item III.C.1. of Industry
Guide 3 (i.e., nonaccrual, past due,
restructured), the amount of such loans
should be included in the disclosures
required by that Item. Supplemental
disclosures may be made to facilitate
understanding of the aggregate amounts
reported pursuant to Item III.C.1. These
disclosures may include, for example,
information as to the nature of the loans, any
guarantees, the extent of collateral, or
amounts in process of collection. For
example, if a loan re-recognized by a
transferor is accruing, but it is contractually
2 Only eight of the ten commenters specifically
addressed foreclosed property.
3 This guidance can be accessed at https://www.
sec.gov/divisions/corpfin/acctdis030405.htm.
PO 00000
Frm 00091
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
E:\FR\FM\31MYN1.SGM
31MYN1
31012
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 103 / Tuesday, May 31, 2005 / Notices
past due 90 days or more as to principal or
interest, that loan should be included in the
disclosure required by Item III.C.1(b) even if
the loan is guaranteed through a government
program, such as the Veterans
Administration (VA) or Federal Housing
Authority (FHA).
As recognized by the SEC staff,
delinquent rebooked GNMA loans are to
be included in the aggregate past due
disclosures required by Industry Guide
3. However, public banking
organizations may provide
supplemental disclosure of the fact that
these loans are guaranteed or insured by
the U.S. Government to assist users in
understanding the aggregate amounts of
past due loans. The agencies’ proposal
for reporting past due rebooked GNMA
loans in Call Report Schedule RC–N
parallels the SEC staff’s guidance
because this schedule includes items
that permit the ‘‘supplemental
disclosure’’ of the amount of past due
loans wholly or partially guaranteed or
insured by the U.S. Government.
Nevertheless, the agencies and other
users of the supplemental Schedule RC–
N items on past due governmentguaranteed or -insured loans would
benefit from having delinquent
rebooked GNMA loans identified
separately from other past due
government-guaranteed or -insured
loans, especially for institutions that
have securitized and sold a significant
volume of GNMA loans.
Accordingly, the agencies have
decided to proceed with their original
proposal that would require rebooked
GNMA loans that are past due to be
reported in the main body of Call Report
Schedule RC–N and in supplemental
item 10, ‘‘Loans and leases reported in
items 1 through 8 above which are
wholly or partially guaranteed by the
U.S. Government.’’ However, based on
suggestions from commenters, the
agencies will add a new supplemental
item 10.b to Schedule RC–N effective
June 30, 2005, in which banks would
report ‘‘Rebooked ‘‘GNMA loans’’ that
have been repurchased or are eligible for
repurchase included in item 10
above.’’. 4
In this regard, the agencies note that
banks that originate and hold FHA, VA,
and FmHA mortgage loans in their loan
portfolios, rather than securitizing and
selling them in the form of GNMA
4 In addition, if a bank services but did not
originate mortgage loans backing a GNMA security,
i.e., where the bank was not the transferor of the
losses that have been securitized, the servicing bank
should also include any government-guaranteed or
-insured mortgage ooans that it has purchased out
of the securitization in Schedule RC–R, items 10
and 10b, even if the bank was not required to record
the delinquent loans as assets prior to purchasing
the loans.
VerDate jul<14>2003
16:14 May 27, 2005
Jkt 205001
securities, currently report these loans
as past due in the main body of Call
Report Schedule RC–N if and when
these loans become delinquent. These
past due loans are also reported in
existing supplemental items 10 and 10.a
for past due loans wholly or partially
guaranteed or insured by the U.S.
Government in Call Report Schedule
RC–N. The reporting treatment of these
guaranteed and insured loans in
Schedule RC–N will not change.
Foreclosed Real Estate
Commenters on the portion of the
agencies’ April 2004 proposal on GNMA
loans objected to the proposed balance
sheet classification of foreclosed real
estate collateral backing delinquent
GNMA loans as ‘‘other real estate
owned.’’ Commenters recommended
that institutions report such real estate
as ‘‘other assets’’ because they do not
believe that institutions are exposed to
the underlying risk of the real estate,
despite the foreclosure, due to the
insurance or guarantee by the U.S.
Government. They also observed that, in
contrast to foreclosed real estate arising
from other types of loans, institutions
do not intend to sell foreclosed
properties resulting from GNMA loans
in order to recover the value of these
assets. Instead, institutions look to their
claim on the U.S. Government for
recovery.
The agencies have reviewed and
considered these comments. As stated
in the April 2004 proposal, the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD), the federal entity
that administers the GNMA program,
cannot accept a foreclosed property nor
can the government guarantee or
insurance be honored until all legal
actions related to the foreclosure
process have been completed.
Commenters confirmed that certain
conditions must be met before a
property can be conveyed to HUD.
While these conditions normally will be
met, whether they will ultimately be
met for an individual property is not
known at the time of foreclosure. For
example, the servicing guide for VA
loans indicates the circumstances in
which foreclosed property would not be
conveyed, including when the VA
issues ‘‘no-bid’’ advice (because the
VA’s cost of paying its guarantee is less
than its estimated cost of taking
possession of the property and selling it)
and when there has been a failure to
follow the regulations upon which the
VA’s guarantee is based.
Although the existence of insurance
or a guarantee from the U.S.
Government on a particular foreclosed
loan will aid in determining whether
PO 00000
Frm 00092
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
the carrying value of the asset is
recoverable, it does not determine the
classification of the asset upon
foreclosure. Because an institution’s
claim against the U.S. Government is
effectively conditional until all the
conditions have been met for the
conveyance of a foreclosed property to
HUD, the asset resulting from an
institution’s foreclosure on a delinquent
GNMA loan has more of the
characteristics of real estate than a
receivable from the U.S. Government.
Accordingly, the agencies believe that,
for Call Report balance sheet purposes,
it is more appropriate to view this asset
as other real estate owned than as a
receivable at foreclosure.
The agencies recognize that the more
common practice is for institutions that
foreclose on delinquent GNMA loans to
report the resulting asset as an ‘‘other
asset’’ rather than ‘‘other real estate
owned’’ on the Call Report balance
sheet. In this regard, some commenters
recommended that if the agencies
concluded that these assets should not
be reported as ‘‘other assets,’’ there
should be separate disclosure of these
assets in the Call Report because of the
difference in their risk profile compared
to other types of foreclosed real estate.
The agencies see merit in enabling
institutions with foreclosed properties
from GNMA loans to distinguish the
amount of these properties from other
foreclosed properties. Therefore, the
agencies will delay the implementation
date for institutions to report foreclosed
real estate from GNMA loans as ‘‘other
real estate owned’’ on the balance sheet
until the March 31, 2006, report date.
