Removal of Transferred OTS Regulations Regarding Consumer Protection in Sales of Insurance and Amendments to FDIC Consumer Protection in Sales of Insurance Regulation, 83174-83180 [2016-27898]
Download as PDF
83174
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 224 / Monday, November 21, 2016 / Proposed Rules
provide feedback on it as well.
Alternatively, if the regulatory basis
does not provide sufficient support for
a proposed rule, the NRC will publish
a Federal Register document
withdrawing this rulemaking activity
and addressing the public comments
received on the issues paper.
Dated at Rockville, Maryland, this 1st day
of November, 2016.
For the Nuclear Regulatory Commission.
Mark D. Lombard,
Director, Division of Spent Fuel Management.
[FR Doc. 2016–27944 Filed 11–18–16; 8:45 am]
institution or institution’’ and ‘‘State
savings association.’’ Finally, the FDIC
proposes to transfer an anticoercion and
antitying provision from the subpart
that is applicable to State savings
associations.
Upon removal of the subpart, the
Consumer Protection in Sales of
Insurance, regulations applicable for all
IDIs for which the FDIC has been
designated the appropriate Federal
banking agency will be found in the
part.
Comments must be received on
or before January 20, 2017.
DATES:
BILLING CODE 7590–01–P
You may submit comments
by any of the following methods:
• FDIC Web site: https://www.fdic.gov/
regulations/laws/federal/propose.html.
Follow instructions for submitting
comments on the agency Web site.
• FDIC Email: Comments@fdic.gov.
Include RIN #3064–AE49 on the subject
line of the message.
• FDIC Mail: Robert E. Feldman,
Executive Secretary, Attention:
Comments, Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, 550 17th Street NW.,
Washington, DC 20429.
• Hand Delivery to FDIC: 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 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Please include your name, affiliation,
address, email address, and telephone
number(s) in your comment. Where
appropriate, comments should include a
short Executive Summary consisting of
no more than five single-spaced pages.
All statements received, including
attachments and other supporting
materials, are part of the public record
and are subject to public disclosure.
You should submit only information
that you wish to make publicly
available.
ADDRESSES:
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION
12 CFR Parts 343 and 390
RIN 3064–AE49
Removal of Transferred OTS
Regulations Regarding Consumer
Protection in Sales of Insurance and
Amendments to FDIC Consumer
Protection in Sales of Insurance
Regulation
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
AGENCY:
In this notice of proposed
rulemaking, the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (‘‘FDIC’’)
proposes to rescind and remove from
the Code of Federal Regulations the
subpart entitled ‘‘Consumer Protection
in Sales of Insurance’’ (‘‘the subpart’’)
that was included in the regulations
transferred to the FDIC from the Office
of Thrift Supervision (‘‘OTS’’) on July
21, 2011 in connection with the
implementation of applicable provisions
of title III of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act
(‘‘Dodd-Frank Act’’). The requirements
for State savings associations in this
subpart are substantively similar to the
requirements in the FDIC’s part which
is also entitled ‘‘Consumer Protection in
Sales of Insurance’’ (‘‘the part’’) and is
applicable for all insured depository
institutions (‘‘IDIs’’) for which the FDIC
has been designated the appropriate
Federal banking agency.
The FDIC proposes to rescind in its
entirety the subpart and to modify the
scope of the part to include State
savings associations and their
subsidiaries to conform to and reflect
the scope of the FDIC’s current
supervisory responsibilities as the
appropriate Federal banking agency.
The FDIC also proposes to define
‘‘FDIC-supervised insured depository
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:51 Nov 18, 2016
Jkt 241001
Please note: All comments received will be
posted generally without change to https://
www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal/
propose.html, including any personal
information provided. Paper copies of public
comments may be requested from the Public
Information Center by telephone at 1–877–
275–3342 or 1–703–562–2200.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Martha L. Ellett, Counsel, Consumer
Compliance Section, Legal Division,
(202) 898–6765; John Jackwood, Sr.
Policy Analyst, Division of Depositor
and Consumer Protection, (202) 898–
3991.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
PO 00000
Frm 00005
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
I. Background
The Dodd-Frank Act
The Dodd-Frank Act 1 provided for a
substantial reorganization of the
regulation of State and Federal savings
associations and their holding
companies. Beginning July 21, 2011, the
transfer date established by section 311
of the Dodd-Frank Act, codified at 12
U.S.C. 5411, the powers, duties, and
functions formerly performed by the
OTS were divided among the FDIC, as
to State savings associations, the Office
of the Comptroller of the Currency
(‘‘OCC’’), as to Federal savings
associations, and the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System (‘‘FRB’’), as to savings and loan
holding companies. Section 316(b) of
the Dodd-Frank Act, codified at 12
U.S.C. 5414(b), provides the manner of
treatment for all orders, resolutions,
determinations, regulations, and
advisory materials that had been issued,
made, prescribed, or allowed to become
effective by the OTS. The section
provides that if such materials were in
effect on the day before the transfer
date, they continue to be in effect and
are enforceable by or against the
appropriate successor agency until they
are modified, terminated, set aside, or
superseded in accordance with
applicable law by such successor
agency, by any court of competent
jurisdiction, or by operation of law.
Section 316(c) of the Dodd-Frank Act,
codified at 12 U.S.C. 5414(c), further
directed the FDIC and the OCC to
consult with one another and to publish
a list of the continued OTS regulations
that would be enforced by the FDIC and
the OCC, respectively. On June 14, 2011,
the FDIC’s Board of Directors approved
a ‘‘List of OTS Regulations to be
enforced by the OCC and the FDIC
Pursuant to the Dodd-Frank Wall Street
Reform and Consumer Protection Act.’’
This list was published by the FDIC and
the OCC as a Joint Notice in the Federal
Register on July 6, 2011.2
Although section 312(b)(2)(B)(i)(II) of
the Dodd-Frank Act, codified at 12
U.S.C. 5412(b)(2)(B)(i)(II), granted the
OCC rulemaking authority relating to
both State and Federal savings
associations, nothing in the Dodd-Frank
Act affected the FDIC’s existing
authority to issue regulations under the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (‘‘FDI
Act’’) and other laws as the ‘‘appropriate
Federal banking agency’’ or under
similar statutory terminology. Section
1 Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act, Public Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376
(2010) (codified at 12 U.S.C. 5301 et seq.).
2 76 FR 39247 (July 6, 2011).
E:\FR\FM\21NOP1.SGM
21NOP1
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 224 / Monday, November 21, 2016 / Proposed Rules
312(c) of the Dodd-Frank Act amended
the definition of ‘‘appropriate Federal
banking agency’’ contained in section
3(q) of the FDI Act, 12 U.S.C. 1813(q),
to add State savings associations to the
list of entities for which the FDIC is
designated as the ‘‘appropriate Federal
banking agency.’’ As a result, when the
FDIC acts as the designated
‘‘appropriate Federal banking agency’’
(or under similar terminology) for State
savings associations, as it does here, the
FDIC is authorized to issue, modify and
rescind regulations involving such
associations, as well as for State
nonmember banks and insured branches
of foreign banks.
As noted, on June 14, 2011, pursuant
to this authority, the FDIC’s Board of
Directors reissued and redesignated
certain transferring regulations of the
former OTS. These transferred OTS
regulations were published as new FDIC
regulations in the Federal Register on
August 5, 2011.3 When it republished
the transferred OTS regulations as new
FDIC regulations, the FDIC specifically
noted that its staff would evaluate the
transferred OTS rules and might later
recommend incorporating the
transferred OTS regulations into other
FDIC rules, amending them, or
rescinding them, as appropriate.
One of the OTS rules transferred to
the FDIC governed OTS oversight of
consumer protections for depository
institution sales of insurance. The OTS
rule, formerly found at 12 CFR part 536,
was transferred to the FDIC with only
minor nonsubstantive changes and is
now found in the FDIC’s rules at part
390, subpart I, entitled ‘‘Consumer
Protection in Sales of Insurance.’’ Before
the transfer of the OTS rules and
continuing today, the FDIC’s rules
contained part 343, also entitled
‘‘Consumer Protection in Sales of
Insurance,’’ a rule governing FDIC
oversight of consumer protection
regulations that apply to retail sales
practices, solicitations, advertising, or
offers of any insurance product with
respect to IDIs for which the FDIC has
been designated the appropriate Federal
banking agency. After careful review
and comparison of part 390, subpart I,
and part 343, the FDIC proposes to
rescind part 390, subpart I, because, as
discussed below, it is substantively
redundant to existing part 343 and
simultaneously we propose to make
technical conforming edits to our
existing rule.
3 76
FR 47652 (Aug. 5, 2011).
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:51 Nov 18, 2016
Jkt 241001
FDIC’s Existing 12 CFR Part 343 and
Former OTS’s Part 536 (Transferred, in
Part, to FDIC’s Part 390, Subpart I)
Section 305 of the Gramm-LeachBliley Act (‘‘GLB Act’’) 4 added section
47 to the FDI Act,5 entitled ‘‘Insurance
Consumer Protections.’’ Section 47
applies to retail sales practices,
solicitations, advertising, or offers of
insurance products by depository
institutions 6 or persons engaged in
these activities at an office of the
institution or on behalf of the
institution.7 Section 47 directs the FDIC,
the OTS, the OCC, and the FRB
(collectively the ‘‘Federal banking
agencies’’) to include provisions
specifically relating to sales practices,
disclosures and advertising, the
physical separation of banking and
nonbanking activities, and domestic
violence discrimination.8 On December
4, 2000, pursuant to section 305 of the
GLB Act,9 the Federal banking agencies
published a joint final rule 10 to
implement consumer protection in sales
of insurance provisions of section 47 of
the FDI Act.
