Certification of Assumption of Deposits and Notification of Changes of Insured Status, 8789-8792 [06-1568]
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8789
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
Vol. 71, No. 34
Tuesday, February 21, 2006
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains regulatory documents having general
applicability and legal effect, most of which
are keyed to and codified in the Code of
Federal Regulations, which is published under
50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by
the Superintendent of Documents. Prices of
new books are listed in the first FEDERAL
REGISTER issue of each week.
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION
12 CFR Part 307
RIN 3064–AC93
Certification of Assumption of
Deposits and Notification of Changes
of Insured Status
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC).
ACTION: Final rule.
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AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The FDIC is adopting a final
rule which clarifies and simplifies the
procedures to be used when all of the
deposit liabilities of an insured
depository institution have been
assumed by another insured depository
institution or institutions. The final
regulation would modify the current
rule’s requirements by: Making clear
that an insured institution is required to
file a ‘‘certification’’ when all of its
deposits are assumed, but no
certification is required if only a portion
of its deposits are assumed; and
requiring that the transferring
institution, or its legal successor, file the
certification rather than the assuming
institution. The rule also clarifies that
the transferring institution’s status as an
insured institution automatically
terminates upon the FDIC’s receipt of an
accurate certification stating that: All of
its deposits have been assumed by an
insured depository institution or
institutions, and the legal authority of
the transferring institution to accept
deposits has been terminated
contemporaneously with the deposit
assumption. In such a situation, and in
a situation in which the FDIC has been
appointed receiver of an insured
institution, little practical purpose
would be served by an order terminating
deposit insurance, and the final rule
provides that no such order will be
issued in such situations. Finally, the
rule would provide more specificity
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concerning how notice is given to
depositors when an insured depository
institution voluntarily terminates its
insured status without the assumption
of all of its deposits by an insured
institution. In sum, the revisions would
make the insurance termination process
somewhat easier for insured depository
institutions, and somewhat more
efficient for the FDIC.
DATES: This rule will be effective on
March 23, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Donald R. Hamm, Review Examiner,
Division of Supervision and Consumer
Protection, (202) 898–3528; Thomas
Nixon, Counsel, Legal Division, (202)
898–8766; Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, 550 17th Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20429.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
On October 14, 2005, the FDIC
published a notice of proposed
rulemaking concerning its Part 307 (12
CFR) ‘‘Notification of Changes in
Insured Status.’’ (70 FR 60015) The rule
currently has two sections. Section
307.1 applies to situations where one or
more insured institutions have assumed
the deposit liabilities of another insured
institution. Section 307.2 applies to
situations where an insured institution
seeks to terminate its insured status
without its deposit liabilities being
assumed. The FDIC received no
comments in response to the notice of
proposed rulemaking. The FDIC has
determined to make its October 2005
proposed revision to Part 307 final. A
section-by-section analysis follows.
II. Revised Caption; New Section
307.1—Scope and Purpose
The caption of the Part would be
changed from ‘‘Notification of Changes
of Insured Status’’ to ‘‘Certification of
Assumption of Deposits and
Notification of Changes of Insured
Status’’ to make it more descriptive of
the Part’s content and alert institutions
that the Part addresses deposit
assumptions as well as changes in
insured status.
The current Part 307 does not have a
scope and purpose section. In addition,
since Part 307 had not been revised
since 1983, §§ 307.1 and 307.2
continued to refer to an ‘‘insured bank’’
rather than to an ‘‘insured depository
institution,’’ consistent with the changes
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made to the FDIC’s responsibilities and
terminology by sections 201 and 202 of
the Financial Institutions Reform,
Recovery, and Enforcement Act of
1989.1 The final rule adds a new § 307.1
to describe the purpose of the Part and
to indicate that the Part applies to
insured depository institutions as
defined in section 3(c)(2) of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C.
1813(c)(2), FDI Act). The existing
§§ 307.1 and 307.2 are redesignated as
§§ 307.2 and 307.3, respectively.
III. Section 307.2—Certification of
Assumption of Deposit Liabilities
The current section 307.1 implements
section 8(q) of the FDI Act (12 U.S.C.
1818(q)), which states:
Whenever the liabilities of an insured
depository institution for deposits shall have
been assumed by another insured depository
institution or depository institutions,
whether by way of merger, consolidation, or
other statutory assumption, or pursuant to
contract
(1) The insured status of the depository
institution whose liabilities are so assumed
shall terminate on the date of receipt by the
Corporation of satisfactory evidence of such
assumption;
(2) The separate insurance of all deposits
so assumed shall terminate at the end of six
months from the date such assumption takes
effect or, in the case of any time deposit, the
earliest maturity date after the six-month
period * * *
All assumptions of insured deposit
liabilities, whether a ‘‘total’’ assumption
of all the transferring institution’s
deposits or an assumption of only a
portion of its deposits (a ‘‘partial’’
assumption), by an insured institution
are subject to the Bank Merger Act and
require the prior written approval of the
‘‘responsible agency.’’ 2 The responsible
agency is the primary Federal regulator
of the assuming institution.
