Deposit Insurance Regulations; Temporary Increase in Standard Coverage Amount; Mortgage Servicing Accounts; Revocable Trust Accounts; International Banking; Foreign Banks, 47711-47718 [E9-22406]
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47711
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
Vol. 74, No. 179
Thursday, September 17, 2009
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 Parts 330 and 347
RIN 3064–AD36
Deposit Insurance Regulations;
Temporary Increase in Standard
Coverage Amount; Mortgage Servicing
Accounts; Revocable Trust Accounts;
International Banking; Foreign Banks
AGENCY: Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC).
ACTION:
Final rule.
SUMMARY: The FDIC is adopting a final
rule amending its deposit insurance
regulations to: Reflect Congress’s
extension, until December 31, 2013, of
the temporary increase in the standard
maximum deposit insurance amount
(‘‘SMDIA’’) from $100,000 to $250,000;
finalize the interim rule, with minor
modifications, on revocable trust
accounts; and finalize the interim rule
on mortgage servicing accounts. The
FDIC is also adopting technical,
conforming amendments to its
international banking regulations to
substitute several existing references to
‘‘$100,000’’ with references to the
SMDIA.
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DATES: Effective Date: The final rule is
effective October 19, 2009.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Joseph A. DiNuzzo, Counsel, Legal
Division (202) 898–7349; Christopher
Hencke, Counsel, Legal Division (202)
898–8839; Daniel G. Lonergan, Counsel,
Legal Division (202) 898–6791; or James
V. Deveney, Section Chief, Deposit
Insurance Section, Division of
Supervision and Compliance (202) 898–
6687, Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, Washington, DC 20429.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
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Overview
In the last quarter of 2008, the FDIC
issued interim rules on three depositinsurance related matters: (1) The
temporary increase in the SMDIA from
$100,000 to $250,000; (2) revisions to
the rules on revocable trust accounts;
and (3) revisions to the rules on
mortgage servicing accounts. In this
final rule, the FDIC is amending its
insurance regulations to reflect
Congress’s extension of the temporary
increase in the SMDIA (from $100,000
to $250,000) through December 31,
2013, and finalizing the interim rules on
revocable trust accounts and mortgage
servicing accounts. The four-year
extension of the increase in the SMDIA,
which necessitates revisions to the
deposit insurance regulations and
examples therein, also affords the FDIC
with the opportunity to now make
technical amendments to the FDIC’s
international banking regulations (12
CFR Part 347) to replace several
references therein to a ‘‘$100,000’’
benchmark with references to the
SMDIA, consistent with the Federal
Deposit Insurance Reform Conforming
Amendments Act of 2005 (Pub. L. 109–
173).
I. Extension of Temporary Increase in
the SMDIA
Background
The Emergency Economic
Stabilization Act of 2008 temporarily
increased the SMDIA from $100,000 to
$250,000, effective October 3, 2008,
through December 31, 2009.1 On
October 17, 2008, the FDIC adopted an
interim rule amending its deposit
insurance regulations to reflect this
temporary increase in the SMDIA.2
Subsequent to the issuance of this
interim rule, on May 20, 2009, the
President signed the Helping Families
Save Their Homes Act of 2009, which,
among other provisions, extended the
temporary increase in the SMDIA from
December 31, 2009 to December 31,
2013.3 After December 31, 2013, the
SMDIA will, by law, return to $100,000.
The Final Rule
The final rule amends the FDIC’s
deposit insurance rules (12 CFR Part
330) to indicate that the increase in the
1 Public
Law 110–343 (Oct. 3, 2008).
FR 61658 (Oct. 17, 2008).
3 Public Law 111–22 (May 20, 2009).
SMDIA from $100,000 to $250,000 is
effective through December 31, 2013. In
light of this long-term extension of the
SMDIA, the FDIC also has updated the
deposit insurance coverage examples
provided in the insurance rules to
reflect $250,000 as the SMDIA. The
FDIC believes this will help to avoid
any confusion that might result among
depositors and financial institution
employees if the examples continue to
employ the $100,000 SMDIA and
related numerical values.
II. Deposit Insurance Coverage of
Revocable Trust Accounts
The Interim Revocable Trust Account
Rule
In September 2008, the FDIC issued
an interim rule designed to make the
coverage rules for revocable trust
accounts easier to understand and
apply.4 In particular, the interim rule
eliminated the concept of ‘‘qualifying
beneficiaries.’’ The elimination of the
‘‘qualifying beneficiary’’ concept was
intended to achieve greater fairness by
broadening the scope of eligible
beneficiaries and facilitate deposit
insurance determinations on revocable
trust accounts.
Also, the interim rule provided a twopart deposit insurance coverage
calculation method for revocable trust
accounts. Under the rule, where a trust
account owner has five times the
SMDIA ($1,250,000) or less in revocable
trust accounts at one FDIC-insured
institution, the owner is insured up to
the SMDIA ($250,000) per beneficiary—
without regard to the exact beneficial
interest of each beneficiary in the trust.
For a revocable trust account owner
with both more than $1,250,000 and
more than five different beneficiaries
named in the trust(s), the interim rule
insures the owner for the greater of
either: $1,250,000, or the aggregate total
of all the beneficiaries’ actual interests
in the trust(s) limited to $250,000 for
each beneficiary.
In addition, the interim rule sought to
simplify the application of the deposit
insurance rules to both life-estate
interests and to irrevocable trusts
springing from a revocable trust. The
interim rule simplified the deposit
insurance coverage rules to deem the
value of each life estate interest to be the
SMDIA amount. Thus, for example,
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where the owner creates a living trust
account and provides a life estate
interest for the owner’s spouse, in
addition to specific bequests to named
beneficiaries, the spousal interest is
deemed to be the SMDIA.
Another complication is presented
when an irrevocable living trust springs
from a revocable trust upon the owner’s
death. Under the prior rules, the
coverage of the trust account often
would decrease because the FDIC’s rules
governing irrevocable trust accounts
were stricter than the rules governing
revocable trust accounts.5 To prevent
this decrease in coverage, the interim
rule provided that irrevocable trust
accounts would be governed by the
same rules as revocable trust accounts
when the irrevocable trust is created
through the death of the owner (grantor)
of a revocable living trust.
Finally, the interim rule solicited
specific comment on the effect that the
revocable trust simplifications
enunciated in the interim rule might
have on the Deposit Insurance Fund
(‘‘DIF’’) reserve ratio.6
The FDIC solicited comment on all
aspects of the interim rule, and
explicitly solicited comment on: (1)
Whether the $1,250,000 threshold is a
proper benchmark for distinguishing
coverage for revocable trust owners
based on the beneficial interests of the
trust beneficiaries; (2) whether the
FDIC’s irrevocable trust accounts rules
should be revised in order that all trusts
are covered by similar rules; and (3)
what effect the interim rule will have on
the level of insured deposits.
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Comments Received on the Interim
Revocable Trust Rule
The FDIC received eighteen
comments on the interim rule for
5 For example, assume that account owner ‘‘A’’
establishes a living trust that names three children
as beneficiaries. Assume also that the trust
agreement specifies that the revocable trust shall
become an irrevocable trust upon the owner’s
(grantor’s) death. In this example, during the life of
the owner, the insurance coverage of an account in
the name of the trust would be determined by
multiplying the number of beneficiaries (3) by the
SMDIA ($250,000). Thus, the account would be
insured up to $750,000. Following the death of the
owner, however, the coverage would change
because the trust itself would change from a
revocable trust to an irrevocable trust. Under the
prior rules, the coverage of an irrevocable trust
account would depend upon whether the interests
of the beneficiaries were contingent (for example,
contingent upon graduating from college or
contingent upon the discretion of the trustee).
Assuming that all beneficial interests were
contingent, the coverage of the account would be
$250,000. Thus, in this example, the coverage
would decrease from $750,000 to $250,000
following the death of the owner (and following the
expiration of the FDIC’s six-month grace period).
6 The reserve ratio is determined by dividing the
DIF fund balance by the estimated insured deposits
by the industry, 12 U.S.C. 1817(1).
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revocable trust accounts. These
comments included one from a large
bank trade association representing all
types of banks, one from a bank trade
association representing community
banks, and one from a smaller trade
association representing community and
regional banks, and thrifts, operating in
one particular State. The FDIC also
received fourteen comments from
private citizens and one comment from
some members of a national trade
association for lawyers. Overall, these
comments were highly favorable.
Eight commenters addressed the
interim rule’s overall goal of, and
success at achieving, simplification, and
applauded the FDIC’s efforts to clarify
the deposit insurance rules. One
commenter advocated greater clarity in
the application of the revocable trust
rule’s coverage of trust accounts with
balances exceeding $1,250,000 and
naming more than five beneficiaries,
and another generally asserted that the
rule contained ambiguities.
With regard to specific issues within
the interim rule, ten commenters
expressed strong support for the interim
rule’s deletion of the former rule’s
‘‘qualifying beneficiary’’ concept. One
commenter advocated that the effective
date of this change be made retroactive
to an earlier point in time in order to
provide favorable treatment to
depositors who had uninsured deposits
in bank failures occurring in early 2008.
In response to the FDIC’s specific
solicitation of comment on the interim
rule’s use of a $500,000 benchmark
(presently $1,250,000) for delineating
separate deposit insurance treatment for
higher-dollar revocable trust interests,
five commenters deemed this to be a
reasonable benchmark, although one
advocated that the amount be raised
significantly. One commenter observed
that because most owners of a revocable
trust account at an insured depository
institution will commonly fall below the
benchmark, the interim rule’s lowerdollar coverage approach—that fails to
distinguish unequal beneficial
interests—will simplify coverage.
In response to the interim rule’s
specific solicitation of comment
regarding the Deposit Insurance Fund,
one commenter suggested that it is
likely difficult to clearly determine
whether the interim rule will result in
a net increase in the level of insured
deposits. In short, the commenter
postulated that, while the increase in
deposit insurance limits and other
changes made in the interim rule may
permit more deposits to be deemed
‘‘insured,’’ it may also be the case that
the rule’s effect will be to simply permit
depositors to leave higher account sums
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at one insured depository institution
instead of having to spread such
revocable trust deposits over multiple
institutions.
Four commenters expressly requested
that the FDIC clarify the rules regarding
the proper manner of ‘‘titling’’ a
payable-on-death (‘‘POD’’) account in
order to ensure that the revocable trust
account funds are fully insured.
Specifically, one citizen commenter
relayed that she had received conflicting
advice from numerous local banks as to
whether or not the title of her revocable
trust POD account had to expressly
include the acronym ‘‘POD,’’ the phrase
‘‘in trust for’’ (‘‘ITF’’), or whether it had
to include the name of a beneficiary in
the title, either along with, or without,
such acronyms. The commenter was
unsure whether current FDIC rules
deem it sufficient that the other account
records at the depository institution
contain this information. This
commenter advocated that the burden
should not fall on the public to learn
and clarify the titling rules. Another
commenter advocated eliminating the
requirement that the POD account title
contain the POD/ITF designation, and
asserted that it should be sufficient that
the owner’s account records at the bank
reflect the beneficiaries. A third
commenter expressed the view that
banks appear to take different
approaches to titling these accounts and
recommended uniform rules to address
this titling issue. Two of these
commenters suggested that some banks’
software does not easily permit the
addition of ‘‘POD’’ or ‘‘ITF’’ to account
titles. One bank trade association
observed that the purpose of the account
titling requirement is to facilitate FDIC
staff’s ability, at resolution, to quickly
determine deposit insurance eligibility,
and asked whether a bank’s utilization
of a computer code in the title to denote
account ownership could be deemed
sufficient to meet the revocable trust
account titling requirements. On a
separate titling issue, one commenter
asked that the FDIC clarify that an
owner may, in naming a POD account,
name a revocable trust as a beneficiary.
The FDIC expressly solicited
comment on whether the FDIC’s
irrevocable trust account rules should
be revised so that all trusts are covered
by substantially the same rules. Four
comments addressed the interim rule’s
continuing application of the revocable
trust rules to a living trust after the
death of the owner (and
notwithstanding the fact that such trust
converts to an irrevocable trust upon
such event), and all commented
favorably. These commenters also urged
that the deposit insurance rules for
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irrevocable and revocable trusts should
be the same.
