Use of Community Development Loans by Community Financial Institutions To Secure Advances; Secured Lending by Federal Home Loan Banks to Members and Their Affiliates; Transfer of Advances and New Business Activity Regulations, 76617-76624 [2010-30519]
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 236 / Thursday, December 9, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
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[FR Doc. 2010–30962 Filed 12–8–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6325–39–P
FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE BOARD
12 CFR Parts 950 and 980
FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE
AGENCY
12 CFR Parts 1264, 1266, 1269, and
1272
RIN 2590–AA24
Use of Community Development Loans
by Community Financial Institutions
To Secure Advances; Secured Lending
by Federal Home Loan Banks to
Members and Their Affiliates; Transfer
of Advances and New Business
Activity Regulations
Federal Housing Finance
Board, Federal Housing Finance
Agency.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
Section 1211 of the Housing
and Economic Recovery Act of 2008
(HERA) amended the Federal Home
Loan Bank Act (Bank Act) to expand the
types of eligible collateral that
community financial institution (CFI)
members may pledge to secure Federal
Home Loan Bank (Bank) advances to
include secured loans for community
development activities and to allow
Banks to make long term advances to
CFI members for purposes of financing
community development activities.
Section 1211 further provides that the
Federal Housing Finance Agency
(FHFA) shall define the term
‘‘community development activities’’ by
regulation. To implement these
provisions, FHFA is amending the
advances regulation to allow CFI
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SUMMARY:
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members to pledge community
development loans as collateral for
advances and is adopting a definition of
‘‘community development’’ as proposed.
The final rule also will transfer the
advances and new business activities
rules from parts 950 and 980 of the
Federal Housing Finance Board (FHFB)
regulations, to new parts 1266 and 1272
of the FHFA regulations, respectively,
and make other conforming
amendments. Finally, the final rule will
make a change to the advances
regulation to incorporate a longstanding policy previously established
by the FHFB that secured lending to a
member of any Bank is an advance that
must meet the requirements of the
advances regulation. The final rule
language has been clarified to assure
that certain types of transactions, such
as derivatives, will not be considered
secured lending for the purposes of this
provision. The new provision
addressing secured lending does not
include a prohibition on secured
transactions with affiliates of members,
as was initially proposed.
DATES: The final rule is effective on
January 10, 2011.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Thomas E. Joseph, Senior Attorney
Advisor, thomas.joseph@fhfa.gov, (202)
414–3095 (not a toll-free number);
Office of General Counsel, Federal
Housing Finance Agency, Fourth Floor,
1700 G Street, NW., Washington, DC
20552; or Julie Paller, Senior Financial
Analyst, julie.paller@fhfa.gov, 202–408–
2842 (not a toll-free number); Division
of Federal Home Loan Bank Regulation,
Federal Housing Finance Agency, 1625
Eye Street, NW., Washington, DC 20006.
The telephone number for the
Telecommunications Device for the
Hearing Impaired is (800) 877–8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
A. Establishment of FHFA
Effective July 30, 2008, Division A of
HERA, Public Law 110–289, 122 Stat.
2654 (2008), created FHFA as an
independent agency of the Federal
government. HERA transferred the
supervisory and oversight
responsibilities over the Federal
National Mortgage Association (Fannie
Mae), the Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corporation (Freddie Mac) (collectively,
Enterprises), the Banks, and the Bank
System’s Office of Finance, from the
Office of Federal Housing Enterprise
Oversight (OFHEO) and the FHFB to
FHFA. FHFA is responsible for ensuring
that the Enterprises and the Banks
operate in a safe and sound manner,
including being capitalized adequately,
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76617
and that they carry out their public
policy missions, including fostering
liquid, efficient, competitive, and
resilient national housing finance
markets. The Enterprises and the Banks
continue to operate under regulations
promulgated by OFHEO and FHFB until
FHFA issues its own regulations. See
section 1302 Public Law 110–289, 122
Stat. 2795.
B. Statutory and Regulatory Background
Each Bank is a cooperative institution
that is owned by its members. Any
eligible institution (generally a federally
insured depository institution or stateregulated insurance company) may
become a member of a Bank if it satisfies
certain criteria and purchases a
specified amount of the Bank’s capital
stock. 12 U.S.C. 1424, 1426; 12 CFR part
1263. Only members or certain eligible
housing associates (such as state
housing finance agencies) may obtain
access to secured loans, known as
advances, or other products provided by
a Bank. 12 U.S.C. 1426(a)(4), 1430(a),
1430b.
Prior to HERA, CFIs were defined
under the Bank Act as depository
institutions insured under the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1811 et
seq.) with average total assets of less
than $500 million, as adjusted annually
for inflation thereafter. 12 U.S.C.
1422(13) (2008). Section 1211 of HERA
raised the $500 million average total
assets cap to $1 billion. See section 1211
Public Law No. 110–289, 122 Stat. 2790
(amending 12 U.S.C. 1422(10)). By
Notice published in the Federal
Register in February 2009, FHFA
adjusted the $1 billion figure for
inflation to $1.011 billion. 74 FR 7438
(Feb. 17, 2009). As part of FHFA’s
separate rulemaking addressing Bank
membership for community
development financial institutions,
FHFA included a technical amendment
to the definition of ‘‘CFI’’ to implement
the average total asset cap increase to $1
billion made by HERA.1 See 74 FR
22848, 22857 (May 15, 2009); 75 FR 678,
691 (Jan. 5, 2010).
Under the Bank Act, any member,
including a CFI, that wishes to borrow
from its Bank must pledge certain types
of collateral to secure its repayment
obligation on advances, and must
otherwise demonstrate to the Bank that
it is creditworthy. 12 U.S.C. 1430(a).
Each Bank sets its own lending and
collateral policies, which may vary from
Bank to Bank and will apply to all
borrowing members of that Bank. Prior
to HERA, section 10(a)(3) of the Bank
1 FHFA also relocated the part 925 regulations to
part 1263 of the FHFA’s regulations. 75 FR 678.
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Act specified that a member may pledge
the following types of collateral to
secure an advance: (i) Fully disbursed,
whole first mortgages on improved
residential property not more than 90
days delinquent, or securities
representing a whole interest in such
mortgages; (ii) securities issued, insured
or guaranteed by the U.S. Government
or any agency thereof; (iii) cash or
deposits of a Bank; (iv) other real estate
related collateral acceptable to the Bank,
provided the value of such collateral is
readily ascertainable and the Bank can
perfect its security interest in the
collateral; and (v) for institutions that
qualify as CFIs, secured loans for small
business or agriculture, or securities
representing a whole interest in such
secured loans.2 See 12 U.S.C. 1430(a)(3).
Section 1211 of HERA amended section
10(a)(3)(E) of the Bank Act to broaden
the collateral that may be pledged by
CFI members to include secured loans
for community development activities.
Section 1211 Public Law 110–289, 122
Stat. 2790 (amending 12 U.S.C.
1430(a)(3)(E)).
In addition, prior to HERA, section
10(a)(2) of the Bank Act provided that
a Bank could make a long-term advance
to a member only for the purposes of
providing funds to the member for
residential housing finance, except that
it also allowed long-term advances to
CFI members for purposes of funding
small business, small farm, and small
agri-business lending.3 12 U.S.C.
1430(a)(2). Section 1211 of HERA
amended section 10(a)(2)(B) of the Bank
Act so that a Bank also may make longterm advances to a CFI member to fund
community development activities.
Section 1211, Public Law 110–289, 122
Stat. 2790 (amending 12 U.S.C.
1430(a)(2)(B)).
Section 1211 of HERA also amended
section 10(a)(6) of the Bank Act to
provide that the term ‘‘community
development activities’’ shall have the
meaning given such term by regulation
by the Director of FHFA. Id. (amending
12 U.S.C. 1430(a)(6)). The legislative
history of HERA does not further
illuminate Congress’ intent in making
these amendments.
2 In addition, the Banks under their Community
Investment Cash Advance Programs (CICA) may
provide advances to support economic
development that benefit persons based on defined
targeted income levels or targeted geographic areas.
12 CFR part 952.
3 Applicable regulations define a long-term
advance as one ‘‘with an original term to maturity
of greater than five years.’’
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C. Considerations of Differences
Between the Banks and the Enterprises
Section 1201 of HERA requires the
Director, when promulgating regulations
relating to the Banks, to consider the
following differences between the Banks
and the Enterprises: cooperative
ownership structure; mission of
providing liquidity to members;
affordable housing and community
development mission; capital structure;
and joint and several liability. See
section 1201 Public Law 110–289, 122
Stat. 2782–83 (amending 12 U.S.C.
4513). The Director also may consider
any other differences that are deemed
appropriate. In preparing this final
regulation, FHFA considered the
differences between the Banks and the
Enterprises as they relate to the above
factors. As part of its proposed
rulemaking, FHFA also requested
comments from the public about
whether differences related to these
factors should result in any revisions to
the proposal, but received no comments
on this point in response.
II. The Final Regulation
A. The Proposed Rule and Comments
Received
FHFA published a proposed rule in
the Federal Register on February 23,
2010 to implement the provisions in
HERA allowing CFIs to pledge
‘‘community development loans’’ as
collateral for advances and the Banks to
make long term advances to a CFI
member to fund community
development activities. 75 FR 7990
(Feb. 23, 2010). As part of its
implementation of these provisions,
FHFA proposed defining ‘‘community
development’’ as having:
the same meaning as under the definition set
forth in the Community Reinvestment rule
for the Federal Reserve System (12 CFR part
228), Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(12 CFR part 345), the Office of Thrift
Supervision (12 CFR part 563e) or the Office
of the Comptroller of the Currency (12 CFR
part 25), whichever is the CFI member’s
primary federal regulator.
Id. at 7994.
FHFA also proposed defining
‘‘community development loan’’ as:
A loan that has as its primary purpose
community development, but such loans
shall not include: (1) Any loan or instrument
that qualifies as eligible security for an
advance under § 1266.7(a) of this part; or (2)
Consumer loans or credit extended to one or
more individuals for household, family or
other personal expenditures.
Id.
The proposed rule also would have
amended the advances regulation to
incorporate a long-standing Finance
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Board policy that deemed any form of
secured lending by a Bank to a Bank
System member an advance subject to
the rules governing advances. The
proposal would have extended this
policy to cover affiliates of any
members, and, as a consequence, would
have prohibited a Bank from entering
into secured lending transactions with
member affiliates. Finally, the proposed
rule would have transferred the
advances and the new business activity
regulation, respectively, from parts 950
and 980 of the Finance Board
regulations to parts 1266 and 1272 of
the FHFA regulations.
FHFA received eleven comment
letters on the proposed rule. Eleven of
the twelve Banks commented, including
a joint letter which was signed by three
Banks. One letter came from an
association representing municipal
governments and one letter came from
a private citizen. All the Bank comment
letters addressed proposed § 1266.2(e) of
the rule, which would have required
secured transactions with the member of
any Bank to meet the requirements of an
advance and would have prohibited
secured transactions between a Bank
and an affiliate of a member of any
Bank. As is discussed below, these
letters generally suggested clarification
to the proposed rule language so that
any restriction did not carry unintended
consequences and limit transactions
beyond borrowings by members. These
letters also stated that the proposed
restrictions on secured transactions with
affiliates of members would eliminate
an important and safe liquidity
investment for the Banks and urged that
the provision be substantially revised in
this respect or not be adopted.