The present section 307.1 requires the
institution assuming deposits to certify
to the FDIC that it has assumed the
deposits. It does not specify whether a
certification is required only where a
total deposit assumption occurs or
1 Pub.
L. 101–73, 103 Stat. 103.
Act section 18(c)(2), (12 U.S.C. 1828(c)(2)),
reads as follows:
No insured depository institution shall merge or
consolidate with any other insured depository
institution or, either directly or indirectly, acquire
the assets of, or assume liability to pay any deposits
made in, any other insured depository institution
except with the prior written approval of the
responsible agency * * *
2 FDI
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whether a certification is also required
for a partial deposit assumption, for
example, when a single branch of an
institution is sold. This rule clarifies
that a certification is required only
when there has been a total assumption
of deposits. No certification is required
in the case of a partial transfer of
deposits. Clarifying that no certification
is necessary for a partial assumption is
consistent with the FDIC’s goal of
reducing regulatory burden pursuant to
Section 2222 of the Economic Growth
and Regulatory Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1996 3 while obtaining sufficient
information for the proper
implementation of section 8(q) of the
FDI Act.
There may be situations in which an
insured depository institution disposes
of all of its deposits through a series of
simultaneous partial deposit
assumptions involving multiple
assuming institutions, rather than
through a single total deposit
assumption by one assuming institution.
An example of this would be where all
of the deposits of a transferring
institution were assumed through a
series of branch acquisitions by different
assuming institutions that occurred on
the same day. Viewed cumulatively,
these partial assumptions would
amount to a total assumption of the
deposits of the transferring institution
making certification necessary. In this
situation, this final rule would require
that the transferring institution file a
certification.
The current section 307.1 also does
not distinguish between a deposit
assumption involving operating
institutions versus an assumption
involving an institution in default and
in FDIC receivership. The FDIC plays an
integral role in the transfer and
assumption of deposit liabilities when it
is appointed as receiver for an insured
depository institution in default, and
has in its possession information
regarding the deposit transfer and
assumption transaction. Section 307.2(a)
of this final rule creates an explicit
exception from the certification
requirement when the deposit liabilities
are being transferred from an insured
depository institution in default and the
FDIC has been appointed as receiver.
Who must make the certification. As
noted, the current section 307.1 requires
the assuming institution to provide
certification to the FDIC. This final rule
requires the transferring institution, or
its legal successor (‘‘transferring
institution’’), to make the certification.
Generally, an institution transferring
deposit liabilities will be in a better
3 Pub.
L. 104–208, Sept. 30, 1996, 12 U.S.C. 3311.
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position than the assuming institution
to know whether the transfer constitutes
all of its deposits, thus triggering
application of Part 307 and FDI Act
section 8(q). This is particularly true in
the case of an institution that transfers
all of its deposit liabilities through
multiple transfers to a variety of
assuming institutions. In such a
situation, it may be difficult for the
assuming institutions to have sufficient
knowledge of key facts in order to make
certifications that make clear whether
the transferring institution continues to
hold insured deposits. In a merger or
consolidation there may be only one
surviving entity which is the legal
successor to both the transferring and
assuming institutions. In such instances,
that surviving entity would provide any
required certification.
Content and form of the certification.
Section 307.2(b) of this final rule
establishes the certification’s content.
The requirements are similar to the
current section 307.1 but clarify certain
issues, such as where certifications
should be filed with the FDIC, and the
need for the certification to be on the
letterhead of the transferring institution
or its legal successor and to be signed
by an authorized official. The rule also
requires an institution that is
contemporaneously relinquishing its
authority to engage in the business of
receiving deposits to provide the date
that its authority terminated (or will
terminate) as well as the method of
termination (e.g., whether by the
surrender of its charter, the cancellation
of its charter or license to conduct a
banking business, or otherwise). As
discussed below, this information will
be used by the FDIC to evaluate the
need to issue an order terminating
insurance. To assist the industry with
compliance, the rule provides a
template (Appendix A) that may be used
to satisfy the section 307.2 certification
requirements.
Evidence of Assumption. Similar to
the current section 307.1, section
307.2(d) of this final rule states that the
receipt by the FDIC of an accurate
certification for a total assumption as
required by paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of
section 307.2 shall constitute
satisfactory evidence of such deposit
assumption, as required by section 8(q)
of the FDI Act, and the insured status of
the transferring institution shall
terminate on the date of the receipt of
the certification. The term ‘‘accurate’’
has been included to indicate that a
materially inaccurate certification will
not trigger the automatic termination of
the transferring institution’s insured
status. Section 307.2(d) allows the FDIC
to consider other evidence, in addition
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to a certification, of a total deposit
assumption to constitute satisfactory
evidence of an assumption for the
purposes of section 8(q).
Issuance of an Order. As noted in the
October 2005 notice of proposed
rulemaking, section 8(q) can be
construed as automatically terminating
an institution’s insured status upon the
FDIC’s receipt of satisfactory evidence
of a total assumption. The FDIC did not
generally issue orders terminating the
insured status of transferring
institutions before 1983 when the rule
was last revised, and the current section
307.1 does not discuss the issuance of
such orders. In most cases of total
deposit assumptions, the transferring
institution’s authority to engage in
banking is contemporaneously
cancelled. In such a situation, an FDIC
order terminating insurance has no
practical effect and is unnecessary.
Accordingly, under this final rule no
order terminating an institution’s
insured status will generally be issued
when the transferring institution’s
authority to engage in banking is
cancelled contemporaneously (i.e.,
generally within five business days after
all deposits have been assumed). The
rule also will not require orders when
deposits are transferred and assumed
after a default when the FDIC has been
appointed as receiver of an insured
institution.