One commenter also expressly
advocated that the FDIC clarify that
when a ‘‘sole proprietor’’ is a named
beneficiary, then the sole proprietor is
covered by the rule in his or her
individual capacity. Lastly, one
commenter recommended that the
definition of ‘‘non-contingent trust
interest’’ be expanded to include the
interest of a discretionary beneficiary
and presumptive remainderman of a
discretionary trust.
The Final Revocable Trust Rule
The final rule closely follows the
interim rule, with minor revisions.
Notably, in light of the statutory
extension of the temporary increase in
the SMDIA, the final rule reflects the
new $250,000 SMDIA, the new
$1,250,000 benchmark for revocable
trust account coverage following this
change, and revised examples
employing both of these dollar values
and revised values for the hypothetical
sums within the examples to enhance
their illustrative utility. We also have
provided additional examples
illustrating how the revised rules would
apply. Pursuant to statute, December 31,
2013 is the ending date for the $250,000
SMDIA, and after this date the SMDIA
will revert to $100,000. At that time the
FDIC will revisit the need to revise these
limits and examples.
In response to several specific
questions raised by commenters about
the titling requirements for revocable
trust accounts, clarifying language has
been incorporated into the final rule to
address titling of revocable trust
accounts. Simply, the rule provides that,
for revocable trust accounts, ‘‘title’’
includes an insured depository
institution’s electronic deposit account
records. In addressing this issue, the
FDIC is retaining the requirement that
the title of a revocable trust account
identify the account as such in order to
qualify for coverage under the revocable
trust account rules; however, the final
rule clarifies that the FDIC will consider
information in an insured depository
institution’s electronic deposit account
records to determine if the titling
requirement is satisfied. For example,
the FDIC would recognize an account as
a revocable trust account even if the
account signature card does not
designate the account as a revocable
trust account as long as the institution’s
electronic deposit account records
identify (through a code or otherwise)
the account as a revocable trust account.
The final rule, like the interim rule,
eliminates the concept of ‘‘qualifying
beneficiaries,’’ and requires only that a
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revocable trust beneficiary be a natural
person, or a charity or other non-profit
organization. This change was
universally applauded by commenters
to the interim rule. The final rule also
incorporates the interim rule’s two-part
calculation method for deposit
insurance coverage of revocable trust
accounts. While, as a result of the
temporary increase in the SMDIA, the
benchmark between the lower-dollar
and higher-dollar revocable trust
deposit insurance treatments has
increased to $1,250,000 (from $500,000
as set forth in the originally-issued
interim rule), it is anticipated that the
lower-balance treatment for revocable
trust ownership interests falling below
$1,250,000 at one institution will likely
capture most revocable trust accounts,
and this should advance the FDIC’s
goals of simplifying the treatment of
unequal beneficial interests and
quickening deposit insurance coverage
determinations. The deposit insurance
coverage calculation method for
revocable trust ownership interests that
are both above this $1,250,000
benchmark and involve more than five
beneficiaries, consistent with the
interim rule, will ensure that reasonable
limits remain on the maximum coverage
available to revocable trust account
owners and avoid the potential of
unlimited coverage being afforded to
such accounts through contrived trust
structures. Moreover, consistent with
the interim rule, where a POD account
owner names his or her living trust as
a beneficiary of the POD account, for
insurance purposes, the FDIC will
consider the beneficiaries of the trust to
be the beneficiaries of the POD account.
III. Mortgage Servicing Accounts
Background
The FDIC’s deposit insurance
regulations include specific rules
addressing the deposit insurance
coverage of payments collected by
mortgage servicers and deposited in
accounts at insured depository
institutions (‘‘mortgage servicing
accounts’’). 12 CFR 330.7(d). Accounts
maintained by mortgage servicers in a
custodial or other fiduciary capacity
may include funds paid by mortgagors
(borrowers) for principal and interest,
and may also include funds mortgagors
advance as amounts held for the
payment of taxes and insurance
premiums.
Historically, under section 330.7(d),
funds representing principal and
interest payments in a mortgage
servicing account were insured for the
interest of each owner (mortgagee,
investor or security holder) in those
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accounts. On the other hand, funds
maintained by a servicer in a custodial
or fiduciary capacity representing
payments by mortgagors of taxes and
insurance premiums are added together
and insured for the ownership interest
of each mortgagor in those accounts.
Thus, funds representing payments of
principal and interest were insurable on
a pass-through basis to each mortgagee,
investor, or security holder, while funds
representing payments of taxes and
insurance have been insurable on a
pass-through basis to each mortgagor or
borrower. This treatment was consistent
with the FDIC’s longstanding view,
dating from the adoption of the rules,
that principal and interest funds are
owned by the owners (or mortgagee,
investor or security holder) on whose
behalf the servicer, as agent, accepts the
principal and interest payments, and are
not funds owned by the borrowers.
Taxes and insurance funds, on the other
hand, are insured to the mortgagors or
borrowers under the view that the latter
funds are still owned by the borrower
until the servicer actually pays the tax
and insurance bills.
In October of last year, the FDIC
issued an interim rule addressing the
insurance coverage of mortgage
servicing accounts.7 In the interim rule,
the FDIC acknowledged that
securitization methods for mortgages
have become increasingly complex,
with multi-layer securitization
structures possible, and indicated that
as a consequence it has become both
more difficult and time-consuming for a
servicer to identify and determine the
share of any investor in a securitization
and in the principal and interest funds
on deposit at an insured depository
institution. Prior to the issuance of the
interim rule, the FDIC had become
increasingly concerned that, in the
event of a failure of an FDIC-insured
depository institution, a servicer
holding a deposit account in the
institution would have a difficult and
time-consuming task to identify every
security holder in the securitization and
determine his or her share. Further, the
FDIC believed that application of the
prior deposit insurance rule could result
in delays in the servicer receiving the
insured amounts, and result in losses for
amounts that, due to the complexity of
the securitization agreements, could not
be attributed to the particular investors
to whom the funds belong. Ultimately,
because the FDIC concluded that
application of the previous rule could
potentially result in increased losses to
otherwise insured depositors, lead to
withdrawal of deposits for principal and
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interest payments from depository
institutions, and unnecessarily reduce
liquidity for such institutions, the FDIC
issued the interim rule.
In issuing the interim rule, the FDIC
sought to make the deposit insurance
coverage rules for mortgage servicing
accounts easy to understand and apply.
Moreover, because the considerable sum
of principal and interest funds on
deposit at insured depository
institutions serve as a significant source
of liquidity for the institutions and a
source of credit to the institutions’
respective communities, the FDIC
sought to prevent the application of the
insurance rules from prompting any
inadvertent, adverse consequences. To
address these aims, as well as the
practical issues presented by
increasingly complex securitization
methods, the interim rule determined
deposit insurance coverage on principal
and interest payments in a mortgage
servicing account on a per-mortgagor (or
per-borrower) basis—and not on a passthrough basis to each mortgagee,
investor, or security holder—due to the
fact that servicers are able to identify
mortgagors more quickly than investors.
This approach enables the FDIC to pay
deposit insurance more quickly.
Specifically, the interim rule provided
deposit insurance coverage to a
mortgage servicing account based on
each mortgagor’s payments of principal
and interest into the account up to the
standard maximum deposit insurance
amount of $250,000 per mortgagor.
Coverage is thus provided to the
mortgagees/investors as a collective
group, based on the cumulative amount
of the mortgagors’ payments of principal
and interest into the account. This
deposit insurance coverage of payments
of principal and interest per mortgagor
is not aggregated with, nor otherwise
affects, the coverage provided to each
such mortgagor in other accounts the
mortgagor might maintain at the same
depository institution. This is to be
distinguished from the deposit
insurance coverage afforded to
payments of taxes and insurance
premiums. Consistent with their
treatment historically under the deposit
insurance rules, amounts in a mortgage
servicing account that represent
payments for taxes and insurance are
insured on a pass-through basis as the
funds of each respective mortgagor, but
unlike a mortgagor’s principal and
interest payments in the mortgage
servicing account, the payments for
taxes and insurance are added to other
individually owned funds of each
mortgagor at the same institution and
insured up to the applicable limit.
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Comments on the Interim Rule’s
Mortgage Servicing Provisions
The FDIC received five comments on
the interim rule addressing the deposit
insurance coverage of mortgage
servicing accounts. All five comments
favored the interim rule’s handling of
deposit insurance coverage on payments
of principal and interest in a mortgage
servicing account on a per-mortgagor (or
per-borrower) basis. These views
included comments from a large bank
trade association, a loan servicer, a large
government sponsored enterprise, a loan
securitization professional, along with
one comment submitted by a national
bank. Although all five commenters
supported the FDIC’s interim rule,
several raised specific issues.
One commenter advocated that the
regulations clarify that payments of
taxes and insurance in mortgage
servicing accounts and ‘‘any similar
accounts’’ held by a servicer or paying
agent should not be aggregated with
personal accounts of a mortgagor, and
noted that the interim rule was ‘‘not
clear’’ in this regard. Two commenters
urged the FDIC to apply the interim
rule’s treatment of principal and interest
payments comprising mortgage
servicing accounts to other types of
servicing accounts that similarly consist
of principal and interest payments but
for non-mortgage loans, such as motor
vehicle loans. In short, they suggested
that the FDIC extend the interim rule’s
treatment of principal and interest cash
flows to other types of loan
securitizations and not simply
mortgages, and suggested that these
sums may raise liquidity concerns
similar to those raised by mortgage loan
servicing account funds.
Another commenter supported the
interim rule but expressed concern that
several types of mortgage servicing
deposits might not be adequately
insured. For example, this commenter
advocated that the rules provide passthrough deposit insurance coverage, on
a per-borrower basis, to other types of
mortgage servicing funds, such as
‘‘repair escrows, replacement reserve
escrows, bond related escrow accounts,
rental achievement escrows, and debt
service escrows.’’ This commenter urged
the FDIC to separately insure such
accounts, as well as escrows for taxes
and insurance, up to the SMDIA.
The Final Rule on Mortgage Servicing
Accounts
The final rule is essentially
unchanged from the interim rule.
Although one commenter urged that the
FDIC clarify in the rules that payments
of taxes and insurance in mortgage
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servicing accounts and any ‘‘similar’’
accounts held by a servicer should not
be aggregated with personal accounts of
a mortgagor, and asserted that the
interim rule was ‘‘not clear’’ in this
regard, the FDIC concludes that any
additional clarification is unneeded.
The interim rule expressly addressed
this issue with respect to tax and
insurance payments in servicing
accounts, and specifically contrasted the
deposit insurance treatment of
payments of taxes and insurance with
the insurance treatment afforded
payments of principal and interest in
servicing accounts. The interim rule
provided that the FDIC’s historical
treatment of taxes and insurance
payments had not changed. Drawing a
clear distinction with principal and
interest payments, the interim rule
provided that taxes and insurance funds
are instead ‘‘insured to the mortgagors
or borrowers on the theory that the
borrower still owns the funds until the
tax and insurance bills are actually paid
by the servicer.’’
The preamble to the interim rule
indicated that, although the principal
and interest payments in mortgage
servicing accounts are not aggregated for
insurance purposes with other accounts
the mortgagor might maintain at the
same insured depository institution,
‘‘[a]s under the current insurance rules,
under the interim rule amounts in a
mortgage servicing account constituting
payments of taxes and insurance
premiums will be insured on a passthrough basis as the funds of each
respective mortgagor,’’ and such funds
‘‘will be added to other individually
owned funds held by each such
mortgagor at the same insured
institution.’’ This was also made clear in
the FDIC’s Financial Institution Letter,
FIL–111–2008, issued October 8, 2008.
In short, the interim rule did not alter
the FDIC’s historical treatment of
payments by mortgagors of tax and
insurance premiums in mortgage
servicing accounts.