Section 47 of the FDI Act instructs the
Federal banking agencies to consult and
coordinate with one another and
prescribe and publish joint consumer
protection regulations that apply to
retail sales practices, solicitations,
advertising, or offers of insurance
products by depository institutions or
persons engaged in these activities at an
office of the institution or on behalf of
the institution.11 Section 47 also
requires the Federal banking agencies to
consult with the State insurance
regulators, as appropriate.12 The Federal
banking agencies consulted and
coordinated with respect to this
rulemaking and on an interagency basis
jointly issued rules that are
substantively identical with regard to
consumer protection in sales of
insurance requirements,13 including the
same definition of a ‘‘covered person’’
or ‘‘you.’’ 14
4 Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, Public Law 106–102,
113 Stat. 1338 (1999).
5 12 U.S.C. 1831x.
6 A ‘‘depository institution’’ in this context means
a national bank in the case of institutions
supervised by the OCC, a State member bank in the
case of the FRB, a State nonmember bank in the
case of the FDIC, and a savings association in the
case of the OTS. 65 FR 75822 fn. 1 (Dec. 4, 2000).
7 12 U.S.C. 1831x(a)(1)(A).
8 12 U.S.C. 1831x.
9 12 U.S.C. 1831x(a)(3).
10 65 FR 75822 (Dec. 4, 2000).
11 12 U.S.C. 1831x(a)(1).
12 12 U.S.C. 1831x(a)(3).
13 65 FR 75822 (Dec. 4, 2000).
14 65 FR 75822, 75824 (Dec. 4, 2000). A ‘‘covered
person’’ or ‘‘you’’ means ‘‘any depository institution
or any other person selling, soliciting, advertising,
PO 00000
Frm 00006
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
83175
The scope of part 343 in the FDIC’s
regulations and of part 390, subpart I in
the OTS’s regulations is also
substantively similar. The FDIC
regulations apply to any bank 15 or any
other person that is engaged in such
activities at an office of the bank or on
behalf of the bank.16 Similarly, the OTS
regulations apply to any State savings
association or any other person that is
engaged in such activities at an office of
a State savings association or on behalf
of a State savings association.17 In the
FDIC’s scope provisions, any other
person includes subsidiaries 18 because
only subsidiaries that are selling
insurance products or annuities at an
office of the institution or acting on
behalf of the depository institution as
defined in the rules would be subject to
the requirements of the rules.19 The
OTS regulation specifically states that
its regulation applies to subsidiaries of
a State savings association only to the
extent that it sells, solicits, advertises, or
offers insurance products or annuities at
an office of a State savings association
or on behalf of a State savings
association.20 This OTS provision will
not be carried over to the FDIC’s part
343 because it is redundant and
unnecessary, since the FDIC scope
provision already includes subsidiaries
within its definition.21 The rule
specifically states that a covered person
(or you) includes any person including
a subsidiary or other affiliate if that
person or one of its employees sells,
solicits, advertises, or offers insurance
products or annuities at an office of an
institution or on behalf of an
institution.22
Accordingly, the portions of the OTS
regulations that applied to State savings
associations, their subsidiaries and their
affiliates, originally codified at 12 CFR
part 536 and subsequently transferred to
or offering insurance products or annuities to a
consumer at an office of the institution or on behalf
of the institution. A ‘covered person’ includes any
person, including a subsidiary or other affiliate, if
that person or one of its employees sells, solicits,
advertises, or offers insurance products or annuities
at an office of an institution or on behalf of an
institution. 65 FR 75824 (Dec. 4, 2000). See also 12
CFR 343.20(j)(1) and 12 CFR 390.181.
15 Bank means an FDIC-insured, state-chartered
commercial or savings bank that is not a member
of the Federal Reserve System and for which the
FDIC is the appropriate federal banking agency
pursuant to section 3(q) of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(q)). 12 CFR
343.20(b).
16 12 CFR 343.10.
17 12 CFR 390.180(a)(1), (2).
18 See 65 FR 75822, 75823 (Dec. 4, 2000).
19 65 FR 75822, 75823 (Dec. 4, 2000) (footnote
omitted).
20 12 CFR 390.180(b).
21 12 CFR 343.10.
22 65 FR 75822, 75824 (Dec. 4, 2000) (italics
added).
E:\FR\FM\21NOP1.SGM
21NOP1
83176
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 224 / Monday, November 21, 2016 / Proposed Rules
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
FDIC’s part 390, subpart I, are
substantively similar to the current
FDIC regulations codified at 12 CFR part
343. By amending part 343 to
encompass State savings associations
and rescinding part 390, subpart I, the
FDIC will streamline its regulations and
reduce redundancy.
Although the former OTS rule and
part 390, subpart I, covers savings and
loan holding companies that are
affiliated with savings associations in
addition to savings associations, the
FDIC does not supervise savings and
loan or bank holding companies for
purposes of this rule. Section 312 of the
Dodd-Frank Act 23 divides and transfers
the functions of the former OTS to the
FDIC, OCC, and FRB by amending
section 1813(q) of the FDI Act.
Specifically, section 312 transfers the
former OTS’s power to regulate State
savings associations to the FDIC, while
it transfers the power to regulate savings
and loan holding companies to the
FRB.24 As a result, whereas the former
OTS part 536 applied to savings
associations, their subsidiaries and their
affiliates, including savings and loan
holding companies,25 upon transfer of
part 536 to FDIC’s part 390, subpart I,
only the authority over State savings
associations and their subsidiaries and
other affiliates was transferred to the
FDIC for purposes of this rule.26 The
FRB currently has jurisdiction over the
regulation and supervision of consumer
protections in connection with retail
insurance sales practices as it applies to
affiliates, including savings and loan
holding companies of State savings
associations.27 For this reason, the
existing references to affiliates in part
390, subpart I, are not proposed to be
transferred to part 343 of the FDIC rules.
After careful comparison of the FDIC’s
part 343 with the transferred OTS rule
in part 390, subpart I, the FDIC has
concluded that the transferred OTS
rules governing consumer protection in
sales of insurance are substantively
redundant. Based on the foregoing, the
FDIC proposes to rescind and remove
from the Code of Federal Regulations
the transferred OTS rules located at part
390, subpart I, and to make minor
conforming changes to part 343 to
incorporate State savings associations.
II. The Proposal
Regarding the functions of the former
OTS that were transferred to the FDIC,
23 Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer
Protection Act, Public Law 111–203, 124 Stat. 1376
(2010) (codified at 12 U.S.C. 5412).
24 12 U.S.C. 5412.
25 12 CFR 536.1.
26 12 CFR 390.180.
27 12 CFR part 208, subpart H.
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:51 Nov 18, 2016
Jkt 241001
section 316(b)(3) of the Dodd-Frank Act,
12 U.S.C. 5414(b)(3), in pertinent part,
provides that the former OTS’s
regulations will be enforceable by the
FDIC until they are modified,
terminated, set aside, or superseded in
accordance with applicable law. After
reviewing the rules currently found in
part 390, subpart I, the FDIC proposes
(1) to rescind part 390, subpart I, in its
entirety; (2) to modify to the scope of
part 343 to include State savings
associations and their subsidiaries to
conform to and reflect the scope of
FDIC’s current supervisory
responsibilities as the appropriate
Federal banking agency for State savings
associations; (3) delete the definition of
bank and replace it with a definition of
FDIC-supervised insured depository
institution or institution, which means
any State nonmember insured bank or
State savings association for which the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
is the appropriate Federal banking
agency pursuant to section 3(q) of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12
U.S.C. 1813(q)); (4) add a new
subsection (i), which would define
‘‘State savings association’’ as having
the same meaning as in section 3(b)(3)
of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12
U.S.C. 1813(b)(3)); (5) transfer an
anticoercion and antitying provision
from part 390, subpart I, that is
applicable to State savings associations
to part 343; and (6) make conforming
technical edits throughout, including
replacing the term ‘‘institution’’ in place
of ‘‘bank’’ throughout the rule where
necessary.
If the proposal is finalized, oversight
of consumer protection in sales of
insurance in part 343 would apply to all
FDIC-supervised institutions, including
State savings associations, and part 390,
subpart I, would be removed because it
is largely redundant of the rules found
in part 343. Rescinding part 390,
subpart I, will serve to streamline the
FDIC’s rules and eliminate unnecessary
regulations.
III. Request for Comments
The FDIC invites comments on all
aspects of this proposed rulemaking,
and specifically requests comments on
the following:
(1) Are there any specific provisions
of part 343 that are outdated or obsolete,
or are behind industry standards? If so,
please describe and recommend
alternate methodology.
(2) What impacts, positive or negative,
can you foresee in the FDIC’s proposal
to rescind part 390, subpart I?
Written comments must be received
by the FDIC no later than January 20,
2017.
PO 00000
Frm 00007
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
IV. Regulatory Analysis and Procedure
A. The Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the requirements
of the Paperwork Reduction Act
(‘‘PRA’’) of 1995, 44 U.S.C. 3501–3521,
the FDIC 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 Proposed Rule would rescind and
remove from FDIC regulations part 390,
subpart I from the FDIC regulations.
This rule was transferred with only
nominal changes to the FDIC from the
OTS when the OTS was abolished by
title III of the Dodd-Frank Act. Part 390,
subpart I, is largely redundant of the
FDIC’s existing part 343 regarding
consumer protections for depository
institution sales of insurance. The
information collections contained in
part 343 are cleared by OMB under the
FDIC’s Insurance Sales Consumer
Protections information collection
(OMB Control No. 3064–0140). The
FDIC reviewed its burden estimates for
the collection at the time it assumed
responsibility for supervision of State
savings associations transferred from the
OTS and determined that no changes to
the burden estimates were necessary.
The Proposed Rule would not revise the
Insurance Sales Consumer Protections
information collection under OMB
Control No. 3064–0140 or create any
new information collection pursuant to
the PRA. Consequently, no submission
will be made to the Office of
Management and Budget for review. The
FDIC requests comment on its
conclusion that this NPR does not revise
the Insurance Sales Consumer
Protections information collection
3064–0140.