The rule does provide for the issuance
of an FDIC order terminating the
insured status of a transferring
institution in the relatively limited
circumstance in which a total transfer of
deposit liabilities has occurred but the
transferring institution’s charter is not
contemporaneously cancelled (the
proposed rule had referred to this as an
order confirming the termination of
insurance). Absent the entry of an order
terminating insured status, an
institution in such a situation might
attempt to resume accepting deposits
sometime after the assumption
transaction occurs. An institution might
also attempt to sell its charter, which
could allow what is in fact a new entity
to conduct banking operations without
FDIC review and approval.4
IV. Section 307.3—Notice to Depositors
When Insurance Is Voluntarily
Terminated and Deposits Are Not
Assumed
An insured depository institution that
proposes to voluntarily terminate its
insured status without transferring all of
its deposits to an FDIC-insured
4 Such a sale would require prior approval by the
primary Federal regulator under the Bank Merger
Act or the Change in Bank Control Act.
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institution must obtain the FDIC’s
permission.5 The current § 307.2
requires an insured bank or insured
branch of a foreign bank seeking to
voluntarily terminate its insured status,
but whose deposits will not be assumed
by another insured depository
institution, to provide notice to its
depositors of the date its insured status
will terminate. A copy of this notice
must be provided to and approved by
the appropriate Regional Director of the
Division of Supervision and Consumer
Protection prior to the notice being
distributed to the institution’s
depositors. This final rule clarifies that
the notice must be on the institution’s
letterhead, signed by a duly authorized
officer and sent to the depositor’s last
known address on the institution’s
books. To assist the industry with
compliance, the rule provides a
template (Appendix B) that may be used
to satisfy the section 307.3 certification
requirements.
V. Regulatory Analysis and Procedure
A. Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.),
the FDIC may not conduct or sponsor,
and a person is not required to respond
to, a collection of information unless it
displays a currently valid Office of
Management and Budget (OMB) control
number. The collection of information
contained in this rule was submitted to
OMB for review and was approved
under control number 3064–0124,
which will expire on December 31,
2008.
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Pursuant to section 605(b) of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act (5 U.S.C. 601
et seq.), the FDIC certifies that this rule
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The rule will reduce regulatory
burden by eliminating the need for a
certification to be filed with the FDIC
when the liability for some, but not all,
of the deposits of an insured institution
are transferred to another institution. A
certification requires a minimal amount
of time and resources since it reports
information readily available to the
institution making the certification.
5 FDI Act section 18(i)(3), 12 U.S.C. 1828(i)(3).
This rule does not affect the requirements for FDIC
approval of voluntary deposit insurance
terminations under sections 8(a) and 8(p) of the FDI
Act or for prior written consent for the conversion
of an insured depository institution into a
noninsured bank or institution as required by
section 18(i)(3).
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§ 307.2 Certification of assumption of
deposit liabilities.
C. Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act
The Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996
(SBREFA) (Title II, Pub. L. 104–121)
provides generally for agencies to report
rules to Congress and the General
Accounting Office (GAO) for review.
The reporting requirement is triggered
when a Federal agency issues a final
rule. The FDIC will file the appropriate
reports with Congress and the GAO as
required by SBREFA. The Office of
Management and Budget has
determined that the rule does not
constitute a ‘‘major rule’’ as defined by
SBREFA.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 307
Bank deposit insurance, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
For the reasons set forth in the
preamble, the Board of Directors of the
FDIC hereby revises Part 307 of Title 12
of the Code of Federal Regulations to
read as follows:
I
PART 307—CERTIFICATION OF
ASSUMPTION OF DEPOSITS AND
NOTIFICATION OF CHANGES OF
INSURED STATUS
Sec.
307.1 Scope and purpose.
307.2 Certification of assumption of deposit
liabilities.
307.3 Notice to depositors when insured
status is voluntarily terminated and
deposits are not assumed.
Appendix A to Part 307—Transferring
Institution Letterhead
Appendix B to Part 307—Institution
Letterhead
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1818(a)(6); 1818(q);
and 1819(a) [Tenth].
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
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§ 307.1
Scope and purpose.
(a) Scope. This Part applies to all
insured depository institutions, as
defined in section 3(c)(2) of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act (FDI Act) (12
U.S.C. 1813(c)(2)).
(b) Purpose. This Part sets forth the
rules governing:
(1) The time and manner for
providing certification to the FDIC
regarding the assumption of all of the
deposit liabilities of an insured
depository institution by one or more
insured depository institutions; and
(2) The notification that an insured
depository institution shall provide its
depositors when a depository
institution’s insured status is being
voluntarily terminated without its
deposits being assumed by one or more
insured depository institutions.
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8791
(a) When certification is required.
Whenever all of the deposit liabilities of
an insured depository institution are
assumed by one or more insured
depository institutions by merger,
consolidation, other statutory
assumption, or by contract, the
transferring insured depository
institution, or its legal successor, shall
provide an accurate written certification
to the FDIC that its deposit liabilities
have been assumed. No certification
shall be required when deposit
liabilities are assumed by an operating
insured depository institution from an
insured depository institution in
default, as defined in section 3(x)(1) of
the FDI Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(x)(1)), and
that has been placed under FDIC
receivership.
(b) Certification requirements. The
certification required by paragraph (a) of
this section shall be provided on official
letterhead of the transferring insured
depository institution or its legal
successor, signed by a duly authorized
official, and state the date the
assumption took effect. The certification
shall indicate the date on which the
transferring institution’s authority to
engage in banking has terminated or
will terminate as well as the method of
termination (e.g., whether by the
surrender of its charter, by the
cancellation of its charter or license to
conduct a banking business, or
otherwise). The certification may follow
the form contained in Appendix A of
this part. In a merger or consolidation
where there is only one surviving entity
which is the legal successor to both the
transferring and assuming institutions,
the surviving entity shall provide any
required certification.