It was also suggested that the FDIC
extend the interim rule’s deposit
insurance treatment of principal and
interest cash flows to servicing accounts
for other types of loan securitizations—
and not simply mortgages—such as
motor vehicle loans. The FDIC declines
to do so. As noted in the interim rule,
the FDIC sought to address the
increasing complexity of mortgage
securitizations and the resulting impact
these complexities have upon depositor
certainty as to the application of deposit
insurance rules, and have upon the
timely resolution of deposit insurance
determinations.
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The FDIC also declines the
commenter suggestion that separate
insurance, on a pass-through, perborrower basis be afforded to other
types of mortgage servicing funds such
as ‘‘repair escrows, replacement reserve
escrows, bond related escrow accounts,
rental achievement escrows, and debt
service escrows.’’ As the FDIC noted in
the interim rule, consistent with its
previous deposit insurance rules,
amounts in a mortgage servicing
account constituting payments of taxes
and insurance premiums are insured on
a pass-through basis as the funds of each
respective mortgagor and are added to
other individually owned funds held by
each such mortgagor at the same insured
institution. The FDIC’s interim rule
sought to make the deposit insurance
coverage rules for mortgage servicing
accounts easy to understand and apply.
Additionally, because principal and
interest funds on deposit at insured
depository institutions serve as both a
significant source of liquidity for the
institutions and a significant source of
credit to the institution’s community,
the FDIC sought to ensure that no
inadvertent adverse consequences
resulted from the application of the
deposit insurance rules. It is not clear
that the suggested revisions would be
consistent with either of these aims.
Although commenter[s] suggested that
other types of ‘‘escrow’’ funds should
garner similar treatment under the
insurance rules as do deposits
representing tax and insurance
payments, the comment does not clearly
identify in what specific manner the
legal rights and obligations attendant to
these various types of bond-related, debt
service, and rental achievement escrows
are similar to the rights and obligations
of mortgagors in their tax and insurance
payments. Nor is it clear whether, and
to what extent, such payments represent
a significant liquidity source for
depository institutions such that the
need for more specific clarity as to
deposit insurance is needed in order to
avert any inadvertent consequences or
losses to borrowers or investors.
amended the International Banking Act
of 1978, 12 U.S.C. 3104, necessitating
the need for technical conforming
amendments to substitute the term
‘‘SMDIA’’ in place of ‘‘$100,000’’ in the
FDIC’s International Banking
regulations. 12 CFR Part 347.8 The fouryear extension in the increase in the
SMDIA, which provides the FDIC with
the necessity to make revisions to the
deposit insurance regulations and
examples therein, also affords the FDIC
with the opportunity to now make
technical amendments to the FDIC’s
international banking regulations to
replace several distinct references to a
‘‘$100,000’’ benchmark with references
to the SMDIA, consistent with the
Reform Conforming Act.
IV. Technical Amendments to FDIC
International Banking Regulations
The FDIC is also amending its Part
347 International Banking regulations to
make technical, conforming
amendments relating to the SMDIA. The
FDI Reform Act introduced the term
‘‘SMDIA’’ and instituted several
substantive changes to the deposit
insurance coverage provisions in the
FDI Act. Additionally, the Federal
Deposit Insurance Reform Conforming
Amendments Act of 2005 (‘‘Reform
Conforming Act’’), Public Law 109–173,
VII. The Treasury and General
Government Appropriations Act,
1999—Assessment of Federal
Regulations and Policies on Families
The FDIC has determined that the
final rule will not affect family wellbeing within the meaning of section 654
of the Treasury and General
Government Appropriations Act,
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V. Paperwork Reduction Act
The final rule will revise the FDIC’s
deposit insurance regulations. It will not
involve any new collections of
information pursuant to the Paperwork
Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
Consequently, no information collection
has been submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget for review.
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act
requires an agency that is issuing a final
rule to prepare and make available a
regulatory flexibility analysis that
describes the impact of the final rule on
small entities. 5 U.S.C. 603(a). The
Regulatory Flexibility Act provides that
an agency is not required to prepare and
publish a regulatory flexibility analysis
if the agency certifies that the final rule
will not have a significant impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
Pursuant to section 605(b) of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, the FDIC
certifies that the final rule will not have
a significant impact on a substantial
number of small entities. The final rule
implements the temporary increase in
the SMDIA, simplifies the coverage
rules for mortgage servicing accounts,
and simplifies the deposit insurance
rules for revocable trust accounts held at
FDIC-insured depository institutions.
47715
enacted as part of the Omnibus
Consolidated and Emergency
Supplemental Appropriations Act of
1999 (Pub. L. 105–277, 112 Stat. 2681).
The final rule should have a positive
effect on families by clarifying the
coverage rules for mortgage servicing
accounts, which contain, for a period of
time, the mortgage payments from
borrowers, and the rules for revocable
trust accounts, a popular type of
consumer bank account.
VIII. Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act
The Office of Management and Budget
has determined that the final rule is not
a ‘‘major rule’’ within the meaning of
the relevant sections of the Small
Business Regulatory Enforcement Act of
1996 (‘‘SBREFA’’) (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.).
As required by SBREFA, the FDIC will
file the appropriate reports with
Congress and the General Accounting
Office so that the final rule may be
reviewed.
IX. Plain Language
Section 722 of the Gramm-LeachBlilely Act (Pub. L. 106–102, 113 Stat.
1338, 1471), requires the Federal
banking agencies to use plain language
in all proposed and final rules
published after January 1, 2000. The
FDIC has sought to present the final rule
in a simple and straightforward manner,
and has made revisions to the previous
interim rule in response to commenter
concerns seeking clarification of the
application of the deposit insurance
rules.
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 330
Bank deposit insurance, Banks,
Banking, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Savings and loan
associations, Trusts and trustees.
12 CFR Part 347
Bank deposit insurance, Banks,
Banking, International banking; Foreign
banks.
■ For the reasons stated above, the
Board of Directors of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation hereby
amends parts 330 and 347 of title 12 of
the Code of Federal Regulations as
follows:
PART 330—DEPOSIT INSURANCE
COVERAGE
1. The authority citation for part 330
continues to read as follows:
■
8 Per
statute, the Reform Conforming Act
substitution of the SMDIA in the international
banking provisions was effective on April 1, 2006.
Reform Conforming Act § 2; 71 FR 14629 (March 23,
2006).
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Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1813(1), 1813(m),
1817(i), 1818(q), 1819 (Tenth), 1820(f),
1821(a), 1822(c).
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2. In § 330.1, paragraph (n) is revised
to read as follows:
■
§ 330.1
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(n) Standard maximum deposit
insurance amount, referred to as the
‘‘SMDIA’’ hereafter, means $250,000
from October 3, 2008, until December
31, 2013. Effective January 1, 2014, the
SMDIA means $100,000 adjusted
pursuant to subparagraph (F) of section
11(a)(1) of the FDI Act (12 U.S.C.
1821(a)(1)(F)). All examples in this part
use $250,000 as the SMDIA.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. In § 330.7, paragraph (d) is revised
to read as follows:
§ 330.7 Account held by an agent,
nominee, guardian, custodian or
conservator.
*
*
*
*
*
(d) Mortgage servicing accounts.
Accounts maintained by a mortgage
servicer, in a custodial or other
fiduciary capacity, which are comprised
of payments by mortgagors of principal
and interest, shall be insured for the
cumulative balance paid into the
account by the mortgagors, up to the
limit of the SMDIA per mortgagor.
Accounts maintained by a mortgage
servicer, in a custodial or other
fiduciary capacity, which are comprised
of payments by mortgagors of taxes and
insurance premiums shall be added
together and insured in accordance with
paragraph (a) of this section for the
ownership interest of each mortgagor in
such accounts. This provision is
effective as of October 10, 2008, for all
existing and future mortgage servicing
accounts.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 4. In § 330.9, paragraph (b) is revised
to read as follows:
§ 330.9
Joint ownership accounts.
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*
*
*
*
*
(b) Determination of insurance
coverage. The interests of each co-owner
in all qualifying joint accounts shall be
added together and the total shall be
insured up to the SMDIA. (Example:
‘‘A&B’’ have a qualifying joint account
with a balance of $150,000; ‘‘A&C’’ have
a qualifying joint account with a balance
of $200,000; and ‘‘A&B&C’’ have a
qualifying joint account with a balance
of $375,000. A’s combined ownership
interest in all qualifying joint accounts
would be $300,000 ($75,000 plus
$100,000 plus $125,000); therefore, A’s
interest would be insured in the amount
of $250,000 and uninsured in the
amount of $50,000. B’s combined
ownership interest in all qualifying joint
accounts would be $200,000 ($75,000
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plus $125,000); therefore, B’s interest
would be fully insured. C’s combined
ownership interest in all qualifying joint
accounts would be $225,000 ($100,000
plus $125,000); therefore, C’s interest
would be fully insured.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 5. Section 330.10 is revised to read as
follows:
§ 330.10
Revocable trust accounts.
(a) General rule. Except as provided in
paragraph (e) of this section, the funds
owned by an individual and deposited
into one or more accounts with respect
to which the owner evidences an
intention that upon his or her death the
funds shall belong to one or more
beneficiaries shall be separately insured
(from other types of accounts the owner
has at the same insured depository
institution) in an amount equal to the
total number of different beneficiaries
named in the account(s) multiplied by
the SMDIA. This section applies to all
accounts held in connection with
informal and formal testamentary
revocable trusts. Such informal trusts
are commonly referred to as payable-ondeath accounts, in-trust-for accounts or
Totten Trust accounts, and such formal
trusts are commonly referred to as living
trusts or family trusts. (Example 1:
Account Owner ‘‘A’’ has a living trust
account with four different beneficiaries
named in the trust. A has no other
revocable trust accounts at the same
FDIC-insured institution. The maximum
insurance coverage would be
$1,000,000, determined by multiplying
4 times $250,000 (the number of
beneficiaries times the SMDIA).
(Example 2: Account Owner ‘‘A’’ has a
payable-on-death account naming his
niece and cousin as beneficiaries, and A
also has, at the same FDIC-insured
institution, another payable-on-death
account naming the same niece and a
friend as beneficiaries. The maximum
coverage available to the account owner
would be $750,000. This is because the
account owner has named only three
different beneficiaries in the revocable
trust accounts—his niece and cousin in
the first, and the same niece and a
friend in the second. The naming of the
same beneficiary in more than one
revocable trust account, whether it be a
payable-on-death account or living trust
account, does not increase the total
coverage amount.) (Example 3: Account
Owner ‘‘A’’ establishes a living trust
account, with a balance of $300,000,
naming his two children ‘‘B’’ and ‘‘C’’
as beneficiaries. A also establishes, at
the same FDIC-insured institution, a
payable-on-death account, with a
balance of $300,000, also naming his
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
children B and C as beneficiaries. The
maximum coverage available to A is
$500,000, determined by multiplying 2
times $250,000 (the number of different
beneficiaries times the SMDIA). A is
uninsured in the amount of $100,000.
This is because all funds that a
depositor holds in both living trust
accounts and payable-on-death
accounts, at the same FDIC-insured
institution and naming the same
beneficiaries, are aggregated for
insurance purposes and insured to the
applicable coverage limits.)
(b) Required intention and naming of
beneficiaries. (1) The required intention
in paragraph (a) of this section that
upon the owner’s death the funds shall
belong to one or more beneficiaries must
be manifested in the ‘‘title’’ of the
account using commonly accepted
terms such as, but not limited to, ‘‘in
trust for,’’ ‘‘as trustee for,’’ ‘‘payable-ondeath to,’’ or any acronym therefor. For
purposes of this requirement, ‘‘title’’
includes the electronic deposit account
records of the institution. (For example,
the FDIC would recognize an account as
a revocable trust account even if the title
of the account signature card does not
designate the account as a revocable
trust account as long as the institution’s
electronic deposit account records
identify (through a code or otherwise)
the account as a revocable trust
account.) The settlor of a revocable trust
shall be presumed to own the funds
deposited into the account.
(2) For informal revocable trust
accounts, the beneficiaries must be
specifically named in the deposit
account records of the insured
depository institution.
