Revisions to Prohibitions and Restrictions on Proprietary Trading and Certain Interests In, and Relationships With, Hedge Funds and Private Equity Funds, 35008-35022 [2019-15019]
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35008
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 140 / Monday, July 22, 2019 / Rules and Regulations
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency
12 CFR Part 44
[Docket ID OCC–2018–0029]
RIN 1557–AE47
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 248
[Docket No. R–1643]
RIN 7100–AF33
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION
12 CFR Part 351
RIN 3064–AE88
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING
COMMISSION
17 CFR Part 75
RIN 3038–AE72
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
17 CFR Part 255
[Release no. BHCA–6; File no. S7–30–18]
RIN 3235–AM43
Revisions to Prohibitions and
Restrictions on Proprietary Trading
and Certain Interests In, and
Relationships With, Hedge Funds and
Private Equity Funds
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency (OCC), Treasury; Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve
System (Board); Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (FDIC); Securities
and Exchange Commission (SEC); and
Commodity Futures Trading
Commission (CFTC).
ACTION: Final rules.
AGENCY:
The OCC, Board, FDIC, SEC,
and CFTC are adopting final rules to
amend the regulations implementing the
Bank Holding Company Act’s
prohibitions and restrictions on
proprietary trading and certain interests
in, and relationships with, hedge funds
and private equity funds (commonly
known as the Volcker Rule) in a manner
consistent with the statutory
amendments made pursuant to certain
sections of the Economic Growth,
Regulatory Relief, and Consumer
Protection Act (EGRRCPA). The
EGRRCPA amendments and the final
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SUMMARY:
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rules exclude from these prohibitions
and restrictions certain firms that have
total consolidated assets equal to $10
billion or less and total trading assets
and liabilities equal to five percent or
less of total consolidated assets. The
EGRRCPA amendments and the final
rules also revise the restrictions
applicable to the naming of a hedge
fund or private equity fund to permit an
investment adviser that is a banking
entity to share a name with the fund
under certain circumstances.
DATES: These final rules are effective on
July 22, 2019.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
OCC: Roman Goldstein, Risk
Specialist, Treasury and Market Risk
Policy, 202–649–6360; Tabitha Edgens,
Senior Attorney; Mark O’Horo, Senior
Attorney, Chief Counsel’s Office, (202)
649–5510; for persons who are deaf or
hearing impaired, TTY, (202) 649–5597,
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency, 400 7th Street SW,
Washington, DC 20219.
Board: Flora Ahn, Special Counsel,
(202) 452–2317, Gregory Frischmann,
Senior Counsel, (202) 452–2803, Kirin
Walsh, Attorney, (202) 452–3058, or
Sarah Podrygula, Attorney, (202) 912–
4658, Legal Division, Constance
Horsley, Deputy Associate Director,
(202) 452–5239, Cecily Boggs, Senior
Financial Institution Policy Analyst,
(202) 530–6209, David Lynch, Deputy
Associate Director, (202) 452–2081,
Division of Supervision and Regulation;
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, 20th and C Streets NW,
Washington, DC 20551.
FDIC: Bobby R. Bean, Associate
Director, bbean@fdic.gov, Michael E.
Spencer, Chief, Capital Markets
Strategies, michspencer@fdic.gov,
Andrew D. Carayiannis, Senior Policy
Analyst, acarayiannis@fdic.gov, or Brian
Cox, Capital Markets Policy Analyst,
brcox@fdic.gov, Capital Markets Branch,
(202) 898–6888; Michael B. Phillips,
Counsel, mphillips@fdic.gov, Benjamin
J. Klein, Counsel, bklein@fdic.gov, or
Annmarie H. Boyd, Counsel, aboyd@
fdic.gov, Legal Division, Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street
NW, Washington, DC 20429.
SEC: Andrew R. Bernstein, Senior
Special Counsel, Sam Litz, AttorneyAdviser, Aaron Washington, Special
Counsel, or Carol McGee, Assistant
Director, at (202) 551–5870, Office of
Derivatives Policy and Trading
Practices, Division of Trading and
Markets, and Matthew Cook, Senior
Counsel, Benjamin Tecmire, Senior
Counsel, and Jennifer Songer, Branch
Chief, at (202) 551–6787 or IArules@
sec.gov, Division of Investment
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Management, U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission, 100 F Street NE,
Washington, DC 20549.
CFTC: Cantrell Dumas, Special
Counsel, (202) 418–5043, cdumas@
cftc.gov; Jeffrey Hasterok, Data and Risk
Analyst, (646) 746–9736, jhasterok@
cftc.gov, Division of Swap Dealer and
Intermediary Oversight; Mark Fajfar,
Assistant General Counsel, (202) 418–
6636, mfajfar@cftc.gov, Office of the
General Counsel; Stephen Kane,
Research Economist, (202) 418–5911,
skane@cftc.gov, Office of the Chief
Economist; Commodity Futures Trading
Commission, Three Lafayette Centre,
1155 21st Street NW, Washington, DC
20581.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Section 13 of the Bank Holding
Company Act of 1956 (BHC Act),1 also
known as the Volcker Rule, generally
prohibits any banking entity from
engaging in proprietary trading or from
acquiring or retaining an ownership
interest in, sponsoring, or having certain
relationships with a hedge fund or
private equity fund, subject to certain
exemptions.2
Under the statute, authority for
developing and adopting regulations to
implement the prohibitions and
restrictions of section 13 of the BHC Act
is shared among the OCC, Board, FDIC,
SEC, and CFTC (the agencies).3 The
agencies adopted final rules
implementing section 13 of the BHC Act
in December 2013 (the 2013 final rule).4
The agencies recently proposed
amendments to these rules to provide
clarity about what activities are
prohibited, and to improve supervision
1 12
U.S.C. 1851.
id.
3 See 12 U.S.C. 1851(b)(2). Under section
13(b)(2)(B) of the BHC Act, rules implementing
section 13’s prohibitions and restrictions must be
issued by: (i) The appropriate Federal banking
agencies (i.e., the Board, the OCC, and the FDIC),
jointly, with respect to insured depository
institutions; (ii) the Board, with respect to any
company that controls an insured depository
institution, or that is treated as a bank holding
company for purposes of section 8 of the
International Banking Act, any nonbank financial
company supervised by the Board, and any
subsidiary of any of the foregoing (other than a
subsidiary for which an appropriate Federal
banking agency, the SEC, or the CFTC is the
primary financial regulatory agency); (iii) the CFTC
with respect to any entity for which it is the
primary financial regulatory agency, as defined in
section 2 of the Dodd-Frank Act; and (iv) the SEC
with respect to any entity for which it is the
primary financial regulatory agency, as defined in
section 2 of the Dodd-Frank Act. See id.
4 See ‘‘Prohibitions and Restrictions on
Proprietary Trading and Certain Interests in, and
Relationships With, Hedge Funds and Private
Equity Funds; Final Rule,’’ 79 FR 5535 (Jan. 31,
2014).
2 See
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and implementation of section 13 of the
BHC Act.5
The Economic Growth, Regulatory
Relief, and Consumer Protection Act
(EGRRCPA) amended section 13 of the
BHC Act by modifying the definition of
‘‘banking entity’’ to exclude certain
community banks and their affiliates
from section 13’s restrictions and by
permitting an investment adviser that is
a banking entity to share a name with
a hedge fund or private equity fund that
the banking entity organizes and offers
under certain circumstances.6
Prior to the enactment of EGRRCPA,
the definition of ‘‘banking entity,’’ for
purposes of section 13 of the BHC Act,
included any insured depository
institution, as defined in the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act (FDI Act),7 any
company that controls an insured
depository institution, or that is treated
as a bank holding company for purposes
of section 8 of the International Banking
Act of 1978 (IBA), and any affiliate or
subsidiary of such entity (excluding
from the term insured depository
institution certain insured depository
institutions that function solely in a
trust or fiduciary capacity, subject to a
variety of conditions).8
Section 203 of EGRRCPA, entitled
‘‘Community bank relief,’’ modified the
scope of the term ‘‘banking entity’’ to
exclude certain community banks and
their affiliates. Specifically, under
section 203, the term ‘‘insured
depository institution’’ no longer
includes any institution that does not
have, and is not controlled by a
company that has: (i) More than $10
billion in total consolidated assets; and
(ii) total trading assets and trading
liabilities, as reported on the most
recent applicable regulatory filing filed
by the institution, that are more than 5
percent of total consolidated assets.
Therefore, an insured depository
institution and its affiliates generally are
not ‘‘banking entities’’ if the insured
depository institution and each
affiliated insured depository institution
meets the statutory exclusion.9
5 See ‘‘Proposed Revisions to Prohibitions and
Restrictions on Proprietary Trading and Certain
Interests in, and Relationships With, Hedge Funds
and Private Equity Funds,’’ 83 FR 33432 (July 17,
2018).
6 See Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and
Consumer Protection Act, Public Law 115–174,
sections 203, 204 (May 24, 2018). These provisions
were effective upon EGRRCPA’s enactment.
7 Section 3(c)(2) of the FDI Act defines an insured
depository institution to include any bank or
savings association the deposits of which are
insured by the FDIC under the FDI Act. 12 U.S.C.
1813(c)(2).
8 12 U.S.C. 1813(c)(2), 1851(h)(1).
9 Section 203 amended section 13(h)(1)(B) of the
BHC Act by excluding certain institutions from the
term ‘‘insured depository institution’’ exclusively
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However, EGRRCPA did not amend the
definition of ‘‘banking entity’’ as it
relates to a company that is treated as
a bank holding company for purposes of
section 8 of the IBA. Accordingly, the
statutory exclusion does not apply to a
foreign banking organization with a U.S.
branch or agency, which continues to be
subject to the prohibitions in section 13
of the BHC Act.
Section 204 of EGRRCPA revised the
restrictions applicable to the naming of
a hedge fund or private equity fund 10 to
permit an investment adviser that is a
banking entity to share a name with the
fund under certain circumstances. Prior
to enactment of EGRRCPA, section 13
provided that a banking entity (or an
affiliate of the banking entity), including
an investment adviser, that organized
and offered a hedge fund or private
equity fund could not share the same
name or a variation of the same name
with the fund (the name-sharing
restriction).11 Section 204 of EGRRCPA
amended the name-sharing restriction to
permit a hedge fund or private equity
fund organized and offered by a banking
entity to share the same name or a
variation of the same name as a banking
entity that is an investment adviser to
the hedge fund or private equity fund,
if: (1) The investment adviser is not an
insured depository institution, a
company that controls an insured
depository institution, or a company
that is treated as a bank holding
company for purposes of section 8 of the
IBA; 12 (2) the investment adviser does
not share the same name or a variation
of the same name with any such
entities; and (3) the name does not
contain the word ‘‘bank.’’
On February 8, 2019, the agencies
published a notice of proposed
rulemaking (the proposal) to revise the
2013 final rule consistent with the
EGRRCPA statutory amendments.13 For
for the purposes of section 13. Insured banks and
savings associations that qualify for this exclusion
for the purposes of section 13 of the BHC Act
remain insured depository institutions under
section 3(c)(2) of the FDI Act. Additionally, an
institution that meets the criteria to be excluded
from the definition of insured depository institution
under EGRRCPA may still be a banking entity by
virtue of its affiliation with another insured
depository institution or a company that is treated
as a bank holding company under section 8 of the
IBA.
10 The terms ‘‘hedge fund’’ and ‘‘private equity
fund’’ are defined at 12 U.S.C. 1851(h)(2). See also
12 CFR 44.10(b); 12 CFR 248.10(b); 12 CFR
351.10(b); 17 CFR 255.10(b); 17 CFR 75.10(b)
(defining ‘‘covered fund’’ for purposes of the 2013
final rule).
11 12 U.S.C. 1851(d)(1)(G)(vi) (2017).
12 12 U.S.C. 3106.
13 ‘‘Proposed Revisions to Prohibitions and
Restrictions on Proprietary Trading and Certain
Interests in, and Relationships With, Hedge Funds
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the reasons discussed below, the
agencies are now adopting the proposal
as final without change.
II. Description of the Final Rules
A. Definition of Banking Entity
Consistent with the proposal, the
agencies are modifying the definition of
‘‘insured depository institution’’ in
§ __.2(r) of the 2013 final rule to
conform that definition with section 203
of EGRRCPA. Under this revised
definition, an insured depository
institution must satisfy two conditions
for it and its affiliates to qualify for the
exclusion. First, the insured depository
institution, and every entity that
controls it, must have total consolidated
assets equal to or less than $10 billion.
Second, total consolidated trading assets
and liabilities of the insured depository
institution, and every entity that
controls it, must be equal to or less than
five percent of its total consolidated
assets.
Trade associations representing large
commercial banks, community banks,
and credit unions all generally
supported the agencies’ proposal to
implement the community bank relief
provision under section 203 of
EGRRCPA.14 Some commenters cited,
among other considerations, the
statute’s plain meaning, legislative
history, and policy considerations for
their support of the proposal.15 Certain
other commenters suggested that section
203 extended relief to firms with either
$10 billion or less in total consolidated
assets or trading assets and liabilities
equal to 5 percent or less of total
consolidated assets.16 Under these
commenters’ view of section 203, many
banks with total consolidated assets
well over $10 billion, including certain
global systemically important banks (G–
SIBs) with over $250 billion in total
consolidated assets, would be exempt
from section 13 of the BHC Act.
After considering these comments, the
agencies are not persuaded by the
argument that the exclusion under
section 203 of EGRRCPA extends to
institutions with total consolidated
assets in excess of $10 billion. The
agencies believe that the statute requires
an institution to satisfy both criteria to
qualify for the exclusion. This approach
and Private Equity Funds,’’ 84 FR 2778 (Feb. 8,
2019).
14 See American Bankers Association;
Independent Community Bankers of America;
National Association of Federally-Insured Credit
Unions; California Bankers Association.
15 Los Huertos and Mount; National Association
of Federally-Insured Credit Unions.
16 See Competitive Enterprise Institute;
Competitive Enterprise Institute et al.;
Luetkemeyer; Matthew Thomas.
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is most consistent with the statutory
language of EGRRCPA, the
congressional intent behind the statute,
and the structure of the statute as a
whole.
The agencies note that Section 203 of
EGRRCPA, is entitled ‘‘Community bank
relief,’’ and that numerous floor
statements made by senators
contemporaneously with passage of the
legislation in the Senate on a bipartisan
basis indicated that section 203 was
only intended to exclude community
banks and their affiliates.17 Moreover,
the Senate Banking Committee’s
summary of section 203 describes it as
exempting banking entities that have
total consolidated assets of $10 billion
or less and total trading assets and
trading liabilities that are five percent or
less of total consolidated assets.18 For
these reasons, the agencies are adopting
without change the proposed revisions
to the banking entity definition.
Some commenters requested that, for
purposes of determining whether
trading assets and liabilities are within
the five percent threshold, the agencies
limit their review to an institution’s
most recent applicable regulatory
filing.19 These commenters requested
that the agencies not review all
‘‘available information,’’ as suggested in
the preamble to the proposal,20 because
such information could be at variance
with the trading assets and/or liabilities
figure(s) reported in the most recent
applicable regulatory filing. These
commenters also requested that the
agencies confirm that section 203 of
EGRRCPA is self-effectuating and that
no additional action is required by the
agencies for the community bank
exclusion to take effect.
The agencies confirm that a bank or
savings association seeking to determine
its eligibility for the exclusion may use
its most recent quarterly Consolidated
Report of Condition and Income (call
report) as the source of data for its
consolidated assets and its total trading
assets and liabilities at the bank or
17 See, e.g., 164 Cong. Rec. S1696 at S1701,
S1720, S1724–25 (Mar. 14, 2018).
18 See S. 2155, Section-By-Section, as Passed by
Senate, United State Senate Committee on Banking
and Urban Affairs (March 14, 2018).
19 See American Bankers Association; California
Bankers Association. Another commenter requested
that the agencies provide additional clarity for the
purposes of determining which institutions qualify
for the relevant exclusion. See Grimm. That
commenter also requested further clarity with
respect to the changes made to the name-sharing
restriction pursuant to section 204 of EGRRCPA.
20 The preamble to the proposal stated that ‘‘the
Agencies would expect to use available
information, including information reported on
regulatory reporting forms available to each Agency,
with respect to whether financial institutions
qualify for the exclusion.’’ 84 FR 2781.
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savings association level. Similarly, a
banking organization may use the most
recent filing of the Board’s FR Y–9C by
its holding company as the source of
data about the consolidated assets and
total trading assets and liabilities of the
companies controlling the bank or
savings association. Generally, the
agencies believe that most current FR
Y9–SP filers will be able to determine
eligibility for the exclusion based on the
call report data filed by their affiliated
insured depository institution(s). All
entities that seek to rely on the
community bank exclusion should
assure themselves that all affiliated
banks or savings associations and
holding companies satisfy the total
consolidated assets and trading asset
and liability thresholds. As the agencies
noted in the proposal, institutions that
meet the eligibility requirements under
section 203 of EGRRCPA are no longer
subject to the requirements of section 13
of the BHC Act, and no additional
action by the agencies is required for the
exclusion to take effect.
Two commenters requested that the
agencies provide clarification that
certain securities held by banks or
savings associations and their holding
companies are not within the category
of ‘‘trading assets’’ for purposes of
determining eligibility for the
exclusion.21 As described above, the call
report or FR Y–9C, as applicable, may
be used as the source of data for
purposes of determining compliance
with the total assets and trading asset
and liability thresholds. Institutions
should classify assets and liabilities
consistent with the instructions to the
relevant report in consultation with
appropriate supervisors, as necessary.
One commenter requested that the
agencies generally clarify that securities
held as available-for-sale do not count
towards the trading assets and liabilities
threshold.22 The call report and FR Y–
9C require reporting an institution’s
available-for-sale securities separately
from the institution’s trading assets.
Accordingly, securities appropriately
classified as available-for-sale and
excluded from trading assets on an
institution’s call report or FR Y–9C will
not count toward an institution’s trading
assets and liabilities threshold. Another
commenter requested that the agencies
address the classification of securities
held in connection with employee
deferred compensation programs for
purposes of the call report and FR Y–
21 American Bankers Association (securities
reported as available-for-sale); Bessemer Group, Inc.
(mutual fund shares held to hedge nonqualified
compensation plan liabilities).
22 American Bankers Association.
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9C.23 The question of how to classify
specific types of assets, such as assets
held in connection with employee
deferred compensation programs, on the
call report and FR Y–9C is fact-specific
and beyond the scope of this
rulemaking.24 As stated above,
institutions should classify assets and
liabilities consistent with the
instructions to the relevant report in
consultation with appropriate
supervisors, as necessary.
Two commenters generally opposed
providing an exclusion to community
banks.25 One of these commenters
suggested that, for a community bank to
remain eligible for the exclusion, it
should be required to pass periodic tests
by its regulator.26 As noted above,
EGRRCPA excludes community banks
from section 13 if they meet the
specified total consolidated assets and
trading asset and liability conditions,
and these provisions became effective
upon enactment. Accordingly, the
agencies are finalizing the exclusion as
proposed in order to conform the
regulation to the statutory exclusion.
The banking agencies note that they will
continue to examine community banks
that are exempt under section 203 for
compliance with applicable laws and
regulations, including the requirement
under applicable banking laws and
regulations that they operate in a safe
and sound manner.
Another commenter requested relief
from the control definition or a specific
exclusion for investors in companies
that control industrial loan companies
(ILCs).27 Any changes to the definition
of ‘‘control’’ under the BHC Act 28 are
outside of the scope of this
rulemaking.29 Furthermore, the agencies
do not find any support for a specific
exemption from section 13 of the BHC
Act for investors in ILC parents under
EGRRCPA. Accordingly, the agencies
are not adopting an exemption from
23 Bessemer
Group, Inc.
regulatory reporting forms to which the
commenter is requesting revision or clarification are
also used for other purposes, such as for
determining capital requirements. See 12 CFR part
3, app. B; 12 CFR 217.202; 12 CFR 324.202 (using
trading assets and liabilities for the purpose of
determining ‘‘covered positions’’ under the market
risk capital rule). Accordingly, changes to the
reporting forms or the instructions thereto would
likely have unintended consequences for other
areas of supervision and regulation.
25 Tinee Carraker, Rodger Cunningham.
26 See Carraker.
27 See EnerBank.
28 12 U.S.C. 1841(a)(2); 12 CFR 225.2(e)(1).
29 The Board recently invited comment on a
notice of proposed rulemaking to simplify and
increase the transparency of the rules for
determining control of a banking organization. Press
Release: https://www.federalreserve.gov/
newsevents/pressreleases/bcreg20190423a.htm.
24 The
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section 13 of the BHC Act for parent
ILCs or investors in the parent ILCs that
do not otherwise meet the eligibility
requirements for the community bank
exclusion under section 203.
B. Modification of Name-Sharing
Restriction
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Consistent with the proposal, the
agencies are modifying the namesharing restriction in § l.11(a)(6)(i) of
the 2013 final rule to conform that
restriction to section 204 of EGRRCPA.
Pursuant to this change, a hedge fund or
private equity fund sponsored by a
banking entity is permitted to share the
same name or a variation of the same
name with a banking entity that is an
investment adviser to the fund, subject
to the conditions specified in the
statute.30 These conditions require that
the investment adviser is not, and does
not share the same name (or a variation
of the same name) as, an insured
depository institution, a company that
controls an insured depository
institution, or a company that is treated
as a bank holding company for purposes
of section 8 of the IBA,31 and that the
investment adviser’s name does not
contain the word ‘‘bank.’’ 32
The agencies received four comments
on these proposed changes to the namesharing restriction. One commenter
generally supported the proposed
changes to the name-sharing
restriction.33 Two commenters asked
the agencies to provide relief from the
name-sharing restriction for covered
funds that are required or expected by
regulators in a foreign jurisdiction to
share the same name or a variation of
the same name with a fund manager,
and the fund manager shares a name or
a variation of the same name as its
banking entity affiliate.34 One of these
commenters asserted that concerns
regarding investor confusion about the
role of the banking entity or perceived
bailout risk would be mitigated because
30 EGRRCPA, section 204. While the statute
applies these restrictions and conditions to ‘‘hedge
funds’’ and ‘‘private equity funds,’’ the 2013 final
rule applies to ‘‘covered funds,’’ as defined in § l
.10 of the regulations. See supra footnote 10.
31 12 U.S.C. 1851(d)(1)(G)(vi)(I); 12 U.S.C.
1851(d)(1)(G)(vi)(II).
32 12 U.S.C. 1851(d)(1)(G)(vi)(III). The
requirement that the name not contain the word
‘‘bank’’ was included in the name-sharing
restriction by section 204 of EGRRCPA but already
is a condition under the 2013 final rule.
Accordingly, the agencies did not make any
additional modifications to the rule to reflect this
condition.
33 Independent Community Bankers of America.
34 American Bankers Association; Investment
Adviser Association. Another commenter stated
that the agencies should be mindful of any foreign
requirements on name-sharing between covered
funds and banking entities. See Matthew Thomas.
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the funds would be required to comply
with the written disclosure
requirements under the 2013 final rule
for organizing and offering a covered
fund.35 Another commenter suggested
that the agencies could use their
exemptive authority under section
13(d)(1)(J) of the BHC Act to implement
this exemption.36
The purpose of these revisions to the
2013 final rule is to conform the
amendments to section 204 of
EGRRCPA. Section 204 of EGRRCPA did
not provide an exclusion allowing
banking entities to share a name with a
covered fund if required or expected to
by foreign regulators. Accordingly, the
agencies have determined not to make
the requested change to the namesharing restriction, which goes beyond
the scope of this rulemaking, and are
adopting the changes implementing
section 204 as proposed.