(c) Filing. The certification required
by paragraph (a) of this section shall be
provided within 30 calendar days after
the assumption takes effect, and shall be
submitted to the appropriate Regional
Director of the FDIC’s Division of
Supervision and Consumer Protection,
as defined in 12 CFR 303.2(g).
(d) Evidence of assumption. The
receipt by the FDIC of an accurate
certification for a total assumption as
required by paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of
this section shall constitute satisfactory
evidence of such deposit assumption, as
required by section 8(q) of the FDI Act
(12 U.S.C. 1818(q)), and the insured
status of the transferring institution
shall terminate on the date of the receipt
of the certification. In appropriate
circumstances, the FDIC, in its sole
discretion, may require additional
information, or may consider other
evidence of a deposit assumption to
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constitute satisfactory evidence of such
assumption for purposes of section 8(q).
(e) Issuance of an order. The
Executive Secretary, upon request from
the Director of the Division of
Supervision and Consumer Protection
and with the concurrence of the General
Counsel, or their respective designees,
shall issue an order terminating the
insured status of the transferring
insured depository institution as of the
date of receipt by the FDIC of
satisfactory evidence of such
assumption, pursuant to section 8(q) of
the FDI Act and this regulation.
Generally, no order shall be issued,
under this paragraph, and insured status
shall be cancelled by operation of law:
(1) If the charter of the transferring
institution has been cancelled, revoked,
rescinded, or otherwise terminated by
operation of applicable state or federal
statutes or regulations, or by action of
the chartering authority for the
transferring institution essentially
contemporaneously, that is, generally
within five business days after all
deposits have been assumed; or
(2) If the transferring institution is an
insured depository institution in default
and for which the FDIC has been
appointed receiver.
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§ 307.3 Notice to depositors when insured
status is voluntarily terminated and
deposits are not assumed.
(a) Notice required. An insured
depository institution that has obtained
authority from the FDIC to terminate its
insured status under sections 8(a), 8(p)
or 18(i)(3) of the FDI Act without its
deposit liabilities being assumed by one
or more insured depository institutions
shall provide to each of its depositors,
at the depositor’s last known address of
record on the books of the institution,
prior written notification of the date the
institution’s insured status shall
terminate.
(b) Prior approval of notice. The
insured depository institution shall
provide the appropriate Regional
Director of the FDIC’s Division of
Supervision and Consumer Protection,
as defined in 12 CFR 303.2(g), a copy of
the proposed notice for approval. After
being approved, the notice shall be
provided to depositors by the insured
depository institution at the time and in
the manner specified by the appropriate
Regional Director.
(c) Form of notice. The notice to
depositors required by paragraph (a) of
this section shall be provided on the
official letterhead of the insured
depository institution, shall bear the
signature of a duly authorized officer,
and, unless otherwise specified by the
appropriate Regional Director, may
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follow the form of the notice contained
in Appendix B of this part.
(d) Other requirements possible. The
FDIC may require the insured
depository institution to take such other
actions as the FDIC considers necessary
and appropriate for the protection of
depositors.
Appendix A to Part 307—Transferring
Institution Letterhead
[Date]
[Name and Address of appropriate FDIC
Regional Director]
SUBJECT: Certification of Total Assumption
of Deposits
This certification is being provided
pursuant to 12 U.S.C. 1818(q) and 12 CFR
307.2. On [state the date the deposit
assumption took effect], [state the name of
the depository institution assuming the
deposit liabilities] assumed all of the deposits
of [state the name and location of the
transferring institution whose deposits were
assumed]. [If applicable, state the date and
method by which the transferring
institution’s authority to engage in banking
was or will be terminated.] Please contact the
undersigned, at [telephone number], if
additional information is needed.
Sincerely,
By:
[Name and Title of Authorized
Representative]
Appendix B to Part 307—Institution
Letterhead
[Date]
[Name and Address of Depositor]
SUBJECT: Notice to Depositor of Voluntary
Termination of Insured Status
The insured status of [name of insured
depository institution], under the provisions
of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, will
terminate as of the close of business on [state
the date] (‘‘termination date’’). Insured
deposits in the [name of insured depository
institution] on the termination date, less all
withdrawals from such deposits made
subsequent to that date, will continue to be
insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, to the extent provided by law,
until [state the date]. The Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation will not insure any
new deposits or additions to existing
deposits made by you after the termination
date.
This Notice is being provided pursuant to
12 CFR 307.3.
Please contact [name of institution official
in charge of depositor inquiries], at [name
and address of insured depository
institution] if additional information is
needed regarding this Notice or the insured
status of your account(s).
Sincerely,
By:
[Name and Title of Authorized
Representative]
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By order of the Board of Directors, at
Washington, DC, on this 10th day of
February, 2006.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Robert Feldman,
Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 06–1568 Filed 2–17–06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6714–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 39
[Docket No. FAA–2006–23935; Directorate
Identifier 2005–NM–060–AD; Amendment
39–14492; AD 2006–04–11]
RIN 2120–AA64
Airworthiness Directives; Airbus Model
A321–100 Series Airplanes
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Final rule; request for
comments.
