Deposit Insurance Regulations; Definition of Insured Deposit, 56583-56589 [2013-22340]
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56583
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
Vol. 78, No. 178
Friday, September 13, 2013
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER
contains regulatory documents having general
applicability and legal effect, most of which
are keyed to and codified in the Code of
Federal Regulations, which is published under
50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by
the Superintendent of Documents. Prices of
new books are listed in the first FEDERAL
REGISTER issue of each week.
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION
12 CFR Part 330
RIN 3064–AE00
Deposit Insurance Regulations;
Definition of Insured Deposit
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation (FDIC).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The FDIC is adopting a final
rule (‘‘Final Rule’’) that amends its
deposit insurance regulations with
respect to deposits in foreign branches
of U.S. insured depository institutions
(‘‘IDI’’ or ‘‘U.S. bank’’). The Final Rule
clarifies that deposits in branches of
U.S. banks located outside the United
States are not FDIC-insured deposits.
This would be the case even if they are
also payable at an office within the
United States (‘‘dual payability’’). As
discussed further below, a pending
proposal by the United Kingdom’s
Prudential Regulation Authority (‘‘U.K.
PRA’’), formerly known as the Financial
Services Authority, has made it more
likely that large U.S. banks will change
their U.K. foreign branch deposit
agreements to make their U.K. deposits
payable both in the United Kingdom
and the United States. This action has
the potential to expose the Deposit
Insurance Fund (‘‘DIF’’) to expanded
deposit insurance liability and create
operational complexities if these types
of deposits were treated as insured. The
purpose of the Final Rule is to protect
the DIF against the liability that it
would otherwise face as a potential
global deposit insurer, preserve
confidence in the FDIC deposit
insurance system, and ensure that the
FDIC can effectively carry out its critical
deposit insurance functions.
DATES: The effective date of the Final
Rule is October 15, 2013.
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SUMMARY:
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F.
Angus Tarpley III, Supervisory Counsel,
Legal Division, (202) 898–6646;
Catherine Ribnick, Counsel, Legal
Division, (202) 898–6803; Matthew
Green, Associate Director, Division of
Insurance and Research, (202) 898–
3670.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
I. Background
Congress created the FDIC in 1933 to
end the banking crisis experienced
during the Great Depression, to
maintain stability and public confidence
in the nation’s financial system, and to
safeguard bank deposits through deposit
insurance. If a bank fails, the FDIC pays
out deposit insurance from the DIF,
which is funded by assessments on IDIs.
In the most recent financial crisis, the
FDIC’s deposit insurance guarantee,
with its backing by the full faith and
credit of the United States Government,
contributed significantly to financial
stability in an otherwise unstable
financial environment. In the FDIC’s
history, no depositor has ever lost a
penny of an insured deposit.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Act
(‘‘FDI Act’’) 1 mandates the payment of
deposit insurance ‘‘as soon as possible’’
to reduce the economic disruptions
caused by bank failures and to preserve
stability in the financial markets of the
United States.2 The FDIC generally pays
out deposit insurance on the next
business day after a bank failure, and
insured depositors often have
uninterrupted access to their insured
deposits through ATMs and other
means. The prompt payment of deposit
insurance preserves confidence in the
deposit insurance system and promotes
financial stability. Prompt payment
depends on a number of key factors,
including the FDICs having immediate
access to the deposit records of a failed
bank and clarity about the application of
laws and practices that could affect
deposits in a particular location.
A. Definition of ‘‘Deposit’’
The term ‘‘deposit’’ is defined in
section 3(l) of the FDI Act.3 Since the
establishment of the FDIC in 1933,
Congress has made distinctions between
domestic and foreign deposits. The
U.S.C. 1811, et seq.
FDI Act section 11(f)(1), 12 U.S.C.
1821(f)(1).
3 12 U.S.C. 1813(l).
current statutory definition of ‘‘deposit’’
under section 3(l) makes clear that
foreign branch deposits are not
‘‘deposits’’ for any purpose under the
FDI Act, except under certain prescribed
circumstances. In relevant part, the law
specifies that ‘‘any obligation of a
depository institution which is carried
on the books and records of an office of
such bank or savings association located
outside of any State’’ shall not be a
deposit for any of the purposes of the
FDI Act or be included as part of the
total deposits or of an insured deposit,
‘‘unless—(i) such obligation would be a
deposit if it were carried on the books
and records of the depository
institution, and would be payable at, an
office located in any State; and (ii) the
contract evidencing the obligation
provides by express terms, and not by
implication, for payment at an office of
the depository institution located in any
State.’’ 4
Therefore, deposit obligations carried
on the books and records of a foreign
branch of a U.S. bank that would
otherwise fall within one of the
categories of deposits created by section
3(l) are not deposits unless they (1)
would be deposits if carried on the
books and records of the IDI in the
United States and (2) are expressly
payable in the United States.5
The vast majority of deposit
agreements governing relationships
between U.S. banks and their foreign
branch depositors have to date not
expressly provided for payment of
foreign branch deposits at an office in
the United States. Accordingly, these
foreign branch deposits would not
qualify as ‘‘deposits’’ for any purpose
under the FDI Act, including deposit
insurance and the priority regime for the
distribution of a failed bank’s
receivership assets, known as
‘‘depositor preference,’’ as further
discussed below. While ‘‘deposit’’ has a
defined legal meaning under the FDI
Act, for ease of reference, these
obligations in foreign branches will
generally be called ‘‘foreign branch
deposits’’ in this Final Rule.
B. National Depositor Preference
When a U.S. bank fails, uninsured
depositors share in the proceeds from
the liquidation of the failed bank’s
1 12
2 See
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4 FDI
Act section 3(l)(5), 12 U.S.C. 1813(l)(5).
The FDI Act provides that the FDIC Board
may prescribe a deposit by regulation.
5 Id.
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assets. In 1993, Congress amended the
FDI Act to establish a system of
depositor preference in failed-bank
resolutions.6 In general, ‘‘depositor
preference’’ refers to a resolution
distribution regime in which the claims
of depositors have priority over (that is,
are satisfied before) the claims of
general unsecured creditors.
Under this regime, set forth in section
11(d)(11) of the FDI Act, the receiver of
a failed bank distributes amounts
realized from its liquidation to pay
claims in the following order of
priority.7 Administrative expenses of
the receiver are reimbursed first.8 Any
‘‘deposit liability’’ is reimbursed next,
followed in order by general or senior
liabilities, subordinated liabilities, and
obligations to shareholders. The term
‘‘deposit liability’’ in section 11(d)(11) is
not defined.
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C. The 1994 Advisory Opinion
Shortly after Congress added the
national depositor preference
provisions, the FDIC’s Acting General
Counsel was asked whether the term
‘‘deposit liability’’ would include
deposit obligations payable solely at a
foreign branch of a U.S. bank.9 As
described in the Acting General
Counsel’s 1994 Advisory Opinion
(‘‘General Counsel Advisory Opinion
94–1’’), national depositor preference
makes general unsecured creditor
claims subordinate to any ‘‘deposit
liability’’ of the institution. General
Counsel Advisory Opinion 94–1
concluded that the term ‘‘deposit
liability’’ should be defined with
reference to ‘‘deposit’’ under section 3(l)
of the FDI Act, which excluded, for any
purpose, any obligation of a bank
payable only at an office of that bank
located outside the United States.10
Under the interpretation set forth in
General Counsel Advisory Opinion 94–
1, ‘‘deposit liability’’ for purposes of
national depositor preference includes
only deposits payable in the United
States and excludes obligations payable
solely at a foreign branch of a U.S. bank.
6 Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993,
Public Law 103–66, 107 Stat. 312.
7 12 U.S.C. 1821(d)(11).
8 Secured creditors’ claims are satisfied to the
extent of their security.
9 See FDIC Advisory Opinion 94–1, Letter of
Acting General Counsel Douglas H. Jones (Feb. 28,
1994).
10 Section 3(l) was later amended to specify that
an obligation carried on the books and records of
a foreign office of a U.S. bank would not be a
‘‘deposit’’ for any purpose unless it were payable
at an office located in the United States and the
contract evidencing the obligation expressly
provided for such payment and met other criteria.
Riegle Community Development and Regulatory
Improvement Act, Public Law 103–325 (1994),
section 326(b)(2).
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Accordingly, an obligation in a foreign
branch of a U.S. bank has not been
considered a ‘‘deposit liability’’ for
purposes of the national depositor
preference provisions of section
11(d)(11) of the FDI Act. Thus, if a U.S.
bank were to fail, its foreign branch
depositors would share in the
distribution of the bank’s liquidated
assets as general creditors after the
claims of uninsured domestic depositors
and the FDIC as subrogee of insured
depositors have been satisfied.11 If a
foreign branch deposit of a U.S. bank
were expressly payable at an office of
the bank in the United States, however,
that deposit would be treated equally
with uninsured domestic deposits in the
depositor preference regime.
D. Foreign Branch Deposits of U.S.
Banks
Many U.S. banks currently operate
through branches in foreign countries,
often to provide banking, foreign
currency and payment services to
multinational corporations. Foreign
branch deposits have doubled since
2001 and total approximately $1 trillion
today. In many cases, these branches do
not engage in retail deposit taking or
other retail banking services. Often,
their typical depositors are large
businesses that choose to bank in a
foreign branch of a U.S. bank under
deposit agreements governed by nonU.S. law to take advantage of a large
bank’s multi-country branch network,
which allows the transfer of funds to
and from branch offices located in
different countries and in different time
zones.
Currently, the overwhelming majority
of the foreign branch deposits of U.S.
banks are payable only outside the
United States. In the past, making
deposits in foreign branches dually
payable would have been costly to U.S.
banks for several reasons. First, dually
payable deposits would have increased
a bank’s deposit insurance assessment
base (which, in the past, excluded
deposits payable solely outside the
United States) and, therefore, its deposit
insurance assessment. Second, the
dually payable deposits would have
become subject to the Federal Reserve’s
Regulation D.12 Third, U.S. banks may
have refrained from making foreign
11 While section 41 of the FDI Act, 12 U.S.C.
1831r, generally prohibits the FDIC in its corporate
capacity and other agencies from making any
payment that would satisfy any claim against a
bank for foreign branch deposits, the FDIC as
receiver of a failed bank may make payments from
the receivership estate to satisfy such claims.