The agencies will also add a new
subitem to Schedule RC–M, item 3.b,
‘‘All other real estate owned,’’ to enable
institutions to disclose the amount of
such real estate in the March 2006 Call
Report. Until then, i.e., through the
December 31, 2005, report date,
institutions should continue to report
these foreclosed properties in their Call
Reports in accordance with their
existing reporting policies for such
properties.
B. ‘‘When-Issued’’ Securities
The agencies also proposed in April
2004 to revise the Call Report Glossary
entry for ‘‘When-Issued Securities
Transactions,’’ which currently
indicates that institutions should follow
settlement date accounting for whenissued securities, by replacing it with
one that calls for trade date accounting
for such securities. In addition, the
agencies proposed to remove the
references to commitments to purchase
and sell when-issued securities from the
instructions for Schedule RC–L, item 9,
E:\FR\FM\31MYN1.SGM
31MYN1
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 103 / Tuesday, May 31, 2005 / Notices
‘‘All other off-balance sheet liabilities,’’
and item 10, ‘‘All other off-balance sheet
assets,’’ respectively. Furthermore, the
agencies proposed to revise the Call
Report Glossary entry for ‘‘Trade Date
and Settlement Date Accounting’’ to
clarify that institutions should follow
trade date accounting for all securities,
including when-issued securities.
Five commenters on the agencies’
April 2004 proposal addressed the
reporting of when-issued securities, two
of whom supported using trade date
accounting for such securities. The
other three commenters disagreed with
the agencies’ proposal. These
commenters noted that, under
paragraph 59(a) of Statement of
Financial Accounting Standards No.
133, Accounting for Derivative
Instruments and Hedging Activities, as
amended (FAS 133), when-issued
securities that meet certain criteria
should be accounted for as derivatives
rather than securities and, therefore, this
derivatives accounting treatment should
be followed in the Call Report.
The agencies have reviewed relevant
portions of FAS 133 and agree that, in
appropriate circumstances, banks
should report when-issued securities as
derivatives and not as securities.
Accordingly, the FFIEC and the agencies
have concluded that they should not
proceed with the three elements of their
April 2004 proposal related to whenissued securities. However, the agencies
will clarify the Call Report instructions
addressing when-issued securities,
where necessary, to ensure that they are
in conformity with FAS 133.
C. Loans Within the Scope of SOP 03–
3
SOP 03–3 applies to ‘‘purchased
impaired loans,’’ i.e., loans 5 that a bank
has purchased, including those acquired
in a purchase business combination,
when there is evidence of deterioration
of credit quality since the origination of
the loan and it is probable, at the
purchase date, that the bank will be
unable to collect all contractually
required payments receivable. To assist
the agencies in understanding the
relationship between the allowance for
loan and lease losses and the carrying
amount of the loan portfolios of those
banks whose portfolios include
purchased impaired loans, the agencies
proposed to add three items to the Call
Report. All three of these items
represent information included in the
disclosures required by SOP 03–3. The
agencies proposed to add two
Memorandum items to Schedule RC–C,
5 As defined in SOP 03–3, the term ‘‘loans’’
includes ‘‘debt securities.’’
VerDate jul<14>2003
16:14 May 27, 2005
Jkt 205001
part I—Loans and Leases: (1) The
outstanding balance 6 and (2) the
carrying amount (before any loan loss
allowances) as of the report date of the
purchased impaired loans held for
investment 7 that are included in
Schedule RC–C. In addition, the
agencies proposed to add a
Memorandum item to Schedule RI–B,
part II—Changes in Allowance for Loan
and Lease Losses, in which banks would
report the amount of post-acquisition
loan loss allowances for purchased
impaired loans held for investment that
is included in the total amount of the
allowance for loan and lease losses as of
the report date.
The agencies also stated that they
planned to revise the instructions to
Schedule RC–N—Past Due and
Nonaccrual Loans, Leases, and Other
Assets, to explain how purchased
impaired loans should be reported in
this schedule. SOP 03–3 does not
prohibit placing loans on nonaccrual
status and any nonaccrual purchased
impaired loans should be reported
accordingly in Schedule RC–N. For
those purchased impaired loans that are
not on nonaccrual status, banks should
determine the loans’ delinquency status
in accordance with the contractual
repayment terms of the loans without
regard to the purchase price of (initial
investment in) these loans or the
amount and timing of the cash flows
expected at acquisition.
As previously mentioned, the
agencies received three comments in
response to their March 2005 proposed
reporting revisions related to SOP 03–3,
one from a community bank trade
association, one from a large banking
organization, and another from a trade
group outside the banking industry. In
its comment letter, the community bank
trade association advised that, although
most community banks it surveyed are
not purchasers of impaired loans, the
proposed items would add clarity to the
Call Report for those that are. The
association also stated that the
additional time needed by bankers to
report the proposed items may range
6 The outstanding balance is the undiscounted
sum of all amounts, including amounts deemed
principal, interest, fees, penalties, and other under
the loan, owed to the bank at the report date,
whether or not currently due and whether or not
any such amounts have been charged off by the
bank. However, the outstanding balance does not
include amounts that would be accrued under the
contract as interest, fees, penalties, and other after
the report date.
7 Loans held for investment are those loans that
the bank has the intent and ability to hold for the
foreseeable future or until maturity or payoff. Thus,
the outstanding balance and carrying amount of any
purchased impaired loans that are held for sale
would not be reported in these proposed
Memorandum items.
PO 00000
Frm 00093
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
31013
from 10 minutes to one hour once the
process for automating the reporting of
this information has been created,
which can be burdensome. The agencies
note that the need for a bank that
purchases impaired loans to establish a
process to account for and track these
loans is a result of SOP 03–3 becoming
part of generally accepted accounting
principles, which are the foundation for
the Call Report, and would be necessary
even if no new items were added to the
Call Report for purchased impaired
loans. The new items for purchased
impaired loans produce only a small
increase in the overall reporting burden
for the Call Report because the overall
burden represents an average across all
institutions, including the vast majority
that will not be purchasers of impaired
loans.
The community bank trade
association also identified certain Call
Report schedules that its member banks
consider most burdensome because of
the level of detail required. The agencies
recognize these bankers’ concerns and
are evaluating potential revisions to the
Call Report that would reduce the level
of detail for small institutions.