AGENCY:
SUMMARY: The FAA is superseding an
existing airworthiness directive (AD),
which applies to certain Airbus Model
A321–111, –112, and –131 series
airplanes. That AD currently requires
repetitive inspections to detect fatigue
cracking in the area surrounding certain
attachment holes of the forward pintle
fittings of the main landing gear (MLG)
and the actuating cylinder anchorage
fittings on the inner rear spar; and
repair, if necessary. The existing AD
also provides for optional terminating
action for the repetitive inspections.
This AD adds inspections of three
additional mounting holes and revises
the thresholds for the currently required
inspections. This AD results from
manufacturer analysis of the fatigue and
damage tolerance of the area
surrounding certain mounting holes of
the MLG. We are issuing this AD to
detect and correct fatigue cracking on
the inner rear spar of the wings, which
could result in reduced structural
integrity of the airplane.
DATES: This AD becomes effective
March 8, 2006.
The Director of the Federal Register
approved the incorporation by reference
of certain publications listed in the AD
as of March 8, 2006.
The incorporation by reference of
Airbus Service Bulletin A320–57–1101,
Revision 02, dated October 25, 2001, as
listed in the regulations, was approved
previously by the Director of the Federal
Register as of April 21, 2004 (69 FR
17906, April 6, 2004).
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 71, Number 34 (Tuesday, February 21, 2006)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 8789-8792]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 06-1568]
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Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains regulatory documents
having general applicability and legal effect, most of which are keyed
to and codified in the Code of Federal Regulations, which is published
under 50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by the Superintendent of Documents.
Prices of new books are listed in the first FEDERAL REGISTER issue of each
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Federal Register / Vol. 71, No. 34 / Tuesday, February 21, 2006 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 8789]]
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
12 CFR Part 307
RIN 3064-AC93
Certification of Assumption of Deposits and Notification of
Changes of Insured Status
AGENCY: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC).
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: The FDIC is adopting a final rule which clarifies and
simplifies the procedures to be used when all of the deposit
liabilities of an insured depository institution have been assumed by
another insured depository institution or institutions. The final
regulation would modify the current rule's requirements by: Making
clear that an insured institution is required to file a
``certification'' when all of its deposits are assumed, but no
certification is required if only a portion of its deposits are
assumed; and requiring that the transferring institution, or its legal
successor, file the certification rather than the assuming institution.
The rule also clarifies that the transferring institution's status as
an insured institution automatically terminates upon the FDIC's receipt
of an accurate certification stating that: All of its deposits have
been assumed by an insured depository institution or institutions, and
the legal authority of the transferring institution to accept deposits
has been terminated contemporaneously with the deposit assumption. In
such a situation, and in a situation in which the FDIC has been
appointed receiver of an insured institution, little practical purpose
would be served by an order terminating deposit insurance, and the
final rule provides that no such order will be issued in such
situations. Finally, the rule would provide more specificity concerning
how notice is given to depositors when an insured depository
institution voluntarily terminates its insured status without the
assumption of all of its deposits by an insured institution. In sum,
the revisions would make the insurance termination process somewhat
easier for insured depository institutions, and somewhat more efficient
for the FDIC.
DATES: This rule will be effective on March 23, 2006.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Donald R. Hamm, Review Examiner,
Division of Supervision and Consumer Protection, (202) 898-3528; Thomas
Nixon, Counsel, Legal Division, (202) 898-8766; Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street, NW., Washington, DC 20429.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
On October 14, 2005, the FDIC published a notice of proposed
rulemaking concerning its Part 307 (12 CFR) ``Notification of Changes
in Insured Status.'' (70 FR 60015) The rule currently has two sections.
Section 307.1 applies to situations where one or more insured
institutions have assumed the deposit liabilities of another insured
institution. Section 307.2 applies to situations where an insured
institution seeks to terminate its insured status without its deposit
liabilities being assumed. The FDIC received no comments in response to
the notice of proposed rulemaking. The FDIC has determined to make its
October 2005 proposed revision to Part 307 final. A section-by-section
analysis follows.
II. Revised Caption; New Section 307.1--Scope and Purpose
The caption of the Part would be changed from ``Notification of
Changes of Insured Status'' to ``Certification of Assumption of
Deposits and Notification of Changes of Insured Status'' to make it
more descriptive of the Part's content and alert institutions that the
Part addresses deposit assumptions as well as changes in insured
status.
The current Part 307 does not have a scope and purpose section. In
addition, since Part 307 had not been revised since 1983, Sec. Sec.
307.1 and 307.2 continued to refer to an ``insured bank'' rather than
to an ``insured depository institution,'' consistent with the changes
made to the FDIC's responsibilities and terminology by sections 201 and
202 of the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act
of 1989.\1\ The final rule adds a new Sec. 307.1 to describe the
purpose of the Part and to indicate that the Part applies to insured
depository institutions as defined in section 3(c)(2) of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(c)(2), FDI Act). The existing
Sec. Sec. 307.1 and 307.2 are redesignated as Sec. Sec. 307.2 and
307.3, respectively.
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\1\ Pub. L. 101-73, 103 Stat. 103.
