Federal Home Loan Bank New Business Activities, 57499-57505 [2016-19858]
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 163 / Tuesday, August 23, 2016 / Proposed Rules
IV. Plain Writing
The Plain Writing Act of 2010 (Pub.
L. 111–274) requires Federal agencies to
write documents in a clear, concise,
well-organized manner that also follows
other best practices appropriate to the
subject or field and the intended
audience. The NRC has written this
document to be consistent with the
Plain Writing Act as well as the
Presidential Memorandum, ‘‘Plain
Language in Government Writing,’’
published June 10, 1998 (63 FR 31883).
The NRC requests comment on the
proposed rule with respect to clarity
and effectiveness of the language used.
V. Availability of Documents
The documents identified in the
following table are available to
interested persons as indicated.
ADAMS
Accession No.
Document
Letter and License Application .........................................................................................................................................................
Supplement Letter ............................................................................................................................................................................
Package with the Transmittal and Request for Supplemental Information Responses Supporting HI–STORM FW CoC No.
1032, Amendment No. 2.
Supplement to HI–STORM FW CoC No. 1032, Amendment 2 .......................................................................................................
Proposed CoC No. 1032, Amendment No. 2 ...................................................................................................................................
Proposed CoC No. 1032, Amendment No. 2 —Appendix A ...........................................................................................................
Proposed CoC No. 1032, Amendment No. 2—Technical Specifications, Appendix B ...................................................................
CoC No. 1032, Amendment No. 2—Preliminary Safety Evaluation Report ....................................................................................
The NRC may post materials related
to this document, including public
comments, on the Federal rulemaking
Web site at https://www.regulations.gov
under Docket ID NRC–2016–0103. The
Federal rulemaking Web site allows you
to receive alerts when changes or
additions occur in a docket folder. To
subscribe: (1) Navigate to the docket
folder (NRC–2016–0103); (2) click the
‘‘Sign up for Email Alerts’’ link; and 3)
enter your email address and select how
frequently you would like to receive
emails (daily, weekly, or monthly).
Administrative practice and
procedure, Criminal penalties,
Hazardous waste, Indians,
Intergovernmental relations, Manpower
training programs, Nuclear energy,
Nuclear materials, Occupational safety
and health, Penalties, Radiation
protection, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Security measures, Spent
fuel, Whistleblowing.
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
For the reasons set out in the
preamble and under the authority of the
Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended;
the Energy Reorganization Act of 1974,
as amended; the Nuclear Waste Policy
Act of 1982, as amended; and 5 U.S.C.
552 and 553; the NRC is adopting the
following amendments to 10 CFR part
72.
PART 72—LICENSING
REQUIREMENTS FOR THE
INDEPENDENT STORAGE OF SPENT
NUCLEAR FUEL, HIGH-LEVEL
RADIOACTIVE WASTE, AND
REACTOR-RELATED GREATER THAN
CLASS C WASTE
1. The authority citation for part 72
continues to read as follows:
■
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ML15233A038
ML16054A625
ML16054A628
ML16054A627
ML16054A624
Authority: Atomic Energy Act of 1954,
secs. 51, 53, 57, 62, 63, 65, 69, 81, 161, 182,
183, 184, 186, 187, 189, 223, 234, 274 (42
U.S.C. 2071, 2073, 2077, 2092, 2093, 2095,
2099, 2111, 2201, 2210e, 2232, 2233, 2234,
2236, 2237, 2238, 2273, 2282, 2021); Energy
Reorganization Act of 1974, secs. 201, 202,
206, 211 (42 U.S.C. 5841, 5842, 5846, 5851);
National Environmental Policy Act of 1969
(42 U.S.C. 4332); Nuclear Waste Policy Act
of 1982, secs. 117(a), 132, 133, 134, 135, 137,
141, 145(g), 148, 218(a) (42 U.S.C. 10137(a),
10152, 10153, 10154, 10155, 10157, 10161,
10165(g), 10168, 10198(a)); 44 U.S.C. 3504
note.
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 9th day
of August, 2016.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
2. In § 72.214, Certificate of
Compliance 1032 is revised to read as
follows:
RIN 2590–AA84
■
List of Subjects in 10 CFR Part 72
ML15092A130
ML15114A423
ML15170A433
§ 72.214 List of approved spent fuel
storage casks.
*
*
*
*
*
Certificate Number: 1032.
Initial Certificate Effective Date: June
13, 2011, superseded by Amendment
Number 0, Revision 1, on April 25,
2016.
Amendment Number 0, Revision 1,
Effective Date: April 25, 2016.
Amendment Number 1 Effective Date:
December 17, 2014, superseded by
Amendment Number 1, Revision 1, on
June 2, 2015.
Amendment Number 1, Revision 1,
Effective Date: June 2, 2015.
Amendment Number 2, Effective
Date: November 7, 2016.
SAR Submitted by: Holtec
International, Inc.
SAR Title: Final Safety Analysis
Report for the Holtec International HI–
STORM FW System.
Docket Number: 72–1032.
Certificate Expiration Date: June 12,
2031.
Model Number: HI–STORM FW
MPC–37, MPC–89.
*
*
*
*
*
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Victor M. McCree,
Executive Director for Operations.
[FR Doc. 2016–20091 Filed 8–22–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 7590–01–P
FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE
AGENCY
12 CFR Part 1272
Federal Home Loan Bank New
Business Activities
Federal Housing Finance
Agency.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking;
request for comment.
AGENCY:
The proposed rule would
modify a part of the Federal Housing
Finance Agency (FHFA) regulations,
which addresses requirements for the
Federal Home Loan Banks’ (Banks) new
business activities (NBAs). The
proposed rule would reduce the scope
of NBAs for which the Banks must seek
approval from FHFA and would
establish new timelines for agency
review and approval of NBA notices.
The proposed rule also would
reorganize a part of our regulations to
clarify the protocol for FHFA review of
NBAs.
DATES: FHFA must receive written
comments on or before October 24,
2016.
SUMMARY:
You may submit your
comments on the proposed rule,
identified by regulatory information
number (RIN) 2590–AA84 by any of the
following methods:
ADDRESSES:
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• Agency Web site: www.fhfa.gov/
open-for-comment-or-input.
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments. If
you submit your comments to the
Federal eRulemaking Portal, please also
send it by email to FHFA at
RegComments@FHFA.gov to ensure
timely receipt by the agency. Please
include ‘‘RIN 2590–AA84’’ in the
subject line of the message.
• Hand Delivery/Courier: The hand
delivery address is: Alfred M. Pollard,
General Counsel, Attention: Comments/
RIN 2590–AA84, Federal Housing
Finance Agency, Constitution Center,
(OGC) Eighth Floor, 400 Seventh Street
SW., Washington, DC 20219. The
package should be delivered to the
Seventh Street entrance Guard Desk,
First Floor, on business days between 9
a.m. and 5 p.m.
• U.S. Mail, United Parcel Service,
Federal Express, or Other Mail Service:
The mailing address for comments is:
Alfred M. Pollard, General Counsel,
Attention: Comments/RIN 2590–AA84,
Federal Housing Finance Agency,
Constitution Center, (OGC) Eighth Floor,
400 Seventh Street SW., Washington,
DC 20219.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Lara
Worley, Principal Financial Analyst,
Lara.Worley@FHFA.gov, 202–649–3324,
Division of Federal Home Loan Bank
Regulation; or Winston Sale, Assistant
General Counsel, Winston.Sale@
FHFA.gov, 202–649–3081 (these are not
toll-free numbers), Office of General
Counsel (OGC), Federal Housing
Finance Agency, Constitution Center,
400 Seventh Street SW., Washington,
DC 20219. The telephone number for
the Telecommunications Device for the
Hearing Impaired is 800–877–8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
I. Comments
FHFA invites comment on all aspects
of the proposed rulemaking, which
FHFA is publishing with a 60-day
comment period. After considering the
comments, FHFA will develop a final
regulation.
Copies of all comments received will
be posted without change on the FHFA
Web site at https://www.fhfa.gov, and
will include any personal information
you provide, such as your name,
address, email address, and telephone
number. Copies of the comments also
will be available for public inspection
and copying on government-business
days between the hours of 10 a.m. and
3 p.m. at the Federal Housing Finance
Agency, Constitution Center, 400 7th
Street SW., Washington, DC 20219. To
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make an appointment to inspect
comments please call the Office of
General Counsel at (202) 649–3804.
II. Background
FHFA is an independent agency of the
federal government established to
regulate and oversee the Federal
National Mortgage Association, the
Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corporation (together, the Enterprises),
the Banks (collectively with the
Enterprises, the regulated entities), and
the Bank System’s Office of Finance.1
FHFA is the primary federal financial
regulator of each regulated entity.