Two comment letters, including the
joint Bank letter, addressed the
proposed provisions allowing
‘‘community development loans’’ to be
pledged as collateral by CFIs. Both
letters made similar comments and
generally urged FHFA to expand the
definitions of ‘‘community
development’’ and ‘‘community
development loan’’ and not tie the
definition to criteria based on income
targeting. These comments are also
addressed more fully below. No
comments were made on other aspects
of the proposed rule. All comment
letters are posted on the FHFA Internet
Web site at https://www.fhfa.gov.
B. Final Rule Provisions
Definitions—§ 1266.1
FHFA proposed adding definitions for
‘‘community development’’ and
‘‘community development loan’’ to the
advances regulation to help implement
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the HERA provision allowing CFI
members to pledge community
development loans to secure advances.
In the proposed rule, ‘‘community
development’’ was defined with
reference to the definition for this term
adopted by CFI members’ primary
federal regulators under Community
Reinvestment Act (CRA) regulations.4 In
turn, FHFA proposed to define
‘‘community development loan’’ as a
loan that has community development
as its primary purpose. Because FHFA
did not intend the proposed definition
to call into question the validity of any
collateral allowed under the advances
regulation to be pledged by all members,
the proposed definition of ‘‘community
development loan’’ excluded categories
of eligible collateral identified in
§ 950.7(a) of the advances rule 5 from its
scope. FHFA specifically requested
comments on whether, and how, these
proposed definitions might be altered to
better help CFI members fund
community development activities
while continuing to assure that
advances be secured only by high
quality collateral. 75 FR at 7992.
FHFA received two comments on
these definitions. Both comments urged
FHFA to adopt a broader definition for
‘‘community development’’ that would
not include the income targeting criteria
inherent in the proposed definition.
They argued (albeit for different
reasons) that the proposed definition of
‘‘community lending’’ was contrary to
Congressional intent in adopting section
1211 and that a broader definition
would better meet Congress’ reasons for
including this provision in HERA.
Instead of the proposed definition, the
commenters suggested developing a
definition based on the one used for
‘‘economic development projects’’ in
FHFA’s current Community Investment
Cash Advance Programs (CICA)
regulations.6 One commenter proposed
a specific definition for ‘‘community
development’’ that included criteria that
4 See 12 CFR 25.12, 228.12, 345.12, and 563e.12.
Under this definition, ‘‘community development’’
would have encompassed affordable housing,
community services targeted to low- and moderateincome individuals, economic development
activities through financing of businesses and farms
that meet size eligibility standards of the Small
Business Administration’s Development Company
or Small Business Investment Company Programs
or have gross annual revenues of $1 million or less,
and activities that revitalize or stabilize low- or
moderate-income geographies, designated disaster
areas, or certain designated, distressed, or
underserved non-metropolitan middle-income
geographies.
5 As part of the transfer of the advances regulation
to part 1266, this provision will be redesignated as
§ 1266.7(a). This provision identifies collateral that
can be pledged by all Bank members to secure
advances.
6 See 12 CFR 952.1.
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would limit the definition to projects or
activities that were the recipient of any
form of federal, state or local
government support. The commenter
believed such criteria would help
identify the activity or project as one
viewed by federal, state or local
governments as important for the
community in question.
FHFA has considered these
comments, but generally does not find
them persuasive. As noted when FHFA
proposed its definition of ‘‘community
development,’’ the legislative history of
HERA does not clearly illuminate
Congressional intent in allowing
secured loans for community
development to be pledged as collateral
by CFI members to support advances.
Instead, section 1211(b) of HERA
provided FHFA with broad flexibility to
define the term ‘‘community
development activities.’’ More
importantly, although HERA did not
specify income targeting criteria in the
provision concerning ‘‘community
development,’’ the concept of
community development lending is not
new in banking law and is a welldeveloped concept as evidenced by the
Community Reinvestment Act, and the
regulations adopted by federal banking
regulators to implement that statute. As
it noted in proposing this definition,
FHFA is relying on this long-standing
regulatory history in defining the term.
Moreover, by linking the definition of
‘‘community development’’ to the
Community Reinvestment Act rules of
the banking regulators, FHFA will
ensure that future changes and
developments in this area will be
captured in FHFA’s definition of
‘‘community development’’.
FHFA believes that this approach will
help CFI members to use advances to
provide financing for their
communities’ development needs, as
those needs are embodied by those
members’ CRA obligations. 75 FR at
7992. FHFA, therefore, is adopting the
definition of ‘‘community development’’
as proposed.
FHFA also is adopting the definition
of ‘‘community development loan’’
generally as proposed. In this respect, a
community development loan is a loan
that has community development as its
primary purpose. The final rule, as
adopted, also clarifies that the term
‘‘community development loan’’
includes a participation interest in a
community development loan.
FHFA recognizes that many loans that
are extended to support community
development already will be acceptable
collateral for advances under existing
Bank Act provisions and FHFA
regulations. As a consequence, the
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76619
definition excludes from the meaning of
‘‘community development loan,’’ any
loan that qualifies as acceptable
collateral under other provisions of the
Bank Act and FHFA regulations. As
explained when FHFA initially
proposed this definition, FHFA does not
intend to call into question the validity
of any security pledged (or to be
pledged) under the existing categories of
eligible collateral. Thus, the definition
of ‘‘community development loan’’
excludes from its scope, categories of
eligible collateral now identified in
§ 950.7(a) of the advances rule,7 which
can be pledged by any member to secure
an advance, as well as small agribusiness loan, small business loan, or
small farm loan, which currently are
forms of acceptable collateral for CFI
members.8 The definition of
‘‘community development loan’’ also
specifically excludes consumer loans or
credit extended to one or more
individuals for household, family, or
other personal expenditures. This
exclusion does not change the status of
any loan that qualifies as eligible
collateral for advances under existing
categories of collateral in the Bank Act
or current regulations. For example, the
new language does not affect the status
of home equity loans as other real
estate-related collateral eligible to
secure advances.
Commenters also urged that FHFA
include municipal bonds within the
definition of community development
loans so that municipal bonds could be
accepted as collateral from CFIs to
secure advances. They noted that FHFA
regulations already allow members to
use municipal bonds as collateral to
secure letters of credit where the letter
of credit helps facilitate residential
7 As part of the proposed transfer of the advances
regulation to part 1266, this provision would be
redesignated as § 1266.7(a).
8 When proposing the definition of ‘‘community
development loan,’’ FHFA noted that because small
agri-business, small business and small farm loans
can be pledged only by CFI members, there was no
need to exclude them from the definition of
community development loan, despite likely
overlap in these existing categories of collateral and
community development loans. See 75 FR at 7992.
Upon reconsideration, such overlap may
nonetheless cause some confusion, especially when
determining whether the new business activity
requirements applied to a loan that may fall both
within the definition of community development
loan and the definition of one of the other
categories of CFI member only collateral. Moreover,
because small agri-business, small business, and
small farm loans are defined as loans that are
within legal lending limits of the CFI member and
reported on specific regulatory financial reports of
that member, these loans are easy to identify, and
it will be straightforward to determine whether
loans fall into one of the existing categories of
eligible CFI collateral or whether the loans may
qualify only as a ‘‘community development loan’’ to
be pledged as collateral for an advance.
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housing finance or community lending.
12 CFR 1269.2(c)(2).
Section 1266.7(b)(1) as amended by
this rulemaking, however, already
allows the Banks to accept from CFI
members, as collateral for advances, any
security to the extent that the security
represents a whole interest in a secured,
small agri-business, small business,
small farm or community development
loan. This restriction limiting the type
of securities that can be pledged under
the special CFI collateral provision is
statutory, and the wording of
§ 1266.7(b)(1) closely follows that of the
Bank Act. See 12 U.S.C. 1430(a)(3)(E).
Extending the definition of community
development loans to include all
municipal securities would go beyond
what is authorized in the Bank Act and
would not be consistent with the
statutory limitation.9 FHFA, therefore, is
not altering the final definition of
community development loan as
requested. CFI members, of course, can
still pledge as collateral for advances
any municipal bond to the extent
allowed by § 1266.7(b)(1), as that
provision is being amended by this
rulemaking.
To implement the HERA provisions
which allow CFIs to rely on long-term
advances to fund ‘‘community
development loans,’’ FHFA proposed
amending the definition of ‘‘residential
housing finance assets’’ to incorporate
‘‘community development loans’’ into
the definition. See 75 FR at 7993. To
avoid confusion, FHFA also proposed
removing the reference to ‘‘community
lending’’ from the ‘‘residential housing
finance assets’’ definition and
incorporating each element of
‘‘community lending,’’ as defined in
§ 900.2,10 into the definition. Thus, the
proposed definition specifically referred
to ‘‘loans or investments providing
financing for economic development
projects for targeted beneficiaries’’ and
9 The comparison made by commenters to the
provision in the letter of credit regulation is
somewhat misplaced. Prior to adopting the letter of
credit regulation, the Finance Board determined
that, as a matter of law, the Bank Act did not
require that letters of credit be collateralized. It did,
however, conclude that such a requirement was
advisable as a matter of safe and sound banking
practice and provided for the acceptance of certain
types of collateral for letters of credit that the
Banks, by law, were not permitted to accept to
secure advances. See Final Rule: Standby Letters of
Credit, 63 FR 65693 (Nov. 30, 1998); and Office of
General Counsel Opinion, 1998–GC–14 (Oct. 28,
1998). The HERA amendments that will be
implemented by this rule, however, limit eligible
advance collateral for a CFI member to secured
community development loans or securities
representing a whole interest in such secured loans.
10 The definition of ‘‘residential housing finance
assets’’ in § 950.1 of the Finance Board’s advances
regulations incorrectly states that ‘‘community
lending’’ is defined in § 900.1 rather than in § 900.2.
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for CFI members, to the extent not
already included, ‘‘small business loans,
small farm loans, small agri-business
loans, or community development
loans.’’ Other than adding ‘‘community
development loans,’’ the proposed
changes were editorial in nature and did
not alter the scope of the definition for
‘‘residential housing finance assets.’’ No
comments were received on these
changes and the definition of
‘‘residential housing finance assets’’ is
being adopted as proposed.
FHFA also proposed adding to newly
designated § 1266.1 definitions for
‘‘Bank Act,’’ ‘‘advances,’’ ‘‘Bank,’’ and
‘‘targeted beneficiaries.’’ These
definitions were contained in § 900.1 or
§ 900.2 of the FHFB rules, and FHFA
proposed to carry them over to newly
designated part 1266 without
substantive change.11 No comments
were received on these definitions and
FHFA is adopting them as proposed.
Secured Lending—§ 1266.2(e)
FHFA proposed amending newly
designated § 1266.2 of the advances
regulation to incorporate a longstanding position that any secured
lending by a Bank to members is
deemed an advance subject to all
requirements related to advances. This
position was first taken by the FHFB in
1995 by resolution; this resolution has
not been rescinded and is still in effect.
Fin. Brd. Res. No. 95–13 (Aug. 9, 1995).
FHFA proposed incorporating this
position into the regulation to prevent
Banks from using forms of secured
lending to members, such as reverse
repurchase transactions, to avoid
specific requirements and obligations
associated with making advances to
members, including stock purchase
requirements. To assure that the
proposed provision could not be
circumvented by a Bank extending
secured credit to an affiliate of a
member, the proposed provision also
prohibited secured lending to any nonmember, affiliate of a member, given
that such non-member affiliates would
not be eligible to receive an advance
under the regulations.