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III. Section 307.2--Certification of Assumption of Deposit Liabilities
The current section 307.1 implements section 8(q) of the FDI Act
(12 U.S.C. 1818(q)), which states:
Whenever the liabilities of an insured depository institution
for deposits shall have been assumed by another insured depository
institution or depository institutions, whether by way of merger,
consolidation, or other statutory assumption, or pursuant to
contract
(1) The insured status of the depository institution whose
liabilities are so assumed shall terminate on the date of receipt by
the Corporation of satisfactory evidence of such assumption;
(2) The separate insurance of all deposits so assumed shall
terminate at the end of six months from the date such assumption
takes effect or, in the case of any time deposit, the earliest
maturity date after the six-month period * * *
All assumptions of insured deposit liabilities, whether a ``total''
assumption of all the transferring institution's deposits or an
assumption of only a portion of its deposits (a ``partial''
assumption), by an insured institution are subject to the Bank Merger
Act and require the prior written approval of the ``responsible
agency.'' \2\ The responsible agency is the primary Federal regulator
of the assuming institution.
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\2\ FDI Act section 18(c)(2), (12 U.S.C. 1828(c)(2)), reads as
follows:
No insured depository institution shall merge or consolidate
with any other insured depository institution or, either directly or
indirectly, acquire the assets of, or assume liability to pay any
deposits made in, any other insured depository institution except
with the prior written approval of the responsible agency * * *
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The present section 307.1 requires the institution assuming
deposits to certify to the FDIC that it has assumed the deposits. It
does not specify whether a certification is required only where a total
deposit assumption occurs or
[[Page 8790]]
whether a certification is also required for a partial deposit
assumption, for example, when a single branch of an institution is
sold. This rule clarifies that a certification is required only when
there has been a total assumption of deposits. No certification is
required in the case of a partial transfer of deposits. Clarifying that
no certification is necessary for a partial assumption is consistent
with the FDIC's goal of reducing regulatory burden pursuant to Section
2222 of the Economic Growth and Regulatory Paperwork Reduction Act of
1996 \3\ while obtaining sufficient information for the proper
implementation of section 8(q) of the FDI Act.
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\3\ Pub. L. 104-208, Sept. 30, 1996, 12 U.S.C. 3311.
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There may be situations in which an insured depository institution
disposes of all of its deposits through a series of simultaneous
partial deposit assumptions involving multiple assuming institutions,
rather than through a single total deposit assumption by one assuming
institution. An example of this would be where all of the deposits of a
transferring institution were assumed through a series of branch
acquisitions by different assuming institutions that occurred on the
same day. Viewed cumulatively, these partial assumptions would amount
to a total assumption of the deposits of the transferring institution
making certification necessary. In this situation, this final rule
would require that the transferring institution file a certification.
The current section 307.1 also does not distinguish between a
deposit assumption involving operating institutions versus an
assumption involving an institution in default and in FDIC
receivership. The FDIC plays an integral role in the transfer and
assumption of deposit liabilities when it is appointed as receiver for
an insured depository institution in default, and has in its possession
information regarding the deposit transfer and assumption transaction.
Section 307.2(a) of this final rule creates an explicit exception from
the certification requirement when the deposit liabilities are being
transferred from an insured depository institution in default and the
FDIC has been appointed as receiver.
Who must make the certification. As noted, the current section
307.1 requires the assuming institution to provide certification to the
FDIC. This final rule requires the transferring institution, or its
legal successor (``transferring institution''), to make the
certification. Generally, an institution transferring deposit
liabilities will be in a better position than the assuming institution
to know whether the transfer constitutes all of its deposits, thus
triggering application of Part 307 and FDI Act section 8(q). This is
particularly true in the case of an institution that transfers all of
its deposit liabilities through multiple transfers to a variety of
assuming institutions. In such a situation, it may be difficult for the
assuming institutions to have sufficient knowledge of key facts in
order to make certifications that make clear whether the transferring
institution continues to hold insured deposits. In a merger or
consolidation there may be only one surviving entity which is the legal
successor to both the transferring and assuming institutions. In such
instances, that surviving entity would provide any required
certification.
Content and form of the certification. Section 307.2(b) of this
final rule establishes the certification's content. The requirements
are similar to the current section 307.1 but clarify certain issues,
such as where certifications should be filed with the FDIC, and the
need for the certification to be on the letterhead of the transferring
institution or its legal successor and to be signed by an authorized
official. The rule also requires an institution that is
contemporaneously relinquishing its authority to engage in the business
of receiving deposits to provide the date that its authority terminated
(or will terminate) as well as the method of termination (e.g., whether
by the surrender of its charter, the cancellation of its charter or
license to conduct a banking business, or otherwise). As discussed
below, this information will be used by the FDIC to evaluate the need
to issue an order terminating insurance. To assist the industry with
compliance, the rule provides a template (Appendix A) that may be used
to satisfy the section 307.2 certification requirements.
Evidence of Assumption. Similar to the current section 307.1,
section 307.2(d) of this final rule states that the receipt by the FDIC
of an accurate certification for a total assumption as required by
paragraphs (a), (b) and (c) of section 307.2 shall constitute
satisfactory evidence of such deposit assumption, as required by
section 8(q) of the FDI Act, and the insured status of the transferring
institution shall terminate on the date of the receipt of the
certification. The term ``accurate'' has been included to indicate that
a materially inaccurate certification will not trigger the automatic
termination of the transferring institution's insured status. Section
307.2(d) allows the FDIC to consider other evidence, in addition to a
certification, of a total deposit assumption to constitute satisfactory
evidence of an assumption for the purposes of section 8(q).