The agencies are also finalizing
conforming changes to the definition of
‘‘sponsor.’’ 37 Pursuant to these changes,
the definition of the term ‘‘sponsor’’
includes a banking entity that shares the
same name or a variation of the same
name with a fund, for corporate,
marketing, promotional, or other
purposes, except as permitted under § _
_.11(a)(6)—i.e., the name-sharing
restriction as amended by EGRRCPA.
The agencies did not receive any
comments on the proposed conforming
changes to the definition of ‘‘sponsor.’’
The agencies are adopting this change as
final in order to conform the rule to the
EGRRCPA statutory revisions.
III. Administrative Law Matters
A. Paperwork Reduction Act
Certain provisions of the final rule
contain ‘‘collection of information’’
requirements within the meaning of the
Paperwork Reduction Act (PRA) of 1995
(44 U.S.C. 3501–3521). In accordance
with the requirements of the PRA, the
agencies may not conduct or sponsor,
and a 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 agencies
reviewed and determined that the final
would not change the current reporting,
recordkeeping or third-party disclosure
requirements associated with section 13
of the BHC Act under the PRA.
However, the final rule would reduce
the number of respondents for the Board
35 See Investment Adviser Association; 12 CFR
44.11(a)(8); 12 CFR 248.11(a)(8); 12 CFR
351.11(a)(8); 17 CFR 255.11(a)(8); 17 CFR
75.11(a)(8).
36 See American Bankers Association.
37 EGRRCPA section 204.
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35011
(including OCC-, FDIC-, SEC-, and
CFTC-supervised institutions under a
holding company), FDIC (with respect
to supervised institutions not under a
holding company), and OCC (supervised
institutions not under a holding
company), which will be addressed as a
nonmaterial change to OMB.
B. Plain Language
Section 722 of the Gramm-LeachBliley Act 38 requires the OCC, Board,
and FDIC (Federal banking agencies) to
use plain language in all proposed and
final rules published after January 1,
2000. The Federal banking agencies
have sought to present the proposed
rule in a simple and straightforward
manner and did not receive any
comments on plain language.
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
OCC: The Regulatory Flexibility Act,
5 U.S.C. 601 et seq., (RFA), requires an
agency, in connection with a final rule,
to prepare a Final Regulatory Flexibility
Analysis describing the impact of the
rule on small entities (defined by the
SBA for purposes of the RFA to include
commercial banks and savings
institutions with total assets of $550
million or less and trust companies with
total assets of $38.5 million of less) or
to certify that the rule would not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
The OCC currently supervises
approximately 758 small entities.39
Because the statutory provisions are
already in effect, and this rule only
revises the OCC’s existing regulations to
conform to this statutory change, this
rule does not affect a substantial number
of small entities. Section 204 of
EGRRCPA generally does not apply to
OCC-supervised institutions.
The OCC’s threshold for a significant
effect is whether cost increases
associated with a proposed rule are
greater than or equal to either 5 percent
of a small bank’s total annual salaries
and benefits or 2.5 percent of a small
bank’s total non-interest expense. Even
if the rule affected a substantial number
38 Public Law 106–102, section 722, 113 Stat.
1338, 1471 (1999).
39 We base our estimate of the number of small
entities on the SBA’s size thresholds for commercial
banks and savings institutions, and trust
companies, which are $550 million and $38.5
million, respectively. Consistent with the General
Principles of Affiliation 13 CFR 121.103(a), we
count the assets of affiliated financial institutions
when determining if we should classify an OCCsupervised institution as a small entity. We use
December 31, 2018, to determine size because a
‘‘financial institution’s assets are determined by
averaging the assets reported on its four quarterly
financial statements for the preceding year.’’ See
footnote 8 of the U.S. Small Business
Administration’s Table of Size Standards.
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of small banks, the OCC does not
believe that it would have a significant
economic impact on small banks,
because OCC-supervised institutions
that qualify for the exclusion under
section 203 of the EGRRCPA should not
have compliance costs associated with
12 CFR part 44. OCC-supervised
institutions can determine their
eligibility for the exclusion at the bank
level based on information they are
separately required to file in their
Consolidated Reports of Condition and
Income. Therefore, the OCC certifies
that the rule would not have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of OCC-supervised
small entities.
Board: The RFA imposes certain
requirements on the Board regarding
any potential significant economic
impact that a rule may have on a
substantial number of small entities.
The size standard to be considered a
small business for banking entities
subject to the rule is generally $550
million or less in consolidated assets.40
The Board has considered the potential
economic impact of the final rule on
Board-supervised small entities in
accordance with the RFA. The Board
believes that the final rule will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities for
the reasons described below.41
1. Reason for the Final Rule
As discussed in this SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION, the agencies are revising
the regulations implementing section 13
of the BHC Act in conformance with
EGRRCPA. The final rule therefore
excludes from the definition of ‘‘insured
depository institution’’ if an insured
depository institution (and any
company that controls such institution)
has total consolidated assets equal to
$10 billion or less and total trading
assets and liabilities equal to five
percent or less of total consolidated
assets. Such institutions are exempt
from the prohibitions and restrictions
under section 13 of the BHC Act.
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2. Statement of Objectives and Legal
Basis
As discussed above, the agencies’
objective in finalizing amendments to
the regulations implementing section 13
40 U.S. SBA, Table of Small Business Size
Standards Matched to North American Industry
Classification System Codes, available at https://
www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/files/Size_
Standards_Table.pdf. Pursuant to SBA regulations,
the asset size of a concern includes the assets of the
concern whose size is at issue and all of its
domestic and foreign affiliates. 13 CFR 121.103(6).
41 The Board published an initial RFA analysis in
connection with the proposal and received no
public comments related to its analysis.
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of the BHC Act is to conform the
regulations to changes recently enacted
by sections 203 and 204 of EGRRCPA.
The agencies are explicitly authorized
under section 13(b)(2) of the BHC Act to
adopt rules implementing section 13.42
3. Description of Small Entities to
Which the Regulation Applies
Section 203 of EGRRCPA exempted
approximately 3,193 Board-supervised
small entities from section 13 of the
BHC Act.43 The Board’s final rule
conforms its regulations implementing
section 13 to the statutory changes.
4. Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping,
and Other Compliance Requirements
Sections 203 and 204 of EGRRCPA
were effective upon enactment, and,
thus, any economic impacts on small
entities associated with these changes
were caused by the statutory changes.
Section 203 of EGRRCPA exempted all
Board-supervised small entities from the
reporting, recordkeeping, and all other
requirements associated with section 13
of the BHC Act. While section 203 of
EGRRCPA, therefore, affects a
substantial number of Board-supervised
small entities, it is not expected to have
a significant economic impact on such
entities. This is because such small
entities generally engage in limited
activities subject to section 13 of the
BHC Act and are subject to limited
compliance requirements under the
rule.
The Board estimates that Boardsupervised small entities that are no
longer subject to section 13 of the BHC
Act due to section 203 of EGRRCPA will
save, on average, approximately $5,000
per year.44 This represents, on average,
U.S.C. 1851(b)(2).
institutions eligible for this
exclusion would consist of state member banks,
bank holding companies, and savings and loan
holding companies that meet the eligibility criteria
for the exclusion.
44 This estimate is based on the paperwork,
recordkeeping, and disclosure-related compliance
requirements associated with section 13 of the BHC
Act that the Board estimates for purposes of the
PRA. Because community banks do not
significantly engage in the types of activities subject
to section 13’s prohibitions and restrictions, the
majority of the ongoing costs associated with
section 13 for community banks prior to EGRRCPA
were likely related to recordkeeping and should
thus be captured by this data. The average
estimated compliance cost savings would be $9,225,
equal to 146 hours multiplied by an estimated total
hourly compensation rate of $63.36 per hour.
According to the May 2017 National IndustrySpecific Occupational Employment and Wage
Estimates for the Depository Credit Intermediation
sector the 75th percentile wages for a compliance
officer is $40.55 per hour. The wage information
reported by the BLS in the Specific Occupational
Employment and Wage Estimates does not include
health benefits and other non-monetary benefits.
According to the December 2018 Employer Cost of
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42 12
43 Qualifying
Frm 00010
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less than 1.25 percent of net income and
less than 0.07 percent of total equity for
such entities. For the reasons stated
above, section 203 of EGRRCPA and the
Board’s final rule are not expected to
have a significant economic impact on
Board-supervised small entities.
Section 204 of EGRRCPA, which
amends the restrictions related to the
naming of covered funds, will likely
only have direct economic impacts on
investment advisory businesses subject
to section 13 of the BHC Act. Because
the Board is not the primary financial
regulatory agency for investment
advisers,45 section 204 of EGRRCPA not
expected to have a significant economic
impact on Board-supervised small
entities.
5. Identification of Duplicative,
Overlapping, or Conflicting Federal
Regulations
The Board has not identified any
federal statutes or regulations that
duplicate, overlap, or conflict with the
proposed revisions.
6. Discussion of Significant Alternatives
The Board does not believe that this
final rule will have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number small entities. As a result, the
Board has not adopted any alternatives
to the final rule.
FDIC: The RFA generally requires
that, in connection with a final
rulemaking, an agency prepare and
make available for public comment a
final regulatory flexibility analysis
describing the impact of the rulemaking
on small entities.46 A regulatory
flexibility analysis is not required,
however, if the agency certifies that the
rule would not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities. The SBA has
defined ‘‘small entities’’ to include
banking organizations with total assets
less than or equal to $550 million.47
Employee Compensation data compensation rates
for health and other benefits are 33.7 percent of
total compensation. The wage is also inflation
adjusted according to the BLS data on the
Consumer Price Index for Urban Consumers (CPI–
U) so that it is contemporaneous with the non-wage
compensation statistic. The inflation rate was 3.59
percent between May 2017 and December 2018.
Therefore, the adjusted average wage for a
compliance officer is $63.36 per hour.
45 See 12 U.S.C. 1851(b)(2)(B)(i)(II).
46 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.
47 The SBA defines a small banking organization
as having $550 million or less in assets, where ‘‘a
financial institution’s assets are determined by
averaging the assets reported on its four quarterly
financial statements for the preceding year.’’ 13 CFR
121.201 n.8 (2018). ‘‘SBA counts the receipts,
employees, or other measure of size of the concern
whose size is at issue and all of its domestic and
foreign affiliates . . .’’ 13 CFR 121.103(a)(6) (2018).
Following these regulations, the FDIC uses a
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Generally, the FDIC considers a
significant effect to be a quantified effect
in excess of 5 percent of total annual
salaries and benefits per institution, or
2.5 percent of total non-interest
expenses. The FDIC believes that effects
in excess of these thresholds typically
represent significant effects for FDICsupervised institutions. The FDIC
supervises 3,489 depository
institutions,48 of which 2,674 are
defined as small banking entities by the
terms of the RFA.49 Of the 2,674 small,
FDIC-supervised institutions, all report
having total consolidated assets less
than or equal to $10 billion, and total
trading assets and liabilities less than or
equal to five percent of total
consolidated assets, and are therefore,
covered by the rule.50
Although the rule applies to 2,674
small, FDIC-supervised institutions, the
rule would not have a significant
economic impact. The statutory changes
established by EGRRCPA no longer
prohibit certain institutions to engage in
proprietary trading,51 thereby
potentially increasing the volume of
such activity for affected banking
entities. The rule would amend the
FDIC’s regulations to conform to this
exemption established in EGRRCPA.
Therefore, this component of the rule
would have no direct effect on small,
FDIC-supervised institutions.
However, even if the economic effects
of the proposed rule were considered
relative to a pre-statutory baseline the
proposed changes that enable certain
institutions to engage in proprietary
trading are unlikely to have a significant
effect on a substantial number of small,
FDIC-supervised institutions. In the
years prior to the enactment of the 2013
final rule (2006 to 2012) a maximum of
59 small, FDIC-supervised institutions
reported a nonzero value for trading
assets, trading liabilities, or structured
financial products. Additionally, in the
years prior to the enactment of the 2013
final rule (2006 to 2012) trading assets
as a percent of total assets ranged
between 0.00013 and 0.07 percent for
small, FDIC-supervised institutions.52
According to the most recent Call
Report data trading assets as a percent
of total assets is 0.007 percent for small,
FDIC-supervised institutions.53 Not all
covered entity’s affiliated and acquired assets,
averaged over the preceding four quarters, to
determine whether the covered entity is ‘‘small’’ for
the purposes of RFA.
48 FDIC-supervised institutions are set forth in 12
U.S.C. 1813(q)(2).
49 Call Report: December 31, 2018.
50 Call Report: December 31, 2018.
51 12 CFR 351.3(a).
52 Call Report: March 2006–December 2012.
53 Call Report: December 2018.
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trading activity is necessarily
proprietary trading, so only a subset of
trading assets would be affected by this
rule. Also, changes in the dollar volume
of trading assets and their percentage of
total assets are affected by market
conditions, economic conditions, and
the decisions of senior management at
small, FDIC-supervised institutions,
among other things. However, the small
volume of pre-Volcker Rule trading
assets and liabilities at small
institutions suggests that the proposed
rule is unlikely to have significant
effects on small, FDIC-supervised
institutions, assuming that past behavior
is indicative of the propensity of small,
FDIC-supervised institutions to engage
in trading activity that otherwise would
have been prohibited under the Volcker
Rule.
As previously stated, EGRRCPA
permits a covered fund organized and
offered by a banking entity to share the
same name, or a variation of the same
name, as a banking entity that is an
affiliated investment adviser to the
hedge fund or private equity fund, with
some restrictions. By permitting a
covered fund to share the name of a
banking entity, or variation thereof, the
fund can utilize the franchise value of
the banking entity to more effectively
market the fund to the bank’s current
account holders or the public. The size
of this potential benefit is difficult to
accurately estimate with available data
because it depends on the business
model of individual banks and funds,
the propensity of those funds to
advertise to particular groups, and the
decisions of customers, among other
things. However, since the rule would
conform FDIC regulations with the
statutory language enacted by
EGRRCPA, this component of the rule
would have no direct effect on small,
FDIC-supervised institutions.
Finally, the rule would introduce
conforming changes that would reduce
recordkeeping, reporting, and disclosure
costs for affected FDIC-supervised
institutions. EGRRCPA states that
certain institutions with total
consolidated assets less than or equal to
$10 billion, and total trading assets and
liabilities less than or equal to five
percent of total consolidated assets, are
excluded from restrictions on engaging
in proprietary trading activity. The rule
would amend the FDIC’s regulations to
conform to this exclusion established in
EGRRCPA. In so doing, the rule would
make conforming changes to reduce the
recordkeeping and reporting
requirements for small, FDIC-supervised
institutions that were excluded from
proprietary trading restriction by
EGRRCPA. Although the vast majority
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Fmt 4700
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35013
of small, FDIC-supervised institutions
are not currently required to comply
with the recordkeeping, reporting, or
disclosure requirements associated with
proprietary trading, the rule would
introduce conforming changes that
would exclude some small, FDICsupervised institutions. Of these newly
excluded institutions, the rule would
conform to Section 203 of EGRRCPA,
which reduced recordkeeping,
reporting, or disclosure requirements by
up to an estimated 8 hours per
institution, or approximately $506.88
per year.54 55 The estimated reduction in
recordkeeping, reporting, or disclosure
costs per institution represents less than
0.01 percent of non-interest expenses,
on average, for small, FDIC-supervised
institution.56 Thus, the FDIC believes
the rule would not have a significant
economic impact on small, FDICsupervised institutions.
For the reasons described above and
under section 605(b) of the RFA, the
FDIC certifies that the rule would not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities.
CFTC: Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b), the
CFTC hereby certifies that the rule
would not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small
entities for which the CFTC is the
primary financial regulatory agency.
As discussed in this SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION, the agencies are revising
the 2013 final rule in order to be
consistent with statutory amendments
made by EGRRCPA to section 13 of the
BHC Act. The statutory amendments (a)
modified the scope of the term ‘‘banking
entity’’ to exclude certain community
banks and their affiliates and (b)
permitted any banking entity to share a
name with a hedge fund or private
equity fund that it organizes and offers
under certain circumstances.
54 8
hours * $63.36 per hour = $506.88.
estimated reduction in costs is calculated
by multiplying 8 hours by an estimated total hourly
compensation rate of $63.36 per hour. According to
the May 2017 National Industry-Specific
Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates for
the Depository Credit Intermediation sector the 75th
percentile wages for a compliance officer is $40.55
per hour. The wage information reported by the
BLS in the Specific Occupational Employment and
Wage Estimates does not include health benefits
and other non-monetary benefits. According to the
December 2018 Employer Cost of Employee
Compensation data compensation rates for health
and other benefits are 33.7 percent of total
compensation. The wage is also inflation adjusted
according to the BLS data on the Consumer Price
Index for Urban Consumers (CPI–U) so that it is
contemporaneous with the non-wage compensation
statistic. The inflation rate was 3.59 percent
between May 2017 and December 2018. Therefore,
the adjusted average wage for a compliance officer
is $63.36 per hour.
56 Call Report, December 31, 2018.
55 The
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The revisions generally apply to
banking entities, including certain
CFTC-registered entities. These entities
include bank-affiliated CFTC-registered
swap dealers, futures commission
merchants, commodity trading advisors
and commodity pool operators.57 The
CFTC has previously determined that
swap dealers, futures commission
merchants and commodity pool
operators are not small entities for
purposes of the RFA and, therefore, the
requirements of the RFA do not apply
to those entities.58 As for commodity
trading advisors, the CFTC has found it
appropriate to consider whether such
registrants should be deemed small
entities for purposes of the RFA on a
case-by-case basis, in the context of the
particular regulation at issue.59
In the context of the rule, the CFTC
believes it is unlikely that a substantial
number of the commodity trading
advisors that are potentially affected are
small entities for purposes of the RFA.
In this regard, the CFTC notes that only
commodity trading advisors that are
registered with the CFTC are potentially
covered by the rule, and generally those
that are registered have larger
businesses. Similarly, the rule applies to
only those commodity trading advisors
that are affiliated with banks, which the
CFTC expects are larger businesses.
Because the CFTC believes that there
are not a substantial number of
registered, banking entity-affiliated
commodity trading advisors that are
small entities for purposes of the RFA,
and the other CFTC registrants that may
be affected by the rule have been
determined not to be small entities, the
CFTC believes that the rule will not
have a significant economic impact on
a substantial number of small entities
for which the CFTC is the primary
financial regulatory agency.
SEC: In the proposal, the SEC certified
that, pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b), the
proposal would not, if adopted, have a
significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
57 The rule may also apply to other types of CFTC
registrants that are banking entities, such as
introducing brokers, but the CFTC believes it is
unlikely that such other registrants will have
significant activities that would implicate the rule.
See 79 FR 5808, 5813 (Jan. 31, 2014) (CFTC version
of 2013 final rule).
58 See Policy Statement and Establishment of
Definitions of ‘‘Small Entities’’ for Purposes of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, 47 FR 18618 (Apr. 30,
1982) (futures commission merchants and
commodity pool operators); Registration of Swap
Dealers and Major Swap Participants, 77 FR 2613,
2620 (Jan. 19, 2012) (swap dealers and major swap
participants).
59 See Policy Statement and Establishment of
Definitions of ‘‘Small Entities’’ for Purposes of the
Regulatory Flexibility Act, 47 FR 18618, 18620
(Apr. 30, 1982).
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Although the SEC solicited written
comments regarding this certification,
no commenters responded to this
request.
As discussed in this SUPPLEMENTARY
INFORMATION, the agencies are adopting
the proposal as final without change, in
order to be consistent with statutory
amendments made by EGRRCPA to
section 13 of the BHC Act. The statutory
amendments (a) modified the scope of
the term ‘‘banking entity’’ to exclude
certain community banks and their
affiliates and (b) permitted any banking
entity to share a name with a hedge
fund or private equity fund that it
organizes and offers under certain
circumstances.
The revisions the agencies are
adopting will generally apply to banking
entities, including certain SECregistered entities.60 These entities
include bank-affiliated SEC-registered
broker-dealers, investment advisers,
security-based swap dealers, and major
security-based swap participants. Based
on information in filings submitted by
these entities, the SEC believes that
there are no banking entity registered
investment advisers,61 broker-dealers,62
security-based swap dealers, or major
security-based swap participants that
are small entities for purposes of the
RFA.63 For this reason, the SEC certifies
60 The SEC’s Economic Analysis, below, discusses
the economic effects of the final amendments. See
SEC Economic Analysis, section III.F.
61 For the purposes of an SEC rulemaking in
connection with the RFA, an investment adviser
generally is a small entity if it: (1) Has assets under
management having a total value of less than $25
million; (2) did not have total assets of $5 million
or more on the last day of the most recent fiscal
year; and (3) does not control, is not controlled by,
and is not under common control with another
investment adviser that has assets under
management of $25 million or more, or any person
(other than a natural person) that had total assets
of $5 million or more on the last day of its most
recent fiscal year. See 17 CFR 275.0–7.
62 For the purposes of an SEC rulemaking in
connection with the RFA, a broker-dealer will be
deemed a small entity if it: (1) Had total capital (net
worth plus subordinated liabilities) of less than
$500,000 on the date in the prior fiscal year as of
which its audited financial statements were
prepared pursuant to 17 CFR 240.17a–5(d), or, if not
required to file such statements, had total capital
(net worth plus subordinated liabilities) of less than
$500,000 on the last day of the preceding fiscal year
(or in the time that it has been in business, if
shorter); and (2) is not affiliated with any person
(other than a natural person) that is not a small
business or small organization. See 17 CFR 240.0–
10(c). Under the standards adopted by the SBA,
small entities also include entities engaged in
financial investments and related activities with
$38.5 million or less in annual receipts. See 13 CFR
121.201 (Subsector 523).
63 Based on SEC analysis of Form ADV data, the
SEC believes that there are not a substantial number
of registered investment advisers affected by the
proposal that qualify as small entities under RFA.
Based on SEC analysis of broker-dealer FOCUS
filings and NIC relationship data, the SEC believes
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that the rule, as adopted, will not have
a significant economic impact on a
substantial number of small entities.
D. Riegle Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act
Pursuant to section 302(a) of the
Riegle Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act
(RCDRIA),64 in determining the effective
date and administrative compliance
requirements for new regulations that
impose additional reporting, disclosure,
or other requirements on insured
depository institutions, each Federal
banking agency must consider,
consistent with principles of safety and
soundness and the public interest, any
administrative burdens that such
regulations would place on depository
institutions, including small depository
institutions, and customers of
depository institutions, as well as the
benefits of such regulations. In addition,
section 302(b) of RCDRIA requires new
regulations and amendments to
regulations that impose additional
reporting, disclosures, or other new
requirements on insured depository
institutions generally to take effect on
the first day of a calendar quarter that
begins on or after the date on which the
regulations are published in final
form.65 The rule reduces burden and
does not impose any reporting,
disclosure, or other new requirements
on insured depository institutions.
Accordingly, the agencies are not
required by RCDRIA to consider the
administrative burdens and benefits of
the rule or delay its effective date.66
Because delaying the effective date of
the rule is not required and would serve
no purpose, the final rule will be
effective on the date of publication in
the Federal Register.
that there are no SEC-registered broker-dealers
affected by the proposal that qualify as small
entities under RFA. With respect to security-based
swap dealers and major security-based swap
participants, based on feedback from market
participants and information about the securitybased swap markets, the Commission believes that
the types of entities that would engage in more than
a de minimis amount of dealing activity involving
security-based swaps—which generally would be
large financial institutions—would not be ‘‘small
entities’’ for purposes of the RFA. See Regulation
SBSR—Reporting and Dissemination of SecurityBased Swap Information, 81 FR 53546, 53553 (Aug.