12 12 CFR Part 204. Regulation D imposes uniform
reserve requirements on all depository institutions
with transaction accounts or non-personal time
deposits.
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deposits dually payable out of concern
that doing so could cause them to lose
the protection from sovereign risk
accorded them under section 25(c) of
the Federal Reserve Act.13
Recent events have reduced the cost
of making foreign deposits dually
payable. First, in section 331(b) of the
Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act,14 Congress
changed the deposit insurance
assessment base so that it now in effect
covers all liabilities, including foreign
branch deposits. Thus, a U.S. bank’s use
of dual payability would no longer
increase a bank’s assessment base or
deposit insurance assessment. Second,
the Federal Reserve now pays interest
on reserves and allows more flexibility
with respect to the reserves it requires.
Finally, as discussed below, nothing in
this Final Rule is intended to preclude
a U.S. bank from protecting itself against
sovereign risk.
E. The U.K. PRA Consultation Paper
In September 2012, the U.K. PRA
published a Consultation Paper
addressing the implications of national
depositor preference regimes in
countries outside the European
Economic Area (‘‘EEA’’). The
Consultation Paper proposes to prohibit
banks from non-EEA countries,
including U.S. banks, from operating
deposit-taking branches in the United
Kingdom unless U.K. depositors in
those branches would be on an equal
footing in the national depositor
preference regime with domestic
(uninsured) depositors in a failure
resolution of the bank. A significant
percentage of foreign branch deposits of
U.S. banks are located in the United
Kingdom and would be subject to this
requirement.
The Consultation Paper proposes
several options to ensure that depositors
in U.K. branches would be treated
equally in the event of a multinational
bank’s resolution. U.S. banks with
branches in the United Kingdom could
comply in one of these ways. First, the
U.S. bank could accept deposits in the
United Kingdom using a U.K.incorporated subsidiary. Second, U.S.
banks could create a trust arrangement
to segregate assets of the U.K. branch to
meet its deposit liabilities, under which
the trust would specify the U.K. branch
depositors as beneficiaries of the trust.
13 12 U.S.C. 633. This section provides that a
member bank is not required to repay a deposit in
a foreign branch if it cannot do so because of ‘‘war,
insurrection, or civil strife’’ or actions taken by the
foreign government, unless the member bank has
explicitly agreed in writing to repay foreign
deposits in such circumstances.
14 Public Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1538.
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Third, U.S. banks could take other
actions to comply, such as making their
U.K. deposits payable both in the
United States and in the United
Kingdom. The Consultation Paper
indicates that dual payability should
allow U.K. depositors to participate in
the preference given to home country
(that is, United States) depositors in the
resolution of a U.S. bank. The U.K. PRA
is still considering comments on the
Consultation Paper and has not
provided a date by which the
requirements proposed in the
Consultation Paper will be
implemented.
F. Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
In light of the U.K. PRA’s proposal
and subsequent action required of U.S.
banks with branches in the United
Kingdom, the FDIC proposed to amend
its deposit insurance regulations with
respect to deposits payable in branches
of U.S. banks located outside the United
States. On February 19, 2013, the FDIC
published in the Federal Register and
invited public comment on a Notice of
Proposed Rulemaking: Deposit
Insurance Regulations; Definition of
Insured Deposit (the ‘‘Proposed
Rule’’).15 The Proposed Rule proposed
to amend the FDIC’s deposit insurance
regulations to clarify that deposits in
foreign branches of U.S. banks are not
FDIC-insured deposits. The FDIC is now
adopting as final the proposed
amendments to its deposit insurance
regulations, 12 CFR 330.3(e), with minor
technical changes.
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II. Statutory Framework
A. Definition of ‘‘Insured Deposit’’
The Final Rule clarifies that foreign
branch deposits are not insured deposits
for purposes of the FDI Act, regardless
of the location at which the deposit is
payable. The FDI Act defines ‘‘insured
deposit’’ as the net amount due any
depositor for deposits in an insured
depository institution as determined
under section 11(a) of the FDI Act.16
Section 11(a) of the FDI Act,17 crossreferenced in the definition of ‘‘insured
deposit,’’ instructs the FDIC to ‘‘insure
the deposits of all insured depository
institutions as provided in this Act,’’ but
does not expressly address foreign
deposits. The FDI Act definition of
‘‘deposit’’ in section 3(l)(5)(A) makes
clear that obligations carried on the
books and records of an office located
outside the United States shall not be
deposits for any purpose under the FDI
Act, but it does not address whether
FR 11604 (February 19, 2013).
Act section 3(m)(1), 12 U.S.C. 1813(m)(1).
17 12 U.S.C. 1821(a).
they must be considered deposits for all
purposes, including for purposes of
deposit insurance, if they would qualify
as deposits under 3(l)(5)(A) because
they are payable at an office within the
United States under express contractual
terms.
B. Rulemaking Authority
The FDIC issues rules and regulations
necessary to carry out the statutory
mandates of the FDI Act and other laws
that the FDIC is charged with
administering or enforcing. In instances
such as this one where a statute is silent
or general in nature on issues critical to
the FDIC’s fundamental responsibilities,
the FDIC has used its rulemaking
authority to effectuate its statutory
duties.
Providing deposit insurance to IDIs
and maintaining public confidence in
the banking system through deposit
insurance in the event of a U.S. bank’s
insolvency are two central functions of
the FDIC. In order to permit the FDIC to
carry out these functions successfully,
the FDIC is authorized to undertake
rulemaking to implement the FDI Act
effectively, particularly with respect to
its deposit insurance functions. The FDI
Act gives the FDIC explicit rulemaking
and definitional authorities to ensure
that it can adapt to changed
circumstances as necessary to carry out
its deposit insurance responsibilities.
The FDI Act contains several
provisions granting the FDIC authority
to issue regulations to carry out its core
functions and responsibilities, which
include the duty ‘‘to insure the deposits
of all insured depository institutions.’’
Notably, FDI Act section 11(d)(4)(B)(iv)
authorizes the FDIC to promulgate
‘‘such regulations as may be necessary
to assure that the requirements of this
section [FDI Act section 11, which
addresses, in section 11(f) the payment
of deposit insurance] can be
implemented with respect to each
insured depository institution in the
event of its insolvency.’’ 18
Other grants of FDIC rulemaking
authority can be found in FDI Act
section 9(a)(Tenth) (authorizing the
FDIC Board to prescribe ‘‘such rules and
regulations as it may deem necessary to
carry out the provisions of this chapter
. . . ’’) and FDI Act section 10(g)
(authorizing the FDIC to ‘‘prescribe
regulations’’ and ‘‘to define terms as
necessary to carry out’’ the FDI Act).19
15 78
16 FDI
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18 12
19 12
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U.S.C. 1821(d)(4)(B)(iv).
U.S.C. 1819(a)(Tenth); 1820(g).
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III. Summary of Comments in Response
to Proposed Rule
As noted above, the FDIC solicited
public comment on the Proposed Rule
on February 19, 2013. The comment
period ended on April 22, 2013. The
FDIC received comments from three
industry groups and two individuals in
response to the Proposed Rule. After
careful consideration of the comments,
the FDIC is adopting the Proposed Rule
as final, with technical format changes.
A. Comments in Response to Proposed
Rule
Overall, commenters did not object to
the concept that foreign branch deposits
are not insured, as clarified in the
Proposed Rule. One individual
acknowledged that the Proposed Rule
would limit the DIF’s exposure, but
argued that it would adversely affect
public relations. The commenter
suggested that foreign deposits be
insured up to the domestic limit, with
U.S. banks with foreign branches paying
double their current assessments in
order to strengthen the DIF. However,
the FDIC believes that it is inconsistent
with congressional intent and the
FDIC’s statutory mandate of promoting
confidence in the U.S. banking system
to insure foreign deposits in the manner
the commenter proposed. The FDIC
believes that the better approach is to
make clear that foreign branch deposits,
whether or not deposit liabilities for the
purpose of national depositor
preference, are not ‘‘insured deposits.’’
Commenters did not object to the
Proposed Rule itself, but most of the
commenters raised several issues related
to risks they assert would result if U.S.
banks employed dual payability to
satisfy the U.K. PRA requirement to
treat domestic and foreign branch
deposits equally. These commenters
advocated an alternative approach,
which they believe would better address
their concerns. The FDIC has carefully
considered their comments and
discusses them below.
B. Section 11(d)(11) Approach
Instead of adopting the FDIC’s
Proposed Rule, the commenters
suggested that the FDIC formally
interpret ‘‘deposit liability’’ for purposes
of the depositor preference regime in
section 11(d)(11) of the FDI Act, to
include all deposits of a U.S. bank,
wherever payable (the ‘‘section
11(d)(11) approach’’). According to the
commenters, this alternative would
achieve the result of equal treatment of
uninsured domestic deposits and
foreign branch deposits in the event of
a U.S. bank’s resolution without
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creating global liability for the DIF.
They also argued that this would
eliminate the risk of litigation over
depositor preference, as well as reduce
the risk of litigation by foreign
depositors over deposit insurance
because banks would be less likely to
employ dual payability. Alternatively,
commenters suggested a ‘‘combined
approach’’ in which a formal
interpretation of ‘‘deposit liability’’
could be issued in addition to a rule
clarifying that deposits in foreign
branches are not insured, even if they
are also payable at a U.S. branch.
The commenters acknowledged that
the proposed alternative would
contradict FDIC General Counsel
Advisory Opinion 94–1, but they argued
that their interpretation of ‘‘deposit
liability’’ is supported by the plain
meaning of the term deposit liability, its
uses elsewhere in the FDI Act,
legislative history, and reference to state
law priority regimes. They further
argued that the depositor preference
provision in the FDI Act does not
distinguish among depositors because it
accords priority to any ‘‘deposit
liability.’’
Commenters argued that the term
‘‘deposit liability’’ in the FDI Act should
not be bound by the Act’s definition of
‘‘deposit.’’ They cite to a canon of
statutory construction that suggests that
where Congress chooses to use two
different terms, they are intended to
have two different meanings.