(c) Definition of beneficiary. For
purposes of this section, a beneficiary
includes a natural person as well as a
charitable organization and other nonprofit entity recognized as such under
the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as
amended.
(d) Interests of beneficiaries outside
the definition of beneficiary in this
section. If a beneficiary named in a trust
covered by this section does not meet
the definition of beneficiary in
paragraph (c) of this section, the funds
corresponding to that beneficiary shall
be treated as the individually owned
(single ownership) funds of the
owner(s). As such, they shall be
aggregated with any other single
ownership accounts of such owner(s)
and insured up to the SMDIA per
owner. (Example: Account Owner ‘‘A’’
establishes a payable-on-death account
naming a pet as beneficiary with a
balance of $100,000. A also has an
individual account at the same FDICinsured institution with a balance of
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$175,000. Because the pet is not a
‘‘beneficiary,’’ the two accounts are
aggregated and treated as a single
ownership account. As a result, A is
insured in the amount of $250,000, but
is uninsured for the remaining $25,000.)
(e) Revocable trust accounts with
aggregate balances exceeding five times
the SMDIA and naming more than five
different beneficiaries. Notwithstanding
the general coverage provisions in
paragraph (a) of this section, for funds
owned by an individual in one or more
revocable trust accounts naming more
than five different beneficiaries and
whose aggregate balance is more than
five times the SMDIA, the maximum
revocable trust account coverage for the
account owner shall be the greater of
either: five times the SMDIA or the
aggregate amount of the interests of each
different beneficiary named in the
trusts, to a limit of the SMDIA per
different beneficiary. (Example 1:
Account Owner ‘‘A’’ has a living trust
with a balance of $1 million and names
two friends, ‘‘B’’ and ‘‘C’’ as
beneficiaries. At the same FDIC-insured
institution, A establishes a payable-ondeath account, with a balance of $1
million naming his two cousins, ‘‘D’’
and ‘‘E’’ as beneficiaries. Coverage is
determined under the general coverage
provisions in paragraph (a) of this
section, and not this paragraph (e). This
is because all funds that A holds in both
living trust accounts and payable-ondeath accounts, at the same FDICinsured institution, are aggregated for
insurance purposes. Although A’s
aggregated balance of $2 million is more
than five times the SMDIA, A names
only four different beneficiaries, and
coverage under this paragraph (e)
applies only if there are more than five
different beneficiaries. A is insured in
the amount of $1 million (4
beneficiaries times the SMDIA), and
uninsured for the remaining $1 million.)
(Example 2: Account Owner ‘‘A’’ has a
living trust account with a balance of
$1,500,000. Under the terms of the trust,
upon A’s death, A’s three children are
each entitled to $125,000, A’s friend is
entitled to $15,000, and a designated
charity is entitled to $175,000. The trust
also provides that the remainder of the
trust assets shall belong to A’s spouse.
In this case, because the balance of the
account exceeds $1,250,000 (5 times the
SMDIA) and there are more than five
different beneficiaries named in the
trust, the maximum coverage available
to A would be the greater of: $1,250,000
or the aggregate of each different
beneficiary’s interest to a limit of
$250,000 per beneficiary. The beneficial
interests in the trust for purposes of
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determining coverage are: $125,000 for
each of the children (totaling $375,000),
$15,000 for the friend, $175,000 for the
charity, and $250,000 for the spouse
(because the spouse’s $935,000 is
subject to the $250,000 per-beneficiary
limitation). The aggregate beneficial
interests total $815,000. Thus, the
maximum coverage afforded to the
account owner would be $1,250,000, the
greater of $1,250,000 or $815,000.)
(f) Co-owned revocable trust accounts.
(1) Where an account described in
paragraph (a) of this section is
established by more than one owner, the
respective interest of each account
owner (which shall be deemed equal)
shall be insured separately, per different
beneficiary, up to the SMDIA, subject to
the limitation imposed in paragraph (e)
of this section. (Example 1: A and B,
two individuals, establish a payable-ondeath account naming their three nieces
as beneficiaries. Neither A nor B has any
other revocable trust accounts at the
same FDIC-insured institution. The
maximum coverage afforded to A and B
would be $1,500,000, determined by
multiplying the number of owners (2)
times the SMDIA ($250,000) times the
number of different beneficiaries (3). In
this example, A would be entitled to
revocable trust coverage of $750,000 and
B would be entitled to revocable trust
coverage of $750,000.) (Example 2: A
and B, two individuals, establish a
payable-on-death account naming their
two children, two cousins, and a charity
as beneficiaries. The balance in the
account is $1,750,000. Neither A nor B
has any other revocable trust accounts at
the same FDIC-insured institution. The
maximum coverage would be
determined (under paragraph (a) of this
section) by multiplying the number of
account owners (2) times the number of
different beneficiaries (5) times
$250,000, totaling $2,500,000. Because
the account balance ($1,750,000) is less
than the maximum coverage amount
($2,500,000), the account would be fully
insured.) (Example 3: A and B, two
individuals, establish a living trust
account with a balance of $3.75 million.
Under the terms of the trust, upon the
death of both A and B, each of their
three children is entitled to $600,000,
B’s cousin is entitled to $380,000, A’s
friend is entitled to $70,000, and the
remaining amount ($1,500,000) goes to
a charity. Under paragraph (e) of this
section, the maximum coverage, as to
each co-owned account owner, would
be the greater of $1,250,000 or the
aggregate amount (as to each co-owner)
of the interest of each different
beneficiary named in the trust, to a limit
of $250,000 per account owner per
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47717
beneficiary. The beneficial interests in
the trust considered for purposes of
determining coverage for account owner
A are: $750,000 for the children (each
child’s interest attributable to A,
$300,000, is subject to the $250,000-perbeneficiary limitation), $190,000 for the
cousin, $35,000 for the friend, and
$250,000 for the charity (the charity’s
interest attributable to A, $750,000, is
subject to the $250,000 per-beneficiary
limitation). As to A, the aggregate
amount of the beneficial interests
eligible for deposit insurance coverage
totals $1,225,000. Thus, the maximum
coverage afforded to account co-owner
A would be $1,250,000, which is the
greater of $1,250,000 or the aggregate of
all the beneficial interests attributable to
A (limited to $250,000 per beneficiary),
which totaled slightly less at
$1,225,000. Because B has equal
ownership interest in the trust, the same
analysis and coverage determination
also would apply to B. Thus, of the total
account balance of $3.75 million, $2.5
million would be insured and $1.25
million would be uninsured.)
(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (f)(1)
of this section, where the owners of a
co-owned revocable trust account are
themselves the sole beneficiaries of the
corresponding trust, the account shall
be insured as a joint account under
§ 330.9 and shall not be insured under
the provisions of this section. (Example:
If A and B establish a payable-on-death
account naming themselves as the sole
beneficiaries of the account, the account
will be insured as a joint account
because the account does not satisfy the
intent requirement (under paragraph (a)
of this section) that the funds in the
account belong to the named
beneficiaries upon the owners’ death.
The beneficiaries are in fact the actual
owners of the funds during the account
owners’ lifetimes.)
(g) For deposit accounts held in
connection with a living trust that
provides for a life-estate interest for
designated beneficiaries, the FDIC shall
value each such life estate interest as the
SMDIA for purposes of determining the
insurance coverage available to the
account owner under paragraph (e) of
this section. (Example: Account Owner
‘‘A’’ has a living trust account with a
balance of $1,500,000. Under the terms
of the trust, A provides a life estate
interest for his spouse. Moreover, A’s
three children are each entitled to
$275,000, A’s friend is entitled to
$15,000, and a designated charity is
entitled to $175,000. The trust also
provides that the remainder of the trust
assets shall belong to A’s granddaughter.
In this case, because the balance of the
account exceeds $1,250,000 ((5) five
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times the SMDIA) and there are more
than five different beneficiaries named
in the trust, the maximum coverage
available to A would be the greater of:
$1,250,000 or the aggregate of each
different beneficiary’s interest to a limit
of $250,000 per beneficiary. The
beneficial interests in the trust
considered for purposes of determining
coverage are: $250,000 for the spouse’s
life estate, $750,000 for the children
(because each child’s $275,000 is
subject to the $250,000 per-beneficiary
limitation), $15,000 for the friend,
$175,000 for the charity, and $250,000
for the granddaughter (because the
granddaughter’s $310,000 remainder is
limited by the $250,000 per-beneficiary
limitation). The aggregate beneficial
interests total $1,440,000. Thus, the
maximum coverage afforded to the
account owner would be $1,440,000, the
greater of $1,250,000 or $1,440,000.)
(h) Revocable trusts that become
irrevocable trusts. Notwithstanding the
provisions in section 330.13 on the
insurance coverage of irrevocable trust
accounts, if a revocable trust account
converts in part or entirely to an
irrevocable trust upon the death of one
or more of the trust’s owners, the trust
account shall continue to be insured
under the provisions of this section.
(Example: Assume A and B have a trust
account in connection with a living
trust, of which they are joint grantors. If
upon the death of either A or B the trust
transforms into an irrevocable trust as to
the deceased grantor’s ownership in the
trust, the account will continue to be
insured under the provisions of this
section.)
(i) This section shall apply to all
existing and future revocable trust
accounts and all existing and future
irrevocable trust accounts resulting from
formal revocable trust accounts.
State branch of any initial deposit of
less than an amount equal to the
standard maximum deposit insurance
amount (‘‘SMDIA’’).
*
*
*
*
*
(v) Standard maximum deposit
insurance amount, referred to as the
‘‘SMDIA’’ hereafter, means $250,000
from October 3, 2008, until
December 31, 2013. Effective January 1,
2014, the SMDIA means $100,000
adjusted pursuant to subparagraph (F) of
section 11(a)(1) of the FDI Act (12 U.S.C.
1821(a)(1)(F)).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 8. In § 347.206, paragraph (c) is
revised to read as follows:
PART 347—INTERNATIONAL
BANKING
§ 347.215 Exemptions from deposit
insurance requirement.
6. The authority citation for part 347
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1813, 1815, 1817,
1819, 1820, 1828, 3103, 3104, 3105, 3108,
3109; Title IX, Pub. L. 98–181, 97 Stat. 1153.
7. In § 347.202:
A. Paragraph (e) is revised.
B. Paragraphs (v), (w) and (x) are
redesignated as (w), (x) and (y),
respectively, and a new paragraph (v) is
added.
The revision and addition read as
follows:
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■
■
■
§ 347.202
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Domestic retail deposit activity
means the acceptance by a Federal or
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§ 347.206 Domestic retail deposit activity
requiring deposit insurance by U.S. branch
of a foreign bank.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Grandfathered insured branches.
Domestic retail accounts with balances
of less than an amount equal to the
SMDIA that require deposit insurance
protection may be accepted or
maintained in an insured branch of a
foreign bank only if such branch was an
insured branch on December 19, 1991.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 9. In § 347.213, paragraph (a)(1) is
revised to read as follows:
§ 347.213 Establishment or operation of
noninsured foreign branch.
(a) * * *
(1) The branch only accepts initial
deposits in an amount equal to the
SMDIA or greater; or
*
*
*
*
*
■ 10. In § 347.215:
■ A. Paragraph (a) introductory text is
revised.
■ B. Paragraph (b)(1) is revised.
The revisions read as follows:
(a) Deposit activities not requiring
insurance. A State branch will not be
considered to be engaged in domestic
retail deposit activity that requires the
foreign bank parent to establish an
insured U.S. bank subsidiary if the State
branch accepts initial deposits only in
an amount of less than an amount equal
to the SMDIA that are derived solely
from the following:
*
*
*
*
*
(b) Application for an exemption. (1)
Whenever a foreign bank proposes to
accept at a State branch initial deposits
of less than an amount equal to the
SMDIA and such deposits are not
otherwise exempted under paragraph (a)
of this section, the foreign bank may
apply to the FDIC for consent to operate
PO 00000
Frm 00008
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
the branch as a noninsured branch. The
Board of Directors may exempt the
branch from the insurance requirement
if the branch is not engaged in domestic
retail deposit activities requiring
insurance protection. The Board of
Directors will consider the size and
nature of depositors and deposit
accounts, the importance of maintaining
and improving the availability of credit
to all sectors of the United States
economy, including the international
trade finance sector of the United States
economy, whether the exemption would
give the foreign bank an unfair
competitive advantage over United
States banking organizations, and any
other relevant factors in making this
determination.