FHFA’s regulatory mission is to ensure,
among other things, that each of the
regulated entities ‘‘operates in a safe and
sound manner’’ and that its ‘‘operations
and activities . . . foster liquid,
efficient, competitive and resilient
national housing finance markets.’’ 2
The eleven Banks are organized under
the Federal Home Loan Bank Act (Bank
Act) as cooperatives,3 meaning that only
members may purchase the capital stock
of a Bank, and only members or certain
eligible housing associates (such as state
housing finance agencies) may obtain
access to secured loans, known as
advances, or other products provided by
a Bank.4 Each Bank is managed by its
own board of directors and serves the
public interest by enhancing the
availability of residential mortgage and
community lending credit through its
member institutions.5
In 2000, the Federal Housing Finance
Board (Finance Board), a predecessor to
FHFA, adopted a rule (Modernization
Rule) implementing certain statutory
amendments made by the Federal Home
Loan Bank System Modernization Act of
1999.6 Because the statutory
amendments had expanded the types of
collateral that the Banks may accept, the
Finance Board established a prior
review process through which the
Finance Board could assess the risks to
the Banks of accepting the new types of
collateral. That process was codified in
the NBA regulation at 12 CFR part 980,
which also required the Banks to obtain
Finance Board approval prior to
undertaking any other NBAs that
presented risks the Banks had not
previously managed.7 In 2010, FHFA redesignated part 980 as part 1272 of its
1 12
U.S.C. 4511.
U.S.C. 4513(a)(1)(B).
3 See 12 U.S.C. 1423 and 1432(a).
4 See 12 U.S.C. 1426(a)(4), 1430(a), and 1430b.
5 See 12 U.S.C. 1427.
6 See 65 FR 44414 (July 18, 2000). The Federal
Home Loan Bank System Modernization Act of
1999 is Title VI of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act,
Pub. L. 106–102, 113 Stat. 1338 (Nov. 12, 1999).
7 See 65 FR 44420 (July 18, 2000).
2 12
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regulations.8 Aside from that redesignation, the NBA regulation has
remained unchanged since 2000.
In April 2013, FHFA published a
Notice of Regulatory Review (Review
Notice) pursuant to its regulatory review
plan published in 2012.9 The Review
Notice requested the public’s comment
on FHFA’s existing regulations for
purposes of improving their
effectiveness and reducing their
burden.10 In response to the Review
Notice, FHFA received a letter co-signed
by all of the Banks (Request Letter) with
comments on certain regulations,
including part 1272.11 The Request
Letter’s comments on part 1272 focused
on two issues: (1) The scope of the NBA
rule; and (2) The length of time afforded
to FHFA under the rule to respond to an
NBA notice.
Specifically, the Request Letter
expressed concern that the broad scope
of the rule requires the Banks to expend
significant time and effort to determine
whether a proposed activity is subject to
the rule’s purview. Further, the Banks
expressed concern that the rule requires
them to analyze the risks associated
with a contemplated NBA to their
member institutions, as well to the
Banks themselves. The Banks noted
that, if applied literally, that provision
requires them to:
evaluate whether risks from certain business
activities are regularly managed by hundreds
of member banks, credit unions and
insurance companies of widely different
sizes and locations, which have many
different business and operational models
and strategies.12
The Request Letter also noted that ‘‘the
addition of a materiality concept would
greatly enhance the FHLBanks’ ability to
assess the regulations’ applicability.’’
With respect to the time frame for
FHFA’s response to NBA notices, the
Banks expressed concern that the
current regulation allows the review
period to be extended indefinitely and
that FHFA should revise the regulation
to require more prompt decisions on
NBA submissions. FHFA is now
proposing to amend part 1272 to
address the Banks’ concerns.
8 See
75 FR 76622 (Dec. 9, 2010).
78 FR 23507 (April 19, 2013). See also
Regulatory Review Plan, 77 FR 10351 (Feb. 22,
2012).
10 78 FR 23508 (April 19, 2013).
11 The Request Letter is available on FHFA’s Web
site, at the following link: https://www.fhfa.gov//
SupervisionRegulation/Rules/Pages/CommentDetail.aspx?CommentId=4012.
12 Id at 2–3.
9 See
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III. Consideration of Differences
Between the Banks and the Enterprises
When promulgating regulations
relating to the Banks, section 1313(f) of
the Federal Housing Enterprises
Financial Safety and Soundness Act of
1992 requires the Director of FHFA
(Director) to consider the differences
between the Banks and the Enterprises
with respect to the Banks’ cooperative
ownership structure; mission of
providing liquidity to members;
affordable housing and community
development mission; capital structure;
and joint and several liability.13 The
changes proposed in this rulemaking
apply exclusively to the Banks and
generally affect the scope and timing of
their NBA notifications. Apart from
those changes, the substance of the
proposed rule is substantially similar to
that of the existing NBA regulation. In
preparing this proposed rule the
Director has considered the differences
between the Banks and the Enterprises
as they relate to the above factors, and
requests comments about any particular
differences that the Director should
consider when developing a final rule.
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
IV. Analysis of the Proposed Rule
The Proposed Rule. The purposes of
the proposed rule are to revise the scope
of activities requiring submission of an
NBA notice, specify the response time
to an NBA notice, and reorganize and
clarify the rule. Additional changes are
clarifying or conforming in nature. The
following paragraphs describe the
proposed revisions.
Definitions. In § 1272.1, FHFA
proposes to revise the definition of
‘‘new business activity’’ and to add new
definitions for two terms. In response to
the Banks’ request to narrow the scope
of activities requiring prior FHFA
approval under part 1272, FHFA is
proposing to exclude from the definition
of ‘‘new business activity’’ the
acceptance of new types of advance
collateral, i.e., types of collateral that are
legally permissible but that a particular
Bank has not previously accepted.
Paragraphs (1) and (2) of the existing
definition of new business activity,
relating to the acceptance of ‘‘other real
estate related collateral’’ (ORERC) and
‘‘community financial institution
collateral’’ (CFI collateral), respectively,
were included in the definition because
prior to 1999 the Banks could only
accept limited amounts of ORERC and
were not authorized to accept CFI
collateral at all. The Finance Board
found that the Banks lacked sufficient
experience with those new collateral
13 See
12 U.S.C. 4513(f).
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types, and specifically included that
collateral within the definition of new
business activities so it could ensure
that the Banks had processes in place to
manage the risks associated with the
new collateral.14 In the 16 years since
the adoption of the Modernization Rule,
most of the Banks have been approved
to accept CFI collateral or some forms of
ORERC and have developed significant
experience in managing the risks
associated with those collateral types.
Those types of collateral are no longer
new, and the remaining universe of new
types of collateral that might potentially
fall into the ORERC category is small.
Thus, FHFA believes that there would
be little risk associated with removing
the references to these types of collateral
from the definition of new business
activity, which will allow the Banks to
begin accepting any new types of
collateral from their members and
housing associates without prior
regulatory review. Under the proposed
rule, FHFA would assess the Banks’
acceptance of new types of collateral
through its examination process.
The current definition of new
business activity also includes any
activity that entails risks not previously
and regularly managed by the Bank or
by the Bank’s members. For the reasons
articulated in the Banks’ Request Letter,
FHFA is proposing to delete from the
definition the reference to the Banks’
members. Nonetheless, FHFA requests
comments from the public about
whether such deletion could negatively
impact the Banks’ safety and soundness
or mission.
In the Request Letter, the Banks also
asked FHFA to add a materiality
concept to the rule. The Banks
contended that doing so would
‘‘enhance [their] ability to assess the
regulation’s applicability’’ to particular
activities. FHFA has considered this
request and proposes to incorporate a
materiality provision into the definition
of ‘‘new business activity.’’ Under the
proposed definition, the Banks would
be required to submit a notice only for
those activities that ‘‘entail material
risks not previously and regularly
managed by the Bank.’’ The scope of
this proposed definition would address
the agency’s principal safety and
soundness concerns with respect to
NBAs, while also allowing the Banks
greater flexibility to initiate those
activities, including modifications to
existing activities, without prior agency
approval. Assessing the materiality of
the risks associated with a new activity
necessarily will entail some subjective
judgments by the Banks. For those
14 See
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instances in which it is unclear whether
the risks associated with a proposed
activity would be material, FHFA
expects that a Bank would discuss the
contemplated activity with FHFA staff
early in the process to determine
whether the risks warrant the
submission of an NBA notice. For those
instances in which a Bank undertakes a
new activity based on its own
determination that the associated risks
are not material, FHFA expects to assess
those decisions as part of the regular
examination process, and will address
any safety and soundness concerns
associated with such activities in the
same manner that it addresses such
concerns arising from other aspects of a
Bank’s operations. FHFA specifically
requests public comment on whether
the proposed inclusion of materiality
language within the definition of new
business activity is the most appropriate
means of incorporating a materiality
assessment into the regulation, whether
materiality should be defined, and
whether limiting the NBA review
process to those activities presenting
new material risks could present any
safety and soundness concerns.
FHFA is also proposing to add two
new definitions to the NBA regulation.
The proposed rule includes a definition
of ‘‘business day’’ because deadlines set
forth in the proposed rule would be
measured by business days rather than
calendar days, as is the case under the
current rule. FHFA proposes the use of
business days because that approach
assures that the review periods for NBA
notices will be the same in all cases,
even if they are filed during periods of
the year that have multiple legal
holidays. Lastly, FHFA is proposing to
define ‘‘NBA Notice Date’’ as the date
on which FHFA receives an NBA notice.
The purpose of this new term is to
establish a unified start date against
which the various deadlines in the
proposed rule are to be measured.
Filing Requirement. The proposed
rule would not make any changes to
§ 1272.2, which prohibits the Banks
from commencing any NBAs except in
accordance with the requirements of the
NBA regulations of part 1272.
New Business Activity Notice
Requirement. The proposed rule
generally restructures part 1272 to
clarify the protocol for notice and
review of NBAs. Sections 1272.3
through 1272.7 have been reorganized
into the Banks’ notice requirements,
FHFA’s review process, requests for
additional information, FHFA’s
examination authority, and delegation
of approval authority, respectively.