Commenters argued that the term
‘‘deposit liability’’ is used elsewhere in
the FDI Act to suggest a broader
definition than the term ‘‘deposit,’’ from
which foreign deposit obligations are
excluded. They contended that there is
legislative history supporting the notion
that Congress did not intend to
distinguish between foreign and
domestic depositors under the depositor
preference provisions of the FDI Act. In
particular, these commenters pointed to
congressional committees which used
broad and general language to describe
depositor preference. Moreover, the
commenters suggested that Congress
intended to follow state depositor
preference statutes, and that one of
these states specifically included foreign
branch deposits in its depositor
preference statute, while the majority of
other states with depositor preference
statutes did not refer to foreign deposits
specifically, but referred to deposits in
a broad and general manner.
From a practical standpoint, several
commenters noted that the section
(11)(d)(11) approach is also consistent
with current bank reporting
requirements. For instance, deposit
liabilities on a bank’s balance sheet
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would include all deposits, domestic
and foreign. Similarly, the general
instructions for Schedule RC–E to the
Consolidated Reports of Condition and
Income (‘‘Call Report’’), which all
insured depository institutions must
file, refer to both domestic and foreign
branch deposits as ‘‘deposit liabilities.’’
The Call Report also requires foreign
deposits to be reported as ‘‘deposit
liabilities.’’
According to these commenters, the
approach of reinterpreting ‘‘deposit
liability’’ as used in section 11(d)(11)
not only bolsters international
cooperation, but also eliminates the
potential for inconsistent treatment of
deposits in different foreign
jurisdictions. They argued that the
section 11(d)(11) approach would be
compatible with the FSB’s Key
Attributes and the most recent draft of
the European Commission’s proposed
Resolution and Recovery Directive. It
would also eliminate potential risks and
costs to the FDIC and the ongoing need
for guidance to banks, foreign
depositors, and foreign regulators on
how dual payability would work.
Ultimately, commenters argued that
the section 11(d)(11) approach would
better address industry concerns about
ensuring equal treatment of depositors
under the U.S. depositor preference
regime in a liquidation than if U.S.
banks were to change their deposit
agreements to make foreign branch
deposits dually payable. The
commenters contended that the FDIC
would be justified in changing its
previous position, set forth in General
Counsel Advisory Opinion 94–1, by
adopting their proposed approach under
section 11(d)(11) of the FDI Act.
According to the commenters, General
Counsel Advisory Opinion 94–1
reached its conclusion without
sufficient substantive discussion.
Furthermore, they noted that General
Counsel Advisory Opinion 94–1 was not
a binding interpretation approved by the
FDIC Board of Directors and would
therefore not be entitled to significant
deference.
The FDIC believes that formally
interpreting ‘‘deposit liability’’ as the
commenters proposed would be
inconsistent with current statutory
language, and as commenters
acknowledged, would overturn a
longstanding Advisory Opinion. General
Counsel Advisory Opinion 94–1 is
based on a reasonable interpretation of
the FDI Act. While the term ‘‘deposit
liability’’ is not defined in the FDI Act,
the definition of ‘‘deposit’’ under
section 3(l) explicitly refers to the term
‘‘deposit liabilities.’’ In addition, the
legislative history of the depositor
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preference provision does not define
‘‘deposit liability’’ under section
11(d)(11) and does not explicitly
include foreign branch deposits in the
class of depositors who are entitled to
depositor preference.20 The FDI Act
does allow a deposit in a foreign branch
of a U.S. bank to receive depositor
preference, but only under the
circumstances specifically stated in the
statute; that is, the deposit must be
dually payable.
C. Comments Relating to Dual
Payability
The commenters also presented a
number of arguments related to the
negative consequences that would result
if they employ dual payability, in
support of their proposed alternative
approach. These arguments include
contentions that:
• In the future, other foreign financial
regulators might not allow banks to use
dual payability as an acceptable means
to ensure equal treatment of domestic
and foreign branch deposits.
• The Proposed Rule would weaken
efforts to facilitate international
cooperation for cross-border resolution.
• It is unclear whether a U.S. bank
with foreign branches would retain the
protections of section 25C of the Federal
Reserve Act on its dually payable
deposits.
• Bank resolutions would become
more complex and burdensome for the
FDIC under the Proposed Rule if U.S.
banks made deposits dually payable.
• Banks would incur significant
operational and administrative expenses
if they employed dual payability to
satisfy the U.K. PRA.
• Both retail customers and
multinational corporate depositors
would also be confused about changes
to their deposit contracts and the
implications of dually payable deposits.
Finally, some commenters argued that
the section 11(d)(11) approach would
eliminate the litigation risk to the FDIC
that they believe could occur under the
Proposed Rule. The commenters
contended that the terms ‘‘deposit’’ and
‘‘insured deposit’’ are equivalent. Under
this interpretation, a dually payable
foreign branch deposit would also be an
‘‘insured deposit’’ under section 3(m).21
The FDIC is cognizant of the fact that
the industry considers dual payability
and the other options that the U.K. PRA
suggested for compliance with the
Consultation Paper to be undesirable for
a variety of reasons. Without expressing
20 See House Budget Committee Report, H.R. Rep.
No. 103–111, 103rd Cong., 1st Sess. 1993 at 87,
1993 U.S.C.C.A.N. 378, 462 (May 25, 1993).
21 12 U.S.C. 1813(m).
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an opinion as to the merits of the
commenters’ various policy arguments
in support of the section 11(d)(11)
approach, the FDIC believes that their
proposed approach is inconsistent with
current statutory language, as discussed
above. However, the FDIC does have
authority to adopt this Final Rule. The
FDIC is authorized under the FDI Act to
issue regulations and has used its
rulemaking authority in the past to
address the conditions under which it
will insure deposits and believes it may
use that authority in a similar manner
to address the insurance status of
foreign branch deposits.22 Ultimately,
the Final Rule only clarifies that foreign
branch deposits are not insured, a
concept to which commenters were not
opposed. The Final Rule does not affect
the ability to employ dual payability to
comply with the U.K. PRA, which is an
option under current law for U.S. banks.
D. Other Comments
The FDIC sought comment on
whether it should consider another
option that would not entirely preclude
deposit insurance for dually payable
deposits, but only if enumerated
conditions designed to protect the DIF
and facilitate deposit insurance
determinations were satisfied. The FDIC
did not receive any comments
addressing this alternative.
The FDIC also requested comment on
the Proposed Rule’s effect on deposits at
Overseas Military Banking Facilities
located on Department of Defense
installations or similar facilities or
programs authorized under Federal
statute. The FDIC did not receive any
comments in response to this request.
While not a formal comment in
response to the Proposed Rule, the FDIC
received an inquiry on the deposit
insurance status of a former member of
the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands.
IV. Description of the Final Rule
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with RULES
A. Overview
The Final Rule amends the deposit
insurance regulations, 12 CFR 330.3(e),
as they relate to deposits payable
outside of the United States. The Final
Rule states explicitly that an obligation
of an IDI that is carried on the books and
records of a foreign branch of a U.S.
bank shall not be an insured deposit for
the purposes of the deposit insurance
regulations, even if the obligation is also
22 FDI Act sections 11(d)(4)(B)(iv), 12 U.S.C.
1821(d)(4)(B)(iv); 9(a)(Tenth), 12 U.S.C.
1819(a)(Tenth); 10(g), 12 U.S.C. 1820(g); see, e.g.,
Unlimited Coverage for Noninterest-Bearing
Transaction Accounts, 75 FR 69577 (Nov. 15, 2010)
(codified at 12 CFR part 330); Permanent Increase
in Standard Coverage Amount, 75 FR 49363 (Aug.
10, 2010) (codified at 12 CFR part 330).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:44 Sep 12, 2013
Jkt 229001
payable at an office within the United
States. This ensures that the FDIC will
be able to fulfill its statutory mission
and protect the DIF from potential
global liability.
The Final Rule would not affect the
ability of a U.S. bank to make a foreign
deposit dually payable. Should a bank
do so, its foreign branch deposits would
be treated as deposit liabilities under
the FDI Act’s depositor preference
regime in the same way as, and on an
equal footing with, domestic uninsured
deposits.
The Final Rule clarifies that it does
not affect the operation of Overseas
Military Banking Facilities operated
under Department of Defense
regulations, 32 CFR Parts 230 and 231,
or similar facilities authorized under
Federal statute. These types of facilities
are established under statutory
authority, separate from State or Federal
laws that govern the broader banking
industry, for the benefit of specific U.S.
persons. These include active duty and
reserve U.S. military personnel,
Department of Defense U.S. civilian
employees, and U.S. employees of other
U.S. government departments stationed
abroad. Consistent with this approach,
an U.S. Overseas Military Banking
Facility located in a foreign country has
been treated as a domestic office for
purposes of the Call Report.
Accordingly, deposits placed at these
facilities overseas would not be affected
by this Final Rule and would continue
to receive FDIC deposit insurance if
they meet the definition of ‘‘deposit’’ in
section 3(l) of the FDI Act.23
As noted above, the FDIC received an
inquiry about the intended effect of the
Proposed Rule on one of the former
members of the Trust Territory of the
Pacific Islands. The Final Rule is not
intended to affect the status of insured
deposits, if any, in depository
institutions located in any of the former
members.24
The Final Rule also makes a technical
change in section 330.3(e) to streamline
the regulation by incorporating the
definition of ‘‘State’’ under the FDI
Act.25
23 12 U.S.C. 1813(l); see FDIC Advisory Opinion
96–6, Letter of Assistant General Counsel Alan J.
Kaplan (Mar. 5, 1996).
24 Micronesia, the Marshall Islands, and Palau,
formerly among the members of the Trust Territory
of the Pacific Islands, are independent countries.
The FDI Act refers to the Trust Territory of the
Pacific Islands, but the trusteeship of its former
members has been terminated. See section 3(a)(3),
12 U.S.C. 1813(a)(3).
25 Id. The term ‘‘State’’ means any State of the
United States, the District of Columbia, any territory
of the United States, Puerto Rico, Guam, American
Samoa, the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands, the
Virgin Islands, and the Northern Mariana Islands.
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56587
B. Objective of the Final Rule
The Final Rule addresses several key
concerns: (1) Maintaining public
confidence in the nation’s financial
system; (2) protecting the DIF; (3)
ensuring that, in the event of a U.S.
bank’s insolvency, the FDIC is in a
position to effectively administer
deposit insurance payments; and (4)
addressing global financial issues of
importance to the deposit insurance
system and the banking public.