Finally, the Proposed Rule would (1)
amend part 343 to include State savings
associations and their subsidiaries
within its scope; and (2) define ‘‘FDICsupervised insured depository
institution or institution’’ and ‘‘State
savings association;’’ (3) transfer an
anticoercion and antitying provision
from part 390, subpart I, that is
applicable to State savings associations
to part 343; and (4) make conforming
technical edits throughout These
measures clarify that State savings
associations, as well as State
nonmember banks are subject to part
343. With respect to part 343, the
Proposed Rule does not revise any
existing, or create any new information
collection pursuant to the PRA.
Consequently, no submission will be
made to the Office of Management and
Budget for review. The FDIC requests
E:\FR\FM\21NOP1.SGM
21NOP1
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 224 / Monday, November 21, 2016 / Proposed Rules
comment on its conclusion that this
aspect of the NPR does not create a new
or revise and existing information
collection.
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
B. The Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act
(‘‘RFA’’), requires that, in connection
with a notice of proposed rulemaking,
an agency prepare and make available
for public comment an initial regulatory
flexibility analysis that describes the
impact of the proposed rule on small
entities (defined in regulations
promulgated by the Small Business
Administration to include banking
organizations with total assets of less
than or equal to $550 million).28
However, a regulatory flexibility
analysis is not required if the agency
certifies that the rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities,
and publishes its certification and a
short explanatory statement in the
Federal Register together with the
proposed rule. For the reasons provided
below, the FDIC certifies that the
Proposed Rule would not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
As discussed in this notice of
proposed rulemaking, part 390, subpart
I, was transferred from OTS part 536,
which governed consumer protections
for depository institution sales of
insurance. OTS part 536 had been in
effect since 2001 and all State savings
associations were required to comply
with it. Because it is substantially same
as existing part 343 of the FDIC’s rules
and therefore redundant, the FDIC
proposes rescinding and removing the
transferred regulation now located in
part 390, subpart I. As a result, all FDICsupervised institutions—including State
savings associations and their
subsidiaries—would be required to
comply with part 343 if they are selling,
soliciting, advertising, or offering any
insurance product. Because all State
savings associations and their
subsidiaries have been required to
comply with substantially similar
consumer protection rules if they
engaged in sales of insurance since
2001,29 the Proposed Rule would not
place additional requirements or
burdens on any State savings
association irrespective of its size.
Therefore, the Proposed Rule would not
have a significant impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
28 5
U.S.C. 601 et seq.
FR 75822 (Dec. 4, 2000). The final rule
became effective April 1, 2001.
C. Plain Language
Section 722 of the GLB Act, codified
at 12 U.S.C. 4809, requires each Federal
banking agency to use plain language in
all of its proposed and final rules
published after January 1, 2000. The
FDIC invites comments on whether the
Proposed Rule is clearly stated and
effectively organized, and how the FDIC
might make it easier to understand. For
example:
• Has the FDIC organized the material
to suit your needs? If not, how could it
present the rule more clearly?
• Have we clearly stated the
requirements of the rule? If not, how
could the rule be more clearly stated?
• Does the rule contain technical
jargon that is not clear? If so, which
language requires clarification?
• Would a different format (grouping
and order of sections, use of headings,
paragraphing) make the regulation
easier to understand? If so, what
changes would make the regulation
easier to understand?
• What else could we do to make the
regulation easier to understand?
D. The Economic Growth and
Regulatory Paperwork Reduction Act
Under section 2222 of the Economic
Growth and Regulatory Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1996 (‘‘EGRPRA’’), the
FDIC is required to review all of its
regulations, at least once every 10 years,
in order to identify any outdated or
otherwise unnecessary regulations
imposed on insured institutions.30 The
FDIC completed the last comprehensive
review of its regulations under EGRPRA
in 2006 and is commencing the next
decennial review. The action taken on
this rule will be included as part of the
EGRPRA review that is currently in
progress. As part of that review, the
FDIC invites comments concerning
whether the Proposed Rule would
impose any outdated or unnecessary
regulatory requirements on insured
depository institutions. If you provide
such comments, please be specific and
provide alternatives whenever
appropriate.
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 343
Banks, banking; Consumer protection
in sales of insurance; Savings
associations.
12 CFR Part 390
Consumer protection in sales of
insurance.
29 65
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:51 Nov 18, 2016
Jkt 241001
30 Public
PO 00000
Law 104–208, 110 Stat. 3009 (1996).
Frm 00008
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
83177
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons stated in the
preamble, the Board of Directors of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
proposes to revise part 343 of title 12 of
the Code of Federal Regulations and
amend part 390 of title 12 of the Code
of Federal Regulations as set forth
below:
■ 1. Revise part 343 to read as follows:
PART 343—CONSUMER PROTECTION
IN SALES OF INSURANCE
343.10 Purpose and scope.
343.20 Definitions.
343.30 Prohibited practices.
343.40 What you must disclose.
343.50 Where insurance activities may take
place.
343.60 Qualification and licensing
requirements for insurance sales
personnel.
Appendix A to Part 343—Consumer
Grievance Process
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1819 (Seventh and
Tenth); 12 U.S.C. 1831x.
§ 343.10
Purpose and scope.
This part establishes consumer
protections in connection with retail
sales practices, solicitations,
advertising, or offers of any insurance
product or annuity to a consumer by:
(a) Any institution; or
(b) Any other person that is engaged
in such activities at an office of the
institution or on behalf of the
institution.
§ 343.20
Definitions.
As used in this part:
(a) Affiliate means a company that
controls, is controlled by, or is under
common control with another company.
(b) Company means any corporation,
partnership, business trust, association
or similar organization, or any other
trust (unless by its terms the trust must
terminate within twenty-five years or
not later than twenty-one years and ten
months after the death of individuals
living on the effective date of the trust).
It does not include any corporation the
majority of the shares of which are
owned by the United States or by any
State, or a qualified family partnership,
as defined in section 2(o)(10) of the
Bank Holding Company Act of 1956, as
amended (12 U.S.C. 1841(o)(10)).
(c) Consumer means an individual
who purchases, applies to purchase, or
is solicited to purchase from you
insurance products or annuities
primarily for personal, family, or
household purposes.
(d) Control of a company has the same
meaning as in section 3(w)(5) of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12
U.S.C. 1813(w)(5)).
E:\FR\FM\21NOP1.SGM
21NOP1
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
83178
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 224 / Monday, November 21, 2016 / Proposed Rules
(e) Domestic violence means the
occurrence of one or more of the
following acts by a current or former
family member, household member,
intimate partner, or caretaker:
(1) Attempting to cause or causing or
threatening another person physical
harm, severe emotional distress,
psychological trauma, rape, or sexual
assault;
(2) Engaging in a course of conduct or
repeatedly committing acts toward
another person, including following the
person without proper authority, under
circumstances that place the person in
reasonable fear of bodily injury or
physical harm;
(3) Subjecting another person to false
imprisonment; or
(4) Attempting to cause or causing
damage to property so as to intimidate
or attempt to control the behavior of
another person.
(f) Electronic media includes any
means for transmitting messages
electronically between you and a
consumer in a format that allows visual
text to be displayed on equipment, for
example, a personal computer monitor.
(g) FDIC-supervised insured
depository institution or institution
means any State nonmember insured
bank or State savings association for
which the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation is the appropriate Federal
banking agency pursuant to section 3(q)
of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12
U.S.C. 1813(q)).
(h) Office means the premises of an
institution where retail deposits are
accepted from the public.
(i) State savings association has the
same meaning as in section (3)(b)(3) of
the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, 12
U.S.C. 1813(b)(3).
(j) Subsidiary has the same meaning
as in section 3(w)(4) of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C.
1813(w)(4)).
(k)(1) You means:
(i) An institution; or
(ii) Any other person only when the
person sells, solicits, advertises, or
offers an insurance product or annuity
to a consumer at an office of the
institution or on behalf of an institution.
(2) For purposes of this definition,
activities on behalf of an institution
include activities where a person,
whether at an office of the institution or
at another location sells, solicits,
advertises, or offers an insurance
product or annuity and at least one of
the following applies:
(i) The person represents to a
consumer that the sale, solicitation,
advertisement, or offer of any insurance
product or annuity is by or on behalf of
the institution;
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:51 Nov 18, 2016
Jkt 241001
(ii) The institution refers a consumer
to a seller of insurance products or
annuities and the institution has a
contractual arrangement to receive
commissions or fees derived from a sale
of an insurance product or annuity
resulting from that referral; or
(iii) Documents evidencing the sale,
solicitation, advertising, or offer of an
insurance product or annuity identify or
refer to the institution.
§ 343.30
Prohibited practices.
(a) Anticoercion and antitying rules.
You may not engage in any practice that
would lead a consumer to believe that
an extension of credit, in violation of
section 106(b) of the Bank Holding
Company Act Amendments of 1970 (12
U.S.C. 1972) in the case of a State
nonmember insured bank and a foreign
bank having an insured branch, or in
violation of section 5(q) of the Home
Owners’ Loan Act (12 U.S.C. 1464(q)) in
the case of a State savings association,
is conditional upon either:
(1) The purchase of an insurance
product or annuity from the institution
or any of its affiliates; or
(2) An agreement by the consumer not
to obtain, or a prohibition on the
consumer from obtaining, an insurance
product or annuity from an unaffiliated
entity.
(b) Prohibition on misrepresentations
generally. You may not engage in any
practice or use any advertisement at any
office of, or on behalf of, the institution
or a subsidiary of the institution that
could mislead any person or otherwise
cause a reasonable person to reach an
erroneous belief with respect to:
(1) The fact that an insurance product
or annuity sold or offered for sale by
you or any subsidiary of the institution
is not backed by the Federal government
or the institution, or the fact that the
insurance product or annuity is not
insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation;
(2) In the case of an insurance product
or annuity that involves investment risk,
the fact that there is an investment risk,
including the potential that principal
may be lost and that the product may
decline in value; or
(3) In the case of an institution or
subsidiary of the institution at which
insurance products or annuities are sold
or offered for sale, the fact that:
(i) The approval of an extension of
credit to a consumer by the institution
or subsidiary may not be conditioned on
the purchase of an insurance product or
annuity by the consumer from the
institution or a subsidiary of the
institution; and
PO 00000
Frm 00009
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
(ii) The consumer is free to purchase
the insurance product or annuity from
another source.