12, 2016).
64 12 U.S.C. 4802(a).
65 Id.
66 Additionally, the 30-day delayed effective date
requirement under the Administrative Procedure
Act is not applicable to a rule, such as the one
herein, that grants or recognizes an exemption or
relieves a burden. 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(1).
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E. OCC Unfunded Mandates Reform Act
Determination
The OCC has analyzed the rule under
the factors set forth in the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA)
(2 U.S.C. 1532). Under this analysis, the
OCC considered whether the rule
includes a Federal mandate that may
result in the expenditure by State, local,
and Tribal governments, in the
aggregate, or by the private sector, of
$100 million or more in any one year
(adjusted for inflation). The rule does
not impose new mandates. Therefore,
the OCC has determined that the rule
would not result in expenditures by
State, local, and Tribal governments, or
the private sector, of $100 million or
more in any one year. Accordingly, the
OCC has not prepared a written
statement to accompany this rule.
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F. SEC Economic Analysis
The agencies are adopting
amendments to the 2013 final rule to
implement the statutory mandates of
sections 203 and 204 of EGRRCPA. In
accordance with section 203 of
EGRRCPA,67 the final rules amend the
definition of ‘‘insured depository
institution’’ in § ll.2(r) of the 2013
final rule to exclude an institution so
long as it, and every company that
controls it, has both (1) $10 billion or
less in total consolidated assets and (2)
total consolidated trading assets and
liabilities that are 5 percent or less of
total consolidated assets. The final rule
also amends the 2013 final rule to
reflect the changes made by section 204
of EGRRCPA. That provision modified
section 13 of the BHC Act to permit, in
certain circumstances, bank-affiliated
investment advisers to share their name
with the hedge funds or private equity
funds they organize and offer.
The amendments to the 2013 final
rule reflect the statutory provisions of
EGRRCPA that are already in effect, and
the SEC continues to believe that market
participants are already responding to
the statutory changes. Thus, the baseline
against which the SEC is assessing the
effects of these amendments
incorporates both: (i) The enacted
statutory provisions of sections 203 and
204 of EGRRCPA, and (ii) the SEC’s
understanding that banking entities
67 Specifically, Section 203 of EGRRCPA provides
that the term ‘‘insured depository institution,’’ for
purposes of the definition of ‘‘banking entity’’ in
section 13(h)(1) of the BHC Act (12 U.S.C
1851(h)(1)), does not include an insured depository
institution that does not have, and is not controlled
by a company that has: (1) More than $10 billion
in total consolidated assets; and (2) total trading
assets and trading liabilities, as reported on the
most recent applicable regulatory filing filed by the
institution, that are more than 5 percent of total
consolidated assets.
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with both total consolidated assets of
$10 billion or less and total
consolidated trading assets and
liabilities (henceforth, ‘‘TAL’’) that are 5
percent or less of total consolidated
assets are, consistent with EGRRCPA, no
longer complying with the 2013 final
rule. The SEC continues to believe that
any costs, benefits, and economic effects
of the final rules, including those on
efficiency, competition, and capital
formation, stem entirely from these
statutory provisions and not from the
conforming amendments to the 2013
final rule.
The SEC is mindful of the costs and
benefits imposed by its rules. In the
proposal, the SEC solicited comment on
the economic effects of the amendments
on SEC registrants and on efficiency,
competition, and capital formation in
securities markets. The SEC has
considered these comments, as
discussed below.
This analysis is limited to areas
within the scope of the SEC’s function
as the primary regulator of U.S.
securities markets. In particular, the
SEC’s economic analysis is focused on
the effects of the final amendments on
registrants the SEC oversees for
purposes of section 13 of the BHC Act,
investors and issuers in securities
markets, and the functioning and
efficiency of such markets.
As discussed in more detail below,
the enactment of the statutory
exemption in section 203 of EGRRCPA:
(i) Eliminated the costs of compliance
with section 13 of the BHC Act for
certain banking entities, with the cost
savings potentially being passed along
to customers and counterparties; (ii) was
not followed by significant changes in
trading activity by broker-dealers
(‘‘BDs’’) that qualify for the statutory
exemption, and such trading activity
remains extremely limited in absolute
terms by year-end 2018; (iii) may have
created incentives for entities that do
not qualify for the statutory exemption
but are close to the relevant thresholds
to decrease their asset size or trading
activity to become subject to the
statutory exemption, though such an
effect had not materialized by year-end
2018; and (iv) may have improved the
competitive position of entities that
qualify for the statutory exemption
relative to those that are not, and the
competitive position of U.S. entities that
qualify for the statutory exemption
relative to certain foreign banking
entities.
The statutory exemption in section
204 of EGRRCPA may also have: (i)
Improved the ability of certain bankaffiliated registered investment advisers
(‘‘RIAs’’) to compete for investor capital
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with RIAs that are not affiliated with
banks; (ii) provided bank-affiliated RIAs
that can share a name with a fund with
a competitive advantage over those
bank-affiliated RIAs that cannot share a
name with a fund because they do not
meet the statutory conditions for name
sharing; and (iii) reduced some
investors’ search costs in the capital
allocation process by making it easier
for some investors to identify bankaffiliated advisers of funds, to the extent
that such advisers could share a name
with a fund as a result of the statutory
exemption.
The SEC continues to believe that
these economic effects stem from the
statutory provisions of EGRRCPA that
are fully in effect, and that the
conforming amendments will not result
in any additional costs, benefits, or
effects on efficiency, competition, and
capital formation.
Certain SEC-regulated entities, such
as BDs and RIAs, that fell under the
definition of ‘‘banking entity’’ for the
purposes of section 13 of the BHC Act
before the enactment of EGRRCPA
qualify for the final amendments
implementing sections 203 and 204 of
EGRRCPA.68 As presented in Panel A of
Table 1,69 the SEC estimates that there
are as many as 114 bank-affiliated BDs
with aggregate assets of approximately
$101 billion and aggregate holdings of
approximately $16 billion that are
within the scope of these final
amendments.70 The SEC estimates that,
at most, 296 bank-affiliated RIAs are
within the scope of the final
68 The SEC believes that all bank-affiliated
entities that may register with the SEC as securitybased swap dealers and major security-based swap
participants are unaffected by the amendments due
to the size of the balance sheet and the amount of
trading activity of their affiliated banking entities.
The SEC’s analysis is based on DTCC Derivatives
Repository Limited Trade Information Warehouse
data on single-name credit-default swaps.
Throughout this economic analysis, the term
‘‘banking entity’’ generally refers only to banking
entities that are subject to section 13 of the BHC Act
and for which the SEC is the primary financial
regulatory agency as defined in section 2(12)(B) of
the Dodd-Frank Act. See 12 U.S.C. 1851(b)(2); 12
U.S.C. 5301(12)(B).
69 In the proposal (84 FR at 2786) the SEC used
data from the release for the recently proposed
amendments to these rules to provide clarity about
what activities are prohibited, and to improve
supervision and implementation of section 13 of the
BHC Act (83 FR at 33525) as of Q3 2017. In this
release, we update the estimates and use data as of
Q4 2018 and Q4 2017. Data sources for Table 1
include Reporting Form FR Y–9C data for domestic
bank holding companies and Reports of Condition
and Income data for banks that are not bank holding
companies. BD bank affiliations were obtained from
the Federal Financial Institutions Examination
Council’s National Information Center. BD assets
and holdings were obtained from FOCUS Reports
data.
70 As of Q4 2018, these 114 BDs were affiliated
with 98 banks or holding companies.
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amendments and no longer subject to
section 13 of the BHC Act.71
TABLE 1—BD COUNT, ASSETS, AND HOLDINGS BY AFFILIATION
BD affiliation
Total assets,
$mln 72
Number
Holdings,
$mln 73
Holdings
(alt.), $mln 74
Panel A. After the enactment of EGRRCPA: BD statistics as of Q4 2018
Bank BDs, affiliated bank total assets > $10bln & TAL > 5% of
total assets ...................................................................................
Bank BDs, affiliated bank total assets > $10bln & TAL ≤ 5% of
total assets ...................................................................................
Bank BDs, affiliated bank total assets ≤ $10bln & TAL > 5% of
total assets ...................................................................................
Bank BDs subject to section 203 of EGRRCPA 75 .........................
Non-bank BDs .................................................................................
Total ..........................................................................................
BD affiliation
61
2,826,909
709,534
548,426
74
198,380
43,450
15,393
0
114
3,545
0
100,518
1,196,845
0
16,379
374,597
0
5,376
223,844
3,794
4,322,651
1,143,960
793,038
Total assets,
$mln
Number
Holdings,
$mln
Holdings
(alt.), $mln
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Panel B. Before the enactment of EGRRCPA: BD statistics as of Q4 2017
Bank BDs, affiliated bank total assets > $10bln & TAL > 5% of
total assets ...................................................................................
Bank BDs, affiliated bank total assets > $10bln & TAL ≤ 5% of
total assets ...................................................................................
Bank BDs, affiliated bank total assets ≤ $10bln & TAL > 5% of
total assets ...................................................................................
Bank BDs subject to section 203 of EGRRCPA 76 .........................
Non-bank BDs .................................................................................
Total ..........................................................................................
57
2,711,033
615,206
489,964
83
223,474
42,684
11,749
0
113
3,642
0
108,457
1,001,819
0
17,743
316,691
0
6,463
202,668
3,895
4,044,782
992,324
710,844
The costs of the 2013 final rule no
longer apply to the entities that qualify
for the statutory exemption, which, as
discussed above, is already fully in
effect.77 To the extent that the
compliance costs related to section 13 of
the BHC Act and the relevant
implementing regulations would
otherwise have been passed along to
customers and counterparties of the
affected entities, the cost reductions
associated with section 203 of
EGRRCPA may be flowing through to
customers and counterparties in the
form of reduced transaction costs and
increased willingness to engage in
trading activity, including
intermediation that facilitates risksharing, as well as covered fund
activities.78
The statutory exemption in section
203 of EGRRCPA provided entities
thereby excluded from section 13 of the
BHC Act with greater flexibility in
pursuing certain types of potentially
profitable trading and covered fund
activities. Additionally, to the extent
that section 13 of the BHC Act may have
previously reduced the ability or
willingness of such entities to engage in
permitted hedging, underwriting or
market-making due to compliance costs,
the statutory exemption may have
facilitated access to capital and trading
activity.
In the proposal, the SEC stated that
some entities with $10 billion or less in
total consolidated assets and TAL equal
to or less than 5 percent of its total
consolidated assets may have responded
to the statutory exemption by increasing
or planning to increase their trading
activity and covered funds activities,
while still remaining under the
applicable thresholds at the
consolidated holding company level.
Using Q4 2018 data, the SEC estimates
that 21 such holding companies with 22
71 As estimated in the release for the recently
proposed amendments to these rules to provide
clarity about what activities are prohibited, and to
improve supervision and implementation of section
13 of the BHC Act (83 FR at 33525), there were 308
bank-affiliated RIAs based on data as of March 31,
2018. Using data as of March 31, 2019, the SEC is
updating the estimate to approximately 296 bankaffiliated RIAs. The SEC does not have information
or data that would allow us to estimate how many
of these bank-affiliated RIAs would have preferred
to share a name with funds they advise. For the
purposes of this analysis, the SEC estimates that
these 296 bank-affiliated RIAs and 114 bankaffiliated BDs may be able to engage in covered
fund activities as a result of section 203 of
EGRRCPA. The SEC does not have information or
data that would allow us to estimate how many of
these entities would have preferred to engage in
covered fund activities.
72 BD total assets are based on FOCUS report data
for ‘‘Total Assets.’’
73 BD holdings are based on FOCUS reports data
for securities and spot commodities owned at
market value, including bankers’ acceptances,
certificates of deposit and commercial paper, state
and municipal government obligations, corporate
obligations, stocks and warrants, options, arbitrage,
other securities, U.S. and Canadian government
obligations, and spot commodities.
74 This measure excludes U.S. and Canadian
government obligations and spot commodities.
75 This category includes all bank-affiliated BDs
affiliated with holding companies that have both
consolidated total assets less than or equal to $10
billion and TAL less than or equal to 5% of total
assets, as well as bank-affiliated BDs for which
parent firm TAL data was not available. Based on
a manual search of regulatory filings for holding
companies with missing assets and liabilities data
and current FR Y–9C and FR Y–9SP reporting
requirements, the SEC believes that entities with
missing data have low levels of trading activity and
likely qualify for the exemption in section 203 of
EGRRCPA. To the degree that this may not be the
case for some bank-affiliated BDs, these figures may
overestimate the number of affected entities.
76 Id.
77 In the proposal, the SEC estimated based on
data as of Q3 2017 that annual compliance cost
savings for SEC-regulated entities due to section
203 of EGRRCPA may be as high as approximately
$16,626,385 (= 2,035 hours × 0.18 × (Attorney at
$409 per hour) × 111). Based on data as of Q4 2018
we now estimate these annual compliance cost
savings may be as high as approximately
$14,682,037 (= 2,035 hours × 0.18 × (Attorney at
$409 per hour) × 98).
78 See 79 FR 5778 for the agencies’ estimated
ongoing compliance and recordkeeping burdens
related to the requirements of the 2013 final rule.
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BD affiliates and available information
about TAL have, on aggregate, total
consolidated assets of approximately
$74.5 billion and gross TAL of
approximately $688 million.79 The SEC
further estimates that the gross TAL of
these 21 holding companies that qualify
for the exemption in section 203 of
EGRRCPA and for which data is
available increased by approximately
$98 million between Q4 2017 and Q4
2018 (from $590 million in Q4 2017 to
approximately $688 million in Q4
2018). The SEC does not have
information about the remaining banks
and holding companies. However, the
SEC is aware that, in total, 98 banks and
holding companies that qualify for the
exemption in section 203 of EGRRCPA
and have affiliated BDs, can have, on
aggregate, total gross TAL of no more
than $49 billion without exceeding
either threshold and becoming subject
to section 13 of the BHC Act.80
Therefore, the SEC estimates that the
increase in the aggregate TAL of all 98
affected banks and holding companies
with SEC-regulated affiliates is likely no
more than $48.3 billion.81 The SEC
continues to note that, if an increase in
risk-taking by such affected entities is
observed by market participants that
provide capital to them, these capital
providers may demand additional
compensation for bearing more financial
risk, which may decrease the
profitability of the entity’s trading and
covered fund activities.
Because EGRRCPA was enacted
relatively recently (on May 24, 2018)
and a realignment of a BD’s balance
sheet may necessarily be gradual, it is
not yet clear if the economic effects of
sections 203 and 204 are fully realized
79 The current FR Y–9C and FR Y–9SP filing
requirements limit data availability. As of Q4 2018,
the SEC has information about TAL of 21 holding
companies with 22 BD affiliates.
80 This figure is based on a maximum of $10 bln
of total consolidated assets and a maximum TAL of
5 percent of total consolidated assets and is
calculated as follows: 98 holding companies × $10
bln total assets × 0.05 = $49 bln.
81 This figure is calculated as follows: $49
bln¥$0.688 bln = $48.312 bln. The SEC recognizes
that these estimates may under- or overestimate the
increases in trading activity that may occur as a
result of section 203 of EGRRCPA for four primary
reasons. First, the profitability of trading activity is
likely to strongly influence incentives to engage in
trading activity and may vary depending on trading
strategy, market sector, and time period measured.
Second, growth in a holding company’s total
consolidated assets is influenced by business
models, prevailing market conditions, industry
competition, bank merger and acquisition activity,
among other factors. Third, this estimate assumes
that no affected entity will enter or exit the industry
as a result of the statutory exclusion. Fourth, this
estimate assumes for purposes of this economic
analysis that small holding companies that file form
FR Y–9SP, which does not contain data on TAL, do
not currently have any TAL.
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in the relevant securities markets.
However, Table 1 reports changes in the
size and trading activity of different
groups of BDs within an approximate 12
month window around the enactment of
section 203 of EGRRCPA. Comparing BD
statistics in Q4 2017 against Q4 2018,
the number of bank-affiliated BDs that
qualify for the exemption in section 203
of EGRRCPA increased by one. BDs that
qualify for the exemption in section 203
of EGRRCPA decreased their assets by
approximately $8 billion, and their
holdings by between approximately $1.1
billion (using a measure of holdings that
excludes U.S. and Canadian government
obligations and spot commodities) and
approximately $1.4 billion (using an
inclusive measure of holdings).82 In
comparison, although the number of
bank-affiliated BDs that do not qualify
for the exemption in section 203 of
EGRRCPA decreased by 5, such BDs
experienced in the aggregate an
approximately $90.8 billion increase in
total assets, and an increase in holdings
between $62.1 billion (excluding U.S.
and Canadian government obligations
and spot commodities) and
approximately $95.1 billion (using an
inclusive measure of holdings).
It is difficult to draw meaningful
causal inference from these trends in
assets and holdings due to a number of
methodological considerations. First,
the effect of enactment of section 203 of
EGRRCPA is confounded by other
changes, notably the market
participants’ potential reaction to other
statutory relief for small banking entities
in EGRRCPA (such as sections 201, 207,
and 210 of EGRRCPA) and to the
agencies’ proposed amendments to the
2013 final rule that affected bankaffiliated BDs that do not qualify for the
exemption in section 203 of EGRRCPA.
Second, there is a lack of ‘‘control’’ and
‘‘treatment’’ groups that are likely to
satisfy the ‘‘parallel trends’’ assumption
required for a difference-in-difference
analysis.83 Third, quarterly reporting of
FOCUS data is insufficiently frequent to
perform an announcement effect
analysis of BD risk taking and asset size
in the days immediately before and
immediately after the enactment of
EGRRCPA. Fourth, as discussed in the
proposal, certain entities can influence
whether they qualify for the statutory
exemption in section 203 of EGRRCPA
82 This discussion describes changes in assets and
holdings in absolute terms since percentage
measures magnify changes when initial levels of a
measure are extremely low.
83 Causal inference using difference-in-difference
generally requires that differences between
treatment and control groups along the dimension
of interest (e.g., risk-taking) are constant in the
absence of regulatory intervention.
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35017
by adjusting their balance sheets and
trading books, which is likely to
confound inference. Fifth, the relief in
section 203 of EGRRCPA may have been
at least partly anticipated by market
participants.84 In addition, in the
proposal, the SEC anticipated spillover
effects between bank-affiliated BDs that
qualify for the exemption in section 203
of EGRRCPA and bank-affiliated BDs
that do not. Both anticipation and
spillover effects contaminate the
estimation of regulatory effects.
Thus, the SEC cannot conclusively
determine whether the above changes in
BD characteristics arose as a result of
the passage of EGRRCPA. However, the
above statistics indicate that bankaffiliated BDs that qualify for the
exemption in section 203 of EGRRCPA
slightly decreased their balance sheet
and trading activity.85 This group of BDs
continues to represent a very small
fraction of the BD industry, representing
approximately 2.3% of all BD assets and
between 0.7% and 1.4% of all BD
holdings.
In the proposal, the SEC noted that
certain banking entities with more than
$10 billion in total consolidated assets
and/or TAL greater than 5 percent of
total consolidated assets may be
incentivized to shrink their balance
sheets or trading activity under the
thresholds. The SEC recognized that this
may reduce the willingness of such
banking entities to serve as
intermediaries, and may also reduce the
potential for market impacts from the
failure of a given entity.
As can be seen in Table 1, the number
of bank-affiliated BDs not subject to
section 203 of EGRRCPA has declined
by five between Q4 2017 and Q4 2018.
These counts are impacted by the fact
that holding companies may have
multiple BD subsidiaries, and by
occurrences of mergers and other
changes in the organizational structure
within holding companies. Bankaffiliated BDs that do not qualify for the
exemption in section 203 of EGRRCPA
have experienced an increase in assets
(by $91 billion) and holdings (by
between $62.1 billion and $95.1 billion
84 See U.S. Department of the Treasury, ‘‘A
Financial System that Creates Economic
Opportunities: Banks and Credit Unions’’ (June
2017).
85 As discussed above, BDs that qualify for the
exemption in section 203 of EGRRCPA exhibited a
decrease in holdings by approximately $1.4 billion
when including the holdings of U.S. and Canadian
government obligations and spot commodities, and
by approximately $1.1 billion when excluding
them. Thus, such government obligations and spot
commodities accounted for approximately $277
million or 20% of the decrease in the inclusive
measure of holdings by BDs that qualify for the
exemption in section 203 of EGRRCPA.
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depending on the measure). BDs
unaffiliated with banks or bank holding
companies have also increased their
assets (by $195 billion) and holdings (by
between $21.2 billion and $57.9 billion
depending on the measure), despite the
backdrop of the aggregate decline in the
number of BDs in the industry.
These observations suggest that
aggregate industry and macroeconomic
factors may be driving a general increase
in the size and trading books of BDs.
Such observations may also indicate
that banking entities not subject to
section 203 of EGRRCPA may currently
be unable or unwilling to shrink their
balance sheets and trading books in
order to fall under the relevant
thresholds in section 203 of EGRRCPA.
The SEC continues to believe that
banking entities not excluded from
section 13 of the BHC Act pursuant to
section 203 of EGRRCPA may weigh the
size and complexity of each banking
entity’s trading activities and
organizational structure, and the
profitability of their banking and trading
books, against the magnitude of
expected compliance savings from not
being subject to section 13 of the BHC
Act. The SEC continues to note that,
similar to the discussion above, due to
methodological limitations (including,
among others, confounding events and
the likely violation of the parallel trends
assumption), these observations of
trends do not allow us to draw a causal
inference. It is also possible that the
effects of section 203 of EGRRCPA are
still being realized, and the observed
trends may under- or overestimate
potential long-term shifts in risk-taking
by entities that qualify for the
exemption in section 203 and those that
do not.
In the proposal, the SEC stated that to
the degree that statutory changes in
section 203 of EGRRCPA may have
contributed to an increase in the gross
volume of TAL, there may be an
increase in risk-taking among entities no
longer subject to section 13 of the BHC
Act. However, this need not necessarily
be the case. For example, a hedging
transaction that offsets a risk exposure
from an existing asset would increase
the reported gross TAL without
necessarily producing a net increase in
the risk born by the entity. As described
above, bank affiliated BDs that qualify
for the exemption in section 203 of
EGRRCPA have not increased their gross
volume of TAL over the analyzed time
period. The SEC continues to recognize
that bank-affiliated BDs that qualify for
the exemption in section 203 of
EGRRCPA account only for
approximately 2.3% of aggregate BD
assets and between 0.7% and 1.4% of
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aggregate BD holdings. Thus, the
statutory exemption affects only a small
fraction of the BD industry. Moreover,
the SEC continues to recognize that both
the risks and the returns from newly
permissible trading and covered fund
activities by individual bank-affiliated
BDs are likely to be passed along to their
customers and counterparties.
In the proposal, the SEC recognized
that potential shifts in risk-taking due to
section 203 of EGRRCPA, as discussed
above, may lead to two competing
effects. On the one hand, if affected
entities are now able to bear risk at a
lower cost than their customers (i.e.,
because such entities are no longer
subject to section 13 of the BHC Act),
increased risk-taking could promote
secondary market trading activity and
capital formation in primary markets,
and thus increase access to capital for
issuers. Similarly, the statutory
exemption may increase banking
entities’ covered fund activities, which
may broaden investment opportunities
for investors in covered funds and
facilitate access to capital by companies
in which those funds invest. On the
other hand, the statutory exemption
may increase risk-taking by individual
SEC-regulated entities, the amount of
covered fund activity in which they
engage, as well as total risk in the
financial system, which may ultimately
negatively impact issuers and investors.
