Proposed Agency Information Collection Activities; Comment Request, 54190-54216 [2016-19268]

Download as PDF 54190 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices will provide annual snapshots of the database to NARA to determine historical value. The FAA (DAA–0237– 2016–0008) proposes to maintain most records created in support of the ADS– B Rebate Program for 3 years after the program ends; payment records will be retained for 6 years; The FAA will manage ADS–B related records as permanent records until the proposed schedule is approved by NARA. SYSTEM MANAGER(S) AND ADDRESS: Manager, Aircraft Registration Branch, AFS–750, Federal Aviation Administration, Mike Monroney Aeronautical Center, P.O. Box 25082, Oklahoma City, OK 73125. Manager, Automatic Dependent Surveillance— Broadcast (ADS B) Program, AJM–2323 800 Independence Ave. SW., Washington, DC 20591. NOTIFICATION PROCEDURE: Same as ‘‘System manager.’’ RECORD ACCESS PROCEDURES: Same as ‘‘System manager.’’ CONTESTING RECORD PROCEDURES: Same as ‘‘System manager.’’ RECORD SOURCE CATEGORIES: Individuals, manufacturers of aircraft, maintenance inspectors, mechanics, and FAA officials. All forms associated with this system and subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act have been approved by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) under the referenced information collection requests; OMB control numbers, 2120–0024, 2120– 0029, 2120–0042, 2420–0043, 2120– 0078, and 2120–0729. EXEMPTIONS CLAIMED FOR THE SYSTEM: None. Issued in Washington, DC. Claire W. Barrett, Departmental Chief Privacy Officer. [FR Doc. 2016–19354 Filed 8–12–16; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE 4910–9X–P DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION Bureau of Transportation Statistics sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES [Docket ID Number DOT–OST–2014–0031] Agency Information Collection; Activity Under OMB Review; Passenger Origin-Destination Survey Report Office of the Assistant Secretary for Research and Technology (OST–R), Bureau of Transportation Statistics (BTS), DOT. ACTION: Notice. AGENCY: VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 Jkt 238001 In compliance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.), this notice announces that the Information Collection Request (ICR) abstracted below will be forwarded to the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) for extension of currently approved collections. The ICR describes the nature of the information collection and its expected burden. The Federal Register Notice with a 60-day comment period soliciting comments on the following collection of information was published on May 25, 2016 (81 FR 33321). No comments were received. DATES: Written comments should be submitted by September 14, 2016. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: James Bouse, Office of Airline Information, RTS–42, Room E34–441, OST–R, BTS, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE., Washington, DC 20590–0001, Telephone Number (202) 366–4876, Fax Number (202) 366–3383 or EMAIL james.bouse@dot.gov. COMMENTS: Send comments to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, 725– 17th Street NW., Washington, DC 20503, Attention: OST Desk Officer. SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION: OMB Approval No.: 2139–0001. Title: Passenger Origin-Destination Survey Report. Form No.: None. Type of Review: Extension of a currently approved collection. Respondents: Large certificated air carriers that provide scheduled passenger service. Number of Respondents: 48. Total Number of Annual Responses: 192. Estimated Time per Response: 60 hours. Total Annual Burden: 11,520 hours. Needs and Uses: Survey data are used in monitoring the airline industry, negotiating international agreements, reviewing requests for the grant of antitrust immunity for air carrier alliance agreements, selecting new international routes, selecting U.S. carriers to operate limited entry foreign routes, and modeling the spread of contagious diseases. The Passenger OriginDestination Survey Report is the only aviation data collection by DOT where the air carriers report the true origins and destinations of passengers’ flight itineraries. The Department does have another aviation data collection (T–100) which (1) gives passenger totals for citypairs served on a nonstop basis and (2) market totals for passengers traveling on a single flight number. If the passenger travels on multiple flight numbers, a SUMMARY: PO 00000 Frm 00150 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4703 new market is recorded for each change in flight number. The Confidential Information Protection and Statistical Efficiency Act of 2002 (44 U.S.C. 3501 note), requires a statistical agency to clearly identify information it collects for non-statistical purposes. BTS hereby notifies the respondents and the public that BTS uses the information it collects under this OMB approval for non-statistical purposes including, but not limited to, publication of both Respondent’s identity and its data, submission of the information to agencies outside BTS for review, analysis and possible use in regulatory and other administrative matters. ADDRESSES: Send comments to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, Office of Management and Budget, 725 17th Street NW., Washington, DC 20503, Attention: OST Desk Officer. Comments are invited on: Whether the proposed collection of information is necessary for the proper performance of the functions of the Department. Comments should address whether the information will have practical utility; the accuracy of the Department’s estimate of the burden of the proposed information collection; ways to enhance the quality, utility and clarity of the information to be collected; and ways to minimize the burden of the collection of information on respondents, including the use of automated collection techniques or other forms of information technology. Issued in Washington, DC, on August 9, 2016. William Chadwick, Jr., Director, Office of Airline Information, Bureau of Transportation Statistics. [FR Doc. 2016–19352 Filed 8–12–16; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE 4910–9X–P DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY Office of the Comptroller of the Currency FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION Proposed Agency Information Collection Activities; Comment Request Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), Treasury; Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board); and Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC). AGENCIES: E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM 15AUN1 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices Joint notice and request for comment. ACTION: In accordance with the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) of 1995 (44 U.S.C. chapter 35), the OCC, the Board, and the FDIC (the ‘‘agencies’’) may not conduct or sponsor, and the respondent is not required to respond to, an information collection unless it displays a currently valid Office of Management and Budget (OMB) control number. The Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council (FFIEC), of which the agencies are members, has approved the agencies’ publication for public comment of a proposal for a new Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income for Eligible Small Institutions (FFIEC 051). The proposed FFIEC 051 is a streamlined version of the existing Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income for a Bank with Domestic Offices Only (FFIEC 041), which has been created by removing certain existing schedules and data items that would be replaced by a limited number of data items that would be collected in a new supplemental schedule, eliminating certain other existing data items, and reducing the reporting frequency of certain data items. The FFIEC 051 generally would be applicable to institutions with domestic offices only and assets of less than $1 billion. The FFIEC 041 would be applicable to institutions with domestic offices only that do not file the FFIEC 051. When compared to the existing FFIEC 041, the proposed FFIEC 051 shows a reduction in the number of pages from 85 to 61. This decrease is the result of the removal of approximately 950 or about 40 percent of the nearly 2,400 data items in the FFIEC 041. In addition, the FFIEC and the agencies are seeking public comment on proposed revisions to the FFIEC 041 and the Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income for a Bank with Domestic and Foreign Offices (FFIEC 031), which are currently approved collections of information. The Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income are commonly referred to as the Call Report. The proposed FFIEC 051 and the revisions to the FFIEC 041 and FFIEC 031 would take effect as of the March 31, 2017, report date. At the end of the comment period for this notice, the comments and recommendations received will be analyzed to determine the extent to which the FFIEC and the agencies should modify the proposal for the FFIEC 051 and the revisions to the FFIEC 041 and FFIEC 031 prior to giving final approval. As required by the PRA, the agencies will then publish a second sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES SUMMARY: VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 Jkt 238001 Federal Register notice for a 30-day comment period and submit the final FFIEC 051, FFIEC 041, and FFIEC 031 to OMB for review and approval. DATES: Comments must be submitted on or before October 14, 2016. ADDRESSES: Interested parties are invited to submit written comments to any or all of the agencies. All comments, which should refer to the OMB control number(s), will be shared among the agencies. OCC: Because paper mail in the Washington, DC, area and at the OCC is subject to delay, commenters are encouraged to submit comments by email, if possible, to prainfo@ occ.treas.gov. Comments may be sent to: Legislative and Regulatory Activities Division, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, Attention: ‘‘1557–0081, FFIEC 031, 041, and 051,’’ 400 7th Street SW., Suite 3E–218, Mail Stop 9W–11, Washington, DC 20219. In addition, comments may be sent by fax to (571) 465–4326. You may personally inspect and photocopy comments at the OCC, 400 7th Street SW., Washington, DC 20219. For security reasons, the OCC requires that visitors make an appointment to inspect comments. You may do so by calling (202) 649–6700 or, for persons who are deaf or hard of hearing, TTY, (202) 649–5597. Upon arrival, visitors will be required to present valid government-issued photo identification and submit to security screening in order to inspect and photocopy comments. All comments received, including attachments and other supporting materials, are part of the public record and subject to public disclosure. Do not include any information in your comment or supporting materials that you consider confidential or inappropriate for public disclosure. Board: You may submit comments, which should refer to ‘‘FFIEC 031, FFIEC 041, and FFIEC 051,’’ by any of the following methods: • Agency Web site: https:// www.federalreserve.gov. Follow the instructions for submitting comments at: https://www.federalreserve.gov/ generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm. • Federal eRulemaking Portal: https:// www.regulations.gov. Follow the instructions for submitting comments. • Email: regs.comments@ federalreserve.gov. Include the reporting form numbers in the subject line of the message. • Fax: (202) 452–3819 or (202) 452– 3102. • Mail: Robert DeV. Frierson, Secretary, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 20th Street and PO 00000 Frm 00151 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4703 54191 Constitution Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20551. All public comments are available from the Board’s Web site at www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/ foia/ProposedRegs.cfm as submitted, unless modified for technical reasons. Accordingly, your comments will not be edited to remove any identifying or contact information. Public comments may also be viewed electronically or in paper in Room MP–500 of the Board’s Martin Building (20th and C Streets NW.) between 9:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. on weekdays. FDIC: You may submit comments, which should refer to ‘‘FFIEC 031, FFIEC 041, and FFIEC 051,’’ by any of the following methods: • Agency Web site: https:// www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal/. Follow the instructions for submitting comments on the FDIC’s Web site. • Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the instructions for submitting comments. • Email: comments@FDIC.gov. Include ‘‘FFIEC 031, FFIEC 041, and FFIEC 051’’ in the subject line of the message. • Mail: Manuel E. Cabeza, Counsel, Attn: Comments, Room MB–3105, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street NW., Washington, DC 20429. • Hand Delivery: Comments may be hand delivered to the guard station at the rear of the 550 17th Street Building (located on F Street) on business days between 7:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m. Public Inspection: All comments received will be posted without change to https://www.fdic.gov/regulations/ laws/federal/ including any personal information provided. Paper copies of public comments may be requested from the FDIC Public Information Center by telephone at (877) 275–3342 or (703) 562–2200. Additionally, commenters may send a copy of their comments to the OMB desk officer for the agencies by mail to the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs, U.S. Office of Management and Budget, New Executive Office Building, Room 10235, 725 17th Street NW., Washington, DC 20503; by fax to (202) 395–6974; or by email to oira_ submission@omb.eop.gov. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For further information about the proposed revisions to the Call Report discussed in this notice, please contact any of the agency staff whose names appear below. In addition, copies of the Call Report forms and the proposed FFIEC 051 can be obtained at the FFIEC’s Web site (https://www.ffiec.gov/ffiec_report_ forms.htm). E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM 15AUN1 54192 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices OCC: Kevin Korzeniewski, Senior Attorney, (202) 649–5490, or for persons who are deaf or hard of hearing, TTY, (202) 649–5597, Legislative and Regulatory Activities Division, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency, 400 7th Street SW., Washington, DC 20219. Board: Nuha Elmaghrabi, Federal Reserve Board Clearance Officer, (202) 452–3884, Office of the Chief Data Officer, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, 20th and C Streets NW., Washington, DC 20551. Telecommunications Device for the Deaf (TDD) users may call (202) 263–4869. FDIC: Manuel E. Cabeza, Counsel, (202) 898–3767, Legal Division, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street NW., Washington, DC 20429. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The agencies are proposing to create a new Call Report for eligible small institutions, the foundation for which is a currently approved collection of information for each agency. In addition, the agencies are proposing revisions to data items reported on the FFIEC 041 and FFIEC 031 Call Reports. Report Title: Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income (Call Report). Form Numbers: FFIEC 051 (proposed for eligible small institutions), FFIEC 041 (for banks and savings associations with domestic offices only), and FFIEC 031 (for banks and savings associations with domestic and foreign offices). Frequency of Response: Quarterly. Affected Public: Business or other forprofit. OCC OMB Control No.: 1557–0081. Estimated Number of Respondents: 1,412 national banks and federal savings associations. Estimated Average Burden per Response: 58.70 burden hours per quarter to file. Estimated Total Annual Burden: 331,538 burden hours to file. Board sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES OMB Control No.: 7100–0036. Estimated Number of Respondents: 839 state member banks. Estimated Average Burden per Response: 59.23 burden hours per quarter to file. Estimated Total Annual Burden: 198,776 burden hours to file. FDIC OMB Control No.: 3064–0052. Estimated Number of Respondents: 3,891 insured state nonmember banks and state savings associations. Estimated Average Burden per Response: 43.89 burden hours per quarter to file. VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 Jkt 238001 Estimated Total Annual Burden: 683,104 burden hours to file. The estimated burden per response for the quarterly filings of the Call Report is an average that varies by agency because of differences in the composition of the institutions under each agency’s supervision (e.g., size distribution of institutions, types of activities in which they are engaged, and existence of foreign offices). The agencies’ burden estimates for the Call Report include the estimated time for gathering and maintaining data in the required form and completing those Call Report data items for which an institution has a reportable (nonzero) amount. However, with respect to the time for reviewing instructions, the burden estimates generally include review time associated with those schedules and data items for which the institution has reportable amounts and do not include review time applicable to data items for which the institution determines, upon instructional review, that it does not have reportable amounts. As provided in the PRA, burden estimates exclude the time for compiling and maintaining business records in the normal course of an institution’s activities. Type of Review: Revision and extension of currently approved collections. General Description of Reports These information collections are mandatory: 12 U.S.C. 161 (for national banks), 12 U.S.C. 324 (for state member banks), 12 U.S.C. 1817 (for insured state nonmember commercial and savings banks), and 12 U.S.C. 1464 (for federal and state savings associations). At present, except for selected data items and text, these information collections are not given confidential treatment. Abstract Institutions submit Call Report data to the agencies each quarter for the agencies’ use in monitoring the condition, performance, and risk profile of individual institutions and the industry as a whole. Call Report data serve a regulatory or public policy purpose by assisting the agencies in fulfilling their missions of ensuring the safety and soundness of financial institutions and the financial system and the protection of consumer financial rights, as well as agencyspecific missions affecting national and state-chartered institutions, e.g., monetary policy, financial stability, and deposit insurance. Call Reports are the source of the most current statistical data available for identifying areas of focus for on-site and off-site PO 00000 Frm 00152 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4703 examinations. The agencies use Call Report data in evaluating institutions’ corporate applications, including, in particular, interstate merger and acquisition applications for which, as required by law, the agencies must determine whether the resulting institution would control more than 10 percent of the total amount of deposits of insured depository institutions in the United States. Call Report data also are used to calculate institutions’ deposit insurance and Financing Corporation assessments and national banks’ and federal savings associations’ semiannual assessment fees. Current Actions I. Introduction As the result of a formal initiative launched by the FFIEC in December 2014 to identify potential opportunities to reduce burden associated with Call Report requirements for community banks, the agencies are proposing a new streamlined Call Report (FFIEC 051) for eligible small institutions and revisions to the existing versions of the Call Report (FFIEC 041 and FFIEC 031). In embarking on this effort, the FFIEC is responding to industry concerns about the cost and burden associated with the Call Report. The FFIEC’s formal initiative includes actions in five areas,1 three of which have served as the foundation for the proposed FFIEC 051. These three actions, discussed below, include community bank outreach, surveys of agency Call Report data users, and consideration of a more streamlined Call Report for eligible small institutions. In addition, as a framework for the actions it is undertaking, the FFIEC developed a set of guiding principles for use in evaluating potential additions and deletions of Call Report data items and other revisions to the Call Report. In general, data items collected in the Call Report must meet three guiding principles: (1) The data items serve a long-term regulatory or public policy purpose by assisting the FFIEC member entities in fulfilling their missions of ensuring the safety and soundness of financial institutions and the financial system and the protection of consumer financial rights, as well as agencyspecific missions affecting national and state-chartered institutions; (2) the data items to be collected maximize practical utility and minimize, to the extent practicable and appropriate, burden on financial institutions; and (3) equivalent 1 See 80 FR 56539 (September 18, 2015) and 81 FR 45357 (July 13, 2016) for information on other actions taken under this initiative. E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM 15AUN1 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices data items are not readily available through other means. sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES II. FFIEC’s Community Bank Call Report Burden-Reduction Initiative A. Community Bank Outreach As one of the actions under the FFIEC’s community bank Call Report burden-reduction initiative, the agencies conducted and participated in several outreach efforts to better understand, through industry dialogue, the aspects of reporting institutions’ Call Report process that are significant sources of reporting burden, including where manual intervention by an institution’s staff