(c) Prohibition on domestic violence
discrimination. You may not sell or
offer for sale, as principal, agent, or
broker, any life or health insurance
product if the status of the applicant or
insured as a victim of domestic violence
or as a provider of services to victims of
domestic violence is considered as a
criterion in any decision with regard to
insurance underwriting, pricing,
renewal, or scope of coverage of such
product, or with regard to the payment
of insurance claims on such product,
except as required or expressly
permitted under State law.
§ 343.40
What you must disclose.
(a) Insurance disclosures. In
connection with the initial purchase of
an insurance product or annuity by a
consumer from you, you must disclose
to the consumer, except to the extent the
disclosure would not be accurate, that:
(1) The insurance product or annuity
is not a deposit or other obligation of,
or guaranteed by, the institution or an
affiliate of the institution;
(2) The insurance product or annuity
is not insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC) or any
other agency of the United States, the
institution, or (if applicable) an affiliate
of the institution; and
(3) In the case of an insurance product
or annuity that involves an investment
risk, there is investment risk associated
with the product, including the possible
loss of value.
(b) Credit disclosure. In the case of an
application for credit in connection
with which an insurance product or
annuity is solicited, offered, or sold, you
must disclose that the institution may
not condition an extension of credit on
either:
(1) The consumer’s purchase of an
insurance product or annuity from the
institution or any of its affiliates; or
(2) The consumer’s agreement not to
obtain, or a prohibition on the consumer
from obtaining, an insurance product or
annuity from an unaffiliated entity.
(c) Timing and method of
disclosures—(1) In general. The
disclosures required by paragraph (a) of
this section must be provided orally and
in writing before the completion of the
initial sale of an insurance product or
annuity to a consumer. The disclosure
required by paragraph (b) of this section
must be made orally and in writing at
the time the consumer applies for an
extension of credit in connection with
which an insurance product or annuity
is solicited, offered, or sold.
E:\FR\FM\21NOP1.SGM
21NOP1
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 224 / Monday, November 21, 2016 / Proposed Rules
(2) Exception for transactions by mail.
If a sale of an insurance product or
annuity is conducted by mail, you are
not required to make the oral
disclosures required by paragraph (a) of
this section. If you take an application
for credit by mail, you are not required
to make the oral disclosure required by
paragraph (b) of this section.
(3) Exception for transactions by
telephone. If a sale of an insurance
product or annuity is conducted by
telephone, you may provide the written
disclosures required by paragraph (a) of
this section by mail within 3 business
days beginning on the first business day
after the sale, excluding Sundays and
the legal public holidays specified in 5
U.S.C. 6103(a). If you take an
application for credit by telephone, you
may provide the written disclosure
required by paragraph (b) of this section
by mail, provided you mail it to the
consumer within three days beginning
the first business day after the
application is taken, excluding Sundays
and the legal public holidays specified
in 5 U.S.C. 6103(a).
(4) Electronic form of disclosures. (i)
Subject to the requirements of section
101(c) of the Electronic Signatures in
Global and National Commerce Act (12
U.S.C. 7001(c)), you may provide the
written disclosures required by
paragraph (a) and (b) of this section
through electronic media instead of on
paper, if the consumer affirmatively
consents to receiving the disclosures
electronically and if the disclosures are
provided in a format that the consumer
may retain or obtain later, for example,
by printing or storing electronically
(such as by downloading).
(ii) Any disclosure required by
paragraphs (a) or (b) of this section that
is provided by electronic media is not
required to be provided orally.
(5) Disclosures must be readily
understandable. The disclosures
provided shall be conspicuous, simple,
direct, readily understandable, and
designed to call attention to the nature
and significance of the information
provided. For instance, you may use the
following disclosures in visual media,
such as television broadcasting, ATM
screens, billboards, signs, posters and
written advertisements and promotional
materials, as appropriate and consistent
with paragraphs (a) and (b) of this
section:
(i) NOT A DEPOSIT
(ii) NOT FDIC-INSURED
(iii) NOT INSURED BY ANY FEDERAL
GOVERNMENT AGENCY
(iv) NOT GUARANTEED BY THE
INSTITUTION
(v) MAY GO DOWN IN VALUE
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:51 Nov 18, 2016
Jkt 241001
(6) Disclosures must be meaningful.
(i) You must provide the disclosures
required by paragraphs (a) and (b) of
this section in a meaningful form.
Examples of the types of methods that
could call attention to the nature and
significance of the information provided
include:
(A) A plain-language heading to call
attention to the disclosures;
(B) A typeface and type size that are
easy to read;
(C) Wide margins and ample line
spacing;
(D) Boldface or italics for key words;
and
(E) Distinctive type size, style, and
graphic devices, such as shading or
sidebars, when the disclosures are
combined with other information.
(ii) You have not provided the
disclosures in a meaningful form if you
merely state to the consumer that the
required disclosures are available in
printed material, but do not provide the
printed material when required and do
not orally disclose the information to
the consumer when required.
(iii) With respect to those disclosures
made through electronic media for
which paper or oral disclosures are not
required, the disclosures are not
meaningfully provided if the consumer
may bypass the visual text of the
disclosures before purchasing an
insurance product or annuity.
(7) Consumer acknowledgment. You
must obtain from the consumer, at the
time a consumer receives the
disclosures required under paragraphs
(a) or (b) of this section, or at the time
of the initial purchase by the consumer
of an insurance product or annuity, a
written acknowledgment by the
consumer that the consumer received
the disclosures. You may permit a
consumer to acknowledge receipt of the
disclosures electronically or in paper
form. If the disclosures required under
paragraphs (a) or (b) of this section are
provided in connection with a
transaction that is conducted by
telephone, you must:
(i) Obtain an oral acknowledgment of
receipt of the disclosures and maintain
sufficient documentation to show that
the acknowledgment was given; and
(ii) Make reasonable efforts to obtain
a written acknowledgment from the
consumer.
(d) Advertisements and other
promotional material for insurance
products or annuities. The disclosures
described in paragraph (a) of this
section are required in advertisements
and promotional material for insurance
products or annuities unless the
advertisements and promotional
materials are of a general nature
PO 00000
Frm 00010
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
83179
describing or listing the services or
products offered by the institution.
§ 343.50 Where insurance activities may
take place.
(a) General rule. An institution must,
to the extent practicable, keep the area
where the institution conducts
transactions involving insurance
products or annuities physically
segregated from areas where retail
deposits are routinely accepted from the
general public, identify the areas where
insurance product or annuity sales
activities occur, and clearly delineate
and distinguish those areas from the
areas where the institution’s retail
deposit-taking activities occur.
(b) Referrals. Any person who accepts
deposits from the public in an area
where such transactions are routinely
conducted in the institution may refer a
consumer who seeks to purchase an
insurance product or annuity to a
qualified person who sells that product
only if the person making the referral
receives no more than a one-time,
nominal fee of a fixed dollar amount for
each referral that does not depend on
whether the referral results in a
transaction.
§ 343.60 Qualification and licensing
requirements for insurance sales
personnel.
An institution may not permit any
person to sell or offer for sale any
insurance product or annuity in any
part of its office or on its behalf, unless
the person is at all times appropriately
qualified and licensed under applicable
State insurance licensing standards with
regard to the specific products being
sold or recommended.
Appendix A to Part 343—Consumer
Grievance Process
Any consumer who believes that any
institution or any other person selling,
soliciting, advertising, or offering
insurance products or annuities to the
consumer at an office of the institution
or on behalf of the institution has
violated the requirements of this part
should contact the Division of Depositor
and Consumer Protection, Consumer
Response Center, Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation, at the following
address: 1100 Walnut Street, Box #11,
Kansas City, MO 64106, or telephone 1–
877–275–3342, or FDIC Electronic
Customer Assistance Form at https://
www5.fdic.gov/starsmail/index.asp.
PART 390—REGULATIONS
TRANSFERRED FROM THE OFFICE OF
THRIFT SUPERVISION
2. The authority citation for part 390
continues to read as follows:
■
E:\FR\FM\21NOP1.SGM
21NOP1
83180
Federal Register / Vol. 81, No. 224 / Monday, November 21, 2016 / Proposed Rules
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1831y.
Subpart I—[Removed and Reserved]
3. Remove and reserve subpart I,
consisting of §§ 390.180 through
390.185.
■
Dated at Washington, DC, this 15th day of
November, 2016.
By order of the Board of Directors.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Valerie J. Best,
Assistant Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2016–27898 Filed 11–18–16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6714–01–P
DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION
Federal Aviation Administration
14 CFR Part 39
[Docket No. FAA–2016–9385; Directorate
Identifier 2016–NM–111–AD]
RIN 2120–AA64
Airworthiness Directives; Gulfstream
Aerospace Corporation Airplanes
Federal Aviation
Administration (FAA), DOT.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking
(NPRM).
AGENCY:
We propose to adopt a new
airworthiness directive (AD) for all
Gulfstream Aerospace Corporation
Model G–1159B airplanes. This
proposed AD was prompted by a review
of airplane maintenance records, which
revealed that incorrect rudder
assemblies were installed on certain
airplanes. This proposed AD would
require certain inspections, and
replacement or modification of the
rudder assembly if necessary. We are
proposing this AD to address the unsafe
condition on these products.
DATES: We must receive comments on
this proposed AD by January 5, 2017.
ADDRESSES: You may send comments,
using the procedures found in 14 CFR
11.43 and 11.45, by any of the following
methods:
• Federal eRulemaking Portal: Go to
https://www.regulations.gov. Follow the
instructions for submitting comments.
• Fax: 202–493–2251.
• Mail: U.S. Department of
Transportation, Docket Operations, M–
30, West Building Ground Floor, Room
W12–140, 1200 New Jersey Avenue SE.,
Washington, DC 20590.