*
*
*
*
*
Dated at Washington, DC, this 9th day of
September 2009.
By order of the Board of Directors.
Robert E. Feldman,
Executive Secretary, Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation.
[FR Doc. E9–22406 Filed 9–16–09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6714–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 73
[Docket No. FAA–2009–0770; Airspace
Docket No. 09–ASW–20]
RIN 2120–AA66
Amendment to Restricted Areas R–
5103A, R–5103B, and R–5103C;
McGregor, NM
AGENCY: Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Final rule; technical
amendment.
SUMMARY: This action amends the
airspace description of Restricted Areas
R–5103A, R–5103B, and R–5103C;
McGregor, NM. In a final rule published
in the Federal Register on November 3,
1994, (59 FR 55030), an error was made
in the airspace description to the time
of designation for Restricted Areas R–
5103A, R–5103B, R–5103C and R–
5103D (R–5130D was subsequently
revoked on January 20, 2005 (69 FR
72113)). Specifically, the time of
designation stated ‘‘0700–2000 local
time, Monday–Friday, other times by
NOTAM’’ instead of ‘‘0700–2000 local
time Monday–Friday; other times by
NOTAM’’. This action corrects that
error.
E:\FR\FM\17SER1.SGM
17SER1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 74, Number 179 (Thursday, September 17, 2009)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 47711-47718]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: E9-22406]
========================================================================
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
week.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 74, No. 179 / Thursday, September 17, 2009 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 47711]]
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
12 CFR Parts 330 and 347
RIN 3064-AD36
Deposit Insurance Regulations; Temporary Increase in Standard
Coverage Amount; Mortgage Servicing Accounts; Revocable Trust Accounts;
International Banking; Foreign Banks
AGENCY: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The FDIC is adopting a final rule amending its deposit
insurance regulations to: Reflect Congress's extension, until December
31, 2013, of the temporary increase in the standard maximum deposit
insurance amount (``SMDIA'') from $100,000 to $250,000; finalize the
interim rule, with minor modifications, on revocable trust accounts;
and finalize the interim rule on mortgage servicing accounts. The FDIC
is also adopting technical, conforming amendments to its international
banking regulations to substitute several existing references to
``$100,000'' with references to the SMDIA.
DATES: Effective Date: The final rule is effective October 19, 2009.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Joseph A. DiNuzzo, Counsel, Legal
Division (202) 898-7349; Christopher Hencke, Counsel, Legal Division
(202) 898-8839; Daniel G. Lonergan, Counsel, Legal Division (202) 898-
6791; or James V. Deveney, Section Chief, Deposit Insurance Section,
Division of Supervision and Compliance (202) 898-6687, Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation, Washington, DC 20429.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Overview
In the last quarter of 2008, the FDIC issued interim rules on three
deposit-insurance related matters: (1) The temporary increase in the
SMDIA from $100,000 to $250,000; (2) revisions to the rules on
revocable trust accounts; and (3) revisions to the rules on mortgage
servicing accounts. In this final rule, the FDIC is amending its
insurance regulations to reflect Congress's extension of the temporary
increase in the SMDIA (from $100,000 to $250,000) through December 31,
2013, and finalizing the interim rules on revocable trust accounts and
mortgage servicing accounts. The four-year extension of the increase in
the SMDIA, which necessitates revisions to the deposit insurance
regulations and examples therein, also affords the FDIC with the
opportunity to now make technical amendments to the FDIC's
international banking regulations (12 CFR Part 347) to replace several
references therein to a ``$100,000'' benchmark with references to the
SMDIA, consistent with the Federal Deposit Insurance Reform Conforming
Amendments Act of 2005 (Pub. L. 109-173).
I. Extension of Temporary Increase in the SMDIA
Background
The Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 temporarily
increased the SMDIA from $100,000 to $250,000, effective October 3,
2008, through December 31, 2009.\1\ On October 17, 2008, the FDIC
adopted an interim rule amending its deposit insurance regulations to
reflect this temporary increase in the SMDIA.\2\ Subsequent to the
issuance of this interim rule, on May 20, 2009, the President signed
the Helping Families Save Their Homes Act of 2009, which, among other
provisions, extended the temporary increase in the SMDIA from December
31, 2009 to December 31, 2013.\3\ After December 31, 2013, the SMDIA
will, by law, return to $100,000.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Public Law 110-343 (Oct. 3, 2008).
\2\ 73 FR 61658 (Oct. 17, 2008).
\3\ Public Law 111-22 (May 20, 2009).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Final Rule
The final rule amends the FDIC's deposit insurance rules (12 CFR
Part 330) to indicate that the increase in the SMDIA from $100,000 to
$250,000 is effective through December 31, 2013. In light of this long-
term extension of the SMDIA, the FDIC also has updated the deposit
insurance coverage examples provided in the insurance rules to reflect
$250,000 as the SMDIA. The FDIC believes this will help to avoid any
confusion that might result among depositors and financial institution
employees if the examples continue to employ the $100,000 SMDIA and
related numerical values.
II. Deposit Insurance Coverage of Revocable Trust Accounts
The Interim Revocable Trust Account Rule
In September 2008, the FDIC issued an interim rule designed to make
the coverage rules for revocable trust accounts easier to understand
and apply.\4\ In particular, the interim rule eliminated the concept of
``qualifying beneficiaries.'' The elimination of the ``qualifying
beneficiary'' concept was intended to achieve greater fairness by
broadening the scope of eligible beneficiaries and facilitate deposit
insurance determinations on revocable trust accounts.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ 73 FR 56706 (Sept. 30, 2008).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Also, the interim rule provided a two-part deposit insurance
coverage calculation method for revocable trust accounts. Under the
rule, where a trust account owner has five times the SMDIA ($1,250,000)
or less in revocable trust accounts at one FDIC-insured institution,
the owner is insured up to the SMDIA ($250,000) per beneficiary--
without regard to the exact beneficial interest of each beneficiary in
the trust. For a revocable trust account owner with both more than
$1,250,000 and more than five different beneficiaries named in the
trust(s), the interim rule insures the owner for the greater of either:
$1,250,000, or the aggregate total of all the beneficiaries' actual
interests in the trust(s) limited to $250,000 for each beneficiary.
In addition, the interim rule sought to simplify the application of
the deposit insurance rules to both life-estate interests and to
irrevocable trusts springing from a revocable trust. The interim rule
simplified the deposit insurance coverage rules to deem the value of
each life estate interest to be the SMDIA amount. Thus, for example,
[[Page 47712]]
where the owner creates a living trust account and provides a life
estate interest for the owner's spouse, in addition to specific
bequests to named beneficiaries, the spousal interest is deemed to be
the SMDIA.
Another complication is presented when an irrevocable living trust
springs from a revocable trust upon the owner's death. Under the prior
rules, the coverage of the trust account often would decrease because
the FDIC's rules governing irrevocable trust accounts were stricter
than the rules governing revocable trust accounts.\5\ To prevent this
decrease in coverage, the interim rule provided that irrevocable trust
accounts would be governed by the same rules as revocable trust
accounts when the irrevocable trust is created through the death of the
owner (grantor) of a revocable living trust.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ For example, assume that account owner ``A'' establishes a
living trust that names three children as beneficiaries. Assume also
that the trust agreement specifies that the revocable trust shall
become an irrevocable trust upon the owner's (grantor's) death. In
this example, during the life of the owner, the insurance coverage
of an account in the name of the trust would be determined by
multiplying the number of beneficiaries (3) by the SMDIA ($250,000).
Thus, the account would be insured up to $750,000. Following the
death of the owner, however, the coverage would change because the
trust itself would change from a revocable trust to an irrevocable
trust. Under the prior rules, the coverage of an irrevocable trust
account would depend upon whether the interests of the beneficiaries
were contingent (for example, contingent upon graduating from
college or contingent upon the discretion of the trustee). Assuming
that all beneficial interests were contingent, the coverage of the
account would be $250,000. Thus, in this example, the coverage would
decrease from $750,000 to $250,000 following the death of the owner
(and following the expiration of the FDIC's six-month grace period).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Finally, the interim rule solicited specific comment on the effect
that the revocable trust simplifications enunciated in the interim rule
might have on the Deposit Insurance Fund (``DIF'') reserve ratio.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ The reserve ratio is determined by dividing the DIF fund
balance by the estimated insured deposits by the industry, 12 U.S.C.
1817(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FDIC solicited comment on all aspects of the interim rule, and
explicitly solicited comment on: (1) Whether the $1,250,000 threshold
is a proper benchmark for distinguishing coverage for revocable trust
owners based on the beneficial interests of the trust beneficiaries;
(2) whether the FDIC's irrevocable trust accounts rules should be
revised in order that all trusts are covered by similar rules; and (3)
what effect the interim rule will have on the level of insured
deposits.
Comments Received on the Interim Revocable Trust Rule
The FDIC received eighteen comments on the interim rule for
revocable trust accounts. These comments included one from a large bank
trade association representing all types of banks, one from a bank
trade association representing community banks, and one from a smaller
trade association representing community and regional banks, and
thrifts, operating in one particular State. The FDIC also received
fourteen comments from private citizens and one comment from some
members of a national trade association for lawyers. Overall, these
comments were highly favorable.
Eight commenters addressed the interim rule's overall goal of, and
success at achieving, simplification, and applauded the FDIC's efforts
to clarify the deposit insurance rules. One commenter advocated greater
clarity in the application of the revocable trust rule's coverage of
trust accounts with balances exceeding $1,250,000 and naming more than
five beneficiaries, and another generally asserted that the rule
contained ambiguities.
With regard to specific issues within the interim rule, ten
commenters expressed strong support for the interim rule's deletion of
the former rule's ``qualifying beneficiary'' concept. One commenter
advocated that the effective date of this change be made retroactive to
an earlier point in time in order to provide favorable treatment to
depositors who had uninsured deposits in bank failures occurring in
early 2008. In response to the FDIC's specific solicitation of comment
on the interim rule's use of a $500,000 benchmark (presently
$1,250,000) for delineating separate deposit insurance treatment for
higher-dollar revocable trust interests, five commenters deemed this to
be a reasonable benchmark, although one advocated that the amount be
raised significantly. One commenter observed that because most owners
of a revocable trust account at an insured depository institution will
commonly fall below the benchmark, the interim rule's lower-dollar
coverage approach--that fails to distinguish unequal beneficial
interests--will simplify coverage.
In response to the interim rule's specific solicitation of comment
regarding the Deposit Insurance Fund, one commenter suggested that it
is likely difficult to clearly determine whether the interim rule will
result in a net increase in the level of insured deposits. In short,
the commenter postulated that, while the increase in deposit insurance
limits and other changes made in the interim rule may permit more
deposits to be deemed ``insured,'' it may also be the case that the
rule's effect will be to simply permit depositors to leave higher
account sums at one insured depository institution instead of having to
spread such revocable trust deposits over multiple institutions.
Four commenters expressly requested that the FDIC clarify the rules
regarding the proper manner of ``titling'' a payable-on-death (``POD'')
account in order to ensure that the revocable trust account funds are
fully insured. Specifically, one citizen commenter relayed that she had
received conflicting advice from numerous local banks as to whether or
not the title of her revocable trust POD account had to expressly
include the acronym ``POD,'' the phrase ``in trust for'' (``ITF''), or
whether it had to include the name of a beneficiary in the title,
either along with, or without, such acronyms. The commenter was unsure
whether current FDIC rules deem it sufficient that the other account
records at the depository institution contain this information. This
commenter advocated that the burden should not fall on the public to
learn and clarify the titling rules. Another commenter advocated
eliminating the requirement that the POD account title contain the POD/
ITF designation, and asserted that it should be sufficient that the
owner's account records at the bank reflect the beneficiaries. A third
commenter expressed the view that banks appear to take different
approaches to titling these accounts and recommended uniform rules to
address this titling issue. Two of these commenters suggested that some
banks' software does not easily permit the addition of ``POD'' or
``ITF'' to account titles. One bank trade association observed that the
purpose of the account titling requirement is to facilitate FDIC
staff's ability, at resolution, to quickly determine deposit insurance
eligibility, and asked whether a bank's utilization of a computer code
in the title to denote account ownership could be deemed sufficient to
meet the revocable trust account titling requirements. On a separate
titling issue, one commenter asked that the FDIC clarify that an owner
may, in naming a POD account, name a revocable trust as a beneficiary.