The goal of the Final Rule is to ensure
that the FDIC can carry out its mandate
to provide deposit insurance and to
protect the DIF. Absent this rulemaking,
the extension of deposit insurance to
foreign branch deposits could
potentially compromise the DIF, and by
implication, the U.S. Government,
which provides a full faith and credit
backing to the deposit insurance
guarantee. This threat is aggravated by
the higher deposit insurance limits the
FDIC provides in contrast with the
deposit insurance systems of many
other countries. There is no indication
that Congress ever intended the DIF to
have global liability.
Moreover, by its very nature,
performing a deposit insurance
determination for deposits in foreign
branches could compromise the FDIC’s
ability to make timely deposit insurance
payments. The FDI Act directs the FDIC
to pay deposit insurance ‘‘as soon as
possible.’’ 26 The FDIC usually makes
this prompt payment by the next
business day after a closing, and the
timely payment of deposit insurance
plays a key role in promoting depositor
confidence in the U.S. deposit insurance
system and stability in the banking
industry.
The FDIC would likely face obstacles
in trying to satisfy this statutory
obligation when dealing with deposits
in foreign branches. These challenges
could include interference with the
FDIC’s prompt and unfettered access to
books and records of the foreign branch
and being forced to deal with the impact
of the local law applicable to the
branch, including the appropriate role
of the foreign jurisdiction’s regulatory
authorities. In an extreme case, for
example, FDIC representatives might be
unable to obtain visas or other travel
permits to enter the foreign jurisdiction.
Even if full access to the foreign
branch’s premises and deposit records
were provided to the FDIC, access could
be delayed for an indeterminate period
of time. Further, operational issues
could not only impede the FDIC’s
prompt payment of deposit insurance to
26 Section
E:\FR\FM\13SER1.SGM
11(f)(1), 12 U.S.C. 1821(f)(1).
13SER1
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depositors of foreign branches of failed
U.S. banks, but could also aggravate a
financial crisis that transcends national
borders.
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C. Section-by-Section Analysis of the
Final Rule
The Final Rule makes three changes
to the deposit insurance rules. First, it
adds to the current list of authorities
two additional statutory references: FDI
Act section 10(g) and FDI Act section
11(d).27 Next, the Final Rule amends the
definition of ‘‘insured deposit’’ in
section 330.1(i) of Part 330 to add the
phrase ‘‘and this part’’ to the existing
definition.
Lastly, in section 330.3(e), which
deals with ‘‘General Principles,’’ the
Final Rule amends the existing text
relating to ‘‘Deposits payable solely
outside of the United States and certain
other locations.’’ The Final Rule strikes
‘‘solely’’ from the subsection heading
and makes the existing text the first of
three paragraphs. The Final Rule also
makes a technical change to the existing
text by substituting ‘‘any State’’ for ‘‘the
States of the United States, the District
of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam, the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana
Islands, American Samoa, the Trust
Territory of the Pacific Islands, and the
Virgin Islands.’’ This amendment
streamlines the regulation by
incorporating the definition of ‘‘State’’
under the FDI Act.
The second paragraph clarifies that
any deposit carried on the books and
records of an office of a U.S. bank
located outside any State, regardless of
where payable—that is, even if dually
payable—is not an insured deposit. In
the third paragraph the Final Rule
establishes, by rule of construction, that
Overseas Military Banking Facilities
operated under Department of Defense
regulations, 32 CFR Parts 230 and 231,
are not to be considered as located
outside any State, as defined in section
3(a)(3) of the FDI Act.
V. Summary Evaluation
In identifying the need to clarify that
deposits in foreign branches of U.S.
banks are not FDIC-insured deposits, the
FDIC has evaluated legally available and
viable alternatives, as well as the
benefits and costs associated with such
alternatives, based on available
information. The Final Rule is
consistent with statutory authority and
objectives and would achieve the FDIC’s
mission of maintaining stability and
public confidence in the nation’s
financial system by insuring deposits. It
would also help ensure the FDIC’s
27 12
U.S.C. 1820(g); 12 U.S.C. 1821(d).
VerDate Mar<15>2010
17:44 Sep 12, 2013
Jkt 229001
ability to administer a failed U.S. bank’s
receivership. Further, the Final Rule
would benefit the public by clarifying
the treatment of foreign branch deposits
during a resolution and by limiting the
exposure to the DIF that could occur as
a result of changes in the requirements
for U.S. banks to operate in foreign
countries.
The FDIC seeks to minimize to the
extent practicable the burdens which
the Final Rule could impose on the
banking industry and the public. While
the FDIC recognizes that some U.S.
banks may employ dual payability for
their foreign branch deposits to address
the U.K. proposal, the final rule does
not change this avenue available under
current law. Therefore, based on
available information, the FDIC believes
that the Final Rule itself would not
impose any additional costs on the
banking industry or the public.
VI. Regulatory Analysis and Procedure
A. Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork
Reduction Act (‘‘PRA’’), 44 U.S.C. 3501,
et seq., the FDIC may not conduct or
sponsor, and a person is not required to
respond to, a collection of information
unless it displays a currently valid
Office of Management and Budget
(‘‘OMB’’) control number. The Final
Rule clarifies that deposit insurance is
not available for deposits in foreign
branches of U.S. banks. It does not
require any new collections of
information as contemplated by the
PRA. Consequently, no information has
been submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget for review. If a
future modification to the Call Report is
warranted, it would be issued separately
and published in the Federal Register
for notice and comment.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act
(‘‘RFA’’), 5 U.S.C. 601, et seq., requires
each Federal agency to prepare a final
regulatory flexibility analysis in
connection with the promulgation of a
final rule, or certify that the final rule
will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities.28 The RFA provides that an
agency is not required to prepare and
publish a regulatory flexibility analysis
if the agency certifies that the proposed
rule will not have a significant impact
on a substantial number of small
entities.
Pursuant to Section 605(b) of the RFA,
the FDIC certifies that the Final Rule
will not have a significant economic
28 See
PO 00000
5 U.S.C. 603, 604 and 605.
Frm 00006
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The Final Rule specifies that
deposit insurance is inapplicable to
deposits in foreign branches of U.S.
banks. Using reports of condition and
income and FFIEC form 030 reports
filed within recent years, the FDIC has
been able to identify only one bank that
is considered a small entity for the
purposes of the RFA that has a foreign
branch and, thus, could be affected by
the Final Rule. The Final Rule, however,
imposes no burdens on IDIs of any size
because it clarifies only that foreign
branch deposits are not insured and
does not require any action on the part
of U.S. banks.
C. Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act
The Office of Management and Budget
has determined that the Final Rule is
not a ‘‘major rule’’ within the meaning
of the Small Business Regulatory
Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996
(‘‘SBREFA’’), 5 U.S.C. 801 et seq. As
SBREFA requires, the FDIC will file the
appropriate reports with Congress and
the General Accounting Office so that
the Final Rule may be reviewed.
D. Plain Language
Section 722 of the Gramm-LeachBliley Act (Pub. L. 106–102, 113 Stat.
1338, 1471) requires the Federal
banking agencies to use plain language
in all proposed and final rules
published after January 1, 2000. The
FDIC has sought to present the Final
Rule in a simple and straightforward
manner.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 330
Bank deposit insurance, Banks,
Banking, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Savings and Loan
associations, Trusts and trustees.
For the reasons stated above, the
Board of Directors of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation amends
part 330 of title 12 of the Code of
Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 330—DEPOSIT INSURANCE
COVERAGE
1. The authority citation for part 330
is revised to read as follows:
■
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1813(l), 1813(m),
1817(i), 1818(q), 1819(a)(Tenth), 1820(f),
1820(g), 1821(a), 1821(d), 1822(c).
2. In § 330.1, revise paragraph (i) to
read as follows:
■
§ 330.1
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(i) Insured deposit has the same
meaning as that provided under section
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3(m)(1) of the Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(m)(1))
and this part.
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. In § 330.3, revise paragraph (e) to
read as follows:
§ 330.3
General principles.
*
*
*
*
*
(e) Deposits payable outside of the
United States and certain other
locations. (1) Any obligation of an
insured depository institution which is
payable solely at an office of that
institution located outside any State, as
the term ‘‘State’’ is defined in section
3(a)(3) of the Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(a)(3)),
is not a deposit for the purposes of this
part.
(2) Except as provided in paragraph
(e)(3) of this section, any obligation of
an insured depository institution which
is carried on the books and records of
an office of that institution located
outside any State, as referred to in
paragraph (e)(1) of this section, shall not
be an insured deposit for purposes of
this part, or any other provision of this
part, notwithstanding that the obligation
may also be payable at an office of that
institution located within any State.
(3) Rule of construction. For purposes
of this paragraph (e), Overseas Military
Banking Facilities operated under
Department of Defense regulations, 32
CFR Parts 230 and 231, are not
considered to be offices located outside
any State, as referred to in paragraph
(e)(1) of this section.
*
*
*
*
*
BILLING CODE 6714–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 39
[Docket No. FAA–2013–0527; Directorate
Identifier 2013–CE–014–AD; Amendment
39–17577; AD 2013–18–04]
RIN 2120–AA64
emcdonald on DSK67QTVN1PROD with RULES
During scheduled maintenance, cracks
have been detected at the joint between the
hinge pin sub-assembly and the lock pin of
the main landing gear (MLG) lever hinge
fitting (LHF) of a Piaggio P.180 aeroplane.
The results of the subsequent investigation
revealed that the cracks were initiated by an
unforeseen friction in the MLG wheel lever
sub-assembly.
This condition, if not detected and
corrected, could lead to a structural failure of
the MLG, possibly resulting in loss of control
of the aeroplane during take-off or landing
runs.
To address this potential unsafe condition,
Piaggio Aero Industries (PAI) issued Service
Bulletin (SB) 80–0345 to provide instructions
for early identification of cracks in the MLG
LHF and, in case of identification of the
crack, replacement of the MLG.
For the reasons described above, this AD
required inspections of the MLG LHF and,
depending on findings, replacement of the
MLG.
This AD is considered to be an interim
action, and based on gathered experience,
further AD action may follow.
You may obtain further information by
examining the MCAI in the AD docket.
Comments
We gave the public the opportunity to
participate in developing this AD. The
following presents the comments
received on the proposal and the FAA’s
response to each comment.
Airworthiness Directives; PIAGGIO
AERO INDUSTRIES S.p.A Airplanes
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), Department of
Transportation (DOT).