However, as noted above, the maximum
potential increase in aggregate trading
activity of entities that qualify for the
exemption in section 203 of EGRRCPA
that would not trigger section 13 of the
BHC Act compliance is likely limited to
$48.3 billion.86 Moreover, as shown
above, empirically such changes in risktaking by SEC registrants that qualify for
the exemption in section 203 of
EGRRCPA so far remain very low in
absolute terms, and such BDs continue
to represent a very small fraction of the
industry as measured by both assets and
trading book size. The SEC continues to
recognize that an increase in risk-taking
by entities that qualify for the
exemption in section 203 of EGRRCPA,
to the degree that it is observed by
providers of capital, may increase their
cost of capital and reduce the
profitability of such risk-taking.
In the proposal, the SEC outlined two
primary effects of section 203 of
EGRRCPA on competition. First, entities
exempt from section 13 of the BHC Act
under EGRRCPA are no longer required
to incur related compliance costs and,
thus, may have a competitive advantage
relative to similarly situated entities
above the thresholds. The availability of
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supra footnote 81.
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the statutory exemption may incentivize
entities near the thresholds to decrease
the size of their balance sheet, trading
activity, or both in order to become
exempt from section 13 of the BHC Act,
resulting in greater competition between
entities with consolidated assets and
TAL near the thresholds. As
demonstrated in Table 1 and the
discussion above, the number of BDs
above the thresholds in section 203 of
EGRRCPA has declined only by five,
while their assets and trading activity
have actually increased. Thus, to date
the above competition effects may have
been muted.
Second, section 203 of EGRRCPA may
have placed domestic entities subject to
the statutory exemption on a more even
competitive footing with foreign firms
that are not subject to the substantive
prohibitions and compliance costs
related to section 13 of the BHC Act and
its implementing regulations. In
addition, section 203 of EGRRCPA may
have improved the competitive position
of affected domestic entities relative to
foreign banking entities that are subject
to section 13 of the BHC Act as a result
of such foreign banking entities utilizing
the exemptions related to activity
outside of the United States.87 The SEC
has no data on the activity or risk-taking
of foreign BDs that are not registered
with the SEC and are affiliated with
banks or bank holding companies. No
such data is publicly available and
commenters did not provide data
enabling such quantification. As a
result, the SEC is unable to empirically
evaluate this effect.
Prior to the enactment of EGRRCPA,
a bank-affiliated RIA could not share the
same name or a variation of the same
name as a hedge fund or private equity
fund that it organized and offered under
an exemption in section 13 of the BHC
Act.88 Section 204 of EGRRCPA
changed this condition for bankaffiliated RIAs that meet certain
requirements and provided them with
flexibility in name sharing for corporate,
marketing, promotional, or other
purposes. To the extent that name
sharing effectively and easily conveys
the identity of a fund’s RIA and
preserves the brand value, section 204
of EGRRCPA improved bank-affiliated
RIAs’ ability to compete for investor
capital with RIAs that are not affiliated
with banks.
Section 204 also provided bankaffiliated RIAs that can share a name
with a fund with a competitive
87 See 12 U.S.C. 1851(d)(1)(H) and (I) (2017); See
§§ l.6(e) and l.13(b) of the 2013 final rule.
88 See § l.11 of the 2013 final rule; 12 U.S.C.
1851(d)(1)(G) (2017).
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advantage over those bank-affiliated
RIAs that cannot share a name with a
fund because they do not meet the
statutory conditions for name sharing.
This competitive effect can be
attenuated since bank-affiliated RIAs in
the latter group may change their names
to avoid sharing the same name or a
variation of the same name as a
depository institution, any company
that controls it, or any bank holding
company. However, such a name change
by bank-affiliated RIAs may have
associated costs that would not apply to
bank-affiliated RIAs that do not have the
name of a depository institution, any
company that controls it, or any bank
holding company in their names.
In addition, the statutory namesharing provision may have reduced
some investors’ search costs in the
capital allocation process by making it
easier for some investors to identify the
bank-affiliated RIA of funds, to the
extent that such advisers and funds
could share names as a result of the
statutory exemption.
The SEC reiterates that the economic
effects discussed above stem from the
statutory provisions of EGRRCPA that
are fully in effect, and, therefore, the
SEC believes that these effects may be
already partly realized. The SEC
believes that the conforming
amendments to the implementing
regulations will have no additional
costs, benefits, or effects on efficiency,
competition, and capital formation.
The agencies have received a number
of comments on the proposal, some
supporting 89 and others questioning 90
the agencies’ codification of section 203
of EGRRCPA, and comments opposing
the statutory exemption for community
banks.91 As discussed above, the
agencies believe that the final
amendments conform the regulations
implementing section 13 of the BHC Act
with the statutory amendments made
pursuant to sections 203 and 204 of
EGRRCPA with no exercise of agency
discretion. As such, the SEC believes
there are no reasonable alternatives to
the final rule.
G. Congressional Review Act
Pursuant to the Congressional Review
Act,92 the Office of Information and
Regulatory Affairs has designated these
jbell on DSK3GLQ082PROD with RULES
89 See
ICBA Letter; IAA Letter; LosHuertos and
Mount Letter; NAFCU Letter. See also section II.
90 See Competitive Enterprise Institute Letter;
Competitive Enterprise Institute et. al. Letter;
Luetkemeyer Letter. See also section II.
91 See Tinee Carraker Letter, Rodger Cunningham
Letter.
92 5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.
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rules as not a ‘‘major rule,’’ as defined
by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
H. Effective Date
Pursuant to Section 553(d) of the
Administrative Procedure Act,93 the
required publication or service of a
substantive rule shall be made not less
than 30 days before its effective date,
except, among other things, as provided
by the agency for good cause found and
published with the rule or if the rule is
a substantive rule which grants or
recognizes an exemption or relieves a
restriction. The agencies find that there
is good cause for setting an effective
date that is less than 30 days after
publication of this substantive rule
because this final rule merely conforms
the 2013 final rule to the EGRRCPA
statutory amendments. Furthermore, the
final rule recognizes a statutory
exemption from the definition of
‘‘banking entity,’’ and relieves
restrictions applicable to the naming of
a hedge fund or private equity fund.
Accordingly, the final rules are effective
as of July 22, 2019.
12 CFR Part 44
Banks, Banking, Compensation,
Credit, Derivatives, Government
securities, Insurance, Investments,
National banks, Penalties, Reporting and
recordkeeping requirements, Risk, Risk
retention, Securities, Trusts and
trustees.
12 CFR Part 248
Administrative practice and
procedure, Banks, Banking, Conflict of
interests, Credit, Foreign banking,
Government securities, Holding
companies, Insurance, Insurance
companies, Investments, Penalties,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Securities, State
nonmember banks, State savings
associations, Trusts and trustees.
12 CFR Part 351
Banks, Banking, Capital,
Compensation, Conflicts of interest,
Credit, Derivatives, Government
securities, Insurance, Insurance
companies, Investments, Penalties,
Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Risk, Risk retention,
Securities, Trusts and trustees.
17 CFR Part 75
Banks, Banking, Compensation,
Credit, Derivatives, Federal branches
and agencies, Federal savings
associations, Government securities,
Hedge funds, Insurance, Investments,
PO 00000
Fmt 4700
17 CFR Part 255
Banks, Brokers, Dealers, Investment
advisers, Recordkeeping, Reporting,
Securities.
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the
Currency
12 CFR Chapter I
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons stated in the Common
Preamble, the Office of the Comptroller
of the Currency amends chapter I of title
12, Code of Federal Regulations as
follows:
PART 44—PROPRIETARY TRADING
AND CERTAIN INTERESTS IN AND
RELATIONSHIPS WITH COVERED
FUNDS
1. The authority citation for part 44
continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 27 et seq., 12 U.S.C. 1,
24, 92a, 93a, 161, 1461, 1462a, 1463, 1464,
1467a, 1813(q), 1818, 1851, 3101 3102, 3108,
5412.
Subpart A—Authority and Definitions
2. In § 44.1, revise paragraph (c) to
read as follows:
■
§ 44.1 Authority, purpose, scope, and
relationship to other authorities.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Scope. This part implements
section 13 of the Bank Holding
Company Act with respect to banking
entities for which the OCC is authorized
to issue regulations under section
13(b)(2) of the Bank Holding Company
Act (12 U.S.C. 1851(b)(2)) and take
actions under section 13(e) of that Act
(12 U.S.C. 1851(e)). These include
national banks, Federal branches and
Federal agencies of foreign banks,
Federal savings associations, Federal
savings banks, and any of their
respective subsidiaries (except a
subsidiary for which there is a different
primary financial regulatory agency, as
that term is defined in this part), but do
not include such entities to the extent
they are not within the definition of
banking entity in § 44.2(c).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 3. In § 44.2, revise paragraph (r) to
read as follows:
§ 44.2
*
U.S.C. 553(d).
Frm 00017
National banks, Penalties, Proprietary
trading, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Risk, Risk retention,
Securities, Swap dealers, Trusts and
trustees, Volcker rule.
■
List of Subjects
93 5
35019
Sfmt 4700
E:\FR\FM\22JYR1.SGM
Definitions.
*
*
22JYR1
*
*
35020
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 140 / Monday, July 22, 2019 / Rules and Regulations
(r) Insured depository institution,
unless otherwise indicated, has the
same meaning as in section 3(c) of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12
U.S.C. 1813(c)), but does not include:
(1) An insured depository institution
that is described in section 2(c)(2)(D) of
the BHC Act (12 U.S.C. 1841(c)(2)(D));
or
(2) An insured depository institution
if it has, and if every company that
controls it has, total consolidated assets
of $10 billion or less and total trading
assets and trading liabilities, on a
consolidated basis, that are 5 percent or
less of total consolidated assets.
*
*
*
*
*
Subpart C—Covered Funds Activities
and Investments
Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve
12 CFR Chapter II
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the
Common Preamble the Board amends
chapter II of title 12 of the Code of
Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 248—PROPRIETARY TRADING
AND CERTAIN INTERESTS IN AND
RELATIONSHIPS WITH COVERED
FUNDS (REGULATION VV)
4. In § 44.10, revise paragraph
(d)(9)(iii) to read as follows:
■
§ 44.10 Prohibition on acquiring or
retaining an ownership interest in and
having certain relationships with a covered
fund.
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1851, 12 U.S.C. 221 et
seq., 12 U.S.C. 1818, 12 U.S.C. 1841 et seq.,
and 12 U.S.C. 3103 et seq.
■
6. The authority citation for part 248
continues to read as follows:
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(9) * * *
(iii) To share with a covered fund, for
corporate, marketing, promotional, or
other purposes, the same name or a
variation of the same name, except as
permitted under § 44.11(a)(6).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 5. In § 44.11, revise paragraph (a)(6) to
read as follows:
§ 44.11 Permitted organizing and offering,
underwriting, and market making with
respect to a covered fund.
jbell on DSK3GLQ082PROD with RULES
holding company for purposes of
section 8 of the International Banking
Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3106); and
(ii) Does not use the word ‘‘bank’’ in
its name;
*
*
*
*
*
(a) * * *
(6) The covered fund, for corporate,
marketing, promotional, or other
purposes:
(i) Does not share the same name or
a variation of the same name with the
banking entity (or an affiliate thereof)
except that a covered fund may share
the same name or a variation of the
same name with a banking entity that is
an investment adviser to the covered
fund if:
(A) The investment adviser is not an
insured depository institution, a
company that controls an insured
depository institution, or a company
that is treated as a bank holding
company for purposes of section 8 of the
International Banking Act of 1978 (12
U.S.C. 3106); and
(B) The investment adviser does not
share the same name or a variation of
the same name as an insured depository
institution, a company that controls an
insured depository institution, or a
company that is treated as a bank
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15:49 Jul 19, 2019
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§ 248.2
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(r) Insured depository institution,
unless otherwise indicated, has the
same meaning as in section 3(c) of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12
U.S.C. 1813(c)), but does not include:
(1) An insured depository institution
that is described in section 2(c)(2)(D) of
the BHC Act (12 U.S.C. 1841(c)(2)(D));
or
(2) An insured depository institution
if it has, and if every company that
controls it has, total consolidated assets
of $10 billion or less and total trading
assets and trading liabilities, on a
consolidated basis, that are 5 percent or
less of total consolidated assets.
*
*
*
*
*
Subpart C—Covered Funds Activities
and Investments
10. In § 248.10, revise paragraph
(d)(9)(iii) to read as follows:
■
■
7. The heading for part 248 is revised
as set forth above.
§ 248.10 Prohibition on acquiring or
retaining an ownership interest in and
having certain relationships with a covered
fund.
Subpart A—Authority and Definitions
*
8. In § 248.1, revise paragraph (c) to
read as follows:
■
§ 248.1 Authority, purpose, scope, and
relationship to other authorities.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Scope. This part implements
section 13 of the Bank Holding
Company Act with respect to banking
entities for which the Board is
authorized to issue regulations under
section 13(b)(2) of the Bank Holding
Company Act (12 U.S.C. 1851(b)(2)) and
take actions under section 13(e) of that
Act (12 U.S.C. 1851(e)). These include
any state bank that is a member of the
Federal Reserve System, any company
that controls an insured depository
institution (including a bank holding
company and savings and loan holding
company), any company that is treated
as a bank holding company for purposes
of section 8 of the International Banking
Act (12 U.S.C. 3106), and any subsidiary
of the foregoing other than a subsidiary
for which the OCC, FDIC, CFTC, or SEC
is the primary financial regulatory
agency (as defined in section 2(12) of
the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act of 2010 (12
U.S.C. 5301(12)), but do not include
such entities to the extent they are not
within the definition of banking entity
in § 248.2(c).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 9. In § 248.2, revise paragraph (r) to
read as follows:
PO 00000
Frm 00018
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(9) * * *
(iii) To share with a covered fund, for
corporate, marketing, promotional, or
other purposes, the same name or a
variation of the same name, except as
permitted under § 248.11(a)(6).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 11. In § 248.11, revise paragraph (a) to
read as follows:
§ 248.11 Permitted organizing and
offering, underwriting, and market making
with respect to a covered fund.
(a) * * *
(6) The covered fund, for corporate,
marketing, promotional, or other
purposes:
(i) Does not share the same name or
a variation of the same name with the
banking entity (or an affiliate thereof)
except that a covered fund may share
the same name or a variation of the
same name with a banking entity that is
an investment adviser to the covered
fund if:
(A) The investment adviser is not an
insured depository institution, a
company that controls an insured
depository institution, or a company
that is treated as a bank holding
company for purposes of section 8 of the
International Banking Act of 1978 (12
U.S.C. 3106); and
(B) The investment adviser does not
share the same name or a variation of
the same name as an insured depository
institution, a company that controls an
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22JYR1
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 140 / Monday, July 22, 2019 / Rules and Regulations
insured depository institution, or a
company that is treated as a bank
holding company for purposes of
section 8 of the International Banking
Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3106); and
(ii) Does not use the word ‘‘bank’’ in
its name;
*
*
*
*
*
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the
Common Preamble, the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation amends chapter
III of title 12, Code of Federal
Regulations as follows:
PART 351—PROPRIETARY TRADING
AND CERTAIN INTERESTS IN AND
RELATIONSHIPS WITH COVERED
FUNDS
12. The authority citation for part 351
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1851; 1811 et seq.;
3101 et seq.; and 5412.
Subpart A—Authority and Definitions
13. In § 351.1, revise paragraph (c) to
read as follows:
■
§ 351.1 Authority, purpose, scope and
relationship to other authorities.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Scope. This part implements
section 13 of the Bank Holding
Company Act with respect to insured
depository institutions for which the
FDIC is the appropriate Federal banking
agency, as defined in section 3(q) of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act, and
certain subsidiaries of the foregoing, but
does not include such entities to the
extent they are not within the definition
of banking entity in § 351.2(c).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 14. In § 351.2, revise paragraph (r) to
read as follows:
§ 351.2
Definitions.
jbell on DSK3GLQ082PROD with RULES
*
*
*
*
*
(r) Insured depository institution,
unless otherwise indicated, has the
same meaning as in section 3(c) of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12
U.S.C. 1813(c)), but does not include:
(1) An insured depository institution
that is described in section 2(c)(2)(D) of
the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956
(12 U.S.C. 1841(c)(2)(D)); or
(2) An insured depository institution
if it has, and if every company that
controls it has, total consolidated assets
of $10 billion or less and total trading
assets and trading liabilities, on a
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15:49 Jul 19, 2019
Jkt 247001
consolidated basis, that are 5 percent or
less of total consolidated assets.
*
*
*
*
*
Futures Trading Commission amends
part 75 to chapter I of title 17 of the
Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
Subpart C—Covered Funds Activities
and Investments
PART 75 — PROPRIETARY TRADING
AND CERTAIN INTERESTS IN AND
RELATIONSHIPS WITH COVERED
FUNDS
15. In § 351.10, revise paragraph
(d)(9)(iii) to read as follows:
■
§ 351.10 Prohibitions on acquiring or
retaining an ownership interest in and
having certain relationships with a covered
fund.
12 CFR Chapter III
35021
*
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(9) * * *
(iii) To share with a covered fund, for
corporate, marketing, promotional, or
other purposes, the same name or a
variation of the same name, except as
permitted under § 351.11(a)(6).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 16. In § 351.11, revise paragraph (a) to
read as follows:
§ 351.11 Permitted organizing and
offering, underwriting, and market making
with respect to a covered fund.
(a) * * *
(6) The covered fund, for corporate,
marketing, promotional, or other
purposes:
(i) Does not share the same name or
a variation of the same name with the
banking entity (or an affiliate thereof),
except that a covered fund may share
the same name or a variation of the
same name with a banking entity that is
an investment adviser to the covered
fund if:
(A) The investment adviser is not an
insured depository institution, a
company that controls an insured
depository institution, or a company
that is treated as a bank holding
company for purposes of section 8 of the
International Banking Act of 1978 (12
U.S.C. 3106); and
(B) The investment adviser does not
share the same name or a variation of
the same name as an insured depository
institution, a company that controls an
insured depository institution, or a
company that is treated as a bank
holding company for purposes of
section 8 of the International Banking
Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3106); and
(ii) Does not use the word ‘‘bank’’ in
its name;
*
*
*
*
*
17. The authority citation for part 75
continues to read as follows:
■
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1851.
Subpart A—Authority and Definitions
18. In § 75.1, revise paragraph (c) to
read as follows:
■
§ 75.1 Authority, purpose, scope and
relationship to other authorities.
*
*
*
*
*
(c) Scope. This part implements
section 13 of the Bank Holding
Company Act with respect to banking
entities for which the CFTC is the
primary financial regulatory agency, as
defined in section 2(12) of the DoddFrank Act, but does not include such
entities to the extent they are not within
the definition of banking entity in
§ 75.2(c).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 19. In § 75.2, revise paragraph (r) to
read as follows:
§ 75.2
Definitions.
*
*
*
*
*
(r) Insured depository institution,
unless otherwise indicated, has the
same meaning as in section 3(c) of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12
U.S.C. 1813(c)), but does not include:
(1) An insured depository institution
that is described in section 2(c)(2)(D) of
the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956
(12 U.S.C. 1841(c)(2)(D)); or
(2) An insured depository institution
if it has, and if every company that
controls it has, total consolidated assets
of $10 billion or less and total trading
assets and trading liabilities, on a
consolidated basis, that are 5 percent or
less of total consolidated assets.
*
*
*
*
*
Subpart C—Covered Funds Activities
and Investments
20. In § 75.10, revise paragraph
(d)(9)(iii) to read as follows:
■
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING
COMMISSION
§ 75.10 Prohibitions on acquiring or
retaining an ownership interest in and
having certain relationships with a covered
fund.
17 CFR Chapter I
*
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the
Common Preamble, the Commodity
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Frm 00019
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(9) * * *
(iii) To share with a covered fund, for
corporate, marketing, promotional, or
E:\FR\FM\22JYR1.SGM
22JYR1
35022
Federal Register / Vol. 84, No. 140 / Monday, July 22, 2019 / Rules and Regulations
§ 255.1 Authority, purpose, scope and
relationship to other authorities.
other purposes, the same name or a
variation of the same name, except as
permitted under § 75.11(a)(6).
*
*
*
*
*
*
21. In § 75.11, revise paragraph (a) to
read as follows:
■
§ 75.11 Permitted organizing and offering,
underwriting, and market making with
respect to a covered fund.
(a) * * *
(6) The covered fund, for corporate,
marketing, promotional, or other
purposes:
(i) Does not share the same name or
a variation of the same name with the
banking entity (or an affiliate thereof),
except that a covered fund may share
the same name or a variation of the
same name with a banking entity that is
an investment adviser to the covered
fund if:
(A) The investment adviser is not an
insured depository institution, a
company that controls an insured
depository institution, or a company
that is treated as a bank holding
company for purposes of section 8 of the
International Banking Act of 1978 (12
U.S.C. 3106); and
(B) The investment adviser does not
share the same name or a variation of
the same name as an insured depository
institution, a company that controls an
insured depository institution, or a
company that is treated as a bank
holding company for purposes of
section 8 of the International Banking
Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3106); and
(ii) Does not use the word ‘‘bank’’ in
its name;
*
*
*
*
*
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE
COMMISSION
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the
Common Preamble, the Securities and
Exchange Commission amends part 255
to chapter II of title 17 of the Code of
Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 255—PROPRIETARY TRADING
AND CERTAIN INTERESTS IN AND
RELATIONSHIPS WITH COVERED
FUNDS
22. The authority for part 255
continues to read as follows:
jbell on DSK3GLQ082PROD with RULES
■
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1851.
Subpart A—Authority and Definitions
23. In § 255.1, revise paragraph (c) to
read as follows:
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15:49 Jul 19, 2019
Jkt 247001
§ 255.2
Definitions
*
*
*
*
*
(r) Insured depository institution,
unless otherwise indicated, has the
same meaning as in section 3(c) of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12
U.S.C. 1813(c)), but does not include:
(1) An insured depository institution
that is described in section 2(c)(2)(D) of
the BHC Act (12 U.S.C. 1841(c)(2)(D));
or
(2) An insured depository institution
if it has, and if every company that
controls it has, total consolidated assets
of $10 billion or less and total trading
assets and trading liabilities, on a
consolidated basis, that are 5 percent or
less of total consolidated assets.
*
*
*
*
*
Subpart C—Covered Funds Activities
and Investments
25. In § 255.10, revise paragraph
(d)(9)(iii) to read as follows:
■
§ 255.10 Prohibition on acquiring or
retaining an ownership interest in and
having certain relationships with a covered
fund.
*
17 CFR Chapter II
■
*
*
*
*
(c) Scope. This part implements
section 13 of the Bank Holding
Company Act with respect to banking
entities for which the SEC is the
primary financial regulatory agency, as
defined in this part, but does not
include such entities to the extent they
are not within the definition of banking
entity in § 255.2(c).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 24. In § 255.2, revise paragraph (r) to
read as follows:
*
*
*
*
(d) * * *
(9) * * *
(iii) To share with a covered fund, for
corporate, marketing, promotional, or
other purposes, the same name or a
variation of the same name, except as
permitted under § 255.11(a)(6).
*
*
*
*
*
■ 26. In § 255.11, revise paragraph (a) to
read as follows:
§ 255.11 Permitted organizing and
offering, underwriting, and market making
with respect to a covered fund.