The FDIC expressly solicited comment on whether the FDIC's
irrevocable trust account rules should be revised so that all trusts
are covered by substantially the same rules. Four comments addressed
the interim rule's continuing application of the revocable trust rules
to a living trust after the death of the owner (and notwithstanding the
fact that such trust converts to an irrevocable trust upon such event),
and all commented favorably. These commenters also urged that the
deposit insurance rules for
[[Page 47713]]
irrevocable and revocable trusts should be the same.
One commenter also expressly advocated that the FDIC clarify that
when a ``sole proprietor'' is a named beneficiary, then the sole
proprietor is covered by the rule in his or her individual capacity.
Lastly, one commenter recommended that the definition of ``non-
contingent trust interest'' be expanded to include the interest of a
discretionary beneficiary and presumptive remainderman of a
discretionary trust.
The Final Revocable Trust Rule
The final rule closely follows the interim rule, with minor
revisions. Notably, in light of the statutory extension of the
temporary increase in the SMDIA, the final rule reflects the new
$250,000 SMDIA, the new $1,250,000 benchmark for revocable trust
account coverage following this change, and revised examples employing
both of these dollar values and revised values for the hypothetical
sums within the examples to enhance their illustrative utility. We also
have provided additional examples illustrating how the revised rules
would apply. Pursuant to statute, December 31, 2013 is the ending date
for the $250,000 SMDIA, and after this date the SMDIA will revert to
$100,000. At that time the FDIC will revisit the need to revise these
limits and examples.
In response to several specific questions raised by commenters
about the titling requirements for revocable trust accounts, clarifying
language has been incorporated into the final rule to address titling
of revocable trust accounts. Simply, the rule provides that, for
revocable trust accounts, ``title'' includes an insured depository
institution's electronic deposit account records. In addressing this
issue, the FDIC is retaining the requirement that the title of a
revocable trust account identify the account as such in order to
qualify for coverage under the revocable trust account rules; however,
the final rule clarifies that the FDIC will consider information in an
insured depository institution's electronic deposit account records to
determine if the titling requirement is satisfied. For example, the
FDIC would recognize an account as a revocable trust account even if
the account signature card does not designate the account as a
revocable trust account as long as the institution's electronic deposit
account records identify (through a code or otherwise) the account as a
revocable trust account.
The final rule, like the interim rule, eliminates the concept of
``qualifying beneficiaries,'' and requires only that a revocable trust
beneficiary be a natural person, or a charity or other non-profit
organization. This change was universally applauded by commenters to
the interim rule. The final rule also incorporates the interim rule's
two-part calculation method for deposit insurance coverage of revocable
trust accounts. While, as a result of the temporary increase in the
SMDIA, the benchmark between the lower-dollar and higher-dollar
revocable trust deposit insurance treatments has increased to
$1,250,000 (from $500,000 as set forth in the originally-issued interim
rule), it is anticipated that the lower-balance treatment for revocable
trust ownership interests falling below $1,250,000 at one institution
will likely capture most revocable trust accounts, and this should
advance the FDIC's goals of simplifying the treatment of unequal
beneficial interests and quickening deposit insurance coverage
determinations. The deposit insurance coverage calculation method for
revocable trust ownership interests that are both above this $1,250,000
benchmark and involve more than five beneficiaries, consistent with the
interim rule, will ensure that reasonable limits remain on the maximum
coverage available to revocable trust account owners and avoid the
potential of unlimited coverage being afforded to such accounts through
contrived trust structures. Moreover, consistent with the interim rule,
where a POD account owner names his or her living trust as a
beneficiary of the POD account, for insurance purposes, the FDIC will
consider the beneficiaries of the trust to be the beneficiaries of the
POD account.
III. Mortgage Servicing Accounts
Background
The FDIC's deposit insurance regulations include specific rules
addressing the deposit insurance coverage of payments collected by
mortgage servicers and deposited in accounts at insured depository
institutions (``mortgage servicing accounts''). 12 CFR 330.7(d).
Accounts maintained by mortgage servicers in a custodial or other
fiduciary capacity may include funds paid by mortgagors (borrowers) for
principal and interest, and may also include funds mortgagors advance
as amounts held for the payment of taxes and insurance premiums.
Historically, under section 330.7(d), funds representing principal
and interest payments in a mortgage servicing account were insured for
the interest of each owner (mortgagee, investor or security holder) in
those accounts. On the other hand, funds maintained by a servicer in a
custodial or fiduciary capacity representing payments by mortgagors of
taxes and insurance premiums are added together and insured for the
ownership interest of each mortgagor in those accounts. Thus, funds
representing payments of principal and interest were insurable on a
pass-through basis to each mortgagee, investor, or security holder,
while funds representing payments of taxes and insurance have been
insurable on a pass-through basis to each mortgagor or borrower. This
treatment was consistent with the FDIC's longstanding view, dating from
the adoption of the rules, that principal and interest funds are owned
by the owners (or mortgagee, investor or security holder) on whose
behalf the servicer, as agent, accepts the principal and interest
payments, and are not funds owned by the borrowers. Taxes and insurance
funds, on the other hand, are insured to the mortgagors or borrowers
under the view that the latter funds are still owned by the borrower
until the servicer actually pays the tax and insurance bills.
In October of last year, the FDIC issued an interim rule addressing
the insurance coverage of mortgage servicing accounts.\7\ In the
interim rule, the FDIC acknowledged that securitization methods for
mortgages have become increasingly complex, with multi-layer
securitization structures possible, and indicated that as a consequence
it has become both more difficult and time-consuming for a servicer to
identify and determine the share of any investor in a securitization
and in the principal and interest funds on deposit at an insured
depository institution. Prior to the issuance of the interim rule, the
FDIC had become increasingly concerned that, in the event of a failure
of an FDIC-insured depository institution, a servicer holding a deposit
account in the institution would have a difficult and time-consuming
task to identify every security holder in the securitization and
determine his or her share. Further, the FDIC believed that application
of the prior deposit insurance rule could result in delays in the
servicer receiving the insured amounts, and result in losses for
amounts that, due to the complexity of the securitization agreements,
could not be attributed to the particular investors to whom the funds
belong. Ultimately, because the FDIC concluded that application of the
previous rule could potentially result in increased losses to otherwise
insured depositors, lead to withdrawal of deposits for principal and
[[Page 47714]]
interest payments from depository institutions, and unnecessarily
reduce liquidity for such institutions, the FDIC issued the interim
rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ 73 FR 61658 (Oct. 17, 2008).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In issuing the interim rule, the FDIC sought to make the deposit
insurance coverage rules for mortgage servicing accounts easy to
understand and apply. Moreover, because the considerable sum of
principal and interest funds on deposit at insured depository
institutions serve as a significant source of liquidity for the
institutions and a source of credit to the institutions' respective
communities, the FDIC sought to prevent the application of the
insurance rules from prompting any inadvertent, adverse consequences.
To address these aims, as well as the practical issues presented by
increasingly complex securitization methods, the interim rule
determined deposit insurance coverage on principal and interest
payments in a mortgage servicing account on a per-mortgagor (or per-
borrower) basis--and not on a pass-through basis to each mortgagee,
investor, or security holder--due to the fact that servicers are able
to identify mortgagors more quickly than investors. This approach
enables the FDIC to pay deposit insurance more quickly. Specifically,
the interim rule provided deposit insurance coverage to a mortgage
servicing account based on each mortgagor's payments of principal and
interest into the account up to the standard maximum deposit insurance
amount of $250,000 per mortgagor.
Coverage is thus provided to the mortgagees/investors as a
collective group, based on the cumulative amount of the mortgagors'
payments of principal and interest into the account. This deposit
insurance coverage of payments of principal and interest per mortgagor
is not aggregated with, nor otherwise affects, the coverage provided to
each such mortgagor in other accounts the mortgagor might maintain at
the same depository institution. This is to be distinguished from the
deposit insurance coverage afforded to payments of taxes and insurance
premiums. Consistent with their treatment historically under the
deposit insurance rules, amounts in a mortgage servicing account that
represent payments for taxes and insurance are insured on a pass-
through basis as the funds of each respective mortgagor, but unlike a
mortgagor's principal and interest payments in the mortgage servicing
account, the payments for taxes and insurance are added to other
individually owned funds of each mortgagor at the same institution and
insured up to the applicable limit.
Comments on the Interim Rule's Mortgage Servicing Provisions
The FDIC received five comments on the interim rule addressing the
deposit insurance coverage of mortgage servicing accounts. All five
comments favored the interim rule's handling of deposit insurance
coverage on payments of principal and interest in a mortgage servicing
account on a per-mortgagor (or per-borrower) basis. These views
included comments from a large bank trade association, a loan servicer,
a large government sponsored enterprise, a loan securitization
professional, along with one comment submitted by a national bank.
Although all five commenters supported the FDIC's interim rule, several
raised specific issues.
One commenter advocated that the regulations clarify that payments
of taxes and insurance in mortgage servicing accounts and ``any similar
accounts'' held by a servicer or paying agent should not be aggregated
with personal accounts of a mortgagor, and noted that the interim rule
was ``not clear'' in this regard. Two commenters urged the FDIC to
apply the interim rule's treatment of principal and interest payments
comprising mortgage servicing accounts to other types of servicing
accounts that similarly consist of principal and interest payments but
for non-mortgage loans, such as motor vehicle loans. In short, they
suggested that the FDIC extend the interim rule's treatment of
principal and interest cash flows to other types of loan
securitizations and not simply mortgages, and suggested that these sums
may raise liquidity concerns similar to those raised by mortgage loan
servicing account funds.
Another commenter supported the interim rule but expressed concern
that several types of mortgage servicing deposits might not be
adequately insured. For example, this commenter advocated that the
rules provide pass-through deposit insurance coverage, on a per-
borrower basis, to other types of mortgage servicing funds, such as
``repair escrows, replacement reserve escrows, bond related escrow
accounts, rental achievement escrows, and debt service escrows.'' This
commenter urged the FDIC to separately insure such accounts, as well as
escrows for taxes and insurance, up to the SMDIA.
The Final Rule on Mortgage Servicing Accounts
The final rule is essentially unchanged from the interim rule.
Although one commenter urged that the FDIC clarify in the rules that
payments of taxes and insurance in mortgage servicing accounts and any
``similar'' accounts held by a servicer should not be aggregated with
personal accounts of a mortgagor, and asserted that the interim rule
was ``not clear'' in this regard, the FDIC concludes that any
additional clarification is unneeded. The interim rule expressly
addressed this issue with respect to tax and insurance payments in
servicing accounts, and specifically contrasted the deposit insurance
treatment of payments of taxes and insurance with the insurance
treatment afforded payments of principal and interest in servicing
accounts. The interim rule provided that the FDIC's historical
treatment of taxes and insurance payments had not changed. Drawing a
clear distinction with principal and interest payments, the interim
rule provided that taxes and insurance funds are instead ``insured to
the mortgagors or borrowers on the theory that the borrower still owns
the funds until the tax and insurance bills are actually paid by the
servicer.''