The large banking organization that
commented on the SOP 03–3 revisions
agreed with the proposed addition of
items for the outstanding balance and
carrying amount of purchased impaired
loans and with the proposed use of
contractual terms for determining the
delinquency status of such loans for Call
Report purposes. The organization also
did not object to the proposed item for
reporting amounts included in the
allowance for loan and lease losses
related to purchased impaired loans, but
disagreed with the agencies’ statement
in the March 2005 proposal that all
post-acquisition impairments recorded
under SOP 03–3 should be included in
the allowance account. The organization
stated that it plans to recognize
impairments resulting from decreases in
forecasted cash flows through interest
income and only recognize impairments
through the allowance for loan and lease
losses when undiscounted forecasted
cash flows decrease below the
amortized cost of the purchased
impaired loan or pool of loans.
The agencies have considered the
banking organization’s comment on
post-acquisition impairments. After
reviewing the relevant portions of SOP
03–3 and discussing this comment with
persons involved in the development of
SOP 03–3, the agencies do not believe
the interest income approach advocated
by the banking organization is an
appropriate application of this
accounting standard. Such an approach
will result in the recognition of interest
E:\FR\FM\31MYN1.SGM
31MYN1
31014
Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 103 / Tuesday, May 31, 2005 / Notices
income at an inappropriate percentage
yield under the Statement of Position.
Therefore, the agencies have decided
against revising their statement in the
March 2005 proposal that decreases in
originally expected cash flows on a
purchased impaired loan should be
recognized as an impairment through an
addition to the loan loss allowance.
In its comment letter, the trade group
from outside the banking industry did
not address the SOP 03–3 revisions, but
requested that the agencies revise
several other items in the Call Report.
The agencies will consider these
suggested Call Report changes at a later
date.
D. Other Matters
Call Report Schedule RC–R—
‘‘Regulatory Capital, does not currently
allow a bank to report an amount in
column B, ‘‘Items Not Subject to RiskWeighting,’’ of item 34, ‘‘Cash and
balances due from depository
institutions,’’ because such items were
not expected to exist within this asset
category when this schedule was
originally designed. However, when
amounts are included in column A,
‘‘Totals (from Schedule RC 8),’’ of item
34 for certain embedded derivatives,
these embedded derivatives should be
risk-weighted under the rules for
derivatives rather than the rules that
apply to the cash and due from asset
account. As a result, banks contacted
the agencies upon finding that they
could not properly report the carrying
amount of these derivatives in column
B when allocating the total carrying
amount of their ‘‘Cash and balances due
from depository institutions’’ across the
columns of item 34. In response to
banks’ comments about this reporting
difficulty, the agencies are revising
Schedule RC–R to permit the use of
column B of item 34.
A number of banks have requested
that they be permitted to provide USA
PATRIOT Act Section 314(a) AntiMoney Laundering contact information
for more than two contact persons at
their institutions. The agencies are
adding text fields for two additional
contact persons that will enable a bank,
at its option, to supply information for
a third and fourth anti-money
laundering contact person. This contact
information is not released to the
public.
III. Request for Comment
Public comment is requested on all
aspects of this joint notice. In addition,
comments are invited on:
8 Schedule
RC of the Call Report is the balance
sheet.
VerDate jul<14>2003
16:14 May 27, 2005
Jkt 205001
(a) Whether the proposed revisions to
the Call Report collections of
information are necessary for the proper
performance of the agencies’ functions,
including whether the information has
practical utility;
(b) The accuracy of the agencies’
estimates of the burden of the
information collections as they are
proposed to be revised, including the
validity of the methodology and
assumptions used;
(c) Ways to enhance the quality,
utility, and clarity of the information to
be collected;
(d) Ways to minimize the burden of
information collections on respondents,
including through the use of automated
collection techniques or other forms of
information technology; and
(e) Estimates of capital or start up
costs and costs of operation,
maintenance, and purchase of services
to provide information.
Comments submitted in response to
this joint notice will be shared among
the agencies and will be summarized or
included in the agencies’ requests for
OMB approval. All comments will
become a matter of public record.
Written comments should address the
accuracy of the burden estimates and
ways to minimize burden as well as
other relevant aspects of the information
collection request.
Dated: May 25, 2005.
Stuart E. Feldstein,
Assistant Director, Legislative and Regulatory
Activities Division, Office of the Comptroller
of the Currency.
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, May 24, 2005.
Robert deV. Frierson,
Deputy Secretary of the Board.
Dated at Washington, DC, this 25th day of
May, 2005.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Robert E. Feldman,
Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 05–10778 Filed 5–27–05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810–33; 6210–01; 6714–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Internal Revenue Service
Proposed Collection; Comment
Request for Forms 1040–SS, 1040–PR,
and Anejo H–PR
Internal Revenue Service (IRS),
Treasury.
ACTION: Notice and request for
comments.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The Department of the
Treasury, as part of its continuing effort
to reduce paperwork and respondent
PO 00000
Frm 00094
Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
burden, invites the general public and
other Federal agencies to take this
opportunity to comment on proposed
and/or continuing information
collections, as required by the
Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995,
Public Law 104–13 (44 U.S.C.
3506(c)(2)(A)). Currently, the IRS is
soliciting comments concerning Form
1040–SS, U.S. Self-Employment Tax
Return; Form 1040–PR, Planilla Para La
Declaracion De La Contribucion Federal
Sobre El Trabajo Por Cuenta Propia—
Puerto Rico; and Anejo H–PR,
Contribuciones Sobre El Empleo De
Empleados Domesticos.
DATES: Written comments should be
received on or before August 1, 2005, to
be assured of consideration.
ADDRESSES: Direct all written comments
to Glenn P. Kirkland, Internal Revenue
Service, room 6516, 1111 Constitution
Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20224.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Requests for additional information or
copies of the forms and instructions
should be directed to Larnice Mack,
(202) 622–3179, Internal Revenue
Service, room 6512, 1111 Constitution
Avenue, NW., Washington, DC 20224,
or through the Internet at
Larnice.Mack@irs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Title: Form 1040–SS, U.S. SelfEmployment Tax Return, Form 1040–
PR, Planilla Para La Declaracion De La
Contribucion Federal Sobre El Trabajo
Por Cuenta Propia—Puerto Rico; and
Anejo H–PR, Contribuciones Sobre El
Empleo De Empleados Domesticos.
OMB Number: 1545–0090.
Form Number: Forms 1040–SS, 1040–
PR, and Anejo H–PR.
Abstract: Form 1040–SS is used by
self-employed individuals in the Virgin
Islands, Guam, American Samoa, and
the Commonwealth of the Northern
Mariana Islands to report and pay selfemployment tax and provide proper
credit to the taxpayer’s social security
account. Form 1040–PR is a Spanish
version of Form 1040–SS for use in
Puerto Rico. Anejo H–PR is used to
compute household employment taxes.