Almost all the comment letters
addressed proposed § 1266.2(e). Most of
these commenters noted that the broad
wording in the proposed amendment
could prevent derivative transactions or
similar transactions in which
counterparties would be required to
11 The definitions in part 900 of the FHFB rules
apply only to regulations contained in chapter 9 of
Title 12 of the Code of Federal Regulations. Thus,
definitions in part 900 are no longer applicable to
the advances and the new business activities
regulations once they are transferred to new parts
1266 and 1272.
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post collateral. Commenters suggested
that the rule language should refer to
secured transactions for ‘‘money
borrowed’’ to distinguish reverse
repurchase agreements and similar
transaction from other types of
transactions that may create credit
exposures. FHFA agrees that the
proposed provision is overly broad. It
was not FHFA’s intent to prevent the
Banks from entering into derivative
transactions or prohibit the Banks from
requiring members that may be a
derivative counterparty from posting
collateral. Nor was it FHFA’s intent to
prevent Banks from accepting collateral
to secure other types of member
obligations to the Bank such as those
arising under the members’ credit
enhancement obligations for mortgages
sold to Banks under their AMA
programs. See 12 CFR 955.3(b)(2).
FHFA is therefore adopting as part of
the final rule language similar to that
proposed in commenters’ letters. The
rule now refers to ‘‘all secured
transactions, regardless of the form of
the transaction, for money borrowed
from a Bank by a member of any Bank,’’
so that reverse repurchase type lending
transactions will be covered, but not
other member transactions or
obligations that may create a credit
exposure to a Bank but do not arise from
the Bank lending cash funds to the
member. As with the proposed rule, the
final rule continues to cover these types
of transactions if undertaken between a
Bank and a member of any Bank, and
does not apply only to transactions
between a Bank and one of its own
members.
Commenters also pointed out that
most acceptable reverse repurchase
agreement counterparties would be
affiliates of a Bank System member,
since most major financial institutions
in the United States have at least one
affiliate that is a member of some Bank.
They also noted that reverse repurchase
agreements were an important short
term liquid investment for the Banks,
especially in times of economic stress
when unsecured money-market
investments may be a less desirable
option on a risk-adjusted basis. These
commenters therefore urged that the
rule exclude from the prohibition on
secured transactions with affiliates of
members: (i) Primary dealers in
government securities and (ii) other
counterparties meeting the credit and
other risk management requirements
established by a Bank. One commenter
stated that the rule should exclude
broker-dealer affiliates of members from
the prohibition of the rule. A number of
commenters also pointed out that the
provision prohibiting a Bank from
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making a secured extension of credit to
‘‘an affiliate of any member’’ could
technically prevent the Bank from
making advances to members that were
affiliates of other members and urged
that the language prohibiting secured
lending to affiliates of members be
refined in this respect.
After consideration of the comments,
FHFA has determined not to adopt, as
part of the final rule, the proposed
prohibition on reverse repurchase
agreements and similar secured lending
transactions with affiliates of members.
While FHFA had an indication that
certain Banks were considering entering
into reverse repurchase agreements,
each Bank with members of the other
Bank, to help these members avoid
additional stock purchases, FHFA has
no indication that these transactions
were being considered with affiliates of
members as a way to avoid stock
purchase requirements. FHFA decided
that it should not prevent Banks from
entering into important liquidity
investments at this time on the
possibility that Banks may use reverse
repurchase agreements with affiliates of
members as a way to effectively make
secured extensions of credit to members
without requiring member stock
purchases. If FHFA becomes aware that
the Banks are entering into reverse
repurchase agreements with member
affiliates, not for purposes of making
liquidity investments, but as a means of
facilitating member avoidance of
additional stock purchase requirements,
it may reconsider this position.
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Long Term Advances—§ 1266.3
FHFA proposed to redesignate § 950.3
of the Finance Board’s advances
regulation as § 1266.3, and to make
certain conforming changes to the
provision. No comments were received
on these changes, and FHFA is adopting
§ 1266.3 as proposed. See 75 FR at 7993.
Section 1266.3 implements section
10(a)(2) of the Bank Act, as amended by
HERA, and provides that a Bank shall
make long-term advances only for the
purpose of enabling a member to
purchase or fund new or existing
residential housing finance assets, a
term defined in § 1266.1 to include, for
CFI members, small business loans,
small farm loans, small agri-business
loans, and community development
loans. Thus, the only change being
made in § 1266.3 is to remove, as
redundant, references to small business
loans, small farm loans, and small agribusiness loans that were contained in
former § 950.3.
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Community Development Loans as
Collateral—§ 1266.7(b)(1)
FHFA proposed to implement the
HERA provision allowing CFI members
to pledge loans for community
development activities as collateral for
advances by adding ‘‘community
development loans’’ to the list of CFIspecific collateral set forth in the
redesignated § 1266.7(b)(1). No other
changes were proposed to this
provision. No comments were received
on this provision and it is being adopted
as proposed.
A Bank’s acceptance of ‘‘community
development loans’’ will need to meet
the same requirements as its acceptance
of other types of CFI collateral. Thus,
community development loans pledged
by CFI members to secure advances will
need to be fully secured by collateral
other than real estate. In addition, any
eligible community development loan
will have to have a readily ascertainable
value, be able to be reliably discounted
to account for liquidation or other risk,
and be able to be liquidated in due
course, and the Bank would have to be
able to perfect a security interest in such
loan. A Bank’s acceptance of specific
types of ‘‘community development
loans’’ to secure an advance will also be
subject to its first meeting the
requirements of the new business
activities rule, which will be
redesignated as 12 CFR part 1272 by this
rulemaking, and any other applicable
FHFA regulations, guidance or policies.
As already noted, the amendments
being adopted here also will allow a
Bank to accept, as collateral for
advances, a security representing a
whole interest in secured community
development loans, subject to the
Bank’s first fulfilling any obligations
under the new business activities rule.
Clarification of Provision—§ 1266.11
FHFA is also adopting language in
newly designated § 1266.11 to make
clear that the provision only applies to
the one Bank that has not yet
implemented the capital structure plan
required under the Gramm-Leach-Bliley
Act (GLB Act). The requirements in
newly designated § 1266.11 were all
adopted prior to the passage of the GLB
Act in November 1999 and have not
been amended since the passage of the
GLB Act. See 64 FR 16788 (Apr. 6, 1999)
and 58 FR 29456 (May 20, 1993). The
provision addresses stock purchase and
redemption requirements. The GLB Act
changed these requirements for a Bank,
once the Bank implemented its capital
plan and converted to the capital
structure required under the GLB Act.
See 12 U.S.C. §§ 1426(a)(6) and (c).
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76621
Banks that have converted to the GLB
Act structure are required to set forth in
their capital plans the requirements
governing member stock purchases and
member rights with regard to the
redemption and repurchase of Bank
stock, consistent with the regulations in
12 CFR parts 931 and 933. To avoid any
confusion as to the application of
§ 1266.11, FHFA is amending this
provision to clarify that it only applies
to a Bank that has not converted to the
GLB Act capital structure.
New Business Activities Regulation—
Part 1272
As proposed, FHFA is transferring the
new business activities rule from part
980 of the FHFB regulations to part 1272
of FHFA regulations, making only
technical and conforming changes to the
rule. See 75 FR at 7993–94.
Housing Associates and Letter of Credit
Regulation—Parts 1264 and 1269
FHFA is also making conforming
changes to part 1264 and part 1269 to
change any cross references to former
part 950 to correspond to the correct,
newly designated sections in part 1266.
III. Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collection contained
in the current Bank housing associates
and advances regulations, entitled
‘‘Advances to Housing Associates,’’ has
been assigned control number 2590–
0001 by the Office of Management and
Budget (OMB). The amendments to
those regulations made by this final rule
do not substantively or materially
modify the approved information
collection. Further, the changes to the
new business activity regulation do not
contain any collections of information
pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction
Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.).
Therefore, FHFA has not submitted any
information to the OMB for review.
IV. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The final rule applies only to the
Banks, which do not come within the
meaning of small entities as defined in
the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA).
See 5 U.S.C. 601(6). Therefore in
accordance with section 605(b) of the
RFA, FHFA certifies that this final rule
will not have significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Parts 950,
980, 1264, 1266, 1269 and 1272
Community development, Credit,
Federal home loan banks, Housing,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements.
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 236 / Thursday, December 9, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
For the reasons stated in the preamble,
the Federal Housing Finance Agency is
amending chapters IX and XII of title 12
of the Code of Federal Regulations as
follows:
■
PART 980—[REDESIGNATED AS PART
1272]
§ 1264.3 Housing associate eligibility
requirements.
CHAPTER XII—FEDERAL HOUSING
FINANCE AGENCY
4. Amend § 1264.3(b) by removing the
reference to ‘‘§ 950.17(b)(2) of this title’’
and adding in its place ‘‘§ 1266.17(b)(2)
of this chapter’’.
PART 1264—FEDERAL HOME LOAN
BANK HOUSING ASSOCIATES
CHAPTER IX—FEDERAL HOUSING
FINANCE BOARD
2. Redesignate 12 CFR part 980 as 12
CFR part 1272.
PART 1266—ADVANCES
■
■
3. The authority citation for part 1264
continues to read as follows:
■
PART 950—[REDESIGNATED AS PART
1266]
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1430b, 4511, 4513,
and 4526.
1. Redesignate 12 CFR part 950 as 12
CFR part 1266.
■
5. The authority citation for newly
redesignated part 1266 is revised to read
as follows:
■
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1426, 1429, 1430,
1430b, 1431, 4511(b), 4513, 4526(a).
6. Amend the newly redesignated part
1266 as indicated in the table below:
■
Amend:
By removing the reference to:
And adding in its place:
§ 1266.1, Definition of CFI member ..........................
§ 1266.1, Definition of State housing finance agency
§ 1266.4(g)(2)(i) .........................................................
§ 1266.4(g)(2)(ii) ........................................................
§ 1266.5(b)(2)(ii) ........................................................
§ 1266.6(a) .................................................................
§ 1266.9(a)(1) ............................................................
§ 1266.10(a) ...............................................................
§ 1266.16 ...................................................................
§ 1266.17(a) ...............................................................
§ 1266.17(b)(2)(i) introductory text ............................
§ 1266.17(b)(2)(i)(A) ..................................................
§ 1266.17(b)(2)(i)(B) ..................................................
§ 1266.17(b)(2)(i)(B) ..................................................
§ 1266.17(b)(2)(i)(C) ..................................................
§ 1266.17(c)(2)(i) .......................................................
§ 1266.17(c)(2)(ii) .......................................................
§ 1266.17(e)(2) ..........................................................
§ 1266.17(e)(3) ..........................................................
§ 925.1, each place that it appears ..........................
§ 926.1 .......................................................................
§ 950.2(b)(2) ..............................................................
§ 950.2(a) ..................................................................
§ 917.4 of this chapter ..............................................
§ 917.4 of this chapter ..............................................
§ 950.2(c) ..................................................................
§ 917.4 of this chapter ..............................................
§§ 950.14 and 950.17 ...............................................
part 925 .....................................................................
§ 926.3(b) ..................................................................
§ 950.7(a)(1) or (2) ....................................................
§ 950.7(a)(3) ..............................................................
§ 926.3(b) ..................................................................
§ 950.7(a)(4) ..............................................................
§ 950.3(b), each time it appears ...............................
§ 950.5(b)(2) ..............................................................
part 926 .....................................................................
part 926 .....................................................................
§ 1263.1.
§ 1264.1.
§ 1266.2(b)(2).
§ 1266.2(a).
§ 917.4 of this title.
§ 917.4 of this title.
§ 1266.2(c).
§ 917.4 of this title.
§§ 1266.14 and 1266.17.
part 1263.