The preamble to the interim rule indicated that, although the
principal and interest payments in mortgage servicing accounts are not
aggregated for insurance purposes with other accounts the mortgagor
might maintain at the same insured depository institution, ``[a]s under
the current insurance rules, under the interim rule amounts in a
mortgage servicing account constituting payments of taxes and insurance
premiums will be insured on a pass-through basis as the funds of each
respective mortgagor,'' and such funds ``will be added to other
individually owned funds held by each such mortgagor at the same
insured institution.'' This was also made clear in the FDIC's Financial
Institution Letter, FIL-111-2008, issued October 8, 2008. In short, the
interim rule did not alter the FDIC's historical treatment of payments
by mortgagors of tax and insurance premiums in mortgage servicing
accounts.
It was also suggested that the FDIC extend the interim rule's
deposit insurance treatment of principal and interest cash flows to
servicing accounts for other types of loan securitizations--and not
simply mortgages--such as motor vehicle loans. The FDIC declines to do
so. As noted in the interim rule, the FDIC sought to address the
increasing complexity of mortgage securitizations and the resulting
impact these complexities have upon depositor certainty as to the
application of deposit insurance rules, and have upon the timely
resolution of deposit insurance determinations.
[[Page 47715]]
The FDIC also declines the commenter suggestion that separate
insurance, on a pass-through, per-borrower basis be afforded to other
types of mortgage servicing funds such as ``repair escrows, replacement
reserve escrows, bond related escrow accounts, rental achievement
escrows, and debt service escrows.'' As the FDIC noted in the interim
rule, consistent with its previous deposit insurance rules, amounts in
a mortgage servicing account constituting payments of taxes and
insurance premiums are insured on a pass-through basis as the funds of
each respective mortgagor and are added to other individually owned
funds held by each such mortgagor at the same insured institution. The
FDIC's interim rule sought to make the deposit insurance coverage rules
for mortgage servicing accounts easy to understand and apply.
Additionally, because principal and interest funds on deposit at
insured depository institutions serve as both a significant source of
liquidity for the institutions and a significant source of credit to
the institution's community, the FDIC sought to ensure that no
inadvertent adverse consequences resulted from the application of the
deposit insurance rules. It is not clear that the suggested revisions
would be consistent with either of these aims. Although commenter[s]
suggested that other types of ``escrow'' funds should garner similar
treatment under the insurance rules as do deposits representing tax and
insurance payments, the comment does not clearly identify in what
specific manner the legal rights and obligations attendant to these
various types of bond-related, debt service, and rental achievement
escrows are similar to the rights and obligations of mortgagors in
their tax and insurance payments. Nor is it clear whether, and to what
extent, such payments represent a significant liquidity source for
depository institutions such that the need for more specific clarity as
to deposit insurance is needed in order to avert any inadvertent
consequences or losses to borrowers or investors.
IV. Technical Amendments to FDIC International Banking Regulations
The FDIC is also amending its Part 347 International Banking
regulations to make technical, conforming amendments relating to the
SMDIA. The FDI Reform Act introduced the term ``SMDIA'' and instituted
several substantive changes to the deposit insurance coverage
provisions in the FDI Act. Additionally, the Federal Deposit Insurance
Reform Conforming Amendments Act of 2005 (``Reform Conforming Act''),
Public Law 109-173, amended the International Banking Act of 1978, 12
U.S.C. 3104, necessitating the need for technical conforming amendments
to substitute the term ``SMDIA'' in place of ``$100,000'' in the FDIC's
International Banking regulations. 12 CFR Part 347.\8\ The four-year
extension in the increase in the SMDIA, which provides the FDIC with
the necessity to make revisions to the deposit insurance regulations
and examples therein, also affords the FDIC with the opportunity to now
make technical amendments to the FDIC's international banking
regulations to replace several distinct references to a ``$100,000''
benchmark with references to the SMDIA, consistent with the Reform
Conforming Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\8\ Per statute, the Reform Conforming Act substitution of the
SMDIA in the international banking provisions was effective on April
1, 2006. Reform Conforming Act Sec. 2; 71 FR 14629 (March 23,
2006).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
V. Paperwork Reduction Act
The final rule will revise the FDIC's deposit insurance
regulations. It will not involve any new collections of information
pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
Consequently, no information collection has been submitted to the
Office of Management and Budget for review.
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act requires an agency that is issuing a
final rule to prepare and make available a regulatory flexibility
analysis that describes the impact of the final rule on small entities.
5 U.S.C. 603(a). The Regulatory Flexibility Act provides that an agency
is not required to prepare and publish a regulatory flexibility
analysis if the agency certifies that the final rule will not have a
significant impact on a substantial number of small entities.
Pursuant to section 605(b) of the Regulatory Flexibility Act, the
FDIC certifies that the final rule will not have a significant impact
on a substantial number of small entities. The final rule implements
the temporary increase in the SMDIA, simplifies the coverage rules for
mortgage servicing accounts, and simplifies the deposit insurance rules
for revocable trust accounts held at FDIC-insured depository
institutions.
VII. The Treasury and General Government Appropriations Act, 1999--
Assessment of Federal Regulations and Policies on Families
The FDIC has determined that the final rule will not affect family
well-being within the meaning of section 654 of the Treasury and
General Government Appropriations Act, enacted as part of the Omnibus
Consolidated and Emergency Supplemental Appropriations Act of 1999
(Pub. L. 105-277, 112 Stat. 2681). The final rule should have a
positive effect on families by clarifying the coverage rules for
mortgage servicing accounts, which contain, for a period of time, the
mortgage payments from borrowers, and the rules for revocable trust
accounts, a popular type of consumer bank account.
VIII. Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act
The Office of Management and Budget has determined that the final
rule is not a ``major rule'' within the meaning of the relevant
sections of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Act of 1996
(``SBREFA'') (5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.). As required by SBREFA, the FDIC
will file the appropriate reports with Congress and the General
Accounting Office so that the final rule may be reviewed.
IX. Plain Language
Section 722 of the Gramm-Leach-Blilely Act (Pub. L. 106-102, 113
Stat. 1338, 1471), requires the Federal banking agencies to use plain
language in all proposed and final rules published after January 1,
2000. The FDIC has sought to present the final rule in a simple and
straightforward manner, and has made revisions to the previous interim
rule in response to commenter concerns seeking clarification of the
application of the deposit insurance rules.
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 330
Bank deposit insurance, Banks, Banking, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Savings and loan associations, Trusts and trustees.
12 CFR Part 347
Bank deposit insurance, Banks, Banking, International banking;
Foreign banks.
0
For the reasons stated above, the Board of Directors of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation hereby amends parts 330 and 347 of title
12 of the Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 330--DEPOSIT INSURANCE COVERAGE
0
1. The authority citation for part 330 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1813(1), 1813(m), 1817(i), 1818(q), 1819
(Tenth), 1820(f), 1821(a), 1822(c).
[[Page 47716]]
0
2. In Sec. 330.1, paragraph (n) is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 330.1 Definitions.
* * * * *
(n) Standard maximum deposit insurance amount, referred to as the
``SMDIA'' hereafter, means $250,000 from October 3, 2008, until
December 31, 2013. Effective January 1, 2014, the SMDIA means $100,000
adjusted pursuant to subparagraph (F) of section 11(a)(1) of the FDI
Act (12 U.S.C. 1821(a)(1)(F)). All examples in this part use $250,000
as the SMDIA.
* * * * *
0
3. In Sec. 330.7, paragraph (d) is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 330.7 Account held by an agent, nominee, guardian, custodian or
conservator.
* * * * *
(d) Mortgage servicing accounts. Accounts maintained by a mortgage
servicer, in a custodial or other fiduciary capacity, which are
comprised of payments by mortgagors of principal and interest, shall be
insured for the cumulative balance paid into the account by the
mortgagors, up to the limit of the SMDIA per mortgagor. Accounts
maintained by a mortgage servicer, in a custodial or other fiduciary
capacity, which are comprised of payments by mortgagors of taxes and
insurance premiums shall be added together and insured in accordance
with paragraph (a) of this section for the ownership interest of each
mortgagor in such accounts. This provision is effective as of October
10, 2008, for all existing and future mortgage servicing accounts.
* * * * *
0
4. In Sec. 330.9, paragraph (b) is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 330.9 Joint ownership accounts.
* * * * *
(b) Determination of insurance coverage. The interests of each co-
owner in all qualifying joint accounts shall be added together and the
total shall be insured up to the SMDIA. (Example: ``A&B'' have a
qualifying joint account with a balance of $150,000; ``A&C'' have a
qualifying joint account with a balance of $200,000; and ``A&B&C'' have
a qualifying joint account with a balance of $375,000. A's combined
ownership interest in all qualifying joint accounts would be $300,000
($75,000 plus $100,000 plus $125,000); therefore, A's interest would be
insured in the amount of $250,000 and uninsured in the amount of
$50,000. B's combined ownership interest in all qualifying joint
accounts would be $200,000 ($75,000 plus $125,000); therefore, B's
interest would be fully insured. C's combined ownership interest in all
qualifying joint accounts would be $225,000 ($100,000 plus $125,000);
therefore, C's interest would be fully insured.
* * * * *
0
5. Section 330.10 is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 330.10 Revocable trust accounts.
(a) General rule. Except as provided in paragraph (e) of this
section, the funds owned by an individual and deposited into one or
more accounts with respect to which the owner evidences an intention
that upon his or her death the funds shall belong to one or more
beneficiaries shall be separately insured (from other types of accounts
the owner has at the same insured depository institution) in an amount
equal to the total number of different beneficiaries named in the
account(s) multiplied by the SMDIA. This section applies to all
accounts held in connection with informal and formal testamentary
revocable trusts. Such informal trusts are commonly referred to as
payable-on-death accounts, in-trust-for accounts or Totten Trust
accounts, and such formal trusts are commonly referred to as living
trusts or family trusts. (Example 1: Account Owner ``A'' has a living
trust account with four different beneficiaries named in the trust. A
has no other revocable trust accounts at the same FDIC-insured
institution. The maximum insurance coverage would be $1,000,000,
determined by multiplying 4 times $250,000 (the number of beneficiaries
times the SMDIA). (Example 2: Account Owner ``A'' has a payable-on-
death account naming his niece and cousin as beneficiaries, and A also
has, at the same FDIC-insured institution, another payable-on-death
account naming the same niece and a friend as beneficiaries. The
maximum coverage available to the account owner would be $750,000. This
is because the account owner has named only three different
beneficiaries in the revocable trust accounts--his niece and cousin in
the first, and the same niece and a friend in the second. The naming of
the same beneficiary in more than one revocable trust account, whether
it be a payable-on-death account or living trust account, does not
increase the total coverage amount.) (Example 3: Account Owner ``A''
establishes a living trust account, with a balance of $300,000, naming
his two children ``B'' and ``C'' as beneficiaries. A also establishes,
at the same FDIC-insured institution, a payable-on-death account, with
a balance of $300,000, also naming his children B and C as
beneficiaries. The maximum coverage available to A is $500,000,
determined by multiplying 2 times $250,000 (the number of different
beneficiaries times the SMDIA). A is uninsured in the amount of
$100,000. This is because all funds that a depositor holds in both
living trust accounts and payable-on-death accounts, at the same FDIC-
insured institution and naming the same beneficiaries, are aggregated
for insurance purposes and insured to the applicable coverage limits.)
(b) Required intention and naming of beneficiaries. (1) The
required intention in paragraph (a) of this section that upon the
owner's death the funds shall belong to one or more beneficiaries must
be manifested in the ``title'' of the account using commonly accepted
terms such as, but not limited to, ``in trust for,'' ``as trustee
for,'' ``payable-on-death to,'' or any acronym therefor. For purposes
of this requirement, ``title'' includes the electronic deposit account
records of the institution. (For example, the FDIC would recognize an
account as a revocable trust account even if the title of the account
signature card does not designate the account as a revocable trust
account as long as the institution's electronic deposit account records
identify (through a code or otherwise) the account as a revocable trust
account.) The settlor of a revocable trust shall be presumed to own the
funds deposited into the account.
(2) For informal revocable trust accounts, the beneficiaries must
be specifically named in the deposit account records of the insured
depository institution.
(c) Definition of beneficiary. For purposes of this section, a
beneficiary includes a natural person as well as a charitable
organization and other non-profit entity recognized as such under the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, as amended.