Form 1040–SS and Form 1040–PR are
also used by bona-fide residents of
Puerto Rico to claim the additional
child tax credit.
Current Actions: There are no changes
being made to the forms at this time.
Type of Review: Extension of a
currently approved collection.
Affected Public: Individuals or
households, business or other for-profit
organizations and farms.
Estimated Number of Responses:
430,400.
E:\FR\FM\31MYN1.SGM
31MYN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 70, Number 103 (Tuesday, May 31, 2005)]
[Notices]
[Pages 31009-31014]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 05-10778]
[[Page 31009]]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
Agency Information Collection Activities; Submission for OMB
Review; Comment Request
AGENCIES: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), Treasury;
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board); and Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC).
ACTION: Notice of information collection to be submitted to OMB for
review and approval under the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In accordance with the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. chapter 35), the OCC, the Board, and the FDIC
(the ``agencies'') may not conduct or sponsor, and the respondent is
not required to respond to, an information collection unless it
displays a currently valid Office of Management and Budget (OMB)
control number. On April 29, 2004, the agencies requested public
comment for 60 days on proposed revisions to the instructions for the
Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income (Call Report), which are
currently approved collections of information. After considering the
comments received, the Federal Financial Institutions Examination
Council (FFIEC), of which the agencies are members, has adopted the
proposed instructional revisions and also will add new items to the
Call Report based on suggestions by commenters. In addition, on March
11, 2005, the agencies requested public comment for 60 days on other
proposed revisions to the Call Report. The FFIEC and the agencies have
considered the comments received on these additional revisions, which
the FFIEC has adopted as proposed. The agencies are submitting the
revisions adopted by the FFIEC to OMB for review and approval.
DATES: Comments must be submitted on or before June 30, 2005.
ADDRESSES: Interested parties are invited to submit written comments to
any or all of the agencies. All comments, which should refer to the OMB
control number(s), will be shared among the agencies.
OCC: You may submit comments, identified by [Attention: 1557-0081],
by any of the following methods:
E-mail: regs.comments@occ.treas.gov. Include [Attention:
1557-0081] in the subject line of the message.
Fax: (202) 874-4448.
Mail: Public Information Room, Office of the Comptroller
of the Currency, 250 E Street, SW., Mailstop 1-5, Washington, DC 20219;
Attention: 1557-0081.
Public Inspection: You may inspect and photocopy comments at the
Public Information Room. You can make an appointment to inspect the
comments by calling (202) 874-5043.
Board: You may submit comments, which should refer to
``Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income, 7100-0036,'' by any of
the following methods:
Agency Web Site: https://www.federalreserve.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments on the https://
www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
E-mail: regs.comments@federalreserve.gov. Include docket
number in the subject line of the message.
Fax: 202-452-3819 or 202-452-3102.
Mail: Jennifer J. Johnson, Secretary, Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System, 20th Street and Constitution Avenue,
NW., Washington, DC 20551.
All public comments are available from the Board's Web site at
https://www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm as
submitted, except as necessary for technical reasons. Accordingly, your
comments will not be edited to remove any identifying or contact
information. Public comments may also be viewed electronically or on
paper in Room MP-500 of the Board's Martin Building (20th and C
Streets, NW.) between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. on weekdays.
FDIC: You may submit comments, which should refer to ``Consolidated
Reports of Condition and Income, 3064-0052,'' by any of the following
methods:
https://www.FDIC.gov/regulations/laws/federal/propose.html.
E-mail: comments@FDIC.gov. Include ``Consolidated Reports
of Condition and Income, 3064-0052'' in the subject line of the
message.
Mail: Steven F. Hanft (202-898-3907), Paperwork Clearance
Officer, Room MB-3064, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th
Street, NW., Washington, DC 20429.
Hand Delivery: Comments may be hand delivered to the guard
station at the rear of the 550 17th Street Building (located on F
Street) on business days between 7 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Public Inspection: You may inspect comments at the FDIC Public
Information Center, Room 100, 801 17th Street, NW., between 9 a.m. and
4:30 p.m. on business days.
A copy of the comments may also be submitted to the OMB desk
officer for the agencies: Mark Menchik, Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, New Executive
Office Building, Room 10235, Washington, DC 20503, or electronic mail
to mmenchik@omb.eop.gov.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For further information about the
revisions discussed in this notice, please contact any of the agency
clearance officers whose names appear below. In addition, copies of
Call Report forms can be obtained at the FFIEC's Web site (https://www.
ffiec.gov/ffiec_report_forms.htm).
OCC: Mary Gottlieb, OCC Clearance Officer, or Camille Dixon, (202)
874-5090, Legislative and Regulatory Activities Division, Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency, 250 E Street, SW., Washington, DC 20219.
Board: Michelle E. Long, Clearance Officer, (202) 452-3829,
Division of Research and Statistics, Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, 20th and C Streets, NW., Washington, DC 20551.
Telecommunications Device for the Deaf (TDD) users may call (202) 263-
4869.
FDIC: Steven F. Hanft, Paperwork Clearance Officer, (202) 898-3907,
Legal Division, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street,
NW., Washington, DC 20429.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: Request for OMB approval to revise the
currently approved collections of information identified below.
The effect of the proposed revisions to the reporting requirements
for the Call Report will vary from institution to institution depending
on the institution's involvement with the types of activities or
transactions to which the proposed changes apply. More specifically,
the agencies expect that the reporting changes that relate to certain
securitized U.S. government-guaranteed or -insured residential mortgage
loans will primarily affect the small percentage of institutions that
originate or purchase and then securitize these loans. The revisions to
the Call Report dealing with acquired loans with evidence of
deterioration of credit quality since origination, including
acquisitions of such loans in business combinations accounted for using
the purchase method, will generally apply only to the limited number of
[[Page 31010]]
institutions that are involved in purchase business combinations or
that engage in purchases of loans with credit quality problems as a
business activity. The agencies estimate that implementation of these
reporting changes will result in a small increase in the current
reporting burden imposed by the Call Report for those institutions
involved with these activities and transactions. The following burden
estimates include the effect of the proposed revisions.
Report Title: Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income (Call
Report).
Form Number: Call Report: FFIEC 031 (for banks with domestic and
foreign offices) and FFIEC 041 (for banks with domestic offices only).
Frequency of Response: Quarterly.
Affected Public: Business or other for-profit.
OCC
OMB Number: 1557-0081.
Estimated Number of Respondents: 2,000 national banks.
Estimated Time per Response: 46.45 burden hours.
Estimated Total Annual Burden: 371,633 burden hours.
Board:
OMB Number: 7100-0036.
Estimated Number of Respondents: 922 state member banks.