• Hand Delivery: Deliver to Mail
address above between 9 a.m. and 5
p.m., Monday through Friday, except
Federal holidays.
For service information identified in
this NPRM, contact Gulfstream
asabaliauskas on DSK3SPTVN1PROD with PROPOSALS
SUMMARY:
VerDate Sep<11>2014
17:51 Nov 18, 2016
Jkt 241001
Aerospace Corporation, Technical
Publications Dept., P.O. Box 2206,
Savannah, GA 31402–2206; telephone
800–810–4853; fax 912–965–3520; email
pubs@gulfstream.com; Internet https://
www.gulfstream.com/product_support/
technical_pubs/pubs/index.htm. You
may view this referenced service
information at the FAA, Transport
Airplane Directorate, 1601 Lind Avenue
SW., Renton, WA. For information on
the availability of this material at the
FAA, call 425–227–1221.
Examining the AD Docket
You may examine the AD docket on
the Internet at https://
www.regulations.gov by searching for
and locating Docket No. FAA–2016–
9385; or in person at the Docket
Management Facility between 9 a.m.
and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday,
except Federal holidays. The AD docket
contains this proposed AD, the
regulatory evaluation, any comments
received, and other information. The
street address for the Docket Office
(phone: 800–647–5527) is in the
ADDRESSES section. Comments will be
available in the AD docket shortly after
receipt.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Krista Greer, Aerospace Engineer,
Airframe Branch, ACE–117A, FAA,
Atlanta Aircraft Certification Office
(ACO), 1701 Columbia Avenue, College
Park, GA 30337; phone: 404–474–5544;
fax: 404–474–5606; email: krista.greer@
faa.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
Comments Invited
We invite you to send any written
relevant data, views, or arguments about
this proposal. Send your comments to
an address listed under the ADDRESSES
section. Include ‘‘Docket No. FAA–
2016–9385; Directorate Identifier 2016–
NM–111–AD’’ at the beginning of your
comments. We specifically invite
comments on the overall regulatory,
economic, environmental, and energy
aspects of this proposed AD. We will
consider all comments received by the
closing date and may amend this
proposed AD because of those
comments.
We will post all comments we
receive, without change, to https://
www.regulations.gov, including any
personal information you provide. We
will also post a report summarizing each
substantive verbal contact we receive
about this proposed AD.
Discussion
We reviewed Gulfstream airplane
maintenance records which revealed
that incorrect rudder assemblies were
PO 00000
Frm 00011
Fmt 4702
Sfmt 4702
installed on certain Gulfstream Model
G–1159B airplanes (also referred to by
marketing designation GIIB).
Investigation revealed that the
Gulfstream GII/GIIB Illustrated Parts
Catalog (IPC) did not clearly specify that
the rudder assemblies for Model G–1159
airplanes (also referred to by marketing
designation GII) have part number (P/N)
1159CS20004–3, and the rudder
assemblies for Model G–1159B airplanes
have P/N 1159CS25000–3/–9.
Installation of rudders for Model G–
1159 airplanes on Model G–1159B
airplanes does not comply with the
design fail-safe requirements for Model
G–1159B airplanes. Although the rudder
assembly designs are similar, the upper
hinge configuration for Model G–1159B
airplanes includes a dual load path to
prevent control surface flutter in the
event of middle or upper hinge failure.
Installation of an incorrect rudder
assembly could result in flutter and
subsequent loss of the rudder, which
could result in loss of control of the
airplane.
Related Service Information Under 1
CFR Part 51
We reviewed Gulfstream GII/IIB
Customer Bulletin 468, dated February
17, 2016 (for Model G–1159 and Model
G–1159B airplanes). The service
information describes procedures for
inspecting the rudder assembly to
determine the part number, verifying
that the part number of the rudder
assembly matches what is recorded in
the airplane maintenance records,
inspecting the rudder hinges, and
modifying the rudder assembly. This
service information is reasonably
available because the interested parties
have access to it through their normal
course of business or by the means
identified in the ADDRESSES section.
FAA’s Determination
We are proposing this AD because we
evaluated all the relevant information
and determined the unsafe condition
described previously is likely to exist or
develop in other products of the same
type design.
Proposed AD Requirements
This proposed AD would require
accomplishing the actions specified in
the service information described
previously.
Costs of Compliance
We estimate that this proposed AD
affects 24 airplanes of U.S. registry. We
estimate the following costs to comply
with this proposed AD:
E:\FR\FM\21NOP1.SGM
21NOP1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 81, Number 224 (Monday, November 21, 2016)]
[Proposed Rules]
[Pages 83174-83180]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2016-27898]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
12 CFR Parts 343 and 390
RIN 3064-AE49
Removal of Transferred OTS Regulations Regarding Consumer
Protection in Sales of Insurance and Amendments to FDIC Consumer
Protection in Sales of Insurance Regulation
AGENCY: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
ACTION: Notice of proposed rulemaking.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: In this notice of proposed rulemaking, the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (``FDIC'') proposes to rescind and remove from
the Code of Federal Regulations the subpart entitled ``Consumer
Protection in Sales of Insurance'' (``the subpart'') that was included
in the regulations transferred to the FDIC from the Office of Thrift
Supervision (``OTS'') on July 21, 2011 in connection with the
implementation of applicable provisions of title III of the Dodd-Frank
Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act (``Dodd-Frank Act'').
The requirements for State savings associations in this subpart are
substantively similar to the requirements in the FDIC's part which is
also entitled ``Consumer Protection in Sales of Insurance'' (``the
part'') and is applicable for all insured depository institutions
(``IDIs'') for which the FDIC has been designated the appropriate
Federal banking agency.
The FDIC proposes to rescind in its entirety the subpart and to
modify the scope of the part to include State savings associations and
their subsidiaries to conform to and reflect the scope of the FDIC's
current supervisory responsibilities as the appropriate Federal banking
agency. The FDIC also proposes to define ``FDIC-supervised insured
depository institution or institution'' and ``State savings
association.'' Finally, the FDIC proposes to transfer an anticoercion
and antitying provision from the subpart that is applicable to State
savings associations.
Upon removal of the subpart, the Consumer Protection in Sales of
Insurance, regulations applicable for all IDIs for which the FDIC has
been designated the appropriate Federal banking agency will be found in
the part.
DATES: Comments must be received on or before January 20, 2017.
ADDRESSES: You may submit comments by any of the following methods:
FDIC Web site: https://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal/propose.html. Follow instructions for submitting comments on
the agency Web site.
FDIC Email: Comments@fdic.gov. Include RIN #3064-AE49 on
the subject line of the message.
FDIC Mail: Robert E. Feldman, Executive Secretary,
Attention: Comments, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th
Street NW., Washington, DC 20429.
Hand Delivery to FDIC: 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 a.m. and 5 p.m.
Please include your name, affiliation, address, email address, and
telephone number(s) in your comment. Where appropriate, comments should
include a short Executive Summary consisting of no more than five
single-spaced pages. All statements received, including attachments and
other supporting materials, are part of the public record and are
subject to public disclosure. You should submit only information that
you wish to make publicly available.
Please note: All comments received will be posted generally
without change to https://www.fdic.gov/regulations/laws/federal/propose.html, including any personal information provided. Paper
copies of public comments may be requested from the Public
Information Center by telephone at 1-877-275-3342 or 1-703-562-2200.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Martha L. Ellett, Counsel, Consumer
Compliance Section, Legal Division, (202) 898-6765; John Jackwood, Sr.
Policy Analyst, Division of Depositor and Consumer Protection, (202)
898-3991.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
The Dodd-Frank Act
The Dodd-Frank Act \1\ provided for a substantial reorganization of
the regulation of State and Federal savings associations and their
holding companies. Beginning July 21, 2011, the transfer date
established by section 311 of the Dodd-Frank Act, codified at 12 U.S.C.
5411, the powers, duties, and functions formerly performed by the OTS
were divided among the FDIC, as to State savings associations, the
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (``OCC''), as to Federal
savings associations, and the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System (``FRB''), as to savings and loan holding companies. Section
316(b) of the Dodd-Frank Act, codified at 12 U.S.C. 5414(b), provides
the manner of treatment for all orders, resolutions, determinations,
regulations, and advisory materials that had been issued, made,
prescribed, or allowed to become effective by the OTS. The section
provides that if such materials were in effect on the day before the
transfer date, they continue to be in effect and are enforceable by or
against the appropriate successor agency until they are modified,
terminated, set aside, or superseded in accordance with applicable law
by such successor agency, by any court of competent jurisdiction, or by
operation of law.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act,
Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010) (codified at 12 U.S.C.
5301 et seq.).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 316(c) of the Dodd-Frank Act, codified at 12 U.S.C.
5414(c), further directed the FDIC and the OCC to consult with one
another and to publish a list of the continued OTS regulations that
would be enforced by the FDIC and the OCC, respectively. On June 14,
2011, the FDIC's Board of Directors approved a ``List of OTS
Regulations to be enforced by the OCC and the FDIC Pursuant to the
Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act.'' This list
was published by the FDIC and the OCC as a Joint Notice in the Federal
Register on July 6, 2011.\2\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ 76 FR 39247 (July 6, 2011).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Although section 312(b)(2)(B)(i)(II) of the Dodd-Frank Act,
codified at 12 U.S.C. 5412(b)(2)(B)(i)(II), granted the OCC rulemaking
authority relating to both State and Federal savings associations,
nothing in the Dodd-Frank Act affected the FDIC's existing authority to
issue regulations under the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (``FDI Act'')
and other laws as the ``appropriate Federal banking agency'' or under
similar statutory terminology. Section
[[Page 83175]]
312(c) of the Dodd-Frank Act amended the definition of ``appropriate
Federal banking agency'' contained in section 3(q) of the FDI Act, 12
U.S.C. 1813(q), to add State savings associations to the list of
entities for which the FDIC is designated as the ``appropriate Federal
banking agency.'' As a result, when the FDIC acts as the designated
``appropriate Federal banking agency'' (or under similar terminology)
for State savings associations, as it does here, the FDIC is authorized
to issue, modify and rescind regulations involving such associations,
as well as for State nonmember banks and insured branches of foreign
banks.