(d) Interests of beneficiaries outside the definition of
beneficiary in this section. If a beneficiary named in a trust covered
by this section does not meet the definition of beneficiary in
paragraph (c) of this section, the funds corresponding to that
beneficiary shall be treated as the individually owned (single
ownership) funds of the owner(s). As such, they shall be aggregated
with any other single ownership accounts of such owner(s) and insured
up to the SMDIA per owner. (Example: Account Owner ``A'' establishes a
payable-on-death account naming a pet as beneficiary with a balance of
$100,000. A also has an individual account at the same FDIC-insured
institution with a balance of
[[Page 47717]]
$175,000. Because the pet is not a ``beneficiary,'' the two accounts
are aggregated and treated as a single ownership account. As a result,
A is insured in the amount of $250,000, but is uninsured for the
remaining $25,000.)
(e) Revocable trust accounts with aggregate balances exceeding five
times the SMDIA and naming more than five different beneficiaries.
Notwithstanding the general coverage provisions in paragraph (a) of
this section, for funds owned by an individual in one or more revocable
trust accounts naming more than five different beneficiaries and whose
aggregate balance is more than five times the SMDIA, the maximum
revocable trust account coverage for the account owner shall be the
greater of either: five times the SMDIA or the aggregate amount of the
interests of each different beneficiary named in the trusts, to a limit
of the SMDIA per different beneficiary. (Example 1: Account Owner ``A''
has a living trust with a balance of $1 million and names two friends,
``B'' and ``C'' as beneficiaries. At the same FDIC-insured institution,
A establishes a payable-on-death account, with a balance of $1 million
naming his two cousins, ``D'' and ``E'' as beneficiaries. Coverage is
determined under the general coverage provisions in paragraph (a) of
this section, and not this paragraph (e). This is because all funds
that A holds in both living trust accounts and payable-on-death
accounts, at the same FDIC-insured institution, are aggregated for
insurance purposes. Although A's aggregated balance of $2 million is
more than five times the SMDIA, A names only four different
beneficiaries, and coverage under this paragraph (e) applies only if
there are more than five different beneficiaries. A is insured in the
amount of $1 million (4 beneficiaries times the SMDIA), and uninsured
for the remaining $1 million.) (Example 2: Account Owner ``A'' has a
living trust account with a balance of $1,500,000. Under the terms of
the trust, upon A's death, A's three children are each entitled to
$125,000, A's friend is entitled to $15,000, and a designated charity
is entitled to $175,000. The trust also provides that the remainder of
the trust assets shall belong to A's spouse. In this case, because the
balance of the account exceeds $1,250,000 (5 times the SMDIA) and there
are more than five different beneficiaries named in the trust, the
maximum coverage available to A would be the greater of: $1,250,000 or
the aggregate of each different beneficiary's interest to a limit of
$250,000 per beneficiary. The beneficial interests in the trust for
purposes of determining coverage are: $125,000 for each of the children
(totaling $375,000), $15,000 for the friend, $175,000 for the charity,
and $250,000 for the spouse (because the spouse's $935,000 is subject
to the $250,000 per-beneficiary limitation). The aggregate beneficial
interests total $815,000. Thus, the maximum coverage afforded to the
account owner would be $1,250,000, the greater of $1,250,000 or
$815,000.)
(f) Co-owned revocable trust accounts. (1) Where an account
described in paragraph (a) of this section is established by more than
one owner, the respective interest of each account owner (which shall
be deemed equal) shall be insured separately, per different
beneficiary, up to the SMDIA, subject to the limitation imposed in
paragraph (e) of this section. (Example 1: A and B, two individuals,
establish a payable-on-death account naming their three nieces as
beneficiaries. Neither A nor B has any other revocable trust accounts
at the same FDIC-insured institution. The maximum coverage afforded to
A and B would be $1,500,000, determined by multiplying the number of
owners (2) times the SMDIA ($250,000) times the number of different
beneficiaries (3). In this example, A would be entitled to revocable
trust coverage of $750,000 and B would be entitled to revocable trust
coverage of $750,000.) (Example 2: A and B, two individuals, establish
a payable-on-death account naming their two children, two cousins, and
a charity as beneficiaries. The balance in the account is $1,750,000.
Neither A nor B has any other revocable trust accounts at the same
FDIC-insured institution. The maximum coverage would be determined
(under paragraph (a) of this section) by multiplying the number of
account owners (2) times the number of different beneficiaries (5)
times $250,000, totaling $2,500,000. Because the account balance
($1,750,000) is less than the maximum coverage amount ($2,500,000), the
account would be fully insured.) (Example 3: A and B, two individuals,
establish a living trust account with a balance of $3.75 million. Under
the terms of the trust, upon the death of both A and B, each of their
three children is entitled to $600,000, B's cousin is entitled to
$380,000, A's friend is entitled to $70,000, and the remaining amount
($1,500,000) goes to a charity. Under paragraph (e) of this section,
the maximum coverage, as to each co-owned account owner, would be the
greater of $1,250,000 or the aggregate amount (as to each co-owner) of
the interest of each different beneficiary named in the trust, to a
limit of $250,000 per account owner per beneficiary. The beneficial
interests in the trust considered for purposes of determining coverage
for account owner A are: $750,000 for the children (each child's
interest attributable to A, $300,000, is subject to the $250,000-per-
beneficiary limitation), $190,000 for the cousin, $35,000 for the
friend, and $250,000 for the charity (the charity's interest
attributable to A, $750,000, is subject to the $250,000 per-beneficiary
limitation). As to A, the aggregate amount of the beneficial interests
eligible for deposit insurance coverage totals $1,225,000. Thus, the
maximum coverage afforded to account co-owner A would be $1,250,000,
which is the greater of $1,250,000 or the aggregate of all the
beneficial interests attributable to A (limited to $250,000 per
beneficiary), which totaled slightly less at $1,225,000. Because B has
equal ownership interest in the trust, the same analysis and coverage
determination also would apply to B. Thus, of the total account balance
of $3.75 million, $2.5 million would be insured and $1.25 million would
be uninsured.)
(2) Notwithstanding paragraph (f)(1) of this section, where the
owners of a co-owned revocable trust account are themselves the sole
beneficiaries of the corresponding trust, the account shall be insured
as a joint account under Sec. 330.9 and shall not be insured under the
provisions of this section. (Example: If A and B establish a payable-
on-death account naming themselves as the sole beneficiaries of the
account, the account will be insured as a joint account because the
account does not satisfy the intent requirement (under paragraph (a) of
this section) that the funds in the account belong to the named
beneficiaries upon the owners' death. The beneficiaries are in fact the
actual owners of the funds during the account owners' lifetimes.)
(g) For deposit accounts held in connection with a living trust
that provides for a life-estate interest for designated beneficiaries,
the FDIC shall value each such life estate interest as the SMDIA for
purposes of determining the insurance coverage available to the account
owner under paragraph (e) of this section. (Example: Account Owner
``A'' has a living trust account with a balance of $1,500,000. Under
the terms of the trust, A provides a life estate interest for his
spouse. Moreover, A's three children are each entitled to $275,000, A's
friend is entitled to $15,000, and a designated charity is entitled to
$175,000. The trust also provides that the remainder of the trust
assets shall belong to A's granddaughter. In this case, because the
balance of the account exceeds $1,250,000 ((5) five
[[Page 47718]]
times the SMDIA) and there are more than five different beneficiaries
named in the trust, the maximum coverage available to A would be the
greater of: $1,250,000 or the aggregate of each different beneficiary's
interest to a limit of $250,000 per beneficiary. The beneficial
interests in the trust considered for purposes of determining coverage
are: $250,000 for the spouse's life estate, $750,000 for the children
(because each child's $275,000 is subject to the $250,000 per-
beneficiary limitation), $15,000 for the friend, $175,000 for the
charity, and $250,000 for the granddaughter (because the
granddaughter's $310,000 remainder is limited by the $250,000 per-
beneficiary limitation). The aggregate beneficial interests total
$1,440,000. Thus, the maximum coverage afforded to the account owner
would be $1,440,000, the greater of $1,250,000 or $1,440,000.)
(h) Revocable trusts that become irrevocable trusts.
Notwithstanding the provisions in section 330.13 on the insurance
coverage of irrevocable trust accounts, if a revocable trust account
converts in part or entirely to an irrevocable trust upon the death of
one or more of the trust's owners, the trust account shall continue to
be insured under the provisions of this section. (Example: Assume A and
B have a trust account in connection with a living trust, of which they
are joint grantors. If upon the death of either A or B the trust
transforms into an irrevocable trust as to the deceased grantor's
ownership in the trust, the account will continue to be insured under
the provisions of this section.)
(i) This section shall apply to all existing and future revocable
trust accounts and all existing and future irrevocable trust accounts
resulting from formal revocable trust accounts.
PART 347--INTERNATIONAL BANKING
0
6. The authority citation for part 347 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1813, 1815, 1817, 1819, 1820, 1828, 3103,
3104, 3105, 3108, 3109; Title IX, Pub. L. 98-181, 97 Stat. 1153.
0
7. In Sec. 347.202:
0
A. Paragraph (e) is revised.
0
B. Paragraphs (v), (w) and (x) are redesignated as (w), (x) and (y),
respectively, and a new paragraph (v) is added.
The revision and addition read as follows:
Sec. 347.202 Definitions.
* * * * *
(e) Domestic retail deposit activity means the acceptance by a
Federal or State branch of any initial deposit of less than an amount
equal to the standard maximum deposit insurance amount (``SMDIA'').
* * * * *
(v) Standard maximum deposit insurance amount, referred to as the
``SMDIA'' hereafter, means $250,000 from October 3, 2008, until
December 31, 2013. Effective January 1, 2014, the SMDIA means $100,000
adjusted pursuant to subparagraph (F) of section 11(a)(1) of the FDI
Act (12 U.S.C. 1821(a)(1)(F)).
* * * * *
0
8. In Sec. 347.206, paragraph (c) is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 347.206 Domestic retail deposit activity requiring deposit
insurance by U.S. branch of a foreign bank.
* * * * *
(c) Grandfathered insured branches. Domestic retail accounts with
balances of less than an amount equal to the SMDIA that require deposit
insurance protection may be accepted or maintained in an insured branch
of a foreign bank only if such branch was an insured branch on December
19, 1991.
* * * * *
0
9. In Sec. 347.213, paragraph (a)(1) is revised to read as follows:
Sec. 347.213 Establishment or operation of noninsured foreign branch.
(a) * * *
(1) The branch only accepts initial deposits in an amount equal to
the SMDIA or greater; or
* * * * *
0
10. In Sec. 347.215:
0
A. Paragraph (a) introductory text is revised.
0
B. Paragraph (b)(1) is revised.
The revisions read as follows:
Sec. 347.215 Exemptions from deposit insurance requirement.
(a) Deposit activities not requiring insurance. A State branch will
not be considered to be engaged in domestic retail deposit activity
that requires the foreign bank parent to establish an insured U.S. bank
subsidiary if the State branch accepts initial deposits only in an
amount of less than an amount equal to the SMDIA that are derived
solely from the following:
* * * * *
(b) Application for an exemption. (1) Whenever a foreign bank
proposes to accept at a State branch initial deposits of less than an
amount equal to the SMDIA and such deposits are not otherwise exempted
under paragraph (a) of this section, the foreign bank may apply to the
FDIC for consent to operate the branch as a noninsured branch. The
Board of Directors may exempt the branch from the insurance requirement
if the branch is not engaged in domestic retail deposit activities
requiring insurance protection. The Board of Directors will consider
the size and nature of depositors and deposit accounts, the importance
of maintaining and improving the availability of credit to all sectors
of the United States economy, including the international trade finance
sector of the United States economy, whether the exemption would give
the foreign bank an unfair competitive advantage over United States
banking organizations, and any other relevant factors in making this
determination.
* * * * *
Dated at Washington, DC, this 9th day of September 2009.
By order of the Board of Directors.
Robert E. Feldman,
Executive Secretary, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
[FR Doc. E9-22406 Filed 9-16-09; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6714-01-P