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
Jkt 229001
Request To Change Compliance Time
From Hours Time-in-Service (TIS) to
Landings
Carlo Cardu of PIAGGIO AERO
INDUSTRIES S.p.A requested the
compliance time be changed from hours
TIS to landing, as recommended in the
related service bulletin, to take into
account actual landing gear usage.
We partially agreed with the
commenter to include landings as a
measure for the compliance of this AD
because the unsafe condition addressed
in this AD is a function of cycles on the
landing gear. We disagreed with only
using landings because this class of
airplane does not require landings to be
recorded. If an operator does document
landings, this is an acceptable measure.
However, if an operator does not record
landings, TIS is also an acceptable
measure for compliance.
We have changed the final rule AD
action based on this comment.
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. The
NPRM was published in the Federal
Register on June 19, 2013 (78 FR 36691).
The NPRM proposed to correct an
[FR Doc. 2013–22340 Filed 9–12–13; 8:45 am]
17:44 Sep 12, 2013
unsafe condition for the specified
products. The MCAI states:
Discussion
Dated at Washington, DC, this 10th day of
September, 2013.
By order of the Board of Directors.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Robert E. Feldman,
Executive Secretary.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
We are adopting a new
airworthiness directive (AD) for all
PIAGGIO AERO INDUSTRIES S.p.A
Model P–180 airplanes. 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 cracks at the joint between
the hinge pin sub-assembly and the lock
pin of the main landing gear lever hinge
fitting. We are issuing this AD to require
actions to address the unsafe condition
on these products.
DATES: This AD is effective October 18,
2013.
The Director of the Federal Register
approved the incorporation by reference
of certain publications listed in the AD
as of October 18, 2013.
ADDRESSES: You may examine the AD
docket on the Internet at https://
www.regulations.gov or in person at
Document Management Facility, U.S.
Department of Transportation, Docket
Operations, M–30, West Building
Ground Floor, Room W12–140, 1200
New Jersey Avenue SE., Washington,
DC 20590.
For service information identified in
this AD, contact Piaggio Aero Industries
S.p.A—Airworthiness Office, Via Luigi
Cibrario, 4–16154 Genova-Italy; phone:
+39 010 6481353; fax: +39 010 6481881;
email: airworthiness@piaggioaero.it;
Internet: https://www.piaggioaero.com/#/
en/aftersales/service-support; and
Messier-Dowty Limited, Cheltenham
Road, Gloucester, GL2 9QH, England;
phone: +44(0)1452 712424; fax:
+44(0)1452 713821; email:
americatassc@safranmbd.com; Internet:
www.safranmbd.com. You may review
copies of the referenced service
information at the FAA, Small Airplane
Directorate, 901 Locust, Kansas City,
Missouri 64106. For information on the
availability of this material at the FAA,
call (816) 329–4148.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Mike Kiesov, Aerospace Engineer, FAA,
Small Airplane Directorate, 901 Locust,
Room 301, Kansas City, Missouri 64106;
telephone: (816) 329–4144; fax: (816)
329–4090; email: mike.kiesov@faa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
SUMMARY:
56589
Request To Change the Requirement To
Replace the Main Landing Gear (MLG)
Lever Hinge Fitting (LHF)
Carlo Cardu of PIAGGIO AERO
INDUSTRIES S.p.A requested we
change the corrective action from
replacing the MLG LHF with a
PO 00000
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Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\13SER1.SGM
13SER1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 78, Number 178 (Friday, September 13, 2013)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 56583-56589]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2013-22340]
========================================================================
Rules and Regulations
Federal Register
________________________________________________________________________
This section of the FEDERAL REGISTER contains regulatory documents
having general applicability and legal effect, most of which are keyed
to and codified in the Code of Federal Regulations, which is published
under 50 titles pursuant to 44 U.S.C. 1510.
The Code of Federal Regulations is sold by the Superintendent of Documents.
Prices of new books are listed in the first FEDERAL REGISTER issue of each
week.
========================================================================
Federal Register / Vol. 78, No. 178 / Friday, September 13, 2013 /
Rules and Regulations
[[Page 56583]]
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
12 CFR Part 330
RIN 3064-AE00
Deposit Insurance Regulations; Definition of Insured Deposit
AGENCY: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC).
ACTION: Final rule.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The FDIC is adopting a final rule (``Final Rule'') that amends
its deposit insurance regulations with respect to deposits in foreign
branches of U.S. insured depository institutions (``IDI'' or ``U.S.
bank''). The Final Rule clarifies that deposits in branches of U.S.
banks located outside the United States are not FDIC-insured deposits.
This would be the case even if they are also payable at an office
within the United States (``dual payability''). As discussed further
below, a pending proposal by the United Kingdom's Prudential Regulation
Authority (``U.K. PRA''), formerly known as the Financial Services
Authority, has made it more likely that large U.S. banks will change
their U.K. foreign branch deposit agreements to make their U.K.
deposits payable both in the United Kingdom and the United States. This
action has the potential to expose the Deposit Insurance Fund (``DIF'')
to expanded deposit insurance liability and create operational
complexities if these types of deposits were treated as insured. The
purpose of the Final Rule is to protect the DIF against the liability
that it would otherwise face as a potential global deposit insurer,
preserve confidence in the FDIC deposit insurance system, and ensure
that the FDIC can effectively carry out its critical deposit insurance
functions.
DATES: The effective date of the Final Rule is October 15, 2013.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: F. Angus Tarpley III, Supervisory
Counsel, Legal Division, (202) 898-6646; Catherine Ribnick, Counsel,
Legal Division, (202) 898-6803; Matthew Green, Associate Director,
Division of Insurance and Research, (202) 898-3670.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Congress created the FDIC in 1933 to end the banking crisis
experienced during the Great Depression, to maintain stability and
public confidence in the nation's financial system, and to safeguard
bank deposits through deposit insurance. If a bank fails, the FDIC pays
out deposit insurance from the DIF, which is funded by assessments on
IDIs. In the most recent financial crisis, the FDIC's deposit insurance
guarantee, with its backing by the full faith and credit of the United
States Government, contributed significantly to financial stability in
an otherwise unstable financial environment. In the FDIC's history, no
depositor has ever lost a penny of an insured deposit.
The Federal Deposit Insurance Act (``FDI Act'') \1\ mandates the
payment of deposit insurance ``as soon as possible'' to reduce the
economic disruptions caused by bank failures and to preserve stability
in the financial markets of the United States.\2\ The FDIC generally
pays out deposit insurance on the next business day after a bank
failure, and insured depositors often have uninterrupted access to
their insured deposits through ATMs and other means. The prompt payment
of deposit insurance preserves confidence in the deposit insurance
system and promotes financial stability. Prompt payment depends on a
number of key factors, including the FDICs having immediate access to
the deposit records of a failed bank and clarity about the application
of laws and practices that could affect deposits in a particular
location.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 12 U.S.C. 1811, et seq.
\2\ See FDI Act section 11(f)(1), 12 U.S.C. 1821(f)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
A. Definition of ``Deposit''
The term ``deposit'' is defined in section 3(l) of the FDI Act.\3\
Since the establishment of the FDIC in 1933, Congress has made
distinctions between domestic and foreign deposits. The current
statutory definition of ``deposit'' under section 3(l) makes clear that
foreign branch deposits are not ``deposits'' for any purpose under the
FDI Act, except under certain prescribed circumstances. In relevant
part, the law specifies that ``any obligation of a depository
institution which is carried on the books and records of an office of
such bank or savings association located outside of any State'' shall
not be a deposit for any of the purposes of the FDI Act or be included
as part of the total deposits or of an insured deposit, ``unless--(i)
such obligation would be a deposit if it were carried on the books and
records of the depository institution, and would be payable at, an
office located in any State; and (ii) the contract evidencing the
obligation provides by express terms, and not by implication, for
payment at an office of the depository institution located in any
State.'' \4\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ 12 U.S.C. 1813(l).
\4\ FDI Act section 3(l)(5), 12 U.S.C. 1813(l)(5).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Therefore, deposit obligations carried on the books and records of
a foreign branch of a U.S. bank that would otherwise fall within one of
the categories of deposits created by section 3(l) are not deposits
unless they (1) would be deposits if carried on the books and records
of the IDI in the United States and (2) are expressly payable in the
United States.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\5\ Id. The FDI Act provides that the FDIC Board may prescribe a
deposit by regulation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The vast majority of deposit agreements governing relationships
between U.S. banks and their foreign branch depositors have to date not
expressly provided for payment of foreign branch deposits at an office
in the United States. Accordingly, these foreign branch deposits would
not qualify as ``deposits'' for any purpose under the FDI Act,
including deposit insurance and the priority regime for the
distribution of a failed bank's receivership assets, known as
``depositor preference,'' as further discussed below. While ``deposit''
has a defined legal meaning under the FDI Act, for ease of reference,
these obligations in foreign branches will generally be called
``foreign branch deposits'' in this Final Rule.
B. National Depositor Preference
When a U.S. bank fails, uninsured depositors share in the proceeds
from the liquidation of the failed bank's
[[Page 56584]]
assets. In 1993, Congress amended the FDI Act to establish a system of
depositor preference in failed-bank resolutions.\6\ In general,
``depositor preference'' refers to a resolution distribution regime in
which the claims of depositors have priority over (that is, are
satisfied before) the claims of general unsecured creditors.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993, Public Law 103-
66, 107 Stat. 312.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under this regime, set forth in section 11(d)(11) of the FDI Act,
the receiver of a failed bank distributes amounts realized from its
liquidation to pay claims in the following order of priority.\7\
Administrative expenses of the receiver are reimbursed first.\8\ Any
``deposit liability'' is reimbursed next, followed in order by general
or senior liabilities, subordinated liabilities, and obligations to
shareholders. The term ``deposit liability'' in section 11(d)(11) is
not defined.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\7\ 12 U.S.C. 1821(d)(11).
\8\ Secured creditors' claims are satisfied to the extent of
their security.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. The 1994 Advisory Opinion
Shortly after Congress added the national depositor preference
provisions, the FDIC's Acting General Counsel was asked whether the
term ``deposit liability'' would include deposit obligations payable
solely at a foreign branch of a U.S. bank.\9\ As described in the
Acting General Counsel's 1994 Advisory Opinion (``General Counsel
Advisory Opinion 94-1''), national depositor preference makes general
unsecured creditor claims subordinate to any ``deposit liability'' of
the institution. General Counsel Advisory Opinion 94-1 concluded that
the term ``deposit liability'' should be defined with reference to
``deposit'' under section 3(l) of the FDI Act, which excluded, for any
purpose, any obligation of a bank payable only at an office of that
bank located outside the United States.\10\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ See FDIC Advisory Opinion 94-1, Letter of Acting General
Counsel Douglas H. Jones (Feb. 28, 1994).