Estimated Time per Response: 52.38 burden hours.
Estimated Total Annual Burden: 193,177 burden hours.
FDIC
OMB Number: 3064-0052.
Estimated Number of Respondents: 5,263 insured state nonmember
banks.
Estimated Time per Response: 37.10 burden hours.
Estimated Total Annual Burden: 781,029 burden hours.
The estimated time per response for the Call Report is an average
that varies by agency because of differences in the composition of the
institutions under each agency's supervision (e.g., size distribution
of institutions, types of activities in which they are engaged, and
existence of foreign offices). The average reporting burden for the
Call Report includes the effect on burden of the new Central Data
Repository (CDR) system that the agencies are developing for processing
Call Reports. The time per response for the Call Report is estimated to
range from 15 to 600 hours, depending on an individual institution's
circumstances, before considering the effect of voluntary testing and
global enrollment activities related to the CDR. The reporting burden
for testing and enrollment activities for an individual institution is
estimated to range from 16 to 69 hours, depending on the institution's
level of participation.
General Description of Reports
These information collections are mandatory: 12 U.S.C. 161 (for
national banks), 12 U.S.C. 324 (for state member banks), and 12 U.S.C.
1817 (for insured state nonmember commercial and savings banks). Except
for selected items, these information collections are not given
confidential treatment.
Abstract
Institutions file Call Reports with the agencies each quarter for
the agencies' use in monitoring the condition, performance, and risk
profile of individual institutions and the industry as a whole. In
addition, Call Reports provide the most current statistical data
available for evaluating institutions' corporate applications such as
mergers, for identifying areas of focus for both on-site and off-site
examinations, and for monetary and other public policy purposes. Call
Reports are also used to calculate all institutions' deposit insurance
and Financing Corporation assessments and national banks' semiannual
assessment fees.
Current Actions
I. Overview
On April 29, 2004, the agencies (together with the Office of Thrift
Supervision (OTS)) jointly published a notice soliciting comments for
60 days on proposed revisions to the Call Report (69 FR 23502). This
joint notice requested comment on two proposed instructional changes
that would affect how institutions report certain information in the
Call Report, but the notice did not propose to change the report forms
themselves. First, the agencies proposed to change and clarify the
reporting requirements related to certain U.S. Government-guaranteed or
-insured residential mortgage loans backing Government National
Mortgage Association (GNMA) securities that meet certain delinquency
criteria and are subject to seller buy-back provisions, i.e., ``GNMA
loans.'' These clarifications involved the reporting of GNMA loans as
delinquent and the balance sheet classification of property backing a
delinquent GNMA loan on which an institution has foreclosed. Second,
the agencies proposed to change the reporting requirements for ``when-
issued'' securities from settlement date accounting to trade date
accounting.
The agencies received 13 comments on their April 2004 proposal, ten
from banks and banking organizations, two from bankers' associations,
and one from a trade group whose members include banking organizations.
Only two of the commenters addressed both of the subjects in the
agencies' April 2004 proposal. The FFIEC and the agencies have
considered these comments and have decided to proceed with the
instructional revisions pertaining to mortgage loans subject to buy-
back provisions, but with the addition of new items to the Call Report
schedules in which banks report information on past due loans and on
other real estate owned.\1\ The FFIEC and the agencies also have
decided against requiring trade date accounting for all ``when-issued''
securities. These decisions are discussed below.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ The OTS joined with the agencies in the April 2004 proposal.
The OTS intends to follow a course of action similar to the agencies
with respect to mortgage loans subject to buy-back provisions in the
future when updating the reporting requirements for the Thrift
Financial Report.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In addition, on March 11, 2005, the agencies jointly published a
notice requesting comment on proposed revisions to the Call Report in
response to Statement of Position 03-3, Accounting for Certain Loans or
Debt Securities Acquired in a Transfer (SOP 03-3), which was issued by
the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants (70 FR 12269).
SOP 03-3 applies to loans acquired in fiscal years beginning after
December 15, 2004. The agencies proposed to add three items to the Call
Report relating to loans within the scope of SOP 03-3. The agencies
also proposed a revision to the Call Report instructions to explain how
the delinquency status of loans within the scope of SOP 03-3 should be
determined for purposes of disclosing past due loans in the Call
Report.
The agencies received three comments in response to their March
2005 proposal, one from a community bank trade association, one from a
large banking organization, and another from a trade group outside the
banking industry. The FFIEC and the agencies have considered these
comments and, as discussed below, have decided to proceed with the SOP
03-3 changes as proposed.
The revisions to the Call Report have been approved for publication
by the FFIEC. The agencies will implement the proposed Call Report
changes as of the June 30, 2005, report date, except for the revisions
pertaining to foreclosed properties backing delinquent GNMA loans.
Nonetheless, as is customary for Call Report changes, if the
information to be reported in accordance with the revised reporting
requirements is not readily available, institutions are advised that
they may report reasonable
[[Page 31011]]
estimates of this information for the report date as of which the
proposed changes first take effect, i.e., June 30, 2005. With respect
to the reporting of foreclosed properties backing GNMA loans,
institutions should report these properties in their Call Reports in
accordance with their existing reporting policies for such properties
through the December 31, 2005, report date. Effective with the March
31, 2006, report date, all institutions should report these properties
as other real estate owned on the balance sheet and disclose the amount
in a new subitem that will be added to the Call Report schedule in
which information on the composition of other real estate owned is
reported.
Type of Review: Revision of currently approved collections.
II. Revisions to the Call Report
A. GNMA Buy-Back Option
Under the GNMA Mortgage-Backed Securities Guide, the issuer of GNMA
securities has the option to repurchase individual Federal Housing
Administration (FHA), Department of Veterans Affairs/Veterans
Administration (VA), and Farmers Home Administration (FmHA) mortgage
loans backing the securities when these GNMA loans meet certain
delinquency criteria. Because of this option, if and when individual
loans that have been accounted for as sold in accordance with Statement
of Financial Accounting Standards No. 140, Accounting for Transfers and
Servicing of Financial Assets and Extinguishments of Liabilities (FAS
140), later meet GNMA's specified delinquency criteria and are eligible
for repurchase, FAS 140 requires these individual delinquent GNMA loans
to be brought back onto the issuer's books as assets, along with an
offsetting liability. This rebooking of the GNMA loans is required
regardless of whether the issuer intends to exercise the buy-back
option.
The agencies proposed that all delinquent rebooked GNMA loans
(including those for which the institution is taking steps to foreclose
on the real estate collateral at the time of repurchase, but for which
the sheriff's sale has not yet taken place) should be reported as past
due on Call Report Schedule RC-N--Past Due and Nonaccrual Loans,
Leases, and Other Assets, in accordance with their contractual terms.