§ 1264.3(b).
§ 1266.7(a)(1) or (2).
§ 1266.7(a)(3).
§ 1264.3(b).
§ 1266.7(a)(4).
§ 1266.3(b).
§ 1266.5(b)(2).
part 1264.
part 1264.
7. In newly redesignated part 1266,
revise all references to ‘‘Finance Board’’
to read ‘‘FHFA’’ and revise all references
to ‘‘the Act’’ to read ‘‘the Bank Act’’.
■ 8. In newly redesignated § 1266.1, add
in correct alphabetical order definitions
for ‘‘Advance’’, ‘‘Bank’’, ‘‘Bank Act’’,
‘‘Community development’’,
‘‘Community development loan’’,
‘‘FHFA’’, and ‘‘Targeted beneficiaries’’,
and revise the definition of ‘‘Residential
housing finance assets’’ to read as
follows:
■
§ 1266.1
Definitions.
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*
*
*
*
*
Advance means a loan from a Bank
that is:
(1) Provided pursuant to a written
agreement;
(2) Supported by a note or other
written evidence of the borrower’s
obligation; and
(3) Fully secured by collateral in
accordance with the Bank Act and this
part.
*
*
*
*
*
Bank, written in title case, means a
Federal Home Loan Bank established
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Jkt 223001
under section 12 of the Bank Act, as
amended (12 U.S.C. 1432).
Bank Act means the Federal Home
Loan Bank Act, as amended (12 U.S.C.
1421 through 1449).
*
*
*
*
*
Community development has the
same meaning as under the definition
set forth in the Community
Reinvestment rule for the Federal
Reserve System (12 CFR part 228),
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(12 CFR part 345), the Office of Thrift
Supervision (12 CFR part 563e) or the
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency (12 CFR part 25), whichever is
the CFI member’s primary Federal
regulator.
Community development loan means
a loan, or a participation interest in such
loan, that has as its primary purpose
community development, but such
loans shall not include:
(1) Any loan or instrument that
qualifies as eligible security for an
advance under § 1266.7(a) of this part;
(2) Any loan that qualifies as a small
agri-business loan, small business loan
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
or small farm loan, under definitions set
forth in this section; or
(3) Consumer loans or credit extended
to one or more individuals for
household, family or other personal
expenditures.
*
*
*
*
*
FHFA means the Federal Housing
Finance Agency.
*
*
*
*
*
Residential housing finance assets
means any of the following:
(1) Loans secured by residential real
property;
(2) Mortgage-backed securities;
(3) Participations in loans secured by
residential real property;
(4) Loans or investments providing
financing for economic development
projects for targeted beneficiaries;
(5) Loans secured by manufactured
housing, regardless of whether such
housing qualifies as residential real
property;
(6) Any loans or investments which
FHFA, in its discretion, otherwise
determines to be residential housing
finance assets; and
(7) For CFI members, and to the extent
not already included in categories (1)
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 236 / Thursday, December 9, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
through (6), small business loans, small
farm loans, small agri-business loans, or
community development loans.
*
*
*
*
*
Targeted beneficiaries has the
meaning set forth in § 952.1 of this title.
9. Amend newly redesignated
§ 1266.2 by adding new paragraph (e) to
read as follows:
■
§ 1266.2 Authorization and application for
advances; obligation to repay advances.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Status of secured lending. All
secured transactions, regardless of the
form of the transaction, for money
borrowed from a Bank by a member of
any Bank shall be considered an
advance subject to the requirements of
this part.
10. Revise newly redesignated
§ 1266.3 to read as follows:
■
§ 1266.3 Purpose of long-term advances;
Proxy test.
(a) A Bank shall make long-term
advances only for the purpose of
enabling any member to purchase or
fund new or existing residential housing
finance assets.
(b)(1) Prior to approving an
application for a long-term advance, a
Bank shall determine that the principal
amount of all long-term advances
currently held by the member does not
exceed the total book value of
residential housing finance assets held
by such member. The Bank shall
determine the total book value of such
residential housing finance assets, using
the most recent Thrift Financial Report,
Report of Condition and Income,
financial statement or other reliable
documentation made available by the
member.
(2) Applications for CICA advances
are exempt from the requirements of
paragraph (b)(1) of this section.
■ 11. Amend newly redesignated
§ 1266.7 by revising paragraph (b)(1) to
read as follows:
§ 1266.7
Collateral.
*
*
*
*
*
(b) * * *
(1) General. Subject to the
requirements set forth in part 1272 of
this chapter, a Bank is authorized to
accept from CFI members or their
affiliates as security for advances small
business loans, small farm loans, small
agri-business loans, or community
development loans, in each case fully
secured by collateral other than real
estate, or securities representing a whole
interest in such secured loans, provided
that:
(i) Such collateral has a readily
ascertainable value, can be reliably
discounted to account for liquidation
and other risks, and can be liquidated in
due course; and
(ii) The Bank can perfect a security
interest in such collateral.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 12. Revise newly redesignated
§ 1266.11 to read as follows:
76623
§ 1266.11 Capital stock requirements;
redemption of excess stock.
(a) Capital stock requirement for
advances. For a Bank that has not
converted to the capital structure
authorized by the Gramm-Leach-Bliley
Act, the aggregate amount of
outstanding advance made by the Bank
to a member shall not exceed 20 times
the amount paid in by such member for
capital stock in the Bank.
(b) Unilateral Redemption of excess
stock. A Bank that has not converted to
the capital structure authorized by the
Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act:
(1) May, after providing 15 calendar
days advance written notice to a
member, require the redemption of that
amount of the member’s Bank capital
stock that exceeds the applicable capital
stock requirements in paragraph (a) of
this section, provided that the member
continues to comply with the minimum
stock purchase requirement set forth in
§ 1263.20(a) of this chapter; and
(2) May not impose on, or accept
from, a member a fee in lieu of
redeeming a member’s excess stock.
PART 1269—STANDBY LETTERS OF
CREDIT
13. The authority citation for part
1269 continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1429, 1430, 1430b,
1431, 4511, 4513 and 4526.
14. Amend part 1269 as indicated in
the table below:
■
Amend:
By removing the reference to:
And adding in its place:
§ 1269.1, Definition of community lending ................
§ 1269.1, Definition of Residential housing finance ..
§ 1269.1, Definition of SHFA associate .....................
§ 1269.2(c) .................................................................
§ 1269.3(a) introductory text ......................................
§ 950.1 of this title .....................................................
§ 950.1 .......................................................................
§ 1269.1 .....................................................................
§ 950.7 of this title .....................................................
§§ 950.17(b)(1)(i) or (ii) of this title ...........................
§ 1269.3(b) .................................................................
§ 950.17(b)(2)(i)(A),(B) or (C) of this title ..................
§ 1269.4(a)(1) ............................................................
§ 1269.4(a)(1) ............................................................
§ 1269.4(c) .................................................................
§ 1269.5(b)(1) ............................................................
§ 1269.5(b)(2) ............................................................
§ 950.17(b)(2)(i)(B) ....................................................
§ 950.17(d) ................................................................
part 950 .....................................................................
§ 960.3 .......................................................................
§§ 950.7(d), 950.7(e), 950.8, 950.9 and 950.10 of
this title.
§ 1266.1 of this chapter.
§ 1266.1.
§ 1264.1.
§ 1266.7 of this chapter.
§ 1266.17(b)(1)(i) or (ii) of this chapter.
§ 1266.17(b)(2)(i)(A),(B) or (C) of
this chapter.
§ 1266.17(b)(2)(i)(B).
§ 1266.17(d).
part 1266.
§ 1269.3.
§§ 1266.7(d), 1266.7(e), 1266.8,
1266.9 and 1266.10 of this chapter.
PART 1272—NEW BUSINESS
ACTIVITIES
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1431(a), 1432(a),
4511(b), 4513, 4526(a).
15. The authority citation for newly
redesignated part 1272 is revised to read
as follows:
■
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■
16. Amend the references in the newly
redesignated part 1272 as indicated in
the table below:
Amend:
By removing the reference to:
And adding in its place:
§ 1272.1, Definition of new business activity ............
§ 1272.1, Definition of new business activity ............
§ 950.7(a)(4) ..............................................................
§ 950.7(b) ..................................................................
§ 1266.7(a)(4).
§ 1266.7(b).
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Federal Register / Vol. 75, No. 236 / Thursday, December 9, 2010 / Rules and Regulations
Amend:
By removing the reference to:
And adding in its place:
§ 1272.3 introductory text ..........................................
§ 1272.3(b) introductory text ......................................
§ 1272.3(b)(2) ............................................................
§ 1272.3(b)(3) ............................................................
§ 1272.4(a) .................................................................
§ 1272.4(a) .................................................................
§ 1272.4(b) .................................................................
§ 1272.4(b) .................................................................
§ 1272.4(c) .................................................................
§ 1272.5(a) introductory text ......................................
§ 1272.5(a)(4) ............................................................
§ 1272.5(a)(5) ............................................................
§ 1272.5(b) .................................................................
§ 980.4(b) ..................................................................
§ 950.7 .......................................................................
§ 917.4 of this chapter ..............................................
§ 950.10 .....................................................................
§ 980.3 .......................................................................
§ 980.5(a)(1) through (4) ...........................................
§ 950.7(a)(4) ..............................................................
§ 980.3 .......................................................................
§ 980.6 .......................................................................
§ 980.3 .......................................................................
§ 980.7 .......................................................................
§ 980.7 .......................................................................
§ 980.6 .......................................................................
§ 1272.4(b).
§ 1266.7.
§ 917.4 of this title.
§ 1266.10.
§ 1272.3.
§ 1272.5(a)(1) through (4).
§ 1266.7(a)(4).
§ 1272.3.
§ 1272.6.
§ 1272.3.
§ 1272.7.
§ 1272.7.
§ 1272.6.
17. Amend newly redesignated part
1272 by revising all references to
‘‘Finance Board’’ to read ‘‘FHFA’’.
■ 18. Amend newly redesignated
§ 1272.1 by adding in correct
alphabetical order definitions for
‘‘Bank,’’ ‘‘Bank Act’’ and ‘‘FHFA’’ to read
as follows:
■
§ 1272.1
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
Bank, written in title case, means a
Federal Home Loan Bank established
under section 12 of the Bank Act, as
amended (12 U.S.C. 1432).
Bank Act means the Federal Home
Loan Bank Act, as amended (12 U.S.C.
1421 through 1449).
FHFA means the Federal Housing
Finance Agency.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 19. In newly redesignated § 1272.5,
amend paragraphs (a)(5) and (b) by
revising the words ‘‘Finance Board’s’’ to
read ‘‘FHFA’s’’.
Dated: November 30, 2010.
Edward J. DeMarco,
Acting Director, Federal Housing Finance
Agency.
[FR Doc. 2010–30519 Filed 12–8–10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8070–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 39
[Docket No. FAA–2010–0614; Directorate
Identifier 2010–NE–24–AD; Amendment 39–
16538; AD 2010–25–05]
erowe on DSK5CLS3C1PROD with RULES
RIN 2120–AA64
Airworthiness Directives; Rolls-Royce
Deutschland Ltd & Co KG Models
BR700–710A1–10; BR700–710A2–20;
and BR700–710C4–11 Turbofan
Engines
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
AGENCY:
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14:52 Dec 08, 2010
Jkt 223001
ACTION:
Final rule.