Functionally, most of the provisions are
similar to the current regulation, but
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reorganized to better reflect the order in
which they are performed.
In § 1272.3, FHFA proposes retaining
the NBA notice requirement with
several changes that will limit its scope
to describing the items that must be
included as part of the notice. First, the
proposed rule would relocate the
timelines for commencement of an NBA
to § 1272.4, as described in detail below.
Second, FHFA proposes to replace the
current itemized list of required notice
contents with a revised list that includes
more principles-based submission
requirements. FHFA’s intent is to
provide the Banks greater flexibility in
drafting notices that are appropriate to
an NBA’s scope. The proposed notice
requirements are similar to the current
requirements in that a notice must
address FHFA’s core legal and
regulatory concerns. Thus, the proposed
requirements would generally require
that a Bank provide a thorough and
complete description of the proposed
activity. This approach is intended to
afford the Banks additional discretion in
tailoring notice contents to the nature of
the proposed activity and its
corresponding risks. FHFA would retain
the authority to require the submission
of additional information from the
Banks as necessary to evaluate the risks
associated with the new activity. See
proposed §§ 1272.4(b), 1272.5.
The proposed rule would elaborate on
the existing requirement that a Bank
provide an opinion of counsel relating
to the proposed new activity. For NBAs
raising legal questions of first
impression, FHFA proposes requiring
the opinion to provide a thorough
analysis of the legal authority for the
activity that not only cites the general
legal authority, but clearly explains how
the cited authority permits the proposed
activity. This proposed language is
intended to ensure that the Banks
perform a robust analysis of each of the
legal issues relating to the contemplated
new activity at an early stage of the
process and provide FHFA with that
analysis. A simple statement that
counsel has reviewed the proposed
activity and concluded that it is legally
permissible will not satisfy this
requirement.
FHFA proposes removing the
itemized list of informational items
found in § 1272.3(a)(3), and replacing it
with a requirement that the submission
provide a full and complete description
of the proposed activity. FHFA expects
that NBA notices, and especially those
for activities not previously approved
for any Bank, will need to discuss many
of the items listed in the current
regulation. However, FHFA recognizes
that not all of the existing items in the
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regulation would be relevant to all
notices, and that there will be some
activities for which the current listing of
items might be underinclusive. The
more thorough and clear the
submission, the more readily will FHFA
be able to evaluate the request.
The proposed notice requirements
also specifically ask the Bank to inform
FHFA whether the proposed activity
represents a modification of an activity
that FHFA has previously approved for
that Bank, or whether it is an activity
that FHFA has approved for any other
Banks. Although FHFA generally will
recognize when a proposed NBA has
been previously approved for other
Banks, the submitting Bank should
provide this information to help
expedite FHFA’s decision on the notice.
FHFA specifically requests public
comment on whether the proposed
notice description requirements
appropriately balance the FHFA’s
informational needs with the associated
compliance burden imposed on the
Banks.
The proposed rule would require a
Bank to discuss how the proposed
activity would support the Bank’s
housing finance and community
investment mission. The current
regulation requires a notice to describe
the effect of a proposed activity on the
housing or community development
market, but does not affirmatively
require the Banks to demonstrate how
the proposed activity would support the
Banks’ statutory mission. FHFA’s duties
include ensuring that the Banks’
activities foster such mission, see 12
U.S.C. 4513(a). The proposed rule
elsewhere includes a related approval
standard for NBA notices, which
requires that FHFA approve notices
only if the activity is conducted in a safe
and sound manner and is consistent
with the Banks’ housing finance and
community investment mission. This
proposed requirement is also intended
to dovetail with the general description
requirement so that the submitting Bank
produces a comprehensive picture of
the proposed activity covering the range
of its attributes, from technical
production and risk concerns to the
activity’s potential effects on the Bank’s
mission.
Paragraphs 1272.3(a)(4) and (5)—
regarding the Bank’s capacity to manage
new risks and its assessment of the
risks, respectively—have been
combined into proposed § 1272.3(a)(4).
FHFA believes that the proposed
language captures the fundamental
concepts in the current regulation’s
requirements while streamlining the
rule text and reducing the Banks’ overall
compliance burden.
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With respect to the anticipated dollar
volume of an activity, the proposed rule
clarifies that a Bank is to estimate the
volume over the activity’s initial three
years of operation. This is intended to
narrow the scope of the current
regulation, which requires an estimate
of the dollar volume of the activity over
the long- and short-term, and clarifies
that the estimate is to be based on
anticipated production once the activity
begins, especially in cases where the
Bank may not immediately implement
the new activity.
Finally, FHFA proposes eliminating
§ 1272.3(b), which addresses the
submission requirements for NBAs
relating to the acceptance of new types
of advance collateral, because the
acceptance of new types of collateral
would no longer constitute an NBA, as
described in the definitions discussion
above.
Agency Review. FHFA proposes
revising § 1272.4 through § 1272.6 to
collapse their respective concepts into a
more concise, narrative format and to
establish new timelines for agency
review of NBA notices. Proposed
§ 1272.4 establishes FHFA’s review
process for NBA notices. Under the
current regulation, a Bank may
commence an NBA 60 days after
FHFA’s receipt of the associated notice
unless FHFA disapproves the activity,
instructs the Bank not to commence the
activity pending further consideration
by the agency, declares its intent to
examine the Bank, or requests
additional information. See
§ 1272.5(a)(1)–(4). In the Request Letter,
the Banks expressed concern that the
existing regulation allows FHFA to
easily extend its review of NBA notices
by either requesting additional
information or by instructing the Banks
not to commence a new activity shortly
after receipt of the notice. See
§ 1272.4(a). The proposed rule would
address the concerns by providing for
the automatic approval of NBA notices
if FHFA fails to act by certain deadlines,
as described below. The proposed rule
would establish two time periods for
FHFA review: A 30 business-day period,
generally intended for activities already
approved for other Banks, and an 80
business-day period, generally intended
for activities of first impression or that
otherwise require significant agency
examination. Under both proposed
timelines, subject to certain extensions
and caveats, the Bank would be able to
commence the new activity at the end
of each time period if FHFA failed to
approve, deny, or respond to the Bank
regarding the activity.
Proposed § 1272.4(a) sets an initial 30
business-day period for FHFA to
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Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 163 / Tuesday, August 23, 2016 / Proposed Rules
approve or deny an activity, or inform
the Bank that the request raises legal,
policy, or supervisory issues that
require further evaluation. Requests
raising new legal or policy issues or
which pose significant safety and
soundness issues would generally be
processed under the 80 business-day
timeline in proposed § 1272.4(b). If
FHFA fails to take one of those three
actions by the end of 30 business days
from the NBA Notice Date, the proposed
rule provides that the notice would be
deemed to have been approved and the
Bank could commence the activity for
which the notice was submitted. If
FHFA notifies the Bank that the activity
requires further evaluation, then the
proposed rule provides that FHFA must
approve or deny the notice no later than
80 business days from the NBA Notice
Date. If FHFA fails to approve or deny
the notice by that date, then it would be
deemed to be approved, and the Bank
could commence the activity. For all
submissions, FHFA intends to approve
or deny the notice prior to the
applicable deadline, and expects that it
will act on many notices substantially
before the deadline. FHFA believes that
these time periods will afford it
sufficient time to review, consider, and
fully evaluate the merits of both routine
and novel submissions. The proposed
rule includes one exception to the
automatic approval provisions, which
pertains to NBA submissions that raise
significant policy issues that the
Director determines require additional
time. Proposed § 1272.4(d) provides that
the Director may extend the 80
business-day period by an additional 60
business days to facilitate such review.
In such cases, FHFA will inform the
Bank of the extension before the end of
the 80 business-day period and the Bank
may not commence the proposed
activity until FHFA has affirmatively
approved the notice. This proposed
exception to the automatic approval
provisions is intended to preserve the
Director’s oversight authority on notices
deemed by the Director to be of
sufficient consequence to merit an
extended review period and also to
prevent automatic approval of such
notices during periods of transition
between FHFA Directors or if the
Director is otherwise unable to attend to
the matter.
Proposed § 1272.4(c) states that for
purposes of calculating the number of
days that make up the applicable review
period, no days would be counted
between the day FHFA communicates a
request for additional information and
the day the Bank responds to all
questions asked. One purpose of the
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automatic approval provisions is to
provide some certainty as to the date by
which FHFA should act on a notice. In
order for FHFA to act, however, it must
have a complete notice, including
responses to its requests for additional
information. Because FHFA may be
unable to continue processing a notice
while it is awaiting receipt of additional
information from a Bank, those days are
not included within the applicable time
periods. If a Bank’s submitted notice is
clear and thorough, FHFA expects that
there will be less need to request
additional information.
FHFA proposes adding new
§ 1272.4(e), which would establish an
explicit standard under which the
agency will make determinations with
respect to NBAs. The proposed standard
considers whether the activity will be
conducted in a safe and sound manner
and whether the activity is consistent
with the housing finance and
community investment mission of the
Banks and the cooperative nature of the
Bank System. The policy considerations
underlying this proposed standard stem
from FHFA’s statutory oversight duties
and reflect current agency practice. See
12 U.S.C. 4513(a). The current
regulation implies, but does not
explicitly set forth, a standard for
review, and FHFA now proposes a
specific standard in keeping with its
statutory mission and practice. Further,
FHFA proposes to include in the same
section a provision authorizing FHFA to
impose conditions in connection with
the approval of any NBA. This provision
is similar to the current provision at
§ 1272.7(b)(2).
FHFA proposes establishing a revised
protocol for additional information
requests in proposed § 1272.5. As with
the current regulation, FHFA reserves
the right to request additional
information regarding a proposed NBA.
However, FHFA proposes adding
several conditions to such requests.
Specifically, after FHFA makes an
initial request for additional
information, any subsequent requests
for additional information must be
limited to information that is necessary
to fully respond to the initial request,
i.e., for cases in which a Bank’s response
was not fully responsive or otherwise
requires clarification, or because the
Bank’s response raises new legal or
policy issues not evident based on the
notice or the Bank’s previous response.
FHFA intends for these proposed
conditions to facilitate the review
process by limiting the scope and
circumstances in which FHFA can make
subsequent requests for additional
information and to incent the Banks to
provide clear and thorough submissions
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and responses to information requests.
These limitations notwithstanding, the
proposed rule also authorizes the
Director to request any additional
information regarding any NBA for
which the Director has extended the
review period. Ultimately, the Director
is responsible for supervising the Banks
and otherwise ensuring that they act in
a safe and sound manner, and this
provision of the proposed rule is
intended to allow the Director to have
whatever information the Director
deems necessary to carry out those
responsibilities when reviewing an NBA
notice. See 12 U.S.C. 4513(a)(2)(B).
FHFA specifically requests public
comments on whether these proposed
conditions on requests for additional
information appropriately balance
FHFA’s regulatory duties with the
Banks’ compliance burden.
Proposed § 1272.6 reorganizes and
combines §§ 1272.7(a) and
1272.7(b)(2)(v) into one paragraph,
reserving FHFA’s right to examine the
Banks with respect to their
implementation of an NBA.
Delegation of Authority. Proposed
§ 1272.7 includes a delegation of
authority to the Deputy Director for
Federal Home Loan Bank Regulation
(Deputy Director) to approve NBA
submissions, but further provides that
the Director reserves the right to modify,
rescind, or supersede any such
approvals granted under this delegation
of authority. The provision is modeled
on a similar delegation of authority in
12 CFR 1211.3, which authorizes the
Deputy Director to grant ‘‘approvals’’ in
accordance with the procedures
regulations of that part. Although the
term ‘‘approval,’’ as defined in § 1211.1,
arguably is broad enough to encompass
NBA notices, when FHFA first included
that delegation in the procedures
regulations it explained in the
Supplementary Information to the
proposed rule that the provisions
pertaining to ‘‘approvals’’ did not apply
to NBA notices. See 79 FR 15257, 15258
(March 19, 2014) (because NBA notices
‘‘are subject to the procedural
requirements of part 1272 . . .
approvals for an NBA would not be
subject to’’ the ‘‘approvals’’ provisions
of § 1211.3). FHFA anticipates that most
NBA notices will be approved by the
Deputy Director pursuant to the
proposed delegation of authority and
that notices raising novel legal or policy
questions will be referred to the Director
for decision.
V. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act (44
U.S.C. 3501 et seq.) requires that
regulations involving the collection of
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information receive clearance from the
Office of Management and Budget
(OMB). This rule contains no such
collection of information requiring OMB
approval under the Paperwork
Reduction Act. Consequently, no
information has been submitted to OMB
for review.
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The proposed rule applies only to the
Banks, which do not come within the
meaning of small entities as defined in
the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA).
See 5 U.S.C. 601(6). Therefore, in
accordance with section 605(b) of the
RFA, FHFA certifies that this proposed
rule, if adopted as a final rule, is not
likely to have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 1272
Federal home loan banks, Reporting
and recordkeeping requirements.
Authority and Issuance
Accordingly, for reasons stated in the
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION and under
the authority of 12 U.S.C. 1431(a),
1432(a), 4511(b), 4513, 4526(a), FHFA
proposes to amend subchapter D of
chapter XII of title 12 of the Code of
Federal Regulations as follows:
CHAPTER XII—FEDERAL HOUSING
FINANCE AGENCY
Subchapter D—Federal Home Loan Banks
■
1. Revise part 1272 to read as follows:
PART 1272—NEW BUSINESS
ACTIVITIES
Sec.
1272.1 Definitions.
1272.2 Limitation on Bank authority to
undertake new business activities.
1272.3 New business activity notice
requirement.
1272.4 Review process.
1272.5 Additional information.
1272.6 Examinations.
1272.7 Approval of notices.
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1431(a), 1432(a),
4511(b), 4513, 4526(a).
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§ 1272.1
As used in this part:
Business Day means any calendar day
other than a Saturday, Sunday, or legal
public holiday listed in 5 U.S.C. 6103.
NBA Notice Date means the date on
which FHFA receives a new business
activity notice.
New business activity (NBA) means
any business activity undertaken,
transacted, conducted, or engaged in by
a Bank that entails material risks not
previously managed by the Bank. A
Bank’s acceptance of a new type of
17:24 Aug 22, 2016
Jkt 238001
§ 1272.2 Limitation on Bank authority to
undertake new business activities.
No Bank shall undertake any NBA
except in accordance with the
procedures set forth in this part.
§ 1272.3 New business activity notice
requirement.
Prior to undertaking an NBA, a Bank
shall submit a written notice of the
proposed NBA that provides a thorough,
meaningful, complete, and specific
description of the activity such that
FHFA will be able to make an informed
decision regarding the proposed
activity. At a minimum, the notice
should include the following
information:
(a) A written opinion of counsel
identifying the specific statutory,
regulatory, or other legal authorities
under which the NBA is authorized and,
for submissions raising legal questions
of first impression, a reasoned analysis
explaining how the cited authorities can
be construed to authorize the new
activity;
(b) A full description of the proposed
activity, including, when applicable,
infographics and definitions of key
terms. In addition, the Bank shall
indicate whether the proposed activity
represents a modification to a
previously approved activity in which
the Bank is engaged or is an activity that
FHFA has approved for any other
Banks;
(c) A discussion of why the Bank
proposes to engage in the new activity
and how the activity supports the
housing finance and community
investment mission of the Bank;
(d) A discussion of the risks presented
by the new activity and how the Bank
will manage these risks; and
(e) A good faith estimate of the
anticipated dollar volume of the
activity, and the income and expenses
associated with implementing and
operating the new activity, over the
initial three years of operation.
§ 1272.4
Definitions.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
advance collateral does not constitute a
new business activity.
Review process.
(a) Within 30 business days of the
NBA Notice Date, FHFA will take one
of the following actions:
(1) Approve the proposed NBA;
(2) Deny the proposed activity; or
(3) Inform the Bank that the activity
raises policy, legal, or supervisory
issues that require further evaluation. If
FHFA fails to take any of those actions
by the 30th business day following the
NBA Notice Date, the NBA notice shall
be deemed to have been approved and
the Bank may commence the activity for
which the notice was submitted.
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(b) In the case of any notice that
FHFA has determined requires further
evaluation, FHFA will approve or deny
the notice by no later than the 80th
business day following the NBA Notice
Date. If FHFA fails to approve or deny
a NBA notice by that date, and the
Director has not extended the review
period, the NBA notice shall be deemed
to have been approved and the Bank
may commence the activity for which
the notice was submitted.
(c) For purposes of calculating the
review period, no days will be counted
between the date that FHFA has
requested additional information from
the Bank pursuant to § 1272.5 and the
date that the Bank responds to all
questions communicated.
(d) Notwithstanding anything
contained in this part, the Director may
extend the 80 business day review
period by an additional 60 business
days if the Director determines that
additional time is required to consider
the notice. In such a case, FHFA will
inform the Bank of any such extension
before the 80th business day following
the NBA Notice Date, and the Bank may
not commence the NBA until FHFA has
affirmatively approved the notice.
(e) In considering any NBA notice,
FHFA will assess whether the proposed
activity will be conducted in a safe and
sound manner and is consistent with
the housing finance and community
investment mission of the Banks and the
cooperative nature of the Bank System.
FHFA may deny a NBA notice or may
approve the notice, which approval may
be made subject to the Bank’s
compliance with any conditions that
FHFA determines are appropriate to
ensure that the Bank conducts the new
activity in a safe and sound manner and
in compliance with applicable laws or
regulations and the Bank’s mission.
§ 1272.5
Additional information.
FHFA may request additional
information from a Bank necessary to
issue a determination regarding an NBA.
After an initial request for information,
FHFA may make subsequent requests
for information only to the extent that
the information provided by the Bank
does not fully respond to a previous
request, the subsequent request seeks
information needed to clarify the Bank’s
previous response, or the information
provided by the Bank raises new legal,
policy, or supervisory issues not evident
based on the Bank’s NBA notice or
responses to previous requests for
information. Nothing contained in this
paragraph shall limit the Director’s
authority to request additional
information from a Bank regarding an
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NBA for which the Director has
extended the review period.
§ 1272.6
Examinations.
Nothing in this part shall limit in any
manner the right of FHFA to conduct
any examination of any Bank relating to
its implementation of an NBA,
including pre- or post-implementation
safety and soundness examinations, or
review of contracts or other agreements
between the Bank and any other party.
§ 1272.7
Approval of notices.