As part of this change, the agencies proposed to eliminate an existing
provision in the Call Report instructions that permits institutions not
to report delinquent GNMA loans that are repurchased when they are ``in
foreclosure status'' at the time of repurchase as past due loans in
Schedule RC-N, provided the government reimbursement process is
proceeding normally. In proposing this reporting change, the agencies
noted that delinquent rebooked GNMA loans would also be reported in
supplemental items 10 and 10.a of Schedule RC-N, which disclose amounts
for past due loans wholly or partially guaranteed or insured by the
U.S. Government. These items supplement the main body of the past due
loans schedule by providing information that enables users of the Call
Report to determine the amount of an institution's total delinquent
loans that are not protected by a U.S. Government guarantee or
insurance.
In addition, the agencies proposed that, when an institution
forecloses on real estate backing a delinquent GNMA loan that it has
rebooked as an asset, it should report the property as ``other real
estate owned'' and not as an ``other asset'' on the Call Report balance
sheet. The foreclosed property should be reported in this manner
beginning at the time of foreclosure until it has been sold,
transferred to HUD, or otherwise disposed of.
The agencies received ten comments addressing the portion of the
April 2004 proposal on GNMA loan reporting issues. With one exception,
commenters disagreed with the agencies' proposed reporting treatment
for past due GNMA loans and foreclosed property.\2\ One commenter did
``not object to the proposal that all delinquent rebooked GNMA loans
should be treated consistently and reported as past due'' in the
schedule for past due loans, observing that users of this schedule
``will have a method to identify the amount of loans that are not
guaranteed by the U.S. Government.'' However, this commenter did not
favor the proposed treatment of foreclosed property.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ Only eight of the ten commenters specifically addressed
foreclosed property.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Delinquency Reporting
With respect to delinquency reporting, nine commenters did not
support reporting rebooked past due GNMA loans in the main body of Call
Report Schedule RC-N. These commenters recommended that if these
delinquent loans must be reported in this schedule, they should be
reported only in a Memorandum section of the schedule and should not be
aggregated with other past due loans. They favored segregated reporting
for the GNMA loans because these loans have a different risk profile
than other past due loans due to their guarantees or insurance. These
commenters stated that reporting these delinquent rebooked GNMA loans
with the other past due loans will skew analytical ratios used to
evaluate credit risk, which will lead to misinterpretation of the past
due data and cause banks to have to respond to questions regarding
these data. One commenter specifically suggested that if the agencies
decided to proceed with the proposed inclusion of delinquent rebooked
GNMA loans in the body of the past due schedule, ``a separate line
should be added for past due GNMA loans.'' Nevertheless, this commenter
also expressed concern that the agencies' proposed past due reporting
treatment in Schedule RC-N would produce disparities between the Call
Report past due schedule and the past due reporting by public banking
organizations in their filings with the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC).
The agencies do not believe that their proposal to include
delinquent rebooked GNMA loans in the body of the past due schedule
should lead to inconsistencies in the disclosure of these loans in the
Call Report and in SEC filings. Accounting staff members in the SEC's
Division of Corporation Finance prepared guidance on ``Current
Accounting and Disclosure Issues in the Division of Corporation
Finance'' dated November 30, 2004, and updated on March 4, 2005. Both
versions of this guidance discuss ``Accounting for Loans or Other
Receivables Covered by Buyback Provisions,'' including, but not limited
to, loans securitized through GNMA.\3\ (See Section II.K.1. of the SEC
staff's November 2004 guidance, which was carried forward without
revision to Section II.N.1. of the March 2005 guidance.) The SEC
staff's discussion of this topic states the following concerning loans,
including GNMA loans, that have been ``re-recognized,'' i.e., rebooked
as assets in accordance with FAS 140:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ This guidance can be accessed at https://www.sec.gov/
divisions/corpfin/acctdis030405.htm.
In the event that loans re-recognized by the transferor have the
risk elements contemplated by Item III.C.1. of Industry Guide 3
(i.e., nonaccrual, past due, restructured), the amount of such loans
should be included in the disclosures required by that Item.
Supplemental disclosures may be made to facilitate understanding of
the aggregate amounts reported pursuant to Item III.C.1. These
disclosures may include, for example, information as to the nature
of the loans, any guarantees, the extent of collateral, or amounts
in process of collection. For example, if a loan re-recognized by a
transferor is accruing, but it is contractually
[[Page 31012]]
past due 90 days or more as to principal or interest, that loan
should be included in the disclosure required by Item III.C.1(b)
even if the loan is guaranteed through a government program, such as
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
the Veterans Administration (VA) or Federal Housing Authority (FHA).
As recognized by the SEC staff, delinquent rebooked GNMA loans are
to be included in the aggregate past due disclosures required by
Industry Guide 3. However, public banking organizations may provide
supplemental disclosure of the fact that these loans are guaranteed or
insured by the U.S. Government to assist users in understanding the
aggregate amounts of past due loans. The agencies' proposal for
reporting past due rebooked GNMA loans in Call Report Schedule RC-N
parallels the SEC staff's guidance because this schedule includes items
that permit the ``supplemental disclosure'' of the amount of past due
loans wholly or partially guaranteed or insured by the U.S. Government.
Nevertheless, the agencies and other users of the supplemental Schedule
RC-N items on past due government-guaranteed or -insured loans would
benefit from having delinquent rebooked GNMA loans identified
separately from other past due government-guaranteed or -insured loans,
especially for institutions that have securitized and sold a
significant volume of GNMA loans.
Accordingly, the agencies have decided to proceed with their
original proposal that would require rebooked GNMA loans that are past
due to be reported in the main body of Call Report Schedule RC-N and in
supplemental item 10, ``Loans and leases reported in items 1 through 8
above which are wholly or partially guaranteed by the U.S.
Government.'' However, based on suggestions from commenters, the
agencies will add a new supplemental item 10.b to Schedule RC-N
effective June 30, 2005, in which banks would report ``Rebooked ``GNMA
loans'' that have been repurchased or are eligible for repurchase
included in item 10 above.''. \4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ In addition, if a bank services but did not originate
mortgage loans backing a GNMA security, i.e., where the bank was not
the transferor of the losses that have been securitized, the
servicing bank should also include any government-guaranteed or -
insured mortgage ooans that it has purchased out of the
securitization in Schedule RC-R, items 10 and 10b, even if the bank
was not required to record the delinquent loans as assets prior to
purchasing the loans.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In this regard, the agencies note that banks that originate and
hold FHA, VA, and FmHA mortgage loans in their loan portfolios, rather
than securitizing and selling them in the form of GNMA securities,
currently report these loans as past due in the main body of Call
Report Schedule RC-N if and when these loans become delinquent. These
past due loans are also reported in existing supplemental items 10 and
10.a for past due loans wholly or partially guaranteed or insured by
the U.S. Government in Call Report Schedule RC-N. The reporting
treatment of these guaranteed and insured loans in Schedule RC-N will
not change.