(a) * * *
(6) The covered fund, for corporate,
marketing, promotional, or other
purposes:
(i) Does not share the same name or
a variation of the same name with the
banking entity (or an affiliate thereof)
except that a covered fund may share
PO 00000
Frm 00020
Fmt 4700
Sfmt 4700
the same name or a variation of the
same name with a banking entity that is
an investment adviser to the covered
fund if:
(A) The investment adviser is not an
insured depository institution, a
company that controls an insured
depository institution, or a company
that is treated as a bank holding
company for purposes of section 8 of the
International Banking Act of 1978 (12
U.S.C. 3106); and
(B) The investment adviser does not
share the same name or a variation of
the same name as an insured depository
institution, a company that controls an
insured depository institution, or a
company that is treated as a bank
holding company for purposes of
section 8 of the International Banking
Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3106); and
(ii) Does not use the word ‘‘bank’’ in
its name;
*
*
*
*
*
Dated: June 26, 2019.
Morris Morgan,
Senior Deputy Comptroller and Chief
Operating Officer.
By order of the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, July 8, 2019.
Margaret McCloskey Shanks,
Deputy Secretary of the Board.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
By Order of the Board of Directors.
Dated at Washington, DC, on June 18, 2019.
Valerie J. Best,
Assistant Executive Secretary.
Issued in Washington, DC, on July 9, 2019,
by the Commission.
Christopher Kirkpatrick,
Secretary of the Commission.
Securities and Exchange Commission
Dated: July 5, 2019.
J. Lynn Taylor,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2019–15019 Filed 7–19–19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE
CORPORATION
12 CFR Part 330
RIN 3064–AF04
Joint Ownership Deposit Accounts
Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation.
ACTION: Final rule.
AGENCY:
The FDIC is amending its
deposit insurance regulations to update
one of the requirements that must be
satisfied for an account to be separately
insured as a joint account. Specifically,
the final rule provides an alternative
SUMMARY:
E:\FR\FM\22JYR1.SGM
22JYR1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 84, Number 140 (Monday, July 22, 2019)]
[Rules and Regulations]
[Pages 35008-35022]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2019-15019]
[[Page 35008]]
=======================================================================
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DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
12 CFR Part 44
[Docket ID OCC-2018-0029]
RIN 1557-AE47
FEDERAL RESERVE SYSTEM
12 CFR Part 248
[Docket No. R-1643]
RIN 7100-AF33
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
12 CFR Part 351
RIN 3064-AE88
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION
17 CFR Part 75
RIN 3038-AE72
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
17 CFR Part 255
[Release no. BHCA-6; File no. S7-30-18]
RIN 3235-AM43
Revisions to Prohibitions and Restrictions on Proprietary Trading
and Certain Interests In, and Relationships With, Hedge Funds and
Private Equity Funds
AGENCY: Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC), Treasury;
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System (Board); Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC); Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC); and Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).
ACTION: Final rules.
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SUMMARY: The OCC, Board, FDIC, SEC, and CFTC are adopting final rules
to amend the regulations implementing the Bank Holding Company Act's
prohibitions and restrictions on proprietary trading and certain
interests in, and relationships with, hedge funds and private equity
funds (commonly known as the Volcker Rule) in a manner consistent with
the statutory amendments made pursuant to certain sections of the
Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer Protection Act
(EGRRCPA). The EGRRCPA amendments and the final rules exclude from
these prohibitions and restrictions certain firms that have total
consolidated assets equal to $10 billion or less and total trading
assets and liabilities equal to five percent or less of total
consolidated assets. The EGRRCPA amendments and the final rules also
revise the restrictions applicable to the naming of a hedge fund or
private equity fund to permit an investment adviser that is a banking
entity to share a name with the fund under certain circumstances.
DATES: These final rules are effective on July 22, 2019.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
OCC: Roman Goldstein, Risk Specialist, Treasury and Market Risk
Policy, 202-649-6360; Tabitha Edgens, Senior Attorney; Mark O'Horo,
Senior Attorney, Chief Counsel's Office, (202) 649-5510; for persons
who are deaf or hearing impaired, TTY, (202) 649-5597, Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency, 400 7th Street SW, Washington, DC 20219.
Board: Flora Ahn, Special Counsel, (202) 452-2317, Gregory
Frischmann, Senior Counsel, (202) 452-2803, Kirin Walsh, Attorney,
(202) 452-3058, or Sarah Podrygula, Attorney, (202) 912-4658, Legal
Division, Constance Horsley, Deputy Associate Director, (202) 452-5239,
Cecily Boggs, Senior Financial Institution Policy Analyst, (202) 530-
6209, David Lynch, Deputy Associate Director, (202) 452-2081, Division
of Supervision and Regulation; Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, 20th and C Streets NW, Washington, DC 20551.
FDIC: Bobby R. Bean, Associate Director, [email protected], Michael E.
Spencer, Chief, Capital Markets Strategies, [email protected],
Andrew D. Carayiannis, Senior Policy Analyst, [email protected], or
Brian Cox, Capital Markets Policy Analyst, [email protected], Capital
Markets Branch, (202) 898-6888; Michael B. Phillips, Counsel,
[email protected], Benjamin J. Klein, Counsel, [email protected], or
Annmarie H. Boyd, Counsel, [email protected], Legal Division, Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation, 550 17th Street NW, Washington, DC
20429.
SEC: Andrew R. Bernstein, Senior Special Counsel, Sam Litz,
Attorney-Adviser, Aaron Washington, Special Counsel, or Carol McGee,
Assistant Director, at (202) 551-5870, Office of Derivatives Policy and
Trading Practices, Division of Trading and Markets, and Matthew Cook,
Senior Counsel, Benjamin Tecmire, Senior Counsel, and Jennifer Songer,
Branch Chief, at (202) 551-6787 or [email protected], Division of
Investment Management, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F
Street NE, Washington, DC 20549.
CFTC: Cantrell Dumas, Special Counsel, (202) 418-5043,
[email protected]; Jeffrey Hasterok, Data and Risk Analyst, (646) 746-
9736, [email protected], Division of Swap Dealer and Intermediary
Oversight; Mark Fajfar, Assistant General Counsel, (202) 418-6636,
[email protected], Office of the General Counsel; Stephen Kane, Research
Economist, (202) 418-5911, [email protected], Office of the Chief
Economist; Commodity Futures Trading Commission, Three Lafayette
Centre, 1155 21st Street NW, Washington, DC 20581.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
Section 13 of the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956 (BHC Act),\1\
also known as the Volcker Rule, generally prohibits any banking entity
from engaging in proprietary trading or from acquiring or retaining an
ownership interest in, sponsoring, or having certain relationships with
a hedge fund or private equity fund, subject to certain exemptions.\2\
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\1\ 12 U.S.C. 1851.
\2\ See id.
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Under the statute, authority for developing and adopting
regulations to implement the prohibitions and restrictions of section
13 of the BHC Act is shared among the OCC, Board, FDIC, SEC, and CFTC
(the agencies).\3\ The agencies adopted final rules implementing
section 13 of the BHC Act in December 2013 (the 2013 final rule).\4\
The agencies recently proposed amendments to these rules to provide
clarity about what activities are prohibited, and to improve
supervision
[[Page 35009]]
and implementation of section 13 of the BHC Act.\5\
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\3\ See 12 U.S.C. 1851(b)(2). Under section 13(b)(2)(B) of the
BHC Act, rules implementing section 13's prohibitions and
restrictions must be issued by: (i) The appropriate Federal banking
agencies (i.e., the Board, the OCC, and the FDIC), jointly, with
respect to insured depository institutions; (ii) the Board, with
respect to any company that controls an insured depository
institution, or that is treated as a bank holding company for
purposes of section 8 of the International Banking Act, any nonbank
financial company supervised by the Board, and any subsidiary of any
of the foregoing (other than a subsidiary for which an appropriate
Federal banking agency, the SEC, or the CFTC is the primary
financial regulatory agency); (iii) the CFTC with respect to any
entity for which it is the primary financial regulatory agency, as
defined in section 2 of the Dodd-Frank Act; and (iv) the SEC with
respect to any entity for which it is the primary financial
regulatory agency, as defined in section 2 of the Dodd-Frank Act.
See id.
\4\ See ``Prohibitions and Restrictions on Proprietary Trading
and Certain Interests in, and Relationships With, Hedge Funds and
Private Equity Funds; Final Rule,'' 79 FR 5535 (Jan. 31, 2014).
\5\ See ``Proposed Revisions to Prohibitions and Restrictions on
Proprietary Trading and Certain Interests in, and Relationships
With, Hedge Funds and Private Equity Funds,'' 83 FR 33432 (July 17,
2018).
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The Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer Protection Act
(EGRRCPA) amended section 13 of the BHC Act by modifying the definition
of ``banking entity'' to exclude certain community banks and their
affiliates from section 13's restrictions and by permitting an
investment adviser that is a banking entity to share a name with a
hedge fund or private equity fund that the banking entity organizes and
offers under certain circumstances.\6\
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\6\ See Economic Growth, Regulatory Relief, and Consumer
Protection Act, Public Law 115-174, sections 203, 204 (May 24,
2018). These provisions were effective upon EGRRCPA's enactment.
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Prior to the enactment of EGRRCPA, the definition of ``banking
entity,'' for purposes of section 13 of the BHC Act, included any
insured depository institution, as defined in the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act (FDI Act),\7\ any company that controls an insured
depository institution, or that is treated as a bank holding company
for purposes of section 8 of the International Banking Act of 1978
(IBA), and any affiliate or subsidiary of such entity (excluding from
the term insured depository institution certain insured depository
institutions that function solely in a trust or fiduciary capacity,
subject to a variety of conditions).\8\
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\7\ Section 3(c)(2) of the FDI Act defines an insured depository
institution to include any bank or savings association the deposits
of which are insured by the FDIC under the FDI Act. 12 U.S.C.
1813(c)(2).
\8\ 12 U.S.C. 1813(c)(2), 1851(h)(1).
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Section 203 of EGRRCPA, entitled ``Community bank relief,''
modified the scope of the term ``banking entity'' to exclude certain
community banks and their affiliates. Specifically, under section 203,
the term ``insured depository institution'' no longer includes any
institution that does not have, and is not controlled by a company that
has: (i) More than $10 billion in total consolidated assets; and (ii)
total trading assets and trading liabilities, as reported on the most
recent applicable regulatory filing filed by the institution, that are
more than 5 percent of total consolidated assets. Therefore, an insured
depository institution and its affiliates generally are not ``banking
entities'' if the insured depository institution and each affiliated
insured depository institution meets the statutory exclusion.\9\
However, EGRRCPA did not amend the definition of ``banking entity'' as
it relates to a company that is treated as a bank holding company for
purposes of section 8 of the IBA. Accordingly, the statutory exclusion
does not apply to a foreign banking organization with a U.S. branch or
agency, which continues to be subject to the prohibitions in section 13
of the BHC Act.
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\9\ Section 203 amended section 13(h)(1)(B) of the BHC Act by
excluding certain institutions from the term ``insured depository
institution'' exclusively for the purposes of section 13. Insured
banks and savings associations that qualify for this exclusion for
the purposes of section 13 of the BHC Act remain insured depository
institutions under section 3(c)(2) of the FDI Act. Additionally, an
institution that meets the criteria to be excluded from the
definition of insured depository institution under EGRRCPA may still
be a banking entity by virtue of its affiliation with another
insured depository institution or a company that is treated as a
bank holding company under section 8 of the IBA.
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Section 204 of EGRRCPA revised the restrictions applicable to the
naming of a hedge fund or private equity fund \10\ to permit an
investment adviser that is a banking entity to share a name with the
fund under certain circumstances. Prior to enactment of EGRRCPA,
section 13 provided that a banking entity (or an affiliate of the
banking entity), including an investment adviser, that organized and
offered a hedge fund or private equity fund could not share the same
name or a variation of the same name with the fund (the name-sharing
restriction).\11\ Section 204 of EGRRCPA amended the name-sharing
restriction to permit a hedge fund or private equity fund organized and
offered by a banking entity to share the same name or a variation of
the same name as a banking entity that is an investment adviser to the
hedge fund or private equity fund, if: (1) The investment adviser is
not an insured depository institution, a company that controls an
insured depository institution, or a company that is treated as a bank
holding company for purposes of section 8 of the IBA; \12\ (2) the
investment adviser does not share the same name or a variation of the
same name with any such entities; and (3) the name does not contain the
word ``bank.''
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\10\ The terms ``hedge fund'' and ``private equity fund'' are
defined at 12 U.S.C. 1851(h)(2). See also 12 CFR 44.10(b); 12 CFR
248.10(b); 12 CFR 351.10(b); 17 CFR 255.10(b); 17 CFR 75.10(b)
(defining ``covered fund'' for purposes of the 2013 final rule).
\11\ 12 U.S.C. 1851(d)(1)(G)(vi) (2017).
\12\ 12 U.S.C. 3106.
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On February 8, 2019, the agencies published a notice of proposed
rulemaking (the proposal) to revise the 2013 final rule consistent with
the EGRRCPA statutory amendments.\13\ For the reasons discussed below,
the agencies are now adopting the proposal as final without change.
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\13\ ``Proposed Revisions to Prohibitions and Restrictions on
Proprietary Trading and Certain Interests in, and Relationships
With, Hedge Funds and Private Equity Funds,'' 84 FR 2778 (Feb. 8,
2019).
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II. Description of the Final Rules
A. Definition of Banking Entity
Consistent with the proposal, the agencies are modifying the
definition of ``insured depository institution'' in Sec. __.2(r) of
the 2013 final rule to conform that definition with section 203 of
EGRRCPA. Under this revised definition, an insured depository
institution must satisfy two conditions for it and its affiliates to
qualify for the exclusion. First, the insured depository institution,
and every entity that controls it, must have total consolidated assets
equal to or less than $10 billion. Second, total consolidated trading
assets and liabilities of the insured depository institution, and every
entity that controls it, must be equal to or less than five percent of
its total consolidated assets.
Trade associations representing large commercial banks, community
banks, and credit unions all generally supported the agencies' proposal
to implement the community bank relief provision under section 203 of
EGRRCPA.\14\ Some commenters cited, among other considerations, the
statute's plain meaning, legislative history, and policy considerations
for their support of the proposal.\15\ Certain other commenters
suggested that section 203 extended relief to firms with either $10
billion or less in total consolidated assets or trading assets and
liabilities equal to 5 percent or less of total consolidated
assets.\16\ Under these commenters' view of section 203, many banks
with total consolidated assets well over $10 billion, including certain
global systemically important banks (G-SIBs) with over $250 billion in
total consolidated assets, would be exempt from section 13 of the BHC
Act.
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\14\ See American Bankers Association; Independent Community
Bankers of America; National Association of Federally-Insured Credit
Unions; California Bankers Association.
\15\ Los Huertos and Mount; National Association of Federally-
Insured Credit Unions.
\16\ See Competitive Enterprise Institute; Competitive
Enterprise Institute et al.; Luetkemeyer; Matthew Thomas.
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After considering these comments, the agencies are not persuaded by
the argument that the exclusion under section 203 of EGRRCPA extends to
institutions with total consolidated assets in excess of $10 billion.
The agencies believe that the statute requires an institution to
satisfy both criteria to qualify for the exclusion. This approach
[[Page 35010]]
is most consistent with the statutory language of EGRRCPA, the
congressional intent behind the statute, and the structure of the
statute as a whole.
The agencies note that Section 203 of EGRRCPA, is entitled
``Community bank relief,'' and that numerous floor statements made by
senators contemporaneously with passage of the legislation in the
Senate on a bipartisan basis indicated that section 203 was only
intended to exclude community banks and their affiliates.\17\ Moreover,
the Senate Banking Committee's summary of section 203 describes it as
exempting banking entities that have total consolidated assets of $10
billion or less and total trading assets and trading liabilities that
are five percent or less of total consolidated assets.\18\ For these
reasons, the agencies are adopting without change the proposed
revisions to the banking entity definition.
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\17\ See, e.g., 164 Cong. Rec. S1696 at S1701, S1720, S1724-25
(Mar. 14, 2018).
\18\ See S. 2155, Section-By-Section, as Passed by Senate,
United State Senate Committee on Banking and Urban Affairs (March
14, 2018).
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Some commenters requested that, for purposes of determining whether
trading assets and liabilities are within the five percent threshold,
the agencies limit their review to an institution's most recent
applicable regulatory filing.\19\ These commenters requested that the
agencies not review all ``available information,'' as suggested in the
preamble to the proposal,\20\ because such information could be at
variance with the trading assets and/or liabilities figure(s) reported
in the most recent applicable regulatory filing. These commenters also
requested that the agencies confirm that section 203 of EGRRCPA is
self-effectuating and that no additional action is required by the
agencies for the community bank exclusion to take effect.
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\19\ See American Bankers Association; California Bankers
Association. Another commenter requested that the agencies provide
additional clarity for the purposes of determining which
institutions qualify for the relevant exclusion. See Grimm. That
commenter also requested further clarity with respect to the changes
made to the name-sharing restriction pursuant to section 204 of
EGRRCPA.
\20\ The preamble to the proposal stated that ``the Agencies
would expect to use available information, including information
reported on regulatory reporting forms available to each Agency,
with respect to whether financial institutions qualify for the
exclusion.'' 84 FR 2781.
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The agencies confirm that a bank or savings association seeking to
determine its eligibility for the exclusion may use its most recent
quarterly Consolidated Report of Condition and Income (call report) as
the source of data for its consolidated assets and its total trading
assets and liabilities at the bank or savings association level.
Similarly, a banking organization may use the most recent filing of the
Board's FR Y-9C by its holding company as the source of data about the
consolidated assets and total trading assets and liabilities of the
companies controlling the bank or savings association. Generally, the
agencies believe that most current FR Y9-SP filers will be able to
determine eligibility for the exclusion based on the call report data
filed by their affiliated insured depository institution(s). All
entities that seek to rely on the community bank exclusion should
assure themselves that all affiliated banks or savings associations and
holding companies satisfy the total consolidated assets and trading
asset and liability thresholds. As the agencies noted in the proposal,
institutions that meet the eligibility requirements under section 203
of EGRRCPA are no longer subject to the requirements of section 13 of
the BHC Act, and no additional action by the agencies is required for
the exclusion to take effect.
Two commenters requested that the agencies provide clarification
that certain securities held by banks or savings associations and their
holding companies are not within the category of ``trading assets'' for
purposes of determining eligibility for the exclusion.\21\ As described
above, the call report or FR Y-9C, as applicable, may be used as the
source of data for purposes of determining compliance with the total
assets and trading asset and liability thresholds. Institutions should
classify assets and liabilities consistent with the instructions to the
relevant report in consultation with appropriate supervisors, as
necessary.
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\21\ American Bankers Association (securities reported as
available-for-sale); Bessemer Group, Inc. (mutual fund shares held
to hedge nonqualified compensation plan liabilities).
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One commenter requested that the agencies generally clarify that
securities held as available-for-sale do not count towards the trading
assets and liabilities threshold.\22\ The call report and FR Y-9C
require reporting an institution's available-for-sale securities
separately from the institution's trading assets. Accordingly,
securities appropriately classified as available-for-sale and excluded
from trading assets on an institution's call report or FR Y-9C will not
count toward an institution's trading assets and liabilities threshold.
Another commenter requested that the agencies address the
classification of securities held in connection with employee deferred
compensation programs for purposes of the call report and FR Y-9C.\23\
The question of how to classify specific types of assets, such as
assets held in connection with employee deferred compensation programs,
on the call report and FR Y-9C is fact-specific and beyond the scope of
this rulemaking.\24\ As stated above, institutions should classify
assets and liabilities consistent with the instructions to the relevant
report in consultation with appropriate supervisors, as necessary.
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\22\ American Bankers Association.
\23\ Bessemer Group, Inc.
\24\ The regulatory reporting forms to which the commenter is
requesting revision or clarification are also used for other
purposes, such as for determining capital requirements. See 12 CFR
part 3, app. B; 12 CFR 217.202; 12 CFR 324.202 (using trading assets
and liabilities for the purpose of determining ``covered positions''
under the market risk capital rule). Accordingly, changes to the
reporting forms or the instructions thereto would likely have
unintended consequences for other areas of supervision and
regulation.
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Two commenters generally opposed providing an exclusion to
community banks.\25\ One of these commenters suggested that, for a
community bank to remain eligible for the exclusion, it should be
required to pass periodic tests by its regulator.\26\ As noted above,
EGRRCPA excludes community banks from section 13 if they meet the
specified total consolidated assets and trading asset and liability
conditions, and these provisions became effective upon enactment.
Accordingly, the agencies are finalizing the exclusion as proposed in
order to conform the regulation to the statutory exclusion. The banking
agencies note that they will continue to examine community banks that
are exempt under section 203 for compliance with applicable laws and
regulations, including the requirement under applicable banking laws
and regulations that they operate in a safe and sound manner.
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\25\ Tinee Carraker, Rodger Cunningham.
\26\ See Carraker.
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Another commenter requested relief from the control definition or a
specific exclusion for investors in companies that control industrial
loan companies (ILCs).\27\ Any changes to the definition of ``control''
under the BHC Act \28\ are outside of the scope of this rulemaking.\29\
Furthermore, the agencies do not find any support for a specific
exemption from section 13 of the BHC Act for investors in ILC parents
under EGRRCPA. Accordingly, the agencies are not adopting an exemption
from
[[Page 35011]]
section 13 of the BHC Act for parent ILCs or investors in the parent
ILCs that do not otherwise meet the eligibility requirements for the
community bank exclusion under section 203.
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\27\ See EnerBank.
\28\ 12 U.S.C. 1841(a)(2); 12 CFR 225.2(e)(1).
\29\ The Board recently invited comment on a notice of proposed
rulemaking to simplify and increase the transparency of the rules
for determining control of a banking organization. Press Release:
https://www.federalreserve.gov/newsevents/pressreleases/bcreg20190423a.htm.
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B. Modification of Name-Sharing Restriction
Consistent with the proposal, the agencies are modifying the name-
sharing restriction in Sec. _.11(a)(6)(i) of the 2013 final rule to
conform that restriction to section 204 of EGRRCPA. Pursuant to this
change, a hedge fund or private equity fund sponsored by a banking
entity is permitted to share the same name or a variation of the same
name with a banking entity that is an investment adviser to the fund,
subject to the conditions specified in the statute.\30\ These
conditions require that the investment adviser is not, and does not
share the same name (or a variation of the same name) as, an insured
depository institution, a company that controls an insured depository
institution, or a company that is treated as a bank holding company for
purposes of section 8 of the IBA,\31\ and that the investment adviser's
name does not contain the word ``bank.'' \32\
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\30\ EGRRCPA, section 204. While the statute applies these
restrictions and conditions to ``hedge funds'' and ``private equity
funds,'' the 2013 final rule applies to ``covered funds,'' as
defined in Sec. _.10 of the regulations. See supra footnote 10.
\31\ 12 U.S.C. 1851(d)(1)(G)(vi)(I); 12 U.S.C.
1851(d)(1)(G)(vi)(II).
\32\ 12 U.S.C. 1851(d)(1)(G)(vi)(III). The requirement that the
name not contain the word ``bank'' was included in the name-sharing
restriction by section 204 of EGRRCPA but already is a condition
under the 2013 final rule. Accordingly, the agencies did not make
any additional modifications to the rule to reflect this condition.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The agencies received four comments on these proposed changes to
the name-sharing restriction. One commenter generally supported the
proposed changes to the name-sharing restriction.\33\ Two commenters
asked the agencies to provide relief from the name-sharing restriction
for covered funds that are required or expected by regulators in a
foreign jurisdiction to share the same name or a variation of the same
name with a fund manager, and the fund manager shares a name or a
variation of the same name as its banking entity affiliate.\34\ One of
these commenters asserted that concerns regarding investor confusion
about the role of the banking entity or perceived bailout risk would be
mitigated because the funds would be required to comply with the
written disclosure requirements under the 2013 final rule for
organizing and offering a covered fund.\35\ Another commenter suggested
that the agencies could use their exemptive authority under section
13(d)(1)(J) of the BHC Act to implement this exemption.\36\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\33\ Independent Community Bankers of America.