As noted, on June 14, 2011, pursuant to this authority, the FDIC's
Board of Directors reissued and redesignated certain transferring
regulations of the former OTS. These transferred OTS regulations were
published as new FDIC regulations in the Federal Register on August 5,
2011.\3\ When it republished the transferred OTS regulations as new
FDIC regulations, the FDIC specifically noted that its staff would
evaluate the transferred OTS rules and might later recommend
incorporating the transferred OTS regulations into other FDIC rules,
amending them, or rescinding them, as appropriate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ 76 FR 47652 (Aug. 5, 2011).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
One of the OTS rules transferred to the FDIC governed OTS oversight
of consumer protections for depository institution sales of insurance.
The OTS rule, formerly found at 12 CFR part 536, was transferred to the
FDIC with only minor nonsubstantive changes and is now found in the
FDIC's rules at part 390, subpart I, entitled ``Consumer Protection in
Sales of Insurance.'' Before the transfer of the OTS rules and
continuing today, the FDIC's rules contained part 343, also entitled
``Consumer Protection in Sales of Insurance,'' a rule governing FDIC
oversight of consumer protection regulations that apply to retail sales
practices, solicitations, advertising, or offers of any insurance
product with respect to IDIs for which the FDIC has been designated the
appropriate Federal banking agency. After careful review and comparison
of part 390, subpart I, and part 343, the FDIC proposes to rescind part
390, subpart I, because, as discussed below, it is substantively
redundant to existing part 343 and simultaneously we propose to make
technical conforming edits to our existing rule.
FDIC's Existing 12 CFR Part 343 and Former OTS's Part 536 (Transferred,
in Part, to FDIC's Part 390, Subpart I)
Section 305 of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (``GLB Act'') \4\ added
section 47 to the FDI Act,\5\ entitled ``Insurance Consumer
Protections.'' Section 47 applies to retail sales practices,
solicitations, advertising, or offers of insurance products by
depository institutions \6\ or persons engaged in these activities at
an office of the institution or on behalf of the institution.\7\
Section 47 directs the FDIC, the OTS, the OCC, and the FRB
(collectively the ``Federal banking agencies'') to include provisions
specifically relating to sales practices, disclosures and advertising,
the physical separation of banking and nonbanking activities, and
domestic violence discrimination.\8\ On December 4, 2000, pursuant to
section 305 of the GLB Act,\9\ the Federal banking agencies published a
joint final rule \10\ to implement consumer protection in sales of
insurance provisions of section 47 of the FDI Act.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\4\ Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, Public Law 106-102, 113 Stat. 1338
(1999).
\5\ 12 U.S.C. 1831x.
\6\ A ``depository institution'' in this context means a
national bank in the case of institutions supervised by the OCC, a
State member bank in the case of the FRB, a State nonmember bank in
the case of the FDIC, and a savings association in the case of the
OTS. 65 FR 75822 fn. 1 (Dec. 4, 2000).
\7\ 12 U.S.C. 1831x(a)(1)(A).
\8\ 12 U.S.C. 1831x.
\9\ 12 U.S.C. 1831x(a)(3).
\10\ 65 FR 75822 (Dec. 4, 2000).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 47 of the FDI Act instructs the Federal banking agencies to
consult and coordinate with one another and prescribe and publish joint
consumer protection regulations that apply to retail sales practices,
solicitations, advertising, or offers of insurance products by
depository institutions or persons engaged in these activities at an
office of the institution or on behalf of the institution.\11\ Section
47 also requires the Federal banking agencies to consult with the State
insurance regulators, as appropriate.\12\ The Federal banking agencies
consulted and coordinated with respect to this rulemaking and on an
interagency basis jointly issued rules that are substantively identical
with regard to consumer protection in sales of insurance
requirements,\13\ including the same definition of a ``covered person''
or ``you.'' \14\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\11\ 12 U.S.C. 1831x(a)(1).
\12\ 12 U.S.C. 1831x(a)(3).
\13\ 65 FR 75822 (Dec. 4, 2000).
\14\ 65 FR 75822, 75824 (Dec. 4, 2000). A ``covered person'' or
``you'' means ``any depository institution or any other person
selling, soliciting, advertising, or offering insurance products or
annuities to a consumer at an office of the institution or on behalf
of the institution. A `covered person' includes any person,
including a subsidiary or other affiliate, if that person or one of
its employees sells, solicits, advertises, or offers insurance
products or annuities at an office of an institution or on behalf of
an institution. 65 FR 75824 (Dec. 4, 2000). See also 12 CFR
343.20(j)(1) and 12 CFR 390.181.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The scope of part 343 in the FDIC's regulations and of part 390,
subpart I in the OTS's regulations is also substantively similar. The
FDIC regulations apply to any bank \15\ or any other person that is
engaged in such activities at an office of the bank or on behalf of the
bank.\16\ Similarly, the OTS regulations apply to any State savings
association or any other person that is engaged in such activities at
an office of a State savings association or on behalf of a State
savings association.\17\ In the FDIC's scope provisions, any other
person includes subsidiaries \18\ because only subsidiaries that are
selling insurance products or annuities at an office of the institution
or acting on behalf of the depository institution as defined in the
rules would be subject to the requirements of the rules.\19\ The OTS
regulation specifically states that its regulation applies to
subsidiaries of a State savings association only to the extent that it
sells, solicits, advertises, or offers insurance products or annuities
at an office of a State savings association or on behalf of a State
savings association.\20\ This OTS provision will not be carried over to
the FDIC's part 343 because it is redundant and unnecessary, since the
FDIC scope provision already includes subsidiaries within its
definition.\21\ The rule specifically states that a covered person (or
you) includes any person including a subsidiary or other affiliate if
that person or one of its employees sells, solicits, advertises, or
offers insurance products or annuities at an office of an institution
or on behalf of an institution.\22\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\15\ Bank means an FDIC-insured, state-chartered commercial or
savings bank that is not a member of the Federal Reserve System and
for which the FDIC is the appropriate federal banking agency
pursuant to section 3(q) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12
U.S.C. 1813(q)). 12 CFR 343.20(b).
\16\ 12 CFR 343.10.
\17\ 12 CFR 390.180(a)(1), (2).
\18\ See 65 FR 75822, 75823 (Dec. 4, 2000).
\19\ 65 FR 75822, 75823 (Dec. 4, 2000) (footnote omitted).
\20\ 12 CFR 390.180(b).
\21\ 12 CFR 343.10.
\22\ 65 FR 75822, 75824 (Dec. 4, 2000) (italics added).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Accordingly, the portions of the OTS regulations that applied to
State savings associations, their subsidiaries and their affiliates,
originally codified at 12 CFR part 536 and subsequently transferred to
[[Page 83176]]
FDIC's part 390, subpart I, are substantively similar to the current
FDIC regulations codified at 12 CFR part 343. By amending part 343 to
encompass State savings associations and rescinding part 390, subpart
I, the FDIC will streamline its regulations and reduce redundancy.
Although the former OTS rule and part 390, subpart I, covers
savings and loan holding companies that are affiliated with savings
associations in addition to savings associations, the FDIC does not
supervise savings and loan or bank holding companies for purposes of
this rule. Section 312 of the Dodd-Frank Act \23\ divides and transfers
the functions of the former OTS to the FDIC, OCC, and FRB by amending
section 1813(q) of the FDI Act. Specifically, section 312 transfers the
former OTS's power to regulate State savings associations to the FDIC,
while it transfers the power to regulate savings and loan holding
companies to the FRB.\24\ As a result, whereas the former OTS part 536
applied to savings associations, their subsidiaries and their
affiliates, including savings and loan holding companies,\25\ upon
transfer of part 536 to FDIC's part 390, subpart I, only the authority
over State savings associations and their subsidiaries and other
affiliates was transferred to the FDIC for purposes of this rule.\26\
The FRB currently has jurisdiction over the regulation and supervision
of consumer protections in connection with retail insurance sales
practices as it applies to affiliates, including savings and loan
holding companies of State savings associations.\27\ For this reason,
the existing references to affiliates in part 390, subpart I, are not
proposed to be transferred to part 343 of the FDIC rules.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\23\ Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act,
Public Law 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (2010) (codified at 12 U.S.C.
5412).
\24\ 12 U.S.C. 5412.
\25\ 12 CFR 536.1.
\26\ 12 CFR 390.180.
\27\ 12 CFR part 208, subpart H.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
After careful comparison of the FDIC's part 343 with the
transferred OTS rule in part 390, subpart I, the FDIC has concluded
that the transferred OTS rules governing consumer protection in sales
of insurance are substantively redundant. Based on the foregoing, the
FDIC proposes to rescind and remove from the Code of Federal
Regulations the transferred OTS rules located at part 390, subpart I,
and to make minor conforming changes to part 343 to incorporate State
savings associations.
II. The Proposal
Regarding the functions of the former OTS that were transferred to
the FDIC, section 316(b)(3) of the Dodd-Frank Act, 12 U.S.C.
5414(b)(3), in pertinent part, provides that the former OTS's
regulations will be enforceable by the FDIC until they are modified,
terminated, set aside, or superseded in accordance with applicable law.
After reviewing the rules currently found in part 390, subpart I, the
FDIC proposes (1) to rescind part 390, subpart I, in its entirety; (2)
to modify to the scope of part 343 to include State savings
associations and their subsidiaries to conform to and reflect the scope
of FDIC's current supervisory responsibilities as the appropriate
Federal banking agency for State savings associations; (3) delete the
definition of bank and replace it with a definition of FDIC-supervised
insured depository institution or institution, which means any State
nonmember insured bank or State savings association for which the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation is the appropriate Federal
banking agency pursuant to section 3(q) of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(q)); (4) add a new subsection (i), which
would define ``State savings association'' as having the same meaning
as in section 3(b)(3) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C.