\10\ Section 3(l) was later amended to specify that an
obligation carried on the books and records of a foreign office of a
U.S. bank would not be a ``deposit'' for any purpose unless it were
payable at an office located in the United States and the contract
evidencing the obligation expressly provided for such payment and
met other criteria. Riegle Community Development and Regulatory
Improvement Act, Public Law 103-325 (1994), section 326(b)(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Under the interpretation set forth in General Counsel Advisory
Opinion 94-1, ``deposit liability'' for purposes of national depositor
preference includes only deposits payable in the United States and
excludes obligations payable solely at a foreign branch of a U.S. bank.
Accordingly, an obligation in a foreign branch of a U.S. bank has not
been considered a ``deposit liability'' for purposes of the national
depositor preference provisions of section 11(d)(11) of the FDI Act.
Thus, if a U.S. bank were to fail, its foreign branch depositors would
share in the distribution of the bank's liquidated assets as general
creditors after the claims of uninsured domestic depositors and the
FDIC as subrogee of insured depositors have been satisfied.\11\ If a
foreign branch deposit of a U.S. bank were expressly payable at an
office of the bank in the United States, however, that deposit would be
treated equally with uninsured domestic deposits in the depositor
preference regime.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ While section 41 of the FDI Act, 12 U.S.C. 1831r, generally
prohibits the FDIC in its corporate capacity and other agencies from
making any payment that would satisfy any claim against a bank for
foreign branch deposits, the FDIC as receiver of a failed bank may
make payments from the receivership estate to satisfy such claims.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
D. Foreign Branch Deposits of U.S. Banks
Many U.S. banks currently operate through branches in foreign
countries, often to provide banking, foreign currency and payment
services to multinational corporations. Foreign branch deposits have
doubled since 2001 and total approximately $1 trillion today. In many
cases, these branches do not engage in retail deposit taking or other
retail banking services. Often, their typical depositors are large
businesses that choose to bank in a foreign branch of a U.S. bank under
deposit agreements governed by non-U.S. law to take advantage of a
large bank's multi-country branch network, which allows the transfer of
funds to and from branch offices located in different countries and in
different time zones.
Currently, the overwhelming majority of the foreign branch deposits
of U.S. banks are payable only outside the United States. In the past,
making deposits in foreign branches dually payable would have been
costly to U.S. banks for several reasons. First, dually payable
deposits would have increased a bank's deposit insurance assessment
base (which, in the past, excluded deposits payable solely outside the
United States) and, therefore, its deposit insurance assessment.
Second, the dually payable deposits would have become subject to the
Federal Reserve's Regulation D.\12\ Third, U.S. banks may have
refrained from making foreign deposits dually payable out of concern
that doing so could cause them to lose the protection from sovereign
risk accorded them under section 25(c) of the Federal Reserve Act.\13\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\12\ 12 CFR Part 204. Regulation D imposes uniform reserve
requirements on all depository institutions with transaction
accounts or non-personal time deposits.
\13\ 12 U.S.C. 633. This section provides that a member bank is
not required to repay a deposit in a foreign branch if it cannot do
so because of ``war, insurrection, or civil strife'' or actions
taken by the foreign government, unless the member bank has
explicitly agreed in writing to repay foreign deposits in such
circumstances.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Recent events have reduced the cost of making foreign deposits
dually payable. First, in section 331(b) of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act,\14\ Congress changed the deposit
insurance assessment base so that it now in effect covers all
liabilities, including foreign branch deposits. Thus, a U.S. bank's use
of dual payability would no longer increase a bank's assessment base or
deposit insurance assessment. Second, the Federal Reserve now pays
interest on reserves and allows more flexibility with respect to the
reserves it requires. Finally, as discussed below, nothing in this
Final Rule is intended to preclude a U.S. bank from protecting itself
against sovereign risk.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1538.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
E. The U.K. PRA Consultation Paper
In September 2012, the U.K. PRA published a Consultation Paper
addressing the implications of national depositor preference regimes in
countries outside the European Economic Area (``EEA''). The
Consultation Paper proposes to prohibit banks from non-EEA countries,
including U.S. banks, from operating deposit-taking branches in the
United Kingdom unless U.K. depositors in those branches would be on an
equal footing in the national depositor preference regime with domestic
(uninsured) depositors in a failure resolution of the bank. A
significant percentage of foreign branch deposits of U.S. banks are
located in the United Kingdom and would be subject to this requirement.
The Consultation Paper proposes several options to ensure that
depositors in U.K. branches would be treated equally in the event of a
multinational bank's resolution. U.S. banks with branches in the United
Kingdom could comply in one of these ways. First, the U.S. bank could
accept deposits in the United Kingdom using a U.K.-incorporated
subsidiary. Second, U.S. banks could create a trust arrangement to
segregate assets of the U.K. branch to meet its deposit liabilities,
under which the trust would specify the U.K. branch depositors as
beneficiaries of the trust.
[[Page 56585]]
Third, U.S. banks could take other actions to comply, such as making
their U.K. deposits payable both in the United States and in the United
Kingdom. The Consultation Paper indicates that dual payability should
allow U.K. depositors to participate in the preference given to home
country (that is, United States) depositors in the resolution of a U.S.
bank. The U.K. PRA is still considering comments on the Consultation
Paper and has not provided a date by which the requirements proposed in
the Consultation Paper will be implemented.
F. Notice of Proposed Rulemaking
In light of the U.K. PRA's proposal and subsequent action required
of U.S. banks with branches in the United Kingdom, the FDIC proposed to
amend its deposit insurance regulations with respect to deposits
payable in branches of U.S. banks located outside the United States. On
February 19, 2013, the FDIC published in the Federal Register and
invited public comment on a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking: Deposit
Insurance Regulations; Definition of Insured Deposit (the ``Proposed
Rule'').\15\ The Proposed Rule proposed to amend the FDIC's deposit
insurance regulations to clarify that deposits in foreign branches of
U.S. banks are not FDIC-insured deposits. The FDIC is now adopting as
final the proposed amendments to its deposit insurance regulations, 12
CFR 330.3(e), with minor technical changes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ 78 FR 11604 (February 19, 2013).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
II. Statutory Framework
A. Definition of ``Insured Deposit''
The Final Rule clarifies that foreign branch deposits are not
insured deposits for purposes of the FDI Act, regardless of the
location at which the deposit is payable. The FDI Act defines ``insured
deposit'' as the net amount due any depositor for deposits in an
insured depository institution as determined under section 11(a) of the
FDI Act.\16\ Section 11(a) of the FDI Act,\17\ cross-referenced in the
definition of ``insured deposit,'' instructs the FDIC to ``insure the
deposits of all insured depository institutions as provided in this
Act,'' but does not expressly address foreign deposits. The FDI Act
definition of ``deposit'' in section 3(l)(5)(A) makes clear that
obligations carried on the books and records of an office located
outside the United States shall not be deposits for any purpose under
the FDI Act, but it does not address whether they must be considered
deposits for all purposes, including for purposes of deposit insurance,
if they would qualify as deposits under 3(l)(5)(A) because they are
payable at an office within the United States under express contractual
terms.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\16\ FDI Act section 3(m)(1), 12 U.S.C. 1813(m)(1).
\17\ 12 U.S.C. 1821(a).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Rulemaking Authority
The FDIC issues rules and regulations necessary to carry out the
statutory mandates of the FDI Act and other laws that the FDIC is
charged with administering or enforcing. In instances such as this one
where a statute is silent or general in nature on issues critical to
the FDIC's fundamental responsibilities, the FDIC has used its
rulemaking authority to effectuate its statutory duties.
Providing deposit insurance to IDIs and maintaining public
confidence in the banking system through deposit insurance in the event
of a U.S. bank's insolvency are two central functions of the FDIC. In
order to permit the FDIC to carry out these functions successfully, the
FDIC is authorized to undertake rulemaking to implement the FDI Act
effectively, particularly with respect to its deposit insurance
functions. The FDI Act gives the FDIC explicit rulemaking and
definitional authorities to ensure that it can adapt to changed
circumstances as necessary to carry out its deposit insurance
responsibilities.
The FDI Act contains several provisions granting the FDIC authority
to issue regulations to carry out its core functions and
responsibilities, which include the duty ``to insure the deposits of
all insured depository institutions.'' Notably, FDI Act section
11(d)(4)(B)(iv) authorizes the FDIC to promulgate ``such regulations as
may be necessary to assure that the requirements of this section [FDI
Act section 11, which addresses, in section 11(f) the payment of
deposit insurance] can be implemented with respect to each insured
depository institution in the event of its insolvency.'' \18\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\18\ 12 U.S.C. 1821(d)(4)(B)(iv).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Other grants of FDIC rulemaking authority can be found in FDI Act
section 9(a)(Tenth) (authorizing the FDIC Board to prescribe ``such
rules and regulations as it may deem necessary to carry out the
provisions of this chapter . . . '') and FDI Act section 10(g)
(authorizing the FDIC to ``prescribe regulations'' and ``to define
terms as necessary to carry out'' the FDI Act).\19\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\19\ 12 U.S.C. 1819(a)(Tenth); 1820(g).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
III. Summary of Comments in Response to Proposed Rule
As noted above, the FDIC solicited public comment on the Proposed
Rule on February 19, 2013. The comment period ended on April 22, 2013.
The FDIC received comments from three industry groups and two
individuals in response to the Proposed Rule. After careful
consideration of the comments, the FDIC is adopting the Proposed Rule
as final, with technical format changes.
A. Comments in Response to Proposed Rule
Overall, commenters did not object to the concept that foreign
branch deposits are not insured, as clarified in the Proposed Rule. One
individual acknowledged that the Proposed Rule would limit the DIF's
exposure, but argued that it would adversely affect public relations.
The commenter suggested that foreign deposits be insured up to the
domestic limit, with U.S. banks with foreign branches paying double
their current assessments in order to strengthen the DIF. However, the
FDIC believes that it is inconsistent with congressional intent and the
FDIC's statutory mandate of promoting confidence in the U.S. banking
system to insure foreign deposits in the manner the commenter proposed.