Foreclosed Real Estate
Commenters on the portion of the agencies' April 2004 proposal on
GNMA loans objected to the proposed balance sheet classification of
foreclosed real estate collateral backing delinquent GNMA loans as
``other real estate owned.'' Commenters recommended that institutions
report such real estate as ``other assets'' because they do not believe
that institutions are exposed to the underlying risk of the real
estate, despite the foreclosure, due to the insurance or guarantee by
the U.S. Government. They also observed that, in contrast to foreclosed
real estate arising from other types of loans, institutions do not
intend to sell foreclosed properties resulting from GNMA loans in order
to recover the value of these assets. Instead, institutions look to
their claim on the U.S. Government for recovery.
The agencies have reviewed and considered these comments. As stated
in the April 2004 proposal, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD), the federal entity that administers the GNMA
program, cannot accept a foreclosed property nor can the government
guarantee or insurance be honored until all legal actions related to
the foreclosure process have been completed. Commenters confirmed that
certain conditions must be met before a property can be conveyed to
HUD. While these conditions normally will be met, whether they will
ultimately be met for an individual property is not known at the time
of foreclosure. For example, the servicing guide for VA loans indicates
the circumstances in which foreclosed property would not be conveyed,
including when the VA issues ``no-bid'' advice (because the VA's cost
of paying its guarantee is less than its estimated cost of taking
possession of the property and selling it) and when there has been a
failure to follow the regulations upon which the VA's guarantee is
based.
Although the existence of insurance or a guarantee from the U.S.
Government on a particular foreclosed loan will aid in determining
whether the carrying value of the asset is recoverable, it does not
determine the classification of the asset upon foreclosure. Because an
institution's claim against the U.S. Government is effectively
conditional until all the conditions have been met for the conveyance
of a foreclosed property to HUD, the asset resulting from an
institution's foreclosure on a delinquent GNMA loan has more of the
characteristics of real estate than a receivable from the U.S.
Government. Accordingly, the agencies believe that, for Call Report
balance sheet purposes, it is more appropriate to view this asset as
other real estate owned than as a receivable at foreclosure.
The agencies recognize that the more common practice is for
institutions that foreclose on delinquent GNMA loans to report the
resulting asset as an ``other asset'' rather than ``other real estate
owned'' on the Call Report balance sheet. In this regard, some
commenters recommended that if the agencies concluded that these assets
should not be reported as ``other assets,'' there should be separate
disclosure of these assets in the Call Report because of the difference
in their risk profile compared to other types of foreclosed real
estate. The agencies see merit in enabling institutions with foreclosed
properties from GNMA loans to distinguish the amount of these
properties from other foreclosed properties. Therefore, the agencies
will delay the implementation date for institutions to report
foreclosed real estate from GNMA loans as ``other real estate owned''
on the balance sheet until the March 31, 2006, report date. The
agencies will also add a new subitem to Schedule RC-M, item 3.b, ``All
other real estate owned,'' to enable institutions to disclose the
amount of such real estate in the March 2006 Call Report. Until then,
i.e., through the December 31, 2005, report date, institutions should
continue to report these foreclosed properties in their Call Reports in
accordance with their existing reporting policies for such properties.
B. ``When-Issued'' Securities
The agencies also proposed in April 2004 to revise the Call Report
Glossary entry for ``When-Issued Securities Transactions,'' which
currently indicates that institutions should follow settlement date
accounting for when-issued securities, by replacing it with one that
calls for trade date accounting for such securities. In addition, the
agencies proposed to remove the references to commitments to purchase
and sell when-issued securities from the instructions for Schedule RC-
L, item 9,
[[Page 31013]]
``All other off-balance sheet liabilities,'' and item 10, ``All other
off-balance sheet assets,'' respectively. Furthermore, the agencies
proposed to revise the Call Report Glossary entry for ``Trade Date and
Settlement Date Accounting'' to clarify that institutions should follow
trade date accounting for all securities, including when-issued
securities.
Five commenters on the agencies' April 2004 proposal addressed the
reporting of when-issued securities, two of whom supported using trade
date accounting for such securities. The other three commenters
disagreed with the agencies' proposal. These commenters noted that,
under paragraph 59(a) of Statement of Financial Accounting Standards
No. 133, Accounting for Derivative Instruments and Hedging Activities,
as amended (FAS 133), when-issued securities that meet certain criteria
should be accounted for as derivatives rather than securities and,
therefore, this derivatives accounting treatment should be followed in
the Call Report.
The agencies have reviewed relevant portions of FAS 133 and agree
that, in appropriate circumstances, banks should report when-issued
securities as derivatives and not as securities. Accordingly, the FFIEC
and the agencies have concluded that they should not proceed with the
three elements of their April 2004 proposal related to when-issued
securities. However, the agencies will clarify the Call Report
instructions addressing when-issued securities, where necessary, to
ensure that they are in conformity with FAS 133.
C. Loans Within the Scope of SOP 03-3
SOP 03-3 applies to ``purchased impaired loans,'' i.e., loans \5\
that a bank has purchased, including those acquired in a purchase
business combination, when there is evidence of deterioration of credit
quality since the origination of the loan and it is probable, at the
purchase date, that the bank will be unable to collect all
contractually required payments receivable. To assist the agencies in
understanding the relationship between the allowance for loan and lease
losses and the carrying amount of the loan portfolios of those banks
whose portfolios include purchased impaired loans, the agencies
proposed to add three items to the Call Report. All three of these
items represent information included in the disclosures required by SOP
03-3. The agencies proposed to add two Memorandum items to Schedule RC-
C, part I--Loans and Leases: (1) The outstanding balance \6\ and (2)
the carrying amount (before any loan loss allowances) as of the report
date of the purchased impaired loans held for investment \7\ that are
included in Schedule RC-C. In addition, the agencies proposed to add a
Memorandum item to Schedule RI-B, part II--Changes in Allowance for
Loan and Lease Losses, in which banks would report the amount of post-
acquisition loan loss allowances for purchased impaired loans held for
investment that is included in the total amount of the allowance for
loan and lease losses as of the report date.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ As defined in SOP 03-3, the term ``loans'' includes ``debt
securities.''