The Deputy Director for Federal Home
Loan Bank Regulation may approve
requests from a Bank seeking approval
of any NBA notice submitted in
accordance with this part. The Director
reserves the right to modify, rescind, or
supersede any such approval granted by
the Deputy Director, with such action
being effective only on a prospective
basis.
Dated: August 16, 2016.
Melvin L. Watt,
Director, Federal Housing Finance Agency.
[FR Doc. 2016–19858 Filed 8–22–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8070–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE
Bureau of Industry and Security
15 CFR Part 740
[160519443–6443–01]
RIN 0694–AG97
Temporary Exports to Mexico Under
License Exception TMP
Bureau of Industry and
Security, Commerce.
ACTION: Proposed rule.
AGENCY:
This proposed rule would
align the time limit of License Exception
Temporary Imports, Exports, Reexports,
and Transfers (in-country) (TMP), which
authorizes, among other things, certain
temporary exports to Mexico, with the
time limit of Mexico’s Decree for the
Promotion of Manufacturing,
Maquiladora and Export Services
(IMMEX) program. Currently, TMP
allows for the temporary export and
reexport of various items subject to the
Export Administration Regulations
(EAR), as long as the items are returned
no later than one year after export,
reexport, or transfer if not consumed or
destroyed during the period of
authorized use. Other than a four-year
period for certain personal protective
equipment, the one-year limit extends to
all items shipped under license
exception TMP. However, the one-year
srobinson on DSK5SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
SUMMARY:
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17:24 Aug 22, 2016
Jkt 238001
period does not align with the time
constraints of Mexico’s IMMEX
program, which allows imports of items
for manufacturing operations on a time
limit that may exceed 18 months. This
rule proposes to amend TMP to
complement the timeline of the IMMEX
program. Under this proposed
amendment, items temporarily exported
or reexported under license exception
TMP and imported under the provisions
of the IMMEX program would be
authorized to remain in Mexico for up
to four years from the date of export or
reexport.
DATES: Comments must be received by
October 24, 2016.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments
by any of the following methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://
www.regulations.gov. The identification
number for this rulemaking is BIS–
2016–0023.
• By email directly to
publiccomments@bis.doc.gov. Include
RIN 0694–AG97 in the subject line.
• By mail or delivery to Regulatory
Policy Division, Bureau of Industry and
Security, U.S. Department of Commerce,
Room 2099B, 14th Street and
Pennsylvania Avenue NW., Washington,
DC 20230. Refer to RIN 0694–AG97.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Regulatory Policy Division, Office of
Exporter Services, Bureau of Industry
and Security, by telephone (202) 482–
2440 or email: RPD2@bis.doc.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Overview
Mexico’s Decree for the Promotion of
Manufacturing, Maquiladora and Export
Services, known as IMMEX, is a
platform used by U.S. and foreign
manufacturers to lower production costs
by temporarily importing production
materials into Mexico. Created in 2006,
IMMEX is the product of the merger of
two previous Mexican economic
policies: The Maquiladora program,
which was designed to attract foreign
investment by exempting temporary
imports from taxes, and the Temporary
Import Program to Promote Exports
(PITEX), which incentivized Mexican
companies to grow and compete in
foreign markets by providing temporary
import benefits. Under IMMEX,
companies located in Mexico are not
subject to quotas and do not have to pay
taxes on items temporarily imported
and manufactured, transformed, or
repaired before reexport.
Under IMMEX, the length of time that
imports may remain in Mexico is
commodity dependent, with some items
allowed to remain in-country for 18
months or more. These time allotments
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57505
are greater than the time limits for
License Exception Temporary Imports,
Exports, Reexports, and Transfers (incountry) (TMP) allowed under
§ 740.9(a)(14) of the EAR. With few
exceptions, items exported under TMP,
if not consumed or destroyed during the
authorized use abroad, must be returned
to the United States one year after the
date of export. The discrepancy between
the time periods of IMMEX and TMP
reduces the efficacy of both policies,
thereby hindering the shipment of items
subject to the EAR to and from Mexico.
U.S. companies that produce items
subject to the EAR and ship those items
to Mexico under IMMEX have notified
the Bureau of Industry and Security of
this discrepancy and have requested
that BIS amend the EAR to increase
compatibility with IMMEX. Considering
the strength of Mexico’s export control
regimen, as exemplified by its accession
as a member to the Wassenaar
Arrangement, the Australia Group, and
the Nuclear Suppliers Group, BIS
proposes to amend § 740.9(a) to account
for IMMEX’s time limit. For the purpose
of simplicity, BIS does not propose to
match the various time periods
instituted by IMMEX. Instead, this rule
proposes to revise § 740.9(a)(8) to allow
temporary exports and reexports to
remain in Mexico for up to four years,
which accommodates the maximum
available time that temporarily imported
items may remain in Mexico under
IMMEX and is in parallel with the
validity period of BIS’s licenses.
Additionally, this rule proposes to
revise introductory paragraph
§ 740.9(a)(14) to include a reference to
§ 740.9(a)(8) as an exception to the oneyear time limit of TMP.
Export Administration Act
Since August 21, 2001, the Export
Administration Act of 1979, as
amended, has been in lapse. However,
the President, through Executive Order
13222 of August 17, 2001, 3 CFR, 2001
Comp., p. 783 (2002), as amended by
Executive Order 13637 of March 8,
2013, 78 FR 16129 (March 13, 2013),
and as extended by the Notice of August
7, 2015, 80 FR 48233 (August 11, 2015)
has continued the EAR in effect under
the International Emergency Economic
Powers Act (50 U.S.C. 1701 et seq.). BIS
continues to carry out the provisions of
the Export Administration Act, as
appropriate and to the extent permitted
by law, pursuant to Executive Order
13222 as amended by Executive Order
13637.
Rulemaking Requirements
1. Executive Orders 13563 and 12866
direct agencies to assess all costs and
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 163 (Tuesday, August 23, 2016)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 57499-57505]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-19858]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE AGENCY
12 CFR Part 1272
RIN 2590-AA84
Federal Home Loan Bank New Business Activities
AGENCY: Federal Housing Finance Agency.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking; request for comment.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The proposed rule would modify a part of the Federal Housing
Finance Agency (FHFA) regulations, which addresses requirements for the
Federal Home Loan Banks' (Banks) new business activities (NBAs). The
proposed rule would reduce the scope of NBAs for which the Banks must
seek approval from FHFA and would establish new timelines for agency
review and approval of NBA notices. The proposed rule also would
reorganize a part of our regulations to clarify the protocol for FHFA
review of NBAs.
DATES: FHFA must receive written comments on or before October 24,
2016.
ADDRESSES: You may submit your comments on the proposed rule,
identified by regulatory information number (RIN) 2590-AA84 by any of
the following methods:
[[Page 57500]]
Agency Web site: www.fhfa.gov/open-for-comment-or-input.
Federal eRulemaking Portal: https://www.regulations.gov.
Follow the instructions for submitting comments. If you submit your
comments to the Federal eRulemaking Portal, please also send it by
email to FHFA at RegComments@FHFA.gov to ensure timely receipt by the
agency. Please include ``RIN 2590-AA84'' in the subject line of the
message.
Hand Delivery/Courier: The hand delivery address is:
Alfred M. Pollard, General Counsel, Attention: Comments/RIN 2590-AA84,
Federal Housing Finance Agency, Constitution Center, (OGC) Eighth
Floor, 400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20219. The package should
be delivered to the Seventh Street entrance Guard Desk, First Floor, on
business days between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m.
U.S. Mail, United Parcel Service, Federal Express, or
Other Mail Service: The mailing address for comments is: Alfred M.
Pollard, General Counsel, Attention: Comments/RIN 2590-AA84, Federal
Housing Finance Agency, Constitution Center, (OGC) Eighth Floor, 400
Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20219.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Lara Worley, Principal Financial
Analyst, Lara.Worley@FHFA.gov, 202-649-3324, Division of Federal Home
Loan Bank Regulation; or Winston Sale, Assistant General Counsel,
Winston.Sale@FHFA.gov, 202-649-3081 (these are not toll-free numbers),
Office of General Counsel (OGC), Federal Housing Finance Agency,
Constitution Center, 400 Seventh Street SW., Washington, DC 20219. The
telephone number for the Telecommunications Device for the Hearing
Impaired is 800-877-8339.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Comments
FHFA invites comment on all aspects of the proposed rulemaking,
which FHFA is publishing with a 60-day comment period. After
considering the comments, FHFA will develop a final regulation.
Copies of all comments received will be posted without change on
the FHFA Web site at https://www.fhfa.gov, and will include any personal
information you provide, such as your name, address, email address, and
telephone number. Copies of the comments also will be available for
public inspection and copying on government-business days between the
hours of 10 a.m. and 3 p.m. at the Federal Housing Finance Agency,
Constitution Center, 400 7th Street SW., Washington, DC 20219. To make
an appointment to inspect comments please call the Office of General
Counsel at (202) 649-3804.
II. Background
FHFA is an independent agency of the federal government established
to regulate and oversee the Federal National Mortgage Association, the
Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (together, the Enterprises), the
Banks (collectively with the Enterprises, the regulated entities), and
the Bank System's Office of Finance.\1\ FHFA is the primary federal
financial regulator of each regulated entity. FHFA's regulatory mission
is to ensure, among other things, that each of the regulated entities
``operates in a safe and sound manner'' and that its ``operations and
activities . . . foster liquid, efficient, competitive and resilient
national housing finance markets.'' \2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ 12 U.S.C. 4511.
\2\ 12 U.S.C. 4513(a)(1)(B).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The eleven Banks are organized under the Federal Home Loan Bank Act
(Bank Act) as cooperatives,\3\ meaning that only members may purchase
the capital stock of a Bank, and only members or certain eligible
housing associates (such as state housing finance agencies) may obtain
access to secured loans, known as advances, or other products provided
by a Bank.\4\ Each Bank is managed by its own board of directors and
serves the public interest by enhancing the availability of residential
mortgage and community lending credit through its member
institutions.\5\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ See 12 U.S.C. 1423 and 1432(a).
\4\ See 12 U.S.C. 1426(a)(4), 1430(a), and 1430b.
\5\ See 12 U.S.C. 1427.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In 2000, the Federal Housing Finance Board (Finance Board), a
predecessor to FHFA, adopted a rule (Modernization Rule) implementing
certain statutory amendments made by the Federal Home Loan Bank System
Modernization Act of 1999.\6\ Because the statutory amendments had
expanded the types of collateral that the Banks may accept, the Finance
Board established a prior review process through which the Finance
Board could assess the risks to the Banks of accepting the new types of
collateral. That process was codified in the NBA regulation at 12 CFR
part 980, which also required the Banks to obtain Finance Board
approval prior to undertaking any other NBAs that presented risks the
Banks had not previously managed.\7\ In 2010, FHFA re-designated part
980 as part 1272 of its regulations.\8\ Aside from that re-designation,
the NBA regulation has remained unchanged since 2000.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\6\ See 65 FR 44414 (July 18, 2000). The Federal Home Loan Bank
System Modernization Act of 1999 is Title VI of the Gramm-Leach-
Bliley Act, Pub. L. 106-102, 113 Stat. 1338 (Nov. 12, 1999).
\7\ See 65 FR 44420 (July 18, 2000).
\8\ See 75 FR 76622 (Dec. 9, 2010).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In April 2013, FHFA published a Notice of Regulatory Review (Review
Notice) pursuant to its regulatory review plan published in 2012.\9\
The Review Notice requested the public's comment on FHFA's existing
regulations for purposes of improving their effectiveness and reducing
their burden.\10\ In response to the Review Notice, FHFA received a
letter co-signed by all of the Banks (Request Letter) with comments on
certain regulations, including part 1272.\11\ The Request Letter's
comments on part 1272 focused on two issues: (1) The scope of the NBA
rule; and (2) The length of time afforded to FHFA under the rule to
respond to an NBA notice.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\9\ See 78 FR 23507 (April 19, 2013). See also Regulatory Review
Plan, 77 FR 10351 (Feb. 22, 2012).
\10\ 78 FR 23508 (April 19, 2013).
\11\ The Request Letter is available on FHFA's Web site, at the
following link: https://www.fhfa.gov//SupervisionRegulation/Rules/Pages/Comment-Detail.aspx?CommentId=4012.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Specifically, the Request Letter expressed concern that the broad
scope of the rule requires the Banks to expend significant time and
effort to determine whether a proposed activity is subject to the
rule's purview. Further, the Banks expressed concern that the rule
requires them to analyze the risks associated with a contemplated NBA
to their member institutions, as well to the Banks themselves. The
Banks noted that, if applied literally, that provision requires them
to:
evaluate whether risks from certain business activities are
regularly managed by hundreds of member banks, credit unions and
insurance companies of widely different sizes and locations, which
have many different business and operational models and
strategies.\12\
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\12\ Id at 2-3.
The Request Letter also noted that ``the addition of a materiality
concept would greatly enhance the FHLBanks' ability to assess the
regulations' applicability.'' With respect to the time frame for FHFA's
response to NBA notices, the Banks expressed concern that the current
regulation allows the review period to be extended indefinitely and
that FHFA should revise the regulation to require more prompt decisions
on NBA submissions. FHFA is now proposing to amend part 1272 to address
the Banks' concerns.
[[Page 57501]]
III. Consideration of Differences Between the Banks and the Enterprises
When promulgating regulations relating to the Banks, section
1313(f) of the Federal Housing Enterprises Financial Safety and
Soundness Act of 1992 requires the Director of FHFA (Director) to
consider the differences between the Banks and the Enterprises with
respect to the Banks' cooperative ownership structure; mission of
providing liquidity to members; affordable housing and community
development mission; capital structure; and joint and several
liability.\13\ The changes proposed in this rulemaking apply
exclusively to the Banks and generally affect the scope and timing of
their NBA notifications. Apart from those changes, the substance of the
proposed rule is substantially similar to that of the existing NBA
regulation. In preparing this proposed rule the Director has considered
the differences between the Banks and the Enterprises as they relate to
the above factors, and requests comments about any particular
differences that the Director should consider when developing a final
rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\13\ See 12 U.S.C. 4513(f).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
IV. Analysis of the Proposed Rule
The Proposed Rule. The purposes of the proposed rule are to revise
the scope of activities requiring submission of an NBA notice, specify
the response time to an NBA notice, and reorganize and clarify the
rule. Additional changes are clarifying or conforming in nature. The
following paragraphs describe the proposed revisions.
Definitions. In Sec. 1272.1, FHFA proposes to revise the
definition of ``new business activity'' and to add new definitions for
two terms. In response to the Banks' request to narrow the scope of
activities requiring prior FHFA approval under part 1272, FHFA is
proposing to exclude from the definition of ``new business activity''
the acceptance of new types of advance collateral, i.e., types of
collateral that are legally permissible but that a particular Bank has
not previously accepted. Paragraphs (1) and (2) of the existing
definition of new business activity, relating to the acceptance of
``other real estate related collateral'' (ORERC) and ``community
financial institution collateral'' (CFI collateral), respectively, were
included in the definition because prior to 1999 the Banks could only
accept limited amounts of ORERC and were not authorized to accept CFI
collateral at all. The Finance Board found that the Banks lacked
sufficient experience with those new collateral types, and specifically
included that collateral within the definition of new business
activities so it could ensure that the Banks had processes in place to
manage the risks associated with the new collateral.\14\ In the 16
years since the adoption of the Modernization Rule, most of the Banks
have been approved to accept CFI collateral or some forms of ORERC and
have developed significant experience in managing the risks associated
with those collateral types. Those types of collateral are no longer
new, and the remaining universe of new types of collateral that might
potentially fall into the ORERC category is small. Thus, FHFA believes
that there would be little risk associated with removing the references
to these types of collateral from the definition of new business
activity, which will allow the Banks to begin accepting any new types
of collateral from their members and housing associates without prior
regulatory review. Under the proposed rule, FHFA would assess the
Banks' acceptance of new types of collateral through its examination
process.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\14\ See 65 FR 44420 (July 18, 2000).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The current definition of new business activity also includes any
activity that entails risks not previously and regularly managed by the
Bank or by the Bank's members. For the reasons articulated in the
Banks' Request Letter, FHFA is proposing to delete from the definition
the reference to the Banks' members. Nonetheless, FHFA requests
comments from the public about whether such deletion could negatively
impact the Banks' safety and soundness or mission.
In the Request Letter, the Banks also asked FHFA to add a
materiality concept to the rule. The Banks contended that doing so
would ``enhance [their] ability to assess the regulation's
applicability'' to particular activities. FHFA has considered this
request and proposes to incorporate a materiality provision into the
definition of ``new business activity.'' Under the proposed definition,
the Banks would be required to submit a notice only for those
activities that ``entail material risks not previously and regularly
managed by the Bank.'' The scope of this proposed definition would
address the agency's principal safety and soundness concerns with
respect to NBAs, while also allowing the Banks greater flexibility to
initiate those activities, including modifications to existing
activities, without prior agency approval. Assessing the materiality of
the risks associated with a new activity necessarily will entail some
subjective judgments by the Banks. For those instances in which it is
unclear whether the risks associated with a proposed activity would be
material, FHFA expects that a Bank would discuss the contemplated
activity with FHFA staff early in the process to determine whether the
risks warrant the submission of an NBA notice. For those instances in
which a Bank undertakes a new activity based on its own determination
that the associated risks are not material, FHFA expects to assess
those decisions as part of the regular examination process, and will
address any safety and soundness concerns associated with such
activities in the same manner that it addresses such concerns arising
from other aspects of a Bank's operations. FHFA specifically requests
public comment on whether the proposed inclusion of materiality
language within the definition of new business activity is the most
appropriate means of incorporating a materiality assessment into the
regulation, whether materiality should be defined, and whether limiting
the NBA review process to those activities presenting new material
risks could present any safety and soundness concerns.
FHFA is also proposing to add two new definitions to the NBA
regulation. The proposed rule includes a definition of ``business day''
because deadlines set forth in the proposed rule would be measured by
business days rather than calendar days, as is the case under the
current rule. FHFA proposes the use of business days because that
approach assures that the review periods for NBA notices will be the
same in all cases, even if they are filed during periods of the year
that have multiple legal holidays. Lastly, FHFA is proposing to define
``NBA Notice Date'' as the date on which FHFA receives an NBA notice.
The purpose of this new term is to establish a unified start date
against which the various deadlines in the proposed rule are to be
measured.
Filing Requirement. The proposed rule would not make any changes to
Sec. 1272.2, which prohibits the Banks from commencing any NBAs except
in accordance with the requirements of the NBA regulations of part
1272.