We are adopting a new
airworthiness directive (AD) for the
products listed above. This AD results
from mandatory continuing
airworthiness information (MCAI)
issued by an aviation authority of
another country to identify and correct
an unsafe condition on an aviation
product. The MCAI describes the unsafe
condition as:
SUMMARY:
Due to manufacturing problems of BR700–
710 HP stage 1 and 2 turbine discs it was
necessary to re-calculate the Declared Safe
Cyclic Life (DSCL) for all BR700–710 HP
turbine discs. The analysis concluded that it
is required to reduce the approved life limits
for the HP turbine disc part numbers that are
listed in Table 1 and Table 2 of this AD
(MCAI). Exceeding the revised approved life
limits could potentially result in noncontained disc failure.
We are issuing this AD to preventfailure of the high-pressure turbine
(HPT) stage 1 and stage 2 discs,
uncontained engine failure, and damage
to the airplane.
DATES: This AD becomes effective
January 13, 2011.
ADDRESSES: The Docket Operations
office is located at Docket Management
Facility, U.S. Department of
Transportation, 1200 New Jersey
Avenue, SE., West Building Ground
Floor, Room W12–140, Washington, DC
20590–0001.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Mark Riley, Aerospace Engineer, Engine
Certification Office, FAA, Engine &
Propeller Directorate, 12 New England
Executive Park, Burlington, MA 01803;
e-mail: mark.riley@faa.gov; telephone
(781) 238–7758; fax (781) 238–7199.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Discussion
We issued a notice of proposed
rulemaking (NPRM) to amend 14 CFR
part 39 to include an AD that would
apply to the specified products. That
NPRM was published in the Federal
Register on August 23, 2010 (75 FR
PO 00000
Frm 00010
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
51693). That NPRM proposed to correct
an unsafe condition for the specified
products. The MCAI states that:
Due to manufacturing problems of BR700–
710 HP stage 1 and 2 turbine discs it was
necessary to re-calculate the Declared Safe
Cyclic Life (DSCL) for all BR700–710 HP
turbine discs. The analysis concluded that it
is required to reduce the approved life limits
for the HP turbine disc part numbers that are
listed in Table 1 and Table 2 of this AD
(MCAI). Exceeding the revised approved life
limits could potentially result in noncontained disc failure.
Comments
We gave the public the opportunity to
participate in developing this AD. We
received no comments on the NPRM or
on the determination of the cost to the
public.
Conclusion
We reviewed the available data and
determined that air safety and the
public interest require adopting the AD
as proposed.
Costs of Compliance
Based on the service information, we
estimate that this AD will affect about
1,026 BR700–710 engines of U.S.
registry. We also estimate that no
additional labor cost will be incurred to
replace the discs. The average labor rate
is $85 per work-hour. Required parts
will cost about $6,000 per disc. Based
on these figures, we estimate the cost of
the AD on U.S. operators to be
$6,156,000. Our cost estimate is
exclusive of possible warranty coverage.
Authority for This Rulemaking
Title 49 of the United States Code
specifies the FAA’s authority to issue
rules on aviation safety. Subtitle I,
section 106, describes the authority of
the FAA Administrator. ‘‘Subtitle VII:
Aviation Programs,’’ describes in more
detail the scope of the Agency’s
authority.
We are issuing this rulemaking under
the authority described in ‘‘Subtitle VII,
E:\FR\FM\09DER1.SGM
09DER1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 75, Number 236 (Thursday, December 9, 2010)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 76617-76624]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2010-30519]
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FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE BOARD
12 CFR Parts 950 and 980
FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE AGENCY
12 CFR Parts 1264, 1266, 1269, and 1272
RIN 2590-AA24
Use of Community Development Loans by Community Financial
Institutions To Secure Advances; Secured Lending by Federal Home Loan
Banks to Members and Their Affiliates; Transfer of Advances and New
Business Activity Regulations
AGENCY: Federal Housing Finance Board, Federal Housing Finance Agency.
ACTION: Final rule.
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SUMMARY: Section 1211 of the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008
(HERA) amended the Federal Home Loan Bank Act (Bank Act) to expand the
types of eligible collateral that community financial institution (CFI)
members may pledge to secure Federal Home Loan Bank (Bank) advances to
include secured loans for community development activities and to allow
Banks to make long term advances to CFI members for purposes of
financing community development activities. Section 1211 further
provides that the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA) shall define
the term ``community development activities'' by regulation. To
implement these provisions, FHFA is amending the advances regulation to
allow CFI members to pledge community development loans as collateral
for advances and is adopting a definition of ``community development''
as proposed. The final rule also will transfer the advances and new
business activities rules from parts 950 and 980 of the Federal Housing
Finance Board (FHFB) regulations, to new parts 1266 and 1272 of the
FHFA regulations, respectively, and make other conforming amendments.
Finally, the final rule will make a change to the advances regulation
to incorporate a long-standing policy previously established by the
FHFB that secured lending to a member of any Bank is an advance that
must meet the requirements of the advances regulation. The final rule
language has been clarified to assure that certain types of
transactions, such as derivatives, will not be considered secured
lending for the purposes of this provision. The new provision
addressing secured lending does not include a prohibition on secured
transactions with affiliates of members, as was initially proposed.
DATES: The final rule is effective on January 10, 2011.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Thomas E. Joseph, Senior Attorney
Advisor, thomas.joseph@fhfa.gov, (202) 414-3095 (not a toll-free
number); Office of General Counsel, Federal Housing Finance Agency,
Fourth Floor, 1700 G Street, NW., Washington, DC 20552; or Julie
Paller, Senior Financial Analyst, julie.paller@fhfa.gov, 202-408-2842
(not a toll-free number); Division of Federal Home Loan Bank
Regulation, Federal Housing Finance Agency, 1625 Eye Street, NW.,
Washington, DC 20006. The telephone number for the Telecommunications
Device for the Hearing Impaired is (800) 877-8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
A. Establishment of FHFA
Effective July 30, 2008, Division A of HERA, Public Law 110-289,
122 Stat. 2654 (2008), created FHFA as an independent agency of the
Federal government. HERA transferred the supervisory and oversight
responsibilities over the Federal National Mortgage Association (Fannie
Mae), the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac)
(collectively, Enterprises), the Banks, and the Bank System's Office of
Finance, from the Office of Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight
(OFHEO) and the FHFB to FHFA. FHFA is responsible for ensuring that the
Enterprises and the Banks operate in a safe and sound manner, including
being capitalized adequately, and that they carry out their public
policy missions, including fostering liquid, efficient, competitive,
and resilient national housing finance markets. The Enterprises and the
Banks continue to operate under regulations promulgated by OFHEO and
FHFB until FHFA issues its own regulations. See section 1302 Public Law
110-289, 122 Stat. 2795.
B. Statutory and Regulatory Background
Each Bank is a cooperative institution that is owned by its
members. Any eligible institution (generally a federally insured
depository institution or state-regulated insurance company) may become
a member of a Bank if it satisfies certain criteria and purchases a
specified amount of the Bank's capital stock. 12 U.S.C. 1424, 1426; 12
CFR part 1263. Only members or certain eligible housing associates
(such as state housing finance agencies) may obtain access to secured
loans, known as advances, or other products provided by a Bank. 12
U.S.C. 1426(a)(4), 1430(a), 1430b.
Prior to HERA, CFIs were defined under the Bank Act as depository
institutions insured under the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C.
1811 et seq.) with average total assets of less than $500 million, as
adjusted annually for inflation thereafter. 12 U.S.C. 1422(13) (2008).
Section 1211 of HERA raised the $500 million average total assets cap
to $1 billion. See section 1211 Public Law No. 110-289, 122 Stat. 2790
(amending 12 U.S.C. 1422(10)). By Notice published in the Federal
Register in February 2009, FHFA adjusted the $1 billion figure for
inflation to $1.011 billion. 74 FR 7438 (Feb. 17, 2009). As part of
FHFA's separate rulemaking addressing Bank membership for community
development financial institutions, FHFA included a technical amendment
to the definition of ``CFI'' to implement the average total asset cap
increase to $1 billion made by HERA.\1\ See 74 FR 22848, 22857 (May 15,
2009); 75 FR 678, 691 (Jan. 5, 2010).
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\1\ FHFA also relocated the part 925 regulations to part 1263 of
the FHFA's regulations. 75 FR 678.
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Under the Bank Act, any member, including a CFI, that wishes to
borrow from its Bank must pledge certain types of collateral to secure
its repayment obligation on advances, and must otherwise demonstrate to
the Bank that it is creditworthy. 12 U.S.C. 1430(a). Each Bank sets its
own lending and collateral policies, which may vary from Bank to Bank
and will apply to all borrowing members of that Bank. Prior to HERA,
section 10(a)(3) of the Bank
[[Page 76618]]
Act specified that a member may pledge the following types of
collateral to secure an advance: (i) Fully disbursed, whole first
mortgages on improved residential property not more than 90 days
delinquent, or securities representing a whole interest in such
mortgages; (ii) securities issued, insured or guaranteed by the U.S.
Government or any agency thereof; (iii) cash or deposits of a Bank;
(iv) other real estate related collateral acceptable to the Bank,
provided the value of such collateral is readily ascertainable and the
Bank can perfect its security interest in the collateral; and (v) for
institutions that qualify as CFIs, secured loans for small business or
agriculture, or securities representing a whole interest in such
secured loans.\2\ See 12 U.S.C. 1430(a)(3). Section 1211 of HERA
amended section 10(a)(3)(E) of the Bank Act to broaden the collateral
that may be pledged by CFI members to include secured loans for
community development activities. Section 1211 Public Law 110-289, 122
Stat. 2790 (amending 12 U.S.C. 1430(a)(3)(E)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ In addition, the Banks under their Community Investment Cash
Advance Programs (CICA) may provide advances to support economic
development that benefit persons based on defined targeted income
levels or targeted geographic areas. 12 CFR part 952.
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In addition, prior to HERA, section 10(a)(2) of the Bank Act
provided that a Bank could make a long-term advance to a member only
for the purposes of providing funds to the member for residential
housing finance, except that it also allowed long-term advances to CFI
members for purposes of funding small business, small farm, and small
agri-business lending.\3\ 12 U.S.C. 1430(a)(2). Section 1211 of HERA
amended section 10(a)(2)(B) of the Bank Act so that a Bank also may
make long-term advances to a CFI member to fund community development
activities. Section 1211, Public Law 110-289, 122 Stat. 2790 (amending
12 U.S.C. 1430(a)(2)(B)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ Applicable regulations define a long-term advance as one
``with an original term to maturity of greater than five years.''
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Section 1211 of HERA also amended section 10(a)(6) of the Bank Act
to provide that the term ``community development activities'' shall
have the meaning given such term by regulation by the Director of FHFA.
Id. (amending 12 U.S.C. 1430(a)(6)). The legislative history of HERA
does not further illuminate Congress' intent in making these
amendments.
C. Considerations of Differences Between the Banks and the Enterprises
Section 1201 of HERA requires the Director, when promulgating
regulations relating to the Banks, to consider the following
differences between the Banks and the Enterprises: cooperative
ownership structure; mission of providing liquidity to members;
affordable housing and community development mission; capital
structure; and joint and several liability. See section 1201 Public Law
110-289, 122 Stat. 2782-83 (amending 12 U.S.C. 4513). The Director also
may consider any other differences that are deemed appropriate. In
preparing this final regulation, FHFA considered the differences
between the Banks and the Enterprises as they relate to the above
factors. As part of its proposed rulemaking, FHFA also requested
comments from the public about whether differences related to these
factors should result in any revisions to the proposal, but received no
comments on this point in response.