is necessary to report particular information. As an initial step toward improving this understanding, representatives from the FFIEC member entities visited nine community institutions during the third quarter of 2015. In the first quarter of 2016, two bank trade groups, the Independent Community Bankers of America and the American Bankers Association, each organized a number of conference call meetings with small groups of community bankers in which representatives from the FFIEC member entities participated. During the visits to banks and the conference call meetings, the community bankers explained how they prepare their Call Reports, identified which schedules or data items take a significant amount of time and/or manual processes to complete, and described the reasons for this. The bankers also offered suggestions for streamlining the Call Report. The agencies note that during the banker outreach calls, as well as in comment letters submitted under a review of agency regulations required by the Economic Growth and Regulatory Paperwork Reduction Act (EGRPRA),2 they received many comments about the burden of reporting in accordance with the revised regulatory capital rules in Call Report Schedule RC–R—Regulatory Capital. The agencies revised this schedule in March 2015 to include the data items that would be necessary for an institution to calculate its regulatory capital ratios under the revised capital rules. The greater detail of those rules requires a degree of categorization, recordkeeping, and reporting that is greater than under the prior applicable capital rules. The FFIEC, through its Task Force on Reports (task force), is monitoring the banking agencies’ response to the concerns about the revised regulatory capital rules raised 2 EGRPRA requires the federal banking agencies to conduct a decennial joint review of their regulations to identify those that are outdated, unnecessary, or unduly burdensome. VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 Jkt 238001 during the EGRPRA comment process and the associated reporting burden of Schedule RC–R arising from the implementation of those rules by community banks. The agencies also note that during the banker outreach calls and visits, they received many comments addressing the substantive burden arising from reviewing the Call Report instructions on a quarterly or other periodic basis even for those data items applicable to an institution for which the institution determines that there is no information for it to report. As noted previously, the agencies’ burden estimates for the Call Report include estimated time for reviewing instructions, gathering and maintaining data in the required form, and completing those Call Report data items for which an institution has a reportable (nonzero) amount. Consistent with past practice, the agencies’ burden estimates do not reflect burden associated with an institution’s time for reviewing the instructions for applicable data items for which an institution does not have reportable amounts. Therefore, the agencies’ burden estimates do not reflect the burden reduction associated with an institution no longer having to review the instructions for those applicable data items without reportable amounts that the agencies are proposing to remove from the Call Report. Further, as noted previously, the estimated burden per response is an average estimate for all filers of the Call Report. This estimate does not separately distinguish between the FFIEC 031, FFIEC 041, and the proposed FFIEC 051 versions of the Call Report. The agencies will consider revising the methodology for estimating burden hours and preparing separate burden estimates for the FFIEC 031, FFIEC 041, and FFIEC 051 reports. B. Acceleration of the Statutorily Mandated Review of the Call Report As a second action, the agencies accelerated the start of the next statutorily mandated review of the existing Call Report data items (Full Review),3 which otherwise would have commenced in 2017. Users of Call Report data items at the FFIEC member entities are participating in a series of nine surveys conducted over a 19month period that began in mid-July 2015. As an integral part of these surveys, users are asked to fully explain the need for each Call Report data item they deem essential, how the data item is used, the frequency with which it is 3 This review is mandated by section 604 of the Financial Services Regulatory Relief Act of 2006 (12 U.S.C. 1817(a)(11)). PO 00000 Frm 00153 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4703 54193 needed, and the population of institutions from which it is needed. Call Report schedules have been placed into nine groups and prioritized for review, generally based on level of burden cited by banking industry representatives. Based on the results of the surveys, the agencies are identifying data items that are being considered for elimination, less frequent collection, or new or upwardly revised reporting thresholds. The results of the first three surveys have been incorporated into this proposal. Burden-reducing reporting changes from the remaining six surveys will be proposed in future Federal Register notices with an anticipated March 31, 2018, implementation date. C. Consideration of a More Streamlined Call Report for Eligible Small Institutions As a third action, the agencies considered the feasibility and merits of creating a less burdensome version of the quarterly Call Report for institutions that meet certain criteria. Together with the outcomes of the preceding two actions to date, the results of this action are the subject of this proposal, i.e., the FFIEC 051 Call Report for eligible small institutions, which is summarized in Section III, Overview of the Current Proposal, below. III. Overview of the Current Proposal Under the auspices of the FFIEC and its task force, the agencies collectively reviewed the feedback from the previously mentioned banker outreach efforts completed in 2015 and 2016 as one of the inputs for developing a proposal to address industry concerns about the regulatory reporting burden imposed on institutions by the Call Report. In addressing these concerns, the agencies aimed to balance institutions’ requests for a less burdensome regulatory reporting process with FFIEC member entities’ need for sufficient data to monitor the condition and performance of, and ensure the safety and soundness of, institutions and carry out agencyspecific missions. With these two goals in mind, the task force developed, and the FFIEC and the agencies agreed to propose, a separate, more streamlined, and noticeably shorter Call Report to be completed by eligible small institutions as well as certain burden-reducing revisions to the current FFIEC 041 and FFIEC 031 versions of the Call Report. The agencies recognize that institutions operate under widely varying business models, which affects the nature and extent of their activities and translates into differences in the amount of E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM 15AUN1 54194 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES information to be reported in their Call Reports. For purposes of the FFIEC 051 Call Report, the agencies propose to define ‘‘eligible small institutions’’ as institutions with total assets less than $1 billion and domestic offices only.4 These institutions currently file the FFIEC 041 Call Report. Eligible small institutions would have the option to file the FFIEC 041 Call Report rather than the FFIEC 051. In addition, for a small institution otherwise eligible to file the FFIEC 051, the institution’s primary federal regulatory agency, jointly with the state chartering authority, if applicable, may require the institution to file the FFIEC 041 instead based on supervisory needs. In determining whether an institution with less than $1 billion in total assets should be required to file the FFIEC 041 rather than the FFIEC 051, the appropriate agency will consider criteria including, but not limited to, whether the eligible institution is significantly engaged in complex, specialized, or other high-risk activities.5 It is anticipated that such determinations would be made in a limited number of cases. The existing Call Report instructions generally provide that shifts in an institution’s reporting status are to begin with the March Call Report based on the institution’s consolidated total assets as reported in the Call Report for June of the previous calendar year. Applying this principle to the FFIEC 051, an institution with domestic offices only would be eligible to file the FFIEC 051 Call Report beginning as of its proposed effective date of March 31, 2017, if it reported consolidated total assets of less than $1 billion in its Call Report for June 30, 2016. Thereafter, if the total assets of an institution with domestic offices only that files the FFIEC 051 Call Report increase to $1 billion or more as of a June 30 report date, it would no longer be eligible to file the FFIEC 051 Call Report beginning as of the March 31 report date the following year. The 4 As part of this initiative, the agencies are committed to exploring alternatives to the $1 billion asset-size threshold that could extend the eligibility to file the FFIEC 051 to additional institutions. 5 This proposed reservation of authority is consistent with the reservation of authority applicable to a holding company with consolidated total assets of less than $1 billion that would otherwise file the Board’s FR Y–9SP, Parent Company Only Financial Statements for Small Holding Companies (OMB Control No. 7100–0128). See page GEN–1 of the instructions for the FR Y– 9SP. VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 Jkt 238001 institution would instead begin to file the FFIEC 041 report.6 In developing the proposed FFIEC 051 for eligible small institutions, the data items currently collected in the FFIEC 041, including individual schedules, were reviewed to determine how the existing reporting requirements could be modified to make the information in the Call Report more applicable to and less burdensome for smaller, noncomplex institutions without adversely affecting FFIEC member entities’ data needs. As a result of this interagency review, the following changes were made to the FFIEC 041 report form to create the proposed FFIEC 051 and are discussed in detail in Sections IV.A through IV.D below and in Appendix A: • The addition of a Supplemental Schedule to collect indicator questions and indicator data items on certain complex and specialized activities, as discussed in section IV.A below, as a basis for removing partial or entire schedules (and other related items) which are currently included in the FFIEC 041; • The elimination of data items identified as no longer necessary for collection from institutions with less than $1 billion in total assets and domestic offices only during the completed portions of the Full Review or during a separate interagency review that focused on data items infrequently reported by institutions of this size; • Changes to the frequency of data collection for certain items identified as needed less often than quarterly from institutions with less than $1 billion in total assets and domestic offices only; and • Removal of all data items for which a $1 billion asset-size reporting threshold currently exists. In addition, the agencies plan to prepare a separate, shorter set of Instructions for Preparation of Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income for users of the FFIEC 051, which would be published by the beginning of the quarterly reporting period in which the FFIEC 051 takes effect. In designing the proposed FFIEC 051 Call Report, the agencies have sought to maintain, to the extent possible, the existing structure of the FFIEC 041 Call Report, including the numbering and 6 Consistent with the existing Call Report instructions, if an institution reaches $1 billion or more in consolidated total assets due to a business combination, a transaction between entities under common control, or a branch acquisition that is not a business combination, then the institution must file the FFIEC 041 Call Report beginning with the first quarter-end report date following the effective date of the transaction. PO 00000 Frm 00154 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4703 sequencing of data items within Call Report schedules. Institutions and their staff members involved in the preparation of the Call Report are familiar with how the FFIEC 041 Call Report is currently organized. Feedback from banker outreach activities indicated that they did not favor the rearranging of existing data items that would be retained in a streamlined Call Report for small institutions because the need to adapt to these structural changes would itself be burdensome. As noted above, the statutorily mandated review of the existing Call Report data items is an ongoing process. The agencies have included certain proposed revisions to the existing FFIEC 031 and FFIEC 041 Call Reports based on the task force’s evaluation of the results of the first three surveys of Call Report users at FFIEC member entities are included in this notice (see Section V below). Additional changes to the FFIEC 031, the FFIEC 041, and the FFIEC 051 will be proposed in future Federal Register notices after the conclusion of the remaining user surveys. The agencies invite comment on any difficulties that institutions would expect to encounter in implementing the systems and process changes necessary to accommodate the proposed FFIEC 051 and the proposed revisions to the FFIEC 041 and FFIEC 031. In addition, the agencies invite comment on the estimated lead time necessary for institutions to be properly prepared for reporting on the proposed FFIEC 051 Call Report, and the revised FFIEC 041 and FFIEC 031 Call Reports, and whether the proposed March 31, 2017, implementation date for these reporting changes provides sufficient time. The specific wording of the captions for the new or revised Call Report data items and schedule titles discussed in this proposal and the numbering of these data items should be regarded as preliminary. IV. Discussion of Proposed Call Report Revisions To Create the FFIEC 051 A. Replacement of Partial or Entire Schedules With a Supplemental Schedule The FFIEC 041 Call Report schedules requiring the reporting of data on activities considered complex or specialized were identified and reviewed to determine which schedules (or portions of schedules) could be eliminated from the FFIEC 051 and replaced with questions asking whether the institution engages in any of these complex or specialized activities along E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM 15AUN1 sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices with corresponding indicator data items that would be completed for those activities in which the institution engages. The indicator data items would provide aggregate data specific to the identified complex or specialized activity, allowing users of the Call Report at FFIEC member entities to ascertain the degree to which an institution engages in such activity. The following is a list of the identified schedules and activities along with the related proposed indicator questions and data items that would be included in a new Schedule SU in the FFIEC 051 Call Report: • Derivatives data currently collected on Schedule RC–L—Derivatives and Off-Balance Sheet Items and in certain other schedules would be eliminated from the FFIEC 051 (except from Schedule RC–R—Regulatory Capital) and replaced with the following indicator question and data items: Æ Does the institution have any derivative contracts? (If yes, complete the following items.) Æ Total gross notional amount of interest rate derivatives held for trading Æ Total gross notional amount of all other derivatives held for trading Æ Total gross notional amount of interest rate derivatives not held for trading Æ Total gross notional amount of all other derivatives not held for trading • Schedule RC–D—Trading Assets and Liabilities would be eliminated from the FFIEC 051. Indicator questions and data items are not necessary because total trading assets and total trading liabilities are reported on Schedule RC—Balance Sheet. • Schedule RC–P—1–4 Family Residential Mortgage Banking Activities would be eliminated from the FFIEC 051 and replaced with the following indicator question and data items: Æ For the two calendar quarters preceding the current calendar quarter, have either the institution’s sales of 1– 4 family residential mortgage loans during the quarter or its 1–4 family residential mortgage loans held for sale or trading as of quarter-end exceeded $10 million? (If yes, complete the following items.) Æ Principal amount of 1–4 family residential mortgage loans sold during the quarter Æ Quarter-end amount of 1–4 family residential mortgage loans held for sale or trading • Schedule RC–Q—Assets and Liabilities Measured at Fair Value on a Recurring Basis would be eliminated from the FFIEC 051 and replaced with the following indicator question and data items: VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 Jkt 238001 Æ Does the institution use the fair value option to measure any of its assets or liabilities? (If yes, complete the following items.) Æ Aggregate amount of fair value option assets Æ Aggregate amount of fair value option liabilities Æ Year-to-date net gains (losses) recognized in earnings on fair value option assets Æ Year-to-date net gains (losses) recognized in earnings on fair value option liabilities • Schedule RC–S—Servicing, Securitization, and Asset Sale Activities would be eliminated from the FFIEC 051 and replaced with the following indicator questions and data items: Æ Does the institution have any assets it has sold and securitized with servicing retained or with recourse or other seller-provided credit enhancements? (If yes, complete the following item.) Æ Total outstanding principal balance of assets sold and securitized by the reporting institution with servicing retained or with recourse or other sellerprovided credit enhancements Æ Does the institution have any assets it has sold with recourse or other sellerprovided credit enhancements but has not securitized? (If yes, complete the following item.) Æ Total outstanding principal balance of assets sold by the reporting institution with recourse or other sellerprovided credit enhancements, but not securitized by the reporting institution Æ Does the institution service any closed-end 1–4 family residential mortgage loans for others or does it service more than $10 million of other financial assets for others? (If yes, complete the following item.) Æ Total outstanding principal balance of closed-end 1–4 family residential mortgage loans serviced for others plus the total outstanding principal balance of other financial assets serviced for others if more than $10 million To note, the item related to the credit card fees and finance charges will be addressed in the Credit Card Lending Specialized Items section, below. • Schedule RC–V—Variable Interest Entities would be eliminated from the FFIEC 051 and replaced with the following indicator question and data items: Æ Does the institution have any consolidated variable interest entities? (If yes, complete the following items.) Æ Total assets of consolidated variable interest entities Æ Total liabilities of consolidated variable interest entities • Credit Card Lending Specialized Items included in Schedule RI–B— PO 00000 Frm 00155 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4703 54195 Charge-offs and Recoveries on Loans and Leases and Changes in Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses; Schedule RC–C—Loans and Lease Financing Receivables; and Schedule RC–S— Servicing, Securitization, and Asset Sale Activities would be replaced with the following indicator question and data items: Æ Does the institution, together with affiliated institutions, have outstanding credit card receivables that exceed $500 million as of the report date or is the institution a credit card specialty bank as defined for Uniform Bank Performance Report (UBPR) purposes? (If yes, complete the following items.) Æ Outstanding credit card fees and finance charges included in credit cards to individuals for household, family, and other personal expenditures (retail credit cards) Æ Separate valuation allowance for uncollectible retail credit card fees and finance charges Æ Amount of allowance for loan and lease losses attributable to retail credit card fees and finance charges Æ Uncollectible retail credit card fees and finance charges reversed against year-to-date income Æ Outstanding credit card fees and finance charges included in retail credit card receivables sold and securitized with servicing retained or with recourse or other seller-provided credit enhancements • FDIC Loss-Sharing Agreement data items included in Schedule RC–M— Memoranda, and Schedule RC–N—Past Due and Nonaccrual Loans, Leases, and Other Assets would be eliminated from the FFIEC 051 and replaced with the following indicator question and data items: Æ Does the institution have assets covered by FDIC loss-sharing agreements? (If yes, complete the following items.) Æ Loans and leases covered by FDIC loss-sharing agreements Æ Past due and nonaccrual loans and leases covered by FDIC loss-sharing agreements, with separate reporting of loans and leases past due 30–89 days and still accruing, loans and leases past due 90 days or more and still accruing, and nonaccrual loans and leases Æ Portion of past due and nonaccrual covered loans and leases protected by FDIC loss-sharing agreements, with separate reporting of loans and leases past due 30–89 days and still accruing, loans and leases past due 90 days or more and still accruing, and nonaccrual loans and leases Æ Other real estate owned covered by FDIC loss-sharing agreements E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM 15AUN1 54196 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES Æ Portion of covered other real estate owned that is protected by FDIC losssharing agreements B. Elimination of Data Items Identified During the Statutorily Mandated Full Review of the Call Report and the Review of Infrequently Reported Items As discussed