1813(b)(3)); (5) transfer an anticoercion and antitying provision from
part 390, subpart I, that is applicable to State savings associations
to part 343; and (6) make conforming technical edits throughout,
including replacing the term ``institution'' in place of ``bank''
throughout the rule where necessary.
If the proposal is finalized, oversight of consumer protection in
sales of insurance in part 343 would apply to all FDIC-supervised
institutions, including State savings associations, and part 390,
subpart I, would be removed because it is largely redundant of the
rules found in part 343. Rescinding part 390, subpart I, will serve to
streamline the FDIC's rules and eliminate unnecessary regulations.
III. Request for Comments
The FDIC invites comments on all aspects of this proposed
rulemaking, and specifically requests comments on the following:
(1) Are there any specific provisions of part 343 that are outdated
or obsolete, or are behind industry standards? If so, please describe
and recommend alternate methodology.
(2) What impacts, positive or negative, can you foresee in the
FDIC's proposal to rescind part 390, subpart I?
Written comments must be received by the FDIC no later than January
20, 2017.
IV. Regulatory Analysis and Procedure
A. The Paperwork Reduction Act
In accordance with the requirements of the Paperwork Reduction Act
(``PRA'') of 1995, 44 U.S.C. 3501-3521, the FDIC 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 Proposed Rule would rescind and remove from FDIC regulations
part 390, subpart I from the FDIC regulations. This rule was
transferred with only nominal changes to the FDIC from the OTS when the
OTS was abolished by title III of the Dodd-Frank Act. Part 390, subpart
I, is largely redundant of the FDIC's existing part 343 regarding
consumer protections for depository institution sales of insurance. The
information collections contained in part 343 are cleared by OMB under
the FDIC's Insurance Sales Consumer Protections information collection
(OMB Control No. 3064-0140). The FDIC reviewed its burden estimates for
the collection at the time it assumed responsibility for supervision of
State savings associations transferred from the OTS and determined that
no changes to the burden estimates were necessary. The Proposed Rule
would not revise the Insurance Sales Consumer Protections information
collection under OMB Control No. 3064-0140 or create any new
information collection pursuant to the PRA. Consequently, no submission
will be made to the Office of Management and Budget for review. The
FDIC requests comment on its conclusion that this NPR does not revise
the Insurance Sales Consumer Protections information collection 3064-
0140.
Finally, the Proposed Rule would (1) amend part 343 to include
State savings associations and their subsidiaries within its scope; and
(2) define ``FDIC-supervised insured depository institution or
institution'' and ``State savings association;'' (3) transfer an
anticoercion and antitying provision from part 390, subpart I, that is
applicable to State savings associations to part 343; and (4) make
conforming technical edits throughout These measures clarify that State
savings associations, as well as State nonmember banks are subject to
part 343. With respect to part 343, the Proposed Rule does not revise
any existing, or create any new information collection pursuant to the
PRA. Consequently, no submission will be made to the Office of
Management and Budget for review. The FDIC requests
[[Page 83177]]
comment on its conclusion that this aspect of the NPR does not create a
new or revise and existing information collection.
B. The Regulatory Flexibility Act
The Regulatory Flexibility Act (``RFA''), requires that, in
connection with a notice of proposed rulemaking, an agency prepare and
make available for public comment an initial regulatory flexibility
analysis that describes the impact of the proposed rule on small
entities (defined in regulations promulgated by the Small Business
Administration to include banking organizations with total assets of
less than or equal to $550 million).\28\ However, a regulatory
flexibility analysis is not required if the agency certifies that the
rule will not have a significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities, and publishes its certification and a short
explanatory statement in the Federal Register together with the
proposed rule. For the reasons provided below, the FDIC certifies that
the Proposed Rule would not have a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\28\ 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
As discussed in this notice of proposed rulemaking, part 390,
subpart I, was transferred from OTS part 536, which governed consumer
protections for depository institution sales of insurance. OTS part 536
had been in effect since 2001 and all State savings associations were
required to comply with it. Because it is substantially same as
existing part 343 of the FDIC's rules and therefore redundant, the FDIC
proposes rescinding and removing the transferred regulation now located
in part 390, subpart I. As a result, all FDIC-supervised institutions--
including State savings associations and their subsidiaries--would be
required to comply with part 343 if they are selling, soliciting,
advertising, or offering any insurance product. Because all State
savings associations and their subsidiaries have been required to
comply with substantially similar consumer protection rules if they
engaged in sales of insurance since 2001,\29\ the Proposed Rule would
not place additional requirements or burdens on any State savings
association irrespective of its size. Therefore, the Proposed Rule
would not have a significant impact on a substantial number of small
entities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\29\ 65 FR 75822 (Dec. 4, 2000). The final rule became effective
April 1, 2001.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Plain Language
Section 722 of the GLB Act, codified at 12 U.S.C. 4809, requires
each Federal banking agency to use plain language in all of its
proposed and final rules published after January 1, 2000. The FDIC
invites comments on whether the Proposed Rule is clearly stated and
effectively organized, and how the FDIC might make it easier to
understand. For example:
Has the FDIC organized the material to suit your needs? If
not, how could it present the rule more clearly?
Have we clearly stated the requirements of the rule? If
not, how could the rule be more clearly stated?
Does the rule contain technical jargon that is not clear?
If so, which language requires clarification?
Would a different format (grouping and order of sections,
use of headings, paragraphing) make the regulation easier to
understand? If so, what changes would make the regulation easier to
understand?
What else could we do to make the regulation easier to
understand?
D. The Economic Growth and Regulatory Paperwork Reduction Act
Under section 2222 of the Economic Growth and Regulatory Paperwork
Reduction Act of 1996 (``EGRPRA''), the FDIC is required to review all
of its regulations, at least once every 10 years, in order to identify
any outdated or otherwise unnecessary regulations imposed on insured
institutions.\30\ The FDIC completed the last comprehensive review of
its regulations under EGRPRA in 2006 and is commencing the next
decennial review. The action taken on this rule will be included as
part of the EGRPRA review that is currently in progress. As part of
that review, the FDIC invites comments concerning whether the Proposed
Rule would impose any outdated or unnecessary regulatory requirements
on insured depository institutions. If you provide such comments,
please be specific and provide alternatives whenever appropriate.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\30\ Public Law 104-208, 110 Stat. 3009 (1996).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 343
Banks, banking; Consumer protection in sales of insurance; Savings
associations.
12 CFR Part 390
Consumer protection in sales of insurance.
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons stated in the preamble, the Board of Directors of
the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation proposes to revise part 343
of title 12 of the Code of Federal Regulations and amend part 390 of
title 12 of the Code of Federal Regulations as set forth below:
0
1. Revise part 343 to read as follows:
PART 343--CONSUMER PROTECTION IN SALES OF INSURANCE
343.10 Purpose and scope.
343.20 Definitions.
343.30 Prohibited practices.
343.40 What you must disclose.
343.50 Where insurance activities may take place.
343.60 Qualification and licensing requirements for insurance sales
personnel.
Appendix A to Part 343--Consumer Grievance Process
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1819 (Seventh and Tenth); 12 U.S.C. 1831x.
Sec. 343.10 Purpose and scope.
This part establishes consumer protections in connection with
retail sales practices, solicitations, advertising, or offers of any
insurance product or annuity to a consumer by:
(a) Any institution; or
(b) Any other person that is engaged in such activities at an
office of the institution or on behalf of the institution.
Sec. 343.20 Definitions.
As used in this part:
(a) Affiliate means a company that controls, is controlled by, or
is under common control with another company.
(b) Company means any corporation, partnership, business trust,
association or similar organization, or any other trust (unless by its
terms the trust must terminate within twenty-five years or not later
than twenty-one years and ten months after the death of individuals
living on the effective date of the trust). It does not include any
corporation the majority of the shares of which are owned by the United
States or by any State, or a qualified family partnership, as defined
in section 2(o)(10) of the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956, as amended
(12 U.S.C. 1841(o)(10)).
(c) Consumer means an individual who purchases, applies to
purchase, or is solicited to purchase from you insurance products or
annuities primarily for personal, family, or household purposes.
(d) Control of a company has the same meaning as in section 3(w)(5)
of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(w)(5)).
[[Page 83178]]
(e) Domestic violence means the occurrence of one or more of the
following acts by a current or former family member, household member,
intimate partner, or caretaker:
(1) Attempting to cause or causing or threatening another person
physical harm, severe emotional distress, psychological trauma, rape,
or sexual assault;
(2) Engaging in a course of conduct or repeatedly committing acts
toward another person, including following the person without proper
authority, under circumstances that place the person in reasonable fear
of bodily injury or physical harm;
(3) Subjecting another person to false imprisonment; or
(4) Attempting to cause or causing damage to property so as to
intimidate or attempt to control the behavior of another person.
(f) Electronic media includes any means for transmitting messages
electronically between you and a consumer in a format that allows
visual text to be displayed on equipment, for example, a personal
computer monitor.
(g) FDIC-supervised insured depository institution or institution
means any State nonmember insured bank or State savings association for
which the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation is the appropriate
Federal banking agency pursuant to section 3(q) of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(q)).
(h) Office means the premises of an institution where retail
deposits are accepted from the public.
(i) State savings association has the same meaning as in section
(3)(b)(3) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, 12 U.S.C. 1813(b)(3).
(j) Subsidiary has the same meaning as in section 3(w)(4) of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(w)(4)).
(k)(1) You means:
(i) An institution; or
(ii) Any other person only when the person sells, solicits,
advertises, or offers an insurance product or annuity to a consumer at
an office of the institution or on behalf of an institution.