\34\ American Bankers Association; Investment Adviser
Association. Another commenter stated that the agencies should be
mindful of any foreign requirements on name-sharing between covered
funds and banking entities. See Matthew Thomas.
\35\ See Investment Adviser Association; 12 CFR 44.11(a)(8); 12
CFR 248.11(a)(8); 12 CFR 351.11(a)(8); 17 CFR 255.11(a)(8); 17 CFR
75.11(a)(8).
\36\ See American Bankers Association.
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The purpose of these revisions to the 2013 final rule is to conform
the amendments to section 204 of EGRRCPA. Section 204 of EGRRCPA did
not provide an exclusion allowing banking entities to share a name with
a covered fund if required or expected to by foreign regulators.
Accordingly, the agencies have determined not to make the requested
change to the name-sharing restriction, which goes beyond the scope of
this rulemaking, and are adopting the changes implementing section 204
as proposed.
The agencies are also finalizing conforming changes to the
definition of ``sponsor.'' \37\ Pursuant to these changes, the
definition of the term ``sponsor'' includes a banking entity that
shares the same name or a variation of the same name with a fund, for
corporate, marketing, promotional, or other purposes, except as
permitted under Sec. __.11(a)(6)--i.e., the name-sharing restriction
as amended by EGRRCPA. The agencies did not receive any comments on the
proposed conforming changes to the definition of ``sponsor.'' The
agencies are adopting this change as final in order to conform the rule
to the EGRRCPA statutory revisions.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\37\ EGRRCPA section 204.
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III. Administrative Law Matters
A. Paperwork Reduction Act
Certain provisions of the final rule contain ``collection of
information'' requirements within the meaning of the Paperwork
Reduction Act (PRA) of 1995 (44 U.S.C. 3501-3521). In accordance with
the requirements of the PRA, the agencies may not conduct or sponsor,
and a 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 agencies reviewed and determined
that the final would not change the current reporting, recordkeeping or
third-party disclosure requirements associated with section 13 of the
BHC Act under the PRA. However, the final rule would reduce the number
of respondents for the Board (including OCC-, FDIC-, SEC-, and CFTC-
supervised institutions under a holding company), FDIC (with respect to
supervised institutions not under a holding company), and OCC
(supervised institutions not under a holding company), which will be
addressed as a nonmaterial change to OMB.
B. Plain Language
Section 722 of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act \38\ requires the OCC,
Board, and FDIC (Federal banking agencies) to use plain language in all
proposed and final rules published after January 1, 2000. The Federal
banking agencies have sought to present the proposed rule in a simple
and straightforward manner and did not receive any comments on plain
language.
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\38\ Public Law 106-102, section 722, 113 Stat. 1338, 1471
(1999).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
C. Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis
OCC: The Regulatory Flexibility Act, 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq., (RFA),
requires an agency, in connection with a final rule, to prepare a Final
Regulatory Flexibility Analysis describing the impact of the rule on
small entities (defined by the SBA for purposes of the RFA to include
commercial banks and savings institutions with total assets of $550
million or less and trust companies with total assets of $38.5 million
of less) or to certify that the rule would not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
The OCC currently supervises approximately 758 small entities.\39\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\39\ We base our estimate of the number of small entities on the
SBA's size thresholds for commercial banks and savings institutions,
and trust companies, which are $550 million and $38.5 million,
respectively. Consistent with the General Principles of Affiliation
13 CFR 121.103(a), we count the assets of affiliated financial
institutions when determining if we should classify an OCC-
supervised institution as a small entity. We use December 31, 2018,
to determine size because a ``financial institution's assets are
determined by averaging the assets reported on its four quarterly
financial statements for the preceding year.'' See footnote 8 of the
U.S. Small Business Administration's Table of Size Standards.
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Because the statutory provisions are already in effect, and this
rule only revises the OCC's existing regulations to conform to this
statutory change, this rule does not affect a substantial number of
small entities. Section 204 of EGRRCPA generally does not apply to OCC-
supervised institutions.
The OCC's threshold for a significant effect is whether cost
increases associated with a proposed rule are greater than or equal to
either 5 percent of a small bank's total annual salaries and benefits
or 2.5 percent of a small bank's total non-interest expense. Even if
the rule affected a substantial number
[[Page 35012]]
of small banks, the OCC does not believe that it would have a
significant economic impact on small banks, because OCC-supervised
institutions that qualify for the exclusion under section 203 of the
EGRRCPA should not have compliance costs associated with 12 CFR part
44. OCC-supervised institutions can determine their eligibility for the
exclusion at the bank level based on information they are separately
required to file in their Consolidated Reports of Condition and Income.
Therefore, the OCC certifies that the rule would not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of OCC-supervised small
entities.
Board: The RFA imposes certain requirements on the Board regarding
any potential significant economic impact that a rule may have on a
substantial number of small entities. The size standard to be
considered a small business for banking entities subject to the rule is
generally $550 million or less in consolidated assets.\40\ The Board
has considered the potential economic impact of the final rule on
Board-supervised small entities in accordance with the RFA. The Board
believes that the final rule will not have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities for the reasons
described below.\41\
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\40\ U.S. SBA, Table of Small Business Size Standards Matched to
North American Industry Classification System Codes, available at
https://www.sba.gov/sites/default/files/files/Size_Standards_Table.pdf. Pursuant to SBA regulations, the asset
size of a concern includes the assets of the concern whose size is
at issue and all of its domestic and foreign affiliates. 13 CFR
121.103(6).
\41\ The Board published an initial RFA analysis in connection
with the proposal and received no public comments related to its
analysis.
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1. Reason for the Final Rule
As discussed in this SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION, the agencies are
revising the regulations implementing section 13 of the BHC Act in
conformance with EGRRCPA. The final rule therefore excludes from the
definition of ``insured depository institution'' if an insured
depository institution (and any company that controls such institution)
has total consolidated assets equal to $10 billion or less and total
trading assets and liabilities equal to five percent or less of total
consolidated assets. Such institutions are exempt from the prohibitions
and restrictions under section 13 of the BHC Act.
2. Statement of Objectives and Legal Basis
As discussed above, the agencies' objective in finalizing
amendments to the regulations implementing section 13 of the BHC Act is
to conform the regulations to changes recently enacted by sections 203
and 204 of EGRRCPA. The agencies are explicitly authorized under
section 13(b)(2) of the BHC Act to adopt rules implementing section
13.\42\
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\42\ 12 U.S.C. 1851(b)(2).
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3. Description of Small Entities to Which the Regulation Applies
Section 203 of EGRRCPA exempted approximately 3,193 Board-
supervised small entities from section 13 of the BHC Act.\43\ The
Board's final rule conforms its regulations implementing section 13 to
the statutory changes.
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\43\ Qualifying institutions eligible for this exclusion would
consist of state member banks, bank holding companies, and savings
and loan holding companies that meet the eligibility criteria for
the exclusion.
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4. Projected Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance
Requirements
Sections 203 and 204 of EGRRCPA were effective upon enactment, and,
thus, any economic impacts on small entities associated with these
changes were caused by the statutory changes. Section 203 of EGRRCPA
exempted all Board-supervised small entities from the reporting,
recordkeeping, and all other requirements associated with section 13 of
the BHC Act. While section 203 of EGRRCPA, therefore, affects a
substantial number of Board-supervised small entities, it is not
expected to have a significant economic impact on such entities. This
is because such small entities generally engage in limited activities
subject to section 13 of the BHC Act and are subject to limited
compliance requirements under the rule.
The Board estimates that Board-supervised small entities that are
no longer subject to section 13 of the BHC Act due to section 203 of
EGRRCPA will save, on average, approximately $5,000 per year.\44\ This
represents, on average, less than 1.25 percent of net income and less
than 0.07 percent of total equity for such entities. For the reasons
stated above, section 203 of EGRRCPA and the Board's final rule are not
expected to have a significant economic impact on Board-supervised
small entities.
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\44\ This estimate is based on the paperwork, recordkeeping, and
disclosure-related compliance requirements associated with section
13 of the BHC Act that the Board estimates for purposes of the PRA.
Because community banks do not significantly engage in the types of
activities subject to section 13's prohibitions and restrictions,
the majority of the ongoing costs associated with section 13 for
community banks prior to EGRRCPA were likely related to
recordkeeping and should thus be captured by this data. The average
estimated compliance cost savings would be $9,225, equal to 146
hours multiplied by an estimated total hourly compensation rate of
$63.36 per hour. According to the May 2017 National Industry-
Specific Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates for the
Depository Credit Intermediation sector the 75th percentile wages
for a compliance officer is $40.55 per hour. The wage information
reported by the BLS in the Specific Occupational Employment and Wage
Estimates does not include health benefits and other non-monetary
benefits. According to the December 2018 Employer Cost of Employee
Compensation data compensation rates for health and other benefits
are 33.7 percent of total compensation. The wage is also inflation
adjusted according to the BLS data on the Consumer Price Index for
Urban Consumers (CPI-U) so that it is contemporaneous with the non-
wage compensation statistic. The inflation rate was 3.59 percent
between May 2017 and December 2018. Therefore, the adjusted average
wage for a compliance officer is $63.36 per hour.
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Section 204 of EGRRCPA, which amends the restrictions related to
the naming of covered funds, will likely only have direct economic
impacts on investment advisory businesses subject to section 13 of the
BHC Act. Because the Board is not the primary financial regulatory
agency for investment advisers,\45\ section 204 of EGRRCPA not expected
to have a significant economic impact on Board-supervised small
entities.
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\45\ See 12 U.S.C. 1851(b)(2)(B)(i)(II).
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5. Identification of Duplicative, Overlapping, or Conflicting Federal
Regulations
The Board has not identified any federal statutes or regulations
that duplicate, overlap, or conflict with the proposed revisions.
6. Discussion of Significant Alternatives
The Board does not believe that this final rule will have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number small entities. As
a result, the Board has not adopted any alternatives to the final rule.
FDIC: The RFA generally requires that, in connection with a final
rulemaking, an agency prepare and make available for public comment a
final regulatory flexibility analysis describing the impact of the
rulemaking on small entities.\46\ A regulatory flexibility analysis is
not required, however, if the agency certifies that the rule would not
have a significant economic impact on a substantial number of small
entities. The SBA has defined ``small entities'' to include banking
organizations with total assets less than or equal to $550 million.\47\
[[Page 35013]]
Generally, the FDIC considers a significant effect to be a quantified
effect in excess of 5 percent of total annual salaries and benefits per
institution, or 2.5 percent of total non-interest expenses. The FDIC
believes that effects in excess of these thresholds typically represent
significant effects for FDIC-supervised institutions. The FDIC
supervises 3,489 depository institutions,\48\ of which 2,674 are
defined as small banking entities by the terms of the RFA.\49\ Of the
2,674 small, FDIC-supervised institutions, all report having total
consolidated assets less than or equal to $10 billion, and total
trading assets and liabilities less than or equal to five percent of
total consolidated assets, and are therefore, covered by the rule.\50\
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\46\ 5 U.S.C. 601 et seq.
\47\ The SBA defines a small banking organization as having $550
million or less in assets, where ``a financial institution's assets
are determined by averaging the assets reported on its four
quarterly financial statements for the preceding year.'' 13 CFR
121.201 n.8 (2018). ``SBA counts the receipts, employees, or other
measure of size of the concern whose size is at issue and all of its
domestic and foreign affiliates . . .'' 13 CFR 121.103(a)(6) (2018).
Following these regulations, the FDIC uses a covered entity's
affiliated and acquired assets, averaged over the preceding four
quarters, to determine whether the covered entity is ``small'' for
the purposes of RFA.
\48\ FDIC-supervised institutions are set forth in 12 U.S.C.
1813(q)(2).
\49\ Call Report: December 31, 2018.
\50\ Call Report: December 31, 2018.
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Although the rule applies to 2,674 small, FDIC-supervised
institutions, the rule would not have a significant economic impact.
The statutory changes established by EGRRCPA no longer prohibit certain
institutions to engage in proprietary trading,\51\ thereby potentially
increasing the volume of such activity for affected banking entities.
The rule would amend the FDIC's regulations to conform to this
exemption established in EGRRCPA. Therefore, this component of the rule
would have no direct effect on small, FDIC-supervised institutions.
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\51\ 12 CFR 351.3(a).
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However, even if the economic effects of the proposed rule were
considered relative to a pre-statutory baseline the proposed changes
that enable certain institutions to engage in proprietary trading are
unlikely to have a significant effect on a substantial number of small,
FDIC-supervised institutions. In the years prior to the enactment of
the 2013 final rule (2006 to 2012) a maximum of 59 small, FDIC-
supervised institutions reported a nonzero value for trading assets,
trading liabilities, or structured financial products. Additionally, in
the years prior to the enactment of the 2013 final rule (2006 to 2012)
trading assets as a percent of total assets ranged between 0.00013 and
0.07 percent for small, FDIC-supervised institutions.\52\ According to
the most recent Call Report data trading assets as a percent of total
assets is 0.007 percent for small, FDIC-supervised institutions.\53\
Not all trading activity is necessarily proprietary trading, so only a
subset of trading assets would be affected by this rule. Also, changes
in the dollar volume of trading assets and their percentage of total
assets are affected by market conditions, economic conditions, and the
decisions of senior management at small, FDIC-supervised institutions,
among other things. However, the small volume of pre-Volcker Rule
trading assets and liabilities at small institutions suggests that the
proposed rule is unlikely to have significant effects on small, FDIC-
supervised institutions, assuming that past behavior is indicative of
the propensity of small, FDIC-supervised institutions to engage in
trading activity that otherwise would have been prohibited under the
Volcker Rule.
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\52\ Call Report: March 2006-December 2012.
\53\ Call Report: December 2018.
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As previously stated, EGRRCPA permits a covered fund organized and
offered by a banking entity to share the same name, or a variation of
the same name, as a banking entity that is an affiliated investment
adviser to the hedge fund or private equity fund, with some
restrictions. By permitting a covered fund to share the name of a
banking entity, or variation thereof, the fund can utilize the
franchise value of the banking entity to more effectively market the
fund to the bank's current account holders or the public. The size of
this potential benefit is difficult to accurately estimate with
available data because it depends on the business model of individual
banks and funds, the propensity of those funds to advertise to
particular groups, and the decisions of customers, among other things.
However, since the rule would conform FDIC regulations with the
statutory language enacted by EGRRCPA, this component of the rule would
have no direct effect on small, FDIC-supervised institutions.
Finally, the rule would introduce conforming changes that would
reduce recordkeeping, reporting, and disclosure costs for affected
FDIC-supervised institutions. EGRRCPA states that certain institutions
with total consolidated assets less than or equal to $10 billion, and
total trading assets and liabilities less than or equal to five percent
of total consolidated assets, are excluded from restrictions on
engaging in proprietary trading activity. The rule would amend the
FDIC's regulations to conform to this exclusion established in EGRRCPA.
In so doing, the rule would make conforming changes to reduce the
recordkeeping and reporting requirements for small, FDIC-supervised
institutions that were excluded from proprietary trading restriction by
EGRRCPA. Although the vast majority of small, FDIC-supervised
institutions are not currently required to comply with the
recordkeeping, reporting, or disclosure requirements associated with
proprietary trading, the rule would introduce conforming changes that
would exclude some small, FDIC-supervised institutions. Of these newly
excluded institutions, the rule would conform to Section 203 of
EGRRCPA, which reduced recordkeeping, reporting, or disclosure
requirements by up to an estimated 8 hours per institution, or
approximately $506.88 per year.54 55 The estimated reduction
in recordkeeping, reporting, or disclosure costs per institution
represents less than 0.01 percent of non-interest expenses, on average,
for small, FDIC-supervised institution.\56\ Thus, the FDIC believes the
rule would not have a significant economic impact on small, FDIC-
supervised institutions.
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\54\ 8 hours * $63.36 per hour = $506.88.
\55\ The estimated reduction in costs is calculated by
multiplying 8 hours by an estimated total hourly compensation rate
of $63.36 per hour. According to the May 2017 National Industry-
Specific Occupational Employment and Wage Estimates for the
Depository Credit Intermediation sector the 75th percentile wages
for a compliance officer is $40.55 per hour. The wage information
reported by the BLS in the Specific Occupational Employment and Wage
Estimates does not include health benefits and other non-monetary
benefits. According to the December 2018 Employer Cost of Employee
Compensation data compensation rates for health and other benefits
are 33.7 percent of total compensation. The wage is also inflation
adjusted according to the BLS data on the Consumer Price Index for
Urban Consumers (CPI-U) so that it is contemporaneous with the non-
wage compensation statistic. The inflation rate was 3.59 percent
between May 2017 and December 2018. Therefore, the adjusted average
wage for a compliance officer is $63.36 per hour.
\56\ Call Report, December 31, 2018.
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For the reasons described above and under section 605(b) of the
RFA, the FDIC certifies that the rule would not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
CFTC: Pursuant to 5 U.S.C. 605(b), the CFTC hereby certifies that
the rule would not have a significant economic impact on a substantial
number of small entities for which the CFTC is the primary financial
regulatory agency.
As discussed in this SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION, the agencies are
revising the 2013 final rule in order to be consistent with statutory
amendments made by EGRRCPA to section 13 of the BHC Act. The statutory
amendments (a) modified the scope of the term ``banking entity'' to
exclude certain community banks and their affiliates and (b) permitted
any banking entity to share a name with a hedge fund or private equity
fund that it organizes and offers under certain circumstances.
[[Page 35014]]
The revisions generally apply to banking entities, including
certain CFTC-registered entities. These entities include bank-
affiliated CFTC-registered swap dealers, futures commission merchants,
commodity trading advisors and commodity pool operators.\57\ The CFTC
has previously determined that swap dealers, futures commission
merchants and commodity pool operators are not small entities for
purposes of the RFA and, therefore, the requirements of the RFA do not
apply to those entities.\58\ As for commodity trading advisors, the
CFTC has found it appropriate to consider whether such registrants
should be deemed small entities for purposes of the RFA on a case-by-
case basis, in the context of the particular regulation at issue.\59\
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\57\ The rule may also apply to other types of CFTC registrants
that are banking entities, such as introducing brokers, but the CFTC
believes it is unlikely that such other registrants will have
significant activities that would implicate the rule. See 79 FR
5808, 5813 (Jan. 31, 2014) (CFTC version of 2013 final rule).
\58\ See Policy Statement and Establishment of Definitions of
``Small Entities'' for Purposes of the Regulatory Flexibility Act,
47 FR 18618 (Apr. 30, 1982) (futures commission merchants and
commodity pool operators); Registration of Swap Dealers and Major
Swap Participants, 77 FR 2613, 2620 (Jan. 19, 2012) (swap dealers
and major swap participants).
\59\ See Policy Statement and Establishment of Definitions of
``Small Entities'' for Purposes of the Regulatory Flexibility Act,
47 FR 18618, 18620 (Apr. 30, 1982).
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In the context of the rule, the CFTC believes it is unlikely that a
substantial number of the commodity trading advisors that are
potentially affected are small entities for purposes of the RFA. In
this regard, the CFTC notes that only commodity trading advisors that
are registered with the CFTC are potentially covered by the rule, and
generally those that are registered have larger businesses. Similarly,
the rule applies to only those commodity trading advisors that are
affiliated with banks, which the CFTC expects are larger businesses.
Because the CFTC believes that there are not a substantial number
of registered, banking entity-affiliated commodity trading advisors
that are small entities for purposes of the RFA, and the other CFTC
registrants that may be affected by the rule have been determined not
to be small entities, the CFTC believes that the rule will not have a
significant economic impact on a substantial number of small entities
for which the CFTC is the primary financial regulatory agency.
SEC: In the proposal, the SEC certified that, pursuant to 5 U.S.C.
605(b), the proposal would not, if adopted, have a significant economic
impact on a substantial number of small entities. Although the SEC
solicited written comments regarding this certification, no commenters
responded to this request.
As discussed in this SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION, the agencies are
adopting the proposal as final without change, in order to be
consistent with statutory amendments made by EGRRCPA to section 13 of
the BHC Act. The statutory amendments (a) modified the scope of the
term ``banking entity'' to exclude certain community banks and their
affiliates and (b) permitted any banking entity to share a name with a
hedge fund or private equity fund that it organizes and offers under
certain circumstances.
The revisions the agencies are adopting will generally apply to
banking entities, including certain SEC-registered entities.\60\ These
entities include bank-affiliated SEC-registered broker-dealers,
investment advisers, security-based swap dealers, and major security-
based swap participants. Based on information in filings submitted by
these entities, the SEC believes that there are no banking entity
registered investment advisers,\61\ broker-dealers,\62\ security-based
swap dealers, or major security-based swap participants that are small
entities for purposes of the RFA.\63\ For this reason, the SEC
certifies that the rule, as adopted, will not have a significant
economic impact on a substantial number of small entities.
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\60\ The SEC's Economic Analysis, below, discusses the economic
effects of the final amendments. See SEC Economic Analysis, section
III.F.
\61\ For the purposes of an SEC rulemaking in connection with
the RFA, an investment adviser generally is a small entity if it:
(1) Has assets under management having a total value of less than
$25 million; (2) did not have total assets of $5 million or more on
the last day of the most recent fiscal year; and (3) does not
control, is not controlled by, and is not under common control with
another investment adviser that has assets under management of $25
million or more, or any person (other than a natural person) that
had total assets of $5 million or more on the last day of its most
recent fiscal year. See 17 CFR 275.0-7.
\62\ For the purposes of an SEC rulemaking in connection with
the RFA, a broker-dealer will be deemed a small entity if it: (1)
Had total capital (net worth plus subordinated liabilities) of less
than $500,000 on the date in the prior fiscal year as of which its
audited financial statements were prepared pursuant to 17 CFR
240.17a-5(d), or, if not required to file such statements, had total
capital (net worth plus subordinated liabilities) of less than
$500,000 on the last day of the preceding fiscal year (or in the
time that it has been in business, if shorter); and (2) is not
affiliated with any person (other than a natural person) that is not
a small business or small organization. See 17 CFR 240.0-10(c).
Under the standards adopted by the SBA, small entities also include
entities engaged in financial investments and related activities
with $38.5 million or less in annual receipts. See 13 CFR 121.201
(Subsector 523).
\63\ Based on SEC analysis of Form ADV data, the SEC believes
that there are not a substantial number of registered investment
advisers affected by the proposal that qualify as small entities
under RFA. Based on SEC analysis of broker-dealer FOCUS filings and
NIC relationship data, the SEC believes that there are no SEC-
registered broker-dealers affected by the proposal that qualify as
small entities under RFA. With respect to security-based swap
dealers and major security-based swap participants, based on
feedback from market participants and information about the
security-based swap markets, the Commission believes that the types
of entities that would engage in more than a de minimis amount of
dealing activity involving security-based swaps--which generally
would be large financial institutions--would not be ``small
entities'' for purposes of the RFA. See Regulation SBSR--Reporting
and Dissemination of Security-Based Swap Information, 81 FR 53546,
53553 (Aug. 12, 2016).