above, several of the existing Call Report schedules have been reviewed as part of the Full Review of the Call Report. The resulting burden-reducing changes relevant to institutions with less than $1 billion in total assets and domestic offices only have been incorporated into the proposed FFIEC 051. The schedules reviewed to date include: • Schedule RI—Income Statement • Schedule RC—Balance Sheet • Schedule RC–C—Loans and Lease Financing Receivables • Schedule RI–B—Charge-offs and Recoveries on Loans and Leases and Changes in Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses • Schedule RC–N—Past Due and Nonaccrual Loans, Leases, and Other Assets • Schedule RC–E—Deposit Liabilities • Schedule RC–O—Other Data for Deposit Insurance and FICO Assessments This proposal also includes revisions to some of these schedules in the FFIEC 041 and FFIEC 031 Call Reports as a result of the Full Review (see Section V). Going forward, the data items in all other Call Report schedules will continue to be evaluated as part of the Full Review. As another component of this initiative, data items infrequently reported in the FFIEC 041 Call Report by banks with total assets less than $1 billion and domestic offices only were reviewed by the FFIEC member entities to determine which of these items remain necessary for monitoring the safety and soundness of, and meeting agency mission-specific needs with respect to, such smaller, less complex institutions. Of these data items, those deemed no longer essential were excluded from the FFIEC 051. In the proposed FFIEC 051 Call Report, the following schedules would have data items removed as a result of the completed portions of the statutorily mandated Full Review or the review of infrequently reported items (see Appendix A for complete listing of all data items removed on the March 31, 2016, FFIEC 041 Call Report): • Schedule RI—Income Statement • Schedule RI–B—Charge-offs and Recoveries on Loans and Leases and Changes in Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 Jkt 238001 • Schedule RC–C—Loans and Lease Financing Receivables • Schedule RC–E—Deposit Liabilities • Schedule RC–L—Derivatives and OffBalance Sheet Items • Schedule RC–N—Past Due and Nonaccrual Loans, Leases, and Other Assets The agencies note that during the previously mentioned banker outreach efforts, some community banks specifically cited Schedule RC–C, Part I—Loans and Leases, as a particularly burdensome schedule to complete. Many of these banks also indicated that completing this schedule requires a significant degree of manual intervention. As discussed above, Call Report data serve a regulatory or public policy purpose by assisting the FFIEC member entities in fulfilling their missions of ensuring the safety and soundness of financial institutions and the financial system and the protection of consumer financial rights, as well as agencyspecific missions. These agency needs are particularly evident for data collected on Schedule RC–C, Part I. Loan and lease data are critical inputs to assessing the safety and soundness of financial institutions through analysis of the institutions’ management of credit risk, interest rate risk, and liquidity risk, including the analysis of lending concentrations and earnings. Further, standardization of loan categories across the schedules within the Call Report is essential for peer group analysis and industry analysis. Loan and lease information is also an important component of agency statistical models that assess the risk profile of an institution, including its risk of failure. Finally, loan and lease information assists the agencies in fulfilling their specific missions. The Federal Reserve, as part of its monetary policy mission, relies on institution-specific Call Report data to provide information on credit availability and lending conditions not available elsewhere. Loan and lease detail at all sizes of institutions are necessary for policymaking purposes addressing the overall health of the economy. In general, monetary policy initiatives function most effectively when implemented early during a period of credit constraint, with the responses tailored to the types of institutions affected, using standardized loan information only available from Call Reports. Reducing loan detail or data frequency for smaller institutions could potentially derail these efforts by delaying the identification of the start of an economic downturn as well as PO 00000 Frm 00156 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4703 determinations of the effectiveness of any monetary policy changes. Furthermore, Schedule RC–C, Part I, data are used to benchmark weekly loan data collected from a sample of both small and large institutions that are the source for estimating weekly loan aggregates that serve as a more timely and critical input for monetary policymaking purposes. The FDIC’s deposit insurance assessment system for ‘‘established small banks’’ relies on information reported by individual institutions for the Schedule RC–C, Part I, standardized loan categories in the determination of the loan mix index in the financial ratios method, as recently amended, which is used to determine assessment rates for such institutions.7 Notwithstanding the above discussion of the agencies overall needs for information collected on Schedule RC– C, Part I, the agencies have identified 23 data items as having lesser utility for these purposes. The specific data items proposed to be removed from the FFIEC 041 report in creating the FFIEC 051 report are listed in Appendix A. C. Changes to the Frequency of Data Collection The FFIEC member entities have reviewed existing data items in the FFIEC 041 Call Report that would be retained in the FFIEC 051 to determine whether some of these data items could be collected less frequently than quarterly from eligible small institutions without adversely affecting the agencies’ data needs. Data items would be collected in the FFIEC 051 on a less than quarterly basis if they are deemed not necessary for quarterly collection for a supervisory, surveillance, monitoring, or agency mission-specific purpose relevant to institutions with total assets of less than $1 billion and domestic offices only. The following Call Report schedules in the proposed FFIEC 051 would have data items that have had a change in the frequency of data collection from quarterly to semiannually or annually (see Appendix A for a list of the affected data items): • Schedule RI—Income Statement • Schedule RC–B—Securities • Schedule RC–A—Cash and Balances Due from Depository Institutions • Schedule RC–C—Loans and Lease Financing Receivables • Schedule RC–F—Other Assets • Schedule RC–G—Other Liabilities • Schedule RC–L—Derivatives and OffBalance Sheet Items 7 See 81 FR 323186–32188 and 32208 (May 20, 2016). E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM 15AUN1 sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices • Schedule RC–M—Memoranda • Schedule RC–N—Past Due and Nonaccrual Loans, Leases, and Other Assets The agencies note that during the previously mentioned banker outreach efforts, some community banks specifically cited Schedule RC–C, Part II—Loans to Small Businesses and Small Farms, as a particularly burdensome schedule to complete. Many of these banks also indicated that their reported values on this schedule did not vary significantly from quarter to quarter, and inquired whether the reporting frequency could be reduced to annual or semiannual. In 2010, the FFIEC changed the reporting frequency for Schedule RC–C, Part II, from annually to quarterly. Call Report small business and small farm lending data are an invaluable resource for understanding credit conditions facing small businesses. More frequent collection of these data improves the Board’s ability to monitor credit conditions facing small businesses and small farms and significantly contributes to its ability to develop policies intended to address any problems that arise in credit markets. In 2009, the U.S. Department of the Treasury, also identified a particular need for these data as they worked to develop policies to ensure that more small businesses and small farms would have access to credit.8 In addition, the Board finds these data very valuable for monetary policymaking purposes. The institution-level Call Report data provide information that cannot be obtained from other indicators of small business and small farm credit conditions. The agencies’ other indicators of small business credit conditions—including the Board’s Senior Loan Officer Opinion Survey 9 and its Flow of Funds—do not provide the same level of detail that is available from Call Reports, and therefore cannot be used to answer many questions that naturally arise during the policy development process. For example, during a period of credit contraction, these other data sources cannot be used to identify which types of institutions are reducing the volume of their loans to small businesses and small farms. This is a significant constraint for the Board, as having detailed information about the characteristics of affected institutions is crucial to designing welltargeted and effective policy responses. Moreover, there is evidence that small business lending by small institutions 8 See 9 See 74 FR 41973 (August 19, 2009). FR 2018; OMB No. 7100–0058. VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 Jkt 238001 does not correlate with lending by larger institutions. Monetary policymaking benefits importantly from more timely information on small business credit conditions and flows. To determine how best to adjust the federal funds rates over time, the Board must continuously assess the prospects for real activity and inflation in coming quarters. Credit conditions have an important bearing on the evolution of those prospects over time, and so the Board pays close attention to data from Call Reports and other sources. In trying to understand the implications of aggregate credit data for the macroeconomic outlook, it is helpful to be able to distinguish between conditions facing small firms and those affecting other businesses, for several reasons. First, small businesses comprise a substantial portion of the nonfinancial business sector, and so their hiring and investment decisions have an important influence on overall real activity.10 Second, because small businesses tend to depend more heavily on depository institutions for external financing, they likely experience material swings in their ability to obtain credit relative to larger firms. Third, the relative opacity of small businesses and their consequent need to provide collateral for loans is thought to create a ‘‘credit’’ channel for monetary policy to influence real activity. Specifically, changes in monetary policy may alter the value of assets used as collateral for loans, thereby affecting the ability of small businesses to obtain credit, abstracting from the effects of any changes in loan rates. Finally, the credit conditions facing small businesses and small farms differ substantially from those facing large businesses, making it necessary to collect indicators that are specific to these borrowers. Large businesses may access credit from a number of different channels, including the corporate bond market and the commercial paper market. In contrast, small businesses and small farms rely more heavily on credit provided through the depository institution lending channel. The dependence of small businesses and small farms on bank lending—particularly from smaller institutions—magnifies the importance of Call Report data, which provide the most comprehensive data on depository institution lending to small businesses and small farms, and emphasizes the 10 Based on statistics tabulated early in the decade, roughly one quarter of all nonfinancial business assets were outside the corporate sector, and such firms tend to be partnerships and proprietorships, which tend to be small businesses. PO 00000 Frm 00157 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4703 54197 importance of collecting quarterly data from institutions of all sizes. In response to feedback received from banker outreach efforts conducted by the FFIEC member entities, where a sample of community banks indicated that data reported on Call Report Schedule RC–C, Part II, does not vary significantly from quarter to quarter, the Board examined the quarter-to-quarter variation in the Call Report data on small loans to businesses and small loans to farms since 2010. Although some individual banks may see little variation over time in these Call Report items, the aggregate data for community banks do vary enough from quarter to quarter to make a difference in the Board’s sense of what is happening with regard to aggregate credit availability to small businesses, which is a very important sector of the economy. During a downturn, this variability is likely to increase. However, the Board recognizes that the very smallest institutions— those with less than $50 million in total assets—did not contribute significantly to the quarterly variation. Therefore, the agencies propose to change the frequency of reporting Schedule RC–C, Part II, in the FFIEC 051 from quarterly to semiannually for banks with less than $50 million in total assets. Some proponents of reduced reporting frequency for Schedule RC–C, Part II, have suggested that the agencies could tie the frequency of reporting to the business cycle, with lower frequency (annually or semiannually) during normal or expansionary times, and quarterly frequency during a downturn. The agencies do not consider this approach to be feasible because they generally cannot anticipate a downturn before it starts, and once it has been determined that a downturn is under way, there would be an inevitable lag in implementing the quarterly reporting requirement. Furthermore, declines in small business and small farm lending may precede a downturn in economic activity and serve as a leading indicator of such a downturn, providing useful information to the agencies for policymaking purposes. D. Removal of Data Items for Which a Reporting Threshold Currently Exists The proposed FFIEC 051 would not include those FFIEC 041 Call Report data items for which a reporting threshold currently exists that creates an exemption from reporting for banks with total assets less than $1 billion. The following schedules were affected by the removal of these data items (as shown on the marked March 31, 2016, E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM 15AUN1 54198 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices FFIEC 041 form posted on the FFIEC’s Web site): 11 • Schedule RI—Income Statement • Schedule RI–C—Disaggregated Data on the Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses • Schedule RC–B—Securities • Schedule RC–E—Deposit Liabilities • Schedule RC–L—Derivatives and OffBalance Sheet Items • Schedule RC–O—Other Data for Deposit Insurance and FICO Assessments activity level subsequently fall to less than the applicable asset or activity threshold for four consecutive quarters, the institution may cease reporting the data items to which the threshold applies for all reporting thresholds in the FFIEC 031 and FFIEC 041 (and proposed FFIEC 051) Call Reports unless the institution exceeds the threshold as of a subsequent June 30 report date. E. Preparation of Separate Instructions for the FFIEC 051 In addition to the creation of the FFIEC 051, this proposal also includes proposed revisions to some of the schedules in the FFIEC 041 and FFIEC 031 Call Reports as a result of the first three agency user surveys conducted under the Full Review. Going forward, the data items in all other Call Report schedules will continue to be evaluated as part of the Full Review. The following schedules in the FFIEC 041 and FFIEC 031 versions of the Call Report would have data items removed or subject to new or higher reporting thresholds as a result of the statutorily mandated Full Review (see Appendices B and C for a complete listing of the affected data items on the March 31, 2016, FFIEC 041 and FFIEC 031 Call Reports): • Schedule RI—Income Statement • Schedule RI–B—Charge-offs and Recoveries on Loans and Leases and Changes in Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses • Schedule RC–C—Loans and Lease Financing Receivables • Schedule RC–E—Deposit Liabilities • Schedule RC–M—Memoranda • Schedule RC–N—Past Due and Nonaccrual Loans, Leases, and Other Assets In addition, the proposed change governing shifts in reporting status outlined in Section IV.F would also be applicable to institutions that file the FFIEC 031 and FFIEC 041 Call Reports. As noted in Section III, the FFIEC and the agencies will be creating a separate set of Instructions for Preparation of Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income (FFIEC 051). A combined set of instructions for the FFIEC 031 and the FFIEC 041 Call Reports will still be maintained. Instructions for identical data items in the FFIEC 051 and the FFIEC 041 generally would reflect the same text in both sets of instructions. Instructions for those FFIEC 041 data items that are not included in the FFIEC 051 would be excluded from the instructions for the FFIEC 051. Glossary entries in the instructions for the FFIEC 041 that are not relevant to the FFIEC 051 also would be excluded from the FFIEC 051 instructions. Instructions would be added to the FFIEC 051 instructions for the indicator questions and data items in the proposed Supplemental Schedule. F. Shifts in Reporting Status The Call Report instructions presently provide that once an institution reaches or exceeds a specified total asset or other reporting threshold that requires the reporting of additional information in the Call Report, the institution must continue to report the additional information in subsequent years without regard to whether it later falls below reporting threshold. To reduce reporting burden, the agencies are proposing to revise these instructions on reporting thresholds. Accordingly, if an institution’s consolidated total assets or sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES 11 https://www.ffiec.gov/ffiec_report_forms.htm. VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 Jkt 238001 V. Proposed Changes to the FFIEC 031 and FFIEC 041 VI. Request for Comment Public comment is requested on all aspects of this joint notice. Comment is specifically invited on: PO 00000 Frm 00158 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4703 (a) What is the appropriate amount of lead time eligible small institutions would need to change their systems and processes from reporting using the FFIEC 041 to reporting using the proposed FFIEC 051 and whether the agencies should delay the proposed initial implementation date of March 31, 2017; (b) Whether or not institutions prefer the agencies’ staggered approach to streamlining the Call Report for eligible small institutions that will introduce proposed changes in multiple steps during the course of the community bank Call Report burden-reduction initiative rather than waiting to incorporate all the proposed changes into a streamlined Call Report at once after the conclusion of the Full Review of the Call Report data items in 2017; (c) Whether, as proposed, small institutions should have the option to complete the FFIEC 041 rather than being required to file the FFIEC 051 if eligible; Comments also are invited on: (d) Whether the proposed revisions to the collections of information that are the subject of this notice are necessary for the proper performance of the agencies’ functions, including whether the information has practical utility; (e) The accuracy of the agencies’ estimates of the burden of the information collections as they are proposed to be revised, including the validity of the methodology and assumptions used; (f) Ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be collected; (g) Ways to minimize the burden of information collections on respondents, including through the use of automated collection techniques or other forms of information technology; and (h) Estimates of capital or start-up costs and costs of operation, maintenance, and purchase of services to provide information. Comments submitted in response to this joint notice will be shared among the agencies. All comments will become a matter of public record. BILLING CODE 4810–33–P; 6210–01–P; 6714–01–P E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM 15AUN1 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices 54199 Appendix A Proposed FFIEC 051: Changes Made to the FFIEC 041 Schedules Replaced by Schedule SU- Supplemental Information: Schedule RC-D - Trading Assets and Liabilities Schedule RC-P - 1-4 Family Residential Mortgage Banking Activities Schedule RC-Q- Assets and Liabilities Measured at Fair Value on a Recurring Basis Schedule RC-S - Servicing, Securitization, and Asset Sale Activities Schedule RC-V- Variable Interest Entities Schedules impacted by a change in frequency of collection of data: 1. Schedule RC-C, Part II. Loans to Small Businesses and Small Farms -For institutions with less than $50 million in total assets, frequency of data collection will move to semiannual. 2. Schedule RC-A, Cash and Balances Due from Depository Institutions - Institutions with less than $300 million in total assets are already exempt from completing this schedule. For all other FFIEC 051 filers, frequency of data collection will move to semiannual. Data Items Removed· Schedule Item Item Name MDRMNumber Loans to foreign governments and official institutions Interest income from trading assets RIAD4056 l.a.