II. The Final Regulation
A. The Proposed Rule and Comments Received
FHFA published a proposed rule in the Federal Register on February
23, 2010 to implement the provisions in HERA allowing CFIs to pledge
``community development loans'' as collateral for advances and the
Banks to make long term advances to a CFI member to fund community
development activities. 75 FR 7990 (Feb. 23, 2010). As part of its
implementation of these provisions, FHFA proposed defining ``community
development'' as having:
the same meaning as under the definition set forth in the Community
Reinvestment rule for the Federal Reserve System (12 CFR part 228),
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (12 CFR part 345), the Office
of Thrift Supervision (12 CFR part 563e) or the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency (12 CFR part 25), whichever is the CFI
member's primary federal regulator.
Id. at 7994.
FHFA also proposed defining ``community development loan'' as:
A loan that has as its primary purpose community development, but
such loans shall not include: (1) Any loan or instrument that
qualifies as eligible security for an advance under Sec. 1266.7(a)
of this part; or (2) Consumer loans or credit extended to one or
more individuals for household, family or other personal
expenditures.
Id.
The proposed rule also would have amended the advances regulation
to incorporate a long-standing Finance Board policy that deemed any
form of secured lending by a Bank to a Bank System member an advance
subject to the rules governing advances. The proposal would have
extended this policy to cover affiliates of any members, and, as a
consequence, would have prohibited a Bank from entering into secured
lending transactions with member affiliates. Finally, the proposed rule
would have transferred the advances and the new business activity
regulation, respectively, from parts 950 and 980 of the Finance Board
regulations to parts 1266 and 1272 of the FHFA regulations.
FHFA received eleven comment letters on the proposed rule. Eleven
of the twelve Banks commented, including a joint letter which was
signed by three Banks. One letter came from an association representing
municipal governments and one letter came from a private citizen. All
the Bank comment letters addressed proposed Sec. 1266.2(e) of the
rule, which would have required secured transactions with the member of
any Bank to meet the requirements of an advance and would have
prohibited secured transactions between a Bank and an affiliate of a
member of any Bank. As is discussed below, these letters generally
suggested clarification to the proposed rule language so that any
restriction did not carry unintended consequences and limit
transactions beyond borrowings by members. These letters also stated
that the proposed restrictions on secured transactions with affiliates
of members would eliminate an important and safe liquidity investment
for the Banks and urged that the provision be substantially revised in
this respect or not be adopted.
Two comment letters, including the joint Bank letter, addressed the
proposed provisions allowing ``community development loans'' to be
pledged as collateral by CFIs. Both letters made similar comments and
generally urged FHFA to expand the definitions of ``community
development'' and ``community development loan'' and not tie the
definition to criteria based on income targeting. These comments are
also addressed more fully below. No comments were made on other aspects
of the proposed rule. All comment letters are posted on the FHFA
Internet Web site at https://www.fhfa.gov.
B. Final Rule Provisions
Definitions--Sec. 1266.1
FHFA proposed adding definitions for ``community development'' and
``community development loan'' to the advances regulation to help
implement
[[Page 76619]]
the HERA provision allowing CFI members to pledge community development
loans to secure advances. In the proposed rule, ``community
development'' was defined with reference to the definition for this
term adopted by CFI members' primary federal regulators under Community
Reinvestment Act (CRA) regulations.\4\ In turn, FHFA proposed to define
``community development loan'' as a loan that has community development
as its primary purpose. Because FHFA did not intend the proposed
definition to call into question the validity of any collateral allowed
under the advances regulation to be pledged by all members, the
proposed definition of ``community development loan'' excluded
categories of eligible collateral identified in Sec. 950.7(a) of the
advances rule \5\ from its scope. FHFA specifically requested comments
on whether, and how, these proposed definitions might be altered to
better help CFI members fund community development activities while
continuing to assure that advances be secured only by high quality
collateral. 75 FR at 7992.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ See 12 CFR 25.12, 228.12, 345.12, and 563e.12. Under this
definition, ``community development'' would have encompassed
affordable housing, community services targeted to low- and
moderate- income individuals, economic development activities
through financing of businesses and farms that meet size eligibility
standards of the Small Business Administration's Development Company
or Small Business Investment Company Programs or have gross annual
revenues of $1 million or less, and activities that revitalize or
stabilize low- or moderate-income geographies, designated disaster
areas, or certain designated, distressed, or underserved non-
metropolitan middle-income geographies.
\5\ As part of the transfer of the advances regulation to part
1266, this provision will be redesignated as Sec. 1266.7(a). This
provision identifies collateral that can be pledged by all Bank
members to secure advances.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FHFA received two comments on these definitions. Both comments
urged FHFA to adopt a broader definition for ``community development''
that would not include the income targeting criteria inherent in the
proposed definition. They argued (albeit for different reasons) that
the proposed definition of ``community lending'' was contrary to
Congressional intent in adopting section 1211 and that a broader
definition would better meet Congress' reasons for including this
provision in HERA. Instead of the proposed definition, the commenters
suggested developing a definition based on the one used for ``economic
development projects'' in FHFA's current Community Investment Cash
Advance Programs (CICA) regulations.\6\ One commenter proposed a
specific definition for ``community development'' that included
criteria that would limit the definition to projects or activities that
were the recipient of any form of federal, state or local government
support. The commenter believed such criteria would help identify the
activity or project as one viewed by federal, state or local
governments as important for the community in question.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ See 12 CFR 952.1.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FHFA has considered these comments, but generally does not find
them persuasive. As noted when FHFA proposed its definition of
``community development,'' the legislative history of HERA does not
clearly illuminate Congressional intent in allowing secured loans for
community development to be pledged as collateral by CFI members to
support advances. Instead, section 1211(b) of HERA provided FHFA with
broad flexibility to define the term ``community development
activities.'' More importantly, although HERA did not specify income
targeting criteria in the provision concerning ``community
development,'' the concept of community development lending is not new
in banking law and is a well-developed concept as evidenced by the
Community Reinvestment Act, and the regulations adopted by federal
banking regulators to implement that statute. As it noted in proposing
this definition, FHFA is relying on this long-standing regulatory
history in defining the term. Moreover, by linking the definition of
``community development'' to the Community Reinvestment Act rules of
the banking regulators, FHFA will ensure that future changes and
developments in this area will be captured in FHFA's definition of
``community development''.
FHFA believes that this approach will help CFI members to use
advances to provide financing for their communities' development needs,
as those needs are embodied by those members' CRA obligations. 75 FR at
7992. FHFA, therefore, is adopting the definition of ``community
development'' as proposed.
FHFA also is adopting the definition of ``community development
loan'' generally as proposed. In this respect, a community development
loan is a loan that has community development as its primary purpose.
The final rule, as adopted, also clarifies that the term ``community
development loan'' includes a participation interest in a community
development loan.
FHFA recognizes that many loans that are extended to support
community development already will be acceptable collateral for
advances under existing Bank Act provisions and FHFA regulations. As a
consequence, the definition excludes from the meaning of ``community
development loan,'' any loan that qualifies as acceptable collateral
under other provisions of the Bank Act and FHFA regulations. As
explained when FHFA initially proposed this definition, FHFA does not
intend to call into question the validity of any security pledged (or
to be pledged) under the existing categories of eligible collateral.
Thus, the definition of ``community development loan'' excludes from
its scope, categories of eligible collateral now identified in Sec.
950.7(a) of the advances rule,\7\ which can be pledged by any member to
secure an advance, as well as small agri-business loan, small business
loan, or small farm loan, which currently are forms of acceptable
collateral for CFI members.\8\ The definition of ``community
development loan'' also specifically excludes consumer loans or credit
extended to one or more individuals for household, family, or other
personal expenditures. This exclusion does not change the status of any
loan that qualifies as eligible collateral for advances under existing
categories of collateral in the Bank Act or current regulations. For
example, the new language does not affect the status of home equity
loans as other real estate-related collateral eligible to secure
advances.
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\7\ As part of the proposed transfer of the advances regulation
to part 1266, this provision would be redesignated as Sec.
1266.7(a).
\8\ When proposing the definition of ``community development
loan,'' FHFA noted that because small agri-business, small business
and small farm loans can be pledged only by CFI members, there was
no need to exclude them from the definition of community development
loan, despite likely overlap in these existing categories of
collateral and community development loans. See 75 FR at 7992. Upon
reconsideration, such overlap may nonetheless cause some confusion,
especially when determining whether the new business activity
requirements applied to a loan that may fall both within the
definition of community development loan and the definition of one
of the other categories of CFI member only collateral. Moreover,
because small agri-business, small business, and small farm loans
are defined as loans that are within legal lending limits of the CFI
member and reported on specific regulatory financial reports of that
member, these loans are easy to identify, and it will be
straightforward to determine whether loans fall into one of the
existing categories of eligible CFI collateral or whether the loans
may qualify only as a ``community development loan'' to be pledged
as collateral for an advance.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Commenters also urged that FHFA include municipal bonds within the
definition of community development loans so that municipal bonds could
be accepted as collateral from CFIs to secure advances. They noted that
FHFA regulations already allow members to use municipal bonds as
collateral to secure letters of credit where the letter of credit helps
facilitate residential
[[Page 76620]]
housing finance or community lending. 12 CFR 1269.2(c)(2).
Section 1266.7(b)(1) as amended by this rulemaking, however,
already allows the Banks to accept from CFI members, as collateral for
advances, any security to the extent that the security represents a
whole interest in a secured, small agri-business, small business, small
farm or community development loan. This restriction limiting the type
of securities that can be pledged under the special CFI collateral
provision is statutory, and the wording of Sec. 1266.7(b)(1) closely
follows that of the Bank Act. See 12 U.S.C. 1430(a)(3)(E). Extending
the definition of community development loans to include all municipal
securities would go beyond what is authorized in the Bank Act and would
not be consistent with the statutory limitation.\9\ FHFA, therefore, is
not altering the final definition of community development loan as
requested. CFI members, of course, can still pledge as collateral for
advances any municipal bond to the extent allowed by Sec.
1266.7(b)(1), as that provision is being amended by this rulemaking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ The comparison made by commenters to the provision in the
letter of credit regulation is somewhat misplaced. Prior to adopting
the letter of credit regulation, the Finance Board determined that,
as a matter of law, the Bank Act did not require that letters of
credit be collateralized. It did, however, conclude that such a
requirement was advisable as a matter of safe and sound banking
practice and provided for the acceptance of certain types of
collateral for letters of credit that the Banks, by law, were not
permitted to accept to secure advances. See Final Rule: Standby
Letters of Credit, 63 FR 65693 (Nov. 30, 1998); and Office of
General Counsel Opinion, 1998-GC-14 (Oct. 28, 1998). The HERA
amendments that will be implemented by this rule, however, limit
eligible advance collateral for a CFI member to secured community
development loans or securities representing a whole interest in
such secured loans.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
To implement the HERA provisions which allow CFIs to rely on long-
term advances to fund ``community development loans,'' FHFA proposed
amending the definition of ``residential housing finance assets'' to
incorporate ``community development loans'' into the definition. See 75
FR at 7993. To avoid confusion, FHFA also proposed removing the
reference to ``community lending'' from the ``residential housing
finance assets'' definition and incorporating each element of
``community lending,'' as defined in Sec. 900.2,\10\ into the
definition. Thus, the proposed definition specifically referred to
``loans or investments providing financing for economic development
projects for targeted beneficiaries'' and for CFI members, to the
extent not already included, ``small business loans, small farm loans,
small agri-business loans, or community development loans.'' Other than
adding ``community development loans,'' the proposed changes were
editorial in nature and did not alter the scope of the definition for
``residential housing finance assets.'' No comments were received on
these changes and the definition of ``residential housing finance
assets'' is being adopted as proposed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\10\ The definition of ``residential housing finance assets'' in
Sec. 950.1 of the Finance Board's advances regulations incorrectly
states that ``community lending'' is defined in Sec. 900.1 rather
than in Sec. 900.2.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
FHFA also proposed adding to newly designated Sec. 1266.1
definitions for ``Bank Act,'' ``advances,'' ``Bank,'' and ``targeted
beneficiaries.'' These definitions were contained in Sec. 900.1 or
Sec. 900.2 of the FHFB rules, and FHFA proposed to carry them over to
newly designated part 1266 without substantive change.\11\ No comments
were received on these definitions and FHFA is adopting them as
proposed.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ The definitions in part 900 of the FHFB rules apply only to
regulations contained in chapter 9 of Title 12 of the Code of
Federal Regulations. Thus, definitions in part 900 are no longer
applicable to the advances and the new business activities
regulations once they are transferred to new parts 1266 and 1272.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Secured Lending--Sec. 1266.2(e)
FHFA proposed amending newly designated Sec. 1266.2 of the
advances regulation to incorporate a long-standing position that any
secured lending by a Bank to members is deemed an advance subject to
all requirements related to advances. This position was first taken by
the FHFB in 1995 by resolution; this resolution has not been rescinded
and is still in effect. Fin. Brd. Res. No. 95-13 (Aug. 9, 1995). FHFA
proposed incorporating this position into the regulation to prevent
Banks from using forms of secured lending to members, such as reverse
repurchase transactions, to avoid specific requirements and obligations
associated with making advances to members, including stock purchase
requirements. To assure that the proposed provision could not be
circumvented by a Bank extending secured credit to an affiliate of a
member, the proposed provision also prohibited secured lending to any
non-member, affiliate of a member, given that such non-member
affiliates would not be eligible to receive an advance under the
regulations.
Almost all the comment letters addressed proposed Sec. 1266.2(e).
Most of these commenters noted that the broad wording in the proposed
amendment could prevent derivative transactions or similar transactions
in which counterparties would be required to post collateral.
Commenters suggested that the rule language should refer to secured
transactions for ``money borrowed'' to distinguish reverse repurchase
agreements and similar transaction from other types of transactions
that may create credit exposures. FHFA agrees that the proposed
provision is overly broad. It was not FHFA's intent to prevent the
Banks from entering into derivative transactions or prohibit the Banks
from requiring members that may be a derivative counterparty from
posting collateral. Nor was it FHFA's intent to prevent Banks from
accepting collateral to secure other types of member obligations to the
Bank such as those arising under the members' credit enhancement
obligations for mortgages sold to Banks under their AMA programs. See
12 CFR 955.3(b)(2).
FHFA is therefore adopting as part of the final rule language
similar to that proposed in commenters' letters. The rule now refers to
``all secured transactions, regardless of the form of the transaction,
for money borrowed from a Bank by a member of any Bank,'' so that
reverse repurchase type lending transactions will be covered, but not
other member transactions or obligations that may create a credit
exposure to a Bank but do not arise from the Bank lending cash funds to
the member. As with the proposed rule, the final rule continues to
cover these types of transactions if undertaken between a Bank and a
member of any Bank, and does not apply only to transactions between a
Bank and one of its own members.
Commenters also pointed out that most acceptable reverse repurchase
agreement counterparties would be affiliates of a Bank System member,
since most major financial institutions in the United States have at
least one affiliate that is a member of some Bank. They also noted that
reverse repurchase agreements were an important short term liquid
investment for the Banks, especially in times of economic stress when
unsecured money-market investments may be a less desirable option on a
risk-adjusted basis. These commenters therefore urged that the rule
exclude from the prohibition on secured transactions with affiliates of
members: (i) Primary dealers in government securities and (ii) other
counterparties meeting the credit and other risk management
requirements established by a Bank. One commenter stated that the rule
should exclude broker-dealer affiliates of members from the prohibition
of the rule. A number of commenters also pointed out that the provision
prohibiting a Bank from
[[Page 76621]]
making a secured extension of credit to ``an affiliate of any member''
could technically prevent the Bank from making advances to members that
were affiliates of other members and urged that the language
prohibiting secured lending to affiliates of members be refined in this
respect.
After consideration of the comments, FHFA has determined not to
adopt, as part of the final rule, the proposed prohibition on reverse
repurchase agreements and similar secured lending transactions with
affiliates of members. While FHFA had an indication that certain Banks
were considering entering into reverse repurchase agreements, each Bank
with members of the other Bank, to help these members avoid additional
stock purchases, FHFA has no indication that these transactions were
being considered with affiliates of members as a way to avoid stock
purchase requirements. FHFA decided that it should not prevent Banks
from entering into important liquidity investments at this time on the
possibility that Banks may use reverse repurchase agreements with
affiliates of members as a way to effectively make secured extensions
of credit to members without requiring member stock purchases. If FHFA
becomes aware that the Banks are entering into reverse repurchase
agreements with member affiliates, not for purposes of making liquidity
investments, but as a means of facilitating member avoidance of
additional stock purchase requirements, it may reconsider this
position.
Long Term Advances--Sec. 1266.3
FHFA proposed to redesignate Sec. 950.3 of the Finance Board's
advances regulation as Sec. 1266.3, and to make certain conforming
changes to the provision. No comments were received on these changes,
and FHFA is adopting Sec. 1266.3 as proposed. See 75 FR at 7993.
Section 1266.3 implements section 10(a)(2) of the Bank Act, as amended
by HERA, and provides that a Bank shall make long-term advances only
for the purpose of enabling a member to purchase or fund new or
existing residential housing finance assets, a term defined in Sec.
1266.1 to include, for CFI members, small business loans, small farm
loans, small agri-business loans, and community development loans.
Thus, the only change being made in Sec. 1266.3 is to remove, as
redundant, references to small business loans, small farm loans, and
small agri-business loans that were contained in former Sec. 950.3.
Community Development Loans as Collateral--Sec. 1266.7(b)(1)
FHFA proposed to implement the HERA provision allowing CFI members
to pledge loans for community development activities as collateral for
advances by adding ``community development loans'' to the list of CFI-
specific collateral set forth in the redesignated Sec. 1266.7(b)(1).
No other changes were proposed to this provision. No comments were
received on this provision and it is being adopted as proposed.
A Bank's acceptance of ``community development loans'' will need to
meet the same requirements as its acceptance of other types of CFI
collateral. Thus, community development loans pledged by CFI members to
secure advances will need to be fully secured by collateral other than
real estate. In addition, any eligible community development loan will
have to have a readily ascertainable value, be able to be reliably
discounted to account for liquidation or other risk, and be able to be
liquidated in due course, and the Bank would have to be able to perfect
a security interest in such loan. A Bank's acceptance of specific types
of ``community development loans'' to secure an advance will also be
subject to its first meeting the requirements of the new business
activities rule, which will be redesignated as 12 CFR part 1272 by this
rulemaking, and any other applicable FHFA regulations, guidance or
policies. As already noted, the amendments being adopted here also will
allow a Bank to accept, as collateral for advances, a security
representing a whole interest in secured community development loans,
subject to the Bank's first fulfilling any obligations under the new
business activities rule.
Clarification of Provision--Sec. 1266.11
FHFA is also adopting language in newly designated Sec. 1266.11 to
make clear that the provision only applies to the one Bank that has not
yet implemented the capital structure plan required under the Gramm-
Leach-Bliley Act (GLB Act). The requirements in newly designated Sec.
1266.11 were all adopted prior to the passage of the GLB Act in
November 1999 and have not been amended since the passage of the GLB
Act. See 64 FR 16788 (Apr. 6, 1999) and 58 FR 29456 (May 20, 1993). The
provision addresses stock purchase and redemption requirements. The GLB
Act changed these requirements for a Bank, once the Bank implemented
its capital plan and converted to the capital structure required under
the GLB Act. See 12 U.S.C. Sec. Sec. 1426(a)(6) and (c). Banks that
have converted to the GLB Act structure are required to set forth in
their capital plans the requirements governing member stock purchases
and member rights with regard to the redemption and repurchase of Bank
stock, consistent with the regulations in 12 CFR parts 931 and 933. To
avoid any confusion as to the application of Sec. 1266.11, FHFA is
amending this provision to clarify that it only applies to a Bank that
has not converted to the GLB Act capital structure.
New Business Activities Regulation--Part 1272
As proposed, FHFA is transferring the new business activities rule
from part 980 of the FHFB regulations to part 1272 of FHFA regulations,
making only technical and conforming changes to the rule. See 75 FR at
7993-94.
Housing Associates and Letter of Credit Regulation--Parts 1264 and 1269
FHFA is also making conforming changes to part 1264 and part 1269
to change any cross references to former part 950 to correspond to the
correct, newly designated sections in part 1266.
III. Paperwork Reduction Act
The information collection contained in the current Bank housing
associates and advances regulations, entitled ``Advances to Housing
Associates,'' has been assigned control number 2590-0001 by the Office
of Management and Budget (OMB). The amendments to those regulations
made by this final rule do not substantively or materially modify the
approved information collection. Further, the changes to the new
business activity regulation do not contain any collections of
information pursuant to the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C.
3501 et seq.). Therefore, FHFA has not submitted any information to the
OMB for review.
IV. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The final rule applies only to the Banks, which do not come within
the meaning of small entities as defined in the Regulatory Flexibility
Act (RFA). See 5 U.S.C. 601(6). Therefore in accordance with section
605(b) of the RFA, FHFA certifies that this final rule will not have
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Parts 950, 980, 1264, 1266, 1269 and
1272
Community development, Credit, Federal home loan banks, Housing,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
[[Page 76622]]
0
For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Federal Housing Finance
Agency is amending chapters IX and XII of title 12 of the Code of
Federal Regulations as follows:
CHAPTER IX--FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE BOARD
CHAPTER XII--FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE AGENCY
PART 950--[REDESIGNATED AS PART 1266]
0
1. Redesignate 12 CFR part 950 as 12 CFR part 1266.
PART 980--[REDESIGNATED AS PART 1272]
0
2. Redesignate 12 CFR part 980 as 12 CFR part 1272.
PART 1264--FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK HOUSING ASSOCIATES
0
3. The authority citation for part 1264 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1430b, 4511, 4513, and 4526.
Sec. 1264.3 Housing associate eligibility requirements.
0
4. Amend Sec. 1264.3(b) by removing the reference to ``Sec.
950.17(b)(2) of this title'' and adding in its place ``Sec.
1266.17(b)(2) of this chapter''.
PART 1266--ADVANCES
0
5. The authority citation for newly redesignated part 1266 is revised
to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1426, 1429, 1430, 1430b, 1431, 4511(b),
4513, 4526(a).
0
6. Amend the newly redesignated part 1266 as indicated in the table
below:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
By removing the
Amend: reference to: And adding in its place:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sec. 1266.1, Definition of CFI Sec. 925.1, each Sec. 1263.1.
member. place that it appears.
Sec. 1266.1, Definition of State Sec. 926.1.......... Sec. 1264.1.
housing finance agency.
Sec. 1266.4(g)(2)(i).............. Sec. 950.2(b)(2).... Sec. 1266.2(b)(2).
Sec. 1266.4(g)(2)(ii)............. Sec. 950.2(a)....... Sec. 1266.2(a).
Sec. 1266.5(b)(2)(ii)............. Sec. 917.4 of this Sec. 917.4 of this title.
chapter.