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D. Riegle Community Development and Regulatory Improvement Act
Pursuant to section 302(a) of the Riegle Community Development and
Regulatory Improvement Act (RCDRIA),\64\ in determining the effective
date and administrative compliance requirements for new regulations
that impose additional reporting, disclosure, or other requirements on
insured depository institutions, each Federal banking agency must
consider, consistent with principles of safety and soundness and the
public interest, any administrative burdens that such regulations would
place on depository institutions, including small depository
institutions, and customers of depository institutions, as well as the
benefits of such regulations. In addition, section 302(b) of RCDRIA
requires new regulations and amendments to regulations that impose
additional reporting, disclosures, or other new requirements on insured
depository institutions generally to take effect on the first day of a
calendar quarter that begins on or after the date on which the
regulations are published in final form.\65\ The rule reduces burden
and does not impose any reporting, disclosure, or other new
requirements on insured depository institutions. Accordingly, the
agencies are not required by RCDRIA to consider the administrative
burdens and benefits of the rule or delay its effective date.\66\
Because delaying the effective date of the rule is not required and
would serve no purpose, the final rule will be effective on the date of
publication in the Federal Register.
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\64\ 12 U.S.C. 4802(a).
\65\ Id.
\66\ Additionally, the 30-day delayed effective date requirement
under the Administrative Procedure Act is not applicable to a rule,
such as the one herein, that grants or recognizes an exemption or
relieves a burden. 5 U.S.C. 553(d)(1).
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[[Page 35015]]
E. OCC Unfunded Mandates Reform Act Determination
The OCC has analyzed the rule under the factors set forth in the
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 (UMRA) (2 U.S.C. 1532). Under this
analysis, the OCC considered whether the rule includes a Federal
mandate that may result in the expenditure by State, local, and Tribal
governments, in the aggregate, or by the private sector, of $100
million or more in any one year (adjusted for inflation). The rule does
not impose new mandates. Therefore, the OCC has determined that the
rule would not result in expenditures by State, local, and Tribal
governments, or the private sector, of $100 million or more in any one
year. Accordingly, the OCC has not prepared a written statement to
accompany this rule.
F. SEC Economic Analysis
The agencies are adopting amendments to the 2013 final rule to
implement the statutory mandates of sections 203 and 204 of EGRRCPA. In
accordance with section 203 of EGRRCPA,\67\ the final rules amend the
definition of ``insured depository institution'' in Sec. __.2(r) of
the 2013 final rule to exclude an institution so long as it, and every
company that controls it, has both (1) $10 billion or less in total
consolidated assets and (2) total consolidated trading assets and
liabilities that are 5 percent or less of total consolidated assets.
The final rule also amends the 2013 final rule to reflect the changes
made by section 204 of EGRRCPA. That provision modified section 13 of
the BHC Act to permit, in certain circumstances, bank-affiliated
investment advisers to share their name with the hedge funds or private
equity funds they organize and offer.
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\67\ Specifically, Section 203 of EGRRCPA provides that the term
``insured depository institution,'' for purposes of the definition
of ``banking entity'' in section 13(h)(1) of the BHC Act (12 U.S.C
1851(h)(1)), does not include an insured depository institution that
does not have, and is not controlled by a company that has: (1) More
than $10 billion in total consolidated assets; and (2) total trading
assets and trading liabilities, as reported on the most recent
applicable regulatory filing filed by the institution, that are more
than 5 percent of total consolidated assets.
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The amendments to the 2013 final rule reflect the statutory
provisions of EGRRCPA that are already in effect, and the SEC continues
to believe that market participants are already responding to the
statutory changes. Thus, the baseline against which the SEC is
assessing the effects of these amendments incorporates both: (i) The
enacted statutory provisions of sections 203 and 204 of EGRRCPA, and
(ii) the SEC's understanding that banking entities with both total
consolidated assets of $10 billion or less and total consolidated
trading assets and liabilities (henceforth, ``TAL'') that are 5 percent
or less of total consolidated assets are, consistent with EGRRCPA, no
longer complying with the 2013 final rule. The SEC continues to believe
that any costs, benefits, and economic effects of the final rules,
including those on efficiency, competition, and capital formation, stem
entirely from these statutory provisions and not from the conforming
amendments to the 2013 final rule.
The SEC is mindful of the costs and benefits imposed by its rules.
In the proposal, the SEC solicited comment on the economic effects of
the amendments on SEC registrants and on efficiency, competition, and
capital formation in securities markets. The SEC has considered these
comments, as discussed below.
This analysis is limited to areas within the scope of the SEC's
function as the primary regulator of U.S. securities markets. In
particular, the SEC's economic analysis is focused on the effects of
the final amendments on registrants the SEC oversees for purposes of
section 13 of the BHC Act, investors and issuers in securities markets,
and the functioning and efficiency of such markets.
As discussed in more detail below, the enactment of the statutory
exemption in section 203 of EGRRCPA: (i) Eliminated the costs of
compliance with section 13 of the BHC Act for certain banking entities,
with the cost savings potentially being passed along to customers and
counterparties; (ii) was not followed by significant changes in trading
activity by broker-dealers (``BDs'') that qualify for the statutory
exemption, and such trading activity remains extremely limited in
absolute terms by year-end 2018; (iii) may have created incentives for
entities that do not qualify for the statutory exemption but are close
to the relevant thresholds to decrease their asset size or trading
activity to become subject to the statutory exemption, though such an
effect had not materialized by year-end 2018; and (iv) may have
improved the competitive position of entities that qualify for the
statutory exemption relative to those that are not, and the competitive
position of U.S. entities that qualify for the statutory exemption
relative to certain foreign banking entities.
The statutory exemption in section 204 of EGRRCPA may also have:
(i) Improved the ability of certain bank-affiliated registered
investment advisers (``RIAs'') to compete for investor capital with
RIAs that are not affiliated with banks; (ii) provided bank-affiliated
RIAs that can share a name with a fund with a competitive advantage
over those bank-affiliated RIAs that cannot share a name with a fund
because they do not meet the statutory conditions for name sharing; and
(iii) reduced some investors' search costs in the capital allocation
process by making it easier for some investors to identify bank-
affiliated advisers of funds, to the extent that such advisers could
share a name with a fund as a result of the statutory exemption.
The SEC continues to believe that these economic effects stem from
the statutory provisions of EGRRCPA that are fully in effect, and that
the conforming amendments will not result in any additional costs,
benefits, or effects on efficiency, competition, and capital formation.
Certain SEC-regulated entities, such as BDs and RIAs, that fell
under the definition of ``banking entity'' for the purposes of section
13 of the BHC Act before the enactment of EGRRCPA qualify for the final
amendments implementing sections 203 and 204 of EGRRCPA.\68\ As
presented in Panel A of Table 1,\69\ the SEC estimates that there are
as many as 114 bank-affiliated BDs with aggregate assets of
approximately $101 billion and aggregate holdings of approximately $16
billion that are within the scope of these final amendments.\70\ The
SEC estimates that, at most, 296 bank-affiliated RIAs are within the
scope of the final
[[Page 35016]]
amendments and no longer subject to section 13 of the BHC Act.\71\
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\68\ The SEC believes that all bank-affiliated entities that may
register with the SEC as security-based swap dealers and major
security-based swap participants are unaffected by the amendments
due to the size of the balance sheet and the amount of trading
activity of their affiliated banking entities. The SEC's analysis is
based on DTCC Derivatives Repository Limited Trade Information
Warehouse data on single-name credit-default swaps. Throughout this
economic analysis, the term ``banking entity'' generally refers only
to banking entities that are subject to section 13 of the BHC Act
and for which the SEC is the primary financial regulatory agency as
defined in section 2(12)(B) of the Dodd-Frank Act. See 12 U.S.C.
1851(b)(2); 12 U.S.C. 5301(12)(B).
\69\ In the proposal (84 FR at 2786) the SEC used data from the
release for the recently proposed amendments to these rules to
provide clarity about what activities are prohibited, and to improve
supervision and implementation of section 13 of the BHC Act (83 FR
at 33525) as of Q3 2017. In this release, we update the estimates
and use data as of Q4 2018 and Q4 2017. Data sources for Table 1
include Reporting Form FR Y-9C data for domestic bank holding
companies and Reports of Condition and Income data for banks that
are not bank holding companies. BD bank affiliations were obtained
from the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council's
National Information Center. BD assets and holdings were obtained
from FOCUS Reports data.
\70\ As of Q4 2018, these 114 BDs were affiliated with 98 banks
or holding companies.
\71\ As estimated in the release for the recently proposed
amendments to these rules to provide clarity about what activities
are prohibited, and to improve supervision and implementation of
section 13 of the BHC Act (83 FR at 33525), there were 308 bank-
affiliated RIAs based on data as of March 31, 2018. Using data as of
March 31, 2019, the SEC is updating the estimate to approximately
296 bank-affiliated RIAs. The SEC does not have information or data
that would allow us to estimate how many of these bank-affiliated
RIAs would have preferred to share a name with funds they advise.
For the purposes of this analysis, the SEC estimates that these 296
bank-affiliated RIAs and 114 bank-affiliated BDs may be able to
engage in covered fund activities as a result of section 203 of
EGRRCPA. The SEC does not have information or data that would allow
us to estimate how many of these entities would have preferred to
engage in covered fund activities.
Table 1--BD Count, Assets, and Holdings by Affiliation
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total assets, Holdings, $mln Holdings (alt.),
BD affiliation Number $mln \72\ \73\ $mln \74\
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Panel A. After the enactment of EGRRCPA: BD statistics as of Q4 2018
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bank BDs, affiliated bank total assets > 61 2,826,909 709,534 548,426
$10bln & TAL > 5% of total assets......
Bank BDs, affiliated bank total assets > 74 198,380 43,450 15,393
$10bln & TAL <= 5% of total assets.....
Bank BDs, affiliated bank total assets 0 0 0 0
<= $10bln & TAL > 5% of total assets...
Bank BDs subject to section 203 of 114 100,518 16,379 5,376
EGRRCPA \75\...........................
Non-bank BDs............................ 3,545 1,196,845 374,597 223,844
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Total............................... 3,794 4,322,651 1,143,960 793,038
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Total assets, Holdings (alt.),
BD affiliation Number $mln Holdings, $mln $mln
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Panel B. Before the enactment of EGRRCPA: BD statistics as of Q4 2017
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Bank BDs, affiliated bank total assets > 57 2,711,033 615,206 489,964
$10bln & TAL > 5% of total assets......
Bank BDs, affiliated bank total assets > 83 223,474 42,684 11,749
$10bln & TAL <= 5% of total assets.....
Bank BDs, affiliated bank total assets 0 0 0 0
<= $10bln & TAL > 5% of total assets...
Bank BDs subject to section 203 of 113 108,457 17,743 6,463
EGRRCPA \76\...........................
Non-bank BDs............................ 3,642 1,001,819 316,691 202,668
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
Total............................... 3,895 4,044,782 992,324 710,844
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The costs of the 2013 final rule no longer apply to the entities
that qualify for the statutory exemption, which, as discussed above, is
already fully in effect.\77\ To the extent that the compliance costs
related to section 13 of the BHC Act and the relevant implementing
regulations would otherwise have been passed along to customers and
counterparties of the affected entities, the cost reductions associated
with section 203 of EGRRCPA may be flowing through to customers and
counterparties in the form of reduced transaction costs and increased
willingness to engage in trading activity, including intermediation
that facilitates risk-sharing, as well as covered fund activities.\78\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\72\ BD total assets are based on FOCUS report data for ``Total
Assets.''
\73\ BD holdings are based on FOCUS reports data for securities
and spot commodities owned at market value, including bankers'
acceptances, certificates of deposit and commercial paper, state and
municipal government obligations, corporate obligations, stocks and
warrants, options, arbitrage, other securities, U.S. and Canadian
government obligations, and spot commodities.
\74\ This measure excludes U.S. and Canadian government
obligations and spot commodities.
\75\ This category includes all bank-affiliated BDs affiliated
with holding companies that have both consolidated total assets less
than or equal to $10 billion and TAL less than or equal to 5% of
total assets, as well as bank-affiliated BDs for which parent firm
TAL data was not available. Based on a manual search of regulatory
filings for holding companies with missing assets and liabilities
data and current FR Y-9C and FR Y-9SP reporting requirements, the
SEC believes that entities with missing data have low levels of
trading activity and likely qualify for the exemption in section 203
of EGRRCPA. To the degree that this may not be the case for some
bank-affiliated BDs, these figures may overestimate the number of
affected entities.
\76\ Id.
\77\ In the proposal, the SEC estimated based on data as of Q3
2017 that annual compliance cost savings for SEC-regulated entities
due to section 203 of EGRRCPA may be as high as approximately
$16,626,385 (= 2,035 hours x 0.18 x (Attorney at $409 per hour) x
111). Based on data as of Q4 2018 we now estimate these annual
compliance cost savings may be as high as approximately $14,682,037
(= 2,035 hours x 0.18 x (Attorney at $409 per hour) x 98).
\78\ See 79 FR 5778 for the agencies' estimated ongoing
compliance and recordkeeping burdens related to the requirements of
the 2013 final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
The statutory exemption in section 203 of EGRRCPA provided entities
thereby excluded from section 13 of the BHC Act with greater
flexibility in pursuing certain types of potentially profitable trading
and covered fund activities. Additionally, to the extent that section
13 of the BHC Act may have previously reduced the ability or
willingness of such entities to engage in permitted hedging,
underwriting or market-making due to compliance costs, the statutory
exemption may have facilitated access to capital and trading activity.
In the proposal, the SEC stated that some entities with $10 billion
or less in total consolidated assets and TAL equal to or less than 5
percent of its total consolidated assets may have responded to the
statutory exemption by increasing or planning to increase their trading
activity and covered funds activities, while still remaining under the
applicable thresholds at the consolidated holding company level. Using
Q4 2018 data, the SEC estimates that 21 such holding companies with 22
[[Page 35017]]
BD affiliates and available information about TAL have, on aggregate,
total consolidated assets of approximately $74.5 billion and gross TAL
of approximately $688 million.\79\ The SEC further estimates that the
gross TAL of these 21 holding companies that qualify for the exemption
in section 203 of EGRRCPA and for which data is available increased by
approximately $98 million between Q4 2017 and Q4 2018 (from $590
million in Q4 2017 to approximately $688 million in Q4 2018). The SEC
does not have information about the remaining banks and holding
companies. However, the SEC is aware that, in total, 98 banks and
holding companies that qualify for the exemption in section 203 of
EGRRCPA and have affiliated BDs, can have, on aggregate, total gross
TAL of no more than $49 billion without exceeding either threshold and
becoming subject to section 13 of the BHC Act.\80\ Therefore, the SEC
estimates that the increase in the aggregate TAL of all 98 affected
banks and holding companies with SEC-regulated affiliates is likely no
more than $48.3 billion.\81\ The SEC continues to note that, if an
increase in risk-taking by such affected entities is observed by market
participants that provide capital to them, these capital providers may
demand additional compensation for bearing more financial risk, which
may decrease the profitability of the entity's trading and covered fund
activities.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\79\ The current FR Y-9C and FR Y-9SP filing requirements limit
data availability. As of Q4 2018, the SEC has information about TAL
of 21 holding companies with 22 BD affiliates.
\80\ This figure is based on a maximum of $10 bln of total
consolidated assets and a maximum TAL of 5 percent of total
consolidated assets and is calculated as follows: 98 holding
companies x $10 bln total assets x 0.05 = $49 bln.
\81\ This figure is calculated as follows: $49 bln-$0.688 bln =
$48.312 bln. The SEC recognizes that these estimates may under- or
overestimate the increases in trading activity that may occur as a
result of section 203 of EGRRCPA for four primary reasons. First,
the profitability of trading activity is likely to strongly
influence incentives to engage in trading activity and may vary
depending on trading strategy, market sector, and time period
measured. Second, growth in a holding company's total consolidated
assets is influenced by business models, prevailing market
conditions, industry competition, bank merger and acquisition
activity, among other factors. Third, this estimate assumes that no
affected entity will enter or exit the industry as a result of the
statutory exclusion. Fourth, this estimate assumes for purposes of
this economic analysis that small holding companies that file form
FR Y-9SP, which does not contain data on TAL, do not currently have
any TAL.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Because EGRRCPA was enacted relatively recently (on May 24, 2018)
and a realignment of a BD's balance sheet may necessarily be gradual,
it is not yet clear if the economic effects of sections 203 and 204 are
fully realized in the relevant securities markets. However, Table 1
reports changes in the size and trading activity of different groups of
BDs within an approximate 12 month window around the enactment of
section 203 of EGRRCPA. Comparing BD statistics in Q4 2017 against Q4
2018, the number of bank-affiliated BDs that qualify for the exemption
in section 203 of EGRRCPA increased by one. BDs that qualify for the
exemption in section 203 of EGRRCPA decreased their assets by
approximately $8 billion, and their holdings by between approximately
$1.1 billion (using a measure of holdings that excludes U.S. and
Canadian government obligations and spot commodities) and approximately
$1.4 billion (using an inclusive measure of holdings).\82\ In
comparison, although the number of bank-affiliated BDs that do not
qualify for the exemption in section 203 of EGRRCPA decreased by 5,
such BDs experienced in the aggregate an approximately $90.8 billion
increase in total assets, and an increase in holdings between $62.1
billion (excluding U.S. and Canadian government obligations and spot
commodities) and approximately $95.1 billion (using an inclusive
measure of holdings).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\82\ This discussion describes changes in assets and holdings in
absolute terms since percentage measures magnify changes when
initial levels of a measure are extremely low.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
It is difficult to draw meaningful causal inference from these
trends in assets and holdings due to a number of methodological
considerations. First, the effect of enactment of section 203 of
EGRRCPA is confounded by other changes, notably the market
participants' potential reaction to other statutory relief for small
banking entities in EGRRCPA (such as sections 201, 207, and 210 of
EGRRCPA) and to the agencies' proposed amendments to the 2013 final
rule that affected bank-affiliated BDs that do not qualify for the
exemption in section 203 of EGRRCPA. Second, there is a lack of
``control'' and ``treatment'' groups that are likely to satisfy the
``parallel trends'' assumption required for a difference-in-difference
analysis.\83\ Third, quarterly reporting of FOCUS data is
insufficiently frequent to perform an announcement effect analysis of
BD risk taking and asset size in the days immediately before and
immediately after the enactment of EGRRCPA. Fourth, as discussed in the
proposal, certain entities can influence whether they qualify for the
statutory exemption in section 203 of EGRRCPA by adjusting their
balance sheets and trading books, which is likely to confound
inference. Fifth, the relief in section 203 of EGRRCPA may have been at
least partly anticipated by market participants.\84\ In addition, in
the proposal, the SEC anticipated spillover effects between bank-
affiliated BDs that qualify for the exemption in section 203 of EGRRCPA
and bank-affiliated BDs that do not. Both anticipation and spillover
effects contaminate the estimation of regulatory effects.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\83\ Causal inference using difference-in-difference generally
requires that differences between treatment and control groups along
the dimension of interest (e.g., risk-taking) are constant in the
absence of regulatory intervention.
\84\ See U.S. Department of the Treasury, ``A Financial System
that Creates Economic Opportunities: Banks and Credit Unions'' (June
2017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thus, the SEC cannot conclusively determine whether the above
changes in BD characteristics arose as a result of the passage of
EGRRCPA. However, the above statistics indicate that bank-affiliated
BDs that qualify for the exemption in section 203 of EGRRCPA slightly
decreased their balance sheet and trading activity.\85\ This group of
BDs continues to represent a very small fraction of the BD industry,
representing approximately 2.3% of all BD assets and between 0.7% and
1.4% of all BD holdings.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\85\ As discussed above, BDs that qualify for the exemption in
section 203 of EGRRCPA exhibited a decrease in holdings by
approximately $1.4 billion when including the holdings of U.S. and
Canadian government obligations and spot commodities, and by
approximately $1.1 billion when excluding them. Thus, such
government obligations and spot commodities accounted for
approximately $277 million or 20% of the decrease in the inclusive
measure of holdings by BDs that qualify for the exemption in section
203 of EGRRCPA.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the proposal, the SEC noted that certain banking entities with
more than $10 billion in total consolidated assets and/or TAL greater
than 5 percent of total consolidated assets may be incentivized to
shrink their balance sheets or trading activity under the thresholds.
The SEC recognized that this may reduce the willingness of such banking
entities to serve as intermediaries, and may also reduce the potential
for market impacts from the failure of a given entity.
As can be seen in Table 1, the number of bank-affiliated BDs not
subject to section 203 of EGRRCPA has declined by five between Q4 2017
and Q4 2018. These counts are impacted by the fact that holding
companies may have multiple BD subsidiaries, and by occurrences of
mergers and other changes in the organizational structure within
holding companies. Bank-affiliated BDs that do not qualify for the
exemption in section 203 of EGRRCPA have experienced an increase in
assets (by $91 billion) and holdings (by between $62.1 billion and
$95.1 billion
[[Page 35018]]
depending on the measure). BDs unaffiliated with banks or bank holding
companies have also increased their assets (by $195 billion) and
holdings (by between $21.2 billion and $57.9 billion depending on the
measure), despite the backdrop of the aggregate decline in the number
of BDs in the industry.
These observations suggest that aggregate industry and
macroeconomic factors may be driving a general increase in the size and
trading books of BDs. Such observations may also indicate that banking
entities not subject to section 203 of EGRRCPA may currently be unable
or unwilling to shrink their balance sheets and trading books in order
to fall under the relevant thresholds in section 203 of EGRRCPA. The
SEC continues to believe that banking entities not excluded from
section 13 of the BHC Act pursuant to section 203 of EGRRCPA may weigh
the size and complexity of each banking entity's trading activities and
organizational structure, and the profitability of their banking and
trading books, against the magnitude of expected compliance savings
from not being subject to section 13 of the BHC Act. The SEC continues
to note that, similar to the discussion above, due to methodological
limitations (including, among others, confounding events and the likely
violation of the parallel trends assumption), these observations of
trends do not allow us to draw a causal inference. It is also possible
that the effects of section 203 of EGRRCPA are still being realized,
and the observed trends may under- or overestimate potential long-term
shifts in risk-taking by entities that qualify for the exemption in
section 203 and those that do not.
In the proposal, the SEC stated that to the degree that statutory
changes in section 203 of EGRRCPA may have contributed to an increase
in the gross volume of TAL, there may be an increase in risk-taking
among entities no longer subject to section 13 of the BHC Act. However,
this need not necessarily be the case. For example, a hedging
transaction that offsets a risk exposure from an existing asset would
increase the reported gross TAL without necessarily producing a net
increase in the risk born by the entity. As described above, bank
affiliated BDs that qualify for the exemption in section 203 of EGRRCPA
have not increased their gross volume of TAL over the analyzed time
period. The SEC continues to recognize that bank-affiliated BDs that
qualify for the exemption in section 203 of EGRRCPA account only for
approximately 2.3% of aggregate BD assets and between 0.7% and 1.4% of
aggregate BD holdings. Thus, the statutory exemption affects only a
small fraction of the BD industry. Moreover, the SEC continues to
recognize that both the risks and the returns from newly permissible
trading and covered fund activities by individual bank-affiliated BDs
are likely to be passed along to their customers and counterparties.