( 4) RI I.e RI 2.c Interest on trading liabilities and other borrowed money RIAD4185 RI 2.d 5.c Interest on subordinated notes and debentures Note: Items 2.c and 2.d of Schedule RI will be combined into one data item for "Other interest expense." Trading revenue RIAD4200 RI RI 5.e Venture capital revenue RIADB491 RI M2 M8.a Income from the sale and servicing of mutual funds and annuities (included in Schedule RI, item 8) Interest rate exposures RIAD8431 RI RIAD8757 RI M8.b Foreign exchange exposures RIAD8758 RI M8.c Equity security and index exposures RIAD8759 RI M8.d Commodity and other exposures RIAD8760 RI M8.e Credit exposures RIADF186 RI M8.f M8.g RI M9.a Impact on trading revenue of changes in the creditworthiness of the bank's derivatives counterparties on the bank's derivative assets (included in Memorandum items 8.a through 8.e above) Impact on trading revenue of changes in the creditworthiness of the bank on the bank's derivative liabilities (included in Memorandum items 8.a through 8.e above). Net gains (losses) on credit derivatives RIADK090 RI VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00159 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4725 RIAD4069 RIADA220 RIADK094 RIADC889 E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM 15AUN1 EN15AU16.002</GPH> sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES RI 54200 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices Schedule Item Item Name MDRMNumber held for trading RIADC890 MlO Net gains (losses) on credit derivatives held for purposes other than trading Credit losses on derivatives RI Ml3.a Net gains (losses) on assets RIADF551 RI Ml3.a.(l) RIADF552 RI Ml3.b Estimated net gains (losses) on loans attributable to changes in instrumentspecific credit risk Net gains (losses) on liabilities RI Ml3.b.(l) RI Ml5.a RI Ml5.b RI Ml5.c RI Ml5.d RI-B, Part I 2 RI-B, Part I 6 RI-B, Part I M2.a RI-B, Part I M2.b RI-B, Part I M2.c RI-B, Part I M2.d VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 Jkt 238001 Estimated net gains (losses) on liabilities attributable to changes in instrumentspecific credit risk Consumer overdraft-related service charges levied on those transaction account and non-transaction savings account deposit products intended primarily for individuals for personal, household, or family use Consumer account periodic maintenance charges levied on those transaction account and non-transaction savings account deposit products intended primarily for individuals for personal, household, or family use Consumer customer automated teller machine (ATM) fees levied on those transaction account and non-transaction savings account deposit products intended primarily for individuals for personal, household, or family use All other service charges on deposit accounts Loans to depository institutions and acceptances of other banks (Columns A and B) Loans to foreign governments and official institutions (Columns A and B) Loans secured by real estate to non-U.S. addressees (domicile) (included in Schedule RI-B, part I, item 1, above) (Columns A and B) Loans to and acceptances of foreign banks (included in Schedule RI-B, part I, item 2, above) (Columns A and B) Commercial and industrial loans to nonU.S. addressees (domicile) (included in Schedule RI-B, part I, item 4, above) (Columns A and B) Leases to individuals for household, family, and other personal expenditures (included in Schedule RI-B, part I, item 8, above) (Columns A and B) PO 00000 Frm 00160 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4725 RIADA251 RIADF553 RIADF554 RIADH032 RIADH033 RIADH034 RIADH035 RIAD4481, RIAD4482 RIAD4643, RIAD4627 RIAD4652, RIAD4662 RIAD4654, RIAD4664 RIAD4646, RIAD4618 RIADF185, RIADF187 E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM 15AUN1 EN15AU16.003</GPH> M9.b RI sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES RI Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices Item Item Name MDRMNumber RI-B, Part I M4 Ml RI-B, Part II M2 RI-B, Part II M3 RI-C l.a Uncollectible retail credit card fees and finance charges reversed against income (i.e., not included in charge-offs against the allowance for loan and lease losses) Allocated transfer risk reserve included in Schedule RI-B, part II, item 7, above Separate valuation allowance for uncollectible retail credit card fees and finance charges Amount of allowance for loan and lease losses attributable to retail credit card fees and finance charges Construction loans (Columns A through F) RIADC388 RI-B, Part II RI-C l.b Conunercial real estate loans (Columns A through F) RI-C l.c Residential real estate loans (Columns A through F) RI-C 2 Conunercialloans (Columns A through F) RI-C 3 Credit cards (Columns A through F) RI-C 4 Other consumer loans (Columns A through F) RI-C 5 Unallocated, if any RI-C 6 Total (for each column, sum of items l.a through 5) (Columns A through F) RC-B M5.a Credit card receivables (Columns A through D) RCONM746, RCONM747, RCONM748, RCONM749, RCONM750, RCONM751 RCONB838, RCONB839, RCONB840, RCONB841 RC-B M5.b Home equity lines (Columns A through D) RCONB842, RCONB843, RCONB844, RCONB845 RC-B M5.c Automobile loans (Columns A through D) RCONB846, RCONB847, RCONB848, RCONB849 RC-B M5.d Other consumer loans (Columns A through D) RCONB850, RCONB851, RCONB852, RCONB853 RC-B M5.e Conunercial and industrial loans (Columns A through D) RCONB854, RCONB855, RCONB856, RCONB857 RC-B M5.f Other (Columns A through D) RCONB858, RCONB859, RCONB860, RCONB861 RC-C, Part I 2a.(l) RCONB532 RC-C, Part I 2a.(2) To U.S. branches and agencies of foreign banks To other conunercial banks in the U.S. VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00161 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4725 RIADC435 RIADC389 RIADC390 RCONM708, RCONM709, RCONM710,RCONM711, RCONM712,RCONM713 RCONM714, RCONM715, RCONM716, RCONM717, RCONM719, RCONM720 RCONM721, RCONM722, RCONM723, RCONM724, RCONM725, RCONM726 RCONM727, RCONM728, RCONM729, RCONM730, RCONM731, RCONM732 RCONM733, RCONM734, RCONM735, RCONM736, RCONM737, RCONM738 RCONM739, RCONM740, RCONM741, RCONM742, RCONM743, RCONM744 RCONM745 RCONB533 E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM 15AUN1 EN15AU16.004</GPH> sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES Schedule 54201 54202 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices Schedule Item Item Name MDRMNumber RC-C, Part I 2.b RCONB534 RC-C, Part I 2.c.(l) To other depository institutions in the U.S. To foreign branches of other U.S. banks RCONB536 RC-C, Part I 2.c.(2) To other banks in foreign countries RCONB537 RC-C, Part I 4.a To U.S. addressees (domicile) RCON1763 RC-C, Part I 4.b To non-U.S. addressees (domicile) RCON1764 RC-C, Part I 7 RCON2081 RC-C, Part I 9.b.(l) RC-C, Part I 9.b.(2) Loans to foreign governments and official institutions (including foreign central banks) Loans for purchasing or carrying securities (secured and unsecured) All other loans (exclude consumer loans) RC-C, Part I lO.a RC-C, Part I RCON1545 RCONJ451 RC-C, Part I Ml.e.(l) To U.S. addressees (domicile) RCONK163 RC-C, Part I Ml.e.(2) To non-U.S. addressees (domicile) RCONK164 RC-C, Part I M5 M6 RC-C, Part I MlO.a.(l) RC-C, Part I MlO.a.(2) RC-C, Part I MlO.a.(3)(a) RC-C, Part I MlO.a.(3)(b)(l) Loans secured by real estate to non U.S. addressees (domicile) Outstanding credit card fees and finance charges included in Schedule RC-C, part I, item 6.a Construction, land development, and other land loans Secured by farmland (including farm residential and other improvements) Revolving, open-end loans secured by 1-4 family residential properties and extended under lines of credit Secured by first liens RCONB837 RC-C, Part I RC-C, Part I MlO.a.(3)(b)(2) Secured by junior liens RCONF582 RC-C, Part I MlO.a.(4) MlO.a.(5) RCONF584 RC-C, Part I MlO.b Secured by multifamily (5 or more) residential properties Secured by nonfarm nonresidential properties Commercial and industrial loans RCONF583 RC-C, Part I RC-C, Part I MlO.c.(l) Credit cards RCONF586 RC-C, Part I MlO.c.(2) Other revolving credit plans RCONF587 RC-C, Part I MlO.c.(3) Automobile loans RCONK196 RC-C, Part I MlO.c.(4) Other consumer loans RCONK208 RC-C, Part I MlO.d Other loans RCONF589 RC-C, Part I Mll.a.(l) RCONF590 RC-C, Part I Mll.a.(2) Construction, land development, and other land loans Secured by farmland (including farm residential and other improvements) VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00162 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4725 RCONF163 RCONC391 RCONF578 RCONF579 RCONF580 RCONF581 RCONF585 RCONF591 E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM 15AUN1 EN15AU16.005</GPH> sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES RCONF162 lO.b Leases to individuals for household, family, and other personal expenditures (i.e., consumer leases) All other leases Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices Item Item Name MDRMNumber RC-C, Part I Mll.a.(3)(a) Mll.a.(3)(b)(l) Revolving, open-end loans secured by 1-4 family residential properties and extended under lines of credit Secured by first liens RCONF592 RC-C, Part I RCONF593 RC-C, Part I Mll.a.(3)(b )(2) Secured by junior liens RCONF594 RC-C, Part I Mll.a.(4) Mll.a.(5) RC-C, Part I Mll.b Secured by multifamily (5 or more) residential properties Secured by nonfarm nomesidential properties Commercial and industrial loans RCONF595 RC-C, Part I RCONF597 RC-C, Part I Mll.c.(l) Credit cards RCONF598 RC-C, Part I Mll.c.(2) Other revolving credit plans RCONF599 RC-C, Part I Mll.c.(3) Automobile loans RCONK195 RC-C, Part I Mll.c.(4) Other consumer loans RCONK209 RC-C, Part I Mll.d Other loans RCONF601 RC-C, Part I Ml2.a RC-C, Part I Ml2.b RC-C, Part I Ml2.c Ml2.d RC-E M6.a RC-E M6.b RC-E M6.c RC-E M7.a.(l) RC-E M7.a.(2) RC-E M7.b.(l) Loans secured by real estate (Columns A through C) Commercial and industrial loans (Columns A through C) Loans to individuals for household, family and other personal expenditures (Columns A through C) All other loans and all leases (Columns A through C) Note: Memorandum items 12.a through 12.d of Schedule RC-C, Part I, will be combined into data items for "Total loans and leases" (Columns A through C). Total deposits in those noninterestbearing transaction account deposit products intended primarily for individuals for personal, household, or family use Total deposits in those interest-bearing transaction account deposit products intended primarily for individuals for personal, household, or family use Total deposits in all other transaction accounts of individuals, partnerships, and corporations Total deposits in those MMDA deposit products intended primarily for individuals for personal, household, or family use Deposits in all other MMD As of individuals, partnerships, and corporations Total deposits in those other savings deposit account deposit products intended primarily for individuals for personal, household, or family use RCONG091, RCONG092, RCONG093 RCONG094, RCONG095, RCONG096 RCONG097, RCONG098, RCONG099 RC-C, Part I VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00163 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4725 RCONF596 RCONGlOO, RCONGlOl, RCONG102 RCONP753 RCONP754 RCONP755 RCONP756 RCONP757 RCONP758 E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM 15AUN1 EN15AU16.006</GPH> sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES Schedule 54203 54204 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices Item Item Name MDRMNumber RC-E M7.b.(2) l.a.(l) RC-L l.a.(2) RC-L 2.a RC-L 3.a RC-L 7.a.(l) Deposits in all other savings deposit accounts of individuals, partnerships, and corporations Unused commitments for Home Equity Conversion Mortgage (HECM) reverse mortgages outstanding that are held for investment (included in item l.a above) Unused commitments for proprietary reverse mortgages outstanding that are held for investment (included in item l.a above) Amount of financial standby letters of credit conveyed to others Amount of performance standby letters of credit conveyed to others Credit default swaps (Columns A and B) RCONP759 RC-L RC-L 7.a.(2) Total return swaps (Columns A and B) RCONC970, RCONC971 RC-L 7.a.(3) Credit options (Columns A and B) RCONC972, RCONC973 RC-L 7.a.(4) 7.b.(l) RC-L 7.b.(2) RC-L 7.c.(l)(a) Other credit derivatives (Columns A and B) Gross positive fair value (Columns A and B) Gross negative fair value (Columns A and B) Sold protection RCONC974, RCONC975 RC-L RCONG401 RC-L 7.c.(l)(b) Purchased protection RCONG402 RC-L 7.c.(2)(a) Sold protection RCONG403 RC-L 7.c.(2)(b) 7.c.(2)( c) RC-L 7.d.(l)(a) Purchased protection that is recognized as a guarantee for regulatory capital purposes Purchased protection that is not recognized as a guarantee for regulatory capital purposes Investment grade (Columns A through C) RCONG404 RC-L RC-L 7.d.(l)(b) RC-L 7.d.(2)(a) RC-L 7.d.(2)(b) RC-L 8 RC-L 9.b RC-L lO.a RC-L 12.a VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 Sub-investment grade (Columns A through C) Investment grade (Columns A through C) Sub-investment grade (Columns A through C) Spot foreign exchange contracts Commitments to purchase when-issued securities Commitments to sell when-issued securities Futures contracts (Columns A through D) Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00164 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4725 RCONJ477 RCONJ478 RCON3820 RCON3822 RCONC968, RCONC969 RCONC219, RCONC221 RCONC220, RCONC222 RCONG405 RCONG406, RCONG408 RCONG409, RCONG411 RCONG412, RCONG414 RCONG415, RCONG417 RCON8765 RCONG407, RCONG410, RCONG413, RCONG416, RCON3434 RCON3435 RCON8693, RCON89694, RCON8695, RCON8696 E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM 15AUN1 EN15AU16.007</GPH> sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES Schedule Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices Item Item Name MDRMNumber RC-L 12.b Forward contracts (Columns A through D) RCON8697, RCON8698, RCON8699, RCON8700 RC-L 12.c.(l) Written options (Columns A through D) RCON8701, RCON8702, RCON8703, RCON8704 RC-L 12.c.(2) Purchased options (Columns A through D) RCON8705, RCON8706, RCON8707, RCON8708 RC-L 12.d.(l) Written options (Columns A through D) RCON8709, RCON8710, RCON8711, RCON8712 RC-L 12.d.(2) Purchased options (Columns A through D) RCON8713, RCON8714, RCON8715, RCON8716 RC-L 12.e Swaps (Columns A through D) RCON3450, RCON3826, RCON8719, RCON8720 RC-L 13 14 RC-L 14.a RC-L 15.a.(l) Total gross notional amount of derivative contracts held for trading (Columns A through D) Total gross notional amount of derivative contracts held for purposes other than trading (Columns A through D) Interest rate swaps where the bank has agreed to pay a fixed rate Gross positive fair value (Columns A through D) RCONA126, RCONA127, RCON8723, RCON8724 RC-L RCON8733, RCON8734, RCON8735, RCON8736 RC-L 15.a.(2) Gross negative fair value (Columns A through D) RCON8737, RCON8738, RCON8739, RCON8740 RC-L 15.b.(l) Gross positive fair value (Columns A through D) RCON8741, RCON8742, RCON8743, RCON8744 RC-L 15.b.(2) Gross negative fair value (Columns A through D) RCON8745, RCON8746, RCON8747, RCON8748 RC-L 16.a Net current credit exposure (Columns A through E) RC-L 16.b.(l) Cash-U.S. dollar (Columns A through E) RC-L 16.b.(2) Cash- Other currencies (Columns A through E) RC-L 16.b.(3) U.S. Treasury securities (Columns A through E) RC-L 16.b.(4) RC-L 16.b.(5) U.S. Govermnent agency and U.S. Govermnent-sponsored agency debt securities (Columns A through E) Corporate bonds (Columns A through E) RCONG418, RCONG420, RCONG422 RCONG423, RCONG425, RCONG427 RCONG428, RCONG430, RCONG432 RCONG433, RCONG435, RCONG437 RCONG438, RCONG440, RCONG442 RCONG443, RCONG445, RCONG447 VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00165 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4725 RCON8725, RCON8726, RCON8727, RCON8728 RCONA589 E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM 15AUN1 RCONG419, RCONG421, RCONG424, RCONG426, RCONG429, RCONG431, RCONG434, RCONG436, RCONG439, RCONG441, RCONG444, RCONG446, EN15AU16.008</GPH> sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES Schedule 54205 54206 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices Schedule Item Item Name MDRMNumber RC-L 16.b.(6) Equity securities (Columns A through E) RC-L 16.b.(7) All other collateral (Columns A through E) RC-L 16.b.(8) RC-M 13.a.(l)(a)(l) Total fair value of collateral (sum of items 16.b.(l) through (7)) (Columns A through E) 1-4 family residential construction loans RCONG448, RCONG450, RCONG452 RCONG453, RCONG455, RCONG457 RCONG458, RCONG460, RCONG462 RCONK169 RC-M 13.a.(l)(a)(2) RC-M 13.a.(l)(b) RC-M 13.a.(l)(c)(l) RC-M Other construction loans and all land development and other land loans Secured by farmland RCONG454, RCONG456, RCONG459, RCONG461, RCONK170 RCONK171 13 .a.(l )( c)(2)(a) Revolving, open-end loans secured by 1-4 family residential properties and extended under lines of credit Secured by first liens RCONK173 RC-M 13 .a.(l )( c)(2)(b) Secured by junior liens RCONK174 RC-M 13.a.(l)(d) 13.a.(l)(e)(l) RC-M 13.a.(l)(e)(2) RC-M 13.a.(3) Secured by multifamily (5 or more) residential properties Loans secured by owner-occupied nonfarm nomesidential properties Loans secured by other nonfarm nonresidential properties Commercial and industrial loans RCONK175 RC-M RC-M 13.a.(4)(a) Credit cards RCONK180 RC-M 13.a.(4)(b) Automobile loans RCONK181 RC-M 13 .a.(4)( c) 13 .a.(5) Other (includes revolving credit plans other than credit cards and other consumer loans) All other loans and all leases RCONK182 RC-M RC-M 13.b.(l) 13.b.(2) Construction, land development, and other land Farmland RCONK187 RC-M RC-M 13 .b.(3) 1-4 family residential properties RCONK189 RC-M 13.b.(4) 13 .b.(5) Multifamily (5 or more) residential properties Nonfarm nomesidential properties RCONK190 RC-M RC-M 13.b.(7) 13.c RC-M 13.d RC-N 6 RC-N lla.(l)(a) Portion of covered other real estate owned included in items 13.b.(l) through (5) above that is protected by FDIC losssharing agreements Debt securities (included in Schedule RC, items 2.a and 2.b) Other assets (exclude FDIC loss-sharing indemnification assets) Loans to foreign governments and official institutions (Columns A through C) 1-4 family residential construction loans RCONK192 RC-M VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00166 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4725 RCONK172 RCONK176 RCONK177 RCONK179 RCONK183 RCONK188 RCONK191 RCONJ461 RCONJ462 RCON5389, RCON5390, RCON5391 RCONK045, RCONK046, E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM 15AUN1 EN15AU16.009</GPH> sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES RCONG449, RCONG451, Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices Item Item Name MDRMNumber (Columns A through C) RCONK047 RCONK048, RCONK049, RCONK050 1l.a.(1)(b) RC-N 1l.a.(2) RC-N 1l.a.(3)(a) RC-N 1l.a.(3)(b)(1) RC-N 1l.a.(3)(b)(2) RC-N 1l.a.(4) RC-N 1l.a.(5)(a) RC-N 1l.a.(5)(b) RC-N 1l.c RC-N lld1 Other construction loans and all land development and other land loans (Columns A through C) Secured by farmland (Columns A through C) Revolving, open-end loans secured by 1-4 family residential properties and extended under lines of credit (Columns A through C) Secured by first liens (Columns A through C) Secured by junior liens (Columns A through C) Secured by multifamily (5 or more) residential properties (Columns A through C) Loans secured by owner-occupied nonfarm nonresidential properties (Columns A through C) Loans secured by other nonfarm nonresidential properties (Columns A through C) Commercial and industrial loans (Columns A through C) Credit cards (Columns A through C) RC-N lld2 Automobile loans (Columns A through C) RC-N lld3 RC-N lle RC-N 1l.f RC-N Ml.e.(l) RC-N Ml.e.(2) RC-N M3.a RC-N sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES RC-N M3.b RC-N M3.c Other (includes revolving credit plans other than credit cards and other consumer loans) (Columns A through C) All other loans and all leases (Columns A through C) Portion of covered loans and leases included in items 1l.a through 1l.e above that is protected by FDIC loss-sharing agreements (Columns A through C) To U.S. addressees (domicile) (Columns A through C) To non-U.S. addressees (domicile) (Columns A through C) Loans secured by real estate to non-U.S. addressees (domicile) (included in Schedule RC-N, item 1, above) (Columns A through C) Loans to and acceptances of foreign banks (included in Schedule RC-N, item 2, above) (Columns A through C) Commercial and industrial loans to nonU.S. addressees (domicile) (included in Schedule RC-N, item 4, above) (Columns A through C) VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00167 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4725 RCONK051, RCONK052, RCONK053 RCONK054, RCONK055, RCONK056 RCONK057, RCONK058, RCONK059 RCONK060, RCONK061, RCONK062 RCONK063, RCONK064, RCONK065 RCONK066, RCONK067, RCONK068 RCONK069, RCONK070, RCONK071 RCONK075, RCONK077 RCONK078, RCONK080 RCONK081, RCONK083 RCONK084, RCONK086 RCONK076, RCONK079, RCONK082, RCONK085, RCONK087, RCONK088, RCONK089 RCONK102, RCONK103, RCONK104 RCONK120, RCONK121, RCONK122 RCONK123, RCONK124, RCONK125 RCON1248, RCON1249, RCON1250 RCON5380, RCON5381, RCON5382 RCON1254, RCON1255, RCON1256 E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM 15AUN1 EN15AU16.010</GPH> Schedule 54207 54208 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices Item Item Name MDRMNumber RC-N M3.d M5.b.(1) RC-N M5.b.