\6\ The outstanding balance is the undiscounted sum of all
amounts, including amounts deemed principal, interest, fees,
penalties, and other under the loan, owed to the bank at the report
date, whether or not currently due and whether or not any such
amounts have been charged off by the bank. However, the outstanding
balance does not include amounts that would be accrued under the
contract as interest, fees, penalties, and other after the report
date.
\7\ Loans held for investment are those loans that the bank has
the intent and ability to hold for the foreseeable future or until
maturity or payoff. Thus, the outstanding balance and carrying
amount of any purchased impaired loans that are held for sale would
not be reported in these proposed Memorandum items.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The agencies also stated that they planned to revise the
instructions to Schedule RC-N--Past Due and Nonaccrual Loans, Leases,
and Other Assets, to explain how purchased impaired loans should be
reported in this schedule. SOP 03-3 does not prohibit placing loans on
nonaccrual status and any nonaccrual purchased impaired loans should be
reported accordingly in Schedule RC-N. For those purchased impaired
loans that are not on nonaccrual status, banks should determine the
loans' delinquency status in accordance with the contractual repayment
terms of the loans without regard to the purchase price of (initial
investment in) these loans or the amount and timing of the cash flows
expected at acquisition.
As previously mentioned, the agencies received three comments in
response to their March 2005 proposed reporting revisions related to
SOP 03-3, one from a community bank trade association, one from a large
banking organization, and another from a trade group outside the
banking industry. In its comment letter, the community bank trade
association advised that, although most community banks it surveyed are
not purchasers of impaired loans, the proposed items would add clarity
to the Call Report for those that are. The association also stated that
the additional time needed by bankers to report the proposed items may
range from 10 minutes to one hour once the process for automating the
reporting of this information has been created, which can be
burdensome. The agencies note that the need for a bank that purchases
impaired loans to establish a process to account for and track these
loans is a result of SOP 03-3 becoming part of generally accepted
accounting principles, which are the foundation for the Call Report,
and would be necessary even if no new items were added to the Call
Report for purchased impaired loans. The new items for purchased
impaired loans produce only a small increase in the overall reporting
burden for the Call Report because the overall burden represents an
average across all institutions, including the vast majority that will
not be purchasers of impaired loans.
The community bank trade association also identified certain Call
Report schedules that its member banks consider most burdensome because
of the level of detail required. The agencies recognize these bankers'
concerns and are evaluating potential revisions to the Call Report that
would reduce the level of detail for small institutions.
The large banking organization that commented on the SOP 03-3
revisions agreed with the proposed addition of items for the
outstanding balance and carrying amount of purchased impaired loans and
with the proposed use of contractual terms for determining the
delinquency status of such loans for Call Report purposes. The
organization also did not object to the proposed item for reporting
amounts included in the allowance for loan and lease losses related to
purchased impaired loans, but disagreed with the agencies' statement in
the March 2005 proposal that all post-acquisition impairments recorded
under SOP 03-3 should be included in the allowance account. The
organization stated that it plans to recognize impairments resulting
from decreases in forecasted cash flows through interest income and
only recognize impairments through the allowance for loan and lease
losses when undiscounted forecasted cash flows decrease below the
amortized cost of the purchased impaired loan or pool of loans.
The agencies have considered the banking organization's comment on
post-acquisition impairments. After reviewing the relevant portions of
SOP 03-3 and discussing this comment with persons involved in the
development of SOP 03-3, the agencies do not believe the interest
income approach advocated by the banking organization is an appropriate
application of this accounting standard. Such an approach will result
in the recognition of interest
[[Page 31014]]
income at an inappropriate percentage yield under the Statement of
Position. Therefore, the agencies have decided against revising their
statement in the March 2005 proposal that decreases in originally
expected cash flows on a purchased impaired loan should be recognized
as an impairment through an addition to the loan loss allowance.
In its comment letter, the trade group from outside the banking
industry did not address the SOP 03-3 revisions, but requested that the
agencies revise several other items in the Call Report. The agencies
will consider these suggested Call Report changes at a later date.
D. Other Matters
Call Report Schedule RC-R--``Regulatory Capital, does not currently
allow a bank to report an amount in column B, ``Items Not Subject to
Risk-Weighting,'' of item 34, ``Cash and balances due from depository
institutions,'' because such items were not expected to exist within
this asset category when this schedule was originally designed.
However, when amounts are included in column A, ``Totals (from Schedule
RC \8\),'' of item 34 for certain embedded derivatives, these embedded
derivatives should be risk-weighted under the rules for derivatives
rather than the rules that apply to the cash and due from asset
account. As a result, banks contacted the agencies upon finding that
they could not properly report the carrying amount of these derivatives
in column B when allocating the total carrying amount of their ``Cash
and balances due from depository institutions'' across the columns of
item 34. In response to banks' comments about this reporting
difficulty, the agencies are revising Schedule RC-R to permit the use
of column B of item 34.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Schedule RC of the Call Report is the balance sheet.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A number of banks have requested that they be permitted to provide
USA PATRIOT Act Section 314(a) Anti-Money Laundering contact
information for more than two contact persons at their institutions.
The agencies are adding text fields for two additional contact persons
that will enable a bank, at its option, to supply information for a
third and fourth anti-money laundering contact person. This contact
information is not released to the public.
III. Request for Comment
Public comment is requested on all aspects of this joint notice. In
addition, comments are invited on:
(a) Whether the proposed revisions to the Call Report collections
of information are necessary for the proper performance of the
agencies' functions, including whether the information has practical
utility;
(b) The accuracy of the agencies' estimates of the burden of the
information collections as they are proposed to be revised, including
the validity of the methodology and assumptions used;
(c) Ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the
information to be collected;
(d) Ways to minimize the burden of information collections on
respondents, including through the use of automated collection
techniques or other forms of information technology; and
(e) Estimates of capital or start up costs and costs of operation,
maintenance, and purchase of services to provide information.
Comments submitted in response to this joint notice will be shared
among the agencies and will be summarized or included in the agencies'
requests for OMB approval. All comments will become a matter of public
record. Written comments should address the accuracy of the burden
estimates and ways to minimize burden as well as other relevant aspects
of the information collection request.
Dated: May 25, 2005.
Stuart E. Feldstein,
Assistant Director, Legislative and Regulatory Activities Division,
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency.
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, May 24, 2005.
Robert deV. Frierson,
Deputy Secretary of the Board.
Dated at Washington, DC, this 25th day of May, 2005.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Robert E. Feldman,
Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 05-10778 Filed 5-27-05; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810-33; 6210-01; 6714-01-P