(2) For purposes of this definition, activities on behalf of an
institution include activities where a person, whether at an office of
the institution or at another location sells, solicits, advertises, or
offers an insurance product or annuity and at least one of the
following applies:
(i) The person represents to a consumer that the sale,
solicitation, advertisement, or offer of any insurance product or
annuity is by or on behalf of the institution;
(ii) The institution refers a consumer to a seller of insurance
products or annuities and the institution has a contractual arrangement
to receive commissions or fees derived from a sale of an insurance
product or annuity resulting from that referral; or
(iii) Documents evidencing the sale, solicitation, advertising, or
offer of an insurance product or annuity identify or refer to the
institution.
Sec. 343.30 Prohibited practices.
(a) Anticoercion and antitying rules. You may not engage in any
practice that would lead a consumer to believe that an extension of
credit, in violation of section 106(b) of the Bank Holding Company Act
Amendments of 1970 (12 U.S.C. 1972) in the case of a State nonmember
insured bank and a foreign bank having an insured branch, or in
violation of section 5(q) of the Home Owners' Loan Act (12 U.S.C.
1464(q)) in the case of a State savings association, is conditional
upon either:
(1) The purchase of an insurance product or annuity from the
institution or any of its affiliates; or
(2) An agreement by the consumer not to obtain, or a prohibition on
the consumer from obtaining, an insurance product or annuity from an
unaffiliated entity.
(b) Prohibition on misrepresentations generally. You may not engage
in any practice or use any advertisement at any office of, or on behalf
of, the institution or a subsidiary of the institution that could
mislead any person or otherwise cause a reasonable person to reach an
erroneous belief with respect to:
(1) The fact that an insurance product or annuity sold or offered
for sale by you or any subsidiary of the institution is not backed by
the Federal government or the institution, or the fact that the
insurance product or annuity is not insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation;
(2) In the case of an insurance product or annuity that involves
investment risk, the fact that there is an investment risk, including
the potential that principal may be lost and that the product may
decline in value; or
(3) In the case of an institution or subsidiary of the institution
at which insurance products or annuities are sold or offered for sale,
the fact that:
(i) The approval of an extension of credit to a consumer by the
institution or subsidiary may not be conditioned on the purchase of an
insurance product or annuity by the consumer from the institution or a
subsidiary of the institution; and
(ii) The consumer is free to purchase the insurance product or
annuity from another source.
(c) Prohibition on domestic violence discrimination. You may not
sell or offer for sale, as principal, agent, or broker, any life or
health insurance product if the status of the applicant or insured as a
victim of domestic violence or as a provider of services to victims of
domestic violence is considered as a criterion in any decision with
regard to insurance underwriting, pricing, renewal, or scope of
coverage of such product, or with regard to the payment of insurance
claims on such product, except as required or expressly permitted under
State law.
Sec. 343.40 What you must disclose.
(a) Insurance disclosures. In connection with the initial purchase
of an insurance product or annuity by a consumer from you, you must
disclose to the consumer, except to the extent the disclosure would not
be accurate, that:
(1) The insurance product or annuity is not a deposit or other
obligation of, or guaranteed by, the institution or an affiliate of the
institution;
(2) The insurance product or annuity is not insured by the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) or any other agency of the United
States, the institution, or (if applicable) an affiliate of the
institution; and
(3) In the case of an insurance product or annuity that involves an
investment risk, there is investment risk associated with the product,
including the possible loss of value.
(b) Credit disclosure. In the case of an application for credit in
connection with which an insurance product or annuity is solicited,
offered, or sold, you must disclose that the institution may not
condition an extension of credit on either:
(1) The consumer's purchase of an insurance product or annuity from
the institution or any of its affiliates; or
(2) The consumer's agreement not to obtain, or a prohibition on the
consumer from obtaining, an insurance product or annuity from an
unaffiliated entity.
(c) Timing and method of disclosures--(1) In general. The
disclosures required by paragraph (a) of this section must be provided
orally and in writing before the completion of the initial sale of an
insurance product or annuity to a consumer. The disclosure required by
paragraph (b) of this section must be made orally and in writing at the
time the consumer applies for an extension of credit in connection with
which an insurance product or annuity is solicited, offered, or sold.
[[Page 83179]]
(2) Exception for transactions by mail. If a sale of an insurance
product or annuity is conducted by mail, you are not required to make
the oral disclosures required by paragraph (a) of this section. If you
take an application for credit by mail, you are not required to make
the oral disclosure required by paragraph (b) of this section.
(3) Exception for transactions by telephone. If a sale of an
insurance product or annuity is conducted by telephone, you may provide
the written disclosures required by paragraph (a) of this section by
mail within 3 business days beginning on the first business day after
the sale, excluding Sundays and the legal public holidays specified in
5 U.S.C. 6103(a). If you take an application for credit by telephone,
you may provide the written disclosure required by paragraph (b) of
this section by mail, provided you mail it to the consumer within three
days beginning the first business day after the application is taken,
excluding Sundays and the legal public holidays specified in 5 U.S.C.
6103(a).
(4) Electronic form of disclosures. (i) Subject to the requirements
of section 101(c) of the Electronic Signatures in Global and National
Commerce Act (12 U.S.C. 7001(c)), you may provide the written
disclosures required by paragraph (a) and (b) of this section through
electronic media instead of on paper, if the consumer affirmatively
consents to receiving the disclosures electronically and if the
disclosures are provided in a format that the consumer may retain or
obtain later, for example, by printing or storing electronically (such
as by downloading).
(ii) Any disclosure required by paragraphs (a) or (b) of this
section that is provided by electronic media is not required to be
provided orally.
(5) Disclosures must be readily understandable. The disclosures
provided shall be conspicuous, simple, direct, readily understandable,
and designed to call attention to the nature and significance of the
information provided. For instance, you may use the following
disclosures in visual media, such as television broadcasting, ATM
screens, billboards, signs, posters and written advertisements and
promotional materials, as appropriate and consistent with paragraphs
(a) and (b) of this section:
(i) NOT A DEPOSIT
(ii) NOT FDIC-INSURED
(iii) NOT INSURED BY ANY FEDERAL GOVERNMENT AGENCY
(iv) NOT GUARANTEED BY THE INSTITUTION
(v) MAY GO DOWN IN VALUE
(6) Disclosures must be meaningful. (i) You must provide the
disclosures required by paragraphs (a) and (b) of this section in a
meaningful form. Examples of the types of methods that could call
attention to the nature and significance of the information provided
include:
(A) A plain-language heading to call attention to the disclosures;
(B) A typeface and type size that are easy to read;
(C) Wide margins and ample line spacing;
(D) Boldface or italics for key words; and
(E) Distinctive type size, style, and graphic devices, such as
shading or sidebars, when the disclosures are combined with other
information.
(ii) You have not provided the disclosures in a meaningful form if
you merely state to the consumer that the required disclosures are
available in printed material, but do not provide the printed material
when required and do not orally disclose the information to the
consumer when required.
(iii) With respect to those disclosures made through electronic
media for which paper or oral disclosures are not required, the
disclosures are not meaningfully provided if the consumer may bypass
the visual text of the disclosures before purchasing an insurance
product or annuity.
(7) Consumer acknowledgment. You must obtain from the consumer, at
the time a consumer receives the disclosures required under paragraphs
(a) or (b) of this section, or at the time of the initial purchase by
the consumer of an insurance product or annuity, a written
acknowledgment by the consumer that the consumer received the
disclosures. You may permit a consumer to acknowledge receipt of the
disclosures electronically or in paper form. If the disclosures
required under paragraphs (a) or (b) of this section are provided in
connection with a transaction that is conducted by telephone, you must:
(i) Obtain an oral acknowledgment of receipt of the disclosures and
maintain sufficient documentation to show that the acknowledgment was
given; and
(ii) Make reasonable efforts to obtain a written acknowledgment
from the consumer.
(d) Advertisements and other promotional material for insurance
products or annuities. The disclosures described in paragraph (a) of
this section are required in advertisements and promotional material
for insurance products or annuities unless the advertisements and
promotional materials are of a general nature describing or listing the
services or products offered by the institution.
Sec. 343.50 Where insurance activities may take place.
(a) General rule. An institution must, to the extent practicable,
keep the area where the institution conducts transactions involving
insurance products or annuities physically segregated from areas where
retail deposits are routinely accepted from the general public,
identify the areas where insurance product or annuity sales activities
occur, and clearly delineate and distinguish those areas from the areas
where the institution's retail deposit-taking activities occur.
(b) Referrals. Any person who accepts deposits from the public in
an area where such transactions are routinely conducted in the
institution may refer a consumer who seeks to purchase an insurance
product or annuity to a qualified person who sells that product only if
the person making the referral receives no more than a one-time,
nominal fee of a fixed dollar amount for each referral that does not
depend on whether the referral results in a transaction.
Sec. 343.60 Qualification and licensing requirements for insurance
sales personnel.
An institution may not permit any person to sell or offer for sale
any insurance product or annuity in any part of its office or on its
behalf, unless the person is at all times appropriately qualified and
licensed under applicable State insurance licensing standards with
regard to the specific products being sold or recommended.
Appendix A to Part 343--Consumer Grievance Process
Any consumer who believes that any institution or any other person
selling, soliciting, advertising, or offering insurance products or
annuities to the consumer at an office of the institution or on behalf
of the institution has violated the requirements of this part should
contact the Division of Depositor and Consumer Protection, Consumer
Response Center, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, at the
following address: 1100 Walnut Street, Box #11, Kansas City, MO 64106,
or telephone 1-877-275-3342, or FDIC Electronic Customer Assistance
Form at https://www5.fdic.gov/starsmail/index.asp.
PART 390--REGULATIONS TRANSFERRED FROM THE OFFICE OF THRIFT
SUPERVISION
0
2. The authority citation for part 390 continues to read as follows:
[[Page 83180]]
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1831y.
Subpart I--[Removed and Reserved]
0
3. Remove and reserve subpart I, consisting of Sec. Sec. 390.180
through 390.185.
Dated at Washington, DC, this 15th day of November, 2016.
By order of the Board of Directors.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
Valerie J. Best,
Assistant Executive Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2016-27898 Filed 11-18-16; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6714-01-P