(2) RC-N M6 RC-0 M2 RC-0 M6.a Leases to individuals for household, family, and other personal expenditures (included in Schedule RC-N, item 8, above) (Columns A through C) Loans measured at fair value: Fair value (Columns A through C) Loans measured at fair value: Unpaid principal balance (Columns A through C) Derivative contracts: Fair value of amounts carried as assets (Columns A and B) Estimated amount of uninsured deposits, including related interest accrued and unpaid Special mention RCONF166, RCONF167, RCONF168 RC-N RC-0 M6.b Substandard RCONK664 RC-0 M6.c Doubtful RCONK665 RC-0 M6.d Loss RCONK666 RC-0 M7.a M7.b RC-0 M8.a Nontraditional 1-4 family residential mortgage loans Securitizations of nontraditional 1-4 family residential mortgage loans Higher-risk consumer loans RCONN025 RC-0 RC-0 M8.b RC-0 M9.a RC-0 M9.b RC-0 MlO.a RC-0 MlO.b RC-0 Mll RC-0 M12 RC-0 Ml3.a RC-0 Ml3.b RC-0 Ml3.c RC-0 Ml3.d VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 Jkt 238001 Securitizations of higher-risk consumer loans Higher-risk commercial and industrial loans and securities Securitizations of higher-risk commercial and industrial loans and securities Total unfunded commitments Portion of unfunded commitments guaranteed or insured by the U.S. govermnent (including the FDIC) Amount of other real estate owned recoverable from the U.S. govermnent under guarantee or insurance provisions (excluding FDIC loss-sharing agreements) Nonbrokered time deposits of more than $250,000 (included in Schedule RC-E, Memorandum item 2.d) Construction, land development, and other land loans secured by real estate Loans secured by multifamily residential and nonfarm nonresidential properties Closed-end loans secured by first liens on 1-4 family residential properties Closed-end loans secured by junior liens on 1-4 family residential properties and revolving, open-end loans secured by 1-4 family residential properties and extended PO 00000 Frm 00168 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4725 RCONF664, RCONF665, RCONF666 RCONF667, RCONF668, RCONF669 RCON3529, RCON3530 RCON5597 RCONK663 RCONN026 RCONN027 RCONN028 RCONN029 RCONN030 RCONK676 RCONK677 RCONK669 RCONK678 RCONN177 RCONN178 RCONN179 RCONN180 E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM 15AUN1 EN15AU16.011</GPH> sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES Schedule Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices Schedule Item Item Name 54209 MDRMNumber under lines of credit Ml3.e Commercial and industrial loans RCONN181 RC-0 Ml3.f Ml3.g RC-0 Ml3.h RC-0 M14 RC-0 M15 RC-0 M16 RC-0 M17.a RC-0 M17.b RC-0 M17.c RC-0 M17.d RC-0 M18.a Credit card loans to individuals for household, family, and other personal expenditures All other loans to individuals for household, family, and other personal expenditures Non-agency residential mortgage-backed securities Amount of the institution's largest counterparty exposure Total amount of the institution's 20 largest counterparty exposures Portion of loans restructured in troubled debt restructurings that are in compliance with their modified terms and are guaranteed or insured by the U.S. government (including the FDIC) (included in Schedule RC-C, part I, Memorandum item 1) Total deposit liabilities before exclusions (gross) as defined in Section 3(1) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act and FDIC regulations Total allowable exclusions, including interest accrued and unpaid on allowable exclusions Unsecured "Other borrowings" with a remaining maturity of one year or less Estimated amount of uninsured deposits, including related interest accrued and unpaid "Nontraditional 1-4 family residential mortgage loans" as defined for assessment purposes only in FDIC regulations (Columns A through 0) RCONN182 RC-0 RC-0 M18.b VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 Jkt 238001 Closed-end loans secured by first liens on 1-4 family residential properties (Columns A through 0) PO 00000 Frm 00169 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4725 RCONN183 RCONM963 RCONK673 RCONK674 RCONL189 RCONL194 RCONL195 RCONL196 RCONL197 RCONM964, RCONM966, RCONM968, RCONM970, RCONM972, RCONM974, RCONM976, RCONM978 RCONM979, RCONM981, RCONM983, RCONM985, RCONM987, RCONM989, RCONM991, RCONM993 E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM 15AUN1 RCONM965, RCONM967, RCONM969, RCONM971, RCONM973, RCONM975, RCONM977, RCONM980, RCONM982, RCONM984, RCONM986, RCONM988, RCONM990, RCONM992, EN15AU16.012</GPH> sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES RC-0 54210 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices Item Name MDRMNumber M18.c Closed-end loans secured by junior liens on 1-4 family residential properties (Columns A through 0) RC-0 M18.d Revolving, open-end loans secured by 1-4 family residential properties and extended under lines of credit (Columns A through 0) RC-0 M18.e Credit cards (Columns A through 0) RC-0 M18.f Automobile loans (Columns A through 0) RC-0 M18.g Student loans (Columns A through 0) RC-0 M18.h Other consumer loans and revolving credit plans other than credit cards (Columns A through 0) RC-0 M18.i Consumer leases (Columns A through 0) RCONM994, RCONM995, RCONM996, RCONM997, RCONM998, RCONM999, RCONN001, RCONN002, RCONN003, RCONN004, RCONN005, RCONN006, RCONN007, RCONN008, RCONN009 RCONNOlO,RCONNOll, RCONN012, RCONN013, RCONN014, RCONN015, RCONN016, RCONN017, RCONN018, RCONN019, RCONN020, RCONN021, RCONN022, RCONN023, RCONN024 RCONN040, RCONN041, RCONN042, RCONN043, RCONN044, RCONN045, RCONN046, RCONN047, RCONN048, RCONN049, RCONN050, RCONN051, RCONN052, RCONN053, RCONN054 RCONN055, RCONN056, RCONN057, RCONN058, RCONN059, RCONN060, RCONN061, RCONN062, RCONN063, RCONN064, RCONN065, RCONN066, RCONN067, RCONN068, RCONN069 RCONN070, RCONN071, RCONN072, RCONN073, RCONN074, RCONN075, RCONN076, RCONN077, RCONN078, RCONN079, RCONN080, RCONN081, RCONN082, RCONN083, RCONN084 RCONN085, RCONN086, RCONN087, RCONN088, RCONN089, RCONN090, RCONN091, RCONN092, RCONN093, RCONN094, RCONN095, RCONN096, RCONN097, RCONN098, RCONN099 RCONNlOO, RCONN101, RCONN102, RCONN103, RCONN104, RCONN105, RCONN106, RCONN107, RCONN108, RCONN109, RCONN110, RCONN111, VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00170 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4725 E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM 15AUN1 EN15AU16.013</GPH> Item RC-0 sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES Schedule Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices Schedule Item Item Name 54211 MDRMNumber RCONN112, RCONN113, RCONN114 RC-0 M18.j Total (Columns A through N) RCONN115, RCONN117, RCONN119, RCONN121, RCONN123, RCONN125, RCONN127, RCONN116, RCONN118, RCONN120, RCONN122, RCONN124, RCONN126, RCONN128 NOTE: The preceding list of "Data Items Removed" from the proposed FFIEC 051 excludes the following Call Report data items that are scheduled for removal effective September 30, 2016, and March 31, 2017, in accordance with the agencies' July 13, 2016, Federal Register notice (81 FR 45357), subject to OMB approval: Schedule RI, Memorandum items 14.a and 14.b; Schedule RC-C, Part I, Memorandum items l.f.(2), l.f.(5), and l.f.(6); Schedule RC-M, Items 13.a.(5)(a) through (d); Schedule RC-N, Items 1l.e.(1) through (4); and Schedule RC-N, Memorandum items l.f.(2), l.f.(5), and l.f.(6). Change in Frequency of Collection: Semiannual Renortin!! (June and December) Schedule Item Item Name MDRMNumber Structured financial products by underlying collateral or reference assets (Columns A through D) M4 RC-F 6.a through 6.i Adjustable-rate closed-end loans secured by first liens on 1-4 family residential properties (included in Schedule RC-C, Part I, item l.c.(2)(a), column B) All other assets: itemized items greater than $100,000 that exceed 25 percent of this item RC-G 4.a through 4.g VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 All other liabilities: itemized items greater than $100,000 that exceed 25 percent of this item Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00171 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4725 RCONG348, RCONG350, RCONG352, RCONG354, RCONG356, RCONG358, RCONG360, RCONG362, RCONG364, RCONG366, RCONG368, RCONG370, RCONG372, RCONG374, RCON5370 RCONG349, RCONG351, RCONG353, RCONG355, RCONG357, RCONG359, RCONG361, RCONG363, RCONG365, RCONG367, RCONG369, RCONG371, RCONG373, RCONG375 RCON2166, RCON1578, RCONC010, RCONC436, RCONJ448, RCON3549, RCON3550, RCON3551 RCON3066, RCONCOll, RCON2932, RCONC012, RCON3552, RCON3553, RCON3554 E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM 15AUN1 EN15AU16.014</GPH> M6.a through M6.g RC-C, Part I sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES RC-B 54212 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices Schedule Item Item Name MDRMNumber RC-L 9.c through 9.f RCONC978, RCON3555, RCON3556, RCON3557 RC-L lO.b through lO.e RC-N M5.a All other off-balance sheet liabilities (exclude derivatives): itemized items over 25 percent of Schedule RC, item 27.a. "Total bank equity capital" All other off-balance sheet assets (exclude derivatives): itemized items over 25 percent of Schedule RC, item 27.a. "Total bank equity capital" Loans and leases held for sale (Columns A through C) RCONC5592, RCON5593, RCON5594, RCON5595 RCONC240, RCONC241, RCONC226 MDRMNumber RI M.12 M8.b RC-C, Part I M8.c RC-M 6 RC-M 7 RC-M 9 RC-M 11 RC-M 12 RC-M 14.a Noncash income from negative amortization on closed-end loans secured by 1-4 family residential properties (included in Schedule RI, item l.a.(1)(a)) Total maximum remaining amount of negative amortization contractually permitted on closedend loans secured by 1-4 family residential properties. Total amount of negative amortization on closedend loans secured by 1-4 family residential properties included in the amount reported in Memorandum item 8.a above Does the reporting bank sell private label or third-party mutual funds and annuities? Assets under the reporting bank's management in proprietary mutual funds and annuities Do any of the bank's Internet websites have transactional capability, i.e., allow the bank's customers to execute transactions on their accounts through the website? Does the bank act as trustee or custodian for Individual Retirement Accounts, Health Savings Accounts, and other similar accounts? Does the bank provide custody, safekeeping, or other services involving the acceptance of order for the sale or purchase of securities? Total assets of captive insurance subsidiaries RIADF228 RC-C, Part I RC-M 14.b Total assets of captive reinsurance subsidiaries VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00172 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4725 RCONF231 RCONF232 RCONB569 RCONB570 RCON4088 RCONG463 RCONG464 RCONK193 RCONK194 E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM 15AUN1 EN15AU16.015</GPH> sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES Annual Renortin2: (December) Schedule Item Item Name Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices 2.a RI-B, Part I 2.b RC-C, Part II 1 RC-C, Part II 2.a RC-C, Part II 2.b RC-C, Part II 5 RC-C, Part II 6.a RC-C, Part II 6.b RC-E, Part I M6.c RC-M 13.a.(2) RC-M 13.a.(3) RC-M 13.a.(4)(a) RC-M 13.a.(4)(b) RC-M 13.a.(4)(c) RC-N ll.b RC-N ll.c RC-N ll.d.(l) RC-N sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES RI-B, Part I ll.d.(2) RC-N ll.d.(3) VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 Jkt 238001 Item Name MDRMNumber Loans to and acceptances of U.S. banks and other U.S. depository institutions (Column A and Column B) Loans to and acceptances of foreign banks (Column A and Column B) Yes/No indicator whether all or substantially all of the dollar volume of 'loans secured by nonfarm nonresidential properties' and 'commercial and industrial loans to U.S. addressees' have original amounts of $100,000 or less Total number of loans secured by nonfarm nonresidential properties currently outstanding Total number of commercial and industrial loans to U.S. addressees currently outstanding Yes/No indicator whether all or substantially all of the dollar volume of 'Loans secured by farmland' and 'Loans to finance agricultural production and other loans to farmers' have original amounts of $100,000 or less Total number of loans secured by farmland currently outstanding Total number of loans to finance agricultural production and other loans to farmers currently outstanding Total deposits in all other transaction accounts of individuals, partnerships, and corporations Loans to finance agricultural production and other loans to farmers covered by loss-sharing agreements with the FDIC Commercial and industrial loans covered by losssharing agreements with the FDIC Credit card loans covered by loss-sharing agreements with the FDIC Automobile loans covered by loss-sharing agreements with the FDIC All other consumer loans covered by loss-sharing agreements with the FDIC Loans to finance agricultural production and other loans to farmers covered by loss-sharing agreements with the FDIC (Column A through Column C) Commercial and industrial loans covered by losssharing agreements with the FDIC (Column A through Column C) Credit card loans covered by loss-sharing agreements with the FDIC (Column A through Column C) Automobile loans covered by loss-sharing agreements with the FDIC (Column A through Column C) All other consumer loans covered by loss-sharing agreements with the FDIC (Column A through Column C) RIAD4653, RIAD4663 PO 00000 Frm 00173 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4725 E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM RIAD4654, RIAD4664 RCON6999 RCON5562 RCON5563 RCON6860 RCON5576 RCON5577 RCONP755 RCFDK178 RCFDK179 RCFDK180 RCFDK181 RCFDK182 RCFDK072, RCFDK073, RCFDK074 RCFDK075, RCFDK076, RCFDK077 RCFDK078, RCFDK079, RCFDK080 RCFDK081, RCFDK082, RCFDK083 RCFDK084, RCFDK085, RCFDK086 15AUN1 EN15AU16.016</GPH> Data Items Removed Schedule Item 54213 54214 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices Change in Reporting Threshold r,0 b ecompletedb1y b ank s wtt $10b"ll" or more zn tota l assets l "h z wn Schedule Item Item Name MDRMNumber RI M9.a RIADC889 RI M9.b RC-E, Part II 1 RC-E, Part II 2 RC-E, Part II 3 RC-E, Part II 4 RC-E, Part II 5 RC-E, Part II 6 Net gains (losses) on credit derivatives held for trading Net gains (losses) on credit derivatives held for purposes other than trading Deposits of Individuals, partnerships, and corporations (include all certified and official checks) Deposits of U.S. banks and other U.S. depository institutions in foreign offices Deposits of foreign banks in foreign offices Deposits of foreign governments and official institutions in foreign offices Deposits of U.S. Government and states and political subdivisions in the U.S in foreign offices Total deposits in foreign offices RIADC890 RCFNB553 RCFNB554 RCFN2625 RCFN2650 RCFNB555 RCFN2200 NOTE: The preceding list of "Data Items Removed" from the FFIEC 031 excludes the following Call Report data items that are scheduled for removal effective September 30, 2016, and March 31, 2017, in accordance with the agencies' July 13, 2016, Federal Register notice (81 FR 45357), subject to OMB approval: Schedule RI, Memorandum items 14.a and 14.b; Schedule RC-C, Part I, Memorandum items l.f.(2), l.f.(5), l.f.(6), and l.f.(7); Schedule RC-M, Items 13.a.(5)(a) through (e); Schedule RC-N, Items ll.e.(l) through (5); and Schedule RC-N, Memorandum items l.f.(2), l.f.(5), l.f.(6), and l.f.(7). Change in Reporting Threshold r,0 b ecomp1letedb'Y b ank swt"th $10 mz"ll" or more zn average trad" wn zngassets Schedule Item Item Name MDRMNumber RI M8.a Trading revenue from interest rate exposures RIAD8757 RI M8.b Trading revenue from foreign exchange exposures RIAD8758 RI M8.c RIAD8759 RI M8.d RI M8.e Trading revenue from equity security and index exposures Trading revenue from commodity and other exposures Trading revenue from credit exposures I.e RI-B, Part I 2 RI-B, Part I 6 RC-C, Part I VerDate Sep<11>2014 l.a.(4) RI sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES RI 2.a.(l) 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 Jkt 238001 RIADF186 Item Name MDRMNumber Interest on loans to foreign governments and official institutions Interest income from trading assets RIAD4056 Loans to depository institutions and acceptances of other banks ( Colunm A through ColunmB) Loans to foreign governments and official institutions (Colunm A through Colunm B) Loans to U.S. branches and agencies of foreign banks RIAD4481, RIAD4482 PO 00000 Frm 00174 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4725 E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM RIAD4069 RIAD4643, RIAD4627 RCONB532 15AUN1 EN15AU16.017</GPH> Data Items Removed Schedule Item RIAD8760 Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices Schedule Item Item Name MDRMNumber RC-C, Part I 2.a.(2) RCONB533 RC-C, Part I 2.c.(l) Loans to other commercial banks in the U.S. Note: Items 2.a.(l) and 2.a.(2) of Schedule RC-C, Part I, will be combined into one data item for total loans to commercial banks in the U.S. Loans to foreign branches of other U.S. banks RC-C, Part I 2.c.(2) RC-C, Part I 7 RC-E M6.c RC-M 13.a.(3) RC-M 13.a.(4)(a) RC-M 13.a.(4)(b) RC-M 13.a.(4)(c) RC-N 6 RC-N ll.c RC-N ll.d.(l) RC-N ll.d.(2) RC-N ll.d.(3) RC-N M6 54215 Loans to other banks in foreign countries Note: Items 2.c.(l) and 2.c.(2) of Schedule RC-C, Part I, will be combined into one data item for total loans to banks in foreign countries. Loans to foreign governments and official institutions (including foreign central banks) Total deposits in all other transaction accounts of individuals, partnerships, and corporations Commercial and industrial loans covered by loss-sharing agreements with the FDIC Credit card loans covered by loss-sharing agreements with the FDIC Automobile loans covered by loss-sharing agreements with the FDIC All other consumer loans covered by losssharing agreements with the FDIC Loans to foreign governments and official institutions (Column A through Column C) Commercial and industrial loans covered by loss-sharing agreements with the FDIC (Column A through Column C) Credit card loans covered by loss-sharing agreements with the FDIC (Column A through Column C) Automobile loans covered by loss-sharing agreements with the FDIC (Column A through Column C) All other consumer loans covered by losssharing agreements with the FDIC (Column A through Column C) Derivative contracts: fair value of amounts carried as assets (Column A through Column RCONB536 RCONB537 RCON2081 RCONP755 RCONK179 RCONK180 RCONK181 RCONK182 RCON5389, RCON5390, RCON5391 RCONK075, RCONK076, RCONK077 RCONK078, RCONK079, RCONK080 RCONK081, RCONK082, RCONK083 RCONK084, RCONK085, RCONK086 RCON3529, RCON3530 B) VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 Jkt 238001 PO 00000 Frm 00175 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4725 E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM 15AUN1 EN15AU16.018</GPH> sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES NOTE: The preceding list of "Data Items Removed" from the FFIEC 041 excludes the following Call Report data items that are scheduled for removal effective September 30, 2016, and March 31, 2017, in accordance with the agencies' July 13, 2016, Federal Register notice (81 FR 45357), subject to OMB approval: Schedule RI, Memorandum items 14.a and 14.b; Schedule RC-C, Part I, Memorandum items l.f.(2), l.f.(5), and l.f.(6); Schedule RC-M, Items 13.a.(5)(a) through (d); Schedule RC-N, Items ll.e.(l) through (4); and Schedule RC-N, Memorandum items l.f.(2), l.f.(5), and l.f.(6). Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 157 / Monday, August 15, 2016 / Notices Dated: August 5, 2016. Stuart Feldstein, Director, Legislative and Regulatory Activities, Office of the Comptroller of the Currency. Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, August 8, 2016. Robert deV. Frierson, Secretary of the Board. Dated at Washington, DC, this 5th day of August 2016. Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. Ralph E. Frable, Assistant Executive Secretary. [FR Doc. 2016–19268 Filed 8–12–16; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE 4810–33–P; 6210–01–P; 6714–01–C DEPARTMENT OF VETERANS AFFAIRS Veterans Employment Pay for Success Grant Program (‘‘VEPFS program’’) VA Center for Innovation, Vocational Rehabilitation and Employment, Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). ACTION: Notice of funding availability. AGENCY: The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) is establishing a grant program (Veterans Employment Pay for Success (VEPFS)) under the authority of 38 U.S.C. 3119 to award grants to eligible entities to fund projects that are successful in accomplishing employment rehabilitation for Veterans with a Service-connected Disability. VA will award grants on the basis of an sradovich on DSK3GMQ082PROD with NOTICES SUMMARY: VerDate Sep<11>2014 19:23 Aug 12, 2016 Jkt 238001 eligible entity’s proposed use of a Pay for Success (PFS) strategy to achieve goals. This Notice includes the general process for awarding the grant, criteria and parameters for evaluating grant applications, priorities related to the award of a grant, and general requirements and guidance for administering a VEPFS grant program. DATES: Applications for a grant under the VEPFS program must be submitted to Grants.gov by 11:59 p.m. Eastern Time September 14, 2016. Successful applicants will be notified by September 30, 2016. The award made through the VEPFS program will cover a period of 60 months. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Patrick Littlefield, Executive Director, VA Center for Innovation. Patrick.Littlefield@va.gov, (202) 256– 7176. If mailing correspondence, other than application material, please send to: VA Center for Innovation, VA Central Office, Attn: Patrick Littlefield (320), 810 Vermont Avenue NW., Washington, DC 20420. Disclosure: Publication of this Notice does not obligate VA to award any grant or to obligate the entire amount of funding available. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: I. Program Description A. Background This competition of the VEPFS program is a collaborative effort by the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) and the Corporation for National and PO 00000 Frm 00176 Fmt 4703 Sfmt 4703 Community Service (CNCS) to test the Pay for Success (PFS) model as a way to improve suitable Employment Outcomes for Veterans with a Serviceconnected Disability of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD). Improving suitable Employment Outcomes, as noted in Appendix I, means creating positive impact in terms of these outcomes, where the results for individuals that receive the Intervention are better than the results for a valid comparison group that did not receive the Intervention. Throughout this document, the nomenclature of outcomes, consistent with the Pay for Success field’s use of the term, is inextricably linked to impact in this Notice. This competition seeks to create a meaningful difference in Veterans’ lives that would not otherwise exist. This goal is consistent with the mission of VA, which is to fulfill President Lincoln’s promise, ‘‘To care for him who shall have borne the battle, and for his widow, and his orphan’’ by serving and honoring the men and women who are America’s Veterans. VA’s Office of Economic Opportunity within the Veterans Benefits Administration has a further defined mission to ‘‘Help Veterans attain personal and economic success’’ through a variety of benefits, services, and activities including promoting employment opportunities for Veterans. The targeted veterans for this Pay for Success (PFS) pilot will need to have Service-connected Disability of PTSD. E:\FR\FM\15AUN1.SGM 15AUN1 EN15AU16.019</GPH> 54216

Agencies

[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 157 (Monday, August 15, 2016)]
[Notices]
[Pages 54190-54216]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-19268]


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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY

Office of the Comptroller of the Currency

FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM

FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION


Proposed Agency Information Collection Activities; Comment 
Request

AGENCIES:  Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), Treasury; 
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board); and Federal 
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC).

[[Page 54191]]


ACTION: Joint notice and request for comment.

-----------------------------------------------------------------------

SUMMARY: In accordance with the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction 
Act (PRA) of 1995 (44 U.S.C. chapter 35), the OCC, the Board, and the 
FDIC (the ``agencies'') may not conduct or sponsor, and the respondent 
is not required to respond to, an information collection unless it 
displays a currently valid Office of Management and Budget (OMB) 
control number. The Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council 
(FFIEC), of which the agencies are members, has approved the agencies' 
publication for public comment of a proposal for a new Consolidated 
Reports of Condition and Income for Eligible Small Institutions (FFIEC 
051). The proposed FFIEC 051 is a streamlined version of the existing 
Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income for a Bank with Domestic 
Offices Only (FFIEC 041), which has been created by removing certain 
existing schedules and data items that would be replaced by a limited 
number of data items that would be collected in a new supplemental 
schedule, eliminating certain other existing data items, and reducing 
the reporting frequency of certain data items. The FFIEC 051 generally 
would be applicable to institutions with domestic offices only and 
assets of less than $1 billion. The FFIEC 041 would be applicable to 
institutions with domestic offices only that do not file the FFIEC 051. 
When compared to the existing FFIEC 041, the proposed FFIEC 051 shows a 
reduction in the number of pages from 85 to 61. This decrease is the 
result of the removal of approximately 950 or about 40 percent of the 
nearly 2,400 data items in the FFIEC 041.
    In addition, the FFIEC and the agencies are seeking public comment 
on proposed revisions to the FFIEC 041 and the Consolidated Reports of 
Condition and Income for a Bank with Domestic and Foreign Offices 
(FFIEC 031), which are currently approved collections of information. 
The Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income are commonly referred 
to as the Call Report.
    The proposed FFIEC 051 and the revisions to the FFIEC 041 and FFIEC 
031 would take effect as of the March 31, 2017, report date. At the end 
of the comment period for this notice, the comments and recommendations 
received will be analyzed to determine the extent to which the FFIEC 
and the agencies should modify the proposal for the FFIEC 051 and the 
revisions to the FFIEC 041 and FFIEC 031 prior to giving final 
approval. As required by the PRA, the agencies will then publish a 
second Federal Register notice for a 30-day comment period and submit 
the final FFIEC 051, FFIEC 041, and FFIEC 031 to OMB for review and 
approval.

DATES: Comments must be submitted on or before October 14, 2016.

ADDRESSES: Interested parties are invited to submit written comments to 
any or all of the agencies. All comments, which should refer to the OMB 
control number(s), will be shared among the agencies.
    OCC: Because paper mail in the Washington, DC, area and at the OCC 
is subject to delay, commenters are encouraged to submit comments by 
email, if possible, to prainfo@occ.treas.gov. Comments may be sent to: 
Legislative and Regulatory Activities Division, Office of the 
Comptroller of the Currency, Attention: ``1557-0081, FFIEC 031, 041, 
and 051,'' 400 7th Street SW., Suite 3E-218, Mail Stop 9W-11, 
Washington, DC 20219. In addition, comments may be sent by fax to (571) 
465-4326. You may personally inspect and photocopy comments at the OCC, 
400 7th Street SW., Washington, DC 20219. For security reasons, the OCC 
requires that visitors make an appointment to inspect comments. You may 
do so by calling (202) 649-6700 or, for persons who are deaf or hard of 
hearing, TTY, (202) 649-5597. Upon arrival, visitors will be required 
to present valid government-issued photo identification and submit to 
security screening in order to inspect and photocopy comments.
    All comments received, including attachments and other supporting 
materials, are part of the public record and subject to public 
disclosure. Do not include any information in your comment or 
supporting materials that you consider confidential or inappropriate 
for public disclosure.
    Board: You may submit comments, which should refer to ``FFIEC 031, 
FFIEC 041, and FFIEC 051,'' by any of the following methods:
     Agency Web site: https://www.federalreserve.gov. Follow the 
instructions for submitting comments at: https://www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm.
     Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov. 
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
     Email: regs.comments@federalreserve.gov. Include the 
reporting form numbers in the subject line of the message.
     Fax: (202) 452-3819 or (202) 452-3102.
     Mail: Robert DeV. Frierson, Secretary, Board of Governors 
of the Federal Reserve System, 20th Street and Constitution Avenue NW., 
Washington, DC 20551.
    All public comments are available from the Board's Web site at 
www.federalreserve.gov/generalinfo/foia/ProposedRegs.cfm as submitted, 
unless modified for technical reasons. Accordingly, your comments will 
not be edited to remove any identifying or contact information. Public 
comments may also be viewed electronically or in paper in Room MP-500 
of the Board's Martin Building (20th and C Streets NW.) between 9:00 
a.m. and 5:00 p.m. on weekdays.
    FDIC: You may submit comments, which should refer to ``FFIEC 031, 
FFIEC 041, and FFIEC 051,'' by any of the following methods:
     Agency Web site: https://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal/. Follow the instructions for submitting comments on the FDIC's 
Web site.
     Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov. 
Follow the instructions for submitting comments.
     Email: comments@FDIC.gov. Include ``FFIEC 031, FFIEC 041, 
and FFIEC 051'' in the subject line of the message.
     Mail: Manuel E. Cabeza, Counsel, Attn: Comments, Room MB-
3105, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street NW., 
Washington, DC 20429.
     Hand Delivery: Comments may be hand delivered to the guard 
station at the rear of the 550 17th Street Building (located on F 
Street) on business days between 7:00 a.m. and 5:00 p.m.
    Public Inspection: All comments received will be posted without 
change to https://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal/ including any 
personal information provided. Paper copies of public comments may be 
requested from the FDIC Public Information Center by telephone at (877) 
275-3342 or (703) 562-2200.
    Additionally, commenters may send a copy of their comments to the 
OMB desk officer for the agencies by mail to the Office of Information 
and Regulatory Affairs, U.S. Office of Management and Budget, New 
Executive Office Building, Room 10235, 725 17th Street NW., Washington, 
DC 20503; by fax to (202) 395-6974; or by email to 
oira_submission@omb.eop.gov.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: For further information about the 
proposed revisions to the Call Report discussed in this notice, please 
contact any of the agency staff whose names appear below. In addition, 
copies of the Call Report forms and the proposed FFIEC 051 can be 
obtained at the FFIEC's Web site (https://www.ffiec.gov/ffiec_report_forms.htm).

[[Page 54192]]

    OCC: Kevin Korzeniewski, Senior Attorney, (202) 649-5490, or for 
persons who are deaf or hard of hearing, TTY, (202) 649-5597, 
Legislative and Regulatory Activities Division, Office of the 
Comptroller of the Currency, 400 7th Street SW., Washington, DC 20219.
    Board: Nuha Elmaghrabi, Federal Reserve Board Clearance Officer, 
(202) 452-3884, Office of the Chief Data Officer, Board of Governors of 
the Federal Reserve System, 20th and C Streets NW., Washington, DC 
20551. Telecommunications Device for the Deaf (TDD) users may call 
(202) 263-4869.
    FDIC: Manuel E. Cabeza, Counsel, (202) 898-3767, Legal Division, 
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street NW., Washington, 
DC 20429.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The agencies are proposing to create a new 
Call Report for eligible small institutions, the foundation for which 
is a currently approved collection of information for each agency. In 
addition, the agencies are proposing revisions to data items reported 
on the FFIEC 041 and FFIEC 031 Call Reports.
    Report Title: Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income (Call 
Report).
    Form Numbers: FFIEC 051 (proposed for eligible small institutions), 
FFIEC 041 (for banks and savings associations with domestic offices 
only), and FFIEC 031 (for banks and savings associations with domestic 
and foreign offices).
    Frequency of Response: Quarterly.
    Affected Public: Business or other for-profit.

OCC

    OMB Control No.: 1557-0081.
    Estimated Number of Respondents: 1,412 national banks and federal 
savings associations.
    Estimated Average Burden per Response: 58.70 burden hours per 
quarter to file.
    Estimated Total Annual Burden: 331,538 burden hours to file.

Board

    OMB Control No.: 7100-0036.
    Estimated Number of Respondents: 839 state member banks.
    Estimated Average Burden per Response: 59.23 burden hours per 
quarter to file.
    Estimated Total Annual Burden: 198,776 burden hours to file.

FDIC

    OMB Control No.: 3064-0052.
    Estimated Number of Respondents: 3,891 insured state nonmember 
banks
    and state savings associations.
    Estimated Average Burden per Response: 43.89 burden hours per 
quarter to file.
    Estimated Total Annual Burden: 683,104 burden hours to file.
    The estimated burden per response for the quarterly filings of the 
Call Report is an average that varies by agency because of differences 
in the composition of the institutions under each agency's supervision 
(e.g., size distribution of institutions, types of activities in which 
they are engaged, and existence of foreign offices). The agencies' 
burden estimates for the Call Report include the estimated time for 
gathering and maintaining data in the required form and completing 
those Call Report data items for which an institution has a reportable 
(nonzero) amount. However, with respect to the time for reviewing 
instructions, the burden estimates generally include review time 
associated with those schedules and data items for which the 
institution has reportable amounts and do not include review time 
applicable to data items for which the institution determines, upon 
instructional review, that it does not have reportable amounts. As 
provided in the PRA, burden estimates exclude the time for compiling 
and maintaining business records in the normal course of an 
institution's activities.
    Type of Review: Revision and extension of currently approved 
collections.

General Description of Reports

    These information collections are mandatory: 12 U.S.C. 161 (for 
national banks), 12 U.S.C. 324 (for state member banks), 12 U.S.C. 1817 
(for insured state nonmember commercial and savings banks), and 12 
U.S.C. 1464 (for federal and state savings associations). At present, 
except for selected data items and text, these information collections 
are not given confidential treatment.

Abstract

    Institutions submit Call Report data to the agencies each quarter 
for the agencies' use in monitoring the condition, performance, and 
risk profile of individual institutions and the industry as a whole. 
Call Report data serve a regulatory or public policy purpose by 
assisting the agencies in fulfilling their missions of ensuring the 
safety and soundness of financial institutions and the financial system 
and the protection of consumer financial rights, as well as agency-
specific missions affecting national and state-chartered institutions, 
e.g., monetary policy, financial stability, and deposit insurance. Call 
Reports are the source of the most current statistical data available 
for identifying areas of focus for on-site and off-site examinations. 
The agencies use Call Report data in evaluating institutions' corporate 
applications, including, in particular, interstate merger and 
acquisition applications for which, as required by law, the agencies 
must determine whether the resulting institution would control more 
than 10 percent of the total amount of deposits of insured depository 
institutions in the United States. Call Report data also are used to 
calculate institutions' deposit insurance and Financing Corporation 
assessments and national banks' and federal savings associations' 
semiannual assessment fees.

Current Actions

I. Introduction

    As the result of a formal initiative launched by the FFIEC in 
December 2014 to identify potential opportunities to reduce burden 
associated with Call Report requirements for community banks, the 
agencies are proposing a new streamlined Call Report (FFIEC 051) for 
eligible small institutions and revisions to the existing versions of 
the Call Report (FFIEC 041 and FFIEC 031). In embarking on this effort, 
the FFIEC is responding to industry concerns about the cost and burden 
associated with the Call Report. The FFIEC's formal initiative includes 
actions in five areas,\1\ three of which have served as the foundation 
for the proposed FFIEC 051. These three actions, discussed below, 
include community bank outreach, surveys of agency Call Report data 
users, and consideration of a more streamlined Call Report for eligible 
small institutions. In addition, as a framework for the actions it is 
undertaking, the FFIEC developed a set of guiding principles for use in 
evaluating potential additions and deletions of Call Report data items 
and other revisions to the Call Report. In general, data items 
collected in the Call Report must meet three guiding principles: (1) 
The data items serve a long-term regulatory or public policy purpose by 
assisting the FFIEC member entities in fulfilling their missions of 
ensuring the safety and soundness of financial institutions and the 
financial system and the protection of consumer financial rights, as 
well as agency-specific missions affecting national and state-chartered 
institutions; (2) the data items to be collected maximize practical 
utility and minimize, to the extent practicable and appropriate, burden 
on financial institutions; and (3) equivalent

[[Page 54193]]

data items are not readily available through other means.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \1\ See 80 FR 56539 (September 18, 2015) and 81 FR 45357 (July 
13, 2016) for information on other actions taken under this 
initiative.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

II. FFIEC's Community Bank Call Report Burden-Reduction Initiative

A. Community Bank Outreach

    As one of the actions under the FFIEC's community bank Call Report 
burden-reduction initiative, the agencies conducted and participated in 
several outreach efforts to better understand, through industry 
dialogue, the aspects of reporting institutions' Call Report process 
that are significant sources of reporting burden, including where 
manual intervention by an institution's staff is necessary to report 
particular information. As an initial step toward improving this 
understanding, representatives from the FFIEC member entities visited 
nine community institutions during the third quarter of 2015. In the 
first quarter of 2016, two bank trade groups, the Independent Community 
Bankers of America and the American Bankers Association, each organized 
a number of conference call meetings with small groups of community 
bankers in which representatives from the FFIEC member entities 
participated. During the visits to banks and the conference call 
meetings, the community bankers explained how they prepare their Call 
Reports, identified which schedules or data items take a significant 
amount of time and/or manual processes to complete, and described the 
reasons for this. The bankers also offered suggestions for streamlining 
the Call Report.
    The agencies note that during the banker outreach calls, as well as 
in comment letters submitted under a review of agency regulations 
required by the Economic Growth and Regulatory Paperwork Reduction Act 
(EGRPRA),\2\ they received many comments about the burden of reporting 
in accordance with the revised regulatory capital rules in Call Report 
Schedule RC-R--Regulatory Capital. The agencies revised this schedule 
in March 2015 to include the data items that would be necessary for an 
institution to calculate its regulatory capital ratios under the 
revised capital rules. The greater detail of those rules requires a 
degree of categorization, recordkeeping, and reporting that is greater 
than under the prior applicable capital rules. The FFIEC, through its 
Task Force on Reports (task force), is monitoring the banking agencies' 
response to the concerns about the revised regulatory capital rules 
raised during the EGRPRA comment process and the associated reporting 
burden of Schedule RC-R arising from the implementation of those rules 
by community banks.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \2\ EGRPRA requires the federal banking agencies to conduct a 
decennial joint review of their regulations to identify those that 
are outdated, unnecessary, or unduly burdensome.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The agencies also note that during the banker outreach calls and 
visits, they received many comments addressing the substantive burden 
arising from reviewing the Call Report instructions on a quarterly or 
other periodic basis even for those data items applicable to an 
institution for which the institution determines that there is no 
information for it to report. As noted previously, the agencies' burden 
estimates for the Call Report include estimated time for reviewing 
instructions, gathering and maintaining data in the required form, and 
completing those Call Report data items for which an institution has a 
reportable (nonzero) amount. Consistent with past practice, the 
agencies' burden estimates do not reflect burden associated with an 
institution's time for reviewing the instructions for applicable data 
items for which an institution does not have reportable amounts. 
Therefore, the agencies' burden estimates do not reflect the burden 
reduction associated with an institution no longer having to review the 
instructions for those applicable data items without reportable amounts 
that the agencies are proposing to remove from the Call Report. 
Further, as noted previously, the estimated burden per response is an 
average estimate for all filers of the Call Report. This estimate does 
not separately distinguish between the FFIEC 031, FFIEC 041, and the 
proposed FFIEC 051 versions of the Call Report. The agencies will 
consider revising the methodology for estimating burden hours and 
preparing separate burden estimates for the FFIEC 031, FFIEC 041, and 
FFIEC 051 reports.

B. Acceleration of the Statutorily Mandated Review of the Call Report

    As a second action, the agencies accelerated the start of the next 
statutorily mandated review of the existing Call Report data items 
(Full Review),\3\ which otherwise would have commenced in 2017. Users 
of Call Report data items at the FFIEC member entities are 
participating in a series of nine surveys conducted over a 19-month 
period that began in mid-July 2015. As an integral part of these 
surveys, users are asked to fully explain the need for each Call Report 
data item they deem essential, how the data item is used, the frequency 
with which it is needed, and the population of institutions from which 
it is needed. Call Report schedules have been placed into nine groups 
and prioritized for review, generally based on level of burden cited by 
banking industry representatives. Based on the results of the surveys, 
the agencies are identifying data items that are being considered for 
elimination, less frequent collection, or new or upwardly revised 
reporting thresholds. The results of the first three surveys have been 
incorporated into this proposal. Burden-reducing reporting changes from 
the remaining six surveys will be proposed in future Federal Register 
notices with an anticipated March 31, 2018, implementation date.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \3\ This review is mandated by section 604 of the Financial 
Services Regulatory Relief Act of 2006 (12 U.S.C. 1817(a)(11)).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

C. Consideration of a More Streamlined Call Report for Eligible Small 
Institutions

    As a third action, the agencies considered the feasibility and 
merits of creating a less burdensome version of the quarterly Call 
Report for institutions that meet certain criteria. Together with the 
outcomes of the preceding two actions to date, the results of this 
action are the subject of this proposal, i.e., the FFIEC 051 Call 
Report for eligible small institutions, which is summarized in Section 
III, Overview of the Current Proposal, below.

III. Overview of the Current Proposal

    Under the auspices of the FFIEC and its task force, the agencies 
collectively reviewed the feedback from the previously mentioned banker 
outreach efforts completed in 2015 and 2016 as one of the inputs for 
developing a proposal to address industry concerns about the regulatory 
reporting burden imposed on institutions by the Call Report. In 
addressing these concerns, the agencies aimed to balance institutions' 
requests for a less burdensome regulatory reporting process with FFIEC 
member entities' need for sufficient data to monitor the condition and 
performance of, and ensure the safety and soundness of, institutions 
and carry out agency-specific missions. With these two goals in mind, 
the task force developed, and the FFIEC and the agencies agreed to 
propose, a separate, more streamlined, and noticeably shorter Call 
Report to be completed by eligible small institutions as well as 
certain burden-reducing revisions to the current FFIEC 041 and FFIEC 
031 versions of the Call Report. The agencies recognize that 
institutions operate under widely varying business models, which 
affects the nature and extent of their activities and translates into 
differences in the amount of

[[Page 54194]]

information to be reported in their Call Reports.
    For purposes of the FFIEC 051 Call Report, the agencies propose to 
define ``eligible small institutions'' as institutions with total 
assets less than $1 billion and domestic offices only.\4\ These 
institutions currently file the FFIEC 041 Call Report. Eligible small 
institutions would have the option to file the FFIEC 041 Call Report 
rather than the FFIEC 051. In addition, for a small institution 
otherwise eligible to file the FFIEC 051, the institution's primary 
federal regulatory agency, jointly with the state chartering authority, 
if applicable, may require the institution to file the FFIEC 041 
instead based on supervisory needs. In determining whether an 
institution with less than $1 billion in total assets should be 
required to file the FFIEC 041 rather than the FFIEC 051, the 
appropriate agency will consider criteria including, but not limited 
to, whether the eligible institution is significantly engaged in 
complex, specialized, or other high-risk activities.\5\ It is 
anticipated that such determinations would be made in a limited number 
of cases.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \4\ As part of this initiative, the agencies are committed to 
exploring alternatives to the $1 billion asset-size threshold that 
could extend the eligibility to file the FFIEC 051 to additional 
institutions.
    \5\ This proposed reservation of authority is consistent with 
the reservation of authority applicable to a holding company with 
consolidated total assets of less than $1 billion that would 
otherwise file the Board's FR Y-9SP, Parent Company Only Financial 
Statements for Small Holding Companies (OMB Control No. 7100-0128). 
See page GEN-1 of the instructions for the FR Y-9SP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The existing Call Report instructions generally provide that shifts 
in an institution's reporting status are to begin with the March Call 
Report based on the institution's consolidated total assets as reported 
in the Call Report for June of the previous calendar year. Applying 
this principle to the FFIEC 051, an institution with domestic offices 
only would be eligible to file the FFIEC 051 Call Report beginning as 
of its proposed effective date of March 31, 2017, if it reported 
consolidated total assets of less than $1 billion in its Call Report 
for June 30, 2016.
    Thereafter, if the total assets of an institution with domestic 
offices only that files the FFIEC 051 Call Report increase to $1 
billion or more as of a June 30 report date, it would no longer be 
eligible to file the FFIEC 051 Call Report beginning as of the March 31 
report date the following year. The institution would instead begin to 
file the FFIEC 041 report.\6\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \6\ Consistent with the existing Call Report instructions, if an 
institution reaches $1 billion or more in consolidated total assets 
due to a business combination, a transaction between entities under 
common control, or a branch acquisition that is not a business 
combination, then the institution must file the FFIEC 041 Call 
Report beginning with the first quarter-end report date following 
the effective date of the transaction.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In developing the proposed FFIEC 051 for eligible small 
institutions, the data items currently collected in the FFIEC 041, 
including individual schedules, were reviewed to determine how the 
existing reporting requirements could be modified to make the 
information in the Call Report more applicable to and less burdensome 
for smaller, noncomplex institutions without adversely affecting FFIEC 
member entities' data needs. As a result of this interagency review, 
the following changes were made to the FFIEC 041 report form to create 
the proposed FFIEC 051 and are discussed in detail in Sections IV.A 
through IV.D below and in Appendix A:
     The addition of a Supplemental Schedule to collect 
indicator questions and indicator data items on certain complex and 
specialized activities, as discussed in section IV.A below, as a basis 
for removing partial or entire schedules (and other related items) 
which are currently included in the FFIEC 041;
     The elimination of data items identified as no longer 
necessary for collection from institutions with less than $1 billion in 
total assets and domestic offices only during the completed portions of 
the Full Review or during a separate interagency review that focused on 
data items infrequently reported by institutions of this size;
     Changes to the frequency of data collection for certain 
items identified as needed less often than quarterly from institutions 
with less than $1 billion in total assets and domestic offices only; 
and
     Removal of all data items for which a $1 billion asset-
size reporting threshold currently exists.
    In addition, the agencies plan to prepare a separate, shorter set 
of Instructions for Preparation of Consolidated Reports of Condition 
and Income for users of the FFIEC 051, which would be published by the 
beginning of the quarterly reporting period in which the FFIEC 051 
takes effect.
    In designing the proposed FFIEC 051 Call Report, the agencies have 
sought to maintain, to the extent possible, the existing structure of 
the FFIEC 041 Call Report, including the numbering and sequencing of 
data items within Call Report schedules. Institutions and their staff 
members involved in the preparation of the Call Report are familiar 
with how the FFIEC 041 Call Report is currently organized. Feedback 
from banker outreach activities indicated that they did not favor the 
rearranging of existing data items that would be retained in a 
streamlined Call Report for small institutions because the need to 
adapt to these structural changes would itself be burdensome.
    As noted above, the statutorily mandated review of the existing 
Call Report data items is an ongoing process. The agencies have 
included certain proposed revisions to the existing FFIEC 031 and FFIEC 
041 Call Reports based on the task force's evaluation of the results of 
the first three surveys of Call Report users at FFIEC member entities 
are included in this notice (see Section V below). Additional changes 
to the FFIEC 031, the FFIEC 041, and the FFIEC 051 will be proposed in 
future Federal Register notices after the conclusion of the remaining 
user surveys.
    The agencies invite comment on any difficulties that institutions 
would expect to encounter in implementing the systems and process 
changes necessary to accommodate the proposed FFIEC 051 and the 
proposed revisions to the FFIEC 041 and FFIEC 031.
    In addition, the agencies invite comment on the estimated lead time 
necessary for institutions to be properly prepared for reporting on the 
proposed FFIEC 051 Call Report, and the revised FFIEC 041 and FFIEC 031 
Call Reports, and whether the proposed March 31, 2017, implementation 
date for these reporting changes provides sufficient time.
    The specific wording of the captions for the new or revised Call 
Report data items and schedule titles discussed in this proposal and 
the numbering of these data items should be regarded as preliminary.

IV. Discussion of Proposed Call Report Revisions To Create the FFIEC 
051

A. Replacement of Partial or Entire Schedules With a Supplemental 
Schedule

    The FFIEC 041 Call Report schedules requiring the reporting of data 
on activities considered complex or specialized were identified and 
reviewed to determine which schedules (or portions of schedules) could 
be eliminated from the FFIEC 051 and replaced with questions asking 
whether the institution engages in any of these complex or specialized 
activities along

[[Page 54195]]

with corresponding indicator data items that would be completed for 
those activities in which the institution engages. The indicator data 
items would provide aggregate data specific to the identified complex 
or specialized activity, allowing users of the Call Report at FFIEC 
member entities to ascertain the degree to which an institution engages 
in such activity. The following is a list of the identified schedules 
and activities along with the related proposed indicator questions and 
data items that would be included in a new Schedule SU in the FFIEC 051 
Call Report:
     Derivatives data currently collected on Schedule RC-L--
Derivatives and Off-Balance Sheet Items and in certain other schedules 
would be eliminated from the FFIEC 051 (except from Schedule RC-R--
Regulatory Capital) and replaced with the following indicator question 
and data items:
    [cir] Does the institution have any derivative contracts? (If yes, 
complete the following items.)
    [cir] Total gross notional amount of interest rate derivatives held 
for trading
    [cir] Total gross notional amount of all other derivatives held for 
trading
    [cir] Total gross notional amount of interest rate derivatives not 
held for trading
    [cir] Total gross notional amount of all other derivatives not held 
for trading
     Schedule RC-D--Trading Assets and Liabilities would be 
eliminated from the FFIEC 051. Indicator questions and data items are 
not necessary because total trading assets and total trading 
liabilities are reported on Schedule RC--Balance Sheet.
     Schedule RC-P--1-4 Family Residential Mortgage Banking 
Activities would be eliminated from the FFIEC 051 and replaced with the 
following indicator question and data items:
    [cir] For the two calendar quarters preceding the current calendar 
quarter, have either the institution's sales of 1-4 family residential 
mortgage loans during the quarter or its 1-4 family residential 
mortgage loans held for sale or trading as of quarter-end exceeded $10 
million? (If yes, complete the following items.)
    [cir] Principal amount of 1-4 family residential mortgage loans 
sold during the quarter
    [cir] Quarter-end amount of 1-4 family residential mortgage loans 
held for sale or trading
     Schedule RC-Q--Assets and Liabilities Measured at Fair 
Value on a Recurring Basis would be eliminated from the FFIEC 051 and 
replaced with the following indicator question and data items:
    [cir] Does the institution use the fair value option to measure any 
of its assets or liabilities? (If yes, complete the following items.)
    [cir] Aggregate amount of fair value option assets
    [cir] Aggregate amount of fair value option liabilities
    [cir] Year-to-date net gains (losses) recognized in earnings on 
fair value option assets
    [cir] Year-to-date net gains (losses) recognized in earnings on 
fair value option liabilities
     Schedule RC-S--Servicing, Securitization, and Asset Sale 
Activities would be eliminated from the FFIEC 051 and replaced with the 
following indicator questions and data items:
    [cir] Does the institution have any assets it has sold and 
securitized with servicing retained or with recourse or other seller-
provided credit enhancements? (If yes, complete the following item.)
    [cir] Total outstanding principal balance of assets sold and 
securitized by the reporting institution with servicing retained or 
with recourse or other seller-provided credit enhancements
    [cir] Does the institution have any assets it has sold with 
recourse or other seller-provided credit enhancements but has not 
securitized? (If yes, complete the following item.)
    [cir] Total outstanding principal balance of assets sold by the 
reporting institution with recourse or other seller-provided credit 
enhancements, but not securitized by the reporting institution
    [cir] Does the institution service any closed-end 1-4 family 
residential mortgage loans for others or does it service more than $10 
million of other financial assets for others? (If yes, complete the 
following item.)
    [cir] Total outstanding principal balance of closed-end 1-4 family 
residential mortgage loans serviced for others plus the total 
outstanding principal balance of other financial assets serviced for 
others if more than $10 million
    To note, the item related to the credit card fees and finance 
charges will be addressed in the Credit Card Lending Specialized Items 
section, below.
     Schedule RC-V--Variable Interest Entities would be 
eliminated from the FFIEC 051 and replaced with the following indicator 
question and data items:
    [cir] Does the institution have any consolidated variable interest 
entities? (If yes, complete the following items.)
    [cir] Total assets of consolidated variable interest entities
    [cir] Total liabilities of consolidated variable interest entities
     Credit Card Lending Specialized Items included in Schedule 
RI-B--Charge-offs and Recoveries on Loans and Leases and Changes in 
Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses; Schedule RC-C--Loans and Lease 
Financing Receivables; and Schedule RC-S--Servicing, Securitization, 
and Asset Sale Activities would be replaced with the following 
indicator question and data items:
    [cir] Does the institution, together with affiliated institutions, 
have outstanding credit card receivables that exceed $500 million as of 
the report date or is the institution a credit card specialty bank as 
defined for Uniform Bank Performance Report (UBPR) purposes? (If yes, 
complete the following items.)
    [cir] Outstanding credit card fees and finance charges included in 
credit cards to individuals for household, family, and other personal 
expenditures (retail credit cards)
    [cir] Separate valuation allowance for uncollectible retail credit 
card fees and finance charges
    [cir] Amount of allowance for loan and lease losses attributable to 
retail credit card fees and finance charges
    [cir] Uncollectible retail credit card fees and finance charges 
reversed against year-to-date income
    [cir] Outstanding credit card fees and finance charges included in 
retail credit card receivables sold and securitized with servicing 
retained or with recourse or other seller-provided credit enhancements
     FDIC Loss-Sharing Agreement data items included in 
Schedule RC-M--Memoranda, and Schedule RC-N--Past Due and Nonaccrual 
Loans, Leases, and Other Assets would be eliminated from the FFIEC 051 
and replaced with the following indicator question and data items:
    [cir] Does the institution have assets covered by FDIC loss-sharing 
agreements? (If yes, complete the following items.)
    [cir] Loans and leases covered by FDIC loss-sharing agreements
    [cir] Past due and nonaccrual loans and leases covered by FDIC 
loss-sharing agreements, with separate reporting of loans and leases 
past due 30-89 days and still accruing, loans and leases past due 90 
days or more and still accruing, and nonaccrual loans and leases
    [cir] Portion of past due and nonaccrual covered loans and leases 
protected by FDIC loss-sharing agreements, with separate reporting of 
loans and leases past due 30-89 days and still accruing, loans and 
leases past due 90 days or more and still accruing, and nonaccrual 
loans and leases
    [cir] Other real estate owned covered by FDIC loss-sharing 
agreements

[[Page 54196]]

    [cir] Portion of covered other real estate owned that is protected 
by FDIC loss-sharing agreements

B. Elimination of Data Items Identified During the Statutorily Mandated 
Full Review of the Call Report and the Review of Infrequently Reported 
Items

    As discussed above, several of the existing Call Report schedules 
have been reviewed as part of the Full Review of the Call Report. The 
resulting burden-reducing changes relevant to institutions with less 
than $1 billion in total assets and domestic offices only have been 
incorporated into the proposed FFIEC 051. The schedules reviewed to 
date include:

 Schedule RI--Income Statement
 Schedule RC--Balance Sheet
 Schedule RC-C--Loans and Lease Financing Receivables
 Schedule RI-B--Charge-offs and Recoveries on Loans and Leases 
and Changes in Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses
 Schedule RC-N--Past Due and Nonaccrual Loans, Leases, and 
Other Assets
 Schedule RC-E--Deposit Liabilities
 Schedule RC-O--Other Data for Deposit Insurance and FICO 
Assessments

    This proposal also includes revisions to some of these schedules in 
the FFIEC 041 and FFIEC 031 Call Reports as a result of the Full Review 
(see Section V). Going forward, the data items in all other Call Report 
schedules will continue to be evaluated as part of the Full Review.
    As another component of this initiative, data items infrequently 
reported in the FFIEC 041 Call Report by banks with total assets less 
than $1 billion and domestic offices only were reviewed by the FFIEC 
member entities to determine which of these items remain necessary for 
monitoring the safety and soundness of, and meeting agency mission-
specific needs with respect to, such smaller, less complex 
institutions. Of these data items, those deemed no longer essential 
were excluded from the FFIEC 051.
    In the proposed FFIEC 051 Call Report, the following schedules 
would have data items removed as a result of the completed portions of 
the statutorily mandated Full Review or the review of infrequently 
reported items (see Appendix A for complete listing of all data items 
removed on the March 31, 2016, FFIEC 041 Call Report):

 Schedule RI--Income Statement
 Schedule RI-B--Charge-offs and Recoveries on Loans and Leases 
and Changes in Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses
 Schedule RC-C--Loans and Lease Financing Receivables
 Schedule RC-E--Deposit Liabilities
 Schedule RC-L--Derivatives and Off-Balance Sheet Items
 Schedule RC-N--Past Due and Nonaccrual Loans, Leases, and 
Other Assets

    The agencies note that during the previously mentioned banker 
outreach efforts, some community banks specifically cited Schedule RC-
C, Part I--Loans and Leases, as a particularly burdensome schedule to 
complete. Many of these banks also indicated that completing this 
schedule requires a significant degree of manual intervention.
    As discussed above, Call Report data serve a regulatory or public 
policy purpose by assisting the FFIEC member entities in fulfilling 
their missions of ensuring the safety and soundness of financial 
institutions and the financial system and the protection of consumer 
financial rights, as well as agency-specific missions. These agency 
needs are particularly evident for data collected on Schedule RC-C, 
Part I.
    Loan and lease data are critical inputs to assessing the safety and 
soundness of financial institutions through analysis of the 
institutions' management of credit risk, interest rate risk, and 
liquidity risk, including the analysis of lending concentrations and 
earnings. Further, standardization of loan categories across the 
schedules within the Call Report is essential for peer group analysis 
and industry analysis. Loan and lease information is also an important 
component of agency statistical models that assess the risk profile of 
an institution, including its risk of failure.
    Finally, loan and lease information assists the agencies in 
fulfilling their specific missions. The Federal Reserve, as part of its 
monetary policy mission, relies on institution-specific Call Report 
data to provide information on credit availability and lending 
conditions not available elsewhere. Loan and lease detail at all sizes 
of institutions are necessary for policymaking purposes addressing the 
overall health of the economy.
    In general, monetary policy initiatives function most effectively 
when implemented early during a period of credit constraint, with the 
responses tailored to the types of institutions affected, using 
standardized loan information only available from Call Reports. 
Reducing loan detail or data frequency for smaller institutions could 
potentially derail these efforts by delaying the identification of the 
start of an economic downturn as well as determinations of the 
effectiveness of any monetary policy changes. Furthermore, Schedule RC-
C, Part I, data are used to benchmark weekly loan data collected from a 
sample of both small and large institutions that are the source for 
estimating weekly loan aggregates that serve as a more timely and 
critical input for monetary policymaking purposes.
    The FDIC's deposit insurance assessment system for ``established 
small banks'' relies on information reported by individual institutions 
for the Schedule RC-C, Part I, standardized loan categories in the 
determination of the loan mix index in the financial ratios method, as 
recently amended, which is used to determine assessment rates for such 
institutions.\7\
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    \7\ See 81 FR 323186-32188 and 32208 (May 20, 2016).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Notwithstanding the above discussion of the agencies overall needs 
for information collected on Schedule RC-C, Part I, the agencies have 
identified 23 data items as having lesser utility for these purposes. 
The specific data items proposed to be removed from the FFIEC 041 
report in creating the FFIEC 051 report are listed in Appendix A.

C. Changes to the Frequency of Data Collection

    The FFIEC member entities have reviewed existing data items in the 
FFIEC 041 Call Report that would be retained in the FFIEC 051 to 
determine whether some of these data items could be collected less 
frequently than quarterly from eligible small institutions without 
adversely affecting the agencies' data needs. Data items would be 
collected in the FFIEC 051 on a less than quarterly basis if they are 
deemed not necessary for quarterly collection for a supervisory, 
surveillance, monitoring, or agency mission-specific purpose relevant 
to institutions with total assets of less than $1 billion and domestic 
offices only.
    The following Call Report schedules in the proposed FFIEC 051 would 
have data items that have had a change in the frequency of data 
collection from quarterly to semiannually or annually (see Appendix A 
for a list of the affected data items):

 Schedule RI--Income Statement
 Schedule RC-B--Securities
 Schedule RC-A--Cash and Balances Due from Depository 
Institutions
 Schedule RC-C--Loans and Lease Financing Receivables
 Schedule RC-F--Other Assets
 Schedule RC-G--Other Liabilities
 Schedule RC-L--Derivatives and Off-Balance Sheet Items

[[Page 54197]]

 Schedule RC-M--Memoranda
 Schedule RC-N--Past Due and Nonaccrual Loans, Leases, and 
Other Assets

    The agencies note that during the previously mentioned banker 
outreach efforts, some community banks specifically cited Schedule RC-
C, Part II--Loans to Small Businesses and Small Farms, as a 
particularly burdensome schedule to complete. Many of these banks also 
indicated that their reported values on this schedule did not vary 
significantly from quarter to quarter, and inquired whether the 
reporting frequency could be reduced to annual or semiannual.
    In 2010, the FFIEC changed the reporting frequency for Schedule RC-
C, Part II, from annually to quarterly. Call Report small business and 
small farm lending data are an invaluable resource for understanding 
credit conditions facing small businesses. More frequent collection of 
these data improves the Board's ability to monitor credit conditions 
facing small businesses and small farms and significantly contributes 
to its ability to develop policies intended to address any problems 
that arise in credit markets. In 2009, the U.S. Department of the 
Treasury, also identified a particular need for these data as they 
worked to develop policies to ensure that more small businesses and 
small farms would have access to credit.\8\ In addition, the Board 
finds these data very valuable for monetary policymaking purposes.
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    \8\ See 74 FR 41973 (August 19, 2009).
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    The institution-level Call Report data provide information that 
cannot be obtained from other indicators of small business and small 
farm credit conditions. The agencies' other indicators of small 
business credit conditions--including the Board's Senior Loan Officer 
Opinion Survey \9\ and its Flow of Funds--do not provide the same level 
of detail that is available from Call Reports, and therefore cannot be 
used to answer many questions that naturally arise during the policy 
development process. For example, during a period of credit 
contraction, these other data sources cannot be used to identify which 
types of institutions are reducing the volume of their loans to small 
businesses and small farms. This is a significant constraint for the 
Board, as having detailed information about the characteristics of 
affected institutions is crucial to designing well-targeted and 
effective policy responses. Moreover, there is evidence that small 
business lending by small institutions does not correlate with lending 
by larger institutions.
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    \9\ See FR 2018; OMB No. 7100-0058.
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    Monetary policymaking benefits importantly from more timely 
information on small business credit conditions and flows. To determine 
how best to adjust the federal funds rates over time, the Board must 
continuously assess the prospects for real activity and inflation in 
coming quarters. Credit conditions have an important bearing on the 
evolution of those prospects over time, and so the Board pays close 
attention to data from Call Reports and other sources. In trying to 
understand the implications of aggregate credit data for the 
macroeconomic outlook, it is helpful to be able to distinguish between 
conditions facing small firms and those affecting other businesses, for 
several reasons. First, small businesses comprise a substantial portion 
of the nonfinancial business sector, and so their hiring and investment 
decisions have an important influence on overall real activity.\10\ 
Second, because small businesses tend to depend more heavily on 
depository institutions for external financing, they likely experience 
material swings in their ability to obtain credit relative to larger 
firms. Third, the relative opacity of small businesses and their 
consequent need to provide collateral for loans is thought to create a 
``credit'' channel for monetary policy to influence real activity. 
Specifically, changes in monetary policy may alter the value of assets 
used as collateral for loans, thereby affecting the ability of small 
businesses to obtain credit, abstracting from the effects of any 
changes in loan rates. Finally, the credit conditions facing small 
businesses and small farms differ substantially from those facing large 
businesses, making it necessary to collect indicators that are specific 
to these borrowers. Large businesses may access credit from a number of 
different channels, including the corporate bond market and the 
commercial paper market. In contrast, small businesses and small farms 
rely more heavily on credit provided through the depository institution 
lending channel. The dependence of small businesses and small farms on 
bank lending--particularly from smaller institutions--magnifies the 
importance of Call Report data, which provide the most comprehensive 
data on depository institution lending to small businesses and small 
farms, and emphasizes the importance of collecting quarterly data from 
institutions of all sizes.
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    \10\ Based on statistics tabulated early in the decade, roughly 
one quarter of all nonfinancial business assets were outside the 
corporate sector, and such firms tend to be partnerships and 
proprietorships, which tend to be small businesses.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In response to feedback received from banker outreach efforts 
conducted by the FFIEC member entities, where a sample of community 
banks indicated that data reported on Call Report Schedule RC-C, Part 
II, does not vary significantly from quarter to quarter, the Board 
examined the quarter-to-quarter variation in the Call Report data on 
small loans to businesses and small loans to farms since 2010. Although 
some individual banks may see little variation over time in these Call 
Report items, the aggregate data for community banks do vary enough 
from quarter to quarter to make a difference in the Board's sense of 
what is happening with regard to aggregate credit availability to small 
businesses, which is a very important sector of the economy. During a 
downturn, this variability is likely to increase. However, the Board 
recognizes that the very smallest institutions--those with less than 
$50 million in total assets--did not contribute significantly to the 
quarterly variation. Therefore, the agencies propose to change the 
frequency of reporting Schedule RC-C, Part II, in the FFIEC 051 from 
quarterly to semiannually for banks with less than $50 million in total 
assets.
    Some proponents of reduced reporting frequency for Schedule RC-C, 
Part II, have suggested that the agencies could tie the frequency of 
reporting to the business cycle, with lower frequency (annually or 
semiannually) during normal or expansionary times, and quarterly 
frequency during a downturn. The agencies do not consider this approach 
to be feasible because they generally cannot anticipate a downturn 
before it starts, and once it has been determined that a downturn is 
under way, there would be an inevitable lag in implementing the 
quarterly reporting requirement. Furthermore, declines in small 
business and small farm lending may precede a downturn in economic 
activity and serve as a leading indicator of such a downturn, providing 
useful information to the agencies for policymaking purposes.

D. Removal of Data Items for Which a Reporting Threshold Currently 
Exists

    The proposed FFIEC 051 would not include those FFIEC 041 Call 
Report data items for which a reporting threshold currently exists that 
creates an exemption from reporting for banks with total assets less 
than $1 billion. The following schedules were affected by the removal 
of these data items (as shown on the marked March 31, 2016,

[[Page 54198]]

FFIEC 041 form posted on the FFIEC's Web site): \11\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \11\ https://www.ffiec.gov/ffiec_report_forms.htm.

 Schedule RI--Income Statement
 Schedule RI-C--Disaggregated Data on the Allowance for Loan 
and Lease Losses
 Schedule RC-B--Securities
 Schedule RC-E--Deposit Liabilities
 Schedule RC-L--Derivatives and Off-Balance Sheet Items
 Schedule RC-O--Other Data for Deposit Insurance and FICO 
Assessments

E. Preparation of Separate Instructions for the FFIEC 051

    As noted in Section III, the FFIEC and the agencies will be 
creating a separate set of Instructions for Preparation of Consolidated 
Reports of Condition and Income (FFIEC 051). A combined set of 
instructions for the FFIEC 031 and the FFIEC 041 Call Reports will 
still be maintained. Instructions for identical data items in the FFIEC 
051 and the FFIEC 041 generally would reflect the same text in both 
sets of instructions. Instructions for those FFIEC 041 data items that 
are not included in the FFIEC 051 would be excluded from the 
instructions for the FFIEC 051. Glossary entries in the instructions 
for the FFIEC 041 that are not relevant to the FFIEC 051 also would be 
excluded from the FFIEC 051 instructions. Instructions would be added 
to the FFIEC 051 instructions for the indicator questions and data 
items in the proposed Supplemental Schedule.

F. Shifts in Reporting Status

    The Call Report instructions presently provide that once an 
institution reaches or exceeds a specified total asset or other 
reporting threshold that requires the reporting of additional 
information in the Call Report, the institution must continue to report 
the additional information in subsequent years without regard to 
whether it later falls below reporting threshold. To reduce reporting 
burden, the agencies are proposing to revise these instructions on 
reporting thresholds. Accordingly, if an institution's consolidated 
total assets or activity level subsequently fall to less than the 
applicable asset or activity threshold for four consecutive quarters, 
the institution may cease reporting the data items to which the 
threshold applies for all reporting thresholds in the FFIEC 031 and 
FFIEC 041 (and proposed FFIEC 051) Call Reports unless the institution 
exceeds the threshold as of a subsequent June 30 report date.

V. Proposed Changes to the FFIEC 031 and FFIEC 041

    In addition to the creation of the FFIEC 051, this proposal also 
includes proposed revisions to some of the schedules in the FFIEC 041 
and FFIEC 031 Call Reports as a result of the first three agency user 
surveys conducted under the Full Review. Going forward, the data items 
in all other Call Report schedules will continue to be evaluated as 
part of the Full Review.
    The following schedules in the FFIEC 041 and FFIEC 031 versions of 
the Call Report would have data items removed or subject to new or 
higher reporting thresholds as a result of the statutorily mandated 
Full Review (see Appendices B and C for a complete listing of the 
affected data items on the March 31, 2016, FFIEC 041 and FFIEC 031 Call 
Reports):

 Schedule RI--Income Statement
 Schedule RI-B--Charge-offs and Recoveries on Loans and Leases 
and Changes in Allowance for Loan and Lease Losses
 Schedule RC-C--Loans and Lease Financing Receivables
 Schedule RC-E--Deposit Liabilities
 Schedule RC-M--Memoranda
 Schedule RC-N--Past Due and Nonaccrual Loans, Leases, and 
Other Assets

    In addition, the proposed change governing shifts in reporting 
status outlined in Section IV.F would also be applicable to 
institutions that file the FFIEC 031 and FFIEC 041 Call Reports.

VI. Request for Comment

    Public comment is requested on all aspects of this joint notice. 
Comment is specifically invited on:
    (a) What is the appropriate amount of lead time eligible small 
institutions would need to change their systems and processes from 
reporting using the FFIEC 041 to reporting using the proposed FFIEC 051 
and whether the agencies should delay the proposed initial 
implementation date of March 31, 2017;
    (b) Whether or not institutions prefer the agencies' staggered 
approach to streamlining the Call Report for eligible small 
institutions that will introduce proposed changes in multiple steps 
during the course of the community bank Call Report burden-reduction 
initiative rather than waiting to incorporate all the proposed changes 
into a streamlined Call Report at once after the conclusion of the Full 
Review of the Call Report data items in 2017;
    (c) Whether, as proposed, small institutions should have the option 
to complete the FFIEC 041 rather than being required to file the FFIEC 
051 if eligible;
    Comments also are invited on:
    (d) Whether the proposed revisions to the collections of 
information that are the subject of this notice are necessary for the 
proper performance of the agencies' functions, including whether the 
information has practical utility;
    (e) The accuracy of the agencies' estimates of the burden of the 
information collections as they are proposed to be revised, including 
the validity of the methodology and assumptions used;
    (f) Ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the 
information to be collected;
    (g) Ways to minimize the burden of information collections on 
respondents, including through the use of automated collection 
techniques or other forms of information technology; and
    (h) Estimates of capital or start-up costs and costs of operation, 
maintenance, and purchase of services to provide information.
    Comments submitted in response to this joint notice will be shared 
among the agencies. All comments will become a matter of public record.
 BILLING CODE 4810-33-P; 6210-01-P; 6714-01-P

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    Dated: August 5, 2016.
Stuart Feldstein,
Director, Legislative and Regulatory Activities, Office of the 
Comptroller of the Currency.
    Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System, August 8, 
2016.
Robert deV. Frierson,
Secretary of the Board.
    Dated at Washington, DC, this 5th day of August 2016.

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Ralph E. Frable,
Assistant Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2016-19268 Filed 8-12-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4810-33-P; 6210-01-P; 6714-01-C
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