New Business Activity Notice Requirement. The proposed rule
generally restructures part 1272 to clarify the protocol for notice and
review of NBAs. Sections 1272.3 through 1272.7 have been reorganized
into the Banks' notice requirements, FHFA's review process, requests
for additional information, FHFA's examination authority, and
delegation of approval authority, respectively. Functionally, most of
the provisions are similar to the current regulation, but
[[Page 57502]]
reorganized to better reflect the order in which they are performed.
In Sec. 1272.3, FHFA proposes retaining the NBA notice requirement
with several changes that will limit its scope to describing the items
that must be included as part of the notice. First, the proposed rule
would relocate the timelines for commencement of an NBA to Sec.
1272.4, as described in detail below. Second, FHFA proposes to replace
the current itemized list of required notice contents with a revised
list that includes more principles-based submission requirements.
FHFA's intent is to provide the Banks greater flexibility in drafting
notices that are appropriate to an NBA's scope. The proposed notice
requirements are similar to the current requirements in that a notice
must address FHFA's core legal and regulatory concerns. Thus, the
proposed requirements would generally require that a Bank provide a
thorough and complete description of the proposed activity. This
approach is intended to afford the Banks additional discretion in
tailoring notice contents to the nature of the proposed activity and
its corresponding risks. FHFA would retain the authority to require the
submission of additional information from the Banks as necessary to
evaluate the risks associated with the new activity. See proposed
Sec. Sec. 1272.4(b), 1272.5.
The proposed rule would elaborate on the existing requirement that
a Bank provide an opinion of counsel relating to the proposed new
activity. For NBAs raising legal questions of first impression, FHFA
proposes requiring the opinion to provide a thorough analysis of the
legal authority for the activity that not only cites the general legal
authority, but clearly explains how the cited authority permits the
proposed activity. This proposed language is intended to ensure that
the Banks perform a robust analysis of each of the legal issues
relating to the contemplated new activity at an early stage of the
process and provide FHFA with that analysis. A simple statement that
counsel has reviewed the proposed activity and concluded that it is
legally permissible will not satisfy this requirement.
FHFA proposes removing the itemized list of informational items
found in Sec. 1272.3(a)(3), and replacing it with a requirement that
the submission provide a full and complete description of the proposed
activity. FHFA expects that NBA notices, and especially those for
activities not previously approved for any Bank, will need to discuss
many of the items listed in the current regulation. However, FHFA
recognizes that not all of the existing items in the regulation would
be relevant to all notices, and that there will be some activities for
which the current listing of items might be underinclusive. The more
thorough and clear the submission, the more readily will FHFA be able
to evaluate the request.
The proposed notice requirements also specifically ask the Bank to
inform FHFA whether the proposed activity represents a modification of
an activity that FHFA has previously approved for that Bank, or whether
it is an activity that FHFA has approved for any other Banks. Although
FHFA generally will recognize when a proposed NBA has been previously
approved for other Banks, the submitting Bank should provide this
information to help expedite FHFA's decision on the notice. FHFA
specifically requests public comment on whether the proposed notice
description requirements appropriately balance the FHFA's informational
needs with the associated compliance burden imposed on the Banks.
The proposed rule would require a Bank to discuss how the proposed
activity would support the Bank's housing finance and community
investment mission. The current regulation requires a notice to
describe the effect of a proposed activity on the housing or community
development market, but does not affirmatively require the Banks to
demonstrate how the proposed activity would support the Banks'
statutory mission. FHFA's duties include ensuring that the Banks'
activities foster such mission, see 12 U.S.C. 4513(a). The proposed
rule elsewhere includes a related approval standard for NBA notices,
which requires that FHFA approve notices only if the activity is
conducted in a safe and sound manner and is consistent with the Banks'
housing finance and community investment mission. This proposed
requirement is also intended to dovetail with the general description
requirement so that the submitting Bank produces a comprehensive
picture of the proposed activity covering the range of its attributes,
from technical production and risk concerns to the activity's potential
effects on the Bank's mission.
Paragraphs 1272.3(a)(4) and (5)--regarding the Bank's capacity to
manage new risks and its assessment of the risks, respectively--have
been combined into proposed Sec. 1272.3(a)(4). FHFA believes that the
proposed language captures the fundamental concepts in the current
regulation's requirements while streamlining the rule text and reducing
the Banks' overall compliance burden.
With respect to the anticipated dollar volume of an activity, the
proposed rule clarifies that a Bank is to estimate the volume over the
activity's initial three years of operation. This is intended to narrow
the scope of the current regulation, which requires an estimate of the
dollar volume of the activity over the long- and short-term, and
clarifies that the estimate is to be based on anticipated production
once the activity begins, especially in cases where the Bank may not
immediately implement the new activity.
Finally, FHFA proposes eliminating Sec. 1272.3(b), which addresses
the submission requirements for NBAs relating to the acceptance of new
types of advance collateral, because the acceptance of new types of
collateral would no longer constitute an NBA, as described in the
definitions discussion above.
Agency Review. FHFA proposes revising Sec. 1272.4 through Sec.
1272.6 to collapse their respective concepts into a more concise,
narrative format and to establish new timelines for agency review of
NBA notices. Proposed Sec. 1272.4 establishes FHFA's review process
for NBA notices. Under the current regulation, a Bank may commence an
NBA 60 days after FHFA's receipt of the associated notice unless FHFA
disapproves the activity, instructs the Bank not to commence the
activity pending further consideration by the agency, declares its
intent to examine the Bank, or requests additional information. See
Sec. 1272.5(a)(1)-(4). In the Request Letter, the Banks expressed
concern that the existing regulation allows FHFA to easily extend its
review of NBA notices by either requesting additional information or by
instructing the Banks not to commence a new activity shortly after
receipt of the notice. See Sec. 1272.4(a). The proposed rule would
address the concerns by providing for the automatic approval of NBA
notices if FHFA fails to act by certain deadlines, as described below.
The proposed rule would establish two time periods for FHFA review: A
30 business-day period, generally intended for activities already
approved for other Banks, and an 80 business-day period, generally
intended for activities of first impression or that otherwise require
significant agency examination. Under both proposed timelines, subject
to certain extensions and caveats, the Bank would be able to commence
the new activity at the end of each time period if FHFA failed to
approve, deny, or respond to the Bank regarding the activity.
Proposed Sec. 1272.4(a) sets an initial 30 business-day period for
FHFA to
[[Page 57503]]
approve or deny an activity, or inform the Bank that the request raises
legal, policy, or supervisory issues that require further evaluation.
Requests raising new legal or policy issues or which pose significant
safety and soundness issues would generally be processed under the 80
business-day timeline in proposed Sec. 1272.4(b). If FHFA fails to
take one of those three actions by the end of 30 business days from the
NBA Notice Date, the proposed rule provides that the notice would be
deemed to have been approved and the Bank could commence the activity
for which the notice was submitted. If FHFA notifies the Bank that the
activity requires further evaluation, then the proposed rule provides
that FHFA must approve or deny the notice no later than 80 business
days from the NBA Notice Date. If FHFA fails to approve or deny the
notice by that date, then it would be deemed to be approved, and the
Bank could commence the activity. For all submissions, FHFA intends to
approve or deny the notice prior to the applicable deadline, and
expects that it will act on many notices substantially before the
deadline. FHFA believes that these time periods will afford it
sufficient time to review, consider, and fully evaluate the merits of
both routine and novel submissions. The proposed rule includes one
exception to the automatic approval provisions, which pertains to NBA
submissions that raise significant policy issues that the Director
determines require additional time. Proposed Sec. 1272.4(d) provides
that the Director may extend the 80 business-day period by an
additional 60 business days to facilitate such review. In such cases,
FHFA will inform the Bank of the extension before the end of the 80
business-day period and the Bank may not commence the proposed activity
until FHFA has affirmatively approved the notice. This proposed
exception to the automatic approval provisions is intended to preserve
the Director's oversight authority on notices deemed by the Director to
be of sufficient consequence to merit an extended review period and
also to prevent automatic approval of such notices during periods of
transition between FHFA Directors or if the Director is otherwise
unable to attend to the matter.
Proposed Sec. 1272.4(c) states that for purposes of calculating
the number of days that make up the applicable review period, no days
would be counted between the day FHFA communicates a request for
additional information and the day the Bank responds to all questions
asked. One purpose of the automatic approval provisions is to provide
some certainty as to the date by which FHFA should act on a notice. In
order for FHFA to act, however, it must have a complete notice,
including responses to its requests for additional information. Because
FHFA may be unable to continue processing a notice while it is awaiting
receipt of additional information from a Bank, those days are not
included within the applicable time periods. If a Bank's submitted
notice is clear and thorough, FHFA expects that there will be less need
to request additional information.
FHFA proposes adding new Sec. 1272.4(e), which would establish an
explicit standard under which the agency will make determinations with
respect to NBAs. The proposed standard considers whether the activity
will be conducted in a safe and sound manner and whether the activity
is consistent with the housing finance and community investment mission
of the Banks and the cooperative nature of the Bank System. The policy
considerations underlying this proposed standard stem from FHFA's
statutory oversight duties and reflect current agency practice. See 12
U.S.C. 4513(a). The current regulation implies, but does not explicitly
set forth, a standard for review, and FHFA now proposes a specific
standard in keeping with its statutory mission and practice. Further,
FHFA proposes to include in the same section a provision authorizing
FHFA to impose conditions in connection with the approval of any NBA.
This provision is similar to the current provision at Sec.
1272.7(b)(2).
FHFA proposes establishing a revised protocol for additional
information requests in proposed Sec. 1272.5. As with the current
regulation, FHFA reserves the right to request additional information
regarding a proposed NBA. However, FHFA proposes adding several
conditions to such requests. Specifically, after FHFA makes an initial
request for additional information, any subsequent requests for
additional information must be limited to information that is necessary
to fully respond to the initial request, i.e., for cases in which a
Bank's response was not fully responsive or otherwise requires
clarification, or because the Bank's response raises new legal or
policy issues not evident based on the notice or the Bank's previous
response. FHFA intends for these proposed conditions to facilitate the
review process by limiting the scope and circumstances in which FHFA
can make subsequent requests for additional information and to incent
the Banks to provide clear and thorough submissions and responses to
information requests. These limitations notwithstanding, the proposed
rule also authorizes the Director to request any additional information
regarding any NBA for which the Director has extended the review
period. Ultimately, the Director is responsible for supervising the
Banks and otherwise ensuring that they act in a safe and sound manner,
and this provision of the proposed rule is intended to allow the
Director to have whatever information the Director deems necessary to
carry out those responsibilities when reviewing an NBA notice. See 12
U.S.C. 4513(a)(2)(B). FHFA specifically requests public comments on
whether these proposed conditions on requests for additional
information appropriately balance FHFA's regulatory duties with the
Banks' compliance burden.
Proposed Sec. 1272.6 reorganizes and combines Sec. Sec. 1272.7(a)
and 1272.7(b)(2)(v) into one paragraph, reserving FHFA's right to
examine the Banks with respect to their implementation of an NBA.
Delegation of Authority. Proposed Sec. 1272.7 includes a
delegation of authority to the Deputy Director for Federal Home Loan
Bank Regulation (Deputy Director) to approve NBA submissions, but
further provides that the Director reserves the right to modify,
rescind, or supersede any such approvals granted under this delegation
of authority. The provision is modeled on a similar delegation of
authority in 12 CFR 1211.3, which authorizes the Deputy Director to
grant ``approvals'' in accordance with the procedures regulations of
that part. Although the term ``approval,'' as defined in Sec. 1211.1,
arguably is broad enough to encompass NBA notices, when FHFA first
included that delegation in the procedures regulations it explained in
the Supplementary Information to the proposed rule that the provisions
pertaining to ``approvals'' did not apply to NBA notices. See 79 FR
15257, 15258 (March 19, 2014) (because NBA notices ``are subject to the
procedural requirements of part 1272 . . . approvals for an NBA would
not be subject to'' the ``approvals'' provisions of Sec. 1211.3). FHFA
anticipates that most NBA notices will be approved by the Deputy
Director pursuant to the proposed delegation of authority and that
notices raising novel legal or policy questions will be referred to the
Director for decision.
V. Paperwork Reduction Act
The Paperwork Reduction Act (44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.) requires that
regulations involving the collection of
[[Page 57504]]
information receive clearance from the Office of Management and Budget
(OMB). This rule contains no such collection of information requiring
OMB approval under the Paperwork Reduction Act. Consequently, no
information has been submitted to OMB for review.
VI. Regulatory Flexibility Act
The proposed rule applies only to the Banks, which do not come
within the meaning of small entities as defined in the Regulatory
Flexibility Act (RFA). See 5 U.S.C. 601(6). Therefore, in accordance
with section 605(b) of the RFA, FHFA certifies that this proposed rule,
if adopted as a final rule, is not likely to have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
List of Subjects in 12 CFR Part 1272
Federal home loan banks, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements.
Authority and Issuance
Accordingly, for reasons stated in the SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION
and under the authority of 12 U.S.C. 1431(a), 1432(a), 4511(b), 4513,
4526(a), FHFA proposes to amend subchapter D of chapter XII of title 12
of the Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
CHAPTER XII--FEDERAL HOUSING FINANCE AGENCY
Subchapter D--Federal Home Loan Banks
0
1. Revise part 1272 to read as follows:
PART 1272--NEW BUSINESS ACTIVITIES
Sec.
1272.1 Definitions.
1272.2 Limitation on Bank authority to undertake new business
activities.
1272.3 New business activity notice requirement.
1272.4 Review process.
1272.5 Additional information.
1272.6 Examinations.
1272.7 Approval of notices.
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1431(a), 1432(a), 4511(b), 4513, 4526(a).
Sec. 1272.1 Definitions.
As used in this part:
Business Day means any calendar day other than a Saturday, Sunday,
or legal public holiday listed in 5 U.S.C. 6103.
NBA Notice Date means the date on which FHFA receives a new
business activity notice.
New business activity (NBA) means any business activity undertaken,
transacted, conducted, or engaged in by a Bank that entails material
risks not previously managed by the Bank. A Bank's acceptance of a new
type of advance collateral does not constitute a new business activity.
Sec. 1272.2 Limitation on Bank authority to undertake new business
activities.
No Bank shall undertake any NBA except in accordance with the
procedures set forth in this part.
Sec. 1272.3 New business activity notice requirement.
Prior to undertaking an NBA, a Bank shall submit a written notice
of the proposed NBA that provides a thorough, meaningful, complete, and
specific description of the activity such that FHFA will be able to
make an informed decision regarding the proposed activity. At a
minimum, the notice should include the following information:
(a) A written opinion of counsel identifying the specific
statutory, regulatory, or other legal authorities under which the NBA
is authorized and, for submissions raising legal questions of first
impression, a reasoned analysis explaining how the cited authorities
can be construed to authorize the new activity;
(b) A full description of the proposed activity, including, when
applicable, infographics and definitions of key terms. In addition, the
Bank shall indicate whether the proposed activity represents a
modification to a previously approved activity in which the Bank is
engaged or is an activity that FHFA has approved for any other Banks;
(c) A discussion of why the Bank proposes to engage in the new
activity and how the activity supports the housing finance and
community investment mission of the Bank;
(d) A discussion of the risks presented by the new activity and how
the Bank will manage these risks; and
(e) A good faith estimate of the anticipated dollar volume of the
activity, and the income and expenses associated with implementing and
operating the new activity, over the initial three years of operation.
Sec. 1272.4 Review process.
(a) Within 30 business days of the NBA Notice Date, FHFA will take
one of the following actions:
(1) Approve the proposed NBA;
(2) Deny the proposed activity; or
(3) Inform the Bank that the activity raises policy, legal, or
supervisory issues that require further evaluation. If FHFA fails to
take any of those actions by the 30th business day following the NBA
Notice Date, the NBA notice shall be deemed to have been approved and
the Bank may commence the activity for which the notice was submitted.
(b) In the case of any notice that FHFA has determined requires
further evaluation, FHFA will approve or deny the notice by no later
than the 80th business day following the NBA Notice Date. If FHFA fails
to approve or deny a NBA notice by that date, and the Director has not
extended the review period, the NBA notice shall be deemed to have been
approved and the Bank may commence the activity for which the notice
was submitted.
(c) For purposes of calculating the review period, no days will be
counted between the date that FHFA has requested additional information
from the Bank pursuant to Sec. 1272.5 and the date that the Bank
responds to all questions communicated.
(d) Notwithstanding anything contained in this part, the Director
may extend the 80 business day review period by an additional 60
business days if the Director determines that additional time is
required to consider the notice. In such a case, FHFA will inform the
Bank of any such extension before the 80th business day following the
NBA Notice Date, and the Bank may not commence the NBA until FHFA has
affirmatively approved the notice.
(e) In considering any NBA notice, FHFA will assess whether the
proposed activity will be conducted in a safe and sound manner and is
consistent with the housing finance and community investment mission of
the Banks and the cooperative nature of the Bank System. FHFA may deny
a NBA notice or may approve the notice, which approval may be made
subject to the Bank's compliance with any conditions that FHFA
determines are appropriate to ensure that the Bank conducts the new
activity in a safe and sound manner and in compliance with applicable
laws or regulations and the Bank's mission.
Sec. 1272.5 Additional information.
FHFA may request additional information from a Bank necessary to
issue a determination regarding an NBA. After an initial request for
information, FHFA may make subsequent requests for information only to
the extent that the information provided by the Bank does not fully
respond to a previous request, the subsequent request seeks information
needed to clarify the Bank's previous response, or the information
provided by the Bank raises new legal, policy, or supervisory issues
not evident based on the Bank's NBA notice or responses to previous
requests for information. Nothing contained in this paragraph shall
limit the Director's authority to request additional information from a
Bank regarding an
[[Page 57505]]
NBA for which the Director has extended the review period.
Sec. 1272.6 Examinations.
Nothing in this part shall limit in any manner the right of FHFA to
conduct any examination of any Bank relating to its implementation of
an NBA, including pre- or post-implementation safety and soundness
examinations, or review of contracts or other agreements between the
Bank and any other party.
Sec. 1272.7 Approval of notices.
The Deputy Director for Federal Home Loan Bank Regulation may
approve requests from a Bank seeking approval of any NBA notice
submitted in accordance with this part. The Director reserves the right
to modify, rescind, or supersede any such approval granted by the
Deputy Director, with such action being effective only on a prospective
basis.
Dated: August 16, 2016.
Melvin L. Watt,
Director, Federal Housing Finance Agency.
[FR Doc. 2016-19858 Filed 8-22-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 8070-01-P