The FDIC believes that the better approach is to make clear that
foreign branch deposits, whether or not deposit liabilities for the
purpose of national depositor preference, are not ``insured deposits.''
Commenters did not object to the Proposed Rule itself, but most of
the commenters raised several issues related to risks they assert would
result if U.S. banks employed dual payability to satisfy the U.K. PRA
requirement to treat domestic and foreign branch deposits equally.
These commenters advocated an alternative approach, which they believe
would better address their concerns. The FDIC has carefully considered
their comments and discusses them below.
B. Section 11(d)(11) Approach
Instead of adopting the FDIC's Proposed Rule, the commenters
suggested that the FDIC formally interpret ``deposit liability'' for
purposes of the depositor preference regime in section 11(d)(11) of the
FDI Act, to include all deposits of a U.S. bank, wherever payable (the
``section 11(d)(11) approach''). According to the commenters, this
alternative would achieve the result of equal treatment of uninsured
domestic deposits and foreign branch deposits in the event of a U.S.
bank's resolution without
[[Page 56586]]
creating global liability for the DIF. They also argued that this would
eliminate the risk of litigation over depositor preference, as well as
reduce the risk of litigation by foreign depositors over deposit
insurance because banks would be less likely to employ dual payability.
Alternatively, commenters suggested a ``combined approach'' in which a
formal interpretation of ``deposit liability'' could be issued in
addition to a rule clarifying that deposits in foreign branches are not
insured, even if they are also payable at a U.S. branch.
The commenters acknowledged that the proposed alternative would
contradict FDIC General Counsel Advisory Opinion 94-1, but they argued
that their interpretation of ``deposit liability'' is supported by the
plain meaning of the term deposit liability, its uses elsewhere in the
FDI Act, legislative history, and reference to state law priority
regimes. They further argued that the depositor preference provision in
the FDI Act does not distinguish among depositors because it accords
priority to any ``deposit liability.''
Commenters argued that the term ``deposit liability'' in the FDI
Act should not be bound by the Act's definition of ``deposit.'' They
cite to a canon of statutory construction that suggests that where
Congress chooses to use two different terms, they are intended to have
two different meanings. Commenters argued that the term ``deposit
liability'' is used elsewhere in the FDI Act to suggest a broader
definition than the term ``deposit,'' from which foreign deposit
obligations are excluded. They contended that there is legislative
history supporting the notion that Congress did not intend to
distinguish between foreign and domestic depositors under the depositor
preference provisions of the FDI Act. In particular, these commenters
pointed to congressional committees which used broad and general
language to describe depositor preference. Moreover, the commenters
suggested that Congress intended to follow state depositor preference
statutes, and that one of these states specifically included foreign
branch deposits in its depositor preference statute, while the majority
of other states with depositor preference statutes did not refer to
foreign deposits specifically, but referred to deposits in a broad and
general manner.
From a practical standpoint, several commenters noted that the
section (11)(d)(11) approach is also consistent with current bank
reporting requirements. For instance, deposit liabilities on a bank's
balance sheet would include all deposits, domestic and foreign.
Similarly, the general instructions for Schedule RC-E to the
Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income (``Call Report''), which
all insured depository institutions must file, refer to both domestic
and foreign branch deposits as ``deposit liabilities.'' The Call Report
also requires foreign deposits to be reported as ``deposit
liabilities.''
According to these commenters, the approach of reinterpreting
``deposit liability'' as used in section 11(d)(11) not only bolsters
international cooperation, but also eliminates the potential for
inconsistent treatment of deposits in different foreign jurisdictions.
They argued that the section 11(d)(11) approach would be compatible
with the FSB's Key Attributes and the most recent draft of the European
Commission's proposed Resolution and Recovery Directive. It would also
eliminate potential risks and costs to the FDIC and the ongoing need
for guidance to banks, foreign depositors, and foreign regulators on
how dual payability would work.
Ultimately, commenters argued that the section 11(d)(11) approach
would better address industry concerns about ensuring equal treatment
of depositors under the U.S. depositor preference regime in a
liquidation than if U.S. banks were to change their deposit agreements
to make foreign branch deposits dually payable. The commenters
contended that the FDIC would be justified in changing its previous
position, set forth in General Counsel Advisory Opinion 94-1, by
adopting their proposed approach under section 11(d)(11) of the FDI
Act. According to the commenters, General Counsel Advisory Opinion 94-1
reached its conclusion without sufficient substantive discussion.
Furthermore, they noted that General Counsel Advisory Opinion 94-1 was
not a binding interpretation approved by the FDIC Board of Directors
and would therefore not be entitled to significant deference.
The FDIC believes that formally interpreting ``deposit liability''
as the commenters proposed would be inconsistent with current statutory
language, and as commenters acknowledged, would overturn a longstanding
Advisory Opinion. General Counsel Advisory Opinion 94-1 is based on a
reasonable interpretation of the FDI Act. While the term ``deposit
liability'' is not defined in the FDI Act, the definition of
``deposit'' under section 3(l) explicitly refers to the term ``deposit
liabilities.'' In addition, the legislative history of the depositor
preference provision does not define ``deposit liability'' under
section 11(d)(11) and does not explicitly include foreign branch
deposits in the class of depositors who are entitled to depositor
preference.\20\ The FDI Act does allow a deposit in a foreign branch of
a U.S. bank to receive depositor preference, but only under the
circumstances specifically stated in the statute; that is, the deposit
must be dually payable.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\20\ See House Budget Committee Report, H.R. Rep. No. 103-111,
103rd Cong., 1st Sess. 1993 at 87, 1993 U.S.C.C.A.N. 378, 462 (May
25, 1993).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Comments Relating to Dual Payability
The commenters also presented a number of arguments related to the
negative consequences that would result if they employ dual payability,
in support of their proposed alternative approach. These arguments
include contentions that:
In the future, other foreign financial regulators might
not allow banks to use dual payability as an acceptable means to ensure
equal treatment of domestic and foreign branch deposits.
The Proposed Rule would weaken efforts to facilitate
international cooperation for cross-border resolution.
It is unclear whether a U.S. bank with foreign branches
would retain the protections of section 25C of the Federal Reserve Act
on its dually payable deposits.
Bank resolutions would become more complex and burdensome
for the FDIC under the Proposed Rule if U.S. banks made deposits dually
payable.
Banks would incur significant operational and
administrative expenses if they employed dual payability to satisfy the
U.K. PRA.
Both retail customers and multinational corporate
depositors would also be confused about changes to their deposit
contracts and the implications of dually payable deposits.
Finally, some commenters argued that the section 11(d)(11) approach
would eliminate the litigation risk to the FDIC that they believe could
occur under the Proposed Rule. The commenters contended that the terms
``deposit'' and ``insured deposit'' are equivalent. Under this
interpretation, a dually payable foreign branch deposit would also be
an ``insured deposit'' under section 3(m).\21\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\21\ 12 U.S.C. 1813(m).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FDIC is cognizant of the fact that the industry considers dual
payability and the other options that the U.K. PRA suggested for
compliance with the Consultation Paper to be undesirable for a variety
of reasons. Without expressing
[[Page 56587]]
an opinion as to the merits of the commenters' various policy arguments
in support of the section 11(d)(11) approach, the FDIC believes that
their proposed approach is inconsistent with current statutory
language, as discussed above. However, the FDIC does have authority to
adopt this Final Rule. The FDIC is authorized under the FDI Act to
issue regulations and has used its rulemaking authority in the past to
address the conditions under which it will insure deposits and believes
it may use that authority in a similar manner to address the insurance
status of foreign branch deposits.\22\ Ultimately, the Final Rule only
clarifies that foreign branch deposits are not insured, a concept to
which commenters were not opposed. The Final Rule does not affect the
ability to employ dual payability to comply with the U.K. PRA, which is
an option under current law for U.S. banks.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\22\ FDI Act sections 11(d)(4)(B)(iv), 12 U.S.C.
1821(d)(4)(B)(iv); 9(a)(Tenth), 12 U.S.C. 1819(a)(Tenth); 10(g), 12
U.S.C. 1820(g); see, e.g., Unlimited Coverage for Noninterest-
Bearing Transaction Accounts, 75 FR 69577 (Nov. 15, 2010) (codified
at 12 CFR part 330); Permanent Increase in Standard Coverage Amount,
75 FR 49363 (Aug. 10, 2010) (codified at 12 CFR part 330).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
D. Other Comments
The FDIC sought comment on whether it should consider another
option that would not entirely preclude deposit insurance for dually
payable deposits, but only if enumerated conditions designed to protect
the DIF and facilitate deposit insurance determinations were satisfied.
The FDIC did not receive any comments addressing this alternative.
The FDIC also requested comment on the Proposed Rule's effect on
deposits at Overseas Military Banking Facilities located on Department
of Defense installations or similar facilities or programs authorized
under Federal statute. The FDIC did not receive any comments in
response to this request.
While not a formal comment in response to the Proposed Rule, the
FDIC received an inquiry on the deposit insurance status of a former
member of the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands.
IV. Description of the Final Rule
A. Overview
The Final Rule amends the deposit insurance regulations, 12 CFR
330.3(e), as they relate to deposits payable outside of the United
States. The Final Rule states explicitly that an obligation of an IDI
that is carried on the books and records of a foreign branch of a U.S.
bank shall not be an insured deposit for the purposes of the deposit
insurance regulations, even if the obligation is also payable at an
office within the United States. This ensures that the FDIC will be
able to fulfill its statutory mission and protect the DIF from
potential global liability.
The Final Rule would not affect the ability of a U.S. bank to make
a foreign deposit dually payable. Should a bank do so, its foreign
branch deposits would be treated as deposit liabilities under the FDI
Act's depositor preference regime in the same way as, and on an equal
footing with, domestic uninsured deposits.
The Final Rule clarifies that it does not affect the operation of
Overseas Military Banking Facilities operated under Department of
Defense regulations, 32 CFR Parts 230 and 231, or similar facilities
authorized under Federal statute. These types of facilities are
established under statutory authority, separate from State or Federal
laws that govern the broader banking industry, for the benefit of
specific U.S. persons. These include active duty and reserve U.S.
military personnel, Department of Defense U.S. civilian employees, and
U.S. employees of other U.S. government departments stationed abroad.
Consistent with this approach, an U.S. Overseas Military Banking
Facility located in a foreign country has been treated as a domestic
office for purposes of the Call Report. Accordingly, deposits placed at
these facilities overseas would not be affected by this Final Rule and
would continue to receive FDIC deposit insurance if they meet the
definition of ``deposit'' in section 3(l) of the FDI Act.\23\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ 12 U.S.C. 1813(l); see FDIC Advisory Opinion 96-6, Letter
of Assistant General Counsel Alan J. Kaplan (Mar. 5, 1996).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As noted above, the FDIC received an inquiry about the intended
effect of the Proposed Rule on one of the former members of the Trust
Territory of the Pacific Islands. The Final Rule is not intended to
affect the status of insured deposits, if any, in depository
institutions located in any of the former members.\24\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\24\ Micronesia, the Marshall Islands, and Palau, formerly among
the members of the Trust Territory of the Pacific Islands, are
independent countries. The FDI Act refers to the Trust Territory of
the Pacific Islands, but the trusteeship of its former members has
been terminated. See section 3(a)(3), 12 U.S.C. 1813(a)(3).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The Final Rule also makes a technical change in section 330.3(e) to
streamline the regulation by incorporating the definition of ``State''
under the FDI Act.\25\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\25\ Id. The term ``State'' means any State of the United
States, the District of Columbia, any territory of the United
States, Puerto Rico, Guam, American Samoa, the Trust Territory of
the Pacific Islands, the Virgin Islands, and the Northern Mariana
Islands.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
B. Objective of the Final Rule
The Final Rule addresses several key concerns: (1) Maintaining
public confidence in the nation's financial system; (2) protecting the
DIF; (3) ensuring that, in the event of a U.S. bank's insolvency, the
FDIC is in a position to effectively administer deposit insurance
payments; and (4) addressing global financial issues of importance to
the deposit insurance system and the banking public.
The goal of the Final Rule is to ensure that the FDIC can carry out
its mandate to provide deposit insurance and to protect the DIF. Absent
this rulemaking, the extension of deposit insurance to foreign branch
deposits could potentially compromise the DIF, and by implication, the
U.S. Government, which provides a full faith and credit backing to the
deposit insurance guarantee. This threat is aggravated by the higher
deposit insurance limits the FDIC provides in contrast with the deposit
insurance systems of many other countries. There is no indication that
Congress ever intended the DIF to have global liability.
Moreover, by its very nature, performing a deposit insurance
determination for deposits in foreign branches could compromise the
FDIC's ability to make timely deposit insurance payments. The FDI Act
directs the FDIC to pay deposit insurance ``as soon as possible.'' \26\
The FDIC usually makes this prompt payment by the next business day
after a closing, and the timely payment of deposit insurance plays a
key role in promoting depositor confidence in the U.S. deposit
insurance system and stability in the banking industry.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\26\ Section 11(f)(1), 12 U.S.C. 1821(f)(1).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The FDIC would likely face obstacles in trying to satisfy this
statutory obligation when dealing with deposits in foreign branches.
These challenges could include interference with the FDIC's prompt and
unfettered access to books and records of the foreign branch and being
forced to deal with the impact of the local law applicable to the
branch, including the appropriate role of the foreign jurisdiction's
regulatory authorities. In an extreme case, for example, FDIC
representatives might be unable to obtain visas or other travel permits
to enter the foreign jurisdiction. Even if full access to the foreign
branch's premises and deposit records were provided to the FDIC, access
could be delayed for an indeterminate period of time. Further,
operational issues could not only impede the FDIC's prompt payment of
deposit insurance to
[[Page 56588]]
depositors of foreign branches of failed U.S. banks, but could also
aggravate a financial crisis that transcends national borders.
C. Section-by-Section Analysis of the Final Rule
The Final Rule makes three changes to the deposit insurance rules.
First, it adds to the current list of authorities two additional
statutory references: FDI Act section 10(g) and FDI Act section
11(d).\27\ Next, the Final Rule amends the definition of ``insured
deposit'' in section 330.1(i) of Part 330 to add the phrase ``and this
part'' to the existing definition.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\27\ 12 U.S.C. 1820(g); 12 U.S.C. 1821(d).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Lastly, in section 330.3(e), which deals with ``General
Principles,'' the Final Rule amends the existing text relating to
``Deposits payable solely outside of the United States and certain
other locations.'' The Final Rule strikes ``solely'' from the
subsection heading and makes the existing text the first of three
paragraphs. The Final Rule also makes a technical change to the
existing text by substituting ``any State'' for ``the States of the
United States, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Guam, the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands, American Samoa, the Trust
Territory of the Pacific Islands, and the Virgin Islands.'' This
amendment streamlines the regulation by incorporating the definition of
``State'' under the FDI Act.
The second paragraph clarifies that any deposit carried on the
books and records of an office of a U.S. bank located outside any
State, regardless of where payable--that is, even if dually payable--is
not an insured deposit. In the third paragraph the Final Rule
establishes, by rule of construction, that Overseas Military Banking
Facilities operated under Department of Defense regulations, 32 CFR
Parts 230 and 231, are not to be considered as located outside any
State, as defined in section 3(a)(3) of the FDI Act.
V. Summary Evaluation
In identifying the need to clarify that deposits in foreign
branches of U.S. banks are not FDIC-insured deposits, the FDIC has
evaluated legally available and viable alternatives, as well as the
benefits and costs associated with such alternatives, based on
available information. The Final Rule is consistent with statutory
authority and objectives and would achieve the FDIC's mission of
maintaining stability and public confidence in the nation's financial
system by insuring deposits. It would also help ensure the FDIC's
ability to administer a failed U.S. bank's receivership. Further, the
Final Rule would benefit the public by clarifying the treatment of
foreign branch deposits during a resolution and by limiting the
exposure to the DIF that could occur as a result of changes in the
requirements for U.S. banks to operate in foreign countries.
The FDIC seeks to minimize to the extent practicable the burdens
which the Final Rule could impose on the banking industry and the
public. While the FDIC recognizes that some U.S. banks may employ dual
payability for their foreign branch deposits to address the U.K.
proposal, the final rule does not change this avenue available under
current law. Therefore, based on available information, the FDIC
believes that the Final Rule itself would not impose any additional
costs on the banking industry or the public.
VI. Regulatory Analysis and Procedure
A. Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act (``PRA''), 44 U.S.C.
3501, et seq., the FDIC may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not
required to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays
a currently valid Office of Management and Budget (``OMB'') control
number. The Final Rule clarifies that deposit insurance is not
available for deposits in foreign branches of U.S. banks. It does not
require any new collections of information as contemplated by the PRA.
Consequently, no information has been submitted to the Office of
Management and Budget for review. If a future modification to the Call
Report is warranted, it would be issued separately and published in the
Federal Register for notice and comment.
B. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (``RFA''), 5 U.S.C. 601, et seq.,
requires each Federal agency to prepare a final regulatory flexibility
analysis in connection with the promulgation of a final rule, or
certify that the final rule will not have a significant economic impact
on a substantial number of small entities.\28\ The RFA provides that an
agency is not required to prepare and publish a regulatory flexibility
analysis if the agency certifies that the proposed rule will not have a
significant impact on a substantial number of small entities.
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\28\ See 5 U.S.C. 603, 604 and 605.
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Pursuant to Section 605(b) of the RFA, the FDIC certifies that the
Final Rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. The Final Rule specifies that deposit
insurance is inapplicable to deposits in foreign branches of U.S.
banks. Using reports of condition and income and FFIEC form 030 reports
filed within recent years, the FDIC has been able to identify only one
bank that is considered a small entity for the purposes of the RFA that
has a foreign branch and, thus, could be affected by the Final Rule.
The Final Rule, however, imposes no burdens on IDIs of any size because
it clarifies only that foreign branch deposits are not insured and does
not require any action on the part of U.S. banks.
C. Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act
The Office of Management and Budget has determined that the Final
Rule is not a ``major rule'' within the meaning of the Small Business
Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 (``SBREFA''), 5 U.S.C. 801
et seq. As SBREFA requires, the FDIC will file the appropriate reports
with Congress and the General Accounting Office so that the Final Rule
may be reviewed.
D. Plain Language
Section 722 of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (Pub. L. 106-102, 113
Stat. 1338, 1471) requires the Federal banking agencies to use plain
language in all proposed and final rules published after January 1,
2000. The FDIC has sought to present the Final Rule in a simple and
straightforward manner.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 330
Bank deposit insurance, Banks, Banking, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Savings and Loan associations, Trusts and trustees.
For the reasons stated above, the Board of Directors of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation amends part 330 of title 12 of the Code
of Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 330--DEPOSIT INSURANCE COVERAGE
0
1. The authority citation for part 330 is revised to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1813(l), 1813(m), 1817(i), 1818(q),
1819(a)(Tenth), 1820(f), 1820(g), 1821(a), 1821(d), 1822(c).
0
2. In Sec. 330.1, revise paragraph (i) to read as follows:
Sec. 330.1 Definitions.
* * * * *
(i) Insured deposit has the same meaning as that provided under
section
[[Page 56589]]
3(m)(1) of the Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(m)(1)) and this part.
* * * * *
0
3. In Sec. 330.3, revise paragraph (e) to read as follows:
Sec. 330.3 General principles.
* * * * *
(e) Deposits payable outside of the United States and certain other
locations. (1) Any obligation of an insured depository institution
which is payable solely at an office of that institution located
outside any State, as the term ``State'' is defined in section 3(a)(3)
of the Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(a)(3)), is not a deposit for the purposes of
this part.
(2) Except as provided in paragraph (e)(3) of this section, any
obligation of an insured depository institution which is carried on the
books and records of an office of that institution located outside any
State, as referred to in paragraph (e)(1) of this section, shall not be
an insured deposit for purposes of this part, or any other provision of
this part, notwithstanding that the obligation may also be payable at
an office of that institution located within any State.
(3) Rule of construction. For purposes of this paragraph (e),
Overseas Military Banking Facilities operated under Department of
Defense regulations, 32 CFR Parts 230 and 231, are not considered to be
offices located outside any State, as referred to in paragraph (e)(1)
of this section.
* * * * *
Dated at Washington, DC, this 10th day of September, 2013.
By order of the Board of Directors.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Robert E. Feldman,
Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2013-22340 Filed 9-12-13; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6714-01-P