Sec. 1266.6(a).................... Sec. 917.4 of this Sec. 917.4 of this title.
chapter.
Sec. 1266.9(a)(1)................. Sec. 950.2(c)....... Sec. 1266.2(c).
Sec. 1266.10(a)................... Sec. 917.4 of this Sec. 917.4 of this title.
chapter.
Sec. 1266.16...................... Sec. Sec. 950.14 Sec. Sec. 1266.14 and 1266.17.
and 950.17.
Sec. 1266.17(a)................... part 925.............. part 1263.
Sec. 1266.17(b)(2)(i) introductory Sec. 926.3(b)....... Sec. 1264.3(b).
text.
Sec. 1266.17(b)(2)(i)(A).......... Sec. 950.7(a)(1) or Sec. 1266.7(a)(1) or (2).
(2).
Sec. 1266.17(b)(2)(i)(B).......... Sec. 950.7(a)(3).... Sec. 1266.7(a)(3).
Sec. 1266.17(b)(2)(i)(B).......... Sec. 926.3(b)....... Sec. 1264.3(b).
Sec. 1266.17(b)(2)(i)(C).......... Sec. 950.7(a)(4).... Sec. 1266.7(a)(4).
Sec. 1266.17(c)(2)(i)............. Sec. 950.3(b), each Sec. 1266.3(b).
time it appears.
Sec. 1266.17(c)(2)(ii)............ Sec. 950.5(b)(2).... Sec. 1266.5(b)(2).
Sec. 1266.17(e)(2)................ part 926.............. part 1264.
Sec. 1266.17(e)(3)................ part 926.............. part 1264.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0
7. In newly redesignated part 1266, revise all references to ``Finance
Board'' to read ``FHFA'' and revise all references to ``the Act'' to
read ``the Bank Act''.
0
8. In newly redesignated Sec. 1266.1, add in correct alphabetical
order definitions for ``Advance'', ``Bank'', ``Bank Act'', ``Community
development'', ``Community development loan'', ``FHFA'', and ``Targeted
beneficiaries'', and revise the definition of ``Residential housing
finance assets'' to read as follows:
Sec. 1266.1 Definitions.
* * * * *
Advance means a loan from a Bank that is:
(1) Provided pursuant to a written agreement;
(2) Supported by a note or other written evidence of the borrower's
obligation; and
(3) Fully secured by collateral in accordance with the Bank Act and
this part.
* * * * *
Bank, written in title case, means a Federal Home Loan Bank
established under section 12 of the Bank Act, as amended (12 U.S.C.
1432).
Bank Act means the Federal Home Loan Bank Act, as amended (12
U.S.C. 1421 through 1449).
* * * * *
Community development has the same meaning as under the definition
set forth in the Community Reinvestment rule for the Federal Reserve
System (12 CFR part 228), Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (12 CFR
part 345), the Office of Thrift Supervision (12 CFR part 563e) or the
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (12 CFR part 25), whichever
is the CFI member's primary Federal regulator.
Community development loan means a loan, or a participation
interest in such loan, that has as its primary purpose community
development, but such loans shall not include:
(1) Any loan or instrument that qualifies as eligible security for
an advance under Sec. 1266.7(a) of this part;
(2) Any loan that qualifies as a small agri-business loan, small
business loan or small farm loan, under definitions set forth in this
section; or
(3) Consumer loans or credit extended to one or more individuals
for household, family or other personal expenditures.
* * * * *
FHFA means the Federal Housing Finance Agency.
* * * * *
Residential housing finance assets means any of the following:
(1) Loans secured by residential real property;
(2) Mortgage-backed securities;
(3) Participations in loans secured by residential real property;
(4) Loans or investments providing financing for economic
development projects for targeted beneficiaries;
(5) Loans secured by manufactured housing, regardless of whether
such housing qualifies as residential real property;
(6) Any loans or investments which FHFA, in its discretion,
otherwise determines to be residential housing finance assets; and
(7) For CFI members, and to the extent not already included in
categories (1)
[[Page 76623]]
through (6), small business loans, small farm loans, small agri-
business loans, or community development loans.
* * * * *
Targeted beneficiaries has the meaning set forth in Sec. 952.1 of
this title.
0
9. Amend newly redesignated Sec. 1266.2 by adding new paragraph (e) to
read as follows:
Sec. 1266.2 Authorization and application for advances; obligation to
repay advances.
* * * * *
(e) Status of secured lending. All secured transactions, regardless
of the form of the transaction, for money borrowed from a Bank by a
member of any Bank shall be considered an advance subject to the
requirements of this part.
0
10. Revise newly redesignated Sec. 1266.3 to read as follows:
Sec. 1266.3 Purpose of long-term advances; Proxy test.
(a) A Bank shall make long-term advances only for the purpose of
enabling any member to purchase or fund new or existing residential
housing finance assets.
(b)(1) Prior to approving an application for a long-term advance, a
Bank shall determine that the principal amount of all long-term
advances currently held by the member does not exceed the total book
value of residential housing finance assets held by such member. The
Bank shall determine the total book value of such residential housing
finance assets, using the most recent Thrift Financial Report, Report
of Condition and Income, financial statement or other reliable
documentation made available by the member.
(2) Applications for CICA advances are exempt from the requirements
of paragraph (b)(1) of this section.
0
11. Amend newly redesignated Sec. 1266.7 by revising paragraph (b)(1)
to read as follows:
Sec. 1266.7 Collateral.
* * * * *
(b) * * *
(1) General. Subject to the requirements set forth in part 1272 of
this chapter, a Bank is authorized to accept from CFI members or their
affiliates as security for advances small business loans, small farm
loans, small agri-business loans, or community development loans, in
each case fully secured by collateral other than real estate, or
securities representing a whole interest in such secured loans,
provided that:
(i) Such collateral has a readily ascertainable value, can be
reliably discounted to account for liquidation and other risks, and can
be liquidated in due course; and
(ii) The Bank can perfect a security interest in such collateral.
* * * * *
0
12. Revise newly redesignated Sec. 1266.11 to read as follows:
Sec. 1266.11 Capital stock requirements; redemption of excess stock.
(a) Capital stock requirement for advances. For a Bank that has not
converted to the capital structure authorized by the Gramm-Leach-Bliley
Act, the aggregate amount of outstanding advance made by the Bank to a
member shall not exceed 20 times the amount paid in by such member for
capital stock in the Bank.
(b) Unilateral Redemption of excess stock. A Bank that has not
converted to the capital structure authorized by the Gramm-Leach-Bliley
Act:
(1) May, after providing 15 calendar days advance written notice to
a member, require the redemption of that amount of the member's Bank
capital stock that exceeds the applicable capital stock requirements in
paragraph (a) of this section, provided that the member continues to
comply with the minimum stock purchase requirement set forth in Sec.
1263.20(a) of this chapter; and
(2) May not impose on, or accept from, a member a fee in lieu of
redeeming a member's excess stock.
PART 1269--STANDBY LETTERS OF CREDIT
0
13. The authority citation for part 1269 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1429, 1430, 1430b, 1431, 4511, 4513 and
4526.
0
14. Amend part 1269 as indicated in the table below:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
By removing the
Amend: reference to: And adding in its place:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sec. 1269.1, Definition of Sec. 950.1 of this Sec. 1266.1 of this chapter.
community lending. title.
Sec. 1269.1, Definition of Sec. 950.1.......... Sec. 1266.1.
Residential housing finance.
Sec. 1269.1, Definition of SHFA Sec. 1269.1......... Sec. 1264.1.
associate.
Sec. 1269.2(c).................... Sec. 950.7 of this Sec. 1266.7 of this chapter.
title.
Sec. 1269.3(a) introductory text.. Sec. Sec. Sec. 1266.17(b)(1)(i) or (ii) of this chapter.
950.17(b)(1)(i) or
(ii) of this title.
Sec. 1269.3(b).................... Sec. Sec. 1266.17(b)(2)(i)(A),(B) or (C) of this
950.17(b)(2)(i)(A),(B chapter.
) or (C) of this
title.
Sec. 1269.4(a)(1)................. Sec. Sec. 1266.17(b)(2)(i)(B).
950.17(b)(2)(i)(B).
Sec. 1269.4(a)(1)................. Sec. 950.17(d)...... Sec. 1266.17(d).
Sec. 1269.4(c).................... part 950.............. part 1266.
Sec. 1269.5(b)(1)................. Sec. 960.3.......... Sec. 1269.3.
Sec. 1269.5(b)(2)................. Sec. Sec. 950.7(d), Sec. Sec. 1266.7(d), 1266.7(e), 1266.8, 1266.9
950.7(e), 950.8, and 1266.10 of this chapter.
950.9 and 950.10 of
this title.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PART 1272--NEW BUSINESS ACTIVITIES
0
15. The authority citation for newly redesignated part 1272 is revised
to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1431(a), 1432(a), 4511(b), 4513, 4526(a).
0
16. Amend the references in the newly redesignated part 1272 as
indicated in the table below:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
By removing the
Amend: reference to: And adding in its place:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Sec. 1272.1, Definition of new Sec. 950.7(a)(4).... Sec. 1266.7(a)(4).
business activity.
Sec. 1272.1, Definition of new Sec. 950.7(b)....... Sec. 1266.7(b).
business activity.
[[Page 76624]]
Sec. 1272.3 introductory text..... Sec. 980.4(b)....... Sec. 1272.4(b).
Sec. 1272.3(b) introductory text.. Sec. 950.7.......... Sec. 1266.7.
Sec. 1272.3(b)(2)................. Sec. 917.4 of this Sec. 917.4 of this title.
chapter.
Sec. 1272.3(b)(3)................. Sec. 950.10......... Sec. 1266.10.
Sec. 1272.4(a).................... Sec. 980.3.......... Sec. 1272.3.
Sec. 1272.4(a).................... Sec. 980.5(a)(1) Sec. 1272.5(a)(1) through (4).
through (4).
Sec. 1272.4(b).................... Sec. 950.7(a)(4).... Sec. 1266.7(a)(4).
Sec. 1272.4(b).................... Sec. 980.3.......... Sec. 1272.3.
Sec. 1272.4(c).................... Sec. 980.6.......... Sec. 1272.6.
Sec. 1272.5(a) introductory text.. Sec. 980.3.......... Sec. 1272.3.
Sec. 1272.5(a)(4)................. Sec. 980.7.......... Sec. 1272.7.
Sec. 1272.5(a)(5)................. Sec. 980.7.......... Sec. 1272.7.
Sec. 1272.5(b).................... Sec. 980.6.......... Sec. 1272.6.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
0
17. Amend newly redesignated part 1272 by revising all references to
``Finance Board'' to read ``FHFA''.
0
18. Amend newly redesignated Sec. 1272.1 by adding in correct
alphabetical order definitions for ``Bank,'' ``Bank Act'' and ``FHFA''
to read as follows:
Sec. 1272.1 Definitions.
* * * * *
Bank, written in title case, means a Federal Home Loan Bank
established under section 12 of the Bank Act, as amended (12 U.S.C.
1432).
Bank Act means the Federal Home Loan Bank Act, as amended (12
U.S.C. 1421 through 1449).
FHFA means the Federal Housing Finance Agency.
* * * * *
0
19. In newly redesignated Sec. 1272.5, amend paragraphs (a)(5) and (b)
by revising the words ``Finance Board's'' to read ``FHFA's''.
Dated: November 30, 2010.
Edward J. DeMarco,
Acting Director, Federal Housing Finance Agency.
[FR Doc. 2010-30519 Filed 12-8-10; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8070-01-P