Issuance of an Order. As noted in the October 2005 notice of
proposed rulemaking, section 8(q) can be construed as automatically
terminating an institution's insured status upon the FDIC's receipt of
satisfactory evidence of a total assumption. The FDIC did not generally
issue orders terminating the insured status of transferring
institutions before 1983 when the rule was last revised, and the
current section 307.1 does not discuss the issuance of such orders. In
most cases of total deposit assumptions, the transferring institution's
authority to engage in banking is contemporaneously cancelled. In such
a situation, an FDIC order terminating insurance has no practical
effect and is unnecessary. Accordingly, under this final rule no order
terminating an institution's insured status will generally be issued
when the transferring institution's authority to engage in banking is
cancelled contemporaneously (i.e., generally within five business days
after all deposits have been assumed). The rule also will not require
orders when deposits are transferred and assumed after a default when
the FDIC has been appointed as receiver of an insured institution.
The rule does provide for the issuance of an FDIC order terminating
the insured status of a transferring institution in the relatively
limited circumstance in which a total transfer of deposit liabilities
has occurred but the transferring institution's charter is not
contemporaneously cancelled (the proposed rule had referred to this as
an order confirming the termination of insurance). Absent the entry of
an order terminating insured status, an institution in such a situation
might attempt to resume accepting deposits sometime after the
assumption transaction occurs. An institution might also attempt to
sell its charter, which could allow what is in fact a new entity to
conduct banking operations without FDIC review and approval.\4\
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\4\ Such a sale would require prior approval by the primary
Federal regulator under the Bank Merger Act or the Change in Bank
Control Act.
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IV. Section 307.3--Notice to Depositors When Insurance Is Voluntarily
Terminated and Deposits Are Not Assumed
An insured depository institution that proposes to voluntarily
terminate its insured status without transferring all of its deposits
to an FDIC-insured
[[Page 8791]]
institution must obtain the FDIC's permission.\5\ The current Sec.
307.2 requires an insured bank or insured branch of a foreign bank
seeking to voluntarily terminate its insured status, but whose deposits
will not be assumed by another insured depository institution, to
provide notice to its depositors of the date its insured status will
terminate. A copy of this notice must be provided to and approved by
the appropriate Regional Director of the Division of Supervision and
Consumer Protection prior to the notice being distributed to the
institution's depositors. This final rule clarifies that the notice
must be on the institution's letterhead, signed by a duly authorized
officer and sent to the depositor's last known address on the
institution's books. To assist the industry with compliance, the rule
provides a template (Appendix B) that may be used to satisfy the
section 307.3 certification requirements.
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\5\ FDI Act section 18(i)(3), 12 U.S.C. 1828(i)(3). This rule
does not affect the requirements for FDIC approval of voluntary
deposit insurance terminations under sections 8(a) and 8(p) of the
FDI Act or for prior written consent for the conversion of an
insured depository institution into a noninsured bank or institution
as required by section 18(i)(3).
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V. Regulatory Analysis and Procedure
A. Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et
seq.), the FDIC may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not
required to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays
a currently valid Office of Management and Budget (OMB) control number.
The collection of information contained in this rule was submitted to
OMB for review and was approved under control number 3064-0124, which
will expire on December 31, 2008.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
Pursuant to section 605(b) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.), the FDIC certifies that this rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
The rule will reduce regulatory burden by eliminating the need for a
certification to be filed with the FDIC when the liability for some,
but not all, of the deposits of an insured institution are transferred
to another institution. A certification requires a minimal amount of
time and resources since it reports information readily available to
the institution making the certification.
C. Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act
The Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996
(SBREFA) (Title II, Pub. L. 104-121) provides generally for agencies to
report rules to Congress and the General Accounting Office (GAO) for
review. The reporting requirement is triggered when a Federal agency
issues a final rule. The FDIC will file the appropriate reports with
Congress and the GAO as required by SBREFA. The Office of Management
and Budget has determined that the rule does not constitute a ``major
rule'' as defined by SBREFA.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 307
Bank deposit insurance, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
0
For the reasons set forth in the preamble, the Board of Directors of
the FDIC hereby revises Part 307 of Title 12 of the Code of Federal
Regulations to read as follows:
PART 307--CERTIFICATION OF ASSUMPTION OF DEPOSITS AND NOTIFICATION
OF CHANGES OF INSURED STATUS
Sec.
307.1 Scope and purpose.
307.2 Certification of assumption of deposit liabilities.
307.3 Notice to depositors when insured status is voluntarily
terminated and deposits are not assumed.
Appendix A to Part 307--Transferring Institution Letterhead
Appendix B to Part 307--Institution Letterhead
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1818(a)(6); 1818(q); and 1819(a) [Tenth].
Sec. 307.1 Scope and purpose.
(a) Scope. This Part applies to all insured depository
institutions, as defined in section 3(c)(2) of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act (FDI Act) (12 U.S.C. 1813(c)(2)).
(b) Purpose. This Part sets forth the rules governing:
(1) The time and manner for providing certification to the FDIC
regarding the assumption of all of the deposit liabilities of an
insured depository institution by one or more insured depository
institutions; and
(2) The notification that an insured depository institution shall
provide its depositors when a depository institution's insured status
is being voluntarily terminated without its deposits being assumed by
one or more insured depository institutions.
Sec. 307.2 Certification of assumption of deposit liabilities.
(a) When certification is required. Whenever all of the deposit
liabilities of an insured depository institution are assumed by one or
more insured depository institutions by merger, consolidation, other
statutory assumption, or by contract, the transferring insured
depository institution, or its legal successor, shall provide an
accurate written certification to the FDIC that its deposit liabilities
have been assumed. No certification shall be required when deposit
liabilities are assumed by an operating insured depository institution
from an insured depository institution in default, as defined in
section 3(x)(1) of the FDI Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(x)(1)), and that has
been placed under FDIC receivership.
(b) Certification requirements. The certification required by
paragraph (a) of this section shall be provided on official letterhead
of the transferring insured depository institution or its legal
successor, signed by a duly authorized official, and state the date the
assumption took effect. The certification shall indicate the date on
which the transferring institution's authority to engage in banking has
terminated or will terminate as well as the method of termination
(e.g., whether by the surrender of its charter, by the cancellation of
its charter or license to conduct a banking business, or otherwise).
The certification may follow the form contained in Appendix A of this
part. In a merger or consolidation where there is only one surviving
entity which is the legal successor to both the transferring and
assuming institutions, the surviving entity shall provide any required
certification.
(c) Filing. The certification required by paragraph (a) of this
section shall be provided within 30 calendar days after the assumption
takes effect, and shall be submitted to the appropriate Regional
Director of the FDIC's Division of Supervision and Consumer Protection,
as defined in 12 CFR 303.2(g).
(d) Evidence of assumption. The receipt by the FDIC of an accurate
certification for a total assumption as required by paragraphs (a), (b)
and (c) of this section shall constitute satisfactory evidence of such
deposit assumption, as required by section 8(q) of the FDI Act (12
U.S.C. 1818(q)), and the insured status of the transferring institution
shall terminate on the date of the receipt of the certification. In
appropriate circumstances, the FDIC, in its sole discretion, may
require additional information, or may consider other evidence of a
deposit assumption to
[[Page 8792]]
constitute satisfactory evidence of such assumption for purposes of
section 8(q).
(e) Issuance of an order. The Executive Secretary, upon request
from the Director of the Division of Supervision and Consumer
Protection and with the concurrence of the General Counsel, or their
respective designees, shall issue an order terminating the insured
status of the transferring insured depository institution as of the
date of receipt by the FDIC of satisfactory evidence of such
assumption, pursuant to section 8(q) of the FDI Act and this
regulation. Generally, no order shall be issued, under this paragraph,
and insured status shall be cancelled by operation of law:
(1) If the charter of the transferring institution has been
cancelled, revoked, rescinded, or otherwise terminated by operation of
applicable state or federal statutes or regulations, or by action of
the chartering authority for the transferring institution essentially
contemporaneously, that is, generally within five business days after
all deposits have been assumed; or
(2) If the transferring institution is an insured depository
institution in default and for which the FDIC has been appointed
receiver.
Sec. 307.3 Notice to depositors when insured status is voluntarily
terminated and deposits are not assumed.
(a) Notice required. An insured depository institution that has
obtained authority from the FDIC to terminate its insured status under
sections 8(a), 8(p) or 18(i)(3) of the FDI Act without its deposit
liabilities being assumed by one or more insured depository
institutions shall provide to each of its depositors, at the
depositor's last known address of record on the books of the
institution, prior written notification of the date the institution's
insured status shall terminate.
(b) Prior approval of notice. The insured depository institution
shall provide the appropriate Regional Director of the FDIC's Division
of Supervision and Consumer Protection, as defined in 12 CFR 303.2(g),
a copy of the proposed notice for approval. After being approved, the
notice shall be provided to depositors by the insured depository
institution at the time and in the manner specified by the appropriate
Regional Director.
(c) Form of notice. The notice to depositors required by paragraph
(a) of this section shall be provided on the official letterhead of the
insured depository institution, shall bear the signature of a duly
authorized officer, and, unless otherwise specified by the appropriate
Regional Director, may follow the form of the notice contained in
Appendix B of this part.
(d) Other requirements possible. The FDIC may require the insured
depository institution to take such other actions as the FDIC considers
necessary and appropriate for the protection of depositors.
Appendix A to Part 307--Transferring Institution Letterhead
[Date]
[Name and Address of appropriate FDIC Regional Director]
SUBJECT: Certification of Total Assumption of Deposits
This certification is being provided pursuant to 12 U.S.C.
1818(q) and 12 CFR 307.2. On [state the date the deposit assumption
took effect], [state the name of the depository institution assuming
the deposit liabilities] assumed all of the deposits of [state the
name and location of the transferring institution whose deposits
were assumed]. [If applicable, state the date and method by which
the transferring institution's authority to engage in banking was or
will be terminated.] Please contact the undersigned, at [telephone
number], if additional information is needed.
Sincerely,
By:
[Name and Title of Authorized Representative]
Appendix B to Part 307--Institution Letterhead
[Date]
[Name and Address of Depositor]
SUBJECT: Notice to Depositor of Voluntary Termination of Insured
Status
The insured status of [name of insured depository institution],
under the provisions of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, will
terminate as of the close of business on [state the date]
(``termination date''). Insured deposits in the [name of insured
depository institution] on the termination date, less all
withdrawals from such deposits made subsequent to that date, will
continue to be insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation,
to the extent provided by law, until [state the date]. The Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation will not insure any new deposits or
additions to existing deposits made by you after the termination
date.
This Notice is being provided pursuant to 12 CFR 307.3.
Please contact [name of institution official in charge of
depositor inquiries], at [name and address of insured depository
institution] if additional information is needed regarding this
Notice or the insured status of your account(s).
Sincerely,
By:
[Name and Title of Authorized Representative]
By order of the Board of Directors, at Washington, DC, on this
10th day of February, 2006.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Robert Feldman,
Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 06-1568 Filed 2-17-06; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6714-01-P