In the proposal, the SEC recognized that potential shifts in risk-
taking due to section 203 of EGRRCPA, as discussed above, may lead to
two competing effects. On the one hand, if affected entities are now
able to bear risk at a lower cost than their customers (i.e., because
such entities are no longer subject to section 13 of the BHC Act),
increased risk-taking could promote secondary market trading activity
and capital formation in primary markets, and thus increase access to
capital for issuers. Similarly, the statutory exemption may increase
banking entities' covered fund activities, which may broaden investment
opportunities for investors in covered funds and facilitate access to
capital by companies in which those funds invest. On the other hand,
the statutory exemption may increase risk-taking by individual SEC-
regulated entities, the amount of covered fund activity in which they
engage, as well as total risk in the financial system, which may
ultimately negatively impact issuers and investors. However, as noted
above, the maximum potential increase in aggregate trading activity of
entities that qualify for the exemption in section 203 of EGRRCPA that
would not trigger section 13 of the BHC Act compliance is likely
limited to $48.3 billion.\86\ Moreover, as shown above, empirically
such changes in risk-taking by SEC registrants that qualify for the
exemption in section 203 of EGRRCPA so far remain very low in absolute
terms, and such BDs continue to represent a very small fraction of the
industry as measured by both assets and trading book size. The SEC
continues to recognize that an increase in risk-taking by entities that
qualify for the exemption in section 203 of EGRRCPA, to the degree that
it is observed by providers of capital, may increase their cost of
capital and reduce the profitability of such risk-taking.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\86\ See supra footnote 81.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
In the proposal, the SEC outlined two primary effects of section
203 of EGRRCPA on competition. First, entities exempt from section 13
of the BHC Act under EGRRCPA are no longer required to incur related
compliance costs and, thus, may have a competitive advantage relative
to similarly situated entities above the thresholds. The availability
of the statutory exemption may incentivize entities near the thresholds
to decrease the size of their balance sheet, trading activity, or both
in order to become exempt from section 13 of the BHC Act, resulting in
greater competition between entities with consolidated assets and TAL
near the thresholds. As demonstrated in Table 1 and the discussion
above, the number of BDs above the thresholds in section 203 of EGRRCPA
has declined only by five, while their assets and trading activity have
actually increased. Thus, to date the above competition effects may
have been muted.
Second, section 203 of EGRRCPA may have placed domestic entities
subject to the statutory exemption on a more even competitive footing
with foreign firms that are not subject to the substantive prohibitions
and compliance costs related to section 13 of the BHC Act and its
implementing regulations. In addition, section 203 of EGRRCPA may have
improved the competitive position of affected domestic entities
relative to foreign banking entities that are subject to section 13 of
the BHC Act as a result of such foreign banking entities utilizing the
exemptions related to activity outside of the United States.\87\ The
SEC has no data on the activity or risk-taking of foreign BDs that are
not registered with the SEC and are affiliated with banks or bank
holding companies. No such data is publicly available and commenters
did not provide data enabling such quantification. As a result, the SEC
is unable to empirically evaluate this effect.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\87\ See 12 U.S.C. 1851(d)(1)(H) and (I) (2017); See Sec. Sec.
_.6(e) and _.13(b) of the 2013 final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Prior to the enactment of EGRRCPA, a bank-affiliated RIA could not
share the same name or a variation of the same name as a hedge fund or
private equity fund that it organized and offered under an exemption in
section 13 of the BHC Act.\88\ Section 204 of EGRRCPA changed this
condition for bank-affiliated RIAs that meet certain requirements and
provided them with flexibility in name sharing for corporate,
marketing, promotional, or other purposes. To the extent that name
sharing effectively and easily conveys the identity of a fund's RIA and
preserves the brand value, section 204 of EGRRCPA improved bank-
affiliated RIAs' ability to compete for investor capital with RIAs that
are not affiliated with banks.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\88\ See Sec. _.11 of the 2013 final rule; 12 U.S.C.
1851(d)(1)(G) (2017).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Section 204 also provided bank-affiliated RIAs that can share a
name with a fund with a competitive
[[Page 35019]]
advantage over those bank-affiliated RIAs that cannot share a name with
a fund because they do not meet the statutory conditions for name
sharing. This competitive effect can be attenuated since bank-
affiliated RIAs in the latter group may change their names to avoid
sharing the same name or a variation of the same name as a depository
institution, any company that controls it, or any bank holding company.
However, such a name change by bank-affiliated RIAs may have associated
costs that would not apply to bank-affiliated RIAs that do not have the
name of a depository institution, any company that controls it, or any
bank holding company in their names.
In addition, the statutory name-sharing provision may have reduced
some investors' search costs in the capital allocation process by
making it easier for some investors to identify the bank-affiliated RIA
of funds, to the extent that such advisers and funds could share names
as a result of the statutory exemption.
The SEC reiterates that the economic effects discussed above stem
from the statutory provisions of EGRRCPA that are fully in effect, and,
therefore, the SEC believes that these effects may be already partly
realized. The SEC believes that the conforming amendments to the
implementing regulations will have no additional costs, benefits, or
effects on efficiency, competition, and capital formation.
The agencies have received a number of comments on the proposal,
some supporting \89\ and others questioning \90\ the agencies'
codification of section 203 of EGRRCPA, and comments opposing the
statutory exemption for community banks.\91\ As discussed above, the
agencies believe that the final amendments conform the regulations
implementing section 13 of the BHC Act with the statutory amendments
made pursuant to sections 203 and 204 of EGRRCPA with no exercise of
agency discretion. As such, the SEC believes there are no reasonable
alternatives to the final rule.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\89\ See ICBA Letter; IAA Letter; LosHuertos and Mount Letter;
NAFCU Letter. See also section II.
\90\ See Competitive Enterprise Institute Letter; Competitive
Enterprise Institute et. al. Letter; Luetkemeyer Letter. See also
section II.
\91\ See Tinee Carraker Letter, Rodger Cunningham Letter.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
G. Congressional Review Act
Pursuant to the Congressional Review Act,\92\ the Office of
Information and Regulatory Affairs has designated these rules as not a
``major rule,'' as defined by 5 U.S.C. 804(2).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\92\ 5 U.S.C. 801 et seq.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
H. Effective Date
Pursuant to Section 553(d) of the Administrative Procedure Act,\93\
the required publication or service of a substantive rule shall be made
not less than 30 days before its effective date, except, among other
things, as provided by the agency for good cause found and published
with the rule or if the rule is a substantive rule which grants or
recognizes an exemption or relieves a restriction. The agencies find
that there is good cause for setting an effective date that is less
than 30 days after publication of this substantive rule because this
final rule merely conforms the 2013 final rule to the EGRRCPA statutory
amendments. Furthermore, the final rule recognizes a statutory
exemption from the definition of ``banking entity,'' and relieves
restrictions applicable to the naming of a hedge fund or private equity
fund. Accordingly, the final rules are effective as of July 22, 2019.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\93\ 5 U.S.C. 553(d).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
List of Subjects
12 CFR Part 44
Banks, Banking, Compensation, Credit, Derivatives, Government
securities, Insurance, Investments, National banks, Penalties,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Risk, Risk retention,
Securities, Trusts and trustees.
12 CFR Part 248
Administrative practice and procedure, Banks, Banking, Conflict of
interests, Credit, Foreign banking, Government securities, Holding
companies, Insurance, Insurance companies, Investments, Penalties,
Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Securities, State nonmember
banks, State savings associations, Trusts and trustees.
12 CFR Part 351
Banks, Banking, Capital, Compensation, Conflicts of interest,
Credit, Derivatives, Government securities, Insurance, Insurance
companies, Investments, Penalties, Reporting and recordkeeping
requirements, Risk, Risk retention, Securities, Trusts and trustees.
17 CFR Part 75
Banks, Banking, Compensation, Credit, Derivatives, Federal branches
and agencies, Federal savings associations, Government securities,
Hedge funds, Insurance, Investments, National banks, Penalties,
Proprietary trading, Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Risk,
Risk retention, Securities, Swap dealers, Trusts and trustees, Volcker
rule.
17 CFR Part 255
Banks, Brokers, Dealers, Investment advisers, Recordkeeping,
Reporting, Securities.
DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY
Office of the Comptroller of the Currency
12 CFR Chapter I
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons stated in the Common Preamble, the Office of the
Comptroller of the Currency amends chapter I of title 12, Code of
Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 44--PROPRIETARY TRADING AND CERTAIN INTERESTS IN AND
RELATIONSHIPS WITH COVERED FUNDS
0
1. The authority citation for part 44 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 7 U.S.C. 27 et seq., 12 U.S.C. 1, 24, 92a, 93a, 161,
1461, 1462a, 1463, 1464, 1467a, 1813(q), 1818, 1851, 3101 3102,
3108, 5412.
Subpart A--Authority and Definitions
0
2. In Sec. 44.1, revise paragraph (c) to read as follows:
Sec. 44.1 Authority, purpose, scope, and relationship to other
authorities.
* * * * *
(c) Scope. This part implements section 13 of the Bank Holding
Company Act with respect to banking entities for which the OCC is
authorized to issue regulations under section 13(b)(2) of the Bank
Holding Company Act (12 U.S.C. 1851(b)(2)) and take actions under
section 13(e) of that Act (12 U.S.C. 1851(e)). These include national
banks, Federal branches and Federal agencies of foreign banks, Federal
savings associations, Federal savings banks, and any of their
respective subsidiaries (except a subsidiary for which there is a
different primary financial regulatory agency, as that term is defined
in this part), but do not include such entities to the extent they are
not within the definition of banking entity in Sec. 44.2(c).
* * * * *
0
3. In Sec. 44.2, revise paragraph (r) to read as follows:
Sec. 44.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
[[Page 35020]]
(r) Insured depository institution, unless otherwise indicated, has
the same meaning as in section 3(c) of the Federal Deposit Insurance
Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(c)), but does not include:
(1) An insured depository institution that is described in section
2(c)(2)(D) of the BHC Act (12 U.S.C. 1841(c)(2)(D)); or
(2) An insured depository institution if it has, and if every
company that controls it has, total consolidated assets of $10 billion
or less and total trading assets and trading liabilities, on a
consolidated basis, that are 5 percent or less of total consolidated
assets.
* * * * *
Subpart C--Covered Funds Activities and Investments
0
4. In Sec. 44.10, revise paragraph (d)(9)(iii) to read as follows:
Sec. 44.10 Prohibition on acquiring or retaining an ownership
interest in and having certain relationships with a covered fund.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(9) * * *
(iii) To share with a covered fund, for corporate, marketing,
promotional, or other purposes, the same name or a variation of the
same name, except as permitted under Sec. 44.11(a)(6).
* * * * *
0
5. In Sec. 44.11, revise paragraph (a)(6) to read as follows:
Sec. 44.11 Permitted organizing and offering, underwriting, and
market making with respect to a covered fund.
(a) * * *
(6) The covered fund, for corporate, marketing, promotional, or
other purposes:
(i) Does not share the same name or a variation of the same name
with the banking entity (or an affiliate thereof) except that a covered
fund may share the same name or a variation of the same name with a
banking entity that is an investment adviser to the covered fund if:
(A) The investment adviser is not an insured depository
institution, a company that controls an insured depository institution,
or a company that is treated as a bank holding company for purposes of
section 8 of the International Banking Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3106);
and
(B) The investment adviser does not share the same name or a
variation of the same name as an insured depository institution, a
company that controls an insured depository institution, or a company
that is treated as a bank holding company for purposes of section 8 of
the International Banking Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3106); and
(ii) Does not use the word ``bank'' in its name;
* * * * *
Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
12 CFR Chapter II
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the Common Preamble the Board amends
chapter II of title 12 of the Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 248--PROPRIETARY TRADING AND CERTAIN INTERESTS IN AND
RELATIONSHIPS WITH COVERED FUNDS (REGULATION VV)
0
6. The authority citation for part 248 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1851, 12 U.S.C. 221 et seq., 12 U.S.C.
1818, 12 U.S.C. 1841 et seq., and 12 U.S.C. 3103 et seq.
0
7. The heading for part 248 is revised as set forth above.
Subpart A--Authority and Definitions
0
8. In Sec. 248.1, revise paragraph (c) to read as follows:
Sec. 248.1 Authority, purpose, scope, and relationship to other
authorities.
* * * * *
(c) Scope. This part implements section 13 of the Bank Holding
Company Act with respect to banking entities for which the Board is
authorized to issue regulations under section 13(b)(2) of the Bank
Holding Company Act (12 U.S.C. 1851(b)(2)) and take actions under
section 13(e) of that Act (12 U.S.C. 1851(e)). These include any state
bank that is a member of the Federal Reserve System, any company that
controls an insured depository institution (including a bank holding
company and savings and loan holding company), any company that is
treated as a bank holding company for purposes of section 8 of the
International Banking Act (12 U.S.C. 3106), and any subsidiary of the
foregoing other than a subsidiary for which the OCC, FDIC, CFTC, or SEC
is the primary financial regulatory agency (as defined in section 2(12)
of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act of
2010 (12 U.S.C. 5301(12)), but do not include such entities to the
extent they are not within the definition of banking entity in Sec.
248.2(c).
* * * * *
0
9. In Sec. 248.2, revise paragraph (r) to read as follows:
Sec. 248.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
(r) Insured depository institution, unless otherwise indicated, has
the same meaning as in section 3(c) of the Federal Deposit Insurance
Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(c)), but does not include:
(1) An insured depository institution that is described in section
2(c)(2)(D) of the BHC Act (12 U.S.C. 1841(c)(2)(D)); or
(2) An insured depository institution if it has, and if every
company that controls it has, total consolidated assets of $10 billion
or less and total trading assets and trading liabilities, on a
consolidated basis, that are 5 percent or less of total consolidated
assets.
* * * * *
Subpart C--Covered Funds Activities and Investments
0
10. In Sec. 248.10, revise paragraph (d)(9)(iii) to read as follows:
Sec. 248.10 Prohibition on acquiring or retaining an ownership
interest in and having certain relationships with a covered fund.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(9) * * *
(iii) To share with a covered fund, for corporate, marketing,
promotional, or other purposes, the same name or a variation of the
same name, except as permitted under Sec. 248.11(a)(6).
* * * * *
0
11. In Sec. 248.11, revise paragraph (a) to read as follows:
Sec. 248.11 Permitted organizing and offering, underwriting, and
market making with respect to a covered fund.
(a) * * *
(6) The covered fund, for corporate, marketing, promotional, or
other purposes:
(i) Does not share the same name or a variation of the same name
with the banking entity (or an affiliate thereof) except that a covered
fund may share the same name or a variation of the same name with a
banking entity that is an investment adviser to the covered fund if:
(A) The investment adviser is not an insured depository
institution, a company that controls an insured depository institution,
or a company that is treated as a bank holding company for purposes of
section 8 of the International Banking Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3106);
and
(B) The investment adviser does not share the same name or a
variation of the same name as an insured depository institution, a
company that controls an
[[Page 35021]]
insured depository institution, or a company that is treated as a bank
holding company for purposes of section 8 of the International Banking
Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3106); and
(ii) Does not use the word ``bank'' in its name;
* * * * *
FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
12 CFR Chapter III
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the Common Preamble, the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation amends chapter III of title 12, Code of
Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 351--PROPRIETARY TRADING AND CERTAIN INTERESTS IN AND
RELATIONSHIPS WITH COVERED FUNDS
0
12. The authority citation for part 351 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1851; 1811 et seq.; 3101 et seq.; and 5412.
Subpart A--Authority and Definitions
0
13. In Sec. 351.1, revise paragraph (c) to read as follows:
Sec. 351.1 Authority, purpose, scope and relationship to other
authorities.
* * * * *
(c) Scope. This part implements section 13 of the Bank Holding
Company Act with respect to insured depository institutions for which
the FDIC is the appropriate Federal banking agency, as defined in
section 3(q) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, and certain
subsidiaries of the foregoing, but does not include such entities to
the extent they are not within the definition of banking entity in
Sec. 351.2(c).
* * * * *
0
14. In Sec. 351.2, revise paragraph (r) to read as follows:
Sec. 351.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
(r) Insured depository institution, unless otherwise indicated, has
the same meaning as in section 3(c) of the Federal Deposit Insurance
Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(c)), but does not include:
(1) An insured depository institution that is described in section
2(c)(2)(D) of the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956 (12 U.S.C.
1841(c)(2)(D)); or
(2) An insured depository institution if it has, and if every
company that controls it has, total consolidated assets of $10 billion
or less and total trading assets and trading liabilities, on a
consolidated basis, that are 5 percent or less of total consolidated
assets.
* * * * *
Subpart C--Covered Funds Activities and Investments
0
15. In Sec. 351.10, revise paragraph (d)(9)(iii) to read as follows:
Sec. 351.10 Prohibitions on acquiring or retaining an ownership
interest in and having certain relationships with a covered fund.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(9) * * *
(iii) To share with a covered fund, for corporate, marketing,
promotional, or other purposes, the same name or a variation of the
same name, except as permitted under Sec. 351.11(a)(6).
* * * * *
0
16. In Sec. 351.11, revise paragraph (a) to read as follows:
Sec. 351.11 Permitted organizing and offering, underwriting, and
market making with respect to a covered fund.
(a) * * *
(6) The covered fund, for corporate, marketing, promotional, or
other purposes:
(i) Does not share the same name or a variation of the same name
with the banking entity (or an affiliate thereof), except that a
covered fund may share the same name or a variation of the same name
with a banking entity that is an investment adviser to the covered fund
if:
(A) The investment adviser is not an insured depository
institution, a company that controls an insured depository institution,
or a company that is treated as a bank holding company for purposes of
section 8 of the International Banking Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3106);
and
(B) The investment adviser does not share the same name or a
variation of the same name as an insured depository institution, a
company that controls an insured depository institution, or a company
that is treated as a bank holding company for purposes of section 8 of
the International Banking Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3106); and
(ii) Does not use the word ``bank'' in its name;
* * * * *
COMMODITY FUTURES TRADING COMMISSION
17 CFR Chapter I
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the Common Preamble, the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission amends part 75 to chapter I of title 17 of
the Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 75 -- PROPRIETARY TRADING AND CERTAIN INTERESTS IN AND
RELATIONSHIPS WITH COVERED FUNDS
0
17. The authority citation for part 75 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1851.
Subpart A--Authority and Definitions
0
18. In Sec. 75.1, revise paragraph (c) to read as follows:
Sec. 75.1 Authority, purpose, scope and relationship to other
authorities.
* * * * *
(c) Scope. This part implements section 13 of the Bank Holding
Company Act with respect to banking entities for which the CFTC is the
primary financial regulatory agency, as defined in section 2(12) of the
Dodd-Frank Act, but does not include such entities to the extent they
are not within the definition of banking entity in Sec. 75.2(c).
* * * * *
0
19. In Sec. 75.2, revise paragraph (r) to read as follows:
Sec. 75.2 Definitions.
* * * * *
(r) Insured depository institution, unless otherwise indicated, has
the same meaning as in section 3(c) of the Federal Deposit Insurance
Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(c)), but does not include:
(1) An insured depository institution that is described in section
2(c)(2)(D) of the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956 (12 U.S.C.
1841(c)(2)(D)); or
(2) An insured depository institution if it has, and if every
company that controls it has, total consolidated assets of $10 billion
or less and total trading assets and trading liabilities, on a
consolidated basis, that are 5 percent or less of total consolidated
assets.
* * * * *
Subpart C--Covered Funds Activities and Investments
0
20. In Sec. 75.10, revise paragraph (d)(9)(iii) to read as follows:
Sec. 75.10 Prohibitions on acquiring or retaining an ownership
interest in and having certain relationships with a covered fund.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(9) * * *
(iii) To share with a covered fund, for corporate, marketing,
promotional, or
[[Page 35022]]
other purposes, the same name or a variation of the same name, except
as permitted under Sec. 75.11(a)(6).
* * * * *
0
21. In Sec. 75.11, revise paragraph (a) to read as follows:
Sec. 75.11 Permitted organizing and offering, underwriting, and
market making with respect to a covered fund.
(a) * * *
(6) The covered fund, for corporate, marketing, promotional, or
other purposes:
(i) Does not share the same name or a variation of the same name
with the banking entity (or an affiliate thereof), except that a
covered fund may share the same name or a variation of the same name
with a banking entity that is an investment adviser to the covered fund
if:
(A) The investment adviser is not an insured depository
institution, a company that controls an insured depository institution,
or a company that is treated as a bank holding company for purposes of
section 8 of the International Banking Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3106);
and
(B) The investment adviser does not share the same name or a
variation of the same name as an insured depository institution, a
company that controls an insured depository institution, or a company
that is treated as a bank holding company for purposes of section 8 of
the International Banking Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3106); and
(ii) Does not use the word ``bank'' in its name;
* * * * *
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
17 CFR Chapter II
Authority and Issuance
For the reasons set forth in the Common Preamble, the Securities
and Exchange Commission amends part 255 to chapter II of title 17 of
the Code of Federal Regulations as follows:
PART 255--PROPRIETARY TRADING AND CERTAIN INTERESTS IN AND
RELATIONSHIPS WITH COVERED FUNDS
0
22. The authority for part 255 continues to read as follows:
Authority: 12 U.S.C. 1851.
Subpart A--Authority and Definitions
0
23. In Sec. 255.1, revise paragraph (c) to read as follows:
Sec. 255.1 Authority, purpose, scope and relationship to other
authorities.
* * * * *
(c) Scope. This part implements section 13 of the Bank Holding
Company Act with respect to banking entities for which the SEC is the
primary financial regulatory agency, as defined in this part, but does
not include such entities to the extent they are not within the
definition of banking entity in Sec. 255.2(c).
* * * * *
0
24. In Sec. 255.2, revise paragraph (r) to read as follows:
Sec. 255.2 Definitions
* * * * *
(r) Insured depository institution, unless otherwise indicated, has
the same meaning as in section 3(c) of the Federal Deposit Insurance
Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(c)), but does not include:
(1) An insured depository institution that is described in section
2(c)(2)(D) of the BHC Act (12 U.S.C. 1841(c)(2)(D)); or
(2) An insured depository institution if it has, and if every
company that controls it has, total consolidated assets of $10 billion
or less and total trading assets and trading liabilities, on a
consolidated basis, that are 5 percent or less of total consolidated
assets.
* * * * *
Subpart C--Covered Funds Activities and Investments
0
25. In Sec. 255.10, revise paragraph (d)(9)(iii) to read as follows:
Sec. 255.10 Prohibition on acquiring or retaining an ownership
interest in and having certain relationships with a covered fund.
* * * * *
(d) * * *
(9) * * *
(iii) To share with a covered fund, for corporate, marketing,
promotional, or other purposes, the same name or a variation of the
same name, except as permitted under Sec. 255.11(a)(6).
* * * * *
0
26. In Sec. 255.11, revise paragraph (a) to read as follows:
Sec. 255.11 Permitted organizing and offering, underwriting, and
market making with respect to a covered fund.
(a) * * *
(6) The covered fund, for corporate, marketing, promotional, or
other purposes:
(i) Does not share the same name or a variation of the same name
with the banking entity (or an affiliate thereof) except that a covered
fund may share the same name or a variation of the same name with a
banking entity that is an investment adviser to the covered fund if:
(A) The investment adviser is not an insured depository
institution, a company that controls an insured depository institution,
or a company that is treated as a bank holding company for purposes of
section 8 of the International Banking Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3106);
and
(B) The investment adviser does not share the same name or a
variation of the same name as an insured depository institution, a
company that controls an insured depository institution, or a company
that is treated as a bank holding company for purposes of section 8 of
the International Banking Act of 1978 (12 U.S.C. 3106); and
(ii) Does not use the word ``bank'' in its name;
* * * * *
Dated: June 26, 2019.
Morris Morgan,
Senior Deputy Comptroller and Chief Operating Officer.
By order of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
System, July 8, 2019.
Margaret McCloskey Shanks,
Deputy Secretary of the Board.
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
By Order of the Board of Directors.
Dated at Washington, DC, on June 18, 2019.
Valerie J. Best,
Assistant Executive Secretary.
Issued in Washington, DC, on July 9, 2019, by the Commission.
Christopher Kirkpatrick,
Secretary of the Commission.
Securities and Exchange Commission
Dated: July 5, 2019.
J. Lynn Taylor,
Assistant Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2019-15019 Filed 7-19-19; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE P